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A48358 Holy characters containing a miscelany of theolocicall [sic] discovrses that is theology, positiue, scholasticall, polemicall, and morall built upon the foundation of scriptures, traditions, councils, fathers, divided into two books / written by George Leybvrn ... Leyburn, George, 1593-1677. 1662 (1662) Wing L1938; ESTC R18553 388,184 688

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wherof is the spirituall treasure laid vp in the Churches spirituall Treasurie and by her supream Pastour dispensed The end for which God ordained the mistery of the Incarnation was not to remit sin only but the pain of it also wherfore Christ did not giue the great price of his suffering's for sin alone but likewise for the paine corresponding thereunto in consequence of which t' is necessary that (b) According to the definition of Pope Leo the tenth that condemned Luther the Church of God possesses a spirituall Treasure of Indulgences consisting of the aboundant satisfactions of Christ and the blessed Saincts and this catholick assertion is set down in the Councils of Constance ses 8. and of Trent ses 21. c. 9. where Indulgence are named Celestiall Treasure likewise this latter Council declares that Christ hath giuen to his Church Indulgences and power to grant them when the price or satisfaction is abundant and exceedeth the greatness of the debt contracted something of it remaine vnexhausted and vnapplyed but the satisfaction of Christ was so aboundant that in respect of the infinite dignity thereof it was sufficient enough to redeeme the sins of all men joynt and seperate if it had been applyed * 1. Cor. 5. Christus mortuus pro omnibus 1. Jo. 2. ipse Christus est propitiatio pro peccatis nostris c. for Christ died for all 1. Cor. 5. and was a full propitiation for our sins and not for our sins only but also for the sins of the whole world 1. Io. 2. Wherfore something of Christ's satisfaction still remain's to shew in Ages to come the exceeding riches of his suffering's which are the spirituall Treasure reserued in the Treasury of his holy spouse the Church to the benefit of her and her children and truly the aboundant goods that a louing Husband purchaseth he leaues to the vse of his wife and children in consequence whereof Christ bath left all his aboundant and vndisposed riches of his aboundant satisfaction to the Church * Legatione pro Christo fungimur inquit Apostolus Paulus and the dispensation thereof to the supream Minister for him on earth Although all Christ's sufferings considered as merits precisely * Luc. 4. Nonne bac oportuit Christū pati sic intrare in regnum suum Et Philip. 2. humiliauit semetipsum vsque ad mertē mortem autem Crucis propter quod Deus exaltauit illum de●it ill● 〈◊〉 quod est super ●mne nomen were rewarded in the glory of his body (c) According to the holy scripture Philip. 2. Christ humbled himselfe and became obedient vnto death euen the death of the cross wherfore God exalted him and gaue him a name aboue euery name and the exaltation of his holy name neuertheless they did not receiue a full reward therby for as concerning the body's glory of necessity it doth accompany the blessedness of the soul which by naturall consequence is deriued into it if no hindrance interuene wherfore since Christ did not merit the glory of his soul that had full enjoyment of the beatificall vision in the first moment of it's assumption the glory of his body cannot be the reward of his merits neither could the exaltation of his name exhaust all his merit's since one action of Christ alone was sufficient to deserue both the exaltation and the glory of his body wherby is plainly euident that many meritorious actions exercised by Christ are laid vp in the spirituall Treasury of the Church Howeuer though it were granted that the glory of Christ's body and the exaltation of his name did equall all his actions joynt and seperate considered as meritorious to a full reward yet it cannot be said shat his satisfactory actions are exhausted therby For satisfaction is only ordained to remit temporall paine due vnto sin which was inconsistent with Christ's impeccability and sithence all the sins of the world were not sufficient enough to exhaust his satisfactions they containing an intrinsecall infinity of worth and dignity for as much as they were the products (d) The infinit prize of Christ satisfaction proceeded from the infinite dignity of his diuine person that was intrinsecally annex'd vnto it for as S. Thomas teacheth actiones sunt suppositorum But if there were an infinite vnworthines or deformity in the sinnes of all men ioynt and seperat t is extrinsicall onely because it comes meerly of the object which is extrinsicall namely God whom a sinner offendes in consequence whereof the infinite valour or worthiness of Christ's satisfaction far exceeds the vnworthiness of sin taken in it's whole possible latitude of his diuine person doubtlesse some part of these satisfactions doe remain still in the Churches Treasury to be dispensed for the benefit of the faithfull vnto remission of temporall paines due to their sins which was the sole end and motiue of all his actions considered as satisfactory because it is proper to satisfaction only to remit temporall punishment's due to sins Neither is it inconuenient that one and the same action exercised by Christ should haue somthing of merit and somthing of satisfaction for by his bitter passion he merited the exaltation of his name and the glory of his body Luk 24. Philip 2. yet other scripture-testimonies plainly declare that he suffered for us and satisfyed for our sins 2. Cor. 4 and indeed euident experience sheweth different effects to proceede from one and the same indiuiduall cause for doubtless he that charitably prayeth for his enemies by one and the same prayer may obtaine somthing of aduantage in order to them and something of reward in order to himselfe as