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A04847 The spirituall architecture. Or, the balance of Gods sanctuary to discerne the weigh and solidity of a true and sincere, from the leuitie, and vanitie of a false and counterfeit profession of Christianity. Wherein also the sandy foundations of the papisticall faith are briefely discouered. A sermon preached at Pauls Crosse the 16. of Nouember, 1623. by Robert Barrell, Master of Arts, and minister of Gods word at Maidstone in Kent Barrell, Robert. 1624 (1624) STC 1498; ESTC S120643 59,486 84

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that is the Pope and Popish Prelates whereas the Scriptures are written but with inke and paper These traditions they make of three sorts e D. Bysb contra P●rk de Trad. 1. Diuine deliuered by Christ himselfe 2. Apostolicall deliuered by the Apostles 3. Ecclesiasticall deliuered by the Church 1 Diuine 1. Concerning diuine traditions if they bee truely such we most reuerently and religiously receiue them but wee acknowledge none for such but onely those doctrines of faith of Gods worship which are either expresly or by necessary cōsequence contained in the old new Testamēt For although we know and acknowledge that f Bulling de ver Dei the substance of the old Testament was deliuered among the Patriarches from hand to hand by tradition from Adam to Moses and of the new till it was penned by the Apostles and Euangelists g D. Abbot cont Bysh de Trad. as some thinke for eight as others for twenty as others for fourescore yeares yet wee teach that when God had taken the custody of his owne tradition to himselfe by selecting and inspiring choise vessells of grace to commit them to writing least the streames of truth should haue beene polluted by running through the muddy channells of mens mouths then the Church was bound to receiue nothing for diuine truth but what is contained in the Scriptures or necessarily deduced therefrom and firmely grounded thereupon As when God had conueighed the whole light of the world h Gen. 1.3 which before was dispersed in the first dayes creation into the body of the Sunne i v. 14. c. created the fourth day then he would haue the Moone and Starres to deriue their light from thence and the whole earth to be therewith enlightened so though in his first plantation of his Church God did for a time continue the knowledge of his truth by immediate reuelation thereof vnto some chosen men which might deliuer it to his Church from hand to hand yet now since he hath conueighed the whole light of diuine truth into the Canon of the Scripture hee will haue all the Pastors and members of the Church to deriue their light of sauing knowledge and true faith from thence onely so that the doctrine of the Scriptures is now the onely diuine Tradition 2. Touching Apostolicall Traditions wee acknowledge them likewise for diuine if they vnderstand thereby 2 Apost Trad. that diuine doctrine which the Apostles first preached then wrot in the Scriptures as the pillar and foundation of our faith of which S. Paul speakes a Cor. 11.23 Accepi a Domino quod tradidi vobis I haue receiued of the Lord that which I haue also deliuered vnto you c. b Gal. 1.11 12. for the Gospell which was preached of me I receiued it not of man nor was taught it by man but by the reuelation of Iesus Christ And this is the holy and diuine Tradition which c Iren. li. 3. c. 1. Ireneus d Cypr. Epist 74. c. Script est Cyprian and other auncient Fathers speake of contained in the Euangelists Apostolicall Epistles and Acts of the Apostles all which are written Scriptures of the new Testament This diuine and Apostolicall Tradition we call with Tertullian The rule of truth 1 Regula veritatis Tertul. 2 Doctrinae Cypr. 3 Rectitudinis Basil 4 Credendorū agendorum Dyonis Carthus and with Cyprian The rule of doctrine and with Basill 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The rule of right or straight rule of perfection and with their owne Carthusian The rule of faith and manners or of all things to be beleeued and practised for wee constantly auerre with Cyril e Cyril Catech. Hierosol That the securitie of our faith ariseth from the euidence and demonstration of the diuine Scripture so that no man presume aboue that which is written 1. Cor. 4.6 Also we reuerently receiue such Apostolicall Traditions as haue their ground in Scripture though not expresly f Act. 20.7 as the celebration of the Sabboth on the first day of the week g Apoc. 1.10 the Baptisme of Infants c. 3 Eccles Trad. 3. Touching Ecclesiasticall Traditions wee receiue for such First those doctrines of faith which the ancient Primitiue Counsailes haue determined against Haeretikes hauing their ground in Scripture as that there is a Trinitie of persons in the vnitie of the diuine essence and that the Sunne is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is consubstantiall and coaequall with the Father c. yet we dare not say with daring h Enchi● controv c. 1. Costerius That the first foure generall Counsailes are to bee receiued as we