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A15857 H. Zanchius his confession of Christian religion Which novve at length being 70. yeares of age, he caused to bee published in the name of himselfe & his family. Englished in sense agreeable, and in words as answerable to his ovvne latine copie, as in so graue a mans worke is requisite: for the profite of all the vnlearneder sort, of English christians, that desire to know his iudgement in matters of faith.; De religione Christiana, fides. English Zanchi, Girolamo, 1516-1590. 1599 (1599) STC 26120; ESTC S120607 223,465 477

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holie ghost and so Iesus Christ our aduocate is to be prayed vnto and none other Psa 50.16 For of calling vppon God alone there bee expresse commaundements sith he alone is to bee serued and worshipped And of Christ being our mediatour and aduocate we lack not testimonies and examples in the Acts of the Apostles in their Epistles Deu. 10.12 Mat. 4.10 Col. 2.18 in the reuelation And as it is expresly forbidden vs to serue or worshipp any meere creature whatsoeuer it bee either in heauen or earth so also we are forbidden to praye vnto them And if whatsoeuer is not of faith is sinn Ioh. 1.6 much more then is that which is admitted against the cleare worde of God sith the verie heathen themselues thought none was to bee called vppon except he were thought a God And how shall they pray vnto him saith the Apostle in whome they haue not beleeued But that God alone and Iesus Christ are to be beleeued in the whole scripture and the whole catholicke church euen in the creede which is daily rehearsed do manifestly teach II. A christian man may sweare lawfully We also beleeue that a christian man may sweare Ier. 4.2 lawfully namely in trueth as the Prophet teacheth in iudgement in righteousnesse so that his oath be neither false nor rash nor vniust Neither is it condemned that one should take the name of the Lord but if he take it in vaine and for an vntrueth And among all nations since the beginning of the worlde an oath hath beene vsed when it maketh for the glorie of God and profite of our neighbour Yea it hath beene confirmed by the examples of god himselfe of Christ and of the Apostles being a parte of Gods worship to speake nothing of the perpetuall consent of the whole church Wherefore the doctrine of Christ in Matthew Mat. 5.35 Ia. 5.12 or of Iames in his Epistle cannot be repugnant vnto this For they spake against the abusing of oathes and ment to declare a true vnderstanding of the commaundement concerning an oathi III. We must not sweare but by God We beleeue when an oath is to bee taken that we ought to call vppon or take to witnes of our conscience no other besides God and therefore may not sweare but by him For God alone is the searcher of our hearts and he alone must haue his honour and worshipp that he may bee the witnesse and reuenger against our soules if we performe not that which by our oath we promise IV. Oathes which are iust and lawfully taken must be kept Hereuppon we confesse that for the honor of God whose name in our oathes is as it were laide to pleadge all oathes lawfully taken ought to be obserued as also the law commaundeth neither is the name of God to bee taken in vaine or in an vntrueth V. Oaths vpon vngodly and vniust matters such as be against the law of God ought not to bee made or being made ought not to be kept Againe sith wee ought to promise nothing that is vniust or vngodly namely contrarie to the law of God much lesse doe we iudge it lawful to be confirmed by oath or by taking the name of God yet if it be taken we affirme that such an oath vnlawfull in it selfe ought not to bee kept because in performing such an oath the sinne is doubled Mat. 14.7 as wee reade of Herode in the Euangelists VI. Oathes which cannot be kept vvithout breach of Gods law ought not to be kept though some such oathes are in themselus not vniust This also wee adde that all such oathes as cannot be kept without breach of gods commaundement C. 22. q. 4 though they are in themselues not vniust yet are not to bee kept And therefore for example sake they which by oath promise perpetuall single life which afterwards they cannot keepe without manifest breach of Gods law we iudge that such ought by no meanes to keep their oath VII Errors Wee disallowe therefore those which praye vnto idolls dead men things without life or do worship them Wee disallow also the Anabaptists which simplie condemne all oathes and affirme that no manner of oath is lawfull for a christian man as also those which call to witnesse to their soules others besids God lastly those which hold that their oathes which in themselues are vngodlie and cannot without great offence be performed yet that they are to be fully kept and obserued CHAP. XXIII Of Christs church in generall SIth it appeareth that the church of Christ which is his bodie doeth consist of those which are coupled vnto him by the bond of the holie ghost as members to their head and it is manifest that the gospell and sacraments with which as with instruments men are knitt vnto Christ are not administred but in the church and that all which are indued with a true faith in Christ with hope loue repentance and care to doe good works do pertaine vnto the church Therefore we thinke it a thing worth the labour to declare what our faith is concerning the church the rather because about this article chieflie there are so great controuersies And first of all of Christs church in generall so with the whole church it selfe doe we make confession of our faith and purpose afterwards to speake seuerally of the militant church and the things thereunto pertaining I. The article of faith concerning the church out of the Apostles creede We beleeue the holie catholick Church the communion of Saintes II. What we meane by the name of the church the description thereof By the name of Christs church we vnderstād a certen number and companie well knowne to God both of Angells and men not onely chosen and predestinated to haue a perpetual communion with Christ and among themselues and to serue the true God according to his will and commaundement and to loue among themselues mutually with a perpetuall and sincere loue but also of those which in their time shal be effectually and by the holie spirite called out of the number of others and ioyned to their head Christ and so truly made Saintes Which number was begonne from the first creation and gathered and continued in a perpetuall line band of the holy ghost and to be continued to the end of the world yea to all eternitie and partly alreadie triumphing in heauen with Christ and partly yet on earth warring with many enimies for Christ preaching and hearing the worde of the gospell ministring and receiuing the sacraments and taking care that the commaundements of Christs may be kept aswel publickly as priuately III. The church is a companie consisting of many For the Scriptures teach vs that the church is a companie consisting of manie as a bodie compact of many members calling the same the bodie of Christ distinguished into many mēbers and also a flock of sheepe Eph. 1.23 Ioh. 10.3 Heb. 11.10 and the kingdome of God and acitie consisting of many
according to the determinations of the fathers of elder times haue euer no lesse prosperously then faithfully defended the truth of christian religion and preserued the same soundly confirmed in the church To which purpose tend the wordes which they vse in their owne determinations We therefore euery vvhere following the determinations of the old fathers and their rule doe also determine the same c. Nothing then is more safe then that euery man keepe himselfe within these churches as in citties well fensed wherein the holy scriptures are expounded according to the analogie or rules of faith and according to the receiued expositions of the auncient fathers and consequently which hold the same faith that the Apostles did and all the auncient church I haue spoken of the first duety of a christian man which desireth to keep himselfe and his family safe from his enemies vnto euerlasting life namely that he must retire himselfe into the defensed citties of Christs kingdome and there constantly abide vntill that at the last all enemies being put to flight by the glorious comming of our king we may be safe and free in all places But without prouision of vitalls who can long maintaine his life our victual or sustenāce is the daily hearing reading and meditation of Gods word and the receiuing of the holy supper at appointed times For by both these wee are nourished streng thened and we liue that through Christ our life whome they offer and giue vnto vs. He which eateth this bread takē either by the word or by the sacraments shall neuer die In the Acts Christs disciples continued in the Apostles doctrine and in breaking of bread that is in their common loue-feastes in which the Lords supper vsed to be celebrated And such heauēly victuals are seeldome wāting in well defensed citties yet except thou eatest and drinkest and by that meanes preseruest thy life what good will it do thee to be in a defensed cittie Thou must therefore frequent sermons and receiue the sacraments and imploye thy selfe