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

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MISCELLANIA OR A TREATISE Contayning Two Hundred Controuersiall Animaduersions conducing to the study of English Controuersies in Fayth and Religion VVritten by N. N. P. And dedicated to the yonger sort of Catholike Priests and other students in the English Seminaries beyond the Seas With a Pareneticall Conclusion vnto the said Men. Praedica Verbum insta opportunè importunè argue obsecra increpa in omni patientia doctrina 2. Tim. 4. Printed Anno M.DC.XL To the yonger sort of Reuerend and Vertuous Cath. Priestes and Students in the English Seminaries REVEREND and Vertuous men though I hope that this ensuing Treatise will become profitable to diuers of the Catholike Laity yet ingenuously I confesse that it was chiefly and princip●lly vnde●taken for the aduancement of your Studies in C●ntrouersies of Fayth I meane on●● such of you who haue spent your last yeares in ●umane learning and points of School-Diuinity ●nd are therefore in regard of such your want of ri●●rage as yet litle conuersant in Controuersies of fayth ventilated at this day betweene the Catholike and the Protestant To those others of your owne function which are of full and great yeares this Discourse I confesse is lesse seruiceable since themselues through their owne reading are no doubt well acquainted with most of the Animaduersions ●ere set downe and therefore I would not haue any such graue and learned men thinke that I adresse this Worke vnto them for their further benefit for I willingly grant that though my selfe be of their owne course of lyfe I shall be euer ready rather to be instructed by them then vndertake to instruct any of them Touching the Subiect of this Treatise it contayneth certaine Controuersiall Animaduersions for so I here call them about Matte●s of Religion These Animaduersions are of most different a●d seuerall points and in regard of such their diuersi●y they can hardly be reduced to any certaine Heads 〈◊〉 can be set downe in any praecise Method with m●tuall dependency one to the other And therefore i● regard of the want of such Method I haue entituled the whole Worke Miscellania as being a mixture of things in themselues heterogeniou● and of different natures And although some of them might as touching the same point be ranged and set downe togeather and this chiefly in those which do concerne the Reall Presence yet I haue purposely for the most part marshalled them in different places the better to obserue the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 required in the t●a● Method of Miscellania that so no one part of 〈◊〉 Booke shall differ in fo●me from the rest or fr●● the whole imitating herein the vsuall Order of E●grams whose Method in setting them downe co●sists in not obseruing of Method There except ce●taine Animaduersions in defence and proofe of 〈◊〉 Deity and of the Immortality of the Soule i● the end of the Booke which I haue thought ex●●dient to amasse together against such Men w●● m●●ke their Infidelity vnder the ●ecture of Protestancy And as these Animaduersions being promiscuously deliuered without any punctuall order do in part resemble a great plot of ground not deuided into any certaine beds or quarters wherin confusedly and scatteringly grow many flowers of different kinds odours So here you shall find sparsedly Obseruations of so many points in number and of such different Natures as that I hold it more conuenient to refer the Reader immediatly to the pe●using of them then to particularize but any few ●eads in this Dedicatory Epistle Let no man muse at this vnexpected Method We see the world in most things is extrauagant the Method here vsed is also through a kind of necessity extrauagant and thus I am forced at this present to humour the World And I adde hereto that ●●e vncertanity contayned in this Method may beget 〈◊〉 the Reader as often it doth in Bookes of this na●●re and forme an inquisitiue desire to see what ●lloweth in ech ensuing Animaduersion as pres●ming them to be of different Subiects and so may ●ore easely draw on the Reader to the perusall of the whole Treatise This Rapsody of Obseruaions if it be lawfull so far to impropriate the word is taken partly out of that most Eminent Cardinall Bellarmine of ●orthy memory partly out of the most paynefull and l●●rned worke of the Protestants Apology and ●●t of other of the said Authours writings out of ●hich many choyse Obseruations are now fully published which before