Selected quad for the lemma: blood_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
blood_n body_n bread_n transubstantiation_n 7,578 5 11.1962 5 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A01008 A plea for the reall-presence Wherein the preface of Syr Humfrey Linde, concerning the booke of Bertram, is examined and censured. Written by I.O. vnto a gentleman his friend. Floyd, John, 1572-1649.; Lynde, Humphrey, Sir. 1624 (1624) STC 11113; ESTC S115112 24,472 65

There are 8 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

the letter of Gods word rather then the seeming of sense What can be more absurd or what also more wicked then to say as Syr Humfrey doth that the Reall Presence that is the body of the son of God taken by fayth and really is a dead letter and a thing that killeth THE FIFTH POINT Concerning the iudgment of the Nynth Age about the litterall sense of Christ his word This is my Body FROM this litterall and expresse word of Christ Syr Humfrey dares appeale vnto the iudgment of the Christian Catholicke Roman Church of the nynth age wherein Bertram liued whō therefore he tearmes his Mother her worde he preferres before the word of Christ and commends her refusing the word of Christ as being but a dead letter euen (f) 3. Reg. 3. as one of the two strumpets that stroue before Salomon being the true mother of the liuing child did wel not to allow of the word of her fellow-strumpet offering her a dead body These are his wordes The (g) Preface fol. 6. lin 19. seq mother of the child although she were a strumpet yet would she by no meanes suffer her son to be deuided nor accept of a dead child though it was presented to her as her owne Bertrams mother the Catholicke church of this age although at the tyme of his byrth she had lost much of her wonted modesty yet would she not agree to haue her blessed Body of the Sacrament to be deuided or giuen by the halfes yea although what was offered her Christ told her it was her Body yet by no meanes would she allow of the dead letter which killeth but of the quickening spirit that giueth life Thus Syr Humfrey applyeth the Metaphore though he speake of the credit he hath or is like to haue in his Church yet I feare if he come to be tryed by some Puritan Classis he may receaue the like doome and disgrace as one M. Hockenell whome hauing preached before them for his approbation they reiected Vntill (h) B. Bācroft danger posit l. 3. cap. 14 he had taken more paynes at his booke because he iumped not meete in deliuering the Metaphore of his text For I dare say that neuer foule Metaphore was more vnhādsomly trimmed to the purpose then this is by syr Humfrey His comparing the Church vnto a strūpet saying that with time she lost much of her wonted and former modesty that is the pure profession of sauing truth is not this against christs expresse promise That (i) Ioā 14.17 and Matt. 28.20 Cypr. de vnit Eccl. Adulterari non potest sponsa Christi the spirit of truth should remayne with his Church for euer His reprehending the deuiding of the blessed Body of the Sacrament is it not most grosse vttered in direct tearmes against Christ his command Take (k) Luc. 22.17 deuide this among you This (l) 1. Cor. 41.24 is my body that is broken for you Against the practise of the primitiue Church The (m) 1. Cor 10.16 Act. 5.28 bread which we deuide is it not the communion or the body of our Lord yea against the Protestant English Church which deuides her blessed body of the sacrament her Eucharisticall loafe into halfes quartars yea sometymes into twēty or forty peeces His saying that Christ told the Church the Sacramēt was her body is it not incredible boldnes rather then not apply a foule Metaphore thus to chāge and effeminate Gods most holyword by changing his Body into her body But that which surpasseth in blasphemy all that can be spoken is to compare the word of Christ telling the Church This is my body with their words that presented a dead child to the mother of the liuing child which was the word only of her fellow-strumpet contesting with her and speaking falsly against her consciēce Thus openly doth Syr Humfrey professe that it is not the Church of Rome but Christ Iesus and his word with whom he and his Ptotestant Church standes at defiance about the Reall presence For although Christ himselfe telles the Church what is offered her in the Sacrament is his Body yet sayth he VVe Protestants will by no meanes beleeue nor need we beleeue him more then that mother beleeued her lying Stratagonist Verily rather then to oppose so openly and with so foule and irreuerent comparison disgrace our Sauiours word and this word the most sacred venebrable of all other This is my body they might with lesse shame and shew of blasphemy follow the councel that their Father M. Luther gaue thē VVhat (n) Luth. defens verb. coen tom 7. Wittemb fol. 411. haue you no wit You must venture Say then that the wordes This is my body were first writen in the margent and thence by some Papist thrust into the text For you haue a good rule to proue this and your rule is that that is not written which seemeth superflous vnto you Now without these wordes your supper is full and completly set downe in the Ghospell Christ tooke breade gaue thanks brake it and gaue it to his Disciples saying Doe this in remembrance of me These wordes alon cōtaine as much as you beleeue to wit that bread is to be eaten by fayth and remembrance of Christ his body passion and death Why then do you not raze these wordes This is my body out of your Bibles Cōmunion-books wherof you haue not any need or vse as touching the fayth and the celebration of your supper But because the high conceit of the Church Bertrams mother and his persuasion that she by no meanes would allow of the Reall presence or the litterall sense of Christs word This is my body is so great a scandall vnto Syr Humfrey I wil shew how much he is heerin deceaued and how earnest the Church of that age was for Transubstantiation and against the Protestant metaphoricall exposition by producing the verdicts of twelue principall Authours that then wrote Paschasius Corbeyensis Anno 880. In this Inquest Paschasius may iustly challenge the first place seeing he hath written a whole Treatise of this argument Pascha de corpor sang Domini c. 1. wherein he may seeme to confute the phrase of Bertram that in the Sacrament there is not the same flesh that was borne of the Virgin In this treatise there are as many verdicts for Transubstantiation as there are chapters or sentences but this one the first in his booke may suffice Although in the sacrament there is the figure of bread and wine yet after consecratiō it is to be beleeued that they are no other thinge or Substance but the Body and bloud of Christ Hence verity it selfe vnto his disciples sayth This is my flesh for the life of the world and that I may speake a thing yet more wonderful not any other flesh but that which was borne of the B. Virgin that suffered on the Crosse that rose vp from the graue This is the selfe same flesh
