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A97309 The whole body of Christian religion, by Hieron. Zanchius. Translated out of Latine by D. Ralph Winterton. Zanchi, Giralamo, 1516-1590.; Winterton, Ralph, 1600-1636. 1659 (1659) Wing Z7; Thomason E1897_1; ESTC R209936 137,419 420

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be believed and obeyed by all simply and absolutely DOCT. VII That the authoritie of the Church is of great use and hath much power to bring men to believe the holy Scripture ANd yet we deny not but the authoritie of the Church hath great power to move men to hear and to read the holy Scripture as being truely the word of God according to that of St. Augustine Tom. 6. contra Epi Fund c 5. I had not believed the Gospel had not the authoritie of the Church moved me thereunto And yet the same Augustine every where professeth that where as he did believe he received it not from the Church but from the holy Ghost whose gift is faith DOCT. VIII That the Church hath no authoritie over the holy Scripture BUt to dispute whether the authoritie of the Church be not greater then the holy Scripture and much more to averre the affirmative part as if the Church beside the gift of trying spirits and discerning Canonicall Scripture from that which is not and testifying concerning it and interpreting of it had also power to adde to take from and despense with it This we judge to be more then sacriledge For it is God's commandment Ye shall not adde unto the Word which I command you Deut. 4.2 Revel 2● 18.19 Deut 5 32. neither shall you diminish ought from it and you shall not turn aside to the right hand or to the left and further it is his will and pleasure that all and every one in all things simply obey him speaking unto those out of his holy word DOCT. IX That the holy Scripture is so perfect that we can neither adde unto it nor take from it FOr the holy Scripture is so absolute and perfect containing in it abundantly whatsoever is needfull unto salvation that nothing can be added unto it and again it is penned with such divine wisdome that nothing can be taken from it DOCT. X. That we must rely and rest upon the holy Scripture THerefore do we rely and rest upon the doctrine of holy Scripture as also all that are godly ought to do holding fast that of the Apostle All Scripture is given by inspiration of God 2 Tim 3.16 and is profitable for doctrine for reproof for correction for instruction in righteousnesse That the man of God may be perfect 17. throughly furnished unto all good works DOCT. XI That nothing is to be determined concerning religion without the word of God and that all things are to be corrected by it WHerefore also this is our judgement that nothing is to be determined in the Church concerning religion which hath not either pregnant proof out of the Canonicall Scripture or else may be evinced from thence by plain and necessarie consequence and that if ought at any time hath crept into the Church either concerning doctrine or worship which is not agreeable unto holy Scripture it ought either by a lawfull course absolutely be taken away or else be corrected by the word of God And again that all controversies concerning religion ought lawfully to be judged and decided by the said holy Scripture DOCT. XII That the Traditions which are truely Catholike and Apostolike are to be retained in the Church YEt such Traditions as it is certain that they are descended from the Apostles August Tom. 7. contr Donat. lib. 4. cap. 24. Et Tom. 2 ad Ian. Ep. 118. D. 11. cap. 8. and have alwayes been observed by all the Churches as that concerning sanctifying the Lords day in stead of the Sabbath and such like although we have no commandment in Scripture for keeping and observing them yet we think it fit that they should be retained in the Churches DOCT. XIII That the Scripture is perspicuous in those things which are necessarie unto salvation and therefore that it ought to be read of all WE understand and know that the whole doctrine of salvation is not onely sufficiently but also perspicuously delivered in holy Scripture seeing that God himself speaking unto his people used no other language but the vulgar that it might be understood of all And therefore we count it wonderfull injustice and very tyranny to interdict or debarre any one from reading or translating such books as God would have all men for their salvation to read and turn over again and again day and night Psal 1.2 DOCT. XIV That the faithfull interpretations of the godly and learned are not to be contemned ALthough the holy Scripture be perspicuous in those things which are necessarie unto salvation Yet we do not dislike the interpretations expositions of learned and godly men as well ancient as moderne which are fetched out of the same holy Scripture and as farre forth as the Scripture is expounded by the Scripture and that agreeably to the first principles of faith the summe whereof is contained in the Apostles Creed and also in the Creeds of the truely Oecumenicall or generall Councils both ancient and holy assembled together against known heretikes DOCT. XV. That the word of God is the onely prop of faith and foundation of Religion FOr our faith neither can nor ought to rely upon any thing else but the word of God delivered in the holy Scripture Rom. 10.17 For Faith cometh by hearing and hearing by the word of God To which whatsoever is repugnant be it written by what man soever we reject and whatsoever is agreeable unto it we embrace and what soever is neither according as it shall seem expedient or not expedient to the Churches we admit or reject and we teach that it is to be admitted or rejected CHAP. II. Concerning God the divine Persons and Properties DOCTRINE I. That there is but one God distinguished into three Persons Being then taught