receiue the foure Gospells Secondly those rules which the Primitiue Church hath set downe for order and comelinesse in the seruice of God yea a Perk. de Trad. we acknowledge that the present Church hath power to make Canons to that purpose so they bee consonant to the generall Canons of the Scripture namely 1. That they tend to b 1 Cor. 14.26.40 decency and order 2. To aedification 3. That they be free from superstition 4. That the Church be not ouerburthened with the multitude of them Trad. Papist But if by the Churches Traditions they vnderstand the Canons of their latter Counsailes which were but conuenticles or confaederacies against Christ and his truth for the maintenance of Papall Hierarchy and wherein all the Bishops were the Popes sworne seruants and directed by him as by an Oracle what to doe and decree or the decrees of their Popes some of which haue beene Idolatrous some haereticall and some superstitious or if vnder that name they would thrust vpon vs euery Fryers dreame rotten reliques base costome and idle ceremony of the Romish Church then we reiect their vnwritten Traditions as sandy foundations to build our faith vpon and means to lead vs into a sea of errors and vncertaineties wherein there is neither banke nor bottome And such Traditions as these bee the sandy foundations whereon they build many articles of their Romish Creed namely priuate Masses halfe Communions Transubstantiation adoration of the host of Images and reliques Innocation of Saints and Angells Purgatory and the Popes transcendent authoritie in things Ecclesiastical and temporall For c Andrad in Orthodox Explicat Conc. Trident. li. 2. one of their owne plainly confesseth That many points of their Romish faith would reele and totter if they were not supported by Traditions And this is the reason why they refuse their triall by the Scriptures and thinke d Conference betweene Dr. Feately and M. Fisher. Christ and his Apostles both incompetent Iudges and partiall witnesses for the decision of their cause Yea Bellarmine their great Goliah saith peremptorily a Bell. li. 4. de ver dei non scripto c. 12. That it was not the proper end of the Scriptures to bee rule of our faith and that they are at the best but Regula partialis non
Act. 9 39. the poore Widowes who stood weeping for the death of charitable Dorcas 2. 2. Conscien pa● Peace ioy and solace in your owne soules which is the continuall feast that God himselfe makes for them that feede the hungry c. 3. 3. Hon●r A good name which while yee liue shall be c Pro. 3.8 health to your nauells and marrow to your bones and when ye dye it shall be a pretious oyntment to embaulme your bodies in the graue d 15.1 as e Ioh. 12.3.7 Maries spikenard embaulmed Christs body at his funerall 4. 4 Gloria aeterna An f 1 Pet. 1.4 c. 5. v 4. inheritance immortall and vndefiled reserued in heauen for you and an immarciscible crowne of glory g Gal. 6 9. Be not weary therefore of well doing for if yee faint not ye shall reape without wearinesse namely loue honour ioy peace and glory both in earth and heauen h Chrys in loc Qui deficit in semine non gaudebit in messe sed si homo non imponat finem operi deus non imponet finem remunerationi Hee that faints in seed time shall faile in haruest but if a man put no period to his perseuerance in well doing God will put no end to the reward of his well doing The 2. generall part The second difference betweene these wise and foolish builders is in the choise of their foundation the first building on a rocke the other on the sand The principall care of a wise builder is to make choise of a firme foundation to build vpon for if the foundation be immooueable the whole building will stand fast and firme but if the foundation faile all the building though neuer so laboriously framed and artificially composed will fall to the ground and come to ruine Now no foundation is so firme and immooueable as a Rocke and therefore no building so strong as that which is raysed on a rocky foundation which will not faile how great a weight soeuer be laid vpon it nor be mooued much lesse be remooued with any gusts of wind force of stormes or violence of torrents whatsoeuer A true Christian therefore that heares Gods word and doth it is fitly compared to such a wise builder that builds his house vpon a rocke Verse 24. I will liken him c. Expos 1. By this rocke a Aug. Hier. Basil c. in loc some interpreters vnderstand Christ himselfe because by the power of his might the righteous that cleaue vnto him by faith and obedience are protected and strengthened against the violence of all temptations afflictions and persecutions In which sence Dauid saith b Psal 18.2 The Lord is my rocke and my fortresse c. 2. Others by this rocke vnderstand the inuiolable and immooueable diuine truth of his Sacred word So Chrys vpon this text c Chrys in loc 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 He calls the firme securitie of his owne doctrine a Rocke because vpon a rocke a man may build securely and hereby hee mooues all his Disciples to imbrace his diuine