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A13631 Theologicall logicke: or the third part of the Tryall of truth wherein is declared the excellency and æquity of the Christian faith, and that it is not withstood and resisted; but assisted and fortified by all the forces of right reason, and by all the aide that artificiall logicke can yeeld. ... By Iohn Terry Minister of the Word of God at Stocton.; Triall of truth. Part 3 Terry, John, 1555?-1625. 1625 (1625) STC 23914; ESTC S101777 160,318 232

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Eph. 4 24. Rom. 1. 7. 1 Cor. 1. 2. Luke 10. 29. Apoc. 20. 12. hath put on the new man which after God is created in righteousnesse and true holinesse and are called by the very name of Saints by the Apostle and their names and deedes also are written in heauen and in the booke of life Therefore all the faithfull are to be taken for Saints by all the faithfull whatsoeuer meane reckoning the Church of Rome maketh of them QVEST. LXXIIII The Bishop of Rome is not the Vniuersall Pastour of the whole Church Some Popes doe not at all by preaching of the Word of God seed so much as the people of the City of Rome it selfe and none of them all haue such gifts as whereby they are enabled to feed the Vniuersall Church therefore some of them are no feeders or Pastors at all and none of them are the feeders and Pastours of the Vniuersall Church And how can they iustly challenge the office of Saint Peter seeing they so much neglect the trebled charge giuen to Saint Peter by his Master Christ who gaue him the dignity that he might performe the dutie annexed thereunto QVEST. LXXV The Lawes of God onely binde the conscience There is but one Law-giuer that is the Lord of the Conscience and therefore his Lawes onely bind the same So reasoneth Saint Iames There is but one Law-giuer that is able to Iac. 4. 12. saue and to destroy viz. the soule and therefore there is but Matth. 10. 28. one Law-giuer that can giue lawes to the soule and that one Law-giuer is God For God onely searcheth the heart and taketh notice of all the aberrations thereof and can punish them with condigne punishments So reasoneth the Lord himselfe The heart of man is deceitfull and wicked aboue all Ier. 17. 9. things who can know it I the Lord search the heart and try the raynes euen to giue euery man according vnto his wayes and according to the fruit of his workes All Magistrates ciuill and Ecclesiasticall are his vnder-officers not to make lawes but to command that the Lords laws only be put in execution in all matters that concerne the substance of his spirituall kingdome For as concerning the lawes that they haue authority to make in matters of circumstance belonging to the spirituall kingdome and in matters both of substance and circumstance belonging to the temporall gouerment they must be squared by those generall rules that are set downe by this one Law-maker in the authenticall records of his canonicall Scriptures And being so framed they are not for their particularities to be esteemed so much mans laws as they are for the generall grounds of them to be accoūted Gods owne ordinances And being so made they binde the conscience Rom. 13. 5. Exod. 16. 8. 1 Sam. 8. 7. as the Apostle testifieth and they that refuse to be subiect to them doe not cast away man but God that hee should not raign● ouer them QVEST. LXXVI True religion bindeth only to the obseruation of such Canons and rules as are made by God himselfe in matters of substance whereas superstition imposeth other also which Arguments drawen from the Etymology or in●erpretation of the name Religo à religando Aug. de veca religione cap. 54. are aboue and beside the former Religion hath her name as S. Austin saith for that by certaine rules and precepts giuen by God himselfe it doth inclose and keepe in as within certaine limits and bounds all such as desire to performe that religious seruice which is acceptable to God least they should goe astray and wander out of the right way that should bring them to God Whereas superstition Superstitio quasi supra statutum 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1 Tim. c. 2. 3. hath her name for that shee is so bold foolish hardy as to thrust those things vpon Gods people which are aboue and besides the Lawes and statutes of God Ane therefore it was not without cause that the wise man so seriously aduiseth all such as desire to be esteemed of God as his religious seruants to take good heed when they goe to the house of the Lord to performe that religious seruice which is acceptable in his sight that they be prepared most readily and reuerently to hearken Eccl. 4. 17. to the word of God that so they may both learne keep that which is therein commanded vnto them that they presume not to offer to God the sacrifice of Fooles that is that kinde of seruice which is sucked out of their owne or other mens foolish braines and is aboue and beside that which is commanded of God QVEST. LXXVII The Laitic ought to be admitted to the dayly reading of the holy Scriptures If Religion hath her name á relegendo that is from often Religio à relegendo Cicer. de natura deorum lib. 1 reading because the doctrines which concerne religion should be read ouer againe and againe as Tully whose iudgement concerning the originall of Latine words is not to be contemned iudgeth then the Christian Magistrate must not only suffer but also command all his subiects if he desire to haue them to be truly religious daily to read the holy Scriptures for that they containe the summe and substance of all true religion yea the chiefe Magistrate himselfe albeit the care for the whole common wealth lyeth vpon him and therefore hath cause to busie his thoughts thereon continually yet must not let the booke of the Law of God depart out of his mouth but meditate therein day and night that he may doe according to all that is written therein if he will haue his waies made prosperous Iosh 1. 8. if he will haue good successe in his temporall affaires QVEST. LXXVIII The Faithfull themselues and also their Churches ought only to be dedicated vnto God The congregation of the faithfull themselues and the places of their publike assemblies for the performing of diuine service are called the Church or Kirke from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifieth that which is the Lords Whereby wee are giuen to vnderstand that the one and the other should be onely dedicated to the Lord seeing they are the Lords So reasoneth the Apostle You are not your owne for yee are bought with a 1 Cor. 6. 20. price therefore glorifie the Lord both in your bodies and in your spirits for they are Gods And verily for this end and purpose not onely the people of God are called The Lords peculiar but 1 Pet. 2. 19. their Churches also are called Basilicae that is the Kings for that they should be dedicated and consecrated to the King of Kings and Lord of Lords QVEST. LXXIX The faithfull are witting to their faith and loue and to their saluation in Iesus Christ The conscience of all men is as a Register wherein all their 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Conscientia I know what I know thoughts desires words and workes are truely recorded
my Calling and to leaue the discussing of quaestions of learning to the learned I am ready to come to Church and to doe my duty to God and to liue iustly and peaceably with my neighbours Why the learned themselues cannot agree about the points of Faith and how then shall such an one as I am be able to discerne it and to finde it out The truth is that God wrote his Law in the heart of Adam and thereby set in his minde such a light of reason that he had a right iudgement in all things But Adam was not contented with this treasure of wisdome and this measure of knowledge extending it selfe to all that was good but he would needes know euill also that he might by experience try what would be the event thereof And thereupon he forsooke God the Father of light and betooke himselfe to be instructed by the Prince of darkenesse Whereby it came to passe that he fell from truth to falshood from faith to fancy from the knowledge of good to the knowledge of euill from the light of Diuine logicke and reason to divellish sophistry Yea hereby the wily and crafty Serpent stored him and his posterity with all manner of captious and deceiuable sophismes and so enabled him not onely to know but also colourably to defend all falshood and vntruth Against the which so desperate a mischiefe the Lord prouided a soueraigne remedy by causing all Diuine verities necessary to saluation lightned fortified with all manner of sound arguments and reasons to be deliuered to his Church first by word of mouth and afterward by writing in the bookes of the Canonicall Scripture that so when the enemy should come ready furnished and prepared with strong delusion and with all deceiueablenesse of vnrighteousnesse the desender of the Truth on the contrary side might also be armed with all manner of weapons offensiue and defensiue that so he might be enabled to stand fast and firme against all the assaults of the enemy and to get ouer him a glorious victory And hereof it is that the booke of the holy Scripture is called the Bible that is the booke of bookes or the onely booke for that all manner of Divine wisdome is contayned therein The reasons and argument set downe in this booke for the clearing and fortifying of all Diuine verities are of such validity and strength that therefore this booke is called by Saint Hierome a reasonable mountaine where wee may Hieron in Hag. cut downe choice and sit timber for the building vp of the house of Wisedome Yea the first rudiments and principles thereof are of such soundnesse and solidity that Saint Peter 1 Pet. 2. 2. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2 Pet. 1. 16. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2 Thes 3. 2. Chrysost hom 9. in ep ad Col. calleth them reasonable and vndeceiueable milke In which words he opposeth them to the principles of all erronious professions which the same Apostle tearmeth sophisticall fables For the which cause the maintayners of those sophisticall positions are called by the Apostle Saint Paul absurd or vnreasonable men as the sincere imbracers of the Doctrines of the Scriptures are tearmed by Saint Chrysostome reasonable sheepe for that they are able to discerne the voyce of their shepheard from the voyce of a stranger And hereof also it is that the Apostle Saint Paul calleth the seruice of God prescribed in this booke a reasonable seruice For that as Tertullian 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Non exigebat Deus quae siebant sed propter quod fiebant Tert. l. 3. cont Marc. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Heb. 11. 19. teacheth God doth require therein not so much the worke wrought as the doing it vpon those grounds and reasons for the which it should be done One most singular worke of this seruice of God being done by one of the most singular seruants of God that euer liued euen the offering vp of Isaac by his father Abraham was as the Apostle saith performed by him as a Logi●ian by the helpe of Metaphysicall and supernaturall reason And no maruell seeing as in the same place the Apostle teacheth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 D. Downam l. 2. c. 7. Of Christian Warfare the true Christian faith is grounded vpon such a demonstratiue syllogisme that is able as Austin expoundeth the words to convince the iudgement and after a sort to force the minde to yeeld therevnto a most setled assent whō one of our learned and religious Doctors followeth saying that faith is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is a manifest demonstratiō for that it doth not onely shew a thing probably but doth convince it with strong arguments and maketh that cleare and manifest which was otherwise obscure and secret and therefore is called a demonstration of things not seene And if it be not reason that doth season our seruice done vnto God and make it sauory and well tasting vnto him why Leu. 12. 13. Mar. 9. 50. Coloss 4. 6. was salt to be added to euery sacrifice and why are all the faithfull commanded to haue salt in themselues Yea and that their very words should be poudred with salt And was it not for this cause that one Eccholius in the Primitiue Church when he had fallen away againe and againe from the true faith and reasonable seruice of God vnto absurd and impious Idolatry at his last returne cast himselfe downe flat vpon the ground before the Congregation saying trample vpon me vnsauery salt That reason should be our guide not onely in such things as concerne the Divine seruice of God but also in all our actions whatsoeuer Iesus the sonne of Siracke teacheth saying Eccl. 37. 16. Let reason goe before euery enterprise and counsell before euery action Yea Aristotle saw thus much by the light of naturall reason that is that euery vertuous action must be done vpon knowledge and vpon good advise had with right reason Scienter consultò constanter and vpon a setled purpose to be constant therein Wherefore there was great reason that the great and wise G O D should enrich his owne booke with all manner of divine and heauenly reason that so it might be able rightly to guide all his sincere and faithfull seruants in the performing of all manner of vertuous and Religious actions And verily it is in that aboundant manner so filled and furnished with this heauenly treasure that as Luther saith it were no great matter if all other bookes contayning the doctrines of faith and an holy life were on a light fire if this one booke were rightly vnderstood For there is more Diuine learning wisedome and reason in this little booke then in all the large volumnes that euer were written Witnesse not only the explications of the divine doctrines hereof made by our blessed that ●low most plenteously out of the full fountaines of the Isa 12. 3. wels of life we ought to drinke our full draught and euer to haue them
