Antipaedobaptism in the Thought of John Tombes
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Chapter Two
The History and Development of John Tombes's
Antipaedobaptist Polemic and the Literature it Produced
From "Lemster" to Westminster
After nearly twelve years in "Lemster, in
Hereford-shire", Tombes and his family left due to the "violence of the Kings Party".
After "much wandering" and "much danger," Tombes set out
for London. As he wrote, "I resolved to adventure a journey to
London through Wiltshire, to conferre with Brethren of the Assembly".
Having been "advised by my Physitian to remove out of Bristoll,
understanding the Assembly was to sit in July
1643".1
Tombes's motivation in coming to London was stated as:
Wherefore I resolved if ever I came to London, to search further into
those two points of meaning of I Cor. 7. 14. and the History of Paedobaptisme....
...[B]eing come to London September 22, 1643. I applied my selfe to
enquire into the points forenamed.2
As part of this inquiry, Tombes met with a number of
ministers in London about January,
16433 to discuss his scruples as regards infant baptism. According to Tombes, some of the
ministers there present believed him to have been convinced of his error
because he had nothing to say in reply.4
Tombes continued by presenting the motivation for those
first and second literary works on the subject. Both of which are lost.
He wrote:
Not long after the Conference, my most loving and reverend Father in
law Master Henry Scudder fearing the event of the matter, after some writing
that past betweene us, advised me to draw up the reasons of my doubts, and
he undertook to present them to the Committee chosen (as I conceived it) to give
satisfaction about that point.... ...I first drew up nine first arguments in
my Excercitation, which were delivered as I relate in my Examen in February
and March 1643. and after in July following, the other
three.5
The first literary work by Tombes were the letters to Henry
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Scudder. The second was the original
Exercitation expressing nine arguments penned in Latin for the Westminster Assembly sitting
in London. The third is also lost to posterity. It was a one-page
work also given to Henry Scudder. This one page, in quarto, contained,
as Tombes explained, "the main ground of my
doubt".6
Controversy from Without
Tombes then met with a challenge from the pulpit. He
gave the background and a firsthand account of that days events:
Now the Papers7 before named, I perceived were tossed up and down
from one to another, and it seemes Master Edwards the Controversie Lecturer
at Christ-Church got them, and picking out some passages, but concealing
others that would have cleared them under pretence of refuting them, with
the writing of another that be joined with mine, meerly abused me in the Pulpit
at Christ-Church: which I immediately charged him with after his Sermon in
the Vestry, and he only excused it by telling me he named me not, though
there were sundry Ministers there that knew he meant
me.8
While in Oxford, Tombes attended Thomas Goodwin's
lectures on the subject of infant baptism and went again to hear
Master Edwards and his discourse at Christ Church College. He also
read "many Treatises and Sermons". Tombes distilled all of this
activity with the phrase, "...in many of which I found rather invectives
than arguments".9
Tombes's controversial views were becoming known.
The church to which he had been assigned in London, Fenchurch,
refused to hear him preach, even though Tombes "meddled not
with that matter in the Pulpit", yet his reputation preceded him in
that place. One of Tombes's "loving friends", a member of the
Assembly, "understanding the Honourable Societies of the Temples
wanted a Preacher, solicited the bringing of [him]
thither".10
The Master of the Temple had been traditionally
appointed directly by the Crown. During the uncertain time of the
Parliamentarian rule in London, this prerogative of selection was given over
to the House of Commons. The issue of Tombes's appointment was
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Antipaedobaptism in the Thought of John Tombes
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given over to the Assembly of Divines sitting at Westminster.
The Divines selected a committee to nominate a "Preacher" for
the Temple's societies. Stephen Marshall was on the committee.
Marshall did not like Tombes's theological peculiarity. Tombes was
rejected.11
Tombes was without an ecclesiastical charge. He had
contact with John White, Chairman of the Committee for
Plundered Ministers. Master White's desire was to dispute with Tombes
on baptism before recommending him or supporting him further.
This occasioned Tombes's fourth unpublished literary work on the matter.
Tombes tells posterity of his action, "Which occasion I tooke to
open my condition to him in a letter." This exchange brought forth a
book by John White entitled Infant Baptisme proved lawfull by
Scripture.12
Whilst still without means to earn a living, Tombes
continued the narrative of his misfortunes, "Shortly after in August. 1644.
I met with Marshall's Sermon." This must have been a
handwritten copy of Stephen Marshall's sermon, not published until 1645,
entitled, in publication, A Sermon on the Baptizing of Infants;
preached in the Abbey-Church at Westminster, at the Morning
Lecture.13
This encounter with Marshall's sermon provoked
Tombes's fifth literary work on Baptism. Tombes justified his action in
this way:
...[A]nd finding the vehemancy of his spirit against Antipaedobaptists,
and having had experience both of his, and Master Whites inflexiblenesse by
my former writings, and seeing no likelihood of imploiment and maintenance
for me and mine, except I would gather a separated Church, which I durst not
do, as not knowing how to justifie such a practise, I resolved to make a full
answer to Master Marshals Sermon, and finished it November 11. and
having with much difficulty transcribed one Copy, and gotten another written for
me, I sent my own to Master Marshall, who received it December 9,
1644.14
Marshall agreed to see Tombes. Tombes did not ask for
a response to his work, but for a conversation about the pulpit at
the Temple. Tombes asked Marshall, "Whether he held me fit for
the Ministery or not, notwithstanding my dissent from him on that point".
Marshall's reply was, in Tombes's words, "...[H]e desired to
know first whether I would keep my opinion to my selfe". Tombes re
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turned this answer in writing carried by "Father Scudder":
I request you returne this answer to Master Marshall, that whereas I
requested him to declare whether he thought me fit for the Ministery or not,
notwithstanding my dissent about Paedobaptisme, and he demands of me a
promise of silence in that point, I conceive he is bound by the rules of justice,
mercy and prudence to do it without requiring that condition, and that he hath
no reason to be jealous of me considering my carriage in this manner.
Neverthelesse when I shall understand what promise he would have from
me, and what is intended to be done by him for the discussing the point, and
clearing of Truth, to which I ought not be wanting, and what advantage I may
have by his agency for my imployment and maintenance, I shall give him a
punctual answer, and am resolved for peace sake to yield as farre as I may
without violating the solemne Covenant I have taken, and betraying truth and
innocency, Decem. 26.15
Marshall and Tombes met on December 30, 1644 for
a "friendly conference...in the morning before the [Westminster]
Assembly sat". Tombes recapitulated the essence of that meeting:
At the beginning of that Conference, Master Marshall having this last
written message in his hand, & reading those words, [and he demands of me a
promise of silence in that point] told me that he did not demand of me a promise
of silence in that point; for that was beyond his line: this was his very expression.
