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A10250 Propositions and principles of diuinitie propounded and disputed in the vniuersitie of Geneua, by certaine students of diuinitie there, vnder M. Theod. Beza, and M. Anthonie Faius ... Wherein is contained a methodicall summarie, or epitome of the common places of diuinitie. Translated out of Latine into English, to the end that the causes, both of the present dangers of that Church, and also of the troubles of those that are hardlie dealt vvith els-vvhere, may appeare in the English tongue.; Theses theologicae. English Bèze, Théodore de, 1519-1605.; La Faye, Antoine de, 1540-1615. aut; Penry, John, 1559-1593. 1591 (1591) STC 2053; ESTC S101754 189,778 296

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way vnto the gift of repentance 15 PAVLE therefore did not sinne against the holie Ghost who persecuted Christ and his members whome he knew not 1. TIM 1. 16 Although this sinne bee voluntary yet it followeth not that euery sinne which is voluntarie and committed against the conscience is irremissible 17 But contrariwise although these sins are horrible whether they be committed of infirmitie or of malice yet are they forgiuen vnto those that repent as they were vnto DAVID PETER and others 18 The counsel of God concerning the saluation of the elect cannot be dissanulled and therefore the elect cannot be guilty of this sinne 19 Neither doe all the reprobate necessarie fall vnto this sin seeing originall sin is sufficient to condemne them 20 This sinne is placed in the heart of man and therefore seeing God is the searcher of the heart diligent heed is to bee taken least that being carried away with a preposterous zeale we rashly passe sentence against any in judgeing them to be guilty of this sinne 21 Yet are they to be seriouslie admonished who continue to shewe themselues disobedient vnto the admonitions and judgements of God least that being at the length hardened by the Lords just judgement they run headlong vnto this downe-fall Defended by IOHN HALBERIVS CORTRACENVS PRINCIPLES CONCERNING THE RESVRRECTION OF THE FLESH LXXX 1 THe rest of the Articles of our faith being hitherto sufficientlie handled two of them remaine yet to bee discussed namely the resurrection of the flesh and life euerlasting 2 Although the Sonne of God by taking vpon him our nature by dying and rising againe hath performed the parts of our saluation Although also he doth bestow that quickning Spirite of his vpon all those that trulie beleeue the Gospell It remaineth as yet notwithstanding that what hath bene performed in him who is our head be also performed in vs being his members 3 Hence must the faithfull learne both day and night to meditate vpon the marke and shutting vp of their happinesse and to bee continuallie desirous of the same in such sort as although they bee tossed in this worlde by diuers and daungerous stormes of temptation raised vp against them by the Deuill the Worlde and the Fleshe they may yet continue firme and immooue-able in faith and in the hope of the liuing GOD and of the Lord Iesus Christ 4 Euen as death entred into the world by the sinne of the first ADAM whence the necessitie of death did arise Euen so wee affirme that death is abollished in the saints and chaunged vnto aeternall life by the vertue of the latter ADAM that is Christ to the end that as Christ did first of all rise againe vnto that aeternall life So all the elect may rise by him vnto the same 5 Now death is by a naturall generation conuaied vnto all the posteritie of the first ADAM whereas aeternall life is by spirituall ingraffing into the second ADAM deriued vnto his members 6 In this respect is the name of ADAM attributed vnto Christ namely that as ADAM was the stocke of mankinde breathing out poison according vnto the deadlie nature So Christ is made by grace the root of all the Saints powring the juice of eternall life into his members Wee doe therefore condemne the Philosophers who drewe the cause of death not from sinne but from this Aixome in naturall Philosophie vz. whatsoeuer is compounded is subject vnto dissolution Much more doe wee detest the PELAGIANS who teach that sinne and therefore death did arise not from the deprauation of nature in ADAM but from the voluntarie imitation thereof the which errour PAVLE dooth ouerthrowe as by manie Argumentes so by this most clearelie in that Infants themselues also are subject vnto death 7 Although that all sinnes which are the cause of death are truly remitted vnto the beleeuers yet notwithstanding are they no lesse subject vnto death then the very wicked themselues and that for two causes First because that the roote of sinne which is called originall sinne is not vtterlie abollished in them in this life but is brought to an end by death For then doth the strife betweene the flesh and the Spirite cease Secondly because that vnlesse they did shake of this life they could neuer be partaker of that other life which they hope for 8 And therefore we holde that the faithfull are depriued of this life rather by the mercie of God calling them vnto that aeternall kingdom then because that death is the reward of sinne 9 And on the other side that the vnfaithful do not rise by vertue of the resurrection of Christ which is alwaies vnto saluation and is bestowed vpon his members but by the force of that curse of God whensoeuer thou shalt eat of the fruit hereof thou shalt die the death 10 For seeing this degree doth comprehend both the deathes but especially the second which is eternall it must needes be that the vnfaithfull also shall rise againe whereas otherwise their bodies except they should bee joyned again with their soules should escape eternal paines which is ment by the second death 11 The whole person of euery man wholie considered but not in part is said to rise again For as the body only is said to lie down so the same alone to speak properly shall rise againe Whereas the soule seeing by death it hath suffered no detriment in the essence thereof can bee sayd to rise again but metaphorically as when it is brought by the Spirite of Christ from the seruitude of sinne wherein it was dead and wherein it could not so much as thinke much lesse will or doe the things that are of God into that holie libertie which is the way vnto eternall life We do therfore condemne them who dream that the soules seperated from their bodies are a sleepe and that they shall arise togeather with the bodies And we doe also detest the opinion of HYMENEVS and PHILETVS who did not distinguishe the spirituall from the corporall resurrection 12 The Scripture declareth by manifest testimonies that the soules of the faithfull who die in the Lorde are receiued of christ into that eternal paradise situated aboue all heauens whervnto Christ did ascend and that they are there conuersant with Christ being partakers in their measure of blessednes and felicity wheras on the other side the word of GOD and the consideration of thinges that are contrary doe shew that the soules of the wicked are thrust into hell and there tormented in their manner 13 The same bodies that lay down shal rise but not in the same qualities as the verie same body of Christ which was crucified buried did arise but not hauing those qualities wherewith it was endued when it was crucified dead and buried Yet this is the difference in that the bodie of Christ felt no corruption and therefore did ouer-come the power and effect of death euen in the verie house of death But our bodies are deliuered from corruption which seemed
sort doth appertain vnto the soule namelie in that respect that by the resurrection it was restored againe vnto the bodie that is vnto his proper instrument 5 Heere it is also gathered that the same verie bodie which was laid in the graue rose againe 6 The Resurrection did abolish none of the essentiall qualities of the bodie of which sort are to haue a quantitie and to bee finite whence followeth that it is also enclosed within the compasse of the members thereof and is contained in a place We do condemne therfore the Eutychians who held that he had a bodie that was not bodilie and the Valentinians who said that it was an aierie bodie and the Marcionites who turned his true bodie vnto a shadow both before and after the Resurrection 7 By the same reason also doth fall to the ground that inuented forgerie both of Transubstantiation and Consubstantiation as beeing altogether repugnant vnto the truth of the bodie of Christ 8 Christ was the first that rose hauing swallowed vp mortalitie and remooued at once all the infirmities of the naturall life from him selfe although that after his resurrection he did trulie eat and drinke that he might make vs fullie assured that he tooke vpon him again a true bodie 9 Christ which is proper to him alone rose againe by the power of his owne Deitie and not by any borrowed strength or by the force of anie creature Therefore his Resurrection is a most true demonstration that he was trulie God 10 There was great cause why Christ shoulde ryse the third day and not before least that if he had risen sooner his death should haue seemed to be but fained or if he had staied longer in the graue the faith of the elect might haue beene hazarded 11 The Resurrection of Christ was necessarie to the accomplishing of our saluation because that as it behooued him to suffer the death due vnto our sinnes so also it was needfull that death should bee ouercome by him that hee might bring vs vnto aeternall life beeing deliuered from mortalitie 12 It was agreable also vnto the justice of God that Christ should enioy aeternall glorie euen by the condition of the legall couenant which is do this and liue 13 The Resurrection of Christ is a sure pillar of our resurrection because the church is as it were the complement or filling vp of Christ and therefore taking away that head of Christian religion vaine were the preaching of the Gospell Therefore we detest from our harts the Saducees and all Philosophers that haue denied the resurrection of the flesh 14 The doctrine of the Resurrection hath beene continuallie held in the church of God the which also though it do depend vpon