UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN LIBRARY 題 ​了​新​的 ​SCIENTIA “” 美​影集 ​總 ​繼 ​機器人 ​cumse 游 ​然 ​라시 ​: ELINE . : : .:. V. KER ***** KEY $ oliet VOA 10 Coup , public : ::::::.... ok Willie > 1751 Imprimatur, Nov. 10. 1677. Guil . Jane R. P. D. Hen. Epiſc. Lond. a Sacris Dom. gbaw. Johnson Sept 30.1741. Prikaz OF Johnston W IDOLATRY: A DISCOURSE In which is endeavoured A Declaration of, Its Diſtinction from Superſtition; Its Notion,Cauſe,Commencement, and Progreſs ; Its Prađice Charged on Gentiles, Jews, Maho- metans, Gnosticks, Manichees, Arians, Socinians, Romaniſts : As alſo of the Means which God hath vouchſafed towards the Cure of it by the SHE CHINAH of His SO N. By THO. TENISON, B. D. Chaplain in Ordinary to His Majeſty, and late Fellow of Corpus-Chriſti Colledg in Cambridge. LOND ON: Printed for Francis Tyton at the Three-Daggers in Fleet- ſtreet, over againſt St. Dunſtans Church, 167 8. དང་ ་ 4044 OD TOIDON ... yes, then Beste ******** ******************* . . 23 o'co - 2 сарын ** ***** I 28 Sot BL "సరం వరకు :: 7 William 4 9365 ... 2 aveam matto To the Right Honourable ROBERT Earl of MANCHESTER One of the Gentlemen of His Majeſty's Bedchamber, Lord Lieutenant of the County of Huntington, c. My LORD, fiorna do De Bodi to T another, fince I wrote a Ler- ter for private Uſe, about the Worſhip of Images: A Practice moſt ſcandalous to the Chri- fiian Religion, and (as ſome uſe it) ſo extremely ridiculous, that the very Statue, had it any apprehenſion, would mo. deſtly bow it ſelf, and prevent the Adorer. From that ſmall beginning has ariſen a Book fufficiently big but of the leſs folidity by realon of the haſty growth of it. More art, together with more hours of leiſure would have made it a leffer Volume. For in writing of Books, as in carving of Statues, the cutting away of each fuperfluity is a work of skill and time. But . A 3 The Epiſtle Dedicatory. But if this Volume were equally great and good, it would be the more ſuitable Preſent for your Lordſhip, to whom the Dedication of it is due, whether the Author be conſider, ed, or that which he hath written, Iran For the Author he hath had long dependance on your Honourable Family; ſuch as may al moſt be dated from that happy time in which theſe Iſlands were diſenchanted, and received their true and undoubted Soveraign, in place of that Spe&re of Authority which then walked at Whitehall. He is poſſeſſed of one Living by the Bounty of the then Lord Cham- berlain your Father, whoſe moſt generous kindneſs and condeſcenſion muſt for ever be remembred by him. And ſeeing the Noble offer makes the favour, and not the accept- ance; he owes to your Lordſhip his acknow. ledgments for another. Many other Obliga- tions from your Honourable Perſon and Family, and therein from your moſt excellent Lady, (whoſe, eminent and exemplary Virtues fur- paſs the very heighth of her Birth and Quality) as in Gratitude I muſt not forget, ſo in good manners I ought not here to repeat them at large ; for it would be a rude abuſe of your Lordſhips patience to turn this Epiſtle into a ſecond Book. sua For The Epiſtle Dedicatory. For the Book it felf, ſome part of it was meditated the whole reviſed at your Caſtle of Kimbolton ; a place where your Lordſhip does yearly offer new matter to the admiration of Travellers, who ſpeak with ſuch praiſe of the Fair Villa's of England. It was enlarged, and now at laſt publiſhed, not without the deſire of ſome of your Lordſhips very Learned Rela- tions, who by their own accurate Pens have made amends to the world for any trouble they may occaſion by mine. It hath already fome hope of your favourable acceptance and therefore it lays it ſelf with the greater aſſurance at the feet of your Honour. Where it offendeth either in Matter or Form, (for in an heap of ſo many particulars ſome which are not very current may paſs through my hand undiſcerned ;) I beg not Patronage, but excuſe, and . B? GROTET010 In the matter, I would hope that the main of it is paſſable, becauſe I have uſed as its touch- ſtone the Do&rine and Worſhip of that Church, in whoſe Communion (by Gods good Providence) I have always lived, the Church of England : a Church of unparalleld ſobri- ety and invincible Truth. The Country was one of the laſt of thoſe which the Arms of the ancient Romans fubdu'd ; and the Church is fuch The Epiftle Dedicatory. ſuch that it can never be conquered by the Ar. guments of the Modern. It is true, I have ſaid many things which the Church hath not ſaid; for I was unwilling to diſguſt any curious Reader, by ſerving up nothing but what had formerly been often ſet before him. But againſt the Church I am not conſcious that I have written a ſyllable. And for ſome Speculations which might have been fubje& to miſconſtru&tion, I have com- mitted them to (that which they call the beſt keeper of Secrets the Firs. If any offenſive phraſe or notion have eſcaped me, as ſoon as I am ſhewed it, I ſhall be readier to blot it out, than I was ever to write it. Touching my manner of writing, I crave leave to obſerve a few things about the ſtile, and the temper of this Diſcourſe. Concerning ſtile, had it been my Talent, it had not been poſible in ſuch an Hiſtorical and Philological Argument to have made any conſiderable uſe of it. A Diſcourſe into which the words of other men of differing Profeſſions, Ages, Countries, Languages and ſtiles, are ſo frequently woven, muſt needs be uneven and parti-coloured. Concerning the Temper obſerved in this writing, I have endeavour'd to abſtain from all The Epiſtle Dedicatory. all unneceſſary heat and ſevere Language. For I cannot perſwade my ſelf that the Witch- craft of Error can be removed, or ſo much as weakned by the meer ſcratches of the Pen. It bath alſo been my care not to miſrepreſent the opinions of thoſe from whom I differ. Yet I am ſenſible that this very Impartiality, with which I move in the middle path, will draw upon me the cenforious laſhes of many Zea. lots who place themſelves on either hand. Thoſe whom Jeſuitick Bygotry poſſeſſeth will ſay I have maliciouſly blackned their Church. Others whoſe over-rigid humour muſt needs paſs for the only Proteſtancy, whoſe Religion ſheweth it ſelf in nothing but in a fierce and indiſcreet zeal againſt Popery, will think my Pen hath flattered. They will cry out that it hath imitated his pencil, who drew the looſe Gabrielle in the figure of chaſte Diana. But I have (I hope) avoided both thoſe Extremes: Moſt certain I am, I have ſtudied to do ſo. And if juſt moderation muſt be bla- med,I am willing to be a ſufferer in fo good, ſo honourable a cauſe. CHO CHI There are another ſort of Enemies of whoſe Cenſures I am alſo in ſome expe&tation, though in no fear at all : I mean the lower fort of gvifa ca) Criticks, BO The Epiftle Dedicatory. : Criticks, into whoſe Province of Philology I have ſometimes ſtepped. This fort of men feemeth to me like thoſe wretched Barbarians on the Coaſt of Guinea, whoſe Idol is a certain Bundle of Feathers. Religious men of the warmeſt temper are not more earneſt about matters of Faith than theſe are in queſtions of wit, and debates about words and tittles. For though the intereſt of the thing they con- tend about be inſignificant, yet they think that power and maſtery in any thing is worthy their z eal. If I have but miſpelled the name of ſome Heathen-god, I expe& fevere uſage from ſuch Grammarians. But though they ſhall prove angry, I will not retaliate. It is not worth the while to keep up a controverſy begun about a trifle, and to bandy light mat- ters backward and forward by eternal dif- pute. But I treſpaſs upon your Honour by the liberty of this Diſcourſe, and by introducing theſe Pedantick people who make ſo abſurd a figure in Courts. This only I have to add : If there be any thing uſeful in this writing, I know your Lordſhip will accept it for its own fake. And for that which is uſelefs, or de- fe&tive, The Epiſtle Dedicatory. defe&ive I hope it may obtain pardon through the ſubmiſſion of the Author, 9 who is, N From Dr. Lawſon's houſe in Mincing.Lane in Lon. don, March 16, 1697. My Lord, Your Lordſhip’s moſt Obliged and Obedient Servant, THO. TENISON. : : . .. ไทย ใน "" . : ". “ . :: 4. . * . * จ. - - * * . ": 3 นอน ... 24 : เจ้า ": ( CHLOE “ะ แ: :: The CONTENTS of the CHAPTERS. pag. I. P. I2. P. 24. latry P.38. preme God 2 Hap. I. Of the Notion of Superstition Chap. II. Of the Notion of Idolatry Chap. III. Of the cauſes and occaſions of Idolatry in the World Chap. IV. Of the commencement and progreſs of Ido- Chap. V. Of the Idolatry charged on the Gentiles Part 1. How far the Gentiles pere ignorant of a ſu- p. 49. Part 2. Of the Worſhip of Univerſal nature, &c. by the Gentiles as God p. 52. Part 3. How far they owned one true God P: 55. Part 4. What applications they made to one God p.62. Part. 5. Whether they worſhipping one God could be guilty of the fin of Idolatry Part 6. Of their Idolatry in worſhipping the Statues of God P . Part 7. Of their Idolatry in worſhipping Demons p.75. Part 8. Óf their Idolatry in worſhipping the Images of Damons 88. Part 9. Of their worſhipping, Damons more than God p-95. Chap. VI. Of the Idolatry of the Jews. Part I. rt. Of the proviſions made by God againſt the Idolatry of the Jews Part 2. Of the Idolatry of the Jews Part 3. Of the worſhip of the Golden Calf Part 4. Of the worſhip of the Idol Apis Part 5. Of the Originals of Apis and Serapis p.118. Part P. 65. an P: p. 97. p. IOI. po108. PI12. The Contents of the Chapters. of an Ox p.138. p. 148. p. 155. Part 6. Of the Egyptian-Apis whether he were Moſes Part 9. Why Moles might be Idolized among the Egyptians QAR A3 p. 131. Part 8. Why Moſes might be honoured by the Symbol P. 136. Part 9. Why Mofes might be called Apis Part 10. When the Worſhip of Apis commenced p.139. Part 11. Of the Idols Apis and Mnevis P: 140. Part 12. Whence the Original of Apis might be ob- ſeured p. 141. Chap. VII. Of the Idolatry of the Mahometans p. 143. Chap. VIII. Of the Idolatry with which ſome are charged who profeſs themſelves Chriſtians Part 1. Of the Idolatry of the Gnoſticks Part 2. Of the Idolatry of the Manichees Chap. IX. Of the Idolatry with which the Arians and Socinians are charged Part 1. Of the Idolatry of the Arians and Socinians jointly p. 157. Part 2. Of the Idolatry of the Arians p. 163. Part 3. Of the Idolatry of the Socinians p. 169. Chap. 10. Of the Idolatry charged on the Papiſts Part 1. of the Charge which is drawn up againſt But Part 2. Of the mitigation of the Charge of Idolatry against the Papiſts p. 184. Part 3. Of the idolatry charged on the Romaniſts in the Invocation of Saints p.189. Chap. XI. Of the Idolatry charged on the Romaniſts in the Worſhip of Images, and particularly of the Wor. fhip of an image of God p. 264 Chap. XII. Of the Idolatry charged on the Romaniſts in worſlaipping Images Part 1. Of the Worſhip of the Image of Chriſt p.276. them P. 176, Part The Contents of the Chapters. 3 of God Part 2. Of the Worſhip of the Images of Saints p.296. Chap. XIII. Of the Idolatry charged on the Church of England p. 303. Chap.Xiv.Of the means which God hath vouchſafed the World towards the curing Idolatry ; and particu- larly of his favour in exhibiting to that purpoſe the Shechinah of his Son Part 1. Of the cure of Idolatry P311. Part 2. Of the cure of Idolatry by the Shechinah of P: 315 Part 3. Of the Shechinah of God from Adam to Noah p. 320. Part 4: Of the Shechinah of God from Noah to Moſes p. 323 Part 5. Of the Shechinah of God from Mofes to the Captivity, and therein largely of the Ark and Ches rubims and Urim and Thummim të P: 330. Part 6. Of the Shechinah of God from the captivity *** to the Meſſiah P-368. Part 7. Of the cure of Idolatry by the Image of God in Chriſt God-man povas do p. 371. Part 8. Of the Uſefulneſs of this Argument of Gods soni: Shechinahondoost a doua zi a hortab aip: 379. Part 9. Of the Uſefulneſs of this Argument of Cods Shechinah, with relation to the Worſhip of Angels Chap. XV. A Review and Concluſion P: 391. and Images p. 382. :: ating on to V > E RR AT A. $ . 7. lin. 14. for, of a remorſe, read, of remorſe. p.12. 1.13. f. Friebert, 1. Freiberg: p.26. 1.17. f. Diitas r. Deätas. p. 34. 12. f. notions r. mo. tions. p.40. 1.20. f. Families of Cain and Lamech r. Family of Cair. p.41. 1.32. & p.47. 1.33. f. Loyn r. Line. p.42. 1.18,19. f. Commical r. Çonical. P.43. 1.6. f. Vatallus r. Vatablus. p.48.1.18. f. aſcendech a Pyramis r. af. cendeth in a Pyramis. p. 196. 1. 25. f. oppoſite r. appofite. p. 230. Marg. for Virgine r. Virgini. p. 249. Marg. f. quid r. quod. p. 324. 1.20. f. re-ad- ing r, reaching. p. 338. 1. 18. f. man r. mean. p. 355. 1. 26. blot out and. P.385. 16,7. f. Heaven r. Heathen. In p. 385,387,389. there is left out in the Title on the top, with Relation to the worſhip, &*c. p.400. 1.2. f. He t. We. p.410. 123. f. ſecond r. third. p.413. 1.21. f. chres r. fepulchres. Other Miſpellings and little miſtakes are left to the candor of the Rea- der, who is defired as he peruſeth the Book, to caſt his eye fometimes upon the Review at the end of it, a few amendments and additions be- ing there fubjoined. sep ในไม่มาก ไม่มี INVX 2 CHAP. I. of the notions of Superſtition and Idolatry, as they are uſually confounded; and as they ought, of right, to se diſtinguiſh'd. ** namet Know not how I can better begin this diſcourſe concerning Religious Worſhip, than by imitating the Pro- logue of Origen, or rather of Max- imus, to his diſpute againſt the He- refie of Marcion. In the entrance of that Dialogue, he (a) maketh (a) Orig. cont. a right opinion concerning God to be the Baſis and Marc. s. 1. p. Foundation of Univerſal Goodneſs. Men are imper- 2. βάσιν γας διμαι και ο fect, and oftentimes the more they are known, the spacía ua duan leſs they are honoured ; inſomuch, that diſtance and do tão refervedners is made ule of, eſpecially among the Ea- same as ſtern Princes, as the neceſſary inſtrument of Venera- , near Ti tion. But God is a Being abſolutely perfect; and the better he is underſtood, he is worſhipped with the more rational Religion, and with the profounder Re- God is that One, Supreme, Infinite, Spirit ; who by Almighty Power, Wiſdom and Goodneſs, made and governeth the World. And if men entertained ſuch a notion of him, inſtead of thoſe rude and falſe draughts, which are pictur'd in their vain Imaginations, they would pay him an homage more agreeable to his Divine, and to their own reaſonable, though humane nature. They would then ſerve him with that pure Religion, or ſincere Chriſti- B anity, και πίει. verence. of the Notion of Superſtition. Chap. I. anity, which is not adulterated either with Idolatry or Superſtition. Of theſe, the notions being ſo common- ly entangled, that Heſychius expoundeth the name, devis aiya (a ſuperſtitious perſon] by oldeskorétins Can Pfal. 31: 7. Idolater]; and the tranſlators of the Pſalms * render lataubtytas Diensis, the vain or empty (that is, the ex- ceeding) vanities of Idols, by ſuperſtitious vanities: I will in the firſt place offer to the Reader a di- ftinct conſideration of them. Superſtition, if we have regard only to the bare de- rivations of its names in the Greek or Latin Tongues, is no other than a ſingle branch of Idolatry. It is the worſhip of the Divi, cæleftes ſemper habiti, ( as the Law of the twelve Tables fpeaketh ) that is, of the Sempiternal Dæmons; and alſo of thoſe, Quos in cæ- lum merita vocârunt (as the ſame Law diſtinguiſheth )s of ſuch Hero's and fuperexiſting Souls as were, through their eminent and exemplary virtue, tranſlated from Earth to Heaven. Yet in the notion of Plutarch, Inoldarpovía, or Superſtition, conſiſteth not ſo much in the bare worſhip of ſuch inviſible Powers, as in that ſervility and horror of mind which poffeffed the wor- ſhippers, and inclin'd them ( like thoſe who flatter Tyrants) to hate them, and yet to fawn on them, B Plut. de fit and to ſuppoſe them apt to be appeaſed ( b ) by cere- perft. p. 167" monious and inſignificant crouchings. Uſe hath fur- sal doi fogár ther extended the fignification of the word; inſo- much, that ſometimes it comprehendeth, not only all manner of Idolatry, but alſo every falſe and offenſive way, which diſguiſeth it felt under the colour of e Soer. Hift. Religion. Thus Socrates the Hiſtorian, (c) when he Eccl . 1. 3. c. 1. mentioneth the ſigns which Julian gave of his prone- 'N Tão neſs to Superſtition he meaneth by that word the Tas & Xe Teel whole Religion of the Gentiles. * daσιαμονί - But there is ſtill behind its proper and eſpecial anidek, GP, &c. no- Chap. I. of the Nation of Superftition. OD notion ; and the Synod of Mechlin hath attempted to fet down a true defcription of it. The Council of Trent having commanded the aboliſhing of all Super- ſtition, the Fathers of this Synod go about to explain the meaning of that Precept; and they do it (d) af- d concil. Mech. ter the following manner. This Synod (ſay they) ixter . Conc, “ teacheth, that all that uſe of things is ſuperſtitious, Imag. p.801. e which is performed without the warrant of ] the “Word of God, or the Doctrine of the Church, by “ certain cuſtomary rites and obſervances, of which “no reaſonable cauſe can be affigned: And when truſt " is put in Them, and an expectation is raiſed of an “event following from ſuch Rites, and not hoped for “ without them, from the interceſſion of the Saints. * Allo when, in the worthip of Saints, they are done " rather out of raſhneſs and lightneſs, than out of Pi- “ety and Religion. But this defcription is in many reſpects defective. For many of the Ulages which it decrieth, do not relate to Religion, and they deſerve rather the names of follies, impertinences, and ludi- crous inchantments: unleſs a man would diſtinguiſh concerning the kinds of Superſtition, and call fome, the Superftitions of common life, and others, the Super- ſtitions of worſhip. The rites of the former kind be- come the more Superſtitious, if their event be expect- ed from fome prefumed Saint ; for then an imperti- nent cuſtom becomes an impiety, or the uſage of a Magical charm, by which inviſible powers are depend- ed on, for the production of viſible effects. If ( for inſtance fake ) a man ſhall fall into that conceit which hath poffefiled many, even Origen (4) himſelf, that a Origen. cons, certain names fignifie by nature, and not by inſtitu-cul1. s. p. tion; and that an event will follow from a certain ce- 261, 262. remonious pronunciation, or other uſe of them, he meriteth the Title of a Trifling and Credulous Philo- B2 ſopher 4 of the Notion of Superftition. Chap 1 : fopher. But if he maketh ſuch uſe of words [fup- poſe of Adonai or Sabaoth, which Origen believeth to loſe their vertue, if turn'd into any other language:] and hopeth thence for the event from God, through the interceſfion of ſome Spirit; he deſerveth the re- proof due to a ſuperſtitious man, who, by ſuppoſing a Divine attendance on his Trifles, doth highly difho- nour God and bis Saints. Neither doth the Synod of Mechlin abfolve ſuch Rites from the guilt of Superſtition, by adding to the interceſſion of Saints the preſcription of the Church; for that cannot alter the nature of things, though it may render fome Rites, indifferent in their nature, expedient, not to ſay, neceſſary, in point of obedi- ence, for the preſervation of Peace and Order. If Rites of worſhip are exceeding numerous under Chri- ſtianity ; if they are light and indecent; if being in themſelves indifferent, or decent in their uſe, they are impoſed, or obſerved as neceſſary duties; the ſtamp of Authority does not much alter the property of b Reform. Leg. them. Wherefore others (b) have, in more accu- Ecclef. Tit. de rate manner, defined Superſtition ; “A worſhip rela- de Superfit. p. “ ting to God, proceeding from a certain inclination “ of mind, which is commonly called a good intenti- on; and ſpringing always from mans brain, ſeparately “from the Authority of the Holy Scriptures. But nei- ther in this definition are we to reſt: For if the reaſon of mans brain anſwers the Piety of his intention, the worſhip which he offereth, though not commanded in Scripture, if not forbidden by it, may be grateful to God. I ſhould therefore chufe, in this manner, to deſcribe Superſtition. “It is a corruption of publick " or private worſhip, either in the ſubſtance, or in " the Rites of it; whereby men ( actuated by ſervile “ motives) perform, or omit, in their own per- 32. fons ; Chap. I. of the Notion of Superftition. as en “ fons; or urge upon, or forbid to others, any thing as « in its nature Religious or Sinful, which God hath “ neither required, nordiſallowed, either by the Prin- ciples of right Reaſon, or by his revealed Will. It is "the paying of our Religious Tribute, to God or an Idol, in Coin of our own mintage. The poſitive part of it is the addition of our own numberlefs, ab- ſurd, or decent, inventions, to the preſcriptions of “God, in the quality of Laws and Rites, equal, or “ ſuperior to thoſe by him enacted. Firſt, An obſervance of a very great number of the admit of excuſe or praiſe in their fingle conſideration, is a part of this Superſtition: For it prejudiceth the ſubſtance of our duty, by diftracting our attention, and is unagreeable to the Chriſtianity which we pro- feſs; becauſe it is not, as was the Mofaic, a Typical Religion. The Greek Church, as well as a great part of the Latin, aboundeth (a) with Ceremonies ; and a see their the Rituals are of ſo great a bulk that they look like many ceremo Volumes too big for the very Temple, much more for the very cle- the Church. Neither (probably ) ſhould ſuch a num- ments before ber of Rites have ever been impoſed on the Jews, if star. Hodierna their ritual temper, their converſation with a people Ecclef . Grec.p. of like ritual diſpoſition, and the uſe of Types in 86.3.7; and in ſhadowing out the Meſſiah, had not mov'd the Wife Chriftoph. An- dom of God to preſcribe them. OS Під A gel. кер. 1- The late pretender to the Latin Text, and Engliſh Tranſlation of the Order, and Canon of the Mals, (b) conſcious, one would think, of the abſurdneſs of 6 7. D's Great the Romiſh ceremoniouſneſs; at leaſt of the appear- Sacr. exele ance of it, as ſuch, to the reformed in England ; has by the Figures in leſs than Thirty Croſſes omitted more than Twenty of the old. He hath never mentioned the Incenſing of the Altar, the Printed, an. Book, the Prieſt : He hath left out, ſometimes in his Latin P. 20. of the Nation of Superftition. Chap. I. us. clara vo- ce dicit, In no- tare, facta illi lign of the Croſs, from the forehead to the breait ; Latin, and oftner in his Engliſh, a great number of Rites enjoyned the Prieſt, and dayly performed by him. I will give a few inſtances in both kinds. In the very beginning of the Order of the Mals, a Mil. Rom. this is the authentick Rubrick. (a) The Prieſt being 210. Sacerdos accouſtred, when he goeth to the Altar, after having paratus cum in. done due reverence to it, he ſigneth himſelf with the greditur ad Al- debita reveren- and with a loud voice, faith, In the name of the Father. tlar, fignet e Inſtead of this, J. D. thus beginneth his Order. Sa- fronte ad poet- cerdos, ad Gradum Altaris, dicit, in nomine, &c. The Prieſt at the foot of the Altar, faith, In the name of the mine, C. Father. In the Repetition of the Creed, the Prieſt is b Mifj. Rom. required, (b) when he faith, Denm, God, to bow his In ord. Miſl. Head to the Croſs; when he ſaith Jeſus Chriſt, to do the P. 213 like: So that they are together ador'd. When he faith, And was incarnate, to kneel till thoſe words, And was made man. When he hath ended, to croſs psů s himſelf from the forehead to the breaſt. All this J. D. hath omitted, both in his Latin and Engliſh Pages C 7. D. Order (c ). In his pretended Verſion, he thus rendereth, of the Mals, id) Genuflexus, adorat, furgit, oftendit Populo; Here 8 7.d. Canon the Prieſt elevates the ſacred Hoſt: whereas this is the of the Mafs« genuine Tranſlation , Here the Prieſt, with bended P. 36. 37. knee, adoreth the Hoft: Then he riſeth up, and ſhew- eth it to the People. Again, There is a ſuperſtitious levity and want of decence in many Rites, which render them unfit for the ſolemnity of Divine Worſhip. The watchings of women on the Eve of the Nativity, together with the conſequent nurſings and rockings, uſed ſometimes by thoſe of the Roman Communion, are in ſome degree ſuperſtitious. They are apt to raiſe in the mind a mean and common Idea of our Lord's birth, and they give manifeſt occaſions to profane men, to make ridi. Chap. I. of the Nation of Superftition. 2 P. 190. ridiculous a very folemn part of our Chriſtian Faith. In the worſhip and proceſſion of fome Images, the Rites are fo apiſh, that they are fit only for the ſer- vice of fuch an Idol, as that in India, ſpoken of by Vincent le Blanc, which had its Statue made of the Tooth of a Monkey. The very Rituals, and Miffals., and Ceremonials of Rome preſcribe, too often, very idle and unbecoming Rites, and make a kind of Farce to be the part of the Prieſt, or rather his humour, who in Carneval-time, went dreſſed half in the Span- iſh, and half in the French faſhion. (a) They for- a Lallels in bear not ſuch levity in the very uſe of the Keys: For Voy, to Italy. if a perſon dieth excommunicate, but with teſtimo- nies of a remorſe, the Roman Ritual directeth the Prieſt to give him Abſolution"( b ) by whipping the 6 Ritual. Ro- Body, if it remaineth unburied; or the Grave, if the Ed. Antu. Corps be in it, and it ſelf be part of the conſecrated 1619. Ground. A like mimical indecence is enjoyn’d by the Roman Millal (o) on a very folemn time, the Eve • Miſſale Row of Eaſter. By order of that Miffal, all the Lights of man, in Sabba. the Church are extinguiſhºd, that they may again be 187, 188. Edo ligbred by new conſecrated Fire. Proceſſion is made, Paris, 166o. and the Deacon, who carries on a Pole three Can- Rom. de officia dles in Triangular diſtance, docs enter the Church Sab. Santt. fol. with much Ceremony, and lighteth one of the extin- 192, &sca guiſhed Candles, and cryeth out, The light of Chriſt. He proceeding to the middle of the Church, lighteth a ſecond Candle, crying out again, The Light of Chriſt. At laſt, approaching the Altar, he lighteth a third, ten and cryeth with a louder voice, The Light of Chriſt. Nor is there yet an end; for further poſtures, and lightings of Candles, eſpecially of a great one in the Pulpit called Cereus, and of Lamps, are in ſuch fort required (d), that the whole Ceremony looketh d Milf, Roms" more like to the play of Children, than to the wor- p. 1898 ſhip of Chriſtian men. OE 8 of the Notion of Superſtition. Chap. I. * Part 2. fol. 68, OC. 6 Pont. Rom. part 2. fol. 113, c. fol. part 3 186. Of the like levity moſt of their forms of Conſe- cration may be juſtly accuſed. Such is that of the a Pontif . Rom. Benediction of a Bell, (a ) which is ceremoniouſly waſhed with Salt-water, and Croſſed by the Biſhop, and by his Miniſters carefully wiped. Such is that of the Dedication and Confecration of a Church, in which the Biſhop filleth the Two Diago- nal Lines of the Area, with the Latin and Greek Al- phabets, writing firſt from the Corner on the left- hand at his entrance, the Row of the Greek Letters, with the end of his Paſtoral-Staff; and then the La tin ones from the corner on his right-hand. (b) Laſtly, Such is that of the Benediction of Chriſm, c Pontif. Rom. (c) or a mixture of Balm and Oyl. There the Bi- ſhop breatheth three times Croſs-wiſe, over the Chrif- mal Phial. Then Twelve Prieſts, after having bow- ed in order to the Sacrament on the Altar, and the Biſhop, proceed to the Table where the Phial is pla- ced. There they ſucceſſively imitate the Biſhop, mis breathing three times croſs-wiſe over the mouth of the Veſſel: which being done, together with their o- beiſance, a ſecond time to the Sacrament, and the Biſhop, they retire for a ſeaſon. Now it is not readi- ly imagined, by what vertue ſuch forms as theſe affect the Italians, who are a grave and ſteddy people. Nei- ther are the Rites ſolemn enough, which the Greeks ſometimes obſerve; as appeareth at large in Goar and Habertus. And, methinks, thoſe Greeks at Jeruſalem * Journey of ( e ) might have better employ'd their Artiſts, than 14 Engliſh to in making a narrow paſſage through two Pillars, in Jeruſ. p. 29. order to their creeping through, in imitation of the ſtrait Gate, which leadeth to Life Eternal. Laſt of all, The Laws and Rites of Worſhip which man inventeth, how few and decent foever they ap- pear, become Superſtitious, as ſoon as they are made equal Obſervation of Gods Chap. 1. Of the Notion of Superſtition. 9 equal with the expreſs Laws of God. This Superſti- tion our Saviour condemned in the Phariſees, who uſurped the Legiſlative Power of God, and taught ſometimes for neceflary Doctrines the commandments of men. ( a ) They made ſome of their Traditions a Matt. 15. 3. equal to the moſt Moral Laws of Mofes : Nay, they 4, 5, 6,9.. often were more fond of the Iflue of their own Fancy, than of the Edicts of God. They were wont to ſay, (b) That the words of the Scribes were more amiable b Hieros. Bera- than the words of the Law. Alſo, That the words of coth, foldin3. ap the Elders were more weighty than the words of the Pro- Matt. 15. 2. phets. Many of them vilified the Written Word in p. 185, 186. compariſon of the Cabala, or Oral Tradition of the Elders, which they call'd The Foundation. They held the breach of a Traditional Rite, to be as capital as the violation of a Moral Law, Rabbi Foſe teaching, That the eating of bread with unwaſhed hands, was as great a wickedneſs as the humbling of an Harlot (C). See Drufius, Hence our Saviour defended the breach of this Tradi- on Matt. 15.2. tion by his Diſciples, not as it was an innocent Cere- mony, but as it was impoſed as a neceſſary part of Religion: the neglect of which defld a man, (d). and rendered him as guilty in Gods fight, as if he had broken a written Law. Nay, they judged of their Saintſhip rather by the obedience they paid to their Commands. Thus, by the device of their Corban, they made a falſe eſtimate of Charity; believing them- ſelves Righteous, whilſt they violated the indiſpenſable Law of Love to their Parents: Some Uſages there are not commanded by God, yet acceptable to him, if our high eſtimation of them, and our indiſcreet zeal in their uſe or impoſition, does not become the dead Fly in the Spikenard. I cannot diſcern ſuch Superſtition, as others think they have C с d Matt. 19.2e . done 1o of the Notion of Superſtition. Chap. I. a Culver. Light done, (a ) in uncovering the Head when a light is of Nat. Some brought in, and praying for the light of Heaven. I fuperſtitious know not what Irreligion there is, in uſing the like ones, howder Ceremony when our Neighbour ſneezeth; and in wiſh- complementing his health, or bleſſing God for his deliverance from with a Candle , the offenſive vapour. I mean this, of thoſe perſons by whom it doth not appear, but that the inward in- tention doth accompany the outward ſign. A A pru dent Chriſtian is not offended at him, who on a ſolemn occaſion maketh the ſign of the Croſs on himſelf, as an external ſign of his Chriſtian Religion. Neither doth he cenſure thoſe, who well underſtandiņg their own tempers, do uſe faſting before the Euchariſt, as an help to devotion: or thoſe who uſe abſtinence on a Saturday with diſcretion; by way of preparation as 6- Abridge is alledged (b) by ſome ) for the Holy-day which mentofChrift . fucceeds it. And he is not well-grounded in the Faith pof. of the and Charity of a Chriſtian man, who brandeth all Comm, of the thoſe with Superſtition, that comply with the Church Rome. p. 166. of England in her Rites, which are neither in their number many, nor indecent, or immoral in their na- ture; neither are they required as Uſages in them- ſelves neceſſary to Salvation. They are enjoyned and uſed for the ſake of order and comelineſs, without which a Church is as it were undreſſed, and expo- ſed in ungrateful and unbecoming circumſtances, to the devout, who with Reafon conceive fome dif- guſt, as well at the nakedneſs, as at the paint of their Mother. There are, then, certain Free-will-offerings both of Churches and ſingle perſons, which God Almighty [ who as Learned men think, accepted voluntary Sa crifices of Thankſgiving in the infancy of the World, and who moſt certainly accepted of voluntary dedi- cations of Feaſts under the very Law of Moses,] will not Chap. I. of the Notion of Superftition. : not deſpiſe under Chriſtianity ; when they are preſent- ed with piety, humility and prudence. But if any ſhall perform or enjoyn ſuch Rites, under the notion of indiſpenſable duties; if they hall value them as the weightier matters of Religion, and impoſe them, as ſuch, with fierceneſs and intemperate zeal; or if by negative fcrupulofitie, they ſhall place Religion in the meer abhorrence of them; they ſo far ceaſe to be tru- ly devout, and become ridiculouſly and uncharitably ſuperſtitious. God hath not required fuch things at their hands in ſuch manner, or ſuch à mighty dread of them; neither is he pleaſed with ſuch Will-werſhip, a Lutheris refe- Softer words are not to be uſed towards them who rente Hofnera ix . fo highly exalt their imagination, as to make it the p. 110. nihil meaſure of Gods Will, and inforce thoſe obſervances, peftilentius in or omiſſions, as heavenly Laws which the great Go- doceri, quam je vernour of the Church hath left to the diſcretion of ea que necef his Chriſtian Subjects . Their Ufurpation is inſuffera- necessaria fiant. ble, who make more duties and fins than God com- Hac enim mu mandeth or forbiddeth: And nothing but blind and mendacium pro Navilh Superſtition fubjecteth the neck to their uneaſie veritate, Idoluk yoke. (a) pro Deo colitur. Let this little fuffice here, concerning that corrup- tion in the Laws, Rites and Motives of Worſhip; it being only ſpoken in the way to my direct Theme of Idolatry, by which the object of Worſhip is de praved. Saxon. Evang. Yannide Asses Case CHAP. of the Notion of Idolatry. Chap. II. CHAP. II. of the Notion of Idolatry. TDolatry is either Metaphorical or Proper. By Me taphorical Idolatry, I mean that inordinate love of Riches, Honours, and bodily Pleaſures, whereby the paſſions and appetites of men are made ſuperior to the Will of God: Man, by ſo doing, making as it were a God of himſelf and his ſenſual temper. The Cove- tous man worſhippeth Mammon; he valueth his Gold, a Philo Jud. w's "Aguruet Scion, in the language of Philo ( a ), as á de Monarch. 1. Divine Image: As if the Image of God were caſt, in I. p. 813 eminent manner, in that thick Clay ſpoken of by the Prophet, with which the Ifachars of the world do lade themſelves. Such Idolatrous eſtimation of Money gave to a Mine in Friebert, which contained in it exceeding rich Ore, that high and mighty name of Himmelfurſt, or the Prince of Heaven. The Ambi- tious man, rather than he will want high place, og popular fame, he will in unjuft Wars, and unreaſona- ble Duels, offer himſelf a facrifice to Honour; an Idol on whoſe Altars more blood hath been profuſely ſhed, than on thoſe of Moloch or Bellona. To the Glutton; (as Tertullian in his Book of Faſting faith of him, after his ſharp manner, ) “His Belly is his God, his " Paunch is his Altar, his Cook is his Prieſt, his Saw- “ces are his Graces, and his Belching is Propheſie. The unchaſt man owns nothing fo Divine as his Harlot, and borroweth the phraſes of his Courtſhip, from the Goddeſſes and the Shrines, the Temples and the Al- tars, of the Theologers of the Gentiles, that is, their Poets. Now this exceſſive value of the things of the World > Chap. II. Of the Notion of Idolatry. 13 Cum- World, is a very high and impious preſumption: But becauſe it fetteth not up Mammon or the Appetite, as a god, or an object of Religious worſhip; therefore I call it Metaphorical, and not Proper Idolatry; in which latter fubje& only, I am at preſent engag’d. This kind of Idolatry which I call Proper, is by many ſuppoſed a matter of nice and difficult ſpecula- tion. They think the notion of it too abſtruſe for common heads; yea, too hard for ſome Scholaſtick ones, which are not very accurate in dividing a min-ſeed. And yet the Holy Writers do every-where reprove the people for this ſin , ſuppoſing its nature to be commonly underſtood : and ſure it is no other than that which is briefly deſcrib'd by St. Cyprian and Hilary. « Then ( faith St. Gyprián ) is Idolatry com- “mitted, when the Divine Honour is given to ano- “ther, So Hilary the Roman Dcacon (ſometimes mi- “ (taken for St. Ambroſe,) doth, in this place the na- “ture of Idolatry, That it uſurpeth the Honour of God, and challengeth it in right of the creature: Not unlike to theſe deſcriptions is that which we find in the Book of the Reformation (b) of Eccleſiaſti. b Reform. Lek. cal Laws, begun by Henry the Eighth, Ecclef. Tit. de ( faith that Book ) is a Worlhip, in which not the 32. “Creator, but the creature, or ſome figment of man “is adored. To this worſhip of the Creature, the Scripture doth frequently give the name of unclean- neſs. This it hath done, partly in compliance with the Jewiſh Idiom, which calleth any thing that is de- teſtable, dirty or unclean; the perſons of that people being deſecrated by corporal pollutions. It hath alſo done it, by reaſon of thoſe very unchaft Actions and Rites, by which many of the Idols of the Gentiles were ſerved; though in the worſhip of fome few, and particularly in that of Vefta, the great obſervance was Cha- ; cc Idolatry Idol. c. 2. P- X 14 of the Notion of Idolatry. Chap. II. : ) Chaſtity. But the Scripture hath, eſpecially, given to Idolatry that name of uncleanneſs, becauſe it was an alienation of the hearts and bodies of the Jews from the God of Iſrael, who had, as it were, choſen that Church as his Spouſe on Earth. For the like Rea- fon Witchcraft is a ſort of Idolatry, becauſe it break- eth Covenant with God, and entreth into folemn league and compact with Dæmons. Now if this common notion ſeemeth, too briefly, or too generally propounded, I am ready to make a particular enlargement of it in the following definition. “ Idolatry is a fin, which by inward reverence or out- ward ſigns, giveth to ſome other object, in an act or “habit of Religious Homage or Worſhip, that Ho nour which is either eſſential to God; or being com- “municable, yet appertaining to God only till he " hath declared his actual communication of it, is ei- 6 ther not at all communicated, or not in that extent or continuance of vertue, which ſeemeth thereby to « be attributed to it. This definition containeth in it three branches, which are alſo three degrees of Ido- latry. Firſt, The Idolater giveth away, ſometimes, the ef- ſential and incommunicable Honour of God. This he doth two ways; firſt, when he dethroneth God in his imagination, and ſetteth up ſome other object in his place. Thus the Babylonians offended, whilſt they a- dored the primitive Baal, the Sun, as the beſt and greateſt Deity, not only in their World or Empire, but likewiſe throughout the Sphere of all things. He doth it, Secondly, when admitting of God, he addeth another principle equal to him; for he that divideth the Empire of God, diminiſheth his Honour : He makes him ceaſe to be God, that is, to be One and wip: 1.2. c. 7. Supreme. This preſumption Pliny, (a ) chargeth, P. 3. in CC a Plin. nat. Chap. II. Of the Notion of Idolatry. ". blioth. Cod.80 in effect, on Democritus, giving to his two Principles, the names of Pæna and Premium, Puniſhment and Reward ; or (as I think ) more properly, Avenger and Rewarder. The like fault is found in the Perfi- an Theology, which conſtituteth as they ſay ) two Principles; the one the fountain of Good, under the name of Oromaſdes; the other the ſource of Evil, un- der the name of Arimanius: Although it may appear from Theodorus, in his Book (a) of the Perſian Ma-'a Theodor. Mopf gick, that both according to Zarasdas or Zoroaſter) ueft. Epift. apud were the off-ſpring of Zarnam, who was own'd as the Photium in Bi- Prince of all things, and the Father of Hormiſda p. 199. and Satanas, and called Toxu or Fortune. Such Idola- try is likewiſe charged on the Antericans of Mexico, who are reported (b) to have had Two thouſand gods, é-Gages New and amongſt them two principal ones, Tezcatlipuca the Survey of the god of providence, and Vitzilopuchli the god of the well-Indies.c . . 116 wars. It may be that there was a Deity ownd by them 119. ſuperiour to both theſe: For what elſe was intended by that great and ſuperiour Image plac'd on the top of the Chappel of Idols (6) in the City of Mexico ? c Gage ibid. It was either the Statue of the Supreme God, or of P. 117. the ſupreme Demon of their Precinct. And why ſhould it not be thought that Mexico own'd one God as well as Peru, in which the Soveraign Principle (as Acoſta inſtructeth us) was called Pachacamac and Vira cocha, inferióur to whom they eſteemed the Sun and Thunder, their two Principles, (as I gueſs) of Good and Evil. In the next place, the Idoläter giveth to ſome other object, that Honour which might have been communi- cated by Gods Authority, but hath been entirely re- ſerved by his Wiſdom, whileſt no actual communica- tion of it hath been any way declared. This impiety of his is likewiſe of two kinds. . For he giveth the Ho :. 16 of the Notion of Idolatry. Chap. II. 1.1. C. 4. Honour which God hath wholly reſerved, to ſome o ther object, either with reſpect to ſome inherent Pow er with which he ſuppoſeth it to be indu'd by God 3 or with regard to ſome external Relation which he fuppoſeth to be owned by him. In the firſt kind the barbarous Goths offended , whilſt they worſhipped a 01. Worm. Nocca (a) [ a kind of Neptune amongſt them as monum. Danic. one to whom a ſuperiour Power had committed the government of their Seas and Rivers; whil'ſt that Idol poſſibly, had not ſo much virtue communicated to him, as might ſtill one puff of Wind, or cruſh a Bub- ble. In the fecond kind, they would have tranſgreſ- ſed, who in the Temple of Dagon ſhould have done Religious, though relative and inferiour, reverence to his ſhapeleſs Trunk, or even to his Statue in the perfection of its beauty ; God having never own'd it as his Image, or the Image of any Deity, or Angel, ſubſtituted by him. Laſtly, The Idolater giveth Honour to an Object which God owneth and repleniſheth ſometimes with virtue, in the quality of the Fountain of that Virtue; whilſt God hath not indued it with that conſtant Pow- er in it ſelf, but uſed it as the inſtrument of his Works. The Power which healeth Diſeaſes not cu- rable by Phyſick, doth not fo effentially belong to the Prerogative of God, that he cannot communicate it perpetually to Angel or Man, and inveſt him in it, without diminution of his own Omnipotence. For it implyeth not a contradiction, for a creature to be able to alter the whole Texture of ſo little a frame as mans body: Neither is it impoſſible for man to be, by God, indued with a knowledg, which in a certain precinct, may, by ſigns in nature, to men unknown, and paſt their finding out, foretel ſeveral accidents which God determineth not to over-rule; ſuch as Plagues . ogs $ Chap. IL. Of the Notion of Idolatry. 17 : Plagues, or healthful Seaſons ; Famine or Plenty: For this knowledg, though it is not mans natural Ta- lent, is not Omniſcience. Yet whilſt this is done by Gods immediate Power, and man is but inſtrumental in it, he becomes an Idolater, who owneth and thanketh man as the efficient cauſe. And he is guilty two ways: Either whilſt he owneth the Inſtrument as the effici- ent Cauſe, during the time that God maketh uſe of it, or after God hath ceaſed to work by it. In the firſt kind, the Impotent people, who were healed at the Pool of Betheſda, had offended, if they had given thanks to the Angel as to the principal Phyſician. And againſt this kind of Idolatry St. Peter gave cau- tion, when ſeeing the multitude tranſported with ad- miration at the recovery of the Cripple, (a ) He « Ads 3. 12. thus beſpake them, re men of Iſrael, why marvel ze at this & or why look you fo earneſtly on #s, as though by our own power, or holineſs, we had made this man to walk? The offence of the ſecond kind is much great- er than this firſt, becauſe it doth not only give to Gods Inſtrument the honour due to the Divine Efficient Cauſe; but it alſo giveth Divine honour to that, which is not now ſo much as the Inſtrument by which God worketh. And this becomes a very Idol indeed, a vanity or lie, or nothing at all of that which it is eſteemed to be. The Magical Rod in the Temple of Iſis, in imitation of that of Mofes, was but an Idol, if it was an Inſtrument of any wonders; for it was not the Rod of God, but of a Demon. This matter may alſo be illuſtrated, both by the inſtance of the Brazen Serpent ſet up by one of Gods Vicegerents, and, upon its abuſe, deſtroyed by another ; and by that of the Cup of Joſeph. This Cup by which he Divined, was, probably, an inſtrument uſed in ſome Sacrifice, ſome drink-offering ; and in the uſe of D which $ 18 of the Notion of Idolatry: Chap. II. which God vouchſafed him a Spirit of Propheſie , with relation to the affairs of Egypt. Now if the Egyptians afterward made uſe of this Cup, or any other in form of it, without any precept or promiſe from God Almighty; and truſted in it, as in the cauſe of Divination, they then were Idolaters in this laſt kind of that impiety. And this, one would think, was the Egyptian practice, who readeth Lucian in «Or rather in his Book of Sacrifices, (a ) and obſerveth him there his JupiterTra- deriding the Egyptians, becauſe they made, notíesor, for I find no- or, a drinking Pot, a God. And ſuch a Cup may thing like it that be thought, which is deſcribed in the hand of Iſis in his Book de in her Myſtical Table, rather than a Meaſure, as Pige Pignorius, in norius contendeth; as likewiſe that mentioned by Ar- Expo Mele lia nobius (6) in the right hand of Bacchus, who often thence cited makes a Figure in the forementioned. Table But this, as it referreth to Jofeph, is but conjecturéz. ſcarce ſo P. 209.-- In Lia much as opinion: I therefore diſmiſs it. Yet I muſt not beri dextrâ pen: diſmiſs the Argument it felf, till I have further diſtin dens petorius guiſhed both concerning the Objects or Idols of that Honour which is given from God; and the ways by which it is tranſlated from the proper to the falſe Deity. ro trom Theſe Idols are either Perſonal, Internal, or Ex- ternal Objects. By Perſonal Objects, I mean the Ido- laters themſelves, who become their own Statues, and worſhip their very ſelves by the eſtimation they have of their Perſons, as Chriſts, or of their Souls as real portions of the Efſence of God; the fancy of ſome followers of Plotinus of old, who ſaid, “Their Souls at death returned to the ſeminal Reaſon; and of ſome Quakers at this time, who ſay, as Edward Bur. See F.H. Te roughs (c) the morning before he departed this Life, ftimony. " That his Soul and Spirit was centred in its own be- “ing with God. Ex b Arnob. 1. 6. Cantharus. CC Chap. II. of the Notion of Idolatry. r9 Internal Objects are the falſe Idea's which are ſet up in the fancy, inſtead of God and his Divine perfe- ctions. For he who fancieth God under the Idea of Indefinite Amplitude or Extenſion of matter, or of Light or Flame; or under the notion of an irreſiſti- ble Tyrant; and applies himſelf to him as ſuch, with- out the uſe of any viſible external Statue or Picture is as certainly an Idolater, as he who worſhippeth a Graven Image ; for he giveth Divine Honour to an 1 Idea which is not Divine. Only here, the Scene being internal in the Fancy, the ſcandal of the fin is there- by abated. External Objects, are ſuch which have a fubfiſterice diſtinåt from the Phantafats which are by motion im- preſſed on the Brain. And the Catalogue of theſe is a ********* kind of Inventory of nature. I will here give only a fummary account of them, for the particulars are end- lefs. Idolaters have worſhipped Univerſal Nature, yang ses the Soul of the World, Angels, the Souls of men de- 1 parted; either by themſelves, or in union with ſome Star or other Body. They have likewiſe worſhipped the Heavens, and in them both particular Luminaries and Conſtellations; the Atmoſphere, and in it the Meteors and Fowls of the Air; the Earth, and in it Man, together with the accidents of which he is the ſubject, ſuch as Fortitude and Juſtice, Peace and War. And further, on earth they have deified Beaſts, Birds, Inſects, Plants, Groves, Hills, artificial and artleſs Pil- lars and Statues, Pictures and Hieroglyphics ( mean as a Porphyr . de that of the Scaribee ( a) it ſelf, reſembling the Sun Abftin. 1.4 P. 255, 156, many ways, as Porphyrie fancieth ] together with divers foffils and terreſtrial Fire. They have further- more adored the Water (particularly that fruitful one of the Nile 7 and in it, the Fiſhes and Serpents and Inſects; as likewiſe the creatures which are doubtful D 2 In- fo 20 of the Notion of Idolatry. Chap. H. P. 401. 66 Inhabitants of either Element ; ſuch as the Crocodile a Kircher. in in Egypt. Kircher (a ) hath found the Temples of Oedip. g. Synt. 5. c. 3. many of theſe Idols, even in that polite Nation of China: For he hath a Scheme containing the Temple of the Queen of Heaven, the Temple of Heaven, "the Altar of Heaven, the Temple of Demons and Spirits, the Temple of the Planet Mars, the Altar " of the God of Rain, the Altar of the King of Birds, " the Altar of the Earth, the Temple of the Preſi- « dent of Woods, the Temple of Mountains and Ri- vers, the Temple of the Spirit of Medicine, the “ Temple of Gratitude, and of Peace, the Temple of “the Preſident of Mice, and of the Dragon of the b Epicharn. ap. “ Sea. Menander, from Epicharmus (b) fummeth Stobenmin ſerm. the Idols of the World under theſe fewer heads, 89. p. 503.- up Artussüdag, of the Wind, the Water, the Sun, the Earth, the s, inson, Fire. But he is therefore deficient in his computa- wűs, 'Asiens. tion; neither was it his purpoſe to make it accurate. Thus the Image of God who made all things, has (as in a broken mirror) been beheld, without due attention, in the ſeveral parts of the frame of the World, and by the fooliſh Idolater diſtinctly adored : And this adoration being uſed towards external Objects, and not confined to mans ſecret thoughts, hath with the more ſucceſs and ſcandalous diſhonour to God, been propagated in the World. And this remindeth me of the diſtindion which I deſigned alſo to make, be- twixt the ways by which Gods Honour is derived on creatures. For it is either done by the inward eſtima- tion of the mind, directing its intention in an Act or courſe of internal Worſhip; or by the external 'ſigns 1 of Religious Reverence. It is done by both theſe to- gether, or by either of them apart. There is no publick worſhip without manifeſt ſigns of it; , the heart in it ſelf not being diſcern'd by mans eye, but diſco. ... 2.1 Natives made towards them all 2 the Chap. II. of the Notion of Idolatry. diſcovering it ſelf by external tokens. “ The Ifrae " lites (faith St. Cyril) worſhipped the Calf; and " they did it, by crying out theſe are thy gods (f). a St. Cyril A- In them the mind and the outward ſigns of it went liar. 1.9. p together. But others, by the meer outward ſhews of 308. Adoration, how unconcern'd foever they may have kept their minds, have committed Idolatry: Such as the Thurificati in the Primitive Church, who belie- ving the Goſpel, offered Incenſe before an Heathen Idol; that being made a ſign of their departure from Chriſtianity, and their approbation of Gentiliſm. They thereby did an act of open diſhonour to the true God; and they uſed external means apt to incline others, either to worſhip Idols inſtead of Him, or to confirm them, if they were already Idolaters, in their deteſtable profaneneſs . Such Idolaters ( it may be ) were ſome Engliſhmen, who went to Sea with Mr. Davis, in the Reign of Queen Elizabeth, in order to the diſcovery of a North-Weſt paſſage to Cataia, Chi- na, and Eaft-India. On the 29th of July, in the year 1585, (b) they diſcovered Land in 64 degrees and b Hakinits Nes 15 minutes of Latitude bearing North-Eaſt from them. vigations . Ps They found this Land an heap of Ilands, on one of herd of barbarous people, one pointed firſt upwards wirh his hand to the Sun, and then ſmote his breaſt with very vehement force. The Engliſh aptly inter- preting this ſign as an acknowledgment of the Deity of the Sun, and an Oath by that Idol, of fidelity and peace, uſed the ſame ſign themſelves ; gaining there by Friendſhip and Traffick with a few Salvage People, at the expence of the moſt valuable thing, the Ho- nour of God. Of this external Honour, he is jealous, and he re- ſerved 778. of the Notion of Idolatry. Chap. II. ONS, 27. ſerved it to himſelf, amongſt the Jews whom he had eſpouſed, by expreſs command, ſaying, Lo tiſchtacha- veh, Thou ſhalt not, before an Image or Idol, put thy Body into fuch a figure, as is a ſign of worship. In the fame fence ought to be interpreted the 8 megeturá- of the Seventy [Thou ſhalt not bow down ; 7 the word #egoiuntv, not denoting there, a meer act of the mind, but of the body, either by bowing of its whole frame, or its head, or knee, or (which the notation of the word particularly importeth) by the kiffing a nego muvar of the hand, (a) a common ceremony among the Hv, isi pu- Gentile Idolaters; and ancient as the times of Job (b). meitenes Enfatho Three ways of exhibiting fuch external reverence are b Job 31. 26, fuggeſted by the Pfalmift (c), where he calls upon the people, to worſhip with proſtration, to bow, to c Pfal. 95. 5. --Profternamur, kneel before God their Creator. For the ſake of ex- Incurvemus nos, ternal worſhip, folemn Days and publick Aſſemblies Sec Peter have in great part been appointed: By it, our Light cherell . de Ima- ( which retained in the heart only, is as a Lamp burn- gin: p. 22, ing in a Sepulchre,) doth fo conſpicuouſly ſhine before , 227C. men, that it induceth them to an happy conſent in glorifying God with us. By it, is maintaind the viſi- 1 ble Society of Gods Church, whoſe outward commu- nion is preſerved by the external ſigns of words, ge- ſtures and actions, relating to the Chriſtian Religion, and making up the profeſſion of it. This Communi on he, in effect, renounceth, who pretending to the heart of a Chriſtian, hath the tongue of a Blalphemer, or the geſture of an Idolater: who, whatſoever fecret thoughts he entertaineth concerning God, faith open- d Concil.Rhem. ly of him, that he is not Supreme: or, what inward p. 93. Externe hatred foever he conceiveth againſt Idols, fitteth in Ceremoniæ funt their Temples, and eateth of their Sacrifice. « Exter- inſtitute ad de- nal Ceremonies ( as is ſaid (d) by the Fathers of the Synod of Rhemes ) are therefore appointed, affectionem. . clarandam lite am in Deum 66 that Chap. II. Of the Notion of Idolatry. 