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cause_n good_a grace_n work_n 7,426 5 6.4759 4 true
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ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A15508 Charity mistaken, with the want whereof, Catholickes are vniustly charged for affirming, as they do with grief, that Protestancy vnrepented destroies salvation. Knott, Edward, 1582-1656.; Matthew, Tobie, Sir, 1577-1655, attributed author.; Potter, Christopher, 1591-1646.; Potter, Christopher, 1591-1646. Want of charitie justly charged. 1630 (1630) STC 25774; ESTC S102197 54,556 140

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false hood and by exhorting men to imbrace the one and to auoid the other so farre off is she from demeriting by letting Protestants knowe that if they dye impenitent in that Religion they loose their soules THE CONCLVSION IN the meane time it is a most wofull case chat whilest they will be blaming vs for the want of Charity in condemning them there should be so few of them who haue so much compassion and Charity towards themselues as to flye from their extreame danger of eternall death And that such a world of worthy people being drawē vp by pride in the vnderstanding part of the minde and dragged downe by the disorderly affections of the will should be soe very glad to cast themselues away and that for euer Our Lord giue all men grace to feele in their very hearts what a huge misery it is to be in state of any mortall sinne but especially of this present Heresy which both is grieuous in it selfe and is besides a cōtinual noursery of other sins by meanes of those corrupt principles euen concerning life which vnder the false colours of purity piety Christian liberty the light of the ghospell it is wōt to infuse into the heart of man For when they teach men that there is no merit belonging to good worke though they be confest by vs to flowe but from the grace goodnes of Christ our Lord what courage do they giue men to be frequent and cheerefull in doing of good workes And what cause can they assigne why men should abstayne from sinne when they teach them that the best workes which are performed by the greatest Saints in the world are no better then sinnes and they in their owne nature mortall Nay when they teach men that the commaundements of God are not possibly to be kept by any man euen with the helpe of that diuine grace which hath been purchased and merited for vs by Christ our Lord and is communicated to the soules of his seruants by faith and loue what reason can they haue either to exhort men to keepe Gods Commandements or to reprooue them for infringing the same Yea yet further when they professe that men haue not so much as Free will to do any one good worke at all euen when they are first moued and assisted towards it by the good grace of God for without that grace all Catholicks professe that no man is able so much as to thinke one good thought in order to saluation with what sence can they encourage men to doe any thing which is good or with what iustice can they punish them for omitting the same since it hath no dependāce at all in the least degree vpō their own Free wil If therefore now at last they would giue me leaue I would beseech them to looke with steadfast eyes vpon the dangerous state wherein they are and besides to cōsider that our Lord is so highly good in himselfe and hath bene soe gracious to vs that he deserue to be adored and serued though all the world say nay And they are happy miseries which are indured in honour of such a Maiesty as his whose infinite power wisedome are as if they were but meere instruments of his infinite goodnes for the conueighing of graces downe to vs and the drawing of vs thereby vp to him The sinnes of this world and especially of Heresie and Schisme which are the very rootes and sources of millions of sinnes giue matter of sad meditation to the minde of those men who behold these things with a cleare sight yea and euen although by way of supposition there were no voluntary and malitious sinnes committed in the world yet were it misery inough for a man to liue out of the communion of the holy Catholicke Church with losse of time in doing good wherein such inestimable Treasures might be acquired For supposing that a man be a true member of that Church for as much as concernes his beliefe and that for as much concernes his life he be in state of grace there is no momēt of time wherein by the mercy of God which is euer both preuenting and cooperating with the will of man the same man may not procure increase of grace either by the doing of some one good deede or by the saying of some one good word or by the producing of some one good thought to the honour and glory of our Lord God Nor is there any weaknesse of body or want of learning or of other habilityes of the minde or any distresse in fortune which can clipp the wings that is to say the holy affections of the soule from soaring and struggling thus towards heauen Now for euery degree of new grace there is in correspondence a distinct degree of glory layd vp to be possessed in heauē This glory is a thing of such incomparable and soueraigne quality and excellency as that the Blessed Apostle sayth thereof That neither the eye hath seene 1. Cor. 2 nor the eare hath heard nor the heart hath comprehended any such thing as that A poore mans eye in this world might at ease discouer a million of times more greatnes and glory then euer the greatest and most glorious Monarch did enioy And yet a mans eye may be sayd scarce able to see any thing if it be compared with the infinitenes of those other things whereof we may haue newes by our eares For who can see so many things as the tongue of others can tell him of But yet neither can al that which we may euen heare hold any manner of proportion with those worlds of other things which by the faculties of our minde we may conceaue For when all is seene which can be shewed when all is heard which can be tould it remaines for vs to imagine other manner of things then all those and to multiply and frame by fancy vpon a minutes warning both innumerable more species and incomparably more excellent then those former were So that it is no meane expression for the Blessed Apostle to vse when he saith that the glory and ioy of heauen doth excell all that which can be seene or heard by the sense or which can euen be conceaued by the hart of man And yet meanes of high euen by this expression the Apostle himselfe dares not venture or presume to tell vs how great those ioyes are but only that other things are not so great as they And therby he may rather be accounted to deliuer what they are not then what they are This ioy and glory is so high and great and deepe as that one instant therof would incomparably exceede and out strip in true account all the sensuall ioy and glory which hath beene found and felt by all the mortall creatures of flesh and bloud put togeather from the begining of the world till the end thereof though all that glory and ioy could be cast and summed vp into one single act of glorying and enioying For