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A69143 Miscellania or a treatise Contayning two hundred controuersiall animaduersions, conducing to the study of English controuersies in fayth, and religion. VVritten by N.N.P. and dedicated to the yonger sort of Catholike priests, and other students in the English seminaries beyond the seas. With a pareneticall conclusion vnto the said men. Anderton, Lawrence, attributed name. 1640 (1640) STC 576; ESTC S115142 202,826 416

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the supposed answering of those few chosen and picked out by him must serue through the partiality of iudgement in his followers to disgrace all the rest of the Corruptions or falsifications vrged by you Animaduersion LII THe Protestants in falsly alledging the authorityes of Authours do abuse their Readers chiefly foure seuerall wayes First which is the most vsuall by concealing some part of the alledged authority Secōdly by adding some words of his owne to make the produced Authour or Father to speake like a Protestant Thirdly by transposing the words of an authority thereby to make the sense different from the Authors true meaning Fourthly by a wilfull mistaking or confusion of tymes I will exemplify these foure sorts in the wryting of D. White a great Impostour in his Scripts in his booke called The way to the true Churc● Well then the said Protestant in p. 119. o● his said Booke produceth a place out of the Rhemists to proue that the Church of Rom● can make that Scripture which is not an● vnmake that to be Scripture which is Scripture To proue this he produceth the Rh●mists (y) Gaelat 1. thus saying The Scriptures are 〈◊〉 knowne to be true neither are Christians bon●● to receiue them without the attestation of th● Church Now heere marke the true word● of the Rhemists and therein obserue his impurity of dealing committed by concealing part of the Sentence iust crossing his intended drift of vrging that authority Their true words are these The Scriptures whic● are indeed of the Holy Ghosts inditing being p●● into the Churches triall are found proued an● testifyed vnto the World to be such and not ma●● true altered or amended by the same Since the Holy Scriptures in themselues were alwayes true before but not so knowne to be to all Christians All these are the words of the Rhemists where you see the wilfull concealement of this Parcell The Scriptures are n●● made true altered or amended by the Church as also that other the Holy Scripturs in themselues were alwaies true meaning without the attestation of the Church Now all that can truly be gathered out of this authority is that the Scriptures though most sacred and true in themselues cannot be so made knowne to vs in which words lyeth the touch of the point without the Churches attestation But how farre off is this from M. Whytes vrging of this place Touching his imposture committed in ●dding of words this one place shall serue Thus then the said D. White produceth Bellarmine in contempt of the Churches authority saying Other meanes may deceiue me but nothing is more knowne nothing more certaine then the Scriptures That it were the greatest madnes in the world not te belieue thē c. Now in this sentence these words viz. Other meanes may deceiue me are not in Bellarmine but most subtily added to the begining of Bellarmines words and caused to be printed in the same kynd of Character or letter wherein the other words of Bellarmine are printed thereby to make the Reader belieue that they are words of Bellarmine wheras they are added as I about insinuated for the more depressing of the Churches Authority Now the whole sentence of Bellarmine was directed against the Swinkseldians who absolutely denyed Scripture and against whom Bellarmine in that place disputeth Touching the fraud consisting in a cūning transposition of words without adding any words to the authority alledged or concealing any parcell therof this example of the foresaid M. Whyte may serue In pag. 344. of his way to the true Church he produceth for the ouerthrow of the religious vse of Images the Councell of Eliberis thus saying No (z) Can. 36. Picture is to be made in the Church lest that be adored which is painted on the walls But the true words of the Canon are these Plac●●● picturas in Ecclesia non habere ne quod coli●● adoretur in parietibus depingatur Jt pleaseth the Councell that pictures should not be in the Church lest that which is worshipped an● adored be painted on the Walls The nyce difference in words resteth thus Lest that which is worshipped be painted and as M● Whyte translateth Lest that which is painted be worshipped Where the words of the Councell acknowledging the worship of Images maketh the worship due to them to be the cause why they are not painted on the walls to wit because they were subiect to be defaced either by inuasion of Enemyes or rayne c. Now M. Whites translation only by a subtill transposition of the words imports that Pictures are not to be worshipped at all Lastly concerning the Calumny resting in a wilfull confusion of tymes The said Protestant in pag. 61. for proofe of Priests lawfull mariage produceth a Testimony from Sinesius Bishop of Ptolemais thus writing of himselfe to a friend The sacred hand of Theophilus hath giuen me a wyfe and hereupon Iustify to all men that J will neither forsake her nor priuily as an adulterer keep her Company but I will pray to God to send me by her many and good children This Epistle is at large set downe in (a) Eccl. hist l. 14. c. 55. Nicephorus Now heere t●e fraud lyeth that at the tyme when this Epistle was written Sinesius was but a Lay-man but eminent for learning Now after he made himselfe priest and was created Bishop of Ptolemais he euer liued separated from the company of his wyfe as fully appeareth out of Nicephorus in the place aboue alledged Here then the Ministers deceit lyeth in applying that to him as if he had beene then Bishop which was spoken by him being a Layman and so M. White most fraudulently confoundeth those two different tymes together as if all had hapned at one and the same tyme. Animaduersion LIII YF your Aduersary will vant that he will proue all by Scripture only as most of them giue it out they will then force him to draw both his Premisses I meane both his Propositions if so they should be reduced to a forme of Argument from the Scripture alone of which Method within two Arguments at least he is certaine to fayle For if he take either of his Propositions from humane Authority or from naturall Reason you may tell him he leaueth his vndertaken of prouing by Scripture alone and consequently you may deny his force of Argument though Logicall in forme Here I further aduertize that if your Aduersary vndertake the part of an Opponent tye him precisely euer to Oppose which Scene perhaps he being brought to a Non-plus would flyely transferre vpon you In like sort if he taketh vpon him to answere suffer him not to oppose thought he labour so to do to free himselfe from answering Thus be sure that ech of you keepe your chosen Station Animaduersion LIV. IF the Protestant should seeke to expoūd by way of conference of places those words of our Sauiour This is my body this is my Bloud figuratiuely by those other words of his J
is now forbidden as a thing vngodly 11. That there are any Sacraments of the New Testament instituted by Christ for the good of mans Soule Lastly to omit some others 12. That before the ending of the world Antichrist shall come who shal be a designed Enemy of Christ and shall labour to subuert and ouerthrow all Christian Religion All these points both Protestant and Catholike do belieue and hould that the beliefe of them is necessary to Saluation And yet not any of these Articles are expressed or set downe in the Creed Whence I conclude that the Apostles Creed cannot be a sufficient boundary to containe and limit an auayleable Fayth Animaduersion LXII THe bitter Inuectiues of the Protestants one against another are of sufficient force to discouer their dissentions in doctrine as where Luther sayth We (n) Luther in Thes Cont. Louaniens Thes 21. seriously iu●ge the Swinglians and Sacramentaries to be Heretiks and Aliens from the Church of God And to confront this Swinglius thus retorteth vpon Luther Luther (o) Swingl tom 2. in resp ad Luther fol 458. is guilty of high blasphemy against the nature and essence of God c. To descend to the Puritans and Protestants in England we find that the booke entituled Constitutions and Canons Ecclesiasticall printed anno ●604 doth ipso facto excommunicate the Puritans for their maintaining of these positions following as they are there set downe in the Booke The worship of the Church of England is corrupt superstitions vnlawfull repugnant to the Scriptures The Articles of the Bishops Religion are Erroneous their Rites Antichristian c. Now the Protestants do thus r●quite the Puritans saying The (p) M. Powell in h●s consi●erations Puritans are notorious and manifest Schismaticks cut of from the Church And againe The (q) M. Pa●ks in his