23 may be « that by then a declaration may be made of our « affection towards God. And common Reaſon teach- eth, that by giving away the outward ſigns of wor- ſhip, we are prodigal of the internal Honour of God which cannot be preſerved or advanced amongſt Socie- ties of men, meerly by a ſecret and inviſible Inten- tion. Hitherto I have purſued the notion of Idolatry in a poſitive way, according to the proper nature of Wor- ſhip, in which the Ad pafferh towards the Object. But it may not be amiſs to take a little notice of a kind of negative impiety, which precedeth this poſitive falle-worſhip, and to which, fome it would give the name of negative Idolatry. I mean by this, that denial of any thing in the Idea of God which is proper to it, fucceeded by a Worſhip of Him according to that maimed and uunagreeable Idea. For the idea of God being ſo intire that, by any diminu- tion, it becometh the Idea of ſomething elſe; he that firſt removes part of the Idea, and then adores the re- mainder; adores, as God, that which is not like him. He, for inſtance ſake, who denies the conſtancy of Gods knowledg of human affairs, yet worſhips him at certain times, in which he owneth him to have that knowledg (after the manner of thoſe fooliſh Gentiles who worſhipped the Sun by day, and revelled by night when they thought he ſaw hotz) ſuch a one, by breaking of ſuch a neceſſary part of Gods Idea, as this renders it not his Image, and yet adoring it as ſuch, firſt makes an Idol, and then doth it homage. So the god of the Muggletonians rob'd of his Spirituality, im- menſity, ſubſiſtences; what is he but their Idol> The Premiſſes being conſidered, it will thence follow That in giving the Honour of God, fupreme. or ſubor- dinate, to any other thing.be it internal Ideazor perſon- al :: 24 of the Cauſes and Chap. III: al Principle, or outward Object, with reſpect to any fuppoſed, inherent, Divine Power, original or deri- ved, or to any external Relation, by internal wor- ſhip, and by the external ſigns of it, or by either of them, conſiſteth the Notion of Idolatry, the thing deſigned in this Chapter. C CHAP. III. of the Cauſes and Occaſions of Idolatry in the World. IT T hath appeared in the foregoing Chapter, what kind of evil Idolatry is and how it hath ſpread it felf into numberleſs branches. In this Chapter, my pur- poſe is to proceed further, and to inquire into the Root of it, and to conſider from what Cauſes and Oc- caſions it hath ſprung; and on what rotten and irra- tional grounds it is bottom'd. The general Cauſe of Idolatry, is the degenerate eſtate of the Soul, exert- ing it ſelf in the headineſs of the Will, which hurri- eth men to folly, under the wild conduct of Imagina- tion and Senſe. The Scripture calleth this diſtemper, The vanity of the mind ; and to it it aſcribeth the Wor- ſhip of Idols. Of ſuch Worſhippers St. Paul obſerveth, Rom. 1.212 ( a ) That when they knew God, (or had means of knowing him, by the reaſoning of their minds, ex- cited by the beauty, order, and excellence of his Works of Creation and Providence ], they glorified him not as God, neither were thankful; but became vain in their imagination, and their fooliſh heart was darkened. In this eſtate of moral darkneſs they miſtook, and confounded the Objects they met with; * :: Chap. III. Occaſions of Idolatry. 22 5 5 it by with ; and honoured the Creature inſtead of God. It is difficult, if not impoſſible, at this diſtance from perſons and things, to tell the cauſes and occafi- ons of all their miſtakes : Neither could it have been done fully by the wiſeſt of thoſe times. For the love of Idols in fome, like that of Perſons in others, was an unaccountable paſſion. That therefore which I here undertake, is not a full, certain, and manifeft; but a competent, and probable account. Thoſe who worſhipped Univerſal nature as an entire Object, or the ſeveral viſible parts of it diſtinctly, were led to ſuch adoration, by one more general Cauſe, and by divers which were more ſpecial. The more general cauſe of the worſhip of material nature, either in its own form, or in the ſhapes put upon Art, is the natural inclination of the mind in this bo- dy to help it ſelf by ſenſible Objects. The ſubſtance of God Almighty is not an Object which our mind can comprehend, much leſs is our acuteſt fight able to reach it. This Principle many own'd amongſt the Heathens. Such were they mention'd by Porphyrie (b) who, that they might fignify the inviſibility of b Porphyr. ay. Gods Effence, painted his Statues with black. Such Eufeb. de prep. were the Egyptians, remembred by Plutarch, who did Evangel : b 98 therefore make the Crocodile an emblem of God, be- cauſe that creature, by the help of a pellucid mem- brane deſcending from his forehead, was able (as they vulgarly conceited) to ſee with cloſed eyes, without being ſeen. Now man living, as it were, in the con- fines of Heaven and Earth, his cæleſtial mind being united to a body of groſs fleſh and blood ; his under- ſtanding receiveth inſtruction through the gates of the outward fenſes, and is, in eſpecial manner, aſſiſted by Phantaſms which Liglīt pictureth in the Brain. This frame of man rendreth him covetous in his ſpecula- E tions, 3. of the Canfes and Chap. IIT . tions, of the help of ſome external and viſible Object: And amongſt the numerous progeny of mankind, there are very few heads metaphyſical enough for that Pro- a Erper. Pro- verb of the Arabians (a); Shut up the five Windows, verb . Arabs that the Houſe may be fild with Light. It is the ſame thing to the vulgar, not to appear, and not to be; and they would therefore have a viſible Deity, and one who might in a more bodily manner be preſent with them. For this Reaſon, when Oſiris was wor- ſhipped throughout Egypt, and his living Image was viſible only in the ſuperior part of it, the Metropolis of Memphis, the Prieſts took occaſion to ſet on foot a Schiſm; and thoſe of Heliopolis would alſo have a fa- cred Bull, that their Deity might be as viſible and pre- ſent to them, as to the other Egyptians. This Reaſon b Bernier in the Brachman gave to Monſieur Bernier (b) for the his Letter to erection of the Statues of Brahma, and of other Deis : Metbe le Vagey. itas or Deities: To wit, That ſomething might be before p. 171, 171. the eyes of the worſhipper, for the fixing of his mind. Of the like temper were the Heathens ſpoken of by Lactantius in his ſecond Book of the Origine of Error, e Lultant, p. (c) They were jealous left all their Religion ſhould be 1:46. Sed et à vain beating of the Air, if they fato nothing preſent Religio eorum which they might adore. This Affection then for Senfe, this wiſdom of the prefenti vidt Fleſh, is a general Cauſe of the Worſhip of material ant, quod ado- Idols. But they being of divers kinds, have accor- dingly divers more ſpecial Cauſes. Such who worſhipped Univerſal Nature, or the Sy. ſteme of the material World, perceived firſt that there was excellency in the ſeveral parts of it; and then, to make up the grandeur and perfection of the Idea, they joyned them alltogether into one Divine Being. Thus, probably, did Idolaters: But Atheiſts alſo ſervd themſelves on this Pretence, as they do at this day, ſeldome Mr. de la inanis fit o Vant, fi nibil in Chap. III. Occaſions of Idolatry. 27 nempe illa que a Plin. nar. ſame Argument, he citeth it, as to ſeldome receding from any profitable Art. Such a one of old, was Pliny, who maketh God and Nature the fame (*). And ſuch a one, in theſe times, is the Hift. 1. 2. C. 7. bold Author of Tractatus Theologico-politicus, (b) p. 4.-. Per que who defineth God, the infinite power of matter. ne quidem Dens Thoſe who worſhipped Nature in the parts of it, patef] declara- were ſuch as Pliny obſerveth ) who laboured under tu haud dubie a weakneſs and narrowncfs of imagination. It was naturæ potentia, idq; fe quod his opinion (6), That frail and wearied mortality, Deum vocamus. mindful of its own infirm condition, diſtributed Nature b Zract. Theol . into its ſeveral parts, that every one might worſhip that Mirac. p. 100. portion of it mbich was uſeful to him. Uſefulneſs, in- Ed. z. virtus deed, was a common motive; And Cicero affirmeth o potentia ma- teric ipfa Dei (in his firſt Book of the Nature of the Gods ) That virtus eue pou the Egyptians confecrated no Beaft, from whence they did tentia ; Liges not derive fome profit . And in his ſecond Book of the la nature, in a the Scholar of Zeno, That they were beld to be Gods, Plin ubi fiya from whom great advantage accrued to mans life. Nei- prd. p. 3. ther is there any name lo commonly given, amongſt all Nations, to Divine Power, as that which fignifieth the Goodneſs of it. Such is the ancient Kod of the Germans, in the Vocabulary of Goldaftus, and their more modern Gott, or God (d) which we have a Gott a Teut: borrowed from them. But Uſefulneſs , though it was Gut, bonas, a very common motive, yet it was not the only one which inclined the World to Idolatry. For that which raviſhed with its Beauty ( as the Rainbow, worſhipped, faith Joſephus Acoſia, by the Peruvians; though not by thoſe of Egypt who dwelt under fe- rene Heaven]: That which affrighted with its malig- nant Power, [ as the Thunder, worſhipped, faith the ſame Acoſta, by the Incas of Peru; and by the an- cient Germans alſo, who as, Grotius roteth, (e) call- e Grotii Pro- ed their God of Heaven by the name of Thorn, which lebt. Eiffer, E 2 a fig- dd. p. 21 28 of the Cauſes and Chap. III: : fignifieth him that Thundereth]: That which aſto- niſh'd with its greatneſs [as the mighty ſwellings of the Earth in high Mountains, worſhipped here by the a tuſh, de Pri- ancient (a) Britains ]: That, I ſay, which was beau- Britan. p: 2. tiful, hurtful, (b) or Majeſtick, became a Deity, bConfulewift . as well as that which profited with its uſe. Now all 13. 1,2,3,4,7. theſe powers being united in the Sun, whoſe beauty is glorious, whoſe heat ſcorcheth and refreſheth, and is the cauſe of barrenneſs in ſome places, and in others of fruitfulneſs; whoſe motion is admirable, whoſe Globe of Light appeareth highly exalted; That, of all other parts of the viſible World, hath been the cele- brated Idol. For other parts of inſenſible nature, Teſſer virtues were diſcerned in them: But their motion, and the cauſe of it, being either not known, or not conſider'd, the Gentiles eſteemed of them as ſuch Subjects, in which a coeleſtial vigor reſided. Ignorance of nature was, in them, the Mother of Idolatry; as ignorance in Art was the cauſe of that admiration amongſt the Caribbians, which aſcribed the effect of Fire-locks e Hift. of the ( c ) to a Demon. On the ſame account Garlick and Caribe Ith p. Onions obtain'd the reputation of Deities in Egypt. Of ſuch St. Chryfoftom ſomewhere taketh notice, and of the Apology which they made, ſaying, That God was in the Onion, though the Onion was not God. By this Onion, they meant not the common and very de licious one among them, which they were not forbid- den to violate, but did daily eat it; but a certain Scilla which poyſoned Mice, and had a ſtrange fiery d Lucian, in Necyomantia.p. virtue in it, and was called the Eye of Typhon. And 159. Ad Tigri- I ſuppoſe it to be of the fame kind with that, of dem me fluvium which the juice was uſed in the Luſtration of Menip- vit fimul atq; pus in Lucian, when he was initiated into the myſte. abfterfot, faceq; ries of Zoroafter (d). It decreaſed faith faith σκίλλή. Kira 2726 : Chap. III. Occafions of Idolatry. 29 Theatr. c. 2. P. Kircher (b)] in the increaſe of the Moon, and in-b Oedip. Egypa creaſed in the decreaſe of it: for the truth of which, 74, 75, let it reſt upon the Relator. nigrit Concerning Beaſts, Birds, Fiſhes, and Inſects, they, in like manner, were ador'd for their beauty, their beneficial, hurtful, or aftoniſhing properties. They were ſometimes worſhipped, for theſe and other ſuch reaſons, in the whole ſpecies of them: For fo Diana, being turn'd ( as they feigned ) into a Merula, La Mearl, or Black-bird] the whole kind of them was made facred, in the quality of her living Statues, Sometimes fome one fort of them was worſhipped by reaſon of a particular effect of theirs, eſteemed of with high veneration by the World. So the Mice Sminthoi were deified, (c) which eat in funder the e Clem. Alex Cables of the Enemics of Troas. Likewiſe, ſuch li- Admon. ad Gent. p. 25 ving creatures were worſhipped as Beings, which con- tained in them the Souls of fome departed Hero's, Friends, and Benefactors; or which were, themſelves, portions of the Soul of the World. Beaſts at this day, are upon both theſe accounts idoliz'd by the Pendets of Indoftan (d). And after this manner it d Berrier's Me. is, that they explain the ſeveral appearances of their moirs. To me. 3. Deity; of which the firſt, they ſay, was in the nature 155. of a Lion, the ſecond of a Swine: a ſtrange Cabbala, and ſuch as the Jews themſelves will diſown. Touching Artificial things, and lifeleſs Statues, the ends more Ignorant fort worſhipped them for their ſurpri- se zing form, and coſtly matter. Such the Bramins in In- dia moved to the worſhip of the great Idol Refora fix- ed nigh Jagrenate, which is one of the mouths of Ganges. For they fram*d him very curiouſly, and ſet on him forth very richly: giving him two Diamonds (e) e Taverniir's for his Eyes, and hanging another about his Neck: Travels into And of theſe, the leaſt weighed about Fourty Carats. India , Part 2. p. 154, 155, C. P. Others, 173, A 30 of the Cauſes and Chap. II. b Arnob. adv. 292. ** Others, not fo very ignorant as to think, with the set up former, that the Deity was Gold or precious Stones; ide A&s 17. Ca ) venerated their Images, as the places of reſi- dence of Divine Powers, or perhaps, as their Bodies or Cloſets; their Temples being their Houſes or com- mon dwelling-places. Theſe were ſacred to their Gods, not as ſhelters of their Statues (b) from Sun, Wind, Gentes. l. 6. p. or Rain (as the Heathens in Arnobius cunningly apolo- gize) but as inftruments whereby they might have their Gods with them, behold them before their Eyes, ſpeak im- mediately to them, and with them, as preſent perfons, mingle, as it were, their Religious Colloquiesend Many Figures, Statues, and Images were made, at firſt, for very differing ends. They were made, as 4 Wild 14. Memorials of a departed Child (c), or Friend, or See Mand Hero (d): As Remembrancers of a living Friend or Mo's Travels Governour, (e) remaining at a diſtance from us on Pillars of the earth; as Monuments of ſome great Accidents in the Faporejes . p. World, and preſervers of the memory of things to late poſterity; the uſe ( they ſay ) of the Pillars of Seth. Wild 14. Likewiſe, they Likewiſe, they were made as Mathematical Inſtru- ments, as alſo as Hieroglyphicks, and myſtical Em- blems z ſuch as a Dog, the emblem of Sagacity; and an Egg, the Hieroglyphick of the material World. The vanity of man, the Impoſture of the Heathen F wifd. 14: Prieſts, the artifice and ſplendour of the Statues them 13. The fingu- felves (f ); effects, apt to ſtir up admiration, which of the Artifi- followed their ſetting up, or their remove, or their çer did help worſhip, though ariſing from other undiſcerned Cau- the ignorant ſes; together with a multitude of feigned ſtories con- to more fue cerning their original or their diſcovery: Theſe things perſtition. inclind the World to an opinion, that they were re- g Luciani ver. HiR. 1. 2. p. ceptacles of Divinity. Each Temple of the Heathen 403. was like that mentioned by Lucian in his Second ganaba yaol Λύe, Απάτης Book of true Hiſtories, a Temple of Impoſture ($): y 'Aingeias. And . :: Chap. $. Occaſions of Idolatry. 3 390, 393 394. d See Kira framed by Art, that the Sun ſhone on the eyes, lips, 399, And many Images were but the Inſtruments of Jaglers. Some of them were feigned to ſweat and move [ as thoſe in the great Temple of Syria, men- tion'd by the Author (b) of the Syrian Goddeſs]. b Luciat. De Some were made very beautifully; and ſome in fuch deå Syrid. p. horrid ſhapes, that they almoſt affright us in their Pi- Qures: Such are thoſe Pictures which Lorenzo Pignon ria has added (c) to the Book of Cartari, concern-cCart. Seconda ing the Images of the ancient Gods. Some were in parte delle ima ſuch manner contriv'd that they ſeem'd to hold imme- p. 374, 3751 diate commerce with Heaven: Thus, in the Image of 371, 378,387, Serapis at Alexandria, (d) a little Window was ſo 396, 397,398, and mouth of it; and that the people believed it to cher's ordo be kiſſed by that Deity. Some have been feigned to Ag. Synt. 3. drop down from the Heavens as thoſe of Troy and c. s. p. 1996) Epheſus ]: Some to have been tranſported from place to place, in the Air, as the forementioned Image of Serapis, ſaid to be tranſlated, in a moment, from Pon- tus to Alexandria]: And ſome, by direction of Spi- rits, to have been digged out of the earth; or to have been miraculouſly pulled out of the Sea ( as the Golden Tripos of Apollo]. And pity it is that ſuch Arts ſhould be uſed by them who profeſs the Chriſti- an Religion, which needeth no pious frauds for the ſupport of it, but is beſt propagated, as it was from the beginning, by plain and ſincere dealing. But fome Roman-Catholicks have, too frequently, imita- ad Ann, 1313. ted the Sophiſtry of the Heathens ; and particularly, clef. Hiftor.vol. in promoting the dangerous worſhip of our Lady, at 3:P:789. See Läreto and Guadalupa. It ſeems that her Image lay diſcov, of our concealed in this latter place, for the ſpace of more Ladies Image than 600 years, till it was, by miracle (as they ſay ), after this manner diſcovered (e). An Heardſman wichman'ssas. (ecking his ſtrayed Cow, found her at laſt, but to ap- batifmus Mari- pearance 47, 483 See Bzov. on Mount Set yat, în Ang. 32 of the Canfes and Chap. III. in Aphoriſm. could repreſent the Baſis of it 7 and therefore, under pearance dead. He went about, therefore, to take off her Skin; but whilſt he was attempting of it, the Beaſt, to his great aſtoniſhment, did miraculouſly re- en mi vive. Then, alſo, did the Holy Virgin appear to him in glorious ſplendor, and bid him not fear. And ſhe, further, gave him order to call the Eccleſiaſticks of the City, and in her name to promiſe them, that if they digged in that place, they ihould find her Image. The poor man fearing they would not believe his report, The promiſed to enable him with this ſign: to wic, That he finding his Child dead at home, ſhould be able, by his word, to raiſe it to life again before them. This being done, the Image is ſought and found (for they that hide, have ill memories if they can't find again ); and it is plac'd in a magnificent * Temple, and it becomes famous for working Miracles (true as that of its own diſcovery). By ſuch Arts as theſe, the people being induced to think that Images were the dwelling-places of Divine Powers, it was difficult for them that had blind zeal, thenceforth, to ſuſpend their Religious veneration. The like means inclind them to worſhip Beaſts or Birds, as ſhrines and living Statues of fome Deity. Thus the Egyptians made the figure of the Bird Ibis the emblem of their Delta, which it ſeems, by its open Bill it reprefent- & Schwalenberg ed (a); [though my fancy conceiveth not how it Hieroglyphic. 1. 17. P. 117 the favour of Schualenberg, it fixeth rather on the 118, Paſjus Ibidis or Trigon it made at every ſtep. To this they added, That a certain Medicine of extraordina- ry virtue was found out by thoſe Birds, that a Fea- ther of them ſtupified the Crocodile ; that they were hatch'd out of the Egg of a Baſilisk; that they de fended Egypt from the flying Serpents of Arabia. And this was enough, with that Idolatrous Nation, to turn the Chap. III. Occafions of Idolatry. 33 the bodies of thoſe Birds, and the very figures of them likewiſe, into Receptacles and Treafuries of Ce leſtial virtue ; and to give Religious honour to them. Concerning men on earth, the pride and pomp of the great, and the low and flaviſh diſpoſitions of the mean, begat ſometimes the flattery, ſometimes the worſhip of them, as Gods in humane ſhape. This Honour was arrogated by Nebuchadnezzar, who erect- ed a mighty Coloſſus of Gold to no other Deity than himſelf, requiring ſacrifice and Religious adoration to be offered to it: which when Sidrac, Miſach and A- bednego refuſed to do, he expoftulated with them after the manner of an eminent Deity, ſaying, What God is there potent enough to deliver you out of my hands? Of this blaſphemous arrogance there were many inſtances in fucceeding Ages, and that of Alexander cannot e- ſcape the common Reader; and he may find too many others in the Book of Political Idolatry, written by the Learned Filefacus. This kind of Idolatry flatter- ers helped forward, and promoted as much as in them laid even amongſt Chriſtian Princes. They fram d for them the heavenly ſtile of [their Divinity, and their Divine Precept:] words ſaid to be uſed by The- odofits and Valentinian themſelves. ( a ). Pacatus a By Fileſacue Drepanius, in his Panegyric to Theodoſius the Great, who referreth deſcribes the Emperour, as one, from whom Navigan fum. Trin. Tit. tors exped a calm Sea; Travellers, a ſafe return; and 1.--Exc& Soldiers Vi&tory. And of Conſtantine the Son of Con- tefti arbitrio Stantius, the uncertain Author of his Panegyrick af- Though that firmeth in deep Complement ; That his Beauty was may be meant great as his Divinity was certain. But much of this vinuut. See flattery is ſo grofs, that it can ſcarce be ſwallowed by Gothof. in 16. the common people, who, in private, ſmile at their cod Thead, de own publick fawnings. do 2o zosiloba F For P: So bound 34 of the Cauſes and Chap. III. a Berniers Mes moirs. Tom. 3. P. 180. For Spirits of all kinds; men have ſeen fome Appa- ritions, and heard of more. They have alſo had no- tions in the brain, repreſenting to them Images as fpe- Ctres in the Air: They have rightly judged the Soul fo Divine in its operations, as to fuperexiſt: They have ſeen many external effects, and could not gueſs at the Cauſe, or aſcribe it with ſuch probability to Nature, as to ſome higher inviſible Power: They have ſeen appearances in the Heavens; and the very appearances have form'd in their fancy, the counter- feit Idea of a Spirit. For ſo the Heathen of the Eaſt- ern India (a) believed the ſhadow of the Moon on the Eclipſed Sun, to be a black Demon contending with it. Men thus believing, partly from good, and partly from fanciful Reaſons, the exiſtence of Demons and Ghoſts, and apprehending them, truly, as more fpiritual, active, and ſuperiour Beings, it is not to be admired that their weakneſs ador'd them as diſpenſers of good and evil here below. bo Touching Souls departed in particular ; Gratitude deified fome, but Admiration put more names into the Calendar. The people were tranſported by their pow- er and ſplendor on Earth, and they thought their Pu- iſſance would increaſe in higher Regions. Souls ap- peared otherwiſe to their mind, than Bodies do to the on eye, to which they ſeem the leſſer the higher they b Juven. fat. aſcend. And to this end, the Devil was wont to re- ----Taufacra preſent Ghoſts unto the eye or fancy of the Gentiles & major imago in vaſt proportions (b). Such mighty figures Jamblin humanâ, turbar chus, where he writeth of the Egyptian myſteries, a- Dido ap. Virg. fcribeth to Principalities and Archangels. So that Son En.4. Et nunc lomon () might aptly call the ſtate of the dead, men man find the Congregation of Rephaim] or Gyants . To wards the advancement of the Souls of Heroes in the c . Prov: 21.16. opinions of the Idolizers of them, much was contri- buted 13. Chap. III. Occaſions of Idolatry. 35 3 buted, by ſtrange appearances, real or invented, at the time of their death. So the Soul of Paul the Her mite was the more divinely efteemed of, becauſe S. Anthony (as they tell us) ſaw it flying to Heaven (a). a set Martyrol. Romanin So Julins Cafar became one of the Roman gods, whilſt a Comet (b) ſhining for Seven days together, b. Sueton. In was judg'd to be his Soul receiv'd into Glory. And this conceit they further inculcated, by adding a Star to the top of his Statue. Such Canonization of Heroes hath likewiſe been promoted by ſtrange effects, done or counterfeited at their Sepulchres; and ſometimes by their obſcure manner of going out of the World, which the people eſteem'd an heavenly tranſlation. Empedocles hoping this way to arrive at Divine ho nour, threw himſelf ſecretly into the flames of Ætna; but his two Pattens which that Gulf of Fire caſt up, diſcovered his yain and miferable end. Concerning the Soul of the World, men ſeeing in all parts of the Creation motion and virtue judged erroneouſly of the greater World, as they did truly of the leſſer world of Man; and made one Soul to be the Sovereign principle which actuated every part of it. And ſome of the Stoicks ( c ) eſteem'd this Soul c Senica,de Bla as a Form informing the Univerſe : But the Platoniſts nef. 1. 4. C.7: judged it rather a Form aſſiſtant, imagining it unfuta- enim aliud et ble to its Deity to be mixed with, or vitally united natura, quam to the groffeſt ſubceleſtial matter ; and to have per- do de partibus ception of all the motions of it. This conceit is ejus inferta ? driven very far by the Indian Cabaliſts, or Pendets (d). d Bernier's Mc- Creation ( ſay thoſe Doctors) is nothing elſe but an moirs, Tom. 3. extraction and an extenſion which God maketh of his P. 178, 179 umon ſubſtance, of thoſe webs he draws from his own bom- ela; as deſtruction is nothing elſe but a repričal, or ta- king back again of this Divine ſubſtance, and theſe Dig vine webs imta kimſelfs ſo that the laft day of the World, F2 which 36 of the Cauſes and Chap. III. P. 1, 5, 6, 7,8. which they call Maperle or Pralea, when they believe that all ſhall be deſtroyed, ſhall be nothing elſe but ſuch a ge- neral Repriſal. This conceit, in the ſuperſtitious, ma- keth all things in nature adorable as parts of God : * And in the Atheiſtical it deifieth nothing at all; for at the bottom of this imagination, they think they ſee a Pornat. de not God but Nature. With them (a) Cælum is natura deorum, the material Heaven, Juno is the upper Air, Neptune is the natural cauſe of water in the Caverns of the Earth, Pluto is the thick Air next to this Globe, and Rhea is the natural cauſe of ſhowers. Towards all the Idolatries already mention'd, much was contributed by the figurative expreſſions of Ora- tors, eſpecially by their Apoſtrophe's in the Encomi- ums of departed Hero's; as alſo by the elegant fictions of Poets, whoſe invention hath been juſtly reputed one of the great ſtore-houſes of Idols. And for the Idolatry of Qualities, I know not whence to fetch it ſo readily as by going thither. For though the firſt ground of it was the confideration of many of theſe Qualities, in their eminent degree, as means by which b. Lex 18: Tabe the Pagan Heroes were Deified (b); yet Poetry Tit. de Rol.les helped on that cauſe, by ſhaping theſe Qualities into perſonal Powers, negotiating, as it were, betwixt runt, Fterculem, Heaven and Earth, and conveighing them, as the An- Liberum, £ftu- gels did the Soul of Lazarus, into a more heavenly rem, Pollucem, habitation. Poets deſign to move, to ſurprize, to Quirinum. Ef make deep impreſſion on the People. They cannot que datur bun, do this fo readily, by propoſing abſtracted Truths to iufmodi adfcen- the mind, as by cloathing them in ſuch Metaphors and fucs in caluni Pictures as may affect the brain. Hence it is that they tem, pietatem, have uſed ſuch a variety of fictions, in which they have fidem; earum , cloathed every thing they ſay, with the appearances JAMLO: of a Perſon. Peace, and War, Fame and Juſtice, have ſuch perſonal ſhape and action given to them, as is 4 quos in Cælum merita voca landum delubra ne 37 을 ​-, Chap. IIL Occafions of Idolatry. neceſſary for the making a greater impreffion upon the Hearers. For ( to give an ordinary inſtance in this matter ) it doth not ſo much affect us when a man ſays barely, that a Kingdom ſhall want fup- plies of Bread, as when he deſcribes famine riding towards us pale and meager upon a Sceleton of Man or Beaſt attended with thouſands of ſuch ghaft- ly objects; from whence the uncloathed bones ſtare upon us, and tell us that we after the dreadful ex- tremities of hunger and thirſt, enforcing us to prey upon Toads and Serpents , upon our Relations, and our very felves, ſhall become lean, languiſhing, dy- ing, as they By this tranſitory view of the Cauſes and Occa- fions of Idolatry, ſo full of folly, error, and mi- ſtake, it manifeſtly appeareth, upon what weak hath worſhip'd with ſo vigorous a Devotion. . 2 : CHAP 38 of the Commencement and Chap. IV. CHAP. IV. Of the Time in which the Vanity of Man in. troduced Idolatry into the World. TH He Nature and Cauſes of Idolatry being con- ſidered, I intend in the next place to inquire into the time of its Birth, fo far as the filence or un- certainty of Tradition will permit. It is one of the Aphoriſms of Philo the Elder (if he were the Au- a wild.34. 13. thor of the Book of Wiſdom), that Idols (a) were not from the beginning: And it is a queſtion among the Learned, whether Idolatry was any of thoſe pol- lutions which defiled the old World, and brought the deluge upon it. It doth not appear that it was extant before the flood; and many believe it to be no older than Cham. Tertullian, it is true, was of opinion that Idolatry began in the days of Seth, and that Enoch icitored true Religion, and is for that Reaſon ſaid in Scripture to have walked with God. He hath given us * See Tertul.de his opinion, but he hath concealed the grounds of it: Idolatr. Se&.4. And I can think of nothing ſo likely to move him to Siden Enoch this belief, as the reverence he had for the fictitious fimul e culto- Propheſie of Henoch, which he often citeth (b), res Idoli fa- and in which are contained ſevere Comminations, comminatione both againſt the makers, and worſhippers of Idols. predamnat, S. Cyril of Alexandria is much of another mind, c S. Cyr. Alex. 1.1. conty. Jul. affirming in his firſt Book againſt Julian the Apoftate, p. 16. oi muir () Thai all men, from Adam to the days of Noah, VE 'Addy worſhipped that God who by nature was one. And he d tyr. Alex. ſtrengtheneth his opinion with this Reaſon (d ), Be- ibid . p. 17. A. cauſe no man is [by Moſes ] accuſed as a worſhipper 3. P.IIO. other bricatores in Rcc. Chap. IV. Progreſs of Idolatry: other gods, and impure Demons. If that falſe Religion had then ſet foot in the World, it would ſcarce have cſcaped that Divine Hiſtorian ; but he would, in like- Tihood, both have mention'd it plainly, and ſeverely reproved it. For this is no fin of a mean ſtature: It is, in the judgment of Tertullian ( a ), the principal a Tertulian crime of mankind, the chief guilt of the world; the to- his Book de tal cauſe of Gods judgment, or diſpleaſure. He meaneth Idol. Principale that it is a kind of Mother-fin, containing in it all crimen Generis other evils, on which the Judg of the World pafleth ſeculi reatus, fentence of condemnation. Lactantius goeth higher tota caufa 2** ſtill in his cenſure of it (b), giving to it the name blattant. lib. of an inexpiable wickedneſs. And S. Gregory Nazian- 1. Inftit , c182 zen ſheweth what apprehenſion he had of the great- P: 94 neſs of this guilt, when he calleth it (c) The laft cGreg: Nazo: and firſt of evils. So monſtrous a ſin, if it had been Idol. Signator in thoſe early times committed, it would , a man tar nomor would think, have been as ſoon reflected on by Mofes, "pa**** as the violence or injuſtice which then filled the earth, (d) or the unclean mixtures of the fons of God (e) dGen-6.It, with the daughters of men: (That is, as I gueſs, ( in the ſame fenſe in which the tall Trees of Lebanon are called the Cedars of God) the unbridled appetites of the High and Potent, who made their Power ſub- fervient to their luſt.] In the infancy of the World, there were many fes which might prevent the ſin of Idolatry. By the freſh date of it from the Creation, in which God, al-- moſt beyond miracle it ſelf, diſcovered his Almighty Being and Oneneſs; by the appearance of the nós, or Son of God to Adam and others (of which appear- ance, largely afterwards ]; by the long-lives of Adum: and Seth, and the reſt of the Holy Line, who could often inculcate to their families, what themſelves were fo abundantly aſſured of; and poſſibly alſo, by the. 12, 13 & Gef.6. 1,25 Cau- 40 of the Commencement and Chap. IV. הוחל convi&ion of him who was the head of the degene- rate Line, unrighteous Cain himſelf, who having ſeen God in his Shechinah, could not propagate either di- rect Atheiſm or Idolatry, though he was the Father of evil manners: By theſe, and perhaps by other Cauſes to us unknown, it might come to paſs, that the wor- ſhip of Idols was either not in being, or at leaſt, not in frequent exerciſe in thoſe firſt Generations. Gen. 4. 26. We know nothing of thoſe times but by the Pen of Moſes; and a doubtful word of his (a) hath in- clinid fome to refer the Origine of Idolatry to the days of Enos. In his time ( faith Mofes ) men began to Profane, as ſome would render his Text, inſtead of tranſlating it as our Church doth, to call upon, the Name of the Lord. It is true that the Hebrew word, Hochal, doth ſometimes ſignifie Prophaned : But there is no Reaſon which may enforce ſuch an expoſition of it in this place; the Name of God having been for- merly profaned, and with great irreverence abuſed in the irreligious Families of Cain and Lamech. Neither is the termination of our worſhip on the creature, in- ſtead of the Sovereign God, the only prophanation of his Holy Name. A rude Tongue, and an immoral Life commit that offence; and not only an Idolatrous mind or body. Such profaneneſs the Arabian Meta- pkraft imputeth to that time, whilſt he thus turneth the Hebrew of Mofes: Then began men to recede from their obedience to God. But to me, the Chaldee Inter- preter ſeemeth to come nigher to the ſcope of the Words, the fenſe of which he exprefleth in this manner: In thoſe days men began to make ſupplications in the name of the Lord. That is, the numbers of Families increa- ſing in the days of Enos, they appointed more publick places for Gods ſervice, in which at ſet-times, they might together, and in a more ſolemn Congregation, : Wor- Chapi IV. Progreſs of Idolatry. ': 70 21 Worſhip their great Creator. I muſt confeſs that this txpoſition doth much diſagree with the mind of Mai- monides. For he doth not only refer ( a ) the be- a Maimon. de Tdelan e. 1. ginning of Idolatry to the times of Enos, but he ac- cuſeth Emos himſelf of that grofs and ſtupid wicked- neſs. For thus he begins that ſhort Book which he bath written on that Subject. In the days of Enos y es bas men erred very greatly; and the minds of the wife-men stigi esate of that age were overborn with ſtupidneſs: Even Enos caught in timſelf was one of them who thus erred. Nom this was their error, the worſhip of the Stars. A very raſh and rude reflexion upon ſo holy a Patriarch, and reliſhing *** of Rabbinical dotage. For certainly divers of thoſe Writers, if any others, have had a flaw in their Ima- ginations, though Maimonides, amongſt them all, may 16 2*** be allowed the largeſt intervals of fobriety. From Cham, therefore, rather than from Enos, the Learned derive the beginning of Idolatry ; though I know not whether, under him, it may not be dated a little too ſoon. The heart of Cham being before the flood deeply depraved, it was rather hardened by the eſcape, than warned by the mighty danger of that general Deluge. Inſomuch that it was juſt with God to give him up to the further ſeducement of his ſenſuality, and to the viſible power of the old Serpent, who may ſeem to have been, for a time, chained down by the Curſe in Paradiſe, but was now (as I con- jecture) let looſe again for the puniſhment of thoſe, whom Gods ſevere and miraculous diſcipline did not cleanſe of their folly. He therefore is eſteemed the Father of Idolatry, that Monſter in Religion, which in his corrupt Loyn was, by degrees, multiplied into innumerable heads. But $. Cyril of Alexandria, in two places beginneth Idolatry at the confuſion of Lan- b Cyril. Alex. guages, and with Belus rather than Cham (b); eſteem- contra Julian. . G ing 1. 3. p. 110. 42 of the Commencement and Chap. IV. 02 ing the difference of their Dialects, and the diſtracti- on of their opinions concerning God, to have com- bs.cyr. ibid. menced together (b). For the critical minute, it is Μετα - την σε πύργο uncertain; yet for the firſt objects of Idolatry, we MATATUUNT, may aſſent to him ; and them he makes to be the Sun o pausoa and the other heavenly bodies: But the Sun in the firſt eruulator ne place. That was the moſt glorious object which ra- duthyigure viſhed the eye, and it ſhewed it ſelf no-where more hot gloriouſly than in the plains of Chaldea. In thoſe dve mira plains the Tower of Babel was built, and ( as my pri- Tiry Kels vate imagination leadeth me to think) conſecrated Tacredague- $93. See Els by the builders to the Sun, as to the moſt probable cidari (inter Cauſe of drying up mighty Waters. This Tower is Op. Anſelm.) 1. thought to have been built inPyramidal form, according 475. de orig. to theScheme which we have of it in the frontiſpiece of idolor apud Verſtegan. And this form was not improper (though Babel, much unlike the figure of its Globe) becauſe it ex- preſſed its fiery nature, the fire aſcending in a co- & Porphyr. ap. nical ſhape. The Ancients (faith Porphyry (c) ci- Exfeb. de prep. ted by Euſebius ) did ſet forth the nature of Fire by 6.9.p.98. Pyramids-and Obelisks, and dedicated Statues of di- vers figures -to the Olympick gods, as a Cone to the Sun, and a Cylinder to the Earth. But all will not allow this kind of reaſoning to have place here; ſuch Philoſophical conliderations being thought by them matters much later than the times of Babel. But for the building, of Towers or Pyramids as Altaria, or high Altars to the Sun and other heavenly bodies, the practice is ancient, and very general., The Sun was not, meerly, a god of the Hills; yet the Heathen thought it ſuitable to his advanced ſtation, to aſcend them, and to worſhip him upon aſcents, either natu- ral, or, as was neceſſary in ſuch flat Countries, artifi- cial; that they might come as nigh as they could to Mat the Deity they worſhipped. Accordingly Abenephius the. : Chap. IV: Progreſs of Idolatry.lt 43 C. 12. p.310. dem. See alſo the Arabian, in Kircher (a), teſtifieth that the Pyra- a Kóreber in Oedip. Syst. 4 mids of Egypt were called, by their Prieſts, the Altars of the Gods, and that they wrote on them Theologi- cal Myſteries. The fame Kircher noteth, (b) that b Kircher ibi the Coptites called them the Pillars and Altars of Dei- P308, 309. ties: That Bama is ſaid, by Vat allus, to ſignifie pro- perly a very high place for ſacrifice; that ſuch a one is mentioned by Virgil, as facred to Juno: And that Lu- ="delete can ( ) [peaketh of Pyramids, as the Egyptian Prieſts Votaq; Pyr** and Coptites had done. The Pyramids of Egypt were folvuntur ad raiſed upon certain ſquare Platforms ſet one upon the aras. other, and gradually leflening until they ended in one is a Jeaſt and blunt ſquare of Stone. Monſieur Vattier, the dista Arabick Profeſſor of the French King, believed thoſe 20 blant-tops to have been as Pedeſtals for ſome Coloſſes or Obelisks. They might be ſometimes put to that uſe, though not at firſt deſigned for it. For Caligula was pleaſed to ſet his Head on the ſhoulders of the Statues of the Grecian gods; yet thoſe Statues were not made to ſerve as ſuch Supporters. That Learned Profeffor might, poſſibly, have made a truer conje- &ure from a ſhort paſſage in the Arabian Murtadi, whoſe Book he tranſlated. For Murtadi (d) ſpeaks a Murtadi of of the Maritine Pyramid, as of a Temple of the Stars , the Prodig. on which were placed the figures of Sun and Moon. to the Arabia Such a Tower was that ( as I ſuppoſe) which the ans. p. 16. Tanſ of China built, of a ſudden, in the Piazza of Pen kin (e). They built it in Pyramidal form, with Ta- e Alvarez Si- bles upon Tables, till it ended in one ſupreme Table: medo in Hift. And on that they prayed for Rain, which the Sun, c. 18. p. 87. the Original Jupiter Pluvius, doth as a natural cauſe, both fend and remove. The Corinthian Tower once belonged to Sol (f): And it is very probable, that ſ See Laurenb. the Sun was of old worſhipped on a very high Moun- Corinth. & $2. Iain in Crete. The Hill, in the time of Peter Martyr cyon. P. 23. of 44 of the Commencement and Chap. IV. C. $. p. 421, C. 3. of Mount ja Pet. Mart. of Angleria («), was called by the name of the Hill tgat. Babyle of Jove, though the Cretians were then great ſtran- 1. 2. p.80 gers to their ancient Demonology. A late Traveller b Gage in his b ) hath informed us of a Pyramidal Tower in new Survey of Mexico, on the top of which the Heathen Prieſts a 12. p. 119, worſhipped towards the Sun, an American Deity. I ſhould have thought that he had meant the fame with e Sec Kircher's Corteſius (c), and that which he called the Fane of Ordip. Synes the Idol Horcolivo's. But they differ much in their meaſures : And the aſcent of the former is ſaid to be by 114 ſteps, the latter by no leſs than an Hundred a Hift. of the and thirty. Among the Apalachites of Florida d), Carib. if.b. 2. the Prieſts of the Sun, called by the remarkable name 9.3%, Lc. See of faovas, worſhipped their Idol on the top of a ve Kirch. Ord. ry high, round, ſteep and rocky Hill; a full league Tom. 3. D: 27: in its winding Aſcent. The builders of the Hill or Pagoda: Tower of Babel, furely, deſigned that much higher yet ; ſo high that it might hide its head in the Clouds, and would, it may be, have put it, had it been finiſh ed, to the like Idolatrous ufe. It is reaſonable for me, here to expect an objection from the Scripture, which feemeth to impute the building of the Tower of Babel to another end. Come, ſay the builders in 1 Gen. 11. 4. the Eleventh of Geneſis (e ), let us make us a' name, left me be ſcattered abroad upon the face of the earth 3. To this objection two things may be replied, Firſt , the end expreſſed is not excluſive of that which I fup- a poſed; and it is not a wonder, if vain men to encou- sliga , na tham rage one another, how many ends foever they had, 13 did propound that of their pomp and glory. Second- ly, theſe builders deſigned a City, and not only a Tower which was but the Appendix to it, though ſuch a neceſſary one as an Altar is to a Temple. And 2 let their deſign of getting them a Name, might rather re- €8.900 fer to the City, than diſtinctly to the Tower. They in- 40 Chap. IV. Progreſs of Idolatry. 45 a intended to build a place of fixed Reſidence, which might be, as it were, the Head, and Center, and Me tropolis of all Towns, whenever their Families ſhould lo encreaſe as to need further room for habitation. They were reſolved againſt the incommodities of wandring life, and they purpofed to unite themſelves into a more orderly body, and to become a Corpora- tion inſtead of a multitude. And this was the way to get them a Name, to be the firſt City of the World, and to be owned as the Mother-Place of all Nations. But I am not fo fond of this private fancy, as to contend further about the Legitimacy of it. In this I am more aſſured, that the Lights of Heaven, which in the clear firmament of thoſe Countries, appeared fo often and in ſuch luſtre, (whileft the Sun by day ſhone gloriouſly, and the Moon and Stars ſhewed beauti- fully in the night, to them who lay either on the ground, or on flat Roofs , and found no evil influence from them); and which obtained afterwards the name of Ota from their continual motion, were the firſt Idols of the World. Amongſt theſe, the Sun ex- celling, he was made the principal Idol, and was no- where more in honour than at Babylon. Accordingly we read, ſo ſoon, of Bell, [ the Babylonian ] and Baal ( the Phenician and Hebrew Name ), in the The- ology of the Gentiles, This Idol was originally, and principally, the Sun, though great men likewiſe, when deified after their deaths, obtained that Name, as a Title of higheſt renown. And from the many names of Canonized Heroes, given to the Sun, hath rifen a great part of that uncertainty and confuſion, with which the Reader is perplexed in the Labyrinths of Heathen Mythologers.cl - This, however, is generally confeſſed, that the Sun was the firſt Idol; inſtead of which why Jarchi. (a) hath 46 of the Commencement and Chap. IV. 27, 28. a ap. Farchi aprahath put men or herbs into the firſt place, is Maimon. de 1. hard to underſtand, till he come, and be his own E- dol. c. 1. p. 4. lias. Maimonides begins with the Stars, and he hath ground, not only from natural Reaſon, but from the b Job 31. 26, Authority alſo of Job and Mofes. Job (b) thus ex- preſſeth the Idolatry of thoſe ancient times in which he lived. If I beheld the fun when it ſhined, or the Moon walking in brightneſs. And my heart hath been fecretly enticed, or my mouth hath kiſſed my hand: [IF, with devotion of Soul, or profeſſion of outward Ce- Temony, I have worſhipped thoſe heavenly bodies which by their heighth, motion and luſtre, raviſh the ſenſes ]: This alſo were an iniquity to be puniſhed by the judge; for I ſhould have denied the God that is above. Deut. 4. 19. Moſes giveth caution to the people of Iſrael (c) who were coming out of that Idolatrous Land of Egypt, and were journeying towards Idolatrous Cunaan (who were coming from temptation, and going likewiſe to- wards it ]; That when they lifted up their eyes to the Heavens, they ſhould arm their minds againſt that in- chantment to which they were ſubject by the ſenſible glory of the Sun, Moon and Stars. Rabbi Levi Ben Ger- d Ap. Dionyf. Jon (d) gloffing upon this place in Moſes, obſerveth Voll. in Main, that the Sun is firſt named, becauſe his vertues are de Idol. p. 4. moſt manifeft . The most ancient inhabitants of the World ( faith Diodorus Siculus, meaning them that e Diodor.Sickl. lived foon after the Flood, and particularly the (e) s.co.p.10: Egyptians) contemplating, the World above them, and being aſtoniſhed with high admiration at the nature of o the Univerſe , believed that there were eternal Gods, and that the two principal of them were the Sun and the Moon: Of which they called the firſt Oſiris,and the ſecond IGs.And of late years, when the Mariners Compaſs directed men to a new World in America (peopled, no doubt, from ſeveral diſtant parts of the old; j many different Idols Chap. IV. Progreſs of Idolatry. 47 dy- Biblioth. 11. : Idols were found in peculiar places; but for the Sun, it was a Deity both in Mexico and Peru. Babylon was the Mother of this kind of Idolatry ; not Egypt, as the Author de Dea Syria ( a ), and a Lucianes de fome in Diodorus Siculus (b), who make Sol the firſt ded Syrik. p. King of it, have erroneouſly conjectured. For Egypt miss out 1057. Ipditor was not a Nation when the Sun began to be worſhip-garov, 7 ped in Chaldea, where Ur, it may be in aftertimes, pues, is uer, with reſpect to the worſhip of that hot Luminary, abyertai se- was a kind of lefſer Babylon. Babylon infected Egypt, nu te irroilu Aſyria, Phænicia; and they ſpread the contagion 6 Diodor.Sicul. throughout the World. To the worſhip of the Sun, Moon and Stars, and C. 13. p. 120 other appearances in Heaven or the Air, ſuch as Co- mets and Meteors, ( for the worſhip of the former, was apt to draw on that of the latter ſucceeded the falſe Religion towards Heroes, confounded, as I gueſs, with original Demons or Angels. And this came to paſs in the days of Serug, according to Euſebius, Epi- phanius, and Syncellus, The Sun was no ſooner called Bel, Baal, or El, that is, Lord or Governour, but the ſouls of men of renown were alſo flattered with like Appellations, and became properly the Idols of the people. Nimrod and Oſiris were Baals ; and the King of Phænicia was Bel; and they had Religious ve- neracion payed to them. If other Demons were worſhipped (as no doubt they were, being permitted to appear to them); it is a queſtion whether the Gen- tiles did not, by them, miſunderſtand the deified Souls of ſome of their Anceſtors, diſtinctly, or confuſedly remembred; rather than natural Genii, or Angels: For ſuch Beings owed much of their manifeſtation, as ſuch, to the Tradition conveyed in the Loyn of A- braham and Mofes. The worſhip of Demons was followed by that of Pil- lar's 48 Of the Commencement and Chap. IV. $40. D. . (b, a See Mr. Sel- lars or Artleſs Monuments of remembrance (a). Such to Synt, de Di- a Monument was that Pillar anointed by Jacob. It *s Sýris. p. 39. was no Idol in the quality in which he made it, but a .. Record of the Divine preſence: But it is commonly thought that others did take from it a pattern of their follies. Statues or Images were of a like antient date, as is plain from the Hiſtory of the Teraphim, though Artiſts were then rare : The infancy of this new World being, alſo, the infancy both of Mechanical and Liberal Arts. Idolaters likewiſe choſe for their Deities, living Statues, fuch as the Bull in Egypt for Afivologiâ. p. ther for the Deity of the Sun, or of an Hero, accor- ding to truth. Pauſanias, in his Survey of Greece, findeth Stones ſharpened at the top, to have been the earlieſt Symbols of their Gods. [They were, it may be, Cones relating to the Sun, the parent of fire, which, as was before noted, afcendech a Pyramis, and was thought to be an element of Triangular figure € Plato ap. La- by the ancient Philoſophers of Greece (< >] Scaliger, ert. p. 228.1.3. in that learned Appendix of his to his Book of the Tues uer yap hvor 501 Emendation of the accounts of time, doth mention xãoy muegué Rude Stones as the original Statues in Phenicia. Saunabess To What the firſt Symbols amongſt the Romans were, is öldeleov &c. not diſtinctly underſtood. One would gueſs by Nu- ma's Temple, they were Symbols of the Univerſe. But for particular Images, we have it upon the good Varro ap: S. authority of a moſt learned Roman (d), That an Auguft. di civ. Hundred and Seventy years were paſſed ere they came in amongſt them. Under Chriſtianity, the vanity and veneration of Images ſucceeded the Symbol of the Croſs. At this day the Barbarians on the Coaſts of Africa reverence Stones, like our greater Land-marks, e Villaults as Fetiches or Divine Statues (e ); believing them to Rel . of a Voy- be as ancient as the World it felf. . Dei. 1. 4. c.31. P: 272, age to Grinee, P. 174. It . 2 Chap, V. The Idolatry of the Gentiles. 49 It appeareth by this ſhort account of the Original of Idols, that they may plead antiquity : But ſtill their age is nothing, if we compare it to his who is God everlaſting ** CHAP. V. of thoſe who are charged with Idolatry; and of the conformity, or inconformity of their worſhip to the Nature of Idolatry. Of Gen- tiles, Jews, Mahometans, Chriſtians. bad. mongſt them who have profeſſed Chriſtianity, of the Gnoſticks , Manichees, Arrians, So- cinians, Roman-Catholicks, the real Catho- licks of the Communion of the Church of England. And firſt of the Idolatry charged on the Gentiles. Pila doistaba ar do silindrait de les voda So noin PART I. almolog slider How far the Gentiles were Ignorant of one Supreme God. en los oH doma ald I Have infifted hitherto, on the Nature, Occaſions, and Commencement of Idolatry. The next confi- deration ſhall extend to the perſons charged with it, and in the firſt place, to them who have firſt and moſt generally tranſgreffed ; that is to ſay, the Gentiles. Concerning their worſhip, it is here proper for me to artempt the reſolution of three Queſtions, Forft. Whether the Gentiles acknowledged one Su- preme God. Cung 10 2NOLT Secondly, Whether they made Religious Application to him H Н Third- LOVE d 50 The Idolatry of the Gentiles. Chap. V. laze 5 Thirdly, Whether upon the conceſſion of ſuch ac- knowledgment and Application, they may be, and re- ally are chargeable with Idolatry. Firſt , then, I enquire how far the Gentiles owned one fupreme God. This enquiry is not capable of any nice and accurate reſolution. For there is no one Syſteme of the Gentile Theology;as there is of Judaiſm, Mahometaniſm, and the Chriſtian Religion. Divers perſons, in divers places, had divers apprehenſions concerning a Deity; and divers Rites of worſhip. And thoſe diftin& Rites, by the commerce of Nations, were often fo mixed together, that they made a new kind of Religion. 200 lote It is not unlikely, that the dregs of the people a- mong the Gentiles, whom God had given up to bru- tiſhneſs of mind, did riſe little higher than Objects of ſenſe. They worſhipped many of them together ; each as ſupreme in its kind, or no otherwiſe unequal than the Sun and the Moon, or the other coeleſtial bo- dies, by the adoration of which, the ancient Idolaters, * Jeb 31. 28. as Job (a) intimateth, denied (or excluded] the God that is above. Porphyry himſelf, one of the moſt plauſible Apologiſts for the Religion of the Gentiles, doth own in fome, the moſt groſs and blockiſh Idoli. b Porphy", af zing of mean Objects. He telleth us (b) that it is xxfeb. de pre- 24. Evang. not a matter at which we ſhould be amaz'd, if moſt 13.6.7. p.98. ignorant men eſteemed wood and ſtones Divine Sta tues, ſeeing they who are unlearned, look upon Mo- numents which have inſcriptions on them, as ordinary Stones; and eſteem valuable Tables as pieces of com- mon wood ; and regard Books no otherwiſe than as ſo e Mandeflo in many bundles of Paper. Senſible objects arreſted the 154. They ſtupid and unactive minds of the vulgar, who (like have no thoſe indevout (c) Idolaters of Japan) reaſond no knowledge of further concerning the original, or Government of the creation, C. World Chap. V. The Idolatry of the Gentiles. St World. For few Heads are exerciſed by Philoſophy: and we meet not with one Peaſant of a Thouſand a- mong our felves, who asks how the Sun enlightens this Globe, though he believes the body of it no bigger than his Buſhel. Such Heads are inclined to turn the Truth of God into a Lie; to exchange the Sovereign Deity for that which is eſteemed a God, but is not ; and to multiply the kinds of it, according to the va- riety of confiderable effects and appearances whoſe Cauſes are only known to the Secretaries of Nature. It is more probable ſtill, that many Gentiles reached no higher in their devotion than to Demons. Saint Paul taxeth them (a) with offering to Devils and as Cor. ro. not to God. The fame Apoſtle inform’d the Lycaoni- 20. ans (b), that the deſign of his Preaching, was the b Ads 14. 15. converting of men from vanities that is, from their many Idols which were not what they were judged to be: which being no Deities, were in that reſpect no- thing, and vanity ] unto one God, the true and li- ving Cod; from whom therefore, theſe many Idols had withdrawn many of the Heathen. The Inferiour objects had thruſt the Superiour out of poffeffion, as in the Caſe of that woman under the Papacy, who is ſaid to have forſaken God for the Virgin ; and the Virgin in Heaven, for that Lady (as ſhe called her which ſhe ſaw before her eyes in the Church (c), (D.M. Antid. Divers Idols (I ſay) might crowd the Sovereign God ag. Idol and out of their minds, Jehovah might be baniſhed whilft Reply D258 their imaginations were filled with many hundreds of Rep . Ricct. 1.7. Jupiters; with no fewer than Thirty thouſand in the c. 12. p. 284. account of Heſiod, if he ſwelleth not the reckoning with Names, and Sir-names, inſtead of diſtinct Gods. Some of the Gentiles who knew God [that is, had incans by the things that are ſeen (d) of aſcending a Romi L. 29, to the knowledg of the inviſible Creator] did not- 21. H 2 with- 52 The Gentiles worſhip of Chap. V. & 1 Cor. 1.21. withſtanding not truly know him ; nor reach him by Pfal. 79. 6. that wiſdom or vain fort of Philoſophy («) which Jer. 10. 25. 1 Thef. 4. 