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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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that a certaine man called by Saint Luke q Luk. 18.18 a Ruler comming vnto our Lord said r Mat. 19.16 Good Master what good thing shall I doe that I may haue eternall life He desires to obtaine eternall life and perswades himselfe that the onely meritorious cause thereof is to doe a good thing he asketh not what he must beleeue but what he must doe to be saued This was the arrogant and ouer-wee●ing perswasion of al the Iewes of whom the Apostle writeth ſ Rom. 9 3●.32 that Israel which followed after the Law of righteousnesse hath not attained to the Law of righteousnesse wherefore because they sought it not by faith but at it were by the works of the Law for they stumbled at that stumbling stone And therefore answering his demaund and according to the hypothesis position thereof saith vnto him If thou wilt enter into life keepe the Commandements For when the question is made of workes the Morall Law is the rule of good workes Hee commaunds him therefore to keepe the Commandements t Ferus in Mat. vt sciret se nunquam implêsse Quis enim de hoc gloriabitur c. to the ende saith Ferus he might know that he had neuer kept them for who ca● beast of that If we say saith Saint u 1. John 1.8 Iohn that we haue no sin we deceiue our selues If none can beast that he is free from sinne none also can glory nor vaunt that bee hath kept the Law seeing that sinne it no other thing then the transgression of the Law He goes on and asketh againe Which Not that he was ignorant of the Commandements but because hee expected that the Lord should haue prescribed to him others more perfect Notwithstanding the Lord to instruct him that the Morall Law is the vnchangeable rule of the will of God to him that seekes saluation by his workes and to shew x Ferus ibid. that he is not come to destroy the Law but to fulfill rehearseth some of the Commandements Thou shalt doe no murder c. Then shalt loue thy neighbour as thy selfe And that to the ende saith the same Ferus y Ibid. Vt arr●gans ille iuuenis vitam suam ad illa conferens discat quàm ne micam quidem verae pietatis haberet c. that the arrogant young man comparing his life with the Commandements might learne that hee had not so much as 〈◊〉 crumme of true godlinesse For there is nothing that stoppes 〈◊〉 w●ll the mouth of the arrogant and proud men then when they art warned of Gods Commandements and thou seest not so clear●ly in a looking glasse the blemishes of thy body as thou seest thy sin● in the Law Furthermore he rehearseth specially the Commandements of the second Table For he which is conuicted that he hath not kept the things that concerne his neighbour is a great deals more conuinced that he bath not kept the things that are of God For if a man say I loue God and hateth his brother he is a lyar saith Saint z 1. Iohn 4.20 Iohn VI. Therefore our Sauiour answering this young man according to his demand remaunds him to the Law that being conuicted in his conscience how hee was very farre from the perfection of the righteousnesse required in the same he might hee humbled disposed and prepared to heare and receiue by faith the Gospell of the remission of sinnes whereby to be saued but the wretched young man young in yeeres but younger in the knowledge of himselfe and of the spiritual vse of the Law puffed vp with a presumptuous opinion of his vprightnesse dared to open his mouth and say All these things haue I kept from my youth vp It was saith Saint Ambrose a Ambros in Luc. c. 18. inani● iactantia a vaine boasting Saint Ierome saith plainely b Hieron in Mat. c. 19. mentitur adolescens c. the young man lied for if he had fulfilled in word and deede that which is contained in the Law Thou shalt loue thy neighbour as thy selfe how comes it afterwards that he hauing heard say go and sell that thou hast and giue to the poore he went away sorrowfull for hee had great possessions Saint Hilarie writes c Hilar. in Mat. c. 19. Neque superiora illa egerat ad quae remittitur that hee hath not kept the things he is sent back vnto And Saint Austin arguing vpon that he went away sorrowfull d August Epist 89. quaest 4. Qui. viderit quemadmodum illa legis mandata seruauerat puto enim quòd se arrogantiùs quàm veriùs seruâsse responderit Let him consider how he hath kept those Commandements for I thinke that he answered more arrogantly then truly that he had kept them Ferus among the Modernes a great Preacher in his time and of great reputation among his owne proues that he lied e Ferus in Mat. c. 19. I will not say saith he that be hath perfectly fulfilled the Commandements of God vnlesse I should say that hee was pure from sinne whereunto the Scripture gaine-saies euidently For who can boast that he hath no sinne seeing Salomon saith f 1. King 8.46 that there is no man that sinneth not and Saint Iohn g 1. Iohn 1.8 If we say that we haue no sinne we deceiue our selues and the truth is not in vs. And the Psalmist h Psal 130.3 If thou shouldest marke iniquities O Lord who shall stand and Saint Iames i Iam. 3.2 In many things we offend all and the Wise man k Prou. 24.16 A iust man falleth seuen times the day For which cause Christ commaunds all to pray and say l Mat. 6.12 Forgiue vs our trespasses Who is he then that seeth not that this young man spake very presumptuously All these things haue I kept and that with this addition euen from my youth vp seeing that Christ vpbraides euidently and manifestly reprocheth the Iewes m John 7.19 Did not Moses giue you the Law and yet none of you keepeth the Law These reasons are irrefragable and without any reply VII How then saith this young man that hee hath kept the Law Surely because he vnderstood not the true vse of the Law He had laied no violent and bloudy hands vpon any to kill him He had not defiled his neighbours bed He had not stollen another mans goods He had not borne false witnesse against his neighbour before the Magistrate He had done no wrong to his neighbour Hee was taught that to liue blamelesse before men was to fulfill the righteousnesse of the Law For the false Doctors had restrained the vse of the Law to the outward obseruation thereof euen to say n Mat. 5.43 Thou shalt loue thy neighbour and hate thine enemie as if an enemie were not a mans neighbour and this false doctrine was propounded by them as deriued from the Elders So Saint Paul saith that o Phil. 3.7.8
morall and spirituall workes g Mat. 5.16 Let your light sosh ●e before men saith Iesus Christ that they may see your good workes and glorifie your Father which is in heauen It is a thing out of all doubt that the Infidels haue neuer done any thing for this end what could they haue done for the glory of God which was vnknowne to them What haue they euer done but for themselues but h Chrys in opere imperfecto in Mat. hom 33. to aduance themselues in honour reputation and credit It was ambition to lade himselfe with thicke clay as the Prophet saith that is great store of riches to ioyne house to house and lay field to field till there be no place It was brokage and couetousnesse To what other ende doe now adaies the best and honestest of our politicians aime at They haue no other ende of their prudence and other vertues or rather images of vertues then themselues If we consider the religious as they terme them they giue almes they pray in publick they vse many repetitions they march with a sad countenance they disfigure their faces and destroy the bodie with much fasting some of them that they may appeare vnto men that they are charitable deuout mortified so did the Pharisees and other hypocrites in Christs time i Mat. 6.2 Verily saith Christ I say vnto you they haue their reward The world hath them in great estimation they haue that which they sought for It is their reward they serue God with hope of reward condigne as they say and well worthie of their meries were it not for this hope they would not bee so feruent and zealous towards