CHAP. VIII.
[1 Obj.]
Peace.It will be said, dear Truth, what the Lord Jesus and his messengers taught was truth; but the question is about error.
Truth.I answer, This distinction now in discussion concerns not truth or error, but the manner of holding forth or divulging.
I acknowledge that such may be the way and manner of holding forth, either with railing or reviling, daring or challenging speeches, or with force of arms, swords, guns, prisons, &c., that it may not only tend to break, but may actually break the civil peace, or peace of the city.
The instances proposed carry a great show of impetuousness, yet all are pure and peaceable.
Yet these instances propounded are cases of great opposition and spiritual hostility, and occasions of breach of civil peace; and yet as the borders, or matter, were of gold, so the specks, or manner, (Cantic. i. [11,]) were of silver: both matter and manner pure, holy, peaceable, and inoffensive.
Moreover, I answer, That it is possible and common for persons of soft and gentle nature and spirits, to hold out falsehood with more seeming meekness and peaceableness, than the Lord Jesus or his servants did or do hold forth the true and everlasting gospel. So that the answerer would be requested to explain what he means by thisarrogant and impetuous holding forth of any doctrine, which very manner of holding forth tends to break civil peace, and comes under the cognizance and correction of the civil magistrate, lest he build the sepulchre of the prophets,and say, If we had been in the Pharisees’ days, the Roman emperor’s days, or the bloody Marian days,we would not have been partakers with them in the blood of the prophets, Matt. xxiii. 30, who were charged with arrogance and impetuousness.