in reading the holy scriptures 3 It is very needefull also that continuall praiers both publike and priuate bee made vnto God wherein we must aske those things which the Lord Iesus hath commanded to be asked of his father namely al things which pertaine aswell to his glorie as to our owne and our neighbors saluation and that he would defend vs from all kinds of enemies and keep vs safe in the trueth In the day of tribulation shalt thou call vpon me saieth the Lord. And is not then chiefly the day of affliction when heresies do ouerspread and tyrants persecute the truth Then therefore chiefly is God to bee called vpon and that by faith And therefore the Apostle Paule saieth Pray ye vvithout ceasing and Christ Iesus yee must praye alvvaies and not bee vvearie And he that thus prayeth and prayeth by faith howe should he not obtaine wherefore God addeth by his Prophet And I vvill he are thee Aske and yee shall receiue said also the Lord Iesus Christ seeke and yee shall finde knocke and it shall bee opened vnto you 4 But how can it be that men should there liue happily and the cittie be preserued where the cittizens among themselues keep no friendship therefore brotherly loue peace and concord must bee kept then which nothing is sweeter nothing more pleasing to God and nothing can be more profitable for preseruation of the church as contrariewise there is no thing by which churches and all societies are sooner brought to ruine then enuie then hatred then grudgings then enmities then dissentions then domesticall fallinges out Doubtlesse there is no faith where charity hath not place sith true faith as the Apostle witnesseth worketh by charitie And brotherly loue hath euer bin a marke of true christians Christ himselfe saying By this shall men know that yee are my disciples if yee haue loue one vvith another This do the Acts of the Apostles teach vs where Luke saith of the faithfull they had one minde and one heart namely in the Lord. And Tertullian reporteth in Apolog. cap. 39. that the Romanes were wont to say of the christians marke hovv they loue one another For by this brotherly loue as by the true badge of christian religion they would haue christians discerned from them that were no christians 5 Further more how necessary the care of health is to all the cittizens liuing in such a citty to defend them and theirs and so the whole cittie against the enemies was said a little before By this spirituall health I meane a good conscience which as it springeth from faith so also it preserueth faith that it cannot quite decay euē as the life of the body bringeth forth health and health preserueth the body in life Euerie one therefore must be carefull that he keepe a good cōscience But by what meanes is it kept 1. after a due sorrow by a sure trust of the free forgiuenes of our sinnes which we haue committed through Christ Next by a true amendment of life that is an earnest studie of auoiding sinnes afterward and keeping the commandements of god lastly by a firme purpose if by infirmitie we do fal to rise againe and to flie vnto Christ for pardon By this meanes shall wee alwaies hold fast a good conscience He that in this sort constantly looketh vnto his health let him assuredly know that the Lord will neuer suffer him that he shall die at all that is that hee shall euer erre and goe astray vnto his last ende in that doctrine which is necessary to his saluation For the Apostle saith to Timothie keepe faith and a good conscience which while some haue cast aside they haue made shipwrack concerning faith that is the doctrine of faith They therefore which keepe fast a good conscience shall neuer make a deadly shipwrack of the doctrine necessary to saluation Seing God by his grace indueth them as with the treasure of a good conscience so also with a perseuerance in the faith and with a heauenly gift of doctrine The safest thing therefore both at all times and especially in this diuersitie of religions is by cōtinuing in the churches where the pure word of God is preached and the assured foundations of the faith according to the expositions of the fathers are retained to imploye our selues in hearing the word of God and receiuing the sacraments to call vpon God to haue friendship with our brethren and to keep a good conscience to our selues 6 But vnto all these things how necessarie watchfulnesse is who vnlesse he bee vtterly vnskilfull in all things knowes not where there is nothing at all to be feared as in heauen there is also no need of watchfulnesse but they may and they ought to liue in great securitie But where there want no theeues robbers intrappers flatterers couseners traytors enemies and where all things are full of trecheries there howe pernicious and daungerous securitie and retchlesnesse is who is he that knoweth not
the vnthankfull Now what was I able to performe either better acceptable to you or more beseeming your pietie vertue and nobility thē that I should dedicate vnto your name this little booke wherein in as much breuitie and perspicuitie as I could I haue comprehended a summe of our whole christian doctrine For what kinde of man each one is and what manner of study knowledge and religion each one professeth such kinde of works are vsed and indeed ought to bee dedicated and commended to him So Luke did write the Acts to his both in deed and in name Theophylus So Caelius Lactantius his christian institutions to the most christian emperour Constantine So Ambrose his godly bookes of faith and of the holy spirit to that religious emperour Gratian. So lastly to stay no longer in a matter euident all wise men haue chosen such patrons for their bookes as were the bookes that the title of the bookes might be answerable to their profession to whome they were dedicated Wherefore sith I could in no sort better recompence your deserts towards me then by dedication of this booke I desire and beseech you to receiue with your curteous acceptation this howe small a present soeuer perpetuall testimonie of my loue towards you and that your selfe would still continue in that kindnes which you shew to me And for my children T. Cornelius Ludowike Hierome Robert Lael Constantia Anna Lydia Violanthes with their most louing mother and my deare wife in the Lord R. Liuia I most hartely desire they may especially after my death be commended to your good fauour Thus for mine owne part my noble Lord I pray that your yeares may bee as manie as mine are whereby you may still bee a benefactor both to yours and my friends as also to our churches as hitherto you haue beene but so I wish that you may reach to my yeares and beyond without those discommodities which are wont to accompany crooked old age and in respect wherof he that said it is a good thing to bee old added thereunto but not to bee twise old for old age commeth not alone For euen to liue being old is wont to be a heauie burden to old men so that they must rather meditate on death and on the graue then on life whereof the very name in greeke doth put vs in minde For the worde signifying an old man in that tongue importeth as much as one that looketh on the ground But seing both to liue of it selfe is the great blessing of God and may be to the profite of others and also those very discommodities of life which follow old age are profitable to the spirite in godlie men for these causes to pray for the long life of some godly man is no euill prayer but very good although old age can not want some inconueniences The God almightie therefore vouchsafe to preserue your Hon. in sound health and a good and long life for the profite of many to his good pleasure Health and wisedome are two good blessings in mans life At Ne●stade Cal. April 1585. CHAP. I. Of the holy scriptures the foundation of all christian religion I. Concerning god and matters pertaining to Religion hovv vve must simply beleeue in God alone TOuching God and such diuine matters as pertaine to the kingdome of Christ Ambr. epist 31. and our saluation wee hold that wee can be instructed better or more certainly of none other then of God himselfe vvho can neither deceiue nor be deceiued No man hath seene God at any time Ioh. 1.18 The sonne vvhich is in the bosome of his father he hath shewed him vnto vs. II. God himselfe speaketh in the vvrightings of the Prophets and Apostles But we know that God though he hath not meanly or obscurely manifested the knowledge of himselfe and his euerlasting power and deitie to all men in the world by such works as are done by him so that as many as haue not glorified him as god are made inexcusable yet in a more peculiar forte he hath reuealed himselfe and his will to his Church very plainely perspicuously namely by Prophets and Apostles inspired by his grace and by their writinges and therefore these writings of the Prophets and Apostles to be the verie true word of God III. The Prophets and Apostles wrightings to be only Canonicall Now we doubt not but these writings of the Prophets and Apostles are those which the Church of god hath beene accustomed to call by the name of Canonicall bookes because knowing these bookes assuredly to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 inspired from aboue 2. Tim. 3.16 she alwaies acknowledged them onely for the Canon or rule of all