probable from what is certaine euident agreed vpon as will appeare by the proofe of these assertions First it is very probable that this booke of Bertram was written in the Nynth Age after Christ when Bertram liued For though there be not any ancient authour that maks mention therof none I say that liued and dyed before Luther for (d) See Possem his Apparatus Tritemius the auncientest of Syr Humfreys Iury and to whome he doth attribute most dyed since Luthers reuolt from the Church yet (e) See Paschas his booke de corpore sangui Domini tom 4. Bibliot SS PP Paschasius Abbot that liued in that age of Bertram writes in so direct opposition against this booke as it is likely he writ of purpose against it as will appeare probable vnto any that shall compare the two treatises togeather Whence I inferre that it is great want of iudgement in Syr Humfrey (f) fol. 4. lin 10. to contend that Paschas●us writ not against this book For heerby he ouerthrowes the very ground of all his discourse seeing Paschasius his writing against this booke is the only argument that the same was writtē about the tyme of the nynth Age after Christ affords some possibility that it might be Bertrams Secondly it is euident that the booke is darke doubtfull intricate For this is more then apparent vnto all them that are able to iudge and with any indifferency peruse the book And to omit diuers darke passages of his booke and particulerly where he (g) Vide l. Bertram in catalog Test verit l. 10. col 1602. seems to teach most cleerely the foolish and impious Paradoxe of Beza That (h) In cōcil Montis-belgart c contra Hessus p. Corpus Christi nō tantum efficacia sed etiam essentia tempore Abrahae extitit the body of Christ did truly and substantially exist before his incarnation in the wombe of the Virgin This is a manifest signe of Bertrams obscurity that euen some Catholikes thinke the book inclineth vnto the Sacramentarian doctrine against Transubstantiation on the other side euen Protestants acknowledge that the booke fauoureth Transubstantiatiō In so much as the famous Protestant historians of Magdeburge write Semina (i) Cont. 9. c 4. §. de caena col 212. transubstantiationis habet Bertramus Bertrams little booke conteyneth the seedes and originall ground of Transubstantiation Which is confirmed by the testimony of (k) De verbis institut Paschasius who writing against this booke doth testify that though in those dayes some spake obscurely about the Reall presence and out of ignorance erred yet sayth he no man hitherto hath openly denyed what the whole world doth beleeue and confesse to wit the Reall presence or the change of bread and wine into the body and bloud of our Lord. Thirdly it is agreed vpon that additions haue beene made vnto this book since the first writing therof in the nynth age For this no Catholicke denyes many Catholicks constantly affirme the parts of the book so dissonāt in doctrine the one from the other confirme The (l) Index expurg Belg. Non obscurè infusa inserta Doway-censure vnto which Syr Humfry doth appeale consents and giues sentence that the booke hath beene corrupted and that this is manifest Finally (m) Iosias Simler in Biblioth vniuer concord Gen. Protestants themselues confesse that when they (n) censura Duacē in Bertrā first printed the booke in this age to wit Coloniae anno 1532. that the same was printed with additions Additis Augustini Ambrosij Eusebij super ea re sententijs The sentences of Augustin Ambrose and Eusebe being added thereunto And if the sentences of Augustine Ambrose Hierome for in lieu of Eusebe they should haue sayd Hyerome out of whome some sentences are challenged in this treatise but none out of Eusebe if I say these sentences were added vnto the booke as Protestants confesse then also the inferences and consequences framed thereupon were added and consequently the greatest and most ill-sounding part of the booke Fourthly it is exceeding doubtfull whether Bertram were the Authour of this booke whereof neyther Syr Humfrey nor any man els hath brought so much as a good coniecturall proofe For though it be probable the booke was written in Bertrams age yet it doth not thereupon strayghte follow it was written by Bertram yea there be better coniectures for the contrarary For if Bertram had beene authour of this booke written against the Reall Presence as Syr Humfrey thinkes certainly Berengarius would haue named Bertram for his predecessour and which yet he neuer did For why not Bertram aswell as Ioannes Scotus that was in the same age with Bertram whose booke the sayd Berengarius did magnify because written doubtfully of the Reall presence calling him his maister and (o) Lanfrancus in libro cont Berenga extolling him aboue the more ancient Fathers Agayne if that booke had beene published in that age with Bertrams name Paschasius who wrote against that booke would not haue spared Bertrams name but haue written against him by name so to haue impayred his credit that otherwise might giue authority to the errour Specially seeing he named some of that age that spoke and wrote darkely of the Reall Presence as Feuedardus the knight Why was there neuer any mention of Bertram as inclining vnto the Doctrine of Berengarius if he were authour of this booke yea the Protestant Pantaleon (p) cronograph p. 65. making a Catalogue of the workes of Bertram leaueth out this pretended booke Finally it is certaine that though Bertram were authour of this booke and the same written directly against Transubstantiation yet this is a matter of smal moment for Protestants and not a sufficient warrant that there hath beene so much as one Protestant of the now English religion before Luther or Caluin For certain it is that Bertram put case he erred in this point of the Reall presence was Catholike and against Protestants in other as appeares euen by this treatise where he vrgeth Mingling (q) Pag. 56. lin 23. water with wine affirming that it is not lawfull to offer wine not mingled with water as a thing sacramentall mysterious he (r) Pag. 27 lin 14. doth acknowledge the dayly sacrificing and immolating of Christ on the Altar in the Sacrament of his body and bloud He ranckes Chrisme or confirmation in the number of the Sacraments with Baptism and the Eucharist giuing it the middle place and finally priuate Masses or celebration with administration and communion Hence we may conclude two things First the great vanity of Syr Hūfrey his preface who ingageth his credit to wit Preface fol. 3. lin 21. the credit of a pure professour of the Ghospel that is his fayth his Religiō vpon the worthynes of this tract who so earnestly and constantly affirmes Bertram to haue beene the authour thereof and so triumphs against vs for a
