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Title Page

FAITH NO FANCY:

OR, A

TREATISE OF MENTAL IMAGES.

DISCOVERING

THE VAIN PHILOSOPHY AND VILE DINIVITY OF A LATE PAMPHLET INTITLED, MR. ROBE’S FOURTH LETTER TO MR. FISHER:

AND SHEWING

THAT AN IMAGINARY IDEA OF CHRIST AS MAN, (WHEN SUPPOSED TO BELONG TO SAVING, WHETHER IN ITS ACT OR OBJECT), IMPORTS NOTHING BUT IGNORANCE, ATHEISM, IDOLATRY, GREAT FALSEHOOD, AND GROSS DELUSION.

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By Ralph Erskine, A. M.
Minister of the gospel at Dunfermline 

Who was very confidently, but very ignorantly, charged with blasphemy and heresy in the said pamphlet, for condemning that imaginary doctrine.
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WITH AN APPENDIX,
Relating to part of the late writings of the Rev. Meffrs Willison and Currie, especially touching some points of gospel doctrine, injured by their defense of the Act of Assembly, 1722, &c.

TOGETHER WITH A

SERMON, titled, The true Christ no New Christ, and some other Extracts from the same author; with Mr. Fisher’s Review of Cambuflang, which have an immediate connection with the work, and were never before published with it.

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Nunquam periclitatur religio nisi inter Reverendissimos. LUTHER
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PHILADELPHIA:
Printed by WILLIAM McCULLOCH, NO. 50, Chesnut Street.
February, 1805.

THE PREFACE, SHEWING THE OCCASION, NATURE, AND DESIGN OF THE FOLLOWING TREATISE.

I Acknowledge the subject I am now called in providence to treat, is very mysterious, speculative and sublime, in so far as it relates to that glorious object of faith, an incarnate God, or God in our nature; which is one of the highest subjects of divinity, and which I am obliged to handle in opposition to what my opponent calls an imaginary idea of Christ as man. Which idea neither belongs to any branch of solid philosophy nor sound divinity, nor hath it any concern with true religion; and, in so far as it hath nothing of the divinity of Christ, nor of his Godhead and personality in it, can lead no soul toward the proper object of divine adoration. The subject therefore occasions my thoughts to leap from a very great height to a very great depth, and, as it were, from one sphere to another; and so up and down by turns, from that wherein faith and spiritual understanding  moves, in order to see God in our nature, and spiritual objects, to that wherein sense, fancy and imagination moves, and can see nothing but a mere man, or a corporeal object.

The Author I have to do with, seems, as will appear in our progress, very much disposed to extenuate the errors and corruptions of this church, which the Associate Presbytery give testimony against. But, if among other things, the supreme Godhead and proper Divinity of our Lord Jesus Christ, as God equal with the Father and the Holy Ghost, when it was openly attacked, was not duly witnessed for in the judicature, there may be reason to fear, that the dishonors done to the Mediator in his Deity, as well as in his other royal prerogatives as King in Zion, may have provoked God to leave many of this generation to follow divers and strange doctrines, and to give them up to strong delusions and vain imaginations. Of which one of the most gross and dangerous is this imaginary idea of Christ as man; which is a conception including, at the utmost extent of it, no other view of him but merely in his humanity. God hath given us the glass of his word, where, if he also give us the eye of faith, we may see Christ, our incarnate God. Mr. Robe has told us of another glass, namely, that of an imaginary idea, wherein we can only see him as man. And, whether this is helpful to the other, is part of the inquiry I am to make in the following treatise. Mr. Robe, in the title, and in the second  page of his letter, undertakes to discover the fraud and falsehood of the Appendix of my letter, entitled, “Fraud and Falsehood discovered.” How he hath managed this undertaking, the sequel may evidence. Only, if he had found out in that Appendix something of yet greater consequence than fraud and falsehood, and had he been very sure and confident that there was heresy and blasphemy vented therein, then I think these would have deserved a room in capital letters on the title page, that all readers might be alarmed and stirred up to search into, and avoid the heresy and blasphemy which he is pleased to distinguish with capital letters elsewhere in this performance of his, namely, That the human nature of Christ is no part of the object of faith; and that it profiteth nothing, page 73: and again, page 47, That the human nature of the glorious Redeemer is no part of the object of faith. The charge seems very high, if, as he alleges, I have in terms asserted the above positions. But I hope to show, that he hath failed in his proof; and that, instead of finding out heresy and blasphemy, he hath fallen into the mire of gross idolatry, making some other thing than the living and true God, the proper object of faith and worship. It is my province at present, not only to defend myself against his false charge, but especially to clear and vindicate the truth which he has darkened and perverted: I declare my resolution, when I wrote and published that letter, entitled, Fraud and Falsehood discovered, never to contend for the last word, but only for the truth: and therefore it was, that though after the publication thereof, I saw a letter of Mr. Webster’s, directed to me, written with so much haste and dispatch, as seemed to import a vain ambition to have it bear the name of a ready answer; yet I gave no reply thereto, not only because that letter was no answer to mine, almost in any part, except the title page of it, which happened to be advertised by the printer, for certain reasons of his, five or six weeks before the book itself was published; which gave Mr. Webster sufficient time for most of his animadversions; so that there was little occasion for such boasting as appeared therein of the quick production thereof: but also I have no return to it, because, while the whole substance of my pamphlet stood unanswered thereby, I had nothing to give a return to, but partly some gross misrepresentations of facts, which it was little matter whether any believed to be true or not; and partly some sights of idle banter, which deserved no moment of any man’s precious time to write upon, nor would well become the gravity of a minister to employ his time and pen about; while also any thing there objected that seemingly deserved consideration, was obviated evidently in my pamphlet, so as any one that pleased to read it again, might see his letter answered; and especially, while no article of divine truth, nor, consequently, the glory of God, was immediately concerned therein. But, now that I find Mr. Robe hath not only made himself a false witness against me, which I think I should easily bear with, when I know I have truth on my side, and, consequently, am reproached for the name of Christ; but when his bold and arrogant attack upon me imports in it what ought to be of far greater concern, even a bearing false witness against God, and his truth as it is in Jesus; therefore I judge the glory of God, and the credit of truth require, that I see this matter in a clearer light. And, since providence hath put this work in my hand, I undertake it, not so much for the sake of divines, or the learned that are well seen in divinity, among whose hands I could freely let Mr. Robe’s letter pass without any answer, because my very words, as they stand cited by him, will answer for themselves, to any intelligent person that understands divinity; but rather for the sake of the more inadvertent and inconsiderate, that may be ready to have their minds corrupted by such strange doctrine, as that of an imaginary idea of Christ as man, as if that belonged any way to the faith of this great mystery of godliness, God manifested in the flesh; which lies not within the sphere of imagination. The subject therefore I am to treat, however intricate, yet may be very profitable, and of the greatest consequence for time and eternity, as it relates to saving faith, in opposition to delusive fancy and imaginary notions.

As to that part of the title of this book, viz. A treatise of mental images, I hope the learned reader will not mistake the meaning, by supposing me to think, that images were subjectively in the mind or understanding, which I own is not properly the seat thereof; but I call them mental objectively, as they are presented by the imagination to the mind: and so by mental understand no more but internal images, as distinguished from external, and consequently much of the same import with fancies, in the former part of the title, viz. Faith no Fancy, both which are internal. Yet I chose to call them mental, rather than internal images, because as the mind is the proper seat of faith, so these images are especially hurtful and opposite to faith, as they are mental, or as they operate upon, disturb, distract, and darken the mind, diverting it, with these imaginary pictures, from viewing and fixing upon the proper objects of faith.

I hope those who have been the ordinary readers of some other writings that have come from my hand, will not be offended, but will excuse me, that in this work I have been obliged to go much out of my ordinary road of writing only upon divinity, now to treat it with a greater mixture of philosophy, than I have formerly accustomed myself unto. And, since I do not expect that all my readers will be philosophers, (though yet I would by this treatise desire to fence them against vain philosophy), I am sufficiently aware, that, though I have studied as plain, comely, and intelligible language as I could, yet the nature of the subject is such, that I fear much of it will be above the capacity of the vulgar; and that it is only those that are knowing and judicious that will be most edified by some parts of this performance, if the Lord bless it to them. The reason is, because not only is the matter in hand a very high and mysterious point in divinity, but Mr. Robe’s positions about it lead to consider it with relation to the concern he thinks our natural senses, ideas and imaginations have therein: which necessarily obliges me to use some scholastic terms, philosophical arguments, and metaphysical distinctions. These I own are much out of vogue and fashion, among many in our present time. But, though the abuse of them hath led men to much vanity, error and wickedness, yet the right use of them is sometimes exceeding necessary even in divinity, especially controversial. Many that have professed no great liking to metaphysical and philosophical reasonings, have yet found themselves obliged to make use of them, in order to expose the subtil and sophistical arguments of heretics. I find Mr. Locke himself sometimes forming syllogisms in his treatise of human understanding. Even though he decries the syllogistic way  of reasoning in that same book, yet he calls it the art of fencing with the little knowledge we have. The learned professor of philosophy, Heeriboord, disp. page 222, shews, in several particulars, the usefulness of that part of philosophy called metaphysics, particularly in theology; and shuts up his discourse upon that head by observing, that even those who disapprove and condemn metaphysics among whom he mentions the learned Amesius, do yet very skillfully make use of them, when the pressing objections of adversaries require it, and also on other occasions: which, says he, is a clear document and evidence, that metaphysics are exceeding necessary for a divine. To this purpose the learned Davenant, in Col. ii. 8 in many cases illustrates the great advantages and usefulness of philosophy, and the art of right reasoning, in the matters of faith and religion. Though we believe above reason, yet we do so neither rashly nor unreasonably. Macovii reg. theol. & philos. Page 21, 25 ‘Virum cum vero non pngnat, &c Ratio fana non pugnat cum theologia; fana dicimus, nam corrupta pugnat, dre. Ratio requiritur ad theologium, non ut argumentum, fed ut inframentum, &c. The truth of divinity and the truth of philosophy are not opposite, though they be distinct. For example: philosophy teaches that a virgin cannot bring forth a child, and indeed in a natural way this is true. Divinity teaches that a virgin can bring forth a child supernaturally, and this also is true. These truths are not the same, but distinct, yet they are not opposite. Thus, sound reason is not opposite to religion, though corrupt reason is. Reason is necessary in divinity, not as an argument, but as an instrument; that is, not for proving any divine mystery by reason, but for understanding divine things, it is requisite we have reason; for neither infants nor idiots can learn divinity. The Rev. Mr. Alexander Webster, who, in the foresaid letter, was pleased, by way of taunt, to call my work in the foresaid pamphlet, a complete System of Metaphysics, may find more reason, if he please, to design this treatise by that name. But, if he intent, by such a gibe, to ridicule that part of philosophy, which yet men of the greatest learning and renown, both in this, and former ages, have entitled, scientia catholiea, an universal science,  (treating though both of corporeal and spiritual things, yet in a way transcending the nature of all corporeal things as such; which none I think will deliberately deride, that are not sunk into earth and flesh): then I may say all such taunts, as Ovid said in another case, Derident stolidi verba Latina Geta.

