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ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A64357 A Discourse concerning a guide in matters of faith with respect especially to the Romish pretence of the necessity of such a one as is infallible. Tenison, Thomas, 1636-1715. 1683 (1683) Wing T695; ESTC R37882 33,059 50

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St. Chrysostom affirmed concerning St. Paul that the whole World or the World of the Roman Empire was his Diocese You will reply that he promised on him particularly upon this Rock or Stone this Kipha a Syriac Word of the Masculine Gender this Peter to build his Church I answer the Ancients took the Word as Feminine and understood it rather of his Confession than of his Person If it was spoken of his Person it was spoken by way of Emphasis not Exclusion for there were twelve Foundations of these he might be called the first having first preached the Gospel to Jews and Gentiles the Eleven standing up with him and he speaking as the Mouth of the Apostolical Colledge We cannot by the strictest ennumeration find out any living infallible Guide existing in any Age after St. Peter in the Christian Church 1. This Guide could not be the Church diffusive of the first Ages For the suffrages of every Christian were never gathered And if we will have their sense they must rise from the dead and give it us 2. This Guide cannot be the Faith as such of all the Governours of all the Primitive Churches The sum of it was never collected There were anciently general Creeds but such as especially related to the Heresies then on foot and who can affirm upon grounds of certainty that each Bishop in the World consented to each Article or to each so expressed 3. This Guide is not a Council perfectly free and universal For a Guide which cannot be had is none If such a Council could assemble it would not err in the necessaries of Faith For there cannot be a regular Flock without a Shepherd and if all the Spiritual Shepherds in the World should at once and by consent go so much astray the whole Flock of the Church Catholick would be scattered And that would contradict the promise of Christ the Supreme Faithful Infallible Pastor But there never was yet an universal Council properly so called Neither can we suppose the probability of it but by supposing the being of one Temporal Christian Monarch of the World who might call or suffer it In the Councils called General if we speak comparatively there were not many Southern or Western Bishops present at them It was thus at that first Oecumenical Council the Council of Nice though in one sacred place as Eusebius hath noted there were assembled Syrians and Cilians Phoenicians and Arabians Paloestinians Egyptians Theboeans Libyans Mesopotamians a Persian a Scythian Bishop and many others from other Countries But there was but one Bishop for Africa one for Spain one for Gaul two Priests as Deputies of the infirm and Aged Bishop of Rome Whilst for Instance sake there were seventeen Bishops for the small Province of Isauria yet such Councils are very useful such we reverence but God did not set them up as the only and the infallible Guides of Faith If these were such Guides what Guided the Church which was before them By what rule was Ebion judged before the Council of Nice How can we be infallibly Guided by them in Controversies of Faith not determined by them nay not brought before them nay scarce moved till these latter days Such for the purpose are the Controversies about the vertue of the Sacrifice of Christ and of Justification by the Faith of mere recumbence upon his Merits Or how shall a private Man who errs in the Faith be deliver'd from his Heresy seeing he may die some years ere a Council can assemble or being assembled can form its decrees Arius vented his Heresy about ten years before the Council of Nice was called for the suppressing of it And soon after he had given vent to it it spread throughout Egypt and Lybia and the upper Thebes as Socrates has reported And in a short time many other Provinces and Cities were infected with the contagion of it And in the pretended Council of Trent no less than five Popes were successively concerned and it lasted in several places longer than two legal lives of a Man There was indeed a Canon in the Western Church for the holding of a Council once in the space of each ten years But that Canon has not been hitherto obeyed and as affairs stand in the Church it is impracticable For the Pope will exclude all the Greek and Reformed Bishops he will crowd the Assembly with Bishops of his own Creation and with Abots also he will not admit of former Councils unless they serve his purpose not so much as that of Nice it self He will be the Judge though about his own Supremacy He will multiply Italians and others who upon Oath owe their votes to him He will not hold a Council upon the terms approved by all Romish Princes Nor did they agree at their last Council the Emperour would not send his Bishops to Bologna nor the French King his to Trent And though the French Church believed the Doctrines of that Synod yet they did not receive them from the Authority of it but they embraced them as the former Doctrines of the Roman Church And the Parisian Faculty prepared the way to the Articles of Trent Notwithstanding all this we firmly believe that at least the first four general Councils did not err in Faith and it is pious to think that God would not suffer so great a temptation in the Church on Earth Yet still we believe those Councils not to be infallible in their constitution but so far as they followed an infallible rule For the greatest Truth is not always with the greatest number And great numbers may appear on contrary sides The Council of Constantinople under Constantine Copronymus consisting of three hundred thirty eight Bishops decreed against the use of Images in Churches Yet the second Synod of Nice consisting of about three hundred and fifty Bishops determin'd for it And a while after in the West the Council of Frankford consisting of about three hundred Bishops reversed that decree And after that the Council of Trent did re-establish it though there the voting Persons were not fifty With such uncertain doubts of belief must they move who follow a Guide in Religion without reference to a further rule But here there is offered to us by the Guide in Controversies an Objection of which this is the sum The fifth Canon of the Church of England does declare that the thirty nine Articles were agreed upon for the avoidance of the diversities of opinions and the establishing of consent touc●ing true Religion Consent touching true Religion is consent in Matter of Faith Establishing of consent relateth both to Layety and Clergy The third and fourth Canons of 1640. decree the Excommunication of those who will not abjure their holding Popery and Socinianism The Re●ormed Churches in France teach the like Doctrine threatning to cut them off from the Church who acqu●e●ce not in the resolution of a National Synod