of God in the holy Scripture which is his word 1 Thess 4.9 we believe that there is but one God that is one most simple indivisible eternall living and most perfect Essence subsisting in three Persons to wit the Father the Son and the Holy Ghost being distinguished each from other but yet without all manner of division The authour and cause of all things DOCT. II. That each Person by himself is true God but yet so that there are not three Gods FOr thus we believe as we are taught out of the holy Scripture That the Father by himself is true perfect God the Sonne is God the holy Ghost is also God and yet there are not three Gods but one God Rom. 11.36 And of him and through him and to him are all things DOCT. III. That one Person is distinguished from another by Personall Properties and that by Essentiall Properties they are distinguished from all creatures BUt because the holy Scripture so speaketh of God that it attributes unto him many Properties both Essentiall and Personall and teacheth that by the Essentiall he is distinguished from all things created and by the Personall each Person from other Therefore we also believe that As
expresseth by the name of Heaven Earth and they were all exceeding good Prov. 16.4 And we believe likewise that he ordained them for the use of man and for his own glorie And therefore we acknowledge both the Sonne and the holy Ghost to be Creatour of the world as well as the Father For as much as the Father the Son and the holy Ghost is but one and the same God DOCT. II. That the Heaven is distinguished from the Earth and that the Heaven of the blessed doth differ from the other Heavens NEither do we mingle Heaven and Earth together 2 ●●r 22.2 Matth. 6.10 nor make a confusion of the Heavens one with another but according to the holy Scripture we make a distinction as we see the elements and all kinds of creatures animate and inanimate to be distinguished And further we confesse that the Heaven in which the souls of the blessed live with Christ and the bodyes of all the godly shall which Christ also calleth his a Iohn 14.2 Fathers house and b Luk. 23.43 Paradise and which the Apostle calleth c Heb. 11.10 A citie which hath foundations whose builder and maker is God We confesse I say that this Heaven differeth from the other Heavens but much more from Earth and Hell Unto this Heaven also the Apostle alluded when he said 2 Cor. 12.2 That he was caught up to the third Heaven to wit above the Heaven of the aire and above all the visible and moveable orbs DOCT. III. That all the Angels were created good although they did not all stand fast in the truth WE believe also That the Angels were all created good and righteous being substances spirituall and immortall and indued with understanding and free-will although they did not all stand fast in goodness and righteousness Iohn ● 44 and the Truth as our Lord Iesus speaketh but did many of them from the very beginning sinne of their own free-will and so became the enemies of God and all goodness the enemies of all mankind and especially of the Church of God liars and speaking lies of their own murderers devils evil spirits and 2 Pet. 2.4 that therefore they were cast down to Hell and delivered into chaines of darkness to be reserved unto judgement DOCT. IV. The causes or reasons why many of the heavenly Spirits were permitted to sinne and became evil ANd this was not without cause permitted by the wisedome of God as we are taught in holy Scripture For besides that God would have his justice and judgement made known unto them as likewise his anger and wrath against sin by what creature soever committed he hath also appointed to use them as his instruments to a 1 King 21.22 tempt us and exercise our faith and patience in b Eph. 6.12 spirituall combats and all to further our salvation and to conclude He would have them to be the executors and administrators of his justice judgements against mans wickedness that as many as c 2 Thes 2.12 will not believe the truth whereby they may be saved should follow the d Tim. 4 1. doctrines of devils giving heed to seducing spirits and e 2 Thes 2 11. believing lies and so f 12. be damned DOCT. V. That the good Angels were by the grace of God preserved in goodness that so they might become God's ministring Spirits for our good AGain we believe That g D 10. innumerable of the celestiall spirits were by the grace of God in Christ preserved that they might not sin with the rest but persist in truth and obedience and that so they became Gods messengers and h Heb 1.14 ministring spirits for the good of his elect to defend and protect them against the devils and to promote the Kingdome of Christ And they do so love us and wait upon us that they do exceedingly i Luk. 15.10 rejoyce for our salvation But they will k Revel 22.9 not be worshipped of us by any means but put us in minde that God onely is to be worshipped and that they are but our fellow-servants with whom we shall also live a blessed and eternall life as the Angels of God in heaven Matth. 