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A10250 Propositions and principles of diuinitie propounded and disputed in the vniuersitie of Geneua, by certaine students of diuinitie there, vnder M. Theod. Beza, and M. Anthonie Faius ... Wherein is contained a methodicall summarie, or epitome of the common places of diuinitie. Translated out of Latine into English, to the end that the causes, both of the present dangers of that Church, and also of the troubles of those that are hardlie dealt vvith els-vvhere, may appeare in the English tongue.; Theses theologicae. English Bèze, Théodore de, 1519-1605.; La Faye, Antoine de, 1540-1615. aut; Penry, John, 1559-1593. 1591 (1591) STC 2053; ESTC S101754 189,778 296

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vnderstanding and will are renued vnto true holines of life 8 These being renued by faith powred into vs though all the time of our being heere we doe but in a sort vnderstand and will the thinges that are of God yet neuerthelesse our workes which belong vnto Gods seruice are fauourablie accepted by his Majestie as proceeding from Christ liuing and working in vs by the holy Ghost 9 In this respect then we make this difference between Philosophicall and Christian vertues that the former proceeding from a minde not yet regenerated are no other then filthie and impure in the presence of God whereas the latter on the other side doe of fauour please God and are in mercie crowned by him because hee looketh vppon them as fruits of faith flowing from Christ who is the Authour of all our purity and holines 10 Out of these thinges which haue bene spoken may be vnderstood not onely al the parts of our sanctification but euen the causes which concurre for the making vppe thereof may bee so easilie gathered as it may be well perceaued that we put the holy Ghost for the efficient fayth for the instrumentall the force and efficacie of that essentiall holines which is in Christ for the materiall the renuing of our whole minde from impure vnto pure and vpright qualities for the formall and the worshippe of God tending vnto his honor and the loue of our neighbour according vnto the prescript rule of the first and second Table for the finall cause thereof 11 Whence it apeareth that the Libertins who loath the practise of good workes are not to be reckoned vp amongest the number of true Christians seeing they neglect the chiefe end of a Christian life It appeareth also that the PELAGYANS and the halfe PELLAGIANS the PAPISTS are to bee detested because the former of them doe affirme that we are sanctified by nature onely the latter partly by nature and partly by grace Defended by FRANCES P●FAYRIVS of Bearne PRINCIPLES CONCERNING THE IVSTIFICATION OF SINFVLL MAN IN THE PRESENCE OF GOD. XXVI 1 IN asmuch as our whole saluation consisteth in our justification before GOD it is needfull that wee maintaine the true doctrine thereof against al the corruptions of the same if so bee that wee will obtaine saluation 2 This justification then is when God doth attribute the sanctification of his Sonne Iesus Christ performed for mankind vnto those that beleeue in him 3 For whereas God is exceedinglie merciful and excedinglie just his mercie indeed did desire the redemption of man but his justice demaunded an absolute and euery way a perfect satisfaction for the same 4 To the end therfore that the Lord might bestow his mercie vpon vs it was needful that his justice should be satisfied 5 Now the most seuere justice of God could not be satisfied either by him who should be onely man because no Creature no not the Angels themselues can so sustaine the waight of Gods anger as they may be deliuered therfrom much lesse deliuer others or yet by him who shuld be onelie God because the Deitie cannot bee subject vnto any sufferings 6 Therefore God the Father mooued by his vnspeakeable mercie would haue that onelie Sonne of his Coessentiall and Coaeternal with him as he had promised vnto the Fathers when Sin first entered into the world at the time appointed to become true man who as beeing true God and true man without any confusion of the two natures might reconcile men with God 7 Of the justice of this Mediatour the which justice is laied against those thinges that make vs guiltie of Gods wrath there are three parts The one is the penalty sustained for the satisfaction of all our sinnes which hee discharged to the verie vttermost farthing The other is the absolute fulfilling of the whole lawe of GOD thereby couering our whole guiltines both that which wee haue by our originall blemishe or by sinning sinne and also by the sins that ar the most bitter fruits of that root The third is the repairing of our humaine nature in that most perfect humanitie which Christ tooke vpon him whereby all our corruptions and staines are blotted out 8 The righteousnes of Christ profiteth vs nothing vnlesse it be made ours 9 Now it becommeth ours not by any infusion either Essentiall as OSIANDER dreamed or qualitatiue as the jangling Sophisters doe auouch but by a spirituall apprehension or applying of Christ effected in our mindes after the which followeth the free imputation of that threefold righteousnes which is inhaerent in the man Christ onely as in the subject 10 Of this spirituall and most effectuall apprehension and application the only inward instrument is true faith which is that full assurance whereby euery one that beleeueth doth imbrace particularlie the righteousnes of christ offered as appertaining vnto them 11 This faith is in noe wise of our selues but from the meare grace of God the holie Ghost mercifully creating the same in the vnderstanding and the harte of the elect that is being the cause that after they haue heard and vnderstood the worde of the Gospell they doe trulie beleeue although not perfectlie whoe also doth afterwarde seale vp and nourishe this gift in them as they doe learne more and more by the dailie hearing and meditation of the word of the said Gospell and as the Sacraments annexed vnto the worde doe most effectuallie witnesse vnto them 12 Now as the same Christ doth reconcile them vnto his father and purchase vnto them the title of the heauenlie inheritance who being freelie made partakers of that three-folde righteousnes doe lay hold vpon him by faith euen so doth hee sanctifie them by his Spirite abollishing the olde man in them by a little and a little both kindling a new light in their vnderstanding and also sturring vp holie motions in their wils to the end that strongly resisting with all their might the reliques of the old man they shuld beginn both to will and to doe that which is good 13 That newe qualitie then called inhaerent righteousnes and regeneration testified by good workes is a necessarie effect of true faith whence it is to bee gathered that good workes are by no meanes the causes but onelie the witnesses of that imputed justification whereby alone trobled consciences are at rest for they are no otherwise to be considered then as things that necessarilie followe the beleeuers being alreadie justified in Christ 14 Therefore we are said to be justified by faith onelie without any works not that true faith is at any time alone or destitute of good works but in asmuch as workes how good so euer they be do not concurre or availe to the obtaining of the righteousnes of Christ 15 The square and only rule of these good works according to the which they are to be directed most diligently to be waied is the wil of God laied open to vs in the law 16 Now althogh that they who are after this maner reconciled vnto God