God that they would be blotted out of his booke k Exod. 32.32 as Moses or l Rom. 9.3 separated and accursed from Christ for his glorie as Saint Paul To bee short wee are in a time whereof wee may iustly and truely say as Saint Paul said of his time m Phil. 2.21 All seeke their owne not the things which are Iesus Christs Wee are in the last daies and the perillous and trouble some times are come whereof the same Apostle hath prophesied n 2. Tim. 3.1 2 3 4 5. that men shall be louers of their owne selues couetous boasters proud blasphemers disobedient to parents vnthankefull vnholy without naturall affection truce breakers false accusers incontinent fierce despisers of those that are good traitours headie high minded louers of pleasures more then louers of God hauing a forme of godlinesse but denying the power thereof Of which kinde of men God in his great mercy deliuer quickly the world VIII All these keepe not the Law and cannot doe any good worke Some of them will haue many faire and goodly parts as we say the which being examined will be found to be nothing else then o Ambros de vo cat gentium lib. 2. c. 3. splendida peccata glistering and beautifull sinnes by the which they haue barrenly adorned the life of this age saith Saint Ambrose Wee doe not condemne them for that they are ciuilly sober iust moderate and doe leade an outward life without reproch But the Scripture condemnes them for that they liue without faith without charity and propound vnto themselues no other scope of their actions then themselues and so doe ill and doe good things to a bad ende Christ Iesus condemnes them p Iohn 5.44 How can ye beleeue which receiue honour one of another and seeke not the honour that commeth from God onely We doe not condemne them in that they fast austerely pray feruently giue almes largely and doe as they say many pious workes but because doing nothing but that which a Turke and a Iew doth we bewaile them because they runne so fast out of the way seeing they runne not by Christ who is the way to God who is the end of the race and so they labour and toile much yet aduance and goe forward but little As hee that makes haste and runneth a stray out of the Kings high way takes more paines and toiles more then if he were in the right way and notwithstanding he neuer comes where he would I exhort them to turne backe and returne the same way they came towards the Commandements of God to doe according vnto God and for God that which they doe vnder him for themselues and to the ende they may doe it to pray vnto God with Dauid q Psal 143.10 Teach me to doe thy will for thou art my God thy Spirit is good leade me into the land of vprightnes For as Saint Austin saith It is better to goe softly or to halt in the right way then to march streightly and runne out of the way CHAP. V. I. The vnregenerate man is altogether wicked II. The regenerate man is imperfect and defectiue in his most holy actions and cannot keepe the Law which is proued by foure arguments III. The first argument He hath in him the flesh lusting against the Spirit IIII. The second argument Our imperfect knowledge brings forth imperfect workes V. Bellarmines opinion concerning a double perfection commaunded in the Law confuted VI. That perfection which Bellarmine saith is possible to man in this life hath neuer been found in any man VII The third argument If the regenerate man could keepe the Law he should not neede a Mediatour THe a Psal 14.2 3. Lord looked downe from heauen vpon the children of men to see if there were any that did vnderstand and seeke God They are all gone aside they are altogether become filthie there is none that doth good no not one b Ro. 3.13 c. Their throate is an open sepulcher with their tongues they haue vsed deceit the poison of Aspes is vnder their lipps whose mouth is full of cursing and bitternesse their feete are swift to shed blood destruction and misery are in their waies and the way of peace haue they not knowne The reason of all this is There is no feare of God before their eyes He that feares God feares to doe that which displeaseth God as Ioseph that would not defile his masters bed with held and kept-in with the feare of God c Genes 39.9 How can I doe this great wickednesse and sinne against God In like manner comforting and assuring his brethren that he would doe them no hurt he tells them d Genes 42.18 I feare God On the other side he which feares not God giues himselfe libertie vnto all wickednesse whensoeuer any occasion is offered That made Abraham say of Gerar e Genes 20.11 Surely the feare of God is not in this place and they will slay me for my wines sake They which haue not the feare of God in their hearts are ordinarie adulterers lyars f Ephes 4.17.18.19 walking in the vanitie of their minde hauing the vnderstanding darkened being alienated from the life of God through the ignorance that is in them because of the blindnesse of their hearts who
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
that of God reuealed in the Scripture so the priuate iudgment is inferior to the ministerial for it comes not out in publike with a publike calling and authoritie but keepes and containes it selfe in the conscience for her rest and peace and doth not extend or spread her selfe further then the calling of him which hath receiued this gift of God This is common to all true Christians who being all spirituall man haue receiued and had of God the eyes eares taste heart and iudgement of the spirituall man to see heare taste know iudge loue and affect the things of God z 1. Cor. 2.15 The spirituall man faith the Apostle discerneth and iudgeth all things euery Christian is spirituall he which is not spirituall is no Christian for to be a Christian is nothing else then to be spirituall euery Christian therefore knoweth and discerneth the things of his saluation Christians are the sheepe of our Lord Iesus As therefore a naturall sheepe can by the principle of nature make choise of that herbe which is the most wholesome to her and in feeding passe by that which is contrary to her nature so the spirituall sheepe by the principle of grace can iudge betweene the true passages and places vnto the which she is brought and led by her true shepheard and the bad pasture wherewith the stronger would infect and poyson her This doctrine is of Christ Iesus and of his Apostles Christ hath said that a Iohn 10.4.5 the good shepheard putteth forth his owne sheepe and goeth before them and the sheepe follow him for they know his voice and a stranger will they not follow but will flee from him for they know not the voyce of strangers The Apostle requires of all men that b Heb. 5.14 they haue their senses exercised to discerne both good and euill he exhorts them saying c 1. Cor. 14.20 Brethren be not children in vnderstanding howbeit in malice be ye children but in vnderstanding be men d 1. Thess 5.20 Proue all things hold fast that which is good Saint Iohn tells them that it is their dutie e 1. Iohn 4.1 Beloued beleeue not euerie spirit but trie the spirits whether they are of God because many false prophets are gone out into the world They will not place the particulars in the pulpit to preach but they place them at the chaires foote to heare with iudgement and discerne between the true Doctor and the false seducer to follow that man and to take heed of this man according to Christs admonition f Matth. 