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A25460 Fides Catholica, or, The doctrine of the Catholick Church in eighteen grand ordinances referring to the Word, sacraments and prayer, in purity, number and nature, catholically maintained, and publickly taught against hereticks of all sorts : with the solutions of many proper and profitable questions sutable to to [sic] the nature of each ordinance treated of / by Wil. Annand ... Annand, William, 1633-1689. 1661 (1661) Wing A3218; ESTC R36639 391,570 601

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author desires only to be understood chap. 9. Quest. 5. and such infallibillity to be in a Presbytery that the Laws thereof ought not should not be debated in a counsell this also by this oath denyed and that justly To exclude therefore chiefly the Popes authority is his Majesty to be accounted Supream in all causes and over all persons that is hath jurisdiction and power over all men whether Clergy or others not the Pope When God instituted the Church o● the Jews the Priests and the Levits had their orders and laws for their spiritual government as clear and open as the Presbytery can plead for in the new Testament yet that Kin●s had power over them and made Laws for them and were obeyed of by them is clear to him that not manum sub pallio 3 It is in his Majesties own dominious his jurisdiction is bounded within the limits of his own territories right and dominions All which considered it is no derogation to Christs honour to accept that oath but consequentially a supperiater and upholder of it Thus much of the third and last ordinance we undertook to defend in the beginning which was prayer Laus Deo dedit enim v●lle etiam perficere Si quid novisti rectius istis utere si non his utere mecum FINIS ERRATA OF the errours that happened in the printing of this treatise these following are some of these viz. p. 7. l. 16. r. slighting p. 11. marg l. 1● r. use p. 17 l. 16. r. altered 27. r. fondly p. 18. l. 7. r. Inst●●●● p. 21. l 25. r. such laws p. 29 33. r. commanded p. 29. l. 7. r. will not p. 33. l. 1. r. regard p. 39. l. 1. r. creature p. 41. l. 36. r compleated p 45 l. 35. r. ben●●ecessi p. 53. l. r. persecut●on p. 57. l. 10. r. perform without p. 62. l. 33. r. own p. 73. l. 23. r. inlarge p. 81. l. 30. r. Adoption p. 86. l. 6 r. praedicantisses p 104. l. 9 r. Word p. 150. l. 9. r. explanatory p. 107. l. 26. r. int●lligent●a p. 118. l. 2. r. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 159. l. 16. r had p. 169 l. 1. r. refute p. 173. l. 17. r. but and 18. r. grand p. 177. l. 3. r. M●tta l. 25 r. were not p. 181. l. 21. r. p. 193. l. 5. r. Some p. 2. 13. l. 26. r. lively p. 252 l. 13. r. concupiscence p. 255. l. 22. r. B●vt Noble p. 266 l. 13. r. feast p. 275. l. 33. r. vigorous p. 277. marg l. 28 r veneras l. 40. r. 111. p. 214. l. 25. serve p. 288. 22. r. sacred p. 294. l. 18. r. bulk l. 25. r. fonts p. 30.7 marg l. 5. r. pleading l. 11. r Offer them p. 328. l. 16. r. sacred p. 294. l. 1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 361. l. 2. r. Guisel marg l. 3. r. Antiepiscopal p. 37.5 l. r. repealed p. 383. l. 10. r. figurat ea 25. r. per visum marg l. 3. r. 24. permittitur l. 13. r. 23. p. 10. l. 5. r. Reipturis p. 422. l. 10. r. praestat p. 490. l 11. r. Mathew The other faults are left to the Readers charity and inquisition the Author being necessarily detained from the presse A small Co●ncell being called and gathered at Spir. March 15. 1629. decreaed severall things against the Catholick Doctrine to maintain the Tenets of the now Church of Rome as the Communion under one kind c Which decree was opposed by severall of the German Princes wht cast in a Protestation against it in writing those that subscribed that were called Protestants whence the pose of the word came to be given to all that protest or declare against the errours of the new Church of Rome Syn. Trip. pag. 51. Thes. 10. His Majesty pag. 5. to M. Hen. His M●j●sties Declar for ●ffai●s Eccl. In an indi●ect sence she may preach and teach thei● neccesity for he that resisteth lawfull commands ●●neth against Co● If Kings and Princes do tolerate such it were best not to let them know it meekness never doing good to their humour If they be suffered by Law they will have lawless meetings as appeared whereever they were Those that reason our no being gospel Ministers because we are not called as the Apostles were may argue that we are not men since we were not made as Adam was From that charity love that burned always in him towards Christ and his Church he was cast to hungry Lyons by Trajan August An. Cl● 1556. Altare Christia num pag. 8. Ex. ●ren lib. 3. c. 3 ● 5. Those in some points teach one and the same doctrine Epist. con Manich. c. 4 tom 6. Calv. Inst. lib. 4. S. 15. For Act. mon. p. 34 Ex Eus. lib. 3. c. 3. Carnifrira na Prophetarum The broac●er of this do●t i●e was ●ill Hething●on by Trade a Box maker The●e might have been another argument● given for since the wr●●ing of al is they appear no Churches but n●sts of wasps Traytors all our Hereticks being of one stamp and carrying Treason in their bosoms ' as appears by their seditious and murtherous and Treasonable attempts in London jan 6. 