not to be against the Romā authour and of the doctrine with the consent (7) He forsooth gaue his consent that Doway should repeale the decree of pope and Councell of Philip the second and the Duke of Alba to all (8) The booke of Index expurgatorius for Inquisitours not for all Catholiks the Romish Catholikes in his behalfe send greeting And then hauing set down the censure of Doway corruptedly omitting that part wherein they affirme that it is manifest that the booke was corrupted by Protestants in their first editiō thereof at Colen he concludes Heere then is their last definitiue sentence which saying of his is sufficient to define wher the matter is otherwise doubtfull that Syr Humfrey his ignorance is intollerable euen ridiculous in one that presumes to be a writer THE THIRD POINT That Syr Humfrey in his translatiō hath most grossely corrupted the booke of Bertram NOW let vs passe frō the Preface to the Translation which I take to be Syr Hūfreys for though he not directly so affirme yet he insinuates so much and his adorning the same with a Dedicatory with a long Preface his ingaging all the credit he hath and is like to haue in his church vpon the worthynes thereof shewes him the Authour And makes me feare that he would take it ill should I suspect the Translation to be any others then his owne Wherefore that Syr Humfrey may receaue his doome from Bertrams owne mouth of whome he doth so bragge I will in lieu of a Iury produce twelue places of Bertrams book making so clearly for transubstantiation Catholik doctrine Catalog Testium veritatis l. 10. anno 1568 apud Iacobum Staer Ia. cobum Chouet as Syr Humfrey had no other way to hide the matter but to translate the places falsely and that with excessiue audacity The latin according to which I examine Syr Humfrey his translation is set forth by Protestants in their booke tearmed Catalogus Testium veritatis The first place is pag. 4. lin 19. That bread which by the Ministery of the Priest is made the Body of Christ Catalogus testiū col 1058. circa finem doth shew one thing outwardly to mans senses and soundeth another thing inwardly to the mind of the faythfull outwardly indeed the Forme of bread which Substance it was before is set out the colour thereof is shewed the sauour tasted but inwardly a thing farr differing is set forth yea much more pretious and excellent because diuine because heauenly to wit the body of Christ Fittly doth Bertram speake in the behalfe of Transubstantiation and Syr Humfrey ashamed to see such papistry in him seekes by mis-translation to lay a couer ouer it First whereas Bertram sayth efficitur bread is made by the power of the Priest the body of Christ he translates becomes the body Secondly whereas Bertram sayth Aliud longè pretiosius excellentius ostēditur another more pretious and more excellent thing is shewed he translates Is more pretious and excellently shewed Thirdly and principally wheras Bertram sayth Exteriùs quidem panis quod ante fuerat forma pretenditur The forme of bread which thing or substance before it was is shewed he trannslats Outwardly the forme of bread which it had before is shewed Most falsely and grossely First he makes the substantiall verbe fuerat which signifyes substātially to be to suppose for habuerat the accidētall verbe which signifyes the being of thinges as adiacent vnto substance not the prime and substantiall being Secōdly quod which is heere taken substantiuely and signifyes the thing or substance of bread which quiddity or essence of bread Bertram sayth before consecration was but after consecration is not Syr Humfrey taks quod adiectiuely referring the same vnto forma the forme and shape of bread so construing the text Forma quod ostenditur which is such childish and shamefull ignorance as it is vnworthy to be noted yet by this ignorance he peruerts the substāce of the Authours meaning The second place is pag. 7. lin 11. VVhat I pray you In Catal. col 1059. circa medium can be more absurd then to take Bread to be flesh and to affirme VVine to be bloud And a mystery it cannot be in which there is no secret or hidden thing contayned And how can it be sayd to be Christs body in which is not knowne that there is any change made Thus Bertram Syr Humfrey in the margent noteth that heere Bertram proues that no change is made in the elements of the supper cleare against the drift of Bertram who by all meanes labours to proue that the bread is changed not by change according to sensible accidents apparantly but in the inward substance inuisibly This is proued more cleerly by the third place pag. 9. In Catal. col 1059. circa finē lin 12. This change to wit according to outward qualityes is not knowne heere to be made for nothing heer can be found to be changed eyther in touching In Catal. col 1059. circa finē or colour or tast or sauour Therefore if nothing be changed herein it is not then any other thing or substance then what it was before but it is another thing or substance because bread is * Syr Hūfrey heere translates becomes the body not made which word he still carefully auoides In catal col 1060. l. 6. seq Made the body of Christ and wine his blood for so himselfe sayth Take yee and eate yee for this is my body and speaking of the cup he sayth likewise This is the bloud of the new testament Thus Bertram cleerly shewing that the Bread is changed substantially but not so that the same outwardly appeare but is hidden and couered with the figure and forme of bread This is againe made cleere by the fourth place pag. 11. lin 4. Seeing then this cannot be denyed let them tell vs how in what respect the elements are changed for corporally * Syr Hūfrey translates substantially to signify there is no substantial change nothing is seene to be changed in them Therefore they must of necessity confesse eyther that they are changed otherwise then according to the body and so not to be the thing that in verity they seeme but another thing or substance which they are not * Heer Syr Humfrey vnderstood nor the latin seene to be according to their owne proper being Or if they will not confesse this they are compelled to deny that they are the body of Christ which is wicked not only to say but also to thinke This place is plaine and Syr Humfrey doth many wayes by translation obscure it as I haue noted in the margēt The fifth place pag. 22. lin 5. VVe are truely perswaded that no faythfull man doubteth In catal col 1062. lin 41. sequent but that bread was made the body of Christ of which he himselfe giuing it to his disciples sayth This is my body Syr Humfrey translates quite
