( 20 ) their .Faith on a fallible man, or upon; nothing ? Your Relations were not-at the Council of Trent, or Fiorenc4 or Laterane : How (ball theybe Cure what the Pope and Council agreed on? What Foundation, but the words of your Prieft or Grandfather, have you for your affurance ? May not oneof your Priefts lye as well as. all the Greek, Aballine, 6,c. Churches? When Pope ca.-lei/fine himfelf falfly urged the.Nicene Connell forAppeals to Rome,con- trary to Aug-It/line and the Carthage Council ? Either tell your Readers plainly, that it'syou., and fuch .1 you, that. arethe InfallibleFoundation of their Faith or bid them Ray, and not goyour way, till. they are certain: what the Popeandhis Connell' fay and that he is a truePope, and it a true Council, and that they are. more Infallible than, theinajor part of Chriflians.. And our Faith can be no flronger than thew:eakefl: neceffary medium of it, from whence it muff arife. 6. I.have laid to much: of this in a fmall Book,. called, [The certainty of Chriftianity without' Popery,] which I. intreat you impartially to.perufe, where I have alloMew- ed the titter uncertainty-that Popery would: reduce our Cliriftianity to that twill. nowonly tell you, that after your talkof Tradition, and Church,:.ai d Fathers, and Grandfathers, if we had not much:: more tell mony of Tradition -for-our Religion thanÿouhave for Popery, we fhould think. our Faith were very lame. Compare ours with yours :, i. Yours is .A, pretended Authoritative- de- tçrmination, which refls upon. a fiippofed ¡.nrpiration óf force Per(óns, by vi -rtùe of a fpecial Priviledge.peculiar to themfelves. 2. It is the Tradition of the Minor part Qf ehrflhanns. agginfC the majar... L It rats onktheprei teided zifaii~ib iity of a Pope, which, great General coon- i s.have, faidmay be a.hnretïck, an have clepaofeddi ersn as
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