appeareth by the promises which God hath made to such as loue their enemies and wheras the sufferings of the blessed Saints (e) A good worke is counted meritorious for as much as it proceed's from a man inuested with sanctifying grace which is the ground of merit howeuer a meritorious work is satisfactory also when it is perform'd with pain and labour had something of merit and something of satisfaction for they were meritorious in as much as they proceeded from them through sanctifying grace which is the root and prime cause of good merits and in as much as the exercise therof was laborious and painefnll they were satisfactory it followeth clearly that though God hath rewarded them with blessedness * Deus praemiat vltra dignitatem euen beyond what they did merit and consequently all their merits are fully exhausted yet because remission of temporall pain due to sin is the reward of satisfaction painfull suffering as satisfactory had no full reward in the persons of sundry blessed Saint's and therfore remained vnrewarded and vnexhausted in order to them For (f) The Council of Trent defineth that the Virgin Mary neuer committed mortall or veniall sin example the Mother of God had not the least guilt of sinne yet * Et tuam ipsius inquit S. Lucas
will free himselfe of his bondage at his pleasure As a ship that hath lost her helme cannot sail whether and as her self would but is caryed whether and as the wind will euen so a sinner that is depriued of the helme of grace cannot doe the good things which he should but the euill which he should not and as ship of it self can descend but not ascend so a man by the power of his own free will can fali into But cannot rise from sin The works of nature (c) God said by the mouth of his Prophet Ose cap. 13. Perdition is thine O Israel onely in me is thine help whereby is clearly euidenced that the euils which happen come of our own procurement in regard of the sinnes we commit which do not proceed from God who cannot be the author of euil as it is an euil worke though according to the Prophet Amos cap. 3. he is cause of punishment due to sin which is called malum poena But God punisheth in order to amendement in this life and Iustice after death so that those which amend their life need not feare the diuine iustice after death can cast him down but the works of grace only can raise him vp again that he is a seruant of sin and freed of iustice is his own free act but that he is freed of sin and a seruant vnto iustice is the work of grace through IESUS-CHRIST and indeed if the works of nature were sufficient enough to raise vp a sinner vnto iustification of life Christ had dyed * Ga. 2. so per legem iustitia ergo Christus gratis mortuus vnde Aug. infert contra Pelagi Si per naturā tustitia ergo Christus graits moriuus ergo scandalum crucis euacuatum est without cause Furthermore besides this bondage there be sundry other euil things which the deuil hath made of sin for he that sinneth speakes * Jsa 5. va vobis qui dicitis malū bonum bonum malum ponentes tenebras lumē lumen tenebras ponētes amarum in dulce dulce in amarū good of euill and euil of good puts darknes for light and light for darknes puts bitter for sweet and sweet for bitter goes far from the springs of liue waters and dyes in the waters of vnclean delights that is to say a sinner preferreth wickednes to godlines ignorance to knowledg vice to vertue and death to life for as much as he forsaketh God his creator without whom nothing can be lightened sweetened sanctified quickened know therefore says the holy Prophet Ieremy cap. 2. and Behold ô sinner that it is an euil thing and bitter that thou hast for saken God thy lord which is an infinit treasure of good things The deuil makes a couenant with euery man that sinneth which is like the league * 1. Reg. 11 Naas interpretatur serpens significat diabolum of Naas the Amonite 1. Reg. 11. on condition that he may thrust out his right eye that is his obedience to God and his loue to spirituall things which is a very ill agreement in regard it spoileth him of knowledg grace and glory a chess player by one negligent remouall or touch of his men a miss often times loseth the whole game and the whol gaine too euen so one sin destroyeth much good Eccles 9. for euen When a iust man turneth away from his iustice and committeth iniquity all his iustice that be bath done shall not be remembered but in his transgression that he hath committed and in his sin that be bath sinned in them shall be dye Ezech. 8. That is when a sinner does not cast away from him his wickednes wherby he hath taken the couenant of the deuil and turne to God with a new heart and a new spirit but die in the bitternes of his soul he shall lose all the fruit of his good works together with the glory of Heauen Neither are these all the euill things that the deuill hath made of sin for the burdens which he layes on the shoulders of him that sinneth mortally are most beauy and grieuous and albeit that for the present they seem sweet and light yet afterwards they press him down as he that in water drawes a log of wood feels not the full waight therof till he come to land so the burden of a sinner is not felt in the waters of fleshly delights and the pleasures of this life but when he shall goe out of them that is when he shall depart out of the world he will find the (d) S Iohn Apoca. 