the omnipotencie of God onelie may yet in some sort by laying downe some sure grounds and principles bee probablie gathered by humaine reason 15 Our bodies shall not be two in nomber after the resurrection but the verie same bodie that lay downe in the graue shall rise againe The opinion therefore which IOHN the Bishop of Ierusalem held concerning the taking vp of an other body is worthelie condemned 16 The Resurrection of Christ doth properlie belong vnto the elect seeing the wicked are to ryse againe not by the vertue of his resurrection but by the just judgement of GOD vnto aeternall damnation euen by the force of that penaltie which GOD added vnto the commandement hee gaue to ADAM The day that thou shalt eate thou shalt die the death euen the first and the second death 17 It is no wonderfull case that Christ after his Resurrection did not openlie manifest himself vnto all men for as there is a time of mercie so is there a time of judgemēt with God 18 Christ proued his Resurrection vnto his disciples by all kinde of arguments as by the testimonies both of Angels of weomen and of men vnto whome he presented himselfe aliue euen in the same bodie that was marked with the scarres of the wounds adding thereunto also the testimonies of the Prophets 19 Vnto all these things he adjoined his conuersation which he had with them for the space of fourtie daies least either a shorter time should not suffice or if he had continued longer he might seeme to haue risen to such a life as he lead heere at the first 20 Hetherto also belongeth the manner of his appearing which was in some respect naturall that it might be manifest that neither his resurrection nor his glorie did take from him his true humanitie whereby he is and shall be our brother for euer and yet notwithstanding supernaturall that all might knowe him hauing laide downe this naturall life to be vnto vs the first fruits of a spirituall and an aeternall 21 Now seeing both this hystorie of the Resurrection and also testimonies of the Prophets which fore-tolde the same were published openlie and in the audience of as manie as would heare not onelie of the Iewes but of al other people and was also confirmed by all kinde of miracles it must needs be that neither the Iewes nor anie other people can complaine that Christ after hee had risen againe did not offer himself to be seene of them 22 And seing that Christ came to saue his elect wholly both soule and bodie and that his resurrection is his true and full victorie it followeth that that spirituall resurrection whereby it commeth to passe that our soules beeing spiritually vnited vnto Christ the old mā beginneth to die in vs being by little and little to be worne away is buried and the new man riseth again doth depend vpon the resurrection of Christ that euen as Christ after his resurrection not before as far as he is our head began to liue that aeternall life after he had ouercome all the infirmities of this naturall life which sinne excepted he had vndergone for our sakes so that qualitie of an vncorrupted life being begun in our soules while we liue heere and proceeding farther after the dissolation of this bodie is at the length to bee fullie perfected when the restitution of our bodies shall be accomplished and so the elect shall liue that aeternall life with Christ the type of which benefite is the Sacrament of Baptisme vnto vs. 23 Nowe euen as the Spirit of Christ passed from the Crosse into Paradise at the verie same moment that it departed out of the bodie thēce returned into the bodie that whole Christ in respect that he was man might be afterwards glorified so we do beleeue that their spirits who die in the Lord do straight way depart vnto God there to enjoy that measure of glory that is appointed for thē vntill that they beeing adjoined againe vnto the same bodies which will be the verie same in substance trulie corporal though in a far more excellent estate shal liue vnder Christ their head for euermore We do condemne therfore both that fable of Purgatory fire and also their doctrine who dreame that the soules of the departed
God and wee say that we cannot by our owne strength prepare any way for vs to come vnto God but that if wee will come vnto him he must draw vs. 10 It must needs be therefore that hee must first regenerate vs and make vs the sonnes of God and new creatures In which worke we are not co-workers with God but meerelie such as stand still while he worketh that wee may be wrought vpon and reformed by him euen as we were at the first created by him without anye helpe of ours 11 Nowe after regeneration wee are by faith drawne from death vnto life and to will is present with vs but so as wee are compassed about with manie hinderances by reason of the stings of sinne and the flesh in vs which are not vtterlie done away yet wee begin to bee co-workers with God and wee are so wrought vpon as wee also doe work And we shall then whollie obey him and stick vnto him euen when our full restitution beeing wrought wee shall enjoy that blessed and heauenly life 12. The discourse concerning voluntarie changeable and immutable thinges we thought meete to bee seuered from the quaestion of Free-will and placed in the doctrine of Gods prouidence Defended by FRANCES BVEFETIVS of Angiers PRINCIPLES CONCERNING SINNE XVII 1 THe estate wherevnto both ADAM and all his posteritie did fall is contrarie vnto that integritie wherein he was created at the first 2 For whereas the nature of man was then such as hee could haue liued according vnto the vpright and aeternall law which is nothing els but the will of God Sin hath brought him nowe to that passe that hee doth of a set purpose disobay the same 3 Sinne is not a bare want or priuation of good but a swaruing from the will of God 4 And wee thinke that it may bee thus fitlie defined Namely that it is whatsoeuer is against the law and will of God 5 For the force of sinne dooth not depend vppon the breach of some humaine constitution but vpon the transgression of Gods will onelie And therfore the definition of the Philosophers is most vnperfect who account sinne to be that onely which is repugnant vnto reason For reason it selfe can doe nothing els but go astray vntill it be lightned by the light of God The Libertines also are to bee condemned who make that onely to be sinne which a man 's owne conscience thinketh to be sinfull 6 The seat or subject of sinne is the verie soule it selfe that is the reason and the will For the former of these being ignorant of that which it should know or els ruling amisse as well in commanding as in forbidding hath sinne cleauing vnto it And the latter either when it willeth amisse that which it ought not to will or when it willeth not that which it ought to be desirous of sinneth The bodie is onelie the instrument of the soule in sinning 7 Some of the causes of sinne are inward as the will which before sinne came was in ADAM onely mutable But after sinne as well in him as in his posteritie was both mutable and corrupt Some outwarde as the Deuill and the diuerse objects that are laied before vs. 8 But as concerning the Lord hee in no wise can bee thought the Author of sinne who is so farre from turning men from himselfe that hee rather seeketh to conuert all men vnto himselfe as vnto the onely true and perfect end Yet hee is said to make them to doe that which is sinfull when he doth not restraine them from sinning the which whole worke is onelie to bee ascribed vnto his wisedome and justice We do condemne then the MANICHAEES the VELENTINIANS the SELEVTIANS c. who affirmed that sinne proceedeth from God 9 The effect and wages of sinne is death and that aeternally because it is committed against him who is aeternall and infinite That distinction of sinne then into mortall and veniall is improper saue onelie in the diuerse respects of the elect and the reprobate For vnto the elect all sinnes are veniall through Christ But vnto the reprobates there are no sins but they are mortall And it is manifest that the PELAGIANS doe erre when they say that death is natural vnto the bodie 10 Yet for all this we thinke not all sinnes to be equal in that sence that the Stoicks did But wee acknowledge certaine degrees in them according vnto the diuersitie of their objects and circumstances yet the originall corruption and guilt is alike aequall in all men Seeing all men are alike the sinfull sinnes of sinfull ADAM Defended by STEPHEN BLOIVS of Augiers PRINCIPLES CONCERNING THE DIVISION OF SINNE XVIII SEING WE HAVE SPOKEN OF SINNE in generall now we will deale with the same in speciall 1 THe principall sorts of sinnes are named two vz. Originall and Actuall which notwithstanding are rather issuing then disagreeing the one from the other for the one is as it were the cause and the root the other as the fruit and effect 2 Originall sinne is somtimes called absolutelie sinne Otherwhile flesh olde and first ADAM the sinne of nature concupiscence the lusts of the fleshe the lawe of the members the heart of man c. 3 And it may be thus fitlie defined namely an infection deriued from ADAM vnto all mankind 4 The subject wherevnto it cleaueth is not onelie the bodie but euen the soule also For whole man euery part of him is altogether corrupted and the powers and actions as well the superiour as the inferiour both of bodie and soule are polluted whence it commeth that in the affection and wil all things are depraued and peruerted and in the reason it selfe there is nothing but blindnes the ignorance and hatred of God 5 Now although the soule which is not taken from Adā but immediatlie created by God may seme to be voyd of this infectiō and that it seemeth not meet that the sins of the Fathers should be punished in the Children yet seeing ADAM is considered not onlie as some particuler man but as the beginning whēce al mākind did issue in whome also were all the gifts that were to bee bestowed vpon the whole ofspring he by his sinne lost them both to himself and vnto all men that proceed from him who are now in that only respect that they are and do resemble the image of ADAM hatefull vnto God Wee doe condemne therefore the PELLAGIANS who held that men were sinners not by birth but onely by immitation 6 In all men Christ onely excepted there is the same originall sinne and it hath spread it selfe alike vppon all men Neither are there any diuerse sorts of originall sins The Papists then doe erre who do except others besides Christ from originall sinne as the virgin Mary 7 There are two effectes of originall sinne the guilt or the offence whereby all men euen infants which yet haue committed no actuall sinne are made subject vnto Gods wrath and both deathes and also the want and priuation of
