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A07763 Fovvre bookes, of the institution, vse and doctrine of the holy sacrament of the Eucharist in the old Church As likevvise, hovv, vvhen, and by what degrees the masse is brought in, in place thereof. By my Lord Philip of Mornai, Lord of Plessis-Marli; councellor to the King in his councell of estate, captaine of fiftie men at armes in the Kings paie, gouernour of his towne and castle of Samur, ouerseer of his house and crowne of Nauarre.; De l'institution, usage, et doctrine du sainct sacrement de l'Eucharistie, en l'eglise ancienne. English Mornay, Philippe de, seigneur du Plessis-Marly, 1549-1623.; R.S., l. 1600. 1600 (1600) STC 18142; ESTC S115135 928,225 532

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Trinity Of Idolatry for feare that we shold worship the Image for so goeth the case saith he that God doth not forbid onlie to worship Images but likewise to worship him in Images Of heresie also least that by such meanes wee should attribute to God a corporall and bodilie Masse or essentiall difference such as we may obserue to be giuen vnto him in these three figures and shapes And thus much be saide by the way of the pictures of the Trinitie And in another place S. Augustine sheweth the daunger generally of all Images in these wordes saying When men see them set in places appointed to honour in the resemblance which they haue with our members toucheth and striketh the spirites of the infirme and weake with some affection of praying and sacrificing vnto them especiallie at such time as the multitude is seene to runne and flocke thether August l 1. de consens Euang. c. 10. And in an other place speaking of such as deuised Epistles letters from Iesus Christ to S. Peter and S. Paule Can it bee sayeth hee because they had seene them pictured together And thus deserue they to bee mocked which haue sought Christ and his Apostles on painted wals and not in the holy scriptures Chrysostome vpon Genesis Chrysost in Gen. c. 31. ho. 57. mocketh at Labans Gods Wherefore saieth Laban vnto Iacob hast thou stolne away my God A deepe dotage And thy Gods sayeth hee are they such as that one may steale them from thee Again You know that when you were Gentiles you were turned aside vnto dumbe Idols euen you who speake see and heare vnto insensible thinges and is it possible that this thing should bee pardoned But and if in the Temples of Constantinople any such abuse had beene how had hee beene able to haue spoken these things and not to haue become ridiculous But yet sayeth hee to the ende that it might be known that these rules reached to the Images of the Christians We haue not to deale but with the Images of our Saintes for wee doe not inioy their presence by their bodilie Images but by the Images of their soules which wee haue in asmuch as that which they spake Litur Chrysost was the Image of their soules Now there is no cause why any shoulde obiect that in the Lithurgie attributed to him there is mention made of the Image of the Crucifixe for how can that be Chrysostomes seeing therein is prayer made eyther for Pope Nicholas the first neere hand 500. yeares after him or for Nicholas the Patriarke of Constantinople who was more then 700. yeares after likewise for the Emperour Alexius the first more then 700. yeares after for who cannot perceiue see that it was made 400. Hieronym in Esa c. 2. Idem in Iere. Idem in Danicl c. 3. yeares or thereabout after his death a long time also after the second Councell of Nice which established Images S. Ierome sayeth Man a liuing and reasonable creature doth worship copper and stone c. And againe This error hath ouertaken vs euen to place and put religion in riches And in another place notwithstanding that he entreat of the matter of the three children in the bote fierie furnace yet he giueth this generall rule The seruantes of God must not worshi●●e Images And vpon the 113. psalme hee dealeth no better with them then S. Augustine did before But amongst the rest of his Epistles there is one of the famous man ●piphanius Bb. of Salamine in Cipres writing vnto Iohn Patriarke of Ierusalem which S Ierome hath not disdained to translate by which it appeareth manifestlie vnto vs what opinion the Church had conceiued of Images euen vnto this time Epist Epipha ad Ioh. Hiero although as hetherto it neuer came in their mindes to worshippe them but onlie to haue them as remembrances As I was come sayeth hee into a village called Anablatha had espied as J went along a burning lampe and therewithall learned after some enquirie made that it was a Church I went in to pray and found at the entrance into the same a vaile hanging dyed and painted hauing the Image as it were of Christ or of some Saint for I doe not perfectlie call to mind of whome it was Then when I had seene this thing that in the church of Christ against the authoritie of the Scriptures was hung vp the image of a man I cut in pieces the vaile furthermore gaue