Pagina-afbeeldingen
PDF
ePub
[ocr errors]

beft rhetoricians, and the famouseft examples of the greek and roman orations. But fince the religion of it is dif puted, and not the art, I fhall make ufe only of fuch reafons and authorities, as religion cannot except against. It will be harder to gainfay, than for me to evince, that in the teaching of men diverfely tempered, different ways are to be tried. The Baptift, we know, was a ftri&t man, remarkable for aufterity and fet order of life.. Our Saviour, who had all gifts in him, was Lord to express his indoctrinating power in what fort him beft feemed fometimes by a mild and familiar converfe; fometimes with plain and impartial homefpeaking, regardless of those whom the auditors might think he should have had in more refpect; otherwhile, with bitter and ireful rebukes, if not teaching, yet leaving excuseless thofe his wilful impugners. What was all in him, was divided among many others the teachers of his church; fome to be fevere and ever of a fad gravity, that they may win fuch, and check fometimes those who be of nature overconfident and jocund; others were fent more cheerful, free, and still as it were at large, in the midft of an untrefpaffing honefty; that they who are fo tempered, may have by whom they might be drawn to falvation, and they who are too fcrupulous, and dejected of fpirit, might be often strengthened with wife confolations and revivings: no man being forced wholly to diffolve that groundwork of nature which God created in him, the fanguine to empty out all his fociable liveliness, the choleric to expel quite the unfinning predominance of his anger; but that each radical humourand paffion, wrought upon and corrected as it ought, might be made the proper mould and foundation of every man's peculiar gifts and virtues. Some alfo were indued with a staid moderation and foundness of argument, to teach and convince the rational and soberminded; yet not therefore that to be thought the only expedient course of teaching, for in times of oppofition, when either against new herefies arifing, or old corruptions to be reformed, this cool unpaffionate mildness of pofitive wifdom is not enough to damp and aftonish the proud refistance of carnal and falfe doctors, then (that I may have leave to

Q 4

foar

foar awhile as the poets ufe) Zeal, whofe fubftance is ethereal, arming in complete diamond, afcends his fiery chariot drawn with two blazing meteors, figured like beafts, but of a higher breed than any the zodiac yields, refembling two of thofe four which Ezekiel and St. John faw, the one vifaged like a lion, to exprefs power, high authority, and indignation; the other of countenance like a man, to caft derifion and fcorn upon perverse and fraudulent feducers: with thefe the invincible warrior, Zeal, shaking loosely the flack reins, drives over the heads of fcarlet prelates, and fuch as are infolent to maintain traditions, bruifing their stiff necks under his flaming wheels, Thus did the true prophets of old combat with the false; thus Chrift himfelf, the fountain of meekness, found acrimony enough to be ftill galling and vexing the prelatical pharifees. But ye will fay, thefe had immediate warrant from God to be thus bitter; and I fay, so much the plainer is it proved, that there may be a fanctified bitterness against the enemies of truth. Yet that ye may not think infpiration only the warrant thereof, but that it is as any other virtue, of moral and general obfervation, the example of Luther may ftand for all, whom God made choice of before others to be of highest eminence and power in reforming the church; who, not of revelation, but of judgment, writ fo vehemently against the chief defenders of old untruths in the romifh church, that his own friends and favourers were many times offended with the fiercenefs of his fpirit; yet he being cited before Charles the Fifth to answer for his books, and having divided them into three forts, whereof one was of those which he had sharply written, refused, though upon deliberation given him, to retract or unfay any word therein, as we may read in Sleidan. Yea, he defends his eagerness, as being "of an ardent fpirit, and one who could not write a dull ftyle:" and affirmed, "he thought it God's will, to have the inventions of men thus laid open, feeing that matters quietly handled were quickly forgot." And herewithal how ufeful and available God hath made this tart rhetoric in the church's cause, he often found by his own experience. For when he betook himfelf to lenity and moderation, as they call it,