8. faith that the waters destroy many that is worldly delights which after death are made bitter water in which he delighted as bitter as wormwood and the load that sin laid on his neck so heauy that it will suppress him suddenly for as lightening descends from Heauen in the turne of an eye so a sinner will fall down into hell in * Job 21. in puncto descendune ad inferos Ex Luc. 10. videbam Satanam sicut fulgur de calo cadentem a trice which is the place of diuine execution in punishment of transgressions As earthly kings haue faire lodgings for the entertaining of the good people and dark prisons for the punishing of malefactours so the king of glory that is exalted aboue all Princes of the earth hath goodly pallaces for delighting such as do well which is Heauen and dungeons of vtter darknes for tormenting of those that doe euill which is hell where the wicked experience in bitter suffering the power of him whose mercy in bountifull gifts they haue despiced as he that walketh in iustice and shutteth his eyes from seeing euill shall dwell on high with God in full enjoyment of all good things so he that deuiateth from the waies of godlines and delighteth in the pathe of iniquity when the number of his life is cut of (e) The Prophet Isaias cap. 33. expressing the punishments which the wicked endure after their death speaketh to sinners thus Who among yee can endure to dvvell vvith the deuouring fire vvho among yee vvith euerlasting burnings Wherfore S. Gregory saith that the death of the wicked is an euerlasting death shall dwell below with the deuil in deuouring fire and euerlasting burnings which is a death without dying and sorrow without ending for death there is alwayes * S. Gregor●●it miseris ●●ors sine ●●●rte begining and sorrow neuer ending in reguard the deuouring fire is for euer burning and no deliuerance from hell which is a laborynth in the mids of the earth though easely entred into yet affordes no guid or thread to direct out againe and the windings and turnings therof minister nothing of pleasure for brimstone is scattered in euery walke * Job 14. vndique terrebunt eum formidines and trouble anguish feares together with dispaire and horrible confusion be on euery side hope of blessednes being rooted out of this dwelling yet
autem contritio actus voluntatis non appetitus sensitiui a bitter griese and detestation that a penitent sinner voluntarily conceiues to the punishing of his sin as an offence against God together with a full purpose to confess satisfy and neuer to sin again As the innate heat of new wine put into a close vessel makes to boile the whole substance therof and thereby purgeth out the dregs so the fire of contrition kindled in a penitent soul makes it seeth in teares of bitter sorrow * Psal 50. cor cōtritum humiliatum Deus nō despiciet proinde peccator eliciens contritionem perfectam Deo reconciliatur wherby the filth and vncleanesse of sin together with the ill affection inclining thereto purge away As the heate of the sun doth disperse the black clouds which obstruct its brightnesse so the warmeness of a contrite heart dissipates sins which are the dark clouds obstructing the light therof But there (a) Loue that proceed's from the motiue of charity precisely is perfect and called Amor amicitrae the loue of friendship which imports remission of sinns Loue that comes of the motiue of Gods iustice or feare of him is named Amor benevolentiae loue of good will which is imperfect An example of remission of sinnes by perfect loue or perfect contrition which includes perfect loue without the Sacrament or penance is set down Deut. 4. Jf thou seek our lord God thou shalt finde him if thou seeks him vvithall thine heart and vvith all thy soul be two kinds of contrition the one perfect in as much as a penitent sinner grieueth for and detesteth his sin in regard precisely that he loueth God with all his heart that is maketh Gods own goodness the chief motiue of his loue and in respect therof preferreth him before all earthly enjoyments The other is imperfect and by vsage of speech named Attrition proceeding from a motiue far inferiour to that of a full loue to God For example a sinner conceiueth an act of imperfect contrition or attrition when he grieueth to haue sinned and purposeth amendmēt in regard meerly of the deformity of sin which is it's formall essēce or feare of eternall fire which is the proper effect therof if mortall Perfect contrition was of absolute necessity vnto remission of sins in all times before the establishment of the new law No man euen in the old law did finde God that did not seek him with all his heart and with full tribulation of his soul Deut. 8. which imports perfect contrition notwihstanding the Sacraments and sacrifices thereof they being poor beggerly elements and no effectuall instruments of grace and life Yet in the new law of Christ which is not a law of bondage but of grace not of beggery but of plenty and consequently abounding with sauing priuiledges and prerogatiues aboue the other by diuine dispensation attrition (b) The Council of Trent fess 14. declar's that imperfect contrition called attrition though it be grounded in the feare of Hell or in a serious reflexion on the deformity of sin neuertheless if it exclude an affection to sinning is Donum Dei a gift of God and a motion of the holy Ghost And notwithstanding faith the Council that attrition of it selfe cannot bring a sinner vnto iustification of life howeuer in the Sacrament of Penance it disposeth him thereto Whereby euidently appears that attrition is not the same disposition seperate from that it is ioynt vnto the Sacrament in consequence of which the meaning of the Council is that seeing it is a remote disposition vnto iustification without sacramentall penance ioynt thereto is made an immediate disposition that of necessity procures iustifying grace that of it self is not sufficient enough to bring a sinner vnto iustification of life ioyned to and supported by the Sacrament of penance is an effectuall expedient for the obtaining it and indeed Christians vnder the new law were in a worse condition then the Israëlits vnder the old law if beside perfect contrition God should exact of them as a necessary requisit to remission of sins Confession since he required of the Israëlites perfect contrition only Deut. 4. Wherfore that the trouble implyed in confession of sins might be compensed by taking away the absolute necessity of hearing the other burthen implyed in perfect Contrition Christ hath so instituted the Sacrament of penance in his