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way, that God might so order it, that some persons might have the gift of speaking readily and fluently in a language which they never learned, and yet not be able readily and immediately to interpret and explain it to advantage in the vulgar tongue. And on the other hand, other persons that had not the gift of speaking so readily in those strange languages, might yet have a happy gift communicated to them of readily interpreting, in apt and proper expressions, the sense of what was thus spoken. These two gifts were indeed frequently found in the same persons, as is evident from ver. 5, For greater,' i. e. more useful to the church, is he that prophesieth than he that speaketh with tongues, except he interpret, that the church may receive edifying.' Where it is plainly implied, that the same persons that spoke with tongues did sometimes at least also interpret. And therefore he exhorts, ver. 13, Let him that speaketh in an unknown tongue pray that he may interpret; that is, let him pray to God to give him also the gift of aptly and readily interpreting what he spoke in the vulgar tongue, that the other might be rendered more useful; which manifestly supposes that these gifts often met together in the same persons; though it is plain they did not always go together, but were distributed to different persons, see chap. xii. 10, 30, xiv. 28. And there might be wise reasons for this, that might render it proper that those gifts should be sometimes separated, though we do not well know those reasons at this distance, because we are not well acquainted with the circumstances of the case. It is evident, from the account the apostle Paul gives us in the xiith chapter of the Epistle to the Corinthians, that it pleased God in that first age to distribute those extraordinary gifts with great variety, giving to every man severally according to his will.' And it might be so ordered to prevent their being too much elated on the account of those extraordinary gifts, which, as human nature is constituted, even good men themselves might be in danger of; and to make them more deeply sensible of their continual dependence upon God, who alone made them to differ from one another; and that they might in their several ways be useful and necessary to each other, and to the church; and so their mutual harmony might be strengthened. The apostle illustrates this with regard to this very case of different spiritual gifts, communicated to different persons, by an elegant similitude, drawn from the different uses and functions of the members of the body, see 1 Cor. xii. 14-31.

Thus I have gone through what this writer offers with regard to the gift of tongues; for as to his invective against the lying monks of the fourth century,' as he calls them, for pretending to give an account of the apostle's propagating Christianity as far as India, &c. by the help of the gift of tongues, we need not trouble ourselves much about it. Though we have no authentic account of the apostles' travels or preaching, yet it cannot reasonably be doubted, that they did take pains to propagate Christianity in distant countries. Christ's commission to them was express to teach all nations, and to go through all the world, and preach the gospel to

every creature;' and it can scarce be thought, that they who had so profound a veneration for our Lord Jesus, would entirely neglect the commission he gave them. It does not appear that all the apostles of the circumcision kept together in and about Jerusalem, as he pretends, during all St. Paul's travels.' There is no proof that they were all of them together there at any one time when St. Paul came thither, not even at the council at Jerusalem. Or if they were, it no more proves that they were there continually, than St. Paul's being there at those times proves that he was always there. The only apostle that there is any reason to think resided constantly at Jerusalem is St. James, who alone is mentioned at St. Paul's being the last time at Jerusalem, Acts xxi. 18; and Luke's silence about the travels and labours of the other apostles, which this author urges, is no proof at all; since he did not intend to write down the Acts of all the apostles, but chiefly of St. Paul, whose companion he was; and after his conversion he takes not much notice of any other. We find from Gal. ii. 11, that St. Peter was at Antioch, and from his own epistle, that he was at Babylon; whether that be to be understood of Babylon properly so called, or of Rome, as some suppose; yet St. Luke takes not the least notice of either of these; so that no argument can be drawn merely from his silence. As to what he farther urges, that it is not to be supposed that these men, who were rigidly strict to the law, should thus disperse themselves among the heathen nations, where they could neither eat nor drink with any body;' he can neither prove that the apostles were so rigidly strict to the law as he supposes, the contrary to which has been shown; nor if he could, would it prove, that they would not travel among the heathen nations for their conversion. Since it is an undeniable fact, that those Jews who were most strict in the observance of the law, did yet go among the heathen to proselyte them, and did actually, from time to time, turn many of them from their idolatry. So that this writer might have spared his reflections here, except he could have brought some better arguments to support them. That Christianity made a vast progress, even in the apostolic age, is certain, not only from several passages in Scripture, as well as in Christian writers, much elder than the fourth century,+ but from the testimony of heathen writers themselves, particularly Tacitus with regard to the apostolic age, and of Pliny for that immediately following. And considering that

*

See Rom. xv. 19, Col. v. 6, 23, ii. 1, 1 Peter i. 1, v. 13.