through Christ aprehended by faith do daily sin and though also that their good works are not every way perfect but defiled by sinne whereof wee haue many remnants stil continuing in vs after our renuing yet those that do beleeue are to feare no condemnation but may assuredly wait and looke for aeternall life wherof they shal be vndoubtedly partakers These Doctrines therefore are to be detested 1 That no man can be assured of his saluation 2 That the naturall remnants of Free-will beeing holpen by preuenting grace do worke together with or further the first grace to beleeue to do good works 3 That Iustification before the tribunall seat of God is to be attributted if not wholie yet in part vnto good workes and that as being meritorious 4 That the essential righteousnes of christ that is wherby Christ was God is powred into vs which was the phrenesie of OSIANDER 5 That we cannot be justified by a righteousnes that is not inhaerent in our selues 6 That our Iustification in the sight of God is an effect of our Regeneration 7 That it is false that wee are justified by faith 8 That Christ dooth purchase the dignitie of merit by our good workes which is a new-coyned falshood of the Iesuits 9 That the law which God hath left to vs in the Scriptures is not the onely rule of good workes 10 That the merrites of Christ onely are not sufficient for vs vnto saluation 11 Thar Christ in regard of the guilt and the punishment hath onely satisfied for sinnes past that is for sinnes going before Baptisme 12 That in the sinnes which follow baptisme the guilt is onelie remitted and not the punishment also 13 That originall sinne is vtterlie taken away by Baptisme and that by the worke wrought 14 That the good works of the faithfull are in no wise sinfull 15 That there may be some workes of Super-errogation Defended by BARTHOLMEVV RHODINGVS of Hafsia PRINCIPLES CONCERNING GOOD WORKES XXVII 1 GOod workes are as necessary for the sound and the vndoubted discerning of true sanctification in a regenerate man wherof we haue spoken as are good fruits in a tree that beareth to shew that it hath bin rightlie graffed 2 We call good works the effects of those actions onelie which in the regenerat by the working of the Spirite of God through faith are squared according vnto the prescript rule of Gods law that in them God might be glorified and our neighbours helped 3 There are foure thinges then to be especiallie obserued in this definition the holy Ghost as the efficient cause Faith the instrumentall the law of God the formall Gods glorie and the edification of our neighbour as the finall 4 Out of these former parts rightlie vnderstoode the whole doctrine of good workes is made cleare and with al the false doctrines both of ancient and new writers in this argument are out of them easily confuted 5 In the first place then to speak of the efficient cause we affirme that we are enabled to doe good workes onely by the grace and assistance of the holy Ghost renuing our harts when as it doth incline our vnderstanding our wil all our members which are turned from God in such sort as we do obey the knowen will of God for the worketh in vs both to will and to do The PAPISTS then are deceaued who leaning vpon their owne strength do brag of their free-will and their naturall abilities as if it laye in them to preuent or go before the first grace by a kinde of Praeparation and as though of themselues they could in a sort bring foorth good workes 6 Secondly as faith cannot be without good workes so good workes can not be where there is no faith Whereupon we condemne their errour who boldlie auouch that good workes were or coulde bee done by profane men or such as were not endued with faith howe just and wise soeuer they were accounted seeing whatsoeuer is done without faith is sinne 7 Although wee professe that good works are no lesse necessarily conjoined with faith then light with the Sunne or heat with the fire yet do we not say that they are therfore respected of God as though by them we deserued either to bee justified before him or to bee made his Children 8 And they are to be accounted to deale no lesse impudentlie then rashlie and ignorantlie who raise vp the slander that we contemne and reject good workes because we hold that men are justified by faith onlie 9 Thridlie seeing the Law of God is the cause which giueth the forme vnto good workes that is the name of true goodnes we auouch that none of those things which haue no other ground then the bare will or reason of man can be reckened among good workes 10 In like manner that a man may bee said to do well it is not sufficient that what he doth be found to be commanded in the Law of God but this also is required that he assuredlie know that what hee doth bee enjoined vnto him by the Lord and that he doe it with an intent to obey God therein For whatsoeuer is done with a doubtfull conscience is sinne 11 And although the good works of the regenerate be not perfect because we cannot in this life no not though we be assisted by the holie Ghost liue according vnto the prescript of Gods law but rather our good works are stained with manie blemishes yet they do please God not for any worthines of theirs but partly because our defects are couered by the holines merites and intercession of christ and partly because GOD dooth of fauour approoue and crowne them not as they are in them selues but as the effects of his Spirite in vs and witnesses of our faith Whence wee gather that the DONATISTS PELLAGIANS PHARISIES ANABAPTISTS MONKS and the rest of that batch are to bee condemned who brag of a perfection of life and obedience and doe securelie rest themselues in their own workes as though they were in euerie point answerable vnto the law of God 12 Lastly although we haue said that the ends of good workes are the glorie of God and the aedification of our neighbours yet doth it not therefore follow that ●…ereby other ends of greatest moment be excluded of which sort are the testimonie of a good conscience the sure token of true Religion or Christian faith the assurance of our aeternall election the auoyding of the punishment due vnto euill workes and the vndeserued obtaining of the good works Wherefore we may justlie accuse all Atheists Antinomians quarrellers with the law as though it were repugnant vnto it self Hypocrits Libertines and impenitent persons as guilty of impietie who either do despise good works as being vnprofitable or condemne them as burdensom vnto the conscience 13 Neither is it to bee concluded in asmuch as in this mater we make mention of rewards as the scripture doth that therefore they are by merite due vnto good workes For whatsoeuer wee doe or
also who make a subalternall or second prouidēce that is do attribute vnto the true God a generall kinde of prouidence whereas they ascribe vnto Saints or false Gods a more speciall whence it came that blind gentilisme did fain certain lieftenāt Gods 3 Those also who faine a linking together of causes that there is a fatall destenie of things 4 Those that affirme heauenlie affaires to be gouerned by God and earthly things to be disposed by the vertue influence and constellations of the Stars 5 Those who make Gods prouidence to bee onely a bare knowledge of things for they deuide between God men whereas they will haue men and their affaires to bee guided by the power but not by the appointment of God IIII Now though nothing cā be done but by the decree of God which can neuer bee deceaued yet second causes do worke according vnto their own nature therfore although the minds the wils of al men do bend themselfs thither wheresoeuer the Lorde as it were the Ship-maister doth moue them yet is it our owne fault that we do euil and so the cause and the matter of our destruction is in our selues so that the authors of wickednes are vnexcuseable V Gods prouidence therefore being absent from nothing that is done but vprightlie gouerning ruling moouing and conuaying whereto it listeth the judgements wils endeuours enterprises and actions of all men both good and bad and further sending vppon vs by his most wise and iust counsaile though wee often cannot see it whatsoeuer befalleth vs in this life bee they prosperitie or aduersitie can