and till now did ly● much hidden concealed in Marginall references partly also out of all the chiefe Bookes written by th● Catholikes during these last thirty or fourty yeares and partly out of the diligent perusall of the chiefe Protestant Writers And as we obserue that a man comming into 〈◊〉 curious Garden layeth not hold of euery flower which first presenteth it selfe to his sight but will gather here and there such as are most pleasing to th● eye smell So I hope I may here boldly say I haue forborne all vulgar and obuious Obseruations as presuming them to be knowne to you allready resting only and this with the iudgment of other graue me● of my Coate already acquainted with this Worke in such as are choyse selected and full of matter the which Vertuous Men you may vse as so many sho●● Prolegomena or briefe instructions cond●cing to your future more full and exact study of Controuersies Here now you haue in these fe● sheets a full Synopsis or view of the most weighty Obseruations which being made familiar an● knowne to you aforehand may much facilitate a●● make easy your otherwise more painefull search an● study hereafter in those matters and may furni●● you with extemporall and present discourse touchi●● most Controuersies all which seuerall Obseruations being as it were a formlesse materia prim● of Controuersies or to speake in the Poets Dialect rudis indigestaue moles would require no small labour toyle and disquisition in any of you to collect out of the Authors themselues The Animaduersions in this Treatise set downe are in number only two hundred Many ●ore I grant might be added for the increase of ●he Number But these I hold to be most forcing 〈◊〉 am loath that this worke through any affected pro●●xity should become fastidious or wearisome vnto you And wheras you shall find some acknowledgments of Protestants to be oftener set downe then ●●nce you may conceaue the reason therof to be in regard of the seuerall or different Illations or Inferences drawne from the said acknowledgments in seuerall Animaduersions If any of you reape profit by this my Labour as ● hope diuers of you may and will my humble re●uest then in recompence of my paynes taken herein 〈◊〉 that you w●ld vouchsafe your remēbrance of me in ●●ur prayers at the chiefest tymes of your Deuotions 〈◊〉 knowe many of Custome and Vse in Dedicating ●●eir Bookes to Catholikes do intreate of them this ●●nd of fauour But as for my selfe my desire and ●●irituall need of your
good prayers is so vehem●●●●●d vnaffected as that I earnestly beseech you euen 〈◊〉 the most precious Passion of our Lord and ●auiour suffered for the cancelling of our sinnes by ●ur owne charitable Disposition towards others for ●resume those words of the Apostle to be imprinted 〈◊〉 your soules (a) Rom. 5. Charitas Dei diffusa est in ●●ordibus vestris Finally by what is most sacred and holy that yo● would vouchsafe now and then your particular remembrance of me either yet aliue or hereafter dead in that your most retired and Religious Memento vsed in the celebration of the most Blessed and Reuerend Sacrifice of the Masse for the expiating of my manyfold sinnes This I humbly beseech this in all prostration of soule I implore and begge a● your hands and in such your performance ech of yo● iustly may comfort your selues in those words of ou● Sauiour Beati (b) Matt. 5. misericordes quoniam ipsi misericordiam consequentur And thus in th● good hope thereof I cease referring you to the perusall of the Treatise it selfe Yours in our Lord Iesus N. N. P. MISCELLANIA Contayning certaine Controuersiall Animaduersions Animaduersion I. I WILL begin with the approuall or reiecting what is or hath beene accounted the Scripture or the written Word of God which point concernes the Bookes of Ecclesiasticus Toby Judith Hester Machabees c. Where we are to vnderstand that the Canonicall Scriptures are to vs at this day discerned and made knowne not by that which either the Iewes for a time or certaine Fathers do omit deny or doubt of in their Canon of Scripture but by that which many Fathers do constantly affirme Since otherwise and vpon the con●rary ground we might deny with the Lutherans the Epistle of Iames Iude the second of Peter the 2. and 3. of Iohn the Epistle to the Hebrews and the Apocalyps seeing all these bookes (a) Ofiand in Epic. Cent. 4. p. 299. are denied by the Lutherans Now the reason of this Thesis or Proposition is because in the Primitiue Church the Canonicall Scriptures were not generally all at once receaued but in so