5. did not edifie them, though it puffed them up . great- PART 2. Of their worſhip of Univerſal Nature, &c. as God. . His is the common oppinion, concerning many of T the Gentiles; but there is not ſufficient reaſon to believe the ſame thing concerning them all. For it is evident from the Hiſtory of ancient and modern Idolatry, and from the Writings of ſome of the Gen- tiles ; that the acknowledgment of one ſupreme Dei- ty was not wholly baniſhed from all parts of the Pa- gan World. But herein, likewiſe, ſome of them v erred. For, firſt, There were thoſe amongſt them who ac- knowledged Univerſal Nature, as that one fupreme Deity. This Deity the Egyptians vailed, ſometimes under the names of Minerva and Iſis, before whoſe Temple Sai, as Plutarch witneſſeth, this Inſcription was to be read: I am all that which was, and is, and will be hereafter. And in her Image were placed the emblems of all the kinds of things with which Nature See the Sta- is furniſhed (b ). Such a Deity the Arcadians wor- tue of let in ſhipped under the proper Title of Pan, who as Por- Kirch. Oedip. nutus contendeth (c), is the ſame with the Univerſe . Synt. 3. C. 4 The fame Pornutus proceedeth, in ſhewing, that his c de lower part was ſhaggy, and after the falhion of a nel ti (leyós, Goat ; and that by it, was meant the aſperity of the P. 69. - Earth. Bardeſanes Syrus (d) deſcribeth at large the e du- Tós est, &c. Statue of the Univerſe, by which the Brachmans wor- a Bardel. Syr. ſhipped Nature. It was an Image of Ten or Twelve 4. Porphyro, Cubits in heighth: It had its hands extended in the p. 283, 284" form of a Crofs. It had a face Maſculine on the one ſide, P. 189. Nat. Deor. c. Chap. V. Univerſal Nature et fide, and Feminine ori the other. It had the Sun on one of its breaſts, and on the other the Moon: And on the Arms were to be ſeen a very great number of Angels, together with the Heavens, Mountains, Seas, Rivers, the Ocean, Plants and Animals; and ſuch o- ther parts in Nature as make up the Univerſe. Yet I cannot ſay that this was the Statue of their ſupreme Deity: For they tell us, concerning it, that this was the Image which God fet before his Son when he made the World, as a pattern by which he ſhould form his Work. But I may ſay it more truly, of ſome wor- ſhippers of Iſis, that they füppoſed her ſupreme, and did adore her, not, with others, as the inferiour Earth, but in the quality (as I juſt now noted) of univerſal Nature. So Pignorius hath taught us ( a ), * Pignor: de infe Images and before him, Servius and Macrobius. Hence was it p. 2, 3. that the Inſcription on an Antient Marble at Capua, owneth Iſis as all things (b). A like opinion may be, with ground, entertained concerning Veſta, and the dea . Ifis. Avrda ésia, Fire, or Sun, in the midſt of her Temple; as Ply- usBabimus K.C. tarch in Numa hath ſuggeſted. Wherefore no Image was confecrated to her beſides that of her Temple, which by its roundneſs, denoted the World, and by its fempiternal fire, the Sun in it. That fire was re- newed, each year, on the firſt of March (6), in allu- € Macrob. Sa- fion, fure, to the vigour of that Planet which then beginneth, in eſpecial manner, to comfort thoſe parts of the Earth. Orhers again, amongſt the Gentiles, adord the Sun, as the one Sovereign Deity. Such were they in Julius Firmicus, who expreſſed their de sol. Ope votion in this form. O Sol! Thou beſt and greateſt of mundi . Dux ont- things I Thou mind of the Univerſe | Thou Guide and niumPrincipleja Prince of all (d). A like Egyptian form, tranſlated Artimen. 1. 4. Out of that language, by Euphantus, is remembred by p. 157.?? Porphyriez aud thus it beginneth ce). @ Sun ikon Pomona 11 Lord mduras, &c 18, 02: b 7.7/by na Que es. omnia: turn. l. 1. C12 p. 242 54 The Gentiles worſhip of Chap. V. Lord of all, and ye the reſt of the Gods! There Ex- phantus ( as may be probably imagined) found Baal, or ſome ſuch word, in the original Egyptian; and gave us inſtead of it, the Greek Atomte. Such honour of the Sun we find on the Antient Egyptian Obelisk in- a Ste Marbh. terpreted by Hermapion ( a), and reſtored to its Cron. Can. P: antient beauty, by Sixtus Quintus. Orrit the Sun is 433, 434 ſet forth as God; as the Sovereign diſpoſer of the World which, it ſeems, he committed to the Govern- ment of King Rameſtes. Others there were who miftook for the one ſupreme God, the Soul of the World, and, it may be, thought the Sun the Head in that great animated Body, or the place of that Souls principal reſidence. On this faſhi- b Macrob. 51- on, Oſiris, in Macrobius (b), deſcribeth his Godhead. c. The Heavenly world is my head; my belly the Seas my 20: 2:29. feet the Earth : In Heaven are my Ears, and for my alb, Ko su Gwap*- ſeeing Eye, it is the glorious Lamp of the Sun. Porm- w kc. tus likewiſe, reciting the Dogmata of the Heathen < Pornut. de Theology, diſcourſeth (C) to this effect. As we Nat. deor. p. 4: de Jove. [men ] are governed by a Soul, so the world hath its Soul alſo, by which it is kept in frame: And this ſoul of the World is called Jupiter. Ariſtotle himſelf doth ſome- where ſtile God, jiya Cowo, a mighty Animal: So apt are the higheſt Aſpirers in Philoſophy to fall, fome- times into wild and deſperate errors. Amongſt the Romans who excelled Varro in knowledg? And yet S. · Auſtin faith of him, that he believed no higher God d S. Aug.de than the Soul of the World (d), but that by dif- cin, Dei. 14 guſting Images, as debafers of Religion, he approach- 273 ?ed nigh to the true God. Others, both in Egypt and Perſia, worſhipped for the true God, a part only of his' Idea ; whilſt they removed from it, the juſtice and mercy of ſending, preventing, or taking away, any temporal evils in which they thought the ſupreme Deity c. 31, P. 272, Chap. V. Univerſal Natwer Blade Deity not concerned; whilſt they believed certain Demons to be the chaſtizers of thoſe who had not € See Porphyri purged themſelves fufficiently from matter (a). PART 3. How far the Gentiles owned one true God. UT it is not fair to fight always on the blind- ſide of Nature. I come therefore in the next place, to acknowledg, that ſome Gentiles uſed a Di- viner Reaſon than others, and owned one ſupreme God, the King of the World, and a Being diſtinct from the Sun, or the Univerſe, or the Soul of it. This appeareth from the Confeſſion of many Chri- (tians; and from the words of the Gentiles them- felves. Firſt, Divers of the Fathers, though they ſhew the generality of their gods to have been but creatures, yet they confeſs they had amongſt them, ſome appre- henfion of one ſupreme, eternal Deity. S. Chryfoftom, in a ſecond Diſcourſe in his fixth Tome concerning the Trinity (b.), doth charge upon the Arians and Ma- b $. Chrys. op cedonians the crime of renewing Gentiliſm, whilſt they vol . 6. de Trán. B2 profefjed one great God, and another Deity which was leſs, and created. For it is Gentiliſm ( ſaid that Fa- ther) which teacheth men to worſhip a creature, and to ſet up one Great Cor greateſt ] God, and others of in- feriour order. In this Diſcourſe St.Chryſoſtom acknow- ledgeth that the Gentiles adored the one Sovereign God ( for him the Arians believed in, and were in that point good Theiſts, though no Orthodox Chri- ſtians), notwithſtanding he accuſeth them.of Subor- dinate Polytheiſm. S. Cyril of Alexandria ſpeaks the fame thing, and in more plain and direct words (c), com den It is manifeft (ſaid he ) that they who Phyloſophiced i. I, p. 23. A. 56 How far the Gentiles Chap. V. P 26. after the Greecian manner, believed and profeſſed one God, the builder of all things, and by nature ſuperiour to all other Deities. And ( to come to the ſecond way of proof above mentioned ) S. Cyril is very copious in the authorities which he produceth out of the Heathen Writers, in order to the ſtrengthening of his Aſſertion, that they believed in one infinite God. He introduceth Orpheus a Cyr. ibid. (a) ſpeaking as Divinely as David himſelf. God is one, he is of himſelf, of him are all things born, and he ETs is du ro- rulérh over them all . He again, after he had cited ma- merino & C. ny Philoſophers, bringeth in the Poet Sophocles, as one that profeſſed the true God; and the words which he there calleth to mind, are worth the Tranſcri- b Cyr. 15.p.32. bing (6). Of a fruth, There is one God, who made the no Talk Heavens, and the ſpatious Earth, and the goodly fwelling 151 @eds, os of the Sea, and the force of the Wind. But many of us esperàvétates mortals, erring in our hearts, have erected Images of gods made of Wood, or Stone, or Gold, or Ivory, as fap- ports of our grief : And to theſe we have offered ſacrifices and vain Panegyricks; conceiting in that manner that we exerciſed Piety. He forbeareth not, after this, to cite e Cyr, th, p.33, Orpheus again (c), and the Verſes have their weight, Ουρανών δρ and contain this ſenſe in them. I adjure thee, O Hear κίζω σε Θε8 Peyarw odpor ven! Thou wiſe work of the greatGod! I adjure thee thou voice of the Father, which he firſt uttered, when he founded the whole World by his Counſels. The Father calls to mind, likewiſe, many ſayings of Porphyry, and of the Author fallly called Triſmego ft. But they were too well acquainted with Chriſtianity, to have Autho- rity in this Argument of the one God of the Gentiles. Such a Gentile ( one who dreamt not of any Goſpel ] was Anaxagoras, who (as Plutarch teſtifies) did ſetia tilan pure and ſincere pure and ſincere mind over all things, inftead of fate and fortune. In Lertius, we may hear him ſpeaking in his own : Chap. V. owned one true God. &c own words, and they admit of this interpretation(a). a Devta xoá- All things were together (or in a Chaos ]: Then came out vis A+ the Mind and diſpoſed them into order. But on this son curd dan declaration of Anaxagoras I will not depend; becauſe snérunat his vis or mind, might be ſuch as the Platonick Vuxe 1 or Soul of the World. I like better the words of Architas the Pythagorean (b), who ſpeaks of God in barchTyrhas, the ſingular, and ſays he is fupreme, and governs the Stobaum, in World. But nothing is more cloſe to the purpoſe STO than that which hath ſo often been ſaid by Plato. It is Keftirbę irto his opinion recited in Timens Locrus (c), That God is c rim. Lotr. de the Principal Author and Parent of all things. And this dx. Mundi. I* he adds, after an enumeration of the feveral Beings of ter op. Plat. ** which the Univerſe confifteth. He affirmeth in his för åreyrar Politicus, “That God (d) made the great Animal of dp xnyor is the World, and that he directeth all the motions of a Plat. Polit. it:-uhtad. No w Jed, and that there are not two Gods Vol. 2. p. 269. C. E. and p. governing the World with differing Counſels. In his Sophifta ( e ) he determineth that God was the ma- e Plat. in Soph. ker of things, which were not (that is, as fuch] be- vol. I. p. 265. fore he framed them. In his Timæus () he calleth r Plato in Ti. God **ráv xj matépæ tā navode, the Maker and Father of mæo. vol. 3. p. 1 every being: Adding, that it is difficult to find out this Father of the Univerfe; and that when he is found out, it is not fit to declare him to the vulgar. He was, it ſeems, a Jehovah not ordinarily to be named. g Arnob, adu. They who have read his works with care, know what Gent: 1.2.p.68. diſtinction he maketh betwixt (8) God and the gods: And how he extolleth the Divine goodneſs, De digns, mee and maketh it the very Effence of the ſupreme God. communia fet It is, indeed, to be acknowledged, that he fet up o- ni, ther gods, in his Scheme of the Univerſe : Nay, that dicit he owned a ſecond, or third Amerxegàs, or Artiſt of ruptibiles eſſe natura, fed we- that great and noble frame of the viſible World. Iuntate Dei-- But both he and his Diſciples, what other Principle perpetual consi- I 270. A. C. 28. Plato ille divi nus multa de DEOS cor- fo- nevie 58 How far the Gentiles Chap. V. P.6. ſoever they taught or believed, They ſtill maintained Jit to be diſtinct from the [reyaldo ] the one ſupreme a Plató ibid. uncompounded Good. Plato, in his Timeus (a), P. 34. B. wahad teacheth expreſly that the Soul of the World, which see whárta, he calleth a bleſſed God, was made by the God who is Scijorat Jedy eternal. Timæus Locrus (b) ſuppoſeth the World dyrdu ayer to be framed by the ſupreme God, and the Soul to be b Tim. Locr. de put into the middle of it by him that framed it: As An: Mundi, in- if God made the World after the manner in which he ter Opufc.Græc. made Adam. And Salluſtius the Platoniſt, in his Book C Sallut.de of God and the World (c), treateth profeſledly of Diis eo mundo, the firſt Cauſe; concludeth a neceſſity of its Oneneſs ; agerus dich and celebrateth its virtue as ſo eminent, that it can as. . P. 12, 13. ſcarce be expreſſed by any words. The truth is, thoſe TÀU, TOT Gentiles who, with Salluft, admired God as the firſt 79 dva meg and incomprehenſible Cauſe; and with Mercurius in chum,&c. ue" Stobaus (d ), declared him to be a Being abſtruſe to The drgnten the Mind, and impoſſible to the Tongue; ſuch Gen- Duranjeer&c. tiles, I fay, would have erred leſs, had they ſtopped d Stober Serm. 78. de Diis. p. there, and not gone about to explane the mode of his 466. @ido uel Eſſence and Operation, whereby they have fallen into PREMA MODEM many falſe Idea’s, and particularly into that of the de o durator. Soul of the World. But makers of Hypotheſes, eſpe- cially in Subjects of fuch extent, do commonly lole themſelves in their own Labyrinths. That Hypotheſis of the Soul of the World is frequent, at this day, 29 61 në amongſt the Philoſophers of India: And yet that Sect a Mandeſlo's of the Benians which is called Samarath (a), main- Travels into taineth the notion of a ſuperior God. They call him thie Indies, kt. Permifeer, and believe Him to be the firſt Cauſe which P created the World, and which governeth and preſerveth the Univerſe, with a ſovereign and unchangeable Power. be Change here but names, and the matter may be apply- sa ed to the Philoſophy of Plato, who believed in one niv God, though he idoliz'd his Yuxils' or Univerſal Soul, and . Chap. V: orned one True God. 59 and too many other Deities of inferiour rank. This in brief, was the ſtate of the Greeks, in re- lation to the knowledg of God. Like to it was that of the Romansg and of them alſo, whence the Greeks and Romans borrowed ſome valuable notions, together with much droſs, that is, the Egyptians. (a) Anda Allo of the they doubtleſs were beholding to Abraham, to Joſeph, Abul Farajine to Moſes, to the Jews, who both before and after the and Shareſi ani- Captivity came amongſt them. By ſuch means, and us in not. Pom by the ſtudy of Nature, the iéw and Jove of the Greeks and of the and Romans came nigh, as well in ſenſe, as in ſimili- Gaurs or anti- tude of Letters, to the Moſaic Jehovah. Numa Pom- ſee the Trav: pilius, whoſe Religion inclin'd the people to chuſe of Tavernier. L. him King after the death of Romulus, to the end that 4. c. 3. p.167. the Empire which was obtained by force, might be governed by Piety and Juſtice (b), as the Hiſtorian 6 L. Ann . Flo- telleth us it was in his Reign; Numa, I ſay, had ſtu- rasa bersama died in Egypt, and he brought ſome of its Religion Dion . Halicarne into Italy ſome Ages before Pythagoras (c) ſet foot . 2. Sed: 78. there. It was not pure Religion; for he introduced 188, &c. the worſhip of the immortal Gods, (d) and the fu- ..Dion. Hal, perſtition of Augury. He, in the worſhip of Veſta, a Flor. ibid. offered to them Univerſal Nature as the great Deity ; ille Sacra, com but cannot be thought to have been ignorant himſelf ceremonias, om- a Deity greater ſtill, having learned the ſame Ca- deorum immor- bala with Pythagoras, though according to the refer- faliun docuit : vednels (e) which he ſaw practiced by the Egyptian Augures, &c. Prieſts , he did not divulge the myſtery to the multi-See Dion. tude. And manifeſt it is, that the Religion of the Romans, was in leſs meaſure adulterated in the age of the un- from Numa to Tarquinius Priſcus, than after thoſe known myft. times. For he corrupted the Religion of Numa with the vanity of the Greeks and Ethruſcans: And he c- rected Images which Numa would not admit of. For Nime believed (Taith Dionyſius Halicarnaffeus ) that iq of .. P. 191, 192. of Nam. 194332 Hint 92 20.30 no God 60 How far the Gentiles Chap: V. to the Sun tom a See Lud.Viv, God could not be repreſented ( a ) by any Figure. in S.Aug, de And Tertulhan (b) ſpeaking of the debaſement of c. 31. p. 273. Religion under Tarquinius Prifcus, ſheweth Numa to b Tertul. Apolo have been more chaft in his Rites, and to have belie- pe 25m ni ved in a God to whom Ubiquiry belonged. Plutarch dor exili, e alfo reporteth it concerning that wife Prince, that he Deus ipfe nifa forbade the People to think that God had the form of cannot be Man or Beaſt. And the notion of Numa, though much ſtifled, was not quite deſtroyed by the multitude ss of Gods and Statues. There were thofe, in the days © Cšterode wat. of Cicero (c), who recounting many Deities held by Der It of the Philoſophy of Anaximander, profeſſed themſelves y fed nos deum, unable to underſtand any other than one eternal wift fempiter God. opp sely qui poſumus? This God was ſometimes owned under the name of Jupiter, though that name was ambiguouſly applicable, We may infer the eminency of the Deity, called by that name, from the Attributes given to him by ſober se i and Philoſophical men, when they argue about his Na- * Ap. Srobe ture. Such a one was Diotogenes the Pythagorean (0) who ſpeaketh of God in the ſingular number; faith of him, that he is a King whofe City is the World; calleth him by the name of Jupiter; and affirmeth that Jupi- Moter is the ſupreme of all Powers, a God of Excellence, Goodneſs, Power, Juſtice; diſpenſing benefits to the World, and in that fenſe, the Father of Gods and Men. OJ Sivan It is true that the Fathers, and many others do em d Callim. ap: ſteem generally, of the Grecian and Roman Jupiter 1. 3. P. 137 as of an Arch-Devil, and a Topical-god. And they --- Pån Téns, deride his worſhip, as the adoration of a man, who was born and buried in Crete; at leaſt born ſome- Apol. Se&. 25. p. 25. fed non where on earth, as Callimachus himſelf confefſeth Ce latin la Jupi- though he denies the honour to the Cretians; and is Cretam Serm. 46. de Regno. p. 3303 331, 33%. erig, cong.Cell See Tertul. am, &c con- Chap. V. owned one True God. P. 19. confident that, though he was born, he never dyed. Jupiter, faith Arnobius (a), hath Father, and Mother, a Artob . l. I. how can be then be a God? Tertullian alſo had no other thoughts of Jupiter than of an Idol: For thus he dif- courſeth (b). I know one (whom God forgive ) b Terenl. de L- dol. Sect. 213 who when another, in the quarrel managed betwixt them, uſed this imprecation, let Jupiter be angry with you, an- livered again; nay, let him be avenged on you. What could have an Heathen man done more, who believed Ju- piter to be a God? The Senate and People of Rome do in a late Inſcription in the Capitol, give notice (c), c Chytr. Mor. Roman. A.1568. that the place was once dedicated unto fove; but that P. 2 they had made it ſacred to the True God, to Jeſus Chriſt the Author of all good things. And this opini- on might well be entertained concerning Japiter, for many Reaſons: Firſt, becauſe the multitude, both in Greece, and Italy, did worſhip him in the quality of a Denon. The Poets of Greece fet him forth as a De- mon, though the Superior of them ; and (as we read in the firſt Iliad of Homer) as a Power not perfectly Omnipotent, but ſubject to be bound by the reſt of the Gods. And the Law of the Twelve Tables, be- fore-cited, repreſenteth him only as the Preſident of the College of the fempiternal Demons, or Dii Conſent- es (d). Nay, of Jove Plato himſelf faith (e), that d See the inian men eſteemned him the beſt and moſt juſt of the Gods, de sacrific.c.s. and one who held his father in Chains for his unnatu- p. 101.1.0.M. ral cruelty to his Children. Secondly, Becauſe the caterifq; Dis worſhip of Jupiter, in how high a notion ſoever he c Plato in Eu- was ſometimes taken, was not looked upon only by it thy. P. 5. Vol. ſelf, but as the principal worſhip in the Religion of 1, ----Pouico the Gentiles, giving denomination to the other parts tãi tár of it. For the worſhip of Jupiter was, in effect, an rapat, &cc acknowledgment of the whole Gentiliſm of Rome Pa- gan: And he that had adored Jupiter, would by that haye. 62 What Applications they made Chap. V. have been judged, to have been likewiſe a devout Servant of Juno and Venus, and the reſt of that Socie- ty of Grecian and Roman Idols. However, under this name, ſome of the wiſe Gentiles did mean the ſupreme Deity, diſtinct from their College of Demons : and I ſuppoſe Marcus Antoninus, that Philoſophical Prince, to have been one of them. He ſays, indeed, concern- ing the thundering Legion, That they prayed to a God a Marc. Antor: which himſelf knew, not (a): Not that he owned not ap. Fut: Mart. one ſupreme God, but that he underſtood him not in In fine Apolo 2: the ſubſiſtences of Father, Son, and Holy Ghoſt, in , iza' which quality the Chriſtians applyed themſelves to invour. him. Thirdly, Jupiter, when thought of under the notion of one higheſt God, whatſoever he was in fpe- culation, he was actually but an evil Demon. For the Perſons and things which he countenanced could never be approved of by the true and righteous God. Let it then be granted ( for why ſhould men oppoſe the evidence of plain words?) that ſome Gentiles en- tertained a notion of that God who is one and fun preme. P. 102. smeten tenertieren PART 4 . What Applications they made to one God. T His being confeſſed, There is a Second inquiry to be made, whether ſuch Gentiles worſhipped him, or made Religious Application to him? And it is evident they did ſo, both by Prayers, Sacrifices, and Images. Prayer to him was conſequent to their Apprehenſi- ons of him as the Allſufficient and bountiful Governour of Mankind. And ſometimes they prayed to him in the very form of (Kuere erengov, or] Lord have mercy, which the Ancient Chriſtians uſed. Ennius, in Cicero, (b) de- ) * Chap. V. to one God, 63 That we may CC fine. p. 279. And he prayeth that he may be beautiful within; and a (1) declareth that Jove was invoked by All. Heb cít.de nat. calleth him ( Sublime Candens ] not meaning the Sun, 1129, Adipice but the Power that cauſeth Lightning, and the Jove hec fublim-cana who, in Euripides (there alſo cited by Tully), is dones. Quem in owned as [ Summus divus ] the ſupreme God. Sin- Jovem. plicius, in the concluſion of his Notes on Epictetus (c), C Simplic.ir afeth this excellent form: I addreſs my ſelf humbly to p. 331. ins- Epitt. Enchir. thee, O Lord, thou Father and guide of our Reaſon, TEÚw se, 94- that we may be mindful of that nobility with which thon en ny haft adorn'd us: be purged from the puedv, &c. contagion of the body, and bruitiſh affections ; governing then us becometh us, and uſing them as Inſtruments . If Simplicius be ſaid to learn this under Chriſtianity, that cannot be objected againſt Socrates and Plato. Socrates prayeth (d), not only to the gods, but to the d Socr. ap. Pla- fupreme God, under the Title of Pan, in the firſt place. ton. Phædr. in ping Har that he may eſteem the wife-man only to be the man &c. truly wealthy: referring to the things before dif- courſed of in the Phædrus of Plato. The ſame Plato begins his ſecond Dialogue called Alcibiades (e) by d Plat. Alcih. this queſtion put to that Philoſopher, by Socrates, 2. p. 138. 2 who apprehended him to be in a deep contemplation) 'Aansßidden Whether he were going about to call on God? And thence edy occaſion is taken of ſaying many wiſe things, on that mereukb4e- Subject, in the ſequel of that Dialogue. And about And about G TOGEÓK, the middle of that Diſcourſe, he repeateth a very pru- dent form of Prayer uſed by a Poet (f ), who be- f p. 143. Zsa " ſeccheth his God to give him the things which were boring, Te , &c. "good for him, though he ſhould happen not to pray for them; and to keep from him ſuch things as were * hurtfal, though through error he ſhould make fup- plication for them. Again, in Timæus, Plato ob- ferveth ( 8 ) that thoſe who have any ſhare of under. g Plato in T1- ſtanding, when they undertake any thing, be it of meo, Vol. 3- ſmaller El &c. " P. 27. 64 What Applications they made Chap. V. vol. 2. p. 712. @s V- 131. MSÉmirand « ſmaller or of greater concernment, do always in- a Plato de Le- “ voke God. To ſuch Invocation he exhorteth (a) gibus. l. 4. at the conſtitution of any City or civil Body. And Oddy Anness he urgeth Prayer in ſo many places, that I have not Tùy tñs róne room for the repetition of them, in that compaſs to For Sacrifice That alſo the Gentiles offered to God. Plato joyneth both together in the concluſion BPlato in The of his Theages. There (b) Theages exhorteth to an 18.: Vol1 P. appealing of the Numen worſhipped by Socrates, by Prayer and Sacrifice ; and Demodocus and Socrates are conſenting to it. And Porphyry ſuppoſeth ſome Gen- tiles to have offered Sacrifice to the ſupreme God, whilft he taxeth them for offering to him Animals, as unmeet oblations, or indeed, any thing beſides a pure Mind. Martinius in the Fourth Book of his Hi- Mart . Hift . ſtory of China (c), thinketh that people to have Sin. 1.4. p. worſhipped the true ſupreme God under the name of Xangti : And he further obſerveth, that they of fered Prayers and Sacrifices to him, though they uſed no Images in his worſhip. For Images, The Gentiles uſed them in the worſhip of the one God, and not only whilſt they Religiouſly obſerved their Demons. Origen ſuppoſeth Statues of d Orig. contr. both kinds in uſe amongſt them, where he faith (d), cele 2.9. Pe that Thoſe Heathens expoſe themſelves to the deriſion of all men of ſound mind, who, after their Philoſophical diſputations [ Helesi; @sãy ] of God or gods, reſpeit Statues, and either pray to them, or endeavour, by the contemplation of them, as by conſpicuous ſigns, to raiſe their minds [ er tdu voćuevoy ] to the Intelligible Deity . In the mean time ( as he continueth his Diſcourſe) the meaneſt Chriſtian is effe&tually perſwaded that all the World is the Temple of God: And he prayeth to him, in all places, with cloſed eyes, but with the Lights of his mind Chap. V. What Application they made, &c. 65 Mind erected towards Heaven. This had been no re- futation of Celſus, if the Gentiles had not worſhipped the God that is every where, without Images, by Prayer and a pure intention. Origen, in the ſame Book (a), in anſwer to Celſus, who had denied Ima- a Orig. Come Cell. l. y. ges to be worſhipped as Gods, and affirmed them to be 376. Divine Statues only; replyeth in this manner. We cannot think theſe Images to be ſo much as Divine Sta- tues ; ſeeing we circumſcribe not the incorporeal and invi- fible God, with any figure. He ſuppoſeth the Heathen had done fo; elle he had in vain contended againſt their Statues by ſuch an Argument, fetched from the ſpirituality and ubiquity, not of Demons, but of the true and Sovereign God. To him it appeareth, that ſome Gentiles did apply themſelves in the three ways abovementioned, of Prayer, Sacrifice, and Image- worſhip. : 9. 3 PART 5. Whether they worſhipping one God, could be guilty of that ſin. N. OW that being proved, a third Queſtion comes to be reſolved; Whether the acknowledgment of one God by the Gentiles, and their Application to him, being granted, they are yet liable to the charge of Idolatry? In anſwer to this enquiry, I purpoſe to ſhew, that they are ſtill charged ; that they might be guilty not- withſtanding that conceſſion of owning one God; and that in divers reſpects, that guilt was actually contract- ed by them. They are charged with this high offence, by Tertullian, Clemens Alexandrinus, Minucius Felix, Origen againſt Celfus, S. Cyprian de vanitate Idolorum, Arnobius, Lactantius, Julius Firmicus Maternus, ånd K a long 66 Whether they, worſhipping one God, Chap. V. a long order of others : And to cite them in all the places which are pertinent to this matter, were to re- peat a great part of their works. The matter is ſo notorious, that I will illuſtrate it only by a ſingle in- ſtance. Let that inſtance be made in Julian the Apo- ſtate [if he were ever a Chriſtian, in whom the tarcs of Gentiliſm were fown fo very early by Libanius ; and appeared ripe ſo ſoon as ever the Glory of the Empire fhone upon him ]: This man hath been con- demned by the common conſent of the Chriſtian Church in being ſince his time, as a manifeſt and infa- mous Idolater, and a very Bigot in Heatheniſm; and yet he acknowledged one God, and him who is truly a Julian . ap. s.cyril. A the Lord of Lords . He declared this to be the opi- let. 1.4. ad nion of his Sect ( a ), That there was a common Pa- Init . , rent and King of Men. He worſhipped that Jupiter Fragm. p. 534. (b) who is the giver of all kinds of good; who is (c) the greateſt and moſt powerful Being. He worſhip- © Jul. ap. Cyr. Al. I. 10. cont. ped ( though not without the intermixture of a falle I ZHI. p. 354., Religion) the God of Abraham, Ifaac, and Jacob. He d Ap. Cyr. Al. ſays ſo much in Terms, in one place (d) and upan uc his Oath. He ſays the ſame elſewhere (e ) in effect, mes Dsds , as whilft he reports the pains he took ( though perfe&tly Tperovéywv* in vain ) to raiſe the Temple of Jeruſalem out of its pureopodcour, ruines, and thereby, as he pretended, to erect a Mo- *Isd'alo:s, ati nument to him, to whom it was facred. It is true, that Tor Osdy ?A- S. Cyril doth bring his ſincerity under queſtion (f), Begoniles and believes that, in his heart, he placed the God of Oddx, xidth kop. Abraham amongſt his Topical deities: Yet, for Jupiter e Jul. in Frag. Ithonetes (8) worſhipped by Julian, S. Cyril grant- Epift . p. 541. eth him to be eſteemed the Prince of the Gods. And f's. Cyr. I. 10. why he ſhould think that Julian believed not the God 2 14. contr. of Abraham to be the true Jehovah, I cannot readily Fal . p. 128. & conjecture; ſeeing that Emperor had peruſed the Old Tãr são v Teftament, which declares him to be the Creator and πατός τε και υπέρτατG. Go- Oper. 1.10. p. 354 Kai Tol ep. Chap. V. could be guilty of that Sin. 67 Governour of all things, and not meerly, as the Na- tions tranſplanted into Samaria, grofly imagined, The Ged of the Land (a). If now Julian and ſome other à 2 Kings 192 Heathens entertained ſo worthy a notion of God, 26, at, they are, fo far, acquitted of that fort of Idolatry which eſtabliſheth the Polytheiſm of ſome or many coequal Gods, but ſtill they might be, in other re- gards, the worſhippers of Idols. That they might be ſo, appeareth from the definiti- on of Idolatry, in which it is ſhewed that the giving away the honour of God to another Object is a de- gree of that crime, though it be not his fupreme ho- nour: Though we do not take the Crown of income municable honour from him, and, by our fancy, place it on a creature. It appeareth again from the practice of the Jews, who are by God himſelf accuſed of Ido- latry, even when they in part owned and worſhipped him, and before they were wholly led into captivity, and mingled again among the Heathen. They had not forgotten, perfectly, the God of Iſrael in whoſe Law they read; though like Adulterefles, they ſhared their Love with Idols. Wherefore God Almighty required Hofea , not ( as I think ) in a literal fenſe, but ac- cording to the way of a Prophetical Scene, to take unto him an Adulterels (b ); thereby perſonating the b Hoſca 3.1, ftate betwixt himſelf and the Children of Iſrael, who, 2, 3. though they had not rejected him as their true and ſu- preme Husband, yet they had gone a whoring after the inventions of the Gentiles, and provoked God to give them a Bill of Divorce.inc on line Whilſt I am here affirming, that a people who own one God, may yet commic Idolatry,I mean not this meerly of ſuch who judge him to be, Nature, the Sun, or the Soul of the World, all which are finite or imaginary Objects, and by conſequence, Idols, as often as they K 2 68 of their Idolatry in worſhipping Chap. V. are adored in the place of God: But I ſpeak even of the Gentiles who own’d one true incomprehenſible * Callicr. ap. Creator; who with Callicratidas the Pythagorean (a), Stob. Serm. 83; acknowledged (av špusoy ] one beſt Being, [ ápxed Tax eitia tãy čaws] and ſuch as was the Beginning and Cauſe of all things. Some of theſe did actually commit Ido- latry, in their worſhip of the Statues of God, of Demons, and of the Images of thoſe ſubordinate Dei-, ties. P. 486. 20. PART 6. Of their Idolatry in worſhipping the Statues of God. F" Firſt, their Idolatry conſiſted in the worſhip of the Statues of God. This, indeed, was not the higheſt degree of that falfe Religion, for they did not, hereby, dethrone God, and give to the creature his moſt eſſential perfections, but yet they gave away ſuch honour as he had not beſtowed who was the pro- prietor of it. They did ſo, in the worſhip, both of the natural, and of the artificial Statues of God. The Principal natural Statue was the Sun. For fome of the Philoſophical Gentiles made not the Sun it felf the ultimate Object of their worſhip, but they adored 1 God in it. Henee they gave to Vulcan [ that is, the Sun] the Name, fometimes of God, and ſometimes of bi Plutarch. di Fire, as Plutarch (c) inſtructeth us out of Archito- 23. chus. And Maximus Tyrius, being one of more re- fined Reaſon than the generality of the Heathens , would not confeſs that the Sun and the Fire were any c Max. Tyr: further deified, than as they were (c) dyguata, the Diſſert. 38. utrum diis fint Statues or Images of God. The ſame excellent Philo- dicande ftatuæ. fopher upbraideth the Perſians for neglecting the Sta- tues of the fruitful Earth, and the glorious Sun, and the great path of Commerce, the Sea, and chuſing the . P. 371. : Chap. V. the Statues of God. 69 : .............. the devouring Fire as their Statue and their God. In which words, he ſuppoſeth the preſence of a Deity in the Fire, and the Fire to be only the Statue or Image of it, according to the Perſian Theology. Now, in Two things, conſiſted the Idolatry of the Heathens, whilſt they worſhipped the natural Statues of God. Firſt, They were Idolatrous in ſetting up thoſe na- tural Statues, as the places of Gods peculiar Reſidence. And this the Fathers objected to the Heathens; ſhew- ing them, that Chriſtianity repreſented God, as one that filled the World, and not as one that dwelt like a Star ) in ſome cæleſtial Sphear; and taught them in their Prayers to him, to exalt their thoughts above all material Heavens: Or (as Origen (a) is a orię. contra pleaſed to expreſs it ) above even ſupercæleſtial Places. 352. meisies And for this they had Reaſon: For the Gentiles, by boomer worſhipping creatures as Gods Statues, gave Gods re- here to get the lative honour to them, whilſt he owned them only as expé, d'eis his workmanſhip, and not as his eſpecial Images or Tòr irrefv10** Temples. Thereby, likewiſe, they bred in their minds &c. γενόμενο, a dilhonourable Idea of God, as of one who, like a finite Being, dwelt in certain places. This was not the notion of him amongſt all , but the worſhip of him by natural Statues made all of them prone to it. Plato himſelf was under the Temptation. He was not come to any determinate belief concerning the Stars, whether they were Gods, or only the Statues of them. But, upon ſuppoſition that they were. Statues (the part to which he is moſt inclined ) he would have them honoured beyond all Statues on earth, as being made ſuch by a Divine Power (b). b Plato in Epi- Secondly, The Gentiles were guilty of Idolatrous nom. fi 973, Worſhip, in making ſome , at leaſt, of the natural Statues of God, voluntary and authoritative diſpoſers of 984. . 70 of their Idolatry in worſhipping Chap.V. 1 Idol. l. 1. C. I. P. 3 of good and evil, under God, in the World; though not as the ſupreme diſpenſers of them. They believed the Stars to be animated (at leaſt with an aſſiſtant a Maimon. de form 7 and as Maimonides reporteth of them ( a ), created by God for the Government of the World. And we receive it upon the valuable Authority of b L. 2. C. 2: Garcilaſo de la Vega (6) that the Inca's of Peru adored the Sun as the viſible Deity, by which the greater God, who was inviſible, ruled this World. A due conſideration of this Fancy amongſt the Gen- tiles, leadeth us to the true Original of Aſtrology, and to a right account of Taliſmanick Statues. The pre- ſent Aſtrology pretendeth to be Natural and Philofo- phical, and to ſolve the effects it foretelleth (if any it doth, beſides thoſe of Light and Shadow, as in Eclip ſes ) by the mechanical influence of the Stars, which variouſly combine their light and heat. But the E- syptian, Chaldean, and Grecian Aſtrology was, in truth, an Aſtrological Magick, built upon the hypo- theſis of their Demons, and the Heavens which they governed. And they did not think that the Stars wrought a mighty effect, or impregnated a Taliſman, by their proper virtue, but as they were either Intel- ligences themſelves, or divinely influenced and di- rected by the Demons which reſided in them, and governed part of this lower World. The Chaldeans © Diod. Sic.Bi-(c) aſſigned Twelve Gods as Governours of the year, blue Hift. 1.2. and apportioned to each of them one ſign in the Zo- C. 30. p. 113. diack. To theſe they added Thirty Auxiliary Gods in Thirty Stars, of which Fifteen were to have inſpection on things below the earth; and Fifteen above it. And d 4p. Gaſſen- in the Kalendar of Julius Cæfar (d), each God had a dum, in volo S. Month under him, and in it, the ſeveral Conſtellations. & in Marm. Juno governed January, Neptune February, Minerva Farneſ. ap: March , Venus April, Apollo May, Mercury June, Ju- Stew. Elect. p. piter . 120. Chap. V. the Statues of God. : piter Quintilis or July, Ceres Sextilis or Angult, Vul- can September , Mars October, Diana November, Vefta Decomber. At this day the Aſtrological Judgments refer to demonology. Thus Saturn the ſevere Demon, is made to ſignifie malicious perſons ; Mars the Bloody Demon, furious, proud, valiant perſons; and by their Influence to diſpoſe to fuch Qualities. The Horoſcope or Aſcendant is made the principal of all Angles, or if not that, then the Culmen Cæli by Ptolomy; and this judgment at firſt came from the worſhip of the Sun the principal Demon, and moſt reverenced in thofe Angles. In this worſhip then, although ſubordinate, The Gentiles placed Gods Authority where God himſelf had not done it; and their Hopes, and Fears, and Thanks, reſpected certain Creatures, when they were due to God, diſpenſing good and evil immediately by himſelf; or if by them, doing it by them as miniſte- rial Cauſes, not as ſharers in his Government. But of this, more, when I come to conſider their worſhip of Demons; of which, the Stars themſelves were one fort to ſome of them, whilſt they aſcribed to them as high degree of perception and voluntary Power. They thought of the Sun as of an Archangel; though the Diſciples of the Philolaick Syſteme called it only the Organ of God (a), and the Divine Harp, by rea- a Doryldes, apo fon of the Harmony which its motion gave to the reſt Cenfor. de die of the cæleftial Bodies. nat. C:13.P.57. Again, they erred in their worſhip, about the arti- ficial and inſtituted Statues of God. Some of theſe Statues were, poſſibly, at firſt, no more than monumental Pillars, and Records of ſome extraordinary work of God, diſcerned to be the effect of his fuger, by proof of fufficient Reaſon: And ſo fir the Gentiles were commendable, as well as Jacob of ; 72 of their Idolatry in worſbipping Chap. V. .. of the Line of Abraham. For it is the nature of true and grateful devotion, to retain, and propagate the memory of Gods Acts, which by the eminent Wiſdom, Mercy, Power and Juſtice of them, are proper for the exciting of admiration. But I cannot go on in praiſing them, for the honour they gave to other kinds of Statues, which their fancy erected to the ſupreme God. Of theſe, ſome had leſs Art beſtowed on them, be- ing great pieces of Wood or Stone, without any Ima- gery of Man or Beaſt, of Fiſh or Fowl, carved or painted on them. Some regular figure they ſometimes had, as that of an Egg which they ſuppoſed in many things, and particularly in its figure, to reſemble the a "Egunrouver World (a). Such Statues they worſhipped two ways, Ne ne cdo mou firſt, as the Symbols of Gods eſpecial preſence: Second- phyr. de Thebai- ly, as pledges of his favour to them, whereſoever he Celum efl Teſta; was, ſo long as they held them in poſſeſſion; and both item Vitellum, ways they egregiouſly offended." They offended by Terra; inter illa worſhipping ſuch Statues as the Symbols of Gods eſpe- in finum clufus cial preſence. For thereby they aſcribed the relative geri, in quo ca. honour, due to Gods true Shechinah, to an Object for. Varro. See which was exalted to that Divine condition, not by Voll. de Theol. Gentil. I. s.c. his approbation, but by their fancy. And if their fancy was moved to this falſe eſtimation, by ſome a- mazing effects wrought before them, upon the per- formance of their Religious Rites,they were Idolatrous in that caſe,by honouring the power of Demons as Gods Omnipotence. For God permitted evil Spirits to ſe- duce thoſe Pagans, by ſtrange and uncommon opera- tions, wrought at their Statues, who refuſed to live in the uſe of their Reaſon. Further, They tranſgreſſed in uſing Statues as the pledges to aſſure them of Gods favour, ſo long as they remained with them. Such were the Ancilia, and the Palladium introduced by Numa, S. P. 17. Chap. V: 72 the Statues of God. a L. A. Flor. 2. P. 9. nullum For make a Mercury, or an Numa, amongſt the Romans. He did not celebrate them as Statues in which God dwelt, but as ſecret pledges of Empire (a). And this conceit, alſo, be- gat Idolatry amongſt them; for they gave that ho- 1. 1. c. 2. de nourable truſt due to God and his Shechinah, and the zile Ancilia; pledges of his favour, to things deviſed by politick atq; Palladiuma men, and ſuch as God neither formed, nor ſent, nór fecreta quedan ImperiiPignora, appointed as Inſtruments of defence amongſt any peo- &c. ple. Other Statues they uſed as Images and repreſenta- tions of the ſupreme God. This practice Macrobius doth not deny, but he denieth it to be Antient (b). b Macr. in ſome And it is plain, by his context, that he referreth to Plato, and to the Platonick notions which exalted ejus ( h. e. God above all the parts of Nature. And for Plato, it Simmi dei ) fe was agreeable to his principles, to abſtain from all quod cum Dů repreſentations of God, whom he believed to be in- aliis conftituen comprehenſible . Viret us faith of him, (c) that ſeeking Antiquitas . after ſome matter fit for the Image of God, he could c Viret. de On find none proper for that Divine purpoſe. But he here rig. vet. er no- committeth a double miſtake : For in the place which c.9. p. 84. he meaneth, Plato ſpeaketh not of any matter for the Image of God, but for the Statues of the Gods; and at laſt he pitcheth upon certain materials for that uſe. The Philoſopher ( 8 ) thought Gold and Silver unfit, d Plate de Lee becauſe they were invidious things, and Braſs and Iron, gibis. l. 12. becauſe they were inſtruments of War; and Ivory, be- cauſe it was the Tooth of an Elephant, dead already, or obnoxious to death. But at laſt he concludeth (from what reaſon I know not), that an entire Tree or Stone (For the Europeans were not ſo coſtly and pompous in their Images Ce) till the Conqueſt of Aſia, the Foun- p. 870. lig tain of Luxuries.] But though Platoniſts contented hea, &c. deor. themelves with inward Ideas, yet all the Gentile mule viitamini L World Alam, P. 955, 956. e Plin, nar. 74 of their Idolatry in worſhipping Chap. V. World did not ; but divers of them made and wor ſhipped external repreſentations of God the Creator. So did the Egyptians who repreſented their ſupreme Cneph, though diverfly; as appears from the deſcrip- a Porphyr. ap. tion of him in Porphyry (a), and his Image in Car- Eufeb. de Prepo tari (b). So did the Greeks ; Porphyry himſelf con- Evang. I 3. C. feffing that they worſhipped God in the Image of a Td Amurre man, but making an excuſe which Statuaries and Wor- Aylarede hippers ſeldom thought of. By God he means the fu- #Hoay opeux preme Deity, and not ſome one only of the Divine €14, 90 Powers; for he mentions [ ziy Osdir c) as well as 7 bcartari Imaz @ef tas d'urdiysens ] God himſelf, and not only Divine Par. I. p. 81. Virtues, in offering his reaſon for their worſhip by creatore degli Images. He, there, alloweth the Deity to be inviſible, Egittis, &c and he yet thinks him well repreſented in the form of c Parpb. ap. a Man ; not becauſe he is like him in external ſhape, Euf. de præp. Kvang. I. 3. c but [ort nogendy Td Señor, ] becauſe that which is Divine 7. p. 97, 98 is Rational. is Rational. That was not the common Cauſe , but an inclination to a ſenſible Object, and an apprehen- fion of humane Figure as that which was moſt excel- lent, and which belongeth to a King and Governour; under which notion, in the groſſer Idea of it, their reverence of earthly Potentates had pictured God in d Orig. Contr, their heads. When Origen objected to Celfus (d) CILA 1. 7. P.the vanity of worſhipping the inviſible God in the vi- 376. ſible form of man, Celſus neither denieth the matter of fact, nor apologizeth after the manner of Porphyry, but retorteth the objection on the Chriſtians, who profeſſed that man was made after the Image of God. e Celſap.Orig: And Origen obſerveth, that Celſus did not underſtand ibid. oncly ipas négery how to diſtinguiſh, here, betwixt being the Image of 1 TL 8 ees God, and being made after it : And, that, he ignorant- « Tongs Toy άνθρωπος ly cited the Chriſtians, as faying, “ That God made idlar bix va Man his Image, and an appearance like himſelf (e ). * ANG - And, at this day, Pagans, when they entertain a Phan- MOLOY sau . taſm : 67. Chap.V. the Statnes of God 25 talm of God, they are, moſt commonly, Anthropa- morpkites. A very late and principal Actor, in the ruine of the Town of Sacoe in New-England, was an Enthuſiaſtick Indian called Squango ( a ), who, fome a F. Mather in years before, pretended that God appeared to him in Hift . of the the forth of a tall Man in Black Clothes. Now the War in New. England with Gentiles worſhipping ſuch Ideas or external Images, as the Indbars. forms of God, do miſplace his Honour, by paying p. 13. their relative veneration to Objects which were not like him, but infinitely unworthy of him. They turned the Glory of Gods Eſſence into vile and deſpi- cable fimilitudes. A worſe ſort of Idolatry ſtill ( if worſe can be ) were thoſe Gentiles guilty of, who, by Images ( ſuch as thoſe of Baal and Pan) adored Nature, or the Sun, as the ſupreme God. The very Prototypes Prototypes , here, were Idols. So that, in this kind of worſhip, both the ultimate and intermediate, the direct and the relative Honour of God, was devolved on the crea- ture .: PART 7 Of the Idolatry of the Gentiles in their worſhip of De- mons. A Second branch of the Idolatry of the Gentiles, even of their Philoſophers, and men of deep diſputation, was the worſhip of Demons. In this worſhip they were Idolatrous four ways. Firſt, By worſhipping Demons as Powers which, under God, had a conſiderable ſhare of the Govern- ment of the World, by Commiſſion from him. Secondly, By worſhipping Demons which were De- vils, or wicked and accurſed Spirits. Thirdly, By worſhipping the Images of ſuch Demons. Fourth- ... of their Idolairy in Chap.V. (f), (), Fourthly, By their immoderate officiouſneſs towards theſe inferior Deities, which kft them little leiſure for attendance on the ſupreme God. Firſt, The Gentiles committed Idolatry by wor- ſhipping Demons, as Powers which, with ſubordina- tion to God, did, by his allowance, manage a great part of the Government of the World. They did not deny the ſupremacy of God, but they imagined that he ruled not the World by his immediate Providence, but by ſeveral Orders of Demons and Heroes, as his Subſtitutes and Lieutenants. Such as theſe were the Twelve Angels or Preſidents, which the Egyptians be- a Kirch. Oed. lieved (a ) to govern, by Ternaries, the four Quar- Synt. l. C. 5. ters of the World. In the Flaminian Obelisk (b) b Ap. Kirch. the ſupreme Momphta, or ſupramundane Oſiris, is re- Ibid . Synt. 3. preſented, as ruling the Twelve parts of the World, p. by Twelve Solar Demons in the form of Twelve Hawks (that is, of Eagles, for of that kind were the ſacred Accipitres of that Country ). There, as like- wiſe in Greece and Italy, ſeveral inferiour Deities were appointed over ſeveral places, perſons and things. He that is not otherwiſe furniſhed, may read in Kir. c Id. ibid.Tom. cher, of the Genius of Fire (c), Air (d), Water (e), d p. 279. the Sun and Moon ( i ), of Heat and Moiſture (k) fp. 281. and of Fourty eight Aſteriſms as the ſtations of Fourty p. 292. cight Deities (1). Pythagoras and Plato themſelves, 1 P. 295. (m) were, in this point, Authors of egregious Ido- p. 300. latry. Pythagoras, invented, or rather learned, from ms. Aug. de Egyptians, Chaldeans, Thracians, Perſians, his two De- 12. Quod mons or Principles; the one good, the Parent of Uni- etiam Platonici, ty, Reſt, Equality, Splendor; the other evil, the licet de no vecauſe of Diviſion, Motion, Inequality, Darkneſs; for multis ſuch were the Terms which his School uſed in repre- tamen Diisfefenting their nature. And theſe became Objects of much 3. p. 277. & p. 210. 8 P. 282, Deo : Chap. V. their worſhip of Demons. Animå. c. 23 much hope and fear, which ought to have been moved, not by mens devices, but by conſiderations taken from the Almighty Power, Juſtice and Goodneſs of God who is one. Plato feemeth to have aſcribed much both of the frame and of the government of the World to the Genii next to God: By Principles whom he eſteem med highly divine, but not by ſuch as he judged three Subſiſtences of the ſame ſupreme numerical Subſtance. If that had been his Creed (as ſome would have it, who can find in him the myſteries of the Athanaſian Articles), the earlieſt Hereticks, who denied the co- equal Divinity of the Son of God, and therefore be- lieved in another kind of Logos, had never come in ſuch numbers out of his ſchool; the place from whence the Fathers fetch them. (a) With them agreeth Peta- a Tertull." de vius that learned Jeſuit, and in this Argument as lear- p. 280. Doleo ned as in any other. He faith it is moſt evident con- bona fide Plas cerning Arius (b),that he was a very genuine Platoniſt. hæreticorum Plato's principal Idea or Logos, was diſtinct in num- condimentari- ber and nature from his ſupreme Caufe, or God. And um factum, thoſe who follow the Faith of the Nicene Fathers, rea- Trin. 1. 1. c.8. ſon not with conſiſtence, whilft they ſuppoſe this Idea Se&. 2.- to be the ſecond Perſon, and yet find in Plato, ſuch diſtinctneſs of Being, and (which to me ſeems very re- markable) a plain denial of his Generation. It is true, c Porphyr: ap. that Plato, cíted by Porphyry (c), does call the ſecond s. Cyr. contr. Principle, smulegg du xázov, the Word which is the Work- Full.a. p.32. man και μετ' εκείνον πρώτην δύναμιν, the firit Power after the ſupreme God; gváciou vòn, the genuine or only Son of God; vasegy abyou, the Intellectual Word. And yet he ſays of the fame Power, which he calls, všv drevow, and všv cirstlyóntov, an eternal and imperceptible Mind, that it is (d) avroyévrnzör sỹ đUtomátup; unbegotten, and Pa- d Id . ib . p.3r. rent to it felf: He likewiſe calls it 1899 fautdy việe- D. E. in 1. 4. sőta, a Mind ſubſiſting by it ſelf. And St. Cyril, who citeth tonem omnium * ] Marlene fautdy vợe" Philoſ. Hift. 38 7:34. B. c. by Of their Idolatry in Chap. V. citeth Plato out of Porphyry, and is willing to make 1 the Platonick Triad the ſame in effect with the Chri- (a) cyril , thid. ſtian Trinity (a), confefſeth the third Principle, which ſhould anſwer to the Holy Ghoſt, to be no other thanı the Soul of the World, which all Platoniſts under- ſtand to be a diſtinct ſubſtance from the firſt Cauſe. Nay, Porphyry himſelf, in the place which St. Cyril would ſerve his purpoſe on, calleth Plato's three Principles, (5) Porph. ib. I [Tpois diss, (b)] not three Hypoſtaſes but three Gods 1:34. C.D. (C) Plato in Of his other Idea's I have little to ſay, I mean of thoſe Parmen . P.141. properly ſo called before the formation of the World. TI viv; od iv, Parmenides is a Book, either ſo muddy, or ſo pro- 4 74 7ézore, foundly deep, that I cannot ſee to the bottom of it. Td szineto. Therein he diſcourſeth of theſe matters with infinite και Deur Sorei ſubtlety, or rather perplexity of notion. One would onakver a imagin a man of his wit not ſo abſurd as to think TG ; xul peel them eternal Subſtances, and models quite ſeparated To from the mind of God, but rather divine thoughts con- *T60- es géyoyev, cerning the faſhion of the World which he decreed to &c. Et ap.Cyr. make. Yet Ammonius the Scholar of Proclus aſcribeth 1. I.cont. Fule to him that opinion, and followeth him in it: though pas dzirntos, herein Ariſtotle deſerted his Maſter, and not without reaſon. And he ſure, knew his meaning, and had a Key to his Myſteries. Other Idea's there were which Plato owned, and they were ſuch as are more intelli- gible, and more proper for me to ſpeak of in this Ar- gument; they being Angels or Dæmons. The uncer- (d) Anon, de tain Greek Author (d) of the Life of Pythagoras,joined Vita Pythag. P. 213 to that of Porphyry, diſcourſing of the World as con- fiſting of twelve diſtinct Orbs, placeth in the firſt ferior Deities, which from Plato he calleth Idea's, and from Ariſtotle, Intellectual Gods. He means the Intelli- gences of that Philoſopher, though he made them to be but ſeven according to the number of the Planets which aa. &Co Chap. V. 79 their worſhip of Demons. (a) which he fet them to move. Of Plato Tertullian faith, That he held certain inviſible, incorporeal, ſuper- (a) Tertull.de mundial, divine, eternal, ſubſtances to which he gave p. 276. “the name of Idea's, as the cauſes of viſible things. For his Archetypal Idea, it is manifeſt to the Reader of his Works, and particularly of his Timaus, that he i ſuppoſed him to be a Being as ſubſiſtent by it ſelf as Matter, and diſtinct from the ſupreme Divinity. He ſpeaks of it as a Thing, Being, or Perfon, not as a meer pattern of Things ; and his (maelderype] or Plat- form, is held by him to be but the [eixaty] or Image of his principal Idea (b). The next Power to his [Téges do] (b) See Sera or God the pure and unmixed Good, was [vos] or In- Timai Platon. tellect, or [zd dv] Exiſtence compounded of Intellect pag. 6. and Unity,and diſtinct in ſubſtance from the firſt Cauſe according to Plato; though [185] was the firſt accor- ding to Anaxagoras (called võs himſelf for this his Dog- ma) whom Plato outſhot by one Principle. The third Platonick Power was diſtinct from both the former,and it was [fuxa or] the Soul of the World. Nous, Pſyche; Logos, and the like Myſtical terms, were but the names of certain eminent Demons placed by his Fancy at the right hand of God, and uſed in the works of Creation and Providence as Authorative Agents, and not as meer Inſtruments of the firſt Cauſe. They were therefore ſet up and reverenced with prejudice to the honour of the true God, who is the only Creator and Preferver of all things. By Creation the Platoniſts meant only the diſpoſal of the Chaos into order: for their Philoſophy ſuppoſed Matter (c) to have been as (c) See Salluſ. Coeternal with God, as Light is coeval with the Sun. l By Plato God is called [ TOINTÈS Dj nutig rõ öxx] the Ma- p: 15. ker and Father of All that is (d). But he means not in Arg. Timai, (d) See Serran. this of Him as of the immediate Cauſe, but as the Cauſe p. s. of the higher Principles, Cauſes, or Powers, which, with de Diis Mundo. c. 7. 