As soon as ever I heard those words, I conceived my selfe freed from
the snare I most feared of making a promise, which as the case might stand,
I could not keep with a good conscience. Then Master Marshall spake to
this effect, that yet for the satisfaction of those who should enquire of him
concerning me, he desired to know my intentions. Whereupon I dealt freely,
that I intended not to publish my opinion in the Pulpit, if I might be where I
should not be put to baptize: for I conceived it not likely, that there would be a
Reformation of that thing in this Age, there having been so long a practise of
Infant-Baptisme, and such a prejudice in men against the opposers of it: yet I
told him that if any should preach to that people I had charge of, that which
I conceived to be an errour, I did resolve to oppose it there, otherwise
mens preaching abroad should be of no provocation to me: So that it is clear, I
made no promise, and that intimation of mine intentions which I made was
only, that I intended not to preach my opinion in that place unlesse provoked
there.16
Tombes added a condition:
...[T]hat if Lawes were likely to be enacted to make the deniall of
Infant-Baptisme penall, I held my selfe bound in conscience to appeare in publique
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about the matter: yea, and Master Marshall told me he intended me
some animadversions on my Examen; whence it may be collected, that neither
Master Marshall nor my selfe had agreed to lay aside the dispute in
selfe.17
The foregoing was not without controversy. Tombes
believed he had removed any restraints to ministering at the Temple, save
one concession; Marshall believed Tombes to have been silenced in
the matter of antipaedobaptism in order to have an ecclesiastical
appointment and income. Stephen Marshall pressed home one point,
"That the Reformation of Congregations might be without altering the
use of Infant-Baptisme".18
Tombes repeated his pledge before Obadiah Sedgwicke,
his "loving friend" from their days at Oxford. "[A]fter a triall of
me three Lords-daies at the Temple, I was at the end of January
chosen by the Treasurers, and sundry others of the members of both
the honourable Societies of the Temples to be their Preacher for a
yeare".19
On another front, news came from New England that a
law had been passed "against those that denied baptizing of
Infants" making the lack of it penal. To mollify the civil and church
authorities in New England, Tombes sent another handwritten copy of
an augmented version of the Examen of Marshall's sermon, yet
unpublished.20 This was also in direct response to Master John
Cotton's work published under the title The Groundes and Endes of
the Baptisme of the Children of the
Faithfull.21
Three of the Westminster Divines heard of Tombes's "act"
in sending his work to New England. Thomas Goodwin, Richard
Vines and Stephen Marshall, "showed scorne" towards Tombes. This
public display and "sundry things happened which induced me to
yeeld to the importunity of those that solicited earnestly the publishing
of my writings for the publicke good". Tombes also sent to
Marshall an enquiry as to whether Master Marshall would answer the
"point of difference" expressed in the handwritten epilogue to Tombes
Examen. The "best of the answer" Tombes received was, in
Tombes's words, "...sith I had now a place for my Ministery without
baptizing Infants, he expected I would be
quiet."22
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Tombes was aware that some in the Assembly "...did
have scruple in Conscience, the giving approbasion to me because of
my opinion" and a growing response to antipaedobaptism in pulpit
and in print. This added pressure to Tombes's personal quest to clear
the truth and to publish his work. Tombes gives historical insight:
The people of the city much inquired into this matter. A publique
disputation was once allowed about it to which I was earnestly solicited, but for
weighty reasons refused it. Sundry came to me to request the perusall of my papers
for their satisfaction many learned, godly, and prudent persons, both of
them that differed in judgement, as well as those that agreed with me, moved me to
have them printed for the bringing of truth to light. I saw not wherein any danger
to the State or Church might be created by the printing of them, and which
was beyond all to me. I was confirmed it was a truth I held, had tried all fit
meanes to have it examined, had been guided in the searching of it, and preserved
for the businesse by many remarkable providences, and thereupon after prayer
to God by my selfe, and with others for direction, I yeelded to the printing
of them....23
This first published work actually included three works
that introduced Tombes's antipaedobaptist theology to the reading
public in a comprehensive, yet polemical, manner. The title page read,
Two Treatises and an Appendix to them concerning
Infant-Baptisme.24 The first treatise was an English translation of the
Latin Exercitation Tombes had delivered to the Westminster Assembly. His
second unpublished work was presented in a popularised format to
facilitate discussion and comprehension of the issues at hand. The second
of the two treatises was the Examen of the Sermon of Mr
Stephen Marshall, about Infant-Baptisme, in a letter sent to
him. They were published on 15 December, 1645, nearly a year and a week after
it was presented to Marshall in its handwritten form.
The publication "to cleare the truth" provoked a number
of replies. Thomas Bakewell produced A Justification of the two
points now in Controversy with the
Anabaptists....25 John Geree published
a gracious reply under the short title of Vindiciae Paedobaptismi; or
a vindication of Infant Baptism....26
Doctor Nathaniel Homes (also Holmes) contributed
A Vindication of Baptizing Beleevers
Infants....27
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Marshall produced his own public reply,
A Defence of Infant Baptism....28
John Saltmarsh wrote The Smoke in the Temple. Wherein
is a designe for peace and reconciliation of believers of the
several opinions of these lines about
ordinances....29 John Ley replied
to Saltmarsh mentioning Tombes in Light for
Smoak....30 William Hussey added his
An Answer to Mr. Tombes, His special Examination of
Infants-Baptisme.31 Lastly, Thomas Blake answered a letter from
John Tombes with a preface from Edmund Calamy and Richard
Vines entitled Mr. Blakes answer to Mr. Tombes his
letter....32
Tombes could not disengage. The controversy was now
not only public, but in print. Tombes gathered the materials and
replied to each objection specifically after clearing the history of the
dispute in the first section of his next published work,
An Apology, or Plea for the Two Treatises, and Appendix to them concerning
Infant-Baptisme....33 Tombes answered particular questions and
interacted with comments at length in an ingenious popularly written piece
in narrative form. John Bachiler, who licensed the work for the
press said, "Having perused this milde Apology, I conceive that the
ingenuity, learning and piety therein contained deserve the
Presse".34
Due to the publication of the
Apology, Tombes was forced to leave the Temple Church. He moved to Worcestershire where
he was made "Rector at Ross and perpetual Curate at
Bewdley.35 Stephen Marshall agitated for Tombes's dismissal believing Tombes had
broken his pledge to not go public with the point in
controversy.36 The inference had been drawn at some point and then remembered
by Marshall.
In 1647, Robert Baillie (also Bailey and Bayley) published
Anabaptism, the True Fountain of Independency,
Antinomy, Brownisme, and Familisme, and most of the other Errours, which
for the time doe trouble the Church of England,
Unsealed.37 In the same year, Tombes replied in a lengthy personal reply to Baillie
demonstrating how he had been wronged and his reputation tarnished
by invectives in Baillie's work. This work was dated 22 July,
1647.38 Having no settlement from Baillie in the matter, Tombes sent
another copy of the personal reply to Samuel Rutherford to take up the
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matter with Baillie, a fellow Scotsman and
Covenanter.39 Having still no resolution, Tombes sent a copy of the letter to the
"Moderator and Commissioners in the Next Nationall Assembly of the Church
of Scotland" on 24 September, 1650.40
Hearing nothing from Scotland to resolve the matter, Tombes went into print with
An Addition to the Apology five years after he penned it as a private matter to
Baillie.41
In the intervening five years many set out to refute the
new challenges manifest by the publication and preaching
of antipaedobaptist theology. Two paedobaptist refutations directed
at Tombes's previous writings were, William Hussey,
A 1st Provocation of Master Tombes to make good his generall charge against
Mr. W. Husseys satisfaction to his scepticall
exercitation, in 164742 and John Geree,
Vindiciae Vindicarum; or a vindication of Infant
Baptism....43
A New Venue
A difficult epoch in Tombes's life started in 1649 whilst
he ministered in Bewdley. A friendship was kindled with the
young Richard Baxter, ministering a few miles away in Kidderminster.