contrary For we thinke truely that any faythfull man doubteth whether that Bread becomes Christs body making Bertram to affirme that euery man doubts of this chāge of bread into Christs body In catal col 1063. lin 6. 7. The sixth pag. 24. lin 1. Bertram makes Christ speake in this sort Doe not thinke you shall corporally eate my flesh deuided into parts or drinke my bloud Syr Humfrey translates Thinke not I pray you that you must eyther bodily eate my flesh or bodily drinke my bloud So that Bertram his deniall of carnall eating by tearing Christs flesh into peeces Syr Humfrey turnes into a deniall of substantiall eating thereof by reall sūption wheras (a) Cyril 10. in Ioā c. 13. corporaliter secundū carnem In catal vbi supra lin 12. 13. 14. the Fathers in this sense say expresly we take in the Sacrament the flesh of Christ corporally The seauenth pag. 24. lin 13. Bertram bringes Christ saying Then after my ascension the bread and wine turned into the Substance of my body and bloud shall by the mystery or Sacrament be truely eaten of the Faythfull A place so cleare that Syr Hūfrey like a bat that endures not the light would beate the same out by mistranslation For thus it pleaseth him to make Bertram speake Bread and wine being turned into my body and bloud * All this is added the substance thereof shall in a mystery * Verè omitted be receaued First he addeth the word Substance bread turned into the substāce of Christs body shall be eaten sayth Bertram bread being turned into the substāce of Christs body the substance of bread shall be eaten Syr Humfrey will haue him say Is this to translate not rather to peruert the meaning of Authours and make thē to speake fōdly For if bread be turned in the substāce of Christ body how can the substāce therof remaine be eatē Secōdly he leaueth out the word truly saying only it is eaten whereas Bertram sayth it is truely eaten which is a substantiall omission in Bertram because Bertram in the beginning of his booke declares that he takes truly to signify the same as in substance really not only in figure so that if the body of Christ be truly eatē in Bertrams opinion it is eaten in the substance thereof really and not only in figure The eight Bertrā saith pag. 27. lin 13. VVas not Christ immolated in himselfe only once Catal. col 1063. circa finem and that about Easter and yet in the Sacrament not only in all the festiuall dayes of Easter but also euery day he is sacrificed or immolated by the people Thus Bertram which is ranke papistry Now heare Syr Humfrey translating Bertram not into English but into Protestancy VVas not Christ offered about that tyme And yet notwithstāding he is not only euery feast of Easter but euery day offered vnto the faythfull people Thus is Bertram trimmed by Syr Humfrey according to the Protestant cut In Catal. col 1064. circa medium The ninth Bertram sayth pag. 30. lin 8. It is not sayd that Christ doth suffer in himself euery day which he did but once Syr Humfrey to make this place sound against the Masse or dayly oblation of Christs body translates It is not sayd that Christ offers himselfe euery day because he did it but once The tenth Bertram sayth pag. 41. lin 6. Catal. col 1066. circa finem According to the substance or corporall Masse the creatures what they were before the same they afterward remaine But they were before bread and wine according to which forme shape they are seene still to remayne Therefore the thing is inwardly changed by the mighty power of the holy Ghost which change fayth beholdeth This place is too perspicuous for Transubstantiation therefore Syr Humfrey in his translation makes a Transubstantiation thereof changing the very substance of the sense into his owne contrary meaning VVhatsoeuer they were before consecration they are euen the same afterwards but they were bread and wine before and therefore they remayne the same which is proued because we see that euen whē they are consecrated they remayne in the same kind or forme Surely Syr Humfrey this is not to translate Authours out of Latin into English but to translate fancyes out of your owne head into their Treatises For Bertram was wiser then to make this foolish argument which you foyst into his booke Bread remaynes in forme and shape therefore it remaynes in substance The eleuenth Bertram often in this Treatise names the dayly celebration of the mysteryes signifying the custome of priuate masses or celebrations without communion which Syr Humfrey not ēduring still aswell in Bertram as in the sentences of other Fathers translates celebration and administration by this addition to make Bertram a Protestant The twelfe and last place pag. 42. is most notoriously corrupted Catal. col 1067. init where for fourty lines togeather he translates not one sentence line or almost word with correspondēce vnto the latin text I will note only his corruptiō of one line therof Bertram hath this sentence Corpus est Christi quod cernitur sanguis qui bibitur nec quaerendum quomodo factum sit sed tenendum quod sic factum fit VVhat is seene is Christs body what is drūk is his bloud neyther ought we to search the manner how it is done but beleeue that so it is done Syr Humfrey thus translates That is Christs body which is seene that is bloud which is drunke and we must not enquire how it is made or becomes his body but beleeue and hold and so it is become his body Thus he thrusts into Bertrams booke his Puritanicall fayth Crede quod habes habes I now appeale vnto the iudgement of any indifferent Reader to giue sentēce First whether Syr Hūfrey haue not manifestly corrupted the book of his Bertram Secondly whether the booke can be cleare against Transubstātiation and