doctrine 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Jbid. shewing the firme soliditie and immutability therof by the solidity and immobility of a rocke which who so builds his faith vpon shall stand fast d Psa 125.1 like Mount Sion that cannot be remooued but standeth fast for euer But I thinke both these expositions may bee conioyned and by this rocke we may vnderstand both Christ and his Sacred truth for e Ioh. 14.16 c 17.17 as hee is the truth so his word is truth as he is the life and th●t aeternall so his words are f c. 6.68 the words of aeternall life And the whole word of truth is nothing els but the reuelation and manifestation of that aeternall word that increated truth Christ Iesus For hee is the pith and kernell of the whole Bible g Apoc. 1.8 the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of the law and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of the Gospell h Aug. Q. in Ex. 73. 15. de ciu dei c. 18. Velatus in veteri Testamento reuelatus in nouo in illo praedictus in isto praedicatus veiled and clasped vp in the old Testament vnder obscure Prophesies promises types and figures and opened or reueiled in the new for i Exod 73.9 as the two Cherubins had their faces each to other and both to the Propitiatory or mercy-seat so the two Testaments haue relation each to other and are mutually confirmed one by the other and haue both an eye to one and the same Christ k 1 Ioh. 2.2 who is the Propitiation for our sinnes As Christ onely is that foundation whereon the spirituall building of the Church is raysed in some respects 1 Christus Petra namely first because hee alone is the beginning and fountaine whence all spirituall good originally flowes a Iac. 1 17. Euery good and perfect gift is from aboue and commeth downe from the Father of lights c. and the foundation whereon our confidence hope and expectation of any good which wee expect from God groundeth it selfe b 2 Cor 1.20 for in him all the promises of God are yea and Amen to the glory of God the Father Secondly because all our persuasion of the most Sacred and irrefragable authority of diuine truth stayeth it selfe on him alone as being the onely c Mal. 2.5 Angell of that great couenant of life and peace which God hath made with his Church in him reuealed it to his Church by him d Eph. 2.14.16 17. who is our peace-maker and peace-preacher and our peace and the onely inditer of the Sacred Scripture e Luc. 1.70 who spake by the mouths of all his holy Prophets which were but f P●al 45.1 the pens of this ready Writer in which respects the Apostle saith truely g 1 Cor. 3.11 Other foundation can no man lay than that which is laid namely Christ Jesus and on this rocke or foundation the Apostles themselues and their doctrine were founded or els h Act 5.37 as Gamaliel saith both they and it would quickly haue come to nought and fallen to ruine 2. Doctr. Apost So in some other respects i Eph. 2.19 20. the doctrine of the Prophets and Apostles is called the Churches foundation Christ Iesus being the chiefe corner stone First because they were the first that by their doctrine laid the Churches foundation and conuerted Infidells to the Christian faith Secondly because their doctrine receiued immediately from God by most vndoubted reuelation without mixture of errour and now left recorded vnto vs in the Sacred Scripture is the infallible rule of faith to all succeeding generations and that most sure immooueable and rocky foundation vpon which the faith of all Christians may and doth most s●curely stay it selfe Therefore Saint Iohn saith k Apoc. 21. ●4 The wall of the city of God hath twelue foundation
stones and in them were written the names of the Lambes twelue Apostles And herein Peter had no preheminence aboue the rest except a primacy of order onely for a Su●er omnes ●quo Eccles fortitudo solidatu● 〈◊〉 in Jo● li. 1 Saint Hierome saith th● Church is aequally founded on the doctrine of all the Apostles for these words b Mat. 16.18 Tu es Petrus super hanc Petram aedificabo Ecclesiam were not spoken personally to Peter but generally to all the Apostles who as well as Peter did beleeue and confesse the same faith though in token of vnity they were vttered to one which in vnity did appertaine to all the Apostles c Vnus pro multis vnitas pro ●niuersis Aug. in Psal 88. in whose names Peter alone made this confession Moreouer not Peters person or place but the faith which he confessed is that rocke on which the Church is built as both the whole streame of the Fathers and the generall counsell of Chalcedon doe testifie Vide Aug. de ver dom Ser. 13. Hil. de Trin li. 6. Chrysost inc 16 Mat. Theod. in Cant. Pag 235. Ambros in cap. 2. ad Eph. Epist in Appendice Conc. Chalced 13. Seeing therefore he was called d Aug Retract li. 1. c. 21. Petrus a petra from that rocke of faith which he confessed Thou art the Christ the Sonne of the liuing God which faith the rest of the Apostles held taught and confessed as well as he and sealed it with their blood wee may truely inferre with S. Jerome e Hieron in Amos