It was well-known at that time that Tombes was an
ardent antipaedobaptist.44 It was also known that Baxter had had
previous public dealings with other
Antipaedobaptists.45 In spite of this,
Tombes and Baxter had a working relationship wherein they freely
preached in each other's pulpits for weekly
lectures.46
As the theological issue over baptism arose, Tombes
requested something from Baxter in writing in order to study and refute it.
By this time, Tombes was well aware of the variety of foundations
upon which paedobaptism was based. When written reasons for the
practise were not forthcoming, Tombes's disciples pressed Baxter for
his words. Baxter decided to bring ten reasons for Infant Baptism to
the minds of the Bewdlians at the end of a week night sermon
preached in their chapel. Tombes sought to counteract the sermon by
preaching another from 1 Corinthians 7:14 against the federated holiness
of children and their claim to baptism therefrom. After multiple letters
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Antipaedobaptism in the Thought of John Tombes
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and a few private meetings, Tombes and Baxter agreed to a
public debate on the matter to be held from 9:00 am on 1 January, 1649/50.
It was held in the chapel at Bewdley.47
As one biographer recorded this time:
...[H]e went up to Beudley, at what time Mr. Rich. Baxter preached
at Kidderminster, another market town three miles distant from that place.
And 'tis verily thought that he was put upon the project of going there,
purposefully to tame Baxter and his party, who then carried all the country
before them, They preached against one another's doctrines, Tombes being then
a preacher at Beudley, which he kept with Lemster, newly restored to him,
being before forced thence by the royal party, and published books against
each other. Tombes was theCoryphaes of the anabaptists, and Baxter of
the presbyterians. Both had a great company of auditors, who came
manymiles on foot round about, to admire them. Once, I think oftner, they disputed
face to face, and their followers, were like two armies: and at last it came to
pass that they fell together by the ears, whereby hurt was done, and the civil
magistrate had much to quiet them. All scholars there and then present, who
knew the way of disputing and managing arguments, did conclude that Tombes
got the better of Baxter by far.48
The public debate of 1 January 1649/50 produced a
prolonged dispute in print between Baxter and Tombes. Many theological
writers were drawn into this disagreement. In these years the
foundational theological bedrock of antipaedobaptism was established
and codified for generations of "baptists" who used Tombes's
arguments without citation. As one Paedobaptist wrote in 1698, "If you
desire an answer to Mr. Tombs, the most Learnedst Champion for your
Way, which most that have Written after him, have Copy'd
from...."49
During this period Tombes found profound affirmation
when the Oxonian establishment produced a paper that corroborated
what Tombes had been saying for many years. In Tombes's words:
Yea, the Oxford Divines in their late Reasons of the present Judgement of
the University about the Solemne Covenant, [etc.] Approved by generall
consent in a full Convocation, June 1, 1647. say, that Without the consentient
Judgement and Practise of the Universall Church, (which we are not able to
prove) they shoulde be at a losse, when they are called upon for proofe in the Point
of baptizing Infants.50
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Baxter used the introduction in
The Saints Everlasting Rest (1650) to attack "Anabaptists" in
general.51 Tombes took exception to what Baxter included. He produced a work with a most
evocative title, An Antidote against the Venome of a Passage, in the 5th
direction of the Epistle Dedicatory....52
Baxter followed with his first work on the issue titled,
Plain Scripture Proof of Infants Church-Membership and
Baptism.53
Baxter argued for paedobaptism from a different
foundation than Blake, Geree and Marshall. His basic argument was: since
infants are already church members by birth, they have the same
birthright to baptism that Jews had to circumcision. Tombes
worked through Baxter's arguments to produce what became the starting
point for his multiple thousand page "full review" of the dispute as
regards baptism. Tombes, in early 1652 published his
Praecursor, or a Forerunner To a large Review of the Dispute concerning
Infant-Baptism.54
Between 1650 and 1656, Baxter's
Plain Scripture Proof went through four editions. Each edition added new fuel to the
raging dispute. Some of these additions were: An Answer to Mr. Tombes
his Valedictory Oration to the People of
Bewdley (1651), Letters that passed between Mr. Baxter and Mr. Tombes concerning the
Dispute [of 1649] (1652), Praefestinantis Movator, Or, Mr. Tombes,
his Praecursus, staid and examined, and proved not to be from
Heaven, but of men (1652), A Briefe Confutation of divers other of Mr. T.
his mistakes (n.d.), A Corrective For a Circumforaneous Antidote
Against the Verity of a Passage in the Epistle before my Treatise of
Rest (1656), An Addition to the twentieth Chapter of the First Part (n.d.),
Arguments to prove that Baptism is a standing Ordinance for entering
of all Church-Members (ordinarily,) and not first Discipling of a
Nation.55
The letters between Baxter and Tombes show the issues
leading up to and flowing from the disputation. The other
additional works give ever-increasing insight into Baxter's state of mind.
Later that same year, 1652, Tombes would release the first part of his
Magnum opus. In the subtitle we see his wit and his true perspective
of Baxter's position. The work was called Antipaedobaptism, or No
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Plain nor Obscure Scripture Proof of Infants Baptism or
Church Membership. Being the first part of the full review of the
dispute about Infant Baptism....56
Tombes set out to refute all who opposed his position in order to give a "full review" of the issue.
Tombes discussed the arguments put forth in earlier works by
Stephen Marshall, John Geree, Richard Baxter, T. Cobbet, Mr. Thomas
Blake, Josiah Church, and N. Stephens. Between the
Apology in 1646 and Antipaedobaptism, Part One
in 1652, Tombes received many replies via personal letters from his theological inquirers and opponents.
Most of these are lost to posterity. We only have the answers to the
letters incorporated by way of direct citation in Tombes's work. This
makes a degree of reconstruction of the letters possible due to
Tombes's methodology of quoting his opponent extensively whilst
answering them. Tombes did not generalise in his replies. He set up no
straw men. He sought to refute each separate strand of an argument.
Those nuances were often many.
The work of Thomas Cobbet that gained the attention
of Tombes was A Just Vindication of the Covenant and
Church-Estate of Children of Church-Members as also their right unto
Baptisme: wherein such things as have been brought by divers to the
contrary, especially by Ioh. Spilsbury, A.R., Ch. Blackwood, and H. Den
are revised and answered: hereunto is annexed a refutation of a
certain pamphlet styled The plain and wel-grounded treatise touching
baptism.57 This work had been published in 1648. Tombes replied
in 1652.