22.30 DOCT. VI. That man was created after the Image of God WE believe That after that all other things were created at last man also was a Gen. 1.26 27. created after the Image and likenesse of God his body being b 2 7. formed out of the earth but his soul which is a spirituall and immortall substance being made of nothing and c ibid. inspired by God into his body Not long after a wife also was by God given unto him d 2.22 made of his bone as concerning the body and created after the Image of God DOCT. VII Wherein especialy that Image of God consisted BUt we believe that the Image of God consisted in this especially That as God is the absolute Lord of all things So unto man were e G●● 1.28 Psal 8.6 7 8. all things made subject that he should have dominion over the fowles of the aire the fishes of the sea and the beasts of the land insomuch that he was the king of all the lower world And again more especially in this That as God is most holy and righteous So also man was f Eccl. 7.29 created upright at the first that is g Eph. 4 24. in righteousness and true holiness as the Apostle doth interpret it DOCT. VIII That Adam had free-will before his fall HEreupon we believe that man in his first estate had not onely this libertie that he could will nothing against his will which libertie hath alwayes remained in man and still remaineth but also that he was indued with such power from above that if he would he might have not sinned and so not have died but have persevered in righteousness and have escaped death Insomuch that his losse of both is to be justly attributed unto himself and not unto any other DOCT. IX Heresies and Errours condemned WE condemne therefore the Valentinians Alarcionites Manichees and as many as have taught or have left any thing in writing behinde them against this article of our Christian faith whether they feigned the world to be made by some other God then the Father of Christ or whether they held that all things that are good were made by one God that is good and all things that are evil by another that is evil For how can he be God which is not the chief and soveraigne good and the onely maker of all good things We condemne also all those which hold that the soul of man was made of the substance of God or which deny it to be immortall and alwayes working or which make the Image of God to consist onely in the dominion over his creatures or last of all which deny that the first man was created by God at the first with free-will truely so
great that first indeed What Christ is or doth according to his divine nature that is all-Christ the Son of Man said to be or to do and again What Christ is or doth or hath suffered according to his humane nature That is all-Christ God Son of God said in holy Scripture to be to have done and to have suffered As in that place where it said a Acts 20 2● God that is Christ Man and God hath purchased the Church with his own bloud whereas the force of the purchase pertaineth unto the Deitie or Godhead and the pouring out of bloud onely unto the humanitie or Manhood Yet both these Actions are joyned together in one and both are attributed unto the whole Person of Christ although they were and are distinguished For although the natures be distinguished yet are they coupled together in the Person of Christ which is but one Yet further Christ as Mediatour never did or doth any thing according to his humanitie whereunto his divinitie did not and doth not cooperate or work together and again he did nothing according to his divinitie whereunto his humanitie did not consent and willingly agree And therefore well did the Fathers in calling the operations or actions of Christ as Mediatour operatious Theandricall that is of God and Man In the second place As the force of the union which is between the Father and the Son is so great that he doth nothing neither communicateth unto the world any good but by the Son In like manner so great is the force of the Hypostaticall union of the two natures in Christ that there flowes unto us no grace no salvation no life from the Deitie but by the humanitie apprehended of us by faith so that it is altogether necessarie that he be coupled unto the flesh of Christ whosoever will be made partaker of eternall life according to that of our Saviour a Iohn 6.13 Except eate the flesh of the Son of Man the have no life in you And in the last place by the force of the said union it is effected that we cannot worship and adore the Deitie in Christ without worshipping and adoring also the humanitie in him and again That both the humane and divine nature are to be worshipped and adored of us altogether with one and the same manner of worship and adoration according to that a Hebe 1.6 And when he bringeth in the first begotten into the world he saith And let all the angels of God worship him him that is the whole Person God and Mau together whereas yet the humane nature by it self and in it self merely considered neither can nor ought to be worshipped For God onely is to be worshipped But it is not any union but the Hypostaticall union of the divine and humane nature which effects this that we have said Wherefore although God dwelleth in his Saints yet are not they to be worshipped or pray'd unto as is the Man Christ Great therefore surely we confesse is the union whereof we speak but yet such is the union that it excludes all confusion and transfusion For if the union between the Father the Son and the holy Ghost in one essence then which union there neither is nor can be imagined a greater take not away the distinction of Persons neither can this union of natures and so of properties and actions in one Person take away the distinction or bring in a confusion thereof DOCT. XII That unto Christ as Man was given indeed the greatest power that could be but yet finite as also other gifts WE believe further that as Christ as he is God is simply omnipotent and simply wise and so also in his other Atrributes So as he is man there was given unto him power and knowledge fárre surpassing yea almost by infinite degrees the power and knowledge of all creatures both in heaven and on earth but yet finite and so likewise all other gifts and virtues as charitie prudence fortitude justice grace truth and the rest whereof the Prophet Isaiah speaketh a Isa 11.2 And the Spirit of the Lord shall rest upon him c. and Iohn the Evangelist who testifieth that he was b Iohn 1.14 full of grace and truth and Luke c Luk. 2.25 And Iesus increased in wisedome and stature and in favour with God and Man For which cause he is by the Apostle said to be d Eph. 1.20 set at Gods