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A19326 Doctrinall and morall observations concerning religion vvherein the author declareth the reasons of his late vn-enforced departure from the Church of Rome, and of his incorporation to the present Church of England : teaching, maintaining and defending the true Christian Catholike and apostolike faith, professed by the ancient primitiue church, most conspicuous in the outward vertues and constant sufferings of many holy bishops and other good Christians, glorious in the crowne of martyrdome / by Iohn Copley ... Copley, John, 1577-1662. 1612 (1612) STC 5742; ESTC S299 195,885 256

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light of Scriptures Psal 119. vers 10.4 Psal 119. vers 18. vnto thy Lord God Lucerna pedibus meis verbum tuum lumen semitis meis Thy word is a lampe vnto my feete and a light vnto my path And againe Open thou mine eyes that I may behold wonderous things out of the Law 11 Yet thou art to haue great care that thou make not this rule longer than it is nor shorter for this is forbidden by Christ himselfe speaking against such a one saying I protest vnto euery man that heareth the words of the prophecie of this Booke Apoc. 22.18 19. if any man shall adde vnto these things God shall adde vnto him the plagues that are written in this Booke and if any man shall take away from the words of the booke of this prephecie God shall take away his part out of the Booke of life and out of the holy Citty and from the things which are written in this Booke This fault of adding to the Books of holie scripture is very notorious in the Church of Rome as I haue duly obserued Ses 41. For the Councell of Trent addeth to the Canon of the old Testament diuers Apocriphall Books which must be beleeued as Canonicall Scriptures as namely Tobias Iudith Hester and the two bookes of the Macchabees Esdras Wisedome and Ecclesiasticus all which are learnedly proued to be Apocriphall by the right reuerend Father in God my Lords grace of Canterburie in his answer to master Doctor Hill his eight reason Num. 3. sequent the consideration whereof made me plainely conclude that heerein the Church of Rome giues great and apparent occasion for any to iudge that she erreth and consequently not to heare her voice thus vttering falshood for trueth giuing equall authoritie to the Apocriphall Bookes with the holy canonicall Scriptures CHAP. VII Containing an obseruation how the Ministerie of the true Church of Christ is the meanes of teaching the true sense and vnderstanding of Scriptures where and when it hath a visible and externall gouernement ALthough I haue cleerely discouered The externall ministe rie of the Church an ordinarie meanes to know the true sense of Scripture that the sacred Scriptures are the chiefe infallible rule of faith and most sufficient in the precedent obseruation yet could I not rest satisfied till I found also a meanes for the simple and vnlearned to ground their faith vppon because Deus vult omnes saluos fieri ad agnitionem veritatis venire God will haue all to be saued 1. Tim. 2.4 and come to the knowledge of his trueth And as well as he in the gouernment of his creatures hath his end to which he designes them so also by his wisedome he doth most prudently substitute subordinate means for the full accomplishment of such his designements now therefore how those that are neither able to reade the scriptures or though they be able haue not sufficient skill and knowledge to consider the circumstances of Texts and by the analogie of faith not learned enough to find out the true meaning of the Scriptures nor haue the gift of interpretation as many and most haue not whereupon arise many deprauations of Scriptures how such should be directed in the right vse of the rule of Scriptures in finding out the right meaning of them I thought it a matter of great weight wel to discouer and by the declaration thereof to affoord a stay to weake consciences in this behalfe In the scrious discussion of which point it pleased almightie God so to second my carefull Labours and indeuours herein as that I receiued ful satisfaction in mine owne iudgement by this conclusion namely That the most ordinary externall direction left by God especially to direct vnlearned men in the finding out of the true sense and meaning of the Scriptures is the ministerie of the true visible Church of Christ assisted by the holie Ghost and the Church in this respect is called 1. Tim. 3.15 Matt. 5.14 The pillar of truth and the ministers thereof The light of the world 2 And therefore as master Harding himselfe confesseth True vnderstanding of Scripturs only in the Church Doctor Hard. con●ut of the Apologie of the Church of England fol. 36. Mester Celuine admonisheth very well That it is especially to be noted that out of the Church there is no light of the sound vnderstanding of the Scriptures But the inconsiderate Doctour maketh a verie fond inference vpon this ground saying This ground being laid on which each part must sland and be tried in crow no more against vs boast your selues no more we feare not the iudgement of the holie Scriptures nay it is your selues that feare this iudgement for your owne conscience telleth you that on this ground you are the weaker side Jnstit lib. 4 cap. 8. num 7. hee forgot that master Caluine said Let this be a firme axiome That no other word of God is to be had to which place must bee giuen in the Church than what is maintained first in the Law and Prophets then in the writings of the Apostles