li. 3. c. 6. that in this respect they were rocks as well as he whereon the Church is founded Yea f Petrus gessit personam Ecclesicut Iudas inimicorum Christi Aug. in Psal 108. S. Aug. saith farther that Peter in confessing Christ and receiuing the power of the keyes sustained the person not onely of the Apostles but of the whole Church Militant as Iudas did of the Church malignant g Jdem 50. in Ioh c. 12. Vnus malus corpus malorum significat quomodo Petrus corpus bonorum corpus ecclesiae As one Iudas signified the whole societie of the wicked so one Peter the whole company of good men the body of the Church Therefore from those words of Christ to Peter Thou art Peter c. who represented not the Apostles onely but the whole Christian Church confessing the same faith it cannot bee inferred that S. Peter and his successors are that rocke on which the Church is founded Those therefore that build their faith on that foundation of the Prophets and Apostles whereof Christ is the chiefe corner-stone by beleeuing confessing and practizing are those wise builders here specified which build their houses on a rocke For the entire and sincere beleefe profession Nota Eccles infa●●biler● and practise of those supernaturall verities which God hath reuealed in his Sonne Christ by the ministery of the Prophets and Apostles and that in veritie is an infallible note of the true Church and of a true member of the true Church All other notes without this are false and counterfeite and may deceiue vs. Notae fall●biles 1 Antiquitas 1. Antiquitie without truth is nothing els but a Cypr. epist 74. 63 Vetustas erroris for we must not so much attend vnto or consider what others haue done or thought fit to be done before vs as what Christ hath done who is before all we must not follow the custome of man but the truth of God for the true antiquity is truth it selfe deriued from Christ b Esa 9.6 the Father of aeternitie 2. Successio 2. Personall succession without doctrinall is but as c Mat. 26.1 c. Caiaphas succeeded Aaron and yet was an enemy to the true High Priest Christ Iesus d Naz in laudem Athanasis Such false Pastors or bad members of the visible Church succeeded the true and good as darknesse succeedes the light or sicknesse health or a tempest faire weather or madnesse the right vse of reason 3. Vnitas 3. Vnity without truth is but a diuelish faction and like that of thieues and rebells an accu●sed confederacie and wicked conspiracie against the God of truth e Apoc. 19 16. Who is the King of Kings and Lord of Lords Such though they combine and v … themselues neuer so strongly are but like f Gen. 49.5 Simeon and Leui brethren in euill or like g Luc. 23 12. Herod and Pilate that vnited themselues in a league of friendship to persecute Christ Iesus 4. Vniuersalitas Vniuersalitie or multitude without truth is nothing for one h 1 Reg. 18.19 Elias teaching and professing Gods truth and truely worshiping the true God of Israel is to be preferred befo●e foure hundred Proph●ts of Baal though brought vp in Ahabs Court and eating bread at Iezabells table and one i Luc. 23 42. poenitent thiefe confessi●g Christ before the high Priests and Elders Scribes Pharises Sadduces and thousands of Iewes persecuting him 5. Nom●n Catho Nor the specious titles of holy Catholike Apostolike c for that Church which hath these titles without truth is like a boxe in an Apothecaries shop which without hath the title of a soueraigne antidote written in faire Characters and within is full of deadly poyson Bare titles will not serue the turne for those haeretikes in Saint Bernards time who in truth were Apostatici because they reuolted from the Catholike faith tearmed themselues Apostolici though they could shew no signe of their Apostleship a Ber. Ser. 64. in Cant. and in our dayes Popish Catholikes tearme themselues Catholikes and Iebusites Iesuites and the Synagogue of lust the family of loue Applicat Be not therefore carryed away from the rocke of Christs Sacred truth with any or all those glistering shewes which that painted whore of Babylon makes of antiquitie succession vnitievniue rsalitie or the goodly titles of holy Catholike Apostolike c. for all these are but the b 2 Reg. 9.30 painted face of that whorish Iezabell or her c Apoc. 17.4 golden cup glistering without but within full of the wine of her abhominations and filthinesse of her fornications the truth of Gods word alone is that firme and immnoueable rocke on which euery wise Christian must build the spirituall aedifice of his soule and conscience 1 Petra regenerat 1. This is that rocke out of which wee are spiritually hewen Esa 51.2 that is the Rocke of our regeneration for d 1 Pet. 1.23 we are borne againe not of corruptible seed but incorruptible by the word of God which liueth and abideth for euer 2 Nutrit 2. The rocke of our spirituall nourishment vnto saluation whence doe flowe 1. the waters of life to refresh our fainting soules as e Exod. 17 16. streames of Waters flowed from the rocke in Rephidim to refresh the thirsting bodies of the Israelites 2. The