7.15 Beware of false prophets which come to you in sheepes clothing but inwardly they are rauening w●lues yee shall know them by their fruits He presupposeth therefore that they shall haue iudgement to know them but this iudgement being a gift of God a gift grace not of nature a gift proper vnto the spirituall man vnknowne to the naturall the Apostle prayes to God to giue it vs g Phil. 1.9.10 I pray that your lo●● may abound yet more and more in knowledge and in all iudgement that yee may approue things that are excellent that ye may be sincere and without offence till the day of Christ VII Iudge we then of what spirit are they which of spirituall sheepe would deforme vs and transforme vs into brutish sheepe and destituted of reason doe prohibit vs to speake of the things of our God Creator Father and Sauiour but as they list Let vs compare their spirit with that of Christ and of the Apostles Christ would that we should iudge of him by the Scriptures and not simply by his saying said vnto the people h Iohn 5.39 Search the Scriptures And these would haue vs to iudge of them by their bare saying and not by the Scriptures do blame and condemne vs for the diligent search of the Scriptures The Apostle said to the Corinthians i 1. Cor. 10.15 I speake as to wise men iudge yee what I say These feare nothing so much as vnderstanding men to keepe and deteine the world in ignorance they crie out it is not for you to iudge of what we say If the spirit wherewith Christ and the Apostles were guided ●●d led was the holy Ghost what manner of spirit can this be which leader these men A spirit which would make vs like to painted clouds in a Church or like vnto those little court-cupbord gods of whom it is written k Ps ●15 5 ● They haue months but speake not eyes haue they but they see not they haue eares but they heare not noses haue they but they smell not they haue hands but they handle not feete haue they but they walke not neither speake th●y through their throat they that make them are like vnto them so is euery one that trusteth in them And therefore the spirit of darkenesse who detaines the Christians in darkenesse to the ende he may draw and bring them to the gulfe of outward darknesse with himselfe as it is written l Io. 3.19 20. 21 This is the condemnation that light is come into the world and men loued darkenesse rather then light because their deeds were euill for euery one that doth euill hateth the light neither commeth to the light lest his deeds should be reproued but he that doth truth commeth to the light that his deeds may be made manifest that they are wrought in God Let him therefore that will walke in darknesse As for vs that m Ephes 5.8.11 were sometimes darknesse but now we are light in the Lord we will walke as children of light and will haue no fellowship with the vnfruitfull workes of darkenesse but rather reproue them reioycing and taking pleasure in the light of the Scriptures without and in the direction and conduct of the holy Spirit within vs vntill n Iames 1.17 the father of lights who by his grace o Col. 1.13 hath deliuered vs from the power of darknesse and hath translated vs into the kingdome of his deare sonne p Phil. 1.6 finishing that good worke which he hath begun in vs q Col. 1.12 make vs meete to be partakers of the inheritance of the Saints in light r 1. Iohn 3.2 where wee shall bee like to him and shall see him as he is Amen The ende of the first Booke OF EVANGELICALL COVNSELS The second Booke CHAP. I. I. The Iewish Church hath been of old troubled by false prophets who pretended the name of the word of God and laid claime to it in their false lies II. Saint Peter prophesied that the like should happen vnto the Christian Church by false doctors III. Of this number are they which exalt with puffing words the Monasticall life IIII. Making the people beleeue that it is grounded vpon Euangelicall Counsels whereas there is no such Counsell in the whole Scripture THe Church of the Iewes was very much troubled abused and seduced in her time by the false prophets They saith God
bonum à Christ● nobis non imperatum sed demonstratum non mandatum sed commend●tum c. Bellarmine tells vs that The Counsell of perfection is a good worke not inioyned but demonstrated and sh●wed not commanded but recommended by Christ different from a Precept in respect of the matter or subiect in the forme and in the end In the matter two waies first because the matter of a Precept is easier that of a Counsell more difficult Secondly because the matter of the Precept is good that of Counsels better and perfecter In the subiect because the precept is common to all the Counsell is not In the forme The precept bindes by his owne vertue and power but the Counsels depend on the free iudgement and free will of man In the end because the precept promiseth reward to the obseruer of it threatneth penalty and punishment against the transgressor but the Counsels not obserued hath no penaltie and obserued haue a greater reward The like in substance is written and set downe by the Author of the Pastorall Letter though more obscurely and confusedly III. They forge and inuent lyes and afterwards they define distinguish and amplifie them as truth They define them Counsels of perfection and not onely the name but the thing also is vnknowne in the Scripture That is certaine this may be easily proued by concluding arguments necessarie and indissoluble The greatest perfection that men yea the elect Angels can attaine vnto is that whereby man is made like vnto God and that is commanded to all by our Lord Iesus saying d Matth. 5.48 Be perfect euen as your Father which is in heauen is perfect Let them remaund and send packing their Sophistrie to them which seeke by their disputations the glorie of the world in their victorie not the glorie of God in the victorie of the truth let them not abuse the world with the distinction e Bellar. de Monach c. 13 §. 5. of a necessarie perfection which Christ commaunds to all and of a profitable perfection which hee recommended vnto the rich man counselling him to sell all that hee had to giue it to the poore and to follow him for there is no such beneficiall and profitable perfection as that which make vs perfect as God is perfect there is no perfection so great so to be followed as that which is commanded Christ say they counselled the rich man to sell all that hee had and giue it to the poore that was something but Christ commaunds all f Matth. 5.44 to loue their enemies blesse them that curse you doe good to them that hate you and pray for them which despitefully vse you and persecute you This is a great deale more for a man may bestow all his goods to feede the poore and not haue charitie g 1. Cor. 13.3 according to the testimonie of Saint Paul but none can loue their enemie and not haue charitie IIII. Now charitie h Col. 3.14 is the bond of perfectnesse a bond which doth keepe vs perfectly to God as it is written i 1. Iohn 4.16 God i● loue and hee that dwelleth in loue dwelleth in God and God in him A bond which in God vnites vs one with another makes vs one and the same body in Christ imparts and communicate to euery one that which is in all and makes common to all that which is in euery one It makes thy gift mine and my gift thine and so by the communication of gifts and of all the graues which God hath imparted to euery one it perfecteth the bodie of the Church This is the intention of the Apostle saying k 1. Cor. 3.22 Whether Paul or Apollo or Cophas or the world or life or death or things present or things to come all are yours and yet are Christs and Christ is Gods This is so manifest a truth that Bellarmine himselfe confesseth it faying l Bellar. de Monach c. 2. §. 