On this page
-
Text (2)
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
-
-
Transcript
-
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
Additionally, when viewing full transcripts, extracted text may not be in the same order as the original document.
Untitled Article
time , I shall go on as speedily as I can with the rest of the work . One thing I shall promise that , excepting the Holy Scripture and sometimes for recreation a snatch at some other book , T shall read nothing else till it
be done . Again , I must conclude that if I am not go useful as I do desire to your service , yet I hope you will accept of the sincere desires of , " Sir , " Your truly affectionate friend and servant ,
LAUDERDAILL . € C Windsor Castle \ " iOth January , 1658-9 . " For " Mr . Richard Baxter " At Kiderminster "
Untitled Article
Letter VIII . " Reverend and much-honoured Sir , " Yours of the 13 th January was long by the way , for I had it not till Saturday last , 22 d , so late that I could do nothing till Monday . Here is as full an account as I can give you concerning your three questions . I have
transcribed his words , and must give you the testimonies in English , because Blondel puts them in French , and not in the language of the authors . I must again beg your pardon for its English , which I do willingly , that I may express my author ' s meaning ,
and to you intelligibly ( though not to an unlearned reader ) . As for example , dotes for gifts , grade for degree , Saverdoce , Eloge ; for the first three are no more French than they are English , and seeing Blondel makes French of those three Latin words , I may to you make them English . Neither would 1 alter his word
numerostty . In the first question I hope you will be satisfied ; as for the other two I am sorry Blondel is not pleased to prove -what he says . In the second , I conceive he takes it for granted that the Pope could not pretend to more than a primacy in the Roman
empire , for he proves that Scripture gives him none . And the councils consisted only of the Roman empire ; so if it be proved that the countries were Christian which were never parts of that empire , it is all that is necessary . One of the pfeo |> le mentioned may be clearly pfov&d' hy ull the ec-
Untitled Article
clesiastic histories , viz . the Indians . They must be confessed to have been without the verge of Romania , in the largest sense : it is known Frumentius converted them , and he had his ordination at Alexandria , but I will not
be tedious with enforcing more . As to the third question , Blondel offers at no more than I have transcribed , and says not a word of those one or two bishops you mention of Parthia and Armenia . As for apparitions and possessions , ( besides the books which you cite in your book of the Unreasonableness of Infidelity , ) I have in Latin
a book of three famous possessions , of one a priest at Marseilles , who was prince of the synagogues of Satan ( or Sabbat ) in all Europe ; his name ( as I take it ) was Louis Gaufredy , burnt about forty years ago ; and of two possessed nuns in Flanders . The book
is printed at Paris , dedicated to the King of France : if you please I will send it , but it serves more to shame Papists for laying weight upon the devil ' s testimony , ( being exorcised , ) for confirming their grossest
superstitions , ( and I put a learned Romanist lately hugely out of countenance with it , ; yet there are divers things in it to your purpose- I have also two books in a large quarto , written by a French Counsellor , employed by the Parliament of Bourdeaux , in the
judging of witches ; hi 3 name is De l'Ancre ; he is specially recommended by that little discourse of the Devil of Mascon , which was lately printed in English . In these books I am sure there are many stories to your purpose , but the books are French , and
I must dispatch Blondel ere I undertake more . As for relations , I could tell you of some W rify own country most certainly true , some before my time , one since I was a man , in a godly minister ' s house , strangely and undeniably haunted with spirits . If I had
my right , I have the chief interest m and am patron of the parish , and have many times had the relation from the minister ' s mauth . I can tell you of a possession in Scotland , near the place I was born in , since I reipeniber ; the particulars which I had myself of Mr .
Jo . Weem ' s own mouth , but my poor country lies under such a weight of malice arid alfttider , that I-would not willmgty - 'ifcpte any thteg of that pnt in piftti mw : yet fo ^ yoUr satis-
Untitled Article
316 Letters from the Earl ( afterwards Duke ) of Lauderdale to R . Baxter .
-
-
Citation
-
Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), June 2, 1823, page 316, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct1785/page/4/
-