In 1650 after preaching his Valedictory Oration (farewell
sermon) Tombes moved from Bewdley to Ledbury to direct
St. Catherine's Hospital. This was another non-parochial post.
During this time, Tombes heard back from the General Assembly of the
Scottish Kirk as regards his complaint against fellow covenanter
Robert Baillie. The Assembly said:
That Jesus Christ be Lord over his own house, and that his ministers
keep Courts and exercise Jurisdiction and discipline, and all the censures of
the Kirk from the lowest to the highest, in his name only, against all that
depart from and do oppose the truth; or that walk loosely as doth not become the
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Gospell.58
The political situation between Scotland and England
had begun to unravel. The Kirk would not hear Tombes's complaint.
The implication to be drawn Tombes opposed the truth.
Tombes had only tried to act according to his conscience and in
harmony with his understanding of what the Scriptures required of him to
seek restoration. Seeing nothing else could be gained by keeping the
matter private, and since Baillie's work was already in print, Tombes
published the work written in 1645 as his reply to Robert Baillie. It
was called An Addition to the Apology For the two Treatises
concerning Infant-Baptisme (1652).59
Antipaedobaptism was on the minds of churchmen in
England. At the Oxford Act, the annual academic convocation at
the University in that city, in July 1652, Henry Savage delivered a
dissertation on Tombes's antipaedobaptist views. The work was
published in 1655 in its original Latin after Tombes published his reply.
Savage's work was entitled Thesis Doctoris Savage
nempe paedobaptismum esse licitum, confirmatio, contra refutationem
mri Tombes.60 Tombes's reply to Savage was published in London
as Refutatio Positionis ejusq; Confirmationis Paedobaptistmum
esse licitum affirmantis ab Henrico Savage SS.T.D. Coll.
Ball.61 This exchange is noted for its pointed brevity. It must be said, however,
that Tombes had not yet finished his full review of
Antipaedobaptism when Savage decided to criticise his views.
Others took up the paedobaptist mantle to publish more
works against Tombes. In 1653 and 1654 works came from Thomas
Blake,62 John Howe of Lynn,63
and a work that gives insight into the form
and content of the public disputations of the day, published by
John Cragge, though often misattributed to Tombes in bibliographies,
A Publick Dispute betwixt John Tombes, respondent, John Cragge
and H. Vaughan, opponents, touching Infant
Baptism.64
Tombes published a response to this specific work in
short time. He called it A Plea of Anti-paedobaptists against, the
vanity and falshood of scribled papers, entitled, The Anabaptists Anatomiz'd
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and silenc'd in a publique dispute... betwixt John Tombes, John
Cragg, and Henry Vaughan, touching
infant-baptism.65 He also
published the second part of his complete review as
Antipaedobaptism: or, the second part of the full review of the dispute concerning
Infant-Baptism.66 In this work Tombes engaged the writings old and new,
those published in books and sent to him as personal letters, of
Stephen Marshall,67 Richard
Baxter,68 Thomas Blake,69 Thomas Cobbet,
John Cotton, Nathaniel Homes, Robert Baillie, Daniel Featley,
John Brinsley, Cuthbert Sydenham, Henry Hammond, and Thomas Fuller.
This Second Part provoked exponentially more responses.
In 1655 and 1656 more works came forth to deal
with Tombes's arguments, attacks, and conjectures with greater
specificity. Tombes's foe of ten plus years, Robert Baillie, published a
work written in 1645 entitled The Disswasive from the Errours of the
time70 along with A vindication from the exceptions of Mr. Cotton and
Mr. Tombes.71 Another mentioned in the
Second Part published as a review of his own was Henry Hammond,
The Baptizing of Infants Reviewed, and Defended from the exceptions of Mr. Tombes,
in Antipedobaptisme.72 Henry Savage's work on Tombes from the
Oxford Convocation of 1652 was published.73
John Cragge replied with The Arraignment and Conviction of Anabaptism; or a Reply to
Master Tombes his Plea for
Anti-paedobaptists.74 James Nayler,
the Quaker, brought forth the provocative title
The Foot yet in a Snare in reply to an essay Tombes had published in a work by John
Tolderuy.75 Even in Ireland, Tombes's ideas were considered a danger.
Samuel Winter preached, then published The summe of diverse
sermons preached in Dublin, before the Lord Deputie Fleetwood...
wherein the doctrine of Infant-Baptism is asserted and the main objections
of Mr. Tombes, Mr. Fisher, Mr. Blackwood and others
Answered.76
There was a single event that prompted much of the
literary output of those years. In 1654 by an executive act of the Lord
Protector, Oliver Cromwell, Tombes was declared one of the "triers"
for approbation of ministers. This was a high profile position in
the Commonwealth period and politics. Tombes was one of
thirty-eight central triers charged to examine ministers who applied for pulpits
| ||||
Tombes's Polemic and the Literature Produced
| ||
as to their fitness for
ministry.77 Perhaps the question in some
minds was, "How could an antipaedobaptist be fit to try others?"
Tombes's work as a trier was not without its controversy. A royalist,
Anthony Sadler, was examined for the ministry by Tombes and Philip Nye.
Sadler did not like the treatment he received from their hands so
he penned Inquisitio Anglicana: or the disguise discovered,
showing the proceedings of the commissioners at White Hall, for the
approbation of ministers, in the examinations of A.
Sadler.78
From 1657 onward there were greater common foes for
the Puritan and Reformed party to fight: Catholicism,
Quakerism, Antinomianism and subtle variations on the Reformed doctrine
of justification by faith alone. There were political questions in the
air as well. In this transitional context, Tombes
published Antipaedobaptism; or the third part. Being a full review of the
dispute concerning infant baptism.79
In this work alone, Tombes interacted with arguments from thirty-one writers who sent letters or
published works on the matter. Tombes had exhausted the arguments
for antipaedobaptism and had answered to his own satisfaction the
concerns of his detractors. There was but one man who still
purposed, yet again, to engage Tombes on the issue, Richard Baxter.
On 4 May 1656, Baxter preached a sermon which
presented ten reasons for the practise of Infant Baptism. Tombes, upon
perusing the notes sent to him by Baxter, wrote
Felo de Se. or Mr. Richard Baxters
Self-destroying....80
The time between replies shows the
urgency of the debate had been lost. Tombes was amazed that
Baxter had not acquiesced at all. Tombes was nonplussed that Baxter
still believed, "...[T]hat after 1625 years use of Christian Baptism,
the Ministers of the Gospel should be as yet
unresolved".81 He was compelled to reply.
In the same year Tombes presented a more popular work
to the public. Dropping his rigid scholastical methodology for the
second time, he produced A Short Catechism about
Baptism.82 In forty questions and answers Tombes presented a popular argument for
his Antipaedobaptist convictions in another genre. He thus
presented convictions with thirty-two years of maturation.