80 Of their Idolatry in Chap.v. Diis do Mundo. co with ſubordination to him, produced in order ſuch as are inferior to themſelves. Salluſt the Platoniſt openly confeffethit and out of him I will tranſcribe the ſenſe of part of a Chapter, concerning the modelling and governing of the viſible World, by the power of De- mons. He had in his firſt Chapter concerning the Gods and the World, diſcourſed about God, or the firſt Cauſe of all things. A while after in his ſixth Chapter, 3) Salluft. de (a) [which according to its Title treateth of the Cof- c.6. p. 13,14. mical and Encoſmical, or of the Celeſtial and Worldly Gods;] he thus purſueth his Divine Subject. “Of the Gods, ſome are Worldly, and others Heavenly. I call thoſe Worldly who make the World. For the Hea- venly, ſome of them make the ſubſtances of the gods, [or Inferior Demons], ſome, the Mind; ſome, the (b) šrius,võry « Souls (6). Wherefore, of theſe there are three Or- Vuxes. ders, and they may eaſily be found in the diſcourſes which are made of them. For the Worldly gods, ſome make the World (or viſible frame of things]; fome « animate it ; ſome adjuſt the parts of it; and ſome govern or preſerve it ſo compoſed. Here then being “ four things, and each of them conſiſting of firſt, mid- (6 dle and extreme ; it is neceſſary that they who dif- poſe them, be twelve in number. They therefore that make the World are Jupiter, Neptune, and Vul- can. They who animate it, are Juno, Ceres, Diana, “They who adjuſt the parts of it, are Apollo, Venus, 5 and Mercury. They who preſerve it, are Veſta, Pallas, " and Mars.—Theſe firſt poſſeſſing the World before others, (That is the Pagan Heroes;] we may imagin the others in them: To wit, Bacchus in Jupiter ; Æſculapius in Apollo į the Graces in Venus. We may « alſo contemplate their - [ ſeveral | Spheres: The “ Earth, the Orb of Veſta; the Water, that of Nep- tune; the Air,that of funo; the Fire, that of Vulcan. Plato CC V their worſhip of Demons. 80 Plato himſelf , as he is cited by St. Cyril , (a) ſuppoſeth a Plato ap. S. God to have quitted, as it were, the care of things on Julian. 1.2. Earth, and to have committed it to the Inferior gods p. 61. for their diverſion (6). It is true, that in four places b "A Jupila Plato aſſerteth a divine Providence, taking care of the Osvis modely. things on Earth, even of the leaſt things; and doing twv étéegis. it with eaſe, and being no way prevented by ſloth. He doth this in his Tenth Book of Laws (c); in his Poli- c Plato de Leg. ticus (d); in his Epinomis (e); and in his Phedo (f); p. 899, 900, But where he aſſerteth this, he ſpeaketh it as much of 901, 902,903. the gods, as of God. And in his Phado, after Cebes 904 d id.p. 273. had affirmed in the fingular of God, that he conſulted e ld. p. 988. better for man, than man could for himſelf, and was fid. in Phæd. Vol.1.p.62,63 an excellent Lord; Simmias and Socrates in ſome fort conſenting to him, turn his ſentence into the plural of Lords and Gods (8). Julian likewiſe, though he pro- & Id. ibid. pl feffed the belief of one true God, yet he aſſigned ſe-»Ápxovres veral Countries and Cities to the care of ſeveral Tute- dydids, wie lar Gods (h). So we find in Porphyry (i) certain was como com [useinoi @sol, or] Gods that were conceived to be Pre- h Jul. ap. s. ſidents of Regions ; ſuch amongſt whom the Govern- cyr. 1:4. p. Isa ment of the lower World was parted. The Gentiles in- Abſtin.l. 1. fe&t. deed did not wholly exclude the ſupreme God, but 57. p. 49. they worſhipped him as one who had not reſerved un- to himſelf the greateſt ſhare of the Government. Hence is it that we find among their ancient Inſcriptions, many ſuch as that remembred by Elmenhorſtius (k); k Elm. in Not. TO JUPITER THE BEST AND GREATEST in Armob, lot: [Deity), AND TO THE GENIUS (or Demon] OF Max. e Genie THE PLACE. They thought of the ſupreme Jove, but they ſeldom thought of him without his Deputy. Such Philoſophy concerning the Lieutenancy of De- mons is at this day on foot in China. There the Litte- 1 Alv. Simeda rati,or thoſe of the Sect of Confuſio, own one God (1); in Hift. Sing and though they do not reverence him with any ſo- p.86, 87. M lemn Loci. of their Idolatry in Chap. V: Miwanagan sanoopy pas...................... P. SS. . co lemn worſhip, (as if he were a kind of unconcerned, Epicurean Deity), yet they have Temples for Tutelar Spirits. The Sect of the Tauſi alfo acknowledg one Great God, and other leffer Ones, that is, Vicege- rent Demons. The ſame fort of Philofophy is found amongſt the Benjans, in the Eaſtern India. The Sect of them called Samarath, though it believeth one firſt a Mandefte's Cauſe (a), which created the World, yet it affigneth Travels, ls. to him Three Subſtitutes, Brama, Buffiuna, and Mais . « Brama (they fay) hath the diſpoſal of Souls, which " he ſends into ſuch Bodies as Permiſeer [or the fu. preme God,] “appointeth for them; whether they To be the Bodies of Men or Beaſts. Buffiuna teacheth ( the World the Laws of its God : He hath alſo the overſight of Proviſions for common life, and advan- se ceth the growth of Wheat, Herbs and Pulſe, after “ Brama hath indu'd each of them with Souls.Mais ex- " erciſeth its power over the dead. This looks to me like a Tale of Jupiter, Ceres and Pluto. This Opinion of the Gentiles, which aſcribeth ſo much of the Government of this world to Demons, as Gods Commiſſioners in certain Precincts, and as Super- intendents over Places, Perfons, and Things, is mani- feſtly contrary to the tenor of the Scriptures. They le see ifai. 41. teach,(b) That God is the great diſpoſer of Good and 22, 23. C. 43. Evil in all Cities and Places, and that his Providence C.45: 5, 6,7 extendeth to the fall of a little Sparrow, and of a leffer thing than that, an hair of our head. That ſheweth us how he uſed great importunity for the turning of Jew and Gentile from the confidence which 45. Cyr . Alex. they placed in their Genii. This, ſaith St. Cyril (C), he cont. Jul. l.4. would never have attempted, if they had been Preſi- dents of his own appointment. His Angels miniſter before him, but they do not properly govern under him,much leſs is that true of Superexiſting Souls. The Angels 11, 12, 13 P: 124 Chap.V. their worſhip of Demons: 83 2 Angels of Græcia and Perſia were ſuch Spirits, as did L at that time ſerve his will in that particular employ- ment. But we have no cogent reaſon (I think) to perſwade us, that they always enjoyed a fetled Lieu- tenancy over thoſe Countries. It was a raſh concluſi- on which Vatablus drew from thoſe Viſions of Daniel (a), to wit, that to every Nation was aſſigned an An- Vatabl. in gel as Preſident over it. The whole of that Diſcourſe fingula Regio- in Daniel is a Viſion, and a repreſentation of Heaven- nes habent Pre- fides fingulos. ly things in a Scene upon Earth. And they who make particular application of every circumſtance, without due attention to the main deſign of it, forget that they confound Earthly and Heavenly things, and lay their groſs abſurdities of fancy at the door of the Spi- rit of God. Such (for inſtance fake) would they be a who ſhould think from this Viſion, that an Angel tou- cheth Gods Prophets with an hand at what time he in- ſpireth them, becauſe Daniel (b) ſo expreſſeth him- b Dan. 10.109 ſelf as if it were ſo done to him; or who ſhould be- lieve that a good Angel ordained by God to comfort his Prophet, could be detained by an evil one for one and twenty days (c), until he prevailed againſt him by Verl. 13i the aſſiſtance of Michael; becauſe the Scripture uſeth ſuch an humane Image, and alludeth to the impedi- ments of good men on earth, who are not equal in power and motion to the miniſtring Angels, who are quick and vigorous as Spirits or Winds, and flames of Fire.top On ſuch quickneſs and vigor God ferveth his Pur- poſes by the temporary Miniſtry of Angels; but by Himſelf ſtill, and not by them as ſetled Delegates, He diſpenſeth favours and ſeverities. Accordingly God in- viting the Jews to renounce their Genii, or inferior Deities and Patrons, (and not meerly to turn from evil Angels, and to apply themſelves to good ones ;] M 2 pro- 84 * of their Idolatry in Chap.V. promiſeth by himſelf to ſend them that worldly plen- ty which they had facrilegioully aſcribed to their İdols. And St. Paul endeavouring to draw the Lycaonians * A&. 14.15, from their Vanities, remindeth them (a) of the teſti- 16, 17. mony which God had given them, of his Providence in fending them fruitful ſeaſons. This if it had been done by Commiſſioned Demons, the Gentiles might have abated the force of the Apoſtles argument, which proveth the care of the ſupreme God by the ſupplies of outward bleſſings. The fame St. Paul hath left us another Text, moft worthy of our attention, in which he confirmeth the Government and the Providence of the ſupreme God; rejecteth the Lieutenancy of De- mons, and owneth Chriſt alone as the Subſtitute of ba Cor. 8.9. the Father. Though there be, faid he (b), ſuch as are called Gods; though there be many [Superior, and many Inferior Baalim]Gods or Lords ; yet to us [Chriſtians] 2013 Othere is but one God, and one Lord Jeſus Chriſt. He . is the true God, and Eternal life: He is Gods Vice- gerent, who is the Everlaſting mony of the Father ; and not the Platonick Demon called (wit, or that of the Vaa See Irene I.I. lentinians (c); which together with their Logos made 6.12. p.86,87, the ſecond Conjugation of their nampwer the firſt whence d Vide Iren. they came, being väs and dandma, Mind and Truth (d). paſſim, e s. If then God by his Providence diſpenfeth immedi- Aug. de Her.ix Hev. Val.c.II. ately Good and Evil if his care reacheth to things below the Moon (whoſe Orb ſome made the limits of it, with equal vanity and boldneſs; whilſt others, with . More Neb. part. Mämonides (e) allowed a Providence over man, but 3. C. 17.p.381, not over beaſts :) If he uſeth his Angels as miniſtring, 382, 383. not governing ſpirits ; as meſſengers of ſeveral kinds, and not as Commiſſion Officers of his Court, and ad- miniſtrators of the Affairs of his Kingdom; as the At- tendants ordinary or extraordinary of his Subſtitute Jeſus Chriſt, but not as fellow-Viceroys : if he thus far only P-33, 34: Chap. V. 85 their worſhip of Demons. in his Tenth Book only uſeth his Angels, and it may be uſeth not departed Souls ſo far as this amounts to; it is plain Idolatry to worſhip Demons, as did the Gentiles, in that quality of divine Lieutenants. For from them they expect good and evil ; them they fear,them they thank. When God fendeth fruitful Seaſons, and by them Plenty,they fend up their acknowledgments to the Queen of Hea- ven. When God healeth them, they facrifice to Æſch: lapius, as to him that removed their diſtemper from thenz. This is a very great Iniquity, and the common grounds or occaſions of it are highly unworthy of the true God. For moſt of them who believe not his im. mediate Providence, do meaſure his actions by thoſe of worldly Potentates. They conceive him out of ſtate, to do little by his own perſon; or out of eaſe and ſoft- neſs,to commit the management of his affairs to others, both by temporary command, and by ſtanding Com miflion. As if the greateſt variety of buſineſs could di- ſtract or weary him, who is Infinite in Knowledg, and Greatneſs, and Power. Thus St. Cyril (a) judged of a's. cwil . "them who ſubſtituted leſſer Deities under him that con: Fall 2. was ſupreme. He thought that they impeached God bila: 40.28. ** of Arrogance or ſloth, or want of Goodneſs, which Ang. de Civ: envieth none the good it can do. And Iſaiah tacitly c.13. de lentera upbraideth thoſe who diſtruſted his Providence, of the tiä Platonis lke vile opinion concerning him, whilſt he faith of Deos non effe the Creator (b), that He fainteth not, neither is weary. nifi Ronos amk Secondly, The Gentiles were Idolaters through the coloque virty- worſhip they gave to ſuch Demons as were evil ſpirits: d Plato in It is true that Plato owned no inferior Deities but fuch Phædon, Vol. 1. as were [by him eſteemed] good. He maintaineth this a'yx Story it to be his judgment (c). He faith in his Phedo (d), tartean; That nione were to be regiſtred among the gods but kadago etia ſuch who had ſtudied Philoſophy and departed pure out 86 . Chap. V. Of their Idolatry in b 1 Cor. 10.20. 1.4. p.124. out of this life. When he ſpeaketh of Demons who af- flict men, he is to be interpreted rather of good Spi- rits executing Juſtice, than of evil Angels venting their malice. But, whatſoever his opinion was, it is moſt evident that the generality of the Heathens wor- ſhipped ſuch Demons as were morally malignant. And a Porpbyr. 1.2. de abftin.Seä. ſuch Porphyry (a) eſteemed thoſe Genii who had bloo- 58. p. 96. dy Sacrifices offered to them. The Gentiles facrificed C Ap.s. Cyril. to Devils, to the Powers of the Kingdom of Darkneſs , Al. cont. Jul . which were not only not God, but enemies and pro- feffed Rebels againſt him (b). They were in Porphy- See Porph. in 1. 2. de Abſtin. ry's account,Terreſtrial Demons; ſuch who had groſs Se&.42. p.8s, Vehicles, and confequently were of the meaner and 86.&rtu oinal- viler fort of their Genii, and (as they love to ſpeak) T! xví aryte ſunk deepeſt into matter. Pſellus and Porphyry repre- di av áutãr fent them as united to a body of ſo groſs contexture, το πνευματι- nào, (vehicu (c) that they could ſmell the Odors of the Sacrifices, lum aereum, ra- and be fat with the ſteam of human blood. Lucian in spiritalis, uſed his Book de Sacrificiis, abounds with pleaſant (or ra- by the Tran, ther to them who pity the decays of human nature, Naror,] Tiai. with very fad] ſtories of the Revels of Demons. Whether they were Terreſtrial ones or not, I here for- bear to diſpute : but I conclude concerning them, that they were evil. Their nature ſhews it ſelf by the ſer- vices which they accepted, by the perſons whom they have favoured, and by the appearances and wonders with which they ſometimes encouraged them. The Rites with which they were worſhipped were bloo- dy, rude, unclean ; ſuch as an honeſt man would be a Sec S.Cyril. aſhamed to obſerve (d). Porphyry, though a Gentile, contr. Fui.14. hath recorded many of the bloody Sacrifices (e) offer ed by the Rhodians, Phænicians, and Grecians ; and c Porphyr. de Abftin. 1.2. he telleth of a man in his time facrificed in Rome, at P P: 93, 94, 95, the Feaſt of Jupiter Latialis. The like barbarity was commonly uſed in the worſhip of Moloch, and Bellona. And ther than, pars V&Tal, & P. 129. . Chap. V. their worſhip of Demons. And he muſt have ſuch a meaſure of Aſſurance as will fuffer him no more to bluſh than his Ink, who writes down all the Obſcenities uſed in her worſhip, whom they uſually called the Mother of the Gods. Origen telleth Celfus concerning the Chriſtians (a), “That they'a Orig. cons. * had learned to judg of all the Gods of the Heathen Cello lg. p.13% as of Devils, by their greedineſs of the blood of «their Sacrifices, and by their preſence amidſt the Ni- dors of them, by which they deceived thoſe who «mado not God their refuge. And in another place, (b) he proveth this truth out of their own Hiſtories: b Id. ibid. and he inſtanceth particularly in their Deity Hercules ; and he obje&teth againſt him his immoral love, and that vile effeminacy which their own Authors record. I will not tell over again their fooliſh ſtories ſo very of- ren told already ; but offer to the Reader a Relation of freſher date,out of Idolatrous America. «In Mexico (faith an Author (c)who had ſojourned in that City), cGage in his the Heathens had dark houſes, full of Idols, great welt-ind. c. 12. "and ſmall, and wrought of fundry Metals: thefe p. 115. were all bathed and waſhed with blood, -- the *blood of men in the walls of the houſes were an «inch thick with blood, and the floor a foot. "The Prieſts went daily into thoſe Oratories, and ful *fered none other but great Perſonages to enter with & them. And when any of ſuch condition went in " they were bound to offer ſome man as a Sacrifice, that the Prieſts might waſh their hands, and ſprinkle ke the houſe with the blood of the Vi&tim. With fuch Sacrifices no good Angel could be pleaſed : wherefore the worſhip of ſuch being an honour done not to God, or his Miniſters, but to the Devil and his Angels, who live in perfect defiance of true Religion, is an Idola- try ſo deteſtable, that I have not at hand a nane of fufficient infamy to beſtow upon it. PART. 88 Chap.v: of their Idolatry ira PART 8. Of their Idolatry in worſhipping the Images of Demons. "Hirdly, The Gentiles were Idolaters in worſhip- ping the Statues or Images of Demons or He- roe's, either as thoſe Powers were reputed the Depu- ties of God; or as they were really evil ſpirits. The Religious Honour given to the Prototype was Idola- trous, and therefore the Honour done to the Image reſpecting the Prototype, was ſuch alſo. So he that "bows towards the Chair of an Uſurper, does give a- way the honour of the true Soveraign ; becauſe the external ſign of his ſubmiſſion is ultimately referred to the Uſurper himſelf. The Honour which the Gentiles did to their Sta- tues, redounded generally to their Demons ; for their Theology did not ſet up ſuch Images (whatſoever vul- gar fancy or practice did) as final objects of worſhip, or Gods in themſelves. It fet them up as places of Di- vine Reſidence, wherein the Genii were thought to dwell , or to afford their eſpecial preſence in Ora- cles, and other Supernatural aids; as the true God I was ſaid to dwell amidſt the Cherubims. The Egypti- a Ruffin. Ecclef. ans (as Ruffinus (a) ſtorieth) entertained this ſuperſti- pift. 1.2. C.23., tious perſwalion, amongſt a multitude of others, That if any man had laid violent hands on the Statue of Serapis, the Heavens and the Earth would have been b Olymp. Soph, mixed together in a new Chaos. Olympius the Sophiſt ap. 5oz. Hift . (b) exhorteth the Gentiles ſtill to adhere to the Reli- B. 1994: Ed. gion of their Gods, notwithſtanding the Chriſtians defaced their Statues. And he gave them this as the caurdues reaſon of his counſel, Becauſe (faid he) though the cu aurois, Images be corruptible things, yet in them did dwell (c) Virtues (or Demons] which from the ruins of their . 89 P-203, 06 1.7. p. 373; them. Of that Orig. Err.Sed. Chap.V. Worfbipping the Images of Demons. their Statues, took their flight to Heaven. This Opi- nion Arnobius (a) and Lactantius (1) acknowledg to a Arnob. adv. have been common among the Gentiles : and we may ſtill read it in the writings of the wiſer (ſhall I ſay, or b Latt. 1.2. de number were Celſus and Julian. Celfus demandeth (c), 145,144, 145 Whether any man, beſides a ſottiſh Ideot who has not c Celf, ap.Orie. a grain of ſalt in his mind, can believe Stone, Wood, Tic s Braſs , or Gold, formed by an Artificer, to be a God, aga and not rather a Statue facred to the Gods? The Ex: Hát Vim- O, Taura cule of Julian is not unlike to that of Celfus. “We aru emis, " worlhip Images (ſaid that (d) Apoftate Emperour), ai sair dra Snuet, " not that we think them to be very Gods themſelves, e but that by them (as Symbols] we may worſhip the rai "Gods. This Petavius the Jeſuit in his Note on the Julian, in Margent, calleth a frigid Evaſion. I grant it is ſo; but op. p. 537 is not the like Apology uſed in juſtification of Image- 'Oux ive - worſhip, by that Society of which Petavius was a mio auer, at a Brother? So goes the world, even the Learned iva di eurão world : the ſame reaſon is by factious Partiality called Tessels - egnskammer a piller in one mans Cauſe, and a ſtraw in anothers. But let us return to our Argument from this ſhort digreſſion. In purſuit of it, it ought to be taken no- tice of, that the Writers of the Old Teſtament ſeem to ſpeak very differently from Celſus and Julian, in this matter of the Worſhip of Images and Statues. They ſeem to upbraid the Gentiles as the Worſhippers of the Very Statues themſelves, without further reference un- to God or Demons. There ſtood in Zion, then a Fort of the Jebufites, certain brazen Images, as Taliſmanical Protectors of it (e); in them the people truſted, be- Sec Mr.Gre. lieving that David (f) could not take that Fort till Nores on the he had removed thoſe divine Guards. With theſe Da- place 1 2 Satn, 5.6 vid rcproached the people, calling them the Blind 7, 8. and the Lame, which his ſoul abhorred; that is, ſuch Idols N 90 of the Idolatry of the Gentiles in Chap.V. 2.18, 20. Idols as had eyes and ſaw not ; feet, and walked not. Other Prophets argue with Idolaters from their own experience"; and appeal to them, whether their Idols could hear, or fce, or help them ? and whether they were not the works of mens hands which they ado- 4 Ka. 41.7,21, red (a)? They mock them as ſuch who prayed for å & 44.9,10 26 proſperous Journey, to an Idol that could not move ; & 45. 20. and who worſhipped one part of a dead Tree, which & 46. 6,7: by the other part of it, ferved for fuel ; for fuel, not for their Altars but for the ordinary fires of their Kit- Zach. 10. 1,2. chin. They do not deride them as vain men who truſt- ed in a creature which had no power or virtue in it porturi de but what it derived from God, as a late French Au- b De la Recher , thor ſeems to ſuggeſt (b); but as ſuch who depended che de la verite, on an Idol; on a thing which neither in it felf, nor Tom.2, liv.6. from any foreign cauſe, fupreme or fubordinate, con- c.8. p. 327, tained or diſpenſed the virtue they aſcribed to it. One Valor would be apt to conclude from ſuch fcoffs of the Pro- Cav, veio a na , phets, that the Gentiles made their very Images their ultimate Gods. They did fo by interpretation, but not by direct in- tention of mind, unleſs they were the very ſcum of the fcum of the world. Thoſe who had any meaſure of underſtanding diſcourſed after the manner of Clinia o Plato de Le- in Plato's Elevenith Book of Laws (c). “Of the Gods gibus, l. 11. “ (ſaid Clinia) ſome are ſeen ; to others, which we d Gage in Sur. “ ſee not, we ere&t Images and Statues. And though vey of weſt « theſe Statues be in themſelves without life ; yet we eſteem them animated Deities, and believe whilſt we worſhip them, that they are very favourable to us. The barbarous Americans made the ſame diſtinction with the Philoſophical Clinia. They were upbraided by Frier Gage (d) for worſhipping an Idol of black wood which they had placed in a Cave of the Earth. But inſtead of putting them to ſilence, he received this anſwer 328. P.930,931. Ind. C.20 P. 391, to P. 398, j amoto Chap.V. Worſhipping the Images of Demons. 91. anſwer from them. They told him that themſelves be lieved the Image to be but wood of it ſelf; but that they knew allo by their own cars, that it had ſpoken to them: they thence concluded that a God was in it, and that on ſuch a miraculous voice, they rightly foun- ded their devotion. This excuſe then was common,but co was not ſuch extraordinary operation as the Ameri- the Egyptians, Chaldeans, and Aſyrians, the Prophets would ſcarce have appealed to them, whilſt they dif- courſed of the nullity and vanity of their Images ; for then the people might have refuted their Argument by profelling their experience of ſigns and wonders. But nothing was done Supernaturally by many of their Statues. Their Prieſts and Stateſmen deluded them fre- quently with their Tales and Arts ; and they ſacrificed many of the Proviſions for their BELS, to their own ſtomack. Huly ſpeaketh (a) of Images in Egypt known a Apud Reichel- to himſelf, which could move very ſtrangely, as did in de malce tis. the Dove of Archytas. Ruffinus mentioneth an Iron- Image of Serapis at Alexandria ; and Pliny one of the fame metal in the Temple of Arſinoe, ſuſtained by Magnets (6); to the intent that the people might be bSee Pinciera hold them with admiration, as ſupported in the air by Anig. 7.p.17, nothing but Miracles. Dionyſius Halicarnaſſenfis ( tell- 18. eth of the Mother of Marcius Coriolanus, and of other Women fent in Embaſſy to him by the Senate, when 1. & fe&t. 19 he had made defect to the Volfci; that prevailing with P 7842 1844 him to reſtrain his Forces, the Senate out of the pub- lick Treafury built to Fortune a Temple and an Image. and the Women crected a ſecond Image at their pri- vate charge. Of this ſecond Image he reporteth out of the Pontifical Records (Regiſters of their own cheats under better names and colours); that it fpake Latine in the audience of many. What it fpake was it ſeems N 2 € Diox. Halis . of the Idolatry of the Gentiles in Chap.V. : : a Tertull. de 40. 19. Stat.Brachman. P.283. as to this ſenſe, O je Matrons ! ye, by the Holy Lam of the Commonwealth, have made this dedication of me. Where there was not this deeper art, much was contributed towards the deluſion of the people,by the folemn worſhip, the coſtly and pompous dreſs, the ſtately Proceſſions, the ſecret Repoſitories of the Idols of the Heathen. Diſtance procured reverence, and the ſplendor of Gold (of which ſome conſiſted, and the gilding by which others (a) were made very glorious) Idol. p. 89. Soccius & Bixa created amuſement (b) in the eyes and fancies of the deaurantur, Vulgar, who have ſcarce reaſon enough to correct &c. See ifal. their ſenſes. The Statuaries were not maſters of much 6 Porphyr. de true Art: we ſee little of proportion in their Images, or of Ordonance in their Tables. That of Iſis ſhews ap.Bardes. Syr. an ill hand, and a worſe judgment. But of ſuch Art as Sórta Tivat might amuſe and aſtoniſh, either with pleaſant or exTocynvals frightful magnificence, there was enough among the rudeſt Gentiles. In Goa the Heathens of Eaſt-India (c) Blance in his built a Temple of black ſtone, and ſhaped their Pa- d Le Blanc, gods, or Idols, in figures of horror. In Pegu (d) they abounded with Idols of pure gold, whoſe Crowns were enriched with valuable Jewels. One of theſe was of a prodigious heighth, and they called him Apalita, eines and ſuppoſed him to be a Guide to Pilgrims. They had alſo a ſtatue of ſilver in the proportion of a Giant ; and he was ſuch a Patron among them as Mars was a- e della Valle mong the Greeks and Romans. Peter Della Valle (e) in his Travels, ſpeaks of an Image in Ahineli in the ſame India, called Virena. It ſtood (as he deſcribes it) at the upper-end of a Temple upon a Tribunal, in a dark and folemn place. It had many Candles ſet before it in the time of its worſhip. They carried it ſometimes in Proceſſion, under a rich Canopy, with noiſes of Muſick, with Perfumes, and lighted Tapers. There were other infe- rior Idols ſerving as his Attendants. And they had Dia- dems. &c. c Vincent le P. 125. P.114,11S. Chap.V. Worſbipping the Images of Demons. 93 1675 dems like to thofe of the Images of Saints at Rome, or like to the Regno or Pontifical Crown of the Pope. He Gaid it, who was both a Roman, and a Roman Catho- lick. And his deſcription of Virena puts me in mind of that of the Virgin of Halla made by Lipſius (a): It a Lipf. Oper. ftands aloft, it is lighted with Tapers , it is of álver , Tom. pag. the Image of Chriſt and of the Twelve Apoſtles are Ed. Vefale nigh itan Angel ſtands on either ſide, a ſilver Lamp hangs by. This pomp amuſeth ; it is well if it hath not a more Idolatrous effect. The forecited Della Valle de- fcribes a Carr in Ikkeri (6), in which the Idols were b P.D. Vall, carried in pompous Proceſſion; the Carr was excee- ding high, and ſo very great that ſcarce any but one of the wideſt Streets of Rome would (he faith) have been capable of receiving it, and giving it pasſage. Arnobius obſerveth concerning the Gentiles (), That c Arnob. conté. they deſigned to create Fear by the manner in which Gent. 1.6. they framed the Statues of the Gods. Hence (as he 10- teth) Sythes and Clubs, and Thunder-bolts were ap- pendages to their Idols. I will end theſe Inſtances with a Diſcourſe of St. Auſtin's in his fourth Epiſtle. “For * Idols, who is there that doubts whether they be 4. void of all perception? But when they are by an “ honourable ſublimeneſs, placed on their Thrones, « and obſerved by them who pray and offer Sacrifice 3 thoſe Idols by the likeneſs of animated members, and " of organs of ſenſe (though indeed there be no life ** in them) do ſo affect the minds of vveak people, that they appear to them to live and to breathe ** They do fo eſpecially through the veneration of the multitude, vyhilft fo pompous and ſo divine a wor Thip is beſtovved on them. There being then in moſt of ſuch Idols, no divine virtue, but an artificial form and motion ; they vyho worſhipped them, whatſoever they intended to wor- P. 209. 194 of the Idolatry of the Gentiles in Chap.V. GO 1 P. 22, 23. P. ISI, 152 > iss Idols can't move, or an- ſhip in them, were truly ſaid to worſhip them them- felves. This I may illustrare by the confeffion of Ar- a Arnob. l. 1. nobius who was once himſelf a Pagan Infidel (a). b Gall . in vita « worſhipped (ſaid he), Oh my blindneſs ! ſuch Gods Peirasl. 1. 2. as came out of the Smith's Furnace, and ſuch as were p. 90. 1. 4. faſhioned by the Hammer and Anvil. I worſhipped the bones of Elephants: (for they, as Peireskius (6) .. noteth, were honoured by miſtake, for thoſe of Gi- ants.] “I adored a ſmooth ſtone, and a Wooden ſta- tue. I flattered the Image, as if there were a Deity Sistema, omi co preſent there: I fpake to it, I asked benefits of it, (viz.v.7. that a though it perceived nothing. The Prophets therefore uſed an Argument moſt ac- ſwer,) and commodable to the Gentiles, and tending the moſo ſhew your felves ready way to their conviction. For if they vvould not There is no**** have been moſt fottiſhly credulous (c), if they would derſtanding to not have permitted their fancies to have impoſed upon Jay, I have burnt their underſtandings , if they would but have exami- the fire. ned matters of fact with any degree of diligence and d See Iſa. 46. impartiality,the generality of them might have known e Arnob. l. 1. concerning their Images, that they had uſually no p.?2,23. Bene- more of Inſpiration or Divinity in them, than the ficha porcebam ſtones of their ſtreets, or the poſts of their doors (d). de Trunco. 1.,6. The Fathers in their Diſputations with the Heathens, P:200. Amen. do frequently uſe this Argument againſt their Images, re,quem este ip- and deride them for worſhipping things which can se formaris 2. neither help men nor themſelves (e). And thence by mebundum fa. the way, I take leave to obſerve that if they believ'd bricate abs te the Bread to be Chriſts real natural body, they argued rei? D: 202, with Inconſiſtence. For then it would have been an iftorum ſimula. obvious retort, that the object which they themſelves • cbrorum cavis worſhipped in the Sacrament could not deliver it ſelf babitare ? - from a contemptible Mouſe, From the importance of this Diſcourſe, fome an- ſwer may be returned to an Argument uſed by the Learned part of it in in ore ab Araneis ordira Chap.V. Worſbipping the Images of Demons. 95 91 Learned Mr. Thorndike (a), who ſuppoſed Idolatry to Mr. Thori. confift in Polytheiſm. He would prove the Calf or Idol part 3. p.298. of Samaria to have been the ultimate object of them who adored it ; becauſe in Amos (b) it is objected to b Amos 8. 64 6. them. That the Workman made it, and therefore it was not God. Here the Prophet only uſeth an Argument which appealeth to their own reaſon, and which they might have uſed themſelves, but did not. Judg among your felves (faid he in effect) whether this Statue thus framed can be a God, what divine power ſoever you think to reſide in its yet you do by interpretation, make it your God, becauſe you worſhip that which is before you, and there is nothing but the image it ſelfs nothing in it, no virtue iſſuing from it. Wherefore, notwithſtanding your imagination, which your com- mon reaſon might correct, the thing it ſelf is your Deity or your Idol.And the Prophet does not only ar- gue againſt an Idol as againſt a thing made with hands, but alſo as a Statue which contained in it no more of Coleſtial influence than a common Image. For he fore- telleth in the fixth verſe, that it was to be broken ; and in the fifth, ſeventh, and eighth verſes, he obfer- veth, that it could not ſave them from Captivity, but on the other hand, expoſed them to it. I P ART 9. of their Worſhipping Dæmons more than God. Art of all, the Gentiles were Idolaters by juftling out the Worſhip of the Supreme God, or very much of it, through their offiçiouſneſs in the ſervice of Inferior Deities. They could not but be guilty if they give away Gods honour, in whole, or in part. And in part at leaſt, it is certain that they converted it to the ale of Creatures. God who governeth the World: ought 96 of the Idolatry of the Gentiles in Chap.V. ought to have received the honour of their devout Prayers, and becoming Sacrifices ; and the greateſt part of theſe, and ſometimes the whole of them was offered to Dæmons. For who eſteemeth that Tenant faithful to the honour and intereſt of his Lord, who payeth the greateſt rent to another, and offereth him a pepper-corn, though he hath reſerved the whole pro- priety, and the very reception to himſelf. Divers Ma- ſters cannot be at the ſame time obſerved with equal duty: and Devotion cannot flow in the ſame plenty,in divers ſtreams, as in one. Therefore when Tarquinius Priſcus multiplied Deities, and introduced Statues a- mong the Romans, their Religion was immediately much debaſed : when they had many Jupiters, and a great croud of other Deities, and every Deity had its Statue, its Altar, its Sacrifice, its Temple ; little time was left, and as little zeal for the Worſhip of the God of Heaven and Earth. To him ſome of them ſcarce ever faid a Prayer, or offered a Sacrifice. Porphyry thought not ſuch ſervices to be agreeable to the Su- e See Porphyr. .preme God (a), but he concluded that men were to < Without words, without Sacrifices, in Sect. 57. p.49. da 1. 2.Se&.34. “ filence, with a pure mind. But this was a Worſhip ſo p. 78. And fee « abſtracted, that few other Heathens either performed words there, it, or ſo much as underſtood it. Yet ſome might do S.Cyr. Alex. both. For Confuſio the famed Philoſopher of China (b), cort. Fxl. 1.2. p.60,61. acknowledg’d one Supreme God; but he did not ſerve b Alvarez Si- him with Temples, Altars, Prieſts, or Prayers ; though medo in Hiftby ſuch worſhip he Idolized the Heavens, the Earth, c.18. p.86. and Man. c Jer. 10. 8. Let this then from the Premiſes be the concluſion They are alto- gether brutiſh, of the preſent Chapter, that the Gods of the Heathen the ſtock is s are Idols and Vanities, and unworthy the ſubmiſſion do&trine of Va- of any reaſonable creature (©). de Abflin. 1.1. adore him, . Sin. Par. 1. СНАР, CH A P. Vĩ. Concerning the Idolatry of the Jews, and parti. cularly of their worſhipping the Golden Calf. Alſo of the Egyptian Symbol of Apis, as at that time not extant. And of the probable Reaſons which ſet up Moſes as the Original Apis. po PART I. Of the Proviſions made by God againſt Idolatry among the Jews. 2014 TH HE Ifraelites by their Conſtitution were of all Nations a people the moſt averſe to Idolatry. Their firſt Commandment preſcribeth the Worſhip of one God. Their ſecond forbiddeth external religious honour to graven Images ; which by the exhibition of that honour, whatſoever they were before, become very Idols. Wherefore St. Cyprian (a) thus renders the a De Exbers, ſenſe of the Command, Thou ſhalt not make to thy ſelf p.378. Non fan an Idol. And the contention about the Tranſlation of cies tibi de Pelel, by Graven thing, Idol, or Image, is with reſpect 5 Hosinger, is to the deſign of Mofes, an unneceſſary Grammar-War. Cipp. Hebraicu This ſecond Command againſt the Worſhip of Images, Grote in De the Jews have eſteemed the great Command of all. cat. p. 5o. In Their very Moneys have had on the Olvers the name Hebræo, non fer of Mofes inſcribed ; and on the Revers, that ſecond one where to do precept or prohibition (b). Their third Command, idem eft cum Tlon halt not take, er bear in thy mouth (C) the name of in os felices . Jehovah thy God in vain,] may ſeem allo to diſcoun- tenance Idols and to forbid all Oaths of promiſe made by 09 98 of the Proviſions made by God Chap. VI. by them in the name of God, by which they often called their falfe Deities. It may ſeem to forbid not fo directly the breach of Neder, a Vow to the Lord, as Schefugnah, (according to the diſtinction of the Jews) a See Fagius (a), a Vow by the Lord, or by his Name, when that on Numb. 3º. Name was uſed in ſignifying fome Idol. I ſay it may Deut. 20. 10. ſeem ſo to do; for that it does ſo, I rather gueſs than affirm. In this conjecture I am helped by Tertullian : That Father diſcourſing concerning the unlawfulneſs b Tertull. der of naming the Gods of the Gentile-world (b), maketh 20. p. 97,98. uſe of this diſtinction; he teacheth that the bare na- ming of them is lawful, becauſe it is neceſſary in Dif- courſe, but he condemneth the naming of them ,in ſuch in . After this diſtinction he purſueth the Argument $ Exod.23.13, in this manner: “ The Law faith (6), You ſhall make ( no mention of the names of other gods, neither ſhall “they be heard out of your mouths. This it comman- “ded, that we ſhould not call them gods. For it faith s in the firſt part (or Table] of it, Thou ſhalt not take “ up the Name of the Lord thy God in vain, that is in an & id. ib. -- in " Idol (d). He therefore fell into Idolatry who ho- varo, id eft,in « noured an Idol with the name of God. But if they sig cit mult be called gods, I ſhould add ſomething by which " it may appear that I do not own them to be Gods. « For the Scripture it ſelf calls them gods, but then it " addeth (by way of diſcrimination] their gods, or the gods of the Nations. In ſuch manner David called In "them gods, when he ſaid the gods of the Nations were Devils. It is a cuſtomary wickedneſs to ſay, « Mehercule ...And it proceeds from the ignorance ***** “ of ſome who know not that they ſwear by Hercules, * Now what is ſwearing by thoſe whom [in Baptiſm] you have forſworn (or renounced] but a corrupting « of the Faith with Idolatry? For who does not ho- Idolo. Aquila. לשוא verf. interlin. nour Chap. VI. againſt the Idolatry of the Jews,o 99 “nour thoſe he ſwears by ? To this purpoſe are thoſe words in Hofea (a): Though thou Ifrael play the Harlot, a Hol 4 151 yet let not Judah offend; and come not ye unto Gilgal, neither go ge up to Beth-aven, Cor Bethel,] now become a honſe of iniquity, vanity, or Idolatry, (b), nor ſwear the b So the vulg. Lord liveth. That is, ſeeing they worſhip the Golden Latine renders Calves, which are really Idols, though they give to 6.3. Galdad them the name of Jehovah, as ſetting them up for his civitas operam Symbol; yet uſe not you that word there, or the form tium Idglum. of their oath by Jehovah; for thereby you will take up the name of God, and the name by which he is moſt eminently diſtinguiſhed, in vain, or in an Idol. Idols are Elilim, or vanities: they are very lyes, at once to uſe the terms the Prophet gives them, and to allude to the Syriack Verſion of the third Command, (Thou ſhalt not take up the name of the Lord thy God with a lie.] He therefore who ſweareth by them without diſtinction, calling them gods, or giving them any names which ſignifie Divine Power ; He that ſweareth, or voweth by Celum or Celw, that is, the Heavens 3 by Pluto, or the Earth : ſuch a one does not only diſhonour the Neither make See Jofh.23.9. Darse of the true God, but he doth alſo by interpreta-mertior of the tion forfwear himſelf; for he ſweareth by an Idol, lie, gods, nor call or vanity 3 vowing by its help to perform his Oath, to jwear by which therefore he cannot by that means perform, be ferere then, Hot cauſe he truſteth to an helpleſs thing, though by his bow your felves truſt he honoureth it as a Divine Power. Further, one great end of the fourth Command was Sce Jer. 5.2,72 the prevention of Idolatry. The foventh day was ob- farved as a Memorial of that one God the Creator of the World, and the God of Iſrael • and they who kept it holy, kept it holy to Jehovah, and made profeſlion hereby that they were not Gentiles, who worſhipped many Gods, but the feed of Abraham who ſerved but one, the God of that Patriarch, and of Iſaac,and Jacob. 02 D 66 This 100 Of the Proviſions made by God, douc. Chap.VE " This (faith Mr. Mede) was the end of the Sabbath * Mr. Mede's “(a), that thereby, as by a Symbolum, or ſign, that Diferentes. 153 « people might teſtifie and profeſs what God they wor. bath, P.73 " ſhipped. He ought, it may be, to have ſpoken this with limitation, and called it a great end: and that it was fuch, is evident from the Text of Moſes, than whom, no man better underſtood the Levitical Oe Exod 31.12, conomy. To him God ſpake (b) ſaying, Speak thon als ſo to the children of Iſrael , ſaying, Verily mý Sabbaths ye Mall keep: for it is a ſign between me and you, throughout pour Generations, that ye may know that I am the Lord who doth ſanctifie you (or ſet you apart as my Worſhippers, diſtinct from thoſe who worſhip Idols.] Wherefore the children of Iſrael hall keep the Sabbath to obſerve the Sabbath throughout their Generations, for a perpetual Co- venant. It is a ſign between me and the children of Trael for ever. For in fix days the Lord made Heaven and Earth, and on the ſeventh day he reſted (or ceaſed) and was refreshed, [or was pleaſed with that exceeding good and beautiful frame of things, which his Wiſdom,Goodneſs and Power had made.] A like end there was of the Levitical Sacrifices. God needed them not; the Sacrifice of a pure and humble mind was more agreeable to him who is an Intellectual Spirit. But the Iſraelites doted on ſuch a groſs manner of expreſfing their devotion. And ſeeing they muſt needs offer Sacrifice, it pleaſed God to give them a Law which might at once indulge them in their incli- nation, and reſtrain them from facrificing unto Idols ; whilft it appropriated that ſervice to God alone, and denied it to Angels and Men. To this purpoſe St. Cyril . Cyril. Aler. S. crimile diſcourſeth), and this is the ſenſe of the words of that 4. p.1 26. Father. “God had no thirſt which was to be quenched with blood. He required not of himſelf ſo groſs 6 and material a worſhip, but one more ſpiritual, per- fected us Chap. VI. Of the Idolatryîof the Jeros. . TOI “ fected by univerſal virtue. He required a life of ho- "neſty and integrity, and ſuch as ſhone honourably « with good works ; a right contemplation of the “Deity,and a true and blameleſs knowledg,and practice " of that which is really good. But becauſe the feeble " and earthly minds of the Ifraelites could not with- out difficulty be brought off from the worſhip and “ ungodly manners, and deteſtable ſuperſtition of the Egyptians ; therefore God by the Pedagogy of the Moſaic Law, gave them a ſpiritual command againſt many Gods, and yet permitted them after the anci- “ent manner of the worſhip to which they had been " accuſtomed to offer Euchariſtical and Expiatory Ob- "lations, duly and wiſely appointed, and as types and "ſhadows of good things to come. For the begin- s nings (a) of Sciences are imperfect, and by the gra- a Id. ibid. “ dual additions of little and little, they arrive at their p. 126, 127. “ compleat ſtature. Touching the whole Law of Moſes as Mofaical, Mai- b Maim. Mere monides faith of it (b), “ That the principal deſign Nevochim. par: " and intention of it was the removal of Idols. 3. C.29.p.424. i O PART 2. Of the Idolatry of the Jews. TT appeareth then that God gave the Jews fufficient antidotes againſt Idolatry; and it is as manifeſt that their folly rendred them very often ineffectual. They by their ritual inclination, by cohabitation, by com- merce, by apiſh affectation of foreign modes, learned the Egyptian, Aſyrian, and Babylonian Idolatries. Some of this leaven brake out in the Wilderneſs. There they began to lean towards the worſhip of falſe gods by ado... ring the true one (as ſhall be thewed) in the unmeet Symbol of the Golden Calf. Hence God in his juſt Judg- ment. of the Idolatry of the Jews. Chap. VI. 26. . ment, gave ſome of them up to the direct worſhip of * A&. 3.39,to falſe gods (a), beſides the true one, though not whol- Amos 5, 2s, ly without him. They worſhipped Moloch (as fome think*) by the Tabernacle which the Prieſts took up, See Thorndik. and Remphan by a Star, and the Hoſt of Heaven. A €25.p.298. mongſt that Hoſt of orderly Lights, fome have placed the Prototype of Apis, and ſuppoſed him to be the Sur. But it ſeemeth abſurd to ſay, that God permitted the people of the Jews to fall into the worſhip of the Sun afterwards, becauſe they had worſhipped him al- ready. At the entrance of the People into Canaan, that Ge- neration who had ſeen the hand of God fo renarkably upon their diſobedient and Idolatrous Forefathers, and who by his Miraculous power and mercy were poffeffed of part of the good Land, did in pious manner adhere to him. And when Joſinab, under whoſe wiſe and ſuc- ceſsful conduct they had been brought over Jordan, adviſed them at his death, to renounce the Idols of Toſh . 24. , their Fathers, and of the Amorites (b), they with pi- ous carneftneſs cried out, God forbid that we bould for fake the Lord to ſerve other Gods. And they ratified this holy reſolution of theirs by a ſolemn Covenant be- twixt them and Jofbuah. Fofbuah being dead, and that pious Generation be- e fudg. 2. 8, 9, ing gathered to their Fathers, There aroſe (c) another 10,11,12,13. Generation after them who knew not (or owned not] the Lord--but ſerved Baal and Afhtaroth. This Idola- trous diſpoſition continued in the people under their 4 Judg. 2. 16, Judges (d), inſomuch that in the time of Eli (e) the Palladium of Iſrael, the Ark of the Covenant, was per- mitted to fall into the hands of the Philiſtins. They were a very terrible enemy to the Iſraelites for many years : and in order to the removal of their yoke, and { 1 Sam. 7.3,4, to the regaining the favour of God, Samuel (f) ſpake to 29. Chap. VI. Of the Idolatry of the Jews. [03 : unto all the houſe of Iſrael, ſaying, If you do return unto the Lord with all your hearts, then put away the ſtrange gods, and Aſhtaroth from among you, and prepare your hearts unto the Lord, and ſerve him only ; and he will deliver you out of the hand of the Philiſtins. Then the children of Iſrael did put away Baalim [The Idols of the Sun (a),) and Aſhtaroth, (in the LXX. áron, the a See Grotius on Judg.2.13. Idols in the Groves of Aſtarte, or the Earth] and fer- p. 2002, ap. ved the Lord only. Such Piety of Samuel their Judg, Crit, maj. and of David their King, and of Solomon alſo in the former part of his Reign, together with Gods Pre- fence in that Magnificent Temple built by him, did much promote the true Religion, and ſtop the growth of Idolatrous worſhip. But at length Solomon himfelf gave them an unhappy Example of it in his own perſon, being ſeduced to Idols by the charms and ſoftneſſes of his br King. many Heathen Women (b). So fatal an evil is Luſt to the beſt Underſtandings, which whenfoever it pof- feſſeth them, it perfectly befotteth, and reigneth over them with uncontrouled power. This Impiety was ma- nifeſt in Solomon about the thirtieth year of his Reign, as Chronologers commonly account. But the niore le- eret beginning of his defection is by Joſephus and other Jews dated from the Images of Oxen made at his com- mand, as ſupporters of the Brazen Sea (c). It is the 61 King-7.2$ common opinion of the Arabians, and particularly of Abulfarajus (d), that Solomon died in his Sin without d Abulfarajut, Repentance. Of that God is judg. It is more certain i Solomon that before he died, he perſiſted in it notwithſtanding fine pænitentiä. a repeated appearance of Gods Shechinab (e), and that 1 King 11.95 God was highly diſpleaſed with him, and threatned to rend the Kingdom from him after his death. Of that Rent the Inſtrument was Jeroboam, by whole means one Kingdom became divided into two, rather Facti- ons than Kingdoms, thoſe of Judah and Ifrael. In the latter I, to 8. 10, II, I 2. 104 of the Idolatry of the Jews. Chap. VI. 27. 3, to 7. ? latter Jeroboam ſet up two Golden Calves which the people worſhipped at Dan and Bethel; he being jea- * 1 King. 17. lous (a) that if they ſacrificed at Jeruſalem, they would return to their Allegiance due to the King of Judah. For this and other fins God ſuffered the Ten Tribes to be for ever led captive. Judah alſo polluted it ſelf with Idolatry. It began under Rehoboam after his three good years of Government, and came to its height under • 2 Chron.33. Athaliah, Ahaz, and Manaſſeh (b); and at length Ju- dah likewiſe was carried into Captivity. After her re- turn from Captivity under the favour of Cyrus, many of the Jews were more faithful to the true Cod, being ſenſible that for their ſerving of Idols he had caſt them out of his moſt ſafe Protection ; and the Statue of Mo- ſes on an Aſs, found by Antiochus in the Holieſt, is one *Diod. Sit, ap. of the Tales of Diodorus *. Yet after this great delive- 1150. de sta- rance, divers of them relapſed, through that perſecu- tua Mofis Afine tion againſt them, and that toleration of all Gentiliſm Fudei (forte) in Judea, of which Antiochus Epiphanes was the Au- disti Ajvarii. thor (). He fet up the abomination of Deſolation, the «See1 Mac.li Idol of Jupiter Olympias on the Altar of God; an Idol apt to move the pious Jews to forſake the City, and to 1 Mach.r.43. leave it deſolate. Many of the Iſraelites (d) Ceither through fear, or vain inclination] conſented to his Reli- gion, ti detreią lurt, ( as the Seventy) to his worſhip; and they facrificed to Idols and profaned the Sabbath. But Verl 60,61, fome (e) choſe rather to ſacrifice their own lives than to offer to Idols. The Samaritans of all others were under this Tyrant the moſt diſloyal to God; they ſend Let- ters of Aattery to this impious Monſter, of which 70- fephus in the Twelfth Book and ſeventh Chapter of his Antiquities, hath given us a Copy. They inſcribe them, "Arriózu Oedi 'Eriparti, to Antiochus the illuſtrious God. They feign themſelves to be the off-ſpring of the Si. donians and Perſians, that they may not be taken for Jemps, Chap.VI. Of the Idolatry of the Jews. 105 Jews, whom he hated. They conſecrate a Temple on Mount Gerazim, to the Jupiter of Grece, and by ſuch vile arts they inſinuate themſelves into the favour of Antiochus, who commandeth that they be eſteemed, and uſed as Grecians. And yet a while after under Ptolomæus Philometor, they abhor Idols, and contend with the Jews themſelves about the fanctity of their Temple, which they preferred before that of Jeruſa- Jem it ſelf. The Jews by this means, and by former commerce with Grecians, in divers of their Cities and ·Colonies, and particularly in their own Jeruſalem, [which Alexander himſelf is faid to have viſited;] and in Alexandria, (where the Ptolomies had advanced the Worſhip of Grece,and in which Philo in his time num- bered exceeding many Jews (a); ] became leavened a Philo Fud. in Flaccum,p.971, with the Grecian Demonology (b). This Thales learnt 972, &c. in Egypt, and he enlarged and propagated it in the RebSee Diod.sic. gions of Grece . I cannot accuſe the Jews of erecting p: 1154. affir- Statues, or of offering folemn Prayers, or Sacrifices to ming concer- them. Yet all who mark that Tranſlation of the Seven- ning the Fews, that by reaſon ty which is commonly in mens hands, may charge at of the Perſiar leaſt the Helleniſtick Jews, with a falſe and dangerous and Macedonia ar Vi&ories, eſtimation of Dæmons; with an eſtimation of them as they fuffered Preſidents and Tutelar Spirits, who under God did go- many alterati- vern the World. He that runs may read thus much in reiwr youl. their Verſion of the eighth verſe of the thirty-ſecond more of Deuteronomy : When the moſt High divided the Nati- ons (c), when he ſeparated the Sons of Adam, ke ſet the Deut. 33, 8 bounds of the People [nær' deguèr Agzérmor et] according Franco, p: 3. to the number (not of the Children of Iſrael, as the He- brew Copy readeth it, but according to the number]of the Angels of God; who (they ſay) were ſeventy, and whom they call the Sanedrim above. Such Angels ma- ny Jews imagined to have their Thrones in ſeveral Stars, whilſt their footſtools, or inferior places of Go- P vern- 196 Of the Idolatry of the Fewr. Chap. VI. . vernient were in ſeveral parts of the Earth. Hence * See Menaſſeh Aben Ezra faith (a), that it appeared by Experiments Quaft. 2. in [he meaneth fure miraculous effects fücceeding the Deut. p.222. worſhip of Patrons of Places,] that every Nation and every City hath its particular Planet to which it is fub- ject. But he excepteth the people of Iſrael, who being ſubject only to the Government of God, had it ſeems no Planet for their Superintendent. Alſo with alluſion to the Government of the Nations by Angels in Stars and Conſtellations, and not by immediate Providence, b R.Sal. Frame the Jews (b) in their Liturgy give to God the name of the King of the Kings of Kings ; that is, the King of thoſe Angelical Powers who rule over the Potentates on Earth. This belief of the Helleniſts containeth in it a twofold error: That of the Lieutenancy of Angels, and that of the Innocency of thoſe Spirits which Chri- ſtianity calleth Dæmons, in the moſt infamous ſignifi- cation of that name. This double error is found in one paſſage of Jofephus, who recordeth it as one of the Precepts of Mofes, [of Thales, he might have ſaid more truly,] " That one Citizen ought not to blaf Mndels pheme thoſe Heavenly Powers (c) which other C-. Влатфицето "ties have in eſteem as Gods. The Jews after the coming of the Meſſiah, had be fides the motives of their Religion, Political Reaſons againft Images or Idols. For they have been forced by a juſt vengeance purſuing ſuch bloody murthercrs, to live diſperſedly under both Chriſtian and Mahonetan Power. And in Dominions of both kinds the Worſhip of Graven Idols, (beſides that their zeal againſt them, and for their Sabbath was inſtrumental, as the char- racter of a Party, to keep them ſtill in ſome ſort of body), would have much obſtructed their Toleration. The Mahometans would have been, from the other ex- treme, averfe to them z their Law forbidding all Sia- * * tues Chap. VI. Of the Idelatry of the Jews. 107 p. 139, tues and graven or painted Images. In purſuance of this Law, their zeal defaced the Grecian and Roman Coins,which had upon them the Image of their Empe- rours. It did ſo formerly, but ſince that time it is ſo much coold, that they do not believe the Coin pro- faned by the Superſcription. Nay,they prefer the Vene- tian Ducats which have Images upon them, before their own Sultanies which have none, but are ſtamped according to the will of their Prophet (a). But ſo it is a See Leon. often ſeen, that the principle of Avarice becomes much Hift . Turcic. ſtronger than that of falſe Religion. In the days of Julian the Jews were noted amongſt the Gentiles as the Worſhippers of one God ; and,what- foever their opinion was concerning Angels, they were not obſerved for any external worſhip with which they honoured them. That Apoſtate maketh this dif- ference betwixt the Jews and the Gentiles of his Age: that the Gentiles (b) worſhipped many Gods (or Dæ- b Julian, apie mons] but the fews one God only. And thoſe unbe. Cyr: 1.9. 306. lievers pretend, at this day, to the ſtricteſt obſervance of the ſecond Command. It may be here taken a little notice of, how the Jews have been often accuſed by the Gentiles, and amongſt them by Juvenal, Petronius, and Stralo, as Worſhippers of the Clouds. If this reproach had been caſt upon that Religion whilſt the Ark remained in the moſt holy place, I ſhould have thought it occafioned by that mi- Seld. de Dis raculous Cloud which ſhadowed the Mercy-ſeat, and c 17. p. 370, towards which the high-Prieſt did make his obeiſance. 