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A10133 Iacobs vovv, opposed to the vowes of monkes and friers The first volume in two bookes; of the Holy Scripture, and euangelicall counsels. Written in French by Mr. Gilbert Primerose, minister of the word of God in the Reformed Church of Burdeaux. And translated into English by Iohn Bulteel minister of the gospel of Iesus Christ.; Voeu de Jacob. English Primrose, Gilbert, ca. 1580-1642.; J. B. (John Bulteel), d. 1699. 1617 (1617) STC 20390; ESTC S112003 232,060 268

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voice from whence Saint Cyprian inferres l Cypri de ●pere El●emosia The Martyrs that none can bee without sinne that there remaines as yet to those which are healed some wounds that whosoeuer saith he is without sinne is either proud or senselesse Not the Martyrs for it is written of all of them m Reuel 7.14 That they washed their robes and made them white in the bloud of the Lambe Then had they them soiled and distained and haue not found any thing in themselues wherewith to make them white n Reuel 14.5 These are such in whose mouth was found no guile Surely saith Saint Austin o August de peccat merit lib. 2. c. 7. because they haue reproued themselues sincerely and therefore no guile was found in their mouth For if they said that they had had no sinne they should deceiue themselues and truth should not be in them and where truth is not there is vntruth X. Not the whole Church The whole Church which so long as it warres in this vale of miserie beleeues by an article of faith the remission of sinnes not surely the sinnes of others but her owne sinnes for sinnes are pardoned to none but to the Church This is her voice p Canticles 1.5 I am blacke but comely She is not saith Saint q Bernar. in Cant Serm. 25. Bernard without some spot of blacknesse but surely here in the place of her pilgrimage for the time will 〈◊〉 when the Spouse of glory will make her glorious without spot without wrinkle and such like things But if she should now say that she hath no blacknesse at all she should deceiue her selfe and truth should not be in her Neither saith she so but contrariwise she cries incessantly vpon God in all her members r Mat. 6.12 Forgiue vs our trespasses in her most holy members For as Saint Austin saith ſ August in Psal 142. The excellent Rammes amongst Christe sheepe haue receiued commandement to pray so Then how much more the rest whereof none can say that he is without the contagion of ●●●ne that he neede not pray euen so Not Moses not Samuel not Elias not Iohn Baptist not Saint Peter not Saint Paul not Saint Iohn not any one of those that haue obtained good witnesse and testimony from God in the Scripture This voice this language ●aith t Gregor Nysse de orati domin Serm. 5. Gregorie of Nyssen appertaines vnto them all If they were now in the world liuing on earth in this humane frailty the necessitie of sinning would impose vpon them a necessitie of praying in regard of their sinnes past Forgiue vs our sinnes and in respect of their sinnes to come Leade vs not into t●ntation and that not onely for others but also for themselues not onely in humilitie as the Pelagians said but also in truth for saying they were sinners by humilitie and not being sinners truly they should lie through humilitie and in lying they should bee sinners as it h●th beene decided of old by u Concil Mileuit can 6.7.8 the Councell held at Mileui●um in Numidia with denunciation of Anathe●● and curse against those that made the Apostles and other Saints confessors of their sinnes for humblenesse sake in 〈◊〉 not in truth x Canon 8. Quis enim ferat ●rantem non hominibus sed ipsi D●min● menti●n●em It were saith the Councell to lie vnto God and not vnto men Let vs therefore conclude this argument with Saint Ierom● and say y Hieron ad Rusticum epist 44. If Abraham Isaac Iacob the Prophets also and Apostles haue not beene without sinne If the purest wheate hath had his straw and chaffe what can bee said of vs of whom it is written z Jerem. 23.28 What is the chaffe to the wheate saith the Lord CHAP. VIII I. The places aboue mentioned are expounded and vnderstood of veniall sinnes by Bellarmine II. Euery sinne is mortall in his nature which appeares III. If it be measured to God IIII. To the Law V. And to the death of Iesus Christ VI. All sinnes are veniall by grace to him that is in Christ Iesus VII Are notwithstanding some greater then othersome VIII The last Argument Neuer any Monke kept neuer could haue kept the Law BEllarmine a Bellar. de monach c. 13. §. 32.36 expounds all these places of veniall sinnes without the which we are not or are very rarely in this life notwithstanding for all this we may be iust and doe workes of supererogation II. This man when hee writ thus was doubtlesse cauterized and seated in his conscience in regard of the feeling of sinne And thus it is that now adaies they sew cushions vnder the elbow of the poore abused world and crie Peace peace to them for whom there is no peace they make many soules liue that should not liue flattering them in their sinnes by a wretched distinction of sinnes into mortall and veniall a distinction contrary vnto the Scripture which speaking of sinne in generall without distinction without limitation saith b Rom. 6.23 that the wages of sinne is death and denounceth plainely that c Ezech. 18.4 the soule that sinneth it shall die Let sinne be measured to God to the Law to Christ Iesus and they will finde that it is so III. To God d Psal 51.4 Against thee thee onely haue I sinned and done this euill in thy sight saith Dauid vnto God and the most holy men must say the like with him for can a man sinne without transgressing the Law of God and therefore without offending God And who will say that a trespasse against God is a veniall sinne Among vs men the sinne and offence multiplies according to the proportion of the person which is offended and of the place where it is committed The wrong done to a priuate person either in word or deede may bee repaired and satisfied by an honourable amends or by a pecuniarie fine and amercement but to thinke ill of his Prince is a crime of high treason to speake ill of him deserues not the gallowes not the sword but the pinsers the wheele the fire the extremest torments If a sonne rebell against his father if the seruant disobeieth his Master if the subiect despiseth the commandements of his Soueraigne the father thinkes he hath iust occasion to disinherit his son the Master to vse hardly his seruant the Lord to reiect his subiect to pursue him to pr●scribe him to put him to death And the Creator of all the King of Kings and the Lord of Lords the Father the Redeemer the Sauiour of vs all shall bee wronged and iniured in words in thoughts in bad and wicked deedes and actions by his creatures by his seruants by his children by his subiects and shall be wronged and offended in his owne house and in his presence and some one or many of euill seruants shall call and crie vnto their fellow-mates and companions that it
nescit non probat ratio non commendat antiqu● traditio the custome of the Church is ignorant of it reason approues it not neither doth ancient Tradition recommend it ſ Origen in Luc. homil 17. Origen goes further euen to her actuall sinnes and saith that she was scandalizd in the death and passion of our Lord that if she had not suffered scandall Christ should not be dead for her sinnes Saint Chrysostome accuseth her of ambition of ostentation and of vaine glorie in that when our Sauiour taught the people she with his brethren stood without and interrupted him t Mat. 12.46 desiring to speake with him u Chrys in Mat. homil 45. Consider saith hee the importunitie both of the mother and of the brethren for in stead that they should haue entred within and heard with the people or staied without vntill the end of the Sermon and then should haue resorted vnto him stirred vp with ambition and ostentation they call him forth in the presence of all the people to the ende they might seeme to commaund Christ easily and with great power and authoritie whence it appeareth that they were moued by some vaine glorie not making as then any great reckoning or estimation of him x Chrysost in Joan. homil 20. As much saith he expounding the miracle done by our Sauiour at the marriage in Cana of Galilee and surely when shee adrest her selfe to Christ saying vnto him y Iohn 2.3 4. They haue no wine If she had not done amisse nor had failed either in that she would prescribe vnto him a time to work miracles or in desiring by human affection and infirmity to be in more esteeme for his sake Christ had neuer answered her so Woman what haue I to doe with thee z Tertul. de Carne Christi c. 7. Tertullian saith no lesse and a Salmer comment in epist ad Rom. c. 5. disput 51. Salmeron the Iesuit tells vs that some haue proued and verified by two hundred Fathers some by three hundred Ca●etan by fifteene and they saith he irrefragable that the holy Virgin hath not beene preserued from all sinne VI. I write not these things to dishonour or disgrace the holy Virgin nor to match or equall any man with her in holinesse I render her all the honour can be giuen to a creature without transporting to her the honour due to the Creator I honour her remembrande I esteeme her I beleeue I say that b Luke 1.48 she is blessed according as she her selfe hath foretold I giue God thankes for the grace he hath done to her for the grace he hath done to the Church by her in making her the Mother of him who is the head the Spouse and Sauiour I striue and endeuour to ●mitate her humilitie her faith her meekenesse and other Christian vertues wherewith God had adorned and graced her and pray to God to giue mee grace to doe it This is all the honour which is due vnto Saints he which giues them more is an idolater he honours them not but dishonors them I reserue vnto Christ Iesus my onely Sauiour my onely Head my onely Redeemer my onely All the honour which the Scripture giues him and giues to none but him c Tertul. de pr●s●r c. 3. Soli enim Dei filio seruabatur sine delicto permanere For it was reserued to the onely Sonne of God to liue to be and abide without sinne Of all others it is written d Rom. 3.22 That all haue sinned and come short of the glory of God that is to say of the honour which God had giuen them creating them after his image in knowledge righteousnesse and holinesse that e Rom. 11.32 God hath concluded all in vnbeliefe that he might haue mercie vpon all VII In the second ranck after the Virgin I place the Apostles and I behold them acknowledging confessing bewailing their sinnes Saint Paul Saint Paul some twentie yeeres after his conuersion alreadie an Apostle and so farre yea so much aduanst in sanctification that he is not afraid to protest f Gal. 2.20 I liue yet not I but Christ liueth in me g Rom. 7. describes vnto vs an horrible warre that he felt in himselfe a perpetuall warfare of the flesh and the spirit by the which he was so diuided and distracted betweene euill and good that he cries out h Vers 14. I am carnall sold vnder sinne He had his minde enlightened and knowing the good he had also his will inclined to follow the direction of the minde and vnderstanding and to obey the Law and that had he as touching the inward man and as touching that that was renewed in him but he complaines that he had also in himselfe his flesh impugning and thwarting his good will and repugning his vnderstanding and the Law of God and haling him wil he ●ill he to commit the sinne he hates i Vers 15. for saith he that which I do I allow not behold the minde and vnderstanding enlightened condemning the euill for what I would that doe I not but what I hate that doe I. Loe the sanctified will abhorring the euill and notwithstanding he feeles in himselfe so great a peruer●itie that he doth the euill which he hates and condemnes and this peruersenesse is sinne the corruption of his nature withdrawing him from good and drawing him to euill k Vers 16. If then I doe that which I would not I consent vnto the Law that it is good l Vers 17. now then it is no more I that doe it but sinne that dwelleth in me And this sinne is his flesh his naturall corruption spred ouer all the parts of the soule and body which hinders him to doe the good hee would and forceth him to doe the euill hee hates as hee addes m Vers 18.19 For I know that in me that is in my flesh dwelleth no good thing for to will is present with me but how to performe that which is good I finde not for the good that I would I doe not but the euill which I would not that I doe c. And so continues his complaint and declares that not onely hee knowes approues wills the good but also loues it and takes delight in it n Vers 22. For saith he I delight in the Law of God after the inward man what was the cause then that he did it not or rather that he found not the meanes to perfect it The outward man his flesh which he termes o Vers 23. the Law of his members as he termes the inward man the Law of his minde as it followeth But I see another law in my members warring against the law of my minde and bringing me into captiuitie to the law of sinne which is in my members And surely those members are all the parts of the soule and body infected with sinne and this combat is so sharpe and harsh and the euent thereof so heauie