barely and onely in the booke of the Canonicall Scriptures deliuer the seuerall doctrines of all diuine vereties giuing testimony to each of them but once by the pen of one of his vnerring Secretaries seeing when God speaketh any thing albeit it be but once we ought Chrys aduersus vituperatores monasticae vitae to receiue it with all assurance as if it had beene spoken often times For although when humane testimonies are required in the mouth of two or three witnesses euery word must be established and to him that bringeth not a sufficient number 1 Tim 6. 19. of deponents it is by strict law as if he had brought none yet for that God is true and cannot lie nor beare witnesse to any falshood or vntruth or command any thing that is vnrighteous or vniust therefore in his word which is the infallible foundation of truth if he giue testimony to any thing but once vnder the hand of one of his faithfull registers it is as sufficient as if he had testified the same by them all For if Pythagoras his he said it was enough to his scholers for that he was a most learned and wise Philosopher and the Ipse dixit Centurions come goe and doe this was sufficient to his souldiers Matth. 8. 9. and seruants for that he was a most conscionable Commander yea if the Kings witnesse my selfe be a full warrant Teste meipso to all his grants because of his supereminent power and authority then much more the he said it of the most high God ought to be sufficient to his disciples and all that be of his schoole and the come goe and doe this of the most righteous Commander and Iudge of the whole world ought to be enough to worke a most ready and speedy obedience in all his true and faithfull seruants and the witnesse my selfe of the King of kings and Lord of lords ought to be taken as a most full warrant to all his grants by all his loyall and faithfull subiects Wherefore herein we may behold the strange proceeding of our most great and glorious God remitting after a sort his owne right and submitting himselfe in his great goodnesse to our weaknesse and in his high and endlesse wisdome prouiding a gracious remedy for our infirmity For because we are blinde to conceiue and slow to beleeue and hard to learne and ready to forget the holy mysteries of piety and godlines therefore the Lord hath caused not onely doctrines and reasons and arguments to be set downe at once in the booke of the diuine Scriptures but he hath made them to be reitterated againe and againe that thereby they may become lights to our vnderstanding stayes to our faith and helps to our fraile and weake memory So that albeit we are by nature neuer so dull and blockish yet the same lessons being often repeated and opened and cleered againe and againe we shall be thereby enabled by Gods blessing sufficiently to conceiue and faithfully keepe them in good remembrance Pharaohs dreames were Gen. 41. 32. doubled vnto him that the thing opened therein might get of him the better credit so the instructions of faith and an holy life are doubled and trebled in holy Scripture that they might procure of vs a fuller faith So and so good is our gracious God vnto vs which are so and so vnworthy of the least of his mercies that as he hath stored the earth with great variety of bodily food and physicke for the preseruing and recouering of the life health of our bodies so he hath prouided in the Scriptures great abundance of spirituall food and physicke for the maintenance and restitution of the life and health of our soules One kinde of bodily food and one kinde of dressing doth not sauour alike to euery stomacke and therefore God hath prouided variety of both so one motiue to faith and repentance nor the deliuery thereof after one manner doth fit euery ones spirituall taste and stomacke therefore hath the Lord ordained great abundance of both Yea as the Lord gaue sundry signes and wonders to be done by the hands of his seruant Moses before the eies of the children of Israel that therby they Exod. 4. 8. might vnderstand that he was called sent of God to be their deliuerer out of the bondage of Aegypt that to this very end and purpose that if they would not beleeue nor obey the voice of the first signe yet they might be induced thereto either by the second or the third So doth the Lord furnish the Preachers of the Gospell whom he hath appointed to bee ministers of his mercy for the deliuerance of his people out of the spirituall captiuity of sinne and Satan with great variety of forcible and powerfull motiues and perswasions to repentance and faith that if some of the same will not worke and preuaile with them yet other may For the which purpose also he hath caused the mysteries of godlinesse to be set downe not onely in common and vsuall phrases but also in Metaphores and Allegories and hath lightned them with similitudes and resemblances apparent and manifest to the most simple So the Apostle teacheth that the 1 Cor 15 36. dead shall rise to life and glory by the resemblance of seed that after a sort rotteth and death in the ground before it springeth vp and groweth to maturity and ripenesse So elsewhere he prooueth the vnprofitablenesse of speaking in an vnknowne 1 Cor. 14. 1. tongue by the trumpet which if it giue an vncertaine sound none shall be prepared to the warre and by some o●her the like things So he likewise proueth that the faithfull ought not to seeke for life and saluation by the works of the Law seeing Gal. 3. 15. God hath couenanted to giue it to them in Christ Iesus seeing to a mans couenant or testament when it is once made nothing ought to be added or detracted from the same much lesse to the Couenant of God So our Sauiour teacheth that they are Matth. 13. 23. the holy doctrines of his good and gratious Word that causeth our hearts to be good and gracious euen as it is pure and good feed that maketh the ground bring forth pure and good fruit And verily our blessed Sauiour did illustrate with parables all Matth. 13. 34 his diuine instructions which he gaue vnto the people as being the best meanes to bring them to the knowledge of the truth and to their euerlasting saluation which is procured thereby For as our Sauiour himselfe speaking thereof saith if I teach Iohn 3. you earthly things that is heauenly doctrines by earthly similitudes and ye beleeue not how should ye beleeue if I tell you of heauenly things that is after an high and heauenly manner It is impossible saith Saint Denis that the diuine beame Dio● de coeles hierar l. 1. cap. 1. should shine vnto vs but vnder the variety of sacred couerings
seeing they haue turned the Bread into the Body of Christ and are able to offer him vp in their Masse as a propitiatory sacrifice for the sins of quicke and dead the which thing cannot be but much auaileable to themselues which are sure to be well payed for their paynes QVEST. XVII Concupiscence is sinne euen in the Regenerate themselues Why is the liuing man sorrowfull Man suffereth for his sinne So the Apostle By sinne death entred into the world and Lam. 3. 37. Rom. 5. 12. therefore all sickenesse and other miseries that lead thereunto Vnto the which seeing euen sanctified Infants which haue receiued the Sacrament of regeneration and are free from all actuall sinne are subiect therefore concupiscence in sanctified infants is sinne vnlesse we will lay to the charge of the most righteous Iudge of the whole world that he punisheth such persons that are without all fault Yea whereas infants giue no consent to their naturall corruptions and yet are punished for them therefore concupiscence is sinne albeit consent is not giuen to it See S. Aug. Serm. de Temp. 45. QVEST. XVIII Faith repentance and loue with all holy workes proceeding from them doe not deserue any thing at all at Gods hands but make the faithfull endebted to God for the same If Abraham saith the Apostle were iustified by workes hee Rom. 4. 2. hath wherein to reioyce but not before God For gifts and benefits doe not make the doner any whit endebted to the receiuer but they deserue at the hands of the receiuer and make him endebted vnto the doner But faith repentance and loue Phil. 1. 29. and all holy workes proceeding from them are the free gifts and blessings of God wrought in them by the operation of 1 Cor. 12. 11. the holy Ghost and therefore are called the fruits of the Gal. 5. 22. Spirit Wherefore hereby the faithfull deserue nothing at Gods hand but are made the more indebted to God So reasoneth Saint Bernard None by good workes can deserue eternall life Bern. Ser. 1. de 〈◊〉 at Gods hands seeing all the afflictions of this life are not worthy of the glory that shall be reuealed albeit one person could indure them all The merits of men are not such as vnto the which eternall life is by iustice due and that God should doe wrong to them if he did not reward them there with For that I may not let passe that all merits are Gods gifts and that man is thereby rather made a debter to God then God to man what are all merits being compared to so great glory And therefore Dauid cryed out Enter not into iudgement with thy seruant O Lord for in thy sight shall no man liuing be iustified QVEST. XIX The workes of God reuealed in the Scriptures doe manifestly declare them to be the word of God especially the worke of regeneration wrought by the Diuine and powerfull doctrines thereof in the hearts of all such as faithfully and sincerely embrace the same and therefore they are not to be receiued as such onely vpon the testimony of the Church Knowne vnto God are all his workes from the beginning Act. 15. 18. 1 Cor. 2. 11. of the world and to none other besides himselfe and therefore he onely is able to reueale them Wherefore seeing the works of the creation redemption and Sanctification which are the most gracious and glorious workes of God are plainely reuealed in the bookes of the Holy Scriptures therefore the doctrines of the holy bookes are faithfully to be embraced as vndoubtedly proceeding from diuine reuelation And verily who could so distinctly and particularly set downe the manner of the creation of man and of all the rest of the creatures but he that hauing the fulnesse of being in himselfe could giue such a manner and measure of being to them all as should manifest his great power wisedome and goodnesse towards man for whose sake principally the world was made And who could lay open the fall of man from his estate of holinesse and happinesse wherein he was created and the manner thereof but he onely from whose obedience albeit man could depart yet he could not depart from his presence nor so much as dazle his sharpe and cleare eyes albeit he could cleane put out his owne but who could open a meanes of mans recouery from this his miserable and wretched estate whereinto he is fallen by his owne folly but he that was onely able to worke his recouery It is euident that sinne being an offence committed against the infinite Maiesty of the most glorious Deity requireth a satisfaction no lesse then infinite Now who could so much as imagine that God being so grieuously prouoked and so highly offended with man should send his owne Sonne to become man that in mans nature he might suffer death for mans deliuery from death and condemnation For doubtlesse one will scarce die for a righteous man for a good Rom. 5. 7. man it may be that one dare dye that then such a person who when he was in the forme of God thought it no robbery to be equall with God should die for such persons as were not onely neither righteous nor good but aboue measure vnrighteous and euill and that he should die such a death as proceeded from the intollerable wrath of so highly incensed a God against most execrable and cursed sinnes Who hath beleeued our report and to whom is the arme of the Lord reuealed Isay 53. 1. Surely the Gospell wherein this worke is reuealed is Diuine and supernaturall exceeding all humane and naturall apprehension and could not be reuealed but by him that could worke beyond the power of nature The which thing doth more euidently appeare hereby in that wheresoeuer it is plainely reuealed and sincerely imbraced it doth deliuer all such from the most grieuous bondage of sinne and Satan and doth most effectually bring them backe againe vnto God For as Lactantius saith Let humane wisedome stretch it selfe to the vttermost yet it can but cause men to couer their sinnes it cannot enable them to cast them out whereas the Gospell which is the Law of the Spirit of Life not onely freed Saint Paul from the Law of sinne and death but also conuerted Rom. 8. 2. the world and that in short time from infidelity to faith from sinne to righteousnesse from Satan to God albeit it was most mightily resisted not onely with all the wisedome and learning but also with all the power and authority of all the wisest and greatest men of the world and therefore it cannot be denyed but that it is the most mighty and powerfull word of the most mighty and powerfull God The heauens declare themselues to be the workes of God in that they cause the earth which is so bare and barren at Winter to be cloathed in Summer with all manner of hearbes flowers and graine and to abound with all variety of fruit and doth not the doctrine