Ep. De●ic Puritans seeke to vndermyne the foundation of fayth Now add hereto that although infinite other passages might be brought to shew the great discord in fayth among the forraine Protestants yet there is no one more short Argument to conuince this point then to recur to the foure Catalogues of Protestāt Books set downe in the later end of the Booke called The Protestants Apology of the Roman Church In which 4. Catalogues one may find about three hundred Bookes written in great acerbity of stile by one Protestant against another The names of all which books are taken out of Coccius his Thesaurus or from Hospinian both which Authou●s dyed many yeares since Now if so m●●y Bookes of disagreements in fayth among the Protestants were made within so sport a Tyme how many hundred more might be alledged if one did know all other Bookes written by the Protestant against the Protestant since the death of those two former men Animaduersion LXIII MAny vulgar and vnlearned Protestants and especially the Caluinists Puritans do condemne the Catholike Roman Religion because it defendeth and practizeth diuers Ceremonyes they ignorantly tearming such Ceremonyes Idolatrous and superstitious And there is no one argument more preuayling with such men to auert them from our Catholike Religion the● this Now to take a way this scandall o● stumbling block I say that if it were God good pleasure to haue his Fayth and Religion of the old Testament which for the tyme was the true Religion to consis● much in Ceremonyes as we see it did fa●● out in the seuerall Sacrifices appoynted by God In the Tabernacle with the appurtenances and of what matter number and qualityes all things should be as also with proui●ion of Oyle and Lampes The Arke The propitiatory the Consecration of priests the Institution of all vestures vessels and other holy things then belonging to the seruice of God all these to be made performed and done after a strange and different manner as we reade in Exodus As also the Institution of Circumcision consisting in paring away a piece of flesh which serued for freeing Man in that tyme from Origin● Sinne the preparing and eating of the Paschall Lambe sprinkling the dores with the bloud thereof and infinit other Ceremonies recorded in the foresaid booke of Exodus I say if this was Gods vnsearcheable Will to ordaine these things during the tyme of the Old Law wherein he would haue the Honour Seruice and worship exhibited to ●im partly to consist why then may not our Sauiour institute the Religion fayth of Christians belieuing in him to be attended on with diuers Ceremonyes and yet this without any Superstition or Idolatry Now our Aduersaryes common euasion to this our Argument is to say that God instituted Ceremonyes in the Old Law to serue as figures or Types of things which were after to fall out in the New Law which Ceremonyes were thē to end vpon the promulgation of the fayth of Christ. This answeare is most impertinent First because not all the Ceremonyes in the Old Law but only some did serue as figures or Adumbrations of things to happen in the New Testament Secondly because the Question heere is not why or to what end the Ceremonyes of the Old Law were instituted but only whether Ceremonyes tending to the worship of God be pious lawfull Therefore I conclude that seeing the Ceremonies in the Old Law were instituted by Gods direction for the worship of him as we read in Exodus c. 8 Ostendas populo Caeremonias ritus colendi let the other secondary end of them be what it will that therefore and by force of Gods proceeding in the Old Law we Christians may not thinke strange that our Sauiour being God and Man would now in the New Law institute and giue to his Church the like power some Ceremonies and p●blike Rites wherewith he will be worshipped and wherin part of Christian religion shall consist Now therefore let our Adu●●saries if they can giue any true reaso● why the Cerem●nies of the Old Law b●ing incomparably more in number shall be accounted lawfull and yet the Ceremonies of the New Law or Testament as long as they are reputed but Ceremonies must be r●puted superstitions a● Idolatrous Animaduersion LXIV WE Catholikes charge the Protesta●●● with ancient Heresies For example w● shew how the Manichees according to S Austin depriued Man (r) L. de Haeres cap. 4● of Freewill Ho● ●ouinian (s) Ier. l 1. cont I●●in Aug l. Haeres cap. taught that Fasting was not m●ritorious and Virginity was no better the● wedlock or mariage How Aerius (t) Austin l. de Haeres c. 33. taug● it to be most vnlawfull to pray or offer●● Sacrifice for the Dead How the Arians (u) L. 1. cont Marin cap. ● reiected all vnwritten Traditions who a●●● (x) Athanas in Apolog. pro fuga perpetrated Sacrilege against the Sacraments Altars Priests and Religious person How the (y) Austin l. ● Vnitate cap. 12. Donatists taught the Churc● of Christ to be Jnuisible How the Deniall 〈◊〉 the Reall Presence was condemned by certaine ancient Heretiks
Superstitious then a Protestant And a Protestant sooner becom an Atheist then a Catholike The Reason of both is euident And first whereas the Catholike Religion besides the beliefe of many dogmaticall points of fayth retayneth the practise of many Ceremonies the true vse of which Ceremonies as being first instituted by the primitiue Church are most lawfull but now if the ignorant Catholike through want of due instruction do ascribe more to them then is due or do put greater cōfidence in them then he ought as forgetting them to be but Ceremonies then perhaps he may haue a superstitious conceite of them as it happened in the Brazen Serpent though otherwise seruing as the figure of Christ To which the Iewes through abuse thereof in ascribing more worship to it then they ought at length bare a Superstitions respect But now touching the Protestants greater propension to Atheisme the reason is in that Protestancy euer refynes it selfe by Negatiues Thus for example The Caluinist or Puritan denies more then Lutheran or the moderate Protestāt The Anabaptist more then the Puritan The Anti-trinitarians more then the Anabaptists the Iew or Turks more then the Anti-trinitarians and for the last sublimation through deniall of all Iudaisme and Turcisme resolues into Atheisme And hereupon we find that whereas many Protestants by their often refyning of their Religion and all by Negatiues do in the end become Atheists denying euen the being of a Deity that few or no Catholikes immediatly from Catholike Religion euer fall into the open Blasphemy of Atheisme Animaduersion CVIII THe preaching of the Word and Sacraments supposing them to be Notes of the Church as our Aduersaries do suggest proue only the Place where the Church is but not which is the Church For the Church consisteth of men and we cannot tell who they are that receaue the Word truly preached or the Sacraments truly administred Againe whereas as Lubbertus (k) L. 4. de Eccles cap. 1. a Protestant truly teacheth Notius est duplex vnum Naturae alterum nobis Now here the Question is only of such Notes as are Notes in respect of vs for our better informing which is the true Church and not as they are Notes in respect of Nature For here we are instructed a posteriori and according to the measure of that knowledg which God vouchsafes to afford to vs. Now in reference hereto we freely grant that the true preaching of the word and Administration of the Sacraments may be termed Notes of the Church but not Notes to vs which is only the point here stood vpon For though they be Notes in Nature of the truth of the Church yet what doth this auayle vs since they are not Notes to vs for our direction to find which is the true Church Againe the true preaching of the word and the Administration of the Sacraments cannot be Notes to vs which is the true Church seeing the Scripture it selfe cannot be made knowne to vs for Scripture but only by the attestation of the Church as M. Hooker testifieth in these words Of (l) Hooker in Eccles Pol. saec 14. l. 1. pag. 86. things necessary the very chiefest is to know what Bookes we are to esteeme holy which is confessed impossible for the Scripture it selfe to teach And againe We (m) Vbi supra l. 3. p. 146. all know the first outward Motiue to esteeme of the Scripture is the authority of the Church Thus he Now this being granted it ineuitably followeth that first we must know which is the true Church to giue this approbation of the Scripture before we can know which is the Scripture and much more then before we can be assured of the true preaching of the Word and which is the true construction of the Scripture To these former Arguments I adioyne this pertinent obseruation It is this When the Catholikes demand to set downe the true Notes of the Church our Aduersaries answering That is the true Church which enioyeth a true preaching of the Word and an auayleable administration of the Sacraments Now I here affirme that this description of Notes is but our owne Question returned vs back in other termes and consequently but a Sophisme consisting in an idle circulation of the same