counsell to the keepers of the place to burie some poor dead persō therin c. And now also I am to entreat you that you wold giue in charge by straight commandement that there be not any moe such vailes hung vp in the church of Christ as do stand against our religion for it is more seemlie to take away this disquieter of a tender and soft conscience being vnworthie of the church of Christ of the people which are committed vnto thee They labour themselues fall into a great pusle about this place some one way some an other way some disputing against Athanasius and indeed these are they that haue vndertaken the waight and burthē of the strife and contention others in most solemn and deep sort auouching that this Epistle was but lent him which notwithstāding is alleadged vnder his name in the famous Synod of Paris whereof we shall speake by by But whome may we better belieue then himselfe if he teach the same in his works Epiphanius tom ● cont haereses l. 3. In the second tome against heresies hee maketh a beade-roule of the traditions then obserued in the Church and our aduersaries would make vs belieue that images come in by Apostolike tradition but of images notwithstanding not one word What is there of more honor in the Church of Rome then the image of the holy virgine and yet you shall see what he saith euen of her selfe We vnderstand saith he that there are some which would bring her in for a God and which doe sacrifice vnto her Collyridem this was a certaine kind of tarte or cake and which assemble and come together in her name but this is a blasphemous worke contrarie to the preaching of the holy spirite a diuelish worke and the doctrine of the vncleane spirit And herein are accomplished the wordes of the holy Ghost Some shall depart from the faith giuing themselues to fables and the instructions of deuils c. And let it be then saith he that she be dead and buried admit that shee were taken vp or suppose that she abideth and liueth still let vs take out this lesson that we may not in any case honour the Saints further then is decent and becommeth but rather the maister of the Saintes our Lord. And let this errour broached by these seducers vanish and cease for Marie is no God let no man offer in her name for hee that doeth it destroyeth his owne soule c. Who will belieue that hee which spake these
but as monuments and remembrances in the nature of histories by the keeping out of Images so consequently and in the next course wee shall see how by little and little it was brought in by the carelesse negligence of their successors and vnder their receiuing and admitting of the same which Sathan deuised to be by a gentle kind of secrete creeping from priuate houses to publike houses from a prophane historicall vse to the abuse of worship adoration and that altogether vpon meere deuotion Chrysost invita S. Meletri Niceph. l. 12. c. 14. We reade of Meletius of Antiochia who died in the second Oecumenicall Councell that he left behind him such a desire in the people to haue him as that euerie man was willing to haue his picture vpon his walles vessell ringes c. This came partly of too much curiositie partly of the seeking of humaine comfort In as much also as there were celebrated and solemnely kept the yearely memorials of the most famous Martyrs as namely the Panegyricks in their praise and commendation the day of their martyrdome thereby to kindle the zeale of the Christians that they might bee the more constant in holding out after their example It was to be seene that in certaine temples histories containing such matter were painted the better to reuiue and keepe aliue what memorie might let slip and fall away As that of Martyr Barlaam in S. Basill Basilius in orat de Barlaam saying Better painted vpon the wall then described in his oration and speech and that of Theodorus in Gregorius Nissenus saying Where the Mason hath polished the stone as if it had beene siluer and where the painter hath not spared any thing of his arte c. And lastly the histories of the old and new testament vpon the walles of the temple of Nola which Pontius Paulinus about the yeare 430. caused to be painted for to keepe occupied with the consideration of those tablets those that came to the feast which was made in the honour of S. Felix the Martyr who otherwise as saith Trithemius suffered themselues to be carried away and wholly giuen to their wine and good cheare But how farre off is all this from worshipping and adoring of them There is one onely place alleadged against vs vnder the name of Saint Basill wherewith they go about to dazell the eyes of the world I honour saith hee the images of the Apostles and I honour them publiquely for they haue left vs the same by tradition and therefore it is not to be gainsaid or forbidden and thereupon also we erect and set vp in all our Churches their memorialles and histories But vpon their owne consciences let them speake if euer they haue found any such word in all S. Basill his