2 Tim. 4. 15. God hath promised thee O man saith Saint Austin speaking Aug in Ps 148. to all such as are sanctified by regeneration that thou shalt liue for euer and doest not thou beleeue it Oh saith he beleeue it beleeue it For that which he hath done for thee already is a greater matter then that which he hath promised For he hath giuen his onely begotten Sonne who is farre more excellent then thousands of heauens at the dearest rate that may be to purchase for thee euerlasting life and doest thou think that this purchase made by such a person at such an high rate can euer possibly be made voide Especially whereas for his Sonnes sake be hath adopted thee which wert by nature the slaue of Satan the child of wrath and inheritor of euerlasting destruction into the number of his sonnes and heires and renewed thee in part to his owne image in holinesse and true righteousnesse and doest thou yet doubt whether he will giue thee the inheritance of a sonne Vndoubtedly he that for thy Sauiours sake hath in part sanctified thee to liue a sober iust and a godly life in this world will for his sake bring thee to an eternall and an euerlasting life in the world to come QVEST. LV. Our least sinnes are damnable and mortall Arguments drawne from the lesser proportion of reason to the greater If all our righteousnesse be as a menstruous Cloath Ioathsome and odious to God and deserue Gods curse because it wanteth that fulnesse of faith feruency of loue simple sincerity and full freenesse from all sinister respects which the Law of God requireth at our hands then what doe those thoughts words and workes which are meerely sinfull deserue albeit Esay 64. 6. Iob 9. 31. Gal. 3. 10. they be neuer so small Vndoubtedly no sinnes that are meerly so can be smaller or lesse hurtfull then the imperfections of our best workes and yet these being transgressions of the Law of God deserue Gods curse and malediction and therefore all sinnes that are meerely so cannot but deserue the like woe So reasoneth our blessed Sauiour If the light which is Matth. 6. 23. in thee bee darkenesse how great is the darkenesse it selfe And so Saint Bernard If all our righteousnesse be as vnrighteousnesse Bern. Serm. in fest Sanct. then by a stronger reason what shall our sinnes be QVEST. LVI All things necessary to saluation are plainly deliuered in the Ganonicall Scriptures There is no wise man among men but that he will be carefull in his last Will and Testament that all things therein be set downe plainly distinctly and fully which concerne either the legacies which he bequeatheth to his childrē or the duties that he requireth at their hands that so all occasion of discord and debate may be cleane taken away And can we then imagine that our heauenly Father being so wise and so prouident as he is and so desirous to preserue vnity and peace among his deare children would not set downe plainly distinctly and fully in his Will and Testament what be those great and gracious gifts that he doth in his tender kindnesse and loue bestow vpon them with the meanes whereby they shall attaine to the same as likewise what be all those necessary duties which he requireth at their hands So reasoneth Optatus Christ hath Optat. l 5. cont Parm. Donat. dealt with vs as an earthly Father is wont to doe with his children who searing least they should fall out after his decease doth set downe his Will in writing vnder witnesses that if there arise any doubt among them they should goe to his Testament He whose word must end our Controuersies is Christ let vs then goe to his Testament QVEST. LVII The faithfull for the diuine wisedome of the holy Scriptures rightly vnderstood beleeue them to be the Word of God and not onely for the bare authority of the Church If the Gentiles instructed by the light of naturall reason did certainly perceiue the booke of the creatures to be Gods booke by the glorious attributes of God made manifest therein much more the faithfull lightned with the Lampe of Rom. 1. 19. diuine grace may plainly perceiue the booke of the Scriptures wherein God as a familiar friend without casting of a mist doth speak to the heart not onely of the learned but of the vnlearned also as Austin saith to be Gods booke by the diuine Aug. Ep. 3 ad Vol. and heauenly wisedome deliuered therein and therefore they need not build their faith vpon the bare testimony onely of the Church And so reasoneth the Prophet Dauid The Psal 19. 1. heauens saith he declare themselues to be the workes of the glorious God euen by their heauenly influences and diuine operations How much more doth the Law of the Lord by the diuine wisedome and righteousnesse thereof and by the most powerfull and excellent workes that are wrought thereby declare and demonstrate it selfe euidently to be the most wise and righteous word of the most wise and righteous God QVEST. LVIII The naturall man hath no free will in heauenly things Mans will is but feeble and weake for the compassing of earthly businesses that are of any weight or moment therfore in heauenly matters the strength thereof is small or rather as the Apostle saith it is none at all So reasoneth the Wiseman Rom. 5. 6. Sap. 9. 13. What is man that he can know the counsell of God or who can thinke what the will of the Lord is For the thoughts of mortall men are fearefull and their forecasts vncertaine because a corruptible body is heauy to the soule and the earthly mansion keepeth downe the minde that is full of cares and hardly can wee discerne the things that are on earth and with great labour finde we out the things that are before vs Who can then seeke out the things that are in heauen who can know thy counsell except thou giue him wisedome and send thy holy Spirit from aboue So Saint Austin It is an absurd thing that we should thinke Aug. de predest Sanct. cap. 26. that God frameth the wils of men for the setling of earthly Kingdomes and that men frame their owne wils for the obtayning of the Kingdome of heauen The Prophets complaint taken vp against the Iewes with whom he liued and who tooke themselues to be Gods people is true against all men as they are naturally corrupted My people are foolish and haue Ierem. 4. 22. no vnderstanding they are wise to doe euill but to doe well they haue no knowledge Now if we haue no vnderstanding of that which is good then doubtlesse we haue no will thereunto and if we be so foolish that we will not be perswaded of the truth hereof it commeth from him that so befooled our first parents Adam and Eue that he made them beleeue that if they would forsake the direction of the most wise God and fall from him
graces as being the fruitfull mother tender nurse of them all 6 The Christian Faith only doth giue vndeeeiuable assurance of the loue of God of aeternall happines obtained thereby to all the sincere embracers thereof 7 The dignity and vtility of Faith and the difficulty of obtaining and encreasing the same THE QVAESTIONS THAT ARE handled in the second part which are declared by arguments taken from all the Topick places Quaestions handled by argumente drawn from the efficient Cause The Church is not alwayes glorious notorious as a Citty set vpon a high hill All the workes of the most holy in this life are stained with sinne The ignorance and not the knowledge of holy Scripture is the cause of all errours and sinnes From the materiall Cause Not the sufferings and righteousnes of any meere man but onely of our most blessed Sauiour both God and Man are of sufficient worthines to satisfie for sinne or to purchase the inheritance of the kingdome of Heauen The Bread and Wine in the Eucharist are not transubstantiated into the very Body Blood of Christ The righteousnes prescribed in the Law deliuered by Moses is that true righteousnes whereby we are iustified before God and not that righteousnes which is said to be obtained by the vndertaking of Popish vowes From the formall cause We are not iustified by those workes of righteousnesse commanded in the Law which are wrought by our selues but for those which were done by our Sauiour Christ in his owne person for vs and are made ours by the Lord 's gracious imputation The forme and manner to attaine to true sanctification is not to receiue the holy Word of God and the Sacraments onely with our bodily senses but rather with the powers of our Soules nor to trauaile farre and neare on pilgrimage to see and kisse holy Reliques but to see and touch holy things by the inward powers of our mindes which are the proper subiects of sanctification From the finall cause Saluation and aeternall life is from our blessed Sauiour and not from any other person or thing The outward Elements in the Eucharist are not Bread and Wine in shew but in substance There is no miraculous turning of Bread Wine in the Eucharist into the very Body and Blood of Christ nor any other the like miracle Iustification is by faith alone not by faith and workes ioyned together in that worke The faithfull after this life are not punished in the fire of Purgatory From the effects The carnall eating of Christ's Body is nothing auaileable to aeternall life but only the spirituall eating thereof by faith Concupiscence is sinne euen in the Regenerate The workes of God reuealed in the Scriptures doe manifestly declare them to bee the word of God especially the worke of Regeneration wrought by the wise and powerfull doctrine thereof in the hearts of all the sincere embracers of the same and therefore they are not to be receiued for such only vpon the testimony of the Church The Soule of our Sauiour Christ descended locally into hell From the Subiect Fasting or any outward thing doth not sanctifie any but only the inward graces of the spirit and such things as doe breed strengthen the same There is no such place appointed for the faithfull as Purgatory is faigned to be Christ is not corporally in the Eucharist but only in Heauen The City of Rome is the mysticall Babylon and the titulary Catholick Roman Church is the certaine seat of the great Antichrist of the latter times From the adiuncts The Word of God rightly vnderstood doth giue credit to it's selfe and doth cause it selfe to bee beleeued and embraced as the Word of God for the excellency of the diuine doctrine contained therein and not only for the bare testimony of the Church Kneeling is the fittest gesture of the body at the reuerent receiuing of the holy Eucharist Holines doth not consist in vowing to abstain from riches meates and marriages but rather in the holy and lawfull vse of them The Body of Christ is at one time but in one place Christ's Body and Blood ought not and in truth cannot bee often offered vp to God by the Masse Priests as a propitiatory sacrifice for the sinnes of quicke and dead Christ's flesh is not eaten with our bodily mouthes It is a property only belonging to God to forgiue sinne Enoch and Elias cannot come in their owne persons to resist Antichrist and to be slain of him Frō things that be diuerse Regeneration is not wrought by the power of free-will but by the operation of the spirit of God None are elected for foreseene workes Frō things that be contrary A true faith is not seated in that soule where infidelity raigneth or any other sinne Saluation is not merited by our own workes Frō things that bee opposite priuatiuely The naturall man hath no free will to that which is religiousty good Frō things depending vpon relation No diuine worship or seruice is to be giuen to any Angell or Saint Frō things that haue the same proportion of reason The faithfull are made righteous before God by the righteousnes of Christ imputed vnto them The faithfull may aswell know themselues to be endued with true loue as with true faith The Cup in the Eucharist is not to bee taken away from the Lords people The paines of Popish pennance or Purgatory cannot be satisfactory for the least sinne Matrimony is lawfull for the ministers of the Gospell The nailes and speare wherewith our blessed Sauiours most precious Body was tormented grieuously are not to bee worshipped with diuine worship Frō things that haue the greater proportion of reason The sinnes of the faithfull shall not be punished in the fire of Purgatory The Sacraments be not instruments of grace vnlesse their vses be rightly vnderstood Images are not to be worshipped with diuine worship The word of God is not to be read vnto the simple people in a strange tongue In all matters that concerne the diuine worship and seruice of God no doctrine is to be receiued which is not warranted by the authority of the Canonicall Scripture Frō things that haue the lesse proportion of reason The naturall man hath no free will to that which is religiously good Not the suffering much lesse the vowing of voluntary pouerty is the way to perfection The people ought to be able to discerne the doctrine of their teachers Our whole iustification is by the free vndeserued mercy of God in Christ The going on pilgrimage to visit the relickes of the Saints doth not sanctifie The faithfull haue the assurance of their own saluation giuen vnto them The least sinnes are mortall and damnable All things necessary to saluation are plainly deliuered in the Bookes of the Canonicall Scriptures The faithfull embrace the Scriptures as the Word of God for it selfe not only for the testimony of the Church The naturall man hath no free will to that which is religiously
