A keen controversialist, he wrote many treatises, with a general but learned concern to defend Anglican orthodoxy.
Doctrine and the Church His first book was
The Irenicum (1659) advocating compromise with the
Presbyterians; following a Latitudinarian approach, he there shows the influence of
John Selden and takes a close interest in the
synagogue as a model of church structure. The philosophical basis was
natural law and the
state of nature. The arguments of the
Irenicum were still live in the 1680s, when
Gilbert Rule produced a
Modest Answer. It was followed by
Origines Sacrae, Or, A Rational Account of the Grounds of Christian Faith, as to the Truth and Divine Authority of the Scriptures, and Matters Therein Contained (1662) and
A Rational Account of the Grounds of Protestant Religion (1664). It included an attack on
Catholicism, and
Edward Meredith replied on the Catholic side.
A Discourse Concerning the Idolatry Practised in the Church of Rome (1671) formed part of a controversy with the
recusant Catholic
Thomas Godden and noted Church scholar
Serenus de Cressy.
The Mischief of Separation (1687) originally a sermon, was followed up by
The Unreasonableness of Separation: Or, An Impartial Account of the History, Nature and Pleas of the Present Separation from the Communion of the Church of England (1680). These attacks on the separatists among non-conformists prompted a large-scale response from dissenters, many of whom were disappointed with the harsher line from an Anglican who had in the past held out an olive branch. His opponents included
Richard Baxter and
John Owen.
John Howe took the line that "latitude" was not compatible with a "mean narrow" approach. Stillingfleet was also criticised from the conforming side, for coming too close to the arguments of
Thomas Hobbes.
An Answer to Some Papers (1685) attempted to deal with the embarrassing publication of papers, allegedly written by the King,
Charles II, arguing that one true church was that of Roman Catholicism. In the ensuing controversy, he issued
A Vindication of the Answer to some Late Papers (1687) attacking
John Dryden, whom he called a "grim logician". Dryden retaliated, and incorporated the "grim logician" phrase as self-description in his poem
The Hind and the Panther (1687), which alludes to Stillingfleet.
Philosophical controversy A Letter to a Deist (1677) was the first prolonged attack on
deism to appear in English. It also engaged with the thought of
Baruch Spinoza, in
Tractatus Theologico-Politicus, though he was named only as a "late author mightily in vogue". In 1697, Stillingfleet issued
A Discourse in Vindication of the Doctrine of the Trinity (1697) It had three intentions: repelling the
Unitarians, shoring up the unity of the orthodox trinitarians, and doctrinal defence of the Trinity. Under the third heading, Stillingfleet took on
John Locke, and his
Essay on Human Understanding. Stillingfleet engaged in a debate through correspondence (later published) with Locke. He argued in favor of
dualism, and claimed that Locke's
Essay argued against dualism as he understood it. He also considered that the
epistemology of the
Essay opened the door to
Unitarianism. Locke himself had taken an interest in Stillingfleet (with
James Tyrrell and Sylvester Brounower) from 1681. The controversy drew in the playwright
Catherine Cockburn, who wrote in defence of Locke, but to the detriment of her career as author.
Antiquarian scholarship Origines Sacrae (1663) began with a comprehensive analysis of flaws in ancient historians, as a way of defending the account in the
Book of Genesis. It argued against the
Pre-Adamite theories of
Isaac La Peyrère, and took a very critical line with the older theories of ancient British origins, and the writings of
Annius of Viterbo. Another work going back to the roots was
Origines Britannicae: Or, The Antiquities of the British Churches (1685). The
Discourse of the True Antiquity of London appeared in 1704 bundled with
The Second Part of Ecclesiastical Cases. It was a work of high scholarship on
Roman London; it however ignored the new archaeological evidence that was available but not yet in literary form. ==Notes and references==