+ I shall mention particularly that of Justin Martyr, who flourished in a little more than a hundred years after the death of our Saviour. In his dialogue with Trypho, upon occasion of that text in Malachi, chap. i. after having observed, that though the Jews were much dispersed, yet there were some nations among whom none of them ever yet dwelt; he adds, οὐδὲ ἓν γαρ ὅλως εστὶ τὸ γένος ἀνθρωπων εἴτε βαρβάρων εἴτε

vwv, &c. There is no nation of men, whether barbarians or Greeks, or by whatever name they are called, &c. among whom prayers and thanksgivings are not offered to the Father and Maker of all things, through the name of a crucified Jesus.' Allowing these expressions to be a little hyperbolical, they show that Christianity had then made a very wide progress in different parts of the world.

Tacit. Annal. lib. 15. Plin. Epist. lib. 10. Epist. 97, ad Trajan.

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it had no worldly advantages to attend it, that it had the artifices and influence of the priests, the bigotry and superstition of the vulgar, the inveterate prejudices both of the Jews and Gentiles, and the vicious appetites and passions of men engaged against it; and considering the weakness and meanness of the instruments by whom it was first propagated, and the persecutions to which the professors of it were exposed, it is impossible to account for the amazing progress it made, without supposing the truth and evidence of those facts on which it is founded, and especially of the extraordinary gifts poured forth in the apostolic age; among which that of tongues was very remarkable, and particularly fitted to promote the spreading of Christianity in different nations. And if all these apostolical gifts had been no more than frantic fits of enthusiasm, and the primitive Christians were such a parcel of madmen as this writer thinks fit to represent them, I am persuaded that Christianity and its professors would soon have sunk into the same obscurity with the French prophets, to whom he is pleased to compare them. I had observed, that among other gifts of the apostolical age, one was the gift of wisdom and knowledge, whereby they had their minds extraordinarily enlightened in the knowledge of spiritual and divine things, and that it cannot be pretended that this was one of those gifts that were capable of being abused to propagate error and falsehood; since it is a contradiction to suppose, that any person should, by the exercise of this gift of divine wisdom and knowledge, that is, by the very actual exercise of the knowledge of truth, and by declaring and imparting to others the knowledge he himself had of the truth, promote and propagate false doctrine and error.' Our author makes himself very merry with this, and thinks it is not possible for any man to read it and forbear laughing.' But the ridicule turns upon himself. The supposition he had made in his former book, concerning the extraordinary gifts in the apostolic age was this, that those that were endued with those gifts might make either a good or bad use of them, as much as of any natural faculties or talents;' where he evidently runs a parallel between natural faculties and talents and the apostolical gifts, and supposes them to be alike in this, that they were equally capable of being applied to good or ill purposes. This will easily be allowed with regard to natural faculties and talents. For when a man uses those talents, e. g. his judgment, fancy, sagacity, eloquence, to promote error and vice, he as really uses his faculties and talents, as if he employed them in the cause of truth and virtue, only he makes a wrong or bad use of them. But the case is different with regard to some of the apostolical gifts. They were not like natural faculties, which may be really used and exercised, and in that use and exercise be applied to promote error as well as truth; but they were of such a nature, as if really used and exercised at all, could only serve the cause of truth. Of this kind I reckoned the gift of divine wisdom and knowledge, which included the illuminating of their minds with the actual knowledge of divine truth. Now it is manifest, that whenever this gift was really exercised, it could only serve

the cause of truth. Knowledge may be used to promote error, but the knowledge of truth cannot. And the contrary supposition is absurd and self-contradictory.