by no meanes bee frustrated of the effectes which it hath purposed Defended by IOHN CORNELIVS of prouence in France THE ELEVENTH SORT OF PRINCIPLES CONCERNING GODS ETERNALL PREDESTINATION NOW THAT WE HAVE SPOKEN OF GODS Prouidence it followeth that we deale of Praedestination 1 FIrst in generall Praedestination is that aeternal and immouable decree of GOD whereby as it pleased his Majestie he hath decreed all things both vniuersallie and particularlie and also doth effect them by the causes created in like sort appointed by him as he thoght good to the laying open of his owne glory 2 Secondlie applying this decree in speciall vnto mankind Wee call Praedestination that aeternall decree such as we haue alreadie spoken of whereby he hath immutably purposed from all aeternity by sauing some in his great mercie and by damning others in his most just seueritie to manifest himselfe what he is indeed by his effects namely that he is most mercifull and most just 3 Among those second causes as farre as they concern mankind whom properlie this discourse respecteth we are to consider two vz. the vnderstanding and the will as the spring of the actions of men 4 It behooued God being in time to execute the purpose of this aeternall Praedestination otherwise hee should bee the authour of sinne which cannot be to create man good that is such as both the judgement of his vnderstanding could well and vprightlie see into the things laid before him and vprightly judge of them and also the desire of his will should be just and euery way euen 5 It behoued also that this man should be indued with a free and a voluntarie power to mooue himselfe to the end that this power should be a forcible and a selfe-moouing beginning of the actions of man 6 It behooued this man also to haue abilitie if hee wold to fall from this vprightnes and goodnes that a way might be opened both vnto the mercie and the justice of God 7 It is so far then that God bereaued our first Parents of the liberty of humaine will the voluntarie inclination to be caried both waies that on the other side he made no alteration in the same Otherwise as God was the Author so he might be accounted the destroyer thereof 8 For the aeternall purpose of God doth impose no other necessity vpon the euents which he hath determined then such as hee will haue second causes to be mooued according vnto their owne nature whence it followeth that it doth not take away the contingencie or voluntarines of mans will as shall be discussed more fullie God willing in the discourse concerning the nature of man 9 Those two therefore who were the first of all mankind althogh in regard of that which was to come to pas they fell not without the vnchaungeable appointment of God yet in respect of the cause inhaerent in them and the proper beginning of their actions they fell contingentlie not by constraint but willinglie and altogeather by a voluntarie inward motion both in respect of the vnderstanding who blinded and of the will who depraued it selfe 10 Therfore we do retaine these Scholasticall distinctions of necessitie and compulsion of naturall and voluntarie of absolute and conditionall of enforced and ensuing necessitie as true and profitable 11 This fall brought with it that which was conuaied vnto all men as GOD had threatned to wit the bondage of darknes in the whole mind of rebellion against God in the whole will of man 12 And althogh the liberty of making choise between good and euill but not betweene euill and euill be nowe altogeather lost yet there remaine still both in the vnderstanding and also in the will though seruaunts vnto sinne certaine voluntarie motions 13 Out of this bondage God who is bound vnto no man doth when he thinketh good call enlighten those whome according vnto his aeternall fore-appointed election in Christ it pleased him of his meere mercie to chuse and hauing bestowed faith vppon them and regenerated them hee freelie iustifieth them in the same Christ meaning one day to lay open in them being glorified the great glorie of his great and vnspeakeable mercie 14 We doe condemne therefore all those who appoint the foresight and foreknowledge either of faith or works as a praeexistent or foregoing cause of election which was fore-ordained from aeternitie neither do we teach that anie man was elected because he should either beleeue or doe well but contrariwise that they therefore are indued with faith who doe beleeue and that they labour to doe well who are carefull of good workes because that God of his meere free goodnes did appoint them vnto saluation and therfore to haue faith in Christ and the true fruits of faith 15 The certaintie of this Election is not to bee fetched from that aeternall decree known onelie vnto God nor yet from a generall calling but from the gifts inhaerent in vs and the effects proper vnto the elect that is from the good motions of the vnderstanding and the will we must fetch the gift of true regeneration peculiar onely vnto the elect and from Regeneration we must gather that vnrepentant gift of imputed righteousnes From hence againe by our effectual calling we must arise to the full assurance of faith and the testimony of the Spirit of adoption in vs and from thence last of all
way vnto the gift of repentance 15 PAVLE therefore did not sinne against the holie Ghost who persecuted Christ and his members whome he knew not 1. TIM 1. 16 Although this sinne bee voluntary yet it followeth not that euery sinne which is voluntarie and committed against the conscience is irremissible 17 But contrariwise although these sins are horrible whether they be committed of infirmitie or of malice yet are they forgiuen vnto those that repent as they were vnto DAVID PETER and others 18 The counsel of God concerning the saluation of the elect cannot be dissanulled and therefore the elect cannot be guilty of this sinne 19 Neither doe all the reprobate necessarie fall vnto this sin seeing originall sin is sufficient to condemne them 20 This sinne is placed in the heart of man and therefore seeing God is the searcher of the heart diligent heed is to bee taken least that being carried away with a preposterous zeale we rashly passe sentence against any in judgeing them to be guilty of this sinne 21 Yet are they to be seriouslie admonished who continue to shewe themselues disobedient vnto the admonitions and judgements of God least that being at the length hardened by the Lords just judgement they run headlong vnto this downe-fall Defended by IOHN HALBERIVS CORTRACENVS PRINCIPLES CONCERNING THE RESVRRECTION OF THE FLESH LXXX 1 THe rest of the Articles of our faith being hitherto sufficientlie handled two of them remaine yet to bee discussed namely the resurrection of the flesh and life euerlasting 2 Although the Sonne of God by taking vpon him our nature by dying and rising againe hath performed the parts of our saluation Although also he doth bestow that quickning Spirite of his vpon all those that trulie beleeue the Gospell It remaineth as yet notwithstanding that what hath bene performed in him who is our head be also performed in vs being his members 3 Hence must the faithfull learne both day and night to meditate vpon the marke and shutting vp of their happinesse and to bee continuallie desirous of the same in such sort as although they bee tossed in this worlde by diuers and daungerous stormes of temptation raised vp against them by the Deuill the Worlde and the Fleshe they may yet continue firme and immooue-able in faith and in the hope of the liuing GOD and of the Lord Iesus Christ 4 Euen as death entred into the world by the sinne of the first ADAM whence the necessitie of death did arise Euen so wee affirme that death is abollished in the saints and chaunged vnto aeternall life by the vertue of the latter ADAM that is Christ to the end that as Christ did first of all rise againe vnto that aeternall life So all the elect may