point inuested with a new forme of words For when I demand which is the true Church I vertually implicitly and according to the immediate meaning of my words demand which Church is that which enioyeth the true preaching of the word and the true vse of the Sacraments since only the true Church is honored with this kind of preaching and distribution of the Sacraments Thus far touching the Notes prostituted by our Aduersaries as the true Notes of Christ his Church Animaduersion CIX SVch Protestants as do mantayne that there were Protestants in all ages before Luther giue the reason that the feare of Persecution was the cause why the said Protestants did then lye latent and became not visible to the world But this is a meere aēry suggestion For thus I argue The Church of God vnder persecution either communicateth openly with a false visible Church in participation of Sacraments and externall professiō of fayth Or els she doth refrayne from all such externall Communion if she do communicate with a false Idolatrous Church as diuers of our Aduersaryes repute the Church of Rome to be then is she not the true Church since the true Church cannot brooke any such dissimulation For we read With the hart a (n) Rom. 10. Mā belieueth vnto Iustice and with the mouth confesseth vnto Saluation If she doth not communicate with it then by such her forbearing she is made knowne and consequently is become thereby visible for who are persecuted but Men that are knowne Or how can one lying secretly and hiddenly be said to be persecuted The truth of this point is further warrantable from the examples of the persecution in the primitiue Church which of all other pressures of the Church was incomparably the greatest And yet we fynd that the particular Bishops Confessours and Martyrs are euen to this day made knowne who they were what false Opinions and Heresyes they impugned And the like may be said of the English Catholikes persecuted in Queene Elizabeths reigne since the names and memoryes of those reuerend Pryests and others of the Laity to speake nothing of many worthy Confessours and other suffering great losses and disgraces who lost their lyues in her dayes only for Religion are euen to this day fresh and recorded Therefore I heare demaund that if the Catholiks in this our Country being but a small part of Christendome could not but for some few nūbers of yeares in comparison escape the search and hands of their persecutours and become thereby most visible knowne How could then the Protestants being supposed to be dispersed thtoughout many Nations lye hid and auoyd for so many ages together as is pretended the force of that persecution which is affirmed by
vincula reis profer lumē caecis c which acts say they are peculiar to Christ And againe in the same Hymne they obiect those words Monstra te esse Matrem as implying a mother and awfull authority ouer Christ. In explication of the first we demād that our Lady would loose our Sinnes and bring light to the blynd only by her imp●tration and praying to her blessed Sonne not otherwyse and therfore in most of our set p●ayers to her we adioyne these words following Per Dominum nostrum Iesum Christum Touching the second sentence We do not wish her to impose any command or Motherly authority ouer her Some But we only vnderstand hereby shew thy selfe a Mother by appeasing thy sonne in our behalfe this by the remembrance of all thy Motherly tender care and loue towards him in his Infancy through the whole course of his life that by thee he may receaue our prayers and therefore it immediatly followeth in the same Hymne sumat per te preces But now if these words be such an eye-sore to the Protestāts what will they say to those words of S. Paul Omnibus (p) 1. Cor. 9. omnia factus sum vt omnes facerem saluos J am become to all men all things that I may saue all Where the Apostle in words assumeth to himselfe the Saluation of others In like manner in that Antiphone in our Ladies office beginning Salue Regina c. Our Apuersaries insist in those words Et Iesum benedictum fructum ventris tui nobis post hoc exilium ostende And shew to vs after this our exile Jesus c. To which I answere That it is lesse to say To shew the Sauiour vnto men then to say To saue men And yet we read the Apostle thus to say Et teipsum (q) 1. Tim. 4. saluam facies eos quite au●iunt Thou shalt ●●ue thy selfe and them that do heare thee Moreouer it is obiected out of that Antiphone that the B. Virgin is stiled Spes nostra Our Hope To this I say that these words are vsed because next after our Lord Iesus Christ being God and Man we chiefly place our confidence in the mediation of the Bl●s●●d Virgin Since our Hope is not to be placed only in the Authours of our Good but also in the Intercessours and ministers thereof And according hereto when our Lo●d said to the Iewes It (r) Iohn 5. is Moyses who accus●s you in quo speratis in whom you hop● Our Sauiour did not reprehend the Iewes in that they hoped in Moyses but because they did not belieue Moyses Finally our Aduersaries cannot brooke our Lady to be called Mater misericordiae because say they God is the Father of Mercy therefore the B. Virgin cannot nor ought to be called so But this is no good consequence for we read that Christ is called Lux (s) Iohn 9. mundi and yet Christ sayth of his Apostles Vos (t) Math. 5. estis lux mundi Thus such titles may be giuen to God and men in a different relation without any dishonour to God Animaduersion XLVII THe puritans do most maliciously peruert seuerall texts of Scripture in dishonour of our B. Lady For example First they obiect as seeming at least to rest doubtfull of the continuance of our B. Ladyes Virginity that Text Et non (u) Math 1. cognoscebat eam donec peperit filium primogenitum which words say they seeme to afford a double Argument The first is taken from the word Donec inferring from thence that after the byrth of her Sonne she should carnally know Joseph The second from the words following Filium primogenitum seeing Primogenitus properly signifieth that sonne which is first borne in reference to those Sonnes or children which are after borne I answere first touching the word Donec which word as also the word vsque doth not euer signify an affirmation after the time expressed if a Negation did goe before neither alwayes do they signify a Negation when an affirmation did precede For example Sede a (x) Psal 109. dextris m●is donec ponam inimicos tuos scabellum pectum tuorum Sit at my right hand vntill J make thy Enemyes thy footestoole Now these words do not import that after he shall not fit at the right hand of his Father The like sentences to these are these following Donec (y) Math 5. transeat Caelum Terra iota vnum aut vnus apex non praeteribit á lege And againe Ego (z) Math. 28. vobiscum sum vsque ad consummationem mundi In all which locutions sentences of Scripture that which is doubtfull is expressed but that which is certaine is not expressed or spoken of Now touching the word Primogenitus Epiphanius (a) Haeres 78. denieth that Christ was called Primogenitus Mariae the first borne of Mary for the Euangelist sayth not Primogenitum suum but he sayth Fitium suum primogenitum signifying therby that he was the Sonne of the B Virgin but withall the first begotten Sonne of God Seing accordingly we thus read Ipse (b) Coloss 1. namque est primogenitus omnis Creaturae He to wit Christ was the first borne of all Creatures S. Ierome sayth that Christ was called (c) Adue●s Heluid Primogenitus Mariae not because she brought forth any other Sonne after him but because before him she brought forth no other Sonne For it is the phrase of Scripture that those who are Vnigeniti are called Primogeniti So S Paul calleth Christ Primogenitus (d) Heb. 6. Dei for the only-begotten sonne of God Lastly they vrge that sentence Jnter (e) Math. 11. natos mulicrum non surrexit maior Iohanne Baptista There hath not risen among the borne of women a greater then John the Baptist intimating hereby that the Blessed Virgin is inferiour in dignity to S. Iohn Baptist. This is easely answered First if the words as they lye be literally taken as our Aduersaries pretend then should John Baptist be greater then Christ Secondly because S. Iohn Baptist in those words spoken by Christ is compared only with the Holy men of the old Testament but Christ and his Mother as also the Apostles belong to the new Testament Animaduersion XLVIII DIuers Protestants as aboue is shewed do hould such bookes to be Scripture which other Protestants reiect as Apocryphall therefore it followeth that the Scripture it selfe cannot shew at least to vs which is the point controuerted which is Scripture which doubt is only to be referred to the Authority of the Church And therefore M. Hooker truly sayth Of things (f) Eccles Pol. l●● 1 Sect. 14. p. 8● necess●ry the very chiefest is to know what Bookes we are to esteeme Holy which point is confessed impossible for the Scripture it selfe to teach And againe It is (g) Ibidem l. 2. Sect. 4. p. 102 ●4● and D. Couell in defence of M. Hooker art 4. pag. 31.