great a variety of pretended Scriptures great care and search was requisite wherby to determine which Scriptures were Canonicall which not wherby it came to passe that sundry bookes were for the tyme misdoubted o● by some Fathers or Councells omitted o● not receaued which yet afterwards were vpon greater search and consideration generally acknowledged And according herto D. Bilson Bishop (b) In his suruey of ●hrists suffering printed 1604. pag. 664. of Winchester thus truly sayth The Scriptures were not receaued in all places at once no not in Eusebius his ●yme Animaduersion II. D. Whitakers (c) In his answ to M. Reynolds ●efut p. 2● 23. and other of our Aduersaries do reiect the former bookes of the Old Testamēt to wit Ecclesiasticus Toby c. because they were not first written in Hebrew and in that they had not for their knowne Authours those whom God had declared to be his Prophets This Argument is weake For it is a rash assertion so to measure the Scriptures by the tongue wherein they are written as to restrayne the Spirit of God to one only language The ●anity of which said assertion is sufficiently disproued by Example of Daniel a great part whereof to wit from cap. 2. vers 4. v●que ad ●●em cap. 7. though not written in Hebrew is yet by our Aduersaries acknowledged for Canonicall And touching the second point of this Argument it cannot be proued that God would direct by his holy Spirit no Authors in their Writings but such as were knowne and also further declared by certaine testimonies to be Prophets For our Aduersaries cannot yet tell who writ the seuerall bookes of Judges the third and fourth of the Kings the two of Chronicles the booke of Ruth and Iob all which bookes neuerthelesse they admit for true and Canonicall Scripture And hereupon it is that D. Whitakers though crossing his former assertion thus writeth (d) L. de sacra Script ●ag 603. Multorum librorum authores ignorantur c. The authors of many bookes of Scripture are vnknowne as of Iosue Ruth Paralipomenon Hester c. Thus he To whose iudgment D. Willet subscribeth saying We (e) In his Synops p. 4. receaue many bokes in the Old Testament the Authours whereof are not perfectly knowne Animaduersion III. AGainst the writings of the Ancient Fathers the Protestants pretend seuerall difficultyes For example D. (f) Contra Duraeum l. 5. p. 300. K●mpu in his Exam. part 1. p. ●4 Whitakers and others obiect against the Epistles of Ignatius that (g) Dial. ● Theodore● and (h) Dial. 3. contra P●lag Ierome do alledge certaine testimonies from Ignatius his Epistle ad Smirnenses which are not found in that or any other of Ignatius his Epistles Wherto I answere First that the Auncient (i) By Austin in Psalm 95. by Tertull. lib. adu Iudaeos versus finem By Iustin in Triphon circa medium Fathers haue in like maner cited this sentence reguauit a ligno Deus as the saying of Dauid in his Psalms which yet is at this day wanting in them And in like manner some Sentences are alledged from Tully and Plato and the same are not to be found in their wrytings now extant Therfore this former Obiection only argueth that certaine parts of Ignatius his Epistles may be lost but maketh nothing against those now remaining In like sort our Aduersaryes do reiect as counterfeyte the writings of Dionysius Arcopagita as confessed to make for our Catholike Doctrine their chiefe argument is in that these his writings are neuer mentioned by Eusebius and Ierome To this may be answered that (k) Euseb hist l. 5. c. 29. Ierom. in Catal. prope init Eusebius Ierome do confesse that there are many bookes and Authors which neuer came to their knowledge A thing not vnlike if we but remember as incident to those precedent tymes the knowne want of printing and great difficulty of Manuscripts through the violent persecutions which then raigned Finally touching the Lyturgies of Chrysostome they vrge it making altogether for seuerall poynts of our Catholike and Roman fayth that as M. Jewell obiecteth (l) Iewell in his rep●y pag. 10. Chrysostomes Masse prayeth for Pope Nicolas who was Pope seuerall hūdred yeres after Chrysostome that also it prayeth for the Emperour Alexius who liued in like manner many ages after Chrysostome These are but friuolous Cauils For in all ould Lyturgies or Bookes of Cōmon prayer prayer is specially appointed to be made for Princes and Bishops for the names of whom are certayne places reserued which are subiect to alteration according to the change of succeeding tymes and persons The lyke course wherof for Princes we may discerne in the English Communion Booke composed in K. Edwards tyme where according to the change of succeeding gouerment are inserted the names of Queene Elizabeth