new law that as water which albeit according to its own naturall propriety hath nothing of heate yet made hot with fire can produce heate so Attrition which though in order to it 's owne vertue is no effectuall instrument of grace to the quickning a dead soul howeuer together with the help of the Sacrament can deliuer out of the lawes of death and restore it to newnesse of life Again if perfect Contrition were of absolute necessity penance ought not to lay claime * Poenitētia est Sacramētum mortuorum nam id ad quod est primo per se institutum est prima gratia sanctificans seu hominem baptizatum in peccata laepsum reconciliare Ita docet Trid. sess 14. can 1. to the Title of Sacramentum mortuorum that is Christ did not institute it for an effectuall help of such (c) The chiefe effect of sacramentall penance is to reconeile vnto God such as haue sinned after their baptism and because mortall sin is the death of the soul sacramentall penance that is specially instituted to confer the first sanctifying grace vnto remitting of deadly offences is called Sacramentum mortuorum a Sacrament of the dead as are dead in sin because it would presuppose allwayes the remission therof perfect Contrition including a full loue of God which is inconsistent with deadly sin and therby would plainly follow that the sacramentall Absolution of a Priest were a meer declaration of sins remitted afore In consequence of which sacramentall penance should not produce the effect which it signifyes to wit remission of sins which is contrary to the nature (d) It is an Article of catholick faith that the Sacraments of the new law produce sanctifying grace ex opere operato that is by the efficacy of their working after the manner of naturall causes which employe their whole actiuity while they worke so that the Sacrament of penance produces ex opere operato a greater or lesser measure of grace according to the greater or lesser dispositions of those which receiue it As to the form of speaking ex opere operato taken in the passiue signification it is ancient Pope Innocentius the third vsed it and the catholick Church in the Council of Trent receiu'd it which makes it a matter of faith of the Sacraments of the new law they being by vertue of their institution practicall Rites or signes for the effecting of sanctifying grace which indeed they signifie and to say that perfect contrition includeth a desire of the Sacrament of penance hath nothing of weight with it to weaken this
knowledg of his own infirmity left of his great pride detested the wickedness that he had committed in the holy Temple of Ierusalem and prayed also vnto God neuerthelesse found no mercy vnto iustification of life because his repentance proceeded from naturall * S. Thomas ●it actum poenitentiae quem exercuit Antiochus fuisse ex motiue purè natutali motiues precisely For he did not cast away from him the thoughts of sins in regard they were offences to God but in respect they were punishments to himselfe In like manner Esau found no place to penance though he sought with teares Heb. 12. because he did not weepe for his sins wherby he had offended God but for the loss of his father Isaacks blessing that by a diuine ordinance was annexed to his Birth right which he had sold afore for one portion of meate Besid's his heart was full of enuy and malice againsT his brother Iacob whose death he had threatned Gen. 27. A sinner that will finde place to penance and blessing to inheritance ought to behold his wayes * Vide vias tuas in con●alle scito quid feceri● Jerem. 2. in the valley of humility and know what he hath done call to his rememberance the dayes of his life that are passed thinke * Heb. 10. borrendum est incidere in manus Domini viuentis how terrible it is to fall into the hands of the liuing God consider how * Jerem. 2. scito vide quia malum est ●marum reliquisse Do●●inū Deum ●num euill a thing and bitter it is to forsake his Creatour and thereby in vertue of an humble and contrite heart to cast away from him the serpent in his bosome the poyson in his stomack the thiefe in his house that is deadly sin which keeps away from him wrongfully the place to penance and the blessing to the inheritance of Heauen CHAR. XIJ. OF CONFESSION THE CONTENTS T' is not enough that a sinner confess his sinnes to God with his heart vnless he tell them to a Priest with his mouth also that is the Minister of Christ to whom the word of reconciliation is committed Joa 20. As secret auricular so intire perfect confession and likewise the seale or obligation to keepe secret what in secret is sacramentally confessed lie claim to a diuine precept according to the practice of some primitiue Churches publick confession of publick sinnes were enioyn'd as satisfactory penances vnto humbling publick sinners the church of God haith laid aside publick confessions for iust reasons those hazard their foul's which defer sacramentall confession of their sinnes till grieuous sicknes seize on them Confession is an outward act of penance wherby a penitent sinner humbly accuseth himself of himself telling his own sins in the eare of a Priest in uested with power of iurisdiction to the end be may obtain full remission thereof in vertue of his absolution Christ when he instituted the Sacrament of penance Ioan. 20. wherein he conferred on his Apostles and their successors in priestly function authority to absolute from sins committed after baptism enioyned also sacramentall confession for by the words set down Io. 20. plainly appear's that Christ euen then instituted an inward tribunall in order to remission of sinnes and constituted Priest's the spirituall Iudges therin wherfore as in an outward Court of Iustice a person arraigned cannot be absolued or punished by a temporall Iudge legally vnless * Prouerb 12. qui iudic●t quod no●●t iudex est iustitiae he hath the hearing of his cause so a Priest to whom the keys of authority are giuen as to the opening or shutting the gates of Heauen cannot open to or shut against a sinner iuridically whose sins he hath no knowledg of (a) The Council of Trent fess 14. c. 6. 