right hand in the heavenly places e 21. Farre above all principalities and powers and again Iohn saith f Iohn 3.34 God giveth not the Spirit unto him by measure and again the Apostle g Coloss 2.3 In him are hid all the treasures of wisedome and knowledge Whence it cometh to passe that as he is Man he knoweth all things and can do all things which belong unto his office but as for those things which no created substance can do but God alone those he doth by the power of the Deitie yet not without the consent and as it were the supplication of the humane nature insomuch that to all the actions of Christ as he is God concerning our salvation his soul in some manner is alwayes added by the love desire and will thereof As likewise in all which he did as Man the Deitie alwayes concurred even in his death and passion not that the Deitie suffered but that it willed the death passion of Christ and gave unto his death and passion infinite power and efficacie to expiate and purge away our sins To conclude in a word concerning the natures of Christ together with their union and properties we believe whatsoever was set down and concluded by the Nicene Councill and that of Constantinople and that of Ephesus and that of Calcedon agaist Arius Apollinaris Nestorius Eutyches as also what was defined and determined in the sixt Synod against the Monothelites DOCT XIII That the actions of Christ are of two kinds and that what we read that Christ did or suffered was all done and suffered by him according unto truth and not according to outward appearance onely NOw to passe from the Person of Christ and his natures and the union of the natures unto his actions and office peculiarly We believe first as there are two true natures in Chrst whereof each had and hath it 's own true and essentiall properties conjoyned indeed as the natures also are united but not confounded So likewise that there are two kinds of actions which we read that our Lord Iesus Christ partly hath already performed and partly doth not yet cease to performe and that some of these actions flow from the Deitie and others from the humanitie and that they were partly and partly are so conjoyned and yet so distinct that each form as Leo speaketh doth alwayes work with the communion of the other The Word still doing that which is proper to the Word and the flesh exequuting that which belongeth unto the flesh And again as the works
pardoned and forgiven for ever that we are received into grace and made the Sons of God and heires of eternall life The third and last is that being perswaded of the free pardon and forgivenesse of our sins and eternall salvation for Christ's sake and merits we afterwards labour to keep and observe all things whatsoever Christ hath commanded us for the glorie of God and the salvation of our neighbour keeping faith alwayes even unto the end and stedfastly believing that whatsoever sins we commit in our new obedience are not imputed to us and that for Christ's sake onely as also that by the imputation of Christ's most perfect obedience righteousnesse and holinesse unto us our imperfect obedience is made perfect and so reputed and accepted for most perfect in the sight of God The commandments of Christ may be all reduced unto three That denying ungodlinesse and worldly lusts we should live SOBERLY in respect of our selves RIGHTEOUSLY in respect of our neighbour and GODLY a T it 2.12 in respect of God in this present world a 13. Looking for that blessed hope and the glorious appearing of the great God and our saviour Iesus Christ This we believe to be the sum of all that Christ requireth of us in the word of his Gospel and therefore that they are true Gospellers and Christians indeed whosoever with studious care and diligence give themselves wholly to the observation hereof DOCT. VIII In what things most especially the Gospel differs from the Law ANd it appears sufficiently by what hath been said That we confound not the Law with the Gospell For although we confesse that God is the Authour of the Law as well as the Gospel and again that b Rom. 7.12 the Law of it self is holy and just and good as well as the Gospell yet we believe that there is a great deal of difference between them and that not onely because that was delivered to the Iews onely whereas the Gospell belongeth unto all nations nor yet onely because that was temporatie and to last onely untill Christ whereas the Gospel is everlasting not yet onely because that was delivered by Moser and expounded by the Prophets whereas the Gospel was brought unto us by Christ and published unto the whole world by the Apostles Not for these reasons onely I say but more especially for these which follow First because the matters of the Law consists in commandments with curses irrevocable added thereunto if they be broken in the least part It hath indeed the promises not onely of earthly and temporall blessings but also of heavenly and eternall but yet they are all with a condition of most perfect righteousnesse and obedience and not of free grace But the Gospel is properly the message of glad tidings freely setting before us Christ our Redeemer freely pardoning and forgiving sins and saving us not requiring any thing at our hands for the attainment of salvation but onely true faith in Christ which we cannot have without repentance together with a care to do Gods will as we declared before Secondly because the Law did not enable us for the doing of that which it required for it gave us no power whereby we might be saved and so was insufficient and a 1 Cor. ● 6 a killing letter and b 7. the ministration of wrath and death rather stirring up sin then taking it away But the Gospel requireth no more of us then it enableth us to performe and so communicateth really unto us what is offered forasmuch as the holy Ghost worketh