signe that he Mat. 13. 11. hath admitted all such into the couenant of grace in whose hearts hee hath written his holy Lawes by giuing them the right vnderstanding of them For the soule of man is as a Table Ier. 31. 31. 2 Cor. 3 3. Prov. 7. 3. Apoc. 20. 12 board or as a register or a booke of records and the firme conceiuing of a thing in the minde and the sure laying vp thereof in the memory is as the drawing or grauing in a Table board or as the writing of it in a booke of record And therefore when the diuine doctrine of the Word of God is rightly apprehended by our vnderstanding and firmely layed vp and settled in our memory it is as it were printed and grauen in our soules so doth thereby ass●re our Consciences that wee are the beloued people of God For giue in sincerity entertainment in the best roomes of thy soule to the Word of God and thou dost Ioh. 14. 23 Eph. 3. 17. withall giue entertainment to Christ For Christ doth dwell in our hearts by Faith He is not receiued and eaten with our bodily mouthes because he is not our bodily food but with the mouthes of our soules when sweetly and profitably we lay vp in our memories that his flesh was wounded and pierced for Aug. de doct Christian l. 3. c. 10. Tertul. de resur carnis vs. So Tertullian Christ is deuoured by hearing chewed by vnderstanding and digested by beleeuing For reall things are not in our mindes by any corporall contiguity of their reall substances but by a spirituall participation of them by their Res non sunt in animis sed rerum notiones reall notions Neither doe our Sacraments auouch a mingling of persons or an vniting of substances but after a spirituall and a mysticall manner And therefore Christ's Body being not a bodily but a ghostly food is not receiued but by the powers of our soules being indued with a true Faith For the Lord doth bestow his seuerall gifts and blessings Cyp. de coena Dom. Quicquid recipitur ad modum recipientis recipitur vpon his seuerall creatures according vnto their seuerall natures and powers whereby he hath made them capable thereof causing them all to moue and to worke according to those powers and faculties where withall he hath indued them Hee nourisheth nourishable things by their nourishing powers doth minister many comforts to his creatures that haue sense and motion by causing them to apprehend the same by their sensitiue and motiue faculties So likewise doth he bestow his gifts proper to men which are reasonable creatures by making them knowne vnto them by the discourse of reason by causing them to apprehend and embrace the same by their vnderstandings and wils which are the proper faculties of reasonable creatures As for example the Lord worketh a care in many naturall men to lead a ciuill and a righteous life by causing them to apprehend and embrace those arguments and reasons which are of force to perswade to a ciuill and a righteous life As in like manner hee openeth the hearts of such as he calleth to the estate of grace by causing them carefully to attend to the diuine Acts 16. 14. doctrines of the Word of grace For the Spirit of God leadeth them not as blind men which are led by their guides in the way that they see not themselues but he openeth their eyes that they may turne from darknes to light from the power of Satan to God that they may receiue remission of sinnes inheritance among them that are sanctified by Faith in Christ Insomuch that the minds of the Faithfull are first sanctified Acts 26. 18. by a true and right apprehension of the loue of God in Christ made manifest vnto them by the light of the Gospell and their wills are inflamed with a seruent desire to be partakers thereof before they be made the sincere Seruants of Christ For as Austin Aug. de peccat merit remiss l. 2. cap. 3. Aug. hom 15. de verb. Apost saith God worketh our saluation in vs not as in stones that haue no sense or as in those creatures to whom he hath not given reason will For as the same Father also teachetb elsewhere He that made thee without thee doth not make thee Iust without thee He made thee not knowing what was done vnto thee but he maketh thee iust being willing and witting to that worke which is wrought in thee There are two parts of our saluation or deliuerance from sinne whereof the one is a deliuerance from the very being and Heb. 1. 3. 1. Pet. 2. 24 Isa 63. 3 1 Cor. 1. 13. Act. 20. 28 1 Pet. 1. 19 bondage of sinne and the other from the guilt and punishment thereof Now albeit concerning our deliuerance from the guilt punishment of sinne our most mighty Sauiour hath performed that alone by himselfe euen by the shedding of his owne most precious blood yet concerning that other part which consisteth in the d●liuerance from the being and bondage of sinne he doth effect it by diue●s motiues set downe in his holy Word whereby through the effectuall operation of his holy Spirit he doth make his Elect desirous and willing to cast off the grieuous yoake of Satan to haue all their very thoughts brought vnto obedience to the commandements of God Wherefore it was not without cause that the Prophet Daniel Dan. 4. 24. exhorted Nebuchadnezzar to redeeme his sins with righteousnes and his iniquities with mercy towards the poore that so there might be an healing of his errour For as hee that is ouercome of sinne is in bondage to sinne so he that breaketh 2 Pet. 2. 19. the bonds of sinne and casteth off the yoke thereof may rightly be said to redeeme and to saue himselfe from the same Take Redime to captum quam queas minimo 1 Tim. 4. 16. heed saith the Apostle to Timothy to thy selfe and to thy doctrine and continue therein for in so doing thou shalt saue thy selfe and them that heare thee Verily as sinne is the sicknes death of the soule so righteousnesse is the health and life thereof And therefore whereas contraries are cured by contraries Contraria curā●ur contrarys by righteousnes our soules are cured of their sinnes As it is apparent by the words of Daniel before-mentioned Redeeme thy sinnes with righteousnes and thine iniquities with mercy towards the poore loe let there be an healing of thine errour by which words we are taught that by righteousnes our souls are healed of their sinnes Wherefore all such as hearken attentiuely to the doctrine of the Gospell and are thereby brought to saith and righteousnes Luc. 1. 17. whereby they are purged from their sinnes may rightly be said to worke out their owne saluation to redeeme and saue Phil. 2. 12. their owne soules for that they are instruments
by us the nature of man is greatly disgraced in that wee teach that men are become brutish without reason and as dead stocks and stones without sense and life because we teach that by nature they haue not liberty list nor life vnto any thing that is truly and religiously good And why doe they not bring in the same inditement against the bookes of the Canonicall Scriptures which teach that euery man is a beast in his owne knowledge and that our hearts are stony vntill Ier. 10. 14 Ezek. 36. 26. Eph. 2. 1. they be made flesh and that we are starke dead in trespasses and sinnes and therefore haue no sanctified will sense nor life vntill Christ doth quicken vs by his holy Spirit and raise vs vp to an holy life Our doctrine then herein is none other then the very doctrine of the Holy Ghost neither doe we hereby disgrace the nature of man but shew how man by his owne fault hath disgraced himselfe and into what misery he is fallen by his owne folly And this wee teach only concerning the estate of the naturall man before he be renewed by the Spirit of God Whereas the Church of Rome forbiddeth the faithfull thēselues Rom. 15. 4 to search the Scriptures which yet were written for their learning and keepeth them from them vnder the locke key of an vnknown ton●ue and in her diuine seruice readeth them vnto them in a strange language and inioyneth them to receiue their Fatih vpon their Preachers word and credit without all examination and try all commanding them to beleeue blindfully as the Church beleeueth Yea a great Cardinall is bold to avouch that it belongeth no more to th● people to aske a reason of their teachers doctrine then it doth to an house to know Cusan exercit 6. pag. 547. why his Master turneth his head this way or that way Wherefore it is the Church of Rome that maketh the very Faithfull themselues like to the horse and mule in whom there is no vnderstanding contrary to the precise commandement of the Holy Prophet it is the Church of Rome by forceing the Psal 32 9 people to pray in an vnknowne tongue that causeth them to offer vp to God the lips of calues and to patter like pyes and parrets yea whereas by nature all men being degenerate and turned into lions beares wolues and tigres are not recouered out of this their wretched estate but by the sanctified knowledge of the diuine Writers of the most powerfull Gospell of Iesus Christ the Church of Rome keeping thē from the same keepeth them from that whereby they should be recouered out of this their miserable brutish condition And for the iustifying of her doing so there is alleaged by some of her followers this Commandement of Christ Giue not holy things to dogs nor cast pearles before swine Mat 7. 6 Now then let all indifferent men iudge who maketh men beasts whether the Professors of the Gospell of Christ or the followers of the Church of Rome And let all such persons labour both to vnderstand and put in practise the diuine mysteries of Faith and godlines who will not be condemned by God himselfe to be brutish and vnreasonable Creatures CHAP. III. The meanes whereby we are to come to the right vnderstanding of the Word of God is the light of true reason for the opening of the truth whereof these propositions following are explained QVAEST 1 2 3 c. 1 All Questions humane and diuine are to be determined by the rules of reason 2 The testimony of no Author humane or divine is farther to be approued then as it agreeth with the groūds of right reason 3 The holy Scriptures doe declare the greatest mysteryes of godlinesse by arguments and reasons 4 The Law the Gospell are founded vpon most forcible reasons yea the permission by God of the fall of Adam being the occasion of the strange meanes of man's recovery which is opened in the Gospell is grounded vpon most forcible reasons 5 The Professors of euery Religion alleage reasons for the iustifying of their severall devotions 6 The soundnes substance as it were the very quintessence of all divine reason is most plentifully to be found in the Canonicall Scriptures 7 No truth in Philosophy is contrary to any truth in Divinity 8 Testimonies may bee taken out of Philosophy to giue witnes vnto truths in Divinity reasons may be produced out of the booke of Nature to cleare the doctrines of the booke of Grace 9 Where there is no reason that may perswade to faith there ordinarily is no faith 10 Where there is a clearer apprehension of the reasons that perswade to faith there is a more setled assent a more strong faith 11 The doctrines of faith and godlines are often repeated the reasons that perswade thereunto are vrged and inculcated againe and againe in the bookes of the old new testament that we may thereby vnderstand that the clearer and fuller apprehension of them doth beget a clearer and fuller faith 12 We may by supernaturall reason ascend aboue the reach of naturall reason 13 That faith is not the best and strongest that hath the lesse number of reasons and the lesse perspicuous arguments to stay it vp but rather that which hath the greater number and the more perspicuous WHereas the Word of God profiteth not vnlesse it bee Heb. 4. 2 mingled with Faith that is vnlesse it being rightly vnderstood procure a wise and a settled assent it standeth all in hand to seeke out the true meanes whereby they may come to the right vnderstanding thereof if that they desire to reape any benefit thereby The truth is that the Prophets Apostles and Euangelists being the Lord's Secretaries or Registers to set down in writing all diuine and heauenly doctrines necessary to saluation were instructed by the immediate revelation of the Spirit of God that so they might be freed therin from all errour But for any other person to challenge the same priuiledge were but a phantasticall and an Anabaptisticall illusion For euen the Bishop of Rome himselfe who is magnified by his followers as the only man that hath all diuine and humane Lawes locked vp in his brest and is by them accounted the only vnerring Interpreter of holy Scripture and the infallible Iudge of the right sense and meaning thereof yet is by his chiefest Vpholders restrained to the meanes without the which he must not looke to attaine to the right and true vnderstanding thereof The high Bishop saith Bellarmine must not expect revelations but vse Bellar. de concil l. 1. c. 11. Canus locor theolog l. 5. c. 5. ordinary meanes For as Canus affirmeth the holy Writers only set downe Catholick doctrines by the immediate revelation and inspiration of God and therefore needed not outward helpes thereunto Whereas it behoueth Bishops to vse the ordinary course by weighing of reasons and by imploying their diligence Yea Cameracensis
is bold to avouch that both it is impossible Cam sent quaest 1. art 2. to assent without a reason to perswade thereto ot to giue any other manner of assent then the force of the reasons are that procure the same And therfore whereas we ought to giue the fullest assent to all doctrines of piety and godlines which are deliuered in the Word of God we ought most diligently to search out the strongest reasons that may throughly induce perswade thereunto For as S. Ierome testifieth the Gospell Hier. in c. 5. ep ad Gal. doth not consist in the leaues of the Words but in the root of reason And vndoubtedly by arguments and reasons all truths are not only lightned and cleared but also iustified and confirmed For when is any proposition true but when one part Vera est propositio quando pradicatum convenit subiecto In omni legittima pred catione pred catum est genus species proprium an t accidens Basil serm 8. in Psal 108. there of agreeth with the other but when one is a reason and an argument of the other Seeing then reasons and arguments are the causes of truth we are to seek out the right reasons of all things if that we will come to the knowledge of the truth There is much obscurity saith S. Basil in the diuine books but if with the hand of the minde thou dost knocke at the gate of the Scripture and dost diligently sift those places that are hidden by litle and litle thou shalt beginne to vnderstand the reason of the things that are spoken and it shal be opened vnto thee not by any other but by the word it selfe vnto the censure whereof we ought all to stand For all things are cleare euldent in the Scriptures to such as with an holy discourse according to reason will heare the Word of God For as the eye of the body doth discerne the differences of all visible things by the light of the sunne so the eye of the minde doth discerne the differences of all intelligible things by the streaming beams of true reason proceeding from Christ the Sunne of all true wisdome and vnderstanding And therefore in all Vniuersities and Schooles of good learning where wisdome and the knowledge of the truth is sought for after the best manner in all Lectures disputations and conferences not only errours are confuted and doubtfull things opened but confessed truths also are further cleered and confirmed by arguments and reasons And verily there is no man that maketh profession of learning and wisedome and trusteth to the goodnes of his cause D. Morton de ●qui●oc fol. 83. that doth not willingly submit the same to this manner kind of tryall Logicke saith a most learned and iudicious Author and now a most reuerend Bishop in our Church being the Art of discoursing and reasoning is the Art of Arts and high tribunal of reason and truth it selfe which no man in any matter whether it be case of humanity or diuinity can iustly refuse And as another wisely admonisheth the faithfull Christian must remember that he seeke the truth without partiality and that the place to seeke it is the Scripture and the meanes to finde it out is the right vse of true reason Yea saith he it is not vnknowne to any of our English Romanists that Doctour Fulke long since desired to haue all questions controversed betweene Papist and Protestant to be brought to this issue and and to be tried by syllogismes the very iudgment-seat of true reason And no mar●aile seeing God himselfe who is all wisedome reason and truth and needeth not to come to any manner of tryall For the only opening the eyes of his greatest enemies Wisd 5. 