vtterly ouerthrow the same as Syr Humfrey boastes that in so many places makes so clearely for it Thirdly whether it be not the greatest vanity in the world to build a Religion against the Roman Catholicke and saluation out of their Church vpon this tract which is so papisticall as syr Humfrey his English translation is euen ashamed therof Finally whether the Protestants be not in extreme misery and beggary for want of professors and recorders of their Religion before Luther that can find no better then this Booke and this Authour wherof they bragge beyond measure THE FOVRTH POINT A grand Iury against Syr Humfrey shewing the Reall presence which he terames a dead letter to be the doctrin of Gods holy word and the perpetull doctrine of the Church THE infinite wisedom of Gods holy spirit foreseeing with what difficulty the Reall presence of Christs sacred flesh and pretious bloud in the Sacrament would be beleeued of carnall men in regard of the repugnance with reason the
same seemes to haue in their iudgement would haue all the holy Scriptures to set downe this truth more often and sequently more solemnely of set purpose more cleerely expressely then the truth of any other christiā doctrine Out of which I gather these twelue expresse and formall sentences in this behalfe from Christ Iesus his own mouth Ioan. 6.51 The first The bread which I will giue is my flesh which I will giue for the life of the world Ibid. 53. The second Verily verily except you eate the flesh and drinke the bloud of the son of Man you shall not haue life in you Ibid. 54. The third VVhosoeuer eateth my flesh and drinketh my bloud hath eternall life and I will rayse him vp at the last day Ibid. 55. The fourth My flesh is meate indeed my bloud is drinke indeed Ibid. 58. The fifth This is the bread that comes downe from heauen Ibid. 57. The sixt As the liuing Father hath sent me and I liue by the Father so he that eateth me he shall liue by me The seauenth Ibid. 56. He that eateth my flesh and drinketh my bloud dwelleth in me and I in him The eight Ibid. 59. Not as your Fathers did eate the Manna in the wildernes and are dead He that eateth this bread shall liue for euer The nynth Mat. 26. v. 26. 27. 28. And as they were eating Iesus tooke bread blessed brake gaue to his disciples saying Take eate This is my Body And he tooke the cup and gaue thankes and gaue to them saying Drinke yee all of this for this is my Bloud which shall be shed for many vnto the remission of sinnes The tenth Marc. 14. v. 22. 23. 24. And as they did eate Iesus tooke bread and blessed and brake and gaue to them saying This is my Body And he tooke the cup and when he had giuen thākes he gaue to them and they drunke all thereof and he sayd to them This is my Bloud of the new Testament that is shed for many The eleuenth Luke 22.7 19. 20 He tooke bread gaue thankes and brake and gaue to them saying This is my Body which is giuen for you Likewise also the cup after supper saying This cup is the new Testament in my Bloud the cup that is shed for you The twelfth 1. Cor. 11. v. 24. 25. Our Lord Iesus the same night in which he was betrayed tooke bread and when he had giuen thankes brake and sayd This is my Body that shall be giuen for you This doe in remēbrance of me In like māner the Cup when he had supped saying This cup is the new testament in my Bloud What could be spoken more cleare more expresse wherein will Protestāts beleeue Christ vpon his bare word submitting thereunto their carnall fancyes since they contradict the truth of this his text so reiterated in Scripture Reiecting the same as a dead letter that killeth as doth our Syr Humfrey Against whome to proue these wordes are to be taken in the litterall sense I will bring one only argument but that vsed by all the anciēt Fathers and conuincing The word of holy Scripture is to be vnderstood in the litterall sense when that sense is neyther wicked nor absurde This is a rule deliuered by (a) Lib. 3. de doctr christian cap. 7. S. Augustine and receaued of all handes els if it be lawfull by metaphore to destroy the literall sense of Scripture when without inconuenience the same may be vnderstood litterally we shall neuer be certaine of any sense but men wil turne and tosse the word of God by figuratiue construction as they please But the litteral sense of this word of Christ This is my body is neyther wicked nor absurd as I thus demonstrate The sense of Scripture that is possible vnto God is neyther wicked nor absurd for God can neyther be authour of a wicked thing because he is infinitly good nor of an absurd thing because he is infinitly wise but the litteral sense of this place to wit that bread is become really and substantially the body of Christ being changed into the substance therof is possible vnto God Who dares deny this Protestants though some (b) Calu. lib. 4. inst c. 17. §. 24. of thē mutter between the teeth against the omnipotency of God yet I haue not read any that doth in plaine terrmes affirme that God cannot turne the substance of bread into the substance of his body Yea (c) Conf. Wittemb cap. 144. some professe they beleeue this to be possible and that they would (d) Melan. epist ad Carolum Geralit rather burne then say that God cannot put the same body in many places at once Therfore the Catholicke that is the litterall sense of Christ his word This is my body is possible vnto God And this is the argument as I sayd vsed by the Fathers (e) Cyril Ambros Gaudent Euseb alij apud Claud. Zants repetit 3. c. 4 who proue the Reall Presence because Christ being God can do it to wit can conuert the substance of bread and wine into the substance of his body and bloud For if this literall sense be possible vnto God then it is neyther wicked nor absurd if neyther wicked nor absurd then to be receaued as the true sense if to be receaued as the true sense then also to be receaued as an article of fayth being the true litterall sense of Gods word cōcerning the substāce of a most mayne mystery of Religion consequently the Protestant Metaphore that destroyes this litterall sense is an accursed Heresy But the fault of our Aduersaryes in this affaire is not to beleeue more then they can vnderstand and to colour with fine words foule infidelity of hart Thus then yeelding vnto carnall imagination against the litterall sense of Gods holy word they christen and cal by the style of following the quickning spirit They are so blinded as they cannot discerne the suggestions of the flesh from the motions of the spirit For wherein they differ from vs about this Sacrament doe they not therein agree with all Infidels that are in the world Do not heretiks Iews Turkes Pagans beleeue as Protestants do against vs that the Christian Sacrament is really and substantially bread that the body of Christ is not really and substantially present therein Yea their doggs that sometymes lick vp the crums and bits that fall from their communion table could they speake would they not professe with their Maisters so far as their sayd masters differ from vs to wit that it is bread and not changed really into Christs body And yet this carnall Protestant-fancy wherein Infidels yea brut beasts conspire with them is forsooth the quicenkning spirit a doctrine which only the holy Ghost teacheth we wāt fayth the spirit of heauēly life because we do not beleeue that to be bread that so seemeth to flesh and bloud following