1660. They being now un Churched by Law I wish it may be my happinesse to be the last in this Kingdome that shal have ever occasion to handle this Question more I know so much of all or most of them this I desire it heartily Gffi● Beat. Ma. ad Mat. pag. 18. meaning Tho Bec. a fancy impudent Rebel yet made a S. by the Pope Apolog. par 5 c 13 D. 1. 2. Apolog. c. 1● Not that Coloss. in the Isle of Rhodes most Geographer is making this to be the City written to not that this Epistle speaking of Laodicea Hierapolis Cities of N●tolia as bo●dering upon Colos. and near to each other intimates the same these 3. Cities were overthrown together by an Earthquake A.C. 68. Pisc. in loc Terrent He flourished Ann. Chr. 385. An upstart Preacher in the audience of some of the Authors Parish def●nding the Contra●y D●ctrine did occasion the sta●ting of this Question next Sabbath and shewing it to be the Doctrine of Devils one gave the Author freely hish and never to hear such Teachers more It is wished the Reader reap the like profit * * Discessuri ab invicem Apostoli normam praedicationis in commune constitu unt Cyp. ex Alst. Chi Symo. c. Iob is said to have flourished Anno 2330. Moses brought the people 〈◊〉 of Aegypt An. 2453. He came out of his afflictions An. 2332. * * April 6. Anno 1654 There was a solemn fast kept at Oxon for rain there being none for a long time together whereby the corn was much in danger before the Churches broke up there was a great and a plentiful shour and moderate rain a great while after whereby the fields did laugh and sing Charity here begun at home * * Witness their
constituted these extraordinary calls are no warrant for men in our dayes to assume that office for Christ now and afterwards more plainly appoints them to give power to others for the execution of those things having made it an Ordinance and from them and by them to continue to the end of the world And now as these people have constituted themselves a Church and have in that notion by man or woman received the Ordinances of the Church cast out and took in in the times of a Church long agoe constituted we pronounce them to be no Churches but nurseryes of Faction and prusumptuous Boasters That they are no Churches we shall endeavour to prove so clearly as we hope any indifferent or unprejudiced reader will not long halt between two opinions They appear to be no Churches For 1. They have no Bishops Preists Ministers or Teachers call them what they please deriving their authority from the Apostles of Christ. The Apostles were the masters of our Israel ordained by Christ to preach the Gospel to all Nations and where they Taught they Ordained and appointed Ministers for the Ruling and Governing of that Church and gave them power also to Ordaine others For this cause saies Paul to Titus I left the in Crete the same place now called Candy that thou shouldest set in order things that art wanting and ordain Elders in every City as I had appointed Tit. 1.5 The word Elder in the original is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Presbyters or Priests he must ordain Priests he cals them Bishops v. 7. Titus was therefore left in Crete to Ordain Bishops or Priests in every City that the Gospel might be purely taught and the Sacraments administred Thus holy Polycarpus Saint Iohn's Disciple was placed by him in the Church of Smyrna Ignatius that had his name given ab igne charitatis he was also called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as being born of God was the second Bishop of Antioch next Peter For Peter ruled that Church 7. years and afterwards came to Rome An. Christ. 71. The succession of Bishops I would have none offended at the word suppose what other name they will only this is the antient Word from Peter or any other Apostle was a certain sign of a true call into Holy Orders among the Antients Let us suppose a man Ordained by the present Bishop of Canterbury and let it be inquired what power he had to do it he shews it from Abbot Whitgift and so upward for a thousand Years the Records of that Sea being known until you come to Augustin the first Bishop of Canterbury Then ask who gave him power to Ordain for that Office he names you Gregory a holy Catholick Bishop Rome not yet being Antichrist servus Serverum Dei as he called himself He again was Ordained by Pelagius he by Benedictus he by Iohn he by Pelagius the First he by Vigilius he by Sylverius he by Argapetus Anno Christi 535. and so upward for 400. years or more until you come to Alexander the great An. Chr. 121. He was Ordained by Evaristus he by Anacletus he by Clemens he by Cletus he by Linus and he by Saint Peter the Apostle of our Lord the First Bishop of Rome who after he h●d ruled the Church of Antioch 7. year in which City the Apostles and Disciples were first called Christians Acts 11.26 came An. 67 in the 