Characters from 17th Century Histories and Chronicles eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 391 pages of information about Characters from 17th Century Histories and Chronicles.

Characters from 17th Century Histories and Chronicles eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 391 pages of information about Characters from 17th Century Histories and Chronicles.

The most eminent of those, who were formed under those great men I have mention’d, were Tillotson, Stillingfleet, and Patrick.  The first of these was a man of a clear head, and a sweet temper.  He had the brightest thoughts, and the most correct style of all our divines; and was esteemed the best preacher of the age.  He was a very prudent man; and had such a management with it, that I never knew any Clergy-man so universally esteemed and beloved, as he was for above twenty years.  He was eminent for his opposition to Popery.  He was no friend to persecution, and stood up much against Atheism.  Nor did any man contribute more to bring the City to love our worship, than he did.  But there was so little superstition, and so much reason and gentleness in his way of explaining things, that malice was long levelled at him, and in conclusion broke out fiercely on him. Stillingfleet was a man of much more learning, but of a more reserved, and a haughtier temper.  He in his youth writ an Irenicum for healing our divisions, with so much learning and moderation, that it was esteemed a masterpiece.  His notion was, that the Apostles had settled the Church in a constitution of Bishops, Priests, and Deacons, but had made no perpetual law about it, having only taken it in, as they did many other things, from the customs and practice of the synagogue; from which he inferred, that certainly the constitution was lawful since authorised by them, but not necessary, since they had made no settled law about it.  This took with many; but was cried out upon by others as an attempt against the Church.  Yet the argument was managed with so much learning and skill, that none of either side ever undertook to answer it.  After that, he wrote against infidelity, beyond any that had gone before him.  And then he engaged to write against Popery, which he did with such an exactness and liveliness, that no books of controversy were so much read and valued, as his were.  He was a great man in many respects.  He knew the world well, and was esteemed a very wise man.  The writing of his Irenicum was a great snare to him:  For, to avoid the imputations which that brought upon him, he not only retracted the book, but he went into the humours of that high sort of people beyond what became him, perhaps beyond his own sense of things.  He applied himself much to the study of the law and records, and the original of our constitution, and was a very extraordinary man. Patrick was a great preacher.  He wrote much, and well, and chiefly on the Scriptures.  He was a laborious man in his function, of great strictness of life, but a little too severe against those who differed from him.  But that was, when he thought their doctrines struck at the fundamentals of religion.  He became afterwards more moderate.  To these I shall add another divine, who, tho’ of Oxford, yet as he was formed by Bishop Wilkins, so he went into most of their principles; but went far beyond

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Characters from 17th Century Histories and Chronicles from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.