thereby in the elect at the preaching thereof stirring up in them true faith whereby to lay hold on Christ when he is offered unto them and together with him everlasting salvation For c Rom. 10.17 faith cometh by hearing of the Gospel but obedience cometh not by hearing the Law For the holy Ghost at the hearing of the Law did not enable them to keep it whosoever heard the same whereas it doth stirre up faith in the elect at the hearing of the Gospel For which cause as the Law is called the killing letter so the Gospel is called the quickning Spirit or the a 2 Cor. 3.6 Spirit giving life And therefore it is a true and effectuall instrument and meanes unto salvation to every one that believeth From whence followes a third difference which is this that the Law was not wrote in the hearts of men but in tables of stone so that there was not any change in men wrought thereby But the Gospel is wrote in the hearts of the elect by the holy Ghost and worketh in them b 2 Cor. 3.18 a change and true renovation being used by the holy Ghost as an instrument of our sanctification and salvation DOCT. VIII That by the Gospel the Law of Moses is partly taken away and partly not IT appears manifestly by what hath been said what our faith is concerning the abrogation of the Law by the Gospell We believe first that by the Gospel forasmuch as it declareth unto us the fulfilling of all things which were fore-told by types and figures in the old Testament concerning Christ as we shewed before in the 11. Chap. The Law concerning Ceremonies and sacrifices and all the externall Mosaicall worship is absolutely abrogated according to that of the Apostle teaching that they were a Hebr. 9.10 imposed on them untill the time of reformation and that of the Evangelist that b Iohn 1.17 the Law was given by Moses but grace and truth by Iesus Christ Secondly Forasmuch the Gospel is one instrument of the holy Ghost whereby we are ingrafted and united unto Christ and made partakers of redemption and salvation as we shewed in the 12. Chap In that regard we confesse that even the Morall Law also as concerning the curse denounced against the transgressours thereof is by the Gospel of Christ abrogated according to that of the Apostle c Rom. 8.1 There is no condemnation to them which are in Christ Iesus A signe whereof this is that they d ibid. walk not after the flesh but after the Spirit But forasmuch as the Doctrine of the Gospel requireth repentance of us and sanctitie of our whole life and that we live soberly righteously and godly In this regard I say it taketh not away the Morall Law For it agreeth altogether with the Doctrine of the Gospel concerning eschewing vices and following after virtues Thirdly and lastly forasmuch as Christ by his Gospel hath not taken away the Politicall or civill Laws by which commonwealths are governed which are agreeable to the Law of nature Therefore we leave it free to Magistrates to use the Laws which were delivered to the commonwealth of the Iews and to govern their people thereby considering that there are none more equall and just then they Wherefore if there be any one that dare presume to say that by the Gospel of Christ the government of commonwealths is overturned or troubled he offers
comprehend therefore much in few words our judgement is that The Sacraments are outward signes and such as fall under our senses whith are added unto the word of the Gospel according to Christ's institution by reason of our ignorance weakness and for the better stirring up and confirming of our faith whereby all men are seriously called but the elect onely and believers by the holy Ghost inwardly working in their minds and drawing them are brought unto Christ to have true and reall communion with him and with his flesh and bloud and so are made partakers of all Christs benefits which by the word and outward visible signes are signified and offered that being incorporated into Christ they may at length make up the body of the whole Church according as the Father hath preordained unto the praise and glorie of his grace and their eternall salvation DOCT. XVII In summe what communitie the Sacraments of the Old Testament have with the Sacraments of the New COncerning the Sacraments of the Old Testament we need not say much forasmuch as they are abrogated But this one thing must not be omitted to wit that the Fathers of old forasmuch as they had the same God that we have the same promises the same Mediatour the same Spirit regenerating the same faith and the same hope They had likewise the same Sacraments that we have if we have respect unto the substance thereof which is Christ although for ceremonies different from ours And this we the rather hold because theirs were delivered to them to the same end that ours are delivered unto us to wit that they might be confirmed in the faith of Christ and grow up together in communion with him To prove what we have said these places of Scripture are very pertinent he was a Revel 13.8 the Lamb slain from the foundation of the world b 1 Cor. 10.4 They did all drink the same Spirituall drink for they drank of that Spirituall Rock that followed them and that Rock was Christ And again c Heb. 1● 8 Iesus Christ the same yesterday and to day and for ever DOCT. XVIII That there are onely two Sacraments of the Christian Church WE acknowledge onely two Sacraments properly so called which were alwayes common to all the Christian Church by name Baptisme and the Lords Supper whereof the one belongeth to the beginning of our communion with Christ and the other unto the increase thereof Whereupon the one is called the Laver or washing of regeneration and the other the holy Feast or the Lords Supper DOCT. XIX Errours condemned WE cannot therefore but dislike those which will have a Sacrament to be even where no word is