rise by him vnto the same 5 Now death is by a naturall generation conuaied vnto all the posteritie of the first ADAM whereas aeternall life is by spirituall ingraffing into the second ADAM deriued vnto his members 6 In this respect is the name of ADAM attributed vnto Christ namely that as ADAM was the stocke of mankinde breathing out poison according vnto the deadlie nature So Christ is made by grace the root of all the Saints powring the juice of eternall life into his members Wee doe therefore condemne the Philosophers who drewe the cause of death not from sinne but from this Aixome in naturall Philosophie vz. whatsoeuer is compounded is subject vnto dissolution Much more doe wee detest the PELAGIANS who teach that sinne and therefore death did arise not from the deprauation of nature in ADAM but from the voluntarie imitation thereof the which errour PAVLE dooth ouerthrowe as by manie Argumentes so by this most clearelie in that Infants themselues also are subject vnto death 7 Although that all sinnes which are the cause of death are truly remitted vnto the beleeuers yet notwithstanding are they no lesse subject vnto death then the very wicked themselues and that for two causes First because that the roote of sinne which is called originall sinne is not vtterlie abollished in them in this life but is brought to an end by death For then doth the strife betweene the flesh and the Spirite cease Secondly because that vnlesse they did shake of this life they could neuer be partaker of that other life which they hope for 8 And therefore we holde that the faithfull are depriued of this life rather by the mercie of God calling them vnto that aeternall kingdom then because that death is the reward of sinne 9 And on the other side that the vnfaithful do not rise by vertue of the resurrection of Christ which is alwaies vnto saluation and is bestowed vpon his members but by the force of that curse of God whensoeuer thou shalt eat of the fruit hereof thou shalt die the death 10 For seeing this degree doth comprehend both the deathes but especially the second which is eternall it must needes be that the vnfaithfull also shall rise againe whereas otherwise their bodies except they should bee joyned again with their soules should escape eternal paines which is ment by the second death 11 The whole person of euery man wholie considered but not in part is said to rise again For as the body only is said to lie down so the same alone to speak properly shall rise againe Whereas the soule seeing by death it hath suffered no detriment in the essence thereof can bee sayd to rise again but metaphorically as when it is brought by the Spirite of Christ from the seruitude of sinne wherein it was dead and wherein it could not so much as thinke much lesse will or doe the things that are of God into that holie libertie which is the way vnto eternall life We do therfore condemne them who dream that the soules seperated from their bodies are a sleepe and that they shall arise togeather with the bodies And we doe also detest the opinion of HYMENEVS and PHILETVS who did not distinguishe the spirituall from the corporall resurrection 12 The Scripture declareth by manifest testimonies that the soules of the faithfull who die in the Lorde are receiued of christ into that eternal paradise situated aboue all heauens whervnto Christ did ascend and that they are there conuersant with Christ being partakers in their measure of blessednes and felicity wheras on the other side the word of GOD and the consideration of thinges that are contrary doe shew that the soules of the wicked are thrust into hell and there tormented in their manner 13 The same bodies that lay down shal rise but not in the same qualities as the verie same body of Christ which was crucified buried did arise but not hauing those qualities wherewith it was endued when it was crucified dead and buried Yet this is the difference in that the bodie of Christ felt no corruption and therefore did ouer-come the power and effect of death euen in the verie house of death But our bodies are deliuered from corruption which seemed
indeed from all aeternitie or els because they will haue the fleshe of Christ to be taken out of the substance of the Godhead or as some do nowe affirme because all the proprieties of the Deity were poured into the humane nature when the worde was incarnate or to be briefe by what other dotage soeuer they goe about to obscure the coaeternall generation of the Sonne Defended by IOHN HENRY SCHINTYER of Tigurine THE FOVRTH SORT OF PRINCIPLES CONCERNING THE HOLY GHOST HITHERTO CONCERNING THE PERSONS of the Father and the Sonne it followeth now that we speake of the holie Spirit 1 VVHereas the word SPIRIT is diuersly taken in the scriptures we in this doctrine do vnderstand by the holie spirit the third person in Trinitie 2 The holie Spirit is that Essentiall and working power who is essentially subsisting in the Father and the Son from whome the whole Deity wherein also they doe subsist being communicated vnto him after an vnspekable maner though he procedeth or if we may so speake is as it were breathed yet is he not at all seperated in respect of this his proceding but is in regard of the maner of his being distinguished from the persons of the Father and the Sonne And therefore he is not without cause reckoned the third person in nomber seing in consideration of his being hee is referred vnto the Father and the sonne yet not as vnto two beginnings but as vnto one 3 The Deity thus communicated by issuing and proceeding is not multiplied in substance seing he is most simple and single Whence it is that the holie Ghost in regard of his person is and euer hath bin coessentiall and coaeternall with the Father and the sonne and in regarde of his substance is that one onely true God in himselfe Wherevpon also the name of God is sometimes personally attributed vnto him The holy Ghost is therefore to be worshipped by the one and the same faith and inuocation that the Father and Son are 4 And although the works of the Trinnitie which they cal outward or external are vnseperable yet in the effecting of them wee are to obserue a distinction not onelye of the persons but also of the personall actions 5 The proper and the peculiar action of the holie Spirit in all the workes of the Deity bee they naturall and ordinary or els extraordinary was and is to effect in his time and maner those things which the father from all aeternitie hath decreed in his owne wisdome that is in his Son and the Son hath ordered and disposed to come to passe 6 Yet is not the holy spirit any instrumental cause affording his helpe as a seruaunt vnto the Father or the Son but working together with them without any inferioritie or inaequallitie 7 But the power and working of the holy spirit is especiallie seene in the planting and gouerning of the Church In which particular respect he is called the holie spirit even because that he who is most holie doth stirr vp and nourish all the holie motions that are in the elect For he it is by whose inspiration all the holie prophets haue spoken it is he that giueth eares to heare and a hart to beleeue who appointeth Pastors and doth enable them with necessary gifts who stirreth vp the slouthfull and being the true comforter indeed doth comfort the afflicted soule By whome those that are borne againe of him do cry Abba father he also formed the fleshe of Christ in the wombe of the virgine and did most aboundantlie anoint his humane nature to conclude it is he by whose strength we stand vntill we overcome Wherefore we doe abhor and renounce the SABELLIANS who confound the persones with the substance of the Godhead the ARRIANS and the MACEDONIANS who deny the holie Ghost to bee coessentiall with the Father and the Son the GRECIANS of later time who affirme that hee doth onlie proceed from the father and those also who by the holie Ghost