originall righteousnes and the inclination vnto all sorts of wickednes Therfore the scripture teacheth that al mē must be born againe euen infants and all vnto whome for this cause wee doe rightlie maintaine against the ANABAPTISTS that the signe of Regeneration is to be administred Although we make no question but that the reliques of corruption doth still remaine and is not vtterly taken away after Baptisme whatsoeuer the Papists say to the contrary 8 Actuall sinne is when the lawe of GOD is broken in deed and that is two maner of waies either when as that which God commandeth is omitted or that which he forbiddeth is committed Whence those two sorts of sinnes vz. omitted and committed sprang vppe in the Schooles The first whereof ariseth in that we are vnmeet to do well The latter in that we are prone vnto euery euill 9 There are other distinctions of actuall sinne For in respect of the object some are said to be done against God others against men And in regard of the ends some reach vnto the soule onelie others vnto the body also Vnto the first sort of the latter diuision do appertaine all inordinate motions whatsoeuer they are and euen all the euill cogitations euen the beginnings of them before they be fully framed and though the will doth not assent vnto them and those in like sort that the will which especiallie maketh the forme and giueth being vnto sinne doth allow and strengthen Vnto the latter member are all those referred which are brought vnto action by the outward seruice of some part of the bodie The Papists therfore do erre in denying concupiscence and those first inordinate motions to bee sinnes most absurdlie affirming that concupiscence is giuen to man to the end that wrastling with it he shuld be more and more whetted on to imbrace vertue and so should bind God so much the more vnto him by his merite Defended by RAMOND PALOCANE of Bearne PRINCIPLES CONCERNING THE RESTORING OF MANKIND XIX WHERE FIRST THE PERSON OF CHRIST is to be spoken of 1 GOd would not haue the felicitie of man to consist in that first estate wherein hee was created for then had his felicitie beene earthly and in some sort subject vnto chaunge but he placed it in a more firme and a more excellent estate whereby he might liue a heauenlie life and such as from the which he could in no wise fall 2 Now that man might bee brought vnto that perfect estate he fell by his owne fault yet not without the prouidence of GOD and so was made subject vnto the death both of his soule and bodie to the end that being deliuered from sin and death hee might passe vnto a better life and so might become a most certaine president of the justice and mercie of God 3 Our restoring againe consisteth in that that we shuld be freed from sinne and death and also from all the effects of both and should bee preferred vnto the dignitie of that righteousnes and that immortall life which is far more excellent and permanent 4 Our deliuery from sinne is wrought by the abollishing of sinne which is doone two manner of waies First by taking away both the guilt and punishment therof by the mercie of God Secondly by the regeneration of a newe life which is opposed vnto the corruption of nature and by the which Sanctification is so begone in this life as it shall be fullie perfected in the next 5 Our deliuery from death is when as we are assured that God is not angry with vs yea and doe hope and also feele him so appeased towards vs that we know our selues to be safe from the aeternall destruction of bodie and soul and from all other miseries 6 These and all other gifts which God bestoweth vpon the elect are giuen vnto vs in Christ Iesus onely Now that we may bee trulie partakers of them there are two thinges to be considered namely his person and his office 7 The person of Iesus Christ is the Sonne of God who hath personallie vnited vnto himselfe the humaine nature which he tooke of the seed of DAVID For he who is God from all aeternitie began to be man when hee was conceaued by the holie Ghost and incarnate that from the verie moment of his conception he shuld continue for euer true God and true man 8 Now although this work of the restitution as well as of the Creation doth agree vnto the whole Trinity yet the seuerall persons are distinguished For the Father sent the Sonne the holy Ghost did incarnate him and the Sonne made him selfe of no reputation We condemne therefore the CERINTHIANS EBEONITS PHOTIMIANS SAMOSATENIANS ARTEMONIANS and SERVETIANS who affirmed Christ to be but a bare man The ARRIANS EVNOMIANS BONOSIANS and ORIGENISTS who held him to be a God that was created and that hee was the Sonne not by nature but by grace and adoption The MARCIONITS and the VALENTINIANS who denied him to bee true man The APOLLINARISTS who denied him to be indued with a true soule and would haue his diuinitie to serue instead thereof To be short wee detest all those that do any waies either directly or indirectly withstand the puritie of the foresaid doctrine Defended by WILLIAM MOGNES of Niue●se PRINCIPLES CONCERNING THE PERSONALL VNION OF THE TWO NATVRES IN CHRIST XX. VNTO THE FVLL VNDERSTANDING of those things which wee haue to beleeue concerning the person of Christ it serueth to be needfull that wee declare how it is that hee consisting of two natures is yet but one subsisting person 1 THe second person of the Deity namly the word did so neerelie vnite and appropriate vnto himselfe the humaine nature that these two whole natures their proprieties vnited togeather are but one subsisting person Iesus Christ true God and man Yet so as the humain nature doth subsist in the diuine Wherfore this vniō is called an Hypostolicall or a personall vnion 2 In Christ therefore there is not one Christ and another Christ that is Christ God and Christ man seeing the person is onelie one but yet there is one thing and another thing that is a diuine and an humaine nature seeing the natures are diuers 3 Now although these two natures be inseperable yet in very deed they remaine distinct both in themselues and also in their essentiall proprieties and their actions And therfore the diuine nature is seuerally attributed vnto the Deitie and is humaine vnto his humanity 4 Wherefore neither of the natures seuerally considered in it selfe can be said to be the other For you cannot truly say that the Deitie of Christ is his humanity or that his humanity is his Deitie 5 Neither can the essentiall proprieties of the one nature be more attributed vnto the other seuerally considered then the one nature can bee said to be the other For this is no true assertion to say that the Deitie was created is finite and contained within a place Nor yet this The humanitie is without beginning
the Angell witnessed he remained from the very moment of his conception a most pure consubsisting habitation of the eternall Sonne 15 For the holie Ghost when hee tooke the substance the Virgin did altogeather cleanse the said substance from all corruption before such time as hee turned the same into the seed of mans flesh 16 In this most pure flesh was placed also a most holie and a most pure soule that Christ alone shuld be that true holie one of the Lord making holie all his members for euer of whome the Leuiticall high Priest was onely a Type 17 Wee condemne therefore the Samosatenians who will haue Christ to be a bare man The Arrians and Seruetians who gaine-say his Coessentiall and Coeternall Deitie The Marcionites and the Manichaees who change the flesh of Christ into a bare shew The Schuengfeldians who attribute vnto Christ a heauenlie bodie The Appollinarists who affirme that the WORD was in stead of a soule vnto the flesh that was assumed The Nestorians who deuide the person The Eutychians who both confound the natures and mingle togeather their Essentiall properties The Monophysits who in steade of the vnitie of the person did place the vnity of the natures The Vbiquitaries who with EVTICHES do define the personall vnion by a Reall effusion of the properties of the Deitie into the humaine nature and with NESTORIVS doe define the same by the Co-operation of the natures and with the Monothelites to be onely a power proceeding as it were from God and man The Papists who affirme the Virgine Marie to haue bene conceiued without originall sinne and in mainetaining Transubstantiation do ouerthrow whatsoeuer they holde aright concerning the trueth of the fleshe of Christ and the personal vnion And their doctrine also who placing here vpon earth an essentiall Consubstantiation vnder bread and wine do strike vpon the same rocke of confusion Defended by DAVID PIOTAEVS of Lions PRINCIPLES CONCERNING THE NATIVITIE CIRCVMCISION AND BAPTISME OF CHRIST XLII IN THE FORMER PRINCIPLES WE HAVE doone with the conception of Christ now wee are briefly to deale with his Natiuitie 1 EVen as these words of the Creed of the Apostles conceiued by the holy Ghost do set forth the purifiyng of the seed of the Virgin to the end that the bodie of Christ might bee purely formed thereof So these wordes Borne of the Virgin Marie doe declare vnto vs the bringing forth of Christ into the world by the said virgin and so his Natiuitie 2 Wee say that Christ was borne when as the vsuall tearme of Child-bearing common vnto all other men being fulfilled the Virgin brought forth Christ that word of the Father and the Sonne of DAVID 3 For hee which was conceiued was also borne The Virgin Marie therefore is justly called the mother of God though she be not the mother of the Deitie And wee doe justlie condemne NESTORIVS who made a vaine distinction between the mother of Christ and the mother of God as being things opposite the one to the