6. to behold the aequity of all his words and workes wi●l cause themselues will they nill they to cleare him and to condemne themselues yet offereth this plea euen to the idolatrous Heathen standing in defence of their Heathenish gods saying Stand to your cause bring forth your strong reasons saith the King of Iacob let them tell vs what shall come hereafter that Isa 41. 21 we may know that they are gods As if hee had concluded against them with this syllogisme The true God knoweth what shal come to passe hereafter yea world without end but your Heathenish gods do not know nor can foretell what shal come to passe in time to come therefore they beno true gods And verely as Wisedome so Truth seeketh no corners to Pro. 1. 20. hide her selfe in but cryeth without in the open streetes and setteth vp her questions vpon the gates of the greatest Schooles yea they settle such a certainty of all Divine and humane knowledge in the hearts of their followers friends that they refuse not triall nor iudgement no not in the midst of all their enemies Hee that doth euill maintayning errors either in faith or Ioh. 3. 20. manners hateh the Light neither commeth to the Light least his deeds should be reprooued but he that doth the truth commeth to the Light that his deedes may be made manifest that they are wrought according to God For what doth make things manifest but light And what is light but truth Eph. 5. 13. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2 Cor 4. 2. Psal 43. 3. the bright beames whereof will not suffer it selfe to be hidde And what is truth but the agreement of the reasons with the things themselues whereby they are made manifest and knowne This euidence of true reason is that which enableth the professors of euery humane art and science to stand in the iust defence of their seuerall professions and therefore doth it much more inable euery faithfull wise Christian to stand to the iustifying of his most holy Religion Is it not saith Chrysostome a great absurdity that the Physitian Tanner Clothier all manner of Crafts-men generally shal be able to contend for the worthines of their Sciences that a Christian shall not be able to giue a reason of his saith Whereas these Trades being Chrys in Ioh. hom 16. neglected bring but dāmage to our wealth the other being despised doe hurt the soule And yet saith he so madde are we that we bestow vpon the one all our cogitations and cares nothing regarding the most necessary and firme munitions of saluation Albeit it be commanded vs that we should be prepared to giue answere to euery one that asketh vs a reason of that faith that is in vs. For albeit Novices and young beginners in euery mystery Oportet discentem credere cannot at the first sufficiently vnderstand the first principles thereof and therefore must admit them for truthes vpon the bare credit and authority of their Teachers yet in processe of time they must conceiue the reason of euery rule it that they desire to attaine to any sufficient skill therein so in our Christian profession they that be as children must be contented to be fed
with milke and to be taught the first principles of Religion and grounds of the Catechisme and yet they that will become men must be able to take stronger meate and to vnderstand the reasons of all Divine Doctrines for the further strengthening and confirming of their faith And verely by all Doctrines deliuered by men it is a truth Non quis sed quid spectandum generally confessed by all that not so much the party that speaketh but that which is spoken ought to be respected and not the bare and taked authority of any but the sufficiency of the testimony it selfe ought to sway altogether and the waight Salmeron Jesuit● in c 5. ep ad Rom. of reason whereon it is grounded For the efficacy of reason is better then all authorities And of this iudgement are all wise men as well Heathen as Christians I am thus resolued saith Plato not now but alwayes that I am not to enthrall Plato in Critone my iudgement to any of my friends but to reason yea to that reason which by discourse appeareth to be best Whose opinion was seconded by the chiefest of all his Schollers that is by Aristotle Plato said he is my friend but truth that is Aristonoral l. 1. c. 3. made knowne by reason is more my friend So our wise and Christian Philosophers What wilt thou Lact de vero Dei simulachro c. 20. doe quoth Lactantius wilt thou follow thine Ancestors or reason rather So St. Cyprian we are not to prescribe by custome but to conuince by reason yea let there bee gathered together in a generall councell the chiefest of the Bishops and Doctors and of all other learned men of the whole Christian world and let them also be such as rightly embrace the true Catholique and Apostolique Faith and giue a iust censure also in matters of neuer so great waight and moment yet are we not of necessity bound to stand to their verdict Or else Saint Austin was out of the way when he stood vpon this plea Aug Cont. Maxim l. 3. c. 14. with Maximinius the Arrian I will not saith he alledge the Councell of Nice to prejudice thee neither shalt thou produce the Councell of Ariminum to prejudice me I will not be bound to yeeld to the authority of the one nor thou to the authority of the other but by the authority of the Scr●ptures as by most indifferent witnesses not proper to either of vs but common to both let matter with matter cause with cause reason with reason be compared together and so let tryall be made of the truth For he had learned to yeeld that honor to those onely books of the holy Scripture that are called Canonicall Aug ep 19. ad Hieronymum that he did assuredly beleeue that none of the Authors of them did erre any whit at all But as for all other albeit they did excell in learning and holinesse yet he would not rest vpon their iudgements vnlesse they did confirme the same by the authority of Canonicall Scripture or by some reason agreeable vnto truth And verely faith is not to be iudged by the persons but the persons by the faith For as Tertullian saith faith is not therefore sound and Catholique because it is professed by such and such persons but such and such persons are to be deemed sound and Catholique for that they professe the sound and Catholique faith Ramus and Scribonius men of no small iudgement and learning haue taught that all manner of testimonies be they Divine or humane are of themselues i●artificiall arguments and that the doctrines proued thereby haue their credit and authority rather from the qualification of the persons whose testimonies they are then from the bare and naked testimonies themselues So the Emperour Adrian in his rescript credit is to be giuen to him that giueth the testimony and not to the bare testimony And verely we doe not embrace the testimony of God set downe in the bookes of the Scriptures with that reuerent manner as we ought to doe vnlesse when wee giue assent thereunto we d ee it not so much for the bare testimony it selfe as for that it is the testimony of the most wise and holy God which cannot deceiue or be deceiued For then we rightly honour him and his truth Hereof it was that Christ receiued not the witnesse of Iohn as it was the testimony proceeding from a meere man but he receiued it as the testimony Ioh. 5. 33. of such a man as was indued with the Spirit of Eliah and sent before himselfe to prepare his way Nay he saith of his owne bare and naked testimony considered by it selfe If I should beare witnesse of my selfe my witnesse were not true Ioh 5. 31. And yet concerning the same as it is the testimony of the Son of God the very essentiall wisedome of his heauenly Father he saith though I beare record of my selfe my record is true Ioh. 8. 14. for I know whence I came and whither I goe And hereof it is that both God and Christ are so often mentioned in the holy Scripture with their honourable Titles that so the credibility of their persons may yeeld the more and greater credit to their Doctrine Andy et as if this were not sufficient inough the very doctrine it selfe that proceedeth from God and is set downe in the holy Scripture is cleared and iustified by many arguments and reasons And verily how otherwise could the holy Scripture inable the wise and learned professors of the Christian Faith to confute all Heathenish and haereticall errours and to iustifie all Divine and Heauenly Truthes not onely to the Gentiles and Haeretickes but also to the faithfull themselues vnlesse it did minister plenty of all sound and evident arguments for the effecting of the same The Gentiles refuse the very words of the Canonicall Scriptures and the Haeretickes reiect the right and orthodoxall sense of them and therefore neither of them can be convicted but by the euidence of reason yea how can the faithfull themselues giue a sure assent vnto the Doctrines of the holy Scriptures vnlesse they apprehend such arguments and reasons as are sufficient motiues to induce them thereunto And hereof it is that in all sound and Orthodoxe Sermons made either to breed or to encrease and strengthen Faith vnto the doctrines obserued in the words of the Text there are annexed sound and sufficient reasons for the opening and confirming of the same doctrines And this is the cause why preaching is preferred before reading and Catechising as being the more ordinary meanes both to beget and strengthen Faith for that in preaching many reasons are produced as many lights for the better clearing and iustifying of all Truthes and for the fuller convincing of all errours and haeresies the which thing is not done either in reading or in Catechizing There is I confesse no efficient cause of Gods will but his will it selfe for there is nothing without
ready at hand to satisfie our spirituall thirst Vpon Psal 1. 2. Iosh 1. 8. Deut. 6. 7. the one we may looke once and againe and then set them aside vntill some fit opportunity but we must be continually looking vpon the other and neuer let them vpon any occasion goe from vs for any long time or to depart out of our sight It is recorded of Themantes a Painter that herein consisted the excellency of his skill in that out of his draughts many more things were to be collected then were therein fully expressed euen so is it to be seene in the bookes of the Prophets and Apostles which draw out vnto vs the most liuely image of the most gracious and glorious God and of his most goodly and beautifull workes wherein albeit at the first view and in their outward shew there be nothing offered to our sight worthy of any great admiration yet when they are throughly viewed and looked into it is strange and almost incredible what great delight will be raised vp by the due view of that profound wisdome which doth lie hid vnder a bare as it seemeth and a naked narration For as it is reported of a Countrey called Eleusinia that it doth offer still some new matter to such Trauellers as come againe again to review to revise it so is it most true of the Divine Bookes of the sacred Scriptures that hath the learnedst Doctor of the Church of God looked into them neuer so often and so attentiuely and Nnnquam ad te accedo quin recedo doctior profited also therein neuer so much yet if he come to reuise them yea if he still diligently looke into them he may still see and learne more and more And therefore it is not without cause that Chrysostome giueth this garland vnto the most fruitfull Vine of the Divine Scripture aboue all other Cedars of the wood that it is so full of fruit that all the grapes thereof can neuer be gathered and that it is so rich a corne-field that all the eares therof can neuer be cleane gleaned nor contayned within the barnes of our narrow streight hearts So that albeit the most learned and wise be daily occupied in the study thereof yet there will somewhat remaine to be learned further out of it Yea they shall plain●ly find thereby that most of the thing● that they haue already learned therein may be yet againe learned better and better Wherefore it was not without cause that Gregory Nazianzen 1 Cor. 8. 2. and Basil as Ruffinus testifieth did lay aside for thirteene yeares all bookes of sEcular learning that they might giue themselues wholly vnto the study of the Diuine Scripture As Ierome likewise testifieth of himselfe that there were full fifteene yeares past since any prophane Author came into his hands and if happily saith he as we speake to the people any of their sayings come into my minde we remember it as an olde dreame comming vpon vs when we are asleepe Yet let vs not here mistake this learned Father as if he deemed all the wise sayings of the Philosophers to be meer dotages and dreames seeing all truthes in Philosophy came from the same Author from whom doe proceed all truthes in Theology Ve●o nil verius and are all of the like verity albeit they are not of the same authority Wherefore the depositions of prophane Authors are not lightly to be reiected and set at naught when they beare witnesse to the truthes in Diuinity seeing our blessed Sauiour would not haue such inhibited to cast out diuels Mar. 9. 