The work, reader, you are here presented with, being (opus otii) composed at spare hours, that it might not interfere with, nor hinder my other necessary business, has therefore not only been the longer upon my hand, but must, on that account, be supposed to contain several repetitions of the same subject. Yet I have taken what care time allowed me to purge it of needless repetitions. And where the many repetitions in my opponent’s tract, led me also to repeat his arguments anew; yet I endeavor to answer the same thing, not still the same way, but under different considerations and enlargements, or by different examples and illustrations.

If the titles of vain philosophy, and vile divinity I have given to the pamphlet animadverted upon, seem harsh to some, two things, I think, may be said for it. One is this, That as philosophy abused to introduce false and fallacious reasonings in religion, is in scripture called vain, Col. ii. 8. so divinity (considered as a science distinct from that, but) corrupted, and taught so as to give admittance to inward or outward imagery and idolatry in religious worship, or to dead images and idols, which in scripture are called detestable and abominable things, Jer. xvi. 18. may not unfitly be called vile. Another thing I would say, if these titles seem to be a hard reflection upon the author, this is what I cannot well help; but I have not ascribed them directly to the author himself, but his work; because I would fain hope better things of him, and that he hath acted therein, not like himself, or a divine, but through present temptations being hurried into a strain of language, and way of expression, which, when he comes to himself, he will not justify, but condemn. If he proudly disdain to be corrected by one whom he has already represented in such an odious manner, as chargeable with heresy and blasphemy, he will perhaps but add, to his former errors, the guilt of despising the means of conviction. However, though this should be the case, yet my design in this work will not be lost, if it serve so a caution to others against the dangerous tendency of so many gross and erroneous positions, as are advanced in the pamphlet I here offer remarks upon. I intend no to remark upon the whole, but especially what relates to myself, and the attack made upon my doctrine respecting faith, in opposition to fancy. A great part of the pamphlet concerns my brother Mr. Fisher; who, if he had leisure, and thought it worth his while, is able enough to answer the violent and virulent attacks Mr. Robe makes upon, even though boasted of, as he does likewise of some of Mr. Currie’s performances, as if there were no answering of them. But, if he think some writings, because unanswered, to be unanswerable, he but pleases himself with his own imaginary ideas. But so will none whose thoughts are solid, and under the government of reason and judgment.

If what I wrote formerly and in the Appendix here reprinted, had not met with a prejudiced mind, I cannot see how any could have found such gross error therein, as Mr. Robe pretends to do. But, as he is the first that hath charged me with heterodoxy, so none will judge it, I suppose, out of my way to examine, whether he hath truly found it or not; and whether he  hath therein bewrayed his own ignorance and error. When I insinuated in my letter, that, according to my information, they were not all sound divines that were the instruments and promoters of the work at Cambuslang, I had no such clear view that Mr. Robe was of that number. But now indeed I cannot see how to exclude him: for, if I mistake not, unless I could suppose that many things he hath here advanced, are merely disputandi gratia, or only the rash eruptions of resentment, and not his stated judgment, I cannot vindicate him from heterodoxy and idolatry both, relating to the human nature of our glorious Redeemer. And, though I am willing to suppose in charity that the former is the case, yet I do not see any such charitable suppositions he expresses towards me in his whole book: which may shew how much he is under the conduct of his own spirit, or a worse, at present, when he adventures to spread among the common people, that I have vented heresy and blasphemy on this subject, and that in terms, without supposing that I may have any sound meaning in my words, and without being so fair and candid as either to notify that the charge is in his own words or terms, and not mine; or to signify, that my words might admit of the consequence he thus deduces from them. But, when he inferred from them such a dreadful charge as it is impossible to invent words more bloody and bitter than those that denominate one an heretic and blasphemer, I can hardly think it possible, that he was so void of understanding, as truly to believe what he wrote; and so void of common sense and philosophy, as to deduce such conclusions where there were no premises to found them upon, as I am to make appear. It is certainly a great fault for any to put his own forced comment upon his adversary’s words, and, when he hath made it as gross as he can, then to argue against it as his adversary’s opinion. This is what Mr. Robe complains is done against him, p. 3. of his letter. But, if ever a man did practice what he condemns, Mr. Robe hath done so, by racking his invention to support his delusive dreams, fancies, and imaginations relating to the human nature of Christ, and asserting, that I deny Christ’s human nature to belong to the object of faith, because I refuse that Mr. Robe’s imaginary notion of it belongs to that object: that is, because I will not allow the ideal fancy of it in the brain to belong to the real faith of it in the heart, therefore his absurd and monstrous inference is, That I deny it to the object of faith. And, because I assert, that fancy or imaginary idea of Christ’s humanity is but an unprofitable and vain imagination, hence he infers, that I assert in terms, That Christ’s human nature is unprofitable. In this manner I am to shew how much needless pains he hath put himself unto, to find out heresy and blasphemy, where he would never have dreamed there was any such thing, if he had not conceived me to be his antagonist, and if he had not been so much drowned in the depth of delusion, as to confound faith with fancy, and real supernatural and profitable knowledge with ideal, natural and vain imaginary notions. I doubt not but I have indeed inferred many things from Mr. Robe’s strange doctrine, which he may suppose he never thought of: but, if they are necessary consequences of, and natively deducible from his new doctrine, I cannot help charging it therewith. Yea, the doctor cannot be quite innocent, whose doctrine is justly chargeable with supporting even the errors he professes to disclaim, because he ought to see such consequences, and guard against them. Which they cannot be thought to do, who bring in new words into divinity, which frequently have new opinions lurking under them, according to the known maxim, Qui singit nova verba, simul nova dogmata singit. Such a new term in divinity is that of an imaginary idea of Christ as man. What new and odd doctrines are plainly implied in it, and deducible from it, may appear in the following treatise.

As the doctrine of imaginary ideas, in my judgment, belongs not at all to theology; so, if I have advanced any thing new, or unthought of by others before me, upon it, I know not. But I think every man has a liberty to give his mind and opinion, when called to it, upon any point of philosophy, that does not contradict some point of divinity. Which if it do, he ought to take no liberty to admit it into religion, but rather ought to oppose the introduction thereof; which is part of my present work: wherein as oft as I give my judgment, I do it not without giving a reason for it; and, if it be in any matter wherein philosophers differ among themselves, my differing from some of them is therefore inevitable. However, my opponent, by declaring pointedly, that his imaginary idea can have no other object but what is merely corporeal, has made my work the more easy in determining that it cannot belong properly to the act or object of faith, which is the evidence of things not yet seen: yet this subject is so new and strange, (I knowing no divine that hath directly treated it), and the expressions Mr. Robe hath upon it, are so many and various, that I am obliged to enlarge and extend my discourse upon it to a more than ordinary length, that so I may endeavor to shut all the doors he hath opened for his doctrine of natural senses and imaginary ideas, by which he would bring it forth, and make it set up its head among spiritual subjects, as if it were agreeable or had any conformity to the doctrine of revealed religion: while to me this doctrine of his appears disagreeable, yea and disgraceful to human reason and judgment, and much more opposite to divine faith, and the glorious gospel of Christ.

Mr. Robe’s pamphlet was published about the end of August, anno 1743. This book in answer to it, though it took some time and leisure, as I have said, was written and might have been published anno 1744. Which I mention, that the reader may not impute it to me, that the work has been kept so long from his view: which is owing to such as were entrusted with it, and thought fit to publish the title page with proposals for the printing of it; which yet was afterward managed without that ceremony.

Mr. Robe refers so frequently to my words in the Appendix of the foresaid pamphlet, that it seems necessary the reader have it in his eye; and therefore I have thought fit it be here inserted.

APPENDIX to the Pamphlet, entitled, Fraud and Falsehood discovered, published anno 1743.

Reverend Dear Brother,

HAD you not earnestly desired my thoughts and remarks upon Mr. Webster’s postscript, I was disposed to neglect and undervalue it, among the rest of the public trashes, calumnies and reproaches cast upon me and my brethren; believing the Lord will in due time wipe them away, when the wrath of man, and even the rabies cleri, shall praise him: he sits upon the floods, and is mightier than the noise of many waters; he rules the raging of the sea, when the waves thereof arise, he filleth them. However, knowing that no man but myself was capable to clear the facts which I have opened up, relating to the foresaid correspondence, I thought the glory of God, and the credit of truth, obliged me to answer your desire; and the rather that I see also, what a mighty advantage the promoters of this work think they have gained, even by that fraudulent copy of my letter published by Mr. Webster. Mr. Robe calls it my memorable letter to Mr. Wesley, a minister of the church of England; and since I began to write this letter to you, I see the copy taken out of Mr. Webster’s postscript, and reprinted at Glasgow by itself, with his notes. In the title [?] page of that copy, it is called a letter of mine, shewing, that strugglings and outcryrings, so as to drwon the minister’s voice, &c. are very consistent with the work of the Spirit of God. Alas! what is this they are boasting of? And what have they found in my letter for themselves or against me? What is called struggling in the agonies of death in Mr. Wesley’s letter to me, is plainly ascribed to the devil in my letter to him. What they call outcryings,  so as to drown the minister’s voice, is in my letter to him judged to be the noisy part that is acted especially by those that are neither solid nor judicious; and hence I seldom ever heard any such clamorous noise in time of public worship, without giving a public check to it. Mean time, for as unbiased as my deliberate sentiments are supposed to have been when I wrote that letter, if I had been writing it yesterday, I could hardly have told my sentiments mere plainly, in opposition to these very things wherein they judge they had me upon their side.

I see myself designed in the title page of that foresaid copy, Minister of the Associate Congregation of Dunfermline; and I am ready to apprehend that an enemy hath done it: for it is easy to see, that as this way of designing me, imports a denying of my standing pastoral relation to the whole of this parish, and thus a justifying the violent measures that have brought about this Associate situation; so, how rank it smells of a sinful compliance with the defections of the day, and how much it tends to harden some in their neglect and contempt of the only lawful and settled ministry they have in this place, is easy to demonstrate. But, alas! Many that would be thought friends to a reformation work, are lifting up hammers and axes against it, when they do not know or consider they are doing so. ’Tis true, they pretend they are only set against the way and manner wherein we manage our appearance for reformation: but, till once they put hand to the same work in another or a better way and manner, they give evidence, that it is the cause itself, and not our manner of witnessing for it they oppose. ’Tis easy to see how Mr. Webster and others write on Christ’s kingly office and government, in such a general strain, as would agree as much with the principles of loose Sectarians, as of true Presbyterians. What shall we think of the present established church of Scotland, when these among them that sometime professed to be contending within doors for the same reformation principles that we were appearing for without doors, are now betraying the cause of Presbytery; and, under a pretence of religion, and a being as zealous as others for the kingly government of Christ, are busy pulling the royal pearls out of his crown?