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Antipaedobaptism in the Thought of John Tombes
| ||||
Religious freedoms would wane as Cromwell died and
his son, Richard, after proving himself inept at running the
Commonwealth, resigned. Charles II had allowed for religious toleration
in the Declaration at Breda, but that too came to naught. The
openness wherein the debate on baptism thrived would come to a halt.
Restraints and conformity in religion became part and parcel of the
restored monarchy. Tombes, as a matter of conscience, could not
conform theologically to the expectations implied in the Anglican
Settlement after 1660. Therefore he laid down his living, repudiating
his ordination, to live as a lay communicant in the National Church.
His belief in the authority of Scripture for all areas of thought and
life prompted his position as regards the restored King. Tombes wrote
a controversial work entitled A Serious Consideration of the oath
of the King's Supremacy.83 Coming from a former Cromwellian
Trier, this seemed folly. It showed Tombes to be a man of conviction,
not of mere convenience. This work eventually won Tombes an
audience with King Charles II, through Lord
Clarendon.84
The breakdown of prejudice against Tombes is seen in
the commendations prefixed to two of Tombes's other works in 1660.
His major disputant a decade before was asked to commend
Tombes's anti-Catholic85 and
anti-Quaker86 books to the reading public. In
his prefatory comments in True Old Light, Baxter wrote:
...[T]he reverend author hath very judiciously handled in this Treatise,
and therefore I shall say no more of it. The truth is here opened (to the showing
of their errours) with great Scripture evidence; which impartially
considered, may easily convince all that believe the Scriptures: And make it appear
that the Light that is in these men is Darknesse; (Luke 11. 35.) Though the
difference, and too-eager Disputations between the Reverend Author and my
self, about the point of Infant-Baptism, be well known, yet it is our desire that it
be as much known, that we desire to hold the Unity of the Spirit in the bond
of Peace; as Members of the same Head and Body, uniting our force for
the common Truths against the pernicious adversaries thereof: And though
we own not each other, or our selves, the discerned errours in doctrine and
life, which through human frailty we may be guilty of; Nevertheless, whereto
we have already attained, we desire to walk by the same Rule, and mind the
same things; holding that if in any thing we be otherwise minded, God shall
reveal even this unto us.87
| ||||
Tombes's Polemic and the Literature Produced
| ||
To show resolution in the face of hostile theological
opinion, Baxter continued:
I have already told the Episcopal Brethren, that Bishop Usher and I did
fully agree in half an hour, and therefore it is not long of us, that our wound is
yet unhealed. And (though I never treated with Mr. Tombes about such a
matter) I am confident that he and I should agree in one daies treaty, upon terms
of communion, charity, and forebearance, among those of several waies.
And therefore if we continued unhealed, let the shame and horror lie on them
that are obstinate in their uncharitable
waies.88
Tombes did not publish publicly against paedobaptism
again for sixteen years. At that time, 1675, he wrote
A Just Reply.89 This work answered objections brought to the fore by Mr.
Wills90 and Mr. Blinman. Baxter used the publication of this work to publish
his largest work on the issue, More Proofs of Infants
Church-membership and Consequently their Right to Baptism: Or a Second
Defence of Our Infant Rights and Mercies. In Three
Parts.91 In the subtitle, Baxter wrote:
The first is, The plain Proof of God's Statute, or Covenant for Infants
Church-membership from the Creation, and the Continuation of it till the
Institution of Baptism; with the Defence of the Proof against the Frivolous Exceptions
of Mr. Tombes. And a Confutation of Mr. Tombes his Arguments against
Infants Church-membership....92
John Tombes died on 22 May, 1676. Within months,
Baxter published the final chapter in the exchange with Tombes. He
produced Review of the State of Christian
Infants.93 With Tombes was almost buried a now neglected chapter in the rich history of
Puritan theology the story of antipaedobaptism in the theology of
the archetypical Anglican Antipaedobaptist.
There are two ways in which men seek to discover
knowledge: the way of ideology and the way of phenomenology.
What started as a study of men's ideas within the walls of the
University soon drove Tombes to split theological hairs because of the
crisis that ensued. It was this phenomenon that produced sarcasm,
overstatement, slander and governmental intrigue. Tombes was not
an ideologue arguing a point for the sake of his own prestige. He sought
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Antipaedobaptism in the Thought of John Tombes
| ||||
the truth within dispute, believing that ideas have consequences.
Right belief, for Tombes within his theological understanding, caused
right living; wrong belief, otherwise.
Notes for Chapter Two:
1. Tombes, Apology, p. 6.
2. Tombes, Apology, p. 7.
3. This date corresponds to January 1643 according to the
modern reckoning. In the seventeenth century, they changed the year
in March. So, January 1643 (modern reckoning) is chronologically
after July 1643 (old reckoning).
4. Tombes, Apology, p. 8.
5. Tombes, Apology, p. 9.
6. Tombes, Apology, p. 9. Tombes stated this work was less
than forty lines long.
7. Principally the original Latin
Exercitation and the one page letter to Scudder.
8. Tombes, Apology, p. 9. See also William Kiffen,
To Mr. Thomas Edwards [A Public Challenge of a
Sermon], n.p., 1645. This was Thomas Edwards author of the controversial
Gangraena; or a Catalogue and Discovery of Many Errours, Heresies, Blasphemies,
and pernicious Practises of the Sectaries of this Time vented and acted
in England in these four last years, London, 16 February 1646.
9. Tombes, Apology, p. 10.
10. Tombes, Apology, p. 10.
11. Tombes, Apology, p. 10.
12. Tombes, Apology, p. 10. John White,
Infant Baptisme proved Lawfull by Scripture, London, 1644.
13. Stephen Marshall, B.D., A Sermon on the Baptizing of
Infants; preached in the Abbey-Church at Westminster, at the Morning
Lecture, appointed by the Honourable House of
Commons, London. 1645. Tombes first read the sermon sometime in 1644.
14. Tombes, Apology, P. 10.
15. Tombes, Apology, p. 11.
| ||||
Tombes's Polemic and the Literature Produced
| ||
16. Tombes, Apology, pp. 11f.
17. Tombes, Apology, p. 12
18. Tombes, Apology. p. 12
19. Tombes, Apology, p. 13.
20. Tombes, Apology, p. 13. The text of the accompanying
introductory letter is included in the text, pp. 13f.
21. John Cotton, The Groundes and Endes of the Baptisme of
the Children of the Faithfull, Boston, 1644. Part 3, Section 3, pp.
42f. Additional correspondence between Tombes and Cotton is housed
at the American Antiquarian Society, Salisbury Street, Worcester,
Massachusetts, USA. These exchanges show the mid-seventeenth
century interdependence between England and her colonies. The
intellectual life in England had consequences for Colonial America.
See also, Baxter, Saint's Rest, Introduction, where he appeals to
certain miraculous births in New England as a sign of God's judgment
on Anabaptists in New England.