2. that the true perfection confisteth in charitie we know that it hath many degrees but her highest degree is no other thing then that which shee is namely charitie There is also none but knoweth that without any exception of degrees charitie is commanded and recommended commended to all men as being m Rom. 13.10 1. Tim. 1.5 the end● and fulfilling of the Law to the fulfilling of the which we are bound Therefore charitie being the best perfection and charity being the excellentest and greatest perfection and no worke being acceptable vnto God but that which springeth from faith which worketh by charitie he that seekes for a better and greater perfection by I know not what Counsels is but ill counselled and aduised and hee that perswades himselfe that he may attaine vnto it is ignorant of two things of the excellent perfection of charitie and of the great imperfection of his owne nature an enemie to charitie for n Rom. 8.7 the carnall minde is enmitie against God for it is not subiect to the Law of God neither indeed can bee V. The whole Law is comprised in charitie and this charitie consists in two points o Mark 12.30 31. The first and the greatest is Thou shalt loue the Lord thy God with all thy heart with all thy soule and with all thy strength and with all thy minde The second like vnto this is Thou shalt loue thy neighbour as thy selfe This is that which euery man must doe this is all which the holiest and perfectest man can doe p Eccles 12.13 Feare God and keepe his Commandements for this is the whole dutie of man saith Salomon Wherefore there remaines nothing else to be done God hauing commanded that all the parts of man and all his strength powers and faculties be incessantly and for euer exercised in charity towards him and in charitie towards his neighbour according to him To what purpose then is this cauilling so much To what ende O Bellarmine so great a cloud of expositions diuisions corollaries to darken the Sunne Tell me if man can do more then loue God with all his heart with all his soule with all his minde with all his strength The Angels the Saints that are with God can they doe more then that If no creature heauenly nor earthly If Iesus Christ Man in as much as man though holy without measure could do no more to what purpose then these Counsels After that the whole soule the whole boast the whole minde all the powers and faculties haue been and are imploied and occupied in the loue due to God doth there remaine in vs any part any facultie that may be spared to be imploied and busied in Counsels not commanded not due VI. He thinks to shift off this and saith q Bell. de Monach c. 13. §. 11. that to loue God with all his heart and with all his soule is nothing else but to loue him truely sincerely without faining without dissimulation and that to loue him with all his
they Counsels of perfection If there bee any they are of God or of men If from God all men must follow the for if the requests and desires of Kings are commandements as an Heathen man saith how much more then are the Counsels of the King of Kings and the Lord of Lords who looketh vnto none but such e Esay 66.7 as tremble at his word Christ Iesus said to the Church of Laodicea f Reuel 3.18 I counsell thee to buy of me gold●●ied in the fire that thou maiest bee rich and white ●●●ent that thou maiest bee clothed and that the shame of thy unkednesse doe not appeare and anoint thine eyes with eye-salue that thou maiest see This is the onely place of the whole Scripture in the old and new Testament where God giueth counsell vnto man the Creator to his creature the Lord to his seruant the King of heauen to his subiects dwelling on earth And this Counsell is such an expresse commandement that the Lord hath spewed that Church out of his mouth for not following of the same for he that giues counsell to another desires and wishes that hee would conforme himselfe to it and is sorry yea angry and much offended when it is reiected when especially it is a good and wholesom counsell giuen by the superiour to his inferiour by the father to the son the King to his subiect to hasten to end and to vrge this we say al men are bound g Rom. 12.2 Ephes 5.17 to know and proone what is that good that acceptable and perfect will of God to doe the fame according to the prayer which euery one makes vnto God Thy will be done on earth as it is in heauen All the Counsels of God are the will of God wherefore all men are bound to vnderstand them to proue and doe them All that which wee are bound vnto to doe is a commandement the Counsels of God are things that wee are bound to doe therefore the Counsels of God are commandements Againe God wills and requires that all men practise his Counsels God wills not and requires not that all men should shut vp and mew themselues in a cloister abstaine from marriage carrie a wallet or scrip and go like vagabonds from dore to dore from towne to towne to begge and craue almes for such a life would bee the ruine and destruction of the Commonweale and of the Church Therefore to abstaine from mariage liue in pouertie nourish and sustaine himselfe with the labour and sweat of other men to mew himselfe vp in a Monastery separated from the company of men is not a Counsell of God VIII There are Counsels of perfection If there bee all must aspire vnto them euery man is inclined to it by nature euery one tends and inclines vnto perfection by a naturall principle and instinct euery Christian tends and makes towards the Christian perfection by a spirituall instinct by a principle of grace euery Christian is bound to it by commandement is drawne to it by promise is incited and incouraged by the example of all the Saints h Phil. 4.8 9. Brethren saith the Apostle whatsoeuer things are true whatsoeuer things are honest whatsoeuer things are iust whatsoeuer things are pure whatsoeuer things are louely whatsoeuer things are of good report of there bee any vertue and if there bee any praise thinke on these things Those things which yee haue both learned and receiued and heard and seene in me doe and the God of peace shall be with you If the Counsels are of this ranck and number the Apostle commaunds all men and women to doe them to them that doth them hee makes a promise from God that the God of peace shall be with them If they are not of this number they are neither true nor venerable nor iust nor pure nor louely nor of good report there is no vertue nor praise in them And therefore they are not to bee done but to be eschewed and auoided This is the expresse commandement of our Master Doctor and Sauiour Iesus Christ i Matth. 5.48 Be perfect euen as your Father which is in heauen is perfect this is also the expresse commaundement of Saint Paul k 2. Cor. 13.11 Bee perfect l Heb. 6.1 Let vs goe on vnto perfection To this ende the Scripture hath beene giuen vs m 2. Tim. 3.17 That the man of God may be perfect throughly furnished vnto all good workes For this ende the Lord hath giuen vs Pastors and Doctors n Ephes 4.13 till wee 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 God S. Paul made towards this perfection and laboured to come to it by o Phil. 3.13 14. forgetting those things which are behind and reaching forth vnto those things which are before he pressed towards the marke for the price of the high calling of God in Christ Iesus Noah Iob Abraham all the Saints of the old and the new Testament haue done the like for which cause the Scripture termes them perfect God who accepts in his children the will and willingnesse the pronenes of their mindes and forwardnesse for the deede honouring their holy indeuor and affection with the name of perfection which they did aspire vnto and now enioy and possesse Wee ●ake now if the perfection of Counsels bring to the Monkes and Friers any greater perfection then the measure of the stature of the fulnesse of Christ vnto which all Christians shall attaine and come vnto a perfect man If that cannot bee what vse haue Counsels If it can be there will be some perfection out of Christ and without Christ and some greater perfection then the perfect stature of Christ which is impossible We aske againe if a man in this life can attaine vnto a greater perfection then that which was in Noah Iob Abraham Moses in the Patriarches the Prophets and Apostles If any man shall bee aduanced and exalted in glorie aboue them in the life to come If this be absurd and false to what end and purpose is this warbling and pratling of Counsels which brings to no man any greater excellencie aduantage then that which infinite Saints haue attained vnto which haue neuer bin Monks neuer made vow of continencie neuer carried the bag and wallet neuer followed the Monasticall deuotions Abraham Isaac Iacob Noah Moses c. were great men and rich and liued in the state of matrimony The holy Apostles haue neuer followed any other rule then that which is common to all Christians Pouertie and the forsaking of their goods was neuer imposed to them by Christ and they neuer bound themselues to it by vow as the whole history of the Gospell teacheth vs and p Extr●● Iob. 22. Tit. 14. c. 5. Quia quorundam neque Christum exprepriationem praedictam ●mnis iuris cuin●cunque rei proprietatem eius vsū