and therefore the very flesh of Christ it is which euen to this day is offered for the life of the world 2. Strabus 840. Laying aside thinges doubtfull In cap. 11. prioris ad Cor. being assured by most certaine authority we professe that the Substance of bread and wine is conuerted into the Substance of the body and bloud of our Lord though we do not blush to confesse that we are ignorant of the manner of this conuersion The Accidents that remayne of the former substance to wit the colour the sauour the figure the weight neyther qualify the body of Christ nor inhere in it 3. Amalarius Treuirensis 830. De officijs Ecclesiasticis l. 3. cap. 24. We beleeue the single Nature of bread and the Nature of wine mingled with water to be turned into a reasonable or intellectuall Nature to wit into the nature of the body and bloud of Christ 4. Remigius Antisiodorensis 870. They are tearmed bread and wine by Christian truth In psal 22. not that they retayne the nature of bread and wine but only according to figure and shape tast and odour For he that could personally ineffably conioyne by his word flesh assumed in the wombe of the Virgin he also was able to turne the nature of bread and wine into the Nature of his body bloud 5. Hinckmarus Rhemensis 850. It is true flesh and true bloud of Christ In encomio S. Remigij which by eating drinking we take in the Sacrament as himselfe doth testify And we that vnder the Sacrament do verily take his body and bloud are made by them the same euen in Nature with him In which after cōsecratiō the likenes or shape of bread doth remaine that we may not haue horrour of bloud but the grace of Redemption abideth in them 6. Alcuinus 800. The bread of it selfe is an irreasonable Sustance as also the wine Lib. de diuin offic c. 29. de celebrat Missae but the Priest prayeth that the same consecrated by the omnipotency of God be made a reasonable Substance by passing into the body of his sonne For as the diuinity of the word of God is one and the same that filleth the whole world so this body though it be consecrated in many places and at innumerable tymes yet are there not many bodyes nor many cups but one and the same body one and the same bloud the very same that he tooke of the Blessed Virgin 7. Haymo 820. Because bread strengthneth the hart of man In passionem Christi secundū Marcum and wine breedeth bloud in the body of man therfore the bread is worthily changed into the flesh of our Lord and wine is turned into his bloud not by a figure not by a shadow but in verity indeed For we beleeue that in verity it is the body and bloud of Christ 8. Elias Cretensis 804. In orat 1. Nazian Nazianzen by the externall sacrifice vnderstands that which is performed by bread and wine which being vpon the sacred Table are by the ineffable power strength of the Almighty truly conuerted into the body bloud of Christ 9. Florus Magister 860. Christ is eaten when the Nature of bread wine Ad Canonem Missae by the ineffable operatiō of the Holy Ghost is changed into the Sacrament of the body and bloud of Christ 10. Theophilactus 899. Our Lord by saying This is my body shews that bread sanctified on the Altar is his very body In cap. 24. Matth. and not a figure and resemblance therof for he sayd not This is the figure but This is my body for howsoeuer it seeme bread vnto vs yet by an ineffable operatiō it is transformed Again In cap. 14. Marc. This is my body this I say which you eate for bread is not the figure nor the image of the body of our Lord but is conuerted into his body Our Lord sayth The bread I will giue is my flesh he sayd not the figure of my flesh but my flesh But thou mayst say How is it that I see not flesh O man this is by reason of thyne infirmity vnto which God mercifully condescending retaynes the forme of bread and wine which thou dost vse to feed on but it is transelementated that is changed euen according to the primordiall substance thereof into the vertue of flesh and bloud And againe In cap 6. Ioan The bread that is eaten of vs in the Sacrament is not only a certaine figure of the flesh but also the very flesh of our Lord. For he sayd not the bread I will giue is the figure of flesh but my very flesh for bread by the sacred wordes by the mysticall blessing by the assistance of the holy Ghost is transformed into the flesh of our Lord. And be not troubled to thinke that bread becomes flesh For when our Lord did liue on earth was nourished by the substance of bread the bread that was eaten was changed into his body and became of the same substance with his holy flesh therefore now also bread is changed into the flesh of our Lord. 11. Valafridus Strabo 830. De rebus Eccles c. 17. When the sonne of God sayth My flesh is meate indeed and my bloud is drinke indeed it is so to be vnderstood that we ought to beleeue the mysteryes to be the very body and bloud of our Lord and gages of that perfect vnity with our head whereof now we haue the hope and shall afterward enioy the thing 12. Altercatio Synagogae Ecclesie 890. Cap 8. We beleeue that before consecration it is bread and wine after consecratiō it is the true body and the true bloud of Christ not only sacramentally but also essentially And when we say the body of Christ we do not vnderstand the body without the bloud nor do separate the bloud from the body as it was shed and flowed out at his woundes but we beleeue the same body to be whole vndiuided vnder ech forme the same whol in heauen and togeather in all places where it is consecrated or receaued by Christian men And although we can not comprehend by reason how the substance of bread doth passe into the body of our Lord yet we are bound to beleeue it The Councel of Nice 796. Vnto this Iury of Fathers we add a Iudge to giue sentence to wit the seauenth Generall Councell celebrated about Bertrams age in the dayes of Charles the Great thus defining and saying Act. 6. Read as long as thou wilt thou shalt not find that eyther our Lord or the Apostles or the Fathers did call that vnbloudy sacrifice offered by the Priest an Image but the very Body and the very Bloud of Christ CONCLVSION YOv haue in this short censure Syr Humfrey and his religion araigned condemned by fiue Iuryes Iudges First by the Iury of Catholicke Authors with one consent auerring and the Councell of Trent as Iudge giuing sentence accordingly