not the word of God which doth or possibly can assure vs we do well to thinke it is his word N●w if the Scriptures be confessedly vnable to afford vs certaine proofe of themselues then in all true consequence of Reason much lesse are they able to direct exempt vs in case of doubt and question infallibly from Errour the rather as D. Reynolds truly confesseth in (h) Confer c. 2. Diuis 2. pag. 68. that it is not the shew but the sense of the Scripture that must decide Controuersies Now from this I infer that if according to the learned (i) The Authour of the Treatise of the Scripture and the Church cap. 16. fol. 75. Whita con Staplet l. 2. c. 4. p. 203. Kempn in Exam. part 1. pag. 69. and diuers others Protestants here cited it is to be determined to vs which is Scripture by the iudgment of the Church which confessedly hath the assistance of the Holy Ghost in infallibly discerning to vs which Books of Scripture are sacred and which not then necessarily followeth the Churches no lesse needfull assistance of the same Spirit in her like discerning vnto vs the sense of the said Scripture for what auayleth it vs to be made certaine of the Bookes and least vncertaine of the Sense Or what reason can our Aduersaries alledg whereby to acknowledge the Churches priuiledg in the one and deny it where it is no lesse needfull in the other This inference being granted vtterly ouerthroweth the Priuate spirit in its interpretation of Scripture Animaduersion XLIX IT is a demonstration in confutation of the Priuate spirit interpreting the Scrippture to obserue the different or rather contrary constructions which Luther and Caluin and others giue of that short sentence Hoc est Corpus meum c. Hic est sanguit meus And yet they all do vant of their enioying the said Spirit And therfore it is the lesse wonder that S. Austin (k) Austin cont Maximum Arian l. 1. affirmeth that it hath euer beene the custome of all Heretikes to flie to Scripture alone as it is interpreted by this Priuat Spirit The absurdity of which opinion more euidently appeares since it is certaine that among diuers meere contrary or cōtradictory point● of fayth the Scripture condemneth the on● And yet both the maintainers of the said contrary doctrines do flie to the Scripture as Iudge Now what madnes is it for 〈◊〉 man willingly to couet to appeale to that Iudg by whom it is certaine his cause shal be condemned Neither can either of the Litigants put any confidence in the meanes of truly interpreting the Scripture to wit Prayer Conference of places of Scripture knowledg in the Tongues c. since all these meane● are most vncertaine euen by the Confession of D. Whitaker thus writing (l) Whitak l. 2. de Eccles cont Bellar. contr 1. quaest 4 Med●● interpretandi ●oca scripturae sunt incerta c. The meanes of interpreting the obscure places o● Scripture are vncertaine doubtfu●l and ambiguous Therfore it cannot be otherwise but the interpretation it selfe must be vncertaine Si incerta tum potest ess● falsa if the interpretation be vncertaine then may it be false Thus far the said Doctour Animaduersion L. TOuching the depressing of General Councells Peter Martyr thus writeth As long (m) L. de votis pag. 476. as we insist in Generall Councells so long we shall continue in the Papists Errours with whom D. Whitaker conspires in these words Generall (n) Lib. de Concil cont Bellar. q. 6. Councells may erre Now let vs see the great and many disparities wherby a Generall Councell is infinitly aduantaged in respect of not erring aboue the Priuate Spirit of any one man First then a Councell I heere only speake of Generall Councells is in S. Austins (o) So doth S. Austin terme a Generall Councell Ep. 161. iudgment The supreme Tribunall in the Church of God The Priuate Spirit hath but his owne braynes for the Seate of his Iudicature A Coūcell receaues its promise from (p) Where two or three are gathered together in my name c. Math. 18. Christ that his assisting presence shall not be wanting thereto The priuate Spirit euen by Gods (q) No prophesy is of any priuate interpretation 2. Per. c. 1. owne sentence wanteth the certainty of expounding the Word truly A Councell is much reuerenced by the ancient (r) Ierom. l. cont Lucifer Ambr. Ep. 32. Athan Epist ad Epicterum Fathers and acknowledged by diuers of our learned (s) D. Couel in his modest Exam. p. 110. c. Aduersaries