371... But the ſcandal cannot be traced (ſo far as my kedg leads me) beyond the days of Auguſtus. Mr. Selden Lex. c. Rabbin. (c) once gueſſed that this reproach might ariſe from a ix Joh. 20. 4. miſtake of the Idiom of the Jews, who called the Ma- omnia ad ce- jefty of God, Heaven (d). This Idiom Chriſt uſeth, lum, i.e. Omnia whilft he demandeth concerning the Baptiſm of John, Dei. P2 Whe- . Prov. know- ap. H. Otbon, 108 of the Worſhip of the Golden Calf. Chap. VI. .............. Whether it was of Heaven or of Men; of Divine or Hu. mane Authority. Afterwards he was induced to think that the Slanderers of the Jews miſtook them for the Gnoſticks, who made ſo much noiſe about their Hea- vens and Æons. At laſt he rejected the accuſation with ſcorn, and placed it amongſt ſuch groundleſs and ex- travagant forgeries as that of their worſhipping an Aſsy with which malicious ignorance had traduced them. But it is not my purpoſe to write an entire Hiſtory of the Jewiſh Worthip, or to tell how often they ſerved one God, and how often they worſhipped many. I will only inſiſt on one Inſtance, That Peccatum Maxia 2 Exod.32.2i, mum (as the Vulgar (a) Latine calls it) their greateſt ſin; to wit, their Idolatry committed with the Golden Calf. It is an inſtance which themſelves take eſpecial b See Mofes notice of, thinking that in every Judgment fent to them by God (b), there is, as they ſpeak, an ounce of Seld. Synte de Dilt Syrés,C.de that Idol, and it is a ſubject which hath occaſioned a voit:Aw.p.185. Controverſie betwixt the Papiſts and the Reformede. $0, 31. T PART 3 Of the Worſhip of the Golden Calfe. HE Golden Calf was, either the ultimate Object of the peoples Worſhip, or a Symbol of ſome Deity which they finally honoured. Cardinal Cajetan 200 in his Commentary on Éxodus, ſuppoſeth the former, and thinketh them to ſpeak properly in that form which c Nehem. 9. they uſed. Theſe are thy Gods (or this . (c) is thy God] 08.12 who brought thee out of the land of Egypt. As if thoſe Worſhippers, though ſufficiently brutiſh, were as ſtu- pid as the very Idol it ſelf: As if they could believe that their deliverance was miraculously wrought for them, by a Statue which they ſaw formed after the time that they were delivered. Wherefore Cardinal Bellare Chap. VI. Of the Worſhip of the Golden Calf. 10g a Tertull, de vità Megas. 1.3. &c. gave thee Bellarmine contendeth, that the ſpeech hath a Figure in it, and that the Calf was a Symbol of a Deity, yet not of the true God, but of the Idol Apis which they had feen honoured with ſingular reverence in Egypt. That it was not the ultimate Object, but a Symbol or idol. Seats Image, is ſuggeſted by Tertullian (a), who calleth it, p. 87. Simulachrum Vituli, not a God, but the Image or Idol b Philo Jud.de of the Calf. Neither ought it to be diſſembled that p. 677. C. Philo (6), Lactantius (c), and St. Hierom (d), believe çnamtai tūr the Calf to have been the Statue of Apis. * dizumilianar To the great name of Bellarmine t oppoſe that of c Lattant. 1.4. Toftatus,who (e) affirmeth thoſe words of the people, c. 1o. de Vera [Theſe are thy gods,] to carry this ſenſe with them: d S. Hieron. ive “Ifrael, God who was without Body, and unſeen, Hof. C.4. 15. Tom.6. p.20 " and who brought thee out of Egypt, and D. “ a paſſage through the Red Sea, is he whom thou e Toſtat. En now ſeeſt, that is, his Divine virtue reſideth in that Exod, c: 32v «Golden body. Nay, I may oppoſe to Bellarmine the fcatech.concilia greater Authority of the Council of Trent : the Cate- Trident. in 1. chiſm ſet forth by order of that Council, doth teach P. 388.- (though not directly yet by conſequence), that the Inter- Calf of Aaron was a Symbol of Jehovah, ſeeing it fuerunt, qui se bræos, permulti". owneth the Calves of Dan and Bethel to have been Helias iis objia worſhipped as his Statues. Now this latter it acknow- ciebat, in duas ledgeth, becauſe it owneth them in Iſrael, who halted cabant : Quod partes claudi- betwixt God and Baal (as alſo the Samaritans) to have & Samarita been divided betwixt the true God and falſe Deities or Deum Ifraelis Idols (f). What Deities then were the extreams be- DeosGentium twixt which theſe unſtable and giddy Ifraelites did vi- g. 1 King. 16. fibly ſtagger? Did not they ſtagger betwixt the new 31, 32. Religion of Baal (8), learned from the Zidonians 2 h v. and the more ancient and leſs corrupt, (b) yet too all before bin. much depraved one of the God of Iſrael, who (as ap- V.3, He out- peareth by his Name (i) and Rites (k) uſed there) Hor. 4. 15. was worſhipped by thoſe Symbols taken without Di-ik Amo34.475**** vine Prec. Decal. Не. colebant. 30. Ahab did evil above 110 of the Worſhip of the Golden Calf. Chap. VI. vine allowance, from the Cherubim on the Ark which were only Appendages of the Skechinah, and not in- termediate Objects of the High Prieſts Reverenee. If theſe Symbols had not been uſed as the Skechinah of the true God, Jeroboam would not have been ſo ſeverely blamed for making the loweſt of the people Prieſts of the high Places ; for the vileſt and meaneſt people the lees and dreggs of the world had been the fittcft inftru- ments in the ſervice of Idols. Like Deity, like WOL- ſhippers . Now to this Worſhip at Dan and Bethel te roboam was moved by his Political intereſt,which made neceflary for him to continue the Schiſi, 1100 by di- viding the Iſraelites from their God, whom they would nor wholly renounce, but by ſetting apart diſtinct places and Symbols of his eſpecial preſence. There were in Ifrael fecret Worſhippers of God, after a right negative man- ner, no leſs than ſeven thouſand, who ſerved God on- ly. But ſuch as theſe were not viſible to the Prophet who bemoaneth himſelf, as if the Church [ the Church of Ifrael] was confined to his own perſon. He there fore meaneth not by his halters ſuch as ſometimes wor- fhipped the true God in holier manner than Jeroboamna Hof. 1,2 Tobit. 1. 5 13. 5; preſcribed, and ſometimes Badl, (a name common both Ning, 15.18. to the new and old Idols (2) 1: For them he could nos compar. with openly upbraid of whom he had no knowledg. His Reaa, thar is, meaning fehu expoundeth when (b) he oppoſeth the (as Mr. Thornd. Prieſts of Baal to the ſervants of the Lord : For what 3.pl 209.) other ſervants than the Prieſts of Jeroboan did their Napáne Béc publickly officiate in Iſrael ? For Abab ſucceeded his *** Ok, it may Kather Omri who had eftabliſhed the Vanities or Idols be, elker Mogo) (c) of the Calves, and ſinned beyond Jeroboam him- felf(d). And Ahab was ſo far from reſtoring Gods pure b 2 King. 10. Worſhip, that he outwent his Father Omri ia encou- ci King 16. raging that which was falfe and degenerate. So proper- ly may the Ætas Parentum in Horace,, be here applied. Againſt Baaa 26. d Verſ 23. Chap. VI. Of the Worbip of the Golden Calf. . name. Againſt the Authorities of Philo, Lactantius,ands.Hierom before-cited, I put into the ballance the words of Aaron. Aaron called the Idolatrous Feſtival, a Feaſt to Jehovah, making uſe (as Micah (a) did afterwards) of the moſt a Judg. 17. 3. Revered name of God. I argue not here from the bare impoſition of that word, for Idolaters did learn to b wild. 14.26 give to Creatures that incommunicable Name (b). But I Men ferving ei argue from the reverence which is due to Aaron the ſe- ther calamity or lečt high Prieſt of the God of Iſrael . He offendeth ex- tyranny, 'did afcribe unto tremely againſt charity and good manners, who think- ſtones and eth of ſuch a perſon, that he would pacifie a clamorous ſtocks, the Iria people with ſo vile a condeſcenſion. He had a betterdeſign, communicable howſoever the madneſs of the people perverted it. It cannot be thought that the God whom he ſerved in ſo Sacred an Office, ſhould be ſo ſoon forgotten by him, and ſo ungratefully and wretchedly diſhonoured in a c Deut. 12.13. baſe Egyptian Idol, paſſing under the moſt ſeparate Take heed to name of Jehovah. It was ill enough that he ſet up a thou offereſt not Symbol of Gods preſence where he had not appointed thy burnt-offer- him (c). It was a crime ſufficiently high that he had iese in der eine erected an undue Statue, or an arbitrarious external ſeeft. ſign of Gods preſence, though not an Image of him 3 d In Chap.14. for ſuch the Cherubims were not. For I ſuppoſe he 1.1.c.15. Nor e Altiſ. Sum. took his Pattern from part of what he ſaw in the Holy in quolibet fig- Mount, when the Shechinah of God came down upon eft Deus, ſed in it, attended with Angels. Of them ſome were Cheru- proprio ; ficut bims, or Angels appearing with the Faces of Oxen ; vit Deum in as I afterwards ſhew (d). Now it was a great pre- Rubo in quo low ſumption to worſhip God in any other than in his pro- quebatur ei,&c. per and allowed Symbol, (as rightly (e) Altiſiodorus) in Angelo: unde though it happened to be a Cherub, and not Apis. non eft adorana The Sacrifices offered in the Worſhip of the Calf were Se mimidokoa not agreeable to any Egyptian Idol. For amongſt them latria, de non at that time the blood of a Bull was as great an abo- proprio danga #nination as was the blood of a Swine to the Hebrews. priuni. At : 13 leo of the Idol Apis. Chap. VI. a At that time I ſay, for after the Macedonian Conqueſt un ap Macrob. (a), the Idol Apis it ſelf had in the Suburbs bealts fo Saturn. 1.1.c.7. lemnly offered in Sacrifice to it. Alſo before thoſe P-215. tot times all the Egyptians facrificed clean and male Bul- P1.p.117, 118. locks, if Herodotus (b) be an Author of credit. And it appeareth by the Hiſtory of Elijah that Beaſts were 1 king. 18. offered upon the Altars of the Zidonian (c) Baal, or c Sun, from whom they had expectation of an anſwer by fire. But he was either aſleep at that time, with his eye cloſed by the air, then in diſpoſition for clouds or in his journey of Diurnal motion, and did not, or ram ther could not mind their Sacrifice. However in thoſe Exod.8 . 25, early times, and with reference to Egypt (d), the Sa- crifices of Oxen which the people offered at the Gol- den Calf, do prove it to be ſomething elſe than the Symbol of Apis : unleſs a man would ſay that they honoured old Idols with their new Rites, as afterwards A&.7.42,43. they did, worſhipping Moloch (e) with the Rites of the Tabernacle of Jehovah. They did not, as I think, dethrone God, but joined that falſe God with him,and corrupted true Religion with mixtures of Gentiliſm. PART 4 Of the Idol Apis. A Pis the living Ox, was an Idol of ancient (tan- ding for the Grecians who lived before the "I Heroidetbal. times of Alexander (f ) make mention of it. Herodotus P. 195,196. is one of them ; and he recordeth the Slaughter of Apis by Cambyſes, who was the ſecond Monarch of Perſia. He likewiſe introduceth the Egyptians alledging the Feſtivity of the Appearance of Apis as an ancient & Herod. ibid. fraze Holiday (8). They profeſſed it to be a cuſtom, that ** Toni w they might appeaſe that vehement paſſion which a mi- (take had raiſed in him. For when he found the re- joycing Chap: VI. 113 of the Idol Apis. p. 42. joycing at the Appearance of Apis, he imagined them triumphing at that defeat of his Forces which he had it to o lody newly ſuſtained. By this it is plain, that the Idol Apis was ancient, but to me it feemeth not to have exiſted Sati Bi Ash at all as fuch before the death of Mofes. And this I here deſign to ſhew by reaſons allowable in Philological matters, though I have not the vanity to call them infallible Proofs. If this can be done, the one to this Controverſie will of it ſelf fall to the ground, feeing the very fubject of it will be removed. There are few ſtories more uncertain than the Anti- quities of Chaldea and Egypt, of which Kingdoms the former ſeemeth to be the more ancient (a) by about 2See rol forty years : And all that is ſaid of either of them be de wc. Mands . yond the days of Phaleg, is vanity and impoſture. Their vain and ignorant Prieſts, and men not much unlike them, the Mythologers of Grece, have ſet the Accounts - Xvá paletes of time backward and forward, and given feigned Peatajapokok digrees both to their Gods and their Princes. And they have ſo confounded Fable and Hiſtory, that both have been ſwallowed by many without diſtinction. This confuſion hath hapned in nothing more than in their Hiſtorical Theology ; and I think the ſtory of the Idol Apis' may ſerve as a conſiderable example of it. Herodotus, Pliny, Strabo, Ammianus Marcellinus, allkim make different deſcriptions of it: And the Image of that Idol in the Table of Iſis does ſtill differ from each Character in thoſe Writers (6). In all things I ſhall not de menſa Ifiaca. b See Pignor. be able at this diſtance of time, to ſeparate falfhood p. 36, 37. from Truth. But in the point of its Antiquity I do not deſpair of proving its common date to be fictie tious. Before the deliverance of Iſrael out of Egypt, Oxen were very ſacred among the Egyptians (C). But they c Exod. 0.25 were then, if I miſtake not, no otherwile ſacred than Q many Vsi 26. 314 of the Idol Apis. Chap.VE e Strab.l. 17. many Creatures were afterward among the Pythagore- a Hence the ans (a), and are at this day among the Brachmans of Symbol of Remy drixe India. That is, they were not touched with violent u is inter- hand, or weapon : They were not uſed for Food, or preted of not offered in Sacrifice. Hence Strabo ſpeaking of Apis at killing or not facrifcing Memphis (b), and Mnevis at Heliopolis (in times much b siradlo 1.4. nigher to us], does ſay of thoſe Idols that they were Geogr. P803. reputed Deities, whilſt the Oxen in other places were € See Vattier’s held as facred Creatures, but not as gods (). Whether tiladi's Prod.of they were eſteemed ſacred Animals in memory of fo- Egypt, p. 25, Jeph, or from their uſe in Tillage (d), or for ſome d Ovid, 1.4. deeper reaſon, I pretend not to tell: for, it ſeems, kalt. Dos ever , themſelves could not agree about the original of their Egnatam facri. Superſtitions (e). Sacred then they were in ſome ſenſe, ficate before Moſes became a Law-giver to Ifrael. But that Geogr. p. 813. there was any one Ox ſelected ſo early as an object of sitios buzi. Religious worſhip, is an opinion taken up without Monogavpire ground from Hiſtory. My eyes at leaſt have not been aby #614 able to eſpie ſo much as an imperfect footſtep of it. Had ſuch an Idol exiſted, and been imitated allo by the Ifraelites in the Wilderneſs, St. Stephen in his Epitone of their Hiſtory, and particularly in that part of it wherein he remembreth their Idolatry with the Calf, could as eaſily have upbraided them with the falle KAG.7.41,43. Deity Apis, as he did with thoſe (f) of Moleck and Remphan. The Learned Mr. Selden, who referreth the Golden Topy Calf to the Egyptian Pattern, does two ways endear vour to obviate this Objection againſt the Antiquity of Seldde Diis C.4. de vit.Aur. Firſt, He contendeth that this Worſhip of Apis or Oſiris is ſufficiently ancient, becauſe it terminateth in the Sun, which was reputed a Divine Power at the very 20 bonis birth of Idolatry. Now this reaſon, if it proveth any thing, it proveth too much; much more than Mc Selden . P. 150 Chap.VI. Of the Idol Apis. 015 Selden himſelf will own as truth. For from hence it will follow, both that the Idolatry of Egypt was as ancient as that of Babylon, and that the whole almoſt of the Egyptian Idolatry, which was exceeding various, com 6014 menced at the ſame time. There was ſcarce any Idol fet Idol fet de up there, but in one reſpect or other it was referred to that glorious body. It ſcarce ſhined upon any thing, which was not at ſome time or other conſecrated to it. The Lion, the Hart, the Hare, the Eagle, the Hawk, the Crow, the Cock, the Gooſe, the Upupa ; the Pine Tree, the Nile; all theſe, and many others were ſacred to the Sun, as may to thoſe who care not to turn the leaves of many Authors, appear compendioully in the Harpocrates of Cuperus (a). Yet theſe Idols were a Cuperi Haryo erected upon divers occaſions, and as the humor at di- cy, P.14,16,21, 27,43, 44, 45, vers times poſſeſſed fanciful and ſuperſtitious men. 55,60, 89, 90, Secondly, Mr. Selden (b) produceth in favour of the 91,92,93,95. Antiquity of the Idol Apis, the Teſtimony of Euſebius. de Aur. vit. Euſebius (he ſays) affirmeth of Apis, that in the days of p. 1533 King Aſeth, a Calf was deified and called by that name. And for King Aſeth, Mr. Selden ſuppoſeth him to have reignd in Egypt in the days of Ifaac. But he hath gained little ſtrength to his Cauſe, by producing a witneſs who contradicteth himſelf. For Euſeb.elſewhere (c) relates that Apis and Mnevis were c Seld. Ibid. deified under Choos , who is ſaid to have reigned in the 1:154 Comen 2d. Dynaſtie after the Flood. For this he citeth Manetho clys. Dyn. fub a Greciſing Fabler,who diſagreeth with Herodotus, and choo Rege, apin Diodorus, and fetcheth his Relation from pretended Mendeſium ca- Pillars, uncertain both for the place, and the Inſcripti- prum, in Deos . ons of them. Little credit is given by the Judicious to nethone Sacer- his Dynaſties. He maketh in them contemporary per- dote tradit ſons to ſucceed each other; he maketh many Kings out (Euſebius] of the ſeveral deputies of one. He maketh Egypt no an- cient Monarchy, as the Scripture doth. For at the ſame Qa time 116 Chap.VI, of the Idol Apis. 23 time that Menis reigned at Thebes he fetteth up Sežtes a Scalige ap. as a King over other parts of Egypt (a). It muſt indeed be granted, that though Euſebius contradicteth himſelf p. 109. Ex hâc in alligning the particular times yet it ſerveth the pur- verfor et poſe of Mr. Selden, that in both inſtances he referreth eod. temy, en to time ancient enough. He doth ſo in thoſe Places, tig, divers. But in others which Mr. Selden hath not cited, he ſet- Ku obtinuit. teth a more modern date to the Apotheôfis of Apis . In Nam quando his Book of Evangelical Preparation (b), he aſcribeth Dyk.15. L. to Chenephren King of Egypt, both the Deification of arunc . Pafter their Ox, and the impoſition of the name of Apis. He tirea Bucolia addeth, that thenceforth the people erected a Temple ARH regnabat to that Idol. Now he maketh this King Kenephren in part. The Contemporary with Mofes, and one who reverenced Afines that he his perſon, and received from him the rite of Circunt ciſion. All this Eufebius has taken from Artapanus in berate de propis his Hiſtory of the Jews. For Artapanus I cannot ſay ** 8:49much in confirmation of his fidelity. Yet I think him *** of weight enough to be put into the ſcale againſt Me netho the Sebennite, a writer fo abſurdly confident in See 1. pol his Fictions, that he maketh Menis equal to Adam (0) de Ar.mandi. The ſame Eufebius in his Cronicon, fets downí Epaphus, or Apis as born in the Reign of Chencres, that is, of the abovelaid Chenephren, as may be conjectured both from the affinity of the names, and the agreement of the time.For he reporteth of Chencres (called alſo Otuazo or the Rebel againſt Almighty God) that he perilled in the Red Sea. He was therefore Contemporary with Moſes, and no other than that Pharoah who bade defi- e ance to the God of Iſrael, and fell as a Sacrifice to his Omnipotent Juſtice. That he was born in the Reign of Chencres, if it reſpecteth the Natural birth of Mofes, is a miſtake, yet ſuch a one as is common in ancient Chro- nology, which is not exact to a day or a year ; for he was about fourſcore years old at his going forth from Egypt : Chap. VI. IT7 Of the Idol Apis. p. 366, D. Egypt: but the time of his Civil birth may be then ac- counted when he began to head the Iſraelites, and to fay to Pharoah, Let the people go that they may ſerve their God. Then God ſaid to him in effect, Thou art my Son, a Prince and Lieutenant under me; this day have I begotten thee, or created thee a Ruler. If then the perſon repreſented by an Ox was not more ancient than the deliverance by Mofes, much leſs was the Golden Apis extant in Egypt at that time of his departure. Yet Mr. Selden will have this Golden Ox (a) to be the Pattern of the Idolatrous Ifraelites, a Seld. de vit . and not the living Beaſt . It is true, that Plutarch (b) 1.6.2.1.141. mentioneth a Golden Ox,and telleth how for four days b Plutarc. de together it was expoſed with great folemnity, during I. Ofyr . the diſappearance of Apis,oras he expoundeth it,at the decreaſe of Ofiris, or the Nile. And in Pliny we read of a Golden Cat (c) worſhipped by the Citizens of Plin. Nat. Hift. 1.6. c.29. Rhadata in Egypt. I doubt not but that ſuch a Golden Image was extant, many years before Plutarch wrote of Iſis and Ofiris. He is a grave Author, and a man of ſingular skill in the more modern affairs of Egypt. But it is not ſhewn by him, or by any other Hiſtorian, that ſuch a Statue was framed at the beginning of the wor- ſhip of that Idol. Of this Herodotus, the Father of Se- cular Hiſtory,taketh no notice, though he had juſt oc- cafion ſo to do in his Diſcourſe of the diſappearance of Apis, if any ſuch thing had been then in being (d). d Herodo in Alſo in his deſcription of the Palace ſaid to be built Thaliâ. p.195. for Apis by Pfammitichus (e), he drops not a word e ld. in Ex- concerning any ſuch Golden Calf, though he mention- terpe. p.169. eth divers Types [Hieroglyphical, or Ornamental Fi- gures] with which that Palace abounded. Nay Lucian demieth that any Figures or Statues had place in the f Luciax.de Dea ancient Temples of Egypt (f). * Syr. p. 1057. P. 144. 22. PART. 118 Chap, VÌ 86 THE 3 PART 5. Of the Originals of Apis and Serapis. *HE Objections of Mr. Selden being thus removed out of my way, I proceed in inquiring after the true and original Apis. Apis was not ultimately the living Ox, but ſome Deifi'd Perſon of whom the Ox ng Died.Siclat. Was the Symbol ; or (as Diodorus ( a ) reporteth) the šibl . Hiffor : Receptacle into which his ſoul palled in its tranſmi- c.&s. p.74: gration. That he was a man all Writers agree, unleſs b Porphy they be of the ſtrain of Porphyry (b). He was unwil. Evang. 1. 3." ling to own ſo mean and diſhonourable a thing of his .6.13. p.117: Heathen Gods, as to acknowledg them to have been ** dead men ; wherefore he would needs perſwade the world that Apis was ſacred to the Moon only. This he would infer from the white ſpot on the right ſide of Apis, in the form of the Moon. That Mark indeed is mentioned by Pliny and Ammianus Marcellimis; but in more ancient times the Ox had no ſuch Character on him. Herodotus is accurate in his deſcription, and he omitteth not his minute marks, of which this of the C Herod. l.3. Moon is none. “The Bullock (faith he) called Apis “ hath theſe ſigns: In its body it is all black, (for “Moyes in the Text of Herodotus is miſtaken for vers: 7 " on its Forehead it hath a white ſpot of a four-ſquare figure; on its back it hath the Image of an Eagle; on its tongue a Scarabee, and two hairs on its Tail. The Superſtition of after-times encreaſed his Hiero- glyphical Marks. To the Sun or Moon this Ox might be ſacred, and alſo to ſome departed Hero, or Heroeſs, for ſo were the Idols of Oſiris and Iſis. But Hiſtorians are not agreed about the Hero called Apis. Each of them almoſt has a ſeveral conjecture. Suidas (in the word Edewis] ſuppoſeth him to have been * P.195. C. D. Chap. VI. Of the Originals of Apis & Serapis. 119 been a King of Egypt, bearing that name of Apis, and to have obtained after death Divine honour, for his Liberality to the Citizens of Alexandria, whom he ſupplied with Corn in time of Famine. The like con- a Ruffin. Eccl. fuſion of Apis and Serapis is found in Ruffinus (a). He Hift. 1.2.c.23. mentioneth the Famine at Alexandria, and the ſupply by Apis. But concerning him he knows not whether he were a King of Egypt, or a Father of a leſſer Family at Memphis. Of this Apis, whoever he was, he repor- teth further out of an uncertain Gentile Hiſtorian, that he had a Temple at Memphis built in honour of him : Alſo that within the Temple an Ox (the Symbol of a good Husbandman) was preſerved, and honoured di- vinely by the name of Apis. The name of Serapis join- ed with that of Apis in Suidas, and that City of Alex- andria mentioned by both of them, do plainly ſhew whence this Fable came, from modern Grece, not from ancient Egypt. Herodotus and Diodorus knew no ſuch King of Egypt as Apis ; neither is there any ſuch Roy- al name before the days of Moyfes in the Chronology of Eratoſthenes, or Manet ho ; though the latter had ſet it down, time enough, for the name of an Idol. It is true, that in Syncellus the ſeventh King of the Infe- riour Egypt is called Serapis. But the Judicious Reader of Syncellus will have little regard to him in this point; both becauſe he findeth the third King in his Cata- logue fet down by the late, and plainly Greek name of Ariſtarchus ; and becauſe he cannot but know. that Serapis came very late out of Grece to Alexandria. As he was originally a Grecian Deity he was no other than Pluto, of whoni the three-headed Cerberus was the Emblem; he having dominion (an Empire given him by their fancy) over the Water, groſs Air, and Earth, though principally over the latter of them (b): bSee Kirch. In Egypt he was received with great devotion, as if he Oed. Synt. 3. C.S. P.194. 120 Of the Originals of Apis & Serapis. Chap. VI. a Id. Ibid, P. 195. he had been a kind of husband to their Ilis, when ſhe ſignificd the Earth; and a god proper for their Nilus, and their fertile foil. To this invention they foon added, and ſometimes they confounded him with their Apis and Oſiris ; and ſometimes they honoured him as the Sun, or Nature, or the Soul of the World. In the Temple of Alexandria his mighty Image reached one fide of it with its right hand, and the other with its left ; and it was made of all woods and metals ; and by an artificial window (as has been faid already) it admitted the Sun-beams. In ſome of its Statues he re- preſented Jupiter in the Head, Neptune in the Belly, as allo Pluto, and other Stygian Deities; in the Ears, Mercury, and Apollo in the Eyes (a). Thus it fared with this Idol, which when Superſtition had dreſſed it, was the leaſt part of its former ſelf. There is ſomething in the name Æſculapius which ſoundeth like Apis, and on him ſome have fixed. He in- deed is of fufficient Antiquity, if he be (what a lear- b D. Marſh. ned man (b) thinks him) King Toforthrus the fucceffor Chron. Canon. of Menis. But I meet with no reaſon offered for the proof of theſe matters. The found of the name in La- tine and Greek I allow not as a reaſon : the ancient Egyptian name was neither Æſculapius, nor (which is further removed) 'Agrantids, theſe being apparently of other Countrys. Add to this, that the Greeks in the celem. Alex. Stromata of Clemens (c),oppoſe Apis to Æfculapius,and 307. A. & ap. make the firſt the Inventor, the ſecond the Improver of Eufeb. de Pr«p. Phyſick. Somewhat like to this is ſaid by St. Cyril, who E.C.d/do.c.6. following the chaſe of Pagan Mythologers , doth make Apis the Inventor of Phyſick, and the Teacher of it Szcy;. conto to Æſculapius (d); who thenceforth it ſeems left Egypt, Julian. 1.6. and travelled the World for the gaining of Riches by this uſeful Art, which in after-times was ſaid Prover- bially to give them. And to this Tale belongs another of Secul. 1. p.28, 39. P. 475. P. 200. Chap.VI. Of the Originals of Apis & Serapis. 121 P. 1003 of Serapis and Æfculapius, as both meant by Pluto (a), a See Kirch. Old. Synt. 3• who is converſant amongſt Metals,Stones, Roots, Plants, C.S. P. 195. Subterraneous Treaſure, and whatſoever conduceth to the health and life of man. You ſee towards what Na- tion, and what times, this Æſculapius, Apis, or Serapis inclines, and that Mofes never knew him. There is ſtill as little certainty in their opinion who confound the Egyptian Apis, with Apis the Argive, the Son of Phoroneus ; which Apis , Gerard Voſſius (b) fup-b Ger. Volle de poſeth to be that Jupiter who was inceſtuouſly fami- p: 59. 1. liar with Niobe. Of the number of them who make the site Egyptian Apis the ſame with the Argive, Hecateus is one (c). And he being himſelf an Argive, is tempted cHecateus ар: to a vain Fable in honour of his Country. Arnobius, p. 322. See s. out of miſtake, rather than pride, confoundeth Times Aug. de Civit, Dei. 1.18. C. and Perſons (d), whilſt he ſaith of Apis, that he was born in Peloponneſus, and called in Egypt, Serapis. They Arnob. adv. had ſpoken righter who called Serapis the soci's , the] Gent.l.a. p.2014 Coffin, or Grave of Apis ; if they had meant this of Pluto as the God of the Earth, who as 'twere ſwallowa ed the Worſhip of Apis in his own at Alexandria. Herodotus himſelf (though he never nameth the name of Serapis, it being not then invented,] is yet great error (e) when he maketh Epaphus and Apis to e Herod. in Eliko be the ſame. For Epaphus, Great Grandfather to Cad- terpe. p. 169, mus, was (as Ælian (f) noteth) fome Ages after him. p.195.6 A, But we owe it to the Pride of Grece, that her Accounts TiS STO are fo antedated and corrupted. Little truth in the "EtapG,&c. preſent Argument may we expect from Ariſtippus a nimal.1.11.c.10 . Grecian Mythologer, in his Arcadian ſtory ;, or from 8 Ap. Eufeb. de Ariſteas the Argive (8). Of them the firſt maketh Apis 1.102.c.12. p. the Son of Phoroneus the Founder of Memphis į the 499. ex Clem. other affirmeth him to be that very Serapis whom the Strom. prim. Egyptians worſhipped.ba mnako ay itis Loh See D.Marſha In the mean time Pauſanias (5) blotteth the very p.83, R name up in a din Thalia. 122 of the Originals of Apis & Serapis. Chap.VI. 68. P.I 26. C. name of Apis out of the line of the Argives ; and Æs a Suppl. v.266. chylus will not allow him the place of a King (a). 1.2.C.1. p.65 , Apollodorus, who owneth him in that quality ), is ſo far from tranſporting him into Egypt, and honour- C Herod. 1.2. ing of him as the builder of Memphis , (a City built P. 141. by Menis (c), whoſe memory it retains in the very name of it ;) that he finds both his Cradle and Grave in his Fathers Country. His Father left him too deep- ly engaged in a quarrel with Telxion and the Telchines d Syncellus, (d), to become a Conquerour in Egypt : and it was e Apollod. 1.2. by their Stratagems (e) that he died ſo immaturely and c.1.0.68.com- without iſſue in Apia or Peloponneſus. But if it were pard with Syncellus. granted that the Argive were alſo the Egyptian Apis, I ſee not the advantage which it could give to them who make his Symbol the Pattern of the Golden Calf. For f. Ap. Eufeb. de both Africanus and Tatianus (f) prove it of Moſes that Prap. Evang. 1.10.c.io: p. he was equal with Inachus, whom Phoroneus the Fa- 490, & c. 11. ther of Apis is ſaid to ſucceed. The truth is, we are here fallen amongſt dark and uncertain times, and can fcarce tread with aſſurance in any path of Grecian ſto- ry, till we are come to the times of Theſeus. And ſo much Plutarch with fingular honeſty and truth hath openly acknowledged. For Inachus himſelf , ſome think him a Fiction, fome a Man, others a River ; and a- mongſt theſe latter is Pauſanias. The Original Apis adored in Egypt, was no doubt a man; but who he was, it is hard to diſcover; ſo great is the perplexity which the blending as it were of his Worſhip with that of Serapis, after the Mace- donian Conqueſt, has occaſioned in this Argument. 3 See Cuperä Bacchus, Æſculapius, and Serapis, each of them (8) in Harpocy.p.102, 103, 104. Coins, Marbles, and Books, have the form ſometimes of a bearded or aged man, and ſometimes of a child. And this variety of form teacheth us that there was a more ancient and more modern Bacchus, Æfculapius, Apis. P. 494. Chap. VI. Of the Originals of Apis & Serapis. 133 O Macrob. Sat. P. 254. Apis, or Serapis, though under other names. For the Grecian Serapis, whatſoever his Age was in Grece, his Worſhip was eſteemed modern in Egypt. The Égyp- a Horus apud tians (faith Horus (a), meaning all the people of that Nation) received not either Saturn, or Serapis , into 1.1.c.7.p.215 their Temples, till after the death of Alexander the Great. In his time they were admitted in his City of Alexandria, of which Pauſanias faith, that it was fa- cerdo mous for the Temple of Serapis, but could not with colour of reaſon pretend to the Antiquity of that in Memphis. Of the Naucratite in Egypt, Celfus (b) himſelf b celſ, ap.Orig. cont. Cell. l.s. confefſeth, that it was not long ſince they received the Deity of Serapis. Tacitus gives intimation of the uni- on as it were of Apis and Serapis into one Idol, where he ſpeaketh of a Temple built in Rhacotis (the place it may be taking its name from the Shrine] to the modern Serapis, in the very place where one had been anciently conſecrated to Serapis and Iſis . [That is as he ought to have written it, of Apis or Oſiris to- gether with Iſis.] After the death of Alexander, the Ptolomies advancing the Power of Grece, the Super- ſtitions of Serapis were not confined to Alexandria,but were impoſed on all Egypt. In this matter I find a very pertinent place in St.Cyril(o); and I will here infert c s. cyril. Ang it.“ In the 124 Olympiad, Ptolomeus Philadelphus ru- cont. Jul. libe “ ling in Egypt, they report of Serapis, that he was *66 tranſlated from Sinope to Alexandria ; that he was the ſame with Pluto; that they built a Shrine to his Image called by the Egyptians in their native tongue Racotis, by which word they meant nothing but Pluto ; and that they erected a Temple nigh to theſe Monuments. But here the Greeks are at odds ; fome thinking him to be Oſiris rather than Pluto,and others Apis. A mighty feud ariſing from hence, they com- poſed the difference by giving to the Statue the R2 P. 13 6 C “ name 134 Of the Originals of Apis Serapis. Chap.VI: : name of Oſirapis, both parties having a ſhare in the name. In proceſs of time Oli was diſuſed in pronun- a çdılbid.p.91. deſtroy the Idol "Alozza (a). Chaledus pull'd down the houſe (or Temple), and burnt the Image or Tree with fire. Thence a Dæmoneſs iſſued out with great excla- mation, and he ſmote her with his ſword; which when he had reported to Mahomet, he aſſured him that that Dæmoneſs was Alozza, whoſe worſhip ſhould thenceforth ceaſe. Notwithſtanding all this, his Diſciples are accufed of a double Idolatry. Firſt, They are accuſed as worſhippers of their Prophet in the quality of the higheſt Lieutenant of God. And Mahomet himſelf gave the occaſion of this worſhip, by teaching them this Creed, That there is one God, and Mahomet his Prophet : ſetting himſelf as it were at Gods right hand. It is moſt notorious that they pray frequently to him; and they pray not only to him to intercede for them with God, but to give them preſent aſſiſtance by virtue of the commiſſion which he hath received from God. For this it ſeems is one of their Fornis in which they pray for the Grand b M. Guildo Signior (6): “God make you victorious over your Athens, p.165. enemies, and may our good Prophet pour down his bleſſing into your heart. And in this worſhip they offend two ways, for they give the honour to Maho- met of a power which God hath not beſtowed by com- miſſion upon him, and which he hath not in himſelf as he is a creature of his kind. And they give this honour not meerly to an Hero, but to the wicked ſoul of a vile Impoſtor. Secondly, They are accuſed as worſhippers of the © Curti de cla- Tomb of their Prophet. I have not read in any good vis Dominicis. Author that they bow or kneel to it as to an object of Mahumetani worſhip. And yet I find it ſaid of them by Cornelius Prophetæ fui Curtius (c), That they worſhip the Urn of their Pro- phet. He (I confeſs) is not a competene witneſs, for a little Urnam colunt, Chap.VII. Of the Idolatry of the Mahometans. 147 &c. ويا می little before having aſſerted a ſummus cultus, that is, fure, ſupreme worſhip, to be merited by the Nails of the Croſs (a); he faith of the Jews, that they in ſuch a Id.ibid. Aid, manner venerated the rod of Aaron, the two Tables of atq; iterxm aio, ſtone, and the Ark of the Covenant. Yet this methinks, Red. noſtri cla- may be pronounced againſt them as a righteous fen- vos cultum & tence: That if they expect (as they appear to do) fome mereri. Ità He- extraordinary bleſſing at the Tomb at Mecha,by virtue bræi olim vir. of the commiſſion of their Prophet, and of the Maho- gam Aaronis, metan Religion, they exerciſe a religious truſt in that which is a lie ; and they are tempted, as often as the e- vent prayed for ſucceeds their Pilgrimage and Devoti- on, to give thanks to an Impoſtor, for whoſe fake God does not, will not hear them. And ſuch truſt and thanks are highly diſhonourable to the true God, who dwells not in any Shrine, and delights not in any falle Prophet. Such Idolatrous truſt ſome of them ſeem to put in the Magical coins or gems which are uſed by them. Many of them are mentioned by Hottinger (b), 5 Hotting cipki and amongſt them one which contained the names of Hebr. P. 150, 151, 152, 1531 twenty Suratá's in circular form, and a prayer, of &c. which the following words are a part. "Shew me is that which is hidden in thy boſom, Oh thou who art indu'd with majeſty and honour. I fee nothing of moment to be further ſaid by me in this Argument, and therefore I here conclude it. And happy were it for the world if the ſuperſtition of Ma- homet might have as ſpeedy an end. The like may be faid of that kind of Idolatry which hath infected many who profeſs the true or Chriſtian Religion : And that falſe worfhip is my next Subject. : V 2 С НА Р. . 148 Geposten . . CHAP. VIII. . Of the Idolatry with which fome are charged, who profeſs and call themſelves Chriſtians. And firſt of the Idolatry of the Gnoſticks and Manichees. PART 1. Of the Idolatry of the Gnoſticks. W 'Hen Chriſt was incarnate, he ſoon weakned the viſible Empire of the Devil, removing his Idols, and putting his Oracles to filence. One of his great deſigns in coming in the fleſh, was to perſwade the World to leave Idols, and the Atheiſm of many a Maxim. al. gods, as Maximus ſpeaketh (a). He manifeſted the one Orig. in Exhort. ad Martyr. true God in Trinity, declaring that there were three p. 193. in Heaven, and that they Three were One. He reveal- Kardamar , ed much of the nature of the Dæmons which had been The Foulle worſhipped in the World, and decried them as wicked «θεότητα» and malicious ſpirits. God in him gave to the World Orien, contr. the greateſt help againſt the worſhip of Dæmons and Abés To-Idols ; as ſhall afterwards be ſhewed at large, if God awdzórnto. permit. His Apoſtles and followers fpake and wrote with zeal againſt Idols; and God be thanked, not with- out admirable ſucceſs. Amongſt them was St. John the Beloved Diſciple. And he having ſhewn the Son (in b1 Joh. 5. 20, one (b) of his Epiſtles) to be the true Image of the Father, and very God of very God, does thence pro- ceed to exclude all other Symbols in this dehortation, Little children, keep your félves from Idols. And with that as with advice of moment, and fit to be reſerved for 21. Chap. VIII. Of the Idolatry of the Gnofticks. 149 . for a word to take leave with, he cloſeth his Epiſtle. Idols alſo were with zeal declaimed againſt, after him by divers Chriſtians ; of whom ſome were converted fews, who had lived under an expreſs Law againſt Images ; and others were converted Gentiles, who bent themſelves quite another way from their former Rites. And theſe expreſſed their deteſtation of Idols in ſuch fevere manner, that they looked upon Statuaries and Painters as men of unlawful Callings. Others there were Chriſtians by profeſſion, who though they worſhipped not (unleſs by fear or ſtealth, as Epiphanius (a) noteth), the ſame Statues and Deities a Epiphan. Hari with the Gentiles; yet did they ſet up afreſh an Ido- 27. latrous worſhip, which was in truth but diſguiſed Hea- theniſm. Such were the Scholars of Simon Magas, Me- nander, Saturninus, Baſilides, Carpocrates, or according to Epiphanius, Carpocrás ; Valentinus, Cerdon, Marcion, Secundus, Ptolomæus, Marcus, Colorbalus, Heracleon, Lucian, Apelles, and very many others, who from their arrogant boaſting of a Tebous, or ſublime and extraor- . dinary ſort of knowledg, obtained the name of Gno- ſticks. Theſe I will conſider as worſhippers, firſt of Dæ- mons, and ſecondly, of Images. The worſhip of Dæmons they learned from the Ca- bala of Thales, Pythagoras, and Plato. It was the Dogma of Menander, and after him of Saturninus, that (b) this outward World was made by Angels; that is, bs. Aug. Car: that it was framed and compoſed by thoſe Encoſmical Herel. c. 2. p. 6; 7.& c.3.p. 8,9. gods formerly mentioned, and ſpoken of by Salluſt the Platoniſt . Alcinous a Diſciple of the fame School, in his Introduction to the Philoſophy of Plato (c) profeſſeth c Alcin. de the ſame Doctrines. He teacheth it as a Dogma of his Doctr. Plat. Maſter, That God did not properly make, but rather adorn and excite the Soul of the World, awakening it as it were out of its profound inactivity: that thence- forth C.14. P.35 150 of the Idolatry of the Gnofticks. Chap. VIII. Soul a Alcin. Ib. P. 35, 36 : c Id. ib. c. 16. P. 39, &c. forth(as an awakened man whoftretcheth out his arms it extended it ſelf far and near, and joined and con- ſerved (a) the whole of Nature. And to this eternal Συνδείν τε και Soul of the World, a principle which in ſome fort com- curixmv.-- prehended in it the inferior Angels, the Gnoſticks per- haps alluded in their mahport, or fulneſs of the God- head, to which St. Paul oppoſeth the true principle, by which God made all things, his eternal co-eſſential Son. Beyond the Dæmons Alcinous doth not extend b Id. ib.c. 15. the care of God, but fetteth them as his Sons (b) over Sama vi . other things. And he aſcribeth the formation of Ani- nerve des mals, and even of man himſelf, to Junior Dæmons (c). ท) vt. Bafilides was an Alexandrinn where the Pythagorean Cabala had gotten deep footing; and it appeareth by the Errors of Origen, that the very preaching of St. Mark had not worn out the prints of it. Some of them are eaſily diſcerned in the writings of that Father, and eſpecially in hisBook which hath the Title of Tidei épzão. Baſilides enjoind filence to them to whom his Myſte- ries were revealed (d), both in imitation of the fi- lence in the School of Pythagoras, and as a means to a- void the trouble which might ariſe by the more open publication of them. Carpocrates and Valentinuts , both of them were pro- feffed Pythagorean Platoniſts. Valentinus placeth his By thus, or Profundity, and Siges, or Silence, as the firſt conjugation of his mxúpoua, or Fullneſs. And by this he might mean the Soul of the World awakened out of that deep inactivity, which juſt now we heard of in the Jargon of Alcinous. Marcion exprefly maintained the two Principles of Pythagoras ; and he taught that they were diſtinct,and e Orig. Dialo without beginning, and infinite @). Se&. 2. p.43 Theſe Herericks worſhipped a Deity under the my- ſtical name of Abrexas, Cor Abrafax, according to the in- d Iren. 1. 1. C. 23. P. 120. cont. Marc. Chap.VIII. Of the Idolatry of the Gnoſticks. 151 P. 93 b Alcin. C. 14. Влата, leems in , inſcription (a) on ſome Baſilidian Gems.] This name, a See Pigna Menj. Iliac. ſome think, they took up with reſpect to the impoſiti- on of that of Abraham. By it they underſtood a fu- preme Power, and ſeven ſubordinate Angels, the Pre- ſidents of the ſeven Heavens, together with their three hundred and fixtyfive Virtues, anſwering to the num- ber of the days of the year ; and by Baſilides in Epi- phanius, fet over ſo many members of the body of man. By the name as one word they underſtood their one P:38. og dóm Nadir Deity, and under it the Eighth Sphere, which the Pla- toniſts called the higheſt Power, by which all things puis Toeißá. were circumſcribed (b). By the ſeven Letters of that c Galend. ix one word they underſtood the ſeven Angels , and un- vitä Peireskii. der them the ſeven Orbs. And therefore Gafſendus (if I. D:16. Ed, the Printer hath not injured him) commitreth a mi- 1655. ſtake (c) in writing it ÁBRS AX, as ſometimes hedoth. d See the B1- He ſpoileth their Myſtery by the diminution of one Cuperi Harpost. Letter. Such injury the Engravers have done them in p. 14. their Gems, unleſs they deligned by falſe Letters to acica. At the render them ſtill more myſterious (d). By the Nume-disjoin’d z ral Powers of their ſeven-Letters in Greck (they a- belongs not to mounting to the ſum of 365 days), they underſtood for Sigi needs the abovefaid Virtues, Members, and Days of the Year it not e See Epiphan. 1 this matter to commit a miſtake (f ), for he repreſen-Her.26. Thiod. teth Baſilides as one that held, 365 Heavens, and affir- in Bafilide. med them to be the makers of this world. Whereas Et Irin. 11. Baſilides and Saturninus aſcribed ſuch power to the fe- C.34. P. 134r. veral Virtues of the ſeven Angels (8). St. Hierom (b) ft. Aug. Cat , judged that this Abraxas was the Sun, or the Mithra Her , (4.p.10, of the Perſans, becauſe its Annual courſe doth make g Id. ibid. c.3. up the abovefaid number of days. But a good Reaſon in Saturnino.. ought to weigh down his Authority; and there is a P.8, 2; . reaſon ſufficient to perſwade us that they meant ſome 6. P.99 other, h S. Hier. 707). * 152 Of the Idolatry of the Gnoſticks, Chap.VII. . other ſupreme God. For in the ſeven Spheres they in- cluded the Sun as one of the Planets, and therefore did not intend him as the Deity that was above Saturn a Iven.l. 1.C.12. himſelf, but their Anpusgads, or Logos (a), or Artiſt of b Epiphan.Her. all, oriów himſelf . For he in Epiphanius (b) poſſeſſeth 36. the place of the higheſt Orb. And in many of the Baſi- lidian Gems, particularly in that in the cuſtody of © Baron. Annal. Baronius (©), that name of iów is inſcribed, though the Omega be miſrepreſented in the form of a W. They who conſider this Syſteme of their Deities will be apt to think them thoſe Cælicolæ which the Em- perours condemned ; their Religion being a fort of Aſtrological Magick. Now this their worſhip of the Heavens or Angels , came (as I ſaid) from the Schools of Thales and Plato; together with ſome tinctures from the Heathen Poets , and particularly from Heſiod in his Osogovia. But the Syſteme of it was much further enlarged, and va- ried allo with Myſtical ſigns and interpretations. And they ran a kind of Enthuſiaſtick deſcant upon a more natural or Geometrical ground. He that fixeth his atten- tion on the Platonick Scheme of the World, obſerving the ſeveral proportions which Plato fancied in the ad- juſting of its parts when it was firſt framed: He that d Timens Loer. reads in Timeus Locrus(d), of the hundred and fourteen de Ar. Mundi, thouſand, ſix hundred ninety and five diviſions of the eAlcin.de Doct. Soul of the World ; and in Alcinous (e) of the Octoe- Plat. & 13. dral, Icoſaedral, Duodecaedral figures in the compo- ſing of the Univerſe : He that readeth further in Ire- fireneus adv. næus (f) of the Principle called "xúcese, or the Divine Her. I.1.c. I. fulneſs, and of the Quaternations, Octonations, Decads, p. 85, &c. 1.2 . Dodecads, and numberleſs Conjugations of the Æons C.24.p.178,&c. of the Gnoſticks, who began their Fancies very early, C.38. p. 190. though the Scheme of them was ſucceſſively varied, as likewiſe the very wording of it, the Simonians chan- ging Pc. Chap. VIII. Of the Idolatry of the Gnoſticks. 153 P.122, 123 ging their Maſters pwrà into St. John's Logos (a), after a See Doftiff . his Goſpel became publick; ſuch a one will gueſs with keine Epilt. out the gift of Propheſie, what Doctrines did ſet their c.6. p. 59, &c. imaginations on work. He will not wonder that the P. 70, &c. Diſciples of Simon Magus worſhipped in private the Image of Pythagoras (b). They will not think it ſtrange b s. Ang. de that the Valentinians in Irenæus called their firſt Tetrad, fren. 17.c.24 the Pythagorick Tetratty's. , Celſus miſtaketh theſe Gnoſticks for true Chriſtians, and compareth (c) their Myſtical ſcale of things with coolſ, ap.orig. that of the Mithriacs, or Perſian Divines. Origen (d) a Orig . contr . ſuppoſeth thoſe whom he pointeth at to be the Sect of celſuib.p.291. the Ophians, a kind of ſpawn of the Gnoſticks. And he mentioneth a Diagram of theirs (e) which had fallen e Id.ib.p.292, into his hands; and in which they deſcribed the Soul of the World penetrating all things , under the name of Leviathan. If that Diagram had been preſerved, it might have been compared with other Pythagorick and Magick Syſtemes, and a Torch might have been ligh- ted from it, for further diſcoveries of that nature than can now be made. For the Ophites they were manifeſt Idolaters, worſhipping a living Serpent for Chriſt (F). f See Epipban. And the Gnoſticks were no better whilſt they worſhip- Har, 37. ped their Angels as Rulers of the World. Hence Mar- cus the Gnoſtick is reproached exprefly in Irenæus (g), giren.1. T.C.12. after the mention of the Æons, as a maker of Idols. p. 88. Neither is St. Hierom of another mind ; for on the udpxe, &c. third Chapter of Amos thus he diſcourſeth : “ Every * Hererick feigneth what pleaſeth himſelf, and then he .. worſhippeth his own ficțion. Thus did Marcion with “his idle Deity, Valentinus with his thirty Æons, Ba- h S. Hieron. filides with his god Abraxas (h). Tom. 6. op. L'As theſe were the ſink of Hereticks, ſo were they iren. 1.1.Cor. the principal of Idolaters, giving to the Devil him- p 34. See Fell- ſelf by way of honour, the title of Coſmocrator (i), p. 47. X 'EIL Oro! or -154 of the Idolatry of the Gnoſticks. Chap. VIII. car, de Gemmis Chiffletii, 4. men. 11 p. 16. d See the yon. Annal. 120. p. 72, 73. e Confider a a See Joh.Ma or Ruler of this World: As if he had been ſuch by Bafilid. cum the Commiſſion of that Demiourgus, whoſe creature Commentar. Job. (they ſay) he was, and not by the confent of wicked Antu. 1657. b See Epift. Idolaters thenthey were in the firſt place, with reſpect 11.9. to Il.Ca- to the Dæmons whom they worſhipped. And in the ſe- cGalend. in cond place I am inclined to think them ſuch with re- vità Peir. 11, ſpect to the Images of their Deitie and his Dæmons. , Some ſuch things were the Gems (a)of the Bafilidians, Charm of Q. preſerved till theſe late times. Joſeph Scaliger had one Serenus Sarmo- of them in his poſſeſſion (b), and the excellent Peiref- of Bafil. in B4- kius very many(). Amulets they were (d), and Sym- bols too of their Deities, whoſe names of Abraxas, Mi. Tom. 2. A... chael , Gabriel , Ouriel, Raphael , Ananael, Proforaiel, Yabfoe (e) (names of their god, and their ſeven Angels well what is the Preſidents of their ſeven Heavens) were inſcribed ſaid (in Mari. " an. ap. Card. on them, together with the Figures of Men, Beaſts, Rapon. de Ba. Fowls, Plants, Stars ; the Schemes of which may be Fali Later: Lina) ſeen in Pignorius (f). Abraxas is repreſented with hu- of the Popes mane body, with buckler and whip, or ſword in hand, The Malons as Enſigns of Power ; and with Serpents, as feet. Ofá digging in the like abuſe of Magical Gems the Jews and Mahometans Vatican, found themſelves have been guilty ( 8 ). And what are ſuch Wax in a Gol- Gems but Idols, when there is an expectation from den Cafe, on them of ſupernatural virtue, which God hath not com- municated to them ? words were engrava, Ma Irenæus-reporteth of the Gnoſticks (b), that they had via noftra in Pictures and Images , and particularly one of Jeſus made chael, Gabriel, by Pilate ; alſo that they crown'd them and ſet them Raphael Arch with the Images of Pyrhagoras, Plato and Ariſtotle, and angel, & uriel, other Gentile Philoſophers, obſerving or worſhipping hath been at them after the manner of the Heathens. The like is Poplenor , de ſaid by Epiphanius in his Twenty-ſeventh Hereſie; and Menſa Iliaca, bobito P. 92. g See Hosting, Cipp. Hebraica p.138,150,&c. h kren.adv. Hær. ll. C.24. p. 122, 123. by which theſe Chap.VIIL Of the Idolatry of the Manichees. 155 C P. lo by Theodoret, in his firſt Book of Heretical Fables, where he informeth us, that Simon's Statue was like to that of Jupiter's, and Helen's like to that of Minerva's, and that they were worſhipped with Sacrifice and In- 'cenſe. The ſame is written by St. Auſtin (a), who fur- a S. Aug. Cat, ther mentions (b) the Idolatry of Marcellina, one of 5.14. ibid.c.); that Sect, who worſhipped together with the Images p.22. de Cara before remembred, the Statue of Homer. I will end pocr. this Diſcourſe of the Idolatry of the Gnoſticks with the c Mr Thorn following words of the very learned Mr. Thorndike (). Like's juſt “For the Idolatry of the Gnoſticks (which I am confi- weights and “dent is mentioned in divers Texts of the new Teſta-meaſures, C-2: ument) it may well be counted the Idolatry of the Pagans, though pretending to be Chriſtians. Becauſe they did not ſtick toexerciſe the ſame Idolatry when * occaſion was offered; though they had their own “Idolatries beſides ; whether peculiar to their ſeveral Religions, or as Magicians. PART 2. Pri o bone Of the Idolatry of the Manichees. I stiline With the Gnoſticks I will join the Manichees; both agreeing in obſcene Superftitions (d), and in d Leo Max.Ser. the worſhip of the principal evil Dæmon; and both 2. de Feft.Pent. being branches from the fame Magical Trunk of Py- Manicheus thagorean Philoſophy. Cubricus or Manes took the oc- magifter falfa- caſion of his Hereſie from his Marriage with the Wi- conditor si dow of Terbinthus, who died in exerciſing his Magical perftitionis obum Tricks. Terbinthus, who alſo diſguis’d himſelf in Per-Scene, &c. ſia under the name of Budda, deriv'd his folly from his Maſter Scythianus a Saracen in Egypt. Scythianus was learned in the Writings of the Grecians, and wrote e Lubus Holpe. four Books of Pythagorean Magick. And Lucas Holſter de vità vius rightly obferveth (e), that the twofold ouçoxla of phyr. puso X 2 the 190 256 Of the Idolatry of the Manichees. Chap. VIII. the Pythagoreans which comprehendeth (tës dvtexmpéves των ένοποιών και διακριτικών δυνάμεων συζυγίας , the contrary combinations of the principles of Unity and Diviſion, was the root of the two contrary Manichæan Powers. Theſe Pythagoras learned from the Egyptians, who be- fides a good principle ownd Typhon (called alſo Seth, Bebon, and Smy) a principle of Evil and Tyranny. For Manes, he ſtrain'd the conceit of the Pythagore- an Soul of the World to ſuch a degree of extravagance, neret that he plac'd a perceptive fpirit, (as Epiphanius no- be teth) in every Creature. He would not ſo much as 500 break his Bread, or cut a Por-herb,though he had cru- 4 elty enough to eat them. For certainly if Bread were ſtill alive after grinding and baking, it remained ſo in the broken pieces of it. But how wild a flight does mans fancy take, when it moves it ſelf only upon its own wings! I do not recall any paſſage in Hiſtory which ſheweth concerning this monſtrous Heretick, that he either prayed or ſacrificed to this principle of evil. If he did neither, he yer made an Idol of it by exalting it in his mind, to that undue ſupremacy. And on the other hand, he turned the Author of all good into another Idol. For as we are inſtructed by Tkeodoret in his firſt Book of Heretical Fables, he confined that Principle to three quarters of the World, beſtowing the Sou- thern parts upon Matter, the dark Principle,or the De- bola vil. He likewiſe facrilegiouſly robbed God of that part de of his Providence which diſpenſeth righteous judg- ments. Further, as the ſame Theodoret relateth, he fome- times called the Sun and Moon bis Deities. Sometimes hę called the Sun, Chriſt; and prov'd it, as Enthufiafts prove their Dreams, by the Eclipſe it ſuffered at his Crucifixion. Sometimes he maintained them to be two Ships which conveyed the Souls which depart hence, from Chap. IX. Of the Idolatry charged, &c. 157 from Matter to Light. With reaſon then did St. Auſtin (a) thus confeſs his Manichæan impiety; "My vain ... 