Bellarmines words whence it followeth that we ought first to exercise our selues in the obseruation of the Commandements to obtaine the reward and auoide the punishment and that done and not sooner to proceede on to the keeping of Counsels seeing that the not keeping of them is not dammageable and hurtfull to vs by the inflicting and imposing of any punishment and the obseruing of them is not profitable to vs but by the impression of that which they terme Aureola in illa parte II. Now if wee make all them see that haue eyes in their heads that there is no man liuing in this world neuer was any but Iesus Christ the iust neuer shall bee any without some would of conscience hauing a pure heart and without spot thoughts without vice affections without passion and a life in all points innocent none by consequent that euer hath kept or that euer can during his soiourning in this flesh of sinne keepe the Commandements of God Wee will sufficiently proue against Thomas and him which hath translated his little booke that men do toile and labour in vaine after a diligent seeking and inquisition of a greater glorie in the obseruation of Counsels not being able to attaine vnto the first degree of glory by the keeping of precepts that most vainely they seeke perfection in that which is arbitrarie not being able to performe and perfect that which is necessarie for them In a word they abuse themselues in the expectation hope of an vncertain reward for hauing done more then they ought not being able to auoide the certaine punishment for not hauing done that which they ought to haue done And that will we proue not to make men carelesse and negligent but to make them humble not to prouoke them to euill but to make them see and know their disease and miserie to the ende they may seeke their cure in Christ Iesus who ſ Isa 61.1 came to binde vp the broken-hearted III. Man is to be considered in this life two waies out of Christ and altogether such a one as he is by nature not called effectually not iustified in the blood of Christ not sanctified by by the Spirit of God In Christ called iustified sanctified liuing in Christ and hauing Christ liuing in him We need not bring in here the ancient Heathen wee neede not take the paines to goe to the Turkes or search and ransack the Synagogue of the Iewes or transport our selues ouer to those other Nations which haue neuer heard of Christ or which hate Christ and scoffe at his Gospell to finde there men of the first kinde Christendome is full of them the Monasteries are filled with them the priuate houses doe swarme with them As our Sauiour Christ speaking of his Church said t Mat. 20.16 Many be called but few chosen Euen so it is There is an infinite number of Christians u 2. Tim. 3.5 hauing a forme of godlines but denying the power thereof x Tit. 1.16 they professe that they know God but in workes they deuie him being abominable and disobedient and vnto euery good worke reprobate They that are such not hauing the Spirit of Christ Iesus are not his although they are called by his name for such doth he hold them and as to such will he say to them in the last day y Luke 13.27 Matth. 7.23 I tell you I know not whence you are I neuer knew you All they which are of this kinde and stampe in the Church of God as all they also which are out of the Church and know not Christ wee say they cannot doe nor make any good worke yea though they were in the Church Pastors Doctors Bishops Monkes and out of the Church had all the vertues of Solo● Plat● Aristides Epamin●ndas Phoci●n Fabrici●● Camilla and if there were any other among the Heather commendable and praise-worthie for his prudence continencie iustice temperance modestie and other vertues which make men to be admirable among their fellow-companions and to be admired of them In a good worke three things are necessarily required of which the man not regenerate bee hee Christian or Heathen is vnfurnished and destitute A good Author a good course manner and forme a good ende If any of these conditions be wanting he which worketh makes not a good worke hee transgresseth the Law hee taints himselfe with preuarication he binds himselfe to the curse and makes himselfe the childe of hell IIII. The first condition is that hee which doth a good worke be good himselfe Christ our Master hath taught it so when he said z Mat. 12.33 Either make the tree good and his fruit good or else make the tree corrupt and his fruit corrupt for the tree is knowne by his fruit a Mat. 7.18 for a good tree cannot bring forth euil fruit nor a corrupt tree bring forth good fruit Hee compares men vnto trees and saith that they must be first good trees before they can bring any good fruit To be a good tree is to be pleasing and acceptable vnto God that man which thinks and desires to doe a thing that God accepts of and is pleasing vnto him must be first assured that he himselfe is pleasing and acceptable vnto God for it is not the worke that makes the person acceptable vnto God but it is the person which obtaines of God mercie and fauour towards his worke as we reade of Abel and Caine b Gen. 4.4.5 that the Lord had respect vnto Abel and to his offering but vnto Caine and to his offering hee had no respect hee had respect first vnto his person and in the second place to the worke of his person Now man is not a good tree by nature he is by nature c Rom. 11.24 a wilde oliue tree God said of all men considered in their owne nature d Deu. 32.32.33 Their vine is of the vine of Sodom of the fields of Gomorrah their grapes are grapes of gall their clusters are bitter their wine is the poison of Dragons and the cruell venome of Aspes Hee describes them as being nothing worth as starke naught and willing no good thing being able to do nothing as being not onely insufficient and vncapable of good but also most capable of euill vnable and vncapable to thinke say doe the things according vnto God inclined and addicted to things which are displeasing and offensiue to him It is saith he e Isai 9.2 a people malking in darkenesse f Ephes 4.18 hauing the vnderstanding darkened yea a people that is nothing else but darkenesse g Ephes 5.8 ye were sometimes darkenesse saith the Apostle Is there any light in darkenesse which is a ‡ riuation of the light nothing lesse h 1. Cor. 2.14 The naturall man receiueth not the things of the Spirit of God for they are foolishnesse vnto him neither can he know them because they are spiritually discerned This is to describe it both priuatiuely or by
b Rom. 8.14 for as many as are led by the Spirit of God they are the sonnes of God but c Rom. 8. ● if any man haue not the Spirit of God he is none of his Therefore the infidels the hypocrites and all vnregenerated Christians of what religion soeuer they be being destitute of the first qualitie and condition required in a good worke wee may say of them that which our Sauiour Christ said of the Pharisees their companions d Mat. 12.34 O generation of Vipers how can yee being euill speake good things for out of the abundance of the heart the mouth speaketh V. The second condition of a good worke is that it be wel done whereunto is required first that it be conformable vnto the word of God in all things so that he which hath done it may protest with Dauid e Psal 119.105 Thy word is a lampe vnto my feet and a light vnto my path If it declines or swarues neuer so little the workeman of the same is accursed by this sentence and decree f Deut. 27.26 Gal. ● 10 Cursed bee hee that confirmeth not all the words of this Law to doe them Now as God is a Spirit g Rom. 7.14 so the Law is spirituall and is giuen first and principally to the Spirit and is the rule not onely of outward actions but also of the most hidden and secret thoughts of the heart It is not enough that a man lay not violent and bloudy hands on his brother h Mat. 5.22 If he be angr●e with