22. Tombes, Apology, p. 14.
23. Tombes, Apology, p. 15.
24. John Tombes, Two Treatises and an Appendix to them
Concerning Infant-Baptisme, The former Treatise being an Exercitation
presented to the Chair-man of a Committee of the Assembly of Divines.
The later an Examen of the Sermon of Mr Stephen Marshall,
about Infant-Baptisme, in a letter sent to him, London, 1645. The
Appendix was a short work to show Colossians 2:11, 12 "proves not
Infant-Baptisme".
25. Thomas Bakewell, A Justification of Two Points now in
Controversy with the Anabaptists concerning baptism; with a briefe
answer to Master Tombes argument, in his Exercitation about
Infants baptisme. Also a briefe answer to Captaine Hobsons arguments
in his Falacy of Infants baptisme, London, 1646. Although the
title page has only T. B. to denominate the author, Wing attributes
the work to Bakewell. This is uncertain. The arguments addressed
are closer to the concerns of Thomas Bedford, yet the printer is the
same as Bakewell used on other occasions within the same decade.
Neither Tombes, nor Hobson, engage this workan anomalous reaction
| ||
Antipaedobaptism in the Thought of John Tombes
| ||||
by Tombes. Bakewell wrote this as "a briefe Answer to
Master Tombes twelve doubtful Arguments against it in his
Exercitation about Infants' Baptisme".
26. John Geree, M.A. Late of Tewkesbury,
Vindiciae Paedobaptismi: or a vindication of infant baptism in a full answer to Mr. Tombs
his twelve arguments alleaged against it in his Exercitation and
whatever is rational in his answer to Mr. Marshals
sermon, London, 1646.
27. Nathaniel Homes (sometimes Holmes),
A Vindication of Baptizing Beleevers Infants. In some animadversions upon Mr. Tombes
his ex-exercitations about infant-baptisme, London, 1646.
28. Steven Marshall, B.D., A Defence of Infant-Baptism: in
Answer to two Treatise, and an Appendix to them concerning it; Lately
published by Jo. Tombes. Wherein that Controversie is fully
discussed, the ancient and generally received use of it from the Apostles
dayes, until the Anabaptists sprung up in Germany, manifested. The
Arguments for it from the holy Scripture maintained, and objections
against it answered, London, 1646.
29. John Saltmarsh, The Smoke in the Temple. Wherein is a
designe for peace and reconciliation of believers of the several opinions
of these lines about ordinances, to a fore bearance of each other
in love, and meeknesse, and humility, etc. With one argument for
liberty of conscience, etc., London, 1646.
30. John Ley, Prebendary of Chester,
Light for Smoak, or a ...reply to Smoke in the
Temple, London, 1646.
31. William Hussey, of Chislehurst,
An Answer to Mr. Tombes, His special Examination of
Infants-Baptisme, London, 1646.
32. Thomas Blake, Mr. Blakes Answer to Mr. Tombes his letter.
In Vindication of the birth-priviledge or covenant holinesse of
beleevers and their issue, together with the right of infants to
baptisme, London. 1646. The work included prefaces by Edmund Calamy
and Richard Vines. From the content of this work, Blake was
responding to the letter previously mentioned as Tombes's fourth
unpublished work-the one page letter of forty lines in quarto. Blake is
misattributed as the author of A Moderate Answer to these Two Questions,
1. Whether ther be sufficient Ground in Scripture to Warrant the Con
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Tombes's Polemic and the Literature Produced
| ||
science of a Christian to present his infants to the sacrament of
Baptism: 2. Whether it be not sinfull for a Christian to receive the
sacrament in a mixt Assembly, London, 1645. The title page simply
attributes the work to T.B. Alexander Gordon in "Blake,
Thomas", DNB, names this as a work by Blake as does Donald Wing in
Short Title Catalogue 1641-1700, MLA, New York, 1972, p. 177.
Holifield argues for Thomas Bedford as the proper source of this work in
the appendix of The Covenant Sealed, Yale University Press, New
Haven and London, 1974, p. 231. Bedford does not engage
Tombes directly.
33. John Tombes, B.D. An Apology or Plea for the Two
Treatises, and Appendix to them concerning Infant-Baptisme;
Published Decemb. 15, 1645. Against the unjust charges, complaints, and
censures of Doctor Nathaniel Homes, Mr Iohn Geree, Mr
Stephen Marshall, Mr John Ley, and Mr William Hussey; together with
a Postscript by way of reply to Mr Blakes answer to Mr Tombes
his letter, and Mr Edmund Calamy, and Mr Richard Vines Preface to it.
Wherein the principall heads of the Dispute concerning
Infant-Baptism are handled, and the insufficiency of the writings opposed to
the two Treatises manifested, London, 1646.
34. Tombes, Apology, Inside cover.
35. T. L. Underwood, "John Tombes" in Greaves and Zaller,
Biographical Dictionary, Vol. III, p. 245f.
36. John Tombes, Praecursor, or a Forerunner to a large Review
of the Dispute concerning Infant-Baptism; wherein many things
both Doctrinall and personal are cleared : about which Mr. Richard
Baxter, In a Book Mock-titled Plain Scripture Proof of Infants Church
Membership and Baptism, hath Darkened the
Truth, London, 1652. First unnumbered page in the initial dedication.
37. Baillie, Robert. Anabaptism, the True Fountain of
Independency, Antinomy, Brownisme, and Familisme, and most of the other
Errours, which for the time doe trouble the Church of England,
Unsealed, London, 1647.
38. John Tombes, An Addition to the Apology For the two
Treatises concerning Infant-Baptisme, Published December 15. 1645. In which
| ||
Antipaedobaptism in the Thought of John Tombes
| ||||
the Author is vindicated from 21. unjust Criminations in the 92.
page book of Robert Baillie Minister of Glasgow, Intitled Anabaptisme.
And sundry material points concerning the Covenant,
Infants-interest in it, and Baptisme by it, Baptism by an unbaptized person,
Dipping, Erastianism, and Church-Government, are argued, in a
letter (now enlarged) sent in September 1647. to him,
by..., London, 1652.
39. Tombes, Addition, p. 38.
40. Tombes, Addition, fourth unnumbered page.
41. John Tombes, An Addition to the Apology For the two
Treatises concerning Infant-Baptisme, Published December 15. 1645. In
which the Author is vindicated from 21. unjust Criminations in the 92.
page book of Robert Baillie Minister of Glasgow, Intitled Anabaptisme.
And sundry material points concerning the Covenant,
Infants-interest in it, and Baptisme by it, Baptism by an unbaptized person,
Dipping, Erastianism, and Church-Government, are argued, in a
letter (now enlarged) sent in September 1647. to him,
by..., London, 1652.
42. William Hussey, A 1st Provocation of Master Tombes to
make good his generall charge against Mr. W. Husseys satisfaction to
his scepticall exercitation, London, 1647.
43. John Geree, Vindiciae Vindicarum; or a vindication of Infant
Baptism from the exceptions of Mr. Harrison in his
Paedobaptism Oppugned and from the exceptions of Mr.