workes and in deed what likelihood is there thereof that he should at the same time call that an Apostolicall tradition which Epiphanius holdeth to be a Diuelish inuention And further how can this word Adoration stand and agree with his time which was heard but little spoken of for many ages after yea in the most idolatrous and which is as yet to this daye dissembled and caried onely vnder hand Concil Nic. 2. And in deede this is onely the allegation of Pope Adrian the first writing to the Empresse Irene from the second Councell of Nice 400. yeares after S. Basill his time and when as the power and heat of Images did most furiously rage Now Images were scarse any sooner receiued into the Churches Temples The beginning of the worshipping of images then that the people which had lately left and cast off their paganisme thinking to haue found in those of the Apostles and Saints that which they had lost in their images of their owne Gods began at their pleasure to yeeld them the very same honor And this abuse was spread and propagated in diuers places diuersly according to the ignorance or capacitie negligence or diligence of the Bishops but still so as that it gayned in all mens sight great and large countries at that time when barbarousnesse had ouerrunned the whole Romaine Empire by the inuasion of such infinite multitudes of fierce and barbarouse nations and that in such sort as that being once admitted and receiued there was not any meanes left to cast them out againe the most part of the Bishops thinking they had done sufficient seruice in letting the worshipping of them But how much more prouident were they that had vtterly cast them out And how much more wisely had they dealt if they had taken heed to S. Augustine his admonition August in psal 113. That they are more mighty to deceiue soules in as much as they haue eyes then to reforme and amend them in as much as these their eies see not at all Therefore Serenus Bishop of Marseillis in the time of S. Gregorie Oppositions withstandings of the worshipping of Images about the yeare 600. was offended that his people did worship them he is moued with a holy zeale according to the example of king Ezechias and breaketh them Alphonsus of Castres reckoneth him amongst the heretickes for doing so Bellarmin notwithstanding saith that he did him iniurie therein Gregor l. 7. Epist 109. But what saith the foresaid Pope Gregorie vnto him notwithstanding that for the most part he was the father of all the superstitions wherewith the Church was corrupted It hath beene giuen vs to vnderstand that your brotherhood seeing certain adorations of images hath broken cast thē out And certainly we haue commended your zeale in that you would not suffer that any of all the thinges that are wrought by the hand of man should be worshipped Ne quid manufactum Gregor l. 9. Ep. 9. but therewithall likewise we iudge that you ought not to haue broken them which thing he speaketh of more at large in an Epistle to Serenus And addeth afterward It is one thing to adore a picture another to conceiue and apprehend by the picture that which is to be worshipped for the picture is for idiots that which is written for them which can reade Hee did not not then acknowledge them for any other thing then remembrances and stories and thereby doubtlesse in great daunger to haue beene condemned of heresie if he had beene at Trent And in the end to hold the mid way he saith It is needfull and requisite that thou shouldest call the children of the church that is those of thy diocesse and that thou let them see vnderstand by the testimony of the scripture that it is not lawfull to adore or worship any of the workes of mens hands because it is written Thou shalt worship the Lord thy God him onely shalt thou serue And that thou shouldest after this then signifie vnto them that thou wast offended with them for that they had abused themselues by adoring worshipping of such pictures as were not made but only to teach the histories
flesh Now therewithall be it known that it is of the same time which we reade in the Canons That he which hath not a wife may haue a concubine not bee put from the communion for hauing of the same And this course of life they did not iudge to be to liue in the flesh or to liue reproachable and worthy of rebuke c. against the expresse cōmandement of Christ Gentilitas Grounded vpon the Gentiles and heretikes But look a little with me I pray you to the spring fountain from whence their diuinitie floweth Let vs take away saith it this reproch which the Gentiles might iustly obiect against vs that is to say because that the Gentils as we haue said ordained and decreed in many places that their priests should be vnmaried Innocent who liued not long after in his Epistle vnto Exuperius Bb. of Tholosa vttereth the same vpon the same foundation pains wheras the other hath alleadged the example of the Gentiles this fellow hath made him a shield of all the places which the Gnosticks 1. Tim. 