will haue nothing els to be ment saue certaine motions and inspirations onely together with those who deny that he is to be invocated by the one and the selfesame faith with the Father and the Sonne and to be briefe we detest all those that any waies oppugne the Deity of the holy Ghost either in his substance or person Defended by IOHN IAMES COLER of Tygurine THE FIFT SORT OF PRINCIPLES CONCERNING THE ATTRIBVTES OF GOD IN GENERALL HITHERTO WE HAVE SPOKEN OF GOD both as far as wee are able to attaine vnto bee the light of nature also as he is laied before vs in the holy Scripturs to be three in person and one in substance now it followeth that we intreat of his attributes wherby in a sort we are taught what maner of God he is 1 ALthough there be no composition in God nor yet any accidentall qualitie seeing hee is a substance most single and euery way one yet to the end that according vnto our capacitie we might vnderstande what a God hee is he himselfe in the scriptures is accustomed to attribute vnto himselfe many things as qualities 2 By attributes in this place then we vnderstande the essentiall proprieties of the Deity which are attributed vnto him in the scriptures 3 These things are so attributed vnto him that notwithstanding they place nothing in him that is cōpoūd or diuers from his substance but look whatsoeuer they point him out to be the very same he is in his owne most simple substance 4 For both these proprieties and also their actions doe in very deede differ no whit from the substance of the Godhead but onely in some consideration we are to holde them diuers both from the diuine substance and also the on from the other 5 Now these things are attributed vnto the Deity sometimes substātiuely somtims adjectiuely as they speak that we may thereby knowe him to be a being that subsisteth indeede and that he is such a one not by participation and imperfectlie but of himselfe and that most perfectlie 6 Of attributes we make two kinds the one is of them which are so proper vnto the Deitie that they can bee in no sort communicated vnto creatures neither haue they anie other respect vnto creatures saue that by them the Deitie is distinguished from creatures of this kind are aeternity simplenes vnmeasurablenes omnipotencie 7 The other kind is of those who although simply and as far as they are in the Deitie they cannot be communicated yet creatures may be partakers of them not properly but by analogie and a kinde of agreement and that not essentially but in regarde of qualitie and but in part neither such ar wisedome goodnes and the rest of that kind Therefore OSIANDER erred grosly whoe taught that the essentiall righteousnes of God was communicated vnto vs and at this day their error is intollerable who recalling back again the blasphemie of EVTYCHES holde that al the proprieties of the Deitie were powred by personall vnion into the flesh which
we are by little and little to climbe higher higher vnto the full assurance of our free aeternall Praedestination in Christ which is joyned with continuall praier hearing of Gods word and perseuerance in well doing 16 Now all those whome it pleaseth the same GOD who is debter vnto no man in justice to leaue in their own corruption either altogeather not called or called but without the opening of the heart and worthelie to deliuer vp vnto Sathan and their owne concupiscence being such also as wilfully and willinglie harden themselues will hee one day according vnto his aeternall Praedestination adjudge togeather with Sathan vnto aeternall punishments laying open in their iust destruction the glorie of his great and most iust hatred against euill 17 The manifesting of this decree of Reprobation is to be left vnto God vnlesse it be apparant in any that they haue sinned against the holie Ghost as in times past it was with IVLIAN the Apostata The cause why wee are not to determine of Rebrobation from the effects of Sathan and our corruption that sinne against the holie Ghost onelie excepted as wee are to gather our Election from the working of the holie Spirite in vs is this Euen because it hath pleased our mercifull GOD to shew that some yea of the greatest sinners at their very last gasp were of the number of his elect by bestowing forgiuenes of sins vpon them by his extraordinary fauour as it fell out with the theefe that hung vpon the Crosse 18 Those therefore who holde on the waye of destruction are so to bee tolde of their dutie as leauing vnto God the secrets of his judgements we are not to dispaire of anie mans saluation For it is a true consequence indeed to say I beleeue as it appeareth by the effects therfore I am elected and appointed vnto saluation But it is no necessarie consequent to say I do not beleeue and I tread the path of destruction therefore I am a reprobate and appointed to damnation For he that beleeueth not to day may bee endued with faith to morrow But thus rather we are to make a true conclusion I do neither beleeue the Gospell nor labour to beleeue but continue in the way of destruction Wherefore except I betake mee vnto an other course I shall perish And therfore I wil enter vnto an other way which God laieth before mee And these are the cogitations which all pastors are bound by duty with great care to lay before their wandring sheepe 19 God therfore in appointing some of free-gift vnto saluation and others vnto just condemnation is neither author of sinne nor respecter of persons but thereby sheweth himself to be the true God in deed Defended by RAPHAEL EGLINE of Tigurine PRINCIPLES CONCERNING THE CREATION OF ALL THINGS AND THEIR DIVISION XII WE HAVE DONE WITH GODS PROVIdence and Praedestination nowe wee are to entreat of the works of God wherby he doth as it were make him selfe visible vnto vs that is concerning the creation of all things and their distinction 1 CReatiō is the external work of God fore-known and decreed by him of his vnspeakeable goodnes from aeternitie whereby vnto the glorie of his Name he did create of nothing all things that are without him that is all things that haue a substance different from his essence 2 The alone soueraigne cause therefore of the world and all things that haue being therein is God who made all things not after the manner of men but without all labour and also without the worke help and seruice of anie other but by his word alone that is by his Sonne through the power of the holie Ghost For the workes of the Trinitie are vnseparable 3 Neither did he frame all those things of anie fore-being stuffe or matter but euen of nothing that is from that which was not by his word alone he gaue being vnto all things that are Those Philosophers therefore doe erre who held that the world was aeternall and those also who deemed it to haue bene made and formed of moates by chance together with these who taught this visible worlde to haue bene framed by some other then by God In which error was CERINTHVS CARPOCRATES the ARCHONTIANES and others who attributed the work of the creation only vnto certain vertues and powers 4 The chiefe end of the creation is that there should be some who should enjoy the louing kindnes of God in the true tast thereof and glorifie his Majestie for euer To this end were Angels and men created A secundary end of the creation is that all other creatures shoulde together set foorth the glorie of God and serue to the vse of man 5 Now although by the order of nature from one as far as it is one there can proceed but one and that God of all other things is most single and but one yet the infinite varietie of things proceedeth from the same wisedome of God from whence their creation and gouernement doth depend For he worketh not according to the course of nature but doth whatsoeuer he will aboue all nature most freelie and voluntarilie Yet in that inaequalitie of things there appeareth greatest aequalitie yea the diuersitie of things appeere to be but one