neither is there anie way of teaching in the Church of God but by the prescript and rule of his word If master Harding had well obserued this hee would not haue made such an inference or affirmed that the Protestants feare this iudgement but rather would haue concluded as I doe That since both stand vpon the outward ministerie of the true Church let vs seeke the true Church of Christ and hauing found it The deuties of the true church then heare and follow her doctrine teaching according to Scripture and out of Scripture 3 The due obseruation whereof sheweth That the true visible Church is to represse the deprauations of Heretickes and partly to informe those that are vnlearned and to exercise euen the obedience of those that are learned and by the externall ministerie of teaching the true sence of Scriptures is to giue directions and is duetifully by her members to bee heard and followed Which assertion I find not to make either for the present Church of Rome or of Engl. or any other particular Church till it bee prooued which of them is the true Catholike Ancient and Primitiue Apostolike Church teaching the sound Doctrine of the first pure and vntainted ages whereof I am to speake in the Chapter following CHAP. VIII Containeth a fundamentall obseruation how that consormity of doctrine with the ancient doctrine of the Primitiue Church may bee a good meanes in these latter ages to know the true Church of Christ. AFter that I had thus discouered both the most sufficient rule of faith to be the canonicall and true Scriptures and the most ordinarie externall meanes to find out the true sence to be the ministerie of the true Church Antiquitie a good inducement to the true Church I could not yet giue sufficient contentment to my vnderstanding vntill such time as I had found out also
Christian Princes After this I fell by a meere chance vpon the booke of the now Lord of Canterburies written in confutation of some of Master Doctor Hilles quarterne of reasons Next met I with the Bishop of Lincolnes answere to Parsons with some others All which I perused diligently and with great attention in which writings although some doctrinall points much distasted my palate by reason of my setled affection to the Romane faith yet I found many points both doctrinall and morall verie remarkable and powerfull to moue strong doubtes had I not by the implicite faith of whatsoeuer the Romane Church teacheth folued them all and so consequently held them as matters of scandall and temptation the first of which ought not to moue a setled constancie nor the second to finde any entertainment but euen at the verie first occurrence to be reiected yet notwithstanding at the last reflecting vpon many former obseruations I conceiued that ground of implicite faith to be subiect to the daunger of errour and held it fit to examine verie diligently the groundes of the true Church especially for a Cleargie-man who is to yeelde a reason of his faith and to giue satisfaction vnto others and chiefely in such times as the question is to be discussed which is the true Church a man ought to heare to beleeue and to follow if hee will not be esteemed as a Heathen and Publicane Then began I to reflect more seriously vpon the former points and to grow very familiar with the aforesaid bookes and with much stay to examine the reasons and solutions of Cardinall Bellarmine to his aduersaries in the chiefest points of Doctrine now controuerted where finding manie friuolous arguments and idle solutions I grew into much greater care to discusse matters than euer before least whilest I thought to goe the right way to Heauen and to lead others thither wee went both blindfolded to hell 6 Next vnto this occasion happened another The powder-treason another occasion and that was the most vnmatched Pouder-treason as I thinke the most odious conspiracie that euer was inuented or intended by the braine of man the hatefull memorie whereof will proue euerlastingly to all posteritie a spot indelible not onely to the actors but also to all that shall maintaine approue and allow of the same wishing it had had the intended effect acknowledging no other faultinesse therein but the want of that successe which no honest or good Christian minde could euer endure This was so great a scandale to many that had they not beene otherwise confirmed in the faith of Rome they would forthwith haue abiured it and for my selfe in particular when I heard the names read in the proclamation of those who were the chiefe agents therein I stood amazed fearing that it had beene approued by the Pope vnder-hand because I thought if Garnet Gerralde and Greeneway were either agents or concealers thereof the prouidence of the Iesuites was such that they would neuer whatsoeuer they thought in their iudgements of the lawfulnesse thereof haue giuen consent thereunto without the approbation of higher authoritie and my conclusion in iudgement was that if euer I could be assured that the Pope allowed by any conniuencie whatsoeuer of the fact I should therein rather acknowledge him to be the Vicar of hell than the Vice-gerent of Christ And further I was much more amated when I heard that Garnet should acknowledge himselfe to haue heard of it in Sacramentall confession and yet to conceale it from the State and to denise no means or way to discouer the fact without opening himselfe or his penitent which the doctrine of his owne Church obliged him vnto Siluest verbo Confessio §. 3. num 2. prope finem Emanuel Sa Aphoris verbo Confessor S. Thom. addit q. 1. de sigill confes art 1. id primum circa finem colligitur a simili for the auoidance of so publike a harme at least in generall this made me very much to suspect that in his iudgement he approued it whatsoeuer he pretended to the contrarie For though he had made conscience to haue reuealed his penitent yet stood he bound in charitie and iustice to haue reuealed so much in generall by some way or other as sufficient notice might haue been giuen to auoid the publike harme and desolation that should haue ensued to the State thereby which no doubt he might haue done if hee had would by some meanes or other Besides another thing which bred a great maruaile in me was The Pope exalted him soon after to the dignity of Poenitentiarius in Rome that the Pope himselfe did neither chastise Greenway for the same considering the euidence giuen by his brother Garnet no nor so much as far as euer I could vnderstand as giue any publike intimation of dislike of that hatefull designement which he might haue done by either of his Breues to the comfort and satisfaction of his children here in England and chiefely to the State who for his silence therein haue iust cause to suspect that he either winked at it in secret before hand or at least after the successe thereof would haue ratified it for the most heroicall stratageme that euer Catholikes performed and haue placed him in the Calender of his famousest Martyrs as M. Wilson hath alreadie done of Garnet and Owldcorne in his English Martyrologe who as the head Iesuit hath reported fathereth vpon himselfe that most infamous libell called Pruritanus a booke so full of blasphemous application of Gods sacred word so vnrespectiue to his Maiestie so iniurious to the State and so enterlaced with lasciuious and beastly scurrilitie that it would shame any honest man to be esteemed the author thereof therefore the Iesuites doe deale politikely in ascribing it to a secular Priest to make the secular Clergie as odious to the State as themselues since it is well knowne and that not to a few that the first inuenter of the greatest part of that booke was a faire young Iesuit sometimes a student in the Vniuersitie of Louaine who sent his first inuentions thereof to Parsons and others at Rome who made themselues full merrie with them and well approued them insomuch that father Talbot the Master of the Nouices ingeniously confessed that the reading of some of them caused him much to be distracted in his prayers and it is to be thought that that Iesuit who may best chalenge the first inuention of that libelling art when he shall come to read his Breuiarie by the memorie of them he will offer vp a very vnsauorie incense in the sight of God at these words Et dixit omnis populus fiat fiat and will proue such a merrie mad petitioner as will make all the black guard of hell attending him to dance for ioy But to returne to the consideration of the treason when I arriued beyond the seas and heard some to tearme it but an inconsiderate act as though the substance of the designement were not faultie
it absolutely necessary that God should continue that faith by miracles which was formerly planted by them but rest themselues contented with the former of the Primitiue Church lest otherwise they should be subiect to seduction whence I concluded to my selfe that vnlesse the Church of Rome could proue her selfe to be true Catholike and ancient Primitiue I ought not to be led by her pretended miracles in regard that Doctor Stapleton saith Heretikes and the forerunners of Antichrist may do true miracles by Gods permission for the triall of the good which neither my selfe nor any manelse ought to beleeue because Christ hath armed vs with a warning caueat against them saying Nolite eis credere 4 Which Pretence of miracles a signe of false teachers Matth. ●4 24 how true it is I appeale to the holy Scriptures themselues our Sauiours words are most plaine There shall arise false Christs and false Prophets shall shew great signes and wondes so that if it were possible they should deceiue the verie Elect behold I haue told you before but beleeue them not by which warning aduice is giuen to beware of them to discerne them and not to giue credit vnto their teaching notwithstanding all their miracles Neither is Saint Pauls prediction lesse significant of them who remembreth vs 2. Thess 2.9 That the comming of that sonne of perdition is by the working of Satan with all power and signes and lying wonders and in all deceiue ablenesse of vnrighteousnes among them that perish because they receiued not the loue of the truth Apocal cap. 13.13.14 that they might bee saued Saint Iohn also in his Reuelations speaking of the second beast saith He did great wonders so that he made fire to come downe from heauen on the earth in the fight of men and deceiued them that dwellon the earth by the signes which ae permitted to him to do in the sight of the beast Apocal. cap. 16.13 Afterwards we heare also againe that three vncleane spirits like frogs came out of the mouth of the Dragon and out of the mouth of the beast and out of the mouth of the false Prophet for they are the spirits of diuels working miracles And moreouer lastly we find in the same booke That the beast was taken and with him that false Prophet Apocal. cap. 19.20 that wrought miracles before him whereby he deceiued them that receiued the beasts marke Now what is to bee vnderstood by powers signes and wonders I will cite the words of Ioannes Vignerius Institut Christ cap. 9. §. 2. vers 3. Hebr. 2. Matth. 24.24 who saith That miracles in the sacred Scriptures are tearmed powers signes wonders and portentes for Hebrewes the second it is said God witnessing in signes and portents and diuers powers and Matthew the foure and twentieth they are called prodigies which differ thus in that because they exceed the facultie of nature they are termed powers but in that they are ordained to the manifestation of grace they are called signes and for their excellencie they are termed wonders and prodigies as it were shewing things far off So that putting all these places together I could not conclude otherwise then vnlesse I would beleeue these false Prophets vnlesse I were willing to be an Entertenido to the son of Perdition and bee deluded most notoriously by lying wonders vnlesse I would be a perpetuall consort vnto the frogs vamped forth of the Dragons mouth vnlesse I would bee wilfully deceiued as one that had receiued the beasts marke then to shake hands with the present Church of Rome boasting so much in her miraculous powers signes wonders and prodigies for in the reformed Churches I find no such illusions pretended nor the least danger thereof nor any where else but in the present Romane Church 5 By which obseruation Miracles not to be expected in the latter times I was the rather induced to this conclusion for that I finde diuers inclining to thinke it too much curiositie now that the faith is planted and after so long continuance to seeke it out by more miracles Therefore first I will set downe the Doctrine of an old Dominican Friar distinguishing the times of doing miracles whose words are these The Church hath a three-fold state viz. Iacob de Vorag de sanctis in die ascensio ser 6. The Primitiue the moderne and the last In the Primitiue state miracles were wrought often but now seldom and in the last state that is of Antichrist they shall be done most seldome In the Primitiue state they were done often because according to Saint Chrysostome the ancient miraracles haue admiration profit and necessitie Therefore then according to Saint Chrysostome miracles were done as well for admiration because men being then accustomed to their senses were therefore to be lifted vp as for profit because then many were infirme and oppressed of diuels and for necessitie because they were infidels and wrapped vp in errors But in the moderne state they are seldome done because necessitie requireth them not men being now beleeuers yet sometimes they are wrought because profit and vtilitie exalteth them for that sometimes men are found weake and to stand in need of them And why miracles are not done now so frequently as they were in the Primitiue Church there is a threefold reason one is for the strength of faith because now the Church is strengthened and established in faith This reason Bernard assigneth putting an example of the plant into which we power water till we see it fastened in the earth secondly for the profitable example of the world De ciuit Dei lib. 22. This reason Augustine assigneth saying whosoeuer requireth yet wonders that he may beleeue he is a great wonder himself who beleeueth not when the world beleeueth Thirdly for the greater merit of faith because according to Saint Gregory faith hath no merit where humane reason prouoketh it but in the end they shall bee wrought but seldome for three reasons that Isidorus teacheth either that the hand of the persecutors may become more bould or that the patience of the Saints may be the more proued or that the lightnes may be the more shewed of those which shall fall Who speaking heere of the miracles of Saints in these three states of time she weth they shall be scanty in the middle ages after Christ and very raw in the last ages which if it be true what can I do but suspect the pretended miracles of the Church of Rome which swarmeth with so many bookes replenished with their narrations in such strange and vnheard manner as there were neuer the like and therefore they easilie seeme to surmount all beliefe and I may more largely presse those words against those of the Church of Rome which this Authour pointeth at saying to all her followers out of Saint Augustine De ciuit Dei lib. 22. Why say they are not the miracles now done which you doe preach to haue beene done I might
much in one of his Epistles to make mention or to giue salutation to his consort Philippians 4. whome hee therefore denieth himselfe to carrie about that hee may bee the more ready to preach the Gospel 1. epistle of Saint Paul to the Corinthians And againe in the eight Booke of his worke he saith They say that Saint Peter when hee sawe his wife led vnto martirdome he reioyced in the grace of Election and at her returne vnto her owne house and cryed out vnto her when shee was ledde and calling her by her name said O wife remember the Lord. Such were the marriages of Saintes so perfect was the affection of the Blessed Thus hee who liued about the yeare of our Lord God one hundred ninetie and seauen in the time of Commodus the Emperour By which Doctrines and Examples in the Apostles times it is very euident that Priests and Bishops had wiues 5 In the Canons of the Apostles it is decreed thus A Bishop or Priest shall not The marriage of Priests proued by ancient Councels Dist 28. canon Si quis vnder the colour of Religion cast away his owne wife But if he doe reiect her hee shall bee excommunicated but if hee shall perseuere hee shall bee depriued Which Canon is related in an other place The most renowned generall Councell also held at Nice in the time of Constantine the Emperour about the yeare of our Lord GOD three hundred and thirtie where were likewise assembled three hundred and eighteene whereof also mention is made in the Tripartite Historie and elsewhere In the which Caution was made with full consent of all the Fathers Not to prohibite Subdeacons Deacons Lib. 2. cap. 14. dist 31. can Ny●en Sya●d Priestes or Bishoppes from sleeping with their wiues lest by that meanes a yoake should bee imposed vppon them which might bee a cause of fornication In which bufinesse Paphnutius who being himselfe single and most famous for leading holinesse of life and power of doing myracles laboured and obtained verie much Againe as in succeeding Ages some at Rome would haue induced Priestes and Deacons vnto single life or to abstinence from their wiues and went about to make Lawes to this purpose so in the yeare of our Lord God sixe hundred seauentie and seauen the sixth generall Councell was gathered at Constantinople in the time of Constantine the fourth whereat there were present two hundred foure score and nine Bishoppes for which cause some will haue it of the same authoritie with the Euangelicall Bookes in which Councell some things concerning the marriage of Priestes were decreed making mention of them who at Rome laboured much in that matter the words of the Councell are recorded in the corpes of the Connon Lawe in these verie wordes Dist 31. can quoniam in Romam For as much as wee vnderstand it to be deliuered in the order of the Romane Canon that those who are ordained Deacons or Priests shall not accompanie with their wiues we following the ancient Canon of Apostolicall diligence and the constitutions of holy men will indeed haue legall mariages to be of force in no case dissoluing their marriages which their wiues nor depriuing them of familiaritie together in fit season Whosoeuer therefore shall bee found worthie to be ordained Deacon or Subdeacon or Priest such shall in no case be prohibited from ascending to such degree for cohabitation with his wife neither likewise shall they be constrained at the time of their ordination to professe chastitie And forthwith sentence is pronounced against those that shall presume againt this in these words If therefore any shall presume against the Apostles Canons to depriue any Priests or Deacons from the company and communion of their legall wife let him be deposed likewise the Priest or Deacon who for religions sake shall expell his wife let him be excommunicated and if he shall persist in this let him be deposed The same sixt Sinode decreed as appeareth in the Canon law That the Priest who liueth not in lawfull marriage Dist 28 Canon Presbiterum should abstaine from his office Now when I obserued thus in the Canon of the generall Councel mention to be made of the Canon of the Apostles which I haue before rehearsed and also the constitution of the Nicene Councell and with the generall consent of the Councell of Constantinople those to be condemned excommunicated and deposed that would defend the Romane Canon or compell any to keepe it I could no way satisfie my selfe how the mariage of Priests prohibited now in the present Church of Rome is not flat against these ancient generall Councels If Bellarmines assertion be true That a Councell is an assemblie of true Iudges De Concil lib. 1. cap. 18. lib 2. de Concil authorit cap. 1. whose decrees are necessarily to be followed As also againe if it be true That by the Catholike faith wee are to hold that generall Councels confirmed by the high Bishop cannot erre neither in faith nor manners As Bellarmine in another place affirmeth what excuse can the Church of Rome pretend to free her selfe from disobedience to the aforesaid Councels and dischrge her selfe from heresie in not beleeuing what the Councels confirmed by a high Bishop and by the Christian world acknowledged The cited ancient Councels alloweth Priests marriages the late Councell disalloweth them therefore the best conclusion that any man of iudgement can make hereupon is that the former are to be embraced and the latter to be reiected 6 I cannot but wonder to see how the Church of Rome swarueth from the marke of antiquitie in prohibiting or making a law to restraine Priests from the lawfull estate of wedlocke Proofes of antiquitie for the marriage of Priests I find that one Dionisius Bishop of the Corinthians who flourished in the time of Antonius Verus that is about the yeare of our Lord 164. as Eusebius relateth Euseb Eccles hist lib. 4 cap. 23. wrote an Epistle to the Gnosians in the which he warneth and entreateth Pynitus their Bishop not to lay heanie burdens vpon the shoulders of his disciples nor to intimate vnto his brethren the necessitie of enforced chastitie whereby the infirmitie of many shall be end angered Concerning the which Pynitus wrote backe vnto Dionisius embraced his good aduice and counsell and withall entreated him to send him whatsoeuer other spirituall food what strong and sound I haue noted likewise that Origen who succeeded Clement in the Schoole of Al●xandria Origen hom 25. in Matth. about the yeare two hundred as Saint Hierome witnesseth expounding th Gospell of Saint Matthew hath left these words toposteritie against the commanders of single life The Lord reprehendeth saith he such teachers who only doe not which they say but also cruelly and without mercie not according to the estimation of euery hearers strength do enioyne things aboue their power as namely who forbid to marrie and who compell from that which is expedient to immoderate