heard but onely some visible signe seen And those likewise which make no distinction between the thing of the Sacrament and the Sacrament but will have it to be received into the mouth as well as the Sacramentall signe Whereas the thing of the Sacrament is that which the signe coming under the judgement of our sense bringeth unto our minde but letteth not fall into our hand or mouth Neither yet do we like those which in the Sacraments consider nothing else but what they see with their eyes Nor yet those which will have them to be onely badges cognizances to distinguish us from other people or else but bare signes and no instruments of the holy Ghost by which he worketh in us effectually and confirmes us in the communion of Christ But we condemne those which institute new Sacraments beside those which Christ himself hath instituted And those also which tye the grace of God and the things signified by the Sacraments unto the Sacraments in such manner as if every one that receiveth the signes might truely be said alwayes to partake also of the thing it self CHAP. XV. Concerning Baptisme BEsides what hath been said of the Sacraments in generall we further believe and confesse as followeth concerning the Sacrament of Baptisme in speciall DOCTRINE I. What Baptisme is and what the effects thereof a Matt. 21.19 BAptisme is the first Sacrament of the New Covenant by which both all they which either having made confession of their sins and profession of their faith in Christ and so likewise in God the Father the Son and the holy Ghost or such as at least we believe for the pietie of their b 1 Cor. 7.14 parents do belong unto the Covenant and they more especially which truely belong unto the Covenant are c Eph. 1 1● sealed in Christ being as it were d 1 Cor. 6.15 incorporated into him by the holy Ghost in such manner that they are e 1● no longer their own but his by whom they are said to be received unto the fellowship of the Covenant and so become one body with him and all the Saints and are made partakers of all Spirituall and celestiall benefits being by this Baptisme as the laver of regeneration a Ephes 5.26 cleansed from their sins by the bloud of Christ and b Rom. 6.4 buried with him into death that like as Christ was raised up from the dead by the glorie of the Father even so we also should walk in newnesse of life For which cause it is usually called the Sacrament or c Mark 1.4 The Baptisme of repentance for the remission of sins The seal of faith the seal of the Covenant the laver of regeneration the washing away of sins and the Sacrament or seal of newnesse of life DOCT. II. That the power and vertue of Baptisme hath onely place in the elect and that they alone are Baptised not onely with water but also with the holy Ghost BUt yet notwithstanding such excellent things are said of Baptisme and are truely attributed unto it as an instrument used by the holy Ghost and so Sacramentally all they which are Baptised are truely said to be made and to be such We believe that it is fulfilled really onely in the elect which are endued with the holy Ghost forasmuch as they onely do truely believe and truely belong unto Christ and his mysticall body And therefore that all indeed are Baptised with water but the elect onely with the holy Ghost and that all receive the signe not all the thing signified and offered by Baptisme but that the elect onely are made partakers thereof DOCT. III. What be the integrall parts of the Sacrament of Baptisme WE believe that for the making of the Sacrament of Baptisme to be entire those two things are sufficient which Christ hath instituted to wit the simple element of water with which men are Baptised whether by way of immersion or dipping in the water or aspersion sprinkling on the water and that form of words which Christ taught his Apostles to use when they Baptized Matth. 28.9 to wit In the name of the Father and of the Son and of the holy Ghost And we are fully perswaded that they neither used any other forme of words nor added any thing
of Bishops in a Church yet not any succession be it what it will but such as hath also the continuation of the Apostles doctrine We acknowledge I say that it may be truely demonstrated from such a succession that such a Church is Apostolike As of old the Church of Rome and the succession of the Bishops thereof even unto the times of Irenaeus Tertullian Cyprian and some other insomuch that those Fathers did not without cause appeal thereunto and to other such like in their accustomed citations of the Heretikes of their time But as on the one side as concerning those Churches in which the Apostles doctrine together with Christian discipline and the right administration of the Sacraments is retained pure although they were not planted by the Apostles neither can show the perpetuall succession of their Bishops without interruption even from the Apostles time yet we do acknewledge them for Churches truely Apostolike and say with Tertullian and others of the Fathers that they are so to be acknowledged So on the other side what Churches were planted and watered by the Apostles themselves although they can demonstrate unto us the continuall succession of their Bishops without any the least interruption yet if they cannot demonstrate unto us as well the continuation of the Christian and Apostolike doctrine as the succession of their Bishops we may acknowledge and confesse that they have been indeed Christian and Apostolike Churches but that they are such now we cannot acknowledge For as it is not the cap or the hood that makes a Monke as it is in the proverb but pietie and sanctitie of life So neither is it the succession of Bishops but the doctrine of Christ and Christian Religion that makes a Church truely Christian DOCT. VII That not any consent whatsoever but onely that which