39. in his Name which yet did not follow him as his owne disciples did For as in matters of Controversie where truth is to be determined by mens oathes if there be such a number of deponents as the Law requireth it is sufficient albeit it be not amisse if there be more euen so in the decision of questions that are diuine it is sufficient if the truth be confirmed by euident testimonies and reasons taken out of the vn-erring booke of God yet if testimonies also and reasons taken out of prophane Authors bearing witnesse to the same truthes be added to the former it is not preiudiciall but beneficiall to the cause For it is no disgrace to the Diuine truth in Theology the soueraigne Lady and Queene of all Sciences to haue the truthes of all humane arts to attend vpon her Nay rather it is an euident demonstration of her true Nobility seeing she is waited vpon with such a Princely traine Nay her certaine truths cannot be fully opened neither all the truthes of any other Science without some measure of knowledge in them all For there is among 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 them an 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and such a strong linke of assinity the principles and grounds of the one lightning and strengthening the rules of the other that no perfection of knowledge can be had in any one of them without some measure of knowledge in all Wherefore it is not to be seared that the principles and precepts of humane arts will thwart the principles and precepts of sacred Theology seeing they are in no wise contrary the one to the other no not in those very positions which yet seem to carry a shew of contrariety As for example Of nothing nothing Ex nihilo nohil fit Mundus sactus est e●nihilo A priuatione ad hab●tum non sit regressio Mortui resurgent can be made viz. by any limited and finite power is not contrary to this The world was made of nothing viz. by the infinite illimited power of God So there is no recouery frō death to life viz. by any naturall or ordinary meanes is not contrary to this the dead shall all rise viz. by the supernaturall power of God And so in diuers other of the like kind For doth not all reason euen in Philosophy acknowledge the vndoubted truth of this principall in Diuinity viz. that which is impossible with man is possible with God vnto whō nothing is impossible and therefore that which cannot be brought to passe by any naturall power may be effected by a supernatural And doth not also all reason teach that euery truth agreeth Verum vero consona● with euery truth is contrary onely to falshood and vntruth And therefore seeing euery true argument and reason doth agree with that whereof it is an argument and reason and ioyned with it maketh a true proposition no true reason in any wise can be contrary vnto truth Why doth not reason experience and Scripture also teach that one fountaine cannot Iac. 3. 11. send forth sweet water and bitter And therefore seeing all naturall reason as well as Scripture from God the Creator of nature and the reuealer of the Scripture they cannot be contrary one to the other vnlesse that God may be contrary to himselfe Scripture indeed is contrary to the iudgement of corrupted nature and may
be new and strange to nature her selfe in her integrity but it can in no meanes be contrary therevnto Aug de Ciuit. Dei l. 22. c. 1. vnto So Saint Austin truth was perswaded new to custome but not contrary to reason Nay there is admirable consent and harmony as a learned Author testifieth betweene the naturall Amand. Pol. lib. 2 Log. fol. 213. parefactions of God and the sup●rnaturall for from God is both reason and Scripture and reason being obs●ured by sinne and desiled with filthy errours the Spirit of God by the Scripture doth lighten againe and free her from her former aberrations So Saint Ambrose the light of nature being Am de suga se●uli cap. 3. dimmed was to be cleared by the Law To whom accordeth Saint Cyrill The law was giuen that thereby the light that Cyrill in Ioh. l. 1. c. 11. was in vs should be increased Wherefore let no reasonable man dispute against reason nor learned man against humane learning vnlesse he will indanger the reputation of his reason and of his learning also A stranger which was not of the kindred of Israel hauing shauen her selfe and cut of the haire of her eye-browes and of her head and hauing performed all other things ordained in the Law to that purpose might be ioyned to the people of God and be admitted into the Sanctuary So Phis●osophy and humane learning by her corrupt Doctrines a stranger to the seruice of God being pruned from them by the sharpe booke of the Scripture may yeeld some good timber to the Lords Spirituall build●rs for the rearing vp and also for the beautifying of the Spirituall House and Temple of God Truth it is that the errours in Philosophy being wrongfully opposed against the truthes in Theology and stifly and obstinately maintained and defended haue made some of the Philosophers the Partriarches of Haeretickes and yet as true it is that the truthes thereof being diligently sought out by the studious haue had such as haue bin best instructed therein the chiefest Patrons of all Diuine verities and the strongest impugners of all Heathenish and Haereticall pranities And hereof it is that in all well-ordered Schooles and Vniversities yong Schollers are first trayned vp in the knowledge of the tongues and Arts before they be admitted to be students in Diuinity And doth not experience it selfe make this manifest that the siner the naturall wit of any student is and the more it is ripened with a greater measure of all manner of humane learning the fitter such an one is to vnderstand the heauenly doctrines of the diuine Scriptures and to diue into the profundity of the mysteries of Faith Po. as S. Austin saith grace doth not abolish Aug. in Ps 102. nature but make it perfect neither doth nature reiect but embrace grace Yea as Tertullian truely teacheth God sent first nature to be our Schoole-mistris being afterward to send prophesie that thou being first the disciple of nature mightst afterward be more easily induced to beleeue prophesie For the booke of Nature is as well the Lords booke as the booke of Scriptures and the truthes written in the one are as well the Lords truthes as they that are written in the other Neither is there as Nazianzene saith any knowledge of learning to be despised seeing all Science whatsoeuer is in the nature of good things Rather those that despise it we are to account sluggish and clownish who would be glad that all were ignorant that so their own ignorāce might not be espied Verily all such persōs are like the Painter who hauing drawne out the picture of Cockes after an vnseemly and euill fauoured fashion set his Boy to keepe away all liuing Cockes from his shoppe least by their comming neare his rudenesse and vnskilfulnesse might more euidently appeare Wherefore it may well beseeme the sauage Sarazons and the barbarous Turkes to beleeue Lud. viv l. 1. de veritate Religionis Christiane grosly in their false Prophet Mahomet and to haue no learning to be vnable to discourse of any point of their religion and well may the sword be the finall resolution of their sottish Alcharon an argument concluding in Ferio and taken out of the Butchers Shambles as best beseeming such beastly blood-suckers And let it also agree to Henry Nicholas Henry Nicholas in the Gospel of the Kingdome cap. 23. scrip ●…arij Father of the Familists to glory in the name of an vnlearned man and in a scoffe to tearme the skilfull in the Scriptures Scripture-wife or Scripture-men and to warne his Schollers to beware of such And let it agree to wicked Ieroboam that made Israel to sinne and to fall away from God to make the basest of the people being vnlettered persons to be his Priests as being in truth fitter guides to leade into all superstition and Idolatry then vnto the right worshippe and seruice of God So let it agre to the Priests and Prelates of the darke kingdome of Antichrist to be like my Lord of Dunkelden who knew neither old nor new Law and to their Doctors which taught that the Lords Prayer might be aswell to the Virgine Mary as vnto Christ and to one of the Founders of their superstitious orders viz. to Frier Francis who preached to the birds yea to the Popes themselues among whom some were so vnlettered as Alphonsus saith that they knew not Alphon. de castra lib. 1. ca 4 cont hares the very grounds of the Grammer And let these men be their supreame iudges in all controuersies who although they goe awry in the premises yet they cannot erre in the conclusion For belike albeit they take their aime neuer so much amisse and stand cleane contrary to shoot at the marke yet they cannot choose but hit the white And although they goe neuer so contrary a way all the day long yet such admirable and vnerring guides they are that at night they are still right and at the place where they should be But the Lord requireth of all such as should be pastours and feeders of his slocke and instructers and teachers of his people that they be not young nouices and raw schollers 1 Tim. 3. 6. but ancient Students and well grounded Diuines euen such as are able to teach truth and conuince errour they must be learned Scribes in the Kingdome of God able to bring out of their treasury both new and old Yea it is very fit and conuenient that they haue skill in prophane learning that they may wound the enemy with his own weapon cut off Goliahs head with his owne sword and build vp the Temple of God with some stuffe taken out of the ruines of Babylon For as Saint Austin saith it is no small praise and commendation to Aug. de doct Christiana lib. 2. cap. 40. rob the Aegyptians of their sumptuous vestments and of their siluer and gold and to bestow the same things vpon the adorning of the Lords Tabernacle which they
be one of the greatest miracles of our Christian profession And verily if either we looke vpon the prophane worldlings we shall see them scorning at the assurance of the faithfull Sap. 2. 13. which causeth them to glory that God is their Father and hath adopted them for his Sonnes Or if we cast our eyes vpon the faithfull seruant of God himselfe when he is in any great spirituall conflict we shall soone see how ready he is to let loose the sure hold of his hope and to plunge himselfe into the gulfe of despaire because he is guiltie to himselfe of offending so good and so gracious a God by his owne manifold and great iniquities and sinnes Wherefore albeit we haue attained to such a measure of faith as was giuen by Christ to his owne Apostles yet had Luke 17. 5. Marke 9 24. we need continually to pray O Lord increase our faith and to say with the Father of the possessed childe Lord I beleeue helpe mine vnbeleefe Yea as Saint Austine admonisheth Tota opera nostra in hac vita est sanare oculum cordis vnde videtur Deus Aug. de verb. Dom. ser 18. Our whole worke in this life must be continually imploied about the cure of the eye of our heart whereby God is seene that is our faith The which lesson he learned of our Sauiour Christ who when the people demanded of him What they should doe that they might worke the workes of God Answered them saying This is the worke of God that ye beleeue Iohn 6. 26. on him whom he hath sent and so his beloued Disciple hath taught vs also This is the commandement of God 1 Iohn 3. 23. that ye beleeue in the name of the Sonne of God and loue one another as he gaue commandement Wherefore the calumination of the carnall professour and of the Romane Catholike made against the doctrine of the Gospell is vniust and vntrue which is that an easie way is laid open by the professours of the Gospell to life euerlasting and heauen set at a very small rate for that they teach that God so loued the world that he gaue his only begotten Sonne to the end that Ioh. 3. 16. whosoeuer beleeueth in him should not perish but haue life euerlasting Yea our Catholike Romanists may iustly bee challenged for doing great and intollerable wrong to our Christian saith in that they so vilisie and debase the same that they make it common not onely to the reprobate but also to the very Deuils themselues whereas in Tit. 1. 1. Act. 13. 43. very truth it is proper and peculiar to Gods elect yea euen to such as are ordained to life euerlasting THE SECOND PART OF THEOLOGICALL LOGICKE The questions that are handled in this second part concerning the doctrines of faith and are cleered by arguments drawne from all Topicke places Are these QVEST. I. The Church is not alwayes glorious and notorious as a City seated vpon an high hill GOD would haue all men saued and come to the knowledge of the truth Arguments drawne from the efficient cause 1 Tim. 2. 4. 1 Tim. 3. 15. and by the voice of truth vttered by the Church the pillar and ground of truth he doth call to him such as are to be of the truth doth cause thē to hearken vnto the truth and to be led thereby into the euerlasting habitations Psal 43. 3. Now truth and falshood are nigh neighbours and dwell neere each to other for where God hath his Church the deuill hath his Chappell and their houses in outward shew differ little sauing that for the most part the fore-front of falshoodes habitation is gloriously set out garnished and trimmed whereas the doore of truth is plaine and homely Whereby it commeth to passe that falsehood in the right way of truth and righteousnesse the testimonies of the Lord are sure and giue wisedome to the simple For doth pure seed breed Tares or pure Corne And doth wholesome food breed noisome or wholesome humours Vndoubtedly light and sight preserue from stumbling and falling it is Ioh 11. 9. Matth. 22. 29. darkenesse and blindnesse that cause both Yee erre saith our blessed Sauiour to the seduced Sadduces not knowing the Scriptures nor the power of God Euen as their seduced Fathers erred in their hearts because they knew not the Lords Psal 95. 10. Chrysost Hom. 3. de Lazaro wayes The ignorance of the Scripture saith Chrysostome brought in haeresies and a corrupt life and made a confusion of all things Wherefore it is a note of an euill person to hate the light Ioh. 3. 20. lest his deeds should be reproued as it is a badge of an haereticke to accuse the Scriptures of ambiguity and obscurity as Irenaeus affirmeth for that in truth they doe without ambiguity Iren. l 3. c. 2. and obscurity giue definitiue sentence against their haeresies From the which badge and cognizance if the Romish Church will be set free let her purge out of the bookes of her deare darlings the slanderous accusations of the Scriptures which are in them and let her giue a generall liberty to the lay people to haue the Scriptures in a knowne tongue that so they may the more easily attaine to knowledge and let her not any longer commend a blinde faith nor teach that faith consisteth rather in ignorance then in knowledge QVEST. IV. Not the sufferings or righteousnesse of any mere Man but onely of our blessed Sauiour both God and Man are of sufficient worthinesse to satisfie for sinne and to merit the inheritance of the Kingdome of Heauen As in Adam was the common nature of all men he being Arguments drawne from the materiall cause the roote all other the branches that so he might be a fit person with whom the legall Couenant might be made which was that if he would stand stedfast in obedience to the Law of God which was written in his heart and the which he was enabled to performe he should conueigh ouer his nature holy and pure to all his posterity and be translated from an earthly to an heauenly Paradise but if by his fall he stayned and polluted it he should conueigh it ouer to them stayned and polluted and make himselfe and all that by ordinary propagation came from him subiect to all miseries and woes So in Christ Iesus the second Adam was the common nature of man he being the roote and the faithfull the branches and vpon him Rom. 11. 17. Ioh. 15. 5. Gal. 3. 17. Act. 3. 26. was grounded the Euangelicall Couenant that the sufferings which he endured and the righteousnesse which he performed in our nature not for himselfe but for vs should be auaileable to all that are vnited vnto him by a true faith both for their deliuerance from that condemnation which was due vnto them in respect of their sinnes and for the purchasing vnto them of the glorious inheritance of the Kingdome of Heauen Vnto all