christian pietie by which euerie controuersie in religion ought to be auoided and calling likewise the other books though they be contained in the volume of the holie Bible by the name of Apocryphi because she could not be assured they came so from the holy Ghost as those of the former kinde IIII. VVhich be Canonicall bookes and vvhich Apocryphi We therfore Con. Laod. Can. 59. with the whole Church both before since the comming of Christ without al doubt doe acknowledge and embrace these bookes of the old Testament for the verie certaine word of God Fiue bookes of Moses Of Iehousuah one Of Iudges one Of Ruth one Of Samuell two Of the Kinges two Paralip two Of Esdras the two former Of Hester nine chapters And three first verses of the tenth chapters Iob The Psalmes The Prouerbes Ecclesiastes Canticum canticorum Esaie Ieremie with the Lamentations Ezechiell Daniell the twelue former chapters excepting the song of the three children The twelue smale Prophets These other vve receiue for not Canonicall Iudith Tobias Of Esdras the third and fourth Daniell chap. 13. and 14 The songe of the three children which is annexed to the third chapter Wisedome of Solomon Wisedome of Iesus the sonne of Zirach in latin called Ecclesiasticus Baruch Epistle of Ieremie Of Hester the rest from the third verse of the tenth chapter Of the Macchabees both the bookes These of the old Testament Of the new Testament we except none for although there be some books of them wherof some haue doubted yet afterward they were acknowledged yea euen for apostolicall no lesse then the other to which iudgement we also doe subscribe Of the former kinde The gospells after Matthew Marke Luke Iohn Acts of the Apostles Epistles of Paule The first of Peter The first of Iohn Of the latter sorte The epistle to the Hebrues The epistle of Iames The last of Peter The 2. and 3. of Iohn The epistle of Iude The Reuelation For although they which were neuer doubted of may seeme to beate a greater authority then the rest which haue bin doubted of yet wee as well to the one sorte as the other doe giue vndoubted credit as to the assured word of god and to the Apocryphi contained in the volume of the Bible doe we yeeld the chiefe
citizens and such other like names IV. The church consisteth onely of the elect alreadie incorporate into Christ Now that these many of whome the church consisteth are none but elect already ingrafted into Christ and indued with Christs holinesse the same scriptures do plentifully teach both in other places chieflie to the Ephesians where the Apostle speaking of the church and the members thereof saieth Eph. 1 VVe are all chosen in Christ and haue redemption in him and are sealed vvith the holy spirite of promise That Christ is giuen to bee the head of the church and the church is his body It is therefore such a bodie whereof all the members are ioyned by the same spirite both to the head Christ among themselues and are quickned or haue life from the head and are indued with his holinesse so that this whole body is truely holy and called the holie church V. The holy Angells are not excluded from the bodie of the church Neither from this bodie of Christ which is the holie church doe we exclude the Angells both because the Apostle speaking plainely of the church comprehendeth the Angells therin and also because they with vs are likewise gathered into our bodie Heb. 12.22 Eph. 1.10 Col. 2.10 Apo. 229 vnder one and the same head Christ and Christ is expresly called of the Apostle the head of the Angells yea and also because they call themselues our fellovve seruants and haue the saine father with vs and serue the same God and we all of vs shall bee for euer together in the same citie the heauēly Ierusalem lastly they are also Saintes and the church is the communion of all Saints VI. The reprobate hypocrites though they are in the church yet they are not of the church So wee rightly beleeue and confesse that the reprobate hypocrites though they dwell in the church and liue among the Saints yet they are not of the church nor members of the church when they are not truely ioyned to the head Christ nor indued with his spirite and consequently not truely Saints As the Apostle Iohn saieth 1. Ioh. 2.19 of certaine hypocrites they are gone out from vs as filth from the bodie but they were not of vs. For if they had beene of vs they had continued with vs. They therefore are not of the church which at last doe fall from Christ and keepe not that perpetuall communion with Christ and with all his Saints howsoeuer great and rare men they seeme in the church for a time yea and hold the gouernment ouer the christian common wealth and rule ouer the whole church For they are members of Sathan not of Christ whosoeuer haue the spirite not of Christ but of Antichrist VII That there euer vvas and is one onely church of Christ And wee confesse that there euer was and is one onely church of Christ Eph. 4.4.5.6 because there euer was is one onely bodie to which Christ was giuen of the father to bee the head one onely spirite by which all the members are knitt vnto the bodie onely one God to the seruing of whome and glorifying for euer we are all chosen and called one onely faith of al the faithfull beleeuers one saluation lastly one heauenly inheritance of all To which purpose also Christ euer called the church one one flock wherfore we make that church which hath beene since the first creation and before the cōming of Christ no other but the same that it is nowe and shal bee to the ende of the worlde but wee call it one of all times of all places and all persons ioyned with Christ consequently one cōmunion of al the Saints from which they that make an vtter seuering and departure we are persuaded by the holie scriptures that they belong not to this bodie VIII Of the christian church there is one onely head Iesus Christ Hereuppon we are strengthened in this beleefe that sith there is one onely church of Christ which is his bodie there euer was and is yet therefore one onely head of it by this name head we meane him which was giuen of God euen from the worlds beginning to that ende that he might be made of the same nature with it that he might redeeme it that he might ioyne it to himselfe that he might quicken it that he might deck it with the glory of his wisedome that he might kindle it with the fire of heauenlie loue that hee might effectuallie moue it to all good affections and good workes that he might euermore gouerne it keepe it For that this is the proper duetie of the head towards the whole bodie besides dailie experience in nature we learne also out of the holy scripturs But who could perform hath and wil performe this to the church we acknowledge none other besids Christ Iesus meane while not denying but there may bee one head of all hypocrites which are in the church and so of the hypocriticall church sith the Prophets foretold it should be so and the Apostles confirmed the same Eph. 1.22 4.15 5.23 Col. 1.18 But that there is one onely heade Iesus Christ of the holie church we beleeue and confesse with the holie Apostles IX This church is truely holie Whereupon it followeth this church therfore to be truely holie because it hath a head that is most holie maketh it holie because no sinnes are imputed vnto it because from him it draweth the spirite of sanctification and because whatsoeuer holinesse is in the head that is wholy imputed to euerie member X. It is also truely catholicke We also confesse it to be truely catholicke that is vniuersall because the head thereof is also catholicke and euerlasting at all times euen from the foundation of the world to the ende thereof ioyning vnto himselfe members out of all places from all kindes of men and all nations and gouerning and preseruing them to himselfe for eternall blessednesse XI This one church is partly in heauen triumphant and partly on earth militant But wee acknowledge that this church though it is and euer was one yet it is so distinct that one part is triumphant in heauen with Christ alreadie raised from death and sitting at the right hand of the father another part on earth fighting still with flesh blood with the world and the deuill Whereuppon ariseth that vsuall distinction among all the godlie writers of the church of the triumphant and militant church CHAP. XXIV Of the militant church ALbeit by this which wee haue confessed of the church in general euery one may easilie perceiue what we beleeue particularly of the militant church yet that our faith may more clearely plainly be known wee haue purposed to declare our opinion of this church seuerally partly referring that which was spoken of the whole in a briefe rehearsal to this and partly adioyning the properties of this peouliarly I. A description of the militant church Wee therefore beleeue Eph. 1.4