14. Year of Nero the Emperours Reign to Rome by whom he was crucified with his head downwards and all the Bishops after him until Elutherius were put to death by Heathen Emperours for he was the first of 13 Bishops that dyed a naturall death It is said of him Est Primus Episcop●rum Rom●norum qui non perjit morte violenta By this Bishop Lucius who Reigned in England Anno Christi 180. had some knowledge of the faith and Doctrine of the Gospel Bring this succession down again from Peter to Linus from him to Cletus from him to Clemens and so down for 400 years to Gregory who sending Augustin into England set up his Bishops seat first at Dover then removed it as the Gospel prospered unto London whence he was removed to Canterbury where his continued succession remains unto this day In all those places he taught the Gospel and Ordained Priests or Ministers and gave them power to Ordain others Planted Teachers in Winchester York Carlisle and from these again as from fountains came the Authority of Ordination to water other dry parts of the Nation about them and so from age to age was it delivered untill it came upon the Authours head by unquestionable Authority Now let us ask one of these Mechanicks By whom were you constituted and appointed a Church-Officer to exercise the power of the Keys if you say from Christ we deny it for he Ordained none but his Disciples if from his Disciples show or produce your Warrant for Ordination was given to them and by their hands given to others that the succession might be preserved unto the end of the World So Saint Iames the Apostle sate Bishop in the Church of Ierusalem Evodius was Bishop of Antioch next Peter next to him Ignatius and to Theophilus and downward If we had the Register of the Church of Crete in which place Titus was set to Ordain Elders in every City and then ask one By whom were you appointed to dispence the Word and Sacrament and exercise the power of the Keys by such a one he by him and he by him and so you should fal on Titus himself And Timothy who was Ordained by the same Apostle the First Bishop of the Church of Ephesus had a charge in the Epistle sent unto him to commit the Doctrine to faithful men that they might be able to teach others 2. Tim. 2.2 Which Commitment is by laying on of hands that being the Ceremony for translating the power viz. the Authoritative of Teaching from one person to another as afterwards shall be discovered which Commitment Timothy must not be too rash in but weigh and examine what manner of man he is 1 Tim. 5.22 For a Bishop must be blamelesse sober apt to teach 1 Tim. 3.2 Or if it be a Deacon that Tim. so Ordain the lowest authoritative Office in the Church he must be grave 1 Tim. 3.8 Which Office of Deacon-ship if they use well they may be through their faith in God receive a higher Office called a purchasing to themselves a good degree 1 Tim 3.13 Which may truly bear this construction that good degree though a low one shall make them esteemed of God and esteemed so wel of his Church as to make him a Presbyter or a Bishop for that that Office was made a step to that of the Priest-hood is clear both in gospell and Church-History A Deaconship being only a Probationers place for it and according as the Church gave them a Benegessit for the one they received the degree of the other But what authority had Timothy to
to leave every thing done and taught in the Churches of France Spaine or Italy for so they should have denyed the Lord that bought them but the errors or false worship of those Churches It is a cause of laughter to read what use men make of that letter the Pope sent Queen Elizabeth of glorious memory promiseing to ratifie the Common-prayer if she would restore his Supremacy It is as clear as the Sun that the Pope and the Guisel will both of them according to the Proverb play a smal game before they stand out It was lately their main study how to reconcile themselves to the independent who had got the start of them and they have now studyed a new art how to reconcile themselves to the Lord Bishop he being now a corner stone in the Church of England if the Pope use the same policy of all men under heaven they have least cause to declare it since they will truckle with Quaker Ranter they whole brood of bastardly Hereticks to procure unto themselves a supremacy It is worthy of observation that by this the Pope could not pick a quarrel even with the Common-prayer all things therein being so lawfull that he had not impudence to speake against and so exactly composed that he would have established it by Papal Authority without diminution or augmentation And yet it gives no strength at all unto his Kingdom that having these three pillars 1. Infallibility 2. Supremacy 3. Purgatory All which the Common-prayer disowns and renounceth yet the Pope will licence it as he doth English bibles that is because he must he will play at a sm●l ga●e because he hath hopes to win the set he proffered to ratifie Common-prayer not for love to it but to get his hand into the Kingdom of England