euerlasting is giuen vnto vs onely by Christ who is the true Manna that came downe from heauen and the very Bread of eternall life The which thing is repeated and inculcated againe and againe in the sixt of Saint Iohn that so we might be throughly perswaded Ioh. 6. 33. of the vndoubted truth thereof As likewise in Baptisme by Water being a most fit creature to cleanse our bodily vncleannesse is shewed and ratified vnto vs that it is the most pure and precious Bloud of Christ that is able to cleanse 1 Ioh. 1. 7. vs from all our sinnes which defile our soules Whosoeuer then ascribe our iustification and saluation not onely to Christ and his Bloud doe derogate from the testimonies of the holy Sacraments Yea they which ascribe these gracious blessings to the externall Sacramentall Elements which are the proper effects of the inuisible Grace signified by them doe as much as 1 Pet. 3. 21. in them lyeth cause these outward Elements to giue testimony flat contrary to that whereunto they were ordayned by Christ himselfe QVEST. XI The faithfull ought to be certainely assured of their owne saluation The Sacraments were not onely ordayned to shew and signifie vnto the faithfull that their iustification and saluation is onely by Christ but also to be seales of the same vnto them Rom 4. 11. and to giue them the assurance thereof in their owne hearts The which thing if it be true in the Sacraments of the Old Testament much more is it so in the sacraments of the New seeing they are instruments of greater grace The cup of blessing 1 Cor. 10. 16. saith the Apostle which we blesse is it not the Communion of the Bloud of Christ The Bread which we breake is it not the Communion of the Body of Christ That is ought not we that beleeue in Christ be as throughly perswaded of our spirituall participation of Christ the food of our soules and of eternall life in him by faith the mouth of our soules as wee are assured that we are partakers of the outward elements of Bread and Wine and of our bodily nourishment thereby in this temporall life and especially whereas the names of the outward signes are changed by the Spirit of God and receiue the names of things signified as the Bread is called the Body of Christ and the participation of the Bread the participation of his Body and that to this end that the religious receiuers of these holy mysteries should not looke to the nature of the things that are seene but beleeue the change made by grace in that they being Sacraments are not now common creatures but holy pledges and seales of our communion with Christ and all his Theodor. diol 1. blessings therefore the faithfull receiuing the one should rest assured of their participation in the other So reasoneth Saint Bernard A Ring is simply giuen for a Bern. de Carra Dom. Ring and it carrieth no further signification with it it is also giuen to aduance a man to some place of dignity and honour or else to settle one in the possession of an inheritance insomuch that he that hath receiued it may say This Ring is nothing worth but it is the inheritance that I seeke and ayme at After the same manner saith he the Lord drawing neare his death had care to set vs in the possession of his grace to the end that his inuisible grace might be giuen by some visible signe and for that end are all Sacraments ordayned QVEST. XII The outward Elements in the Eucharist are not Bread and Wine in shew but in substance The Sacrament of the Lords Supper was odrayned to this end that by the feeding and nourishing of our bodies by the outward Elements our soules might be assured of our spirituall feeding vpon Christ and of aeternall life obtayned thereby Now if we were willed to feed vpon the empty shewes of Bread and Wine and to cherish our selues therewith might we not iustly conceiue that we were bidden as it were to a Iuglers feast to haue our senses deluded rather then to haue our bodies nourished And what assurance could our soules haue thereby of their spirituall nourishing by the Body and Bloud of Christ Sacraments saith Saint Austin if they haue no Aug. Ep. 23. ad Bonifacium likenesse with the things whereof they are Sacraments can be no Sacraments at all Wherefore seeing the bare and empty shewes of Bread and Wine haue no true similitude with the substantiall Body and Bloud of Christ they can in no wise be the externall signes and Sacraments thereof QVEST. XIII There is no miraculous turning of Bread and Wine in the holy Eucharist into the very Body and Bloud of Christ nor any other miracle at all That which the Apostle auoucheth of the miraculous gift of tongues is true also of all miracles that is That they are for 1 Cor. 14. 22. a signe not for them that beleeue but to them that beleeue not And therefore miracles must be open and manifest euen to all such as haue but the sound vse of their outward senses that they may perceiue in them the power and might of the omnipotent God giuing testimony thereby of the diuine truth of Mar. 16. 20. that heauenly doctrine which is confirmed by such diuine witnesses Heb. 2. 4. But in the Lords Supper there is no turning manifest to sense of Bread and Wine into the Body and Bloud of Christ seeing the formes and also the qualities of Bread and Wine remaine there still and therefore in it there is no such miracle And verily Sacraments were not ordayned for Infidels to Act. 8. 37. conuert them but for the faithfull to confirme them in the faith And therefore as Saint Austin saith they may haue reuerence as things religious but they are not to be wondred at as things miraculous And whereas neither the booke entituled the Miracles of holy Scripture ascribed to Saint Austin nor Nazianzen intreating of the Miracles of our blessed Lord and Sauiour Iesus Christ doe mention any miracle done by him in his last Supper it is manifest what was the iudgement of the true and Orthodoxe Church in their times concerning the same QVEST. XIIII Iustification is giuen by the free mercy of God in Christ and not mericed by our workes As all other the good gifts of God so Iustification especially is freely giuen to the faithfull in Christ to this end that they should not glory in themselues nor trust in the worthinesse of their owne workes but in the most free and vndeserued goodnesse of God in Christ who is made vnto vs of God 1 Cor. 1. 30. wisedome righteousnesse sanctification and redemption that he that glorieth should glory in the Lord. And that we should in no wise doubt of the truth thereof the Apostle vrgeth and inculcateth the same againe and againe By grace yee are saued Ephes 2. 9. through faith and that not of
of the holy Scriptures much more euidently declare it selfe to be the most powerfull word of the most powerfull God in that it beautifieth the bare and barren soile of our soules with true wisedome righteousnesse and holinesse and with all manner of spirituall graces It was an euident effect of the diuine power of the mighty word of the omnipotent God that thereby in the Creation all things receiued their essence and being but of an euill man to make a good man yea to make one that is bruitish and diabolicall to become reasonable and Angelicall is a farre greater worke then the Creation of the whole heauen and earth as Saint Austin teacheth And therefore seeing this so strange a Aug. in Iob. tract 72. Isay 11. 9. worke is wrought as Isayas saith by the doctrine of the Canonicall Scriptures hereby it is sufficiently proued that the booke of the Scriptures is the booke of God Wherefore no maruell that the Apostle Saint Paul when 2 Cor. 3. 1. the truth of his Apostleship and Apostolicall doctrine was questioned by some among the Corinthians so confidently auoucheth that he standeth not in need of any testimoniall from men for his approbation and iustification seeing their owne conuersion wrought by that word which was written in their hearts by his Ministery was a most sufficient demonstration that his Apostleship and doctrine was from God The great works wrought here by our blessed Sauiour in the time of his being on earth did sufficiently declare him to be the true Matth. 11. 5. Ioh. 5. 36. Messiah and shall not the greater workes wrought by his word since his departure out of this life plainely demonstrate it to be the very word of the Sonne of God himselfe Wherefore if the blind Papists the most sightfull and spitefull enemies of the sincere Professors of the Gospell of Christ shal still auouch that they cannot know that the doctrine of the Scriptures is the doctrine of God but by the testimony of the Church we answer them as the man cured of his blindnesse by our most blessed Sauiour answered the blind Pharisies when they made protestatiō that they knew not whence our Sauiour was Doubtlesse saith he this is a maruellous thing that yee Ioh 9. 30. know not whence he is and yet he hath opened mine eyes So doe we also answere Doubtlesse this is a maruellous thing that ye know not whence the Scriptures are but by the testimony of the Church and yet they haue doe and shall open the eyes of the mindes and sanctifie the affections of the hearts of all Ioh. 17. 17. Ioh. 7. 17. such as haue beene are or shall be the people of God and shall thereby make them know that they are of God Wherefore hereby these blind Papists plainly manifest themselues to be none of the Lords people seeing they openly professe that they neither know nor can know the graces of sanctification wrought in their hearts by the Spirit and word of God giuing thereby testimony to it's selfe and to the conscience sanctified therewith that it it of God but that they receiue the same so to be onely vpon the testimony of the Church QVEST. XX. That the soule of our blessed Sauiour after his death descended locally into Hell It is no impeachment vnto our blessed Sauiours victory and triumph that he humbled himselfe to descend in soule into hell the dreadfull prison appointed for all impenitent sinners For as he triumphed ouer al his enemies on his crosse Col. 2. 15. So he was not daunted with the hellish horrors of that dreadfull dungeon when he descended into hell but victoriously triumphed ouer them all Yea the more in his humane nature he was humbled the more great and glorious was his victory and triumph It was Sampsons greater glory that when he was inclosed in Assah a strong City of his enemies he lifted aside the posts and barres of the gates of the City and so set himselfe free and being bound with cords and ropes brake thē asunder Iud. 16. So it was the greater glory of our spirituall Sampson that being in body in the prison of the graue and in soule in the deepe dungeon of hell yet he deliuered himselfe from both at his glorious resurrection And as this was most glorious for Christ so it was most profitable for vs that place our whole hope and confidence in him It is a confessed truth that whatsoeuer our blessed Sauiour performed in our humane nature he performed it for vs. He fulfilled for vs all righteousnesse vnto the which heauen was due and ascended into heauen to take possession thereof for vs and to assure vs of our assumption into that place of aeternall happinesse So likewise he endured for vs whatsoeuer was agreeable to the most seuere Iustice of God to lay vpon him in respect of all our sins and descended into hell and deliuered himselfe from thence to assure vs that he had made satisfaction to the vttermost mite for all our debts had procured for vs deliuerance from hell So teacheth the Apostle Rom. 10. By setting downe the different way that the Law and the Gospell shew whereby we may attaine to righteousnesse and heauenly happinesse the reward thereof and may also be deliuered from sinne and from hellish misery due to the same Moses saith he thus describeth the righteousnesse of the Law that the man that doth that which is commanded therein shall liue thereby Doe this saith the Law and thou shalt liue But doe it totally and continually For cursed is he that continueth not in all things that are written in the booke of the Law to doe them Gal. 3. 10. But the righteousnesse saith he that is of faith that is that righteousnes which our Sauiour Christ hath performed for vs and is reuealed not in the Law but in the Gospell is apprehended obtained by faith speaketh in this wise Say not in thy hart who shal ascend vp into heauen For that is to bring Christ frō thence Or who shal descēd into the depth of hel for that is to bring Christ frō the dead That is to say the righteousnes that Christ hath fulfilled for all that beleeue in him the which the Apostle calleth the righteousnesse of faith assureth the faithfull that they need no more doubt of their ascending into heauen then of Christs ascension seeing he ascended into heauen to take possession thereof in their nature and for their behoofe nor of their deliuerance from hell then of Christs deliuerance seeing he deliuered himselfe from thence to assure them of their deliuerance For the question here handled by the Apostle is not how we may be deliuered from the graue or from a temporall death and may be made partakers of a temporall life but how we may be deliuered from that death that is indured in hell and how we may be made pertakers of aeternall life and happinesse in the Kingdome of heauen For obserue the discourse of the