that this Tract on which Syr Humfrey doth engage the credit of his Religion is darke obscure intricate corrupted since the first writing therof by heretikes not fit to be vulgarly read Secondly by the Iury of his owne falshoodes and errours and the Round Councell-table of the Protestant historians of Magdeburge as Iudge pronoūcing sentence and censuring this booke of Bertram to be papistical euē in the point of Transubstantiation so condemning syr Humfrey of want of iudgement that builds his Religion against this point of Papistry vpon it Thirdly by the Iury or rather iniury of mistranslations offered vnto the booke particulerly in twelue besides many other passages thereof Syr Humfreys owne conscience being Iudge and condemning both this booke as being so papistical as not fit to be truely set forth in English and himselfe of vnsincerity in thus corrupting the works of ancient Authours Fourthly by the Iury of the writers in Bertrams age professing the substāce of bread and wine to be turned into the substāce of the body and bloud of Christ not metaphorically but litterally not by figure but by truth not by shaddow but in verity not only sacramentally but essentially The generall Councell of Nice about the same tyme as Iudge pronouncing the sentence accordingly that bread and wine to be made the body and bloud of Christ not by figure not by metaphore but in verity really Whereby Syr Humfrey that dares write that the Church would by no meanes take the word of Christ This is my body in the litterall sense and for the reall and substantial presence of his body in the Sacrament is condemned of being eyther desirous to deceaue soules in matters of their saluation a thing vnworthy of a Christian much more of a Christian Knight or els as exceedingly to blame to write and speake so confidently of thinges he doth not know nor vnderstand Finally by the Iury of Christs his owne expresse deposition and sentence so many tymes reiterated in holy Scripture and his Omnipotency is the Iudge that defines and declares that heere he meant according to the Letter or els is vnworthy of the title of Verity it selfe For is it the part of exact and infinite Truth to promise a thing often and earnestly in plaine and expresse wordes not to performe the same according to the letter if the performance thereof according to the Letter lye in his power Christ Iesus doth often and earnestly promise that bread and wine in the Sacrament should be and is in all ages to the worlds end his Body and Bloud it lyes in his power to performe this promise according to the letter by turning the substance of bread and wine into the substāce of his body bloud so making bread wine to become really and substātially according to the letter his body bloud in the christiā sacramēt vntil the worlds end And can they think him to be Verity it selfe who thinke that notwithstanding so many his expresse promises he doth not performe his word according to the Letter though it be in his power so to performe it Verily howsoeuer they may gloze the matter in wordes they doe not esteeme of his word as of the word of Verity in their hart which Syr Humfrey as being not very dexterous in applying Metaphores nor wise inough to ponder his words as is required in a writer doth openly professe euen also in wordes by comparing the word of Christ in this point vnto that notorious lye of the strumpet so famously recorded in Scripture as hath beene sayd I will end for what can I say What can I do more Verily if I might thereby reclayme Syr Humfrey from his opposing Christ Iesus and his Church I would be glad to loose as many drops of my bloud as I haue heere spent inke to shew his errour But if I cannot so preuaile with him I must leaue him to Gods iustice in the number of them described by the Apostle Tit. 3.11 Qui delinqunt proprio iudicio condemnati assuring him that these wordes of Christ This is my body howsoeuer he now would eneruate Epist ad Freder Miconium cap. 4. emasculate and disgrace them by foule comparison will proue as Melansthon sayth in the day of iudgemēt Thunderbolts against the denyers of the Reall presence who flye vnto Metaphores rather then submit their vnderstandings vnto the irrefragable euidency of the sacred Text because it is aboue the capacity of their carnal Reason Faults escaped in the Printing Pag. Lin. Fault Correction 4. 7. your you Ibid. in m. fol. 3. b. lin 21. fol. 3. a. lin 21. Ibid. in m. fol. 14. b. lin 16. fol. 14. a. lin 16. 9. in m. Preface fol. 7. b. lin 1. fol. 4. b. lin 6. 8. fol. 5. lin 5. Preface fol. 4. b. fol. 5. Ibid. ouer against lin 10   fol. 7. b. lin 1. 10. in m. fol. 6. lin 4. fol. 5. b. lin 5. Ibid. 9. shune shunne 11. 11. errour to errour is to Ibid. in m. lin 20. lin 10. 12. 9. this his Ibid. 22. errour that error Is that 13. in m. lin 18. lin 16. Ibid. 20. eyther of falshood eyther falshood 20. in m. Concord Gen. Conrad Ges Ibid. 26. challenged alleadged 21. 19. predecessor which predecessor which 23. in m. lin 14. lin 16. Ibid. in m. lin 21. lin vltim Ibid. 9. with administration without administration 24. 11. this his Ibib. in m. lin 12. lin 13. Ibib. in m. fol. 11. a. fol. 21. a 25. 19. First for to examine First to examine Ibid. in m. fol. a. can 19. fol. 9. lin 19. Ibid. in m. fol. 8. a. fol. 9. a 29. 21. he not he doth 31. 1. Fittly doth Thus fittly doth 32. 17. made made 33. 13. appeare appeares 35. 7. 8. the substance thereof the substance therof Ibib. 17. in into Ibid. 18. Christ Christs 39. 11. recorders recordes 40. 8. sequently frequently 42. 11. text truth 44. 18. then their 46. in m. fol. 6. lin 19. fol. 1. lin 19. 49. 8. Stratagonist Antagonist 53. 13. sustance substance FINIS