7. as likewise others more ancient namely Lateran sub Innocent 3. Constant c. haue defined the necessity of sacramentall confession as to mortall sinnes committed after baptism And indeed veniall sinnes importe no such necessity because the Sacrament of penance hath nothing of power to retaine them and consequently confession is of diuine right and an essentiall part of the Sacrament of penance neither matters it that Christ pardoned the sinnes of S. Mary Magdalen and others of whome he exacted no confession for he that searcheth the heart knoweth exactly the state and condition of the spirit albeit nothing be outwardy expressed Howeuer now the Sacrament of penance being instituted after the similitude of an outward Court of Iustice wherein the penitent supplieth the part of the person accused and the Priest of the Iudg in the room of Christ sacramentall confession is of absolute necessity for the remission of mortall sinnes committed after baptism (b) According to S. Austin l. 65. hom 49. c. 3. if to confess our sinnes to God priuately were sufficient vnto the remission of them without cause it is said whatsoeuer yee shall loose in Earth shall be loosed in Heauen c. and in vain the keyes are giuen to the Church of God and thereby as this great Doctour obserues we should frustrate the holy Euangell we should frustrate Christ's own words promising to our selues what he denyeth And according to S. Basil in regulis breuioribus interrog 288. there is a necessity of confession our sinnes to those which are dispensers of the misteries of God it is not enough that a sinner confesse his sins to God with his heart vnless he shall tell them also with his mouth vnto a Priest who is the Minister of Christ to whom is committed * S. Basil in Regulis breuioribus interrog 228. necessario inquit ijs peccata aperire debent quibus credita est dispensatio mysteriorum Dei qua habetur 1. Cor. 4. dispensation of the mysteries of God together with the word of reconciliation A penitent that out of the tribunall of Priests seek absolution from his sins deceiues himself for it is not said in vaine Whatsoeuer yee shall loose vpon earth shall be loosed in Heauen nor the keys of authority in order to the forgiuing of sin's are giuen in vaine to the Church of God which would proue a necessary consequence if the antecedent were granted For the Sacrament of penance which Christ instituted for the pardoning of sins would not be vsefull a●ot if sin's might be pardoned without it In the primitiue times two kind's of confession were in practice the one publick the other secret in reference to two kind's of offences the one openly the other in secret committed and the primitiue Bishops in their seuerall Dioceses respectiuely deputed certain speciall Priests for hearing the confessions of such (c) According to Orig. in hom 2. in psal 37. S. Cyprian l. de lapsis and Tertull l. de poenit c. 9. Confession of publick sinnes was publick in the primitiue Church and publick penitent's had a place in the Church a part from the rest of the faithfull whose sinnes
were not publick as attest Tertull. and S. Cyprian as had openly sinned to the disedifying of other belieuers whence they named them Penitentiaries and those so sinning Penitents and for distinction sake alotted them places in their Churches apart from the rest of their flocke yet now by vsage of speech the name of penitents is appropriated to all sinners joynt and seperat that confesse their sins to any Priest lawfully ordaind and approu'd Howeuer euen those publick offenders did confess their publick together with their secret offences vnto the penitentiary Priests secretly (d) Secret confession made to a Priest is no humane inuention but a diuine institution Concil Trid. fess 14. c. 6. and S. Chrysostom hom in Gen. de Lazaro names secret confession made to a Priest confession made to God himselfe because a Priest is Christ's Vicar or substitute and Iudge appointed by Christ vnto loosing and binding who is chief principall cause that work 's in euery Sacrament for example a Priest that ministereth Baptism though he truly baptizes neuertheless Christ specially is said to baptise according to the holy Euangelist Hic Christus est qui baptizat This is he Christ that baptiseth secret confession importing a diuine precept in order to both kinds of sins entire confession being an essentiall part of the Sacrament of penance and publick confession that was made in an open assembly was a meer iniunction as to satisfaction in flicted by the said Penitentiaries to whom power was giuen by their Bishops to impose publick confession of sundry publick sin's as in prudence they should thinke it expedient for the humbling of publick sinners and thereby vnto terrefying and edifying of others Yet in this and many ages before publick confession together with Penitentiary Priest's in order to the practice mentioned are laid aside * Socrater qui narrat factum nectarij ait eum tantum sustulisse quod Episcopi Ecclejiarū adiunxerant Canoni id est praecepto diuino confitendi propter haeresim Nouatianorum Nectarius Patriarch of Constantinople in respect of great inconueniences occasioned thereby annulled both they being Church additions only ioyned to the diuine precept of sacramentall confession and S. Chrysostome that succeeded Nectarius approued his proceeding therin iudging it vnreasonable and too heauy a burthen for sinners to confess vnto men t at might reproach them for their sins as be such as are no Priests and consequently such as are not concerned in the seal of sacramentall confession * Obligatio sigilli nascitur ex omni sola confessione Sacramentali id est quae suscipitur animo subȳciendi peccataclauibus Ecclesiae which is an obligation not to reueale what is confessed sacramentally the precept therof being of diuine right and whereas it