P. 235, he allows that the power of working miracles was not a permanent abiding habit to be exercised at any time, and at mere will and pleasure; that it was not constant, but occasional; yet he asserts, that whenever they had this power and could exercise it, as they were free agents in it, they might make a good or bad use of it, as much as of any natural power they had, and in the exercise of which they were free,' p. 236. But if the apostles did not work miracles by their own power, but by the immediate impulse and agency of the Divine Spirit, and could never perform those miracles at any time but when he thought fit to enable them to do them; it is absurd to the last degree to suppose that they could exercise that power for such purposes as they themselves pleased, contrary to the mind of the Spirit by whom they were at that time enabled to exercise it. If therefore they should have attempted at any time to work such miracles in confirmation of falsehood, they must have immediately failed in the attempt; except we suppose the Spirit himself, by whose influence these miracles were wrought, and on whose will it depended when they should work them, intended to confirm falsehood, and lent his power for that purpose. To suppose which of a good Spirit, which is the present supposition, is a manifest inconsistency. As to his insinuation, p. 235, as if the efficacy of the miracles depended on the faith of healing,' which he thinks *madmen and lunatics might have in a higher degree than others, as they had the greatest force of imagination;' I would know when the dead were raised, as Eutychus was by the apostle Paul, and Dorcas by St. Peter, whether the faith and imagination of these dead persons did also co-operate to their being raised again? Or, did the faith of the impotent man that had been lame from his mother's womb, i. e. his belief that the apostles would give him money, for this was all he expected from them; did this imagination of his enable them in an instant, by a word speaking, to restore him to the perfect use of his limbs? Acts iii. 4-8,

shall say no more of this here, having taken notice of it before; and besides, our author is pleased afterwards to own, p. 236, that 'the cure of a fever, or any common distemper, by a touch or word of command, must be allowed to be very extraordinary and miraculous.'

485

CHAPTER XI.

The Author's attempt to vindicate what he had said concerning the Apostle's preaching different Gospels, shown to be vain and insufficient. His censures on the Apocalypse considered. The doctrine of Christ's satisfaction farther vindicated against his exceptions. His concluding attempt to prove that there are plain marks of imposture in the law of Moses, and particularly that it was calculated to advance the carnal worldly interest of the politician, and that it gave a large indulgence to personal intemperance, and the lusts of uncleanness. The strange representations he makes of the law of jealousy. The injustice of his reflections upon it shown. The Conclusion.

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THIS writer had, in his former book, made a mighty noise about the different gospels preached by the apostles. He had given a formal account of the Jewish gospel, which he pretends was taught by all the apostles but St. Paul. This pretended Jewish gospel was shown to be entirely his own fiction.* It highly concerned him, therefore, since he had laid so great a stress upon it, to vindicate what he had offered on this head, if he had been able to do it. And he assures us, in the contents of his ninth section, which I am now going to consider, that he has proved that there was a real separation between Peter and Paul, occasioned by the different gospels they preached.' One would, therefore, have expected here some vindication of his Jewish gospels, but nothing of this appears. He crys out, as his custom is, against systems and school divinity, which to be sure is very pertinent to the point in debate. And then he answers all that I had said by asking a few questions, which he supposes must take me three or four volumes more to answer.' One of them relates to the long and warm debates in the Jerusalem council; but how this will prove a difference among the apostles is hard to see; since it appears that there was an entire harmony among them, and that they all concurred in condemning the false Judaizing teachers, as subverting men's souls, and in absolving the Gentiles from the observation of the law of Moses. He next mentions Paul's withstanding Peter to the face, and charging him with prevarication and inconsistency.' But this doth not prove that they preached different gospels. On the contrary, it appears evidently, from that very passage, that St. Peter did not believe the absolute obligation of the ceremonial law more than St. Paul; that the difference between them was not about any point of doctrine; but because Peter, for fear of giving offence to some of the Jews that came from Jerusalem, declined eating openly with the Gentiles as he had done before; for this he was blamed by St. Paul. And this apostle, in what he saith to him on that occasion, proceeds upon it as an uncontested truth, in which

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* See Div. Author, pp. 231-232.

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