4. Montanists Marcionites Manichies did abuse against mariage that is of the doctrine of deuils of the spirits of error aforesaid by the Apostle But this law was not receiued and imbraced all at one time The proceeding of the executing thereof as may plainly be seen by the Prouinciall Councels that insued as being troubled with the renewing and further establishing of the same from time to time with the addition of some one article or other but by little and little by large distances of time betwixt point and point and in the reuolution of diuers ages the Popes continually gaining and incroaching sometime by the example of some one Prouince set against another and sometimes by the power of great Princes standing in need of their authoritie Tertullian had rough hewed the same in Africke by his writinges Conc. Carth. 2. c. 2. Then Syricius caused a councell to be held at Carthage where he caused this decree to be propounded by Faustine Bishop of Potentia in the Marquesdome of Ancona Whereupon it was pronounced That they which did handle the sacramentes should keepe themselues chaste and abstaine from their owne wiues as though chastitie were not properly so called in regard of mariage And that it might the smoothlier passe they adde To the end that we may obserue that which the Apostles haue taught which antiquity hath obserued But Gratian was ashamed of this reason therefore to couer this lie he added this word Exemplo that which they haue taught by their example his conscience accusing him and telling him that the worde which they had taught was contray thereunto Grat. D. 84 Cum in praeter D. 82. C. Plurimos Conc l. Carthag 5. c. 3. D. 84. C. Cum de quorundam Pelag. 28. c. de Svracus ibi Gratian. And their Glosse saith vpon the word Antiquity that this antiquity cannot be deriued or fetcht frō any elder time then the time of Synecius that is that it was a very new late thing For it is granted that this second Councell of Carthage was held in his time in the fift held within a while after vnder Pope Anastasius the Canon is renewed but in more mild termes grounded vpon the former decrees or such as were meerly their owne for there are diuers readings of the matter not vpon the Apostles But Pope Pelagius about the yeare 550. doth tell vs more boldly the intent scope of this decree in the cause of a Bb. of Siracuse in Sicily as namely that The principall cause shold be to auoid the spending of the goods of ecclesiasticall persons in the maintaining aduancing of their wife children or kins folke c. Where Gratian addeth And therefore such authoritie doth not let but that a man which shal be chosen Bb. may take a wife and haue children it being pronided that he take very good heed as did this Bb. of Siracuse that hee do not lauishly spend and consame them And whereas none can be chosen but such a one as is either priest or Deacon Leo. 1. D. 31. in ep ad episc Maurit Hilar. they may lawfully take vpon them the maried estate Leo the first saith Let them not put away their wiues but let them abstain from them Again he commandeth the Bbs. of Mauritania to depriue of their charges such as haue had many wiues And Hilarius the second would haue them depriued who had maried widowes or any other then maids and yet amidst all these inhibitions we see that mariage continued In a word Sidon Apollinar in ep ad Aquil. Euag l. 1. c. 15. that great and worthy person Sidonius Apollinaris Bishop of Auernia was maried and had children after he was Bishop And Synesius Platonicus refused to be Bb. of Damascus if he might not be suffered to lie with his lawfull wife Protesting openly affirming that he would pray oftentimes vnto God to giue him children and it was granted him And at this time that is about the yeare 600. Olympiodorus writ Olympiod in Eccleslast 3. cap. There is a time when wee may keepe company with our wiues to auoid the temptations of the enemie●● and there is a time when we are not to come neere them as when we are to powre out our praiers before God Let vs peruse and ouerlooke the Prouinces and countries abroad The resistances made against the receruing of this Decree In Fraunce to see and obserue the difficulties which did euery where breake out when the execution of this writte and Decree should bee put in practise In Fraunce wee see it renewed after some importunitie vsed in procuring and furthering of the same in the councels of Agatha Aurange Aruernia Orleance Tours Mascon Auxerre c. And yet it is certaine that the first Councell of Tours did mittigate the punishment contenting it selfe not to promote to any higher degree those which were maried after they had taken orders And by the second Councell of Tours held vnder king Cherebert Concil 2. C. 13 14.2 c. c. almost 160. yeares after the decree it appeareth that the Bbs Priests Deacons were as yet maried and that their wiues were called Women bishops women priestes and women Deacons which liued with thē only they were forbidden to lie with thē and were punished when they were taken doing otherwise The same appeareth by the councel of Auxerre held after the yeare 600. Concil Altisiod c. 21.22 by which it was forbidden to sleepe in the same bed with them and to mingle themselues in sinne as also their wiues to marrie againe a hard commission to the Archpriestes to watch betwixt the husband and the wife We haue said that Sidonius Apollinaris Bishop of Auernia was married Soluian Epise Massi● l. ● de prouid Dei and had children being a Bishop But let vs heare Saluian the Bishop of