includes a negation after the manner of meer negatiue precepts for example Thou shalt not commit adultery thou shalt not tell a lie which be binding without exception the seale of sacramentall confession ought not to be broke in any case whatsoeuer again as confession in secret in order to the Sacrament of penance hath it's institution and command from Christ and as the seale of sacramentall confession hath institution and command from Christ also (e) The necessity of whole and entire confession euidently appeares by sundry generall Councils Namely Latera cap. omnis v. riusque sexus Flor. in Decreto Eugenij Trident. fess 14. cap. 5. so integrity as to confessing of sins committed after baptism hath it's institution and command from Christ in order to a Christian that will confess vnto full remission therof in so much that sacramentall confession of necessity must be perfect entire and vndiuided in order to all mortall sins which occurre to a Penitent's memory after sufficient examination of his conscience for that thing is a necessary requisite to sacramentall confession which if it were omitted the Priests absolution would be in vaine and of no effect or purpose and a Priest's absolution is of no value without integrity of confession in order to all mortall sins which occur to a Penitents memory after a serious examination of his conscience not confessed afore because one mortall sin confessed apart from another mortall alike cannot be pardoned Wherefore it is not enough as to the integrity of sacramentall confession to confess wittingly one mortall sin vnconfessed afore sacramentally to one Priest and another mortall alike to another Priest but all mortall sins ioynt and seperate ought to be confessed to one and the same Priest together with the * Trident. sess 14. docet eas circumstantias in confessione explicandas esse quae speciem peccati mutant quibus verbis damnat nōnullos haereticos asserentes circumstantias peccatorum fuisse ab otiosis hominibus excogitatas circumstances that bring with them a new mortall malice to the making of a distinct sin for example it is not enough for a man that hath robbed a Church to confess that he hath committed theft because that circumstance import's a new and distinct sin integrity of sacramentall confession being inconsistent with voluntary omission of any one mortall sinne And for as much as a penitent cannot procure integrity of confession without * Eccles 18. ante indiciū interroga to ipsum in conspectu Domini inuenies propitiationem a due inspection ouer his conscience (f) S. Athanas in illud Euangelij profecti in-Pagum writeth thus 1. letus examine our selues whether our fetters be loos'd whereby he requires inspection into our consciences before we come to confession 2. in case saith he the cord's of sin that tye vs fast be not loos'd already we must deliuer our selues vp to the Disciples of JESUS that is we must confess our sinnes to a Priest for they are those that can loose our cords by the power which they haue receiu'd from our sauiour IESUS who said Whatsoeuer yee shall binde on Earth shall be bound in Heaven and vvhatsoeuer yee shall loose on Earth shall be loos'd in Heauen in consequence of which Priests haue power to absolue iuridically as true Iudges in the Sacrament of penance it is expedient for him to call to his remembrance the howers of his life that are passed especially since his last confession what businesses he hath managed what persons he hath haunted and what sins he is inclined to most As a prudent Physician that vndertak's the cure of a diseased body giues preparatiues to the loosening or stirring vp of ill humours that are cause of the disease before he applies soueraign physick to the purging of them away wherby the cure is done so a discreet penitent in the cure of a sick soul prepares his conscience by examination vnto the remouall of malignant humours of sins which are the cause of it's sickness before he applies the remedy * Aug. de poenitent confessio est salus animarum dissipatrix vitiorum expugnatrix daemonum quid plura obstruit os inferni paradiso portas aperi●
of sacramentall confession to purge out the leauen therof wherby he is cured For as a wounded body cannot be healed while the arrow that gaue the wound continues therin so neither a wounded soul can be cured whiles sin remaines that wounded it Wherfore as an impostume that breaks not outwardly causeth corporall death so sin's that stay within the soul * S. Aug qui inconfessus lates inconfessus condemnaberis vnconfessed cause eternall death Wherby euidently appears the greatness of the hazard that sinners run which (g) S. Cyprian l. de lapsis writeth thus Let euery man confess his sinnes while he is aliue while his confession may be accepted while his satisfaction and remission giuen by a Priest is gratefull in the sight of God defer confession of their sins till great sickness sieze on them and such be like vnto malefactors that confesse their wickednes at the gallowes when they can sin no more being depriued of further opportunity to sinne so that their sins do rather leaue them then they their sins Besides this kinde of slow-negligent penitents seldome confesse vnto iustification of life retaining for the most part an affection to their former transgressious in consequence of which they die in their wickednesse for loue to and remission of sin are inconsistent together Furthermore as a man that is afflicted with many grieuous wounds cannot performe any hard work so a penitent oppressed with many deadly sins togegether with violent sickness cannot * Psalm 14. dereliquit me virtus mea stand against the difficult assaultes of the deuill CHAR. XIIJ. OF SATISFACTION THE CONTENTS The integrity of sacramentall penance requireth sacramentall satisfaction the propriety wherof is to discharge the debt of temporall punishments which euen after the pardoning of sin as to the guilt thereof oft remaines behind vnsatisfyed satisfaction hath