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Baxterianism Barefac'd, &c.
COntroversies nakedly considered in themselves are not (with truly peace∣loving and ingenuous Souls) in the least pleasant, but rather regretful and irksome, especially where they are manag'd with a spirit of Revenge, Self-interest, Treachery, and Vain-glory. But where Truths lie in dan∣ger of being subverted, and particularly those of a more fundamental Station and Magnitude in the Church of God, without which all other super∣structuated ones will prove but meer Cyphers, even so, that the very things which Men seem to have shall be taken away from them and given to the Just, i. e. the justified of God, who will be found to have that Faith, Repentance, Sincerity, &c. as a Consequence of such a State that others thought they had or pretended to have, Mat. 25. 28. chap. 13. 11, 12. Job 27. 16, 17. compared with Luke 8. 18. (as if there were no other way of preserving the Moon and Stars in their refulgent Splendor, but by putting out the Sun; so with some Persons they know not how sufficiently to press on Graces and Duties, unless it be by a dethroning of Christ, and that as he is indeed the alone Sun of Righteousness:) Then I say Polemical Engagements are not only absolutely necessary in themselves, as arising from the nature of the Cause in hand, wherein every one ought to take care of his own Soul, and the eternal Wel∣fare thereof; but to be silent herein, would be so to quit and cast off that Duty enjoin'd us by the Lord, as to run the ha∣zard * 1.1 of being reckoned even by himself amongst the num∣ber of his professed Enemies and Betrayers of his Church: Mat. 12. 30. Acts 20. 26, 27, 28, 29, 30, 31. Now for any one Servant in a Family, whose Duty indeed it is to cover the Infirmities and Weaknesses, properly and truly such, of his fellow-Servants; yet to connive at, or be meal-mouth'd when they become secret Domestick Pioneers (tho he him∣self have no co-actual hand with them therein) by their di∣verting what is committed to their charge from its peculiar use and intendment, will be found not only an Argument of his Unfaithfulness, but Rebellion in a high degree, as there∣by rendring himself no less than a Co-partner or Partaker with them in such vile and ruinous Undertakings: Acts 7. 58. compare chap. 8. 1. chap. 22. 20. Gal. 2. 11. 1 Tim. 5. 22, * 1.2 24, 25. Nay, the slothful Servant is reckoned of God, to be no less than a Brother to the great Waster, Prov. 18. 9. Hence it is that the Apostle Jude, v. 3. exhorting them unto whom he wrote, to contend earnestly for the Faith once de∣livered to the Saints; he does it by a word significative of a hot and violent Fight, an instant Contention; even such a word as that those who diligently, together with Faithful∣ness to and Zeal for the Lord and his Interest, attend unto