spake (e) Luth. tom 7. Wittenberg to him in a base great voice so as he made Luther to sweate his hart to tremble againe the same apppeareth in that Luther saith as is set downe aboue that he was first awake and that then after the Disputation begunne But howsoeuer admit it were but a spirituall fight or Disputation yet in either case the persuasions arguments wherunto Luther heere yealdeth came confessedly from the Diuell what difference then is there whether the Diuell made them to Luther by sensible cōference or by inward suggestion Animaduersion LIX AS Luther was instructed by the Diuel to impugne the Masse so were Carolostadius and Swinglius two great introducers of Protestancy in those former tymes in like manner indoctrinated by the Diuel against the Masse Touching Carolostadius whom Luther calleth a Man (f) Luth. in loc com Class 5. pag. 47. giuen ouer vnto a reprobate sense This man impugned the Masse vnder pretence of Visions and pretended conferences with God of whome the Booke entituled Conspiracy for pretended reformation thus writeth Carolostadius (g) Luth tom 3. Penens fol. 68. a preacher professing the Gospell c. attributed much to Cabinet teachers and pretended conference with God And yet his pretended visions were but meere Illusions of the Deuill of whom euen Luther thus sayth Carolostadius (h) In Theol. Calu in Pr●●em had his expositions from the Deuill As concerning Swinglius whom Conradus Schlusse●burg the Protestant calleth a man of vnfortunate memory This man disputed publikly at Zurick for the abolishing of the Masse and receaued confessedly his nightly Instruction by D●eame from an Admonisher (i) So writeth Swinglius of himselfe herein tom 1. l. de sub fid Eucharist fol. 249. whether Black or Whyte sayth he I remember not Which Instruction is acknowledged by Protestants themselues to be a meere Imposture of Satan For thus hath Conradus Schlusselburg left recorded Sole (k) In Theol. Caluinist in ●roaem meridiano clartus est non Deum verum sed Diabolum ipsissimum c. It is more cleare then the Sunne that not the true God but the Deuill himselfe did inspire the Sacramentary Heresy into Swinglius by Dreame Thus far of these three former mayne Impostours I meane Luther Carolostadius and Swinglius all of them receauing their instruction from the Deuill for their abolishing and impugning of the Masse Animaduersion LX. DIuers A●liaphorists or Neutralls in Religion do maintayne that whosoeuer belieueth the Apostles Creed liuing a good life may be saued Now that the Creed cannot be the Boundary or limit of Christian fayth is thus proued First because though the Protestant and the Catholike do indifferently repeat the Creede yet they vnderstand euery Article thereof in a different sense th●one from the other For example I belieue 1. in God The Catholike belieues that his God no way cooperateth or worketh sinne in man The Protestant belieues that God doth and therefore Beza sayth that God (l) In his Display of Popish practises p. 102. exciteth the wicked will of one thiefe to kill another And in Iesus 2. Christ his only Sonne The Catholike belieues in Christ who is God of God and equall to his Father who suffered Death quoad sufficientiam for all mankind A Sauiour who died only in Bo●y and not in Soule Finally a Sauiour who from his first Conception was endued with all knowledge wisdome and prouidence exempt from all ignorance passion and perturbation The Protestant beli●ueth in Christ as his Sauiour yet in all these circumstances touching Christ differently from the Catholike Descended 3. into Hell The Catholike by Hell in this place vnderstandeth Limbus Patrum from whence our Sauiour did deliuer the soules of the lust there detayned till his comming But the greatest part of Protestants do vnderstand in this article the graue by the word Hell He 4. ascended into Heauen both the Catholiks and the Protestants do teach that Christ truly in body ascended vp into Heauen whereas the Lutherans (m) Luther bib de sacra Caena Domini tom 2. fol 11● do teach that Christs Body is in all places with the Diuinity And that therefore it did not after his passion really ascend vp into Heauen it being there both before and after his passion To iudge 5. the quick and the Dead The Catholike belieues that Christ shall so iudge man as that his good works receauing all their force from our Sauiours Passion shal be rewarded The Protestant belieueth that Christ shall reward only a ba●e and speciall fayth The like disparity of the beliefe of the Articles of the Creed by the Catholike and the Protestant might be exemplifyed in the other following Articles of the Creed here omitted for breuity Only I conclude that seeing it is the sense and not the words only which makes the Creed which Christians ought necessarily to belieue and seeing the Catholike the Protestant b●lieue the words therof in different or rather contrary senses therefore it followeth that it is not sufficient for a Christian in respect of fayth only nakedly to belieue the words of the Creed but he is obliged if so he expecteth saluation to belieue the Articles thereof in that sense and in no other wherein the Apostles did dictate them Animaduersion LXI ADmitting that both Protestant and Catholike did belieue the Creed in a true sense yet followeth it not that this beliefe I meane in respect of beliefe only were a sufficient beliefe or fayth for the saluation of Man The reason hereof is this because it is most certaine that there are diuers points of Christian Religion houlden necessarily to be belieued in the iudgment both of the Protestant and Catholike and yet the same points are not contayned or expressed in the Creed And to insist in these following 1. That there are certaine Diuine writings of infallible authority penned by the Holy Ghost which w● commonly call the Scriptures of the Old and New Testament 2. That there are spirituall substances which we call Angells and that many thousands of them did fall after their Creation and are become those malignant spirits which we call Deuills 3. That there is any materiall place of Hell for the wicked of which we find nothing in the iudgment of the Protestants seeing they vnderstand the graue by the word Hell in the Creed 4. That the paynes of the damned shal be for all Eternity 5. That Adam presently vpon his Creation did fall from the Grace of God and thereby transferred Originall sinne vpon all mankind 6. That the world was once drowned for sinne which inundation is commonly called Noes floud 7. That our Sauiour whilest he conuersed here vpon earth did worke any miracles 8. That S. Iohn Baptist was our Sauiours precursour or forerunner 9. That our Sauiour did chuse to him certaine Men for his Apostles who first did preach and plant the Christian fayth throughout the whole world 10. That Circumcision
any impugned part or branch of their Religion From which vndaunted resolution of theirs we certainely collect that this their constant determination of defending the least point of their Religion proceedeth partly from a generall instinct of God impressed in mans soule teaching ech man that death it selfe is rather to be suffered then we are to deny any part of fayth and Religion in generall And thus according hereto we find that the Athenians who were Heathens though they did erre touching the particular Obiect therin as worshipping false Gods were most cautelous that no one point should be infringed or violated touching the worshipping of their Gods The like religious seuerity was practised by the Iewes as Iosephus (s) Ioseph contra Apion witnesseth Now from these Premisses we deduce against our Adiaphorists or Neutralls in Religion either Catholike or Protestant that no points of true Religion are of that cold Indifferency as that they are not to be much regarded either in beliefe or in profession but that they are of that Nature worth and dignity as a man is obliged to vndergoe all torments yea death it selfe before he yeald or suffer the least relaps in denying any of the said verities or in any externall Profession contrary thereto Animaduersion CXXI FOr the further impugning of the indifferency of seuerall Religions and to shew that euery religion among Christians is not capable of Saluation I will drawe one demonstration out of Scripture The text is this In the (t) 1. Timoth cap. 4. larer tymes certaine shall depart from the fayth attending to spirits of Errour and Doctrine of Deuils forbidding to Marry to abstaine from Meates Heere the Apostle prophesyeth according to the iudgement of S. Chrysestome (u) Hom. 12. in Timoth Ambrose (x) In hunc locum Ierome (y) L. contra Iouinian c. 7. and (z) Haer. 25. 40. Austin of the Heretykes Encratites Marcionists Ebionites and such like who denyed Matrimony as a thing altogether vnlawfull and prohibited absolutely at all tymes and the eating of certaine Meates as Creatures impure Now these Heretykes belieued in the Trinity the Incarnation and other Supreme poynts of Christian Religion And yet euē for these two former Heresyes touching Marriage and eating of Meates and not for their misbeleife in the Trinity Incarnation c. they are said by the Apostle to depart from the fayth of Christ and to attend to the Doctrine of Deuils But such as leaue the fayth of Christ and attend to the doctrine of the Diuels are not in state of Saluation Now these Errours heere mentioned by the Apostle are of as little or lesser consequence then the Controuersyes betweene the Catholiks the Protestāts therefore it standeth vpon ech Christian if so he expect to saue his soule to professe entirely and wholy the true Religion Animaduersion CXXII TOuching the Doctrine of Transubstantiation in the B. Sacrament of the Eucharist the auncient Fathers are most full therin euen by the acknoledgement of the Protestāts themselues First then Gregory the great is cōfessed by D. Humfrey (a) In Iesuitism part 2. rat 5. to haue broght in Transubstantiation into England at his first planting of Christianity in this Country as is aboue shewed Chrysostome is reprehended by the Centurists to vse their owne words (b) Cent. 5. col 517. Quia parum commodè de Transubstantiatione dixit (c) Cent. 4. c. 4. col 295. S. Ambrose is affirmed by the Centurists in the booke ascribed to Ambrose to confirme the Doctrine of Transubstantiation which Father for the said Doctrine is also taxed by (d) L Ep. Oecolampad Swinglij l. 3. Oecolampadius S. Cyrill is reprehended by Peter (e) Ep. ad Bezam annexed to his Common places Martyr in these words I will not easely subscribe to Cyrill who affirmed such a Communion as thereby euen the flesh and bloud of Christ is ioyned to the Blessings for so he calleth the holy bread c. S. Cyprian is charged in the booke ascribed to Vrsinus the Protestant entituled Co●monefactio cuiusdam Theologi de sancta Caen● who there thus writeth (f) Pag. 111. ●18 In Cyprian are many things which seeme to affirme Transubstantiation Lastly Ignatius is acknoledged by Ke●pnitius (g) Exa part 1. p. 94. to haue confirmed the Doctrine of Transubstantiation in that eminent place of his (h) Ep. ad Smirnenses Eucharistias oblationes nō admittūt quòd non confiteantur eucharistiam esse carnem saluatoris quae pro peccatis nostris passa est c. The truth of the Fathers iudgment touching the Reall presence is so fully confessed by our Aduersaryes as that Antony de Adamo a markable Protestant thus acknoledgeth hereof (i) In his Anatomy of the Masse p. 236. J haue not hitherto beene able to know when this Opinion of the Reall bodily being of Christ in the Eucharist did first beginne With whome conspireth Adamus Francisci another Pro estant saying Commentum (k) In Margarita Theol. pag. 156. Papistarum c. The Papists inuention touching Transubstantiation crept earely into the Church Thu● farre of the Protestants Confessions in this poynt whereunto we may add that these Fathers heere aboue charged with the rest of the Fathers of those Ages were the chiefe Pastours Doctours of the Primitiue Church which Church belieued herein according as it was taught by the said Fathers If then these Fathers should erre in the Doctrine of Trāsubstantiation then should it follow that the primitiue Church yea and the vniuersall Church of Christ contrary ●o Christs (l) Math 1● promisse therein should erre Animaduersion CXXIII YF we do take into due consideration 〈◊〉 seuerall chiefe heades and points when vnto the sentences and authorities of 〈◊〉 ancient Fathers touching the Eucharist 〈◊〉 be reduced we cannot otherwise be per●●ded but that the Fathers taught vna●●mously the Doctrine of the Reall Presence and Transubstantiation seing those Heads 〈◊〉 the Fathers sentences are so agreeable a●●fortable to Christs Reall being in the Sacrament and so incompetent and disproportionable to a bare Typicall Presence or being of him therein To begin then The First Head of the Fathers authorityes may be the Appellat●● or Names which the Fathers giue to the Blessed Sacrament far differently from the Sacramentaryes which is an argument that Sacramentaryes differ from the Fathers i● beleife therein Thus the Fathers call the Sacrament The body bloud of our Lord Th● precious body tremenda Mysteria the fearefu●● Misteries the pledge of our Saluation Our pri●● whereas the Sacramentaryes vsuall phra●● is to call the Eucharist the Symboll or sign● of the body and bloud of the Lord. The second Classe or Head is taken from the Comparison of this Sacrament with other things for they compare it with the Manna Paschall Lamb with Panis Propositionis and the lyke saying The Eucharist doth differ from all these things as the Truth differs frō ●●gures the body
concerne Merit of workes as in Luc. 20. and 21. 2. Thess 1. wherein those said words are vsed they translate them To seeme to be worthy or to seeme only to be made worthy therby to weaken such texts for the prouing of Merit of works But in other Texts not touching the Doctrine of Merit they can be content to translate those words truly that is to be worthy and to be worthy indeed as in this Text O how (*) Heb. 20. much sorer punishment shall he be worthy of who treadeth vnderfoote the Sonne of God Thus much for a Tast Animaduersion CLXXIV THe English Protestant Translation of the Bible is not only by the Catholiks ack●owledged to be corrupt and impure but ●so by many Protestant themselues M. ●urges thus censureth of that Translation ●ying How (17) M. Burges in his Apology sect 6. shall I approue vnder my hād 〈◊〉 Translation which hath many omissions many ●dditiōs which sometymes obscureth sometymes peruerteth the sense being sometymes sensles sometymes contrary To whose Iudgment herein subscribe diuers Ministers in their ioint consent thereof in these words A (18) The ministers in their abridgment of a Booke deliuered to king Iames. pag. 11. 12. Translation that taketh away from the Text that addeth to the Text and this sometymes to the changing or obscuring of the meaning of the Holy Ghost And againe A Translation which is absurd and sensles peruerting in many places the meaning of the Holy Ghost All whose Censures herein agree with the like censure of D. Reynolds deliuered in King Iames his presence in Hampton Court who refused to subscribe to the Communion booke because said he it warranted a false corrupt translation of the Bible Now from hence I thus deduce The Protestants by their owne Confessiōs haue had as yet neuer any true English Translation of the Scriptures Therefore as yet the English Protestants neuer enioyed according to their owne Principles a sufficient and competent Iudge of Controuersies Since admitting the Scripture were the sole Iudge of Controuersyes in fayth yet this of necessity must be vnderstood of the Scripture as it is pure and incorrupt not 〈◊〉 it is impure and abastarded with false Translations From the Scripture I will descend to the English Communion booke or Booke of Common Prayer This Communion booke as it is euen at this present we fynd to be thus condemned by Protestan●s Twenty two preachers in London in (19) The Booke is intituled The Petition of twenty two Ministers in London one Petition did thus charge the Common Prayer Booke saying Many things in the Communion Booke are repugnant to the word of God And againe In the Communion Booke there be things of which there is no reasonable sense There is contradiction in it euen in necessary and essentiall points of Religion The holy Scripture is at graced by it A point so euident that D. Couell rebuketh and censureth other Protestants herein saying The (20) D. Couell in his Examen pag. 179. Communion Booke is boldly despised meaning by the Puritans Grosse errours and manifest impietyes meaning in their opinion are in the Communion Booke So he redargueth his owne brethren Now here in like manner as aboue I do thus argue Yf the English Protestants haue had no forme of Common Prayer published to them but such as is repugnant to the Scripture and in which there is contradiction euen in the necessary points of Religion them followeth that euen to this day the ignorant English Protestant neuer prayed to God auayleably For it is Prayer sorting to the word of God and not what is accompanied with errours which is piercing in Gods ea●es See here what dangerous Resu●tancies proceed to the English Protestants from their own Brethrens Confessions though most true that as yet they enioy not the Scripture as truly translated nor a p●ou● set forme of Prayer or Communion Booke Animaduersion CLXXV SEeing we who professe the Roman religion are commonly yea often euen by our Aduersaries called Catholikes therfore I will here briefly shew by laying open the Antiquity of that Title how much we are honored by being so styled whereas other false Doctrines commonly take th●ir Denomination from the first Authour thereof or from the Doctrine it selfe Well then (21) Cyril Cate●his 18. Cyrill thus writeth hereof Si iueris in aliquam vrbem c. Yf thou shalt goe into any Citty thou demaundest not wher● is the Church or house of God for euen the Heretikes say they haue the house of God the Church sed petas vbi sit Catholica Ecclesia c. quasi dicas si hoc petas nullus Haereticorum suam Ecclesiam ostendet But thou demaundest where the Catholike Church is for that name is peculiar to this holy Church the mother of vs all as if thou shouldest say if thou demaundest this no Heretike will ●hew to thee his Church Pacianus Christianus (22) In Epist. ad Sympronianum quae est de Nomine Catholico mihi nomen est Catholicus vero cognomen illud me nuncupat istud me ostendit A Christian is my Name a Catholike my surname by the former J am named by this other J am knowne or discerned And againe Catholicum istud nec Marcionem nec Apellem c. This Name Catholike neither doth it sound or meane Marcion or Apelles or Montanus nec haereticos sumit authores neither doth it admit any Hereticall Authours Now on the other syde how Heresies and their Professours take their appellation this one testimony of Chrysostome for greater breuity shall serue Illi habent (23) Chrysost hom 33. in acta Apost ol quosdam à quibus appellantur prout enim Haerefiarchae nomen ita secta vocatur c. Those men meaning Heretikes haue some men from whom they take their Name for as the Name of the Arch-Heretike is so is the sect called Which saying we find verifyed euen at this day by the words Lutheran Swinglian Caluinist c. Now whereas our Aduersaries by way of retortion call vs Papists To this I answere as is aboue in this Treatise touched that this word Papist is not deriued from any knowne Authour or Arch-Heretike as the words Lutheran Swinglian Caluinist c. but from the Pope and such was S. Peter yea Christ himself Add hereto that (24) Homil 33. in Act 4. Chrysostome as if it were by way of foreseeing we should be called Papists sayth Jt is not hurtfull if Catholikes be called by the name of those who gouerne the Church in the name of Christ so that they receaue not their name from any particular man as Heretikes are named Thus S. Chrysostome To conclude it is to be obserued that we are called Papists only by the Lutherans in Germany and Heretikes in some neere Countryes but we are not so called to omit Jtaly and Spayne in Greece Asia Affrike or in the Jndyes Animaduersion CLXXVI THough the many Controuersyes agitated betweene
which we Catholikes call the Sacrament of Extreme Vnction But to proceede further in this point touching the Booke of Common Prayer in those dayes I will alledge the words of M. Done an eminent Protestant who thus writeth hereof Concerning (38) M. Doue in hit persuasion to English Recusants pag. 31. the Booke of Common prayer when the Masse was first put downe K. Henry had his English Liturgy and that was iudged absolute and without exception But when King Edward came to the Crowne that was condemned and another in the place was made which Peter Martyr and Bucer did approue as very consonant to Gods word When Queene Elizabeth began to reigne the former was iudged to be full of imperfections and a new deuised and allowed by consent of the Clergy But about the middle of her reigne we grew weary of that Booke and great meanes hath beene made to abandon that and establish another Which though it was not obtayned yet do we at the least at euery change of Prince change our Booke of Cōmon prayer We be so wanton that we know not what we would haue Thus this Protestāt Now from hence I conclude First that Protestancy here in England is not so ancient as from king Edwards dayes Secondly that it was not at perfection in the middle of Queen Elizabeths reigne For if it had then beene perfect and complete there had beene no neede of a new Common Prayer-Booke For at euery change of the Common booke of prayer there was a change of points of fayth according to which points the former Cōmunion Booke was to be reformed corrected And therfore according to the iudgment of men of those tymes it is thus said by M. Parker The day-starre (39) M. Parker against Symbolizing part 2. cap. 5. pag. 4. was not risen so high in their dayes when yet Queene Elizabeth reformed the defects of King Edwards Communion Booke c. Yet so altered (40) Ibidem pag. 37. as that when it was proposed to be confirmed by the Parliament it was refused Animaduersion CLXXVIII THe Doctrine of Recusancy is taught both by Protestants and Catholikes Since both of them hould it a most wicked thing and not to be donne but vnder payne of damnation without finall repentance that a man should communicate only in going to the Church and to heare but a sermon contrary to that Religion which himselfe belieueth to be true For though this Act may seeme to be couered vnder pretence of obseruing the Princes commandement for feare of losing our temporall estates yet in very deed this Act of going to the Church virtually and potentially includeth a conformity in all points to the religion of that Church to the which a Man goeth and so ●t comes to be a dissimulation or rather an absolute Abnegation of that Religion which a man houlds in his soule to be the only true Religion Now that the Protestants do teach the Doctrine of Recusancy I meane not to be present at the sermons or Prayers of a different Religion I proue from (41) Caluin de vitandis superstitionibus extat in tract Theolog. pag. 584. Caluin from the Deuines (42) The Deuines of Germany alledged in this point by Sleydan in Comment Englished l. 7 fol. 87. of Germany from Melancthon (43) Melancth in Conc● Theolog. pa. 618. from Peter (44) Peter Martyr in his discourse hereof recited in Melancth Treatise de Concil Theolog. p. 394. Martyr and to omit others from D. (45) W●●e● in Synops. printed 1600. pag. 612. 613. c. Willet That the Catholikes do with the like or greater feruour preach and practice th● same Doctrine of Recusancy is cleare by the Example in our owne Country where sinne Protestancy was first planted some scores besides of the Laity of Venerable learned priests haue chosen rather to suff●● death in Queene Elizabeth her Reigne then once to goe to the Protestant Church their liues being commonly proffered them if they would conforme themselues and leaue their Recusancy But they loathed such Conditions For the more full proofe of this Verity I add the Testimonies of three most eminent most remarkable Men whose iudgments some yeares past being demanded whether the Catholikes of England might for sauing their goods liuings go to the Protestant Church to heare a Sermon did ioyntly condemne the same as most vnlawfull and impious The men were these Cardinall Bellarmine Cardinall Baronius and Muti●●Vitellescus now generall of the Order of the Society of Iesus I will heere set downe their owne words The Judgment of Cardinall Bellarmine COnsideratis rationibus pro vtraqueparte allatis existimo non licere viris Catholicis in Anglia Haereticorum adire Ecclesias multó minùs concionibus ipsorum interesse minimè autem omnium cum ipsis in precibus vel Psalmodia alijsque ipsorum Ecclesiasticis ritibus conuenire Ideo propria manu subscripsi Robertus Bellarminus Sanctae R. Ecclesiae Presbyter Cardinalis tituli Sanctae Mariae in via The iudgment of Cardinall Baronius VIsis consideratis quae superiùs diligenti peruestigatione in vtramque partem disputata reiectis omnino exufflatis quae pro par●e affirmatiua fuere proposita quòd scilicet liceret Catholicis adire Ecclesias Haereticorum vt superiùs sunt proposita inhaeremus saniori sententie posteriori ab Ecclesia Catholica antiquitùs recepta vsu probata quod scilicet ita facere p●● non liceat quam rogo nostros Catholicos Angl●● amplecti ex animo Caesar Cardinalis Baronius titul SS Nerei Achillei Presb. The iudgmēt of Mutius Vitellescus then Prouinciall now Generall of the Order of the Jesuits VJdi rationes quae in hoc Scripto pro vtraque parte afferuntur existimo non licere v● Catholicis in Anglia Ecclesias Haereticor●s adire c. Et puto hoc debere esse extra Contr●●ersiam Mutius Vitellescus Prouincialis Roma● Prouin Societatis Iesu Thus much in generall touching the Doctrine of Recusancy mantayned by diue● learned Protestants and practised with los● of life by many Reuerend Priests here 〈◊〉 England and fortifyed with the iudgme●● of these three former most learned pious and godly Men. Animaduersion CLXXIX ●He most common abuse in England of taking a second wyfe during the lyfe of ●e first committing fornication induceth ●e to expound those words of our Sauiour ●om whence the offenders herein seeme to ●arrant their sensuall proceedings for thus ●●r Sauiour in Mathew 19. speaketh Whosoe●er shall put away his wyfe except it be for for●●tation and shall marry another doth commit ●dultery from which words our Aduersa●es seeme to infer that who doth put away ●s wyfe for fornication and marrieth ano●her doth not commit Adultery But this is ●hus answered To wit that this exception 〈◊〉 Fornication is only to shew that for this ●use a man may put away his wyfe for e●er but not that he may marry another as 〈◊〉 most playne in 5. Mark c. 10.
Sauiours hands that you would beare to me both liuing and dead a charitable pitifull Remembrance at the tyme of your chiefest deuotions I meane at the tyme of celebrating that most Dreadfull Sacrifice wherein our Sauiour by the ministery of your selues daily offereth vp his owne sacred body and bloud to his Heauenly Father for the expiating of sinne in Man And with this I giue you all my last farewell shall euer remayne Yours in all Christian and religious Obseruancy N. N. P. A Table of the chiefe Controuersies handled in this Booke A. A Diaphorists in Religion who Animad 60. Adoration of Saints and Angells Anim. 34. Adoration of the holy Eucharist Anim. 166. Albigenses Waldenses what they were Animad 103. 104. Angells how they may be painted Animad 32. Antichrist his first comming assigned by Protestants Animad 35. The Pope cannot be Antichrist Animad 153. The Antinomi Heretickes descend from Luther Animad 148. Articles of Cath. Religion maintayned by Protestants Animad 187. Articles negatiue ought to be proued by Scripture by Protestants Animad 55. Atheisme in many Protestants of England Animad 193. S. Augustine highly extolled by Protestants Animad 162. The Authors vow and Prayer for the King Queene Animad 191. Cath. Authors ordinarily reiected by Protestants Animad 3. 4. 42. B. BEades their vse and antiquity Anim. 83. Blessed Virgin Mary her Virginity An. 47 Her freeing from Originall sinne Anim. 183. Her Assumption into Heauen Animad 183. A Body may be in two places at once Animad 91. C. CAluin an Enemy to the Diuinity of Christ the B. Trinity Anim. 138. Caluins exposition of Hoc est Corpus meum Animad 49. Carolostadius impugned the Masse by persuasion of the Diuell Animad 59. Catholike Religion neuer changed Animad 79. 80. Title of Catholikes and antiquity thereof Animad 175. Catholiks or Protestants whether incline more to vertue Animad 65. Catholiks and Protestants cannot be both saued Animad 176. Ceremonies derided by Protestants and Puritans Animad 63. About the Ceremonies of the Masse Anim. 16. The Churches definition of Protestants Animad 192. Church of Protestants inuisible Animad 1922 Christian Religion plant●● in England when Animad 36. Communion vnder one kind Animad 28.76 Comparison betweene the liues of Catholiks and Protestants Animad 188. Conference of places of Scripture Anim. 54. Councells Generall depressed by Hereticks Animad 50. The Creed whether it contayneth all Articles necessary of Religion Animad 61. D. ABout the Decalogue or Ten Commandements Animad 30 Decrees of Popes fraudulently vrged by Protestants Animad 38. 