we are onely made acquainted with so much as Saint Ierome maketh mention of It is manifest likewise that the Church of Fraunce did not allow of this superstition in as much as that French Bishoppe of whome Saint Ierome speaketh vnto Ripacius a holy and reuerent man did hold the opinion of Vigilantius according to that which Ireneus saith That the French men and Germaines held and kept so fast what they had first receiued of the Apostolike faith as that they shutte their eares vnto whatsoeuer departed and swarued from the same Vigilantius saith by the report of Saint Ierome That wee must not worship or adore the Martyrs nor the deceased Saintes And who can denie that which hee saith of worship and adoration But for the honour due and of right to bee giuen in the remembring of the Martyrs and Saintes by the acknowledging of the giftes of God in them and the imitation of their constancie who is hee that would contend or striue against it But you say that in this honour inuocation is included which thing Vigilantius denyed Let them shew vs then in all this disputation how hot soeuer S. Ierome be any one word of the inuocation of saints or of Martyrs or any one proofe or allegation that he maketh for the same either out of the scriptures or the fathers the Councels or the Liturgies Greeke or Latine Howsoeuer notwithstanding the case so standeth as that he could not bee ignorant of that goodly Masse of S. Iames at Ierusalem if so be it were at that time for to haue proued thereby the intercession of the virgine Marie and of the Saintes For as concerning that which he saith If any man come to pray ad memorias Martyrum it is well knowne that that was for no other thing but to point the place where had beene accustomed for a long time the meetinges of the Christian assemblies to stirre vp thereby those which were present to the like constancie Origen was the first that said though doubtfully and ambiguously That the blessed soules do pray in the other world for the Church Vpon this stone men haue laboured by degrees to found and settle this inuocation Vigilantius doth take occasion by this foundation and denieth it adding that here we ought to pray one for another that there is not any place for this action elswhere S. Ierome striueth for this proposition of Origens as for an article of faith Vigilant gainsaith it as contrary vnto faith but of them passing beyond their bounds seeing that this proposition if a man stay there and go no further is indifferently to be borne with of the Church But S. Ierome gathereth therevpon this conclusion The Saintes pray vnto God in heauen for the Church therefore the Church here vppon earth must not onely pray vnto God but vnto the Saints also Superstition said But wherefore shal we not pray vnto them seeing that they pray for vs For is there not appearance that they ioyne their praiers vnto ours when we pray vnto them at their graues c. Vigilantius aunswereth No for they doe not meddle any more with humane affaires So far is it off that their soules should keepe about these graues Apocal. 14. S. Ierome thereupon cryeth out Wilt thou chaine vp the Apostles wilt thon make a law for God to keepe Do they not follow the lambe wheresoeuer he goeth c. But the question is not here of the power of God but of the nature which he hath giuen for a law to all thinges Tertullian had said vnto him That it was no good diuinitie Chrysost hom 20. in Mat. Idem de Lazat Diuite August de cu ra pro mort ●erend Idem de G. Virg c. 27. Hieronym in Epitaph Nepotian To reason from the power of God to his will or to the effect And S. Chrysosostome That the soules seperated from the bodies haue not their abode in these regions That the soules of the iust are in the hand of God And S. Augustine had proued it vnto him by scripture That they are not any more dealers in the thinges of this world That in the same place To follow the Lambe is to follow the footsteps of Christ Not saith he in respect that he is the Sonne of God by whom all things were made but the sonne of man who hath shewed vs in himselfe what we ought to doe But S. Ierome doth he say the same vnto vs that they of the Church of Rome say That they know all thinges in the seeing of God Then they reade in God that which is in our hearts in our thoughtes c. No but cleane contrarie In the Epitaph of Nepotian All whatsoeuer I can say to him seemeth to mee to be no more then a dumbe shew because that he heareth not Againe