Tombes, London, 1646.
44. Tombes came to Bewdley because, as a chapel-at-ease, he
would not be required to baptise.
45. Benjamin Coxe, Some Mistaken Scriptures Sincerely
Explained, in a letter, to one infected with Pelagian
errours, London, 1643. In the preface, Coxe gives the context for the work as being his
imprisonment after a public disputation on baptism with Baxter.
Whether or not the dispute led to Coxe's incarceration is a matter of
historical interpretation. Whether or not Baxter is the "friend" to whom
Coxe wrote this brief work is also a disputable matter.
46. Tombes, Praecursur, p. 15ff (Sect. VII). And, "A Discussion
of Mr. Richard Baxter's Ten Reasons of his Practise of about
Infant-Baptism, delivered in a Sermon at Beudley; on Colos. 2. 11."
in Antipaedobaptism, Part Three. London. 1659. Tombes did not pub
| ||||
Tombes's Polemic and the Literature Produced
| ||
lish this reply for nine years as part of his final part of the
comprehensive review. See also, Richard Baxter, "The true History of
the Conception and Nativity of this Treatise: being the Authors
Apology for his attempt of this unpleasant task" in
Plain Scripture Proof of Infants Church-membership and Baptism: being arguments
prepared for (and partly managed in) the publick Dispute with Mr. Tombes
at Bewdley on the first day of Jan. 1649. With a full reply to what
he then answered, and what is contained in his sermon since
preached, in his Printed Books, his M.S. on 1 Cor. 7. 14. which I saw,
against Mr. Marshall, against these Arguments. With a Reply to his
Valedictory Oration at Bewdley; and a corrective against his
Antidote, London, 1656. Fourth Edition (First Edition, 1650). Thirteenth
unnumbered page. Found immediately after the twin letters to the
Churches at Kidderminster and Bewdley. The fourth edition includes
Baxter's work, Plain Scripture Proof, and another ten smaller works.
Pagination is standardised from page one of the main work.
47. T. L. Underwood, "Tombes, John", in Greaves and Zaller,
Biographical Dictionary of British Radical, p. 245.
48. Anthony Wood, from "Tombes, John", in
Athenae Oxonienses, new edition, 1813-20, found in the British Biographical Archive,
London, K C Saur, microfilm plates 427-428.
49. A Discourse of Infant-Baptism, By way of Dialogue,
between Paedobaptista, A Minister, for Infant Baptism.
Antipaedobaptista, his Friend, against it. Aporeticus, An Ingenious
Doubter, London, 1698. p. 54. This work is an honest attempt to deal with the
lingering issues at the end of the seventeenth century. It also shows
some adaptation on the part of the author to antipaedobaptist
concerns. Especially, therein is found a repudiation of the prejudicial use
of alleged connections between Continental Anabaptists
and Antipaedobaptists, p. 57f. An example of this "copy'd" use
of Tombes's argumentation is found in Samuel Chandler and
William Leigh, A Dialogue between a Paedo-Baptist, and an
Anti-Paedo-Baptist: Containing the strength of Arguments Offered on both
sides at the Plymouth Disputation: with The Addition of a few more
Arguments, then ready to be offered, in Vindication of
Infant-Baptism,
| ||
Antipaedobaptism in the Thought of John Tombes
| ||||
London, 1699. p. 6ff.
50. John Tombes, An Antidote Against the venome of a Passage,
in the 5th direction of the Epistle Dedicatory to the whole Book of
Mr. Richard Baxter Teacher at Kederminster in Worcestershire,
intitled, The Saints Everlasting Rest, containing a Satyricall invective
against Anabaptists, London, 1650. p. 28. In the original minutes of
the convocation in the Bodleian Library, Oxford, see section 4, p. 9.
51. Baxter, Richard, The Saints Everlasting
Rest, London, 1650. Sixth unnumbered page.
52. Tombes, Antidote, London, 1650
53. Richard Baxter, Plain Scripture
Proof, fourth edition, London, 1656. First edition, 1650.
54. Tombes, Praecursor, London, 1650.
55. Baxter, Plain Scripture
Truth, fourth edition.
56. John Tombes. Antipaedobaptism, or No Plain nor Obscure
Scripture Proof of Infants Baptism or Church Membership. Being the
first part of the full review of the dispute about Infant
Baptism...whereby the expositions and arguings ... for infant baptism by Mr.
Stephen Marshall, Mr. John Geree, Mr. Baxter, Mr. T. Cobbet, Mr. T.
Blake, Mr. J. Church; and the arguments of Mr. N. Stephens...are fully
refuted, London, 1652.
57. Thomas Cobbet, A Just Vindication of the Covenant and
Church-Estate of Children of Church-Members as also their right
unto Baptisme: wherein such things as have been brought by divers to
the contrary, especially by Ioh. Spilsbury, A.R., Ch. Blackwood, and
H. Den are revides and answered: hereunto is annexed a refutation of
a certain pamphlet styled The plain and wel-grounded treatise
touching baptism, London, 1648.
58. Tombes, Addition, p. A2.
59. Tombes, Addition, London, 1652.
60. Henry Savage. Thesis Doctoris Savage nempe
paedobaptismum esse licitum, confirmatio, contra refutationem mri
Tombes, Oxford, 1655.
61. John Tombes, Refutatio Positionis ejusq;
Confirmationis Paedobaptistmum esse licitum affirmantis ab Henrico Savage SS.T.D.
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Tombes's Polemic and the Literature Produced
| ||
Coll. Ball. in Comitioorum Vesperiis Oxon. Mense Julio, anni, 1652,
London, 1653.
62. Thomas Blake, Three Scripture Texts, by John Tombes in the
first part of his Antipaedobaptism solely handled and totally
perverted, fully vindicated, London, 1653.
63. J[ohn] H[owe], of Lynn, diatribh peri
paido-baptismou: or, a Consideration of Infant Baptism; wherein the grounds of it are
laid down, and the validity of them discussed, and many things of
Mr. Tombes about it scanned, etc., London, 1654.
64. John Cragge, M.A., of Lantilio-Pertholy,
A Publick Dispute betwixt John Tombes respondent, John Cragge and H. Vaughan,
opponents, touching infant baptism ... Also a sermon ... wherein the
necessity of dipping is refuted, and infant baptism asserted.
Frontispiece bears another title more popularly used in bibliographic
information: The Anabaptists Anatomiz'd and Silenced in a Publick
Dispute, London, 1654. Reprinted 1741. John Tombes's name
appears first in the title. Therefrom the wrong implication for attribution
has been made. The work should be attributed to Cragge. The
purpose on the work is to promote paedobaptism. Tombes was
an antipaedobaptist.
65. John Tombes, A Plea for Anti-paedobaptists against, the
vanity and falshood of scribled papers, entitled, The Anabaptists
Anatomiz'd and silenc'd in a publique dispute ... betwixt John Tombes,
John Cragg, and Henry Vaughan, touching
infant-baptism, London, 1654.