14. a fantaſm and my error was [then] my God. But of vanum rbana the Gnoſtick and Minichæan extravagance enough. I taſma con error I come in the next place to ſpeak of people much more fober, and yet not without a mixture of madneſs. meus, erat Deus ... CHAP. IX. of the Idolatry with which the Arians and so cinians are charged. 2 PARTI, 1 T HE Honour of God under Chriſtianity can be by none ſecured but by ſuch who acknowledg the Godhead of his Son. The Gentiles not underſtan- ding this truth, but looking upon Chriſt as in the fleſh, without any Perſonal union of it to a ſubſiſtence in b Arnob. adv. the Godhead, reproached the Chriſtians for their wor- Gent. B.v.p.19 ſhip of him. And they made this to be the cauſe why bominem natum, the Heavenly Powers were angry with them, (as they &c. Quotidia. judged) and afflicted them with perſecution ; becauſe nis fupplicata they put up daily prayers to one that had been a man, c Arnob. 16: and one that died on a Croſs (b); though the objecti- p. 20. on held againſt their Hercules, and many other of their diim&c... Quinam funt hi Deities, who once were men, and died in pain and Hercules ſhame (c). What elſe was Æſculapius whom their Jove flammis concre- (themſelves confefſing it) ſmote with his Thunder (d)? d Orig, contr. Had they known Chriſt to have been a Divine perſon cell.1.3. p. 123: incarnate,they would have worſhipped him themſelves, Aoranti a's and own'd him as the only ſubſtitute whom the Father seeguro bane could have ſo uſed without diminution of the Divine Pirro ad 7 Ald; du- honour. Hence St. Paul maketh the confeſſing of Jefus vãv. to 558 of the Idolatry charged on the Chap. IX, a Phil.2.10,11. ther (a). P. 114 to be the ſupreme Lord, to whom all things in Heaven and Earth, and under the Earth are to da obeiſance, to be a duty that promoteth the glory of God the Fa- ( This glory the Arians and Socinians are ſaid to di- minih ; and they are the perſons whom I am next to conſider Arius the Lybian, a Prieſt of Alexandria is accuſed by the Fathers, both as an Heretick, and as an Idola- ter ; and his Idolatry is charged upon him as the juſt conſequence of his Heretical opinion. And Irenæus b. Iren.l. 1.C.19. hath obſerved concerning moſt Herefies (b), “That " the maintainers of them do acknowledg one God, yet by their corrupt mind do ſo alter the notion of him, that they become ungrateful to him that made them, as did the Gentiles by their Idolatry. Arius c Maxim. in heated by the Diſpute betwixt Biſhop Alexander and Marcion.fe&.,, himſelf, maintained at length with obſtinacy and up- p.z. See Socr: roar, that Chriſt had a beginning of his exiſtence:That Hift.Eceleſ . l.I. there was a time when he was not, though he was before &c. Ed. Vales, the world: That he was not (what Origen or Maximus Sok. H.Eccl: (c) called him) the [asz soboto, or] Conſubſtantial & M. Serv. 1.2. Word of the Father: That he was therefore not the di Trina p. 87. one Deity, the God of Iſrael, but a made or created e Serweta Ref: God: And that the Father, or true God, did by him, Calvini.ad Art, as by his inſtrument create all other things. Servetus, if I well remember his opinions, was a man yet much more nem Chrifti de extravagant than Arius, for he conceived Chriſt to be cælo effe fecun- a Divine Light (d) which God uſed as his Inſtrument dum eſſentiam in making the World; and his fleſh to be made out of Id.de Trin. 1.2. the very ſubſtance of God (e). And by that which I P.87; Non smo have ſeen of his, I judg him fitter to have been chain- ſed & in carne ed up as a mad-man than burnt as an Heretick. Arius Chrifti eft fub had his flaws too, but with much more conſiſtence. He ftantialis Dei- having thus degraded Chriſt into the condition of a . 9. p. 221. Planè dico car- Deitatis, crea Chap. IX. 159 Arians and Socinians. Armen.de Fide. P.24, &c. cont. Arian. creature, was for that reaſon condemned as an Here tick. And becauſe he ſtill worſhipped Chriſt with Di- , vine incommunicable honour, he was alſo accuſed of Idolatry. Amongſt his Accuſers (a) Athanaſius is one of a See Proci. the principal, and he is frequent and earneſt in his de- Epiſcop.C.P. ad clamations againſt him. In his firſt Oration againſt the Arians (b), there is a b Athanaſ.Or. 1. diſcourſe which appertaineth to the preſent occaſion 3 p. 296. B. and this is the meaning of it: The Apoſtle rebuketh "the Gentiles for worſhipping the Creation (c), ſay-cott xridus "ing, That they ſerved the Creature beſides [or, as the oébket uting “Tranſlator renders it (d), before] God (e) the Crea-oufly wor- setor. And thefe [to wit, the Arians] affirming of the hip and Lda «Lord that he is a creature, and ſerving him (or gi-d Servierunt ving him (f) Latria] as a creature, how differ they creature prits < from the Gentiles? How can it be, if ſo they think, For Athan. " that the accuſation of St. Paul before cited (hall not reads it, dp alſo appertain unto them? though dy Such again is his diſcourſe in his fourth Oration(8), be not in our and this is the ſcope of it: “ If there be not ſuch a Lo-Copies of the sgos [or, co-effential Word] as we ſpeak of; if, from f Adige doves not being it came into being, and was made a crea- duro, &c. ture; it is either not true God (ſeeing 'tis in the 8. ker. doia number of created Beings); or, if by the power of Tom.1 . p.468, " Truth in Scripture they are forced to confeſs it to 469.. "be true God, then they acknowledg two Deities, the one the Creator, the other a Creature : Then ſerve they two Maſters, the one uncreated, the other crea- “ted : Then have they two Creeds, one in which they profeſs to believe the true God, the other in “which they own a Deity made and formed by them- felves, and called God. It further of neceſſity fol- « loweth, that whilſt in this blind manner they wor- ſhip the uncreated God, they contend againſt him " that is created ; and that (on the other hand]whilſt “ they 160 Of the Idolatry charged on the Chap. IX. CG they turn to the Creature, they forget the Creator. “For it is not poſſible, by reaſon of the different na- tures and powers of theſe two, to diſcern the one in “the other. They therefore who are of this opinion, “ do plainly join (or confound] many Gods together. « For this is the wickedneſs of them who depart from c one God. Why then do not the Arians whilſt they are of the ſame mind, number themſelves among the “Greeks (or Gentiles]? for they as well as theſe wor- ſhip the Creature above (or beſides] God who crea- “ted all things. But they in order to the circumven- a όνομα το “Ελληνικόν, ting of the ſimple, avoid the name of Gentile (a), which the “yet are of the ſame mind with them. For that com- Tranſlator mon Sophiſm of theirs, We profefs not Two Vncrea- has impropera a ted, is plainly a deluſion of the vulgar. For whilſt Vocabulum they ſay, they do not maintain two Uncreated, they £tbnicorum. “ſet up two Deities : Two of a different nature, one “Uncreated, and one Created. Now if the Heathens worſhip one uncreated Deity,and many created ones; "and theſe [Arians] one uncreated, and one created; “neither is there in that reſpect any great difference betwixt them and the Heathens; whilſt he that is thought by them to be created, is one of the multi- stude of the Heathen-gods ; and the Heathen-gods are of the ſame (finite] nature with that one of theirs, and in like manner Creatures. The like Argu- ment is maintained by this Father in that ſhort Orati- on againſt the Arians, which we find about the begin- b S. Athanaſ , ning of his ſecond Volume (b). But the Tranſcription 7:22. Tom. 2. of every thing of this nature which occurreth in his Works, would be a burthen both to the Reader and my ſelf ; and a burthen ſo much the heavier, becauſe the ſame ſenſe is repeated ſo very often, though in va- riety of phraſe. The charge of Idolatry has been likewiſe drawn up againſt B. Chap. IX. Arians and Socinians, 16 a p.230. againſt the Socinians, called the Modern Arians, the Ariano-Baptiſts (a), and the Arians of Poland. Both o Polon-Conſen. in Corp. Confer Arians and Socinians herein confent, that they deny the natural Divinity of Chriſt, though in other Do-:. ctrines they differ very widely; and very much in their explication of that opinion in which they princi- pally agree. For Arius maintained the præexiſtence of the Logos (6) before the foundation of the World ; d Alex. Alex- whilft Socinus dateth the very being of Chriſt from the andrze Epifcoin Conception of the Virgin. Some Arians maintained a conc. Nicen. likeneſs in the ſubſtance of Chriſt to that of Gods ; p.146. though others called him (oteporer,] one of a different format, The ſubſtance. Sandius (c) thinketh that Arius himſelf be- nijedis dues lieved the Son and Spirit to be ſpecifically suossia with bogár ulicy i Guds the Father. That is his miſtake, and it is not the only ke. one which he has committed. We read otherwiſe of Chrift. Sand. 1.1. Hit. Eccl. him in Socrates the Hiſtorian. In him Alexander (d) Enucl. p.219. reporteth this to be the Dogma of Arius, that Chriít £d. . was not xaz" svim tim matel. Alſo that the Son of Eccl. Hit.c.6. God had liberty of ſinning. This latter he might fome- p. II. times ſpeak, when the heat of diſputation inclined him to rave. But it was his fixed opinion, that the Eſſence of God was perfectly inviſible; and that the Effence of the Son was viſible, being created [though in that he erred too, no ſpirit being ſo, nor the eſſence of the groffeſt body] ; and conſequently that his Effence was not of the ſame ſpecies with that of the Father (e). e See Hilar.de Generally the Arians held it to be an Angelical , rather Syn, Advers. Arianos,p.359, than a Divine nature. But Socinus doth degrade it fur- ther ſtill, and will have Chriſt be a mere man, or inno- cent Prophet. And how wide foever the diſtance was betwixt Alexander or Athanaſius, and the Heretick Arius ; yet of this I am confident that they would all have joined, had that new Scheme of pretended Chri- ſtianity been then extant, in ſuppreſſing or burning the Y Racovian d Socrat. 1.T. 59 360, 66 162 Of the Idolatry cbarged, c. Chap. IX. Racovian Catechiſm. Arius had much the better Creed, Socinus ſomewhat the better temper, and the greater command over his paſſions. But both have much di- ſturbed the Chriſtian Church, and both have been ac- cuſed of Hereſie, Schiſm, and Idolatry. That this laſt crime was charged on Arias, hath been ſhewed already. And I will further ſhew that Socinus alſo hath been accuſed of it. This being done, I will then conſider of the juſtice of the charge, with reſpect both to Arius and Socinus. When I ſpeak of the Idolatry of the Arians and So- cinians, I mean not the worſhip of Statues, or of Dx- mons; unlefs the Logos, as they have faſhioned him, be to be reputed as ane of them: For moſt true is that a Quifquis ta faying of St. Auſtin (a) in his Queſtions on Joſhuah: tem cogitas, be "Whoſoever feigneth in his mind ſuch a God as is not ot, alienum eon.ct God, the ſame carrieth in his heart a ſtrange and falfum Deum c falſe God. And this I have called negative Idolatry, cerde fuo portat: in the definition of that falle worſhip. b Dijquif.Brev. The Socinians are ſo far from the worſhip of Hero's, 6.8. p.41. Creo their Cbrift excepted, that they maintain the ſleep of dunt (Evange- the Soul, and Breaius fome-where maketh its Dormi- lici Jreipfâ mor- tuos vivere. Eo tory fome Particle of the Blood. The Author of the nimirum modo, little Book called Dyquifitio Brevis (b), propoſeth the quo Petrum Doctrine of the Souls Infenſibility as a means of remo- demortuos in ving thoſe of Purgatory, and of the Invocation of aberunt ; hoc Saints . And for the practice which conformeth it felf autem funds to this latter Doctrine, fie calleth it a very wicked Ido- mentum eft, non latry. In that crime if they offend, it is upon their ac- torii, ſed do count of the Invocation of Chriſt; whilft from a God nefanda iſti. they have changed him into a Saint of the higheſt or- us Idololatriz der. And this is the Particular wherein Socinus is accu- , rum demortuo. fed by Franciſcus Davidis, who having ſwallow'd the rum invocatio• firſt error, which rejecteth the Eſſential Divinity of ficios cernitur Chrift, did in purſuance of it (for one falfe way does millead Chap. IX. Of the Idolatry of the Arians. 163 miſlead to many others) deny the lawfulneſs of his wor- ſhip. And though Socinus hath againſt him very firmly proved the lawfulneſs of adoring Chriſt, yet for his .. conſequence (that Chriſt being but a Creature by ef- ſence, is not to be worſhipped as they pretend to adore a See socia: de him], he hath only evaded the force of it by the ſub- in vol 2. oper. tlety of his wit: A wit ſo able to turn it felf into all P: 713,&c.and ſhapes and figures (a), that it could ſcarce be held faſt with Chriſtian. by demonſtration it felf. Frankan.p.7671 Wanderne have been accuced as idolates. But PART 2. Of the Idolatry of the Arians. E ſee then that the Arians both ancient and modern have been accuſed as Idolaters. But becauſe every man would be guilty if accuſation were a crime; it will in the next place be a piece of juſtice, to inquire into the grounds upon which the Accuſers uſually proceed. And here I will firſt conſider apart, the things with which they are ſeverally charged ; and then thoſe things together in which they are together blamed; and declare the grounds and reaſons on which they are in all theſe reſpects condemned. That which ſeemeth to me in this point criminal in the Arians, and not in the Socinians, is the worſhip of Chriſt as Creator of the World. They took thoſe pla- ces of Scripture which aſcribe to the Son of God the making of the Univerſe, as they plainly ſound; and either wanted ſuch confidence as the Socinians, or ra- ther ſuch Grammatical fubtlety, by which they wreſted' them to a very different ſenſe. The places of Scripture which I mean, are ſuch as theſe : All things were made (b) by (the Word), and without him was not any thing b Joh. 1. 3. made that was made. Chriſt is the Image of the inviſible Col. 1. 19, God (c), the firſt-born of every Creature. For in [or by] 16, 19. Y 2 him 164 Of the Idolatry of the Arians. Chap.IX: P.53 Creatio j bim were all things created that are in Heaven, and that are in Earth, viſible and inviſible; whether they be Thrones or Dominions, or Principalities, or Powers. Ali things were created by him, and for him. And he is before all things, and by him all things conliſt . Theſe words toge- ther with all other places of a like nature, the Socinians do induſtriouſly and violently draw to a ſcope at which a comp. Socin. they were never aimed (a). It is true that the aim of c. 1. Sect. 7: St. Paul in the place now cited, has not been ſo partie cularly and critically diſcerned by ſome of the moſt Chrifto tribui- Catholick Commentators. But in general all of them Reſp. illic agi well underſtood that theſe Expreſlions, [The Worlds; de fecundâ, non Things viſible and inviſible; all things that were made creatione , h. c. things in Heaven, and things on Earth], were ſuch as Mundi Innova- no Jews or Chriſtians commonly uſed, in ſpeaking of tione,quoad Rea ligionem eo the founding the Chriſtian Church, and making the Regnum Chrifti , new world of the Goſpel. And where it is ſaid, That every houſe is built by ſome man, but he that built all b Heb. 3. 4. things is God (b); there to interpret it after this fa- ſhion, of Gods revealing the Chriſtian Oeconomy, as they may if they pleaſe ; (for the ſame Key may ferve for all ſuch places), is an abſurd Comment which hath no need of confutation. But with them, who have denied firſt the Satisfaction of Chriſt, and for the fake of that error, his Divinity, and then for the ſake of that ſecond error,his Præexiſtence and Creative power; The beginning of the Logos is at the beginning of the Goſpel z. and the Creation of all things is the new Creation in Evangelical truth and righteouſneſs; how harſhly ſoever theſe Interpretations found to the ears of the Judicious. Why go they not on, and ſay, that God is called the Creator of Iſrael, and therefore may mean the firſt words of the Book of Geneſis of that people, and not of the Material World ? Why do not they Comment in this manner on the words in the Acts, God Š . ? Chap. IX. Of the Idolatry of the Arians: 165 God that made the World (a), and all things therein, a A&. 17. 24. [that is, the Goſpel with all its appurtenancies], ſeeing righteouſneſs], dwelleth not in Temples made with hands. They err who think the Apoſtle in that place to the Coloſſians, did in Allegorical manner allude to Mofes. No, he plainly oppoſeth himſelf to Gnoſticiſm, which was then on foot, though put afterwards into many new dreſſes; and to the Simonian Scheme of the world, more like to that of Pythagoras than that of Moſes; though Moſes has been thought to Platonize, as ſome ſpeak; which to me does not ſo plainly appear from the words he has left us. St. Paul calleth Chriſt, the [city o Oss, or] Image of God, and the [76ToxO one utisew, the] firſt-born of every creature ; not there , by affirming, that Chriſt was not very God but his firlt creature of a different ſubſtance; but oppoſing him to (the sinóres, and to the dpx] the Images and the Begin- ning of the Platonick Simonians (b). He therefore b See of the ſeems to me to ſpeak to this effect. “You boaſt of I Groftic "Alexa “ know not what firſt-borns and Beginnings, which & c. 10. p. 96. “ created other things. Behold here the true Firſt-born and of the and Beginning, who indeed made the World. [Thus dipredict of Me- Ignatius (c) oppoſeth to the Amprends of the Gnoſticks, Marcionite in the Son of God; affirming that there was one God of Orig. Dial.com, the Old and New Teſtament, and one Mediator be- p.3,4,14. And twixt God and Men, this ti Smalspylor vontãy ry at Toy , ay of sixay ſee Heivolta. Websque ni tatárandon, for the creating and go- p.78.where of verning of all things : and thoſe who believe other- the e'xbres of wiſe, he in the following Page condemneth as the of Marcus Diſciples of Simon Magus.] The Thrones, Dominions, cign.Epift. In- Principalities, Powers, mentioned in the next Verſe, Fadelph.p.12a are in like manner oppoſed to the Principles or Angels, Ed. Voll. which Iren. I. I. c. 10. the Elements 166 of the Idolatry of the Arians. Chap. IX. You T&T which thoſe Hereticks fancied to be ſubordinate Crea- tors and Governours of the viſible World. Epiphanius in his Twenty-third Herefie of the Saturnilians(a), de Eye de clareth their odd opinion concerning one Unknown Fa- áyuwsov, &c. ther, and the Cauvusis, speed, asoio, j the Virtues, Prin- cipalities and Powers, made by him, and of the infe. rior creatures made by them. And in his Twenty-ſixth Herefie of the Gnoſticks, he ſetteth down the order of their [đexortes, or] Heavenly Principalities : How little now do theſe names differ from the (Kuerétntes, or] Do- minions; the [apxai, or] Principalities; the [*Esoices or] Powers, of St. Paul the Apoſtle? And that Apoſtle doth no more aſſert in this place the creation of ſuch Orders, than he doth the making of the Gnoſtick Æons in the firſt Chapter to the Hebrews, where he affirmeth of Chriſt that he made 'Agby et In ſuch places he ſaid in effect that the Logos was the true Principle which they miſtook in their notion, and miſcalled by other names, though they were in a kind of purſuit of him, but in the dark, and in falle ways: That it was he that made the World viſible and intellectual, by what names foe- ver they called it, or into what Claſſes foever they had diſpoſed it ; and that this was not the effect of any ſuch powers as they dreamed of, they having no exiſt- ence but in the ſhadows of their own imagination. In the following Chapter (b), he oppofèth the Prin- ciples of Chriſtian Religion to the Elements of their • Verl 9. Philoſophy. And in the next Verſe (c), he oppoſeth to the magaua of the Simonians, the fulneſs of the Dei- d Ver. 10, 19. ty which dwelt in Chriſt. And after that (d) he twice mentioneth his Headſhip over all apped and Egssíu ]Prin- cipalities and Powers: And thence he moſt aptly pro- a ceedeth to the condemnation of the worſhip of An- ? , Verf, 18.agels (): For of them the Gnofticks made egregious Idols.oran hot b Col. 2. 8, I am Chap. IX. Of the Idolatry of the Arians. 167 p. 114. 11 I am the more confirmed in this Diſcourſe upon St. Paul's words by thoſe of Irenæus : *God (laid he in his refutation (a) of the Gnoſtick Herefie) " did mal e a Ireneus adv. « all things, both viſible and inviſible, ſenſible and ir - Her. I. 1. C. 9. "telligible, not by Angels, or other Virtues, « But by his Word and Spirit.--This God is neither « Beginning, nor Virtue, nor Fulneſs: That is (as I ſuppoſe it was read in the Greek Copy,which the Lear- Cened world much wanteth neither'Apzh, nor 'Aperil, nor “ staigagt we, no Gnoftick Principle, but true and very to God. Neither am I concerned at the Objection of thoſe who aſcribe theſe Terms to Valentinus ; for 'tis plain he was not (b) the Inventer. It appeareth by the b Iren. 1.1.c.$. ftudiouſneſs of Socinus, in order to the eluding of the P.5o quer force of ſuch places, that he believed an acknowledg- vás nezouions ment of Chriſt as Creator, was in effect a confeſſion of ypasizas oz... géreas, te's his Godhead. This then being by Arius granted, and αρχαίας εις by Socinus denied, that Chriſt created the Natural Idrov Xaegex- World; it is that ſingle point in which Arius apart maius Pelapa from Socirus, is chargeable with Idolatry. And certain- ubraso SASSE ly he is not accuſed upon flight and idle ſuſpicion, if Tivo, &c the charge be drawn up againſt him, either from Scri- pture or Reaſon. In the Scripture God himſelf doth prove himſelf to the World, to be the true one God, by his making of all things. In what other fence will any man, whole prejudice does not bend him a contrary way, inter- pret the following places? Who hath meafured out (c) 1,40 la the waters in the bollow of bio hand 3 and meted out the Verles 18,19, Heavens with a spans and comprehended the duft of the 20,21, 25, 26, Earth in a meaſure; and weighed the Mountains in ſcales, and the Hills in a ballance Wbo bath directed the ſpirit of ike Lord, or being his coun ſeller bath taught Him 2 TOW 90 DOW 900W sipuloxod nigri ni eolio 9:"Thus faith (d) the God, the Lord, he that created the d IIa:42. 5, 8, Heavens, 27, 28, 168 Of the Idolatry of the Arians. Chap. IX. I!, 12. Heavens, and ſtretched them out ; He that Spread forth the Earth, and that which cometh out of it. He that gi- sveth breath unto the people mpon it, and ſpirit to them that she-walk therein. I am the Lord, that is my name, and my a Iſa. 43.9,10. Glory I will not give to another. Thus faith (a) the Lord that created thee, O Jacob, and formed thee, Iſrael! Fear not.Before me there was no God formed, nei- ther ſhall there be after me. b Jer. sc. 10The Lord (b) is the true God, he is the living God, vand an everlaſting King, (or,the King of Eternity.) Thus ſhall ye ſay unto them, (the Nations, ] The gods that have not made the Heavens and the Earth, even they shall I periſh from the Earth, and from under theſe Heavens. He hath made the Earth by his Power ; he hath eſtabliſhed the World by his Wiſdom, and hath ſtretched out the Heavens by his Diſcretion. Thus ſpeaketh the Scripture : In the next place let it be conſidered whether Reaſon can diſſent from it. What notion will Reaſon give us of the true God, if tem uns it ſuppoſeth ſuch wiſdom and power in a creature as can make the World? For does not Reaſon thence col- lect her Idea of God,conceiving of him as of the migh- ty and wiſe framer of the Univerſe? thus the very Americans themſelves, I mean the Peruvians, did call See Gerard.) their ſupreme God by the name of Pachaia Chacic(c), Vir de Idol. which fignifies as they tell us, the Creator of Heaven and Earth. In this then Arius is particularly to be condemned, in that he ſuppoſeth the Creator a Creature, and yet profeſſeth to worſhip him under the notion of the Maker of all things. It is true, that Arius gave not to Chriſt the very ſame honour he did to the Father. And his Dif- ciples in their Doxologies, were wont in cunning manner, to give Glory to the Father by the Son 11. Chap. IX. Of the Idolatry of the Socinians. 169 6C ed. Sirmonde Son (a). And ſuch a Form Eufebius himſelf uſed (b); 2. Euſeb. Eccleſ . and we find it at the end of one of his Books againſt ad fin. p: 388 Sabellius : “Glory be to the one unbegotten God, by a divlço * “ the one only begotten God the Son of God, in one 5 td.contra holy Spirit, both now and always, and through all Sabell.1.1.p.32 . Ages of Ages, Amen. Neither do the Arians give any glory to Chriſt, but that which they pretend to think enjoined by God the Father. But if Chriſt had been a Creature, the Crea- tor would not by any ſtamp of his Authority have rai- fed him to the value of a natural God; and ſuch a God they honour, whatſoever the terms be with which they darken their ſenſe; for he is honoured by them as Cre- ator and Governour, and diſpenſer of Grace. TH PART 3. Of the Idolatry of the Socinians. c compendiolum Socinianiſmi, "He point in which Socinus offendeth by himſelf, is c. 8. Se&t. 7. the Worſhip he giveth Chriſt whilft he maketh P. 142. Hinc colligunt him but a man ; and ſuch a man as is but a machine of animas post animated and thinking Matter : for though he decli- mortem nihil ſentire aut age- neth not the word, ſoul or fpirit, I cannot find at the re, imò ne qui bottom of his Hypotheſis, any diſtinct ſubſtance of a dem in fe reipa. Soul in Chriſt. If that Principle had been believed by fubfiftere ut per- him, why doth he ſuppoſe the Lord Jeſus bereaved of hec elle quod all Perception as long as his Body remained lifeleſs in paffim dicitur the Grave (c)? Why do his Followers maintain that the dead do no otherwiſe live to God than as there is memoriam Dei. in him a firm purpoſe of their Reſurrecrion (d)? for effe defcenfum ſo the Vindicator of the Confeſſion of the Churches ad inferos, cum of Poland, written by Shlichtingius, is pleaſed to dif- quis in si atum courſe : “ We believe (faid hc) not only that the Soul digitur. " of Chriſt ſupervived his Body, but alſo that the Souls d Vind. Confeſ Ecclef. Polon, ff of other men do the like. But if Cichovius thinketh Z in V.T. morta- os non habere Item bung P. Igor " that 170 Of the Idolatry of the Socinians. Chap. IX. that the dead do otherwiſe live to God, than as it is “always in the hand and power of God to raiſe them up, and reſtore them to life ; let him go and confute Chriſt, where he faith, I am the God of Abraham, Ifaac, and Jacob: God is not the God of the dead, but of the living. Now Reaſon (the great Diana of Soci- nus, though he often took a cloud of fancy for his Goddeſs) can't but judg it a diſparagement to the Idea of a God, to ſuppoſe ſuch Divinity as can go vern the World, and hear and act in all places at once, (as Chriſt is by Socinus confeffed to do); in a portion of living Matter, not fix-foot ſquare, reſerved in the Heavens ; and perceiving by the help of moti- on on its organs. Arius advanced the Idea of Divini . ty to a much higher and more becoming pitch ; for he, overcome with the plain evidence of Scripture, main- tained the Præexiſtence of the Logos, and ſuppoſed him to be a diſtinct ſubſtance from Matter. And he. might conſequently affirm with conſiſtence to his Prin- ciples, that Chriſt could know without the mere help of motion, and be ſpread in his ſubſtance to an ampli- tude equal with that of the Material World. For the Material World is but a Creature, one Body of ma- пу Creatures, and it implieth no contradiction to fay of God, that he can make one Creature as big as the collection of all the reſt. But notwithſtanding ſuch amplitude, there would ſtill be wanting infinite Wif- dom. For in the Idea of God we have no other noti- on of it than as of ſuch a Wiſdom as fufficeth to frame the World, and to govern it after it hath been framed. Now this latter Point is that in which both Arius and Socinus are together condemned, whilft both wor- fhip Chriſt as one who under God diſpoſeth and go verneth all things. It is true, that he is ſuch: but ſuch he Chap. IX. Of the Idolatry of the Socinians. 171 he had not been if he had not been conſubſtantial with the Father. In that ſenſe he is the Father's Wiſdom : and whilſt Arius and Socinus adore him as Gods Wif- dom, yet not as God; they aſcribe to the Creature, the Attribute by which the Creator is known. For the Scriptures, they in oppoſition to all other gods, do as well aſcribe the Government, as the Creation of the World, to that one God of Iſrael. Hear them ſpeaking in this matter, with ſo loud and plain a voice, that he who is dull of hearing cannot miſtake them, unleſs he by obſtinacy make himſelf deafer ſtill, and will not di- ſtinctly hear them. In them we find this Prayer made by the pious King Hezekiah, when he was diſtreſſed by Sennacherib (a). O Lord of Hofts, God of Iſrael,that all.37.26,1% 18, 19, 20 dwelleſt between the Cherubims! Thou art the God, even thou alone of all the Kingdoms of the Earth. Thou haſt made Heaven and Earth. Incline thine ear, O Lord, and hear, open thine eyes, O Lord, and fee; and hear all the words of Sennacherib who hath ſent to reproach the living God. Of a truth, Lord, the Kings of Alyria have laid waft all the Nations and their Countries, and have caſt their Gods into the fire'; for they were no gods but the work of mens hands, wood and ſtone ; therefore they have deſtroyed them. Now therefore, O Lord our God, ſave us from his hand, that all the Kingdoms of the Earth may know that thou art the Lord, even thou only. Other pla- ces there are to the fame purpoſe (b), and amongſt b Sec Ifa. 41. them thefe : Let them (the Nations or Gentiles] give & c.43.1,60 6. glory unto the Lord (c) and declare his praiſe in the cl(a.42.12,13. Iſlands. The Lord fhall go forth as a mighty man ;--He Shall prevail againſt his enemies. I have declared (d) and I have ſaved, and I have fhero- d Iſa:43,12,13, ed, when there was no ſtrange god among you : therefore ye are my witneſſes, faith the Lord, that I am God. Tea, 24801 before the day I was he, I will work, and who ſhall Thus let it Z 2 172 Of the Idolatry of the Socinians, Chap.IX: 16. 11, 12 a Iſa 43,14,15, Thus faith the Lord (a) the Redeemer. I am the Lord your holy one, the Creator of Iſrael, your King. (He that raiſeth you out of mean eſtate, and ruleth over you.] Thus faith the Lord who maketh a way in the Sea; and a path in the mighty water s. b Jer.10, 7, 8, Who would not fear thee, O King of Nations (b)! The ſtock is a doctrine of vanities; but the Lord is the true God, he is the living God, and an everlaſting King. c Zach 10,1,2. Ask ye of the Lord rain (c), in the time of the latter rain; ſo the Lord ſhall make bright clouds, and give them Mowers of rain, to every one graſs in the field. For the Idols have spoken vanity. The eyes of the Lord d Zach.4,10 . (d) run to and fro through the whole Earth. [The King Hab. 1:9,10, of Chaldea](e) jhall gather the captivity as the ſand and Mal ſcoff at Kings. Then fall his mind change, and ke ſhall paſs over, and offend imputing this his power unte ..his god. Art thou not be from everlaſting, O Lord my God, mine Holy One ? we ſhall not die : 0 Lord, thou haft ordained them (the Powers of Chaldea] for judga ment; and, O mighty God! Thou haft eftabliſhed them ifa. 40.13% for correction. Who hath (f) directed the Spirit of the Lord,or being his counſellor hath taught hims with whom took he counſel ? and who inſtructed him, and taught him in the path of judgment ?--Behold the Nations are as a drop of a bucket. See here the Spirit of God aſſerting the Divinity of to the one God of Iſrael , againit Idols, by diſplaying his ats Wiſdom and Power in the Natural and Political Go- vernment of the World. But left the evidence of theſe places ſhould be weakened by any, as Scriptures of the Old Teſtament, relating to times before our Lord was. actually made by the Eternal Father, the King of the World ; I will add a few more which may tend to the giſa. 40.9,10, preventing of ſuch an Evaſion. Iſaiah (g) propheſying of the Baptist, and of the bleſſed times of the Goſpel, 14, IS. intro e by Gods command, though without quam à fummo Chap. IX. Of the Idolatry of the Socinians. 173 introduceth that voice thus crying out to Jeruſalem and Judah: Behold your God. Behold the Lord God will come with ſtrong hand, and his arm ſhall rule for him.---- He ſkall feed his flock like a shepherd, sed In the fame Iſaiah (for I ſcarce feek further than that Evangelical Prophet) the God of Iſrael repeateth this profeflion (a): Before me there was no God framed, a Ifa.43.10,11. neither ſhall there be after me. Thus (b) faith the Lord Sofa ch.44; . the King of Iſrael , and his Redeemer i he Lord of Hoſts, & 48. 12 I am the firſt, and I am the laft, and beſides me there is no God. And yet of the Logos, the Socinians will profeſs as did Nathaniel, Thou art the Son of God, thou art the King of Iſrael; and as doth the Book of the Revelation, that he is, Alpha and Omega, the firſt and the laſt. The God of Iſrael had ſaid alſo in the foregoing Chapter, I, event, am the Lord, and beſides me there is no Saviour.--- Is there a God beſides me yea, there is no's God. I know not any. (c) Yet, of the Logos, Socinians See Ch. 43 and Arians make confeſſion in the words of St. John, si ſaying, That he was in the beginning with God the Father. d Confer. The deſign of all theſe places ought not in reaſon to Schlicht . Vind. be baffled, by ſaying with confidence (d) theſe two C. 1. P. 54 things : Firſt, That the Power which Chriſt had was rum cultores given him by God, and in order to his Glory. Second- non fumus. ly, That it is not unlawful, but our duty, to wor- colimus, tan- Chriſtum, enim ſhip a Creature his permiſſion it be Idolatry. If Chriſt had not been poteftatem Re- more than a creature, God would not have enjoined adeptum,&, fin us fo high a Worſhip of Him: neither would it have cut nomine illi. been conſiſtent with his incommunicable Omnipotence am illius, impe- and Wiſdom to have given him all power in Heaven rantem. and in Earth. “ This (as (e) Athanaſius ſpeaketh) were col. 2. p.581. e S. Athan.op. , , " to turn his Humane Nature into a ſecond Almighty. A, The 174 Of the Idolatry of the Socinians. Chap. IX, * The Logos was ſo before all Worlds, and ceaſed not to be ſo by aſſuming the Humane Nature into Unity of Subſiſtence. To ſay then that Chriſt is a Creature, yet made ſuch a God who can hear all Prayers, ſupply all wants, give all Graces needful to his Body the Church, know all 310LED the ſecrets of all Thoughts not directed to him, go- vern and judg with Wiſdom all the World, and to Worſhip him under this Divine Notion; what is it elle ..than the paying an homage to a preſumed Creature, which is due only to the one very God? for what ap prehenſions greater than theſe do we entertain concer- ning the true God, when we call upon him,confide in him, or revere him? He then that meeteth ſuch an Inſcription in Racovia a in Templo 4- as he may find often (a) in Mijna, in this manner, frano, ap.Natbu D.O.S. and at length, Deo Omnipotenti Sacrum, and menta Miſnica. meant of Chriſt, to whom, in the Verſes fet (b) under- P-362, 363 neath, the application is particularly made; How mift Re-In te he expound it ? He muſt either interpret it of Chriſt Tranfubſtantiated as 'twere by their fancy into the Fa- tum" de Sacrifi , ther, or worſhipped like Neptune (c) in the D. M. at ciis. c.2. p.27 . Rome, in the quality of the true God, whilſt he is D.M. [ie, Deo confeſſed to be but a Creature. For they will own but Maximo] Ne- one God in nature and perſon, and yet will give to Chriſt, not acknowledged as a coeternal Subliſtence, that which belongeth in eminent manner to his Idea. His Idea fure it is ; for that Being appeareth to our mind as the beſt and greateſt, which with ſuch mighty d boro Patientia, Goodneſs, Power and Wiſdom, governs the inſenſible, Se&. 14, 15. fenfible, rational, and Chriſtian World. P.368. Hic eft I end this Chapter with the ſenſe of St. Cyprian's qui cum in par fione tacuerit, words in his concluſion of the Book de Bono Patientiæ Deus me (d): "[Jeſus] Is he who was ſilent in his ſufferings, << but will not be ſo afterwards when he executeth venge- . . Credo unum $3n0 Sacrum. &c. Chap. IX. Of the Idolatry of the Socinians: 175 ** manded this bis Son to be adored. vengeance. This is our God; not the God of.. " all, but the God of the Faithful, and of them who « believe.Him, moſt dear Brethren, let us expect God the Father com « manded this his Son to be adored. And Saint Paul e the Apoſtle, mindful of his command, faith, That “God hath exalted him, and given him a nome above: every name ; that at the name of Jeſus every knee “ should bom; of things Cæleſtial, Terreſtrial and In- a Rev, 22, 9. « fernal. And in the Revelation, the Angel for- b Jefum Domi- " biddeth John who was willing to worſhip him (a), S.Corian rea- " and faith, See thou do it not, for I am thy fellow-jer- deth the Text, "vant and of thy Brethren. Adore the Lord Je-wo.. Beco fus (b), worſhip Gode CG et CHAP. de w begleitete erste som 176 CHAP. X. Of the Idolatry with which the Roman-Catho- licks are charged ; and how far they are juft- ly, or anjuftly accuſed. a PART I. . Of the Charge which is drawn up against them. B Y Roman-Catholicks, I mean thoſe who pretending to own the Doctrine of the Univerſal Church, and to ſubmit to the Diſcipline of it, as it is derived from the ſuppoſed Fountain and Head of it, the Biſhop of Rome, do confeſs the Faith of the Council of Trent. Theſe alſo are guilty of worſhipping Idols, if the multitude of Accuſers createth guilt ; to omit as yet the Arguments which move ſo many to that accufáti- on. Mr. Thorndike ſuppoſeth them accuſed, when he dike in hun affirmeth (a), “ That they who ſeparate from them as Weights and Idolaters, are thereby Schiſmaticks before God. As Meatures, C. l. alſo when he ſaith (b), “ They who charge the Pa- p. 6, 7. b Ch,2, p. 116 “pists to be Idolaters, let them not lead the peo- s ple by the Noſe, to believe that they can prove their Suppoſition when they cannot. Accuſed then they are ; and their Accuſers are nei- ther few, nor of inconſiderable quality. I mean not here the Mahometans and Jews ſo much as the Chriſti- ans, who are of this judgment. The Mahometans are the profeſſed enemies of viſible Idols; and in ſome places where they have unhappily ſucceeded in their Invaſions of Chriſtendom, they have been as fierce and Chap. X. Of the Idolatry charged, drc. 177 and zealous Iconoclaſts (a) as any to whom that name a Leerclau, has been given. And of ſuch zeal the Jews would give Turc. p. 139. external ligns, if they had equal power. Of both the b Grotius in learned Grotius faith (b), That they are much diver- Annot.ad.com ted from Chriſtianity by the Images which they ſee P-314.EE caſt in the way before them. Judæi ac Ma- bumetiſte 14- The Chriſtians of the Greek Church uſe painted Ta- rum (h.e. Ima- bles. But many of them (if many there be of the ſame ginum] aſpectu faith with their late Patriarch of Alexandria, S. Cyril] Pantur à Chri- do think of the Images of Roman-Catholicks, as of lo ſianiſmo. many Idols. That Patriarch being askt what the Greci- ans thought of Images, returned this Anſwer, not as his private opinion, but as the Faith of the Oriental Church (c), the members of which he perſonateth in See the pres that Confeſſion. “We do not reprobate (d) the noble to his Conf . “ Art of Painting. So far are we from that [extreme] ap. Hotting. « that we allow to ſuch as pleaſe, the Pictures of Jeſus forxi évode- " and his Saints. But for the adoration and worſhip of zia, &c. them, we deteſt it, as contrary to the Scripture, and a Sorin Reso “ leſt, inſtead of God, we ſhould ignorantly worſhip p. 531. “ Colour, Artifice, Creatures. He indeed 'uſeth the word seppele, which I rend'red Adoration ; but he joineth it with the word Sprensia, which I tranſlate Worſhip ; and which St. Paul uſeth in ſetting forth the Idolatrous adoration of Angels by the Gnoſticks (e). e col. 2. 18. And it is certain by his fcope, that he meaneth the es tam, Worſhip of Rome Modern 3 and he elſewhere (f), som er resten var calleth it ſuperſtitious and that which ſmelleth rank of f Ap. Hotting. Idolatry. P. 550. Touching thoſe Chriſtians who are known by the g Conf.Helv, in Corp.Confell Title of the Reformed, they judg it one great part of ... : their Reformation, that they have purged their Chur- Rojicomm. ditam ches of Romiſh Idols. or Gentium Idola, The Confeffion of Helvetia () rejecteth as Idola- sed on Chriftia trous, not only the Idols of the Heathens, but the chra. Аа Images 66 178 Of the Idolatry charged Chap. X. Images ligious uſe. alſo of thoſe who have taken upon them the Chriſtian name. a Scot.confes. The general Confeſſion of Scotland (a), to which ap. Synt. conf . the Royal Family, and many others, of condition, ſub- P. 126, 127... fcribed, calleth Tranſubſtantiation a blaſphemous opi- nion ; meaning thereby that blaſphemy, which faith, a Creature is God, and ſuppoſing that the Object, under the ſhews of bread, is bread, though ſet apart to a Re- b Polox: Conf P. 167, 168 The Confeſſion called the Conſent of Poland (b), having declamed againſt many of the Uſages of Rome, and imputed much of the Turks ſucceſs in Chriſtendoni to Gods diſpleaſure at them; proceedeth to an “ Ad- « dreſs to Chriſt, by a Prayer, in which he is beſeech- eed to blot out Idols, Errors, and Abominations. c Confeffio At- The Confeſſion of Strasburg (c) rejecteth that Wor- Civ. 4. Imper. fhip of Images which is practiſed in the Roman Church, Arg.Conft. Mem. Lindau.] 6.22. 22. as contrary to the Scripture, and to the ſenſe of the p. 196, 197, ancient Church ; citing to this purpoſe the Epiſtle of a confell. Allg. Epiphanius, and its Tranſlation by St. Hierom, as alſo Hic mos giori- the Authorities of Lactantius and Athanaſius. Am foli. Dio de The Auguſtan Confeſſion (d) condemneth the Invo- ed bomites,&c. cation of Saints, as a cuſtom which transferreth to men the honour which is due to God only; and which al- cribeth Omnipotence to the dead, by attributing to them the knowledg of the Heart. e conf. Saxon. The Confeſſion of Saxony (e) faith, of the Invoca- P. 87, 88. Re prehendimus tion of Saints, both that it leadeth from God, and that banc corrupte. it aſcribeth Omnipotence to the Creature. And it fet- lam ethnicum, eth upon the Worſhip both of Saints and Images, the reproachful brand of an Heatheniſh corruption. f conf. wirt. de The Confeſſion of Wirtemburgh (f), though being Eucbar.p.115. mindful of the difficulties of its own abſurd Conſub- p. 121,122. ftantiation, it condemneth not the Worſhip of Chriſt under the ſhews of Bread in the Church of Rome as an Chap. X. 179 on the Papiſts. o cultum Deo . an Idolatrous practice ; though it granteth that it is poſſible with God to change the Elements into the Bo- dy and Blood of Chriſt ; yet it doth not expreſs ſuch favour towards their Worſhip of Saints. It condem- neth the Invocation of them according to the Roman Litanies, as a practice which aſcribeth to them ſuch ubiquity and ſuch knowledg of the Heart as belongeth to God only. The Confeſſion of Bohemia (a) allowing ſome pub- a conf. Bobem. Art.17.de cul- lick Feſtivals in memory of the Virgin and other t# Sanct.p.2016 Saints, does yet fuppofe that Worſhip of them which Inſuper is uſed in the Church of Rome to be an honour and a- docent honorem doration due to God. debitum, non The Confeffion of Bafil (b) ſpeaking of ſuch pre-eſe ad Sanctos, cepts and permiſſions under the Papacy as it eſteemeth gines transfe- unlawful ; doth number the Invocation of Saints, and rendum, &c. Veneration of Images amongſt thoſe things which by Art. 11. de ila virtue of the ſecond Commandment ane prohibited by licitis permiſ. God. Papanis, atque in ſpecie de culo In the French Synods of the Reformed, there is fre- tu"Rel. Sanét. quent mention of Romiſh Idolatry (C). &c. p.18,19. For the Church of England, ſhe deſigned in her Arti- Lion. A. 1563. c See Synode de cles briefneſs, and avoidance of diſputes ; and having de Rochel. A. profeſſed the Faith of one God, and one Lord Jeſus glau. A. 160r. Chriſt, ſhe doth not infiſt particularly on the Invoca- in the Book of tion of Saints, or the Worlhip of Images. Yet in her 5. d'Huiffean twenty-ſecond Article concerning Purgatory, ſhe faith cipl. des Egli- of that and of the Romiſh Doctrine, touching Pardons, fes Refformees de Worſhip and Adoration, as well of Images as of Re- p.308, 309. licks, and alſo of Invocation of Saints, " That it is a “fond thing, vainly invented, and grounded upon no warranty of Scripture, but rather repugnant to the.. “ Word of God. Now what can we judg of that Wor- fhip which hath for its object ſomething elſe beſides God, and is contrary to the Scripture? We cannot Aa 2 but France. C. 12. 180 Of the Idolatry charged Chap.X: but think it not a mere impertinence, but a wicked act ; an act which by contradicting his Authority, di- miniſheth his honour : and being an act of Worſhip; nothing leſs than one degree of Idolatry. Again, in its twenty-eighth Article it teacheth concerning the come ſecrated Elements, “That they were not by Chriſts in “ ſtitution or ordinance, reſerved, carried about, lift- " ed up and worſhipped. By which words it noteth the Adoration of the Hoſt in the Church of Rome, not as an innocent circumſtance added by the diſcretion of ..that Church, but as an unlawful worſhip; though it doth not exprefly brand it with the name of Ido- latry. In the Rubrick after the Communion, the Adorati- on of the conſecrated Elements is upon this reaſon for bidden, “ Becauſe the Sacramental Bread and Wine re- " main ſtill in their very natural ſubſtances. And it is there added, " That they ſo remaining, the Adoration 206 of them would be Idolatry to be abhorred by all « faithful Chriſtians. This Rubrick doth in effect charge the Church of Rome with groſs Idolatry; for it ſuppoſeth the Object which they materially worſhip,to be in its natural ſub- ſtance ftill a creature, and a creature disjoined from Perſonal union with Chriſt, and not (according to the a Misal Rom. words of their St. Thomas (a) inſerted into their Mil- Millam. Adoro fal) a Deity latent under the accidents of Bread and te devotè lao Wine. And it concludeth that the worſhip of ſuch a Que Sub bis Fi- ſubſtance is ſuch Idolatry as Chriſtian Religion ab- guris veré lati- horreth. It doth not indeed affirm in terms, that the worſhip of ſuch a ſubſtance by a Romaniſt who verily thinks it to be not bread, but a Divine body, is Idolatry; but it faith that, whence ſuch a concluſion may be inferred. It ſaith that the bread is ſtill bread in its ſubſtance, and if Chap. X. on the Papiſts. aro 181 : if it be really ſuch whilſt it is worſhipped, the miſtake, of the worſhipper cannot alter the nature of the thing, though according to the degrees of unavoidableneſs in the cauſes of his ignorance, it may extenuate the crime. Upon ſuppoſition that ſtill 'tis very bread in its ſub- ſtance, Coſterus,and it may be Bellarmine himſelf,would.. have condemned the Latria of it as the Idolatrous worſhip of a Creature, even in Paul the ſimple, of whom ſtories ſay that he was extreamly devout ; but withal, that he knew not which were firſt, the Apo- a SeeLieftrane ſtles or the Prophets. And here it ought to be well no. Div. Offices, ted, that there is a wide diſtance betwixt this fay. p.207,208.6.7. ing, That Idolatry is a damnable fin; and this affertion, that any ado- That Idolatry in any degree of it, and in a perſon un- ration is done der any kind of circumſtances, actually damneth." to the Bread I would here alſo commend it to the obſervation of there bodily the Reader, that the Church of England ſpeaketh this received, or of the worſhip of the corporal ſubſtance of the Ele-unto any real ments preſent in the Euchariſt after conſecration ; and preſence there not of the real and eſſential preſence of Chriſt. And being of for this reaſon it left out the terms of Real and Ellen- ral Aeſh and tial, uſed in the Book of King Edward the ſixth (a), as ſubject to miſconſtruction. Real it is, if it be pre- b Fuell us in ſent in its real effects, and they are the eſſence of it ſo Apol.Eccl. Ang... far as a Communicant doth receive it: for he recei- veth it not ſo much in the nature of a thing as in the ſum enim afle nature of a priviledg (b). But I comprehend not the rimus veres whole of this Myſtery; and therefore I leave it to the bere in Sacra- explication of others who have better skill in untying mentis fuis : to of knots. Baptiſmo, ut In the Commination uſed by the Church of England, in cenâ, ut eum 'till God be pleafed to reſtore the Diſcipline of Pe- fide con ſpiritu comedamus, con nance, a curſe is denounced againſt all thoſe who de ejus cruce make any carved or molten Image to worſhip it. And as fanguine has it is the curſe which is in the firſt place denounced on æternam. Aſh- Chriſts natu- blood. 2.Book of E. 6. Se&. 14. P.59, Chri- eum Induamus : 182 Of the Idolatry charged Chap. x; * Afb-Wedneſday. It is true that it is taken out of the a Deut.27.15. Book of Deuteronomy (a), and it is the ſenſe of a verſe in that Book uſed at large in the former Common- Prayer-Book, in theſe words, Curſed is the man that maketh any carved or molten Image, an abomination to the Lord, the work of the hands of the craftſman : and putteth it in a ſecret place, [to worſhip it.] That is, though it be done without ſcandal to men, and in ſuch private manner as to avoid the puniſhment which the Law inflicteth on known and publick offenders. But the Church of England repeating this Law in its Con- mination, doth thereby own it to be ſtill of validity, and to oblige Chriſtian men. 984 The Homilies which are an Appendage to our Church, do exprefly arraign the Roman-Catholicks as ** Idolaters in the learned Diſcourſes of the peril of Idolatry. Alſo Engliſh Princes and Biſhops have declared them- felves to be of the fame perſwalion. in b Ed.6,Injunül. King Edward the fixth in his Injunctions (b), reckon- 1. Epife. Nor. eth Pictures and Paintings in the Churches of England dov.Edır.p.9. [as adorned by the Romaniſts]amongſt the Monuments of Idolatry. Of the Injunctions of Queen Elizabeth this «Q Eliz. Iz' is the Thirty-fifth (C), “That no perſons keep in their junct.A.1599. 6 houſes any abuſed Images, Tables, Pictures, Pain- tings, or other Monuments of feigned Miracles, Pil- grimages, Idolatry and Superſtition. Of the Articles Art. of In- of Inquiry in the firſt year of her Reign (d), this is quiry, p.238. one, and pertinent to our preſent Diſcourſe. Whether you know any that keep in their Houſes y “ faced Images, Tables, Pictures, Paintings, or other « Monuments of feigned and falſe Miracles, Pilgrimages, " Idolatry and Superſtition, and do adore them; eſpe- « cially ſuch as have been ſet up in Churches, Chappels , 6 and Oratories. This A. 1547 29 P. 73 any unde- eG 1 Chap. X. *on the Papiſts in ta redono 183 "dr. have not removed and taken away and utterly instant This likewiſe is one of the Articles of Viſitation fet forth by Cranmer Arch-biſhop of Canterbury, in the ſe- cond year of Edward the ſixth ; * Whether Parſons, «i extincted and deſtroyed in their Churches, Chappels, " and Houſes, all Images, all Shrines ----Pictures, Pain- “ tings, and all other Monuments of Idolatry and “ Superſtition- Biſhop Jewels opinion is ſo well kuown, that his words may be ſpared: And that Confeſſion of Faith which he penned, and which maketh a part of his A- pology for the Church of England Cand in which he calleth (a) the Invocation of Saints in the Church of a Corp. Confill. Rome,a practice vile, and plainly Heatheniſh] is put in- and Fewel's to the collection of the Confeſſions of the Reformed, Apol. Eccl. under the Title of the Engliſh Confeſſion (b). But the 18. p.56.Turpe Churches Confeffion it cannot be called with reſpect autem es planè to her Authority, which did not frame it ; whatſoever athnicum elt it be in its ſubſtance, and in its conformity to her Ecclefiis vide- Articles. b Confeffio An- For others of the Church of England, a very Lear-glica ap. Synt. ned perſon, the Hannibal and Terrour of Modern Conf p.89,&c. Rome (c) hath named enough. T. G. hath indeed ex- Adet'in Pref.to cepted againſt many of the Jury: but whether he bath his Diſc.cone. not illegally challenged ſo many of them, remaineth a the Idol.pra&. Queſtion ; or rather it is with the Judicious out of of Rome. diſpute. The fentences of private men ſpoken on this occafi- on, both here and beyond the Seas either broadly (d), d Auth, Queve- or indirectly, are fcarce to be mumbered. Amongſt them beyond the Seas I will name only Danaus and Babel quondam, Hottinger. Sed nunc es ſa- Eta Betbaven, Daneus in his Appendix to the Catalogue of Here- &c. fies written by St. Auſtin, recounteth the Hereticks who had offended, as he thought, in particular man- mus, &c. in the Church monice Europe. P. 230 Roma ner 184 of the mitigation of the eharge Chap. X. ner againſt the ſeveral precepts of the Decalogue. And under the ſecond Commandment he placeth the Simo- nians, the Armenians, the Papiſts, and ſome others, as a Hottinger.in notorious violaters of it. Hottinger (a) diſtributeth Dibert . 1. de the falſe worſhip of the Papiſts into fix kinds of Ido- Necefl. Reform. latry, under the Greek names of Aptorezcoa, or Bread- worſhip; Meetorançoia, or Marian-worſhip, to wit, that of the Bleſſed Virgin ; 'Aylondegoia, or Saint-worſhip; "Ayysaoranenia, or Angel-worſhip Ambayorantia, or Re- lick-worſhip; and laſtly, 'Eixoronamstiu, or the worſhip of Images. P 39. : THI PART 2. Of the mitigation of the charge of Idolatry againſt the Papiſts. HE learned Hugo Grotins, eſpecially in his Anno- tations on the conſultation of Caſſander, in his Animadverſions on the Animadverſions of River, and in his Votum pro Pace; The learned Mr. Thorndike in his Epilogue, and in his Juſt Weights and Meaſures; Curcel- B Curcell. Ep. læus in his Epiſtle to Adrian Patius (b): Theſe three, ad Adr. Pats together with ſome others have pronounced a milder inter Epift. Ec- ſentence in this cauſe, though they approved not of deſiat, p.859. ſuch Invocation of Saints, and worſhip of Images, as is practiſed in the Church of Rome. But it is not my de- ſign to decide the controverſie by the greater number of modern Authorities, but rather to look into the inerits of the cauſe. pa And this I purpoſe to do ſo far only,as Angels, or ra- ther Saints and Images, are the Objects of this Diſqui- fition. Of Relicks, and the Sacramental bread, I forbear to ſay more than that little which follows. For the firſt, that which will be ſaid concerning the wor- .. Chap. X. of Idolatry against the Papifts. 