Let vs not wearie our selues with speaking to him with whom we cannot speake any more But he ceaseth not to vse his Rhetoricall figures his Apostrophes as the others do in the Epitaph of Paula whom he had so entirely loued and in his speech of the death of Blessilla wherein hee speaketh vnto them and causeth them to make answere the dead and deceased daughter to comfort her mournefull and sorrowing mother c. But in his Commentaries his choller and languishing mind is laid aside Idem in Ezech. l. 4. c. 14. tom 5 If we be to put our confidence in any let vs trust in the one only God For cursed is the man that putteth his confidence in man though they were Saintes yea and though they were Prophets We must not trust in Principibus ecclesiarum in those which are the chiefe and principall of the Churches who how vpright and righteous soeuer they be shall not deliuer any but their owne soules not so much as the soules of their owne children And to the end wee may not conceiue him to haue spoken of any but such as were liuing writing vpon the Epistle to the Galathians vpon these words Euerte man shal beare his owne burthen Idem in ep ad Galat. l. 2. c. 6. see what he saith vnto vs Wee learne though somewhat darklie by this little sentence a new doctrine which is hid and secrete that so long as wee are in this present world we may be helped by the praiers and counsels one of another but when as we shall be come before the iudgement seat of Christ neither Iob nor Daniel nor Noe can pray for any man but euerie one shall beare his owne burthen c. Which may seeme to bee a retractation of that which he had stifly maintained against Vigilantius For out of this text are gathered two propositions together Gra. C●in praesenti 13. q. 2. Hieronym de Assumpt Mariae virg tom 4 that is That the prayers of the liuing serue not to any vse for the dead neither the praiers of the dead for the liuing and this place is inserted into the Decree Of the virgine Mary likewise hee sayeth Thou hast
to be innocent and redeemed they frustrate and make of no value the redemption in them But saith he in another place Notwithstanding that the soule of the holy man do wander out of the way of righteousnes yet if it lay fast hold by faith on him which iustifieth the sinner and bewaile vncessantly the sinnes committed in the time of this faith by such his continual washings it retaineth and kepeth stil his righteousnes And of faith he hath these Maxims verie ordinarie and samiliar Idem in Ezec. l. 1. hom 9. 7. In Ezec. hom 19. In Euang. hom 29. l. 3 indict 12. Ep. 27. All the Saints before the comming of Christ were saued by faith let vs not put our confidence in our teares and mourning neither yet in our deedes but in the intercession of our Aduocate faith goeth before brotherly loue and charitie It must bee first preached and taught thereby to raise vs vp vnto good workes vertues bring vs not to beleeue but faith bringeth vs to a vertuous life True faith is that which saith it and harboreth not any conditions or manners contrarie vnto the same we hold fast the faith and therewithall wee exercise it in good workes What is all this but the same which we affirme and say That the iust man liueth by faith that his faith sheweth it selfe aliue by his workes In the same sence dooth also Cassiodorus Olympiodorus Orgelitanus and others of the same time verie often speake although not altogether so properly in certaine places The ages following hold of the night shut in Anno 700. The proceeding of the abuse and yet so as that there shined forth some little glimces of star light Then in stead of the teaching of one onely remission of sinnes in the onely bloud of Christ and that in such sort as that it was famous and reuerently receiued throughout al the time that the purer antiquitie continued Gregorie and Cassiodorus had begun to teach that sins were remitted and forgiuen by martyrdome almes deedes forgiuing of our brethren reclaiming of a sinner c. acknowledging notwithstanding that nothing of all this stood good otherwise then in faith but contrarily that it was continually euill and against true and liuely faith Such as followed after as Cesarius Adelhelmus and others doe reckon vnto vs twelue deedes which do iustifie vs Baptisme Charitie Almes-deedes Teares and lamentation confession affliction correction intercession of the Saints mercie the conuerting of a sinner the forgiuing of our brethren and the suffering of martyrdome But as for faith which is the onely and alone meanes they negligently cast it behinde them This was the remainder of Pelagius his opinion which as our aduersaries they thought that they had well and sufficiently qualified when they said That the first grace was of God the first remission and forgiuenesse of Baptisme and as for all the rest Anno. 800. we ought to seeke and search for it in our selues by our works Now the inuocating and praying vnto Saints iumping and falling in togither with the same about this time did fortifie and adde more force to the error And it is to be noted that as in the change of the winds we see the cloudes in doubtfull sort to wauer and as it were stagger before they resolue vpon and take the direct course before the winde euen so it fared with the ancient writing of those times Beda in Psal 24. 