he

2

he reaped nothing but contempt both from Cajetan and Erafmus, from Cocleus, from Ecchius, and others; infomuch that blaming his friends, who had fo counfelled him, he refolved never to run into the like errour: if at other times he feem to excufe his vehemence, as more than what was meet, I have not examined through his works, to know how far he gave way to his own fervent mind; it fhall fuffice me to look to mine own. And this I fhall eafily aver, though it may feem a hard faying, that the fpirit of God, who is purity itself, when he would reprove any fault feverely, or but relate things done or faid with indignation by others, abftains not from fome words not civil at other times to be fpoken. Omitting that place in Numbers at the killing of Zimri and Cofbi; done by Phineas in the height of zeal, related, as the rabbins expound, not without an obfcene word; we may find in Deuteronomy and three of the prophets, where God, denouncing bitterly the punishments of idolaters, tells them in a term immodeft to be uttered in cool blood, that their wives fhall be defiled openly. But thefe, they will fay, were honeft words in that age when they were spoken. Which is more than any rabbin can prove; and certainly had God been so minded, he could have picked fuch words as fhould never have come into abuse. What will they fay to this? David going against Nabal, in the very fame breath when he had juft before named the name of God, he vows not "to leave any alive of Nabal's houfe that piffeth against the wall." But this was unadvisedly spoken, you will anfwer, and fet down to aggravate his infirmity. Turn then to the firft of Kings, where God himself ufes the phrafe, "I will cut off from Jeroboam him that piffeth against the wall." Which had it been an unfeemly fpeech in the heat of an earneft expreffion, then we muft conclude that Jonathan or Onkelos the targumifts were of cleaner language than he that made the tongue; for they render it as briefly, "I will cut off all who are at years of difcretion," that is to fay, fo much difcretion as to hide nakednefs. Whereas God, who is the author both of purity and eloquence, chofe this phrafe as fittest in that vehement character wherein he fpake. Other wife that plain word might have easily been forborn:

which

which the maforeths and rabbinical fcholiafts, not well attending, have often used to blur the margent with Keri instead of Ketiv, and gave us this infulfe rule out of their Talmud, "That all words which in the law are written obfcenely, must be changed to more civil words:" fools, who would teach men to read more decently than God thought good to write. And thus I take it to be manifeft, that indignation against men and their actions notoriously bad hath leave and authority ofttimes to utter fuch words and phrafes, as in common talk were not fo mannerly to ufc. That ye may know, not only as the hiftorian fpeaks, "that all those things for which men plough, build, or fail, obey virtue," but that all words, and whatsoever may be fpoken, fhall at fome time in an unwonted manner wait upon her purposes.

[ocr errors]

Now that the confutant may also know as he defires, what force of teaching there is fometimes in laughter; I fhall return him in fhort, that laughter being one way of anfwering " a fool according to his folly," teaches two forts of perfons, firft, the fool himself" not to be wife in his own conceit," as Solomon affirms; which is certainly a great document to make an unwife man know himself. Next, it teacheth the hearers, in as much as fcorn is one of those punishments, which belong to men carnally wise, which is oft in fcripture declared; for when fuch are punished, "the fimple are thereby made wife," if Solomon's rule be true. And I would afk, to what end Eliah mocked the falfe prophets? was it to fhow his wit, or to fulfil his humour? Doubtlefs we cannot imagine that great fervant of God had any other end, in all which he there did, but to teach and inftruct the poor mifled peoplc. And we may frequently read, that many of the martyrs in the midst of their troubles were not sparing, to deride and scoff their superftitious perfecutors. Now may the confutant advise again with fir Francis Bacon, whether Eliah and the martyrs did well to turn religion into a comedy or fatire; "to rip up the wounds of idolatry and fuperftition with a laughing countenance :" fo that for pious gravity the author here is matched and overmatched, and for wit and morality in one that follows:

-laughing

"laughing to teach the truth
What hinders? as fome teachers give to boys

Junkets and knacks that they may learn apace."

Thus Flaccus in his first satire, and his tenth:

[ocr errors][merged small]
[ocr errors]

I could urge the fame out of Cicero and Seneca, but he may content him with this. And henceforward, if he can learn, may know as well what are the bounds and objects of laughter and vehement reproof, as he hath known hitherto how to deserve them both. But left fome may haply think, or thus expoftulate with me after this debatement, who made you the bufy almoner to deal about this dole of laughter and reprehenfion, which no man thanks your bounty for? To the urbanity of that man I fhould anfwer much after this fort: that I, friend objecter, having read of heathen philofophers, fome to have taught, that whofoever would but ufe his ear to liften, might hear the voice of his guiding genius ever before him, calling, and as it were pointing to that way which is his part to follow; others, as the ftoics, to account reason, which they call the Hegemonicon, to be the common Mercury conducting without errour thofe that give themselves obediently. to be led accordingly having read this, I could not efteem fo poorly of the faith which I profefs, that God had left nothing to thofe who had forfaken all other doctrines for his, to be an inward witness and warrant of what they have to do, as that they fhould need to measure themselves by other men's measures, how to give fcope or limit to their proper actions; for that were to make us the moft at a ftand, the most uncertain and accidental wanderers in our doings, of all religions in the world. So that the queftion ere while moved, who is he that fpends thus the benevolence of laughter and reproof fo liberally upon fuch men as the prelates, may return with a more juft demand, who he is not of place and knowledge never fo mean, under whofe con

7

tempt

« VorigeDoorgaan »