The present work so much magnified, I cannot but fear is also promoted by some that seem to be favoring of a deistical spirit. I see Mr. Robe, in his second letter to Mr. Fisher, (which seems to be more bulky than the rest of his continuations, and to [? p. x] of a different strain in some places from his ordinary), citing with approbations some words of Mr. Edward’s sermon; and therein I see very great seeming regard paid to the scripture, as the great and standing rule, and infallible and sufficient rule. It would seem any notable epithet may be given it, provided it be not called the only rule to direct us how we may glorify and enjoy God. This good old way of speaking, with respect to the ancient Protestant doctrine of the perfection of the scripture as the only rule of faith and practice, seems to be going out of fashion. I confess I am not perfectly pleased with their testimony to the present extraordinary work of the Spirit of God, whose principles tend any way to the disparagement of the word of God; nor yet their testimony, who take advantage from that work, to despise and disparage a public testimony for the doctrine, worship, discipline and government of his house, appointed in that word. While our opposes in the establishment make this providence a rebuke from heaven to us, and an appeasance of God for them, against us and our secession and testimony, it deserves consideration, whether they be borrowing God’s weapons to fight against his cause among our hands, and whether it bears not some resemblance to Rabshakeh’s blasphemy, Isa. xxxvi. 10. Am I now come up without the LORD against this land to destroy it? the LORD said unto me, Go up against this land, and destroy it. Our Lord hath warned us sufficiently, that they who persecute his people and slay his witnesses, shall think they do God’s service, and say, Let the Lord be magnified; is not the Lord among us? John xvi. 2. Isa. lxvi. 5. Micah iii. 10. 11. 12.

The unbiased regard of the Associate Presbytery to the cause of reformation among their bands, appears even in a special circumstance, wherein yet they are reproached, as if they were now appearing against Mr. Whitefield and his extraordinary work, because the success and spreading influence of it tends, say they, to make our interest among the people to sink [?], and to draw them away from us: whereas Mr. Whitefield was cast off by the unanimous consent of the brethren of the Presbytery, whenever they found his direct opposition to that cause. And this was done at his first coming to Scotland; and so before even they knew what sort of success his ministrations could have here, and when at the same time they knew what splendid reports there were of his wonderful success abroad; yet they durst lay none of these things in balance with the public cause among their hands, which they were sure was the cause of God, or with the ancient work of reformation they were appearing for, which they were sure was the work of God; and that therefore no new work, that men were attempting to raise upon the ruins of it, could be the work of God. Mean time, none of the promoters of the present applauded work have much ground to boast of any victory gained, or advantage obtained against us. It has pleased the Lord to keep these hitherto in the hour of temptation, who were desirous and concerned to keep the word of his patience, and to increase our congregations from time to time, notwithstanding these extraordinary efforts of the enemy against us.

I see in the foresaid second letter of Mr. Robe’s I am more honorably yoked and quoted with the good Mr. Shepherd than I expected, upon the subject of imaginary ideas, or the images of spiritual things represented to the fancy. I am content to be reckoned of the very same mind with that worthy author on this head. Only I don’t think his mind or mine either can so evidently be known from these instances Mr. Robe gives, as from another which I shall cite from the same author on the parable, p. 80. where, speaking of four sorts of men that spin out the finest thread of deceit or delusion to themselves, and that think they believe when yet they have not the Son, he says, “The third sort is those that close not with promises only, but with Christ himself; but it is only with the image and fancy of him which they think is himself. In true faith the Father reveals the Son as he is, or the Son reveals himself as he is; and faith hence closes with him as he is, John vi. 40. But some there are that hear of him, hence think what he is. Hence a carnal mind imagines of him, as it imagines of a king in a far country, and falls down to his image, and trusts to it, and depends on it, and joys in it, until a man come to be converted, or to die, and then he sees the deceit” With this doctrine of Mr. Shepherd’s I cordially agree: and as I am ready to suppose, if it had been faithfully preached in the west of Scotland, we would not perhaps have heard of so many conversions there; so I think Mr. Fisher has too great advantage against his antagonist on this head, while he think s to fasten an absurdity upon him for saying, “If we have an imaginary idea of Christ, we that moment think upon a false Christ.” Hereupon Mr. Robe poses him with questions to this purpose, p. 11. “Is not Christ rue and real man? Had he not a true body on earth? Has he not a true body in heaven? Can you or any man else think upon him really as he is, God man, without an imaginary idea of it? Can you think of him scourged, crowned with thorns, crucified, without an imaginary idea of him? And can you justly think of him and receive him as offered, without an imaginary idea of him as man?” And then attacks Mr. Fisher’s philosophy, for supposing, that to have an imaginary idea of an absent man, was to see a sensible object. I confess I see little either of the philosopher or divine in these mighty sallies. This way of speaking appears indeed new and strange divinity to me; and makes the object of faith truly a sensible object; not the object of faith, but of sense. I think the imaginary idea of a crucified Christ, a man upon the cross, is no better than a Popish crucifix, and mere mental idolatry. Though saving faith eats the flesh of the Son of God, by believing his incarnation; and drinks his blood by believing the satisfaction given by him to justice for us: yet to have any carnal notion or imaginary idea of his flesh and blood, or human body, belongs not in the least to saving faith, but rather to unbelief; and is a vain unprofitable imagination. Is it saving faith to see or know Christ after the flesh, either by the eye as a present man, or in the imagination as an absent man? May God deliver all his people from such gross and abominable idolatry. If such views do necessarily and natively attend our faith while we ourselves are in the flesh, and have flesh as well as spirit about us; yet are not these carnal views the greatest legs [?] and contradictions, instead of being helps and advantages to faith, or any part of it? Does not Christ forbid such carnal notions of eating his flesh? John vi. Such fancies and gross imaginations made his hearers there to stumble at the true Christ? therefore he says to them, verse 65 It is the Spirit that quickened, the flesh profiteth nothing: the words that I speak unto you, they are spirit, and they are life. Is it not the glory of the gospel, that it is the ministration of the Spirit? And is it not the great privilege of believers, that the Lord manifests himself to them as he does not the world? The world have these carnal notions and ideas of him. But are these any ways sib unto God’s shinging into the heart, to give the light of the knowledge of his glory in the face (or person) of Jesus Christ? What is the preaching of Christ crucified, 1 Cor. i. 23 to them that believe? Is it a giving them the notion of a man upon the cross? Or, is it not the wisdom of God, and the power of God, providing for himself a sacrifice, or setting forth to us a propitiation for our sins? So he was upon the cross, so he is now upon the throne, 1 John ii. 2. Does faith’s view of an incarnate God, or of the eternal Son of God become man, by taking to himself a true body and a reasonable soul, or the believing view of God in our nature, and clothed with our flesh; does it include, or rather does it not exclude any carnal fleshly view of him? If the flesh profit nothing, what a vain imagination is the view of an absent man, or a fanciful thinking, that because Christ was made like unto us in all things, sin only excepted, that he is altogether such a one as ourselves? Does an imaginary view of the man help, or rather does it not hurt and hinder the saving sight of the God man, and the believing view of the glorious person of our Immanuel, God with us? The word was made flesh; but imaginary ideas of that flesh are unprofitable fancies: we do not believe till we behold his glory, as the glory of the only begotten of the Father, full of grace and truth, John i. 14. To see Christ savingly, and without a delusion, is not to see flesh, but God manifested in the flesh, 1 Tim. iii. 16. Faith cannot fix upon Immanuel as man with us, but as God with us. It cannot see nor rest upon our nature in God, but upon God in our nature.

Can that be any part of the object of faith which is perceptible by the fancy of every man, and is obvious to natural discerning? While the Spirit of God says, The natural man receiveth not the things of the Spirit of God; because they are foolishness unto him: neither can they know them; for they are spiritually discerned, 1 Cor. ii. 14. The things of man are known by the spirit of man; but the things of God knoweth no man, but the Spirit of God. Nay, the things of God that are taught by the word and Spirit of God, are indeed the objects of faith; but the things of man, which a natural man can receive, and carnal man can discern, are the objects of sense, and of vain unprofitable imagination. As faith looks through the history of the gospel to the mystery of it, so does it through the material flesh of Christ to the mystery of God incarnate. Though we are to believe that Christ is flesh of our flesh, yet the flesh or humanity of Christ is only the glass or veil through which we behold the glory of God. The fancy that terminates on the flesh, is not only vain and unprofitable, but pernicious and prejudicial to the faith that is of God’s operation; which, coming from God, leads to God, and cannot terminate upon Christ himself, but upon God in Christ. Hence the object of saving faith is no image of Christ, seen by fancy, or imaginary idea; but Christ, who is, and as he is the image of the invisible God: and faith’s acting upon this object, is a seeing of him that is invisible, and no sight of him visibly by the bodily eye, or perceptible by natural fancy and imagination. To make faith then include any carnal conception of Christ’s humanity, is a deep deceit and delusion, and as remote from saving faith, as the image one in this part of the earth may frame in his head of the emperor of China. That part of Christ that is visible, was the object of sense on earth, and is the object of vision in heaven, and may be the object of any man’s fancy or imagination; but never was, nor ever will be the object of faith, but as the invisible God is seen therein and thereby. Nothing sensible, nothing corporeal, nothing visible can properly be the object of that faith which is the evidence of things not seen, Heb. xi. 1. and looks not to the things that are seen, but the things that are not seen, 2 Cor. iv. 18. Hence our believing on Christ, a visible Christ present or absent, is not faith, but fancy, if we believe not on the invisible God that sent him, John xii. 44. Jesus cried and said, he that believeth on me, believeth not on me, but on him that sent me. And verse 45. He that seeth me, seeth him that sent me. And chap. xiv. 9. He that hath seen me, hath seen the Father. Matth. x. 40. He that receiveth me, receiveth him that sent me. Mark ix. 37. Whosoever shall receive me, receiveth not me, but him that sent me.

In the act of receiving Christ as God-man, to have (what Mr. Robe calls) an imaginary idea of him as man, is to believe and not believe. It is to receive the person of Christ, and yet to divide the person. To receive the God-man is faith; but to have an imaginary idea of him as man, is not faith, but unbelief; for, as man simply, he is not the object of faith, but of sense or fancy. It is a doing what Christ forbids; as he did to Mary, Touch me not; for it is a mere mental handling of his body; otherwise why does Mr. Robe speak of his being revealed and offered as God-man, and of receiving him as offered; and yet thereupon say, “Can you then justly think upon him without an imaginary idea of him as man,” since he cannot extend that idea to the person of the God-man?

Hence one might ask Mr. Robe, Can he, or any man else, have an imaginary idea of Christ as man, and yet that same moment think upon him really as he is, God-man? Unless Mr. Robe’s meaning were, that he cannot believe without unbelief; or that he cannot think right without thinking wrong, as long as he has the flesh lusting against the spirit within him. In this sense some would grant it is a truth: but this is the reverse of Mr. Robe’s meaning; for he will have the imaginary idea of Christ wrapt in with faith, and with the view, not of a false Christ, but of the true Christ, though yet he owns the idea respects only Christ as man.