As who should say Oecolampadius could not be a Berengarian in opinion infect bookes with that leuen because he liued fiue hundred yeares after Berengarius The fifth errour is to thinke that Catholickes who say Bertram writ a booke of the body blood of our Lord do therefore affirme this booke set out by Oecolampadius to be his booke also to be pure and incorrupt without any nouell insertion of hereticall stuffe This errour is transcendentall in all this quarell with the Iury but (m) fol. 6. b. lin 10. particulerly it causeth him to conceaue a dissention betwixt Heskins that sayth Bertram writ a booke suspiciously and Sixtus Senensis who saith that the booke was corrupted and set forth by Oecolampadius in Bertrams name A great contradiction sure Might not the booke that was written doubtfully by Bertram be corrupted afterward by plaine hereticall assertions set out in his name so corrupted by Oecolampadius The sixt errour that a pious and godly man may not write darkely concerning some mystery of fayth Hence because Espencaeus the 11. Iuror sayth Bertrams booke to be darke obscure intangling his Reader he vrgeth him to contradict Tritemius (n) In chronico the twelfe and the last Iurour saying Bertram was a learned and Godly man and writ a booke of the body and bloud of our Lord yea syr Humfrey (o) fol. 7. a lin 18. to make heere some shew of contradiction where none is with more cunning then sincerity helpeth the matter For whereas Tritemius sayth Bertram writ a prayse-worthy worke of Predestination and one booke of the body and blood of our Lord Syr Humfrey leaueth out the book of predestination and turnes the title of prayse-worthy from it on the booke of the body and bloud of Christ making Tritemius say Bertram writ a prayse-worthy worke to wit one booke concerning the body and blood of our Lord. Can this be well excused in syr Humfrey from witting misrelation to deceaue In the second kind to wit concerning syr Humfreys eyther of falshood or ignorance of latin I set downe these six examples which ioyned with the other six make vp a Iury. First to winne a few yeares of antiquity vnto Bertram and to make him seeme the great writer of Charles the Great whereas Tritemius sayth that Bertram writ a prayse-worthy worke Ad Carolii Regem fratrē Lotharij Imperatoris Vnto King Charles brother of Lotharius Emperour he translates Vnto (p) fol. 7. a lin 13. Charles the Great the Brother of Lotharius the Emperour which is grosse and ridiculous absurdity in history euery man that hath any smacke of learning knowing that Lotharius was Grand-child to Charles the Great not his brother Secondly to the same purpose Whereas the (q) Iudex expurgat Belgic in Bertramo Doway-censure sayth that Bertram was Carus Carolo non tam magno quàm caluo Deare vnto Charles not so great as bald he translates Deare (r) fol. 10. a. lin 2. vnto Charles the Great Syr Humfrey was loth that this his so much esteemed Bertram on whose head he hath set all his credit he hath or is like to haue should be thought to haue written to a bald Emperor fearing some should thēce inferre that he was a bald Authour as they may with as much reason as Syr Humfrey doth conclude (s) fol. 3. b lin 5. 6. that he was a Great authour and no flye because he writ to a Great Emperour De visib monar l. 7 An. 816. Thirdly whereas D. Sanders sayth Quidam suspicantur some suspect the booke of Bertram to be forged vnder his name he translates (u) fol. 5. b lin 9. some say vpon this and no better euidency (x) fol. 6. a lin 3. accuseth Doctour Sanders that he sayth The booke is not Bertrams but some obscure Authour As though there were no difference betwixt doubting and iudging suspecting and saying whereas when we haue but suspition of a thing the common phrase is I cannot say it Fourthly whereas Valentia sayth Dubium (y) Valen. de presen Christi in Euchar. l. 1. cap. 2. est it may be doubted whether Bertram be authour of this booke fieri potest it may be that Bertram writ catholikly his booke was afterward corrupted Notwithstanding this so great cautelousnes of Valentia to shew he did but coniecture Syr Humfrey makes him peremptory absolute and to say without any doubt or feare The (z) fol. 6. a lin 13. worke is spurious Fiftly whereas Garetius sayth Delirare coepit Bertramus Bertram began to write dotingly Syr Humfrey translates He (a) fol. 5. a lin 20. was an old dotard fondly and dotingly For to be a dotard and to write in one matter dotingly be differēt things seeing one act implyeth not the habit yea a learned man in some occasion may write absurdly Neyther doth Garetius mislike Bertram in regard of his agednes or antiquity as Syr Humfreys translation insinuates by making him say He was not only a Dotard but an old Dotard but contrarywise in respect of the nouelty of his phrase and for his new doting and because the former part of the booke is Catholicke and contrary to the later which soundes of heresy a signe that eyther the booke is corrupted or els the Authour when he writ was not present to himselfe Sixtly whereas the Doway-censure sayth Non diffitear Bertranum nesciuisse exactè I will confesse Bertram knew not exactly how accidents subsist without a substance fol. 10. b. lin 22. Syr Humfrey translates I doubt not but Bertram was ignorant how accidents exactly subsist Had Syr Humfrey beene exact and not ignorāt in Latin he would not perchance haue so many wayes misconstrued a few latin wordes Especially he would neuer haue ioyned exactly with to subsist which both the text and reason shew must ioyne with to know for there is difference betwixt knowing and exact knowing but no difference betwixt subsisting and exact subsisting So that the Censure sayth not that Bertrā was wholly ignorant as Syr Humfrey pretendes they say but only that he knew not so exactly how to declare the manner of transubstantiation as Deuines in this age I omit many other the like errours committed as I suppose not in fraud but through ignorance of Latine though Syr Humfrey turne and make vse of them to the aduantagement of his heresy in blindenes of zeale These I haue noted shew sufficiently that the contentions betwixt Catholikes which Syr Humfrey would exhibite in his Preface haue no other ground but his ignorance and misprision and therefore are like to the battailles of Lucian (c) Lucian verae histo fought by mighty armyes vpon the Iland of Cobb-webs THE SECOND POINT Concerning the truth of the Authour and authority of this Booke THIS question may easily be decided among them that will set wrangling aside seeke sincerely after the truth that will distinguish what is doubtfull from what is probable and what is