31. before that they wholy and altogither inclined vnto this corruption For Beda doth cleane and wholie cleare and free the whole matter Forgiue me my sinnes not for my merits but for thy goodnes sake for there is no merit that is a sufficient price or raunsome for eternall blessednesse there is nothing but the meere grace of God that bringeth saluation yea grace freely giuen no regarde had either to merit precedent or such as may after insue And by faith by the alone righteousnesse saith hee of faith Idem in Psa 77 Idem l. ● in Marc. c. 2. 4. Idem l. 1. in Luc. c. 1. 2. Idem l. 4. in Luc. c. 11. Idem in Ioh. c. 6. Albin l. 3. de Trinit c 1. 7 Idem in Psal 4 20. paenit in 7. In Ioh. l. 1. c. 1. Bed l. 3. in Iob. c. 1. Anno 900. Haimo in Ep. ad Rom. c. 1. 4. Impertiendo Idem in Ps 84. Idem in Ps 26 Idem in Mich. c. 6. Idem in Zach. c. 3. Idem in Cantic Cant. c. 4. Consortium Diuum Idem in Epist ad Rom. c. 10. Idem in Ep. ad Heb. c. 5. 9. Idem in Ep. ad Rom. c. 6. Adelbert in altercat Theophil in Ep. ad Tim. c. 1 Anselm in Ep. ad Rom. passim which onely healeth the inwarde man which onelie forgiueth sinnes which onelie saued them which liued in the time of Circumcision and that without their offerings and sacrifices and which alone adopteth vs the children of God c. which is the life of our soule yea which sheweth forth his life by good workes c. And Albinus writeth in like manner Wash mee O Lorde from the spottes of mine vnrighteousnesse by the gift of thy mercie I am verie able to pollute and defile my selfe but I haue no power to cleanse my selfe there is no man iustified in thy sight but by thy grace by thy mercie in the name of the Sauiour and not by his merits And this grace is distributed and giuen vnto vs by the meanes of faith in Iesus Christ c. and the same the gift of God c. Neither yet haue these famous men so written but that withall there haue escaped and slipped from them some places verie different and vnlike such was the contagion of the time as that we are iustified by humilitie patience virginitie c. Notwithstanding that they euermore ioyne faith therewithall Haimo Archbishop of Halberstat saith The righteousnesse of God that is to say the iustification by which hee iustifieth them that belieue in him is manifested in the Gospell when the Lord saith He that shal belieue be baptised shal be saued that is to say shall be righteous This is that righteousnesse by which all those that belieue are iustified by the gift of the Father of the Sonne and of the holy Ghost which is called the righteousnesse of God because that hee in making the faithfull partakers of the same maketh them righteous c. and it is called the righteousnesse of faith by which Abraham was iustified c. And Christ is the Author of this righteousnesse vnto vs For before the world was framed saith hee God decreed with his Sonne to saue mankind without any precedent merites for euen man was not as yet c. This Sonne which hath giuen remission of sinnes and all other benefites of his onely and meere mercie Which is vnto vs the foundation of all righteousnesse In whose onely bloud it resteth for vs to be saued in as much
Mathew S. Marke and S. Luke doe all of them make mention how our Lord tooke the bread blessed it gaue it to his disciples saying vnto them Take eate this is my bodie how commeth it that S. Iohn maketh no mention thereof in this place that is to say in the rehearsing of that which goeth before the passion of our Lord Verily saith he It is a testimonie that our Lord hath spoken of that point a great deale more largely elswhere and where then but in this sermon of Capernaum Chrysost in Mat. hom 83. And Chrysostome saith How came it to passe that his disciples were not much troubled when they heard this Namely these words This is my bodie c. Verily saith he Because he had handled the great and waightie points of this thing before hand he laboured not to confirme that which they did alreadie vnderstand c. And againe And he drurke saith he himselfe least the hearing these words should haue said what then Doe we drinke blood and eate we flesh c. For when he first spake of these things manie were offended onely for the wordes sake to the end therefore that this might not come to passe againe he first performed the action himselfe that so he might take away whatsoeuer might trouble their spirits or perplexe their mindes in the communicating of the misteries Whereby it appeareth that those excellent olde fathers haue referred the place of S. Iohn to the interpretation of the holy supper instituted afterward that is to say that the eating which is ordained in the vse of the sacrament in the holy supper is the same