is a double iustification The first by grace and the second by the merit of our owne workes But his doubling is flat contrary to the simplicity of the Gospell For the Apostle plainly auoucheth that not onely at the first we are reconciled vnto God by Christ and are brought into his fauour and loue and are iustified and saued by his Bloud but much more that we are brought to the end of our saluation and to our full and finall glorification by the very same meanes God saith the Apostle setteth out his loue toward vs seeing while wee were yet Rom. 5. 8. sinners Christ dyed for vs much more then being iustified by his bloud we shall be saued frō wrath by him For if when we were enemies we were reconciled vnto God by the death of his Sonne much more being reconciled we shall be saued by his life In the which words of the Apostle it is manifestly and distinctly set downe that as it is the grace of God in Christ whereby we are reconciled vnto God and iustified at the first so it is the very selfe-same grace of God in Christ that doth saue vs at the last And Greg. Moral lib. 2. cap. 4. so a Bishop of Rome it selfe in her better times hath taught saying The first grace begat me in faith being naked and the very self-same grace shall saue me being naked take me vp into glory Wherefore if we desire to be partakers of the fruit of our redemption wrought for vs by Christ let vs not so meanly thinke thereof as if he should haue begun it onely by his obedience and left it to be finished by our selues Let vs not imagine that he paid but a part of our ransome and a parcell of the price that was to be tendred to God for the full purchase of the glorious inheritance of the Kingdome of Heauen and left it to our selues to discharge the rest Or if we cannot but confesse that he paid the whole summe and the full price let vs not impute to the God of all mercy and the most excellent Patron and Patterne of all Pitty such an hard and vniust kind of dealing as if he should exact againe a new payment at our hands for that which was fully purchased and paid for before Vndoubtedly if our title to the heauenly inheritance by the obedience and righteousnesse of Christ be sufficient good why should we seeke after any other title Seeing Law and reason teacheth vs this that that thing Quod semel neum est non potest ampliue fieri meum Quisemel factus est dominus non potest ex alia causa fieri dominus Quia nomo potest acquirere dominium rei suae which is once iustly mine cannot be made more mine And he that is once made a right owner of a thing cannot againe by another title be made owner of the same thing seeing no man can get againe the Dominion of that which was his own before If then our first title to our Iustification and Saluation by the free and vndeserued mercy of God in Christ be good and sufficient then we cannot afterward lay any claime thereunto by the broken and forged title of our owne workes QVEST. LIII The going on pilgrimage to see or to touch the true reliques of the Holiest of the Saints doth not bring any sanctification at all The seeing and touching of holy persons themselues doth not sanctify any much lesse the seeing or touching of their reliques They that receiue Christ by faith are made the Sonnes Ioh. 1. 12. of God and are renewed to his image in righteousnesse and true holinesse and not such as imbrace and kisse him with their bodily hands and mouthes for then Iudas the Traitor should haue been made a Saint Wherefore if we desire to haue any benefit by visiting the Saints we ought daily and diligently to visite the Scriptures wherein the pictures of their piety are most liuely painted out that so we may be rauished with the admiration thereof and be stirred vp to follow them by an holy imitation And so concerning the Saints which liued since the Apostles times if we be desirous to visite them also wee ought to get their learned bookes which are the best Images of their Almās speech is the image and glasse of his minde Erasm in praefat Hieron ad Guili Warramum holy soules that by their sound and Orthodoxe doctrines which are set downe therein we may be directed in the right way of piety and godlinesse But so it is saith Erasmus complayning of the superstitious folly of many of his time we kisse the shooes of the Saint and their handkerchers albeit loathsome for filth but as for their Bookes which are their best reliques we relinquish hauing little regard of them Their Coat or Shirt we lay vp in a chest adorned with gold and precious stones but as for their writings vpon the which they bestowed much labour and in the which still liueth here with vs that which is in them their chiefest good we leaue them to be consumed with wormes and rust QVEST. LIV. The faithfull that are sanctified by Regeneration may and ought to assure themselues of their full and finall glorification If God was found of the faithfull when they sought him not and made himselfe manifest vnto them when they asked Rom. 10. 20. not after him much more when they turne vnto him hee will turne to them when they draw nigh to him he wil draw nigh Iac. 4. 8. Matth. 7. 7. to them when they seeke him he will be found of them For if when they were enemies they were reconciled vnto God by the death of his Sonne much more may they rest assured of his loue being reconciled vnto him and made his stedfast friends If God for Christs sake offered them a pardon being Traitors and Rebels and standing vp in armes against him certainly he will suffer them to enioy the benefit of that pardon when they haue humbly submitted themselues and are become his loyall subiects If God doth forgiue vnto his all their grieuous sinnes which they willingly and wittingly committed before their effectuall Calling to the estate of grace will he not forgiue their sinnes of infirmity which they afterward commit against the resolute purpose of their owne hearts if he did deliuer them from domineering and raiguing sinnes will he not in the end deliuer them fully from all such sinnes whose power and strength are already in part weakened by their daily repentance and stedfast faith The Lord said Dauid that deliuered 1 Sam. 17. 37. me out of the hand of the Lyon and the Beare will also deliuer me out of the hand of this Philistin Vnto the which words happily the Apostle alluding saith of himselfe And I also was deliuered out of the hand of the Lion And thereupon was confident that the Lord would deliuer him from euery euill worke and would preserue him to his heauenly Kingdome
any thing that is good For man is become saith Chrysostome totallie sinne Chrysost in Gen. Hom. 1. Esay 1. 6. and therefore in his whole vnderstanding and will And this he learned of the Prophet Esay The whole head is sicke and the heart is heauy from the sole of the foote to the crowne of the head there is nothing whole therein What good habilitie or freedome then is in the will to that which is truelie good QVEST. XCII The Church of Rome giueth to the Saints diuine honour Religious faith prayer and deuotion are principall parts of Arguments drawen from the parts to the whole or from the speciall to the generall Ioh 6. Psal 50. 15. that diuine seruice and honour which is due vnto God and is giuen vnto him by all his true and faithfull seruants But these religious duties are by the Church of Rome communicated to the Saints vnto whom they make their prayers in their wants and necessities and trust to be releeued by their meanes and for that purpose deuote themselues to their seruice and therefore they giue vnto them diuine honour QVEST. XCIII There are no persons appointed by God for Popish Purgatory All persons are either beleeuers or Insidels and vnbeleeuers Now neither of these when they receiue from GOD their discharge to depart out of this world haue by his appointment any passe for Purgatory Concerning the beleeuer be he weake or strong in faith so hee be sound and sincere our blessed Sauiour testifieth and that by a solemne and a doubled asseueration that he hath euerlasting life and shall not come into Ioh. 5. 24. condemnation but is passed from death not to the paines of Popish Purgatory but to life that is to the vnspeakeable ioyes of heauen And as for all vnbeleeuers they are condemned already viz. Ioh. 3. 18. in Gods decree and in his holy word the vndoubted record thereof and hell is their place being the prison appointed for all condemned persons and there they are to be reserued against the iudgement of the great day And therefore none at all are appointed by God for Popish Purgatory And verily there is no way detected in the holy Scripture that leadeth thither For there wee finde but two wayes whereof the one is Matth. 7. 13. narrow and leadeth to life that is to heauen and the other broad and leadeth to destruction that is to hell And therefore if our Popish paenitents would needes passe along to Purgatory there to make full satisfaction to God for their sinnes which they haue not throughly satisfied for by their workes of paenance they shall be able to finde no way that leadeth thither QVEST. XCIIII The miracles and doctrine of the Romish Church are fabulous and false by the testimonies of her owne vulgar people learned Writers the ancient Fathers Canonicall Scriptures It is an approued saying that the voice of the people is the Arguments drawen from humane and diuine testimonies 1 Cor. 14. 22. voyce of God the which in Gods matters is true of Gods people and in matters subiect to sense and naturall reason is true in all such persons as haue in them sense and reason sound Wherfore seeing miracles may be discerned by sense and naturall reason and therefore are appointed for Infidels which haue no other meanes to apprehend the truth of them the iudgement of ●…quity and that in euery controuersie that is betweene them Camp Rat. 2. Possevin Biblio●hes Select l. 7. c. 18. vs is wholy for them and directly against vs. The which if it were true why was their Index Expurgatorius made therein order taken to put out diuerse things one of the bookes not only of diverse writers of their owne side but also out of the monuments of the ancient Fathers What Doe any that trust to the goodnesse of their owne cause and to the fulnesse of the witnesses produced by themselues maime and mangle and curtall and abridge their testimonies giuen vnder their owne hands and set downe in record by themselues and so suffer them not to tel out to the end fully and wholy their owne mindes Verily hereby it is plaine and manifest that all antiquity is not fully and wholy for them and therefore that such of them at least that make boast thereof are of the number of such haereticks as sinne being condemned by Tit. 3. 11. their owne consciences Yea whereas they Father vpon diuerse of the greatest lights of the Church diuerse Treatises that neuer came from them as the Liturgies of S. Iames S. Marke S. Denis and the like and as the Decretall Epistles fathered vpon divers ancient Bishops of Rome and produce out of them diverse testimonies for the iustifying of diuerse points of their Idolatry and superstition hereby it is manifest that their cause is very bad in that it cannot bee maintained but by such counterfeit and forged evidences Lastly to conclude if that the gouernours of the Church of Rome were not well witting to themselues in their owne consciences that the testimonie of God himselfe deliuered in the bookes of the Canonicall Scriptures was not directly against them why doe they refuse them as authenticall as supreame iudges in those tongues wherein they were first penned by the speciall and immediate revelation of the spirit of God allow them that dignitie onely in the language of the vulgar Interpreter who was a man subiect to errour And why doe they charge them being thus translated to be obscure ambiguous and doubtfull and therevpon refuse the Text it selfe to bee the supreame Iudge vnlesse it be taken in that sense as it is expounded by the Churches glosse so making the glosse better then the text and seating it in the place thereof Yea why doe they yet charge the Text it selfe being thus expoūded by their Churches glosse to be an vnsufficient Iudge vnlesse there be ioyned vnto it as fellow Benchers and Peeres equall with it in authority the bookes Apochrypha vnwritten verities and traditions Vndoubtedly as it is a very strong presumption that hee which disgraceth the Lawes of his Prince is guilty of trespasse committed against them and so liable by them to condigne punishment so is it an euident argument that many of the doctrines of the Church of Rome are condemned by the Canonicall Scriptures because they are so disgraced by her deare children with diuerse reproachfull imputations For it is the fashion of Hereticks as Irenaeus saith when they are reproued by the Scriptures to reproach and disgrace Jren. l. 3. cap. 2. them as if they were not right and as if they were vttered ambiguously and as if the truth could not be learned out of them by such as knowe not traditions And therefore Tertullian calleth them fugitiues from the light of the Scriptures and further Lucifugae scripturarum Tertull de carnis resurr testifieth that if that were taken from them which they haue common with the Ethnickes and if they were brought to determine all their controuersies by the Scriptures only they could not prevaile And so I beseech God that our Romanists the defenders of all Antichristian heresies may no longer prevaile but that their madnesse may be made manifest to all men Amen FINIS