That imaginary idea that cannot think of him justly, but only of the flesh that profited nothing, must be a very ill neighbor, yea neck-break to faith; which will have nothing to do with a half Christ, but conceives of, receives and matches with the whole person of our Immanuel. We read of the mystery of faith, but to conceive of Christ as man is indeed no mystery at all: yea, to conceive of him as man, and yet at the same time to conceive of him and receive him as God-man, are flat contradictions; and, till faith get itself shaken loose of that unprofitable mate, the imaginary idea of him as man, it will never believe to any profit or advantage, nor believe either to the saving of the soul, Heb. x. 39. Or to the giving glory to God, Rev. iv. 20. What can be thought then of this doctrine of imaginary ideas? I fear it belongs to that sort of philosophy which the Spirit of God warns us against Col. ii. 8. Beware lest any man spoil you through philosophy and vain deceit, after the tradition of men, after the rudiments of the world, and not after Christ. God says, How long shall vain thoughts lodge within you? And such is the abstract notion and vain imagination of Christ’s humanity, or of Christ as man. It is true, the two natures of Christ are distinct, and so may be supposed to be the object of distinct ideas: but neither the one nor the other, separately, are the object of saving faith, but only the person of God-man. If we cannot have an imaginary idea of him as God-man, nor can conceive of, or receive him as such, but only by faith; then how can the imaginary idea of him as man belong to faith, while it cannot but separate the man from the God? And so, the object of that idea being man, and not God, according to Mr. Robe’s concession, p. 12. one cannot but, the he hath that idea, think upon a false Christ, according to Mr. Fisher’s assertion; because he thinks only upon a man: and indeed his imaginary ideas can lead him no higher. Therefore, when these are brought into the nature of faith, as a sine qua non, so as faith cannot be acted without them, it must land either in a false faith, or a false Christ, or both: from which may the Lord in mercy deliver us; for our senses and imaginations will give us little help.

And this lead me to notice another word Mr. Robe has to Mr. Fisher, in that same twelfth page: “Your assertion, that our senses and imagination cannot assist us at all in thinking upon the divine nature and perfections, is in flat contradiction to what the apostle saith, Rom. i. 20. For the invisible things of him from the creation of the world are clearly seen, being understood by the things that are made, even his eternal Godhead—Our senses (says he) and imagination are greatly helpful to bring us to the knowledge of the divine nature and perfections.” I cannot but wonder at this strange divinity. No doubt, the heavens declare the glory of God, and shew that a powerful God was a maker of them; and the apostle there says the same upon the matter, that the true visible frame declares it hath an invisible framer; and so the light of nature, and works of creation, teach the quod sit, or that God is, and that he must be clothed with such perfections of wisdom and power as these works declare; but, if Mr. Robe think, that these visible things that strike our senses can lead us to the quid sit, or what God is, and let us into the knowledge or right notion of the invisible divine nature and perfections, then there would be little need of any other bible than the visible heavens. To say, that our senses and imaginations are greatly helpful thus to the knowledge of the divine nature and perfections, or to think upon the invisible things of God, that are the objects of faith, and not of sense, is, I suppose, in flat contradiction to what the same apostle says, 1 Cor. ii. 11, 12, 13. The things of God knoweth no man, but the Spirit of God. Now, we have received, not the spirit of this world, but the Spirit which is of God; that we might know the things that are freely given us of God. Which things also we speak, not in the words which man’s wisdom teaches, but which the Holy Ghost teaches; comparing spiritual things with spiritual; not natural and sensible things with spiritual, by a faith of God’s operation. Hence, it is the great end of Christ’s promising to send the Spirit, to glorify him, by shewing the things of God that are his, John xvi. 14, 15. We know nothing that is spiritual, in a spiritual way, without the teaching of the Spirit; therefore Christ promises, he (the Spirit) shall teach you all things, John xiv. 20. And hence he is called the Anointing, that teaches us all things, and makes us know all things, 1 John ii. 20, 27. If there be any thing besides these all things necessary, that he only teaches, I know not what else they can be but unprofitable nothings, and imaginary ideas, indeed. Without this spiritual and divine teaching, to make us know the things and perfections of God, our senses and imaginations are so far from being helpful to the knowledge of the divine nature and perfections, that they are only helpful for furthering men’s ignorance of God, and for making them abuse all the knowledge they have of God’s being and attributes that way, unto more and more idolatry, imagery, and gross darkness.

The design and scope of the apostle, in that verse cited by Mr. Robe, is not so much to show what knowledge of God’s nature and perfections men may attain by the visible works of creation, as rather, what knowledge of him, attainable this way, they smother and imprison, by holding the truth in unrighteousness, verse 18. and how all the knowledge of God they had by the creature, made them err concerning the Creator, unto vain imaginations about him, verse 21. and how this light and knowledge, which rendered them inexcusable for not making a better use of it, did, through the corruption of their nature, make them still more culpable; their knowledge, being fuel to their pride and vain glory, instead of being greatly helpful, was greatly hurtful to them, and declarative of their ignorance and folly, verse 22. Professing themselves to be wise, they became fools, and changed the glory of the incorruptible God into an image made like to corruptible man, and to birds, and four footed beats, and to creeping things, verse 23. Hence the more knowledge, wisdom, and learning, that any of the heathens had, the farther were they from the true knowledge of God, and the more superstitious and idolatrous; as appeared in the Athenians, Acts xvii. 16. who were wholly given to idolatry, or full of idols, as in the margin: their knowledge and learning made them greater enemies to a crucified Christ, who was to the Jews a stumbling block, and to the Greeks (especially their most learned philosophers, nothing but) foolishness, 1 Cor. i. 23. Here was all the knowledge of God their senses and imagination in the contemplation of the creature helped them unto; and such is all the help and assistance our senses and imagination can give us in thinking upon the divine nature and perfections, notwithstanding of all that may be known, or is knowable of God by the light of nature, and by the consideration of the creatures, Rom. i. 19, 20. This abuse of nature’s light is so natural to all the lapsed race of mankind, that it is charged upon all the heathen world, They became vai in their imaginations, and their foolish heart was darkened, and they changed the glory of the incorruptible God into an image, &c. Corrupt nature abused all the notions they had of God from the visible creation, to more and more vile and abominable thoughts of God: and no wonder, since it may be said of them, as it was of the whole world of old before the flood, that every imagination of the thoughts of their heart was only evil continually, Gen. vi. 5. In the margin it is the whole imagination. And, if the whole and every imagination be thus corrupt, how greatly helpful our imagination can be to the knowledge of God, may easily be guessed. But was this the case of the heathen nations only? No, no; the scope of the apostle, in these first three chapters of that epistle to the Romans, is to prove both Jews and Heathens to be alike sinful and corrupt, Rom. iii. 9. What then? are we better than they? No, in no wise: for we have before proved both Jews and Gentiles, that they are all under sin. And the design of God therein is, verse 19. That every mouth may be stopped, and all the world may become guilty before God. And why this? but that, since all have sinned, and come short of the glory of God, verse 23. and so are exposed to the wrath of God revealed from heaven in the law, sinners may flee to the righteousness of God revealed in the gospel, chap. i. 17, 18. and apprehending themselves by nature children of wrath, may apprehend God justifying freely by his grace, through the redemption that is in Jesus Christ: whom God hath set forth to be a propitiation, through faith in his blood, to declare his righteousness for the redemption of sins, that he might be just, and the justifier of them that believe in Jesus. This is the knowledge of God and his perfections which the Spirit of God by the gospel leads us to, and from which our senses and imagination do greatly alienate us, instead of being greatly helpful to us.

Thus far I have indeed encroached upon what is the proper province of another and a fitter hand; which I was led to by Mr. Robe’s citing Mr. Shepherd and me upon the subject of imaginary ideas, or the images of spiritual things, Christ, heaven or hell, represented to the fancy.

May this generation be delivered from an imaginary faith, religion and conversion, which will neither unite them to the true Christ, nor bring them to the true heaven, nor keep them out of the true hell. And may the Lord deliver all His people from the influence of gross delusion, instead of gospel-doctrine; from carnal trash, instead of spiritual truth; and from the truth as it is in men’s fancy and imagination, instead of the truth as it is in Jesus and in His blessed Word, the only rule to direct us how we may glorify and enjoy God.

INDEX

FAITH NO FANCY;

OR,

A TREATISE OF MENTAL IMAGES.


BEING obliged to write in defense of the truth I have delivered in the above Appendix, against the violent and virulent attacks made upon it in the pamphlet, entitled Mr. Robe’s fourth letter to Mr. Fisher; that my readers may have the subject matter of the following treatise more distinctly before them, it seems necessary that I handle it in different parts or chapters. That I may reduce to some method the remarks I offer upon that pamphlet,

I. I would consider in general, what I take to be the sum and substance of Mr. Robe’s gross divinity and philosophy, as he lays it, pages 30 and 34 of his letter.

II. I would speak of the glorious person of Christ our Immanuel, God-man, and the mysterious constitution thereof; shewing, how his humanity therein existing can be the object of faith only, and not of fancy, or any imaginary idea.

III. I would shew the error, ignorance, atheism and idolatry, imported in an imaginary idea of Christ as man; and hence,

IV. The absurdity of that principle. That an imaginary idea of Christ as man is helpful to the faith of his being God-man; and that no imaginary idea of any corporeal object can give any help, either to the divine or human faith of any truth or proposition relating to that object.

V. Offer particular remarks upon all the parts of Mr. Robe’s letter relating to this subject, and in so far as he impugns the doctrine delivered in the above Appendix, and charges it with heresy and blasphemy.

VI. Shew in what respect the human nature of Christ is the object of faith, so as it cannot be the object of any imaginary idea.

VII. Adduce the sentiments of eminent divines on the subject; though I have seen none directly treating it.

VIII. Offer some remarks upon certain virulent passages of Mr. Robe’s pamphlet relating to Deism, which he seems unable to purge himself from; and schism, which he charges the Associate Presbytery with, &c.

CHAP. I.