nothing of weight with it vnlesse the penitent that satisfyes be in state of grace God scourgeth euery son whom he receiueth neither holy scriptures nor ancient Fathers exhorte sinners to turne to God with inward penance only outward penance is required namely fasting praying Almes deeds and other painfull afflictions outward penance doth not preiudice the satisfaction of Christ from the merits whereof proceed's whatsoeuer it hath as conducing to heauenly blessedness SAtisfaction is a painfull and laborious exercise of some one or more outward good works namely fasting praying or giuing of Almes c. which a Penitent (a) Satisfaction consistes in the exercise of painfull works appointed and enjoyned by a Ghostly-Father in manner of commande and indeed if such works were required by way of counsell onely the Penitent might choose whether he would receiue the whole entire Sacrament of Penance or not being satisfaction pertaines to the integrity fhereof by command of his Ghostly-father * Satisfactio debet esse actus voluntarius nam qui inuitus poenanae sustinct dicitur potius satispati quam satisfacere voluntarily embraceth for the remitting of temporall paine due to his sins as offences against God together with full purpose to sin no more The prime propriety of satisfaction is to discharge the debt of temporall punishment which after pardon of sin in order to it 's mortall malice and eternall paine if the sin be mortall often times (b) The Council of Trent fess 6. cap. 14. declar's that satisfaction is one part of sacramentall penance enjoyn'd to the remitting of temporall paine which according to holy scriptures is not all waies taken away wholy together with the guilt of sin and the Council of Trent fess 14. cap. 8. expresly teacheth and cap. 12. defineth Sub Anathemate that often tymes God remitteth the guilt of sin vvithout foregiuing the temporall pain due thereto and vponthis catholick assertion is grounded christian faith in order to Indulgences and Purgatory the fire whereof purgeth away temporall pains due to sinnes afore remitted remaines behind vnpaid Although a penitent sinner by a perfect act of contrition or reall receiuing of the Sacrament of Penance finde grace again in the sight of his Creatour Neuertheless he is not alwaise deliuered from temporall afflictions For example God as soon as he saw Dauid's contrition and detestation of the adultery which he had committed with Bersebe and the Murther that the had exercised on Vrias her husband remitted the guilt of those sins and receiued him into fauour again yet notwithstanding his happy reconciliation he was left to endure many temporall calamities euen in order to the offences pardoned afore For afterward God raised euill against him in a great measure The child that was borne vnto him died the sword neuer departed from his own house sundry of his seed were violently slain and his people rebelled against him In like manner although Moyses and Aaron long before their death 's got remission of the guilt of their incredulity contracted * Num. 20. Moyses Aaron Deo contradicebant non loquentes ad Petram in conspectu filiorum Israel quod tamen Deus praeceperat illis at the waters of contradiction Num. 20. belieuing not God to sanctify them in the presence of the children of Israël (c) According to S. Anstin l. 16. con Faus Manich. c. 16. Moses and Aarons sin of incredulity was remitted them long afore their death yet in punishment of that very fault committed afore they were not suffered to conduct his people into the land of promise which was the thing they passionately coueted Again (d) S. Chrysostom hom 80. ad popul Antich discoursing vpon those words Math. 12. The men of Niniue did penance at the preaching of Ionas writes thus Euery where sack-cloath euery where Ashes euery where Teares and the king of Niniue himselfe left his Throne laid aside his Royall Robes put on a hair shirt and powdered his head with ashes whereby the Town was deliuered from destruction the people of Nineue at the preaching of Ionas the Prophet belieued in God Ionas 3. and turned vnto him in tribulation of soul wherby doubtless they procured pardon of their transgressions in order to the guilt therof Neuertheless they voluntarily afterward exercised works of satisfaction for they proclaimed a fast of three dayes put on sack cloath euen from the greatest to the least of them and turned from their euill wayes in bitternesse of sorrow Besid's S. Iohn Baptist Mat. 3. after he had seuerly reproached the Iewes to whom he preached saluation for their grieuous sinnes and exhorted them to penance he inferred vpon it thus do therfore fruits * S. Hier●● nymus in 2. Joells per fructus dignos poenitentiae intellig in ieiunium orationes eleemosynas id ganus alia worthy penance thereby distinguishing penance that is to say inward contrition and detestation of sins comitted from outward good works thence proceeding as obserueth S. Gregory hom 20. in Euangelia And indeed a sinner that is really penitent detesteth and abhorreth his sinnes and turneth to the
debt liable to satisfaction Neither doth this preiudice Christ's satisfaction for though in order to it 's own value and efficacy it is more then abundantly sufficient to ransome all sins whatsoeuer ioynt and seperate neuertheless it causeth remission only according to the disposition of the subject to which it is applyed after the similitude of naturall causes which how potent and actiue soeuer they are themselues yet the subjects on which they worke put bound's to their actiuity and efficacy in working wherfore as it doth not argue insufficiency in naturall causes though they doe not produce effect's proportionable to their efficacy through the indisposition of the subjects so neither doth it argue imperfection in Christ's satisfaction to the preiudice therof although sin's are remitted thereby as to their malice and eternall paine the temporall paine remaining vnremitted through remissnes of a