to be the only certaine meanes of determining Controuersies The Priuate Spirit it that of which we are (t) Dearely beloued belieue not euery Spirit c. commanded to doubt and of whose seducing (u) These things I haue written to you concerning those who de●eaue you Iohn 1. c. 2. God himselfe in Scripture premonisheth vs And which is much condemned euen by the more moderate (x) D. Couell in his defence of Hooker p. 86. D. Sarauia contra Respons Bezae pag 306. and others Protestant A Councell consisteth of many hundred venerable Doctours Pastours gathered from the most remote nations of Christendome and therfore the lesse subiect vpon such their meeting iointly and with mutuall consent 〈◊〉 stampe any Nouelismes in Doctrine presenting that only to be belieued in the●● Canons which is decreed by the mutua● consent of all or the greatest number of them The priuat Spirit is but its owne only weening oftentimes dissenting from others of his Brethren in diuers points of fayth To conclude A Councell as being composed of seuerall hundreds of Bishops Doctours hath many members of it most eminent for vertue readines of the Scriptures skill in the Tongues they all besieging the eares of God with their daily prayers accompanied with many corporall austerities and all to the end that God would be pleased so to guyde their tongues and pens as that they may decree only such doctrines as are agreable to Gods holy Word The Priuate spirit as being but one man doth want for the most part not only Vertue but also those other gifts of the Vnderstanding aboue specified as Learning knowledg in the Scriptures c. And as for Prayer and other meanes of pleasing God it reiecteth all this as superstitious and Papisticall relying in lieu therof vpon his owne Enthusiasmes illuminations from the Lord. And thus much touching the balancing of a Generall Councell with the Protestanticall Priuate Spirit Animaduersion LI. IF you attempt to charge a Protestant-writer with Corruptions or lyes in their wrytings of which Impostures their books are most luxuriant rather insist in a few those manifest and vnanswerable then in a great number seing if your Aduersary can make shew to salue but three or foure of a greater number the which he may the more easely do by how much the number of his falsifications is greater
the supposed answering of those few chosen and picked out by him must serue through the partiality of iudgement in his followers to disgrace all the rest of the Corruptions or falsifications vrged by you Animaduersion LII THe Protestants in falsly alledging the authorityes of Authours do abuse their Readers chiefly foure seuerall wayes First which is the most vsuall by concealing some part of the alledged authority Secōdly by adding some words of his owne to make the produced Authour or Father to speake like a Protestant Thirdly by transposing the words of an authority thereby to make the sense different from the Authors true meaning Fourthly by a wilfull mistaking or confusion of tymes I will exemplify these foure sorts in the wryting of D. White a great Impostour in his Scripts in his booke called The way to the true Churc● Well then the said Protestant in p. 119. o● his said Booke produceth a place out of the Rhemists to proue that the Church of Rom● can make that Scripture which is not an● vnmake that to be Scripture which is Scripture To proue this he produceth the Rh●mists (y) Gaelat 1. thus saying The Scriptures are 〈◊〉 knowne to be true neither are Christians bon●● to receiue them without the attestation of th● Church Now heere marke the true word● of the Rhemists and therein obserue his impurity of dealing committed by concealing part of the Sentence iust crossing his intended drift of vrging that authority Their true words are these The Scriptures whic● are indeed of the Holy Ghosts inditing being p●● into the Churches triall are found proued an● testifyed vnto the World to be such and not ma●● true altered or amended by the same Since the Holy Scriptures in themselues were alwayes true before but not so knowne to be to all Christians All these are the words of the Rhemists where you see the wilfull concealement of this Parcell The Scriptures are n●● made true altered or amended by the Church as also that other the Holy Scripturs in themselues were alwaies true meaning without the attestation of the Church Now all that can truly be gathered out of this authority is that the Scriptures though most sacred and true in themselues cannot be so made knowne to vs in which words lyeth