in respect that whatsoeuer hee hath created are referred vnto that generall kind of the beeing of things which is but one 6 The essentiall diuision of things is from their matter and their forme in which respect some things are visible as all simple mixt bodies either without life and breath or enjoying both Some also are inuisible as Angels the soules of men whose effectes are manifest though both their Materiall and Formall causes as also other circumstances of the time and place wherein they were created be obscure and in some sort vnknowen vnto vs. 7 Now all these things which God created could not but be good seing he himselfe is most good for they were created of him exceedinglie good and most pure without all corruption hauing nothing in them which did not declare the omnipotencie and the exceeding goodnes of the Creator In this originall integritie men and euill Angels might haue still continued if they had woulde and men might haue conuayed the same vnto their posteritie In stead whereof God for the sinne of man did curse the inferiour Creatures which he had created for mans sake 8 As concerning Euill it is not anie thing created or hauing beeing but onelie signifieth the meere absence of the good that ought to be present neither is it in the subjects as an accident but as Priuation opposite vnto good rather expelling the same then hauing beeing in it selfe 9 And although it doth marre that which otherwise is good in it selfe yet is it by accident the cause of good That the degrees of thinges created may appeare which haue their state according as they haue the greater or lesse good in them So vnto the good of all things in generall Euill seemed to bee in some
beleeue this 3 We also distinguish this Faith from the assent wherby some haue peculiarlie applied some peculiar promises made vnto themselues that were diuerse from the promises of aeternall life who notwithstanding were neuer made pertakers thereof 4 The Faith therefore whereof we now speake we doe define to bee that assurance whereby beyond the former assent the godlie are caried vnto Christ and so particularlie apply vnto themselues the promise of saluation offered in him We do condemne therefore all such sophistrie as doth confound these two sorts of faith and especially those who taking Faith for the obedience that is yeelded vnto Gods commandements doe by that meanes mingle the one of them with the other 5 We affirme this Faith to be the meere guift of God peculiar only to the elect and such a guift as in no wise cā be repented off or called back or beeing the most sure immoueable remedie vnto the saluation of all the elect Wee detest therefore all those who imagine that Christ and his sauing grace may be receaued by any merite either praeparatorie or fore-seene And especiallie all these who dreame that Christ may be conuaied vnto vs with the hand or mouth of the bodie 6 We denie also that this Faith can euer vtterly be lost although at some times euen in the most holie men it bee a sleepe as the minde is in those that are ouercome with drinke and notwithstanding that some haue as it were a shadow thereof begun in them 7 This faith doth God creat at what time and in what measure it pleaseth him strengthening and increasing the same by little and little though neuer perfecting it while wee are heere yet graunting so much of it in this life as is needfull for the elect to obtaine the victorie Nowe in the life to come he doth fulfill in deede that which we beleeued and hoped for while wee were heere on earth We doe execrate and detest therefore the CELESTINIANS and the ANABAPTISTS who dreame of a perfection of faith and righteousnes in this life and doe abollish the dailye growth of repentaunce and our continuall praiers which euen vnto our last gaspe we are to make for remission of sinnes Defended by BENIAMIN C●ESSONIVS of Burgundy PRINCIPLES CONCERNING THE CAVSES AND EFFECTS OF FAITH XXIII 1 THe efficient cause of faith indeede and to speake properlie is one to wit the mercie of God that is if the Father in the Sonne by the holie Ghost that the same Coessentiall power of the Father and the Sonne by the which man at the first was created in the image of God should restore in vs the same being left 2 The ordinary meanes whereby the same is wrought that is wherby both the vnderstanding of man is framed vnto a sauing knowledge of God in Christ and a particular receauing thereof and also the will powerfullie disposed vnto a right order of the affections is the preaching of Gods worde deliuered vnto vs be the Prophets and Apostles and for that cause so farre as it concerneth the elect appointed to be in the Church 3 But here two extremities are to be taken heed vnto the on of the ENTHYSIASTES who do not only distinguish but also separate the internall word as they call it that is the worke of the Spirite of God in our soules from the preaching of the written word whence followeth not any faith but rather a meere dotage The other is of those who after the manner of Sorcerers do transfer the efficacacie which is the proper and incommunicable worke of God onlie either vnto the ministers which speake or to the Sacramentall elements wheras notwithstanding they haue no other effect then to represent these things to our vnderstanding which according vnto Gods ordinaunce they are appointed to signifie Wheras then the ministers are said to worke together with God it is so to bee taken as they are vsed but for the outward planting watering when as in the mean time the whole force which worketh in the vnderstanding and the will doth flow from God only 4 Now that which we haue spoken of the Ecclesiastical ministerie is so to be taken as in the meane time wee are to know that God as often as it pleaseth him is able in a moment by the inward operation of his Spirit extraordinarily to regenerate his elect 5 But this extraordinarie worke of God is neither to be expected for of vs nor yet rashlie to be admitted 6 Now the most sure way to try it whether it be trulie from God or no is this namelie that whether it be by the ordinarie hearing of the word or which hath beene alwaies most seeldom whether God worketh by extraordinarie inspiration it must needes euermore teach the verie same doctrine which the written word of the Prophets and the Apostles do teach 7 There is not at all times the like majesty of the good order of this sacred Ministerie because the Lord doeth as often and as farre as hee thinketh good reuenge the negligencie and wickednes of the Sheep-heards and the contempt of the sheepe in such sort that sometimes it is darkened by spots of filthinesse and otherwhiles for a time it goeth as it were cleane out of sight as it came to passe in the former ages 8 Yet the Militant Church either priuate or publicke from others or by means of priuate reading hath euer enjoyed and euer shall enjoy the hearing of the worde and the vnderstanding of the trueth that ariseth therefrom 9 Nowe that true and liuely faith whereof wee speake is no lesse made knowen by the perpetuall and necessarie effects thereof then is the life of the bodie by motion and sense 10 But these effects doe not giue beeing vnto faith or informe the same as the Sophisters doe most absurdlie dreame but they are the vndoubted and sure signes of it 11 These effects are partly caried out of vs vnto Christ with whome we are vnited by faith and partly they do beget some things within vs. 12 The outward effects in asmuch as they doe peculiarly apply Christ and his benefits vnto those that beleeue are therefore the most excellent and of greatest account And they are both the full remission of all sinnes as well originall as actuall by the blood of Christ and also the bestowing vpon vs of all righteousnes fulfilled by him together with the most full restoring and repairing of our nature in the flesh of Christ All which are freelie by faith in Christ imputed vnto vs who take holde both of him and his gifts 13 Another effect of our spirituall joyning togeather with him by faith is that he gouerneth by his holy Spirit both our vnderstanding wil being sanctified and broght out of darknes vnto that marueilous light so as we begin to thinke to will and to doe the thinges that are of God This selfe same Spirite encreasing faith in vs being now not vnder the authoritie of the law and the flesh but vnder the grace