that without the sacrament is declared in that place If then it bee spirituall here let it bee so likewise there And therefore let vs heare what the fathers say vpon the same Tertullian Notwithstanding that he saith That the flesh profiteth nothing Tertul. de resurrect carn wee must gather the sence from the matter of that which is spoken For in as much as they accounted his speeches to be harsh and intollerable as if he had determined in deed to haue giuen them his flesh to eate to direct and bring the state of their saluation to the spirite hee did set downe aforehand It is the spirit that quickeneth Marke that he saith Verily which cannot be expounded and taken there for Visiblie but for Carnally c. Athanasius ●pon this place Whosoeuer shal haue spoken a word against the Son of man De peccat contr spirit whereunto by consequent we haue to oppose Spirituallie Athanasius The Lord disputing in S. Iohn of the eating of his bodie and seeing that many were offended said vnto them what will this bee then if you see the Sonne of man ascend and go where he was before c. It is the spirit which quickneth c. For be hath spoken there both of the one and the other of the flesh and of the spirit and hath distinguished the spirit from the flesh to the end that belieuing not in that onely which appeareth to the eyes but also in the inuisible nature wee may learne that those thinges which hee spake are not carnall but spirituall For to how many men should his bodie bee able to be sufficient meate that so it might bee the foode and nourishment of the whole worlde But to draw them from vnderst anding of him carnally he made mention of his ascention and to make them to vnderstand afterward that the flesh whereof he had spoken was a spirituall meate and heauenly food that he was to giue it them from aboue For the thinges saith he which I haue told you are spirit and life As if he said My bodie which is shewed and giuen for the world is giuen for meate to the ende that it may be giuen spiritually to euerie one and that it may become a defensatiue and preseruatiue to all in the resurrection vnto eternall life S. Augustine expounding these wordes August in psal 98. The wordes which I speake vnto you are spirit and life bringeth in our Lord expounding those of the holy Supper in these tearmes Vnderstand saith he spiritually that which J haue said You shal not eate this bodie which you see you shall not drinke that blood which they shall shed that shall crucifie mee I haue recommended vnto you a certaine Sacrament which spiritually vnderstood will quicken and make you aliue Idem tract 27. in Ioh. and if necessitie require that it be visiblie celebrated yet it must be vnderstood inuisiblie Againe What meaneth this saying They are spirite and life that wee may vnderstande them spirituallie they are spirite and life hast thou vnderstoode them carnally they are notwithstanding spirite and life but not to thee And spiritually that is to say figuratiuely mistically Carnally is as much as to say literally really For saith he Thou hast to obserue this rule Idem de doct Christ l. 3. c. 16 If in the scripture a word or phrase of speech doe for bid thee some vile and wicked thing or command thee some honest and good worke that then it is not figuratiue but if on the contrarie c. thou must then make account of it to be figuratiue If you eate not the flesh c. it may seeme to command a trespasse c. it must needes then be a figuratiue speech a phrase and manner of speech commanding vs to be partakers of the death and passion of our Lord Cyril Cateches mystag Idem in Leuit. l. 7. and sweetly and profitablie to call to our remembrance that his flesh was crucified and pearced through for vs. S. Cyril Bishop of Ierusalem If you eate not c. Not vnderstanding these things according to the spirit they went away offended supposing that he had inuited them to a banket of mans flesh Saint Cyrill Bishop of Alexandria If you eate not c. But if you bee the children of the Church and instructed in the mysteries of the Gospell If the word which is made flesh dwell in you c. know that the thinges which are written in diuine bookes are figures c. For there is also in the new Testament and Gospels the killing letter c. as he shall find that doth not spiritually apprehend the thinges that are there spoken c. and hee bringeth forth this place for an example Theoph. in Ioh. c. 6. Whereupon also Theophilact though he were of that time wherein transubstantiation was set vp saith vpon this place In as much as we vnderstand it spiritually wee are no prophane deuourers of flesh but rather we are sanctified by this meate Againe For that they vnderstood it carnally he saith vnto them That which I tell you must be vnderstood spiritually and that is the way to profite thereby But to expound and take them carnally that profiteth nothing but turneth into matter of grosse offence Therefore he addeth The words that I say are spirit that is to say spirituall and life that is