first the pure doctrine of the gospell is preached heard and allowed of and that so allowed of that there is no place nor hearing for the contrary Ioh. 10.4.5 For these both are properties of the flocke or sheepe of Christ namely to heare the voyce of their shepheard and to reiect the straungers voyce in those also where the Sacraments instituted of Christ as much as in them lieth are lawfully 1. Cor. 11.20 that is according to Christs owne institution administred and receiued and so where other Sacraments deuised by men are not allowed of in those lastlie where the discipline of Christ taketh place that is where a care is taken through loue that both priuately and publickely Mat. 18.19 Tit. 1.8 by admonitions corrections and when need requireth by excommunications the commandements of Christ may bee obserued and so that men may liue soberly iustly and godlie to the glorie of God edification of their neighbours For wheresoeuer vngodlinesse and all loosenesse of life is in publike practise and open offences are not reprooued according to the discipline of Christ there we beleeue that it is possble that manie good and godlie men may be but we beleeue this is not a godlie christian congregation the Lord himself saying Ioh. 13.35 in this men shall know that yee are my disciples if yee loue one another but what loue can there be where no care is taken that according to Christs doctrine brethren which offend may be corrected may repent may be gained vnto the Lord and saued VI. By vvhat manner of succession of Byshops it may be shewed that some church is Apostolicall So we acknowledge that from a perpetuall succession of byshops in some church I say not any manner of succession but such a one as hath had ioyned also vnto it a continuance of the Apostles doctrine it maye rightly bee shewed that that church is Apostolicall such a one as was once the church of Rome the succession of the byshops thereof euen to the time of Ireneus Tertullian Cyprian and some other So that they were wont not without reason to appeale vnto it and cite before it and such other of the fathers the heritickes of their times But indeed as we do acknowledge and confesse with Tertullian and other of the fathers that those churches are to be acknowledged to be truely Apostolicall in which the Apostles doctrine with the discipline of Christ and lawfull administration of the Sacraments is kept pure though the same haue not beene planted by the Apostles nor haue had a perpetuall succession of byshops euen from the Apostles time So againe the churches which were planted and watered by the Apostles although they can shewe a succession of Byshops continuall and without interruption yet if with the succession of byshops they can not also shewe a continuance of the doctrine of Christ and his Apostles we wil graunt that they haue bin christian and Apostolical churches but now we cannot acknowledge them for such For as the hood as the Prouerb saith makes not the monke but his godly and holy life so neither do byshops but the doctrine of Christ and christian religion make the church of Christ VII Not by any manner of consent but by consent in Christs doctrine some churches may be shewed to be true and christian churches For thus wee knowe that it can neuer bee prooued that wheresoeuer there is a full agreement among themselues there are the true churches of God sith both in the Iewish sinagogues and in the turkish congregations and long since in the conuenticles of the Arrians and Donatists there hath euer bene an especiall agreement but wee hold it may bee prooued onely by that consent which is in the pure doctrine of Christ and in true pietie For where the Apostle saieth 1. Cor. 1.10 I beseech you brethren by the name of our Lord Iesus Christ that yee all speake one thing and that there bee no dissentions among yee but be yee knitt together in one minde and in one iudgement hee meaneth in that Lord Iesus Christ by whose name he intreated them VIII The churches bee not taken away by euery dissention that ariseth in them But by the waye we are not so vniust to denie those to bee christian churches wherein there is not alwaies a full consent and agreement of all things For as euerie agreement doth not make a church so euerie dissention doth not dissolue the same so long as the foūdation which is Christ true God and true mā the true and perfect Sauiour be kept sound firme and so long as there is a full agreement in the summe of the Apostles doctrine which is deliuered in their creede IX A confirmation of the former opinion For as the reprobate hypocrites by their being in the churches do not hinder but that they still remaine true churches so neither the dissentions which are raised in the churches by the vngodlie or which through frailtie or ignorance doe spring among the Saints themselues can extinguish the same which verie thing the Apostle teacheth whenas speaking of the ministers of the true churches he saith that vpon the same foundation some do build gold siluer and pretious stones other wood stubble haye and to the Philippians hauing declared the summe of christian doctrine and exhorted all men that who so had profited therein should persist in it afterwards he addeth and if any be otherwise minded God shall reueale the same vnto them if we abide in the same vvhereunto vvee are come For else if we should denie there to bee anie true church where contentions about religion are stirred vp then was there no church at Corinth in Paules time where there were not onely diuisions verie rife one saying I am of Paule another of Cephas another of Apollo but also maruailous controuersies rose concerning religion Nor yet in Gallatia because immediatly after those churches were passing well planted by Paule there sprang vp in them seducers and heresies lastly neither yet could there be said to be any churches in the East or in the West because they were neuer voide of contentions not only betweene the catholicks and the heretikes such as arose from the catholicks but also euen among the godly fathers themselues as the histories doe plentifully make mention in so much that for these dissentions and sects the christians were wōt to bee skoffed at in the theaters and stages among the infidells as also at this day wee are all derided for the same cause among the Turkes and Iewes But as in the primitiue church by those contentions of the christians it was no consequence that therefore they were not the people of God so neither at this time by ours can any man prooue it iustlie against vs but that indeede the contrarie may rather be concluded because it is the propertie of good wheat that is of the gospell wherby Gods people are gathered into his church that where it is sowen
with true faith whereby they are rightly minded how can it bee saide of any particular church that it can not erre that then can much lesse be affirmed of those churches from whence the trueth is banished and wherein lyes doe preuaile and iniquitie it selfe and palpable darkenes They surely which are such cānot be the true church of Christ 1. Tim 3.15 if the church bee the pillar and ground of trueth Therefore we conclude that euerie particular flock and each seuerall sheep thereof can so farre forth not erre as it heareth onely the voyce of the shepheard Christ being guided by the holie ghost but as oft as it heareth not his voyce but harkeneth to strangers voices it cā straight waies do no other thē erre But in a word seing God in the scattering and dissoluing of all churches doeth yet reserue some vnto himselfe whome he holdeth in the trueth and by whose ministerie he will spread the same still to the ende of the world therefore we confesse that the whole catholicke church altogether is neuer suffred to erre XXII Without the catholicke church is no saluation Here hence we consequently learne beleeue that this catholicke church onely is so holie and hath saluation so annexed to it that out of it there is no holines no saluation sith that in it onely the trueth so shineth without which saluation can come to none that without it there can bee no trueth and lastly sith none but the bodie of Christ can be saued Ioh. 3.13 For no man ascendeth into heauen but he vvhich came downe from heauen the sonne of man vvhich is in heauen that is the whole sonne of man withal his whole bodie which is the church that not vnfitly Peter compared the church to Noahs arke in which alone mankinde was preserued 2. Pet. 2.5 and out of which whosoeuer were found perished in the waters of the floode Gen. 7.23 Nowe that which wee confesse of the whole church as a thing most assured the same of euerie particular one we cannot graunt namely to say that in this church alone or that in the Romish or that at Constantinople the rrueth and saluation is obtained so that without it should be no saluation and consequently to depart from it were nothing else then to forsake the trueth our saluation and Christ For some church may bee brought to that passe that vnlesse thou departest from the fellowship therof thou canst haue no parte nor fellowshipp with the catholicke church and her head XXIII The catholicke church is not tyed to certaine persons or places Moreouer we confesse this catholick church because it is catholick therefore to be tied to no certaine places persons or people so that who so would be of the church hee should needs get him to Rome or to Wittemberge or he must depend vpon the authoritie of their churches by shops or ministers Seing Christ is in all places and euerie where may the word be heard the seale of Baptisme receiued the commaundements of Christ kept and a communion with the Saintes had And wheresoeuer these things haue place ther is the church