66. John Tombes, Anti-paedobaptism, or the Second Part Of the
full Review of the Dispute Concerning Infant-Baptism: In which the
invalidity of Arguments inferring a Duty from a positive Rite of the
Old Testament concerning a positive Rite of the New, by reason of
Analogy between them, is shewed; and the Argument against
Infant-baptism, from Christs institution, Matth. 28. 19. the sayings and
practise in the New Testament is made good against the writings of Mr.
Stephen Marshall, Mr. Richard Baxter, Mr. Thomas Blake, Mr. Thomas
Cobbet, Mr. John Cotton, Dr. Nathaniel Homes, Mr. Robert Bailee, Dr.
Daniel Featley, Mr. John Brinsley, Mr. Cuthbert Sydenham, Dr.
Henry Hammond, Mr. Thomas Fuller, and others, London, 1654.
| ||
Antipaedobaptism in the Thought of John Tombes
| ||||
67. Marshall, Defence.
68. Baxter, subsequent editions of
Plain Scripture Proof.
69. Blake, Three Scripture
texts.
70. Robert Bailey [Baillie, or Bayley],
The Disswasive from the Errours of the time vindicated from the exceptions of Mr. Cotton
and Mr. Tombes, n.p., 1655.
71. Baillie, Disswasive, n.p. 1655.
72. Henry Hammond, D.D. The Baptizing of Infants Reviewed,
and Defended from the exceptions of Mr. Tombes, in
Antipedobaptisme, London, 1655.
73. Savage, Thesis.
74. John Cragg[e], The Arraignment and Conviction of
Anabaptism; or a Reply to Master Tombes his Plea for
Anti-paedobaptists, London, 1656.
75. James Nayler, The Foot yet in a Snare... discovered in answer
to John Tombes. London. 1656. John Tombes, in John Tolderuy,
The Foot out of the Snare, or a Restoration of the Inhabitants of Zion
into their place, London, 1655.
76. Samuel Winter, The summe of diverse sermons preached
in Dublin, before the Lord Deputie Fleetwood ... wherein the
doctrine of Infant-Baptism is asserted and the main objections of Mr.
Tombes, Mr. Fisher, Mr. Blackwood and others
Answered, London, 1656.
77. Protector and Council, An Ordinance appointing
commissioners for approbation of public
preachers, London, 1654.
78. Anthony Sadler, Inquisitio Anglicana: or the disguise
discovered, showing the proceedings of the commissioners at White Hall, for
the approbation of ministers, in he examinations of A.
Sadler, London, 1654. Sadler was eventually placed after the Restoration of the
Monarchy.
79. John Tombes, Anti-Paedobaptism: or the Third Part. Being,
A full Review of the Dispute concerning Infant-Baptism. In which,
the Arguments for Infant-Baptism from the Covenant and Initial
Seal, Infants Visible Church-membership, Antiquity of Infant-Baptism,
are repelled. and the Writings of Mr. Stephen Marshal, Mr. Richard
Baxter, Mr. John Geree, Mr. Thomas Blake, Mr. Thomas Cobbet,
Dr, Nathaniel
| ||||
Tombes's Polemic and the Literature Produced
| ||
Homes, Mr. John Drew, Mr Josiah Church, Mr. William Lyford,
Dr. Daniel Featley, Mr. John Brinsley, Mr. Cuthbert Sidenham, Mr.
William Carter, Mr. Samuel Rutherford, Mr. John Crag, Dr.
Henry Hammond, Mr. John Cotton, Mr. Thomas Fuller, Mr John
Stalham, Mr. Thomas Hall, and others, are examined; and many points
about the Covenants, and Seals, and other Truths of weight, are
handled, London, 1657.
80. John Tombes, Felo de Se. or Mr. Richard Baxters
Self-destroying; Manifested In twenty Arguments against Infant-Baptism,
Gathered out of his own Writing, in his Second Disputation of Right
to Sacraments, London, 1659.
81. Baxter quoted by Tombes in
Felo de Se, p. A2.
82. John Tombes, A Short Catechism about
Baptism, London, 1659. This work is reproduced in the appendix of this work.
83. John Tombes, A Serious Consideration of the oath of the
King's Supremacy: wherein these six propositions are asserted. I. That
some swearing is lawful. 2. That some promissory oaths are lawful.
3. That a promissory oath of allegiance and due obedience to a king
is lawful. 4. That the King in his realm, is the onely supreme
governour over all persons. 5. That the King is the governour of the realm,
as well in all spiritual or ecclesiastical things, or causes, as temporal.
6. That the jurisdictions, priviledges, preeminences, and
authorities in that oath, may be assisted and
defended, London, 1660.
84. A. J. Gordon, Tombes, John (1603?-1676) in
Dictionary of National Biography, Smith, Elder and Co., London. 1909. Vol. XIX,
p. 930, col. 2. Lord Clarendon introduced Tombes to Charles II in 1664.
85. John Tombes, Romanism Discussed; or an answer to the
first nine articles of H[enry] T[urberville] his manual of
controversies, London, 1660.
86. John Tombes, True Old-Light Exalted above pretended
new-light; a Treatise of Jesus Christ, as He is the light that enlightens every
one that comes into the World. Against the Quaker, Arminian,
etc..., London, 1660.
87. Richard Baxter in Tombes,
True Old Light, ninth page of preface.
88. Richard Baxter in Tombes,
True Old Light, tenth page of preface.
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Antipaedobaptism in the Thought of John Tombes
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89. John Tombes, A Just Reply to the Books... of Mr. Wills, and
Mr. Blinman: in a letter, London, 1675.
90. H. Wills. An Essay tending to issue the controversie about
Infant Baptism, London, n.d.
91. Richard Baxter, More Proofs of Infants Church-membership
and Consequently their Right to Baptism: Or a Second Defence of
Our Infant Rights and Mercies. In Three Parts. The first is, The
plain Proof of God's Statute, or Covenant for Infants
Church-membership from the Creation, and the Continuation of it till the Institution
of Baptism; with the Defence of the Proof against the Frivolous
Exceptions of Mr. Tombes. And a Confutation of Mr. Tombes his
Arguments against Infants Church-membership..., London, 1675.
92. Baxter, More Proof, Title page.
93. Richard Baxter, Review of the State of Christian Infants.
Whether they should be entered in Covenant With God by Baptism, and
be Visible Members of His Church, and have any Covenant-Right
to Pardon and Salvation? Or whether Christ, the Saviour of the
World, hath shut all Mankind out of his Visible Kingdom, and
Covenant-Rights and Hopes, till they come to Age? And whether he did so
from the beginning of the world, or after his Incarnation? Occasioned
by the Importunity of Mr. E. Hutchinson, (and of Mr. Danvers, and
Mr. Tombes,( who called him to this review in order to his Reaction.
An Impartial Reading is humbly requested, of those Dissenters who
would not be found Despisers of holy Truth, not such as judge before
they hear, London, 1676.
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