185 worſhip of Images will help us ſufficiently in judging of the worſhip of Relicks. If they be made Objects of Religious adoration ; if they be honoured as pledges of Divine protectionzif they be truſted in as Shrines of Divine virtuezat adventure, and in all agesz they become as the Manna which was laid up for any other than the Sabbath-day, uſeleſs to the preſervers, offenſive to God, and unſavory to men of fagacious Noſes. Concerning that ſubſtance which after Sacramental confecration, appeareth as Bread, that excellent Church, in whoſe ſafe communion I have always lived, doth ſtill call it Bread. For the Prieſt, after having conſecrated the E- lements, and received the Communion himſelf in both “ kinds, is required by the Rubrick of that Office, to “adminiſter to others, and when he delivereth the “ Bread to any one, to uſe this Form, The Body of our - Lord Jeſus Chriſt which was given for thee, preſerve “thy Body and Soul to Everlaſting life. Now a Dif courſe concerning the worſhip of that Subſtance which appeareth as Bread, will in effect be a Diſcourſe about the Corporal preſence of Chriſt under the ſhews of that creature, and run the Difputant into another Quefti- on which hath been induſtriouſly fifted by Thouſands. Neither are the printed Volumes touching this ſub- ject few or ſmall. There is a great heap of them writ- ten by the learned Meſſieurs, Arnaud and claud; and Monſieur Aubertin hath obliged the World with a very large and laborious work, about Tranſubſtantiation, in which may be ſeen the ſenſe of the Ancients. Forbearing then any further Diſcourſe about the Worſhip of Relicks, or the Sacramental bread, I pro- ceed to the Worſhip of Saints, Angels, and Images ; in- quiring how far the Church of Rome doth by her Ve- neration render them Idols. Oro At the entrance of this Inquiry, the trueneſs of her Bb Faith :: of the mitigation of the Charge, Chap. X. Faith in one God and three Perfons, is to be acknow ledged and obſerved. The Creed which is formed by order of the Council of Trent, beginneth with the Ara ticles of that of Nice ; though it endeth not without Additions. And Dr. Rivet in his Reflections on thoſe excellent Notes with which the acute Grotius adorned and Roy, the conſultation of Caſſander (a), doth in this point, Annot. H. Grot. own the Orthodoxy of the Roman Faith. In the Ar “ticle of the Divine Trin-unity,there is nothing (faith he) controverted betwixt Papiſts and Proteſtants . And thus much is true, if ſpoken of the generality of them; for they herein adhere to Catholick Doctrine Thus do the Proteſtants of the Church of England; ; but all do not fo, either here, or beyond the Seas who commonly paſs under the’name of Proteſtants. Curcelle- us for inſtance fake, is called a Proteſtant, yet may ſeem ,, no other than a Tritheite, as may appear by the firſt of thoſe four Diſputations which he wrote againſt his ſharp Adverſary Marefiuseppe The Romaniſts then profeſſing the true Catholick Faith in the Article of the bleſſed Trinity, and owning b Verba Anaft, the ſecond Synod of Nice, (which though it favoured probata à conc. Images ſo very highly, yet it aferibed Latria to God Nic 2. Act.4. only (1),) they ſeem injurious to them who do not p.758. C.D. i only charge them with Idolatry, but alſo aggravate offendatur in that Idolatry as equal to the falſe Worſhip of the moſt Adorationis vs. barbarous Gentiles. They ſeem unjuſt, I ſay, in fo do- dem & Homining, unleſs this be their meaning, that the leaſt degree nes, en Santos of that crime under the light of Chriſtianity, be equal mus, non autem to the greateſt under the diſadvantages of Hea- quod aangolar, theniſm. hoc eft,divina) It is certain that the Romaniſts who worſhip the amus. Inquit true God, do not worſhip Univerſal Nature, or ** enim Mofes, Sun, or the Soul of the World in place of the Supreme derabis, & Deity, as did millions of Pagans.. Allo, Nemo autem cultum exbibe or the Chap. X. of Idolatry againſt the Papiſts . *187 tio. Alſo for the Angels which they worſhip, they juſti- fie only the adoration of thoſe Spirits, who perſiſted in their firſt eſtate of unſpotted Holineſs: and they re- * Rituale Roma nounce in Baptiſm (a) the Devil and his Angels, after de Sacr. Bapt. the manner of the Catholick Church. And when an p. 28. Heathen is by them baptized, the Prieſt (b) after ha- Inter. Abrenur- ving figned him, firſt on the Forehead, and then on Reſp. Abrenun- the Breaſt, with the ſign of the Croſs, does exhort him tio. in this Form: Abhor Idols. Reject (their) Images. But bius operibres Int. et omniu the Gentiles ſacrificed to Devils, and to ſuch who by ejus ? the light of nature, might be known to be evil Dx- Reſp. Abrenium mons; becauſe they accepted of ſuch Sacrifices as were Int. Et omnibus unagreeable to the juſtice and charity, and piety of pampis ejus ? Refp. Abrenun- mankind; Sacrifices vile and bloodys ſuch whole ſmoke might be diſcerned by a common noſtril, to ſmell b Rit. Rom. ib: of the ſtench of the bottomleſs pit. Yet ſome of the :32: Horrefce Heathens exprefly denied the practice of ſuch werſhip, fimulacra. and made to the Chriſtians this following profeſlion (c): “We worſhip not evil Dæmons. Thoſe Spirits cs. Augi En "which you call Angels, thoſe we alſo worſhip; the Pfal. 96. Non « Powers of the Great God, and the Miniſteries of the Demonia: Ar- * Great God. -gelos quos dici- For Hero's , they worſhip thoſe only whom they become los comes lieve to have profeſſed Chriſtian Religion, and to have tes Dei magni, been viſible Members of the Catholick Church: For minifterie Dei magni. into that (whatſoever particular communion it was so which afterwards they viſibly owned) they were at firſt Baptized. Whereas the Gentiles worſhipped many who had been worſhippers of falſe gods. Such worſhippers were caftor, Pollux, Quirinus, among the Romans. -Thefe firſt worſhipped falſe Deities, and were after- wards worſhipped themſelves with the like undue ho- nour. O home o For Images, they venerate (for ſo the Council of ,, -Trent loves to ſpeak rather than to ſay adore or wor- ſhip, Bb 2 288 of the mitigation of the charge,exc. Chap. X. tionem autem a In Coxc. 2. ſhip, with the ſecond Synod (a) of Nice) thoſe of Nic . Act:4P. Chriſt the true God, and of ſuch as they eſteem real raſ. Omnes qui Saints in Heaven ; and not the Statues of the Sun, or Sacras Imagines of Univerſal Nature, or of the Soul of the World; or le venerari con- fitentur, adora- incentionally thoſe of Devils, or damned ſpirits. In the Worſhip of Angels, Saints, Images, they for- a ito Patre (h.c. bear Sacrifice, as proper to God : Whereas the Hea Anaftafio Epifc. then did not appropriate it to Him; for ſome of them Theopol,] tance offer'd only their Minds to the Supreme Deity, and redarguuntur. their Beaſts to inferior gods. And the greater number offer'd Vi&ims and their usesse stah or Prayers uſed 6 Her. Serm. in facrificing, both to God and Dæmons (b). Yet it Prudens placa- muſt be confeſſed, that thus far the Church of Rome vi sanguine hath gone towards Sacrifice to Saints. It hath appoin- ., ted Maffes, which it eſteemeth proper Sacrifices or Of ferings of the Body of Chriſt to the Father, in honour of her Saints. Inſomuch that ſuch Maffes bear the names of their Hero's; and nothing is ſaid more com- monly than the Maſs of St. Anthony; the Maſs of this or the other Saint.But in this caſe the Council of Trent hath given caution ; and would not have it believ! that the Sacrifice is offered to the Saint, but to God e Concil . Trid, only (C). Sefl.22. c.3. de Now that which I have hitherto ſhewed, is the fair Miffis in Hon. Sandi. p.853. ſide of the Church of Rome, in reference to the Idola- er en sanit: try with which ſhe is charged. Neither hath my Pen orum nonnullas dawbed in the repreſentation; it hath done her but Ecclefia cele- brare confueula. But there is, beſides this already expoſed to view,a rit, non tamen cloudy ſide of that Church which calleth her ſelf the illis Sacrifici. Pillar of Chriſtian Truth. This that we may the bet- set, ſed Du ter diſcern, let us firſt view it in the Council of Trent, Soli que illos. (or in any later Popiſh Synods), and then in its own ſubſequent Acts; and ſee how far [firſt in the point of Invocation of Saints, and next of Images] it doth dl. redly, interdum Millas juſtice. amonavit Chap. X. Of the Idolatry charged on, e. 189 rectly, or by plain conſequence, and not meerly by . accidental abuſe, uſurp any honour which belongeth to God. . F a Concil. Trid: PART 3 of the Idolatry charged on the Papiſts in their Worſhip of Saints. Irſt, touching the Invocation of Saints, the Council of Trent determineth (a) that the ſpirits of holy InterConc.Max. “men reigning with Chriſt, are to be venerated, and p.89s. See the “ invoked: And that they offer Prayers to God for Bull of Pius the 4th.p.944 us. Alſo, that it is good and lawful to pray to them, " and to flie to their Prayers; their help and aid through Chriſt the only Saviour and Redeemer of men. In purſuance of this Decree, the Church of Rome hath continued her practice of worſhipping Saints ac- cording to certain Forms of words preſcribed in ſuch Books as her Breviary and Miſſal,,, which the Popes by, virtue of another Decree (b) of the fame Council have . conc.Trid.de reviſed, and for common uſe eſtabliſhed. Yum,&c.p.918: Now the forms and ſigns of Worſhip uſed in that See conc. Agho Church are of ſuch a nature, that they ſeem at firſt P. 135. view at leaſt, to give to the Saints, if not that honour which is incommunicable, yet that which God, though satu he might have given it,, hath reſerved to himſelf. It. may ſuffice to illuſtrate this matter, if I ſelect ſome Forms uſed in the Officium Parvum of the holy Virgin, which maketh a part of the Romih Breviary, ſet out in purſuance of the Decree of Trent, by Pius the fifth. In that Office the Virgin is, worſhipped in theſe c Offic. Parur Eſtabliſh us in peace. Unlooſe the bonds of the B.M.p. 89- Ed: guilty. Bring forth light to the blind. Drive away our 1583,& p.96, evils, Make us, abſolved of our faults, meek and chaſte . &e. Vouchſafe us a ſpotleſs life Thon Indice Libro Forms (c). 190 Of the Idolatrycharged on the Chap. X. 107. c ib. p. 103 d ib. p. 107. . : a Ib. p. 90. Thou art moſt worthy (a ) of all praiſe. Let all whe commemorate thee, have experience of thy apſiſtance. b ib . p. 102,et Vouchſafe (b) that I may praiſe thee, O Sacred Virgin, give me power againſt thy Enemies. Let (c) the Virgin Mary bleſs us, and our pious off Spring Mary, Mother of Grace (d), Mother of Mercy! 1!0 thou defend us from the Enemy, and receive us at the hour of death." We alſo find in that little Office this Exhortation e lbid. p. 94. 'aſcribed to Bernard (e) : Let us embrace, my Brethren, Left, 3. Menje the footſteps of Mary, and let 1ts-caſt our ſeives at ber bleſſed feet with moſt devont ſupplication. Let us hold her and not let her go till the bleſs us 3 for ſhe is able. Thefe Forms are agreeable to many others in the former part of the Roman Breviary, out of which I will tranfèribe only the following Suffrages. f Brev. Rom. in Holy Mary (f) fuccour the miſerable, help the weak- hearted, refreſh the weeping, pray for the people, mediate pe 103. for the Clergy, intercede for devout women. Let all who celebrate thy Commemoration, feel Thy Aid (3). Additions in Hail,o Queen (h)! Thon Mother of mercy, life, fweet- Serm. 2. de neſs, and our Hope, we falute thee. To thee met he Daniſh ed children of Eve, do make our fupplication. To thee we to St. Anline figh, mourning and weeping in this valley of tears! Go to ha Breo Rom therefore our Advocatrefs ; turn towards us thoſe the Ad . merciful eyes; and fhem us after this our baniſhment, Jeſus, the bleſſed fruit of thy womb : 0 mild, O pious, Ofweet Virgin Mary! Many of theſe Suffrages taken in their plain and com- mon meaning, do manifeſtly intrench upon the Prero- gative of God. And of this kind alſo are thoſe Romiſo Prayers which are mentioned by Mr. Thorndike in the i Mr. Thornd, laſt part of his Epilogue (i), in which he treateth of Epil. part. 3. the Laws of the Church. The third fort (ſaid he) Commem. de Marid, P See this * Porm with ANNUM. which ſome aſcribe p. 107 P. 356, 357. of Chap. X. Papiſts in their Invocation of Saints. 191 * 6 of [the Prayers of Romaniſte unto Saints] is, when “ they deſire immediately of them the ſame bleſſings, ſpiritual and temporal, which all Chriſtians deſire of “God. There is (as he proceeds) a Pfalter to be ſeen « with the name of God (or rather Lord] changed, every-where into the name of Virgin. There is a « Book of Devotion in French with this Title, Moyen « de bien Servir, prier, & adorer la Vierge Marie: The « way well to ſerve (a), pray to, and adore the blef- a Servir an- « ſed Virgin, The [Prayers of this] third [ſort]taking ritam. “ them at the foot of the Letter, and valuing the in- tent of thoſe that uſe them by nothing but the words « of them, are meer Idolatries. As defiring of the crea- «ture that which God only gives, which is the wor « ſhip of the creature for the Creator, God bleſſed for e evermore. And were we bound to make the Acts of « them that teach theſe Prayers the Acts of the Church, " becauſe it tolerates them, and maintains (b) them in b Conſideri cit, inſtead of caſting them out, it would be hard to Church of “free that Church from Idolatry, which whoſo ad- Rome doth not * mitteth can by no means grant it to be a Church. The Letter then of Romill Forms being very fcan- by making the Prayers it fell, dalous, thoſe who juſtifie the uſe of them muſt fhew foregoing. ſome other words wherein the Romißs Church hath ſo patinkanap explained her ſelf to the World, that men may plainly on art know ſhe never intended them in their common and native acception, but in a ſenſe agreeable to the hos Dores tenure of Scripture ; and of ſuch a ſenſe Mr. Thorndike in the place before cited y hath, judged them ca- restoritel os pable. bio bonboia bon If ſuch an Interpretation be by her promulgated to the World, the force of the Objection againſt ſucha Forms will be abated : abated I ſay, but not quite re- moved. For ſtill ſuch Forms are perilouş amongſt the vulgar, who follow the received ſenſe of words not make ſuch pod with 192 of the Idolatry charged on the Chap.X: may withſtanding their contrary Interpretations. There indeed be a very arbitrarious uſe of ſigns; and if an Humoriſt will give this caution to his neighbour that when he uſeth the word, black, he muſt be inter- preted as meaning, white, he ſhall not lye to him when he tells him that the Snow is black, and that the Crow is white; or when he writes himſelf Blacklous inſtead of Thomas Albius.But amongſt others to whom ſuch caution is not given,and who underſtand nothing of this abſurd humor, his reſerved meaning will not ſalve the veraci- ty of his word. Now let it be examined, Whether the Church of Rome hath made before the world, a plain interpreta- tion of the abovefaid Forms, in ſuch fort, that men cannot, without breach of charity,put upon them any other than this or the like conſtruction, avowed by 2$ce S.crefly's many Doctors (a): Holy Mary, pray for us in order to zi c.3, 9:438 . the obtaining theſe or other bleſſings from the alſufficient Ed.3. This is God.Otherwiſe that Church is anſwerable for the com- only that they mon and ſcandalous meaning of the Latine words, eede for us, which are not now proper to Rome, but the language of the World. If ſuch an Interpretation be divulged we muſt look Serm. 6. 16. of for it either in the Council of Trent, or in ſome fol- Saints, p.195. lowing Synods, or in the Decrees of the Popes, or in this only ace the Catechiſm, Breviaries, Miffals, or ſome other ſuch cord, to Card. Books which are publíckly authorized by that pour Prie. i.e. Church. to deſire them for the Breviarie and Miffal, their Forms have to pray for been already produced ; neither have I omitted any Antecedents and conſequents which may decipher ſome hidden meaning in them. It is true, ſome Litanies ſub- join the sainoor, or, Have mercy, only to the Perſons of the Sacred Trinity; uſing to Saints and Angels, the Form of Orate pro nobis, or pray for us. But they who in In his Anſwer to Dr. Pierce's Use 2 3 Kuet Skencor, Lord bave Chap. X. Papiſts in their invocation of Saints. 193 in one Prayer deſire the Saints only to pray for them, do not barely by that one Prayer manifeſt to the World that they ſtill mean no more than the requeſting of their Interceffions, when in an hundred other Forms they call upon them to beſtow this and that benefit upon them; and ſometimes a benefit which is not to be expected but from the Almightineſs of God. For the Council of Trent, fuch Forms, in the ratifi- cation at leaſt of their common uſe, following by vir tue of its Decree, they ſeem rather to be Explications of the ſenſe of the Council,than to-be by it explained. For that were to make the Key firſt, and the Lack which it ſhould open afterwards. But if the Breviary and Miſtal be explained by the Council, they receive a very dark Interpretation, and therefore next to inſuf ficient. For the common ſenſe of its Forms is natu- rally, or by cuſtom plain ; and therefore their Expli- cation in a forced ſenſe, though exceeding open, will of ſcarce be admitted by the vulgar, who judg by that which is juſt before them. They like ordinary Travel- lers plod on in the common road which is before their eyes, and mind not the directions which are engraven or written on Pillars which ſtand on their right or left hand. That Church should have been careful of the ſcandalous found of Idolatrous Forms, conſidering how ** tender Religion is of the Honour of God: and it fhould have taken further care againſt the peril of that Idolatry which attendeth them ; conſidering the weak capacities of the people, who will conſtrue Idolatrous Forms in an Idolatrous ſenſe. If the Pope ſhall ſet forth a thouſand Declarations concerning the Worſhip of one true God, and yet ſhall pray in this form, Baza dalsger, Baal have mercy, inſtead of this ancient one, * **** of him as of a well-wiſher to Baal, though the name Сс does 194 of the Idolatry charged on the Chap. X. .. Hati : does ſignifie no more than Lord; becauſe the common acceptance of it hath rendred it the ſign of a falſe god. In ſuch manner the World would judg, if he ſhould call on God by the name of żera, though it be but the word DEUS, or God, with a very little alte ration. It appeareth then that in ſome Forms a forced Inter- pretation doth not effectually ſhew the fenfe which is vaild under the Letter, or rather where the Letter looks a contrary way. And for the Forms of the Church of Rome, the Council of Trent does not give any open Interpretation of them, or ſo much as fug- geſt that nothing is meant by them but an Ora pro nobis. For the Council where it treateth of the Invocati a conc. Trid.' on of Saints (a), it doth not only mention the ufeful- Sul, 25. Decr. neſs of their Prayers, but alſo of their help and affift- Sanct. p.895. ance ; which affiſtance if it be no other than that of their Prayers, the addition of the words, Help and ad corum Ord Aid, to that of Prayers may feem very fuperfluous: Something elſe that Church meaneth, and it is elfe- Auxiliumque where expreſſed by Patrocinium, the aid of a Patron, conferre. or rather of a Guardian; for that it intendeth. In the little Office of the bleſſed Virgin this Collect is pre- bo offic. paru. feribed (b), We pray thee, Lord,let all thy Saints every B. Virg. p. 97. where help us, that whilft we celebrate their merits, we may feel their Patrocinie, [op Protection.] I here inter- pret Patrocinie by Guardianſhip, aid, and protection; not only becauſe the word will bear that ſenſe [for in Feſtus, Patrocinium, is, Tutela de defenſio ; and in Cicero , Patronus , is, Cuftos du defenfor Colonid], but becauſe thoſe prayers refer to their Saints as to Patrons and Pa- e Conc. Milev. troneſles of perſons, places and things ; of which more 6.c.7. de cultu at large, in the purſuit of this Argument. In the fixth Council of Milan (c), it is ſaid, “To be agreeable to bonum . siones, opere, 9 Sanctorum, P. 717 « pious Chap. X. Papiſts in their Invocation of Saints. pious Reafon, by Divine Offices, and Litanies, to im- plore the Interceflion or Patrocinie of the Patrons c of Cities and Provinces. From ſuch Patrons they ex- pect other aids beſides thoſe of their prayers; and they tell how they appear in times of danger, and how a- Give they are in effe&ting their deliverance. In the Cx- techiſm of Trent (4), that Church owneth Chriſt as the a Catech. tk only (that is, as they mean it, the principal] Patron. Trid. p.392. And as it intends not to fignifie by that word that Chriſt doth no otherwiſe give aid to his Church than by his Interceſſion; fo neither doth it mean the like by the Patrocinie of the Saints. The Council of Trent mentions their Aids, beſides their Prayers, and accor- dingly the people pray for them in ſuch Forms as theſe: O holy Mary (b) ſtretch abroad the hand of thy mer- nual of Fobre yor...graciouſly (c) hear us in all our needs and neceffi- Heigham in ties, and leave us not comfortleſs, nor alone without help our Ladies Li- in that dreadful day and hour, when our ſouls fhall go out turday. P.38a. of our bodies, but allift and help us, that we may then fafe. c Ibid. p. 382. come and enter in at the gates of Paradiſe. To thy (d) help, o Virgin, Mother of God, poor women labour-d. ibid.Prayers ing in childbirth do fly: refuſe them not in their neceſſz- travelling ties, but help them in all their distreſs, o bleſſed with child. Virgin. P. $19, $200 Verſ. In all our Tribulations and Anguiſhes. Refp. The bleffed Virgin-Mother fuccour us. Where we have a Miſerere, not an Ora.] Sometimes indeed the Romanists call the very prayer of the Virgin a protection, as in this form (e): We besc Ibidi the feech thee, O Lord, that the glorious Interceffion of the Lit for a Satama ever-bleſſed and glorious Virgin Mary may protect us, and bring us to everlasting life. But it is certain that they generally mean fome further aſſiſtance than that of fupplication when they call for it; for they are taught that the Saints arc endued with ſuch a power. Hence Cc 2 John ... 196 i of the Idolatry charged on the Chap. X. a J.H. Man.Pr. John Heigham in his Popiſh Manual (a), hath this Adi at S.Omers,An. 1620. P-584 vertiſement as preparatory to Confeffion. “ Commend « thy ſelf unto Almighty God, to his bleſſed Mother, "and to thy good Angel, praying, that thou maiſt no way be feduced, or deceived by the fraud of the « Devil. Alſo to St. Mary Magdalene, and to St. Bar- 16 bara : who as it is written, have obtained moſt effe: ctual grace and favour of God to aſſiſt in confeſſion, all fuch as pray unto them for their help and afliſt- 66 ance. :: If we proceed to other Councils later than that of the Council of Trent, inquiring in them for interpre- tations of Romih Offices; they are not in pretence any more than Provincial or National Synods, not ge- neral Councils. Wherefore the Interpretations of ſuch Synods (if any, be found in them) are not ſufficient for the enlightning and manifeſting the ſenſe of the whole Church. But ſo far as my obſervation in the peruſal of them, may be of validity, I avouch that there is not in them ſuch an interpretation as referreth the ſenſe of b Concil. Rhem, the abovefaid Forms, meerly to a praying to the Saints fub Pic Quarto, to pray for us. In many of them (b) the Doctrine of p. 757.65 Trent, in this Article is owned and reinforced but not, Rothom p.823. that I know of, further explained. Rhem.ſub Greg That which I find moſt oppoſite to the thing in Burdig. p.946. hand, amidſt fo vaſt an heap of Decrees, is a certain Turon. p. 100% place in the Synod of Cambray: a Synod held, ſome- Biturg. p.1069, o . what more than an hundred years ago (c) under Maxi- Aquay p. 11924 milian a Bergis, Archbiſhop and Duke of Cambray. The mexic. p. 138.. place which I mean is in the third Chapter, under the . Mechlin. p. Title, de functis; and thus it runs : Let the Prayers of the Faithful follow the analogy Narbon. p. 1576, 1980, « and proportion of Faith. Wherefore let the leſs c corcil.camer. “ learned Populace be admoniſhed, that when they Ann. 1555 « viſit the Memorials of the Saints, and implore their P. 176. “ aid, 13. p. 886. P. 1075 1542 * Chap. X. Papiſts in their Invocation of Saints. 197 . * aid, and according to Chriſtian cuſtom, repeat the Lords-prayer, that they underſtand that they direct " them not to the Saints but unto God; the Saints being joined with them as Comprecators. This founds fomewhat like a Pléa from the Roman Church-men to the populace of Cambray, if care be taken that they be inſtructed according to that Decree of their Synod. But that being a Decree enacted in a corner of the world, and in a private Synod, it can- not fuffice in all thoſe places where the Roman Offices are enjoined, and where the uſe of them is continual: Further, two things are here to be obſerved in refera ence to this Decree : Firſt, That the Invocation of Saints as Patrons contradicteth not the analogy of the Roman Faith. Secondly, That the bringing of the Forms of Invocation to the Analogy of Faith in this Decree dces not fo much reſpect the Prayers in the Miſſal and Breviarie,as the Lords-prayer repeated more privately in the Litanies of the Saints (a): Proceed we next to the Roman Decretals. In the domin. 4x4 tam new Decretals, which make the ſeventh Book in the memaria como Alexatione fan- body of their Canon-law, I can find nothing after the tử dài + Creed of Trent urged upon all their Eccleſiaſticks, in Horft. Parad. the Bull of Pius the fourth (b), beſides the preſſing Anime. Se&.2 of the fame Form or Oath anew by Pius the fifth,upon bcorp Fur. the Doctors and Profeſſors of all Faculties (c) Ca. 1. 7. C. For the Catechiſin of Trent, I meet indeed with ſuch 2.7. Decret. an Interpretationof the forementioned Offices, as foun- 4.3. Tit se deth to them that do not well attend, as if all were P. 126. meant of requeſting the Prayers of Saints on our be- half. The place of that Catechiſm (d) is this which I am going to mention. “We do not after the fame man- part. 4. c. 6. ner pray to God and to the Saints. For we pray to Seå, a sumista God, that he would give good things, and deliver us from evil; but we beg of the Saints, becauſe they recitandi Oram. Decr.Conc.Trid. 46. « are 198 Of the Idolatry charged onthe Chap. X Hear us: « are gracious with God, that they would take us in- « to their Patronage, and procure of God the things cwe need. Hence we uſe two different Forms; for we ſay properly to God, Have mercy on us , “to a Saint, Pray for us : though upon another ac- “count we may pray to the Saints themſelves to have mercy on us, for they are very merciful. On this place it may not be amiſs if I beſtow theſe Animadverſions. First, When it is ſaid that Roman Catholicks pray not to the Saints for the beſtowing of good, or the a- verting or removing of evil, this is meant of abſolute Prayer,(to uſe the terms of Cardinal Perron) by which we addreſs our ſelves to the firſt Cauſe, who is God; not of Relative ſupplication, by which they call on the Saints as ſubordinate conveyers of good, and a- verters of evil. So in the Hymn, Ave Mari's ſtella, the Virgin is deſired to give light to the blind, and to a Brev. Rom. in drive away our evils (a). Feft.Pur.p.721 Secondly, When Papists deſire the Saints to pray for IN Offic. B.M. p.89, &c. them, becauſe they are gracious with God, they mean not this only of their deſire that the Saints would uſe their intereſt as Saints in their preſent caſe,for the pro- curing of Gods immediate help; but they alſo intreat them either to procure of God commiſſion to be their Patrons, or to continue his Grace to them in execu- ting the commiſſion formerly given them. This, I fup- poſe, is meant in thoſe Collects," where they deſire God to protect his people who truſt in the Patro- b Offic. B. M. p.97.Scc Mig: “nage of Peter and Paul and other Apoſtles (b). And Rom. in od. this Horstius means in this form of Prayer to the Vir- say. Fac nos, gin(); I beſeech thee by that mighty favour granted que fumus, &c. thee by Christ, that thon wilt obtain for me more grace c Horf. Par , to pleaſe God. Thirdly, Though in the Litany where the Trinity An. Se&. 2: P. 105. 1S Chap. X. Papifts in their Invocation of Saints. 199 : is invoked with the form of, Have mercys the Saints in are called on with that of, Pray for us ; (for the ſame form fo nigh would have founded ill, as if the Saints were equal with God); yet when the Saints are ad- dreſſed to in diſtinct Collects or Hymns, the form is, Help #s, as well as, Pray for us. Thus in the Hymn, Alma Redemptoris Mater. They (a) pray to the Virgin a Brev. Ronde in the form of, Peccatorum miſerere. Complet.p.106, Fourthly, Here is own'd a requeſt both for Patro nage and Prayer. And further, in thar Catechiſm (6), the Saints are b catech. Creo called "Mediators and Patrons; and there is mention Trid. Liga. "(c) of their Aids; and their Worſhip (d) is con- c toid. p.392. e founded with that of Angels under the name of An- d ibid.pag. gelical Spirits. And of them it is there affirmed, that “God hath appointed them to be his Miniſters, that U he ureth their Miniſtration in the Government, 6 both of his Church, and of other things; and " that by their help we are daily delivered from the greateſt dangers of Soul and Body. For the Books of publick Offices, their Forms have been already produced ; neither can I ſee where the Comment of any Rubrick removeth the ſcandal of their Text. Concerning Manuals, they are ufually compoſed by private Doctors, or devout Students, who often in- termix the Gloſſes of their own Reaſon. But nothing leſs than the Church it ſelf can authentickly explain its Univerſal practice. And for ſuch Manuals as are autho- rized by the Church, to me they ſeem to tranſcend, ra- ther than to come ſhort of the Forms of the Millal and Breviarie. Such a Manual is that of the Hours of of the Blefied Virgin, in which if there had been any Inch Explication of the Forms uſed to her, it had been fhut up together with other Manuals, from the com- mon 200 of the Idolatry charged on the Chap.X: lib. prohib. p. 1423 Aven. p. 1440, with Concil. Trid. Decret. Sacr, Libr. P. 747. b See Concil. P: 1201,12031 1204 mon view of the Chriſtian world, by the Interdict of acecil Medio. any vulgar tranllation of it (a). For to every Country lan. 3. p.379, has not been granted the Sclavonian priviledg (b): . c. II. de That people have been allowed the Books of their Re- ligion in their vulgar tongue, with advice notwith- 144.1, comp.' ſtanding, to embrace the Latin, though to them an un- known language. de Edit. 6 uſth In the Province of Mexico it was decreed by the Synod (c), That no Books of Religion ſhould be read without the permiſſion of the Ordinary. And Aqu. p. 1482. the Manuals which were appointed for the uſe of the of the Books people, whether Spaniſh or Indian, were not likely to the Illyrical expound to them the meaning of the Roman Forms; Tougue. for their Contents were theſe : “ The Lords--prayer; & Syr. Mexic. “ The Salutation by the Angel ; The Apoſtles Creed; “ The Articles of Faith, [thoſe in the Creed of Trent]; « The Precepts of the Decalogue; The Precepts of “the Church ; The ſeven Sacraments; the ſeven dead- "ly Sins ; and the Salve Regina. This Antiphona called Salve Regina, has been alrea- dy repeated ; and it is one of the higher Forms of the Worſhip of the Virgin. And Father Paul did in ſome d Fulgentio in meaſure thew his dillike of it (d), in forbearing to re- Father Pant peat it, as did his Brethren at the end of the Maſs. But the Venetian, it is true, that he coloured his averſneſs with ſuch an P. 43 excuſe as this, that he was not to obſerve a Decree of e Syn. Mexic. Thirty Fryars againſt the Order of the whole Church. Now in the abovefaid Synod of Mexico (e), there is a p. 1298. ſpecial inforcement of the ſinging of Salve Regina dai- ly, and with all ſolemnity, during a great part of Lent. And the Biſhops are there much prefled to procure in this manner, with all ſolicitude, the increaſe of pious devotion towards the holy Virgin. The Engliſh Romaniſts have had often in their hands the Manual of Godly Prayers, publiſhed at St. Omers by the Life of Sed. 12. Chap. X. Papiſts in their Invocation of Saints, 201 by John Heigham. In the ſixth Edition of that Book, I find no Explication of the Worſhip of Saints,but much which ſeemeth to advance it to a degree too high for it. Under the first (or in our account the ſecond Com- mandment) the Penitent is there (a) taught to confefs. Maual or this as one breach of it, that he hath not daily recom- mended himſelf to God and his Saints. In the Litany of our Lady he hath theſe Forms : me O holy Mary (b), ſtretch abroad the hand of thy mercy, 5 Man.of J.H. and deliver our hearts from all wicked thoughts, hurtful P. 380. feeches, and evil deeds. O holy Mary ) we worſhip c ibid. p. 38! thee, we glorifie thee. Words which are a part of that Religious Thankſgiving which the ancient Church of- fered to God, and called the Angelical Hymn. Horſtius in his Manual called the Paradiſe of the Soul, reprinted lately at Colen, and adorned with Sculptures, feems as devout as Heigham now cited; for thus he d Hort. Para. prays (d), or comments on Gratia Plena : O bleſſed dif. Arisca... be graciouſly pleaſed to pour forth that Grace Se&. 7. de B. of which thou art full, that the vein of thy benignity Virg. p.445. overflowing, the guilty may receive abfolution ; the fuck, medicine; the weak in heart, ſtrength; the afflicted, con- Jalations thoſe that are in danger, help and deliverance. O that I could but deſerve one drop of ſuch great fulneſs, for the refreſhing of my dry and parched heart ! For the private Oral Inſtructions of the Romißb Ec- clefiafticks concerning the uſe and intent of ſuch Forms, I pretend not to be well acquainted with them. But as to their publick Preaching I am not ignorant of one very common, and no leſs ſcandalous uſage. For the Preacher after a ſhort Preface which introduceth his Text or Subject, exhorts the Congregation to ſay Ave Maria, in order to a bleſſing upon that holy buſineſs about which they are aſſembled. And this the Reader Day lee not only in the more private Sermons of Mon- Dd fleur Virgin 202 of the Idolatry charged on the Chap. X fieur de Lingendes, but likewiſe in the more publick one of John Carthenius a Carmelite, at the Provincial a concil.camer. Synod of Cambray (a). Reverendiflimi By this Diſcourſe it plainly appeareth that the Let- Domini mei, o ter of the Roman Forms in the Invocation of Saints, Patres optimiz, does to the moſt vulgar ears, found as Idolatrous: as Secro, fummi allo that that Church hath not provided any publick, Patris filiam direct, clear Interpretation of them, in its ſubſequent hit matrem Synods, Miffals, Breviaries, Catechiſm, Decretals, Au- formofam,fummi thentick Manuals, or what I likewiſe may add, in its Jam gratiam, Bullarium, which (as ſhall anon be ſhewed) exalteth totiuſque cæle- the Canonized into the condition of Patrons and Guar- terrene Ecclefiæ Regi. nam, Gratiæ ac There then remaineth this only to be faid by the mifericordiæ learned of that Communion : That they who hear the ** dignemiti, Church profeſſing plainly its Faith in one fupreme God dicentes , Ave in Trinity, cannot think it meaneth by any words Murid, kes whatſoever to give to the Creature the ſupreme Ho- nour of that Trinity which it fo folemnly acknowledge eth. And indeed ſeeing all the Romaniſts believe the Apoſtles Creed, feeing many of them appropriate all Abridg. of Latria to God; ſeeing they teach in their Manuals(b) in the Expof , that therefore all Prayers are ended with [Through Je- of the Mas: ſus Chriſt our Lord]" to fignifie that whatſoever we beg of God the Father, we muſt beg it in the name “of Jefus Chriſt,by whom he hath given us all things; ſome allowance is to be made them in the Expoſition of thoſe Forms, which found as if the Saints were invo. ked with Latria. But yet it may be demanded, whether the Forms and practice of a corrupt Church may not contradict their general Rule of Faith? Whether the Roman Forms be applied to that Rule of Faith by any but prudent Eccleſiaſticks and Laicks, who are not the greater number?. Whether amongſt them they take not away ſome honour from God, though not that which P. 294. . Chap.X. Papiſts in their Invocation of Saints. 1903 : . to . which is abſolutely incommunicable? And whether a Church which calleth it ſelf Chriſtian and Catholick, ſhould not be more careful of publick Forms of ſpea- king in Prayer, (ſuch as may render the Supplicants Idolaters, in themſelves in the ignorant uſe of them; and to others by the external ſcandal) whatſoever li- cenſe the world takes in phraſes of common ſpeech. And here it were well if thoſe who fo often alledg Mr. Thorndike, in favour of their cauſe, would weigh the Words of a Letter of his, faid to be written about a year before he died (a). “To pray to the Saints (faith a Dr. H. M. Of "he) for thoſe things which only God can give, as all the idol of Papiſts do, is in the proper fenfe of the words, Ido- Rome, p.gal, « latry. If they ſay, their meaning is by a figure only Zsee the lite ** to deſire them to procure their requeſts of God,how ſenſe in Me. dare any Chriſtian truſt his foul with that Church Thornd. Epil . 6 which teacheth that which muſt needs be Idolatry part 3: P-386, « in all that underſtand not that figure? They who believe here c. 10. not that theſe are his words, are ſure unacquainted part: 3; with the writings of the Author (b), and the great In- Gen. 1.1. The tegrity of the Reporter. It is certain that among our Hebrew word felves in our more ordinary converſation, ſuch forms word in its of ſpeech are uſed towards men, which in their ex- proper ſenſe, tent are applicable to God. We ſay that ſuch Students proper and had their Grace in the Senate-houſe ; or that there God. and they have been created Doctors, (a phraſe it feems too therefore crude for the digeſtion of fome (c) nice ſtomacks.) attributed to When the weak are purſued by a ſavage Beaſt, or by men, how a man cruel as ſuch a creature, they run into the arms great foever. of kinder perſons, and deſire them to ſave them and de- miliar phraſe Jiver them. And becauſe theſe Forms are uſed to men in the ſtile of by thoſe who own nothing but what is humane in fay, tuch a them, and becauſe the matter of their requeſt is appa- one was crea- rently fuch too, and in the power of man ; theſe equi- Marquets, or Focal phraſes are by general acknowledgment, deter- Dake, 66 D d 2 mined the Court to 204 of the Idolatry charged on the Chap. X. : mined to one ſenſe. But were civil Forms more liable to miſtake, a Church, ſure, ſhould exerciſe a more teni- der care in thoſe of Religion; and chuſe ſuch as might be apter to edifie than millead the meaneſt in her Com- munion. Now in ſuch Forms of common ſpeech as I have mentioned, though there is not any proper worſhip of men, yet there is more deſired of them, than that they would pray to God for us. When Efau beſeeched his Father to bleſs him, he did not merely requeſt him to pray for a bleſſing, but to pronounce over him that ſentence of Benediction, which he as the Father of thất Family had commiſſion from God to pronounce with authority and to effect. And when an importunate wi- dow does by her repeated crys for vengeance, or pub- lick juſtice for deliverance and ſafeguard, render the very ears of an unjuſt Judg attentive ; ſhe intreats more of him than that he would ſpeak for her to the King. She ſuppoſeth him in commiſſion, and indued with power to help her, though ſhe knows him in this very point of his aſſiſtance to be ſubordinate to his Prince. There is more in the Forms of the Roman Church than the bare indiſcretion of them. And though the incommunicable honour of God be not by their mea- ſure, the rule of Faith, devolved on the creature (for a Papiſt ſo interpreting thoſe Forms, ſhould by that Church be condemned as an Heretick, and a violater of the fundamental Article of one God in Trinity ;-) yet ſtill to me it ſeemeth, that the honour which God hath not actually communicated, is by them miſplaced on Angels, at leaſt on Saints. I do not, in ſaying this, ground my perſwalion bare- ly on the common Argument of that Ubiquity which many conclude to be aſcribed to Saints and Angels in the inës . Chap. X. Papiſts in their Invocation of Saints. 205 tribuitur Crea tume, creat 74 204 the Invocation of them (a). The foundation of that a cenfell *** Argument is laid on a matter which is difputed. For Talispui they who contend that the Angels hear or know what to exigit, ut is done on Earth, do exprefly deny Ubiquity to them, s qui rogatur, Though ſome private Romaniſts have mentioned ap- jensečo exaudi- pearances of the perſon of the Virgin in diſtant places de politiekem, at the ſame time, and others have repreſented her or jeſt as foli Dio Come other Saint as dwelling in a particular ſtatue. And competit; pal- Chap. X. Papiſts in their Invocation of Saints. 255 paſſage to Antwerp. Amongſt them, the Maſter, con- ceiving no hope of ſaving the Veſſel, or the lives of the Paſſengers, exhorted them to ſubmit themſelves wholly to God, and fo to paſs to a better ftate, after the loſs of this. But, it ſeems , one amongſt them ſuggeſted Vows and Invocations to the Lady of Halla; and his counſel is embraced. Straightway ( ſays he) a light ſhone on the Veſſel, and the Tempeſt ceaſed, and the Veſſel arrived at the Haven, with loſs of goods, but not of the Paſſengers, who repaired to Halla, and profefled themſelves to owe their life to the Virgin, and paid with faithfulneſs, the Vows they had made It had been more pious, ſurely, to have thanked God and the Virgin, or rather God alone, who, it may be, by other means, or by himſelf, was their deliverer. But ſuperſtitious men judg of Cauſes by the concomi- tancie of the effects, and not by the virtue which pro- duceth them. And this is not only the fruit of ſuper- ſtition in the rude and ignorant, but in the politeſt of the Eccleſiaſtics. The very Jeſuites (for ſo did Father Garnet (b) at his execution) afford God the leſs of bSec Proceed. their Application by being ſo bufied, at their laſt ag. Traycors . hour, with their aforeſaid, Mary, Mother of Grace, fing himſelf, Mother of Mercy, defend us from the enemy, and protect he ſaid, in us in the hour of death : whích Verlicles (ſay the com- then Maria poſers (c) of the confeſſion of Saxony) we heard a mater Gratie, Monk, a Profeſſor of Divinity, inculcate, very often, manus tuas,&me: to a dying man, without any mention of Chriſt Jeſus. then per crucis And it hath been commonly obſerved, as a great blot boc fignum fugia in the Romißh devotions, That they uſe many Ave Ma- malignum. ria's to one Pater Noſter. [Which Collects, by the Then he con- way, being repeated by them with ſuch carelef haſte; Maria mater the jabbering of any thing, in an indiſtinct, heedleſs Gratia, &c. way, is by us called patering). Labbe a learned Je-. in corp. Confel ſuite, though in his ſickneſs he was not forgetful of p.88. de Invoc. Chriſt Hom, Pior dos 256 of the Idolatry charged on the Chap:X. C. 5, P 93. Cad me extinxit. Chriſt bis Saviour, yet he mentions the frequency of his addreſſes to the Virgin, during the rage of his Fea- d See Garneri ver (d). This a ſtander by, not knowing his prin- us in his Prek ciples, would have judged to have been the effect of p. 27,28. Orat. his diſtemper. Thus, then, this new Marian devo- ad Virg: Nec tion muchº diminiſheth, and ſometimes quite juſtleth pius vocata, Ar . out, the ancient and unqueſtionable worſhip of Jeſus ; dores febris in- as they ſay, S. Ambroſe is almoſt forgotten, already, at ter aftuofe, rcMilan (ė), through the newer veneration of 3. Rep. Eccl. 1.7. Charles Borromee. Two things now may be, perhaps, jointly pretend- rolus profecto Mediolani Am. ed towards the diſabling the foregoing Diſcourſe; and brofii nomen for. I will return a brief anſwer to them. Firſt, It is taken for confeſſed, That thoſe to whom the Romaniſts pray as unto Patrons and Patroneſſes, are real Saints in Heaven. Secondly, The Romaniſts pretend to prove that God hath declared himſelf to have conferred ſuch honoura- ble office, place, and power upon theſe Patrons ; by the miracles they have wrought for the behoof of their Clients. f eſſais de mo For the firſt ſuggeſtion; It is confeſſed that they rala zol. 3. des worſhip none but ſuch as have been thought profeſſors Gens de bien . of Chriſtianity, and ſuch who are reputed to be ex- alted above either Hell or Purgatory. "Notwithſtand. 318. a eins de bien" ing this, I dare not avouch the eminent Saintſhip, and Qui examirant glorified eſtate of all that are canonized. They who La vie de se read, without partiality, the Hiſtory of S. Thomas Cantorbie, de Archbiſhop of Canterbury, will be inclined to think Dieu jugera de him put into the Kalender by as much miſtake, as ma- toff par la pua ny other things are put into our vulgar Almanacks . rité du coeur I ſee that, even fome of the Roman Communion, do par la mechan, impute his ſaintſhip (f) rather to the fervour of his ceté de fon Alo zeal, than to the ground of his Cauſe. verſaire, que par la fond de la What . ... Se&. 17. P: Chap. X. Papiſts in their Invocation of Saints, 257 fee for your comfort, Intereſt of State hath " What can a man that reverenceth God, think of the Saintſhip of St. Bernardin of Siena, when he conſider- eth of his Doctrine, apt to give pain to the modeſty of the Virgin, almoſt in Heaven it ſelf? This Saint, after a long compariſon betwixt God and Bleſſed Mary (a), thus (thus blaſphemouſly) concludeth. “If " then we give to each their due, in that which God See A, Ridet. “ hath done for man, and which the Virgin hath done s. v. m. es Mary hath done more for God, than God for man ; B.V. M, debite. “ whence God for the Virgins ſake, is much obliged to us. Methinks by theſe words he is juſt ſuch ano- ther Saint as the Author of the Conformities (b), who b See Here writes the parallel of Chriſt and St. Francis,and giveth rod. 1.1. C. 25. to St. Francis, the preheminence. What can a peace- p. 205. able Chriſtian think of the Saintſhip of Pope Hilde- brand, or St. Gregory the ſeventh? Was it not he who * Greg.7. 1.8. imbroiled the World ; who taught * that Kings and Ep. 21. “Dukes had their original from thoſe who not know- ing God, did by pride, rapines, perfidiouſneſs, mur- thers, and by almoſt all manner of wickedneſſes (through the inſtigation of the Devil, the Prince of - this world) affect to domineer over their equals, or "other men, with blind ambition, and intolerable preſumption ; who depoſed Henry the fourth King of the Germans, and abſolved his Subjects from their Oath of Allegiance, and who endeavour'd to ſet up a Papal Monarchy to the diſquiet of all Nations? Nei- ther is it for the Honour of the Goſpel of Peace to Saint either Pope Viktor, or Pope Stephen, who firſt c See Confid. took upon them to be Biſhops,or rather Cenſurers, out touching the of the Dioceſs that belonged to them. Nor did the an- fuppreis Po- cient Church own them as Saints or Martyrs, as doth pery; in the the modern one of Rome (c). . L1 the Hift. acc, of the Reform. 258 ten Of the Idolatry charged on the Chap.X. d in Ed, ult. the Honour of Saints, who had never obtained that high Title by their meer piety of life. It hapned tole- rably in reſpect of the perſon, when Thomas Aquinas was regiſtred among the Saints ; for he was a man of great Scholaſtick. Learning, and of a mighty zeal in the Roman way. But for the true reaſon of his being Ca- nonized, it was ſecular enough. For Pope John the Two and twentieth, to depreſs the Franciſcans, who did for the moſt part adhere to the Emperour Lewis of Father Paul Bavaria, Excommunicated by him (d), did canonize Counc. of Tr. that Doctor and his Doctrine directly oppoſite to that P. 170,171.1.2. of the Followers of St. Francis, in the Article of the Virgins Immaculate Conception. Money alſo maketh ſuch gods, being firſt made one it ſelf. And who knows whether it hath not ſometimes Canonized evil men ? For they whom it thus bribeth, are not uſually beyond the outward colour and pres tence, reſpecters of Saintſhip. Canonization (they lay) ſecureth Chriſtians from worſhipping the damned inſtead of the bleſſed. I wiſh (faith the Archbiſhop of a. Spalat de, (a) Spalato) that it brings not to paſs that very thing Repub.Eccl. 1.7. C. S. p.94. which they think it preventeth. “In this (as he goes “ on) are the faithful fafe, if they reduce their wor- " ſhip to the ſole worſhip of God. And here it is wor- thy our obſervation, that Gregory the ninth complain- ed on his death-bed of that vicious eaſineſs of his, whereby he liſtned to the dreams and viſions of ſuch who pretended to great fan&tity, and occaſioned great b Sec Gerſon. (chiſms and diſturbances in the Church (b). He mean- de Exam. Doct. par.2. Conſ.3. eth this in all likelihood,of Catherine of Siena,by whom he was deluded, and thereby drawn into a deſperate op de ſchiſm ; yet ſhe is St. Catherine, and her Clients are many. It is a ſtrange infallibility with which the Pope 13 is inveſted, if he can judg without error, of the man- ners of ſuch whom he has ſeldom in his eye, and who want Chap.X. Papiſts in their Invocation of Saints. 259 3 want not their flatterers, whatſoever is their party. It is therefore much ſafer to own the ancient Saints, ſuch as St. Chryſoſtome, and St. Ambroſe, whom the whole Church Canonized by its confent, than ſuch Modern ones as St. Catherine, and St. Thomas of Canterbury, whom the Authority of the Pope hath put into the Calendar. Of ſome then the Saintſhip is doubtful and of ſome the very exiſtence. For are not the three Kings of Colen as ſuch, a very fiction? yet are they worſhipped in the Roman Church, as Guardian-Saints a Horft.Par.An. (a). And Horſtius“ prayeth them to obtain for him Se&.2. p.103. is the frankincenſe of devout Prayer, the myrrh of obl. ad Sanctos " Mortification, and the gold of Charity. Is not think tres magos con you St. Almachius a ſubſtantial Patron ? yet ſuch a one pieces, quorum there is in ſome Roman Calendars (b)the title of religiose aſſer- Sanctum Almanacum, being firſt by miſtake written too vat & colit low againſt the firſt day of January ; yet a Saint he oſantti magi, muſt be. And Baronius is loth to part with him, and in &c. his Martyrology he will have him to be the ſame with Rom. I. Fan St. Telemachus (c). But ſecondly, They will prove their Saints to be C Bar . ibid. both Saints and Patrons by the miracles they work up- a sec Syx. on Invocation (d). Thus the Popes in the Bullarium, Nicex.2. A&.4. recite the many miracles wrought by their Saints, and e cat. ex Decr. then they decree them a place in the Calendar. Thus conc. Trid. ad the Catechiſm of Trent proves the honour of Patroci. Parochos, ir nie (e) to be due to the Saints, by the wonders ſeen f Baron. Arn. at their heir Sepulchres and Relicks. Thus Baronius (f) tell- 4. C. 1085. eth of the Saintſhip and Miracles of the abovefaid Gre- Tom. 1 1. gory the ſeventh,and of a virtue in his Garments equal giw. (under to that in the handkerchers of the Primitive Chriſti. ans, mentioned in the Acts. Thus Mr.White (8) boaſt- Covent) in his eth of the reſtitution of a leg (cut off and buried four years) to a young man who prayed to our Lady of end of his Pilar ; affirming the ſtory to be ſufficient to convert Dialogue. the whole world. L12 To b Baron. Mart. P. I. the name of Fran. Enchiridion of Faith, at the Carecherical 260 Of the Idolatry charged on the Chap.X: is To this ſecond Allegation many things may be re- turned. Firſt, When God wrought Miracles at the Tombs of the Martyrs, he wrought them not as anſwers to them who invoked Martyrs, (for in thoſe times they were honoured as Saints, and as Soldiers dying in Chriſts cauſe, and not invoked as Patrons) ; but he thereby encouraged Chriſtians in times of Perſecution, and honoured their Religion in the fight of the Heathen. Secondly, There is no reaſon to expect ſuch Mira- cles in the ſetled Ages of Chriſtian Religion, though there might be at the firſt planting of it. And, Thirdly, We have had a long time,a fixed rule from whence we may learn the practical truth and duties of our Religion, the Word of God. Neither hath God left ſo great a part of his Worſhip as Prayer, to be de- rived from the dreams of the Melancholy, or the de- luſions of Satan, or the Tales of men who write Le- gends for the advantage of their cauſe, or other tricks of politick perſons. He hath required us in Scripture to call upon him through Jeſus Chriſt : and he hath confirmed this and his whole Goſpel, by the real Mira- cles of his Apoſtles, after thoſe of his Son; and the Goſpel being thus fixed, we are not to expect any new diſcoveries of Evangelical duty by the voice or mira- cle of an Angel from Heaven, who if he ſhould be in fuch manner fent to us, with any new Doctrinal or Moral Revelation, ought to be looked on by us as one that trieth our Faith, and not as one from whom a new rule of faith or manners is to be received. Fourthly, Many Romiſh Miracles are events not ef- Silistea fects. A Popiſh woman is extremely fick in body, ſhe a cauſeth an image of the Virgin, as is the faſhion now among fome Romaniſts in England, to be hanged with- in Chap. X. Papifts in their Invocation of Saints. 261 in her curtains, at the feet of her bed. She invoketh the Virgin, and uſeth Phyſick ; ſhe recovers by Art, by ſtrength of nature, by any other way of Gods Pro- vidence ; and the Virgin is entituled to the Cure, be- cauſe the event followed their Invocation of her. Fifthly, Many of the Miracles, are too light to be aſcribed to the Saints of Heaven. The credulous Lip- fius confirms the Invocation of our Lady of Halla by ſtories, ſome of them very ſtrange, and ſome very lu- dicrous. He tells of a Boy raiſed by her from the dead after three days (a). Of a Taylor whom ſhe helped to a Lipſ. Virg. his needle and thread (b), after they had been ſwal- Hall. c. 19. lowed down by him. Of a Soldier who by Miracle loft 6 Lipl. ibid. his noſe (c), having threatned to cut off that of her c.25. p. !272. c Id. ibid. c.7. Image. So Cantapratanus and Antoninus (d) tell at p. 1256. large, how the Virgin mended the hairy ſhirt of Şaint d See Aug. Thomas of Canterbury. wichmans Sab. Sixthly, Many of them are mere cheats performed by cunning men under the notion of pious frauds. A Prieſt skilled as much in Phyfick as Divinity, knows the ſick Romanist to whom he is Confeſſor, to need a vomit. He exhorteth him to invoke the holy Virgin ; he biddeth him view well her Image which he hath put into an Antimonial cup; he adviſeth him to drink of that liquor into which her Image and her bleſſing hath infuſed virtue, and to repeat his devotions to the Vir- gin his Patroneſs. The fick ignorant man obeys, be- lieves him, diſchargeth his ſtomack, and is preſently eaſed. He crys out, a Miracle, a Miracle ; he is con- ftant to his Aves all his days. There are ſome who know this to be an Hiſtory, though I have told it in the form of a ſuppoſition. Seventhly, Many Wonders and Apparitions are the deluſions of the Devil, and dangerous fnares in which le entangleth the commonalty of that Church. By this Mar. p.73 :: means 262 of the Idolatry charged on the Chap.X. a Mat. Paris 16 means he often reconciles himſelf to their favour, and they take him in this diſguiſe for a real Angel of Light. What other conſtruction can a wiſe man make of the ſtory in Mathew Paris concerning the Specter faid to in A. c. 1100. appear to the Earl of Cornwall (a)??