Presbyterians shall have got their share of employments
(which, must be one full half, or else they cannot
look upon themselves as fairly dealt with) I ask,
whether they ought not by their own principles, and
by the strictest rules of conscience, to use the utmost
of their skill, power, and influence, in order to
reduce the whole kingdom to an uniformity in religion,
both as to doctrine and discipline, most agreeable
to the word of God. Wherein, if they can succeed
without blood (as, under the present disposition of
things, it is very possible they may) it is to be
hoped they will at last be satisfied: Only I would
warn them of a few difficulties. The first is
for compromising that important controversy about
the
Old Light and the
New;[7] which otherwise
may, after this establishment, split them as wide
as Papist and Protestant, Whig and Tory, or Churchmen
and Dissenters; and consequently the work will be to
begin again. For in religious quarrels, it is
of little moment how few or small the differences
are, especially when the dispute is only about power.
Thus the jealous Presbyterians of the north, are more
alienated from the established clergy, than from the
Romish priests; taxing the former with idolatrous
worship, as disguised Papists, ceremony-mongers, and
many other terms of arts, and this for a very powerful
reason, because the clergy stand in their way, which
the Popish priests do not. Thus I am assured,
that the quarrel between
Old and
New Light
men, is managed with more rage and rancour, than
any other dispute of the highest importance; and this
because it serves to lessen or increase their several
congregations, from whom they receive their contributions.
[Footnote 7: See “The Correspondent,”
Nos. 1 and 2, 1733, and note prefixed to present reprint
of “Narrative of Several Attempts for the Repeal
of the Sacramental Test” [T.S.]]
Another difficulty which may embarrass the Presbyterians
after their establishment, will be how to adjust their
claim of the kirk’s independency on the civil
power, with the constitution of this monarchy; a point
so delicate, that it hath often filled the heads of
great patriots with dangerous notions of the church-clergy,
without the least ground of suspicion.
As to the Presbyterians allowing liberty of conscience
to those of Episcopal principles, when their own kirk
is predominant, their writers are so universally agreed
in the negative, as well as their practice during
Oliver’s reign, that I believe no reasonable
Churchman, (who must then be a dissenter) will expect
it.
I shall here take notice, that in the division of
employments among the Presbyterians, after this approaching
repeal of the Test Act, supposing them, in proper
time, to have an equal share, I compute the odds will
be three or four to one on their side, in any further
scheme they may have towards making their religion
national. For I reckon, all those gentlemen sent
over from England, whatever religion they profess,
or have been educated in, to be of that party:
Since it is no mark of prudence, for any persons to
oppose the current of a nation, where they are in
some sort only sojourners, unless they have it in direction.