39. Deity of Christ denyed Also the Immortality of the soule Animad 194. Difference betweene Scriptures and Fathers Animad 40. Difference betweene Protestants themselues about Scripture Animad 48. Difference betwene Preachers of Cathol and Protestant Doctrine Animad 160. Disputation with Protestants how to order Animad 20. 41. Disputing with Protestants by entercourse of letters Animad 73. Doctors and Pastors alwayes to be in the Church Animad 117. E. ELias his Example much vrged by Protestants Animad 151. About the Holy Eucharist Animad 26. 125. 126. 127. 128. 129. 130. 165. 166. The Eye of a Man wonderfull Animad 196. F. FAbricke of the world Animad 199. The Face of a Man admirable Anim. 197. Ancient Fathers their Authorities reiected ordinarily by Protestants Animad 3. 4. yet loath to break with them Anim. 42. 43. Their aduantages for interpreting of Scripture Animad 41. Their maintayning of Papistry Anim. 66. The doctrine of Freewill Animad 133. 134. 135. 136. G. GEnerall Councells depressed by Hereticks Animad 50. God the Father how he may be painted Animad 31. 32. 33. God the Author of sinne affirmed by Protestants Animad 185. Grace what concurres in working therof Animad 164. Grecians euer emulous of the Church of Rome Animad 119. H. THe Hand of a Man wonderfull Anim 196. All Heresies arising haue byn recorded by the Church of Rome Animad 118. Hereticks first deniall of diuers points of Cath Religion Animad 11. Hereticks called after the Name of their first Author Animad 77. 78. Hereticks condemne Prophets Apostles Fathers c. Animad 140. Their charge of Catholiks with the errors of the Heathens Animad 141. Holy-water and its Antiquity Animad 84. About the Hymne of Aue Maris stella Animad 46. I. THe Iewes deliuered many Articles of Catholike Religion before Christs comming Animad 98. Iewish Ceremonies many still retayned Animad 158. Images how they may be painted Anim. 31. discussed by Philosophy Animad 33. Jmmortality of the Soule denyed and defended Animad 194. About the doctrine of Jndulgences Animad 171. 172. Induration of Pharao his hart Animad 150. Inuention of a false opinion may be perhaps of no Hereticke Animad 15. Jnuisibility of the Protestants Church Animad 104. 139. 180. Iustification and Merit of Workes Anim. 29. Iustification by only Fayth Animad 189. K. OF Kinges and Queenes excommunicated and deposed Animad 191. Knowledge of a Deity what Animad 194. Knowledge of the Soule what Animad 194. L. LIbertines descended from Luther Animad 148. Euill Liues of Popes obiected by Protestants Animad 145. 146. Luthers Exposition of Hoc est Corpus meum Animad 49. Luthers Spirit being a Catholike and being an Hereticke Animad 57. Luthers Change of the Masse by persuasion of the Diuell Animad 58. 59. Luther no perfect and entyre Protestant Animad 101. Luthers doctrine why applauded Anim. 144. M. B. V. Mary her Conception immaculate Animad 44. The little respect Protestants giue vnto vnto her Animad 45. Lesse giuen to her by Puritans Anim. 47. About her Hymne of Aue Maris Stella Animad 46. Markes of the Protestants Church Anim. 13. Marriage of Priests vrged by Protestants Animad 154. Masse and the Antiquity therof Anim. 159. Merit of Workes Animad 29. Miracles depressed by Protestants Animad 70. N. NEcessity of the visibility of the Roman Church Animad 137. Neutralls in Religion what they hould Animad 60. Notes of the Church Animad 108. 142. P. PErsecution of Catholikes vnder Q. Elizabeth Anima 9. Practice in Controuersies much commended Animad 86. Prayer to Saints Animad 81. Prayer in a strange tongue Animad 169. Prayer needlesse and fruitlesse with Protestants Animad 186. Protestants their sleight in answering Cath. Bookes Animad 131. Protestants whether there were any before Luther Animad 109. 110. Protestants sooner become Atheists then do Catholikes Animad 109. What required to a perfect Protestant Animad 102. Protestants would seeme to agree with the Ancient Fathers Animad 67. Protestants voyde of all reall Fayth Anim. 182. Protestants and Iewes iumpe in many things Animad 5. Protestants agree which ancient condemned Hereticks Animad 6. Their false alleaging of Scriptures Animad 52. Protestants opposite one to another in their writings Animad 17. 18. 19. Protestants charged with a vicious Circle in their disputes Animad 21. Their flying to the Priuate Spirit Animad 22. 100. Their little respect to the B. V. Mary Animad 45. 46. Protestants maintayne diuers Articles of the Cath. Fayth Animad 187. Protestants charge Cath. Religion with teaching disobedience to Princes Anim. 191. Protestants Rebellion in France Holland Germany c. Animad 191. Protestants definition of their Church Animad 192. Protestants many of them Atheistes Animad 193. Protestants Inuectiues one against another Animad 62. ●rotestants charged with Ancient Heresies by Catholiks Animad 64. ●rotestants pretend their Writings and Memory to haue byn extinguished by the Popes Animad 68. ●rotestants borrow from the Church of Rome Animad 94. All Protestants or their Forefathers sometyme Catholikes Animad 88. They cannot agree about their owne doctrines Animad 97. Protestancy when it was in its full height Animad 177. Puritans their dishonour of the B. V. Mary Animad 47. Purgatory defended Animad 149. R. THe Reall-Presence discussed Animad 89. 125. 126. 127. 128. 129. 155. 156. 163. Reall-Presence maintayned by Protestants against Puritans Animad 7. Their Arguments also against the Reall-Presence Animad 8. Doctrine of Recusancy taught both by Catholiks and Protestants Animad 178. About the Doctrine of Reprobation Anim. 184. 190. Roman Religion neuer changed Animad 10. Roman Religion only capable of Saluation Animad 121. S. SAints to be prayed vnto lawfull Animad 27. Saluation certayne in the Cath. Roman Religion Animad 71. Scripture how to be interpreted Animad 25. 37. 152. Difficult to be vnderstood Animad 167. Why written by the Apostles Anim. 170. About the Signe of the Crosse Animad 82. Soule of Man immortall Animad 194. The similitude it beareth to God Anim. 200 Spirits be an inuisible substance Anim. 198. T. TRaditions vnwritten impugned by Protestants Animad 181. Traditions knowne by certayne Rules Animad 168. Translations of the Scriptures by Protestāts corrupted Animad 173. 174. The doctrine of Transubstantiation Anim. 122. 123. 124. 125. 126. 127. 128. 129. 130. Truth how it may be deliuered in negatiue words Anim. 96. V. THe Vbiquity of God Animad 93. The Virginity of our B. Lady Anim. 47. Her freedome from Originall sinne Anim. 183. Visibility of the Roman Church proued by the Jnuisibility of the Protestant Church Animad 111. 112. 113. 114. 115. 116. 180. Visibility of the Protestants Church maintayned by them Animad 12. Vniuersality a strong Argument for Cath. Religion Animad 157. The Voyce of a Man admirable Anim. 197. W. WAldenses Albigenses what they were 〈◊〉 Animad 103. 104. The taking of a second Wife often an abus● in Protestants Animad 179. Word of God written Animad 1. 2. 3. Words of Christ in the last Supper how to b● taken Animad 23. 24. The Worldes existence from Eternity impugned Animad 195. The fabricke of the World Animad 199. Z. ZWinglius his impugning the Masse by persuasion of the Diuell Animad 5● FINIS