WHEN false worship had prevailed in the church of old unto its ruin, God shewed and represented it unto his prophets under the name and appearance of a champer of imagery, Ezek. viii. 12. For therein were portrayed all the abominations wherewith the worship of God was defiled, and religion corrupted. Most of my work at present is, to take a view of some chambers or imagery yet more secret and hidden, namely, retired mental ones; in which we may see many abominations wherewith both the spiritual doctrine of faith, and the divine worship of the gospel is corrupted, and the christian religion I danger of being ruined. From this secret chamber of mental or internal imagery hath come forth all the external gross imagery that ever was in the world, and especially in the christian church; by which means the church of Rome became antichristian*[* See Morning Exercises, vol. 5. Sermon 10. entitled, The chambers of imagery in the church of Rome laid open.]. These Imaginary idea, which are but vain imaginations, and about corporeal objects, brought in now by Mr. Robe, as belonging to the act or object of faith, are, in my opinion, like a new opening of the bottomless pit, out of the smoke whereof came locusts upon the earth, Rev. ix. 2, 3; because, in so far as these ideas are brought out of their own natural place, and supposed to be helpful in the supernatural subjects of divinity, they are no better than a smoke out of the pit, darkening the sun and the air, corrupting the doctrine, obscuring the light of the truth of God, and (whatever Mr. Robe’s design) tending, in themselves, to cover the face of the earth with the darkness of gross error and delusion, and to lay a new foundation for the spreading of idolatry and superstition, by filling the minds of people with natural, carnal notions of Christ as man, and of his doing and dying, as human actions and sufferings; as if these notions were helpful to apprehend Christ, the God-man in his mediatorial works exhibited in the gospel; while yet the glory of the gospel is spiritual and invisible, not obvious to the senses and imaginations of men. There is nothing in the gospel visible but unto faith; as the light of the sun is nothing to them who have no eyes. A dog and a staff are of more use to a blind man than the sun in the firmament. Such are spiritually blind, and want the eyes of faith, or have lost the use and exercise thereof, can see nothing in the gospel, however great and glorious things are spoken of it. The light shines in darkness, and their darkness comprehends it not. The image of Christ as God in our nature, represented to us in the light of the gospel, which is the only glass wherein we can behold his glory, 2 Cor. iii. 18. is of such a nature, that no image of his human body formed in the brain, can stand before it, any more than Dagon could stand before the ark of God. As Christ is present in the gospel, and present, like himself, in his personal, mediatorial, and matchless glory, so he is present there only to our faith and spiritual understanding; while the word is night unto us, even the word of faith, Rom. x. 6, 7, 8. insomuch that none need say he is absent, and who shall ascend into heaven to bring him down from thence, or descend into the deep to bring him up from the dead? Christ, by his human body, was once here present to natural sense; by his divine Spirit he is sometimes present to spiritual sense and experience. But he is no way present to our faith but in the gospel, which, however it be a view through a glass darkly, yet in such a way and manner, that it is the best view of him that can be had, till we see him face to face, 1 Cor. xiii. 12. But Mr. Robe has told us of another way of Christ’s being present, namely, to fancy and imagination, as to his human nature now in heaven; and that in the same way and manner we think of any other absent man; and that this is absolutely necessary and greatly helpful to faith. This is the strange, and fantastical doctrine published in Mr. Robe’s fourth letter to Mr. Fisher; and we have what I may call the sum and substance of it in the following paragraph of that letter, page 30, and 31. “Third position, I asserted, and do assert, That we cannot think upon Jesus Christ really as he is, God and man, in two distinct natures, and one person for ever, without an imaginary idea of him as man, or in his human nature, consisting of a true body and a reasonable soul. The grounds and reasons of this are, that, as we would not have a just conception of the glorious Mediator, if we have not a conception and idea of him as the very true and eternal God, as well as true and real man; so we cannot have a just conception of him if we have not a conception and idea of him as true and real man, as well as the true and eternal God; forasmuch as the Mediator is as really man as he is God. And, as we ought to form no imaginary idea of him as he is God, but a pure conception, without any form or representation of him as God in our minds, so we can no more conceive, and have an idea of him in our understandings as man, but what is called an imaginary idea, or an idea of him in our minds, by the exercise of our imaginations, than we can of Enoch or Elias, or any other man, who is now in heaven: for this reason, that our Lord’s human nature, and particularly his glorified and superexalted body, hath all the essential properties of any other body, and no other. And therefore, if we can never think of any other human nature, or human body, through our natural constitution, and the nature of bodies, but by an imaginary idea, when absent from us, as indeed we cannot, we can never think upon the Mediator as man, and his body now in heaven, by any other idea. So the, when we think upon the Lord Jesus Christ, as he is God and man in two distinct natures, and one person for ever, I must conceive of him to be true and real man: And this is what is called an imaginary idea of him. I must further, by a mere act of my understanding, conceive of him, as not only man, but the very true and eternal God. And, thirdly, I must conceive the manhood personally united with the Godhead in the second person. If any of these three be wanting, I have not such an idea of the Mediator God man as should be.  Sir, (meaning Mr. Fisher,) you’ll please tell the honest well meaning people, in your next warning, that the plain Scots of what I asserted here was, that we cannot think upon Jesus Christ, as he really is, God-man, without thinking of him as man as really as God; and that by the exercise of the same faculties and powers I think and conceive of other men.”
Here is a swatch of Mr. Robe’s strange divinity and philosophy. But, before I offer remarks upon this paragraph, it will be necessary to premise a few things for explaining some terms. Since we have so much occasion to speak of an imaginary idea of Christ as man, two things here may be previously enquired into. 1. What is to be understood by an imaginary idea? 2. What is to be understood by Christ as man?

SECT. I.

First, In order to understand what is meant by an imaginary idea. By an idea is ordinarily understood the imaginary representation of ay thing conceived in the mind. Philosophers define an idea thus, “The form or representation of any sensible object, transmitted into the brain thro’ the organs of light or the eye.” But, in a more general sense, it is taken for “the immediate object of understanding, whatever it be.” Hence, with logicians, idea is, “not only to be understood of those images that are painted by the fancy, but all that is within our understanding, when we can say, we conceive a thing, after what manner soever we conceive it.”

Ideas are said to be either simple or complex, as logicians speak. Simple ideas are those that come into mind by sensation; as, colours by the eye, sounds by the ear, &c. Complex or compound ideas are founded by the power which the mind hath of comparing, separating, or extracting its simple ideas, which come into it by sensation and reflection. It is observed by philosophers, how easily the mind can vary, by imagination, these ideas received by outward sense; that they may represent objects which we never perceived by any sense, yea, that perhaps never existed. And this is done divers ways. As, (1.) By composition; when the mind joins two ideas of things which it perceives, and separates; as when out of the idea of a mountain, and the idea of gold, we form the idea of a golden mountain. (2.) By ampliation; whereby a thing, whose idea is drawn from the senses, is, by the imagination, represented to be greater than it is; as, when out of the idea of a man of common statue, we form the idea of a giant. (3.) By diminution; as when out of the idea of a man of common statue, we form the idea of a pigmy or dwarf. (4.) By accommodation; whereby we bring in the idea of things which we see, for forming the idea of an object we never saw; as the idea of some new artifice, which none have ever seen, formed in the mind of the skillful artificer.

Again, ideas are ranked by philosophers into two sorts: one is corporeal or sensitive ideas; the other is spiritual or intellectual. The former respects bodily things, by which a man forms or acquires ideas or sensations of what relates to bodies: The latter are these by which the soul forms or acquires ideas of itself, of its own actions, or ideas of other minds or spirits, and spiritual things, by reflection. Sensitive ideas are also designed imaginative, though, when the object is present to the sense, it is properly sensitive; when a man imagines his mind does not conceive the object itself as present, but only sees the present image of it picture in his brain. Imaginations are active or passive: The imagination is passive in perceiving or receiving, but mostly active in forming ideas. And, I forming imaginative ideas, in all the four different modes above mentioned, it is manifest that the mind is active. But, when this activity of it is applied to any object that is supposed to be the object of faith, asi if it contributed any help to the saving knowledge of that object, then indeed it may be justly designed, in Mr. Robe’s words, an imaginary idea; and does not amount even to what the learned De Vries calls but idealis sapientia, ideal wisdom; and which is reckoned by philosophers themselves notional and nominal, instead of what is real and solid. Their definition of the word imaginary is, “a thing not real, but fantastic, that appears only in fashion or form, and hath no real being but in one’s fancy.”

I have, in the following discourse, made use of the foresaid common distinction of ideas into sensitive and intellectual; though I know that some who treat of the procedure, extent, and limits of human understanding, are for exploding that distinction, allowing none but these of sensation properly. But my opponent giving occasion for this distinction, and I having no occasion to dispute this point, have not chosen to supersede the use of it.

That much plain and obvious knowledge is lost in a confused jumble and rout of ideas, and by the means of our tedious modern systems upon that subject. We are told by others also, that Tertullian also observed of old, how, in the Platonic ideas, rashly and unduly mixed with Christian faith, the seeds of heresy and error clearly appeared. Hence it was a saying of his, which hath been quoted by Jerome and others of the fathers, hereticorum patriarchæ philosophi, that philosophy paved the way to heresy; which it hath done in several respects. And the apostle Paul seems apprehensive it would do so, Col. ii. 8. Those that were bred in the schools of the philosophers, did oft adapt their notions in divinity to these which they had learned there. Thus Hermogenes, in the second century, maintained what Aristotle, and some other heathen philosophers that followed him, taught about the eternity of the world. So, in our days, many orthodox divines have seen ground to notice, how much the ideal doctrine of Cartesius and his followers hath tended to corrupt the doctrine of the gospel, and propagate abundance of erroneous principles. But, if the mixture of the purest ideas that philosophy speaks of, have had a ruining influence upon religion, much more, may we suppose, will the gross and new doctrine of imaginary ideas; which is not part of religious, nor so much as of rational knowledge, whatever thereof may be supposed to lay therein. The apostle, 1 Thess. iv. 23. Distinguishes between spirit and soul and body. Upon which one observes, “That spirit is that part of our frame which is immaterial, and, consequently, hath immortality in its natural frame and essence; wherein consists the dignity of our nature, and whereby we bear the image of him from whom it was originally breathed into men: That the inferior soul is that part of us which is mortal; that the heathen philosophers called it the beast in us, because the animal and sensitive soul is supposed common to us with the brutes.” Hence, says another, “Man is an amphibious creature, of a middle order and nature between angels and brutes: With the brutes he partakes of a corporeal soul, and a mass of animal spirits; with the angels he partakes of an intelligent, immortal, immaterial spirit*[* Man is but for a little while lower than the angels, while his great soul is cooped up in the house of clay. But his body, he is allied to the earth, and to the beasts that perish; and yet, by his soul, which is spiritual and immortal, he is so near akin to the holy angels, that he may be truly said to be but a little lower than they. Henry on Psalm viii. Rich. Baxter on 1 Thess. v. 23. Says, “The Apostle does not make spirit, soul and body, three substantial compound parts of man—But in these things even Christian philosophers differ. 1. Some think, man hath three distinct souls, intellectual, sensitive; and vegetative 2. Some, that he hath two, intellectual and sensitive; and that the vegetative is a part of the body. 3. Some, that he hath but one, with these three faculties. 4. Some, that hath but one, with these two faculties, intellectual and sensitive. 5. Some, that he hath but one, with the faculty of intellection and will; and that the sensitive is corporeal. (So little do we know ourselves)—What I think most probable I have opened in methodo theologiæ; That man hath but one substantial soul, with both intellectual and sensitive faculties; and that it is uncertain whether the vegetative be its faculty, or only the faculty of the igneous or ethereal substance which is the immediate vehicle of the soul. It is enough for us to know as much of our souls as our duty in using them, and our felicity, doth require; as he may know his clock, watch, house, horse, who knows not how to make them, nor can anatomize them.” Mastricht prodromi theol. p. 51. Quas in tsibus biennium speiebus dispersas vides tres animas, vegetativum, sensitivum & rationalem, eas unitas habes in homine; non tanquam totidem animas, sed tanquam [?] ejusdem animæ partes sen gradus. (Et supra) De partibus essentialibus; & sen mavis facoltatibus, five enim partes dicas, five facultates; & si partes, five actuales, five potentiales, parum refert; modo animum nobis relinquish immaterialem. Macovii distinct. & regulæ, p. 67. Hominis tantum duæ sunt partes essentiales, corpus, scilicet, et anima—Obj. ex. 1 Thess. v. 23. Ubi tres nominantur, corpus, anima, & spiritus. Resp. Dum anima & spiritus corpoti contradistingunutur, non intelligunter duo diversa, sed una eademque res, per diversas facultates expressa: [?] per animam, intelligent anima sensitiva, per spiritum facultas rationalis, ut hoc prolix probatur a Theod. Beza in annotat. Maj N.T.].” “Man,” says the aforesaid anonymous author, “with respect to the simple perceptio of mere sense, is still upon the same level with brutes; he is altogether passive; he retains all the impressions of outward objects, but in the order in which they were stamped, without altering, dividing, compounding, or comparing them with one another. And they would always continue so in the imagination, if there were not a principle above matter, first to contemplate and view them, and then to work up these rude and gross materials into a great number of curious arts and sciences. The simple perception of brutes, says he, is, properly speaking, the perception of the object by the idea, and not the perception of the idea itself, or any view or contemplation of it, in distinction from the object; which simple perception or sense they have from their wise Creator, ofttimes to a greater perfection than men; because the ideas of sense in the imagination of brutes are the whole sum and substance of their knowledge, to speak by way of analogy, which in men are but materials for it, &c.; and because they are wholly and passively conducted in all their pursuits, by the force and impulse of these ideas of sensation alone, (which is natural instinct), and not by any separate view or contemplation of them. All ideas, says the same author, beyond those that are simple (which come into the imagination without the concurrence of the intellect, are the creatures of the intellect or understanding in men; which hath an arbitrary power over these ideas, to alter, enlarge, diminish, and to turn and wind them at pleasure; and thus raises up to itself a new set of compound ideas, with which the imagination is furnished, &c. Thus the ideas of many men may be put together into the idea of an army, many sheep to make up the idea of a flock, many houses the idea of a city. Thus also the idea of one man is by the intellect made to stand for all mankind, which is called an universal idea, &c. The same author thinks it blameable in philosophers to confound the ideas of sensation with the operations of the mind upon them, making the same thing to be an idea and the operation of the mind upon an idea at the same time. And this new set of ideas is expressed by what he calls the absurd term of an idea of reflection; whereas if they had distinguished them in plain language, into ideas of sense, and ideas of reason, it would be better understood; because every body could then see, that reason is the operating of our mind upon our ideas, &c. There is an essential difference between a simple perception of the sense, and a simple apprehension of the mind. The consequence of the former is an idea of the imagination. This perception of sense is common to us with brutes, that are moved by the internal impulse of these ideas which they have got from the impression of the outward object; whereas the latter, says he, that is, the simple apprehension of the intellect, is an act and operation of the mind, not of the sense; and is the perfection and excellency of the human soul; whereby the pure intellect only takes, among its first operations, a simple view or survey of these ideas of sensation, in the very order and condition whereby they lay in the imagination. This is what logicians call simple apprehension, but generally confound with pure sensation.