is in the doctrine of Christ sufficeth to evidence that some are true and Christian Churches SO also we conceive that it cannot be evinced from any kind of agreement of Churches amongst themselves that they are the true Churches of God seeing there ha's been the greatest unity and concord even in the Synagogues of the Iews and the assemblies of the Turks as also heretofore in the conventicles of the Arrians and Donatists but we judge them onely to be demonstrated as such from their consent in the purity of Christian Doctrine and true piety For when the Apostle saith I beseech you 1 Cor. 1.10 brethren by the Name of our Lord Iesus Christ that ye all speak the same thing and that there be no divisions among you but that ye be perfectly joined together in the same mind and in the same judgements he meanes in that Lord Iesus Christ by whose Name he did request them to that unanimitie DOCT VIII That the being of Churches is not destroyed by every kind of dissension that may arise in them NEverthelesse we are not so unjustly rigid against those wherein there is not a perfect harmonie and the same judgement concerning all particulars as therefore to deny them to be Christian Churches Because as any kind of concord do's not constitute a Church so neither does every dissension whatsoever destroy it provided this fundamentall principle that there is such a person as Christ true God and true Man the true and perfect Saviour be firmely acknowledg'd and so the whole summe of Apostolicall Doctrine which is delivered in the Creed be received with universall assent DOCT. IX The same further asserted FOr as reprobates and hypocrites do not hinder Churches from being truely such by their being members of them so likewise those dissentions in the Churches which are raised either by wicked men or amonst the godly themselves through the weaknesse of the flesh or ignorance are not sufficient to abolish them which is attested by the Apostle when speaking concerning the ministers of true Churches he saith that upon the same foundation some do build gold silver pretious stones but others wood stubble hay And in the Epistle to the Philippians Chap. 3. vers 15.16 having first explained the summe of Christian Doctrine and exhorted them all to prosist in the same he subjoines But if any thing ye be otherwise minded God shall reveal even this unto you Neverthelesse whereto we have already attained let us walke by the same rule let us mind the same thing For otherwise if where ever discords happen to arise touching Religion there are not to be acknowledged any true Churches then were not the Corinthians in the time of St. Paul the Church of Christ since not onely many schismes distracted them while one professed I am of Paul another I am of Cephas and a third I am of Apollo but also strange contests and controversies about Religion had fill'd them with feuds and animosities So also will it follow in Galatia for in those Churches soon after they had been excellently planted and constituted by St. Paul there crept in many seducers by whom divers heresies were sowed among them In a word it must be concluded from thence that there never were any either in the East or West that could be truely said to have been Churches because they were never free from contentions not onely raised between the Catholicks Hereticks which had degenerated from Catholicks but even among the holy Fathers themselves as Histories abundantly witnesse insomuch that the Christians by reason of those dissensions and sects us'd to be derided and mocked by the unbelieving gentiles upon their Theaters as we have experience of the like usage at this day from the Turks and Iews upon the same cause But as in the primitive Church it did not follow from those disagreements of the Christians that they were not therefore the people of God so neither can it with equity be otherwise reputed of us but that we have reason to affirme the contrary to be thence deducible it being the property of the good wheat viz. of the Gospel by which the Churches are gathered to Christ that where that is sowne the enemie Satan should soon after scatter his tares in the same field Neither indeed were the champions of darknesse as Simon Menander Ebio Cerinthus Valentinian and other the like plagues heard of any where more or sooner then in the Church that upon the first preaching of the Gospel of Christ Besides that the Church at present in the world could not truely be termed the Church Militant had it not enemies both within and without wherewith perpetually to encounter DOCT. X. That the peace of the Church is not to be disturbed or schismes raised upon every difference in doctrine or ceremonies MOreover we do not approve that any man should make a separation from his own Church or disturb the peace of the Churches and infringe brotherly love much lesse that one Church should condemne another for every difference in doctrine or ceremonies where the foundation is retained as heretofore Victor Bishop of Rome when he went about to excommunicate the Churches