his brother without a cause i 1. Ioh. 3.15 if he hate his brother the Scripture sayes he is a murtherer Hee that hath not actually cōmitted adulterie with his brothers wife if he looks on her to lust after her Christ Iesus sayth k Mat. 5.28 he hath committed adulterie with her already in his heart Which of the Heathen knowes that the Law hath beene written in his heart to the ende it might rule his thoughts which of them hath thought that hidden lust was a vice which of them hath emptied and purged his heart of it what doe wee speake of Infidels How great is the number of our Christians that know not the ten Commandements although there are but ten how few are there of them that know them which thinke on them to conforme their liues according to them To tell them of lust or concupiscence and to condemne it as a sinne is so strange a pa●●doxe vnto them that if God himselfe should come downe from heauen to tell them of it they would not beleeue it so ignorant are they in the knowledge of the true and lawful vses of the Law how then can they order and square their actions by the same This is also the priuiledge of the regenerate to make a benefit of the Law for the direction of his life because God hath ingrauen it in his heart by his holy Spirit which the vnregenerate man knoweth not l Ier. 31.33 I will saith the Lord put my Law in their inward parts and write it in their hearts m Ezech. 36.27 I will put my Spirit within you and cause you to walke in my Statutes and yee shall keepe my Indgements and doe them This hath made Lombard to write after Saint Austin Prosper and other Fathers that n Lombard lib. 2. dist 41. ●t A. where the knowledge of the eternall truth is wanting there vertue is false although the manners and fashions are very good VI. In the next place A worke to bee a good worke well done must be done in faith o Rom. 14.23 for whatsoeuer is not of faith is sinne They which are not renued in the spirit of their mind may be enlightned so farre that they may know the truth and make profession of it and take pleasure in it for a time as Simon Magus and Iudas who beleeued by a temporarie faith but they haue not the iustifying faith p Ephes 3.17 by the which Christ dwelleth in their hearts q Joh. 1.12 Iohn 3.16 which receiue the Lord Iesus r Gal. 3.14 and all the blossing of Abraham through Christ and the promise of the Spirit through faith applying and appropriating it vnto themselues as Thomas which said vnto him ſ Ioh. 20.28.29 My Lord and my God That this is the true faith without equiuocation it appeareth for that the Lord answereth him Thomas because thou hast seene me thou hast beleeued blessed are they that haue not seene and yet haue beleeued And by the words of the Aposile t Gal. 2.20 I liue yet not I but Christ liueth in mee and the life which I now liue in the flesh I liue by the faith of the Sonne of God who LOVED ME and gaue himselfe for ME. A man shall know by her effects if hee haue this faith u Acts 15.9 Faith purifies the heart x Gal. 5.20 workes by loue y 1. Tim. 1.5 for charitie proceedes out of a pure heart and from a good conscience and of faith vnfained They that are not renewed can seele that they haue not this faith for they feele z Tit. 1.15 that their minde and conscience is defiled and therefore they may resolue and conclude with themselues that God detests and abhorrs them and all that they doe because a Heb. 11.6 it is impossible to please him without faith Witnesse among others Cain who offered sacrifice vnto God and was reiected not because the sacrifice was naught but because hee offered it without faith as it is written b Heb. 11.4 By faith Abel offered vnto God a more excellent sacrifice then Cain The Fathers haue acknowledged the same when they said that c Prosper in lib. Epigram epigrammate 81. Lombard lib. 2. dist 41. lit A. The whole life of Infidels is sinne For that also though a man d 1. Co. 13.1.2.3 could speake with the tongues of Angels and had the gift of prophecie and vnderstood all mysteries and all knowledge and though he had all faith so that he could remoue mountaines and though he bestowed all his goods to feede the poore and though he gaue his body to bee burned and hath not charitie he is as sounding brasse or a tinckling cimball he is nothing and all that profiteth him nothing VII The last condition of a good work is that it be done for a good ende e Aug cont Iulian lib. 2. c. 3. The vertues are discerned from the vices non officijs sed finibus not by the outward duties but by their ends saith Saint Austin The ende of euery worke must bee the glory of God who hath giuen vs vertue wifedome and direction for to doe it It ought to be the end of naturall works also f 1. Cor. 10.31 Whether saith the Apostle ye eate or drinke or whatsoeuer ye doe doe all to the glory of God How much more ought it to bee the ende of our
Ephesians y Ephes 2.8.9 By grace are yee saued through faith and that not of your selues it is the gift of God not of workes lest any man should boast referring not our iustification only but also our saluation it selfe vnto the grace of God which we imbrace by faith and excluding from the causes of our saluation our workes without exception yea them which the faithfull doe otherwise hee would not say least any man should boast although hee intendes not to esteeme them or make them vnprofitable and of no vse For saith he z Ephes 2.10 we are his worke-manship created in Christ Iesus vnto good workes which God hath before or deined that we should walke in them A sentence that Saint Bernard vnderstood well when he termed the workes of Saints a Bernard de gratta libéro ar●itrio sub finem viam regni non causam regnandi The way to the Kingdome not the cause of the Kingdome Auant then and farre from vs let all those be that wil diuide and share out the saluation betweene the grace of God and our good workes that say vnto him with the Pharisee b Luk. 18.11 God I thanke thee that I am not as other men are extortioners vniust adulterers we will be humble and referre vnto him all the glory of our saluation in his beginning in his middle in his ende and sing vnto him with Dauid c Psal 115.1 Not vnto vs O Lord not vnto vs but vnto thy name giue glory for thy mercie and for thy Truths sake CHAP. VI. I. The fourth Argument None of the Saints hath euer kept perfectly the Law II. Because they are renewed but in part as it appeares III. By the example of those which were before the Law as of Abel Noah Abraham Isaac Iacob IIII. And by the example of Iob V. By the examples also of them that were vnder the Law as of Moses Aaron their Sister Marie and of all the Priests VI. Item by the example of Dauid VII Of Salomon Ezechias Iosias Daniel and of Esdras VIII And by the Confession of the whole ancient Church BE a 1. Cor. 11.1 ye followers of me euen as I also am of Christ Hee will haue vs to imitate him but with an Euen as not absolutely but conditionally euen as hee imitated Christ and not otherwise for in him there was in the most holiest that haue beene from the beginning of the world there hath been in those that are there is in those that shall come hereafter there wil be things that are not to be imitated but to be abhord not to doe but to eschew and auoide their sinnes b Rom. 11.32 Hieron ad Ch●esiphontem for God hath concluded thē al in vnbeliefe that he might haue mercy vpon all Wherefore to shew that in him alone there is no darkenesse and that in the most holiest there are many cloudes of error which darken their vnderstanding that he is the alone holy onely iust onely good and that all the holy and iust men haue their noblest parts altered by the corruptiō of sin he hath permitted the most approued amongst them the most cherished and beloued of him to slip and fall into the pit of sinne and would that they themselues were his Heralds his Clerkes to publish to write downe their owne sins and the sinnes of their forefathers c Rom. 3.19 That euery mouth may be stopped and all the world may become guiltie before God and that God alone d Rom. 3.26 might be