penitent's contrition By the premises euidently appeares the extream weakness of modern sectaries that acknowledg inward penance only which is a detestation of sin together with a purpose of amendment (b) S. Cyprian l. de lapsis treating of Confession in order to secret sinnes mentions expresly satisfaction as a part of true penance Et confiteantur ait singuli delictum suum dum adhuc qui delinquit in saeculo est dum admitti confessio eius potest dum satisfactio remissio per Sacerdotem grata est apud Dominum and a litle after exhort's sinners to turne to God with their whole heart and to appease his wrath through fasting praying weeping and wailing and according to S. Ambrose trac ad Virginem lapsam cap. 8 if a sinner shall not be indulgent to himselfe God will shew him indulgence that is if he shall punish himselfe God will not punish him and reiect outward penance which is called satisfaction belicuing that God * Concil Trid. sess 6. can 30. si quis post acceptam iustificationis gratiā cuilibet peccatori poenitenti it a culpam remitti reatum aternae poenadeleri dixerit vt nullus remaneat reatus poenae temporalis exoluenda vel in hoc saeculo vel in futuro in purgatorio antequā ad regna caelorū aditus patere possit anathema sit doth neuer inflict temporall punishment's for sin's whose mortall malice and eternall paine due thereto is pardoned afore for the scripture-testimonies alledged doe plainly demonstrate the contrary Besides although the malice or deformity of sin be the sole cause of temporall paine neuertheless it is no formall or materiall cause it is but the efficient morall cause only which is not allwaies in being together with it's effect as clear experience teacheth in things physicall and morall and therfore no man ought to infer from the remission of the malice of sin the remission of all paine corresponding thereto Again albeit that remission of eternall paine be a greater thing and far more difficult then is the remission of temporall paine neuertheless that doth not of necessity infer this for an outward Court of Iustice often times doth spare a malefactours life that deserueth death enioyning him a penalty that is a lesser thing To forgiue a greater punishment is not to forgiue a lesser that hath noessentiall connection with the greater and indeed though eternall pain be inconsistent with the remission of the deformity and malice of mortall sin in as much as sanctifying grace wherby such remission is purchased doth constitute a sinner a child of God Heir of Heauen and coheir of Christ howeuer sanctity and temporall paine are not incompatible together God tooke to mercy again the children of Israel that had made them God's of gold which they adored being pacified by the prayer of Moyses for their Idolatry Exod. 32 (i) Exod. 32. Our lord therfore plagu'd the people for the fault in order to the calfe that Aaron had made Where the particles Therfore for the fault giue euidence that the sole reason which mou'd God to punish them again that is after the prayer of Moses had appeas'd him was the sin of Idolatry afore pardoned as to the guilt thereof neither does Caluin deny in his Comment on the same Chap. of Exod. but that the fault was remitted afore yet afterward he did visit that very sin vpon them with temporall punishment's as doth euidence the same Chapter To conclude all primitiue Fathers of the new lawe doe not exhorte Christians only to turne vnto God with inward contrition of heart * S. Cypria ser 5. de lapsi● Oportet inquit orare impensius rogare diemluctu transigere vigil●●s fletibus noctes ducere tempus omne lacrymosis lamentationibus óccupare but also with praying fasting mourning weeping Almes-deed's and other painfull afflictions Wherfore it is meer foolishness to belieue that God is pacified by inward penance which is detestation of sin and not by outward penance which is satisfaction for temporall paine due thereto together with reparation of the injury which God suffereth by sin Neither doth the saying of S. Paul Ephes 5. viz. No man euer ye hateth his own flesh but nourisheth and cherisheth it infirme this christian doctrine for the same Apostle 1. Cor. 9. confesseth that himself punished his flesh saying I beat down my body and bring it into subiection Though no man can hate his flesh out of hatred to his flesh precisely yet he may punish his flesh out of hatred to the many miseries the rebellion therof brings to the soul and indeed God * Apo. 3. ego quos amo arguo castigo chasteneth the flesh of as many as he loueth CHAR. XIV OF INDVLGENCES THE CONTENTS The Church of God inheriteth the aboundant satisfactions of Christ and his Saincts vnto remitting of temporall paines due to sinnes pardoned afore as to the guilt thereof which is the consistency of the Churches Indulgences or pardons the dispensing whereof is proper to the Church-gouernours which vse less or more moderation in the releasing of temporall punishment's according to tymes places and persons greater-penances and fewer pardons agreed with primitiue christians that carryed about the dying mortifications of their crucified Lord there is nothing of substantiall difference between ancient and modern Indulgences as those so these import remission of temporall pains not onely in the Ecclesiasticall before men but likewise in the diuine Court of Iustice in the sight of God sundry kinds of Indulgences set down The state of grace necessarily required vnto the gaining of them INdulgences are remission of temporall pain due to sins pardoned afore through the application of the (a) Pope Clement the sixt Extra vnigenitus Tit. de poenit calleth the prize of Christ and the Saincts satisfaction 2 Treasure taken in spirituall signification after the similitude of a corporall Treasure laid vp and conseru'd for the common vses of a community or common wealth without being propriated to any particular person aboundant satisfactions of the blessed Saintes and Christ's specially the value and worth