The imagination is stored with an immense number of ideas of all objects which occur to the senses. What an amazing variety of them is daily conveyed in by that one sense of seeing? To which if ye add these of the other senses, we shall render the number inexhaustible. And yet nothing of all these is properly knowledge, considered in themselves, and abstractly from that intuition or view taken of them by the pure intellect: They are only the rude and unwrought materials heaped together for that superstructure which every man is to raise, according to the peculiar disposition of his natural genius, &c.”

This account I have here given of ideas may be of use in the following discourse: Wherein I have occasion to notice how much my opponent confounds sense and imagination with knowledge and understanding, and how much the objects of these are, by his doctrine, blended with the objects of faith.

Sense, imagination, and understanding, have been distinguished in philosophy by the following example. When we behold the sun with open eyes, then external sense is manifest; when we shut our eyes, and think upon the sun, then internal sense, or imagination is manifest; but, when we consider the apparent distance, and compare the apparent magnitude of the sun, with what must be the real distance, and real bulk of it, then understanding is manifested, by deducing consequences from manifest principles. The first two of these belong to the sensitive part of man, the last to the rational. Imaginary ideas relate to the former, and these have no other object, as Mr. Robe frequently and solemnly asserts, but things corporeal. Intellectual ideas relate to the rational part. Sense, reason and faith are powers and faculties that act in their own proper spheres, as different in themselves as the first, second, and third heaven. Sense, whether external or internal, as above mentioned, hath for its objects things corporeal; reason, properly, things intellectual; and faith, things spiritual and supernatural, revealed in God’s word. Sense cannot aspire to the sphere of reason, nor reason to the sphere of faith; and far less can sense and imaginary ideas do so.

Thus far I have given my reader some hints of philosophy anent ideas. But, as to imaginary ones, though I am obliged so frequently, in the progress, to speak these words over and over, I scarce know if I have yet touched the proper meaning of the term imaginary idea. It is such an odd and unusual phrase, especially when applied to any subject of divinity, that even the grammatical explication of it seems to have a strange appearance: for, if according to the schools, an idea is the image of a thing in the mind, then an imaginary idea must signify an imaginary image in the mind; which is much the same as if one should speak of  a fantastical fancy, or a notional notion. And yet this is what the author I have to do with seems to be contending for, as absolutely necessary and greatly helpful to faith, while he makes the imaginary idea of Christ, as man, such a leading and essential ingredient therein. But I shall take this term in the most favorable sense I can; that is, for the property of an idea, by which an imaginative is contradistinguished from an intellectual one. If such a distinction can be allowed, notwithstanding what is said above by some, that there are no ideas, properly so called, but these of sensation only; because we have no images of spiritual objects, or direct and immediate representations thereof, as we have of objects that are material or corporeal. But, as the distinction between imaginative and intellectual ideas is very common in philosophy; so, when I make use of it in the following work I tended mainly to distinguish the man from the beast, or acts that are rational, from these that are merely sensitive.

SECT. II
I come, secondly, to explain what is to be understood by Christ as man; of which Mr. Robe asserts, we must necessarily have an imaginary idea, in order to believing. I know not if ever any divine expressed himself in such terms as these, namely, an imaginary idea of Christ as man; which, if they are agreeable either to philosophy or divinity, reason, or religion, is what I am to enquire into.

I premise, that to think of the corporeal object by an imaginary idea in a natural way, is a natural action of the mind or soul as animal and sensitive. And this can be no otherwise sinful in itself than other natural actions: Thus, tho’ it was lawful and innocent for the natural bodily eyes of the multitude to look upon Christ’s human body, when he was on earth, and to touch it, when pressed upon him in the throng; or yet, when out of his sight, to fancy or imagine what a man he was whom they saw; yet, to incorporate or mix these natural actions with spiritual and religious ones, or with the actings of faith, would have been highly absurd: For, to make that which is the object of sense present, or the object of fancy absent, to be the object of faith and worship is not only contradictory to the nature of divine faith and worship, but equally idolatrous with making any other man, or any other corporeal object of sense or fancy, to be so. For there is no difference between Christ considered only as a human creature, or a corporeal object (as Mr. Robe speaks) and any other human creature, or corporeal object, as such, which may be seen or viewed by the eye or fancy in a natural way without sin. But to be viewed or thought of in a religious way, so as to make that any part of the object of faith or religious worship, is as monstrous idolatry as ever was among the heathens; and contrary to the very dictates of natural reason and natural religion among wise heathens; who have said (with a si, id est, quum, seeing) Si Deus est animus, sit pura mente colendus. The object of faith and worship is some other thing, than what can fall within the compass of any man’s natural sense or fancy, Heb. xi. 1. 27. John iv. 24. It is not flesh, or our human nature in God that we believe in, nor worship; but God himself made manifest in the flesh, or God in our nature; otherwise we worship an idol and image of our own brain. Hence, when sound divines speak of Christ as man, or as a man, they never understand it in Mr. Robe’s sense, namely, of his human body, as it is the object of an imaginary idea, and so distinct from the divine nature and person of Christ. But by Christ as man, or as a man, they understand the person of Christ, denominate from his manhood. Which is a most usual figure, called a synecdoche, or the part for the whole; and a part sometimes, in point of expression and denomination only, and not in point of conception or imagination; for many times this figure of a part denominating the whole, includes nothing but the conception of the thing or person denominate by that part. For example, we find sometimes a person denominate from a quality, which cannot be conceived without the subject, or person in which that quality subsists; suppose it to be a black Indian, or a white European, we call the one a black, and the other a white: In which denomination, though it be only from the different colours, yet it is not colours but persons that are meant or conceived of; because these qualities white and black cannot be conceived in the abstract, without some thing or person thus denominated by that quality. Sometimes, by this figure, the denomination is given to the person from some part; and yet the idea of that part is not included in the conception of what is thus demonstrate, but only the person denominate by it. For example, in that question, Isa. i. 12. Who hath required this at your hand? here persons are meant, though denominate from the hand; because that is the instrument of operation or working; but the imaginary idea of a hand would here be very absurd. Sometimes person are denominate from the foot, as in that expression, Keep thy foot when thou goest into the house of God; Eccles. v. 1. Here persons walking are denominated from that member of the body by which they walk: And so here, to be sure, the imaginary idea of a foot would be quite out of purpose. Thus, men are sometimes denominate from the knee, as Isa. xlv. 23. To me every knee shall bow; that is, every person shall worship; the knee being the outward instrument of homage: This denomination includes no necessity at all of an imaginary idea of every bodily knee, but merely the conception of persons that, either by consent or constraint, shall be obliged to pay homage to Christ. There would be no end of instances of this sort. But, in those that I have given, surely an imaginary idea of hands, and feet, and knees, would import no part of rational knowledge or reflection, but an idea without understanding; for so Mr. Robe afterwards acknowledges, ‘where it ends, understanding proceeds.’ Such an imaginary idea of Christ as man, being in itself without understanding, is what I contend against, as not belonging to judgment or reason, far less to faith or religion.

But all sound divines, as I said, when they speak of Christ as man, they always understand the person of Christ denominate from his manhood*[* Maccovii distinctiones et regulæ theol. & philos. p. 108. Persona (Christi) denominatur ab alterutra natura in concreto, ut homo Christus non significat humanitatem tantum, sed totam personam, humanam, scilicet, & divinam naturam. Christus Deus non significat deitatem tantum, sed Christum Deum & hominem.]. Or, if they speak of his human nature as contradistinct from his divine, they speak of it in such a way as is agreeable with its being the object of rational knowledge and true faith. But so it cannot be, when it is spoke of as the object of an imaginary idea.