« The ſame hour , « faith the Reporter, that William Rufus fell by the “ hand of Sir Walter Tyrrell, the Earl of Cornwall be- (, ing alone in the Forreſt, met with a great hairy “black Goat, carrying the King black and naked, and wounded through the midſt of his breaſt. He adju- ring the Goat by the holy Trinity to tell what this meant, the Goat made him this reply : I carry to his "doom your King, or rather your Tyrant, William Rufus." For I am an evil ſpirit, and an avenger of " that malice of his with which he raged againſt the “ Church of Chriſt; and I procured his murther. They who believe theſe Legends, and take ſuch Ap- paritions as meaſures of their Faith, will think the De- vil good-natur'd towards Chriſtianity, and an execu- tor of vengeance on the enemies of it; though in truth he himſelf is its greateſt and moſt inveterate foe, and wounds it deepeſt when he ſtrikes at it in the dif- guiſe of a friend. The ſtories concerning the appearance of the Virgin to her Clients are very numerous, and of them too many repreſent her in unbecoming poſtures. And ſuch appearances ſhould rather move the dread and abhor- rence, than encourage the Invocation of the Roma- nists, being either the Images of an unclean brain, or the Specters of impure Devils. Laily, Let not the Papiſts prove their worſhip of Saints, as the Heathen did their worſhip of Dæmons. And here I end my Diſcourſe concerning the Wor- ſhip of Saints in the Roman Church, as Patrons, and Patroneſſes, as Preſidents and Lieutenants in the Go- vernment : Chap. X. Papiſts in their Invocation of Saints. 263 KO vernment of the World, with the ſenſe of the judici- ous and moderate Archbiſhop of Spalato (a). a Spalat, de « This in my judgment is the great objection a- alt. 1.7.c.22 gainſt the Invocation of Angels, the Holy Virgin, p. 287. « or other Saints whoſe ſouls are with God in Heaven, «c that it is in the nigheſt degree of peril to become Religious Worſhip; for it is out of doubt that the “ ruder people do religiouſly invoke the Saints; and " that many are internally more affected with religious " paſſion towards the Virgin, or ſome Saint, than to- “wards Chriſt himſelf. For they invoke not a Saint as one that prayeth for them, but as the principal "Helper. Neither ſay they,Pray for me ; but help me; “ Come to my Aid, Save me. Nor do they expreſs it “ in words, or underſtand it in their minds, that theſe things be done for them by the Saints praying for but that the Saints themſelves do immediate- "ly perform theſe things. And in invocating of them, many wholly devote themſelves, all their ſoul, and and ſpirit, to the Virgin Mary and the Saints; and “fubje&t themſelves wholly to them in Spirituals : which is a kind of formed Idolatry. Now though by this Diſcourſe, I may have offence unto the Marians; or rather ſaid that which will be made an offence by their miſconſtruction ; I am not jealous that I have at all offended thoſe bleſſed {pirits, if they have knowledg of that which I write. For they are not covetous of undue honour; but caſt to the thofe Crowns with high indignation under their feet, which are ſet on their heads to the diſhonour of God, tempo by the Idolatrous flatteries of fooliſh men. them; Bad have given Samo stromu CHAP. CHA P. trợ tối đa 364 in Yo stotooni esét utilioni b Aventin. And that as an old man, and the Son as a young man, and the CH A P. XI. Of the Idolatry Charged on the Papiſts in their Worſhip of Images. And firſt of the Worſhip of an Image of God. it ftill re T ſtill remaineth that I ſpeak of the Worſhip of Images in the Roman Church, and of that degree of Idolatry with which it ſeemeth to be ſtained. And for Images I will briefly conſider, thoſe of the Trinity, of God, of Chriſt, of the Saints, and under that of Chriſts, the ſtatue of the Croſs. For the Image of the Trinity we muſt not charge either the making or the worſhipping of it upon Love of God, very conſtitution of the Church of Rome, though men of that Communion have often done both, and the nalBojor. p. 751. See theſe times (a) abound with ſuch Pictures. Formerly Epild: 32. Alex, that Church was very ſevere againſt ſuch practices. And Soldanum ico- Pope John the 22d (b) arraigned certain people in Bo- nii baptizari hemia and Austria, who had painted God the Father cuplentem. ap. Holy Ghoſt as a Dove, as violaters of Religion: And he pronounced them Anthropomorphites, and condem- invenire pellie ned ſome of them to the Fire. It ſeems the modern mus, quod ex. Popes are not ſo ſtrict: neither did the late Printers of unitatis, que in the Miſſal at Paris, or of the Manual of Horſtius at Deo eft, di jum. Colen, dread their Fire , they having adorned the Co- maginem, &c. pies of thoſe Books with ſuch dangerous Sculptures. And it ſhould ſeem by what Mr. Baxter hath faid (); “ That ſome among our ſelves have had a zeal for ſuch “ Pictures ; for he tells of a Tumult raiſed where he " a See the Front, of de Sales the c. Concil. Max. Tom. 10. P. 1214. B. Licet nibil cMr. Baxter in his Com- monwealth, C.13. P.457. had * 03 , Chap.XI. Of the worſhip of an Image of God. . 265 “had dwelt, upon a falſe rumour, that the Church- “wardens were about to obey the Parliaments Order, ( in taking down the Images of the Trinity about the € Church. But moſt probable it is, that the zeal of the multitude was ready to defend ſuch Images, or paintings in windows, rather as the ornaments of the place, in general; than, diſtinctly, as Pictures of the myſterious Trin-unity. Concerning the Image of God, I find not now, as in former times, in the publick Books of the Church of Rome, any forms of Benediction, by which it ſhould be confecrated; though there be forms enough of the conſecration of Crofles, and of the Images of Chriſt and his Saints. Neither doth the Council of Trent ordain, either the making, or the veneration of the Image of God, though it ſuppoſeth that it is, fome- times, painted in ſacred ſtory, for the uſe of their people. For it giveth order (a) that the people be a conc. Yrid. dd inſtructed ſo far, as not to take ſuch a Picture invocat. vener, for Divinity figured. Nay the Catechiſm, by Decree quod ji ali of that Council , ſpeaketh thus, in the explication of quando Hiftorin their firſt Commandment (b). “Moſes, when he " would turn the people from Idolatry, ſaid to them, Decr. Conc.Tring "Tou fam no ſimilitude, on the day in which the dent. p. 394. “ Lord Spake to you in Horeb from the midſt of ſaid, left, being ſeduced by error or miſtake, they “ ſhould make an Image of the Divinity, and ſo give “the honour due to God unto a creature. Yet that ſuch Images are made, and honoured in the Roman Church, is very notorious. And it is not long ſince, here in England, ſome Proteſtants ſaw a ſilver Image of God the Father, carried in Proceflion, in the Paſſion- week, and venerated with ſhews of high devotion. The Learned, who are cautious, forbear the open de- fence as, OC. b Catech. ex Mm 266 of the worſhip of an Image of God. Chap. XI. . . 3 P. 33, c. fence of ſuch Images, yet they call them Judaizers who eſteem the worſhip of God, by them, to be Ido- latry. And, in their diſcourſes, they ſeem to favour this Practice, ſo far as the tendernefs of that ſubject will ſuffer it to be touched, by faying there is no ex- a See T. G. Ca- prefs Text againſt it (a), together with other very tholicks no - kind expreſſions, which diſcover their inclination. Al- ſo the frequency and allowance of fuch Pictures, which under their ſtrict Diſcipline is ſcarce to be imputed to the liberty of Painters and Engravers, ſheweth manyEc- cleſiaſticks to be well-willers to them; (though not as true repreſentations; the hereſie of the groſs Anthro- pomorphites being, as ſuch, renounced by them]. I in- ſtance only in that frontiſpiece which is put before eve- ry of the three parts of the Roman Pontifical, Printed at Lyons. There, on the Top, in a very wooden cut, is pictured an old man with a Globe in his hand, and boty na głory ſtreaming from all parts of him. On his head there is a Triple Crown, or Miter, and over it this Motto, Holy-Trinity, one God, have mercy upon us. At the bottom, the Pope is plac'd, in a like Garb, with Miter, and Key; and a glory about his head. I do not fay that the worſhip of fuch Images is Ido- & latry, by virtue of the firſt (or, with us :) the ſecond command, conſidered as a Mofaical precept. The Ta- bles of ſtone themſelves have, long ago, been broken in funder in that fenfe; even by the very finger of God: For we are not under the Law of Moſes, but under the Covenant of the Goſpel . But if there be any natural reaſon in that Law, it is eternal and un- alterable, like the great Author of it. By virtue of that precept, it was ( as many think ) unlawful for any Jew to make any protuberant ſtatue, either of God, or Demon; or Man, or Animal; and much more to exbibit ſigns of reverence before them. For the very . command doth oblige them by parity of Reaſon. And, Vous Chap.XI. Of the worſhip of an Image of God. 267 very making of Images would have induced that ritual people to the worſhip of them; they wanting little beſides an outward object to receive the ſigns of their inward inclination. And, if they had exhibited ſuch ſigns before an Image, the Gentiles would have ex- pounded them as a compliance with their worſhip. Of theſe things God was jealous, and therefore gave command that the Monſter of Idolatry ſhould not ex- iſt, ſo much as in any feed or Embrio of it. And when- foever men are in ſuch circumſtances, that an Image is a ſnare to themſelves, and to others an apparent ſcan- dal, or a confirmation of them in their evil way; this in the days of Tertullian (a) The Chriſtians ſeem to a Tertull. de t- have been nigh ſuch circumſtances, being mingled a- dol Searches mongſt the Heathen, and fo prone to their works, that lucent Taberna ( as he, in an holy indignation, profeſſeth) there Farve as were more lights hung out at the doors of the Chriſti- ftra, era, ans, then at thoſe of the Heathen themſelves : Lights, not for the direction of the paſſengers, but for the honour of Idols. He, therefore, futably to the exi- gence of that time, urged the ſecond command with a kind of Moſaick ſtrictneſs; and declamed againſt all Statuaries and Painters, as Artiſts of the Common- wealth of darkneſs. But, a Reaſon there is, in that command, which doth always oblige, and the force of it reacheth to mankind. Two things, I ſuppoſe, are perpetually for- bidden by it. The firſt is, the making of any Image of any falſe God, and the honouring of it, in that quality, when it is made. I ſay in that quality, for it is not unlaw- ful to carve or paint the Images of falſe gods, by way Mm 2 them a 268 of the worſhip of an Image of God. Chap. XI. :: Fleetan. P 452 them, if they be ancient, and done by good hands, as rarities of price; and he hath little of judgment or charity, who condemns every Antiquary as an Idolàter. The Genevians have, uſually, here, in their Houſes, the Pictures of Calvin and Luther, and ſuch others, to- gether with thoſe of the Pope and the Devil, ſpending vainly, their breath againſt the Light which they had ſet up. And we ſuffer, in England, the Pictures of falſe gods in the Ovid of Mr. Sandys, as well as they do, in Italy, the Images of Cartari. The ſecond thing is, the attempting the repreſenta tion of the true God, and the worſhipping of it as his Image. I ſay the attempting of it, to avoid the Cavil of the Author of the randonire; for he mocketh at this a 1.V. c. Te ground of the command (a ), namely, becauſe Gods mas: Stiling infinite effence cannot be repreſented, as a reaſon which 462 idly eſtabliſheth a Law from the impoſſibility of the breaking of it. And he, profanely, compares it to the reaſon of the Monſieur, who forbad his Bowyer to make him ſhafts of a Pigs Tail, becauſe no ſhafts could be made of it. And yet it is a reaſon inſiſted on by the very Catechiſm of the Council of Trent above- b Cat. ex decr. cited (6). But who knows not that fuch an Image Conc. Trid. p. was forbidden not properly to be made or perfected, here p. 265. but to be attempted to be made ; becauſe the work- man would fail in his attempt, not only to his own ſhame, but the diſhonour of the true God? The Idols of the Heathen might be repreſented : For being nothing but creatures of God, or Phan- taſms, the creatures of their brains; they were capa- ble of ſome reſemblance. They appeared to the eye, and in a Picture in the fancy; and, conſequently, might be imitated by mans Art. But the eſſence of God is like nothing that is finite; neither like Man, nor like the Heavens, which latter Diodorus moft falfly and 394. cited "irra- Chap.XL. Of the worſbip of an Image of God. 269 acad of them. “that therefore he forbad all Images of him in humane “ figure (a); whilſt he forbad the likeneſs of any a Diod. Sic. ap. Photii Bi- thing in the Heavens, Earth, or Waters . Nor can Gods blioth. p. 115 la eſſence fo appear by it ſelf, as to ſhew its very ſelf. We have a notion of God, but no proper Idea of him, for that importeth in the force of the word, an object with its Imagery perceived in the brain. Hence the Synod of Nice it ſelf did not favour any Images of the Divi- nity (b). Sib Syn. Nicia, Ait. 3. p. 184, But ére I proceed further in this Argument, I think 185.a Theodoro it neceſſary to premiſe a diſtinction of Images, and to Patr. Hierofol. [he. Tg conſider how much or how little of the Idol is in each weusi. anay xal - Of Images then I conſider four forts, taking the li- Foto & vos berty to call them Images of Analogy, of Memory, of dóegro » Repreſentation, of Preſence. και απερίγραν 710 feier By Images of Analogy, I mean fuch Objects as bear posisi digne fome Metaphorical proportion to ſome excellencies of uátisos. God, though they be not the proper Images, Statues, or Pictures of them. Such an Image was that of Jupia ters, remembred by Vignola in his Diſcourſe of the five Orders in Building. He mentioneth there a Capital, in which were the Images of four Eagles inftead of Stalks, and inſtead of Fruits and Flowers, four Jupiters faces with Thunderbolts under them. A Repreſentation this may be judged of the power, piercing eye, quick exe- cution of will, in their own Jove, in the four Quar- ters of the World. Such an Analogical Image of the true God do fome Papiſts (c) eſteem; the Statue or T. G. Cathos Picture of an aged man, whoſe years and experience, laters . c. 4 are apt to fignifie the Eternity and Wiſdom of God; p. 66 and that of a Dove, to ſignifie his purity and fimplici- ty, in a manner ſuitable to our conception. In both theſe Inſtances, I think they are miſtaken. Daniel (as ſhall M 370 Of the worſhip of an image of God. Chap.XI. : ſhall be ſhewed in the laſt Chapter) did not mean the Godhead, or the Father, by the Ancient of Days. Nei- by ther ought his tranſient Viſion which had ſomething humane mixt with it, be made a ftanding-pattern in Religion. Such Viſions being impreſſed on the fancy, could not be there repreſented without fome earthly Imagery, which the enlightned reafon of the Prophet could ſeparate from the Diviner part, which is the thing principally intended. Now to bring the whole ſcene with its glory and its imperfection, before the eyes of the people, in Gods ſtanding-worſhip, is to confound in their Imaginations, things facred and ſecu- lar, and to adulterate their Devotion. Then for the Image of a Dove, the Text in the Goſpels proveth no more than that the Spirit imitated the gentle hovering of that Bird : And the learned think it did ſo in the appearance of a bright cloud, hovering with gentle motion over the waters, and the Perſon of our Lord baptized in them. It is plain by the words of St. Auftine (b), that he Eide & symb. thought it Idolatrous to contemplate God in our mind, according to the extent of thoſe expreſſions which we uſe in ſpeaking of him. And the like cer- tainly he judged of contemplating God according to Dreams and Viſions, which are partly humane, and partly divine. Thus then that great Light of Africa diſ- courſeth : “We believe that [Chriſt] fitteth at “the right hand of the Father. Yet thence are we not 66 to think that the Father is circumſcribed with hu- mane form, ſo as to occur to our mind contempla- ting of him as one that has a right and a left hand, or as one fitting with bended knees; left we fall " into that facriledg for which the Apoſtle condemneth " thoſe who turned the glory of the Incorruptible God " into the fimilitude of corruptible man. Such a Statue is 6 S. Aug. de CC Chap.XI. Of the worſhip of an image of God. 271 “ is not without impiety, erected to God in a Chriſti- wan Temple, much more in the heart, where the Tem- *ple of God is truly ſituate, if it be purged from « earthly concupiſcence and error. - St. Austin then (as Spalatenſis (a) reflecteth on theſe a spal. de R$ words) would have adviſed that the Viſions of Daniel, publica eccles and other of that nature, produced by Bellarmine, p. 293. ſhould be contemplated with the mind, and not be pi- ctured, eſpecially in Churches; that they ſhould be reſolved into their “true ſignification, and not im- « preſſed upon the brain ; left through the Picture of "an Old man, or Dove, the defects of Age, wings " and bill, pofleſs the imagination, There is danger in uſing any Images of Animals, as Statues or Pictures of God; for they will be made not Images only of Analogy, but of repreſentation, by the ignorant ; whilſt ſhape and life are perſonally ſet forth. But there is not ſo great danger in the Images of things without life, eſpecially if they be flat Pictures, not Protuberant Statues, nor Pictures which the "Artiſt hath expreſſed with roundneſs. The worſe and the more flat the work is, the leſs danger there is of its a- bufe. Titian hath painted the Virgin and the Child Je- fus fo very roundly, that (as Sir Henry Wotton a very good judg both of the pictures and diſpoſitions of men, faith (b) of it) a man knows not whether to call it a b Sir Hen. Wota piece of Sculpture or Picture.hr In ſome kinds of Pictures, if there be found analogy, and that analogy be diſcreetly expreſſed[as by the name Jehovah, or according to the Jewiſh modeſty, Adonai , incircled with clouds and rays of glorious Light] I know no fin in the making of it, or contemplating in it, in a Metaphorical way, ſome of the Perfe&tions of the infinite God, in ſuch manner expreſſed. A devout man would not put a Paper with ſuch an impreſſion, tons Letrers: P.315 to 272 Of the worſhip of an Image of God. Chap.XI. to vile uſes : He would think it fitter for his Clofet than for his Chamber of Grimaces; though he would not think it the repreſentation of God, or give it Di- vine honour, by inward eſtimation, or outward ſigns. By Images of memory, I mean ſuch Objects as con- tain in them no analogy to the Divine Perfections, nor et iu any pretended repreſentation of them; but yet are apt to put us in mind of God, being erected as Pillars or Monuments in places where he has done ſome great and excellent work. Such was the Pillar of Jacob; and in the making of ſuch there is no unlawfulneſs; nor in exhibiting before them ſuch ſigns of honour as are proper to be ſhewed before a monument of Divine Wildoni, Power, or Goodneſs; unleſs in times and places where other ſuch Statues are erected to falſe gods, and the erection and honour of them, is by com- mon conſtruction, the mark of their Worſhippers. Such Images of memory are often exhibited by God himſelf. Such was the pillar of Salt, into which the bo- dy of Lots Wife was converted ; a pillar of Remem- brance of Gods juſtice, and of admonition to them who look back towards the pollutions which they have eſcaped. Such was the aduſt earth which Solinus ſpeaks of, in thoſe places where the inhabitants of Sodom were deſtroyed by Sulphureous flames from Heaven: though it was no pillar, yet was it a monument of Di- vine power, and ſeverity towards their unnatural luſts . And he that carves, engraves, or paints theſe holy Hiſtories, may be an uſeful Artiſt. dolerisants By Images of Repreſentation, I mean Statues or Pi- &tures made by art, with intent to exhibit the likeneſs of the perſon. The making and worſhipping ſuch Ima- ges of him, God himſelf condemneth ; appealing to the world, whether there be any thing in nature to which he can be reſembled. Such a Repreſentation is undue Chap.XI. Papiſts in their Invocation of Saints. 273 Matr. &c. p. undue, though made according to the beſt pattern in the viſible world, and much more if it be made in viler, and as the Heathen were wont to do, in the Images of Priapus and Attis (a), in immoral figures. a See Pign. đi And the Worſhipper who gives tò it veneration as to Magn. Deam. an Image of God, does highly diſhonour him, by changing his eſſential glory into ſuch fimilitudes. And it is not ſo ignominious for Cæfar to be painted in the ſimilitude of an Als, or of the worſt Monſter in the Sculptures of Licetus, as for God to be repreſented in the pretended likeneſs of his Deity, by David or So- lomon. Such Images, therefore, the Council of Trent exprelly diſowneth, profeſſing the ſpirituality, inviſi- bility, and infinity of God, which nothing viſible can repreſent. By ſuch Images ( as rightly (b) S. Athana- b S. Athar. fius) the mean Arts of the Painter and Statuary are Vol. 1.op.p.rgt exalted above the Maker of this beautiful Univerſe. Remarkable, here, is that of Pliny, as the ſenſe of a “ It is a weakneſs ( ſaid he ) to ſearch " after the Effigies or Form of God (c). Whoever is c Plin. Nat. "God (if there be any other than Nature) he is Hif.1, 2.c.7: every-where, all ſenfe, all fight, all hearing, all ſoul, "all ſpirit, All Himſelf. By Images of Preſence, I mean Pictures or Statues fram'd and honour'd as places of the eſpecial reſidence and nighneſs of the Divine Power. Such I have ſhew'd the Statues of the Heathen to be. I know not whether they judgʻd them to reſemble Jupiter or Juno, Mars or Venus (for the reſemblance has been generally ſuch 4 Excellere om as pleas'd the Statuary or Painter ): but it is certain rifq; relitis, that they eſteem'd them Shechinah's of God, or Dæ- Dii quibus im- mons. The Poet (d) deſcribeth the Roman Empire Steterae as forſaken by its Coeleſtial Patrons, when he repre- e Tit. Liv.Hift. fenteth them flying from their Altars and Temples.And 1. 38, See the Ambrachienfes ( in Livy (e)) complaining in the Harald. Annot: ad Arneb. l. 6. Senate p. 252. very Atheiſt. P. 2, 3• . Nn 274 110f the worſhip of the Image of God. Chap.XI. brens . binc Tacitus . Senate againſt Fulvius Nobilior, who had fpoil'd their Temples and Images ; proteſt with lamentation, That they had no Gods left them whom they might adore, sampioene s and to whom they might preſent their requeſts. And the Oracle at Delphos confeſs’d to Auguſtus, That it was a vain thing for any thenceforth to repair thither, a me Puer He becauſe (a) an Hebrew Child had commanded the Dæ- mon back to Hell. And ſometimes in their ſuperſti- Cedere fede ju- tious folly, they chain'd down their Statues, that their Aris ergo de gods might not remove. Now ſuch Images are condemned by S. Paul, who, difcedito no- Aris. by telling the Gentiles, that God dwelt not in Tem ples made with hands ; did both intimate that they thought them his Manſion-houſes, and plainly reprove WAS «their erroneous practice. The making of ſuch Houſes or Statues of Preſence to the Infinite Godhead, which filleth all things; and b-See Arroba operateth when and where it pleaſeth (b), is an high 1. 6. p. 203, preſumption : a confinement of the Deity, or 204459 ration, by our will and fancy. Wherefore the wor- ſhip of them, being the worſhip of an object for Gods Shechinah, which is not his Shechinah, is idolatrous, or a robbing of the Creator, by paying homage to the Creature. of the like Idolatry are they guilty, who pretend to ſome kinds of natural Magic. They think God has put certain ſignatures on his creatures, or ſuffer'd ſuch to be put on them by Art, as tokens of his miraculous operation by them. Thus did the Author of that Book c camill. Lto- which the credulous Camillus (c) believeth to be Solo- pid. 1. 3. 6.17: mons. He thought that a ſtone, with the figure of a p. 223. man ſitting on a Plough with a little neck, and long beard, with four men lying in' his neck, and a Fox in s one hand, and a Vultur in another; being hanged a- bout ones neck, would be efficacious to the fruitfulnefs of : 3 p Mix Www Chap.XI. Of the worſhip of the Image of God. 275 of Plantations, and the finding of Treaſures. Now by what other name can we truly call that Truſt he pla- ced in ſuch Figures, than that of Superſtitious and Ido- latrous Hope, whilſt God was no more preſent at them, than at the moſt formleſs ſtone in the ſtreets, unleſs by his Malediction ? And Proteſtants have a ſuſpition of ſome ſuch Truſt ( though not put in an Image of the Godhead, for- bidden at Trent) yet put in the creatures conſecrated in the Roman Church; whilſt they ſet them apart in ſuch forms as this: Bleſs and fanctifie this creature that Set Bened . Crit . by it that is, ſure, by thy virtue in it] Devils may portat. Scc. repelld, and Tempeſts ſcatter'd. . O Nn 2 modo su CHA P. om operad 276 CHAP. XII. . of the Idolatry charged on the Papiſts in the worſhip of Images. PAR T. I. TH : : of the worſhip of the Image of Chrift. HUS much, then, of the Image of the Godhead, or of God the Father and its worſhip. I paſs to the conſideration of an Image, the making and venea ration of which, admitteth of more apology, That of the Word Incarnate. This Image has been made, ſometimes by way of Analogy, and ſometimes by way of Repreſentation. An Analogical Picture of Chriſt"was made by Pauli- nus, who caus'd him to be figur'd in the form of a Lamb, as a type of his meek and innocent ſufferings. A Picture harmleſs in it felf, as the creature whence 'twas taken ; yet apt to beget, in weak and fooliſh minds, not the meer notion of Chriſts humility and in- nocence, but a phantaſm of him in the form of a beaſt. Wherefore, though this way of painting Chriſt was moſt uſual before the ſixth Synod, or third Council of Conſtantinople; yet the Fathers of that Council a concil. 3. faw reaſon to forbid it (a), and to require the Gover- Conſt. in Can. 82. ap. Conc. nours of the Church to take care for the future, that Quinifext p. the Image of Chriſt might be expreſſed in human por- 1177. vol. 5. traict. Si confulty. And, in ſuch Form, ſome Pictures of Chriſt might calo de inde; have place in Churches in the Sixth or Seventh Centu- Taraſ in syn. ries. But Statues, it may be, were not ſo ſoon receiv- Nic. 2. P. 165. ed as Pictures, and it is manifeſt, that in the earlier 48.3. 4. D. times C. Max. Chap.XII. Of the worſhip of the Image of Chriſt. 277 times of St. Auſtin, they were no part of the Invento- ry of the Church. For after this manner it is that he argueth againſt the Heathens, where he Commenteth on thoſe words of David, The Idols of the Gentiles are « filver and gold the work of mens hands. “They (faith “he) worſhip that which themſelves made of Gold « and Silver. For our felves we indeed have many U- "tenſils of this matter or metal which we uſe in the celebration of the holy Sacraments. And being con- ſecrated, they are called holy in honour of him, whom to our ſouls health we ſerve by them. And we muſt confeſs theſe inſtruments or veſſels are the work of < mens hands, but have they mouths and ſpeak not, eyes and ſee not? do we pray to them ; though in the uſe of them we ſupplicate God? However, ſeeing Chriſt was made in the form of a man, I know not why that form which appeared to the eye might not be painted by St. Luke himſelf with- any immoral ſtain to his Pencil. He that found no fault with the Image of Cæfar ftamped on his Coin, hath ſaid nothing which forbiddeth his own repreſen- tation; with reſpect, I mean, to his ſtate of manhood here on earth. For that is not pretended to be the pia cture or image of God-man, any more than the image of the Cæfars, is pretended to be the picture of their fouls ; but it is tħe external reſemblance of fo much of his perſon as was viſible in fleſh. The Controverſie then is not ſo much about the making as about the worſhipping of the Image of Chriſt, either as his Image in his ſtate on earth, or which ſeemeth very abſurd, as his. portraict now in Clory. For though the ſigns of his Paſſion may pre- pare us for Prayers, yet the addreſſes themſelves are made to him as he is glorious in the Heavens, where bis eſtate is unduly typified by a Crucifix which repre- fenteth. out of any 278 Oribe worfhip of the Image of Christ. Chap XII. . p. 33, 34. Without video the or the Sun. that be called hard of God, by remembrance of the Son of God, you mar fenteth him in Golgotha, and not in triumph at Gods Fight hand, where his brightneſs cannot be expreſſed by a pencil of light it felf; though one very lately re- viving the error of the Manichees , hath made the Sun, his Throne, and the right hand of God*. metali Mans The Crucifix was made of old, and admitted into Antira. 1643. private houſes, and at laſt into Churches. But it was firſt uſed as a Picture for the help of memory, not as doubt Chriſt a ſtatue in formal place, on a Pedeſtal, at which it muſt be in the might be worſhipped. Hear in this matter St. Gregory moſt excel- lent, glorious, great,a man of ſome inſight into the practice of the and heavenly Church. This is part of his Letter to Secundinus (a). part of Hea: “ We have ſent to you Images, and we do not amifs, if by viſible things we repreſent things not ſeen.---- Fitly may “I am perſwaded that you defire not the image of the Right- « Chriſt with intent to worſhip it as a God, but that be « more warmed in his love whoſe image you think throughChriſt you « look upon. And for our felves, we are not proſtrate live, & nove, « before it as before a God,but we worſhip him whom being, doc. we call to mind by his Image, not as born or crucifi- a Greg. Mag. « ed, but as fitting on his Throne. And whilſt the 1.7. Ep.$3 - Picture, like a writing, brings to our memory the “ Son of God, it either rejoyceth our mind with the “Reſurrection of Chriſt, or aſlwageth it by his c Pallion. The ſame St. Gregory (b), when Serenus Biſhop of Ep. 109. Marſeille, had in an holy zeal broken thoſe Images which he faw adored, does wiſh he had not broken them, but that preventing the worſhip of them, he CC had ſtill retained them as Hiſtorical Monuments « helpful to the memories of the vulgar. I am not a- gainſt any thing which may be ſerviceable as an help to devotion. Men ſtand enough in need. But there are better helps by far than theſe : And in the Church which by which in him we and have our CC b S. Greg. M. 06 Chap XII, Ofaba wybip of the Image of Clwijft. 279 which is the houfe of oral and living inſtruction, they ſerve not much further than for ornament, unleſs the Lay-people come and view them attentively before the beginning of publick ſervice. After that, the Ob- jects which cauſe the eye to gaze, prevent too much the attention of the ear. And yet to ſay with men who run into extremes, that Devotional Pictures are no helps to excite memory and paſſion, is to forget that they are called mute Poems; to ſpeak againſt common ſenſe; and to impute leſs to a Crucifix than to the Tomb of our friend, or to a thread on our finger. They may be uſeful as Monitors in a Chriſtian Com, monwealth where their worſhip is plainly and frequent- ly forbidden, and by all underſtood to be ſo prohibi- * ted. And it was high ſuperſtition in thoſe who in our late unhappy Revolutions, defaced ſuch Pictures and brake down ſuch Croſſes as Authority had fuffered to remain entire, whilſt it forbad the worſhip of them: and was in that particular ſo well obeyed that none of them (it may be) ever knew one man of the Commu- nion of the Church of England to have been proſtrate before a Croſs, and in that poſture to have ſpoken to it. In the Church of Rome there is greater pretence for bonde that violence which vulgar Reformers preſume to be holy. For the Council of Trent retaineth Images in social Churches, as Objects of Veneration, and the practice both of Prieſts and people does ſtrangely dilate the words of that Council. The Article of the Creed of being and an Trent is this : “I moſt firmly (a) profeſs, that the Ima- a conc. Trid. ges of Chriſt, and of the Mother of God, always a symb. p.944. Virgin, as alſo thoſe of other Saints are to be had " and retained (eſpecially in Churches (b)]: and that b Deret. Conc. “ due honour and veneration is to be given to Trid. de fazare malutoos! prb aidas asumine Due U them. 280 of the worſhip of the Image of Chriſt. Chap.XII . 8 를 ​Scand. Min. Due honour and veneration are in themſelves modeſt words : and where we admit the Pictures and Images of Chriſt, we refuſe not the honour which is due to them. We do not chuſe to put them in vile places, we do not uſe them in vile offices; we eſteem them as ornaments ; we value them as the Images of perſons more honourable than our Prince or our Friend: We uſe them as Remembrancers of the great myſtery of mans Redemption which we cannot too frequently be reminded of. We condemn the indiſcreet zeal of our late pretended Reformers, who judged him worthy fe- queſtration who “ had kept a Picture of Chriſt in his “Parlour, and confeſſed it was to put him in mind of *Cent. 1. of “his Saviour * OCER Se&.82. p.38. We honour ſuch Pictures in a negative ſenſe, by be- ing unwilling to have them contemned. We think them not fit to be placed in the Pavements of Chur- ches, where (as St. Bernard in his Apology to Guiliel- mus Abbas complaineth) they are trodden under foot . Where people ſpit into the mouth of the Image of an Angel, and tear the face of the Image of a Saint, with their clouted ſhoon. We obſerve and commend the diſcretion of many Romiſh Synods, ſince that of Trent € Corcil. Mech (c), which have made Laws againſt laſcivious, impro- Turon . p.1019. per, fabulous, abſurd Images. We inveigh not againſt Mexic. p.1297. the firſt Council of Milan (d) for requiring the Ordi- Zolof . P. 1400. nary to fummon Statuaries , Engravers and Painters ; Mechl.p: 1556. and to require them to uſe their art to the dignity of Narbon.p.158. the Prototype. We condemn thoſe Zealots among the Albigenſes (if ſuch there were) who are ſaid, in ſcorn, to have framed deformed Images, and to have diſho- denſis 1.2. cont. noured the Virgin in a monſtrous ſtatue with one eye Albig. c.9. & (e). The zeal of the Church of England has been much Correl. Curtius more temperate and diſcreet, and ſo (God be thanked min, c.s.p.75: it continues at this day. It is not rude to any thing fet d Conc. Milev.1. P..251. e Lucas T de Clavis Do- apart Chap.XII. Of the worſhip of the Image of Chriſt. 281 apart for Gods ſervice: it would not have a conſecra- ted Chalice quaffed in as a common Bowl; it abhorreth the memory of Julian Prefect of the Eaſt, and Uncle to the Apoſtate, who ſhewed his irreverence towards the Euchariſt, by ſpurning and fitting upon the Com- munion-Plate of the great Church of Antioch. But the Council of Trent ſeemeth to mean ſome thing more than all this, by its due honour and vene- ration. It doth not indeed mean abſolute Latria, or direct Divine honour to be exhibited to the Image it ſelf . It hath otherwiſe explained it felf; and it con- demneth ſuch worſhip of them. It would not have the people believe (a) that there is any Divinity in a conc. Trid. them, or virtue for which they ſhould be worſhip- voc.dr.p.895. . ped ; or that any thing is to be asked of them ; or " that truſt is to be put in Images after the manner of " the Gentiles. A like caution is given by the Synod of Cambray 6). “Let the people be taught, faith a de Imag, C.3. Decree of that Synod, that there is no worſhip due p.178. "to the Image, either for the matter, or the beauty, or the price and value of its work, or for any other thing which may be in the Artifice or ſubſtance of " the Image, but to the thing ſignified to which this worſhip and honour is eſpecially referred. In like manner they are to be admoniſhed, that the mind of the perſon that prayeth, or worſhippeth, is to be carried to the thing fignified, and not to the ſign which neither hears, nor ſees, nor perceives. And ſome of the Church of Rome do purſue this Dio. Inſtit.c. 28 caution in their Manuals of inſtruction which they see Arnob. 1.6. give to the people. And it would be very ſtrange if p. 203. Nor they ſhould herein have been defective; ſeeing the inquiunt) man very Heathens were not. “We worſhip not (faid they) Güri, &c. per "the very Images themſelves (c), but thoſe whom Je Deos effe,&vca they repreſent, and to whoſe names they are ſacred. Cooling love Oo H.T. b Concil.camer. :: CC 36. C Lafl. 1.2. 282 of the worſhip of the Image of Chriſt. Chap. XIL . of Chriſtian Dodr. in Ex- Command. H. T. in his Manual called the Abridgment of Chriſtian Doctrine, propoſeth this Queſtion(d) to his Diſciple: d H.T.Abridg. Is it lawful to give any honour to the Images of Chriſt and his Saints? And then he teacheth him to make poſ. of the 1. this Anſwer: “ Yes; an inferior or relative honour, “ inaſmuch as they repreſent unto us heavenly things; p.118, 119. “ but yet not Gods honour, nor yet the honour due "to his Saints. The fame Author a while after, propoundeth this Query : “Do not Catholicks pray to Images and Re- “ licks ? And then to this he anſwereth: No, by no means: We pray before them indeed, (to keep us " from diſtraction, and to help our memories in the « expreſſion and apprehenſion of Coeleſtial things) but “not to them ; for we know well that they can nei- “ther fee, nor hear, nor help us. There is ſome meaſure of fobriety in theſe words ; but ſome other of their writers ought to have had their Pens removed from them, with as much reaſon as a.Curtius de we take away the ſwords of madmen. Amongſt them I Ca 12. p. 130, reckon Cornelius Curtius the Auguſtinian. This Roma- b De Lingend. nift thus ſpendeth ſome of the heat of his zeal (a). “I vol.3. Corc. de “care not at all for Luther, Calvin, Wickliff, and that “moſt filthy Magdeburgian ſink of impudence and blaf- p.627.- Flagitemus au- phemy. I ſay it, and ſay it again, that the moſt ſacred xilium è cælo, Nails of our Redeemer do merit worſhip, even the & ſanctam “higheſt worſhip. But we have heard better things from the Council Ave of Trent, and ſome who follow it. And by ſuch decla- infra Hebd. rations their Church denieth to the Image it ſelf the Quart. Quadr worſhip of the heart in Prayer, Thankſgiving and the Litany of truſt; and teacheth us to interpret the Forms uſed in their Letter to them, as not to them directed (b). Such a Form is that of, Hail (c) holy Croſs, our only hope Zd, Paris, the ſcepter, of the Son, 1642, the Bed of Grace. Increaſe Clavis Domin. doior. Chrifti. Crucem adore mus. O Crux. c In Brev. Rom. P-317. And in the Croſs P. Joo, ÚG. righter Chap.XII. of the worſhip of the Image of Chriſt. 283 pag.4. The a her Devotion to the Croſs name ſhe ado- reth the maps righteouſneſs in the pious, and to the guilty vouchſafe par- don. All this it feems, howſoever it ſoundeth, muſt be meant not to the very matter and form of the Croſs, which* Dr.Bilſon will have to be adored in the Church the full kon Biljon of of Rone, but only to Chriſt crucified. And this alſo I dempt. of ſuppoſe they would ſuggeſt by the Croſs pictured in mankind by , their Books of Devotion, and particularly in the front of their Millal of Paris (C), together with theſe words Church of of the Apoſtle, God forbid that I ſhould glory five in the Komi bath Croſs of our Lord. Where St. Paul intended not to mag- great parr of nifie the wood of the Croſs, but the Sacrifice upon it. And this way of ſpeaking uſed by the Apoſtle is fol- of Chrift; but lowed in our Litany, in which we deſire of Chriſt de- under that liverance by his Croſs, explaining it by his Paſſion. But ſtill there are outward ſigns of Veneration gi- ter and form ven to the Image it ſelf for Chriſts ſake; not indeed of the Crols. as braſs, or ſilver, or gold, or wood, or ſtone , or as a Par. 166o. piece of excellent Art; but yet as it relates to him,and is his image. Given however they are to the image, though they are ultimately referred to Chriſt. Due ho- nour, ſaith (d) the Council of Trent, is to be given to Deore de ingre them, and the honour which is given to them is resp. 1.895. * ferred to the Prototypes. “We Chriſtians (ſaid Leonti- Lons is Sya: Hins in the Synod (e) of Nice) adoring the figure of B. s the Croſs , honour not the nature of the wood, but Thund mit du Tag ang "the lign, and ring, and image of Chriſt. And again, *) he that feareth God honoureth and adoreth e Lront in Syih * Chrift as the Son of God, and the figure of his Croſs , mas , 246.4 and the images of his Saints . In Images (faith (3) the tdy Toner * Synod of Bourges) we worſhip not the matter,but bim srupt resana that was repreſented. As if it were one A&, and the fid. ibid. Image were worſhipped together with Chriſts God- p 245. head, as is the Humanity, by reaſon of its Perſonal onion with it. They that ſpeak thus, have deprived themſelves of the uſual Evaſion that the Church of 002 Rome d conc. Trid. 284 of the worſhip of the Image of Chriſt. Chap.XII . *Conc. Nic. 2. 262. There Εισης αυτών Rome owneth one God only, and therefore cannot by her own principle, worſhip an Image with abſolute La- tria. For in the worſhip of that one God, or the Di- vinity of Jeſus Chriſt, God-man, they take in the wor- ſhip of the Image or Relick, as of a body made one with him. To that effect there are dangerous ſayings in A&.4: p.261, the ſecond Synod of Nice, related by Photius.' It was there ſaid by Adrian from Epiphanius Biſhop of Con- the fays to the ſtantia in Cyprus, that a King, having his Statue or King, iza ir Image is not preſently two Kings, but one together exeive oul, with his image *. It was there affirmed (though not fuo, &c. particularly,and in thoſe words decreed) “That by the a Asd tñs is worship of Images (a), which ſeems divided, we are φαινομένης Siapo 8 ry us- “ carried up undividedly unto the indiviſible Deity. “And again, that in ſuch worſhip (6), we are carried Stegtoi as “ up into a certain unitive and conjunctive viſion. As jongetős 78 if we adhered to God by clinging with devout embra- a essere las ces to an Image made by humane Art. Yet this in effect είς την αμέρι- . is ſaid by many of their Doctors, who tell us that La- fromSi Te nad tria is given to the Image not abſolutely, but relative ένοποιος θεό TNTa dvayó ly, not by it ſelf (c) but by accident, as they are con- uesa ſidered in conjunction with the Prototype, and making b Kai 8x, one thing with it. Suarez himſelf (d) is one of theſe Sywtoily Tiva raſh men, and affirmeth “ that the Prototype in the i curuyaydo “ Image, and the Image for the Prototype may be ado- εναγόμεθα Jewela, &c. “ red with one interior and exterior Act. But amongſt the Honourers of Images and Relicks, there are not Blanc's Theſes. Th. de Ec. Ro. many ſure who fly higher in their devotion than Cor. Doft.circa cult. nelius Curtius. He does not ſay things we hear every ImagP 342, day, and therefore let us liſten to him a while in this Thom. dip-54: preſent Argument. “Let us now ſee (faith that Idoli- Se&. 3. ezer of the Nails of the Croſs (e)) what kind of Ve- c. Corn. Cuties « neration we owe to theſe Nails : Divines diſtinguiſh “ three kinds of Worſhips which are wont to be ex- 133, 134,135. “ preſſed by the Greek words of Latria, Hyperdulia, " sov exeipny c See Lle de Clovis Do- min. c. 12. p. and Here he 25 , to . Chap. XII. Of the worſbip of the Image of Chriſt. 285 4 and Dulia, which becauſe they terminate either in “God, or in intelligent natures, therefore none of « theſe do properly belong to the Nails, as being things " without life or reaſon, and conſequently not capa- " ble of ſuch worſhips. Wherefore to ſpeak to them as “ ſuch, and to ask any thing of them, would be a ſign «of madneſs and ſuperſtition. So all Catholicks unani- "mouſly conclude (f). Notwithſtanding this, becauſe Here he we inay, and we uſually do adjoin the Nails to Chrift 22. 9.91.4.3, « in our cogitation (8), hence it comes to paſs that by se e reaſon of this connexion, we may give them a cer- ſays vide con- Stain right (or direct] worſhip : for if we contem- cil. Trid. Self & worſhip of Hyperdulia: If we think of his Divinity, we owe to them the Honour of Latria. But for Data lia we bid it keep its diſtance, as being leſs worthy. * Neither ought it to ſeem a wonder to any man, that we give that Honour to Iron, which we acknowledg to be proper to God alone; for this is not given to " this metal in reſpect of its nature, but in rtgard of the perſon by whoſe contact (or union into oneneſs of object] it deſervedly obtaineth that high honour. This is ſtrange language from the Provincial for Bel- gium : But the Fathers of Trent ſpake more modeſt- Is, and we will take their words into further confide- ration. They allow external ſigns of worſhip both be fore, and to an Image. The external ſigns mentioned by them (a), are faluting, uncovering the Head, a concil. Trid. kneeling, bowing or proſtration. And the Synod of self-25.p.895 . Cambray teacheth (b) that the external ſigns of that ofculatur , eyn " Honour, Worſhip, and Invocation which they refer coram quibus to the thing ſignified, ſuch as are bending of the caput aperirin, . knee, and other ſigns of the like kind, are given muus, &c. rightly to Images. And it would not have this ſeem bconcil.camer , ablurd or impious to any man, whilft by the ſigns p.177. they worſhip the Prototypes. This ani new york 186 Of the worſhip of the Image of Chriſt. Chap.XII. This declaration of honouring the Image it felf c Juft weights Mr. Thorndike taxeth (c) as an idle thing; he might C. 19. p. 128. alſo have proceeded, and called it perillous, and a means of ſcandal. For the external honour of Chril is his honour, though not the only honour which is due to him : And ſometimes Hypocrites promote his Honour in the world by the meer ſhews of it; and ſometimes men blindly devout, betray it by exhibiting the ſignes of it where they are not due. It is true, that falutation is both a Civil and a Re- ligious ceremony. Cæcilius in Minutius Felix, point- ing to the Image of Serapis, kified his hand, in token of his devotion to that Idol. And the Romans were wont, when they complemented one another, firſt to reach forth their hand, and then drawing it up to their d Tac. Hift.l.1. mouth, to kiſs it, and this was called, adoring, and C. 36. Nec de erat Otho pro- venerating of them. So Tacitus faies of Otho (d) that tendens manus, he ſtretched out his hand and adored the people, and adorare vul. threw his Kiſſes among them: And of Nero, that he suma, vecere of worſhipped or venerated the Aſſemblie with his hand. Allo Bowing , Kneeling , Proſtration are equivocal where of Nero. fignes : and as we uſe them towards God, fo we do manu veneratus the like towards Princes, and before their empty Chairs of State. Before them, I ſay, for to bow to them, though it be not Idolatry, yet it is a debaſe- ment of our reaſonable perſons. For that external ſign is the ſign of an homage not due to them, but to the abſent Prince of whom they put us in mind: and the Ceremonie interprets and declares that inward ho- mage and ſubmiſſion to them whoſe Chairs they are. Now, though ſuch fignes are thus equivocal, yet they are ſo determined, by their Objects, and Circum- ſtances, to their particular ſenſe ; that a weak capacity can ſcarce commit an error in their interpretation. He that ſees a Croſs made by a Shepherd on one of his hic Sheep, * And elle- .. him at his ordinary work, but at his earneſt devo- Miffal. Kort, Chap.XII. Of the worſhip of the Image of Chriſt. 987 Sheep, does not think it ſignifies alike with the Croſs impreſſion which a Prieſt, or metaphorical Shepheard, makes at the Holy Font on the Forehead of a Child whom he hath juſt incorporated into his Flock. He that ſees another faluting him by pulling off his Hat, and bowing and crying, God ſave you ; cannot think he is, thereby, made a God or an Idol ; but he interprets all this as a ſign of reſpect according to the uſage of his Country. But if he fees a ſecond James Naylor riding on an Aſs in triumph into Briſtol, and hears the women cry Hoſannah, and ſees them bow their knees; he hath cauſe to believe that they are both mad and idolatrous: ſo much there is of Idolatry, in that which the Qua- kers judged Religion ; and ſo little of it in that civi- lity which they think is irreligion, and the worſhip of the creature. He thas fees an Artiſt in the Shop of a Statuary, kneeling before the image of Hercules, and finiſhing his Foot, will look upon him as a man employed in his mechanical Trade. But if he finds him in a Church, at the hours of Prayer, kneeling, or proſtrate, with un- covered Head, with Beads in his Hands, and Tears in his Eyes, and Kiſſes from his Mouth, at the Pedeſtal of a Crucifix, or of an Image of Chriſt; [ an Image ſet up for that uſe; an Image confecrated (a), and perfu- a Rit. Rom. med with confecrated Incenſe; and rendred illuſtrious 244, 245, with confecrated Tapers(1); ] he will not then think Tit. 11,Canl.z. tion. Now it may here be properly demanded of a Ro- 2.187, &c. maniſt, whether the ſign of bowing, kneeling, or pro- ſtration, be exhibited to the Image alone, to Godalone, or to both of them ? and if to both, whetherin equal or unequal degrees? In cannot be ſaid that it is done only to the Image, . , 24 p. In Sax. Sabon as 288 Of the worſhip of the Image of Chriſt. Chap.XII . : raſc. p. 182. as a ſign of civil reſpect, and not to God, becauſe the man is exerciſing himſelf in ſuch devotions as have God only ( the Romaniſts confeffing it ) for their ultimate Object. He is at his Prayers to God, or ſome perſon in the Trinity 3 and kneeling, or bowing at ſuch a time is as much the external part of worſhip, as the ſubmiſſion of the mind is the part internal. It cannot be ſaid by a true Romaniſt, to be done to God only, becauſe the Great Synod, and the Rituals of that Church,declare ſuch external Ceremonies to be ad- dreſſes to the very Images as Images of Chriſt Such Ce- remonies the Synod of Nice ſeemeth generally to mean, when it preſſeth the mooxunnoes, worſhip or adoration of Images, i. e. the veneration of the body of which men a Miß. Rom. only can take cognizance. Such veneration the Coun- Feria 6. in Pa. cil of Trent (as hath appeared already ) doth give by her decree, to the very Images, with regard to their divine Relation, though not in reſpect to their matter part . 2, p. 166. or form. The Miſſal commands the Prieſt, after ha- Sanët. — ea ving fixed the Croſs in a place prepared for it before pret a ut quicun- the Altar (a) to pull off his Shoos and adore the Croſs, (that is, not orare ad ( the old derivation of adorare ) fimum Apofto- to pray to it, for it preſcribes no form there, but to lum tuum, vel bow to it], and then to kiſs it. The Pontifical in- confefforem, &c. deed, ſpeaketh ſometimes of worſhipping before an c Pontif. fol. Image (b); but, in other places, it requireth the wor- 164 16. Tum Pontifex, flexis, ſhip of it. For ſo in the benediction of a new Croſs(c), ante crucem, ge- the Biſhop is required, once and again, to bow his nibus, ipfam de- Knees before it and to adore it devoutly. Nay, once d Portif. part. (d) it declareth that the worſhip Latria is due to the 3. fol. 204 Croſs. Ord. ad recip. proceſſ. Imperat. It cannot be ſaid by a Romaniſt, who regardeth his Cruz. Le- Creed, that this external addreſs is madeto Chriſt and betur di Latria, his Image in equal degree; for that were to give Ho- nour properly Divine unto a Creature ; a ſign of Ho- b Pont. Rom. Lug. 1542. que coram illa ipfum gloriofif (that eritá dextris. nour : Chap. XII. Of the worſhip of the Image of Chriſto: 289 nour being Honour : An Act of acknowledgement in our ſelves, and a means of procuring it amongſt other perſons. They muſt then ſay, if they will ſpeak with ſhew of conſiſtence, that the mind doth apply the act of incur- vation to the Image as a ſign of inferior honour, and to Chriſt as a ſign of that honour which is ſupream. That the Caſe is like to that of Naaman before his con- verſion unto Judaiſm: for then he worſhipped the Idol of Rimmon with religious worſhip, and yet by the ſame act of external adoration or bowing, he did teſtifie his civil reſpect to his Maſter that leaned on him. But their worſhip is not ſo circumſtantiated as that of Naaman's. He doubtleſs did ſome other homage ſepa- rately from his Maſter, to ſhew his ſuppoſed Religion: and they have none leaning on them, ( unleſs by acci- dene;) by complement to whom they may interpret the lign, in part, of a civil reſpect. But how doth one external ſign ſplit, in each ſingle exhibition of it, into two ſignifications, appear to ſignifie doubly, to the common ſpectators? That no miſtake may be committed, the Roman Allemblies had need be ſo many Conventions of great Clerks and wiſe Schoolmen. But, in all Aſſemblies, how few are good Judges ? And how many Spies are there Jewiſh, and Mahometan, and Heathen, to whom it is norally impoſſible to know their diſtinctions ? And how many of the fame Communion have groſs and ſtupid minds and devotions begotten of igno- rance? And what uncharitableneſs is it to makea Ditch in the daily walks of the Blind, and the Weak, and the inadvertent ? and what a ſcandal is this in India, or China, where the Geſtures are ſeen, and the Books that explain them are not underſtood or handled by one of a thouſand? And where their own worſhip of Рp Ima- 990 of the worſhip of the Image of Chriſt. Chap.XII. 2. Images maketh them think the Chriſtians not far from their Religion? They who uſe Images in their devotions, and are as diſcreet in their devotions as that uſage will givethem leave ; theſe profeſs that they bow not to the Image at all, but only to God before it for thus S. Gregory, Durandus, Halcot, Biel ſeem to profeſs]. And it is honour enough to the Image, that our devotion is on choice, done at the foot of it. They ought to profeſs that when they kiſs the Image, though the external lign of worſhip toucheth it and adheres to it, yet it doth not fo adhere to it in the quality of an object which it terminateth on, but as a kind of reſting- place in the way, whilſt it cannot reach its journeys- end by the body, but by the mind only. That being moved by holy paſſion towards the bleſſed Jeſus, they ſalute the Image of Chriſt, not being able to reach his perſon: and they may illuſtrate their meaning by the wiſh of Thomafinus, who paſſionately breaketh into this language (a); “O that there were any man to a Thomaſ de vita, Bibliothe- 44 whom I might be beholding for the Images of Moli- cả, & Muſeo «nus and Pignorius, men to be by me eternally ho- Lawr, Pignorii. . c noured; that I might kiſs the Portraict of thoſe a whom I cannot embrace in perſon. They may fur- ther thus far apologize for the Heathens, and ſay, that when they worſhipped the Sun by the kiſſing of their hand, they did not ſo much kiſs their hand as the pre- fumed deity whom they could not reach. They may add, that when they kiſs the Image of the Son, they exhibit this Ceremonie, not only as an effect, but as a fign of their love to him. For fo a man that kiſſeth the Hemm of a Garment, does in truth, but touch the Hemm, and offer it as it is a ſign of obſervance unto the perſon. The materiality of the Act reacheth the Image, the formality the Prototype. In . : Chap.XII. Of the worſhip of the Image of Chrift. 991 In England, in the days of Henry the Seventh, fonre Romaniſts ſpake not ſo raſhly as Bellarmine, who with- out neceflity impoſed on him by the Decree of Trent, afierted a proper veneration of Images (6), as objects b Bello de Each terminating that worſhip in themſelves, and not as fu- Triumpho leads to Itaining the place of the Prototype. Amongſt them I sue spala de find an ancient Author who hath written in Folio an Rép. Eccl.l. ?. Expoſition of the Ten Commandnients in the way of where he a Dialogue betwixt Dives and Pamper. And becauſe he refutet la the ſpeaks foberly in this Argument, and is not in nyany for the Rele hands, I will heretranſcribe ſome places out of him(a). worſhip of ko « Dives. Whereof ſerve theſe Ymages, I wolde they a'lori preceptes were brent alle. Pauper. They ſerve for thre thynges; ebaper: