Selected quad for the lemma: death_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
death_n aaron_n apostle_n life_n 16 3 3.2448 3 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A46991 A collection of the works of that holy man and profound divine, Thomas Iackson ... containing his comments upon the Apostles Creed, &c. : with the life of the author and an index annexed.; Selections. 1653 Jackson, Thomas, 1579-1640.; Oley, Barnabas, 1602-1686.; Vaughan, Edmund. 1653 (1653) Wing J88; Wing J91; ESTC R10327 823,194 586

There are 25 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

how great soever his Authority was the Pope can have have no pretence to be his successor therein For the edification of the people committed to him by our Saviour was to be finished before Ierusalems destruction since which time Israel hath been perpetually scattered amongst the Nations without a shepherd to gather them And when it shall please the Lord as it is probable it will to reduce them to his fold their Ruler shall be of their own people strangers shall have no more dominion over them 3 Had the Pope derived his right from Saint Thomas Rartholomew or other Apostle which have no writings extant this might have yeelded some surmises not so easie to be disproved that Romish traditions did contain the summe at least of all these Apostles unwritten Doctrine if from Saint Paul the great Doctor of the Gentiles and first planter of faith amongst the Romans as much commended by him as any other of his children in Christ the improbabilitie had been much lesse then now it is in Peters case that the Bishop of Rome if any should have succeeded him But when that people began to grow out of love with the truth fashioning themselves unto this present world the disease whereof Saint Paul forewarned them it was Sathans policie to present unto them longing after such a Monarchical state as their Heathenish Predecessours had such shews of Peters Supremacie and residencie at Rome as by the Divine permission had either crept into some of the Ancients religious cogitations or else in time of darknesse have been shufled by the Predecessors of these cheating mates late discovered into their writings as sit baits to entice them unto this derivation of that absolute power from Peter to their greater condemnation and our good For God no doubt in his providence ordered this their blindnesse to illuminate us as he did the fall of the Jews to confirm the Gentiles in faith seeing of all the Apostles Peters prerogatives as hath been shewed were most evidently personal all to determin with himself unto which observation his own writings also give testimony Even a little before he was to leave the world where he most manifested his earnest desire of preserving his flock found in faith after his death he gives no intimation as shall be shewed more at large hereafter of any Successor unto whom they were to repair His present Epistle he foresaw would be more availeable to this purpose then any Tradition from him I will not be negligent to put you alwayes in remembrance of these things though that he have knowledge and he established 〈◊〉 present truth For I think it meet as long as I am in this Tabernacle to ●… you up by pretting vnto in remembrance seeing I know that the time is at hand that I must lay down this my Tabernacle even as our Lord Jesus Christ hath shewea me I will endeavour therefore alwayes that ye also may be able to have remembrance of those things after my departing 4 As for peculiar direction of later times whence perpetual infallibilitie must be derived it cannot be gathered from his writings that he knew so much as his brother Paul did Albeit in this point these two great pillars of Christs Church more famous then all their fellow Apostles besides for present efficacie of their personal ministerie come far behind the Disciple whom Jesus loved whose written Ambassage was in a peculiar sence to tarry till Christs last coming unto judgement as he himself did unto Christ first coming to destroy Jerusalem and forewarn the Nations Besides the Doctrine of common salvation necessarie for all to know plentifully set down in this Disciples Epistle his Revelations contain infallible directions peculiar to every age And as in some one gift or other every Apostle almost exceeds his fellowes so if amongst all any one was to have this prerogative of being the ordinary Pastor or to have ordinary succeslours as Aaron though inferiour to Moses in personal prerogatives during his life had after his death this doubtlesse was Saint John who ascribes that unto the diligent Expositors hearers or Readers of his Books which the Romanist appropriates to such as relie upon the visible Churches determinations never questioning whether it be that Babylon which Saint John deciphers or no Blessed is he saith Saint John that readeth and they that hear the words of this prophesie and keep those things which are written therein for the time is at hand Blessed they are that read it with fear and reverence or so affected as this Disciple was for unto such the Lord will by means ordinary by sober observation of the event reveal his secret intent as he did it unto him by the extraordinary gift of Prophesie for the testimo● of Jesus is the spirit of Prophesie Revel 19. 10. 5 It is evident the Spirit of God intended to shew Iohn and Iohn to shew the faithfull all the Eclipses that should befall the Church until the worlds end His prophesies since his death were so to instruct the world of all principal events present or to come as Histories do of matters forepast Now as he in our times wherein God inspires not men with Moses spirit is accounted the best Antiquary that is most conversant and best seen in the faithfull Records of time not he that can take upon him to divine as Moses did of the worlds state in former Ages so since the gift of prophesie ceased he is to be esteemed the most infallible teacher the safest guide to conduct others against the forces of hell chiefly heresies or doctrines of Devils that can best interpret him who first descried them and in his life time forewarned the Churches of Asia planted by Saint Paul and watered by him of the abominations that threatned shortly to overspread them and after them the whole visible Church until these later times Doth the Pope then professe more skill in Saint Iohns Revelations then any other If he do let him make proof of his Profession by the evidence of his Expositions But from this Apostle he pretends none at all and we demand but any tolerable proof of succession from S. Peter 6 A supreme oecumenical Head say the Parasites to the Sea Apostolique is as necessary now as in Saint Peters time therefore he must jure civino have a Successour But neither doth Scripture or Reason admit any such Head as they have moulded in their brains either then or now As hath been abundantly proved and their own instances brought to illustrate the probabilitie of such a device contradict them For admit that Christ and earthly Princes stood in like need of Deputie-Governours in their absence would the King of Spain were he to go on Pilgrimage unto his Kingdom of Jerusalem leave but one Deputie over all the Dominions of Spain and Portugal the West Indies Sicilie Naples and Millain Or leaving but one would indue him with such absolute power over all his Subjects in these
custome before any other businesse discourse or care of Himself were he never so wet or weary to call for a retiring room to pour out his soul unto God who led him safely in his journey And this he did not out of any specious pretence of Holiness to devour a Widows House with more facility Rack their Rents or Enhance their Fines for excepting the constant Revenue to the Founder to whom he was a strict accountant no man ever did more for them or less for himself For thirty years together he used this following Anthem and Collect commanded by the Pious Founder in Honour and Confession of the Holy and Undivided Trinity Salva nos Libera nos Vivifica nos O Beata Trinitas c. Save us Deliver us Quicken us O Blessed Trinity Let us praise God the Father and the Son with the Holy Spirit let us praise and Super-exalt his Name for ever Almighty and everlasting God which hast given unto us thy servants Grace by the Confession of a true Faith to acknowledge the Glory of the Eternal Trinity and in the Power of the Divine Majesty to Worship the Unity We beseech thee that through the stedfastness of this Faith we may evermore be defended from all Adversitie which livest and raignest c. This he did perform not onely as a Sacred Injunction of the Founder upon him and all the Society but he received a great Delight in the performance of it No man ever wrote more highly of the Attributes of God then he and yet he professes that he alwaies took more comfort in admiring then in disputing and in praying to and acknowledgeing the Majesty and Glory of the Blessed Trinite then by too curiously prying into the Mysterie He Composed a Book of Private Devotions which some judicious men having perused the same much Extolled and Admired as being replenished with Holy Raptures and Divine Meditations which if it be not already annexed to this Book I hope the Reader will shortly enjoy in a Portable Volume by it self Thus have many other Famous Scholars and Polemical men in their Elder times betaken themselves to Catechizing and Devotion as Pareus Bishop Andrews Bishop Usher and Bellarmin himself seems to prefer his Book De Ascensione Mentis ad Deum Of the Ascension of the Soul to God before any other part of his Works Books saies he are not to be estimated Ex multitudine foliorum sed ex fructibus By the multitude of the Leaves but the Fruit. My other Books I read onely upon necessity but this I have willingly read over three or four times and resolve to read it more often whether it be saies he that the Love towards it be greater then the Merit because like another Benjamin it was the Son of mine old age He seemed to be very Prophetical of the Ensuing times of trouble as may evidently appear by his Sermons before the King and Appendix about the signs of the Times or Divine Fore-warnings therewith Printed some years before touching the Great Tempest of Wind which fell out upon the Eve of the Fifth of November 1636. He was much astonished at it and what apprehension he had of it appears by his words This mighty Wind was more then a Sign of the Time the very Time it self was a Sign and portends thus much That though we of this Kingdom were in firm League with all Nations yet it is still in Gods Power we may fear in his Purpose to plague this Kingdom by this or like tempests more grievously then he hath done at any time by Famin Sword or Pestilence to bury many living souls as well of Superiour as of Inferiour Rank in the Ruin of their stately Houses or meaner Cottages c. Which was observed by many but signally by the Prefacer to M. Herberts Remains I shall not prevent the Reader or detain him so long from the Original of that Book as to repeat the Elogies which are there conferred upon Him I cannot forbear one passage in that Preface wherein he makes this profession I speak it in the presence of God I have not read so hearty vigorous a Champion against Rome amongst our writers of his rank so convincing and demonstrative as D. Jackson is I bless God for the confirmation which he hath given me in the Christian Religion against the Athean Jew and Socinian and in the Protestant against Rome As he was alwaies a Reconciler of differences in his Private Government so he seriously lamented the Publick Breaches of the Kingdom For the Divisions of Reuben he had great Thoughts of Heart At the first Entrance of the Scots into England he had much compassion for his Countrymen although that were but the beginning of their Sorrows He well knew that War was commonly attended with Ruin and Calamity especially to Church and Church-men and therefore that Prayer was necessary and becoming of them Da pacem Domine in diebus nostris c. Give peace in our time O Lord because there is no other that fighteth for us but onely thou O God One drop of Christian blood though never so cheaply spilt by others like water upon the ground was a deep Corrosive to his tender heart Like Rachel weeping for her children he could not be comforted His body grew weak the chearful hue of his countenance was impaled and discoloured and he walked like a dying Mourner in the streets But God took him from the evil to come It was a sufficient Degree of punishment for him to foresee it it had been more then a thousand Deaths unto him to have beheld it with his Eyes When his Death was now approaching being in the chamber with many others I overheard him with a soft voice repeating to himself these and the like Ejaculations I wait for the Lord my Soul doth wait and in his Word do I hope my Soul waiteth for the Lord more then they that watch for the morning As for me I will behold thy face in righteousness I shall be satisfied when I awake with thy likeness And he ended with this Cygnean Cantion Psal 116. 5. Gracious is the Lord and righteous yea our God is merciful The Lord preserveth the simple I was brought low and he helped me Return unto thy Rest O my Soul for the Lord hath dealt bountifully with thee And having thus spoken soon after he surrendered up his Spirit to Him that gave it If you shall curiously enquire what this Charitable man left in Legacie at his death I must needs answer that giving all in his Life time as he owed nothing but Love so he left nothing when he Dyed The Poor was his Heir and he was the Administrator of his own Goods or to use his own Expression in one of his last Dedications he had little else to leave his Executors but his Papers onely which the Bishop of Armagh being at his Funerals much desired might be carefully preserved This was that which he left to Posterity in pios usus for
with other stand mutually affected how both subordinate to the absolute immutability of that one everlasting decree Want of resolution in these points as far as my observation serves me hath continually bred an universal threefold want of care and vigilancie for preventing dangers in themselves avoidable of alacrious indeavors to redeem time in part surprized by them of patience of hearty submission to Gods will and constant expectation of his providence after all hope of redemption from temporal plagues long threatned by his messengers is past For here we suppose what out of the fundamental principles of Christian religion shall in good time be made evident that in all ruinated states or forepast alterations of religion from better to worse there was a time wherein the possibility of misfortunes which afterwards befel them might have been prevented a time wherein they might have been recovered from eminent dangers wherewith they were encompast a time after which there was no possibility left them of avoyding the day of visitation never brought forth but by the precedent fulness of iniquity but alwaies necessarily by it In the discussion of these and other points of like nature because more depending upon strict examination of consequences deduced from the undoubted rules of Scripture then upon authorities of antiquitie skill in the tongues or any other learning that required long experience or observation I laboured most whilest those Arts and Sciences which are most conducible to this search were freshest in my memory And could I hope to satisfie others in all or most of these as fully as I have long since done my self I should take greatest pleasure in my pains addressed to this purpose But would it please the Lord in mercy to raise up some English writer that could in such sort handle these points as their use and consequence or necessity of present times requires succeeding ages I am perswaded should have more cause to bless the day of his nativity then of the greatest States-mens or stoutest Warriors this land hath yielded since the birth of our Fathers this day living It shall suffice he to begin the offering with my mite in hope some learned Academicks for unto them belongs the conquest of this golden fleece will employ their Talents to like publick use What I conceive shall be by Gods assistance unfolded in as plain and unoffensive terms as the nature of the subject will bear or my faculties reach unto partly in the Article of Gods providence partly in other discourses directly subordinate unto it Lastly for the full and perfect growth at least for the sweet and pleasant flourishing of lively Faith one of the most effectual means our industry that can but plant or water attains unto would be to unfold the harmony betwixt Prophetical predictions and Historical events concerning the Kingdom of Christ and time of the Gospel a point for ought I know not purposely handled by any modern writer except those whose success cannot be great until their delight in contention and contradiction be less Notwithstanding whatsoever I shall find good in them or any other without all respect of persons much more without all desire of opposition or occasion of contention a matter alwaies undecent in a Christian but most odious and lothsom in a subject so melodious and pleasant I will not be afraid to follow intending a full Treatise of the divers kindes of Prophecies with the manner of their interpretations before the Articles of Christs Incarnation Passion and Ascension These are the especial points which for the better confirmation of true Christian faith and rectifying perswasions in matters of manners or good life are principally aimed at in these meditations The main obstacle the Atheist stumbles at is the Article of the bodies resurrection Whose passive possibility shall by Gods assistance be evidently demonstrated against him by the undoubted rules of nature whose Priest or Minister he professeth himself to be That de facto it shall be the Scriptures whose truth ere then will appear Divine must assure us Nature cannot though thus much were in some sort known and believed by many natural men from traditions of the ancient or suspected from some notions of the law of nature not quite obliterated in all sorts of the heathen as shall in that Article God willing be observed But why our Assent unto this and all other Articles in this Creed being in good measure established the momentary hopes or transitory pleasures of this world should with most in their whole course of life with all of us in many particular actions in private and secret temptations more prevail then that exceeding weight of glory which Christian hope would fasten on our souls to keep unruly affections under hath often enforced me to wonder and wonderment hereat first moved me to untertake these labors if by any means I may attain unto the causes of this so grievous an infirmity or find out some part of a remedy for it Doubtless had the heathen Philosophers but known or suspected such joyes as we profess we believe and hope for or such a death or more then deadly torments as after this life ended we fear their lives and manners would as far have surpassed the best Christians now living as their knowledge in supernatural mysteries came short of the most learned that are or have been in that profession and yet whatsoever helps any Christian or heathen had for encreasing knowledge or bettering manners are more plentiful in this then any precedent age so that the fault is wholly in our selves that will not apply medicines already prepared as shall God prospering these proceedings be declared in the last Article of this Creed For controversies betwixt us and the Romish Church besides such are directly opposite to the end and method proposed I purposely meddle with none of that rank some as that of the Churches infallibility undermine the very foundation others as the doctrine of merit and justification the propitiation of the Mass unroof the edifice and deface the walls of Christian faith leaving nothing thereof but altarstones for their idolatrous sacrifices For this reason have I built with one hand used my weapon with the other laying the positive or general grounds of Faith against the Infidel or Atheist in the first Book and gaurding them in the second by the sword of the Spirit against all attempts of Romish Sanballats or Tobiahs who still labor to perswade our people the walls of Christs Church here erected since our fore-fathers redemption from captivity unless supported by their supposed infallibility are so weak That if a Fox should go upon them he should break them down In the third which was at this time intended but must stay a while to bring forth a fourth I batter those painted walls whose shallow foundations are discovered in the second The other controversies about the propitiatory sacrifices of the Mass Merits and Justification I prosecute in the Articles of Christs Passion and
that day to believe them if we speak properly and absolutely without reference to their former incredulity Our meaning is they shall do more then believe them for they shall feel them Nor can we say properly that the Elect after the resurrection shall believe the articles of faith seeing all agree that of these three principal vertues Faith Hope and Love onely Love shall then remain The reason is that which you have heard alreadie because evident knowledge must be excluded from the nature of faith and belief and the godly shall then clearly see Christ face to face and fully enjoy the fruit of his Passion which now they onely believe 11 As for certainty We may not exclude it from the nature of belief unlesse this speech be warily understood For the certainty of the Articles of our Faith ought to be greater then the certainty of other knowledge for we must believe them although they be contrary to the capacity of our understanding for even this must we believe that many things as all supernatural things surpasse the reach of our understanding Yet this we may safely say that the certainty of the articles of our belief as of Christ his death of his and our resurrection cannot be so great to us in this life as it shall be in the world to come when we shall evidently know them This rule then is infallible That the knowledge of any thing is more certain then the belief thereof although the belief of some things as of Christ his Passion be more certain then the knowledge of other things as namely then the knowledge of humane sciences So then out of this it is evident that belief taken generally doth neither exclude all certaintie nor necessarily require any seeing some belief hath a kinde of certaintie adjoyned with it and some cannot admit it Wherefore it remaineth that Assent is the essence of belief in general I say such an assent as is not joyned with evidency 12 This Assent may be weaker or stronger and so come nearer unto or be further from certainty according to the nature of that object whereunto we give assent or according to the nature of that whereupon our belief is grounded or lastly according to our apprehension either of the object or that which is the ground of our assent Excesse in the first of these to wit in certaintie or stabilitie of the object doth rather argue a possibility of firmer belief or more credibility not more firm or actual belief For as many things are more intelligible then others and yet are least understood of many so many that are most credible are least believed 13 Excesse in the second of these whence the assent of belief may be strengthned that is in the ground of belief doth rather argue a stronger hypothetical belief then any absolute belief unlesse the apprehension or conceit of this ground be strong and lively In ordinary reports or contracts it skils not of what credit the partie be unto whose credence or authority we are referred for the truth of any promise or report unless we have good inducements to think that he did either say or promise as we were told If we be not thus perswaded by some apprehension of our own we give onely conditional assent unto the report or promise and believe both with this limitation if he say so whose credit we so esteem But if we can fully apprehend that he said so we believe absolutely 14 As in science or demonstrations it is requisite both that we know the true cause of the effect and also that we apprehend it certainly as the true cause otherwise we have onely an opinion so in true and absolute belief it is requisite that we have both a sure ground of our belief and a true apprehension of that ground otherwise our belief must needs be conditional not absolute It remaineth therefore that we set down first the nature of the objects that may be believed secondly the several grounds of belief and thirdly the manner of apprehending them albeit in some the apprehension of the object it self and the ground of belief are in a sort all one as in that belief which is not grounded upon the authoritie of the teacher This rule is general Wheresoever the objects are in themselves more credible the ground may be more strong and the apprehension more lively so men be capable of it and industrious to seek it and equal apprehension of such objects as are more credible in themselves upon such grounds as are more firm makes the belief stronger then it could be of objects lesse credible or upon grounds lesse firm Caeteris paribus every one of these three First Greater credibility of the object Secondly Surer ground of belief Thirdly more lively apprehension of the object or ground encrease belief 15. For the Objects of belief whence this assent must be distinguished they are either natural or supernatural but first of that which is natural The 〈◊〉 of natural belief are of two sorts either scibilia or opinabilia either such things as may be evidently known in themselves but are not so apprehended by him that believes them or else such things as we can have no evident or certain knowledge of but onely an opinion And of this nature are all the monuments of former ages and relations of ancient times in respect of us which are now living all future contingents or such effects as have no necessary natural cause why they should be nor no inevitable let or hinderance why they may not be as whether we should have rain or fair weather the next moneth whether such or such Nations shall wage war against each other the next year These matters past and contingent which are not yet but may be albeit they agree in the general nature of opinabilia that neither of them can be exactly known but onely by opinion believed yet both differ in that which is the ground of our assent or belief The ground or reason why we believe things past as that Tully lived in Julius Caesars time or that the Saxons inhabited this land is the report of others The ground or reason why we believe future contingents is the inclination or propension which we see in second causes to produce such effects or the coherence betwixt any natural or moral contingent cause and their possible or probable issue As if we see one Kingdom mighty in wealth and at peace and unitie in it self bearing inveterate hate to another or if we know that the one hath suffered wrong not likely to be recompenced and yet able in politick estimation to make it self amends we beleeve that such will shortly be at open hostilitie one with another Or if we see the air waterish we believe it will shortly rain Yet are not the grounds why we believe things past and the grounds of believing future contingents alwayes so opposite but that they may jump in one and conspire mutually for the strengthning of belief
CHAP. III. Of general incitements to search the truth of Scriptures or Christian belief 1 WE may hence clearly see how inexcusable even in the judgement of flesh and blood all men are that either by hearing or reading have any accesse unto the Gospel and do not use the best endeavours of their natural wit if God as yet have touched their hearts with no better grace to search out the truth thereof For seeing in the Scriptures are proposed to every mans choice everlasting life or everlasting death what extream madness is it for men to enter into any course of life or to undertake any matter of moment which may exact their chief imployments before they have diligently looked to the main chance before they have tried the utmost of their wits and others best advise to know the tenour of their own estate We see daily what great pains men of no small account do take in the studie of Alchymie spending their spirits and most of their substance in trying conclusions and searching out the truth of those things for which they have but weak grounds of Philosophie or reason onely the conceit of the good they aim at which is rather possible then probable for them to attain inforceth a kinde of hope and encourageth them to go forward 2 To speak nothing of the good the Scripture promiseth the very conceit of eternal death me thinks should move either the Chymicks which spend much gold only upon hope of getting more or any other man whatsoever to spend all the treasure whatsoever either this their Art or all other could yeeld to secure themselves from such horrible torments as the Scriptures threaten to their Contemners or negligent Hearers And why should not all men then in reason bestow most time and pains in searching the truth of those things which concern their souls estate whose securitie in all reason they should purchase with the highest hopes and utmost aim of all other travails in this life Here then as I said the full height of mans Iniquity and his inexcusable Madness is most plainly discovered that having these two motives which in natural reason do sway all Humane Actions offering themselves to encourage him in searching the Scriptures yet notwithstanding most men bestow less labor in them then in other ordinary Studies First if we compare the good they set before us as a recompence and reward of our travails it is beyond all comparison greater then the scope of any other Trade or Science For here is a double Infinity of solid Good First they promise Joy two wayes Infinite both in Degree and Continuance Secondly they threaten unto their Contemners despisers death torments doubly infinite both in Degree and Continuance Now if the probabilities of the truth of Scriptures were far less than is usually found in other studies or Humane hopes yet could this in Humane reason be no reason why we should labour less in them than in other affairs seeing the incomparable excess of the good they promise doth abundantly recompence this But if the Probability of the truth of Scripture be in natural reason equal to the probabilities which men usually take for their grounds in many greatest attempts then certainly not to bestow as great pains and travail in trying the truth of their promises as in any other Human attempts or affairs doth argue infinite Madness Ask we the Chymick what reason he hath to toil so much in the study of Paracelsus or other intricate Writers of his Faculty the like we may say of any Physitians their answer as you may reade in their writings is this Many Philosophers in former ages have laboured much in this study and have set down good rules of their experiments who as is probable would never have taken such pains upon no ground And verily this tradition or the authority they give to their Writers is their chief motive For I think few of their Ancient Authors have bequeathed to their successors any Gold made by this Art thereby to encourage them If then tradition consent of time or approbation of Authors or relation of experiments be an especial inducement for men to adventure their charge pains and travel in this Faculty as in all other affairs without all controversie the Scriptures in all these motives have an especial Prerogative above all other faculties or sciences albeit humane reason were admitted judge For the Authority of Gods Church is far more general then the consent of any Writers in any one faculty whatsoever The consent of time likewise is greater For no Age since Christs time in these civil parts of the World but by the report of other Writers as well as Christians hath yeelded obedience unto Scriptures as the Word of God Men of most excellent spirits and learning in every Age have addicted their studies unto this truth About the time of our Saviours coming Curious Arts and other civil disciplines did most flourish The Grecians sought after Wisdom and secular Philosophy with the like the Romans after Policy State knowledge and discipline of war all the World almost above others those places wherein Christianity was first planted was then set upon Curious Arts yet we see how the study and search of Scriptures in short time did prove as Aarons Rod amongst the Magitians Serpents It hath devoured all and brought them to acknowledge Allegiance unto it using the help of best secular Arts as it were Nutriment for the growth of Christianity and expelling the rest as Excrements out of the Church Nor can the Atheist name any Age wherein the Heathen had an Oliver to oppugn our profession but we had a Rowland to defend it If they had a Porphyrie or Celsus to oppose Philosophy against it we had an Origen a Man by their own confession of the most rare wit and hope for Philosophy then living to forsake Philosophy and follow Christianity It was not despair which made him and many other excellent Scholars Christians but the sure hope which they found in this profession made them contemn all other hopes and cleave to it with their hearts and souls albeit their souls should for so doing be violently separated from their bodies This trial I am perswaded few of their greatest Philosophers would have endured but they had the Potentates of the World as readie to applaud them as to disgrace the Christians and yet the Christians multiplyed as the Israelites did by oppression in Egypt How resolute they were if we may not be believed bearing witness of our own profession let Pliny testifie in whose judgement Constancie and Resolution was the onely crime in our Profession deserving punishment And for this cause he took want of resolution in such as had been accused before him under the name of Christians as a sufficient Argument that they were not Christians in deed or heart For such as he had been enformed could not be inforced to any such idolatrous practise as he perswaded these men unto
c. He increaseth all the Former Plagues Seven Times again v. 23. and 28. The First and Second degrees of the Plagues threatned were in part fulfilled in the dayes of Gedeon Samson Samuel and Saul The third likewise by Wilde Beasts we see fulfilled in the dayes of Jehoram King of Israel 2 King 17. 25 26. The fourth and fift likewise we see in part fulfilled in their Captivity in the dayes of Manasseh Jehoiachim and Zede●iah and in the time Ptolomey the First under Antiochus Fpiphanes Both their own and other Stories give us full Experiments of this Prophecie As their stubbornnesse did Increase so Gods plagues here threatned did wax more Grievous these later Calamities being at the least Seven Times greater both for Extent and Durance then the former Persecutions which they suffered by the Philistines Moabites Aramites and Ammonite● ●ut The last Plague which containeth all the rest more then Seven Times was not accomplished till after our Saviours Death after which time all the rest in part fulfilled before are more then Seven Times multiplied upon them In their former Overthrows or Captivities they suffered the violence of War and oftentimes felt the Extremity of Hostile laws but after these Storms were past so they would submit themselves unto their Conquerors they usually found as was shewed before more then ordinary Favour at their hands But since our Saviours Death the Memory of their former ●lagu●● hath been but an Invitation of the like or worse their continual bad usage prescribing the law fulnesse of their abuse In the 28. of Deuteronomy the Extraordinary Blessings and Plagues which were to overtake this People either in their Life or Death are more exactly calculated And albeit their I lessings might have been more and more Admirable then the Curses that have befallen them yet Moses it seemes foreseeing or fearing what would Be rather then hoping the Best that might Be is almost Four times as long in Calculating their Plagues as their Blessings So have the Miseries of these later Jews been Four times as long as the prosperity of their worthy Ancestours if we would take an exact measure of the One from the Sacred Histories before the Babylonish Captivity of he Later from Experience and Relation of Jewish or Heathen writers And yet no Plague either known by Experience or related by any Writers but is evidently foretold by Moses His particular Predictions shall be inserted as the Events shall give the Occasion throughout th●● Discourse To begin with that most Horrible Plague Deut. 28. 53 c. An● thou shalt eat the fruit of thy Body even the Flesh of thy Sons an● thy Daughters which the Lord thy God hath given thee during the si●ge and straitnesse wherein thy enemy shall inclose thee So that the Man that is tender and exceeding dainty among you shall be grieved at his Brother and at his Wife that ●●eth in his Bosome and at the r●mnart of his Children which he hath yet lef● For fear of giving unto any of them of thes● sh of his Children whom he shalt eat because he hath nothing left him in that si●ge and streightnesse wherein the enemy shall besiege thee in all thy Cities The tender and ●ainty Woman among you which never could venture to set the soal of her foot on the ground for her softnesse and tendernesse shall be grieved at her Husband that l●eth in her Bosom and at her Son and at her Daughter and at her After-birth that shall come out from between her feet and at her Chil●ren which she shall bear For when all things lack she shall cat them secretly during the siege and streightnesse wherein th●● enemy shall ●esiege thee in thy Cities This Prophecie we see fulfilled to an Hairs-Breadth in Vespasians time CAP. XXIII The Fulfilling of Moses and others Prophecies touching the Desolation of Jewry and Destruction of Jerusalem and the Signs of the Time witnessing Gods Wonderful Hand therein 1 SEeing that part of Tacitus is lost whence we might have known more concerning their Calamitie then we can find now in Heathen Writers we must take the Conclusions answerable to Moses predictions from Josephus a Jew by Birth no way partial for Christians And his Conclusions to omit Moses's Authority or other Inducements can not seem Improbable from such Premisses as the Roman writers have confirmed though little intending such Inferences as we now make from them Do those calamities of the Jews related by Josephus and Eusebius seem strange They justly may if we consider This People as Natural or Ordinary men not as Patterns of GODS Extraordinary Judgements Strange might their Judgements seem and incredible to the Romans or Worldly-wise unlesse other circumstances of that Time witnessed by the Romans themselves were as rare But if By the Romans Opinion every Unusual Effect in Nature did Portend some such strange Event in Human Affairs why should not the Wisest of them in that Age expect some Extraordinarie or Miraculous Matters of Vespasians time yet excepting what he did to those stubborn Jews his other Acts were but Ordinarie and required no Pompous or Magnificent Prologues whereas many Signs either foreshewing his Exaltation to the Empire or confirming his Right unto it or Authority in Managing it were such as no Heathen I think hath ever heard of before but most Consonant unto Gods wonted Signs in Israel whilest their Kings did prosper Seeing the Wisdom of the Wise and Understanding of the Prudent amongst this People had been long hid as the Lord had threatned by his Prophet Esay Chapt. 29. and they themselves had complained We see not our tokens we have not one Prophet more Whence was it that Josephus the Jew should become a prophet for Vespasians good who had already brought much likely to bring more Harm upon his Country and Him now Captived and Imprisoned by Him So S●etonius and Tacitus no Factious Friends for Jews or Christians tell us Josephus did Solace himself at his Commitment with This That Vespasian the Emperour should shortly release him Though Vespasian at that time was far enough from such Hopes in the Judgement of the Roman State which had appointed him General in the Jewish wars because His mean Birth and obscure Family did minister least Suspition of affecting the Splendour and Dignity of the Roman Empire if He should prove Conquerour Did the rest of his unruly Country-men conceit any such matter of Vespasian as Josephus did Then had they not continued stubborn as they did But although Israel knew him not and his people had no understanding yet the dumb Ox knew him to be his Owner and appointed Lord of the Farth and in Sign of his Submission to him having ●●st off his yoak r●● suriously into the Room where he sate at supper where affrighting his Attendants from him he streight prostrates himself before his Feet as if he had been weary offering his neck to His Clemen●y Oracles had ceased in Jewry at least
from speaking any good unto the Jew●… yet the Oracles of Carmel assure Vespasian of good Successe in all that he should set ●is hand unto 2 As these and many other Presignifications were more then Natural so the means of his Advancement if we respect onely the purpose of men were meerly Casual nor is it possible for the Atheist to imagin their Concurren●e contrived by Policy 3 But herein we may clearly see Gods Covenant of exalting this People and humbling their foes quite Inverted All the Plagues threatned to such as bare ill will to Sion light on her Friends and Inhabitants All the ●les●ing● promised to such as prayed for Jerusalems Peace are heaped upon them that work her Ruine More particularly do they verisie that Prophe●●e of M●… ●●●t 28. 4● The stranger that is amongst you shall climb up on high and t●●● shalt come down beneath alow For these Children of the Kingdom taking Violent but false hold upon Gods truest Promises do by their unseasonable desire of exalting themselves above the Nations hoise Him up to highest Dignity that was ordained to pluck them down from their seat and bring them below all other people The manner of it was thus 4 There was a constant Opinion through the East that Jewry about this time should bring forth the Monarch of the World In Confidence of which Prophecie the Jews as the Roman Writers observe did Rebel Vesp●… otherwise likely to have lived in Danger and died in Obscurity and disgrace whereunto Nero had designed him appointed for reasons afore alledged to Manage these Wars gets Renown for his good Service among the Roman● Good w●… of the Eastern nations and upon Nero's death and Civil Broiles thence ensuing partly by promise of assistance from the Parthian partly by other unexpected Occurrents had the Empire thrust upon him otherwise backward of himself to entertain Hopes suggested to him from Heaven by many wonderful Signs and tokens Yet after all this being made Emperour on a suddain before he could bethink himself what belonged to so High a Place he wanted 〈◊〉 as the Historian notes Authority and Majesty to countenance his proceedings and these again are conf●●med unto him at his first entrance into the Empire by means more Miraculous then the former Since Rome began was it not heard that any Roman had opened the eyes of the Blind unlesse this man had been from God he ●ould have done nothing Why then do the Heathen rage and the people ●…in thing against God and his Annointed The Christ as if He had not Healed him which was born Blind with Spittle when as Vespasian ●…perour d●d ●ure one desperately blind by spitting upon his eyes or whence came that vertue into this new Emperours feet that he should ●eal a lame and withered thigh by treading upon it Both these effects were well known unto the most judicious Roman Writers of those times so constantly avouched by them as can leave no place for su●pition in Ages following 5 What shall we Christians say to these things Onely this In both these Cures there was the Finger of God pointing out Vespasian to the world as Christs Right Hand appointed for some Extraordinary and Peculiar Service even to in●… the Plagues foretold by him upon these Jews which had reviled traduced and crucified the Lord of Glory for the like and infinite other far greater Miracles wrought amongst them These strange Calamities had they fallen in Nero's or other like Emperours time might have been attributed to their Cruel disposition but that Vespasian for his natural Inclination another Moses scarce provocable to revenge Practize of Treason against his Person in private men should work that strange desolation upon a whole Land hath this signification that he was Gods Instrument onely in this Businesse what he did he did impelled by Him not of his own Motion or Inclination And because he had diligently executed that which was right in Gods eyes and had done unto these Jews according to all things that were in Gods Heart he had by what Revelation God best knoweth Jehu's Blessing Sealed unto him That his Son should sit upon his Throne so confident was he in this perswasion as after the discovery of many to scorn all Conspiracies though daily intended against ●… avouching still either his Sons or None must succeed him in the Empire as both of them did Though the later much degenerate from so worthy a Father most dislike unto his noble brother was most unworthy and uncapable of so High a Place but onely from his Fathers deserts which GOD had ordained should be rewarded with this Honour Had either of his Sons rendred according to the reward bestowed upon them more Scepters had sprung from the Flavian Stock But as it Grew ●pace so did it quickly Fade Titus the fairest Branch to all mens seeming being plucked off to his great Hearts grief in the Blossom for what Secret sin GOD knoweth best This One was grievous enough to have deserved a more grievous death that apprehending his Fates approach he durst so Considently look Heaven in the Face and Expostulate his untimely death as unjust seeing he never had offended the Sacred Powers thereof but Onely Once The Signs of those Times were Extraordinary could the Romans have rightly observed them But these Great Conquerours were taken with their Captives ●rrour in not discerning or mis-applying them As the Spring Sun which naturally reviveth all other living Creatures often times prepareth such Human bodies as are fullest of Life and Bloud but most neglective of the opportunity of taking Physick or using diet convenient for that season to hot and desperate diseases never perceived in their Summers growth until they be ripe of death in the Autumn so albeit the Sun of Righteousnesse whose coming into the world was to give life unto it did first arise in Jewry yet by her childrens Confidence in their wonted Temper so whole and sound unto their seeming that of all other people they onely needed no Physitian the very Beames of saving Health did secretly dispose their evil disposed hearts to violent death which burst out in the later end or Autumn of that Age wherein he appeared For that Generation with whom our Saviour Christ Jesus conversed on earth was not fully past until this People began to swell with insolent and proud hopes of Soveraignty over others and by their untimely provocation of the Romans bring suddain Destruction upon themselves as stout and full Bodies by violent and unseasonable Exercises are soonest brought down from the height of their strength unto the grave The Romans again seeing these Jews defeated and themselves possessed of their hopes Vespasian being called to the Empire during these wars which Titus his son did gloriously finish to the utter ruine of that Nation think sure their Gods had been more potent then the GOD of the Jews and apply the Prophecie meant of Christ unto Vespasian as if He
had been That Monarch of the World which according to the common received Opinion throughout the East was at this time to arise in Jewry So doth the God of this World still blind the eyes of the worldly-wise with Fair Shews or earthly shadows of Heavenly Things that they cannot or care not to look into the Body or Substance of Divine Mysteries for whose representation onely those are given otherwise uncapable of any cause either in Nature Reason or Policy Vespasian the Emperour indeed was the Second Type or shadow of the Messiah That great Monarch and Prince of Peace whose endlesse Kingdom shall put down all Wars for ever For seeing by the Fall of these Jews as Saint Paul saith Salvation is come unto the Gentiles it pleased the Wisdom of our GOD to have their Destruction Solemnized with the self-same Signs that His birth had been which brought forth Life unto the World For immediately after their Fatal Overthrow by Titus Janus had his Temple shut and Peace a Temple erected by Vespasian Thus Divine Suggestions Effect no more in most mens thoughts then diurnal Intention of mind doth in hard Students broken sleeps which usually set the Soul a working seldom finding any distinct Representation of what she seeks though contenting her self oft-times for that Season with some pleasant Phantasm as much different from the true nature of that she hunts after as the clouds which Ixion imbraced were from Juno Vespasians Secret Instinct in this devotion did aim no doubt as it was directed by all Signs of the Time at the true Prince of Peace but was choaked and stifled in the Issue or Passage and his intent blinded in the Apprehension by the palpable and grosse conceipts of Romish Idolatry wherein he had been nuzled as mens In-bred desire of true Happinesse is usually taken up and blind-folded by such pleasant sensible Objects as they most accustom themselves unto And yet God knows whether this vertuous Emperours last Hopes were inwardly rooted in Pride and Presumption of heart or rightly conceived there were onely brought forth amisse As if a man should first apprehend the state of Blessednesse or Regeneration in a dream the Representation of it would be grosse though the Apprehension sound Quite contrary to his Sons disposition when he himself apprehends death coming upon him which the Physitians and Astronomers could not perswade him to beware of he solaced himself with this saying Now shall I be a God his inward Hopes of a Celestial state after this life might for ought that any man knows be true and sound and the representation onely tainted with the Romans grosse Conceipt 6 But whatever became of Him in that other World His Entrance into this His Continuance herein and Departure hence were in all the worlds sight of unusual and Extraordinary Observation The disposition of the Times by the most irreligious amongst the Romans were referred to Fates or divine Powers who had not graced the Birth Life and Death or long flourishing Raign of Augustus with half so many Tokens of their Presence on Earth or Providence over Humane Affairs What Effect or issue can the Roman assign answerable unto them Rome could not invite the nations to come and see whether any prosperity were like hers for hers had been far greater and of longer continuance then now under Vespasian who was suddenly called away by a Comet from Heaven and Augustus his Sepulchre opening of its own accord to welcome him to his grave Whereat then did all these Signs point They should have been as a New Star to lead the wise men of the West unto Hierusalem now crying out of the dust unto the careless Roman Have ye no regard all ye that passe by Behold and see if there be any sorrow like unto my sorrow which is done unto me wherewith the Lord hath afflicted me in the day of his fierce wrath It was not Titus and Vespasian that had afflicted her they were but His Deputies that was Lord of Sion who had Decreed what they Effected For this cause did neither the Father nor the Son take the name of Judaicus albeit the Difficulty of the War begun by the Father and the Famousnesse of the Victory atchieved by the Son according to the custom of the Romans observed by them in their Triumphs and other Solemnities did solicit them hereunto For what victory gotten by any Roman was like unto this either for the multitude of the Slain or the Captives Nothing in this kind could seem strange unto the Politician if it had proceeded from Tacitus pen. But Satan it seems by Gods permission hath called in that part of Tacitus as a Book too dangerous for his Scholars to read lest giving Credence unto it they might Believe him lesse and Christians more in any other points and yet praised be the Name of Our Gracious God who envies no man the truth and hath left us abundant Records of this Story all answerable to his Sacred Word and Prophecies of old concerning Hierusalem From that part of Tacitus which is left we may gather how consonant his Conclusions would have been unto that Faithful and most Ingenious Historian Josephus with whom he Jumps in these particulars That this people were of Bodies Healthful and able their City exceeding strong every way well provided against long siege Which Assertion would have ministred Suspition to such as measure all Stories by rules of Policy unlesse some Roman writer had avouched it seeing Pompey had razed the City-wals and Sosius had taken it by force in Augustus time since continuing in Subiection unto the Romans until the last and Fatal Rebellion But Tacitus tels us that these Jews made their benefit of Claudius his covetousnesse and purchased licence to fortisie the City in time of peace against war during which it grew more populous then before by the reliques of other ruinated Cities resorting unto it And albeit he differ from Josephus in the number of the besieged yet he acknowledgeth Six Hundred Thousand of all sorts the Women as resolute as the Men Armour and munition enough for as many as could and yet more in this People that durst use and manage them then could be expected in such a number Their Seditious and Factious their stubborn and desperate mindes against God and man and their own souls neglective of fearful Signs from Heaven and other prodigious Tokens foretelling their Desolation are Pathetically described by the same Writer The preparations likewise on Titus his part we may gather from him to be as great as any Roman ever used His army at the first approach to the City thought scorn to expect the help of Famine to make the Besieged yield and yet after one or two Assaults made to little purpose enforced to desist until all the Engines of Batterie either of Ancient or Modern Invention were ready And all these circumstances we have fully set down in this fragment of Tacitus which is left 7
amongst Christians or between them and others In which practize they have been continually crusht Finally their general carriage is so odious and preposterous that Albeit the CHRISTIAN Magistrates conspire together for their good they themselves will certainly provoke their own misery 4 The lamentable death of those Jews in London had purchased pitie and compassion towards the rest as the Kings Proclamation for their peace and securitie did witnesse but their Brethren of Lin can not abstain from offering that violence from which the King had priviledged them to one of their own linage for becoming a Christian attempting forcible entrance into the Church whither he had fled for Sanctuarie Unlesse they had thus riotously violated the Kings peace the Christians had not assemble●… together and the Inhabitants were afraid at all to meddle with them But 〈◊〉 God had provided that a great companie of Forraign Mariners should 〈◊〉 pair unto this mutinie who moved with indignitie of the attempt could not content themselves with the rescue of the Convert at the first perhaps onely intended but assault these mutinous Jews through fear repairing to their houses which the other first rifle then burn together with their owners departing unpunished with spoil 5 The end of the Kings Proclamation being once frustrate by this strange Accident though not purposely or directly violated by the inhabitants of this place his subjects elsewhere are willing enough to imitate the Fact without any occasion of like wrongs offered by the Jews only upon opportunitie of doing violence by the Kings absence and the present mustering of Souldiers for the Holy Land upon whom transported hence their partners in evil here at home remaining might post over the whole blame of the fact of part whereof no doubt his Souldiers had been guiltie The like massacres of these Jews ensued at Stamford at Lincolne and S. Edmundsbury shortly after but of all others most memorable and lamentable was that which in the same Lent befel them at York 6 The Jews there dwelling had heard by this time what had been done unto their brethren in London and Lin and see now the like or greater violence intended against themselves so that as Moses in the fore-cited place Deut. 28. 34. addeth They became mad for the sight of their wrong and violence which their eyes did see One of their learned Rabbines perswades four hundred of his companie besieged with him in a strong Tower by a furious multitude to prove themselves such as the world had long taken them and were now persecuted for right Cut-throats indeed rather then fall into their enemies hands himself confirming his doctrine by his example in cutting his wives throat first then his childrens and lastly by killing himself The residue of the four hundred which he had perswaded unto this unnatural and Jewish Act not only willing to imitate him herein would before their death have enforced many others that would not yield unto this Rabbines advice to a more violent death had they not conveyed themselves into a strong Turret within the main Tower which defended them from the flames that consumed their goods And yet these poor souls that had scaped their fellows violence were born to suffer thelike of their Christian Enemies to their shame who had promised them life upon condition they would yield themselves and become Christians which whether they meant in heart or no as they promised he that trieth the secrets of all hearts doth know Sure I am their professed Christian enemies did turn Jews in heart that treacherously killed them before any trial made of their sinceritie towards Christ 7 All these wrongs and violences were committed only by the people much against the Magistrates mindes but hereafter the supream Magistrates Kings themselves as if they had learned wit of their subjects took the Monopoly of wronging the Jews into their own hands To omit what Richard the first had done unto them their hard usage under King John Henry the third Edward the first makes me think that Moses in the last words of his often mentioned Prophecie Deut. 28. spake in his language that said Patria est ubicunque bene est so as England and every place in Europe wherein their condition of life hath been more hard and burdensome then their forefathers had been in Egypt may be said to be that Egypt whereunto the Lord had threatned to bring them again by ships King Johns exactions were so grievous that they had rather suffer then do what he commanded many of them being imprisoned and tortured before they would yield what he demanded What an intolerable thing was it for a private man in those times to pay ten thousand marks for refusal of which that poor Jew of Bristow was so pittifully used But with God it was just to punish him by his own greedinesse of gain for unlesse his money had been as dear to him as meat to such as make Their Belly Their God he would have let his Gold go before he had lost Seven Teeth o●…ne 8 King Henry the third first demands the third part of all their moveables for his supplies then punisht them grievously by the purse for a murther secretly committed by them and thirdly makes them buy their miserable peace by the third part of what was left Finally he brought them to such extream povertie that his brother to whom he let them out to farm could it seems make nothing of them and so they were freed from this brutish servitude as Moses in the fore-cited place had fore-told for want of a Buyer The King surely did not so much pitty them as he did himself and his posteritie who should have gotten nothing of them if the bargain with his brother had gone forward whereas his Successor Edward the first accounted their goods as his own for Non-payment of what he demanded the whole generation scattered throughout this Land were shut up in one night where they enjoyed no day until they had fined at the Kings pleasure who yet perhaps did recover but as much as he and his subjects were endamaged by two hundred and odde of their Country-men all condemned some eight years before for circumcising counterfeiting and washing his coyn This King albeit their wealth under him was much diminished had this advantage of his predecessours The English desirous to have them banished and they as willing to spite the English by their staying here were both forward to purchase their contrarie desires by large offers to the King until the English at last did out-vie them by a fifteenth which the Parliament granted for their utter avoidance of this Land so much welcomer was their room then companie 9 All their immoveable goods with their Obligations and Bils of debt were confiscated Thus as Moses saith they had builded houses but could not dwell therein Vineyards they had planted which they could not carry with them never to return hither again they nor their seed to
some whose Belief unto Divine Oracles hath been confirmed by Experiments answerable unto them 1 THe Method is such as the Simplest Christian may easily learn and the greatest Professors need not to contemn For S. Peter himself that great Doctor of the Circumcision did profit much by this Practise He had often heard that God was no Accepter of Persons This truth was acknowledged by Elihu who had never heard nor read the written law of God He accepteth not the person of Princes and regardeth not the rich more then the poor for they be all the work of his hands The like hath the Wise man from the same reason He that is Lord over all will spare no person neither shall he fear any greatnesse for he hath made the small and great and careth for all alike The same in substance is often repeated in the Book of Life and no man could denie it that had heard it but once proposed if he did acknowledg God for the Creator of all Notwithstanding the fresh Experiment of Gods calling Cornelius to Christian Faith comfirmed S. Peter in the right Belief of Divine Oracles to this effect and as it seems taught him the true meaning of that place Deut. 10. 16. Circumcise therefore the fore skin of your heart as if he had said Glorie not in the circumcision of the flesh and harden your necks no more for the Lord your God is God of gods and Lord of lords a great God Mighty and Terrible which accepteth no persons From this place alone the proud Jews might have learned that the Lord was God of the Gentiles as well as of Them and from the Abundance of his inward Faith enlarged by the forementioned Experiment S. Peter burst out into these Speeches Of a truth I perceive that God is no accepter of persons but in every Nation he that feareth him is accepted with him 2 The same Method the Lord himself hath commended unto us in many places of Scripture wondering oft times at the dulnesse of his peoples hearts that could not from the Experiments of His Power Might and Majestie shewed in them or for them acknowledge those Principles of Faith which Moses commended unto them in writing O saith he that they were wise then would they understand this they would consider their later end how should one chase a thousand and two put ten thousand to flight except their strong God had sold them and the Lord had shut them up And again Eehold now for I am He and there is no Gods with me Why should they Believe this They were to take none for gods but such as could do the works of God What were these Such as God avoucheth of himself in the next words I kill and I give life I wound and I make whole neither is there any that can deliver out of my band These and like Effects specified in the former place often manifested amongst this People might have taught them the truth of the former Oracle albeit Moses had been Silent For so the Finger of God manifested in Naamans the Syrian Generals cure which was but one part of the former effects appropriated unto God did write this divine Oracle as distinctly in his heart as Moses had done it in the Book of the Law For after he was cleansed from his leprosie he turned again to the man of God he and all his company and came and stood before him and said Behold now I know there is no God in all the world but in israel And again thy servant will henceforth offer neither burnt sacrifice nor offering unto any other God save unto the Lord. This was as much as if he had said Behold now for the Lord is He and there is no other Gods with Him He woundeth and he maketh whole 3 If the cure of Leprosie contrary to Humane Expectation could so distinctly write this divine Oracle in an uncircumcised Aramites heart without any patern or written Copie whence to take it out how much more may the Lord expect that the like Experiments in our selves should imprint his Oracles already written by Moses and other his Servants of old in our hearts and consciences that have these paterns of Naaman and others registred to our hands admonishing us to be observant in this kind But alas we are all by nature sick of a more dangerous leprosie then Naaman knew and yet the most of us far sicker of Naamans Pride then of his leprosie If Gods Ministers shall admonish the curious Artists or Athenian wits of our times as Elisha his Prophet did Naaman they reply with Naaman in their hearts We looked they should have called upon the name of the Lord their God and made us New Men in an Instant and now they bid us wash our selves again and again in the water of life and be clean Are not the Ancient Fountains of Greece that nurse of Arts and Mother of Eloquence and the pleasant Rivers of Italy the School of delicate modern Wits better then all the waters of Israel Are not Tullie and Aristotle as learned as Moses and the Prophets Thus they depart from us in displeasure 4 But if the Lord should command us greater things for our temporal Preferment or for the avoidance of corporal Death or torture would we not do them How much rather then when he saith unto us Wash your selves often in the Holy Fountain the Well of life and ye shall be clean even from those sores which otherwise will torment both body and soul eternally Yea but many read the Scriptures again and again and daily hear the word Preached publickly and yet prove no purer in life and action then their Neighbours The reason is because they hear or read them negligently not comparing their Rules with Experiments daily incident to their course of life their preparation and resolution are not proportionable to the weight and consequence of this sacred Businesse their Industrie and alacritie in observing and practizing the prescripts commended to their Meditations by their Pastors do in no wise so far exceed their care and diligence in worldly matters as the dignitie of these Heavenly Mysteries surpasseth the pleasures or commodities of this brickle earthly life and not thus Prepared to Hear or Read the Scriptures to Hear is to Contemn to Read is to Profane them even the often repetition of the words of life without due reverence and attention breeds an insensibility or deadnesse in mens souls Yet should not such mens want of Sense breed Infidelitie in others rather this Experience of so much hearing and little doing Gods will may confirm the truth of his word concerning such Teachers and Hearers Many in our times not Monkes and Friars only but of their stern Opposites not a Few Having a 〈◊〉 of godliness but denying the power thereof crept into houses and lead captive simple Women laden with sins and lead with divers lusts ever hearing and never able to come to
doth the Pope challenge to himself the gift of Prophecie but only of legal Decisions which are no otherwise written then many write and contain no deeper nor more Supernatural Matter then many may invent most of them usually penned in a base and barbarous Logick Phrase his Stile at the best is not peculiar his Character easie to be counterfeited by any man that can pen a Proclamation or frame an Instrument in Civil Courts 7 To recollect what hath been said First seeing God is more to be Believed then Men secondly seeing we have better Arguments to perswade the People that these Scriptures daily read in our Church are Gods own Words then the Priests and Jesuites have that the Tidings which they bring from beyond Sea are the Popes or Churches Decrees or Sentence we may and ought Teach them to relie immediately upon Gods Word preached or read unto them as the surest and most Infallible Rule of Faith the most lively most effectual and most forcible Means of their Salvation Or if the Jesuites will teach them to Believe the Popes Decrees given ex Cathedra or the Churches Opinion indefinitely taken Fide divina by Infallible Faith but the Jesuites or Priests Expositions or Translations of them only Conditionally and with this Limitation If so they be the Pope or Churches Decrees we may in like sort with far greater Reason teach the People to Believe the Scriptures or the Word of God absolutely and our Translations or Expositions of it but Conditionally or with Limitation so far as they are Consonant to the Word of God Seeing it is as probable that we may expound Gods Word as rightly and sincerely as the other can the Church or Popes Edicts we have better Reason to exact this conditional Obedience and Assent in the Vertue and Authoritie of Gods Word which we make the Rule of Faith then they can have to exact the like Obedience by Vertue of the Pope or Churches Edict which is to them the Mistresse of Faith For it is more certain to any man living that Gods Word is most Infallibly True then that the Pope cannot Erre Wherefore if the Absolute Belief of the Popes Infallibilitie and Conditional Belief of the Jesuites or Priests his Messengers Fidelitie or Skill be sufficient to Salvation much more may the Absolute Belief or Assent unto the Infallibility of Gods Word and such Conditional and limited Belief of his Ministers Fidelitie be sufficient for the Salvation of his People who as hath been proved cannot be more certain that the Romish Church saith This or That then we can be of Gods Word For they never hear the Church or Pope speak but in Jesuites or Priests Mouthes And although they knew he said just so as those say yet may a man doubt in Modestie whether the Popes Words be alwayes Infallible but of the Infallibilitie of Gods Word can no man doubt 8 And Here I cannot but much wonder at the preposterous courses of these Romanists who holding an Implicite Faith of Believing as the Church Believes in many Points to be sufficient unto Salvation will yet fasten this implicite Faith upon the present Church of Rome and not refer it rather unto that Church as it was under S. Peters Jurisdiction and Government For if Universalitie be as they contend a sure Note of undoubted Truth then must it needs be more undoubtedly True that S. Peter could not Erre in Matters of Faith then that this present Romish Pope and his Cardinals cannot so Erre For all Papists hold this as True of S. Peter as of this present Pope and all Protestants hold it True of S. Peter not in the present Pope and so did all the Fathers without controversie hold it most True that S. Peter did not teach amisse in his Apostolical Writings So that Universalitie is much greater for S. Peter then for this Pope that now is or the next that shall be 9 For these Reasons fully consonant to their own Positions all Papists me-thinks in Reason should make the same Difference in their Estimate of S. Peter and later Popes which a French Cardinal as the Tradition is at Durham once made betwixt S. Cuthbert and venerable Bede Abeit S. Cuthbert was accounted the greater Saint amongst them whose greater Benefactour he had been in which respect they brought the Cardinal first unto S. Cuthberts Tomb yet because he knew him not so well but only by their Report he praies very warily Sancte Cuthberte si Sanctus es or a pro me But afterwards brought unto Bedes Tomb then in the Consistory because he had been Famous in Forrain Nations from the Commendations of lesse partial Antiquitie he fell to his prayers without Ifs and And 's Vener abilis Beda quia tu Sanctus es or a pro me 10 Proprotional to this Caution in this French-mans Prayers should every modern Papist limit his Belief of the present Popes Infallibilitie in respect of S. Peters And say thus in his heart As for S. Peter I know he Believed and Taught aright And I beseech God I may Believe as he Believed and that my Soul may come whither his is gone as for this present Pope if he believe as S. Peter did be likely to follow him in LIfe and Death I pray God I may Believe as he Believes and do as he Teacheth but otherwise believe me I would be very loath to pin my Belief upon his Sleeve lest happily he run Headlong to Hell to that which should have drawn me up to Heaven For in this Life I walk by Faith and by Faith I must ascend Thither if I ever come There and therefore I dare not fasten my Belief upon any Man whom I would be loath to follow in his Course of Life But most surely might this Implicite Faith be fastned upon Gods written Word contained in the Writings of Moses the Prophets Apostles and Evangelists We know O Lord that Thou hast Taught them All Truth that is Necessary for thy Church to know And our Adversaries confess that thy Word uttered by Them rightly understood is the most sure Rule of Faith for by This they seek to establish the Infallibilitie of the Church and Pope They themselves speak aright by their own Confession where they speak consonantly unto it Wherefore the safest Course for us must be to search out the True Sense and Meaning of it which is as easie for us as them to find as in the Processe of these Meditations God willing shall appear 11 Unto the main Objection concerning the Means of knowing Scripture to be Scripture we have partly answered or rather prevented it in the first Treatise and throughout this whole intended discourse we shall God willing explicate the former general Means or Motives as also bring other peculiar Inducements for the establishing of True Faith unto the particular Articles in this Creed contained For the present Difficultie concerning the Rule of Illiterate Lay-mens Faith or such as understand not those Languages in which
Believe their Infallibilitie most infallibly it could be no Rule of Faith but might be rejected till we see it evidently proved whereas they contend it should be the Rule of Faith unto all and by their own confession a main Article of their Creed but according to their Positions as we shall hereafter prove the onely Article of Christian Faith How destitute these their Assertions are of all Grounds of Reason or Rules of Nature hath been made evident There remain onely Two Pillars possibly imaginable for supporting this pretended Infallibilitie Tradition and Scripture Against Tradition all the Arguments they can heap against the Certainty of Scriptures stand good as shall hereafter God willing be shewed That no Argument can be drawn from Scripture to their succour albeit the later Jesuites have earnestly sought to scrape a many for better then Scrapings are not the very best they bring we are now to prove 7 That our Belief of Scriptures Truth and their true Sense by what Means soever we attain thereto must be infallible Both agree The Means that must infalliblie ascertain or prove their Divine Truth and true Meaning unto us say our Adversaries is the Churches Infallibilitie which likewise must be infallibly Beleeved otherwise it could not be the Rule of Faith or Belief infallible It shall suffice here once for all to admonish the Reader That as often as we mention Belief of Scriptures or the Churches infallibility in this Dispute we mean not any kind of Belief but that only which is infallible so likewise whiles we mention the Means or Proofs of either we understand onely Means or Proofs infallible whereon Faith may immediately relie as upon a Rule most sure and certain In all these we demand nothing but what our Adversaries most willingly grant From their grant we argue thus 8 If either the Scriptures can thus ascertain or prove the Churches Infalibilitie or It the infallible Truth of Scriptures to our Souls we must of necessity either Believe the one of these before the other The Churches Infalibility before Scriptures or Scriptures before It or both together without all prioritie of Belief or praeexistent knowledge of the one whence the Belief or knowledge of the other must spring The members of the Division are in the Proposal actually two but in the Disquisition will prove three To begin with the first 9 If they say we must believe the Scriptures to be the Word of God before we 〈◊〉 believe 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of their Church they overthrow their own and est ablish 〈◊〉 Postions For thus they make the Scripture a Rule of our Faith at the least In this one Article of the Catholick Churches Infallibilitie which by this Assertion we may and ought infallibly to believe because the Scriptures which we first infallibly believe do teach and prove it Hence private men should be taught by the Holy Ghost first to believe the Truth of Scriptures and for it the Churches Infallibilitie Wherefore the Scripture must be the immediate Rule of their Belief in the Article of the Churches Infallibility which to them is the generall Rule of Faith and so by consequence the Scriptures which to us are onely the Rule of Earth must be more then so to them even the Rule of their Rule of Faith But if the Scriptures may be the immediate and insallible Rule of their Belief in this one Article of the Churches Infallibility what reason possibly can be imagined why they should not be the infallible and immediate Rule of their Faith in all other parts or Articles of their Creed For I call Heaven and Earth Men and Angels to witnesse b●…xt ours and the Romish Church whether the Articles of Christs Incarnation his Death his Passion his Burial his Resurrection his Aseension his Intercession for us the Resurrection of the dead and Life everlasting c. be not to any mans Capacitie in the World much more plainly set down in sundry places of Scripture then the Infallibilitie of the present Romish Church in these words Peter feed my sheep Peter to thee 〈◊〉 give the ●…s of Heaven Thou art Peter and upon this Rock will I build my Church It seemed good to the Holy Ghost and us or in any place her sonnes can challenge for it Wherefore if the Holy Ghost teach us this Article of the Churches Infallibilitie immediately without the Churches infallible Authoritie which as we now suppose must be proved from the Scriptures first infallibly Believed then questionlesse he may and will immediately teach us the other Articles of our Creed and whatsoever necessary to Salvation which are more plainly and perspicuously set down in Scriptures without the help or assistance of the Churches infallible Authority which it is supposed to teach by places more doubtfull 10 Or if our Adversaries will hold it no Absurdity to say that the Holy Ghost may teach us the true Sense and Meaning of the fore-mentioned places of Scripture which seem to make for the Infallibility of the Romish Church as Petre pasce oves c. immediately without the help or assistance of the Churches Infallibilitie which is here the lesson supposed to be taught and refers all other Points of Faith or matters of Doctrine unto the Churches teaching immediately they are bound in Reason to shew a Scripture for this Assertion And besides they must perforce make the same comparison betwixt the Holy Ghosts immediate teaching and the Church or Popes immediat teaching which our Saviour Christ made between the Holy Ghosts extraordinary teaching which was to ensue his Glorification and his own immediate teaching before his Passion and as soon as the Holy Ghost hath once taught us the Meaning of these places which make for the Churches Infallibilitie that may be applied unto him in respect of the Popes Supereminencie in teaching which our Saviour Christ spake of himself and his own personall Instructions in the dayes of his Humility in respect of that 〈◊〉 ●ed Comforters Illuminations to be bestowed in abundant measure upon his Apostles immediately upon his Ascention For thus by their Assertions that Holy Comforter after that Lesson once taught Tues Petr●… should take his leave of faithfull hearts in the same termes our Saviour there did of his Disciples I tell you the Truth it is expedient for you that I go away For if I go not away the Comforter that Infallible Teacher on whose Authority your Souls must rest will not come unto you but if I depart I will send him unto you and again I have many things to say unto you but ye cannot hear ●oem now how●eit when He is come that hath the Spirit of Truth your infallible Teacher whose Tongue while he speaks ex Cathedra I must attend he will lead you unto all Truth for he shall not speak of himself but whatsoever he shall hear be shall speak he shall glorifie me for he shall receive of me and shew it unto you These words I say might be
and feeling of his goodnesse and truth of his word 7 Though no Law-giver or Governour whether temporal or spiritual especially whose calling was but ordinary could possibly before or since so well deserve of the people committed to his guidance as this great General already had done of all the host of Israel were they upon this consideration forthwith to believe what soever he should avouch without further examination sign or token of his favour with God without assured experience or at the least more then probable presumptions of his continual faithfulnesse in that service whereunto they knew him appointed Albeit after all the mighty works before mentioned wrought in their presence they had been bound thereunto the meanest handmaid in that multitude had infallible pledges plenty of his extraordinary calling lockt up in her own unerring senses But from the strange yet frequent manifestation of Moses power and favour with God so great as none besides the great Prophet whom he prefigured might challenge the like the Lord in his al-seeing wisdom took fit occasion to allure his people unto strict observance of what he afterwards solemnly enacted as also in them to forwarn all future generations without express warrant of his word not absolutely to believe any governour whomsoever in al though of tried skil and fidelity in many principal points of his service That passage of Scripture wherein the manner of this peoples stipulation is registred wel deserves an exact survey of all especially of these circumstances How the Lord by rehearsal of his mighty works so epassed extorts their promise to do whatsoever should by Moses be commanded them and yet will not accept it offered until he have made them ear-witnesses of his familiarity and communication with him First out of the Mount he called Moses unto him to deliver this solemn message unto the house of Jacob Ye have seen what I did to the Egyptians and how I carried you upon ●agles wings and have brought you unto me Now therefore if you will hear my voice indeed and keep my covenant then ye shall be my chief treasure above all people though all the earth be mine After Moses had reported unto God this answer freely uttered with joynt consent of all the people solemnly assembled before their Elders All that the Lord commanded we will do was the whole businesse betwixt God and them fully transacted by this Agent in their obsence No he is sent back to sanctifie the people that they might expect Gods glorious appearance in Mount Sinai to ratifie what he had said upon the return of their answer Lo I come unto thee in a thick cloud that the people may hear whilest I talk with thee and that they may also believe thee for ever They did not believe that God had revealed his word to Moses for the wonders he had wrought but rather that his wonders were from G●d because they heard God speak to him yea to themselves For their principal and fundamental lawes were uttered by God himself in their hearing 〈◊〉 Moses expresseth These words to wit the Decalogue the Lord spake unto ●… 〈◊〉 ●ul●●tude in the ●ou●t out of the midst of the fire the cloud and the 〈◊〉 with a great voice and add●d no more And lest the words which they had heard might soon be smothered in fleshly hearts or quickly slide o●● of their brittle memories the Lord wrote them in two Tables of stone and at their transcription not ●oses onely but Aaron Nada● and A●th● with the seventy Elders of Israel are made spectators of the Divine glory ravished with the sweetnesse of his presence † They saw saith the Text th●… of Isr●●l and un●er his feet as it were a work of a Saphire stone and as the 〈◊〉 h●a●●n when it is clear And upon the Nobles of the children of Israel ●e 〈◊〉 his 〈◊〉 also they saw God and did eat and drink After these Tables through A●●s●s anger at the peoples folly and impiety were broken God writes the 〈◊〉 same words again and renews his Covenant before all the people promising undoubted experience of his Divine assistance 8 Doth Moses after all this call fire from heaven upon all such as distr●●t his words ●aron and M●riam openly derogate from his authority which the Lord consirmes again viva voce descending in the † pillar of the 〈◊〉 co●…ng these d●tractors in the doore of the Yabe●●acce Wherefore were you 〈◊〉 a●raid to sp●ak against my servant even against Moses Th●●s the Lord was 〈◊〉 a●g●●e and depa●t●d leaving his mark upon Miriam cured of her leprosie by Moses instant prayers No marvell if Korah Dathan and ●●irams judgements were so grievous when their sin against Moses after so many documents of his high calling could not but be wilfull as their perseverance in it after so many admonitions to desist most malitious and obstinate Yet was M●s●s further countenanced by the appearance of Gods glory unto all the Congregation and his authority further ratified by the strange and fearfull end of these chief malefactors † foretold by him and by fire i●luing from the Lord to consume their confederates in offering incense ungratefull to their God Tantae molis erat Judaeam condere gentem So long and great a work it was to ●…ie Israel in true faith But without any like miracle or prediction such as never saw him never heard good of him must believe the Pope as well as Israel did their Law-giver that could make the Sea to grant him passage the clouds send bread the windes bring flesh and the hard rock yeeld drink sufficient for him and all his mighty host that could thus call the heavens as witnesses to condemn and appoint the earth as executioner of his judgements upon the obstinate and rebellious yet after all this he inflicts no such punishments upon the doubtfull in faith as the Romish Church doth but rather as is evident out of the places before alledged confirms them by commemoration of these late cited and like Experiments making † God 's favours past the surest pledges of his assistance in greatest difficulties that could beset them To conclude this people believed Moses for God● testimony of him we may not believe Gods Word without the Popes testimony of it He must be to God as Aaron was to Moses his mouth whereby he onely speaks distinctly or intelligibly to his people CAP. XVII That the Churches authority was no part of the rule of faith unto the people after Moses death That by Experiments answerable to his precepts and predictions the faithfull without relying upon the Priests infallible proposals were as certain both of the divine truth and true meaning of the Law as their fore-fathers had been that lived with Moses and saw his miracles 1 TO proceed unto the ages following Moses How did they know Moses law either indeed to be Gods Word or the true sence and meaning of it being indefinitely known
which cause they were in conscience bound to examine his doctrine by Moses and the Prophets otherwise they might have believed the saving truth but falsly and upon deceitfull grounds The stronger or more absolute credence they had given unto his words or works without such examination the more they had ensnared their souls and set their consciences upon the Rack by admitting a possibility of contradiction betwixt two doctrines both firmly believed without any evidence of their consonancy or Both conspiring to the same end The speedier and higher this edification in Christ had been the sooner it might have ruinated that foundation which God by Moses and the Prophets had reared in Israel unlesse this new work had been orderly squared well proportioned closely layed and strongly cemented unto the former In secular schooles he is held an unwise answerer that will admit Socraticall Interrogations for albeit there appear no difficulty in any one proposed apart yet in the processe a respondent may be easily brought to grant Conclusions from which he knows not what Consequences may be drawn because their Consonancie with the Problem whose defence he undertakes is not so evident nor immediate as upon a sodain may be fully examined And not examining the consonancie of every other proposition with the principles of that faculty whereto the Problem belongs the best answerer living may be made either grant what he should not or deny what should be granted Now Christs doctrine was to Mosaical and Prophetical as the Conclusion to the Promises or as the Corollary of greatest use unto the Speculative Theorem Suppose then a Jew well skilled in Moses and the Prophets should instantly upon the first hearing of our Saviours Sermons or sight of his miracles have admitted him for such an infallible teacher upon termes as absolute and irrevocable as the Jesuite would have the Pope acknowledged by all Christians a good disputant might easily have staggered him by these or 〈◊〉 Socratical demands Do you steafastly believe Moses writings for Gods word G●● forbid I should doubt of this Do ye believe this new doctrine confirmed by miracles as firmly What if I do Do you know as certainly whether both agree as well as one part of Moses writings with another What if I do not Untill you be fully resolved in this your belief in both cannot be sound for in case they should disagree the one must needs be false and if choice were given you whether in sooth would you disclaim Here a wise man that as the wise King speaks had eyes in his head and would not be led by a blind faith would have paused a while and thought with himself This is a point that should be looked to for if these new doctrines should prove incompatible as for any just examination hitherto made they may I cannot see wh●ther deserves more credence Whiles I consider Moses writings and call to mind those mighty wonders our fathers told us with like continuall experiments of their divine truth nothing can seem more certain then they again whiles I behold these new miracles me thinks his authority that works them should be as great as Moses was yet if they should happen to disagree the one must be better believed then the other or else for ought I see there can be no certainty of either for if this mans possibly may be why might not Moses doctrine likewise be false or if our fathers were deceived by his signes and wonders why may not we be so served by this mans miracles But if upon just triall they shall be found fully to agree in every point as I trust they do then doubtlesse both are from God and I shall stedfastly believe this new doctrine to be divine if such as Moses had foretold and withall more evidently acknowledge then before I could that Moses spake by the Spirit of the all-seeing everliving God if this Jesus of Nazareth be in all points like to him and so qualified as he foretold the great Prophet should be But in the interim till the triali ●e made it is best to lay sure hold on Moses and the Prophets For prior tempore potior jure their writings doubtlesse were from God because hitherto they could not be destroyed time and they shall trie whether Jesus and his doctrine be so or no whether he be that great Prophet that should come or we are yet to look for some other 4 Thus when John Baptist sent his Disciples to our Saviour with this very question Art thou he that should come or shall we look for another The answer he returned again whether for confirmation of Iohns own faith or as the most interpreters think of his Disciples was this and no more Go and shew Iohn what things ye have seen and heard that the blind see the halt go the lepers are cleansed the deaf hear the dead rise again and the Gospel is preached to the poor and blessed is he that shall not be offended in me These or other of their fellow Disciples had enformed their Master Iohn before of Christs healing the Centurions servant by his word or command though absent of his raising the widows son from death to life of the rumours spread abroad of him thorowout all Judea and the regions round about and upon this report as Saint Luke tells us did John make the former solemne demand But some will yet demand how could he or his Disciples be confirmed by the answer given them wherein is little more then formerly both had heard for the raising up of the widowes son which especially occasioned their coming was the greatest of all in this Catalogue and yet as great as this some of the ancient Prophets had done how could it then prove him to be the Messias Had he told them as much in plain termes they might have beleeved him because this great work did witnesse him to be a Prophet and therefore one that could not lie But by this answer how could they gather more then the people upon the astonishment of that accident had said for when the dead man sate up and spake fear saith the Evangelist came on them all and they glorified God saying A great Prophet is raised up among us and God hath visited his people Luke 7. 16. 5 Yet this objection at least the solution confirms the truth of my former assertion that by his miracles alone considered they were not bound absolutely to believe he was the Messias but by comparing them with other circumstances or presupposed truths especially the Scriptures received and approved prophesies of the Messias though no one for the greatnesse of power manifested in it could of it self yet the frequencie of them at that time and the condition of the parties on whom they were wrought might absolutely confirme John and his Disciples because such they were in these and every respect as the Evangelical Prophet had foretold Messias should work for this reason our Saviour delivers his
proportional Mean between him and lesser Prophets Other in these few gifts wherein they resembled their father came far short of him Christ in all far exceeded him Others were all of Jacobs line raised up by Gods appointment so to instruct their brethren in doubtful cases as they should not need to consult sorcerers or entertain familiarity with wicked spirits Christ to omit the eminency of his Prophetical function till hereafter besides this common fraternity with his people was in more especial manner Abrahams seed and in particular sort raised up by Jehovah his God by intrinsick assumption into the unity of his person not by external assistance or impulsion of his spirit Ruse●… likewise he was in a strict and proper sense 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from amid this people being as it were extracted out of the pure virgin as the first woman was out of the man by Jehovahs own immediate hand from his cradle to his crosse most exactly answering to that delineation of the Great Prophet and Mediatour to be revealed which was exhibited first in Moses when he stood before the Lord in Horeb. His strange deliverance from Herodian butchery whiles all the Infant males besides did perish was fully parallel to the others exemption from Pharaohs cruelty like to Moses he was in the number of his Disciples in communication of his spirit unto them in admitting them to more special participation of his secrets in the peculiar testifications of his familiarity with God in his fasting in his transfiguration in multitude of miracles But these and the like I leave to the Readers observation 10 The peculiar and proper undoubted notes of the great Prophet there spoken of wil be most conspicuous in our Saviour if we compare him first with Moses then with ordinary Prophets according to that difference the Lord himself made between these and Moses If there be a Prophet of the Lord among you I will be known to him by a vision and wil speak unto him by dream My servant Moses is not so who is faithful in all mine house Unto him wil I speak mouth to mouth and by vision not in dark words but he shall see the similitude of the Lord. Wherefore then were ye not afraid to speak against my servant even against Moses It is said signanter he should see the similitude of of God not God for as the Evangelist saith No man hath seen God at any time so was it told Moses from the Lords own mouth that he could not see his face and live Yet saw this great Prophet more of God then all the Prophets beside Herein then was Christ like unto him but far above him that He was in the bosome of his father not admitted to see his back parts only and hath declared him to the world Moses from the abundance of his Prophetical spirit so perfectly foretold the perpetual estate of his people from the Law given to the time of their Messias as the best Prophets may seem to be but his schollers From participation of that fulnesse which was in Christ hath that Disciple whom he loved far exceeded Moses as wel in the extent weight and variety of matters foretold as in the determinate manner of foretelling them And I know not whether if it were possible to call both Christ and Moses from heaven their presence though more glorious then it was upon Mount Tabor would be more forcible to illuminate the Jew or Athiest then serious reading the books of Deuteronomy and the Revelation comparing the one with the Jews known misery the other with Ecclesiastical Stories the late abominations of the Papacy and Romanists more then Jewish blindnesse The one shews Moses to have been the father of Prophets the other Christ from whose immensurable fulnesse John had that extraordinary measure of the spirit to be The Fountain of Prophesies whose supereminencies and inexhaustible fulnesse may yet be made more apparent by comparing him not with Moses the Symbol or Mean but with the other extream to wit the rank of lesser Prophets 11 It is rightly observed by the Schoolmen Lumen Propheticum erat aliqualiter aenigmaticum these ordinary Prophets illuminations were not so evident or distinct as certain they discerned rather the Proportion then Feature of truth which they saw but as it were through the cover or in the case not in it self And albeit the event did alwayes prove their answers true oft-times in an unexpected sence yet could they not alwayes give such answers when they pleased Nor did the light of Gods countenance perpetually reside upon them as the Suns brightnesse doth by reflexion upon the stars they had their vicissitude of day and night daily Eclipses overcastings many their chief illuminations came but as it were by Flashes Thus Jeremy in the late cited controversie dares not adventure to give the people a sign for confirmation of his doctrine or other more distinct or determinate prediction besides that of the general event about which the contention was That he knew because the Lord had put it into his mouth would in the end condemn his adversarie of presumption But after Hananiah had outfaced him with a sensible sign of his own making breaking the yoak which he had taken from Jeremiahs neck on which the Lord had put it and boldly avouched in the presence of all the people Thus saith the Lord even so will I break the yoak of Nebuchadnezzar King of Babel from the neck of all nations within the space of two years the word of the Lord came unto Jeremiah again and sends him back with this message to his adversary Hear now Hananiah the Lord hath not sent thee but thou makest this people to trust in a lie Therefore thus saith the Lord Behold I wil cast thee from off the earth this year thou shalt die because thou hast spoken rebelliously against the Lord. So Hananiah the Prophet died the same year in the seventh moneth Not long after this event were both Prince and people of J●dah rooted out of the land the Lord had given them because contrary to Moses adminition they reverenced the Prophet that spake presumptuously and would not hearken unto the words which the Lord put in Jeremiahs mouth Elisha likewise to whom Elias had given a double portion of his spirit in respect of his fellows of all the Prophets unlesse Elias might be excepted most famous for the gift of miracles a lively type of the Messias in raising from death and giving life had his spirit of Divination but by Fits needed Musick to tune his spirits unto it He gave the barren Shunamite a son of death notwithstanding he knew not as the Lord of life did of Lazarus in his absence nor could he by her unusual gesture or strange signs of sorrow distinctly divine the true cause of her coming only when Gehezi went to thrust her away he said as much as he knew Let her
did his words give life unto his greatest works his Divinations were to his Miracles as his humane soul was to his body And no question but the conception of their Faith that heard him preach was as immediately from those words of eternal life which issued from his mouth as ours is from the Word preached by his Messengers To what other use then could miracles serve save onely to breed a praeviall admiration and make entrance for them into his hearers hearts though his bodily presence at all times was not yet were his usuall works in themselves truly glorious more then apt to dispell that veil of prejudice commonly taken against the meannesse of his person birth or parentage had it been meerly naturall not occasioned through wilfull neglect of extraordinary means precedent and stubborn opposition to present grace most plentifully offered His raising others from death to life was more then sufficient to remove that offence the people took at that speech If I were lift up from the earth I should draw all men unto me To which they answered We have heard out of the Law that the Christ bideth forever and how sayest thou that the Son of Man must be lift up Who is that Son of Man 18 To conclude then his distinct and arbitrary foretelling Events of every sort any Prophet had mentioned many of them not producible but by extraordinary miracles withall including divine testifications of farre greater glory ascribed to him then Moses or any Prophet ever challenged was The demonstrative Rule according to Moses prediction whereunto all visible signes and sensible miracles should have been resolved by their spectators as known effects lead contemplators unto the first and immediate causes on which their Truth and Being depends That Encomium This is my Beloved Son in whom I am well pleased Hear him with the like given by John Baptist Behold the Lambe of God that taketh away the sins of the world unto all such as took him for a true Prophet did more distinctly point out the similitude peculiar to Him with Moses expressed in the forecited place of Deuteronomy literally though not so plainly as most Readers would without direction observe it seeing even interpreters most followed either neglect the words themselves in which it is directly contained or wrest their meaning Unto him shall ye hearken according to all that thou desiredst of the Lord thy God in Horeb in the day of the assembly Their request then was Talk th●● with us and we will hear but let not God talk with us lest we die Here the whole multitude bound themselves to hear the word of the Lord not immediately from his mouth but by Moses For whiles the people stood afar off he onely drew neer to the darknesse where God was This their request and resolution else-where more fully expressed the Lord highly commended I have heard the voice of the words of this people which they have spoken unto thee they have well said all that they have spoken Oh that there were such an heart in them to fear me and to keep all my commandements alway that it might go well with them and with their children for ever If we observe that increment the literal sence of the same words may receive by succession of time or as they respect the Body not the Type both which they jointly signifie the best reason can be given of Gods approving the former petition and Israels peculiar disposition at that time above others will be this That as posterity in rejecting Samuel rejected Christ or God the second Person in Trinity so here the Fathers in requesting Moses might be their spokesman unto God requested that Great Prophet ordained to be the Author of a better Covenant even that promised womans seed their brother according to the flesh to be Mediator betwixt God and them to secure them from such dreadfull flames as they had seen so they would hearken as then they promised unto his words as unto the words of God himself esteeming him as the Apostle saith so farre above Moses As he that builds the house is above the house And in the Emphasis of that speech Whosoever will not hearken unto my words which he shall speak in my name I will require it of him purposely resumed by Moses with these threats annexed as if he had not sufficiently expressed his mind in the like precedent Unto ‖ him ye shall hearken The same difference between Moses and the Great Prophet then meant is included which the Apostle in another place expresseth He that despiseth Moses Law dieth without mercy under two or three witnesses Of how much sorer punishment suppose ye he shall be worthy which treadeth under foot the Son of God and counteth the blood of the Testament as an unholy thing Untill the soveraignty of the Law and Prophets did determin that Encomium of Moses did bear date There arose not a Prophet si●●e in Israel like unto Moses whom the Lord kn●w face to face but vanished upon the Criers voice when the Kingdom of heaven began to appear The Israelites to whom both promises were made did far exceed all other nations in that they had a Law most absolute given by Moses yet to be bettered by an Everlasting Covenant the Former being as an earnest penny given in hand to assure them of the Latter In respect of Both the name of a Soothsayer or Sorcerer was not to be heard in Israel as in the nations which knew not God much lesse expected a Mediator in whom the spirit of life should dwell as plentifully as splendor doth in the body of the Sun from whose fulnesse ere he visibly came into the world other Prophets were illuminated as those lights which rule the night are by that great light which God hath appointed to rule the day at whose approach the Prince of darknesse with his followers were to avoid the Hemisphere wherein they had raigned In the mean time the testimonies of the Law and Prophesies served as a light or candle to minish the terrors of the night Even Moses himself and all that followed him were but as messengers sent from God to sollicit his people to reserve their alleageance free from all commerce or compact with Familiar spirits until the Prince of glory came in person 19 Thus without censure of their opinion that otherwise think or teach albeit the continuance of Prophets amongst this people were a mean to prevent all occasions of consulting sorcerers or witches yet the chief ground of Moses disswasion from such practises according to the literall connexion of these words The nations which thou shalt possesse hearken unto those that regard the times and unto sorcerers as for thee the Lord the God hath not suffered thee so with those following hitherto expounded The Lord thy God will raise up unto thee a Prophet was the consideration of their late mighty deliverance by Moses the excellencie of
their present Law and their expectation of a greater Law-giver when the first covenant should wax old and Prophesies for a long time fail unto strict observance of whose precepts they solemnly bound themselves as was lately observed ever whilest the former was established That which moves me to embrace this interpretation is Balaams Prophesle uttered of Israel considered in the abstruct as he might have been not as he proved as Malachie speaks of Levt or according to the excellencie of his calling in Moses and in Christ or Gods promise which he for his part was ready to performe God brought them saith he out of Egypt their strength is as an Unicorne For there is reforcery in Jacob nor soothsaying in Israel according to this time it shall be said of Jacob What hath God wrought And in the Chapter following he joyns Israels deliverance from Egypt as the foundation or beginning and his victory in Christ as the accomplishment or finishing of his glory Of that Jacob meant by Bal●… even we Gentiles are a part every way as strictly bound by Mos●● Law as Israel was to abandon soothsaying and sorcery but especially bound to abhor these and like works of darknesse from that light the star●e of Ia●o● hath ●fforded us These two great Prophets then Christ and M●ses appointed successively to declare Gods will unto his people were the main supporters of true religion in Israel by whose doctrine all curious and superstitions arts were to vanish And if my observation fail not Israel was much lesse given to sorcerie after ordmary Prophets ceased then before because this great Prophet the hope of Israel was at hand 20 The apprehension of what we now by long search hardly find was more facile to the ancient ●ews from the known conceipts or received traditions thereto pertinent Before the Law was written one they had heard should be sent from God a mighty deliverer of his people unto whom Moses thought himself much inferiour as appears by his reply to God when he was first sent to visit his brethren Mi●te quaeso quem missurus es Send I pray thee whom thou wilt send as if he had said One thou hast appointed from everlasting to declare thy Name unto his brethren to shew mercy to thy people and thy power upon thine enemies and I beseech thee send him now for this is work besitting his strength not my weaknesse From the like notions or received opinions did the Pharisees understand this place as meant of the Prophet that was to come albeit it may be doubted whether they took him to be the same with the Messiah For so they demand of John severally Art thou the Christ Art thou Eliah Art thou the Prophet Eliah was plainly distinguished from the Messias by Isaiah or perhaps they knew the Messias and the Prophet to be the same yet like strict examiners proposed these two severall names to leave John no evasion It was likewise a truth presupposed and known at least amongst the Pharisees that Eliah Messta● the Prophet one or all should baptise Hence they further question the Baptist † Why baptizest thou then if thou be not the Christ neither Elias nor the Prophet And of himself he saith because He ‖ to wit the Christ should be declare● to Israel therefore am I come baptizing with water This answer with his practise permitted by the Pharisees and approved by the people so fully concurring with the former notion but especially his praediction of Christs baptizing with the Holy Ghost and as Saint Matthew addes with fir● were most pregnant testimonies against unbelievers after they had notice of the Holy Ghosts descending upon the same day their Law was given from heaven for the plentiful manner of effusion and placide illapse into the souls of every sort resembling water powred out as the Prophets phrase imports but for outward appearance and inward effects of ardent zeal like unto fire And likely it is as well the pillar of fire which enlightned Israel by night as the cloud that rested upon the tabernacle under which Saint Paul saith the Fathers being were baptized in it were such praeluding Types of Baptisme by water and the Holy Ghost as the Rock was of Christ or the waters thence flowing of those springs of life which issue from him to the refreshing of every faithfull thirstie soul The mysticall significations of such shadows of good things to come were sufficiently known to the Jews living in our Saviours time Whence as the two judicious Commentatours Bucer and Martyr observe his adversaries mouthes were instantly stopt at the first allegation of those places the modern Jews bark most against as not inferring what the Evangelists report their forefathers granted because these had a peculiar manner of interpreting Scriptures not acknowledged by the later grown out of use for the most part amongst Christians or rather overgrown with the abuse of luxuriant allegories and mysticall senselesse senses framed by Monkish or rather Apish imitation of Orthodoxal antiquity The weeding out of such tares as through these bad husbands sloth and negligence have abounded in Gods harvest will not we trust be either difficult or dangerous to the good seed primitive antiquity hath sowen whose general method and manner of interpreting prophecies though in particulars it often fail partly through adventurous imitation of some Philosophers in unfolding Heathenish mysteries partly through want of skill in the originall Tongues holds the just Mean between barbarous Postillers and some late Preachers worthily famous yet too nice and scrupulous in this subject as shall appear when we come to handle it 21 But to finish what we had last in hand the most remarkable most publick document our Saviour gave to unbelievers of his designment to that great Office foretold by Moses was the constant avouchment of his death and resurrection unto such as so well observed his words that after they had taken away his life procured a strong watch to be set about his sepulchre lest his Disciples should take his body thence and by emptying It seem to fulfill his prophecie Nor did he once onely but twice foretell not barely he would rise again but that thus much was presignified by the Prophet Jonahs three dayes imprisonment in the Whales belly thus inviting them to observe all congruity of circumstance beween the historical type already exhibited and the substance prophecied which method as hereafter God willing will appear is of all the best for insinuating faith into superstitious perverse and crooked hearts otherwise most unapt to receive truths late revealed Since Christs glorification sundry Impostors have done many works hardly distinguishable by spectators from true miracles but the end of all their purposes which they sought thence to perswade was alwayes so dissonant to the uncorrupt notions precedent types or prophecies of the Messiah as unto hearts well setled and surely grounded upon Scriptures formerly established and confirmed
their greatest wonders seemed but Apish toyes howsoever difficiles nugae And some of these juglers either out of the strength of their own illusions or upon the presumption of their profane skill in deceiving others have adventured to foretell their resurrection but were not able to dissolve the bands of death their everlasting durance in whose prisons hath openly shewed they spake presumptuously that not Mahomet himself the greatest of them was that Great Prophet foretold by Moses What was the reason then the Jews would not the Turks unto this day will not believe in Christ crucified For the inhabitants of Jerusalem Saint Paul hath answered Because they knew him not nor yet the words of the Prophets which are read every Sabbath day they have fulfilled them in condemning him The same Apostle though indued with the power of miracles yet in that place rather useth Davids words then his own works to prove Christs resurrection Of which that saying of Christ was most truly verified in the obstinate Jews Not hearing Moses and the Prophets so as to be moved by them to true repentance neither were they perswaded though this great Prophet of whom they wrote was raised from the dead again 22 Were we well acquainted either with that manner of interpretation or those prenotions the Apostle supposed as known when he used that testimony of the Psalmist Thou art my Son this day have I begotten thee to prove our Saviours resurrection it would not be hard to perswade us Moses words hitherto expounded were as literally meant of Gods raising his Son out of his Maiden grave as out of his virgin Mothers womb And I make no question but the conclusion of S Peters Sermon Unto you whom a little before he had termed children of the Prophets hath God raised up his Son were meant by him of his raising Christ from the dead And yet are these words but an application of the former principal text he there insists upon Moses said unto the Fathers The Lord your God shall raise up unto you a Prophet even of your brethren like unto me ye shal hear him all things whatsoever he shall say unto you And unto this resurrection doth the strict propriety of that phrase from the middest of thee well agree For these things were not done in a corner but in Jerusalem the Metropolis of Judea not without expresse notice given to the rulers Moses indeed foretold his own death and whatsoever other Prophets raised up by God unto this people did foretell came still to passe yet none ever foretold his own raising up But seeing Christ First raising from the virgins womb though most miraculous was yet more private he forewarned the world to expect This Second altogether as powerful but more publick And in it again he is like to Moses raised up by God to be a Saviour of his people out of that Ark which without divine especial providence had been his Tomb. This similitude amongst the rest betwixt Christ and Moses as wel in their later as first birth but especially the notice our Saviour gave unto his enemies of the later hath made them unwittingly Prophets to their wo. For seeing it hath left their unbelief without excuse their last errour concerning his Resurrection is become worse then the first concerning his Birth Neither could have seemed incredible though both most miraculous to this ungratious seed of Jacob had they looked as the Prophet willed them unto the rock whence they were hewn and to the hole of the pit whence they were digged The mighty increase of Sarahs womb no better then dead and strange multiplication of Isaacs seed beyond the posterity of all the people with whom he sojourned did but portend the fruitful of-spring of the Virgins only Son should in number and dignity far surmount the sons and daughters of all the fertile mothers in Judea Isaacs posterity had been great yet able to be numbered by David But his generation who shall declare that was cut out of the land of the living Therefore strang there even of one and him as dead or destinated to death as Isaac was yea of one truly dead that made his grave with the wicked as many as the stars in the skie in multitude in dignity greater and as the sand by the sea store innumerable Mightier was the encrease of that Rock wherein he made his grave whence we are hewen then of that pit whence Israel according to the flesh was digged His exaltation since hath been their fall For seeing they would not believe his predictions as their Lawgiver had commanded the world may clearly see the curse indefinitely there denounced against all such as would not hear fulfilled upon that stubborn generation according to the full extent of S. Peters paraphrase upon it Not one or a fe●●only were destroyed out of the people as Korah Dathan and Abiram for disobedience unto Moses but the whole people or nation were utterly rooted out of the land All which with all particular circumstances and signs precedent or ensuing this great Prophet in his life time had so distinctly foretold that if we compare former Prophets with him they may seem to have but dreamed he alone that put these unknown ditties into their heads to have had the perfect skill of right interpreting their meaning CAP. XXII That the method used by the great Prophet himself after his resurrection for planting faith was such as we teach The excesse of Antichrists exaltation above Christ The Diametrical opposition betwixt the spirit of God and the Spirit of the Papacy 1 MOses was to be acknowledged a great Prophet because the whole host of Israel infallibly knew the Lord was with him in all he did every Prophet after him to be known by the Rules which he had given for their discernment Christ Jesus to be taken for The Great Prophet and Mediator of the everlasting Covenant because in words in works in all his wayes exactly answerable to Mosaical and prophetical Characters of the Messiah that was to come This sweet Harmony of legal Types or ancient prophecies as wel with the whole course of his blessed life as with his ignominious and cruel death or manner of his glorious resurrection I should either have esteemed or regarded lesse had not my Saviour himself preferred the assurance of prophetical testimonies before the certainty of their senses that had conversed with him in their life time admitted to conference with him after his rising from the dead For so we read of two Disciples which had seen his miracles heard his doctrine and acknowledged him for a Prophet mighty in word and deed but yet distrusted the report of his resurrection after it had been the second time confirmed by such of their fellows as had doubted with them yea their Master himself had told them as much before his death And had he not good reason then to upbraid them with distrust having now
though friendly admonished cease henceforth to urge their outworn arguments drawn from antiquity universality from that reverence and allegiance which most Kingdoms of Europe have for these thousand years and more born to the See of Rome or from the bloudy victories over all other inferiour Churches or private spirits that have oppugned her These or like allegations in their judgement abundantly prove their Church to be Christs best beloved the Pope to be his Deputy or rather his corrival here on earth whose words sound as the word of God and not of Man albeit the spirit hath plainly foretold that the beast which had his power from the Dragon and should open his mouth unto blasphemies against God to blaspheme his name and his tabernacle and them that dwell in heaven should have power given withall to make war with the Saints and to overcome them yea over every kindred tongue and nation so as all that dwell upon the earth should worship hint whose names were not written in the Book of life of the Lamb which was slain from the beginning of the world 5 To the Jesuites brags that no visible Church since the world began did either spread it self so far or flourish so long as theirs hath done I only oppose that of our Saviour Ex tuo ipsius ore judicabere serve nequam Thine own confession shall condemn thee thou bond-slave of Satan For if the Romish Hierarchy be or hath been in the worlds eye the most potent and flourishing that ever was This description of the Beasts power cannot agree so wel to any as unto it Nor doth the Scripture any where intimate the true Church militant should dominere over all Nations or be so triumphantly victorious as they boast theirs hath been To think the Antichrist whom they expect should in three years space subdue as many Nations as have been tributary to the See of Rome is a conceit that justifies the Jew as well in his credulity of things to come which are impossible as in his hypocritical partiality towards his present estate which he never suspects of Apostasie Unto this observation the Reader may adde other like descriptions of this scarlet Whore all so fitly agreeing to the Papacy as he that will not acknowledge it for the Kingdom of great Antichrist hath great reason to suspect his heart that if he had lived with our Saviour he would scarce have taken him for his Messias nor can the Jesuites bring any better reasons why the Pope should not be the Antichrist then the Jews did why Christ should not be the great Prophet Yet this I say not to discourage such as doubt whether the Pope be that Man of sin or to bring them out of love with their belief which may be sound without expresse or actual acknowledgement of this truth not as yet revealed unto them as those two Disciples no doubt were neither hypocrites nor infidels albeit they mistrusted the report of Christs resurrection for they were farther from approving the practises of the Jews against him then from actual acknowledgement of it If any man thus doubt whether the Pope be Antichrist so he do not approve his hatred and war against Gods Saints or his other devilish practises Gods peace be upon him and in good time I trust his eyes shal be enlightned to see the truth in this particular as those two Disciples did in the Article of the resurrection 6 Seeing we have proved the Popes authority so far to exceed Christ it may seem needlesse to compare it with the Apostles Yet lest any Jesuite should except that their authority might be greater after their Masters glorification then his was before let us a while examin what they assumed unto themselves what they gave unto the Scriptures before extant CAP. XXIII That the authority attributed to the present Pope and the Romish rule of faith were altogether unknown unto Saint Peter the opposition betwixt Saint Peters and his pretended Successors doctrine 1 TO begin with S. Peter the first supposed to be enstalled in this See of Rome It may be presumed that this Supremacy over his fellow Apostles were it any was in his life time whiles his miracles were fresh and the extraordinary efficacy of his Ministery daily manifested as wel known amongst the faithful as the Popes now amongst Roman Catholicks If necessary it had been to acknowledge him or his successors as a second Rock or foundation the commendation of this doctrine unto posterity had been most requisite at the time he wrote his second Epistle as knowing then the time was at hand he should lay down his Tabernacle when he endeavoured his auditors might have remembrance of his former doctrine to make their calling and election sure If ever there had been a fit season for notifying the necessity of the See Apostolicks infallibility all the circumstances of this place witnesse this was it If any they to whom he wrote were most bound to obey it Their faith had been planted by him his present intent and purpose was more and more to confirm them in the truth wherein they were in some measure established And being thus mindful wil he not make choice of means most effectual to prevent Heresie or Apostasie What are these then absolute reposal in his and his Successors infallibility Had this been the best rule of faith he knew his fault were inexcusable for not prescribing it to such is most willingly would have used it His personal testimony and authority was I confess as great as any mortal mans could be with his own eyes he had beheld the Majesty of our Lord Christ whom he preached unto them If any trust there be in humane senses this Saint of God could not possibly be deceived If any credence to be given unto miracles or sanctity of life his flock might rest assured he would not deceive his works so witnesse the sincerity of his doctrine or if his eye were not in these his auditors judgements sufficient witnesses of this truth he further assures them when his Lord received of God the Father honour and glory there came such a voice unto him from the excellent glory This is my beloved son in whom I am well pleased And this voice saith he we heard when it came from heaven being not a far off but with him in the mount If S. Peters seat or chair had been as the Pole-star whereto our Belief as the Mariners needle should be directed lest we float we know not whither in the Ocean of opinions were the Bosome of the visible Church the safest harbour our souls in all storms of temptation could thrust into this Apostle was either an unskilful Pilot or an uncharitable man that would not before his death instruct them in this course for the eternal safety of their souls whose bodily lives he might have commanded to have saved his own Had perpetual succession in his See or Apostolical tradition never interrupted been such an
Aristotles forge so the fire be out of us when we come into the Sanctuary But just in this manner doth the Mimical Jesuite reply to the former truth I demand saith he whether the Doctour would approve this consequence Paul preaching to the Athenians confirmed his Doctrine with the testimony of the Poet Aratus and the Athenians had done well if they had sought whether Aratus had said so or no therefore all Doctrines must be judged by Poets But what if the Beraeans practise considered alone or as Jesuites do Scriptures onely Mathematically do not necessarily inferre thus much The Learned Doctors charitable mind would not suffer him to suspect any publick Professor of Divinity as Sacroboscus was could be so ignorant in Scriptures as not to consider besides the different esteem of Prophets and Poets amongst the Jews what Saint Paul had Acts 26 22. expressely said I obtained help of God and continue unto this day witnessing both unto small and great saying none other things then those which the Prophets and Moses did say should come Unlesse he could have proved Christs resurrection and other Articles of Christian faith out of Moses and the Prophets the Jews exceptions against him had been just For they were bound to resist all Doctrines dissonant to their ancient Ordinances especially the abolishment of Rites and Ceremonies which Paul laboured most knowing the Law-giver meant they should continue no longer then to the alteration of the Priesthood but in whose maintenance his adversaries should have spent their bloud whiles ignorant they were without default of the truth Paul taught as not sufficiently proved from the same Authority by which their lawes were established Nor was any Apostle either for his miracles or other pledges of the Spirit that he could communicate unto others to be so absolutely believed in all things during his life time as Moses and the Prophets writings For seeing the gift of miracles was bestowed on hypocrites or such as might fall from any gifts or graces of the spirit they had though the spectatours might believe the particular conclusions to whose confirmation the miracles were fitted yet was it not safe without examination absolutely to relie upon him in all things that had spoken a divine truth once or twice In that he might be an hypocrite or a dissembler for ought others without evidence of his upright conversation and perpetuall consonance to his former Doctrine could know he might abuse his purchased reputation to abet some dangerous errour Nor do our Adversaries though too too credulous in this kind think themselves bound to believe revelations made to another much lesse to think that he which is once partaker of the Spirit should for ever be infallible Upon these supporters the forementioned Doctors reason which the Jesuite abuseth to establish the Churches Authority stands sirme and sound I absolutely believe all to be tru●… that ●od saith because he saith it nor do I seek any other reason but I dare not as 〈◊〉 so much unto man lest I make him equall to God for God alone and he in whom the Godhead dwelleth bodily is immutably just and holy Many others have continued holy and righteous according to their measure untill the end but who could be certain of this besides themselves no not they themselves alwayes And albeit a man that never was in the state of grace may oft-times deliver that Doctrine which is infallible yet were it to say no worse a grievous tempting of God to rely upon his Doctrine as absolutely infallible unlesse we know him besides his skill or learning to be alwayes in such a state Though both his life and death be most religious his Doctrine must approve it self to the present Age and Gods providence must commend it to posterity Nor did our Saviour though in life immutably holy and for Doctrine most infallible assume so much unto himself before his Ascension as the Jesuites give to the Pope For he submitted his Doctrine to Moses and the Prophets writings And seeing the Jesuites make lesse account of Him then the Jews did of Moses it is no marvell if they be more violently miscaried with envious or contemptuous hatred of the Divine truth it self then the Jews were against our Saviour or his Doctrine These even when they could not answer his reasons drawn from Scriptures received though most offensive to their distemperate humour were ashamed to call Moses and the Prophets Authority in question or to demand how do ye know God spake by them Must not the Churches infallibility herein assure you And if it teach you to discerne Gods Word from mans must it not likewise teach you to distinguish the divine sence of it from humane This is a strain of Atheisme which could never find harbour in any professing the knowledge of the true God before the brood of Antichrist grew so flush as to seek the recovery of that battail against Gods Saints on Earth which Lucifer their Father and his followers lost against Michael and his holy Angels in Heaven CAP. XXV A brief taste of our Adversaries blasphemous and Atheistical assertions in this argument from some instances of two of their greatest Doctours Bellarmin and Valentian That if faith cannot be perfect without the solemne testification of that Church the rarity of such testifications will cause infidelity 1 FOr a further competent testimonie of blasphemies in this kind where-with we charge the Church of Rome let the Reader judge by these two instances following whether the Christian world have not sucked the deadliest poison that could evaporate from the infernal lake through Bellarmines and Valentians pens Valentian as if he meant to out-flout the Apostle for prohibiting all besides the great Pastor Christ Jesus for being Lords over mens faith will have an infallible authority which may sit as Judge and Mistresse of all Controversies of faith and this to be not the authoritie of one or two men deceased not peculiar to such as in times past have uttered the divine truth either by mouth or pen and commended it unto posterity but an authority continuing in force and strength amongst the faithfull thorowout all ages able persptcuously and openly to give sentence in all Controversies of Faith Yet as these Embassadours of God deceased cannot be Judges shall they therefore have no Say at all in deciding conroversies of faith You may not think a Jesuite would take Jesus Name in vain he will never for shame exclude his Master for having at least a finger in the government of the Church Why what is his office or what is the use of his authority registred by his Apostles and Evangelists Not so little as you would ween For his speeches amongst others that in their life time have infallibly taught divine truths by mouth or pen may be consulted as a witnesse or written law in cases of faith but after a certain sort and manner either to speak the truth or somewhat thereto not impertinent
Valentian I absolutely deny as the Catholick Doctors upon good reasons generally do that the Pope can erre in such a business The certainty of this his belief he would ground upon those promises by which we are assured it shall never come to pass that the universal Church can be deceived in points of Religion But the whole Church should erre very grossly in such matters should it repute and worship him for a Saint which is none Hereit would be observed how Satan instigates these men unto such Tenents as may occasion God and his Gospel to be blasphemed First they would make it an Article of Faith that all must believe as the Pope teacheth whence it follows that either he cannot teach amiss or else faith may perish from off the earth Which if it could God were not true in his promises The surest pledge the Christian world can have of his fidelity in them must be the Popes infallibility so as from the first unto the last he must be held as true in his dealings as God in his sayings If he fail in Canonizing a Saint whom he cannot possibly know to be such unless he knew his heart which belongs wholly unto his maker God must be a lyar and there is no Truth in him The final issue intended by Satan in these resolutions is this When men have been a long time led on with fair hopes of gaining heaven by following the Popes direction and yet in the end see as who not blind sees not his gross errors and detestable villanies they may be hence tempted to blaspheme God as if he had been his copartner in this cosenage From this root I take it hath Atheism sprung so fast in Italy For whilest faith is in the blade and their hopes flourishing they imagine God and the Pope to be such friends as their blind guides make them But afterwards comming to detestation of this man of sin and his treachery holding his spiritual power as ridiculous they think either as despitefully or contemptuously of the Deity or say with the fool in their hearts there is no God 3 Thus Antichrists followers still run a course quite contrary to Christian religion For if it be true as it is most true that faith cannot utterly perish from off the earth what damnable abuse of Gods mercie and favour toward mankinde is this in seeking as the Jesuites do to make all absolutely rely upon one in matters of Faith For so if he fail all others must of necessity fail with him That is the whole world must be as kind supernatural fools to him as that natural idiote was to his Master who being demanded whether he would go to heaven with him or no replyed he would go to hel with so good a Master seeing any man would be willing to go to heaven with an ordinary friend yea with his enemy Though we should use no other argument but that Avoid ye sons of Satan for it is written ye shall not tempt the Lord your God It should me thinks be enough to put all the Jesuites in the world unto silence in this point did they not as far exceed their father in impudency as they come short of him in wit For this manner of tempting God is more shameless then Divels suggestion unto our Saviour when he was instanly silenced with this reproof A presumption it is more damnable to expect the protection or guidance of Gods spirit in such desperate resolutions as Valentian here brings then it were for a man to throw himself headlong from an high towr upon hope of Angelical supportance For seeing as I said God hath promised that true faith shal not perish from off the earth for all men to adventure their faith upon one mans infallibility who may have less saving faith in him then Turk or Infidel is but a provoking or daring of God to recall his promise Or what more damnable doctrine can be imagined then that all men should worship him for a Saint whom the wickedest man on earth doth commend unto him for such 4 But to proceed As the Doctrine is most impious so are the grounds of it most improbable For how can the Pope or Papists infallibly know this or that man to be a Saint Seeing there is no particular revelation made of it either to the Pope or others I answer saith Valentian that the general revelation whereby it is evident that whatsoever the Pope shall decree as pertaining to the whole Church is most true may suffice in this case Moreover saith he unto the Canonizing of Saints appertain these revelations of Scripture in which heavenly joyes are generally proposed to all such as lead a Godly life For by the Popes determination we know the Saint which he hath Canonized to be contained in the foresaid universal proposition Whence it is easie to frame an assent of faith by which we may perswade our selves that such a Saint hath obtained eternal bliss 5 I would request the Reader by the way to note the Jesuites injurious partiality in scoffing at such of our Writers as without express warrant of particular revelation hold a certainty of their own salvation when as they onely by Gods general promises to such as lead a godly life and the Popes infallibility in declaring who have so lived can be certain defide others are saved But the former doubt is rather removed then quite taken away by this his answer if it stand alone As yet it may be questioned how any can infallibly know the truth of what he cannot possibly know at all but onely by other mens testimonies in their nature the Jesuite being judge not infallible and in whose examination it is not impossible his Holinesse may be negligent For how men live or dye in England Spain or the Indies no Pope can tel but by the information of others no Popes The Reader perhaps wil prognosticate Valentians answer as in truth I did For when I first framed the doubt before I read it in him me thought it stood in need of such a reply as Bellarmin brought for defence of the vulgar interpreter Altogether as foolish it were to think any private mans information of anothers uprightness in the sight of God as to hold Theodotion the Heretick could not erre in translating of the Bible But though they may be deceived in testification of anothers sanctity yet Valentian tels you supposing the Pope is once induced by their testimonies though in nature fallible to pronounce him a blessed Saint all must infallibly believe their testimonies at least so far as they prove in general that he died a Godly and religious death are true and that the party commended by them is of that number which as we may gather from the general revelations of Scriptures shall be made partakers of everlasting life Again whether the Pope in defining a controversie use diligence or no yet without all question he shall define infallibly and consequently use the authority
instruction have more Saints in their private Kalenders then all the world knows of Bellarmine grants the Pope may commend some under the title of Saints unto a set Province or Diocess though he enjoyn not the whole Church so to esteem or at least not so to entertain them That Saints reputed not Canonized may be privately adored That in this case a general custome may prescribe and breed just presumption of the Popes tacit app●●bation though he give no direct injunction for the practise nor positive signification of his consent For many were adored as Saints before the solemnitie of ●●nonizing was in use first practised as far as this great Clerks reading serves him by Pope Leo the third 3 Now as their projects are of another mould and their means to effect them more desperate then heretofore so these intimations make it more then suspicious lest secretly they crown such of every sort as have been best qualified for their purposes or have adventured farthest for the Churches dignity with the Titles of Saints to encourage others to like attempts And if turbulent or ambitious spirits greedy of ●ame may be fed with hopes of being eternized in Jesuitical Kalenders if men male-contented with this present may have sweet promises of everlasting happiness in the life to come upon what mischiefs will they not adventure when as the one sort is weary of life the other curbed onely with fear of present shame or disgrace after death otherwise ready to rush into any danger or avow most desperate out-rages Albeit the parties proposed to be worshipped had been in their life times not so bad but rather incited to bold enterprizes by their ardent zeal yet who would not desire to imitate the adventurous actions of them whose memory he adores And yet this longing desire of imitating such extraordinary enterprizes as others of noble spirits have been thrust upon by secret instinct is alwaies dangerous and in men not so well qualified as their Authors were prepostorous For it will find occasions of like practise when none is given vertue shall be the object of despite because in factious oppositions contempt of it may afford matter of glory Hatred and malice to Princes persons shal be accounted zeal and devotion to the Church But if Powder-plotters or publick Assasinates may be dignified with Titles of Saints or proposed for imitation the Christian world may perceive the height whereto this mischief may grow when it will be too late to controul it It is an excellent ca●●at which old Gerson hath not impertinent to this purpose though intended by him especially for private use Amongst other Sophismes used by Satan to ensnare mens souls That Topick of examples or similies affords as many experiments of fallacies as there be men whilest every one strives to imitate any one and professeth to frame his life by the example of such 〈◊〉 either the Church doth Canonize or their Superiers Governors Doctors or men of fame approve What doth the Son say some but what he sees the Father do and yet these mates follow not the best but the worst Fathers at least that in them which is worst for them to follow by this ex●●ple some of them stick not to say Paul commended himself Paul had visions in a trance and why may not God in these daies work the like effects in others Hence are Prophecies faigned hence are admonions by miracles hence are damned persons adored by the multitude witness the Legend yea and Vienna can bear witness of a dead dogs adoration Let the sacred Roman See therefore beware let the Pope that sits therein beware upon what grounds or motives they canonize any 4 Rather let all Christian States beware least they give such authority to either For if the danger were not alwaies imminent from their trayterous and blood-thirsty mindes that profess this Doctrin in any Kingdom Yet from divine justice the plagues upon Prince and People that authorize and permit the profession of it wil be one day publick and grievous For better might they nurse all other kindes of enchantments or magical practises better might they give harbor to all other heresies broched since the world began then susser this Ocean of all mischiefs whether flowing from errors in manners or matters of doctrin to encroach upon their coasts And here let not the Reader deceive himself by imagining the Holy Ghost had used a Metaphor rather then strict propriety of speech when he called the Whore of Babylon a Witch or Inchantress For the faith whereby the Romanist boasts he believes the Scriptures as elsewhere God willing shal be shewed is meerly magical this doctrin we now dispute against the very Idea of infernal superstition or as they term it vana observantia in respect of the essence and quality and for the extent of mischief whereto it leads as the main Sea of sorcery and all other kindes of magical superstition as so many brooks or rivers For whence springs sorcery properly so called Either from express compact with evil spirits or from the sole●● performance of certain blind ceremonies which are but sacrifices unto infernal powers wherein they ga●n interest in the sacrificers souls in witness whereof they sometimes bear their marks in their bodies But if we look into the mystery of this iniquity the Jesuites by subscribing unto this doctrin of the Churches transcendent authority and taking the solemn oath of their order enter a covenant though not so express or immediate yet more sirm and desperate then other Magicians usually do For they swear and teach others to swear absolute obedience to the Pope they think themselves bound and would bind others not to examin his decrees to esteem of his Pardons though des●itute of all warrant srom Gods word as highly as the Magicians do of Charms for which they can give ●o reason either in art or nature to offer up their prayers and other religious worshi● unto such as he shal appoint them albeit for ought they know or as they justly may suspect damned miscreants which is a more hellish sacrifice then any other Magicians use And though witches do yet all sorts of sorcer●●s enter not express covenant with the Prince of darkness And it is all one whether like witches they give their souls to him immediately or thus absolutely betroth them to his Proxy or principal Agent here on earth For as the Apostle instructs us by thus worshipping the Beast they worship the Dragon his Master 5. Lastly in respect of this mouth of blasphemy Mahumetism and Gentilism are as a Toy The ancient Heathen out of their inbred ignoranc●… and want of external means for right information of their understanding changed the glory of the incorruptible God into the similitude of corruptible things often taxed by meer Philosophers for their grossness These blasphemers though professing the worship of the everliving true and onely God though partakers of ●is written word and all the helps
2. 14. unto the end of the chapter Acts 3. 12. to the 13 verse of the 4. chapter ‖ Acts 2. 20. Acts 3. 25. S. Pauls extraordinary power and efficacy in winning the Gentiles unto Christ Acts 2. 28. * See the like successe of his preaching Acts 4. 4. Who were the sheep Peter was principally appointed to feed and what authority he had over them * Jesus said unto them come and 〈◊〉 and none of are Disa●ples ●… ask him 〈◊〉 art thou 〈◊〉 they knew he was the 〈◊〉 John 21. 12. * Thus much it seems Peter did prophecy unaware John 1● verse 37. but failed in application of the time So our Saviour saith Thou canst not follow me now but thou shalt follow 〈◊〉 afterward as well in death as in life after death * † Vide Bellar. de R●m Pont. lib. 1. cap. 16. 1 Pet. 5. vers 1 2 3. * Dubitabit aliquis cur si non Mattheus Matthaei tamen Grae●us interpres 〈◊〉 nominum generis distinctionem adhibu●● it Respondeo in promptu rationem esse quia quamvis Graeci Petra 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 genere masculino 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ●●mi●ino dicatur tamen Petrus quia vir erat non Petra foeminino sed Pet●u● masculino nomine vocandus 〈◊〉 S●…do aut●m loco ubi de aedificij Fundamento agehatur non Petrum sed Petram dixit quamvis ide● utrun que nomen significa●er ●oi● in e●usmodi aedificijs nomen Petra foemininum magis est usitatum 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 enim Atticum rarum est Maldonat 〈◊〉 16. Matthaei Vide Bellar. de Rom. Pont Lib. 1. Cap. 10. What the name of Cephas doth import in Saint Peter 〈◊〉 4. 14. * † ●… Cornelius qui patrem luminibus carentem pro baculo regebat Scipio cognon in●… dedit Macrob. Satur. lib. 1. cap. 6. ‖ Vide Macrobium loco citato * Matth. 16. ver 13 14 15 c John 1. v. 49. * Pronomen Hanc non potest rese●ri ad Christum Petram sed ad Petrum Petrā debet enim referri ad aliquod proximum non ad ●emotum proximè ante dictum fuerat non Christo sed Petro Tu es Cephas id est Petra deinde licet Christus dici posset Petra tamen hoc in loco non est vocatus Petra à Petro confitente sed Christus filius Dei vivi de bet autem referri illud Hanc ad cum qui nominatus est Petra non ad cum qui non est appellatus hoc nomine Bellar. lib. 1. de Rom. Pont. cap. 10. Vide Deut. 32. Psal 18. psal 19. 〈◊〉 Tu vero considera verborum Prophe●e amplitudinem poterat dicere Mittam vobis Messiam sed voluit tam insigne beneficium verbis in●ignibus Metapho●icis explicare Est autem translatio sumpta ab aedificantibus quae verborum amplitudine i●●ui● rei magnificentiam majestatem Pintus in 28. Isai ver 16. See other Annotations out of Bellarmin in this Chapter See Maldonat on Matth. 21. cap. 42. ver * Omnes quos legi praeter Hilarium existimant sensum esse ●ore ut diaboli potentia Ecclesiam quidem exerceat Nunquam vero opprimat Quae sententia parva est nec verba Christi implet nec enim solent portae vincere sed resistere itaque non potuit offendendi vis sed desendendi portas significari Sensus igitur nisi fallor est Fore ut Ecclesia super Petram à Christo fundata omnem diaboli potentiam expugnet ita ur nulla arte nuilis viribus possit resistere Hoc enim multo majus est verbis magis consentaneum Po●tas enim Inseri non praevalituras adversus Ecclesiam phrasis Hebraica est 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 non poterunt adversus illam id est non potetunt illi resistere † Vide Maldonatum in versum 18. cap. 16. Mat. Bellar. lib. 1. de Pont. Rom. cap. 19. ‖ Psal 18. ver 31. a Psal 46. * Isa 28. 16. Vide Forerium in hunc locum † The word in the Original signifieth to make haste and therefore any kind of haste according to the difference of the matter or object in this place aequivalent to the latin proripia a word signifying haste but haste caused by shame or fear of mens presence from which the party ashamed seeks with confused speed to hide himself Et cum clamarem quo nunc se proripit ille Tityre coge pecus tu post carecta latebas This is true of faith which the Apostle saith of love 1 John 4. 17. Herein is love perfect in us that we should have boldnesse in the day of judgement for as he is even so are we in this world Vid. Luc. 21. 25 26. of the confused state of the wicked ‖ Rom. 10. 9. * Rom. 1● † Mat. 16. 23. ‖ Psal 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Acts 4. 〈◊〉 Mat. 21. b Verse 41. c Verse 41. d Ver. 42 〈◊〉 * Psal 50. 25. * 1 John 4. 12. No man hath seen God at any time If we love one another God dwelleth in us and his love is perfect in us Hereby know we that we dwel in him and he in us because he hath given us of his spirit And we have seen and do testifie that the Father sent the son to be the Saviour of the world Whos●ever confesseth that Jesus is the son of God in him dwelleth God and ●e in God See 1 John 2. 15 16. 1 John 4. 3. In what sense the Papists deny Christ to be come in the flesh * 1 Cor. 3. 11. * 〈◊〉 2. 20. 〈◊〉 doth that 〈◊〉 Rev. ●1 14. prove any more then that 〈◊〉 the Apostles 〈◊〉 the 〈◊〉 was erected † D●… euta omnes Apostole 〈◊〉 gubernationis Omnes enum 〈◊〉 ●apita rectores pastores 〈◊〉 universae sed 〈◊〉 eodem modo quo Pertus Illi enim habuerunt summ●… atque ampli●●mam potestatem ut Apostoli sen Legati Pe●●us autem u● Pas●●r ●●di●atius De●… ita h●… plenitudmem potestatis ut 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 esset capur corum ab illo ●… Bellar. lib. Rom. Pont c. 11. ●… significat Petram ut ●… Hi●ronymus te●… 2 Epistolae ad Galat. Graecè ●… caput ut lib. 2. coutia ●… annotavit Optatus A●… ex celeber●mis C●… Nihil enim frequen●… app●… cum solo ●…municans ●… ut ●… ●…●●i●… quam ●… caput ●… 17. * Heb. 8. 13. † The difference between Christ and the Pope much lese by the Papists opinion then between the Pope and other Bishops † Nos non negamus 〈◊〉 defendimus contra negantes verbum Dei ministratum per Apostolos Prophetas osse primum fundamentū nostrae fidei Ideo enim credimus quidquid credimus quia Deus id per Apostolos Prophetas revelavit sed addimus praeter hoc sun●…um primum requi●i aliud fundamentum secondarium id est Ecclesiae testificationem Neque enim scimus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Deus revelaverit
of Scriptures unto some and Facility and Perspicuity unto others of like Profession cannot justly impeach them of greater Obscurity then befits the infallible rule as wel of theirs as of all other mens Faith in their several Vocations For as mens Callings are divers and Gods Gifts to men in their divers Callings in nature and qualitie different so likewise is the Measure of his like gifts to men in the same calling not one and the same To some he gives more Knowledge to others lesse yet all he commands not to presume above that which is Written and every man to limit his desires of knowing that which is Written by the distinct Measure of Gods Gifts in himself not to affect or presume of such skil as they have unto whom God hath given a greater Talent And besides this that the Scripture is the inexhaustible store-house ●hence all men have their several Measures of Divine Knowledge as wel he that hath most as he that hath least even in this again it is a perfect rule that it commands all sapere idque ad sobrietatem to be wise according to that Measure of Knowledge which God hath given them and not to seek to know at least not to say why should I not know as much as any other of any Profession For this were Pride and Arrogancie the fatal enemies of all true Christian Knowledge if so his Gifts be lesse then others And for the avoidance of these main Obstacles of Christian Knowledge or true Interpretation of Scriptures the Scripture hath commanded every man to think better of others than of himself and not to be wise in his own conceit 12 From the former General will follow this Particular Albeit some Parts of Scripture be very obscure unto some the same perspicuous unto other Ministers or Preachers of the Word yet may the whole Canon be the infallible Rule of Faith unto both according to the diverse Measure of their Gifts rightly and unpartially taken If the one either fail in the Exposition of sundrie Places which the other rightly expounds or cannot apprehend so much in them as the other doth he is in Sobriety of Spirit bound to acknowledge his own Infirmitie and content himself with that knowledge which is contained within the Measure of Gods Gifts bestowed upon himself and this again he is to take by the same Rule So that the Scriptures are a perfect Rule to both to all for Direction in the search of Divine Knowledge for limitation of mens desires whiles they seek it or Conceit of what they have gotten That they do not so thorowly instruct or furnish some as others though all men of God for exact performance of their Ministerial function can be no argument of their Insufficiencie to make all such in their Place and Order competently Wise unto Salvation more than it would be to prove E●clides Elements or other more absolute Mathematical Work an insufficient and imperfect Rule for instructing Surveyours or other Practical Mathematicians whose skill lies onely in measuring Triangles Circles or other plain or solid Bodies because containing many Questions of higher Nature and greater Difficultie as of the Circles Quadrature of Lines or Numbers Surd or Asymmetral well befitting the exercise of speculatorie learned Mathematical Wits CAP. XIII The true state of the Question about the Scriptures Obscurity or Perspicuity unto what Men and for what Causes they are Obscure 1 THe Question then must be Whether the Scriptures be an absolute Rule of Christian Faith and Manners to every Man in his Vocation and Order according to the Measure of Gods Gifts bestowed upon him We affirm It is such to all None are so cunning none so excellent or expert in Divine Mysteries but must take it for a Rule beyond whose Bounds they may not passe from which they daily may learn more none so sillie but may thence learn enough for their Salvation so they will be Ruled by it And yet even of those Points which are perspicuously set down to the diverse Capacities of Men in the same or several Professions the Question is not Whether any can fully comprehend their intire Meaning Certain it is In this life they cannot But neither will our Adversaries I hope avouch that the infallible Authoritie of their Church can make us so comprehend the full meaning of Mysteries contained either in Scriptures or her pretended unwritten Traditions Of Scriptures the best learned Christian may say wth the Heathen Socrates Hoc unum scio me nihil scire I know this one thing that I know nothing Nothing as I should or as fully as I then shall when I shall know as I am known for in this life we know but in part and we prop●… in part 2 Lastly even in respect of Places though containing Points of Salvation onely thus imperfectly known though as perspicuous and clear as can be required the Rule of Faith should be the Question is not whether they be very Obscure and Difficult unto some or unto the Major part of Mankind if we consider them as they are or may be not as they should or might be that is if we consider them as disobedient to the Truth known or carelesse to amend their lives by this light of Scripture For unto all such as hate it this very light it self proves an occasion of falling Nor could any thing be more plainly or perspicuously set down in any other Rule of Faith imaginable than this very Point we now handle is in Scriptures to wit that such Parts of them as contain matters necessary to Salvation are most easie to some most hard to others And albeit they might through the Iniquity of Mankind prove difficult to all or impossible to be understood of most now living living as for the most part we do yet were this Difficultie or Impossibilitie of understanding them aright upon these Suppositions no hindrance at all why they should not be a complete Rule of Faith to all no just reason for admitting any infallible Authority besides theirs 3 For of such as admit any Authority equivalent to theirs it must be further demanded whether the Infallibilitie of it can take away that Blindnesse of heart which by Gods just Judgement lights upon all such as detain the knowledge of God or his sacred Word in Unrighteousnesse If for their sins God punish them with this spiritual darknesse in discerning his Will revealed in his written Word no other infallible Authority as we suppose can take away those scales from their eyes which hinder their sight in the means of their Salvation If men have been called to this Light and prefer Darknesse before it either they must receive sight and direction from it again or continue still in ignorance and the shadow of death but doth God look up all or most mens eyes in such darknesse No for this blindnesse by our Doctrine befals onely such as have deserved it by the forementioned sins which once removed by Repentance the
Rule of Life shall inlighten them unrepented of no other Rule or Authoritie shall teach them the way to Life 4 Since we thus grant that the Scriptures may be Obscure to most men by their own default but perspicuous to others free from like fault or Demerit it remains we further enquire whether the same Scriptures do not most plainly set down First the Causes why they are so Obscure to some and Perspicuous to others Secondly the Remedy or means how their Obscurity or difficulty may be prevented If they plainly teach these two Points this is a sure Argument that they are if not that they cannot be so excellent a Rule of Faith as we acknowledge them For this very Point That the Scriptures in respect of diverse Persons are Obscure and Perspicuous though Obscure to none but through their own Default is a Principle of Christian Faith and therefore must be plainlie set down in the absolute complete Rule of Faith And to omit others in their due place to be inserted what can be more perspicuonsly taught either by Scriptures or other Writings than this Truth God giveth grace to the Humble and resisteth the proud or this He will confound the Wisdom of the Wise or such as Glory in their Wisdom These and like Rules of Gods Justice in punishing the proud and disobedient hold as true in the search of Scripture as in any other matter yea especially herein Thus were the Scribes and Pharisees men of extraordinary skill in Scriptures blinded in the most necessary Points of their Salvation though most plainly set down in Scriptures For what could be more plainly set down then many Testimonies of their Messias Many places of far greater Difficultie they could with Dexteritie unfold how chanced it then they are so Blinded in the other They were scattered in the proud Imagination of their hearts and glorious conceits of their Prerogatives in being Mosis Successours and in their stead simple and illiterate but humble and meek spirited Men raised up to be infallible Teachers of the Gentiles to unfold those Mysteries of Mans Redemption which the Scribes and Pharisees could not see with evidence of Truth to enlighten the sillie and ignorant and convince the Consciences of their learned proud Oppugners By their Ministerie Prophetical and Mosaical Mysteries became a Light unto the Gentile whose life had been in the shadow of death whilest a Veil was laid before the hearts of the most learned Jewes so that even whilst the Sun of Righteousnesse which enlightens every man that comes into the World did arise in their coast and ascend unto their Zenith they groap their way as men that walk in dangerous Paths by dark-night 5 Was the Scripture therefore no Rule of Faith unto these Jews to whom it was so Dishcult and Obscure Or is it not most evident that this Blindnesse did therefore come upon Israel because they hated this Light being carried away with Lowd cries of Templum Domini Templum Domini as the Papists now are with The Church The Church And for words of supposed Disgrace offered to It onely upon a Surmise that Christ had said he would destroy and build It up again brought to seek the destruction of the Glory of It even of the Lord of Glory Thou that wouldest make others beleave the Pope is such dost thou beleeve the Scriptures to be Infallible How is it then whilest thou readest Gods Judgements upon thy Brother Jew thou doest not tremble and quake lest the Lord smite thee also thou painted wall with like Blindnesse seeing thou hast justified thy brother Pharisees stubborn Pride wilfull Arrogancie and witting Blasphemie in oppugning Scriptures And as for all such whose hearts can be touched with the terrour of Gods Judgements upon others in fear and reverence I request them to consider well whether one of the greatest Roman Doctours were not taken with more than Jewish madnesse in mistaking Scripture in it self most plain and easie who to prove the Scriptures Obscurity to be such as in this respect it could not be the Rule of Faith alledgeth for his proof that place of the Prophet And the vision of them all is become unto you as the word of a Book that is sealed up which they deliver to one that can read saying Read this I pray thee then shall he say I cannot for it is sealed 6 The Prophet relates it as a wonder that they should not be able to discern the Truth What Truth an obscure or hidden Truth Impossible to be understood This had been a wonderfull Wonder indeed that men should not be able to understand that which was Impossible to be understood Wherein then was the true Wonder seen In this that they whose eyes had formerly been illuminated by the evidence and clearnesse of the Divine Truth revealed by Gods Messenger should not be able to discern the same still alike clear and perspicuous but now to be shut up from their eyes as appeareth by the similitude of the sealed Book whose Character was legible enough but yet not able to be read whilst sealed A man might as well prove the Sun to be dark because Polyphemus after 〈◊〉 had put out his eye could not see it as the Scriptures by this place to be Obscure The Prophets words entire are these Stay your selves and Wonder they are blind and make you blind they are drunken but not with wine they stagger but not with drink For the Lord hath covered you with a spirit of slumber and hath shut up your eyes The Prophets and your chief Seers hath he covered And the vision of them all is become unto you c. And more plainly Therefore the Lord said because this people come near me with their mouth and honour me with their lips but have removed their heart from me and their fear towards me was taught by the precepts of men doth he not mean the Blind Obedience of Modern Papists as well as ancient Jews Therefore behold I will do a marvellous work in this People even a marvellous work and a wonder For the Wisdom of the wise men shall perish and the understanding of the prudent man shall be hid The Lord himself foretels it as a wonder that this People should be so ignorant in the Word of God and yet will the Jesuite make us beleeve the Word of God is so Obscure that it cannot be unto us the Rule of Faith when as without the knowledge and light of it not which it hath in it self but which it communicates to us there is no Vision no Knowledge in the Visible Church but such wonderfull Darknesse as the Prophet here describes 7 Let the Reader here give sentence with me whether it were not wonderfull Jewish Blindnesse or wilfull Blasphemie in Valentian so confidently to avouch that the Veil which Saint Paul saith is laid before the Jews hearts was woven a great part out of the Difficulty of Scriptures such Scriptures as the