found iust and the iustifier of him which beleeueth in Christ Iesus who alone e Isai 53.9.1 Pet. 2.22 did no sinne neither was guile found in his mouth who alone hath beene able to protest in truth that f Iohn 14 30. The Prince of this world commeth and hath nothing in me being g Basil in Psal 5. much for a man if hee can say hee hath but little and but few things in mee This is our fourth argument whereby we will clearely proue that there hath neuer been any Saint in whom all his old infirmitie hath beene in such wise consumed but that during the dayes of this his perishing life he hath fought an intestine and inward battaile with the same in the which he hath sometimes fainted and fallen downe and hath neuer preuailed in such sorte that he hath beene able to free and exempt himself wholly from sinne h Basil in homil de poenitent I accuse not therefore the righteous but I glorifie God who alone hath been able to prouoke his enemies with this defiance i Iohn 8.46 which of you conuinceth me of sinne Wee reprehend the errour we beate and throw downe the tower and turrers of pride which our Monkes haue built and reared vp thinking to skale Paradise by their workes not commanded not due it being euident and well knowne by the examples of the Saints of old in comparison of whom the most holiest of these times the most retired of our Monkes and Friers are but dung that they are farre from that perfection of those workes that are due II. If Adam had not violated the commandement of his Lord and God and had remained obedient vnto the heauenly mandate he had reserued vnto his owne heires the prerogatiue of a naturall innocencie saith Saint k Ambrosaed Iren. epist 71. Ambrose but affecting to attribute vnto himselfe that which he had not receiued to be like him that had created him he was stript and depriued of that which he had receiued he lost his drachme or piece of siluer and departing from his Fathers table to eate husks the bread of swine he fel vnder and came within the power of the Prince of darkenesse from being able not to sinne to not being able but to sinne hauing lost altogether the libertie of his counsell after he had sold deliuered and inthrald himselfe to him that had guld and cousoned him In this state hath he begotten men in his owne likenesse after his image all which are borne tainted with his pollution and stained with the bands of his death-bringing slauerie and bondage from which seruitude the elect children of God are released and deliuered by him which hath said l Iohn 8.36 If the Sonne shall make you free yet shall be free indeede In this life not to consent vnto sinne and not to walke after their lusts in the life to come not to sinne not to couet at all It is the glorie of Heauen of the heauenly Ierusalem m Reuel 21.27 that there shall in no wise enter any thing that defileth It is the vanitie and shame of the earth that she cannot beare in her bosome any Saint that is not harried and troubled with the fierce and sauage law of sin that hee may say n Prou. 20.9 I haue made my heart cleane I am pure from my sinne For o Gregor Nyss de beatitudin Orat. 6. sin is conceiued borne increaseth and endeth
ser 50. Nec latuit praeceptorem praecepti pondus hominum excedere vires sed iudicauit vtile ex hoc ipso suo illes insufficie●tiae admoneri vt scirent sanè ad quem iustitiae finem niti pro viribus oporteret Ergo mandando impossibilia non praeuaricatores homines fecit sed humiles c. The Master was not ignorant saith Saint Bernard that the burden of the Commandement did surpasse the strength of man but hee thought it good and necessarie that by the very same they should be warned of their insufficiencie that they might know to what ende and marke of righteousnesse they ought to make towards with all their strength and power commanding therefore things impossible he hath not made men preuaricators but humble that euery mouth may be stopped and all the world may become subiect to the iudgement of God because that by the workes of the Law there shall be no flesh iustified in his sight for receiuing the Cōmandements and feeling our defect and want wee will crie vp to heauen and God will haue mercy vpon vs and wee shall know in that day that hee hath saued vs not by the workes of righteousnesse that wee haue done but according to his mercie Secondly because he vnderstands not the language of the Scripture hee restraines the choice to voluntarie and free things to the obseruation of the which man is not bound and compelled by any Law Hee might haue read the words of the Prophet Moses saying to the people of Israel touching the Law x Deut. 30.19 I call heauen and earth to record this day against you that I haue set before you life and death blessing and cursing therefore chuse life that both then and thy seede may liue As also Ioshuahs words to the same people y Ioshua 24.15 If it seeme euill vnto you to serue the Lord chuse you this day whom ye will serue Conformably to this Dauid saith z Psal 119.30 I haue chosen the way of truth thy iudgements haue I laid before me And Saint Cyrill expounds the Prophets words of them which chuse and retaine Christs Testament as Lyrinensis of those that liue righteously and vprightly with their neighbour VII He expounds as falsely these words I will giue vnto them a name better then of sons and of daughters a Bellar. de monach c. 9. parag 3. 9. maintaining that by sons and daughters God meanes those good and godly persons that are married which are Gods sons and daughters and that God promiseth to those which are virgins a greater good and a greater glory then to these What could he say more impertinently then this For to be a sonne and a daughter of God is the common name of all the faithfull and their highest and most excellent title and degree of honour from whence depends all their prerogatiue glory ioy and consolation both in life and death and it is not a name of an inferiour qualitie appertaining onely to some lesse priuiledge Witnesse our Sauiour Christ when he saith To as many as receiued him to them b Iohn 1.12 gaue he power to become the sonnes of God euen to them that beleeue in his name Witnesse God himselfe saying by his Prophets and by his Apostle c Isa 52.11 Ierem. 31.1.9 2. Cor. 6.17.18 Come out from among them and be ye separate saith the Lord and touch not the vncleane thing and I will receiue you and will be a Father vnto you and ye shall be my sonnes and daughters saith the Lord Almightie d Rom. 8.17 And if children then heires heires of God and ioynt-heires with Christ saith the Apostle What may we What can we hope desire wish more It is that which is giuen to honest and good men married persons by Bellarmines confession what remaines then to the Monkes what haue the Friers else a name saith he more excellent then of sonnes of God why then they are not sonnes of God And to maiden Virgins a name better then of daughters of God why then they are not Gods daughters what other name shall we giue them for he which is not the childe and sonne of God is the sonne of rebellion the childe of wrath whose father is the Deuill a name saith he better then of sonnes What greater or better name I pray you can wee haue on earth then to bee sonnes and heires of a King except we were Kings And what better or greater name in heauen then to bee Gods sonne and heire without being God The Angels are called e Iob 1.6 2.1 the sonnes of God The Saints are called the sonnes of God he which is the Sonne of God by nature was manifest in the flesh that we might be made the sonnes of God by grace The holy Ghost is sent into our hearts to assure vs that wee are the sonnes of God f Rom. 8.15.16 Ye haue receiued the Spirit of adoption whereby wee cry Abba Father The Spirit it selfe bear●th witnesse with our spirit that we are the children of God And there is no name in the Scripture so expresse so significatiue and of so large extent for it comprehends in it all the good that God bestowes on his elect and chosen people vnto whom he giues all his blessings in the name title and state of