pay your life for your refusall DOCT. XVII That whoso hath departed from the Romane Church hath not thereby broken the unity of the Church and forsaken the body of Christ FOrasmuch therefore as we are accused of Apostacy from the Catholick Apostolick Church of Christ and censur'd to have broken the unity thereof in regard we refuse to communicate any longer with the assemblies of the Romane Church in their wicked superstitions and Idolatrous worship but choose rather to follow the old doctrine worship and discipline revived through divine mercy by the servants of Christ we protest before God and his Angels and the whole Church to the end of the world that they do a high injury not to us alone but even to the holy Ghost and all the primitive Church since we have neither done not do any thing in this particular whereunto we have not been commanded by the holy Ghost and taught by the Fathers and likewise inform'd of by the Popish Doctors themselves DOCT XVIII The same confirmed FOr our Lord giveth particular advertisement a 1 Cor. 5.11 2 Cor. 6.14 c. Tit. 3.10 Rom. 16.17 that weeschew communion with idolaters and obstinate apostates and hereticks in their idolatries and heresies b C. 24. q. 1. c. 24 and 26. and q. 3. c. 9. Nor have the Fathers taught otherwise as they are produced for witnesses hereof even in the Decree it self then that if not onely any man but any Church do reject the faith and retain not the principles of Apostolicall Religion preached by the Apostles nor persist in the doctrine of Christ it is to be deserted And it is certain C. 24. q. 1. c. 9. the Roman Church which flourished in the dayes of the ancient Fathers was then extolled so much by them and stiled the holy Church and the Mother of the Churches for no other cause then for that it held stedfastly the doctrine received from the Apostles when most part of the rest had departed from it But in these dayes what doctrine and worship they professe and how much they have in many particulars degenerated is sufficiently known Wherefore we again protest that we have separated from the present Roman Church onely upon inducement from the word of God and in obedience to the command of God therein and in that respect deemed it necessary to depart from the idolatries of this most corrupted Roman Church that we might no longer continue in apostacy from the Catholick and Apostolick Church but at length return into her bosome DOCT. XIX That we have not absolutely departed from the Roman Church but onely in some particulars FOr we have not forsaken the Roman Church generally and in all regards but onely in those things wherein she is fallen from the Apostolick Church and from her self the ancient and pure Church Nor have we departed from her with any other mind then of returning to her and renewing communion in her assemblies in case she would reforme and resume her former purity Which that it may at length come to passe we pray unto the Lord Iesus with our whole souls For what can be more desireable by every pious man then that where we were born again by Baptisme there also to live unto the last so it be in the Lord I Hierome Zanchie with my whole family do declare this to the whole Church of Christ to all eternitie DOCT. XX. That the whole Catholick Church is not suffer'd to fall into errour but that all particular Churches may erre BUt we believe and acknowledge that this Catholick Church which we have described above is so governed by the Spirit of Christ that he will never suffer all of it to erre at the same time because he alwayes preserves the light of truth in some pious persons and by their ministry keepes it pure to the end of the world and propagates it to succeeding ages Whereunto we do not doubt to apply that of St. Paul 1 Tim. 3.15 that the Church is the pillar and ground of the truth because there is no truth out of the Church but it is constantly preserved in it seeing there is alwayes some assembly found great or small in which the word of truth is preached But we conceive the matter is farre otherwise in the case of particular Churches which are alwayes mixt of good and bad For first in these assemblies either the pure word of God is preached or errours are taught with it But where there is no ministery of the word at all there we acknowledge no Church If therefore false tenets be preached together with the truth how can it be affirmed that such assemblie cannot erre when it erres manifestly But if the pure word of God be taught yet the hypocriticall reprobates who believe not doe alwaies erre seeing they reject the light of truth and walk in darknesse and of such there is almost ever the greatest number in all places Neverthelesse the godly although they are never suffered by Christ so to erre as to persevere in errour and perish Mat 24.14 since Christ saith the Elect cannot be seduced even by the miracles and wonders of Antichrist namely to the end unto destruction yet they may erre both severally and many together and that not only in point of manners but also in the doctrine of faith as is apparently evidenced by the holy and Ecclesiasticall histories and what hath hapned even to the godly and religious Bishops and to their Churches in the East and West DOCT. XXI The confirmation of the precedent assertion St. Peter indeed erred at Antioch and sundry persons in the Church of Corinth and very many in those of Galatia being seduced by false Apostles fell into hainous errours although they were not long after reclaimed from their errours by the Apostle Gal. 2.11 c. 1 Cor. 11 c. Gal. 1.6 c. Psal 119.176 David also teacheth that even the sheep of Christ may erre when he saith I have gone astray like a lost sheep And why is the ministry of the word in the Church necessary for all the faithfull if they are not lyable to errour Therefore since all even godly men have often erred severally and do frequently erre in some particular Church and that true and pure too and that hypocrites never have the gift of true faith by which to understand that which is right with what reason can it be said of any particular Church that it is impossible for it to erre And with much lesse can it be affirmed of those which are estranged from the truth and in which lies and the Spirit of iniquitie and grosse darknesse do prevaile Certainly they that are so qualifi'd cannot be the true Churches of Christ if the Church be the pillar and ground of truth Wherefore we conclude 1. Tim. 3.15 that every particular flock and all the severall sheep thereof are so farre incapable of erring as being lead by the holy Spirit they give eare onely to