IACOBS VOVV OPPOSED TO THE VOWES OF MONKES AND FRIERS The first Volume in two Bookes Of the Holy Sripture And Euangelicall Counsels WRITTEN IN FRENCH BY Mr. GILBERT PRIMEROSE MINISTER of the Word of God in the Reformed Church of Burdeaux And TRANSLATED INTO ENGLISH by IOHN BVLTEEL Minister of the Gospell of Iesus Christ August de Trinit lib. 4. c. 6. Contra Rationem Scripturas Ecclesiam Nemo Sobrius Christianus Pacificus Senserit 2. COR. 13.8 We can doe nothing against the truth but for the truth LONDON Printed by Felix Kyngston for Nathaniel Newbery and are to be sold at his shop vnder Saint Peters Church in Corne-hill and in Popes-head Alley 1617. TO HIS DEARE AND LOVING BRETHREN Mr. IAMES BVLTEEL AND Mr. PETER BVLTEEL Merchants I. B. wisheth increase of externall prosperitie and internall peace and comfort in this life and eternall felicitie in the life to come through our Lord Iesus Christ ALL Scripture is giuen by inspiration of God deare and louing Brethren and is profitable for doctrine a 2. Tim. 3.16.17 for reproofe for correction for instruction in righteousnesse that the man of God may be perfect throughly furnished vnto all good workes And therefore the same Scripture is called b Heb 6.5 the good Word of God c Psal 119.103 the sweete Word d Heb. 4.12 the quicke and powerfull Word e Colos 1.5 the Word of truth f Heb. 5.13 the Word of righteousnes g Act. 14.3 the Word of grace h Act. 13.26 the Word of saluatiō i Psal 19.7 making wise the simple yea k 2. Tim. 3.15 wise vnto saluation through faith which is in Christ Iesus l Psal 19 ● conuerting the soule reioycing the heart enlightning the eyes m Rom. 15.4 instructing vs and n Deut. 31.13 making vs to feare God ●●endring in vs o Iob. 20.31 faith p Rom. 15.4 consolation hope patience q Joh. 5.39 hauing 〈◊〉 eternall life r Joh. 20.31 Gregor 1. Origen Isider Fulgent Athanas Greenam Tilen Molin for by it wee beleeue in Christ Iesus and beleeuing we haue life through his name Hence it commeth to passe that the holy Scripture is for diuers considerations diuersly termed of the Fathers both ancient and moderne A long Epistle which the Creator sends to the creature The Testament of God the Sonne The Librarie of God the holy Ghost The booke of true loue wherein God vnfoldeth his loue vnto man The mirror of Diuine grace and mans misery The rich Treasury of the King of glory wherein is the spiritual Manna the Bread of life common to the perfect ones and to the young ones where is Iacobs Well out of the which the learned and the simple may drinke where are meates for all ages the sincere and wholesome milke of the Word the two Testaments being the two brests of the Church of God for the new borne babes and strong meates for them that are of full age where are remedies for all euils preseruatiues to keepe vs from diseases plasters to heale our wounds weapons against tentations heresies a sword to kill hereticks a touchstone of truth to display error an exact rule of all things the Mistris of faith and of vertue a lanterne to direct our steppes an anker in time of tempest Yea the Scripture is called Paradise God sometimes ſ Ambros ep 41 Deambulabat Deus in Paradiso nunc deambulat in Paradise Deus quando scripturas lego Paradisus Genesis in quo virtut●s pullulant Patriarcharum Paradisus Deuteronomium in qu● germinant legis praecepta Paradisus Euangelium in qu● arbor vitae b●nos fructus facit walked in Paradise saith Saint Ambrose and now God walketh in Paradice when I reade the Scripture Genesis is a Paradise wherein the vertues of the Patriarkes doe branch forth Deuteronomie is a Paradise wherein the Law doth spront forth The Gospell is a Paradise wherein the tree of life doth bring forth good fruits And truly well may it be called a Paradise for the godly person can in no place finde a sweeter and pleasanter refreshing then in the Paradise of the holy Scriptures where the tree of knowledge is not of that that was forbidden but of that which is appointed of God for the elect where standeth in the middes the tree of life which is Chris t. The dore whereunto is not kept close by Cherubins and the fierie sword but it is opened by the instinct of the holy Spirit and the light of the Gospell to all that be hungrie where the riuers be of liuely waters whereof the Church of the faithfull is ouerflowne and cherished and where the mindes of the godly are enriched with most fine gold and precious stones that is with the riches of heauenly graces t Muscul loc Com. cap. 20. de S Script where bee trees of all sortes faire to the eye and sweete to the taste trees planted by God handsome and fruitfull that is the Patriarkes Prophets and Apostles where the aire passeth very smooth and calme I meane the breathing of the holy Spirit most sweetly cherishing the hearts of the dwellers in this Garden where the voice of God is walking and seeking the saluation of the seduced man not crying this onely Adam where art thou but calling all men also vnto him instructing and teaching the ignorant correcting and prouoking to amendment them that do sinne shewing vnto them that bee deceiued the tree of true knowledge leading them that bee subiect vnto death and destruction vnto the tree of life raising vp them that are fallen comforting the carefull and refreshing them that bee wearie The Garden of Eden out of the which Adam was thrust for his disobedience had scarsely the shadow of the true pleasure which the Elect doe enioy in this garden of holy Scripture wherein they heare the voice of God they see the appearings of Angels they bee conuersant with the holy Patriarkes and Prophets with Christ himselfe and the Apostles and do feede on the tree of life not onely taking no hurt but exceeding profit being made partakers of it for euer But as the old Serpent indeuoured to banish our first parents out of the corporall and terrestriall Paradise so hath he laboured to banish his posteritie out of the spiritual and heauenly Paradise of the holy Scripture depriuing them of the vse profit and consolation thereof Witnesse the u August contra Petil. lib. 1. c. 27. Circumcellians who seduced by this old Serpēt and brought into a distast dislike therof contemptuously refused and contumeliously reiected yea defaced and burnt the Scripture If x Ioseph Antiq. lib. 20. cap. 4. a wicked Souldier and an Heathen was beheaded by the Commandement of Cumanus an Heathen gouernor of Iudaea for tearing a copie of the booke of the Law of Moses at the sack of a Towne What were these wicked hereticks not heathen but Christians though vnder that name worse then
which lighteth euery man that commeth into the world Seuenthly that the fathers are so many in number their writings in like manner that though a man had an iron body he could not take the paines to reade them all and though he had a memory of steele he could not remember the expositions of all of them that there is no man liuing which hath them all no man liuing which hath read all those we haue yea I suppose and presume that I may say truely that all the liuing together haue not read them all whereas all can and may reade the Scripture ouer and ouer euery one oftentimes learne by it with prayer and labour all that is necessarie for their saluation Eightly lastly that the Scriptures are snatched out of the peoples hands deteined in such a brutish ignorance that they cannot know if the things written by the Fathers are of the Scripture or no the meanes to reade the Fathers is taken away from them so that they cannot know how they expound the Scriptures and therefore it is a meere mockerie to send the ignorant to the Fathers which they haue neuer read which they cannot reade though they would and dare not reade them though they could and whom they cannot vnderstand though they should reade them and therefore are taught to referre themselues in all these things to that which their Pastors and Doctors will make them beleeue II. This is the sense of that which followeth in the Pastorall letter where to that which hath been said that we ought not to speake of the Scriptures otherwise then the fathers expound them is added And besides your spirituall Fathers Pastors and Doctors that are instituted of God grounded on the lawfull succession of the Apostles to expound and interpret it to you f Malach. 27. Labia Sacerdotis custodient scientiam ex ore eius legem requirent The Priests lipps shall keepe knowledge and they shall seeke and aske the Law at his mouth III. We ought not to take away from the true Pastors and Doctors any thing of that which God giues them Saint Paul saith of himselfe and of all g 1. Cor. 4.1 Let a man so account of vs as of the Ministers of Christ and Stewards of the mysteries of God and elsewhere h 2. Co. 5.19.20 God hath committed vnto vs the Word of reconciliation We therfore are Ambassadours for Christ as though God did beseech you by vs. We ought then to account and esteeme of them and to put them in another ranke then priuate persons are we are to heare them with attention and reuerence in the declaration of their commission And if we honour the Ministers and Ambassadours of a Prince for the Princes sake who sends them how much more shall we honour and reuerence the Ministers of Christ Iesus who is the i Acts 3.15 Prince of life and hath written on his thighe k Reuel 19.16 The King of Kings and Lord of Lords for Christ Iesus sake But they ought also to know that they are but Ministers of Christ therfore are not Lords and Masters ouer the Church which is the body and spouse of Christ that they are the Ministers of Christ therfore are called administerium non ad magisterium to serue and that with labor and paines like those which row in shipps 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as the Greeke word beareth and not to gouerne and play the Regent according to their owne fancie and affection that they are stewards of the great mysteries of God of the great mysteries of the Gospel the which they must distribute that is to say preach and apply it to the vse and saluation of the Saints That they are the Ambassadors for Christ and therefore they ought to produce their letters and patent of their commission and declare faithfully the substance of the same without any addition diminution or changing thereof They are no more priuiledged then Saint Paul was who l 1. Cor. 11.23 receiued of the Lord that which he deliuered vnto them and m Acts 26.22 Rom. 1.22 hath giuen nothing but that which was written touching the substance of the doctrine And of that whereof euery one had the copie in hand to examine if he kept himselfe in the precincts and compasse of his charge and commission as n Acts 17.11 they of Berea did with praise and commendation IIII. Therefore the Apostle hauing declared what is their charge and function and the dignitie or excellencie thereof giues them this admonition o 1. Cor. 4.2 Moreouer it is required in Stewards that a man be found faithfull faithfull in care in labor and especially in the preaching of the will of God in purenesse and simplicitie without any mixture of humane traditions his will say we wholy comprehended in the Scriptures of the which God will that all should haue copie as being all his children and hauing right and reason to know the contents of his Testament to the ende that if they which are but his Teachmen and Heralds doe interpret other language then his relate and deliuer otherwise then that which he hath giuen in writing and hauing sent the copies throughout all the world they be not heard what succession soeuer they pretend Aaron from and by whom the Leuiticall succession began p Exod. 32.4 made a golden calfe and notwithstanding the Leuits who were inferiour vnto him would not be partakers of his sinne q but obserued the words of God and kept them If a prophet or a dreamer of dreames did arise amongst the people and made signes and miracles and hee say let vs goe after other Gods and let vs serue them God commanded to put such a one to death and saith to the people r Thou shalt not hearken vnto the words of that prophet or dreamer of dreames c. Yee shall walke after the Lord your God and feare him and keepe his commandements and obey his voyce and you shall serue him and cleaue vnto him In like manner the Prophet Isaiah sends them to ſ Isai ● 20 the Law and to the testimony saying If they speake not according to this word it is because there is no light in them Saint Peter also to the Pastors and Ministers t 1. Pet. 4.11 If any man speake let him speake as the oracles of God And Saint Iohn writing to a woman and in her person to all u 2. Iohn 10. If there come any vnto you and bring not this doctrine receiue him not into your house neither bid him God speede V. Neither is there any succession that is free or can priuiledge them Vriah the high Priest descended by succession from Aaron builds contrary to Gods commandement an Altar according to the patterne of that of Damascus and sets it in the Temple x 2. King 16.11 according to all that the King Ahaz had sent from Damascus Caiphas hauing the succession with the Scribes and
him all that beleeue are iustified from all things from which ye could not be iustified by the Law of Moses Secondly the Law sends vs to our selues to seeke there her back-righteousnesse and requires of vs perfect holinesse in our nature and perfect holinesse in our thoughts words and deeds but shewes vs not the way to come and attaine vnto it The Gospell sends vs backe to the righteousnesse of Christ who hath paied for vs that which he did not owe and is f Ierem. 23.6 The Lord our righteousnesse Thirdly the Law doth promise eternall life with condition of workes in all points holy and perfect saying g Leuit. 18.5 Ezech. 20.11 Rom. 10.5 Gal. 3.12 The man that doth them shall liue in them h Mat. 19.17 if thou wilt enter into life keepe the Commandements The Gospell promiseth eternall life freely without any condition of works and requireth of vs onely faith to imbrace Christ who is our life i Phil. 1.19 faith which God himself giueth vs k Rom. 4.5 To him that worketh not but beleeueth on him that iustifieth the vngodly his faith is counted for righteousnesse saith the Apostle hauing said afore l Rom. 3.21.22 that now the righteousnesse of God without the Law is manifested euen the righteousnesse of God which is by faith of Iesus Christ vnto all and vpon all them that beleeue Fourthly the Law was in man or mans nature before the fall and some reliques thereof remaines as yet in the hearts of all men m Rom. 2.14.15 which doe by nature the things contained in the Law and shew the work of the Law written in their heart The Gospell is n Ro. 16.25.26 Ephes 3.5.9 a mysterie which was k●pt secret since the world began but now is made manifest and by the Scripture of the Prophets made knowne to all Nations Fifthly o 1. Tim. 1.9 1. Cor. 2.7 8. 9. We know that the Law is not made for a righteous man but for the lawlesse and disobedient for the vngodly and sinners c. To the ende that hauing conuinced them of sinne she condemne them and kill them The Gospell is not preached but to them p Mat. 11.28 that are heauie laden and labour by the feeling of their sinnes q Esay 61.1 Luke 4.21 and are broken hearted Sixthly r Rom. 3.20 The Law giues the knowledge of sinne ſ Rom. 4.15 and worketh wrath that is hir effect wherefore it is called t 2. Cor. 3.7 the ministration of death The Gospell u Rom. 1.16 is the power of God vnto saluation to euery one that beleeueth Seuenthly the Law was written x 2. Cor. 3.3 in Tables of stone The Gospell is written in fleshie Tables of the heart Eighthly y Iohn 1.17 The Law was giuen by Moses grace and truth by Iesus Christ who hath brought the Gospell himselfe and hath been in person z Heb. 8.6 Mediatour of the new Testament Ninthly and Lastly a Exod. 24.7 8. The Law hath been dedicated by the blood of beasts The Gospell b Heb. 9.12 hath been consecrated by the owne blood of the Sonne of God And therefore the Law and the Gospell not being one and the same doctrine in substance c Gal. 4.24 but being as different as the mountaine of Sina and that of Sion and as Agar the bond-woman which engendereth to bondage according to the flesh and Sarah the free-woman engendring free children by vertue of the promise certainely if these pretended counsels are of the Law they haue been ill yea absurdly termed Euangelicall and if they are Euangelicall they are no part of faith and can haue no communion at all with 〈…〉 III. The Author of the Pastoral Letter saith that the Law is diuided into Precepts and Counsels What could bee said more absurd The Law commands or forbids alwaies it neuer counsels The Law hindes by authority of the Soueraigne and Master and neuer lets go or giues ouer her right to giue counsell or aduice which is arbitrable and left to the wil of others The word of the Law is one Do these things If it speaks not so it is no more Law So Christ Iesus reduceth the whole law to these two Commandements d Mat. 22.27 39. 40. Thou shalt loue the Lord thy God with all thy heart and with all thy soule and with all thy minds Thou shalt loue thy neighbour as thy selfe and saith On these two Commandements hang all the Law and the Prophets Marke All the Law reduced to two Commandements Counsels are no Commandements they are not therefore of the Law In like manner the Apostle speaking of the righteousnesse of the Law and of the righteousnesse of faith opposeth the one to the other in this manner Moses e Rom. 10.5 6. 7. describeth the righteousnesse which is of the Law that the man which doth those things shall line by them that the righteousnesse which is of faith speaketh on this wise Say not in thine heart who shall ascend into heauen That is to being Christ downe from aboue c. The word is nigh thee euen in thy mouth and in thy heart that is the word of faith which may each The whole Law then consists in doing as the whole Gospell ●●beleeuing the one and the other to obtaine eternall life Now the Counsels are not for to obtaine life therefore they are not of the Law and appertaine not to the righteousnesse of the Law g Bellas pr●fat de Monach. § 1. Qui Euangelica consilia Christisecuti vita genus arctioris ac sublimieris instituunt quàm aut lex diuina aut humana praescribit Pag. 10. And indeed Bellarmine saith that they which follow the Counsels of Christ d●● leade ●●stricter and 〈…〉 thou the Diuine or 〈◊〉 Law prescribes If therefore be say true it is easie ●o conclude that such Counsels are not of any Law either cli●●ne or humane IIII. The very words of the Pastocall Booke doth furnish and minister to 〈◊〉 this argument where this difference in set downe betweene Counsell and Precept Her that doth the workes of Counsell shall haue a greater glory and he that fulfills not the Precept shall not be able to auoide the punishment All the world is bound to the 〈◊〉 under p●●● of euerlasting torments The whole world is stirred vp and drawne to the other both by the authoritie and by the loue of the Sauiour that giues the Counsell Is not that to say that the Counsels are not of the Law for the Law is giuen to all and all are bound to keepe it vnder paine of incurring the Lords curse for it is from thence that the Apostle proues h Gal. 3.10 Deut. 27.26 that as many as are of the works of the Law are vnder the curse for it is written Cursed is euery one that continueth not in all things which are written in the booke of the Law to doe them Marke that he sayes All the
kept it perfectly or else he accuseth the most Iust of great malice That cannot he doe for he which keepes perfectly that which God commands him in this life is without sinne sinne being no other thing then the transgression of Gods commandements all which doe meete at one ende and abut vpon charitie b Hieron ad Rusticum epist 44. c. 4. Now there is none that is pure from sinne though his life had been but for a day saith Saint Ierome The Apostle himselfe doth openly confesse that he and all the Saints are tied to this vnauoidable necessitie of c Aug. de tempore serm 47. sinne saith Saint Austin and that doth hee confesse in the seuenth Chapter of the Epistle to the Romans as wee shall see in the fourth argument There is none then that keepes perfectly that which God commands him yea that can keepe himselfe all being tied to this necessitie of sinning by the flesh lusting against the Spirit and by the Law of their members warring incessantly against the Law of their minde and bringing them into captiuitie to the Law of sinne which is in their members d Rom. 7.23 Gal. 5.17 as the Apostle speaks This is more perspicuously set before our eyes by death which is saith the Scriptures e Ioshua 23.14 the way of all the earth f Heb. 9.27 it being appointed vnto men once to die It is therefore a manifest conclusion that all are sinners and by consequent all transgressours of the Commandements of God g Rom. 6.23 for the wages of sinne is death and the effect of death in the faithfull is the death of sinne h Rom. 6.7 for he that is dead is freed from sinne which made the holy Apostle to sigh and call after death i Rom. 7.24 O wretched man that I am who shall deliuer me from the body of this death Now Bellarmine not being able to name any one Saint who hath been in his life pure from sinne and saying notwithstanding that they can perfectly keepe Gods Commandements hee accuseth and chargeth them with a notorious malice for what is the cause that they haue not kept the Commandements was it ignorance that was in them Noe for they knew the Commandements was it impotencie that was in them No for Bellarmine saith that they could keepe the Commandements The salt was then only in their will for three things concurre together in the reasonable creature to the producing and bringing forth of a good worke knowledge will power Now to know and to be able to doe good and not to will the doing of it is the propertie of a malicious and peruerse spirit it is a malice altogether condemned as it is written k Iames 4.17 To him that knoweth to doe good and doth it not to him it is sinne Let this be farre from Saints And therefore we will correct the saying of Bellarmine and say that the Saints and faithfull haue the wil to keepe perfectly the Commandements of God but they haue not the power and strength to doe them and that will we verifie by Saint Paul saying of himselfe l Rom. 7.18 To will is present with me but how to performe that which is good I finde not And of vs all m Gal. 5.17 The flesh lusteth against the Spirit and the Spirit against the flesh and these are contrarie the one to the other so that ye cannot doe the things that ye would Lastly because that all which Bellarmine writes touching the diuers degrees of perfection commanded in the Law is maintained by him for the cause and defence of the Monkish state and life which he termes n Bellar. de monach c. 2. the state of perfection I would willingly aske Bellarmine himselfe or the most holiest Monke or Frier if seeing he thinkes he can keepe the Commandements of God he hath euer kept them If he saies that he hath kept them he is a lyar For hee that keepes the Commandements hath no sinne o 1. Iohn 1. ● Now if we say that we haue no sinne we deceiue our selues and the truth is not in vs. If he confesseth that he hath not kept them he confesseth himselfe to be a wicked and malicious man in that hee would not doe that which he could and by his owne confession is doubly the childe of hell p Luk. 12.47 For that seruant which knew his Lords will and prepared not himselfe neither did according to his will shall be beaten with many stripes VII The third argument is this If a man could keepe the Law he should haue no neede of a Mediatour q Gal. 2.21 For if righteousnesse come by the Law then Christ is dead in vaine They answere that Christ indeede should haue died in vaine if man could keepe the Law by his naturall strength and power but it is by grace that Christians keepe it and this grace hath been giuen them through the merit of the obedience and death of Christ which for this cause is not frustrate nor in vaine An answere iniurious to Christ and altogether false For if it were so our righteousnesse and saluation should be immediately of the Law and not of Christ and Christ should not be our Sauiour but onely an instrument by the which we are ayded and enabled to keepe the Law and by the obseruation of the same made our owne sauiours What blasphemie against the Sonne of God r 1. Cor. 1.30 Who of God is made vnto vs wisedome and righteousnesse and sanctification and redemption In as much as ſ 2. Cor. 5.21 God hath made him to be sinne for vs who knew no sin that we might be made the righteousnesse of God in him We are then righteousnesse as he is sinne he is sinne t August Encherid cap. 41. not his owne but ours not in himselfe but in vs euen so are wee righteousnesse not our owne but that of God not in our selues but in him And marke he hath beene made vnto vs righteousnesse by God it is not written that we are made righteousnesse by him Againe we are the righteousnesse of God in him it is not said that we are the righteousnesse of God by him as by an instrument So doth the same Apostle write that u Col. 2.10 we are complete in him and not complete in our selues by him he felt it so when being as then renewed hauing been alreadie yea a long time an Apostle and neere vnto death when hauing fought a good fight kept the faith and finished his course he writes from prison vnto his Philippians that x Phil. 3.8.9 he counted all things but lesse and dung that he might winne Christ and be found in him not hauing his owne righteousnesse which is of the Law but that which is through the faith of Christ to wit the righteousnesse which is of God by faith He would haue vs to thinke and feele it so when he wrote to vs in the person of the
with the life of man p Idem de oratione Abel And the Scriptures doe teach vs that there cannot be found any man whatsoeuer that liues a day without spot III. Witnesse Abel q Heb. 11.4 who by faith offered vnto God a more excellent sacrifice then Kaine by which he obtained witnesse that he was righteous God testifying of his gifts If by faith surely not by his workes not by the merite of his sacrifice but by the merit of the Lambe without blemish and spot the onely and perfect obiect of faith represented and exhibited by and in the first sacrifice in the offering of the which the holy man did affirme earnestly and auouch openly and solemnely his death-worthy demerits did sigh and groane after the merits of his Sauiour did imbrace his sacrifice by saith to haue life by it If as yet man doubts let him consider that he is dead that by his death we iudge and deeme of his sinne as of the cause by the effect r Rom. 5.12 Noah For by one man sinne entred into the world and death by sinne and so death passed vpon all men for that all haue sinned Witnesse Noah who hath testimonie ſ Genes 6.9 that he was a iust man and perfect in his generation and walked with God but not that hee was without sinne for after hee had found grace in the eyes of the Lord in the ruine of the world by the Flood the Scripture discouers his infirmitie and accuseth him t Genes 9.21 for that he dranke of the wine of his vineyard was drunken and was vncouered within his tent He was then iust according to that righteousnesse whereof it is said u Prou. 24.16 The iust man falleth seuen times and riseth vp againe According to the which it is also said x Ezech. 18.22 33.19 that the transgressions of the wicked shall not be mentioned vnto him shall not hurt him at what hower soeuer he returnes from his waies vnto the Lord y Hieron ad Rusticum epist 44. saith Saint Hierome Iust therefore and righteous in and by acknowledging himselfe to be vniust and vnrighteous prosecuting this acknowledgement addicting and applying himselfe to righteousnesse and not as hauing attained vnto the perfection thereof witnesse z Abraham Abraham of whom alreadie iustified by faith renewed already abounding as then in good workes The Apostle writeth a Rom. 4.2 If Abraham were iustified by workes he hath whereof to glory but not before God He iustified himselfe that is to say hee approued and shewed himselfe iust by his workes towards men when he offered his sonne Isaac as Saint b Iam. 2.21 Iames obserues And that thirtie yeeres after that the Scripture witnesseth of him that he had beene iustified by faith before God For this sentence of holy Dauid wholly giuen to the obseruation of the Law repeated and confirmed by Saint Paul shall for euer remaine firme c Psal 143.2 Rom. 3.20 Faith iustifies man before God Workes iustifie man before men By the deeds of the Law there shall no flesh bee instified in the sight of God Faith imbracing Christs righteousnes for the remission of sinnes iustifies the person before God good workes which proceede alwaies from man which is iustified and which did neuer precede or goe before to iustifie him iustifies the person before men The proofes are manifest for Abraham after he was d Chrys de penitent hom 6. tom 5. infidelitate Sancti peccauit Abraham iustified by faith sinned through vnbeliefe and therefore did not escape Gods punishment so that his seede did serue foure hundred yeeres saith Saint Chrysostome e Genes 16.2.3 and that also when he tooke Agar to wife to giue by hereffect to the promise of God touching the blessed seede not perswading himselfe as then that God would raise and giue him it by his barren and old wife of fourescore yeeres Then also when distrusting of Gods prouidence and protection he concealed a part of the truth calling her onely his sister and causing her to say so for the which he was iustly reproued by Alimelech Furthermore after that he was iustified God gaue circumcision g Rom. 4.11 to bee a seale of the righteousnesse of the faith vnto him which he had yet being vncircumcised a seale I say on Gods part for the remission of his sinnes in the bloud of Iesus Christ the which hee did apprehend by faith in the effusion of his owne and of all his wherefore Christ saith of him h John 8.56 Abraham reioyced to see my day and he saw it and was glad A Sacrament also to bee to him on his side a signe of his dut●e towards his God to circumcise daily the foreskinne of his heart i Col. 2.11 in putting off the body of ●he sinnes of the flesh by the Circumcision of Christ If Abraham the Father of all those which belieue being in vncircumcision and Father of the Circumcision was a finner before and after his iustification and had neede of the grace and mercie of his God to be saued shall we beleeue that his children haue been more holy more righteous and iust and lesse sinners then he witnesse his sonne Isaac Isaac who by a like distrust told a lie concerning his wife to the inhabitants of Gerar saying k Gen. 26.7 she is my sister fearing that the inhabitants and men of the place should kill him for her sake because she was faire to looke vpon Which diffidence and lye was so much the greater because God commanded him to remaine and stay there with promise of his protection telling him l Gen. 26.3 Iacob Soiourne in this land and I will bee with thee and will blesse thee Witnesse Iacob who vpon his death-bed renounced all his workes asking and crauing mercy and grace cried vnto his God m Gen. 49.18 I haue waited for thy saluation O Lord to wit the Lord Iesus who was to come n Mat. 18 11. to saue that which was lost and by reason of this charge and office is named o Luke 3.6 the saluation of God Witnesse all the Patriarkes all whom the Scripture incloseth and concludeth vnder sinne that their children presume not to be without sinne but that feeling themselues attainted with the corruption dwelling in them of necessity they must confesse and say we are no better then our fore-fathers and that so p Chrysost de poenit hom 6. tom 5. Quò solus ipse in hominis corpore sine peccato inueniatur Iob. Christ be found alone in the body of man without sinne IIII. Witnesse among an infinite number of others the holy man Iob whom God himselfe commends to haue beene perfect beyond comparison and without his like in the world * Iob 2.8 There is none like him in the earth saith God a perfect and an vpright man one that feareth God and escheweth euill A great commendation and incident to few persons Now if
any not vnderstanding the language of Canaan striues against the sound doctrine imagining in himself that Iob for being better then other men was without sinne before God he will be conuinced of error by Iobs owne booke there shall he finde Eliphas preaching q Iob 4.17 Hier. aduers Pelag. lib. 2. Shall mort all man be more iust then God shall a man be more pure then his Maker Behold be put no trust in his seruants and his Angels he charged with fally How much lesse on them that dwell in houses of clay whose foundation is in the dust which are crushed before the moth A Sermon whence Saint Ierome inferres r Hier. aduers Jouian lib. 2. Angelos quoque omnum creaturam peccare posse that the Angels themselues and all creatures may sinne There also shall he finde the same Eliphas preaching againe ſ Iob 15.14.15.16 What is man that he should be should be cleane and he which is borne of a woman that he should be righteous Behold be putteth no trust in his Saints yea the Heauens are not cleane in his sight How much more abominable and filthie is man which drinketh iniquitie like water A sentence from the which Saint Hierome implies that euery man is a sinner t Hieron ad Rusticum epist 44. circa sinne There is none saith he pure from sinne though his life were but a day Now the yeeres of his life are many The starres themselues are not cleane and pure in his presence and he hath found some peruersitie in his Angels Si in caelo peccatum quanto magis in terra If there be sinne in heauen how much more on earth if there be trespasse or omission of dutie in those which are without corporall tentation how much more in vs that are compassed about with this weake flesh and may say with the Apostle u Rom. 7.24 O wretched man that I am who shall deliuer me from the body of this death There shall he finde Iob agreeing and consenting vnto this holy doctrine and sighing forth these true words from the bottom of his heart x Hieron aduers Pelag. lib. 1. Job 9.2 I know it is so of a truth but how should man be iust with God If he will contend with him he cannot answere him one of a thousand How much lesse shall I answere him and chuse out my words to reason with him whom though I were righteous yet would not I answere but I would make supplication to my Iudge If I iustifie my selfe mine owne mouth shall condemne me If I say I am perfect it shall also proue me peruerse If I wash my selfe with snow water and make my hands neuer so cleane yet shalt thou plunge me in the ditch and mine owne clothes shall abhorre me There shall he finde God himselfe rebuking Iob and reprouing him of his sinne for that a Iob 38.2 he darkened counsell by words without knowledge and Iob confessing his sinne and saying to him b Iob 40.4.5 Behold I am vile what shall I answere thee I will lay my band vpon my mouth once haue I spoken but I will not answere yea twice but I will proceede no further c Iob 4● 6 wherefore I abhorre my selfe and repent in dust and ashes V. Such was the condition of all those that haue liued from Abel vntill the Law which being come hath not diminished sinne but hath augmented it hath not quickned nor giuen life to them that followed it but hath killed them and put them to death hath not made any one iust but hath condemned the most iust and righteous among them in discouering their vnrighteousnes When the Morall Law was giuen after a manner fitting the Maiestie of the Law-giuer and sutable vnto the iustice and rigour of the same d Heb. 12.19.21 They that heard it entreated that the Word should not be spoken to them any more And so terrible was the sight that Moses said Moses I exceedingly feare and quake euen that Moses notwithstanding who c Numb 12.3 was very meeke aboue all the men which were vpon the face of the earth with whom the Lord spake f Numb 12.8 mouth to mouth and not in darke speeches and by whose hand the Lord gaue the Law when God published his Law he must needes haue trembled because hee saw in the same the Iustice of God and his owne vnrighteousnesse Surely if any could haue beene conformable to the iustice and vprightnesse of the same it was he that was the mediatour and it is of him that wee haue the confession of his sin and of the people g Psal 90.8 Thou hast set our iniquities before thee our secret sinnes in the light of thy countenance It is he himselfe which hath written the historie of his vnbeliefe and of that of Aaron his brother Aaron when they glorified not God at the waters of strife for which cause the Lord spake vnto them saying h Numb 20.12 Chrysost de p●niten homil 6. to 5. Because ye beleeue me not to sanctifie me in the eyes of the children of Israel therefore ye shall not bring this Congregation into the Land which I haue giuen them Moses who gaue the Law Aaron who kept the Law the one a Prophet and Leader of the people the other the High-Priest and Teacher of the people who should haue been pure from sinne so holy without spot without vice as these especially that carried written on his forehead i Exo. 28.36.38 HOLINES TO THE LORD that in his Priesthood did represent Iesus Christ the High-Priest of his Church who is the holy of holy ones k Exod. 30.10 Leuit. 16.2 Heb. 9.7 who alone went into the holy place who only bare vpon his brest the Vrim and Thummim alone saw the Arke of the Testimonie who onely asked at the mouth of the Lord who answered him from betweene the Cherubins couering the Arke It is hee notwithstanding that made l Exod. 32 4. a molten calfe and said to the people These bee thy Gods O Israel which brought thee vp out of the land of Egypt He with his sister Miriam a Prophetesse m Numb 12.1 All the Priests spake against Moses It is he who with all the Priests that should succeede him was expressely commanded to offer sacrifice once euery yeere and to n Leuit. 16.17 Heb. 9.7 m●ke an attonement for himselfe and for his house-hold and for all the Congregation of Israel VI. They which are come after them haue not been better for sinne doth propagate it selfe alwaies from the fathers to the children and passeth from the one to the other without sparing of any one the whole world is his nurse-child Excellent things are said of Dauid by him Dauid which saith alwaies true o 1. King 14.8 He hath k●pt saith he my Commandements and hath followed me with all h●s heart to doe that onely which was right in mine eyes Vnderstand that onely
with that exception and reseruation which is added in the next Chapter p 1. King 15.5 Saue onely in the matter of Vriah the Hittite A vile and villanous matter an inhumane and barbarous act a cruell deede he put his feete in the bed of his intire friend he tooke away the onely lambe of his poore neighbor he imbrued his bloudy hands in the bloud of the iust who watched who fought for him and in this sin he committed so many sinnes and all of them so great that to blot them out and wipe them away he craues for not one compassion but many not one washing and clensing but a washing and a washing againe ouer and ouer crying vnto his God with a broken heart and contrite spirit q Psal 51.1.2 Haue mercy vpon me O God according to thy louing kindnes according vnto the multitude of thy tender mercies blot out my transgressions wash me throughly from mine iniquitie and clense me from my sinne He desires that a great sinne bee blotted out by a great mercie r Hier. aduers Iulian. lib. 2. Magnum peccatum magnâ deleri vult misericordiâ Furthermore that onely must bee vnderstood in regard of crimes whereof Dauid that acte of his in the matter of Vriah onely excepted hath been cleare not in regard of his sinnes of infirmities of his faults committed by error for after that crime committed and perpetrated in the person of Vriah ſ 2. Sam. 24.1.2 Chron. 21.1 Sata● kindling in his heart the fier of pride which was not as yet altogether extinguished prouoked Dauid to number Israel so that the anger of the Lord was kindled against him and against his people and it is of him of whom we haue these praiers and confessions t Psal 19.12 Who can vnderstand his errours clense thou mee from secret faults u Psal 25.7 Remember not the sinnes of my youth nor my transgressions according to thy merci remember thou mee for thy goodnesse sake O Lord x Psal 40.11.12 With-hold not thou thy tender mercies from me O Lord let thy louing kindnesse and thy truth continually preserue me for innumerable euils haue compassed me about mine iniquities haue taken hold vpon me so that I am not able to looke vp they are more then the haires of mine head therfore my heart faileth me y Psal 130.3.4 If thou Lord shouldest marke iniquities O Lord who shall stand But there is forgiuenesse with thee that thou mayest be feared z Psal 143.1.2 Heare my prayer O Lord giue eare to my supplications in thy faithfulnesse answere me and in thy righteousnesse And enter not into iudgement with thy sernant for in thy sight shall no man liuing be iustified Hee which so often recommended the righteousnes of hi cause to God when his enemies did pursue him and persecute him wrongfully and then cried * Psal 7.8 Iudge me O Lord according to thy righteousnes according to mine integrity that is in MEE When he presents himselfe before God as a creature before his Creator the seruant before his Lord the childe before his father to giue him an account of his demeanor and seruice towards him he renounces his owne righteousnesse and flies to that of his God distinguishing as hee ought betweene the iustice and righteousnesse of his cause and his actions towards men and betweene the iustice and righteousnesse of his person before God For touching that he doth protest that he is iust and innocent and takes God to witnesse as his defender and a reuenger of wrongs Touching this hee yeelds and confesseth his vnrighteousness he declines by all manner of deprecation the ang● furie iust vengeance of his Iudge crying a Psal 6.1 O lord rebuke me not in thine anger neither chasten me in thy hote displeasure Implores by all manner of supplication the mercy peace and grace of his God and hauing obtained it he preacheth and publisheth it to all b Rom. 4.6 describeth and declareth the blessednesse of the man vnto whom God imputeth righteousnesse without workes saying yea crying with a loud voice to the ende all men may heare all may in●ouour to feele it c Psal 32.1.2 Blessed is he whose transgression is forgiuen whose sinne is couered Blessed is the man vnto whom the Lord imputeth not iniquitie This is that text on the which the ancient Fathers haue spoke very excellent things d Hieron in Psal 32. Quod ●egitur non videtur quod non videtur non imputatur quod non imputatur nec punietur Saint Ierome That which is hid is not seene and that which is not seene is not imputed and that which is not imputed is no● punished If you obiect that Dauid addes and in whose mouth or according to the Hebrew in whose spirit there is no guile hee expounds that of the mouth of him which confesseth himselfe a sinner e Aug pr●●fat in Psal 31. Saint Austin Who are the blessed Not th●se in whom God findes no sinne for he findes it in all men f Rom. 3.23 for all haue sinned and come short of the glory of God If then sinnes are found in all it remaines that there are none blessed but those whose sinnes are remitted Thou hast done no good thing and the remission of thy sinnes is giuen thee man lookes vp●n thy workes Et omnia inueniuntur mal● and all of them are found bad and euill If God should giue to those workes that which is their due without doubs he would condemne them g Rom. 6.23 Non tibi deus reddit debitam poenā sed donat indebitam gratiam For the wages of sinne is death what is due to bad workes but damnation what is due to good workes the Kingdome of Heauen Now art thou found with bad works of thou shouldest haue what thou ●ast deserued thou shouldest be punished But how goeth the matter God giues th●●●ot the punishment due to thee but hee giues thee grace not due to th●● Debebat vindinctam dat indulgentiam He owed vengeance he giues indulgence and mercie Item h Ibid. Conc. 2. Noluit aduertere noluit animadnertere noluit agnoscere maluit ignoscere Blessed are not they in wh●m no sinnes are found but they whose sinnes are couered Are they couered they are abolisht and blotted out If God hath couered sinnes hee hath not had the will to marke or note them if hee hath not had the desire to marke them he would not take any knowledge of them he hath not had the desire to punish them hee hath not minded to ordeine of them he had rather pardon them Saint Bernard i Bernard in Cantica ser 23. O hee alone truly happie vnto whom the Lord hath not imputed his sinne for there is no man but hath bad s●●● sinne for all haue ●inned and all haue neede of the glorie of God Notwithstanding who shall lay any thing to the charge of Gods Elect Non peccare
Dei iustitia est beminis iustitia iudulgentia Dei I● sufficeth me in li●● of all righteousnesse that I haue him alone prop●●ious against whom alone I haue sinned All that which he hath ordained not to impute vnto ●●e is as if it had neuer ●e●ne Not to sinne 〈◊〉 the righteousnesse of God the righteousnesse of 〈◊〉 i● the 〈◊〉 and gentl●●●sse of God In a word Saint Ambrose writes that k Ambros de bono mortis c. 2. vita aeterna pe● catorum remissio est life eternall is the remission of sinnes They are as many blowes of a battle-axe vpon all the satisfactions righteousnesse and merits of men for if he whose sinne is pardoned is not punished with the penaltie of sinne which is eternall death consisting in a totall and euerlasting priuation of the fauour grace and blessing of God he must of necessitie for euer enioy the presence of God wherein life eternall consists To be deliuered from Gods curse is to be saued because to be damned is to be hated reiected and for euer forsaken of God wherefore who is not damned is not hated of God and hee which is not hated of God is beloued of him Now he whom God loues hath alwaies God on his right hand enioyes alwaies his presence and therein eternall happinesse as it is written l Psal 16.11 In thy presence is fulnesse of ioy at thy right hand there are pleasures for euermore And therefore is it that Dauid declares that the happinesse the whole felicitie of man life eternall depends vpon the remission of sinnes so much say the Fathers also to this ende that all they may be ashamed who confessing that Iesus Christ hath deliuered them from eternall death by his death deuise that we must do good works to merit life eternall For as S. Bernard saith m Bernard ad milites Templi c. 11. Sic namque mortua morte reuertitur vita quemadmodum ablato peccato redit iustitia Salomon So death being dead life returnes againe as sinne being taken away righteousnesse returneth againe that none say that he is happie because he is no sinner but that they onely esteeme themselues happy which haue obtained the remission of their sinnes VII I should be too long if I should make a catalogue of all the other Saints of the old Testament I will not speake of o 1. King 11.4.5.6 Hieron aduers Iouian lib. 2. Ezechias Salomon the beloued of the Lord who for that he loued many strange women hee turned his heart from the loue of the Lord his heart was not perfect with the Lord his God but went after Ashtareth the goddesse of the Sidonia●s and after Milcom the abomination of the Am●rites and did euill in the sight of the Lord. I will not speake of Ezechias who being sicke prayed vnto God and said p Jsai 38 3. Remember now O Lord I beseech thee how I haue walked before thee in truth and with a perfect heart and haue done that which is good in thy sight when hee giues God thanks for the recouery of his health he confesseth himselfe a sinner and saith q Isai 38.17 Thou hast in loue to my soule deliuered it from the pit of corruption for thou hast cast all my sinnes behind thy backe I will omit also that the Spirit of God blames him r 2. Chron. 32.25 that he rendered not againe according to the benefite done vnto him for his heart was lifted vp therefore there was wrath vpon him Josias I will not recite that Iosias who in the whole course of his life ſ 2. Chron. 34.2 did that which was right in the sight of the Lord toward the ende thereof puffed vp with his prosperitie t 2. Chron. 35.22 Hieron ad Stesiphont in s●●e Daniel hearkned not vnto the words of Neco proceeding from the mouth of God I see Daniel to whom God reuealed all that which should happen to his Church vntill the last destruction of Ierusalem of whom God himselfe testifieth and witnesseth of his singular u Ezech. 14.14 righteousnesse and x Ezech. 28.3 wisedome I see him condemning himselfe and the whole people of sinne and iustifying God in his iust vengeance which he had taken of them y Dan. 9.10.11 We haue not obeyed the voyce of the Lord our God to walke in his Lawes and all Israel haue transgressed thy Law euen by departing that they might not obey thy voyce Esdras I see Esdras the Priest and Scribe making a semblable and like confession to his God and saying z Esdr 9.6.7 O my God I am ashamed and blush to lift vp my face to thee my God for our iniquities are increased ouer our ●eads and our trespasse is growne vp vnto the heauens The whole ancient Church since the dayes of our fathers haue we been in a great trespasse vnto this day VIII Lastly I see the whole ancient Church presenting her selfe before God like a poore malefactor and guilty offendor with this confession a Isai 64.6 But we are all as an vncleane thing and all our righteousnesse are as filthy raggs and we all doe fade as a leafe and our iniquities like the winde A Confession which the ancient Doctors doe iudge appertaines also to the Christian Church Origen Austin Macarius c. b Bernard in festiuit Omnium Sanctor Serm. 1. Iniustitia inuenietur omnis iustitia nostea minus habens and after them Saint Bernard What might be all our righteousnesse before God shall it not be reputed as filthie raggs according to the Prophet● and if we iudge according to rigour all our righteousnesse will bee found to be vniust and not currant what then will it be of sinnes seeing that righteousnesse cannot answere for her selfe and therfore crying aloud with the Prophet Enter not into iudgemēt with thy seruant good Lord let vs haue recourse in al humblenes vnto that mercy which alone can saue our soules c Adrian de Traiecto de Eucharistia fol. 20. Iugiter super pannu● vitae quem iustitiae operibus teximus stictamus saniem diuersorum criminum Adrian of Vtrecht saith That our merits are a staffe of reede which breakes and pierces the hand of him that leanes on it they are at an vncleane thing as filthie raggs on this cloth of good life that we thinke to weaue and worke vpon by our workes of righteousnesse we distill continually the corrupt filthy and putrified matter of diuers crimes What confidence then can man haue before God who loues none that is not conuerted to him with all his heart Thus spake hee who since hath been Pope named Adrian the VI. CHAP. VII I. Although that the Spirit hath beene more plentifully giuen vnder the Gospell then vnder the Law yet none hath perfectly kept the Law vnder the Gospell II. Not Zacharie and Elizabeth III. Not Iohn Baptist IIII. Nor the Virgin Marie V. The Fathers haue taught that the Virgin Marie
of the imperfect worke on Saint Matthew o Chrysost in Matth. c. 3. hom 4. To be made righteous and worthy of heauen and therefore to bee washt in his bloud to be renewed and sanctified by his spirit which are the two significations of Baptisme IIII. If any among the liuing should haue beene cleane and pure from sinne The Virgin Marie the holy Virgin the mother of our Lord Iesus Christ ought to haue been of whom the holie Ghost witnesseth that p Luke 1.42 she is blessed among women and whom vntill the worlds ende q Luke 1 48. all generations shall call blessed Blessed certaine for hauing receiued that grace to be the mother of our Sauiour and not for being without sinne and exempted from the number of those which haue neede of a Sauiour for shee was conceiued in sinne according to the Lords sentence r John 3.6 That which is borne of flesh is flesh To be borne of flesh is to bee borne by generation according to the ordinarie course of nature whosoeuer is so borne is flesh ſ August de fide ad Pet. Di●conum c. 26. Account surely saith Saint Austin that he is borne in originall sinne subiect to impietie subiect vnto death and therefore the childe of wrath The reason is rendred by Saint Paul t Rom. 5.12 where he saith By one 〈◊〉 sinne entred into the world and death by sinne so death passed vpon all men for that all haue sinned And there is none exempted from this number but Iesus Christ u Chrysost de quinta feri● passionis hom 6. who alone knoweth not what is sinne alone doth not participat with our fault and did one nothing to sinne and death saith S. Chrysostome following Saint Paul the Apostle who attributes vnto Christ alone the prerogatiue to haue been x Heb. 7.26 holy harmelesse vndefiled separate from sinners because indeed he alone y Pet. diaconus ad Fulgentium is borne after a new manner of generation borne I say of man of the substance of a chosen virgin but not by man not by naturall generation but by the supernaturall operation of the Holy Ghost who of the substance of the virgin formerly sanctified by him did appropriate and fit a body to our Sauiour and inspired in the same a most pure and a most holy soule This new manner of generation and conception without spot hath caused that our Lord hath not felt the contagion of earthly corruption being hee alone a Dan. 2.45 who hath beene cut out of the mountaine without hands being the immediate worke of the hand of God which not appertaining to the holy Virgin conceiued and borne after the manner and common order of other men she hath had neede of Gods grace and mercie as other men haue she hath prayed forgiue vs our debts as well as other men and as a member of the Church shee hath beleeued for her selfe all the Articles of the beliefe and this Article among the rest I beleeue the remission of sinnes To be short seeing that she died as other men doe she was a sinner as other men are b 1. Cor. 15.56 for the sting of death that which giueth life and strength to death is sinne take away the sting from death and it is dead whosoeuer is without sinne as all of vs shall bee in the Kingdome of heauen may boldly defie death and vpbraide it with the Apostle c 1. Cor. 15.55 O death where is thy sting O graue where is thy victorie That is the reason why Christ could not haue died if God d 2. Cor. 5.21 had not made him to be sinne for vs that is to say if he had not imputed vnto him our sinne as to him who had constituted himselfe the pledge and suretie for sinners and their prayer vnto the very last farthing or mite I beleeue religiously that the Virgin hath been a lesse sinner then other men but I also beleeue that a woman-sinner she hath beene as well as other men because she her selfe hath taught me to beleeue it so I read her Song and I see her publishing with a loud voyce e Luke 1.47 that her spirit hath reioyced in God her Sauiour In God therefore who hath forgiuen her her sinnes for Christ is not otherwise a Sauiour f Mat. 1.21 Thou shalt call his name Iesus saith the Angell to Ioseph for he shall saue his people from their sinnes and shall not saue them otherwise as he himselfe protesteth saying g Mat. 9.13 I am not come to call the righteous but the sinners to repentance h Mat. 15.24 I am not sent but vnto the lost sheepe of the house of Israel i Mat. 18.11 The Sonne of man is come to saue that which was lost for them alone hath he beene sent k Isai 61.1.2.3 Luke 4.18.19 to preach good tidings vnto the meeke and vnto the poore to bind vp the broken-hearted to proclaime libertie to the captiues and the opening of the prison to them that are bound to comfort all that mourne c. To them onely came he and them alone he calles vnto him l Mat. 11.28 Come vnto me all ye that labour and are heauie laden m Iohn 7.37 If any man thirst let him come vnto me n Mat. 9.12 that are sicke declaring that they that are whole and holy haue no neede of him wherefore either the Mother of our Sauiour was a sinner or our Lord and Sauiour was not her Sauiour and Redeemer and shee should haue sung for others and not for her selfe that the Lord o Luke 1.53.54 hath filled the hungry with good things and hath remembred his mercie which mercie she should neuer haue felt she should neuer haue thirsted after seeing shee should neuer haue felt the miserie of sinne nor the wrath of God the iust wages of sinne This is so cleare and apparent that it needeth not any longer and ampler proofe V. Notwithstanding if the consent of the Church can bee of some weight to make it the more credible it is the common and ordinarie voyce of the Church that p August cont Iulianum All humane flesh Christs flesh onely excepted is fl●sh of sinne because that q Idem contra Pelagium lib. 2. c. 40. ex Ambrosio of man and of the woman that is to say of the coniunction of their bodies none is without sinne and he that is without sinne is ingendred and borne without this conception And so all the rest Origen Chrysostome Anselme Fulgentius Bernard and Peter Lombard the Master of the Schoolemen all which write that the holy Virgin was conceiued in sinne and borne in iniquitie as all other men are And from thence Saint Bernard drawes an argument to condemne the feast of the conception of the Virgin Marie then newly instituted and ordained saying that r Bernard ad Canonicos Lugdun epist 174. Quum ritus ecclesiae
and dolefull in this life that nothing is left to him but to bemoane his miserie and call after death to be deliuered of it p Vers 24. O wretched man that I am who shall deliuer me from the body of this death Who Surely God by Iesus Christ who by the corporall death will deliuer and free the members of his body from the necessitie of sinning and will make them fully victorious ouer the flesh whence he concludes with this solemne action of thanksgiuing q Vers 25. I thanke God through Iesus Christ our Lord and comforts all those that are excercised with the like combat assuring them that r Rom. 8.1 Now there is no condemnation to them which are in Christ Iesus VIII The Pelagians ſ Hieron aduers Pelagian lib. 2. in principio in Saint Ieroms time did expound all these words of the vnregenerate man affirming that the Apostle speakes in the name and person of a man not as yet called iustified sanctified and not in his owne person There are some now adayes which maintaine the same opinion t August lib. 1. Retract c. 13. Saint Austin was at the beginning of this opinion but afterwards ouercome by the truth he retracts and recants acknowledging that in the words of the Apostle u Idem contra Iulian. li. 6. c. 11. is the groaning and heauie lamentation of the Saints warring against the concupiscence of the flesh After him x Prosper contra Collatorem c. 8. Vox vocati est sub grati● constituti Prosper writing against Cassian S●mipelagian and Father of many of our time saith that this sentence For to will is present with me but how to performe that which is good I finde not is the voice of a man called and that is vnder grace All the circumstances of the Text doe shew and expresse as much The Apostle speakes alwaies of himselfe and in the present tense I am carnall sold vnder sinne The things whereof he complaines cannot belong to any other then to the regenerate man for he allowes the good he wills the good he consents vnto the Law that it is good he delights in the same That is proper peculiar to a regenerate man y Psal 1.2 whose delight is in the Law of God he wills not the euil when he doth it he hates it when he doth it it is perforce as a poore gally-slue tied to his chaine is forced to goe where he would not shall we say that these words are of an infidell of a carnall man which drinketh iniquitie like water Surely the language of a carnall man is I doe that which is euill and I will doe it I doe not that which is good and I will not doe it It is his free will to will to doe euill to will not to doe good On the other side the speech of a spirituall man in this life is Alas I doe the euill which I would not doe for I hate it I doe not and cannot perfect the good I would doe I desire to perfect it for it is my delight As the language of man glorified in heauen is I doe not that which is euill and I will not doe it I doe that which is good and I will doe it Moreouer the Apostle writes that hee delights in the Law of God after the inward man there is no inward man in a carnall man he is all outward he thinkes meditates wills desires pursues and followes eagerly after outward and worldly things The Apostle feeles after such a sort his sinne and esteemes yea findes it so heauie a burden that he publisheth himselfe as it were by proclamation miserable and wretched for the same and desires death with great affection to be deliuered and freed of it The man not renewed esteemes himselfe wretched when hee sinnes not he will not liue but to sin and would not die but when he can sinne no more The Apostle comforts himselfe in the grace and mercie of Christ Iesus his Sauiour and giues him thankes for it The man not regenerate who is such a one as wee haue described in the fifth and sixth Chapter knoweth he Christ Or if he knowes him doth he loue him or call vpon him Christ may be z Ier. 12.2 neere in their mouth but farre from their reines The marke wherewith God designes them is a Psal 14.4 They call not vpon the Lord. This doctrine hath excellent vses The regenerate man is compounded of the outward and inward man of the old and new man of the flesh and spirit he hath as yet in him the infirmities of the flesh it is a remedie against pride He hath in him the Spirit of Iesus Christ his sinnes are pardoned and forgiuen him and he shall not come into condemnation This is a remedie against despaire But of this we will hereafter speake IX If Saint Paul b 2. Cor. 12.4 who was caught vp into Paradise and heard vnspeakable words which it is not lawfull for a man to vtter found and felt himselfe faint and weake and often carried away captiue by his most secret and deare infirmities if hee confesse that c 2. Cor. 12.7.9 he hath had a thorne in his flesh for remedie against the which he had neede of the grace of God none of the other Apostles could boast or glorie to haue liued without sinne Not Saint Iames for hee rankes himselfe with sinners Saint Iames. saying d Iames 3.2 In many things WE offend all e Hierom. aduersus Pelagian lib. 2. Non pauca peccata sed multa nec quorundam sed omnium posuit Saint Peter He hath not saith Saint Ierome put downe a few sinnes but many not of some few persons but of all Not Saint Peter for hee hath also said that f 1. Pet. 2.24 Iesus Christ bare OVR sinnes in his owne bodie on the tree g Hier. aduers Pelag. lib. 1. J●reprehensibilis aut nullus aut rarus qui● enim est qui non quasi in pulchro corpore aut nae●um aut ve●rucam habeat There is none that is faultlesse or they are very rare saith Saint Ierome for who is he that hath not as in a faire body a mole a wart or some naturall marke for if the Apostle saith of Saint Peter h Gal. 2.14 Saint Iohn that hee walked not vprightly according to the truth of the Gospell and was to be blamed in so much that Barnabas also was carried away with the like dissimulation who would chafe and be angry if that which the Prince of the Apostles hath not had be denied to him Not Saint Iohn who being the well beloued Disciple leaned on Iesus bosome for he also placeth himselfe amidst the number of sinners and saith i 1. Iohn 1.8 If WE say that WE haue no sinne WE deceiue our selues and the truth is not in VS And this is the voice of Saints k Aug. de peccat merit lib. 2. c. 7. Austin A
is no great matter it is but a veniall sinne God will not regard it By sinne the great God the infinite immortall immense God is offended and men dare say that it is a small sinne O sinne not veniall but mortall not small but great but worthie of an infinite and immortall punishment of all those which dare teach that man can sinne against the infinite Maiestie of the Almightie and yet not sinne infinitely nor be guiltie of an infinite punishment IIII. Let sinne be measured by the Law e 1. Iohn 3.4 for sinne is the transgression of the Law Now the Law-spares not him which transgresseth the least i●t or tittle of the same but pronounceth this sentence and decree f Gal. 3.10 Cursed is euery one that continueth not in all things which are written in the booke of the Law to doe them What is there any sinne so small which is not committed against some word or other of the Law of God which by consequent drawes not the curse vpon the head of him which transgresseth it This cannot bee denied me that hee which is guiltie of the transgression of all the Commandements of the Law is worthie of death g Iames 2.10 But whosoeuer shall keepe the whole Law and yet offend in one point is guiltie of all saith S. Iames for as much as the Law generally vnderstood requires nothing but obedience which is not rendred by him which transgresseth the least word thereof Wherefore such a one is worthie of death although he had spoken but an idle word seeing that Christ declares that h Mat. 12.36 Euery idle word that men shall speake they shall giue account thereof in the day of iudgement or had vttered i Ephes 5.4.6 but foolish talking or iesting seeing that the Apostle saith because of these things commeth the wrath of God vpon the children of disobedience The Saints which haue prayed with such seruencie for the remission of sinnes which haue confessed that they could not subsist before God if he would proceede against them in rigour and extremitie who renouncing vnto their owne iustice and righteousnesse haue called vpon him for grace and mercy to their vnrighteousnesse haue knowne this haue ●elt it thus haue acknowledged and confessed it V. All they that will compasse and measure their sinnes by the satisfaction which our pledge hath made vnto the iustice of God will know and finde it so will confesse this and feele it so What termest thou that a sinne veniall not to be punished by death for the which the God of glorie died Wilt thou say that to be veniall and pardonable for a little asperges a little Holy-water sprinckle for the which the onely and best beloued Sonne of God hath spilt his bloud Wilt thou blesse thy selfe in thine heart in committing a fault a sinne for the which k 2. Cor. 5.21 God hath made him to be sinne for vs who knew no sinne yea l Gal. 3.13 a curse for vs to redeeme vs from the curse of the Law Of that Law which accurseth all them which keepe not euery word thereof Now such are the sinnes which they terme veniall m 1. Iohn 1.7 for the bloud of Iesus Christ clenseth vs from all sinne And as Saint Iohn saith speaking as well of himselfe as of others n 1. Iohn 2.1.2 If any man sinne we haue an Aduocate with the Father Iesus Christ the righteous and hee is the propitiation for our sinnes Sinne thus examined and measured to God against whom it is committed to the Law of God by the which it is condemned to Iesus Christ who hath spilt his bloud to blot it out cannot seeme veniall to none but to him who insensible of his owne corruption mockes at God despiseth the Law and sets naught by it and counts the bloud of the Couenant the death of our Immanuel God-Man and Man-God an vnholy thing All sinnes therefore are mortall in their nature and are alwaies mortall to them which liue not by the Spirit of Christ VI. o Rom. 8.1 But there is no condemnation to them which are in Christ Iesus to them which haue Christ liuing in their hearts by faith and are true members of his body To these all sinnes are veniall and in effect are pardoned and forgiuen them by the merit and indulgence of God VII All this hinders not that some sinnes are greater then othersome and more or lesse rigorously punishable with death eternall as our Sauiour Christ himself declareth when he saith that p Ma. 10.14.15 11.24 it shall be more tolerable for the land of Sodom and Gom●rra in the day of iudgement then for them which heare not nor receiue his word Euen so among men capitall crimes are vnequall and different and punished with a more sharpe and cruel death in some then in othersome VIII I haue sufficiently proued that not one of those which are recommended in the Scripture for their holinesse hath kept the Law I haue brought in a great number of Fathers Bishops Priests Monks which subscribe vnto this whelsome and holy doctrine haue yeelded vnto it condemned themselues and confessed themselues to bee sinners as other men I would faine see now if these righteous men these bo●sters these sellers of merits could make any one come forth out of their Monasteries whom the Cowle the Sackcloth and Monasticall discipline haue so sanctified and renewed that hee hath obserued and kept all the Commandements hath no need to say Forgiue vs our trespasses nor to confesse himselfe a sinner to his brethren in life and death Let them not iuggle and dodge with the truth as the Pelagians did for when Saint q Hieron ad C●esiphontem Egregij Doctores dicunt esse posse quod nunquam fuisse demonstrant Ierome asked them who those were whom they esteemed to be without sinne they shifted of his demaund by a new tricke affirming that they spake not of those that are so or haue beene so but that may be so They that would auoide it with such a ●est and wile I will oppose to them as a wall of iron S. Ierom● answere Goodly Doctors which say that that may be which they cannot shew that it hath euer been seeing the Scripture saith r Eccles 1.9 The thing that hath been it is that which shall be and that which shall be done is that which hath been done Let then these holy Fathers these mortified men display and lay open their righteousnesse before God and giue God thankes with the Pharisee ſ Luk. 18.11.12 God I thanke thee that I am not as other men are extortioners vniust adulterers or euen as this Publican I fast twice in the weeke I giue tithes of all that I possesse As for mee acknowledging my selfe with Saint Paul t 1. Tim. 1.15 the chiefest sinner I will goe vnto the throne of grace to obtaine mercie and will crie and call vpon my Iudge with the Publican u
darkenesse the doctrine of the will is infected by the naturall peruersitie remaining yet in it the holinesse of the affections is soiled and troubled with euill villanous and disordered motions and the limmes of the body are often applied vnto filthinesse and wickednesse In like manner in regard of the Law he which is led and guided by the Spirit of Iesus is sanctified in regard of all the Commandements of the Law He findes them equally iust he affects them all hee applies himselfe to the obseruation of all of them without omitting any one and notwithstanding by reason of his frailty he cannot keepe so much as one perfectly namely with all his heart with all his soule with all his thought with all his strength for God onely without mingling therein the consideration of his owne interest which is the perfection which the Law commaunds and demaunds vnder paine of damnation IV. Because this imperfect perfection resides and remaines in all the parts of the soule and of the body as in his subiect and extendeth it selfe vnto all the parts of the Law as to his obiect it is termed The perfection of parts and is a sure marke whereby a man shall know whether he be renewed or no and whether he haue a heart without hypocrisie For the whole religion of an hypocrite is vpon the tippe of his tongue and at his fingers endes it consists wholly in words and outward shew his heart is farre from God as it is written i Mat. 15.8 This people draweth nigh vnto me with their mouth and honoureth me with their lipps but their heart is farre from me His vnderstanding may be enlightened to know God but his heart is neuer sanctified to know God he will striue to keepe some Commandements of the Law but there will be alwaies some one or other of them that will goe against his stomack as k Mark 6.20 Herod feared Iohn knowing that he was a iust man and an holy and obserued him and when he heard him he did many things and heard him gladly but he could not forgoe his brothers wife for all Saint Iohns warning and admonition telling him * Vers 18. that it was not lawfull for him to haue his brothers wife shewing in this one thing that he hated in his heart Gods Commandements and that he was destitute of the sanctifying Spirit which crucifies the whole man and makes him affected to all the commandements Of this perfection speakes Saint Paul when he speakes of himselfe as also of others l 1. Cor. 13.9 We know in part and 〈◊〉 prophesie in part And in this sort were Noah Abraham Aza Iob c. perfect V. But the other perfection whereof the Apostle speaketh in the next verse The Perfection of degrees * Vers 10. that when that which is perfect is come then that which is in part shall be done away is the priuiledge of the Kingdome of heauen and is named the Perfection of degrees because then the Image of God shall be restored in man in the highest degree he shall haue perfection of holinesse according vnto his capacitie in euery part of his soule and body and shal perfectly keepe all the Commandements and euery one thereof In this sense m August in Ioan. tract vers Ex parte libertas ex parte seruitus nondum tota nondum pura nondum plena quia nondum plena aeternitas habemus enim ex parte infirmitatem ex parte accepimus libertatem Saint Austin saith that There is not yet a perfect libertie because the flesh lusts against the Spirit c. but libertie in part in part bondage not as yet an entire and whole libertie not yet a pure freedome nor yet full because not as yet a full eternitie For partly we haue infirmitie and feeblenesse and wee haue partly receiued liberty And he proues this by those places of Scriptures which we haue in the Episile to the Romans particularly because the Apostle saith n Rom. 7.18 To will is present with mee but how to performe that which is good I finde not When then shall bee the perfect libertie and freedome When saith hee there shall be no more enmitie and hostilitie o 1. Co. 15.26.53 54 55 when the last enemie shall be destroyed which is death for this corruptible must put on incorruption and this mortall must put on immortalitie then shall be brought to passe the saying that is written Death is swallowed vp in victorie O Death where is thy sting O Graue where is thy victorie What is that to say O Death where is thy sting the flesh lusteth against the spirit c. that is to say The s●ing of death is sinne as the Apostle speakes and sinne is alwaies in vs vntill death and wee consequently are alwaies imperfectly perfect Saint Ierome saith to this purpose that p Hieron ad ●tesiph Haec hominibus sola perfectio si se imperfectos esse nouerint this is the onely perfection of men if they know themselues to bee imperfect VI. Secondly there are two sorts of faithfull in the Church the one lesse the other more aduanced in knowledge q Heb. 5.13.14 some are babes and haue neede of milke others are of full age perfect men and haue need of strong meate euen those who by reason of vse haue their senses exercised to discerne both good and euill These in comparison of those are called perfect And it is in this sense that Saint Paul saith r 1. Cor. 2.6 We speake wisedome among them that are perfect And in another place Let vs therfore ſ Phil. 3.15 as many as be perfect be thus minded He meanes VS that are more forwards and aduanced let vs be thus minded let vs haue this feeling And what feeling Surely that we are not as yet perfect as it is manifest by the words going before for he had said Not as though I had alreadie attained t Vers 12.13.14 either were already perfect but I follow after if that I may apprehend that for which also I am apprehended of Christ Iesus Brethren I count not my selfe to haue apprehended but this one thing I doe forgetting those things which are behind and reaching forth vnto those which are before I presse towards the marke for the price of the high calling of God in Christ Iesus Then he adds Let vs therefore as many as be perfect be thus minded to wit saith Saint Ierome u Hieron aduers Pelag. lib. 1. Imperfectos nos esse con●iteri nec dum comprehendisse nec dum accepisse haec est hominis vera sapientia imperfectum esse se nosse atque vt ita loquar cunctorum in carne iustorum imperfecta perfectio est to confesse that we are imperfect that we haue not as yet apprehended not yet receiued This is the true wisdome of 〈◊〉 to know and acknowledge himselfe to be imperfect and that I may so say The perfection of all the
there should be no difference betweene me and the Creator that I should be aduanced higher then the Angels and that I should haue that which the Angels haue not Of him namely of Christ it is written as a thing proper to himselfe he did no sinne neither was guile found in his mouth If this bee common to me and Christ what had hee proper to himself And so he makes the Law possible to none but to Christ alone and attributes vnto Christ as a thing proper to him the perfect keeping of the Law But these answeres satisfie and pacifie not the conscience and therefore hee addes a third answere Thou sayest the Commandements of God are possible he speakes to the Pelagian and answeres him saying and who denieth it but how this is to bee vnderstood the chosen vessell sheweth plainely for saith he d Rom. 8.3 What the Law could not doe in that it was weake through the flesh God sending his owne Sonne in the likenesse of sinfull flesh and for sinne condemned sinne in the flesh IIII. The sense and meaning is that the impossibilitie of the Law proceedes not from the Law for if a man could keepe the whole Law it would iustifie him but it comes from the flesh that is to say from the corruption of the humane nature which makes man vncapable to fulfill the Law and consequently makes the Law vnable to iustifie man But God in his mercie hath prouided and hath sent his owne Sonne in the likenesse of sinfull flesh that is to say in the human nature altogether like vnto ours sinne excepted and in this flesh of the Sonne in our human nature which hee hath put on God hath condemned sinne surely in that he hath punisht it in the humanitie of the Sonne being made a curse for vs. And that the e Rom. 8.4 Righteousnesse of the Law might be fulfilled in vs questionlesse in as much as that in our nature and in our name Christ hath satisfied the curse thereof by the curse of his crosse which is allowed of God as if we had satisfied in our owne persons as also in as much as wee being iustified by faith in Christ wee are sanctified by the Spirit of Christ and by the same guided and fashioned to the willing obedience of the Law which begins here in the place of our pilgrimage and proceedes on daily from good to better and shall be consummated perfected in our countrie the place of our rest For that none hath euer fulfilled and cannot fulfill the Law during the dayes of this life f Hieron ad Ctesiphontem Saint Ierome proues it by the Apostles example lamenting g Ro. 7.14.24 25 that he was carnall sold vnder sinne so that he cries out O wretched man that I am who shall deliuer me from the bodie of this death and then he comforts himselfe with his answer The grace of God through Iesus Christ our Lord What say I the example of the Apostle alone when he proues h Hieron aduers Pelagia lib. 1. lib. 2. by a great number of places of the old and new testament and by the example of all the Saints that none euer hath fulfilled the Law but Iesus Christ alone who said i Mat. 5.17 I am not come to destroy the Law or the Prophets I am not come to destroy but to fulfill V. But to answere plainely to this obiection we will confider man in a fourefold differing state and condition in the state of his innocencie in the state of his rebellion and of his fall in the state of his regeneration and in the state of his glorification In the state of innocencie man was vpright perfectly holy perfectly righteous God gaue to this vpright holy and righteous man his iust and righteous Law possible in it selfe and possible to him which had receiued grace to be able to keepe it to be able not to transgresse it remaining in this state it did direct him vnto all perfection and he kept it in all perfection VI. But hauing allied himselfe with Satan the Prince of darkenesse and alienated himselfe from God who dwelleth in the light which no man can approch vnto he fell into darknes and hauing withdrawne himselfe from the obedience of his Creator k Psal 36.10 with whom is the fountaine of life and inthralled himselfe to his enemie l Heb. 2.14 to him that had the power of death that is the deuill he became m Ephes 2.2 Impossible to the corrupt nature dead in trespasses and sinnes and in such wise the slaue of sinne that he cannot but sinne In this state God giues him his Law which he cannot keepe not through the default of the Law but through the fault n Rom. 8.7 of the wisdome of the flesh which is enmitie against God for it is not subiect to the Law of God neither indeede can be yea it will not bee subiect to it and will not obserue it but applies her selfe with all her power to the transgression thereof Now it is not crueltie nor tyranny to require of this man the slaue of sinne the bondman of the deuill that which he cannot pay as it is not cruelty to aske of a bankrupt paiment of his debts A Tyrant exacts of his subiects that which they owe him not God exacts nothing of man but that which man had receiued of him all the heart all the soule all the thoughts the whole body and all the strength of that all What is the cause that man cleares not this debt T' is not long of God who o Eccles 7.29 hath made man vpright enriching him with all spirituall blessings but it is long of man who being an vnthrift a prodigall spend-all hath wasted and consumed the goods which he had receiued and by his owne fault is become vnable and vnapt to pay VII Furthermore a Tyrant demaunds vniustly of his subiect that which is not his due nor in the power of his subiect hath no other end then the ruine of his subiect In respect whereof notwithstanding it hath some vses 1. The Law accuseth him of sinne But God demaunding iustly of man that which man owes him iustly and whereof he cannot acquit himselfe by reason of his voluntary vnrighteousnesse seekes but mans saluation for he giues him his Law to make him see his owne debt as it is written p Rom. 3.20 2. It condemnes him of sinne By the Law is the knowledge of sinne And to make him shun and auoide Gods anger and wrath which is reuealed from heauen against him because of his debt as againe it is written q Rom. 4.15 3. In condemning him it leades him vnto Christ The Law worketh wrath that he knowing and acknowledging his infinite debt and feeling himselfe bound by the same vnto an infinite punishment hee may seeke out him who would and could answere for him as a pledge and suretie and who hath paied for him that which he owed
measure to the regenerate man by grace by the increasing of grace it is possible to man glorified in all sorts and manners and is not impossible but to the carnall man by his owne fault and not by any fault of the Law CHAP. XII I. The fifth Obiection The Commandements are not grieuous to the regenerate man according to the Scriptures II. Saint Ieromes Answers to this Pelagian obiection III. The Commandements are not grieuous for diuers considerations IIII. The sixth Obiection Whosoeuer is borne of God doth not commit sinne now if he commit not sinne hee keepes perfectly the Law V. Saint Ieromes and Saint Austins Answere to this Pelagian obiection He commits not sinne as he is a regenerate man VI. An other Answer He sinnes not with a full and intire consent of the will BVt they againe a Bellar. de monach cap. 13. vers 28. reply malepartly Obiection 5 and will make the Law in such perfection possible to the regenerate man that hee may keepe it without transgressing it because Christ saith b Ma. 11.29.30 Take my yoke vpon you for my yoke is easie and my burden is light And Saint Iohn saith c 1. Iohn 5.3 that his Commandements are not grieuous II. This obiection is also of the Pelagians to the which d Hieron aduers Pelag. lib. 2. Saint Ierome answeres that that is said in comparison of the superstition of the Iewes who had diuers sorts of ceremonies which none could fulfill literally nor precisely and in comparison of that sentence of Saint Peter e Act. 15.10 Now therefore why tempt ye God to put a yoke vpon the necke of the Disciples which neither our fathers nor we were able to beare And this yoke is extended by Saint Ierome euen vnto the Morall Law as it appeares by infinite instances which hee drawes from thence shewing that in them all man is made a transgressor whence he pronounceth these sentences So long as we liue wee are in the combat and so long as we fight and warre there is no certaine and sure victorie The Apostle and all the faithfull cannot doe that which they would Obserue The Apostle then how much lesse the other faithfull Againe f 1. Iohn 1.5 Ostendit omnium aliorum lumina aliquâ sorde maculari God saith he is called light and in him is no darkenesse at all when he saith there is no darkenesse at all in the light of God he declares that all other mens lights are tainted with some filth and pollution Lastly the Apostles are called the light of the world but it is not written that there is no darkenesse at all in the Apostles light III. Wee answere therefore that the yoke of Christ is not the Morall Law considered in her strictnesse and rigour for the Apostle saith g Rom. 6.14 Ye are not vnder the Law but vnder Grace The yoke of Christ is the doctrine of the Gospell wherein we finde a remedie against the yoke of the Law which commands to doe that which surpasseth the strength of the whole man liuing giues him no strength to doe it and notwithstanding accuseth him curseth him rackes and torments him if he doth it not as h Exod. 5.6.7.8 Pharaoh who did impose a great task on the Israelites Ye shall giue saith he to the Taske-masters of the people the people no more straw to make brick as heretofore let them go and gather straw for themselues the tale of the bricks which they did make heretofore you shall lay vpon them you shall not diminish ought thereof let there more worke be laide vpon the men and so increasing the Israelites taske did beate the Officers demaunding of them Wherefore haue yee not fulfilled your taske in making bricke both yesterday and to day as heretofore True it is that Pharaoh exacted tyrannously that which was not due to him but the Law exacts iustly that whereunto we are bound by right of Creation and Redemption And God had giuen vs straw which we hauing burned and consumed the Law is by our fault become to vs yoke of iron whereof wee are freed by the Gospell wherein Christ is propounded vnto vs easing vs yea deliuering vs frō this hard bondage two manner of waies First he disburdens vs of all that which is troublesome and intolerable in the Law as namely from the curse of the Law i Gal. 3.13 For Christ hath redeemed vs from the curse of the Law being made a curse for vs. Secondly hee creates in vs a cleane heart and renewes a right spirit within vs suggesting and ministring in vs new force and strength to wrastle with our flesh an enemie to the Law In this manner the yoke of Christ the Gospell of Iesus Christ as the ordinarie Glosse also expounds it is easie his burthen is light Thus Gods Commandements are not grieuous to wit to him which is in Christ for they can neither accuse him not condemne him but they are to him pleasant delightfull easie and acceptable For as Saint Iohn adds k 1. John 5.4 what soeuer is borne of God ouercommeth the world and this is the victory that ouercommeth the world namely euen our faith They are therefore easie to faith but hard yea impossible to the flesh And because the flesh is mingled with faith and that our spirituall strength is weakened by our naturall infirmitie they are to vs ioyntly both easie and hard possible and impossible grieuous and pleasant heauie and light and shall bee so vntill that our old man be wholly destroyed and our new man bee perfectly re-established after the Image of him that created him IIII. He which hath not a feeling of these things Obiection 6 Bellar. de iustif lib. 4. c. 13. para vltimo hath a leprous cauterized and putrified soule but such a one feeles them that makes as if he did not feele them and against his feeling and conscience seekes yet euen in the Scripture whereupon to ground falsehood and vntruth He that sinnes not transgresseth not the Law but fulfilleth it say they * 1. Iohn 3.9 But whosoeuer is borne of God doth not commit sinne for his seede remaineth in him and hee cannot sinne because he is borne of God saith Saint Iohn therefore whosoeuer is borne of God transgresseth not the Law but keepeth it V. Too much of one thing is death to the Reader they do nothing but set before vs the vnsauorie coleworts of the Pelagians for this obiection is also of the Pelagians S. l Hieron aduers Pelag. lib. 1. Ierome resolues it opposing vnto it another sentence of S. Iohn m 1. Iohn 1.8 If we say we haue no sinne we deceiue our selues and the truth is not in vs. How then doe these things agree together is there any contradiction in the Apostle God forbid But there are tares with this seede of God saith Saint Ierome that shall not be separated from the wheate vntill the ende of the world In as much
we are as new borne babes hauing neede of the milke of the word that we may grow thereby and then we grow i Rom. 1.17 from faith to faith we aduance and go on from age to age k Ephes 4.13 Till we all come in the vnitie of the faith and of the knowledge of the Sonne of God vnto a perfect man vnto the measure of the stature of the fulnesse of Christ IIII. Thirdly all the workes that God makes alone and without the co-working of the creature are perfect in their kinde but in our regeneration our will workes together with God the flesh that is in vs by nature resists the Spirit which he puts in vs by grace whence it is impossible but that the good workes which we doe haue a smacke of the corruption that is in vs. An expert Scriuener handling alone his pen will write neately and perfectly but if he holdes his young Schollers hand and guides his pen in his hand the writing will not be so neate and will manifest it selfe by her imperfection that it is not the Masters hand alone as it will appeare also by reason of the straightnesse measure and neatnesse that it is not the Schollers hand alone Euen so is it with vs all the good workes we doe doe issue and proceede from two contrarie principles in vs from Gods Spirit and from our flesh God doth them in vs and by vs as by young ignorant prentises and nouices which cannot follow the perfect direction of the Spirit by reason of our flesh vnprofitable and vnseruiceable to good and strong vnto euill whence it followeth that as they are defectiue and vicious they belong to vs as our owne so as they are good and holy God claimes and challenges them himselfe as his owne V. Now followeth the answere to the last obiection Obiection 8 Bellar. de iustif lib. 4. §. 5. seq If our good works are thus vicious and corrupt then are they sinnes and if sinnes then worthie of death and therefore are not to be done but are to be left vndone yea auoided It would also follow that God should bee the author of sinne for hee is the author of euery good worke in vs l Phil. 2.13 working in vs both to will and to doe of his good pleasure VI. This is a subtill cauill to shift of the truth and to cast a miste before the eyes of the ignorant we ought we ought and must doe good workes m 1. Sam. 15.22 to obey God n Mat. 6.33 to seeke and aeduance the Kingdome of God o Mat. 5.16 1. Pet. 3.1 to winne by our holy conuersation those which obey not the Word p 1. Pet. 2.12 3.16 to stoppe the mouthes of the enemies of the Gospel when they speake against vs as euil doors q Ephes 4.1 to walke worthy of the vocation wherewith we are called and r Phil. 1 27. Col. 1.10 as it becommeth the Gospel of Christ ſ 1. Thes 2.12 who hath called vs vnto his Kingdom and glory by grace who gaue t Tit. 2.14 himselfe for vs that he might bee our head to whom the Father hath giuen vs to be members of his bodie and a peculiar people zealous of good workes u Iames 2.18 1. Pet. 3.15 to testifie of our life and the truth of our faith before the Church to testifie it to our selues and to x 2. Pet. 1.10 make our calling and election sure that wee may y Rom. 8.5 Gal. 5 16.22.2● learne and know by the works of the Spirit if we walke after the Spirit and that we may z Mat. 6.16 know the tree by his fruit VII He which doth good workes to these endes sinnes not and tho workes which hee doth in this manner are not sinnes They are good in their principle for they proceede from God they are good in their manner of doing them for they are done in faith in obedience in charitie they are good in their matter and substance for they are conformable to the Law they are good also in their ende for they tend and extend to the glory of God to our neighbours good to our strengthening and setting in the feare of God in the assurance of the grace of God towards vs. Sinne is no such matter it proceedes from the stinking sinke of the flesh it is contrarie to the Law contrarie to faith and charitie sinne is committed in vnbelie●● and disobedience and hath for his faith and beliefe the world and the things that are in the world so that it is as vnpleasant and displeasing vnto God as the good works are pleasing and acceptable vnto him VIII But man being composed of flesh and spirit it falleth out that when the spirit makes his good workes the flesh steps in vnlooked for and taints them with the stench of his corruption to the great griefe and displeasure of the spirit of the new man who ●urceaseth not to proceede and goe on to doe the best he can being assured that God who hath already accepted of his person in Iesus Christ will also accept approue and receiue in good part the little good he doth forgiuing him for Christ Iesus sake the euill that the flesh hath foisted in and accepting for the loue of Christ that good which remains as being the worke of his Spirit IX Euen so hath he promised it saying a Mal. 3.17 I will spare them at a man spareth his owne sonne that serueth him so doth God b Psal 103.13.14 like as a father pitieth his children so the Lord pitieth them that feare him for he knoweth our frame he remembreth that we are dust He accepts first our persons he adopts vs to himselfe and makes vs his children in Iesus Christ and afterwards he accepts our workes because of our persons If once we are his children and heires in Christ he handles and intertaines vs as father and no more as a Iudge he accepts the holy endeuour which our new man brings and yeeldes to his seruice and supports the opposition and impugning of our old man against him In a word when he viewes and beholds in our good workes the euill which is ours he forgiues vs it for Christ his sake c Jsai 53.5 who was wounded for our transgressions and bruised for our iniquities and when he beholds and considers the good which is his he crownes it for the same Christ Iesus sake d Ephes 1.6 in whom hee hath made vs accepted X. Not therefore for our merits but according to his mercie whereof he saith e Exod. 20.6 I will shew mercie vnto thousands of them that loue me and keepe my Commandements that his sentence remaine for euer f Tit. 3.4 Vers 5. After that the kindnesse and loue of God our Sauiour toward man appeared not by workes of righteousnesse which we haue done but according to his mercy he saued vs by the washing of regeneration and renewing