that not without good cause were the Donatists condemned who shutt vp the church in Africa onely and not in al Africa neither but in certaine parcells of it where they thēselues dwelt and taught that it was onely there Nor lesse worthily are they to be condemned which accompt the churches of no forraine countries for true churches but onely such as consist of men of their owne nation XXIV The catholicke church is partly visible and partly inuisible To conclude we beleeue this church to be partly indeed visible and partly inuisible but these in diuerse respects Visible in that it consisteth of men visibly hādling and hearing the word of God ministring and receiuing the sacraments praying not onely priuately but also publikely to God exercising the workes of loue towards their neighbours and glorifying God by their whole life which things can not indeede be performed but they must sensiblie be perceiued And if it should be meerly inuisible howe could it bee discerned from the Synagogues of the wicked Againe we call it also inuisible first because it hath in it many hypocrites mingled which performe all these outward things as the elect doe and who are the elect for of them onely consisteth the church surely it cannot be knowne of vs but onely of God according to that The Lord alone knoweth who are his 2. Tim. 2.19 Ro. 2.28.29 Whereunto also tendeth that of the Apostle He is not a Jewe which is one outward but one within Moreouer because the church in regard of the outward appearance being euermore pressed with manifold calamities in the worlde the number of the professours of Christs faith is sometimes so diminished all christian congregations thrust vpp into such narrowe straightes that it may seeme euen to be none at al remaining namely when there is no longer any publike assemblie wherein Gods name is called vppon as the histories both sacred and ecclesiasticall do most clearely and plentifully teach to haue often happened whenas notwithstanding it is very certaine that God alwaies reserueth some church vnto himselfe vppon the earth Mat. 16.18 28.20 the Lord himselfe saying And the gates of hell shall not preuaile against it and behold J am vvith you euen to the ende of the world and the same do we also with the whole church confesse in the creed saying I beleeue the holy catholick church namely to haue euer bin from the beginning to bee now and shal bee vnto the ende of the world euen vppon the earth For properly we beleeue alwaies those things which we do not alwaies see Heb. 11.1 This is our confession concerning the militant church what it is how it differeth from the triumphant howe diuerse oft times in it selfe howe of many particulars it is made one catholicke church by what markes the true may bee discerned from the false what manner of succession of byshops what māner of consent may proue a true church howe not for euery difference in the verie doctrine the vnitie of the church is to be broken what is ment by the name of ecclesiasticall vnitie and in what things it consisteth of what estimation it ought to bee in what respect also it may erre and in what it cannot erre and how without the church there is no saluation and lastly howe it is visible and howe inuisible It remaineth that we speake of the gouernment thereof CHAP. XXV Of the gouernment of the militant church and of the ecclesiasticall ministerie I. The church is gouerned of Christ WE beleeue Col. 1.17 that as all thinges were made haue their being and are ruled by Christ so hee also gouerneth the church which is his kingdome his bodie by a more peculiar meanes then all other things as being author king Eph. 1.23 Luc. 11.33 Heb. 3.6 and head of the same as the Angell saieth of
ministers teachers studentes libraries and bookes all kinds of instruments and thinges necessarie for churches and schooles but also spittles and hospitals and other such like places where such liue as are peculiarly to be releeued and cared for of the church XXX VVhat manner of tēples or churches christians ought to haue what language to vse therin of churches and ceremonies what habitt apparell what holie dayes to bee kept to whome they must praye and lastly that the ceremonies which were not prescribed by Christ and the Apostles ought to be free And sith it is none of the least causes why faithfull people so farre forth as may bee are wont and ought to dwel together in the same cities townes and villages that they might not onely priuately among themselues dayly nourish a cōmon faith by godlie conferences practise mutuall charitie by christiā duties but also that they might meete together in certaine places at certaine knowne times publikely to praise pray vnto God to heare his worde to receiue the sacraments to performe publicke workes of charitie towardes the poore which thinges indeede cannot be done without language without rites ceremonies therefore concerning thē also what our opinion is we will briesty declare Seing it is beyond all controuersie that all thinges in the church ought to be done to edification all shew of superstition ought to be auoided we iudge that true pietie and the churches edification requireth Temples or churches first concerning places that if they may vse the olde and prophaned temples the same must be cleane purged of all idolls and all reliques and monuments of idolatrie and superstition 1 Cor. 6.16 For vvhat agreement hath the temple of God with idolls Language Moreouer no lāguage is to be vsed but that which is known to the whole congregation For what edification can come to the church by an vnknowne language 1 Cor. 14 28 the Apostle surely commaundeth thē to keep silence in the church which speak languages if there be no interpreter Thirdlie all pride and vanitie of garmentes are to bee shunned and all those ornaments Garments which doe rather beseeme the prophane theaters of the Gentiles then the sacred temples of christiās and which rather tend to delight the flesh thē to edifie the spirit but all things must be done in the churches with most high reuerence and modestie as in the verie sight of God and his Angells And albeit concerning the fashion of garments which ministers ought publikly to weare either in their ministerie or out of it we doe not thinke it a matter to bee so stood vpō that for it the peace of the church ought to be troubled yet where they come neerest to the simplicitie of the Apostles there wee iudge the church rather to bee approued Holie-daies Fourthly that vpon euerie Lords day the cōgregation should come together and make an holie assemblie sith we see that euer since the Apostles time that day hath beene religiouslie consecrated and dedicated to that holie businesse Next vnto the Lords day we can not but allow of the hallowing of those daies likewise wherein we keep the memorie and the auncient church did celebrate the natiuitie of our Lord Iesus Christ of his circumcision his passion his resurrection his ascension into heauen his sending downe the holy ghost vpon the Apostles Vpon other daies euen as each church shall thinke to be conuenient so also let them call an holie assemblie to the word to the sacramēts to prayers or collects Col. 2.16 But euermore let all superstitious obseruation of dayes be farre from them Praiers Fiftlie that prayers may be made to God onely and to Iesus Christ without inuocation of Angells or any Saints that are dead euen as the Prophets and Apostles did and the whole auncient church as it is manifest to bee seene in the old collectes Heb. 13.56 to say nothing of Gods owne commaundement who will haue this sacrifice of praise and of the mouth to be offered vpp to him onely Ceremonies Sixtly concerning rites and ceremonies to be kept in the church the same pietie and edification of the church doth require that they should not so bitterly and sharply bee controuerted as though the contention were vppon life and death but should be left to euerie congregation in free choise as wee read in Socrates and other ecclesiasticall writers it was in the olde church concerning which matters in generall wee allow and imbrace both the epistles of Augustine to lanuarius Tom. 2. ep 118 119 For these tend to the churches edificatiō XXXI Publike fastes ought sometime to be commaunded and the same are most profitable commendable Of fastes yet no man must be constrayned to them It appertaineth also to a profitable gouernment of the church that as priuate fastes are in mens free choise so also to the publike fastes al men are to be counselled but no man to be constrained The commoditie of fastes cannot sufficiently be commended yea it often happeneth that they are verie needfull so that godlie magistrats and ministers of the church are compelled to commaund publike fastes vnto the whole church for the appeasing of some greeuous wrath of God as it was wont to be done in the old testament and in the primitiue church not that by them we cā deserue remission of sinnes and mitigation of gods anger but that by taming of the flesh the spirite may be stirred vp more feruently to call vppon God to appease him by faithfull inuocation By the waye it pertaineth to the churches edification that no mans conscience bee compelled and bounde vnto such fastes sith they ought to proceed from a free willing and truely humbled spirite as also the Apostle writeth of almes to bee bestowed on the poore that they ought to be done not with heauinesse or vppon constraint but as euerie man can finde in his heart XXXII At no time Choise of meates not in the times of publike fastes the faithfull ought to bee forbidden any kinde of meates Hereof it also followeth that at no time either of fastes or not fasts any kinde of meats is to be forbidden to any sith none of these things cā defile a man Mat. 15.11 Tit. 1.15 1. Tim. 4.1.3 but to the eleane al things are cleane And the Apostle calleth their doctrine who cōmaund abstinence from meats for religions sake the doctrine of deuills that doctrine therefore how can it tend to the churches edification XXXIII Sick people must be visited Of sickmen and buriall comforted and strengthned in faith and they that are dying must bee acompanied with prayer commended to Christ the bodies of the dead reuerently buried Neither ought the church to take lesse care of the sicke thē of the whole nor of the dead then of the liuing seing all are members of Christ and their bodies temples of the holie ghost We therfore acknowledge that