Hence, it is easy to prove, that the sense in which Mr. Robe speaks of Christ as man, cannot be the sense in which any orthodox divine ever spoke of it. Though he expresses himself on this head, in such a way as, in my opinion, is irreconcilable with good sense and reason; yet, that I may not be supposed to have written this treatise so idly, as to fill it with trifling criticisms upon ungrammatical expressions or to spend time in a mere logomachy, or strife and contention about the meaning of words, I shall here make it evident, that Mr. Robe hath explained himself to my hand, and laid down his stated principle relating to what he calls an imaginary idea and what he makes the object of it, insomuch that, by Christ as man, he cannot be supposed to mean the person of our Mediator denominate by his manhood, in which sense he is the object of faith, and that because,

(1.) He speaks of an imaginary idea of him as man; and consequently, he speaks of his manhood in the sense wherein it is the object of that imaginary idea; which, he owns, respects only corporeal objects. This he hath frequently asserted in the strongest terms. He lays it down as a position of his, page 29, “That we can have no imaginary idea of spiritual things; seeing only corporeal things are the object of that faculty and power in man called imagination.” To the same purpose he had said, p. 9. “This faculty was never designed of God for this purpose, viz of giving imaginary ideas of God, and spiritual things.” p. 24. “That there can be no imaginary ideas of spiritual things; these are not the objects about which the imagination can be conversant, neither can it receive any species of them. This was my judgment, says he, anent imaginary ideas of spiritual things, and this it continues to be, and you shall never be able to prove the contrary.” How these and the like expressions are reconcilable with some other expressions in his book, will appear afterwards. Only, as to the matter in hand, when Mr. Robe speaks of an imaginary idea of Christ as man, it must be a wronging of him to suppose that he means any other thing by the object of that idea, than the figure or image of Christ’s human body pictured in the brain. He cannot mean what philosophers call esse personæ, but esse substantiæ. He cannot be supposed to mean the person of Christ; for that is not an object of an imaginary idea, he being thus God as well as man. Yea, he cannot mean the humanity of Christ properly, for that includes soul as well as body, and so must be the object of some other than a mere imaginary idea. But he must mean, according to his own explication of that idea, nothing else but the corporeal substance of Christ’s human body; not the soul, but the body; not the man, nor the human nature, but the human substance, or corporeal part of that nature: For, as Mr. Robe says himself again, p. 55, the imaginary idea cannot extend to the soul. Yea, by his imaginary idea he cannot mean imagination accompanied with knowledge and understanding, the object whereof are things spiritual and intelligible, as such, for he says, understanding proceeds where the imaginary idea ends, p. 54. Which seems to say, that he owns that it is an idea without knowledge; as indeed it is in itself an idea without rational knowledge, as I shall afterwards shew.

(2.) That Mr. Robe’s imaginary idea of Christ as man, in stead of importing the person of Christ denominate from his human nature, does plainly exclude the consideration of his person and Godhead, is what he further proves to my hand, by making these the object of some other ideas, though at the same time. Hence, in p. 31. he makes distinct ideas necessary for thinking upon the Lord Jesus Christ, as he is God and man, in two distinct natures and one person. “First, says he, I must conceive of him to be true and real man; and this is what is called an imaginary idea of him. 2dly, I must, by a mere act of my understanding, conceive of him as not only man, but the very true and eternal God. 3dly, I must conceive the manhood personally united with God.” Here I might quarrel, 1st, That there is not word of faith, but only ideas, and acts and conceptions of the natural understanding. 2dly, That the glorious object of faith is thus divided, that one part of it may be the object of this idea, and another part the object of another idea; one part of it laid before the sensitive, another part before the intellectual faculty of the soul; as if Christ in his person were divided, and part of the division were conceivable by fancy and imagination, and part of it by a mere act of the understanding; and as if a whole Christ were no the object of faith, but a part of him the object of any man’s imaginary idea. This doctrine Mr. Robe repeats and confirms, p. 54, where he says, “I must, by one idea, think of him as man, by another as God, and by a third as God and man personally united.” By the bye, I may here remark, that, if according to the philosophical account of ideas above, we can have no proper or immediate idea of any spirit, far less of the infinite God, who is infinitely above our most elevated intellectual conception, then the absurdities of Mr. Robe’s rash and bold speeches anent his having an idea of God might be many ways exposed. Though he sometimes says in his letter, that he cannot believe what he hath no conception of; yet here at least he may find himself obliged to believe the being of that God of whom he can have no idea. The light of nature itself, by which we have the natural knowledge of God, teaches us also, that, in knowing we do not know him; and that to have an idea or conception of him, who is inconceivable, is a contradiction. The learned De Vries and Mastricht, and other eminent doctors and divines abroad, contend so strenuously against the Cartesian doctrine, concerning ideas of God, as leading to imagery and idolatry, that, to me, it appears very dangerous to admit of such ideas.

But my present scope leads me especially here to consider the first member of Mr. Robe’s distinction, as above, or the first thing he makes requisite to our thinking of Christ as we ought; namely, to have an imaginary idea of him as man. This, I say, he proves to be no idea of his person or Godhead, by shewing, that these must be conceived by ideas of another kind; intimating thus again, that his imaginary idea excludes all other objects but corporeal; and, consequently, any part of the object of that idea: And hence that idea, so far as it goes, excludes all thoughts of Christ as God, or as God man, out of the soul, until it have the assistance of these ideas of another kind, to bear company with that imaginary one. Before I go on to the third evidence he gives of this matter, I must notice here how Mr. Robe hath mistaken himself in his way of speaking which he uses through is book. For here he says, “I must conceive of him to be true and real man; and this is what is called an imaginary idea of him.” If here he means, that to conceive of this truth, That Christ is true and real man, is an imaginary idea of him as man, he hath quite forgot himself, or else spoke what he knew what; for his imaginary idea can have no other but a corporeal object. And therefore this truth, That Christ is a true and real man, cannot be the object of an imaginary idea. A truth may relate, as to the subject matter of it, unto some corporeal thing; but a truth, as it is a truth, relate to what it will, is a thing intelligible, that may be the object of knowledge, faith, or credit; but cannot be the object of an imaginary idea: For it hath no corporeal form; none can frame any image of it in their brain. But of this more afterwards.

There is a vast odds between the truth of that proposition, That Christ is true man, and the imaginary idea of a true man. We believe upon the testimony of God, that Christ is true man; and thus his being a true man, is the object of our faith. But, as to the imaginary idea of his being a true man, which Mr. Robe makes the first thing requisite to the right thinking of him as God and man in two distinct natures, here is a miserable mixture of faith with fancy. He mixes this conceiving of Christ as man, by an imaginary idea, with the conceiving of him as God, and as God man, by the mere act of the understanding; and so the faith of his person with the fancy of his manhood, as if this fancy were essential to faith; which tends to make the faith of Christ’s manhood nothing but a fancy. Whereas, the true faith of Christ’s being man, is a thing most remote from that imaginary idea or fancy about Christ’s manhood: For it receives the truth of that proposition, That Christ is true man, upon the same divine testimony that it receives the truth of this, That he is true God, and God-man in one person. And both these truths are received by one and the same faculty, namely, spiritual understanding, or a mind enlightened in the knowledge of Christ by the word and Spirit of God. To seek after any part of the knowledge of Christ in our own imaginary idea of him as man, is equally foolish as to seek the morning star in a dungeon, or the sun in a dunghill. How vastly differs the faith of Christ’s manhood in the heart, from the fancy of it in the head? By the imaginary idea of it we see, but do not believe and we see nothing but the image of a human body, as it stands in the brain; but by faith we know and believe his true humanity, as it is recorded in the Bible, saying, as 1 John v. 20. We know that the Son of God is come, and hath given us an understanding to know him that is true, &c. Here faith and fancy differ as much, as what is real differs from what is imaginary, and as a heart persuasion differs from a head notion. But of these things more afterwards.

I proceed to a third proof and evidence Mr. Robe here gives, that, when he speaks of Christ as man, he cannot understand it of the person denominate from his manhood, in which sense it would be the object of faith; but that he means only Christ’s human body, as it is the object of an imaginary idea, in which respect it can only be the object of sense, not of faith. This he proves, I say, by the following words, in the forecited pages, 30 and 31. “We can no more conceive, and have and an idea of Christ in our understandings as man, but what is called an imaginary idea, or an idea of him in our minds, by the exercise of our imagination, than we can of Enoch or Elias, or of another other man who is now in heaven; for this reason, that our Lord’s human nature, and particularly, his glorified and super exalted body, hath all the essential properties of any other body, and no other: And therefore, if we can never think of any other human nature, or human body, through our natural constitution, and the nature of bodies, but by an imaginary idea, when absent from us, which indeed we cannot, we can never think of our Mediator as man, and his body now in heaven, by any other idea, &c”. Then he adds, “The plain Scots of what I assert is, that we cannot think upon Jesus Christ, as he really is, God-man, without thinking of him as man, as really as God; and that by the exercise of the same faculties and powers I think and conceive of other men.” Here, I must say, appears to me such a heap of  gross, absurd, and notional stuff, instead of solid divinity, that, for my part, I would not be the author of it for the whole world. The grossness and absurdity thereof may appear in the following remarks,

First, Here faith and fancy are miserably confounded; the faith of Christ’s divine person, as God-man, (which necessarily includes the faith of his humanity) with the fancy of his human body, in the exercise of the same faculties and powers whereby we conceive of other men: And so he makes the human nature of Christ not the object of faith at all, but of fancy and imagination. Here it is to be noticed, that the faculties he speaks of are corporeal, as he brings in Charnock asserting, p. 8. The objects these are conversant about, are only corporeal, as he himself hath declared; and, consequently, they are such as cannot conceive of Christ as man, having, together with a true body, a rational soul; which is no corporeal object, though the chief part of his human nature: And so his corporeal idea, according to himself, cannot conceive of Christ as man, while it conceives only of a human body, which is not the man, but the least part of the human nature. It is hard to think Mr. Robe understood what he wrote, unless he can here be supposed to speak by a figure called Hendiadys, that is, when one thing is expressed by two terms; and so, by the human nature of Christ, to mean his human body, and no more; because this only, being corporeal, can be the object of an imaginary idea. But how can this be his meaning, when so frequently he speaks of the human nature of Christ, as not only a true body, but also a reasonable soul? Yet Mr. Robe here speaks of the human nature, or the human body, as if these two were alternatives, and could equally be the object of an imaginary idea; and speaks of the idea of Christ’s human body, as if it were the same with the idea of his human nature: whereas the human nature includes the human soul, as well as the human body. And he elsewhere declares and maintains, that neither the human soul, or any spirit, can be the object of an imaginary idea; and yet here he says, Christ’s human nature can be conceived by no other than an imaginary idea. It cannot be said with any good sense, either that the human nature is a soul, or that the human nature is a body; for human nature consists of soul and body unite. It cannot be said, man is a soul, or man is a body; because these are the integral parts of a man, and the union of these together constitutes the man or the human nature: And therefore, to conceive of him thus united, requires some other than an imaginary idea; which can have no other than the corporeal part to be the object of it. The soul, being spiritual, cannot be the object of that imaginative faculty. I know not how many times I have this absurdity to notice in Mr. Robe’s pamphlet; as will appear afterwards.