other 4 Of the sure perswasion of this Natiuitie wee reape a double profit the one that hence we learne that the word yet without the laying a side of his diuine nature or anie conuersion or mixture of the same hauing taken vppon him our flesh our soule and our minde that in all thinges sinne excepted he might be made like vnto his brethren began to be God and man The Arrians therfore are to be condemned who denie our Sauiour Christ to haue had an humaine soule and the Appollinaristes who deny him to haue had an humaine mind 5 The other that by this meanes wee might be assured that Christ according vnto the flesh is from those Fathers of whome Mary came that is from ADAM ABRAHAM and DAVID vnto whom it was peculiarlie promised that the Messias should come of their seed 6 Hee was also borne as it must needs bee according vnto the fore-telling of the Prophets of a Virgine that was vnknown of man because otherwise he could not be borne a pure man and so he himselfe should haue stood in need of a Mediator The Iewes therefore are to be condemned who holde against the Christians that it was not needfull that the Messias should be borne of a Virgine but that he should be the Son of some King or of some Prophet 7 The virginitie of Marie after her Child-bearing to wit that as it is most certaine that before her Childe-bearing she was vnknowen of man so also she remained a Virgin after the same vnto her dying day is religiouslie beleeued yet there is nothing expreslie found concerning this point in the holie Scriptures neither doth it belong anie-wise vnto the mysterie of our saluation 8 In this place we do not onelie refuse but vtterlie detest all filthie questions and such as are most vnagreeable vnto so holy a birth 9 Christ beeing an infant and bound in his swaddling bands after the maner of all other men that are borne cried in his swathes as also he did trulie sucke milke it behoued also that his bodie and his humaine wisdome though it made greater growth in him then in other men and his experience did grow as he did increase in yeares in so much as God would not haue the lawes of nature to bee broken in these things 10 Christ therefore at that time had a Childes bodie and afterward a mans finite and hauing the instrumentall parts thereof and therefore circumscribed in a place the which essentiall qualities of a true bodie hee neither did at any time nor euer will cast of They err therfore who teach that the bodie of Christ can be euerie where and yet his humanitie remaine still vnuiolated neither doth it followe thence that the natures are separated 11 That bodie euen vnto his death was subject vnto humaine infirmities and so of it selfe subject vnto corruption though it neuer felt the corruption of the Graue but after his resurrection he laid aside all those infirmities that were brought vpon man for sin and euen the naturall life it selfe Whence MANES is conuinced with MARCION and those whome they call DOKITAE who teach that Christ in deede neuer did or could suffer any thing and that he did onely beare men in hand that he suffered 12 This Natiuitie was the beginning of the open humiliation of Christ whereby he made himselfe of no reputation namely when taking vpon him the form of a Seruant he trulie came into this world euen as his death and buriall was the last part of the same 13 Furthermore in that he was circumcised ●nd baptized it was not done therfore because he in himselfe needed to be made cleane by them as though before he were poluted but that we should learne 14 First that the whole force both of the circumcision of the Fathers did and of our Baptisme dooth depend vppon him as beeing hee by whome the Sacraments are trulie made the signs of our reconciliation with God 15 Secondly that hee was the Sauiour and
the Mediator both of the Fathers that were circumcised and also of vs that now are vnder Baptisme 16 Thirdly that he came therefore into the world not to breake but to performe the law and perfectlie to fulfill it euen in the least points 17 Fourthly that he is the knot the band of both the couenants although he abrogated the olde by the new 18 We then condemne their blasphemy who thinking that Christ was born a bare man do teach that in his baptisme hee was first of all made pertaker of the holy Ghost and therefore that he is called God onelie in name Defended by DANIEL CHAMERIVS Occitanus PRINCIPLES CONCERNING THE PASSION AND DEATH OF OVR LORD IESVS CHRIST XLIII HAVING HANDLED THOSE THINGES which appertaine vnto the conception and Natiuitie of Iesus Christ our Sauiour we are to come vnto his Passion 1 AS soone as the WORD that aeternall Son of God taking vpon him mans flesh was brought foorth into this world hee began euen then to performe the mysterie of our Saluation Neither had it sufficiently profited vs that Christ had onely beene borne vnlesse also hee had performed whatsoeuer was required to bee done that wee should be reconciled vnto God 2 The will of the Father consisted in these points first that in him mans nature being perfect and pure from all sinne should most holily most perfectly and most fully fulfill all the righteousnes of the lawe Secondly that by the whole course of his life hee should take vpon himselfe the punishments due vnto our sinnes and pay the ransome of them by a full satisfaction 3 Therefore whereas in our beliefe wee go presentlie from his Natiuitie to the suffering of the Crosse thereby setting down a part for the whole is comprehended what soeuer Christ suffered euen from the very moment of hys conception vnto the day that hee was deliuered into the hands of the Iudge and that not without cause seeing this was the last and especiall act of the suffering of Christ for vs. 4 By his passion in like sort we vnderstand also al those sorts of injuries wherewith the Euangelists doe write that he was reproched and his punishments agrauated 5 In these sufferings of Christ we consider three things especially 6 And first of al both that fearful hatred of God against euerie transgression of the law which could in no wise bee appeased but by a most perfect satisfaction 7 And also that vnspeakable loue of God towards mā who sent that onely begotten Son of his that whosoeuer shuld beleeue in him should not perish but haue euerlasting life 8 Next wee are to consider the instruments which the Lord vsed to effect so great a worke and they were most euill namelie Sathan the Priests IVDAS and PILATE for who but such as were most wicked could finde in their heartes to accuse or condemne him that was most innocent yet the LORDE vsed them in such sort as by their meanes he brought to passe that worke which of all other the workes of God was the most holy and the most admirable that is the redemption of his Elect and as for the instruments who sinned not by compulsion but wilfullie and against their owne conscience hee allotted them vnto most just condemnation 9 Thirdly we consider the effects of that sacrifice namelie the force of that most perfect obedience of his euen vnto the death of the Crosse whereby we are clad with such a righteousnes as the law of God requireth and also the most ful satisfaction for all our sinnes wrought by this oblation once offered whence doth follow remission of sins freelie in respect of vs. Wherefore the Papists doe erre most foulie who besides the onely Passion of Christ go about to place their own merites and the merites of Saints as a needful supplie of the saide Passion or as though Christ was therefore borne that he might powre into vs the force to merite aeternall life of our selues 10 Nowe seeing Christ was true man that is consisting of a true soule and of a true bodie of a man he had a body subject vnto outward passions and therfore he bare most greeuous sufferinges in his bodie to the end that hee might trulie deliuer vs euen in respect of our bodies 11 Now in respect of the soule he was strucken thorow with most vnspeakable anguishes and torments yea hee suffered in his soule the most horrible and fearefull burthen of Gods wrath that he might deliuer our soules from the euerlasting torments of Hell They therefore are to be condemned who haue affirmed that Christ either did not suffer as the Simonians or that hee did not trulie but supposedly suffer as the Marcionites and the Manichaees did 12 The Diuinitie notwithstanding which was personally vnited vnto the humanitie that was assumed did not depart therefrom in the time of the passion but it so farre with helde it selfe in not shewing the force thereof vntill that his soule did vnspeakablie apprehende and feele the wrath of God then the which nothing can bee imagined more horrible the burthen whereof he had neuer bene able to sustaine vnlesse at the last he had bene strengthened to gaine the victorie by the same Deitie of the word 13 Iesus Christ then to speake properly suffered in his bodie and in his soule yet notwithstanding we may trulie and Christianlie say that the Lorde of glory was crucified dead c. not that the Deitie did suffer for the Diuinitie is imparible but that this bodie and this soule is the proper body and the proper soule of the WORD We doe detest therefore both the open Eutychians who as they confound the proprieties and the natures so they hould that the Deity did suffer also the close and secret Eutychians who are compelled in deede to confesse that the Deitie did not suffer but yet do hould that the communicating of the proprieties of the Godhead and the Manhood are reall euen in respect of the natures them selues and therefore that the WORDE in respect of it selfe did suffer some thing 14 That base estate of the WORD whereby he made himselfe of no reputation not in himselfe but in the fleshe which was assumed was especiallie seene as it were with the eies in his Passion wherein the aeternall Sonne of God as wee may say forgetting himselfe if I may so speake did hasten of his owne accord vnto such a punishment 15 The condemnation of Christ vnder CAIPHAS and PONTIVS PILAT which is a matter of no small moment consideration went before the punishment which he suffered For when as we could not stand before the Tribunall seat of God Christ appeared before the seat of the high Priest PONTIVS PILATE yet was he by and by condemned to be hanged vpon the Crosse the just for the vnjust that he might set vs free from the judgement of GOD the Father 16 The kind of punishment wherevnto he was judged was the Crosse then the which there was nothing more ignominious euen by the
law of God to the end we might know that hee was not onely dead but also made a cursse for vs. 17 Christ therfore being the true and the onely Priest performing the worke of the Mediatour-shippe as all the shadowes of the lawe did prefigure him carrying about with him that Tabernacle of his bodie entred once into the holie place where vppon the Altar of the Crosse hee once offered himselfe a Sacrifice and a brunt offering vnto his Father by sheadding his most precious bloode hee I say beeing the Priest the Sacrifice the verye redemption ransome and propitiation and euen all these thinges for euer Wee detest therefore with all our hearts that blasphemie whereby the Papists are not affraid to affirme that Christ is as yet daily offered vnto his Father reallie and in deed for the quick and dead by the sacrificing Priest then the which blasphemie nothing can bee more execrable 18 Nowe Christ by his death hath abollished both the first and the second death vnto his Elect. The first death not that he hath fully destroyed the same but that he hath chaunged it in such sort as it is no longer a punishment of sinne or an entry vnto the other death but a passage vnto aeternall life 19 The latter indeede in respect that hee beeing dead did altogeather put it vnder his feet and openly triumph ouer the same wherefore also wee are no longer to feare it 20 By the death of Christ wee vnderstand the true separation of his soule from his bodie the which soule as hauing it in his owne hands when he had fulfilled al these things which were forespoken of the Prophets concerning his satisfaction for vs and hauing performed all the solemnities of the true expiatorie sacrifice hee willinglie calling againe and againe with a great crie on his Father gaue vp 21 Yet was not the Diuinitie of Christ therefore seperated in his death either from his bodie or from his soule but it was alwaies personallie vnited vnto both in such sort as that band of the personall vnion was neuer broken Wherefore some haue not taught aright in giuing out that Christ by his death ceased to be man 22 Lastlie besides all the fruites which wee drawe as hath beene shewed from the passion crosse and death of Christ this is not the least that by the benefite and power of them our old man suffereth is crucified quit broght to nothing with him Defended by ANTONIE THYSIVS a low countriman PRINCIPLES CONCERNING THE BVRIAL AND THE DESCENSION OF CHRIST INTO HELL XLIIII 1 ALL these things that Christ suffered or did for our cause are in the second part of the Apostolical Creed comprehended in the actions of his humiliation or exaltation 2 The actions of his humiliation are either of his secret or of his open humiliation of his secret is his conception all the rest euen vnto his Resurrection are of his open humiliation 3 Wee haue hitherto dealt concerning the act of his secret humiliation and also concerning the foure first heades of his open humbling his Natiuitie Passion crucifying and death the two latter aboue named do yet remaine viz. his Buriall and his Descension into Hell the former whereof belongeth vnto his body the latter vnto his soule as afterward we will speake 4 The Buriall of Christ is to be expounded euen as the wordes themselues doe sound wherein are to bee considered First the persons who buried Christ Secondly the forme and manner of his burial Thirdly the end Fourthlie the effects Fiftly the place Sixtly the time he remayned in the graue 5 The persons who buried him were IOSEPH of Aramathea and NICODEMVS who hauing obtained the bodie of Christ of PILATE did anoint the same with Balme and wrapped it in fine linnen and afterwards buried it In all which points we haue a singuler example of faith and also of Gods prouidence hereby making a way to the resurrection of Christ 6 The forme of his buriall consisteth in his anointing the which in respect of God was a type of that liuely smel flowing from the death of Christ his winding laying in the graue which were assured testimonies of his death And here wee are not to conceale their notable delusion who not onely superstitiouslie but also ignorantlie and foolishlie doe in Sauoy offer a certaine Linen to bee worshipped wherein Christ shoulde bee wrapped in the graue the which they also foolishly call a handkercherffe or napkin wherein the whole bodie of Christ is painted wheras the Iewes according to their custome doe onelie binde the head in a Napkin 7 The endes of this buriall are manifolde For first of al Christ would therefore be buried that he might be declared to be truly dead 2. That he might persue death fliing as it were vnto her innermost denne 3. That hee might make our buriall smell of the liuelie sauour of his death and so driue away from vs the horror of the graue 4 That by this meanes hee might leaue a sure testimonie of the resurection 8 The effect of the Burial of Christ is first of all this that as dying he ouercame death and persued this victorie of his that he might deliuer his bodie frō the effect of death that is from being turned vnto dust euen so by the same power of his hee might bring the bodies of his members vnto aeternall incorruption The other is that euen as the burial of that bodie which was assumed into for vs a spiritual an aeternall life was a certaine cōtinuance of death so is it vnto vs a pledge of the spirituall death of the olde man dying in vs by litle and little in which respect we are said in Baptisme to be buried with him into his death 9 Neither is the bodie of sinn weakned in vs at a moment but by continuall progresse dooth dailie more and more languishe vntill it bee made altogeather without strength which shall then be when wee shall perfectlie rise againe 10 Hee is said to bee buried in a Fielde neere vnto the place where he was crucified and that in a newe graue cut out of a rocke that it might bee clearlie manifest that hee was trulie buried and therefore also that hee rose againe and not some other in his stead 11 As concerning the sealing watching of the graue both came to passe by the gret prouidence of God namelie that the most extreame enemies of Christ by whose seal and guard the Sepulchers was made safe might bee compelled against their wils to confirme the Resurrection of Christ that by and by followed 12 It was not necessary that the time wherein hee lay in the graue should in euery point bee answearable to the Type of IONAS but we are to know that Christ hasting as it were vnto the victorie the Scripture is wont by setting down a part for the whole to giue the name of some whole thing to the beginning and end thereof So Christ beeing put in the graue at the latter end of that
signified The signes are water and the sacramentall rites which are a dipping into the water and a taking out of the same againe whence washing doth follow The thing signified is the blood of Christ vnto the remission of our sinnes and that spirituall and deuine force whereby wee are regenerated which regeneration consisteth partlye in the abolishing of the olde man which decaieth by little little and partlie in the creating of the new which is to be perfected by degrees 6 The formall cause of Baptisme consisteth in the lawfull vse of the institution the especiall part whereof is the inuocation of the name of the Father of the Sonne and of the holie Ghost together with the rite either of dipping into the water or of the sprinckling of the same 7 For it is not greatlie materiall whether the person that is to be baptised be whollie dipt vnder the water or whether the water bee onelie sprinkled either vppon his head or his face Vaine therefore and void is that washing where either Baptisme is not done into the name of the Father the Sonne and the holie Ghost or water is not vsed 8 Those vaine questions that haue risen from that false absolute necessitie of Baptisme as whether it be lawfull to baptize with distilled water with vrin or stale or with sand where naturall water cannot be gotten wee reject as absurd and ridiculous neither thinke we that any contention ought to be made whether the water is to bee once or thrise applied 9 It is not lawfull no not for any Angell in heauen to ordaine any Sacramentall rites seeing the signification of them doeth respect the promise of grace For it is in the power of GOD alone both to promise what hee thinketh good and also to establishe his promises by what signes it pleaseth him 10 They did greatly offend therefore who not contented with the simplicitie of the Lordes institution thought that they could adorne Baptisme by adding curious rites thervnto where as of the contrarieside the Lord will haue the Sacraments of the newe couenant which are opposed vnto the olde to be therefore most few and simple to the end that wee should so much the more readilie be drawen from these corporall and sensible things to the consideration of spirituall and heauenly matters I Those innumerable added trifles therefore which haue presentlie growen into manifest superstition and wherof some were added by the Papists as chrisme spittle Tapers wee haue justlie abollished though they be of antiquitie as being will-worship II Now as touching Exorcisme if by that name be vnderstood not the solemne couenant of Christianitie but the conjuring of Sathan and Spirites wee altogeather refuse the same as being rashly and foolishly drawen from those that were possessed with Diuels to be applied vnto men that were in their right wits and to the infants of Christians III Yet did not these spots though filthie and loathsom and therefore to be carefully abollished anihilate Baptisme as long as the essentiall forme thereof remained 11 The first that the Lorde appointed to publishe this action was IOHN therefore called the Baptist but the Author hereof is properly Christ who onely hath this authority in the house of his Father 12 Nowe the outward administration of this Sacrament as also the simple preaching of the worde hee hath committed vnto Pastors lawfully called Their error therefore is very greeuous who commit this office vnto priuate men and much more greeuous who giue women leaue to intermeddle in this action in the cause of necessitie as they call it 13 ALTHOVGH they are not to be accounted to haue a lawfull calling who haue inuaded the places of true Pastors either by a common error or by long permission yet are they to be DISTINGVISHED from meere priuat mē Therefore Baptisme administred by them according to the forme appointed by Christ is to stand Yet are not they to be excused who now that the holy Ministerie is in some sort reformed doe as farre as in them lyeth confirme the false calling of these men by giuing their children to be Baptized of them 14 To the end in the mean time that all these things may bee lawfully done they are to be so performed in the Church as it may be vnderstood what is done therfore a certaine forme togeather with meet conuenient praiers is to be vsed in the vulgar tongue which may declare the originall vse and end of Baptisme Therefore also Baptisme is profaned by them who either administer the same without any exposition or depraue the administration thereof by some false worshippe or administer it in a straunge and an vnknowen tongue Although it be true Baptisme as long as that remaineth which is the chiefe thing therein namelie the signe and the right inuocation of the Father the Son and the holy Ghost for Baptisme doth neither depend vppon the faith nor yet is defiled by the sinnes of him that administreth it but is grounded onely vppon the ordinance of the Sonne of God 15 The Analogie furthermore of the signes and the things signified is manifest For the element of water vsed for the washing of the outwarde filthines doth most fitlie represent that blood which was shead for the taking away of the sinnes of the world and applied to purifie vs Briefelie that either dipping into or sprinckling of the water though it bee but done in a short space doth yet clearelie represent the first part of our regeneration that is the sealing of our inward and spirituall ingraffing into Christ his death and buriall whereby our olde man togeather with all our sinnes being by little and little brought to decay is altogeather buried Last of all in that hee who is baptized whether hee bee dipt vnder the water or sprinckled with the same doth yet rise again it laieth open as it were before our eies the remission of our sinnes and the rising againe of our new man 16 The proper end of Baptisme is that by this solemne and holy action wee might bee knowen by the testimony of men and Angels to bee in the number of the visible Church also that by meanes of this action the adoption of the elect might to their full assurance bee more more sealed by the holy Ghost in their hearts 17 The principall efficient cause heereof is the holie Ghost who in his good time doth inwardly performe that which by the word of promise accompanied with outward signes is declared vnto the mind Whence also may be gathered what are the effects of Baptisme 18 Now the instrumental cause of the efficacie of baptisme is the very same that maketh the worde alone to bee powerfull namly faith wrought by the holy Ghost throgh the hearing of the word in those that are of age I Their error therefore is intollerable who dreame that there is any diuine power either in the water or in the rites of Baptisme seeing that whole efficacie is solie the worke of the holie Ghost which can
bee communicated vnto no creature II Now whereas in the Scriptures and in the writing of the Fathers that is sometimes ascribed vnto the outwarde Baptisme which is properlie belonging vnto the inward or that vnto the signe which appertaineth vnto the thing signified or to the Minister which is proper vnto the holy Ghost alone this commeth to passe not because that that thing which is the onely worke of the power of God can bee any waies transferred to any other thing but that the truth of that which is signified by the Sacrament may in regard of God who promiseth be knowen to be alwaies present III They are also greatly deceiued who thinke that Baptisme was properly and chiefly ordained to the end that Christians might by that outward mark be discerned from all other people 19 Now the signes themselues haue no other force then of Sacramentall signification that is to call the thing signified not onely vnto our remembrance but also offer the same vnto vs to be receiued by faith 20 Seeing Regeneration wherof Baptisme is the pledge is onely begun in the Saints the jangling Sophisters doe greeuouslie erre who thinke that originall sinne which is the corruption of nature is altogether taken away by baptisme and that by the worke wrought that is by the verie action of Baptisme and that it is abollished from the verie same moment that Baptisme is receiued neither will they haue that fire of concupiscence which remaineth in those that are baptized to be accounted a sinne Defended by ANTHONY THYSIVS a Low-countrey man THE SECOND PART OF THE PRINCIPLES CONCERNING BAPTISME LIX WEE HAVE DISPVTED IN THE FORmer Principles touching the causes and effects of Baptism it followeth that wee deale with those things touching the same argument which wee referred vnto this Disputation 1 THe subject of Baptisme is hee who is baptized And all those are to bee baptized who in regard of likelihood are contained within the couenant of God 2 Now the infants that are the progenie of beleeuing Parents and also those who beeing of full age doe offer themselues vnto the church by making profession of their faith and yeelding their consent vnto the Doctrine therein prefessed are to be accounted within the couenant 3 We holde that they who are of full age are not to be receiued vnto baptisme before such time as they be instructed and haue yeelded a confession of their true faith together with a protestation that they will lead a better life Because for more assurance the confession of the mouth is to be required at their hands 4 Touching infants seeing our adoption doth not depend vpon our selues or vpon any outward thing but onely vpon the election of God which began to be manifested at our very conception by vertue of that couenant I will be thy God and the God of thy seed and againe I will be the God of those that feare me vnto a thousand generations And although that infants be not indued with actuall faith which is by hearing yet doe wee at this day justlie baptize as in times past they were circumcised the infants of the Saints because they are comprehended with in the couenaunt of aeternall life by meanes of the faith of their Parents 5 It maketh nothing against this point that al who are borne of faithfull Parents are not elected For if this reason might preuaile wee would hardly be drawen to admit those that are of yeares Seeing all that professe are not elected It is not our part to enquire into those secrete mysteries of God but wee may justlie presuppose that both all their children who professe Christianitie and all those also who being of full yeares doe make profession of true faith are elected vnto aeternall life 6 Whereas euery man is said to bee saued by his owne faith and not by another mans it is to be vnderstood onely of those that are of yeares and we cannot allow of the opinion concerning the actuall faith of infants But leauing vnto God his secrete judgements wee doubt not but that the faithfull Parents doe according vnto the condition of the couenant apprehend the promise both to themselues and also to their children 7 Now the Sacramental adding of the seale doth presuppose that which is sealed to be present indeed namely that the partie baptized is by likelihoode comprehended within the couenant 8 If no wel ordered Church did euer admit either Iews or Turkes being of yeares or any other the professed enemies of Christ vntill they had beene catechised and made open profession of Christianitie much lesse cann any receiue their children but with the manifest profanation of Baptisme 9 Touching Papistes wee are in some sort to thinke otherwise of them in asmuch as wee may justly presuppose that the Church doeth as yet remaine within the filthines of Poperie in respect of the elect that are in their time to be drawen out of that mire because that the seale of christianitie though defiled with many spots and staines hath continued among them in the substantiall forme thereof as also the doctrine of Christianitie in respect of the Trinity and the person of Christ And therefore we are of judgment that the children of Papistes may bee receiued vnto Baptisme if either one of the Parents do require the same or som man be present that wil promise their right bringing vp 10 It is a great error to tie saluation vnto the outward Sacramentes as though they were absolutelie necessarie therevnto which the Papistes themselues that are of anie sound judgement doe not altogeather holde And on the other side hee that despiseth the marke of the couenant is justlie guiltie of aeternall death And therefore it is not the want but the contempt of Baptisme that is damnable the which sinne as also all other may bee done away by true repentance 11 Now he cannot be accounted a contemner of Baptisme who wanted oportunitie to receiue the same lawfullie And therefore wee doe cast away these cases of necessitie and all the corruptions brought into the Church vpon this occasion as being the inuentions of men 12 The effects of Baptisme administred either vnto infants or vnto those that are of age is not to be tied vnto the verie time of the administration thereof For the seede both of the worde and also of the Sacraments lieth as it were buried in the earth as long as it pleaseth God to deferre his grace 13 Now seeing wee are baptized for our whole life after and that Christ doeth neuer cast away those that were giuen him it followeth that Baptisme is not to be itterated We doe therefore condemne Rebaptization neither can wee in this point allow of CYPRIAN and the Affricane Churches and especiallie of that false and dangerous opinion which holdeth that the remission of sins past is onely sealed by Baptisme whence it came to passe that some did very carelesly defer Baptisme vnto their last end 14 The Baptisme of IOHN and of Christ was one and the
are taught what we ought to craue namely the free remission of all our sinnes whatsoeuer they bee by and for Iesus Christ our Lord. 7 There are foure things then contained in this Petition 1. a confession of our sinnes who haue made vs guiltie of aeternall death 2. The great patience and clemency of God towardes vs is commended who doth not onelie beare with vs who daily offend him but also doth pardon euery one of vs so many sinnes 3. Out of the proper signification of the worde 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 FORGIVE we gather that the remission of our sinnes is a free gift 4. The word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 DEBT which the Syrians call CHIBAH doeth teach vs that all our sinnes which are heere figuratiuelie and according to the propriety of the Syrian tong called DEBTS are whollie forgiuen vs. The Papists therefore are mad with their merits and distinctions betweene the punishment and the offence between mortall and veniall sinnes as they define them though we doe not denie some sins to bee greater then others and who flie vnto their satisfactions as beleeuing that their sins are not wholie done away by Christ onely 8 Vs Christ would haue vs to vse this worde to the end we might learne not onely to be carefull of our owne saluation but also of our brethrens and this is true loue which is so much commended vnto vs. 9 In the other part of this Petition we are taught what our dutie is 10 Namely that following the example of our most mercifull Father we should trulie forgiue all trespasses vnto those that haue offended vs which is one of the speciall effects of true loue 11 Now this second part is added that we may rightly craue the remission of our sinnes and so may come vnto prayer with true faith and repentance the marke whereof is loue towards our neigbour 12 Neither are we bound onely to forgiue those that haue offended vs but euen to loue them no lesse then our selues 13 The word AS doth not paint out the cause degree or aequalitie of the forgiuing proceeding from vs with the remission which wee craue at Gods hand but it setteth downe the resemblaunce thereof after a sort and our willingnes therevnto 14 This worde then is added as a signe whereby wee might be confirmed that God hath so certainlie forgiuen vs our sinnes as we are assured that we haue forgiuen our neighbours and that we are voyd of all hatred enuie and reuenge 15 Now we forgiue our neighbours their sinnes as far as they concerne vs and not in regard that they haue offended God whome hee especiallie offendeth whosoeuer hee be that trespasseth against his neighbour 16 Whosoeuer then desireth his sinnes to be forgiuen him and hath not forgiuen his neighbour or hauing forgiuen him in words doth intend to be yet reuenged hee doth againe desire that God would not remit him his sins but to take punishment of them 17 Yet is it lawfull for a Christian to seeke redresse by the Magistrate of the injurie that is done vnto him both that thereby the societie of men may bee preserued and that lewd men be not incouraged to abuse the patience of the good but yet so as all desire of priuate reuenge and al offence be auoyded Wrongfully therefore did IVLIAN the Apostata gather out of this doctrine that Christians did take awaie the authoritie of the Magistrate and the vse of lawes Defended by SAMVEL BOYSSYNVS Occitanus PRINCIPLES TOVCHING THE SIXT PETITION OF THE LORDS PRAIER LXX HAVING DONE WITH THE FIVE FIRST Petitions of the Lords Prayer the sixt and the last is now to be opened 1 THis last Petition is rightly placed after all the rest and especially next after the first For first seeing wee doe heere also craue of our God those thinges which make for our saluation order requireth that after we haue in the former Petition begged the remission of our sinnes we should heere desire the strength of the Spirit whereby wee might bee daily enabled to stand against all temptations 2 For although our sinnes are forgiuen vs yet are wee neuer so cleared of them but the reliques of the flesh doe still remaine in vs whereby our aduersarie doeth driue vs vnto diuers sinnes Wherefore wee desire that the Lorde would not suffer vs to be ouercome by the Deuill and the lusts of our flesh which doe continuallie warre against vs. 3 Nowe because wee wrastle not with flesh and blood that is with those enemies which we are able to gainst and by our owne strength but against the powers of the Aire that is against Sathan himselfe who doth continuallie as a roaring Lyon lie in wait for vs and prouoke vs to sin this Petition is altogeather necessarie for vs that thereby wee may obtaine spirituall armour at Gods hands 4 This request consisteth of two partes the Petition it selfe and the declaration thereof The Petition is LEAD VS NOT INTO TEMPTATION the declaration of it is BVT DELIVER VS FROM EVIL 5 In these wordes LEAD VS NOT c. is shewed that neither the Deuill himselfe nor any other aduersarie can doe ought against vs but by the Lordes permisision and as farre as he will permit them 6 By the worde LEAD as also by many other that are found in the Scripture as to harden to deliuer vp into a reprobate sense c. is not ment a bare permission of God onely as some thinke but a permission joyned with the decree and ordinance of God who doth vse the woorke of Sathan and the concupiscence of men either for the punishing of sin with sin or for the chastisemēt of his children 7 Now the Lorde is said to lead those into temptation whom in his just judgement he giueth ouer vnto sathan or their own wils 8 Neither are wee for this cause to thinke that God is the Author of sinne for what so euer he willeth the same doth hee will justlie and holilie and his action euen in that temptation wherevnto men do yeeld is altogeather without sinne wheras the action of Sathan and those that obey him is both vnjust and altogeather sinfull It is without cause therefore that some doe gather out of this doctrin that we make God to be the author of sinne 9 Neither are we taught simplie to pray that we be not tempted at all but that wee bee not lead into temptation For it profiteth vs to bee sometimes tempted but we pray that wee be not ouercome of the temptation and so offend God 10 The word TEMPTATION or to TEMPT is of a double signification for sometimes it signifieth to sift or to trie and sometimes to lead vnto euill God therefore is saide one way to tempt and Sathan another Sathan that hee may destroy condemne and ouerthrow but God to the end that by trying his he may see what strength is in them not because God knoweth not what is man but partlie to teach his children to knowe themselues and partlie that he
monstruous disorders and wee accounte them for such constitutions as vnto whome no obedience is to bee yeelded 15 Yet we hold it not in any case lawful for priuat men to rise against their Magistrates though neuer so great tyrants for that is a far different thing frō refusing to yeeld obedience vnto impious or vnjust lawes 16 It becommeth Christians least of all other men to be contentious yet notwithstanding they are not forbidden when other meanes will not preuaile either to craue their aid or to defend their right before the Magistrates thogh the verie enemies of true religion as far as they may doe the same without giuing of offence so that it be done also with an vpright conscience a mind void of al guile reuenge and euill affection They are deceiued therefore who thinke it vnlawfull that Christians to seek and maintain their right by ciuil Pleas and to craue the helpe of the Magistrate 17 All men of what age nation sexe or condition so euer they be are bound without exception to be subjects vnto this ordinance of man not onely for feare of punishment which the lawe doth inflict but euen for conscience sake as the Apostle saith who commaundeth vs to make praier for all Magistrates without exception Rebellious and seditious therefore is the Papisticall Cleargie who vnder the colour of certaine counterfeit immunities hath presumed to with-drawe the necke from the yoke of the Magistrate 18 Yet is it the duetie of the superiour powers of which sort are the seauen electors in the Romain Empire and the states of kingdomes in all monarchies to restrain all furious tyrants which thing if they doe not performe they shall yeeld an account of their treacherie in the presence of God 19 As often as the Magistrate commandeth any thing that is repugnant either to the worship which wee owe vnto God or to the loue which we owe vnto our neighbour wee cannot yeeld obedience therevnto with a safe conscience For as oft as the commaundement of God and men are directlie opposed one against another this rule is to be perpetuallie obserued that it is better to obey GOD then men but yet so as no man is to passe the boundes of his calling as is set downe in the fifteenth Principle of this head Defended by IOHN IOBERTVS of poictiers PRINCIPLES TOVCHING THE REMISSION OF SINNES AND THE SIN AGAINST THE HOLY GHOST LXXIX 1 THe Article concerning the Church is already inentreated of it followeth nowe that wee deale with those benefites which our heauenlie Father doth bestow vpon his children partly in this life and partly in the life to come which are remission of sinnes resurrection of the bodie and life euerlasting 2 The Article touching the remission of sinnes beeing already spoken of when as we dealt with the justification of man by Christ opened the first Petition of the Lords Praier we wil now briefly touch the same and then come to that irremissible or vnpardonable sin which is called the sinne against the holy Ghost 3 Sinne in generall we define to bee a transgression or swaruing from the law repugnant vnto Gods wil brought into the world by our first Parents through the instigation of Sathan the fruit whereof is by the just curse of God the miserie of the life present and death aeternall 4 Nowe remission of sinnes is the free and the most full pardon of all our sinnes obtained by Christ apprehended by faith in the place of which sins succeedeth the imputation of the righteousnes of the said Christ 5 The fountaine of the remission of our sins is the aeternall and constant loue of God towards his Church Eternall because he loued vs from aeternity for if he had begun to loue vs hee should haue bene subject vnto change constant because with God is no shadow of change 6 Hence it appeareth that remission of sinnes beeing once bestowed can neuer be dissanulled For it must needs be that the counsel of God touching the saluation of his should be stable and firme 7 The cause whereby and for the which we obtaine remission of sins is the loue of God towardes man in Christ who draweth vs from condemnation deliuereth vs from the power of darknes and maketh vs meet to obtaine the inheritance of the Saints in light 8 The instrumentall cause is faith wrought in vs by the hearing of the worde Preached and confirmed by the vse of the Sacraments whereby we now doe not onely know that Christ is our Sauiour but also doe applie him and all his riches which are indeffinitely offered vnto the church as ours and euerie one of vs in particuler are assured of our Election 9 The faith therefore of the remission of our sinnes is a most full and sure perswasion whereby euerie faithfull man dooth assuredlie beleeue that God the Father hath pardoned him all his sins for the onely sacrifice of Christ and in their steed doth impute vnto him the righteousnes of Christ It appeareth out of the former things that the opinion concerning the remission of the fault but not of the punishment is altogether most detestable from whence the doctrine touching meritorious satisfaction in the presence of God touching indulgences Purgatory and praier for the dead haue arisen 10 Seeing God who is offended with sinne is just it followeth that whosoeuer doth not that which the Lawe commandeth and whosoeuer dooth that which the Lawe requireth not maketh himselfe subject vnto the burthen of Gods wrath whence it appeareth that the verie least transgression of the Lawe deserueth death if yee consider the nature of sinne Yet no sinne is so hainous but it is pardonable in Christ that one sinne excepted which is altogeather vncurable and irremissable whereof wee are now to speake seing we haue already dealt with remissible sinnes 11 This vncurable sinne is called sinne vnto death blasphemie against the holy Ghost not simply in respect that the holie Ghost is the third person in the Trinitie but in regard that it is hee onelie who enlightneth the mindes of men and openeth the way of saluation 12 The sinne against the holie Ghost is the voluntarie deniall of Christ beeing truelie knowen the falling away from the Gospell being sealed in the heart of man by the holie Ghost enlightning the same arising from the hatred of the truth joyned with a sauadge and more then barbarous tyrannie against the same and the Sophisticall opugning therefore and also with the contempt of the sacrifice of Christ which is the alone propitiation for sinne 13 This seemeth to be the manifest discription of this horrible sinne the cause thereof is the minde and will of man opugning the knowen truth by a Sathanicall kind of pride and cruelty 14 This sinne would the Lord therefore haue justlie to be vnpardonable because that they who do after this sort throw themselues hedlong do tread vnder foot the blood of Christ whome they haue trulie knowen without whom there is no saluation and doe stop vp the
to haue bene able vtterlie to haue abolished them Wee doe therefore condemne those who dream that the soules hauing lost their former bodies by corruption shall assume other bodies in their steede 14 This change shall bee done at a moment in those whome Christ shall finde aliue at his second comming 15 The Axiome of the Philosophers that the generation of one thing is the corruption of an other hath no place in this matter and the similitude of PAVLE drawne from the seed sowen in the ground is not to be drawn anie farther than vnto the change of the quality 16 Wee affirme that the one and the selfe same man in number shal arise both in respect of his bodie which is his matter and also in respect of his forme that is of his soule which shall quicken the one and the selfe same bodie although by the retaking againe of the forme the person might in a nice sort seeme to be an other in number than it was before 17 By reason of this change of the qualities and not because the very bodilie quantity and circumscription are taken away for they are perpetuall circumstances or adjuncts of a bodie PAVLE doth affirme that the natural bodie is changed into a spirituall Great therfore is their errour and meerelie contrary vnto the Resurrection of the bodies who teach that the bodies are essentiallie changed by Resurrection into a spirituall nature For by this meanes death should so abolish the nature of the bodie as the Resurrection cold not restore the same and the analogie also betweene Christs Resurrection the resurrection of his members should be destroied 18 By this means furthermore the threatning of the punishments of that aeternal fire and paine should be altogether Allegoricall yea and after the resurrection both the godlie and the wicked shuld become some third spirit compact or braied together as it were of the natural spirit and the bodie accidentallie transformed into the nature either of the same or of a diuers spirit 19 But they doe verie greeuouslie erre who imagine that the bodie of Christ after his glorification which ensued vpon his Resurrection became not onelie of a spirituall nature which though it were graunted not to bee circumscribed in regard of quantitie yet they must needs yeild that the same is bounded within the propriety of the nature of it but also of a diuine seeing the Deitie alone is euerie where by a proprietie altogether vncommunicable vnto anie thing els Neither hath the Resurrection abolished the true bodilie humaine nature of Christ but the infirmities of his naturall bodie beeing laid aside God hath endued the same humane nature with most excellent supernaturall guifts 20 The qualities of the bodies beeing glorified cannot be knowne vnto vs while we are in this life neither are we curiouslie to enquire of them Yet may it be gathered by the woordes of Christ comparing the Saincts vnto the brightnesse of the Sunne and affirming them to be aequall with the Angels by the storie of the Resurrection and Ascension of Christ also out of the first to the CORINTH and both the Epistles of PAVLE to the THESSALONIANS that besides their incorruption they shall bee also bright or shining and of a more refined quick substance than now they are 21 Of the contrarie side it may in some sort be gathered how horrible and fearefull the state shall be of those men who are to be adjudged vnto the secōd death which is the euerlasting curse of God Seeing their soules shall therefore neuer bee seperated from their bodies euen because that their vnspeakable torments may be aeternall Defended by ABEL BARRERIVS a Gascoigne PRINCIPLES CONCERNING ETERNALL LYFE LXXXI 1 THe Article concerning the Resurrection of the flesh being handled at large in the former principles we are now at the length come to the exposition of that which is touching Aeternall life 2 This Article is therefore set last in the belief because it is the end and shutting vp of all those things which are there propounded vnto vs to be beleeued 3 We make life in this place to be that power and facultie whereby the soule doth not onelie moue it self but doth also giue motion sense vnto the body and this latter effect thereof in this life doth PAVL cal 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is naturall as being applied vnto the vse of this present life of which sort also was the life of ADAM before his fall although it was neither subject vnto mortalitie neither vnto those things which tend vnto death as he was after his fal But the soule being againe ioyned to the bodie shall both moue it self by a farre more excellent power and shall also quicken the bodie in a far diuers sort from that naturall life which shall be done away namelie by a spirituall life and aequall vnto the Angels as also the verie bodie shall rise again endued with far more excellent qualities whervpon it was called of PAVLE a spirituall bodie not in regard of the substance but of the qualities thereof 4 To liue therfore the etetnall life is to be in that state wherein the elect being after the blessed resurrection most fully joyned with Christ their head shal know God in heauen together with the Angels after a manner altogether vnknowne vnto vs at this day enjoy his prescence and glorifie him eternally We do therfore justlie condemne the error of the CHILIASTES 5 By the worde ETERNAL in this place we vnderstand that which hath a beginning but neuer shall haue an end 6 Touching curious and difficult questions as concerning the sight of God which we are to haue in the life to come and such like wee thinke meete to omitte them because it is sufficient for vs to knowe that God hath prepared for vs those thinges which neither eie hath seene eare hath heard nor enterd into the hart of man 7 The Author of that life is God who freely bestoweth the same vpon those whome of his meere mercie he hath chosen in Christ before the foundation of the world from whome as from the head this blessed immortallitie dooth flowe in a most full sorte into his members that are joyned vnto him 8 For the foundation both of our resurrection vnto life and also of that eternall life is that resurrection and glory of Christ our head because hee is the first fruites of the rising from the deade of those for whome hee prayed that they should be there where he is 9 That life therfore is not without respect generally bestowed vpon all men but only vpō the elect as being those who onelie are found in Christ according vnto that saying of PAVL ROM 11. The elect haue obtained it the rest are hardened and according vnto that voice of Christ Come yea blessed of my Father 10 This blessed immortallitie shal be common in deed vnto all the elect but not in the same measure as it may be probablie gathered by the consideration of the contrarie