the touch of the point without the Churches attestation But how farre off is this from M. Whytes vrging of this place Touching his imposture committed in ●dding of words this one place shall serue Thus then the said D. White produceth Bellarmine in contempt of the Churches authority saying Other meanes may deceiue me but nothing is more knowne nothing more certaine then the Scriptures That it were the greatest madnes in the world not te belieue thē c. Now in this sentence these words viz. Other meanes may deceiue me are not in Bellarmine but most subtily added to the begining of Bellarmines words and caused to be printed in the same kynd of Character or letter wherein the other words of Bellarmine are printed thereby to make the Reader belieue that they are words of Bellarmine wheras they are added as I about insinuated for the more depressing of the Churches Authority Now the whole sentence of Bellarmine was directed against the Swinkseldians who absolutely denyed Scripture and against whom Bellarmine in that place disputeth Touching the fraud consisting in a cūning transposition of words without adding any words to the authority alledged or concealing any parcell therof this example of the foresaid M. Whyte may serue In pag. 344. of his way to the true Church he produceth for the ouerthrow of the religious vse of Images the Councell of Eliberis thus saying No (z) Can. 36. Picture is to be made in the Church lest that be adored which is painted on the walls But the true words of the Canon are these Plac●●● picturas in Ecclesia non habere ne quod coli●● adoretur in parietibus depingatur Jt pleaseth the Councell that pictures should not be in the Church lest that which is worshipped an● adored be painted on the Walls The nyce difference in words resteth thus Lest that which is worshipped be painted and as M● Whyte translateth Lest that which is painted be worshipped Where the words of the Councell acknowledging the worship of Images maketh the worship due to them to be the cause why they are not painted on the walls to wit because they were subiect to be defaced either by inuasion of Enemyes or rayne c. Now M. Whites translation only by a subtill transposition of the words imports that Pictures are not to be worshipped at all Lastly concerning the Calumny resting in a wilfull confusion of tymes The said Protestant in pag. 61. for proofe of Priests lawfull mariage produceth a Testimony from Sinesius Bishop of Ptolemais thus writing of himselfe to a friend The sacred hand of Theophilus hath giuen me a wyfe and hereupon Iustify to all men that J will neither forsake her nor priuily as an adulterer keep her Company but I will pray to God to send me by her many and good children This Epistle is at large set downe in (a) Eccl. hist l. 14. c. 55. Nicephorus Now heere t●e fraud lyeth that at the tyme when this Epistle was written Sinesius was but a Lay-man but eminent for learning Now after he made himselfe priest and was created Bishop of Ptolemais he euer liued separated from the company of his wyfe as fully appeareth out of Nicephorus in the place aboue alledged Here then the Ministers deceit lyeth in applying that to him as if he had beene then Bishop which was spoken by him being a Layman and so M. White most fraudulently confoundeth those two different tymes together as if all had hapned at one and the same tyme. Animaduersion LIII YF your Aduersary will vant that he will proue all by Scripture only as most of them giue it out they will then force him to draw both his Premisses I meane both his Propositions if so they should be reduced to a forme of Argument from the Scripture alone of which Method within two Arguments at least he is certaine to fayle For if he take either of his Propositions from humane Authority or from naturall Reason you may tell him he leaueth his vndertaken of prouing by Scripture alone and consequently you may deny his force of Argument though Logicall in forme Here I further aduertize that if your Aduersary vndertake the part of an Opponent tye him precisely euer to Oppose which Scene perhaps he being brought to a Non-plus would flyely transferre vpon you In like sort if he taketh vpon him to answere suffer him not to oppose thought he labour so to do to free himselfe from answering Thus be sure that ech of you keepe your chosen Station Animaduersion LIV. IF the Protestant should seeke to expoūd by way of conference of places those words of our Sauiour This is my body this is my Bloud figuratiuely by those other words of his J