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publishing books against those doctrines in religion, wherein all Chriftians have agreed; much more to connive at such tracts as reject all revelation, and, by their confequences, often deny the very being of a God. Surely, it is not a fufficient atonement for the writers, that they profefs much loyalty to the present government, and sprinkle up and down fome arguments in favour of the diffenters; that they dispute as ftrenuoufly as they can, for liberty of conscience, and inveigh largely against all ecclefiaftics, under the name of high-church; and, in fhort, under the shelter of fome popular principles in politics and religion, undermine the foundations of all piety and vir

tue.

As he doth not reckon every fchifm of that damnable nature which fome would reprefent, fo, he is very far from closing with the new opinion of those who would make it no crime at all; and argue at a wild rate, that God Almighty is delighted with the variety of faith and worship, as he is with the varieties of nature. To fuch abfurdities are men carried by the affectation of · free-thinking, and removing the prejudices of education; under which head, they have, for fome time, begun to lift morality and religion. It is certain, that, before the rebellion in 1642, though the number of Puritans (as they were then called) was as great as it is with us, and though they affected to follow paftors of that denomination; yet, those pastors had episcopal ordination, pos

feffed

feffed preferments in the church, and were fometimes promoted to bishoprics themselves. But, a breach in the general form of worship was, in those days, reckoned fo dangerous and finful in itself, and so offensive to Roman Catholics at home and abroad, that it was too unpopular to be attempted neither, I believe, was the expedient then found out, of maintaining separate paftors out of private purses.

When a fchifm is. once spread in a nation, there grows at length a difpute, which are the fchifmatics. Without entering on the arguments used by both fides among us, to fix the guilt on each other, it is certain, that, in the fenfe of the law, the fchifm lies on that fide which opposeth itself to the religion of the ftate. I leave it among the divines to dilate upon the danger of fchifm as a fpiritual evil; but I would confider it only as a temporal one. And I think it clear, that any great feparation from the established worship, though to a new one that is more pure and perfect, may be an occafion of endangering the public peace; because it will compofe a body always in reserve, prepared to follow any difcontented heads, upon the plaufible pretexts of advancing true religion, and oppofing error, fuperftition, or idolatry. For this reason, Plato lays it down as a maxim, That men ought to worship the gods according to the laws of the country; and he introduces Socrates, in his last discourse, utterly disowning the crime laid to his charge, of teaching new divinities, or methods

of

of worship. Thus, the poor Hugonots of France were engaged in a civil war, by the fpecious pretences of fome, who, under the guife of religion, facrificed so many thousand lives to their own ambition and revenge. Thus was the whole body of Puritans in England drawn to be inftruments or abettors of all manner of villany, by the artifices of a few men, whose designs, from the first, were levelled to deftroy the conftitution both of religion and government*. And thus, even in Holland itself, where it is pretended, that the variety of fects live fo amicably together, and in fuch perfect obedience to the magiftrate, it is notorious, how a turbulent party, joining with the Arminians, did, in the memory of our fathers, attempt to deftroy the liberty of that republic. So that, upon the whole, where fects are tolerated in a state, it is fit they should enjoy a full liberty of confcience, and every other privilege of freeborn fubjects, to which no power is annexed. And, to preferve their obedience, upon all emergencies, a government cannot give them too much ease, nor trust them with too little power.

The clergy are usually charged with a perfecuting fpirit, which they are faid to discover, by an implacable hatred to all diffenters: and this appears to be more unreasonable, because they suffer less in their interests by a toleration, than any of the conforming laity; for, while the church remains in its prefent form, no diffenter can poffi.

* Lord Clarendon's history.

bly

bly have any fhare in its dignities, revenues, or power; whereas, by once receiving the facrament, he is rendered capable of the highest employments in the ftate. And it is very poffible, that a narrow education, together with a mixture of human infirmity, may help to beget among fome of the clergy in poffeffion, fuch an averfion and contempt for all innovators, as phyficians are apt to have for empirics; or lawyers for pettifoggers, or merchants for pedlars: But, fince the number of fectaries doth not concern the clergy, either in point of intereft or confcience, (it being an evil not in their power to remedy,) it is more fair and reasonable to fuppofe, their diflike proceeds from the dangers they apprehend to the peace of the commonwealth, in the ruin whereof, they must expect to be the first and greatest fufferers.

To conclude this fection, it must be observed, that there is a very good word, which hath, of late, fuffered much by both parties; I mean moderation; which the one fide very juftly difowns, and the other as unjustly pretends to.

Befide

what paffes every day in conversation, any man who reads the papers published by Mr. Lefley, and others of his ftamp, muft needs conclude, that, if this author could make the nation fee his adverfaries under the colours he paints them in, we have nothing else to do, but rife as one man, and deftroy fuch wretches from the face of the earth. On the other fide, how shall we excufe

the

the, advocates for moderation? among whom, I could appeal to a hundred papers, of univerfal approbation, by the cause they were writ for, which lay fuch principles to the whole body of the Tories, as if they were true; and believed, our next business fhould, in prudence, be, to erect gibbets in every parish, and hang them out of the way. But, I fuppose it is prefumed, the common people understand raillery, or at least rhetoric; and will not take hyperboles in too literal a fenfe; which, however, in fome junctures, might prove a defperate experiment. And this is moderation, in the modern fenfe of the word; to which, fpeaking impartially, the bigots of both parties are equally intitled.

SECT. II.

The fentiments of a church-of-England man, with respect to government.

WE

E look upon it as a very juft reproach, though we cannot agree where to fix it, that there fhould be fo much violence and hatred, in religious matters, among men who agree in all fundamentals, and only differ in some ceremonies, or, at moft, mere fpeculative points. Yet, is not this frequently the cafe between contending parties in a ftate? For inftance, do not the generality of Whigs and Tories among us, profefs to agree in the fame fundamentals, their loyal

ty

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