who can be able to stād in the battaile and to continue the same The breast where the vitall partes lye must bee armed round about with the breast-plate of righteousnes I say of righteousnes of faith especially and of a good conscience For who is able to stand to coape with so many and so great enemies in the battaile vnlesse he bee persuaded that God standeth his helper and fauourer by him and doth from his heart hate iniquity against which loueth righteousnes for which the battaile is begunne We must haue our loynes girt about with the girdle of trueth and our feete shodd with the knowledge of the gospell of peace that is it behooueth vs to bee so armed on all partes with the knowledge loue and might of the trueth that we must be euer ready and prepared to fight for the gospell holding in our left hand the shield of faith wherewith we may receiue and quench all the fiery darts of the aduersarie but in our right hand the sword of the word of God wherewith the enemie may bee driuen back and wounded VVe shall indeed vse the shield of faith if against al the sophismes and subtelties of heretikes wee hold fast those principles of faith whereof we spake howsoeuer wee bee to seeke in refelling their fine and subtle quirks then haue we vse of the sword of the word if we conuince the enemies by apparent testimonies of scriptures and reasons drawne by necessary consequence from them to which purpose it preuailes not a little if wee cast at the enemies sharp pointed darts stinging arrowes out of the quiuers of the auncientest fathers as also we see those laeter fathers themselues haue done bringing forth the testimonies and arguments of their predecessors against heretikes VVe must therefore take vnto vs this whole complete armour of god with earnest praier vnto him that in these troublesome and euill daies wee may be able to withstand so manie diuers and mightie enemies and in the ende we may triumph ouer them 9 To the preseruation of the cittie and safetie of each cittizen howe needfull it is that the cittie being cleane voide of all the enemies fauourers hirelings close workers and traytors may liue the more safely and quietly who that hath any sight at all in things past and present can be ignorant Therefore the church gouernors and magistrats must take great care that according to the Apostles discipline it may heedfully be lookt vnto what doctrine each one professeth and what life he leadeth they which being taught and admonished will not amend to let them bee made knowne to the whole congregation openly separated from the holy assemblies and from the conuersation with the other faithfull least by their contagion others should also be infected or least as the Apostle saieth a little leuen marre the whole lump But to euery of the faithfull let such obstinate men be as Ethnicks and Publicanes and let this saying of Iohn bee kept if any man come vnto you bringing not this doctrine namely which the Apostles haue deliuered concerning the sonne of God and concerning the foundations of christian religion him receiue not into house nether bid him god speed This discipline is perpetuall in the church of which Tertullian in apolog the 39 chapter speaketh The magistrate further is to punish by Gods commandement according to the qualitie of their faults or blasphemies 10 That which in the ende wee said concerning the last duetie of each cittizen the same is also in this businesse which wee haue in hand verie easie to bee knowne I would it were as easie to bee performed Our faith therefore which we giue and promise in Baptisme must constantly bee kept vnto our prince Christ Iesus to our last ende yea if need be euen to the spilling of our blood and our liues And therefore that doctrine which by the writings of the Prophets and Apostles by the manifest principles of faith and also by common consent of the whole auncient church wee knowe assuredly to bee the doctrine of Iesus Christ the same wee must hold and keepe with a most constant faith against all new opinions neither must we onely keepe them in our mindes but also freely confesse the same with our mouths and openly professe that we will neuer bee willing to decline from the same and so we must professe it that vnlesse wee doe it wee can hope for no saluation For vvith the heart it is beleeued vnto righteousnesse but vvith the mouth confession is made vnto saluation VVith God indeede who seeth the hearts of men onely faith shall bee sufficient but with men and for mens sake the free confession and profession thereof is also necessarie Hee vvhich is ashamed of me before men I vvill also bee ashamed of him before my father said the Lord Iesus Christ For we while we are in this world must set forward the glorie of God the name of Christ and saluation of our neighbour and it is meet that we should make knowne to the whole church what manner of religion wee follow and with what faith we are by Gods grace indued that it may be euidently knowne who be the members thereof Whereuppon the same Lord stirring vs vp to this confession added He which confesseth me before men him will I also confesse before my father And therfore we must neither be allured by commodities to betray Christ neither must we be skared by threatnings and punishments from free confessing of him but rather fixing our eyes vpon the same Lord the captaine and perfecter of our faith who with a willing gladnes suffred the torment on the crosse not caring for the reproch sitteth at the right hand of the throne of God we must constantly runne out our purposed race For he vvhich endureth vnto the ende shal be saued By these tenne pointes noble Earle I hope I haue declared the right meanes by which in this so great diuersitie of opinions about the way of saluation in so great inuasion mighty power of euill spirits and in so cruell tyrannie of the deuill euerie one may prouide for the safetie of him and his I haue now almost 34. yeares by Gods good gift done my endeauour that I might my selfe follow the same course and besides the holie scriptures which do teach apparently that it is according to Gods will I haue learned by experience of many yeares that it is a heauenlie and excellent waye For vppon the very same occasion leauing the Babylonicall captiuitie I gatt me into the free churches of Christs kingdome as into defensed citties First to the churches in Rhetia where I liued eight months and more afterwards vnto Geneua where likewise I abode nine months From thence I came to Strausburgh where then florished the French church and there I liued and taught 11. yeares but not without some conflict after the death of that ornament of the whole cōmon wealth and parent of the schoole Iames Sturmius and the
draw life frō that but we must also draw it from this To declare plainly this neere and reall copulation of our flesh with the flesh of Christ he brings a similitude of waxe not that it euerie way agreeth in all thinges as is manifest but because it fittly sheweth our communion with Christ to be reall and substantiall And this he ment when concluding he said not onely spiritually but also corporally that is not onely in respect of the spirite but also in respect of the bodie both Christ is the vine and we his braunches This therefore he spake not of the manner of our coupling to Christ whether it be spirituall or corporall but of the thinges which are coupled namely that not onely our soules and our spirites are most neerely ioyned with the soule and spirit of Christ but also our flesh with his flesh This is to be gathered out of the aduersaries proposition against which he argueth which is that wee are not ioyned with Christ in flesh Coll. 500. B. These aduerbs therefore spiritually corporally in Cyrill doe not signifie the meanes by which we are vnited to Christ the vine but the things which are vnited as is already said and declared But the meanes also Cyrill graūteth to be spirituall that is by our faith and by the spirite of Christ for in euerie place hee teacheth and specially vpon the sixt of Iohn that we eate the flesh of Christ by faith And by this eating he prooueth our incorporation Vpon the 13. chapter The 7. aphorisme If any shall make exceptions concerning the law thus were not the elect in the old Testament indued with grace to keepe the law as wee in the new are indued with grace to beleeue the gospell I answer They were but not to the hearing of the law as vve are with faith to the hearing of the gospell but because they first beleeued in the euangelicall promises concerning Christ and for that cause receiued the gift yet but vnperfectly and in part onely to keep the law not because they heard the law but because they beleeued in Christ to come that alwaies the obedience of the lawe might follow of the faith in Christ euen as an effect followeth the cause Vppon the 24. chapter Aphor. 