children and out of this state and condition he giue them no spirituall wholesome and sauing blessing VIII Now we shall finde the true sense and meaning of this place if wee adde thereunto that which goes before and that which followes after which hath been industriously and wittingly omitted by Bellarmine lest it should haue hindred hi● bad cause The words going before are Let not the sonne of the stranger that hath ioyned himselfe to the Lord speake saying The Lord hath vtterly separated me from his people neither let the Eunuch say Behold I am a drie tree Here then the stranger and the Eunuch fearing God are ioyned together both of them bewailing their miserie The one because he was separated from Gods people The other because he was a drie tree The Eunuch is first comforted by the wordes of this place whereupon Bellarmine grounds his Counsels The stranger is comforted in the verses following in these words Also the sonnes of the stranger that ioyne themselues to the Lord to serue him and to loue the name of the Lord c. euen them will I bring to my holy mountaine and make them ioyfull in my house of prayer c. The Gentils called by the Prophet the sonnes of the stranger g Ephes 2.12 were at that time without Christ being aliens from the Common-weale of Israel and strangers from the couenants of promise hauing no hope and without God in the world As for the Iewes God made a promise to Abraham their father saying h Gens 22.17 In blessing I will blesse thee and in multiplying I will multiply thy seede as the starres of the heauen and as the sand
certaine Scribe came and said vnto him Master I will follow thee whither soeuer thou goest and he refused him Hee that had been possessed with the Diuell and was deliuered by Christ i Mark 5.18.19 prayed him that hee might be with him but Iesus suffered him not But most commonly to follow Christ is to deny himselfe to take vp the crosse of Christ to rest in him with a true and liuely faith and depend on him in life and death This following is common to all commanded to all men k Mat. 16.24 Whosoeuer saith hee will come after mee let him deny himselfe and take vp his crosse and follow me The Lord would haue this young man to follow him specially in this manner and therefore wee haue said that these words were a commandement of faith for it is with the feete of faith that wee follow the Lord goe to the Lord and obey the Lord. There being therefore no other following of Christ then that which was corporall and of few persons which hath ceased and that which is spirituall common to all the faithfull which is perpetuall there is nothing in this text for the Monkes and Friers For to follow Christ is not to frame and apply himselfe vnto the iudgement and will of another as Bellarmine falsely saith but to frame himselfe vnto the will of Christ alone l Mat. 23.10 who is our only Doctor and teacher whom we must heare and our only patterne whom wee must imitate and our Lord whom wee must obey There is no more due vnto the others how holy soeuer they haue been then to S. Paul that saith m 1. Cor. 11.1 Be ye followers of me euen as I also am of Christ XV. The promise annexed to this commandement is And thou shalt haue treasure in heauen whence Bellarmine inferres that to giue all deserueth a singular and speciall reward This man turnes all the promises that God makes to them which obey him into salaries and wages due and iustly giuen to the merits of men as if the creature could merit of his Creator man which is but a little worme could make God beholding to him and could purchase to himselfe for a little money that glorie which eye hath not seene nor eare heard neither hath entred into the thought of man How much better n Ferus in Mat. c. 19. Ferus expounding this promise Admirable saith he is the goodnesse of God he might exact without any remuneration and damne the disobedient but behold he allures by promises and makes himselfe a debtor he who is debtor to none but vnto whom all creatures are indebted what other thing then can I say then that which Dauid saith o Psal 106.1 Praise yee the Lord O giue thankes vnto the Lord for he is good for his mercie ●ndureth for euer let Israel say he is good God then promiseth vnto men eternall life to draw them to their dutie and hee doth that as a Father whereas hee might compell them as a Iudge He promiseth them that which he owes them not to the end they giue and render that which they owe he giues them that which he promised them not for their merit but for his mercie sake He giues them I say a treasure in heauen this treasure is nothing else but eternall life which onely the rich man asked for which only the Lord promised and was it not enough and more then enough an exchange without proportion of earth for heauen of a treasure of durt and mud for a treasure of an vnspeakable price of the vanitie of riches for the eternall weight of a glorie exceedingly excellent This treasure signifies no other thing in the holy Scripture I will say vnto him that beleeueth otherwise and that seeketh eternall life in his oyle in his gold in his siluer and other corruptible things as S. Peter said vnto Simon Magus p Acts 8.20 Thy money perish with thee because thou hast thought that the gift of God may be purchased with money XVI The rich man hearing that Christs words did import a condition without the which he could not obtaine life euerlasting discouers his hypocrisie and shewing that his money was dearer and more precious to him then his God and the treasure he possessed here on earth was better to him and more esteemed then that which was promised him in heauen goes away sorrowfull and giues Christ occasion to pronounces dreadfull sentence against him and against all rich men that set their hearts on riches and put their trust and confidence in them that they shall neuer enter into the kingdome of heauen q Mat. 19.27.28 Then answered Peter and said vnto him Behold wee haue forsaken all and followed thee what shall we haue therefore And Iesus said vnto them Verily I say vnto you that yee which haue followed me in the regeneration when the Sonne of man shall sit in the throne of his glorie ye shall also sit vpon twelue thrones iudging the twelue tribes of Israel r Bellar. de monach c. 9. §. 32. This is as much saith Bellarmine as if Peter had said Behold wee haue done that which this young man will not doe what wilt thou giue vs therefore Whereunto our Sauiour said not I will giue you nothing for I spake but to this young man and that not in earnest but only that he might not know that he lied He answered not so but said Verily I say vnto you c. This glosse spoiles the text and is contrarie to the truth For the Apostles sold not all they had and gaue not all to the poore for although they had left their ordinary vocation whereby they might haue got their liuing and had left the care of their domesticall businesse to follow Christs calling they renounced not for all that the possession the right and prerogatiue nor left the vse thereof when they were in those places The historie sheweth plainly that after ſ Mat. 9.10 Luk. 5.29 Matthew had followed Christ he made him a great feast in his owne house Yea Peter that said these things had yet his house as it is written t Mat. 8.14 When Iesus was come into Peters house he saw his wiues mother laid and sicke of a feuer Christ telling his disciples what should befall them at his death saith he not u Iohn 16.32 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in propria The houre commeth yea is now come that ye shall be all scattered euery man to his owne And being vpon the Crosse said vnto Iohn touching the Virgin x Iohn 19.27 Behold thy mother is it not said that from that hower that Disciple tooke her 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 vnto his owne home They had therefore yet their houses and therfore Bellarmine imputes vnto them a lie in making them say Behold we haue done that which this young man will not doe For they had not sold all nor giuen all but it appeares by the last Chapter