03.01. EDITOR'S ADVERTISEMENT.
EDITOR’S ADVERTISEMENT. BY FAITH IN JESUS CHRIST; SHEWING, TRUE GOSPEL-HOLINESS FLOWS FROM THENCE; OR, MR. FOWLER’S PRETENDED DESIGN OF CHRISTIANITY, PROVED TO BE NOTHING MORE THAN TO TRAMPLE UNDER FOOT THE BLOOD OF THE SON OF GOD; AND THE IDOLIZING OF MAN’S OWN RIGHTEOUSNESS AS ALSO, HOW WHILE HE PRETENDS TO BE A MINISTER OF THE CHURCH OF ENGLAND, HE OVERTHROWETH THE WHOLESOME DOCTRINE CONTAINED IN THE 10TH, 11TH, AND 13TH, OF THE THIRTY-NINE ARTICLES OF THE SAME, AND THAT HE FALLETH IN WITH THE QUAKER AND ROMANIST, AGAINST THEM. This is one of the least known but most deeply interesting productions of John Bunyan. It has never been reprinted in a separate form; and once only in any edition of his works--that with notes, by Mason and Ryland, and then with great carelessness, the errata remaining uncorrected, and one leaf being entirely omitted. This treatise was published to counteract the pernicious errors in a very popular volume called ’The Design of Christianity, by Edward Fowler, minister of God’s Word at Northill, in Bedfordshire. Printed by the authority of the Bishop of London, April 17th, 1671’; an octavo volume of 308 pages. The whole object proposed by Mr. Fowler was to shew, that Christianity is intended merely to restore man to the original state which he enjoyed before the fall.
Bunyan was at that time suffering his tedious imprisonment for conscience sake in Bedford jail; and having refused to expatriate himself, was in daily fear lest his cruel sentence, ’you must stretch by the neck’ for refusing to attend the church service, should be carried into execution. The fame of Fowler’s gross perversion of the design of Christ’s gospel reached Bunyan in prison, and its popularity grieved his spirit. At length, on the 13th of the 11th Month (February), a copy of the book was brought to him; and in the almost incredible space of forty-two short days, on the 27th of the 12th Month (March) 1671-2, he had fully analysed ’The Design,’ exposed the sophistry, and scripturally answered the gross errors which abound in every page of this learned and subtle piece of casuistry. The display of Latin and Greek quotations from the heathens and fathers, those thunderbolts of scholastic warfare, dwindled into mere pop-gun weapons before the sword of the Spirit, which puts all such rabble to utter rout. Never was the homely proverb of Cobbler Howe more fully exemplified, than in this triumphant answer to the subtilities of a man deeply schooled in all human acquirements, by an unlettered mechanic, whose knowledge was drawn from one book, the inspired volume:-- ’The Spirit’s teaching in a cobbler’s shop, Doth Oxford and Cambridge o’ertop.’ The Babel building of the learned clergyman could not withstand the attack of one who was armed with such irresistible weapons. His words burn ’like a fire,’ and consume the wood, hay and stubble; while they fell with overpowering weight, as ’a hammer that breaketh the rock in pieces’ (Jeremiah 23:29). So cunningly was ’the design’ constructed, that nothing but the fire and hammer of God’s word could have demolished it. Armed with such weapons, he fearlessly from his dungeon made the attack; and, encouraged by the Spirit which animated the prophet, he was not ’dismayed at their faces,’ but became as ’a defenced city, and an iron pillar, and brazen walls against the whole land’ (Jeremiah 1:48).
Such internal and powerful support encouraged Bunyan to use the greatest plainness of speech. He as fully aware of his danger, and of the great influence of Mr. Fowler, but he had counted the cost of plain honest dealing, and was undaunted by the perils which surrounded him. With noble bearing, worthy the descendant of the apostles, he declares, ’As for your subtle and close incensing THE POWER to persecute Nonconformists, know that we are willing, God assisting, to overcome you with truth and patience; not sticking to sacrifice our lives, and dearest concerns in a faithful witness-bearing.’ ’Wherefore, sir, laying aside all fear of men, not regarding what you may procure to be inflicted upon me, for this my plain dealing with you, I tell you again, that you are one of them that have closely, privily, and devilishly, by your book, turned the grace of our God into a lascivious doctrine.’ Mr. Fowler’s opinions were not only contrary to scripture, but to that which some esteem a more heinous offence, they opposed the thirty-nine articles; and the result was that Bunyan, who vindicated the scriptures and those articles, was kept in prison, while the clergyman who opposed them was soon after consecrated Bishop of Gloucester! It may lead some simple readers to wonder how it could be, that state religion thus made a mockery of itself. The reason is perfectly obvious; Fowler’s religion was that of a statesman, which may be comprised in one word, expediency; and the man who could publish as truth, that religion consists in obeying the orders made therein by the state, deserved the primacy of the united churches of England and Ireland. His words are, speaking of religious observances, ’Whatsoever of such are commended by the custom of the places we live in, or commanded by superiors, or made by any circumstance convenient to be done; our Christian liberty consists in this, that we have leave to do them. And, indeed, it is so far from being a sin, that it would be so to refuse so to do.’ Could the state have selected a fitter tool for their purposes?