cause made known before the Presbyterie not that anie satisfaction shoulde thereby be made vnto God as though the penaltie were satisfied but to the end that the pride of the sinner being beaten downe the Church might haue a sure testimonie of his repentance those punishments wee say haue the saide Papists changed with manifest impietie into certaine formes of penalties that partlie are full of superstition and partlie altogether blasphemous which also they teache to bee such a satisfaction of the penalty in the presence of God as deserueth remission of sinnes 15 Vnto this most foule delusion they joyne an other twofolde error to wit purgatorie and indulgences wheras indulgence was nothing els at the first but some mitigation of the seueritie of the Canons whereby vpon good grounds some fauour was shewed vnto those that had offended least they should haue bin swallowed vp with over much heauines Wee detest therefore that whole fable of purgatory as being an execrable impietie and meere contrarie vnto our free reconciliation by Christ 16 The lawe is properlie the object of repentance as the promises of the Gospell are of fayth Therfore to speake properlie Faith is the mother and not a parte of repentance 17 Yet if by repentance wee will vnderstand the whole change of man vnto better we acknowledge that fayth is a principall parte thereof whereby a man is changed from beeing an vnbeleeuer to be a beleeuer 18 Nowe we rightly gather by the former things that repentance is a meere gift of God and that it is ridiculouslie said to arise from our naturall free-will seeing by nature we are seruants vnto sinne 19 And seeing that the flesh doth in some sort remaine in vs two things doe followe thence first that continuall Repentance is required of vs as long as we are in this life Secondly that Repentaunce is acceptable vnto God not by any merrite thereof but onelie by his meere free mercie 20 We condemne the Nouatians who deny repentance vnto them that are once fallen 21 And the Annabaptists who dreame that they haue attained vnto a perfect degree of righteousnes in this life 22 And that ouer great seueritie of the Cannons who did exclude the Ministers of the Church after they had once made publicke repentance from al hope of being receaued againe Defended by DANIEL DOOLEGIANVS a Low-countrey man PRINCIPLES CONCERNING THE CONCEPTION OF IESVS CHRIST XLI SEING WE HAVE SVFFICIENTLY SPOken of the person and office of Christ and also of the Lawe which bringeth vs vnto Christ we thinke it meet now particularly to handle those things out of the Creed of the Apostles which Christ in the performance of his office hath done for vs beginning with his conception in the wombe of the Virgine 1 BY Conception wee vnderstande that which was made within the Virgin namely that in deed essentially she should beginne to beare in her wombe that Sonne of God which was true God and true man 2 Neither was that man formed any space of time before the person of the word was vnited vnto him but that Man began to bee at the one and the verie same moment that it was personallie assumed by the aeternall word 3 This humanity was and shal continue for euer a true and a perfect humaine nature in regard both of the bodie and soule beeing then made when as it was conceaued in the wombe of the Virgine and not before 4 That aeternall person also of the word or of the Sonn of God Coessentiall with the Father is the true person of the Sonne of God 5 In this conception which was a beginning in time of that personall vniting the one nature did not simplie assume the other but the person of the Sonne tooke vppon him the nature of man in that one particular man and did preferre it vnto the dignitie of the person of the Deitie Wherein notwithstanding doe remaine both the very natures also their proprieties wherby they are that which they are distinguished without anie confusion or separation 6 Whereas DAMASCEN then doth call the person of Christ wholie considered a compound person because hee is God and man his words are warily to be taken For the partes concurring togeather for the making of some third thing which of it selfe is not as the soule and the body in the making of a man doe of them selues exist before the third thing made of them is existent But in the person of Christ the Deitie of the worde doth not onely sustaine the consideration of the one nature but euen of the whole person attributing this vnto that man that hee doth subsist in the very Sonne of God and is not man alone of him selfe For otherwise there should be one person of the Son of God and another of the Sonne of man neither wherof could of him selfe be the Mediator 7 The parts furthermore that properlie make vpp the whole are compounded togeather But the Deity can admit no composition seeing it is most perfect and therefore in this conception it did preferre that man vnto the dignitie of the diuine person but so as nothing was added thereby vnto the worde but rather that that man did receiue this personall dignitie from the word whereby it is come to passe that as wee haue said he is exalted aboue the Angels the natures yet remaining 8 Therefore Christ was rightlie said by the Fathers to be greater then himselfe and lesser then himselfe 9 Nowe this assumed bodie was made out of the substaunce of the Virgin Marie according vnto the promises made by the Prophets in which respect he the very same who is the Sonne Coeternall and Coessentiall with the Father is trulie the Sonne of ADAM out of the stocke of ABRAHAM and DAVID Coessentiall also with his Mother 10 This conception the effect whereof was the personall vnion of the word and that man could not possiblie be wrought by the power of any Creature 11 Furthermore Christ is said in the beliefe according vnto the Scriptures to bee conceaued of the holie Ghost which is as the Angell GABRIEL doth expound the power of the most high and the third person in the Deitie 12 Yet cannot Christ bee said therefore to be the Son of the holy Ghost for in this conception the holy Ghost doth not sustaine the consideration of the Father who begate of his owne substance but of a cause forming the flesh out of a matter taken els-where 13 Yet is this Conception the worke of the whole Trinitie but distinctlie considered for the Father doth send his Son into this flesh the Sonne is conceaued in this flesh the holy Ghost dooth forme this flesh out of the substance of the Virgin 14 Although that that Virgine blessed aboue all women was yet the daughter of ADAM and therfore infected of her selfe with that vniuersall contagion of all mankind whereof also vndoubtedly she brought forth some fruits Yet notwithstanding the flesh of Christ was in no wise poluted with that contagion but as