knowing or at least ho●ing he might get in his arme and by degrees his whole body for the same reason the Guisel truckeled formerly under the Independent and lately with the Anabaptist and now would hold the stirrop to his spi●itual lordship not for love of either but to keep self in credit with the world being concious to himself that from him came all the evils that have befallen either Church or state in the by-past years and least with Cain he should become a vagabond is desireous of any that will befriend him 2. It s giving offence to tender consciences This is a high note and often heard but 1. Who discovered or layd the ground of that offence 2. How easily might that offence be removed if in popular Sermons the innocency and purity of that book were preached the people have for 16 years heard much against it and now they hear nothing at least from you for it no wonder therefore if they be not affected with it We say affected for it seemes to be but a prejudice against that book not conscience that maketh them to oppose the same that being guided by Sripture and reason not spleen and passion When we behold that service rayled at scorned shunned contemned condemned and the users of it scandaled and yet not one sentence word or petition proved unlawfull or not according to scripture we have ground to conjecture that it is stomack not religion maketh them to do so and the over-flowings of their gall not tendernesse of their consciences that makes them to flee out into such depraveing and abusive language They would appear so holy that it is dangerous to offend them or lay a stone of stumbling before them Yet what greater offence can be given then to abuse a national or personall Church by defaming the prayers therein established or by the other made when in the meane time in all their findings one sentence unlawfull in these prayers they cannot find were they as tender as they would seeme to be we should have more argueing lesse rayling The greatest number of them that pretend to receive offence are of that disposition that they desire not to be informed touching those set formes whether by discourse preaching or reading and the other part can produce no unseemly thing in them and yet they being established by good laws and Just authority give still occasion to conjecture that not conscience but wilfulnesse and obstinacy is the mother of their non-conformity There is a God above who often brings mens wicked devices upon their own pate It was pi●y to see commissioners apointed in every county and ministers as their assistants turning cut ministers from their places to the ruine of their familees for not subscribing to the directory or for reading Common-prayer when they were bound by oath law and allegiance to the same and now men that are enjoyned or desireed to read Common-prayer pretend conscience and cry out they are offended and the same persons complain of persecution when the true owners are restored but c. The Reader can bear us witnesse that we have not mentioned that act of Popish Queen Mary who at her first coming to the Crown seeking to Erect popery in England repealed all acts made in the favour of the Common-prayer and altogether abolished it to facilitate that work Nor of the Practise of those Recusants who being under the penalty of a fine if they came not to the publick Churches of this nation in the days of Queen Elizabeth would commonly refraine themselves from hearing Common-prayer and not enter Church being in this Puritanicall untill the preacher was in the pulpit which are arguments of no smal weight to defend that the Common-prayer is not popishly affected the Papists themselves being witnesses To conclude this question seeing that some men do not grow strong and well favoured through holynesse knowledge and sobriety by other ordinances of the Church Common-prayer which they scornfully call po●age is fittest for their weak stomacks and sickly constitutions while those that are strong and of good digestion may receive the more meat and grow in grace and knowledge by their eating that is by a holy using the set formes of the Church together with other dutys Quest. 4. Whether there be not vaine repetitions in those formes This is a grand argument brought by many justifying their non conformity to the Churches liturgy and most heard from those men whose publick prayers were for the most part carried on by empty or at least by many repititons To be brief we must distinguish of repetitions there is a bare repetition and there is a vain repetition 1. Bare repetitions if repetitions of themselves were unlawfull lawfull to be used in prayer that is to repeate or bring over again and again the same thing before asked then many of the Saints of God must be blamed and the son of God must not be Justified who in one prayer repeated the same petition thrice over Mat. 26.44 It is a desireable faculty to vary in prayer yet every one cannot do it and they that can will repeate somtimes 1. Through pinching necessity this made Christ cry earnestly in