Mr. Fowler is somewhat inconsistent with regard to persecution; in p. 266 he says, ’As for factious hypocrite, they would be with ease supprest’; in p. 262 he describes these factious hypocrites, ’Such as preach up free grace,--laying hold on Christ’s righteousness and renouncing our own righteousness.’ Such are to be suppressed, but for Roman Catholics ’imposing their own sense upon the word of God, and their persecuting, burning, and damning men for not subscribing to theirs as to God’s word can be no better than an act of devilish pride and barbarous cruelty,’ p. 247. Does not the same pride and cruelty apply equally to the church of Bonner for burning Latimer, of Fowler, for the imprisonment of Bunyan; and of Philpot, for dragging his brother, Shore, from his family, and shutting him up in Exeter jail? The admirers of Bunyan will feel surprised at his strictures upon persons calling themselves Quakers. In these severe remarks he does not refer to the Society of Friends; but to some unworthy individuals who assumed the name of Quakers. They will be equally surprised at his freedom of speech with one who he considered to be an enemy to his Lord. He calls Mr. Fowler ’a brutish, beastly man,’ ’this thief,’ ’a blasphemer,’ ’horribly wicked,’ ’a learned ignorant Nicodemus,’ ’one that would fling heaven’s gates off the hinges,’ ’a bat,’ ’an angel of darkness.’ Such epithets sound strangely in our more refined age; but they were then considered essential to faithful dealing. The Bishop in his reply, called ’Dirt wiped off,’ beat the tinker in abusive language; he calls Bunyan ’A wretched scribbler,’ ’grossly ignorant,’ ’most unchristian and wicked,’ ’a piece of proud folly,’ ’so very dirty a creature that he disdains to dirt his fingers with him,’ ’Bunyan can no more disgrace him than a rude creature can eclipse the moon by barking at her; or make palaces contemptible by lifting up their legs against them,’ ’a most black-mouthed calumniator,’ ’infamous in Bedford for a pestilent schismatic,’ and with a heart full of venom he called upon his majesty not to let such a firebrand, impudent, malicious schismatic to enjoy toleration, or go unpunished, lest he should subvert all government. Bunyan had then suffered nearly twelve years’ incarceration in a miserable jail, and was more zealous and intrepid than ever: and yet this learned fanatic would have added to his privations, because he could not resist the arrows of truth with which this poor prisoner for Christ assailed him, drawn all burning from the furnace of God’s holy word.
Bunyan’s views of the kingly office of Christ are very striking: not only is he king over the church requiring personal obedience, but over the universe for the benefit of believers. ’Christ is as well a Lord for us, as to, or over us; and it highly concerneth the soul--when it believeth in, or trusteth to, the righteousness of Christ, for justification with God--to see that this righteousness lords it over death and sin, and the devil and hell for us.’ ’He led captivity captive, that is, carried them prisoners, whose prisoners we were: He rode to heaven in triumph, having in chains the foes of believers.’ This compendious treatise is upon a most important subject, and detects dangerous errors enveloped in most insinuating sophistry. In preparing this edition for the press, the text has been carefully collated with the original, which is in the editor’s possession. The quotations have been verified; those from Fowler by the first edition of his ’Design of Christianity,’ 1671. The extracts from ’Penn’s Sandy Foundation,’ by the second edition, in the Friends’ library, Devonshire House. Those from Campian have not been discovered; the author’s being confined at Bedford, while his book was printing in London, occasioned numerous typographical errors which have been corrected, and all the obsolete words explained. To assist the reader, a few leading words have been introduced in italics, and between brackets, to distinguish them from the text.
GEORGE OFFOR.