punishment of the wicked 11 The especiall ende for the which eternall life is bestowed vpon vs is this namly that acknowledging the immeasurable and infinit mercy of God wee may attribute vnto him eternall praises as it is meete 12 We shall at the time when God hath appointed be put in full posession of that life at which time the number of those that are to bee saued being fulfilled Iesus Christ shall be seene of vs who looke for him to our saluation to come as a redemer from Heauen 13 Seeing the Lord hath put this day in his own power to be inquisitiue when the same shal be is a point of extreame madnes We do therefore condemne those both olde and new writers who breaking into the secrets of God do think that they can set downe when that day shall be whereas the knowledge heereof is not giuen no not to the Angels themselues 14 It is our dutie therefore rather to be watchful least being drowned with the delightes of the worlde and the flesh and as it were overwhelmed in a dead sleepe that last day do come vpon vs being vnprepared at vnawares 15 Now although the full perfection of that life which wee hope for be referred vnto the very last day yet notwithstanding it taketh certaine beginnings in our mindes even while we are heere when as the holy Ghost dooth by the preaching of the worde dispell the darcknes of our minde and indue the same with the true knowledge of God whence afterwarde doth proceed a willing minde to obey his commandements and that hope which cannot deceaue them that beleeue 16 Vnto this eternall life which shall bring vnspeakable felicitie vnto the elect death eternall is oposed which shall bring vnto the wicked that destruction which neuer shall haue an end 17 Even as that most happie felicitie cannot nowe be comprehended of vs so also that miserie of the damned is altogether incomprehensible 18 This most horrible state is called the second death not because that either the soul is thereby seperated from the bodie or that the soule or the body of the damned do suffer death but because that as by the first death the body and the soul of the wicked is dissolued the one of them hastning vnto putrefaction the other going to haue a tast of the eternall paines even so by this second punishment both the soule and the body are not only wholie excluded for euer from Gods fauor but also adjudged vnto his most fearefull and neuer ending curse 19 For the like cause is this death called eternall fier because that fier is a most sharp vehement punishment but wee are not here curiouslie to dispute touching the paines of Hell lest that wee thereby run into poeticall fables 20 Yet do these verie fables teach vs that the doctrine concerning the eternall punishment which the wicked are to vnder goe euen after this life did alwaies sound in the worlde The Epicures therefore and such as deny the immortallitie of the soule are confuted not onely by the word of God but also by common sense 21 That these punishments are eternall whereunto eternall life is oposed it is manifest by the expresse●●ord of God and also by the infinit nature of Gods majestie who is offended The Church therfore justly condemned the Origenists whoe dreamed that the wicked and the Diuells themselues hauing fulfilled those punishments should at the length be deliuered 22 Yet dooth our Sauiour Christ manifestlie witnes MAT. 10.13 that the state of the damned in respect of the measure of their punishments shall not be alike Defended by IAMES TREMVLAEVS of Geneua FINIS THE TABLE AND ORDER OF THE PRINCIPLES CONTAINED in this Treatise 1 PRinciples concerning God pag 1. 2 Of the holy and vnsearchable Trinitie 3. 3 Of God the Father and the Sonne 5. 4 Of the holy Ghost 9. 5 Of the attributes of God in general 10. 6 Of the omnipotencie of God 12 7 Of the knowledge that is in God 13. 8 Of the will of God 15. 9 Of the goodnes grace loue and mercie of God 16. 10 Of Gods prouidence 17. 11 Of Gods eternall Praedestination 19 12 Of the creation of all things and their diuision 23. 13 Of good and euill Angels 26. 14 Of man 30. 15 Of the faculties of the soule of man 33. 16 Of Free-will 35. 17 Of Sinne. 37. 18 Of the diuision of Sinne. 39. 19 Of the restoring of man-kind 41 20 Of the personall vnion of the two natures in Christ 43. 21 Of the office of Christ 25. 22 Of Faith 47. 23 Of the causes and effects of faith 49. 24 Of mans justification in the sight of God 52. 25 Of Sanctification 54. 26 Of the justification of sinfull man in the sight of God 56. 27 Of good works 60. 28 Of the Law of God 63. 29 Vpon the preface of Gods Law and the first Commandement 66. 30 Vpon the second Commandement 68 31 Vpon the third Commandement 72. 32 Concerning vowes 75. 33 Vpon the fourth Commandement 78. 34 Vpon the fift Commandement 82. 35 Vpon the sixt Commandement 86. 36 Vpon the seuenth commandement 89 37 Vpon the eight Commandement 92. 38 Vpon the ninth Commandement 94. 39 Vpon the tenth Commandement 97. 40 Concerning Repentance 100. 41 Of the conception of Iesus Christ 104 42 Of the natiuitie circumcision and baptisme of Christ 108. 43 Of the Passion and death of our Lord Iesus 111. 44 Of his buriall and descention into hel 115. 45 Of his Resurrection 121. 46 Of his ascension into heauen 125 47 Of his sitting at the right hand of the Father 128. 48 Of his comming againe to judge the quicke and the dead 131. 49 Of faith in the holie Ghost 136. 50 Vpon the Article I beleeue that there is an holie Catholicke Church 139. 51 Vpon the Article I beleeue that there is a Communion of Saints 144. 52 Of the word of God 147. 53 Of Traditions 151. 54 Of Councels and Fathers 153 55 of the Sacraments 160. 56 Of the agreement and difference betweene the Sacraments of the olde and new testament 167. 57 Of the numbers of the Sacraments of the new Testament 169. 58 of Baptisme being the first Sacrament of the new Testament 172. 59 The second sort of principles concerning Baptisme 177. 60 Of the Lords Supper 180. 61 of the popish masse 185. 62 of Consubstantiation 189. 63 Of prayer or the inuocation of Gods name 193 64 Vpon the preface of the Lords praier 197. 65 Touching the Petitions of the Lordes praier in general and particularly touching the first of them 202. 66 Of the second petition 208. 67 of the third petition 208. 68 Of the fourth petition 212. 69 of the fift petition 216 70 of the sixt petition 219 71 Vpon the conclusion of the Lordes prayer 222. 72 of the sacred ministerie of the Church where the doctrine of the Law and the Gospell are compared together 274 73 of the ministers of Gods worde vnder the Gospel 281. 74 of the false ministerie of the Gospell 233 75 of the Ecclesiasticall functions that ar depraued and retained onely in name in the counterfait Romish church 238 76 of the power and authoritie of the Church 242. 77 of Ecclesiasticall censures and excommunication 251. 78 of the magistracie 258. 79 of remission of sinnes and the sinne against the holie Ghost 263. 80 of the resurrection of the fleshe 266. 81 of Eternall life 272. FINIS Beare good Reader with the false pointing in some places of the booke correct the nomber of the Principles according vnto the Table and mend these faultes with thy Pen. Pag. 10. lin 5. by for be Pa 16. lin 33. beget for begotten Pag. 19. lin 33. vvhich for of Pag. 20. lin 31. Read The Lord then vvas so far from bereauing c. Pag. 34. lin 2. adde grovving lin 23. ad in Pa. 35. ad subiect vnto none the supreame gouernour of himselfe Pa. 43. lin 23. seemeth for serueth Pag. 44. lin 34. This for the. Pa. 48. lin 29. as for for Pa. 49. lin 25. lost for left Pa. 52. lin 24. adde that hee pag. 62. lin 21. adde revvard of and 24. ad or Pa. 72. lin 5. derogate for degenerate Pa. 79. lin 35. signifiing for signified Pa. 83. lin 25. dele honor and 26. ad honor Pa. 93. lin 9. dele as Pag 103. lin 6. read 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Pag. 114. lin 3. Read and although he vvas at the first pronounced innocent by Pilate c. Pa. 117. lin 5. Read for vs into c. Pag. 129. lin 30. Read tvvo sittinges Pa. 132. lin 20. Read those things vvhich Pag. 148. lin 7. olde for nevve Pa. 153. lin 3. councelles for counsellers Pag. 154. line 13 Read or primacie Pag. 168. line 38. in for into Pag. 207. line 16. summe for some Pag. 209. line 1. are for or Pag. 209. line 18. fift for first Pag. 221. line 5. in Pag. 223. line 29. Being for Seeing Pa. 227. line 17. either for ever Pag. 232. line 28. by the for of Pag. 135. line 1. for for from line 19. this for thus and 23. that vvhen c. 37. cyties for rites Pag. 246. line 3. it is c. Pag. 251. line vlt. rulers for rules Pag. 259. line 2. better for more Pag. 262. for for that