1. When wee saide that the signification of a Sacrament is so receiued that not the word alone nor the element alone but the element together with the word is called a sacrament we ment nothing els but that as the word alone without the element or signe cannot bee said to be a Sacrament so neither cā the signe without the worde For a Sacrament as the church hath vsed to define it is a visible signe of an inuisible grace add by the word that is by Christs institution consecrated to that purpose that is altered from the common vse to that matter So Augustine Tom. 5. de ciuit Dei lib. 10. ca. 5. The visible sacrifice is a sacrament or a holie signe of the inuisible sacrifice And in D. de cons dist 2. ca. sacrif A sacrament saieth he is a visible forme of an inuisible grace And the same Augustine Tom. 9. in Ioh. tract 80. saith concerning the word of the gospell the vvorde commeth to the element and so is made the sacrament euen that visible vvorde as it were A sacrament therefore according to the receiued signification in the church we doe euer did acknowledge to bee a visible signe And whereof of an inuisible grace But from whence hath it the vertue to bee signe of such a thing from the word of Christ the institutor For take away the word and it shal be no Sacrament Pull away the word saieth Augustine and what is the water but water This is the meaning of our words not that the word is the sacrament or to speake properly any parte of the Sacrament in as much as a Sacrament is defined to bee a visible signe of an inuisible grace but because without the word a visible element cannot be a Sacrament of an inuisible thing but therefore it is the visible signe of an inuisible thing because by the word of the Lord it is instituted thereunto Irenaeus also making no mention of the word because that is alwaies supposed hath left in writing that the Eucharist that is the Sacrament of the Eucharist consisteth of two matters an earthly that is the signe a heauenly that is the thing signified neither yet the thing signified is the signe or the Sacrament but because the signe cānot be without the thing signified for else wherof should it bee a signe therefore hee said that the Sacrament of the Eucharist consisted both of an earthly matter that is the signe and a heauenly matter that is the thing signified This belongeth to the confirmation of that which we said concerning the word and the element Vpon the 25. chapter Of baptisme The third aphorisme Of the water it appeareth in the Acts where it is manifestly shewed that neuer any thing was mixed with the water by the Apostles Other forme of baptizing besides that which we haue in the 28. of Matthew Christ did not institute and that the Apostle did simplie follow Christ is beyond al cōtrouersie Where as therefore we read in the Acts that the Apostles baptized some in the name into the name of Christ that doth nothing pertaine to the christian forme of baptisme Iohn indeed baptized into the name of Christ as it appeareth in which name notwithstanding as Ambrose expoundeth it the trinitie was closelie signified as the person anointed that is of the sonne in that he had taken the nature the person annointing that is the father and the annointing that is the person of the holie ghost But Christ himself expresly set downe the proper forme of baptisme saying in the name of the father of the sonne and of the holie ghost Wherefore it is manifest that the phrase of speach to be baptized into the name of Christ doth nothing belong to the forme of christian Baptisme Which is also hereby confirmed that wee neuer reade that the Apostles baptized any saying that they baptized them into the name of Christ but we read onely that many were baptized in the name and into the name of Christ Then what mēt the holie ghost by that forme or manner of speach he ment in my iudgement summarily to shewe thus much First in that they which professed faith in Christ were commaunded to be baptized that it should be done by the name authoritie and commandement of Iesus Christ yea that they should be baptized in this forme In the name of the father the sonne and of the holy ghost euen by commaundement of Christ Therefore they were baptized in the name of Christ that is according to the commandement forme prescribed by Christ Secondly they which were so baptized as they were now incorporated into Christ by faith in Gods sight and admitted into the fellowship of the new couenant so are they by
anie portion of gouerning and keeping the clergie is committed and also a watchfullnes and inquirie that there be none in this order vngarded or vnlooked vnto Thus farre Bucer not onely rehearsing but also commending the custome of the auncient church ordaining diuers orders of ecclesiasticall functions whereof we before spake I should also haue had consideration of those churches which albeit they imbrace the gospell of Christ Iesus yet they still retaine their bissiops and Archbishops both in deed and name What that in the churches euen of the protestants neither bishops indeed nor archbishops are wanting whome hauing turned the names out of good greeke into badd latine they call Superintendents and generall Superintendents yea there also where neither those old names in good greeke nor these newe in ill latine are vsed at all yet there are wont to bee some superior persons in whose hands is almost the whole authoritie The controuersie then hath beene about the names but seing wee agree about the thing why should wee cōtend about the names By the way as I did not disallow the Fathers in that matter whereuppon the question is so can I not but loue the zeale of our men which do therefore hate those names because they are afraide least with the names the old ambition and tirannie should bee brought in againe to the destruction of the church Aphorisme 12. For neither did Christ ordaine any such head neither would the fathers admit therof because it was not expedient for the church but contented themselues with the foure Patriarches of Rome Constantinople Antioch and Alexandria all which were of an equall authoritie and power and euery of them conteined within his owne bounds as also it was decreed in the coūcel at Nice cōfirmed in others that not without many very weightie causes whereof in my iudgement this was not one of the least least there should bee a doore set open to tirannie in the church but rather if that any one durst attempt any thing against the sound doctrin of Christ against the libertie of the church then the other archbishops with their bishops of no lesse authoritie might oppose themselues against him suppresse his insolencie and cut of his tiranny The church in respect of Christ is a kingdome in respect of men which are in it and ether rule or be ruled it is an Aristocracie Aphorisme 21. These be two questions farre differēt whether bishops may also be princes and princes bishopps keeping also their principalities in their hands and whether they which are both bishops and princes besids their ecclesiastical authoritie may also haue ciuill power ouer those that are their subiects and so whether their subiects must obey them as princes or not In my Aphorisme I spake not one word of the former question for it was not needful but onely of the latter Now who seeth not how I shewed by apparent demonstrations that princes must be wholly obeyed howsoeuer rightfullie or wrongfullie they bee made princes For why should not they that are subiects both to the princes and Archbishops of Colone Mentz and Treuers in matters that are not repugnant to christian pietie be obedient vnto them Surely it were meere sedition in them not to obey them And if to these why should not they also which are within the iurisdiction of the bishop of Rome in the same matters for the same cause obey him For there is one and the same reason of them all Of the former question as I saye I spake not at all neither purposed I nowe in this briefe confession to discourse thereof knowing that all are not herein of one opinion much may be said to and fro both wayes that place in the 20 of Mat. Yee know that the Lords of the Gentiles haue dominion ouer them and they that are great exercise authoritie ouer them But it shall not bee so among you some expound it one waye of the Apostles onely and ministers of the word others another waye of all Christs disciples and all christians An appendix to the eleuenth chap. Of Christ the redeemer or of the person of Christ THey which write that the essentiall proprieties of the diuine