Second remark. He here debases the human nature of Christ, as an object no otherwise discernible, than the same way that we discern any other man in heaven or in the earth. Thus, it is only Mr. Robe, not Mr. Erskine, that makes the human nature of Christ not the object of faith. For, unless he makes Enoch and Elias in heaven, or any other man on earth, the object of his faith, equally with Christ as man, he must have some other way of thinking on Christ as man, he must have some other way of thinking on Christ as man, than he hath of thinking on them; though I own an imaginary idea can think no otherwise of Christ as man, that it does of other men. It forms a picture of their bodies in the brain, even as it does the picture of Christ’s body. He can think no otherwise of other men, than to think they are persons: For to think of a man, and not of a human person, is impossible; for none can think of a nature without a subject, or a human nature without a human person, wherein that nature exists, (of which more afterwards): Even so, the imaginary idea of Christ as man, or in his human nature, as Mr. Robe speaks, necessarily makes him at best think of a human person. And here is the very root and spring of old Nestorianism, making Christ to have two persons, a human and a divine, as well as two natures. Mr. Robe may profess this is not his principle, that Christ is a human person: If so, then he must deny his present doctrine, namely, that he can have an imaginary idea of Christ as man, in the manner and way he thinks of other men. Why, he thinks truly and rightly of other men; because, as men, they are persons: But he thinks falsely of Christ as man; because, as man, he is no person. Therefore his fancy of Christ as man, is indeed but a fancy. One may feed himself with the vain and vile notion of Christ as man, but I can venture to say, as a minister of Christ, that he never saw Christ’s human nature by faith, nor ever had a right thought of it, who never could think of it but as he thinks of other men.

Third remark. He here declares, that, when he thinks of Christ as man, it is by the exercise of the same faculties and powers by which he thinks or conceives of other men. Here is a gross and carnal doctrine, when not cautioned nor guarded, as ever I read of; though it is agreeable enough to the doctrine of imaginary ideas in divinity. The powers and faculties of the soul, by which true believers see Christ to be man, are the same with these by which they see him to be God, and to be God-man in one person: And these are not merely natural, but the powers and faculties of a new nature, renewed by the power of divine grace, giving spiritual illumination and saving faith: For the natural man receiveth not the things of the Spirit of God, neither can he know them, for they are spiritually discerned. It is true, as Charnock says, vol. ii. p. 72, 73. “Regeneration is not a removal of the old substance or faculties of the soul;—but the soul is so much changed,—that it is, as it were, a new soul, a new understanding, a new will—The change is so great, that the soul seems to be of another species and kind; because it is acted by that grace which is another principle from that principle which acted it before. New creation is called a resurrection. Our Saviour, in his resurrection, had the same body, but endued with a new quality.—So, though the essence of the soul and faculties remain the same, yet another kind of light is darted in, and other qualities implanted—’Tis not a change of the essential acts of the soul, as acts;—but the principle, end, and objects of these acts, arising from these restoring qualities, are altered—As when a man walks from east to west, ’tis the same motion in body and joints;—yet they are contrary motions, because the terms to which they tend, are contrary one to the other.”—Such indeed are the different, yea, and contrary motions and objects of the soul’s acts, when it has the natural notion and imaginary idea of Christ as man, and when it has the spiritual view of him as Immanuel God-man. They differ just as much as the natural sight of a man in our nature, by the eye of sense or fancy differs from the supernatural sight of God in our nature, by the eye of faith, and spiritual understanding. They that never saw the man Christ in any other light, than by the same powers and faculties whereby they see or think of other men, whether present or absent, are yet grossly ignorant of Christ. They that by faith see Christ to be man, they by the same faith see him to be God, and they see God in him: For he that hath seen me, hath seen the Father, says Christ. It is true, Mr. Robe speaks also of Christ’s being God, and God-man in one person, and makes these the objects of a more pure intellectual idea, though he makes Christ as man the object of an imaginary idea. But this will by no means bring him out of the miry clay and horrible pit of ignorance and absurdity, into which he hath fallen by this new doctrine of notional and ideal religion. For, as the intellectual powers of nature can no more bring any man to the saving knowledge of God, than imaginary ideas can bring him out of the miry clay and horrible pit of ignorance and absurdity, into which he hath fallen by this new doctrine of notional and ideal religion. For, as the intellectual powers of nature can no more bring any man to the saving knowledge of God, than imaginary ideas can bring him to the right knowledge of Christ’s human nature; so this human nature of Christ was never seen or known to any saving advantage, but by the same supernatural powers and spiritual faculties whereby we see him to be God, and to be God-man in one person: For it is not in one light we see Christ as man; and in another as God; and in a third as God-man in one person; but in one and the same light we see the glorious person of our Immanuel God-man, when God, who commanded light to shine out of darkness, shines into our hearts, to give us the light of the knowledge of his glory in the face, or person of Christ. 2 Cor. iv. 6. Gal. i. 16. John i. 14. We know not Christ savingly to be the Son of man, namely, by the Spirit of wisdom and revelation in the knowledge of Christ, Eph. i. 17. And, till God give us an understanding to know him that is true, we know not that the Son of man is come in our nature, or that he is true man, any more than we know that he is the true God and eternal life, 1 John v. 20. Both these are seen in one and the same light of the Word and Spirit of God, and by one and the same eye of faith and saving knowledge, which looks to the person God-man; not to his manhood, as Mr. Robe supposes, with one eye, namely, an imaginary idea, and to his Godhead and personality with another eye, namely, an intellectual idea. Which, from what I have said, appears to be most unscriptural doctrine, or rather anti-scriptural, especially when the human nature of Christ, that Mr. Robe makes the object of faith, is such a humanity as we can as easily conceive of, as we can of any other man out of sight. I am confident, they that never saw the human nature of Christ in any other light, never believed it, nor had any view of it, as the object of faith. Yea, it were as unlawful to make that imaginary Christ the object of their faith, as it is unlawful and idolatrous to make any other man the object of faith. God will not be mocked with our dreams and head notions; nor will he give his glory to another.

It is true, Mr. Robe, in his tripartite division of ideas above mentioned, says, “That, if any of them be wanting, it is not such an idea of the Mediator God-man as should be.” But, as each of these ideas are mere philosophical notions, and one may have them all, and yet want the saving knowledge of Christ; so it is plain, that the first of these, namely, the imaginary idea of Christ as man, can at best, even according to Mr. Robe, go no farther than the notion of a mere man; such as Enoch or Elias, whom he instances. And, seeing to make a mere man the object of faith, is gross idolatry, therefore to make that imaginative faculty, which was never designed for conceiving any other but objects of sense, to be one of these faculties whereby we are to conceive the object of faith, is gross divinity, leading directly to the foresaid gross idolatry; because that imaginary idea (whatever other idea it is supposed to be followed with) can see no farther about Christ than a mere man; nay, not so far; for it can conceive of no more but a human body, a mere corporeal object; under which consideration it is an object of sense, but not of faith; an object of carnal imagination, but not of divine worship, any more than the body of Enoch or Elias in heaven, objected to our imagination on earth. Yea, to worship Christ’s human body, as represented by such an imaginary idea, is the same thing with worshipping a dead idol, or a molten image, instead of an incarnate God; who alone is the object of saving faith and divine worship.

Mr. Robe’s threefold idea that he makes necessary for a right thought of Christ, and consequently to right believing, and whereof his first is the imaginary idea of Christ as man, seems, from what is said, to want a necessary addition, which would make it fourfold, namely, an intellectual idea of Christ’s human soul; for the imaginary idea, according to his own acknowledgement, respects only corporeal or bodily things. But yet after all, none of all these four, either separately or jointly, make up a right thought of Christ, I mean a spiritual thought of him; nor do they all amount to a believing on the Son of God: For they all belong, partly to fancy, notion, speculation, and, at best, a human ratiocination; or partly to some branch of natural philosophy, illuminated with objective scripture revelation; and are all of them obvious to any man that read the Bible, and hath the right exercise of reason and of his natural faculties. But faith acts in another sphere; the subject of it being a man or woman whose mind is enlightened in the knowledge of Christ, by the word and Spirit of God, and whose natural powers are renewed and spiritualized. Hence, none ever received Christ by believing on his name, unless they were born not of blood, nor of the will of the flesh, nor of the will of men, but of God. Then, and not till then, can they say, The word was made flesh; and we beheld his glory, the glory as of the only begotten of the Father, full of grace and truth, John i. 12, 13, 14. Hence we are taught also, that none can come to Christ by faith or believing, except the Father draw them; which the Father does by his effectual teaching: It is written in the prophets, and they shall all be taught of God.  Every man therefore, that hath heard, and hath learned of the Father, cometh unto the Son. And again, Christ says, No man can come unto me, except it be given him of my Father, John vi. 44, 45, 46.

I might produce a fourth evidence of this, that, when Mr. Robe speaks of Christ as man, he cannot understand it of the person of Christ, the object of faith, denominate from his manhood; because, as he makes Christ as man, only the object of an imaginary idea, so he makes that idea of Christ as man, to be a naked and simple idea, distinct from the idea of him as Mediator God-man, which he makes not a simple, but a complex idea. For, p. 54 having said, “Where the imaginary idea ends, the understanding proceeds,” &c. he adds, “The idea we have of the Mediator God man in two natures and one person, when it is adequate, as the subject is capable to have of the object, is not a simple, but complex idea, consisting of ideas distinct and different in their natures, as the two natures of the glorious Mediator.” Hence it is evident, his imaginary idea of Christ as man, being both distinct and different in its nature from, and prior or previous to that complex idea, which includes the whole person of Christ, is, according to him, a naked simple idea of sensation, respecting what is merely sensible and corporeal; and so can itself include no consideration of the person of Christ, or of the proper object of faith. Such a naked simple idea can surely judge no way of any truth or falsehood. Hence the foreign divines and philosophers, as De Vries and Mastricht*[* Gangrana Cart. cap. 29.], in their disputes against the skeptic notions of the Cartesian writers (who, in favours of their innate ideas of all things, made the senses of little other use in men than in brutes, destitute as of reason, so of these ideas; and judging the senses so fallacious, as no way to be trusted, no judgment to be formed of any truth by them;) when, in answer hereunto, they assert the senses to be judges, and their testimony to be necessary to the knowledge and faith of truths relating to sensible things, they at the same time assert that the senses cannot properly judge or reason, affirm or deny any thing; and that therefore by senses they do not mean naked senses, but the prudent use of the senses, resulting from the rational soul; whereof brutes are destitute, though they have both sense and perception: which also is there proven against the Cartesians, cap. 30. Now, while Mr. Robe makes only the perception of Christ as God-man, to be a complex intellectual idea, but the perception of Christ as man to be a simple idea of sensation or imagination, distinct from, and going before that which is complex and intellectual, it is plain, that that naked sense or simple imagination, thus destitute of understanding, reason, and reflection, in itself can by no means include the rational knowledge of any truth whatsoever, far less of the object of faith. The sense and perception of brutes may be brought in to compare with any naked or simple sensitive apprehension, not under the rule and conduct of a rational soul, and the intellectual faculty thereof.