nature are reallie communicated to the humaine nature not that they be in the same either essentiallie and formally or subiectiuelie and habitually but onely by the reason and respect of the personall or Hypostaticall vnion for so they speake darkelie indeede and ambiguouslie when both they might and ought to speake plainer if they meane this in no other sense then as Vigilius writ and thought namely that the proprieties of the natures are made proper to Christ himselfe but are common to the natures betwixt themselues not in thēselues but in Christ that is in his person I will not surelie gainesay them neither do I thinke that any good or learned man will gainesay them For Vigilius according to the catholick churches doctrine speaking out of the councell at Calcedon said and declared that the proprieties of the humaine nature were made commō to the diuine in the verie same sense that the diuine are also saide to bee communicated to the humaine But now these proprieties of the humanitie as to suffer or to die are so communicated to the deitie that for all that yet the verie deitie is not made in verie deede passible or mortall the cause whereof Vigilius setteth downe to be this namelie because to die and to suffer are not made common to the deitie but onely in the person so that they can not truely be said but of the humaine nature by it selfe and of the person in respect of the humaine nature Wherefore we must euen so thinke and saye altogether of the communication of the diuine proprieties Vigilius owne wordes bee these booke 5. chap. 2. And now sith out intention is chiefly bent against those which following the error of one nature doe with a willfull obstinacie resist the decree of the Calcedon councell I thinke it not amisse for the remoouing of their vaine contradictions and beating to peeces their glassie opinions with the mallett of truth to rehearse some fewe things concerning the humaine nature of the sonne of God which they euerie waye denie to be in him and to shew what want of christianity is in them and how farre of they bee from the hope of euerlasting life It is a rule of the catholick faith to confesse one and the same Lord Iesus Christ as true God so also true man one of them both not two into one the same without all time borne of the father the same in time borne of the virgine so that each of these births do so hold on Christ that he suffred not any losse in either retaining in himself that was proper to him both waies that is that the nature of the word should not be chaūged in the flesh the nature of the flesh was not swallowed vpp in the word Hereuppon the same Lord Iesus Christ
like as no other but the verie same Christ rose from the dead so he rose in no other but in the verie same bodie in which he suffred died and was buried 14 For he could not be truely said to be raised and to rise from the dead except that which truely died the verie same quickened againe should rise againe 15 Now the bodie wherein Christ suffred died and was buried was a true humane bodie visible palpable circumscribed Therefore Christ after his resurrection had and retained no body but that which was circumscribed in a certaine place and wheresoeuer it was and is might and may be seene and handled 16 Add also that the Apostle carefully discoursing of the qualities with which our bodies being raised vp to eternall life shal be indued he saith not that they shal not be subiect either to the eye or to the touch or not bee circumscribed in a definite place but he rehearseth onely incorruption glorie and power as is the agilitie thereof and that they shall rise spirituall not that the corporall substance shal be chaunged into an incorporeall but that they shal be as the greeks call it immortall and shal be full of the holie spirite dwelling and working in them The Apostle therefore taught that these are qualities neuer to bee seperated from the bodies namely that they shal be circumscribed visible palpable Wherefore neither did Christs body after his resurrection put of these qualities 17 Neither is that exception any thing that Christ after he was risen came in to his disciples the dores beeing shut For it was not therefore either made vnvisible or vncircumscribed or vnpalpable seeing Christ being come in and seene of his disciples presently saide Feele or handle and see Luc. 24. for a spirit hath not flesh and bones as ye see me haue And therefore as the Fathers teach there was no chaunge made of Christs bodie no more then there was when he or Peter walked vpon the waters but by the omnipotency of his diety hauing power ouer all things the doores gaue place to the true and firme bodie of the sonne of God 18 Wherefore not without cause did the Fathers condemne not onely Marcion the Maniches and others which taught that Christ tooke not a true and firme humane bodie but a phantasticall one and did all things according to imagination and phantasie but also the Originists Iohn of Hierusalem and Euticius of Constantinople Hier. tom 12. ad Pāmach Greg. in Iob. lib. 24 c. 29. Bishops and others which said that Christs bodie after his resurrectiō was made so spirituall that it was more thinne then ayre and therefore invisible and vnpalpable 19 Seeing then that in the supper no other bodie of Christ is giuen vs to be eaten but that which was broken for vs that is truely suffered and died it followeth that Christs 〈◊〉 body which we eate in the Supper is truely circumscribed visible and palpable and consequently seeing nothing is seene touched or perceiued in the Supper besides bread the same body cannot in it owne substance really be contained vnder the formes of bread and wine or lie hidden in the very bread and wine 20 Nowe we acknowledge the resurrection of Christ is both the cause and an example of our as well spirituall as corporall resurrection The cause of the spirituall because the Apostle saith to the Rom. 4. he rose againe for our iustification and an example because he saith Rom. 6. we are bur●ed togither with him by baptisme into his death that as Christ was raised from the dead by the glory of the Father so we also should vwalke in newenesse of life 21 But that he is the cause of our corporall resurrection we doubt not 1. Cor. 5. for that the Apostle saith If Christ be risen againe we shall also rise againe and for that he also saith Christ is the first fruits of them that rise and an example for that the same Apostle also writeth he shall chaunge our vile bodies Phil 3.21 that they shall be like his glorious bodie 22 Wherupon It also followeth either Christs bodie not to be invisible vnpalpable vncircumscribed and so not spirituall bodies but incorporall spirits 23 For where Christ saith Feele and see for a spirite hath not flesh and bones as yee see me haue hee did not onely conclude that himselfe was no spirite but he especially taught this that there is no flesh nor bones but may bee seene and felt 24 The Scripture teacheth and the church cōfesseth that our Lord Iesus Christ being raised from the dead did shew vnto his disciples for fortie daies space by many arguments that he was truely risen and then euen in the beholding of the Apostles that he was lifted vpp from the earth ascended into heauen Therfore like as no other Christ rose againe then he which died so no other ascended into heauen nor in no other body then he in which that truely rose againe frō the dead the sonne of God truely humane visible palpable and circumscribed 25 Wherefore as the conuersation of the same Lord Iesus Christ wherein he conuersed amōg his Apostles after his refurrection for fortie daies space was not fantasticall but reall and true so also his ascension was not onely visible but also truely as the fathers say locall when the Apostles sawe him ascend from the earth vp into heruen 26 But such an ascension and mouing cannot agree to his divine nature therefore he ascended according to his humane nature 27 Yet by the way we denie not this but that Christ as God like as he is said to haue descended from heauen in respect that he abased himselfe taking vpon him the vile forme of a seruant and suffred in it so also it may rightly be said that he is exalted and ascended vp into heauen namely in respect that in the very same forme of a seruant when it was glorified euen the forme of God was after a sort glorified by his ascention and after it that is was made glorious in the wholle world 28 But it is apparent that as this consequence is not good Christ himselfe beeing God and man ascended into heauen in a locall and visible moouing Therefore he in the same sort ascended according to his dietie so neither is this good Christ God and man is with us to the ende of the world truely and in his owne essence therefore he is present on earth as wel in the substance of his body and soule as in the essence of his dietie 29 If also the Apostles sawe with their eies Christan his owne body by chaunge of place ascending from earth into heauen then the heauen into which he did ascend cānot be an vbiquitary heauen but it must needes be farre distant from the earth 30 Moreover nature and all right requireth that for every thing some certē place must be assigned as we see god hath done in all the things which he created Seing then no created thing