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A10966 A treatise vpon sundry matters contained in the Thiry nine Articles of religion, which are professed in the Church of England long since written and published by Thomas Rogers. Rogers, Thomas, d. 1616.; Rogers, Thomas, d. 1616. Faith, doctrine and religion professed in England. 1639 (1639) STC 21233; ESTC S1674 207,708 274

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desired his Majesty to take them out a new Lesson as did the 71 Brethren of Suffolke are not to be liked Neither can we extoll the goodnesse of our God sufficiently toward our King and us all for inspiring his royall heart with holy wisedome to discerne these unstayed and troublesome spirits and inabling his Highnesse with power and graces from above to decree orders and directions for the generall benefit and peace of the whole Church neither suffered he his eyes to sleepe nor his eye-lids to slumber nor the temples of his head to take any rest till he had set them downe afore all other though never so important and weightie affaires of the Crowne and Kingdome King James patronizeth the Doctrine and Religion countenanced by Queene Elizabeth 26 My selfe have read and thousand thousands with an hundred thousand of his Subjects besides have either read or heard of Proclamations after Proclamations to the number of sixe or seven at the least of bookes and open speeches of his Majesty uttered in the Parliament House and all of them made vulgar within a yeare and little more after his happy ingresse into this kingdome and taking the administration of this most famous nourishing Empire upon himself whereby the doctrine in this Land allowed publikely graced and imbraced of all sorts at his entrance into the Realme hath bin not onely acknowledged to be agreeable to Gods Word sincere and the very same which both his Highnesse and the whole Church and kingdome of Scotland yea and the Primitiue Church professed but also by his authoritie Regall and paramont as one of the maine pillers supporting his Estate ratified to continue and all hope either of allowing or tolerating in this kingdome of any other doctrine religion or faction whatsoeuer opposite or any way thwarting the Faith and confession of the Church of England in most plaine pithy and peremptory words and speeches cut off The yeere 92. was not more famous for the Vniformity of doctrin in religion then concluded then the yeere 1604. Domii incarnati An. 1604. is memorable and will be for seconding the same neither got the Clergie in those dayes more credit in composing the Articles of our Vnitie in Faith then did the last Conuocation whereat your Grace then Bishop of London was present and President in ratifying the Acts and Articles of their Antecessors neither was Q Elizabeth more honoured in establishing them at the first then is our K. Iames renowned and more and more will be for approouing vnder the great Seale of England the late and last Constitutions and Canons Ecclesiasticall 27. Subscription the third time vrged Whereby no person shall hereafter bee receiued into the ministery nor neither by Institution or Collation admitted to any Ecclesiasticall liuing nor suffered to Preach to Catechize or to be Lecturer or Reader of Diuinitie in either Vniuersitie or any Cathedrall or Collegiat Church Citie or Market towne Parish Church Chappell or in any other place in this Realme except c. and except he shall first subscribe to these three Articles c. Whereof the third is that he alloweth the booke of Articles of Religion c. Nor any licenced to Preach Reade Lecture or Catechize comming to reside in any Diocesse shall be permitted there to Preach Reade Lecture Catechize or minister the Sacraments or to execute any other Ecclesiasticall function by what authoritie soeuer he be thereunto admitted vnlesse he first consent and subscribe to the three Articles Neither shall any man teach either in publike schoole or in private house except he shall first prescribe to the first and the third Articles simply c. Neither shall any man be admitted a Chancellor Commissary or Officiall to exercise any Ecclesiasticall jurisdiction except c. and shall subscribe to the Articles of Religion agreed upon in the Convocation in the yeare 1562. c. And likewise all Chancellours Commissaries Registers and all other that doe now possesse or execute any places of Ecclesiasticall jurisdiction or service shall before Christmas next in the presence of the Archbishop or Bishop or in open Court under whom or where they execute their offices take the same Oathes and subscribe as before he said or upon refusall so to doe shall be suspended from the execution of their Offices untill they shall take the said Oaths and subscribe as aforesaid 28. In which Constitutions the wisedome of his Highnesse sheweth it selfe to be excellent who indeed as exceeding necessary both for the retaine of peace in the Church and preventing of new doctrine curious speculations and offences which otherwise daily would spring up and intolerably encrease calleth for Subscription in testimony of mens cordiall consent unto the received doctrine of our Church but exacteth not their Oathes as some doe much lesse Oathes Vowes and Subscription too but onely in a particular respect and that of a very few in publike office as our neighbours have done Againe he requireth Subscription but not of civill Magistrates not of the Commons as else where some doe not of every man yea of women aswell as of men as did the persecuted Church at Franckeford in Queene Maries daies not of Noble Gentlemen and Courtiers as in Scotland was Enacted in our Kings minoritie but only of Ecclesiasticall Ministers Teachers and spirituall Officers or of those which would be such Of the Subscription called for and so doe the reformed Churches in France and Germany at this very day Last of all his Majestie calleth for Subscription unto Articles of Religion but they are not either Articles of his own lately deuised or the old newly turkened but the very Articles agreed vpon by the Archbishops and Bishops of both Prouinces and the whole Clergie in the Conuocation holden at London and that in the yeere of our Lord God 1562. a Cant. 2.127 and vnto none other euen the same Articles for number thirtie nine b Ibid. no moe no fewer and for words sillables and letters the very same vnaugmented vndiminished vnaltered 29. And being the same the whole world is to know that the Church of England is not in religion changed The Church of England settled and constant in her Religion or variable like the Moon nor affecteth noueltie or new lessons but holdeth stedfastly conscionably that truth which by the Martyrs and other Ministers in this last age of the world hath bin restored vnto this kingdome and is grounded vpon Gods written Word the onely foundation of our Faith And being the same all men again may see that we are still at Vnitie both among our selues at home and with the neighbour Churches abroad in all matters of chiefest importance and fundamentall points of religion though our aduersaries the Papists would faine beate the contrary into the common peoples heads And being the same there is now as also from the first restauration of the Gospell among vs there hath beene an Vniformitie likewise of doctrine by authoritie
A TREATISE VPON SVNDRY MATTERS CONTAINED IN THE THIRTY NINE Articles of Religion which are professed in the Church of ENGLAND Long since written and published by THOMAS ROGERS Rom. 16. verse 17. I beseech you brethren marke them diligently which cause divisions and offences contrary to the doctrine which ye have received and avoide them LONDON Printed by JOHN LEGATT and are to be sold by RICHARD THRALE at the signe of the Crosse-keyes at Pauls Gate 1639. TO THE MOST REVEREND FATHER in God and his Right Honourable good Lord RICHARD by the Divine providence Archb. of Canterbury and Primate of England and Counceller to the most High and Mighty Prince JAMES King of Great Britaine France and Ireland MOst Reverend Father in God there is no one thing in this world that of men truely zealous and Christian in these latter dayes of the world with greater earnestnesse hath bin desired then that by a joynt and common consent of all the Churches rightly and according to the Canons of the sacred Scriptures reformed there might be a draught made and divulged containing and expressing the sum and substance of that Religion which they doe both concordably teach and uniformely maintaine That holy man of happy remembrance D. Cranmer who sometime enjoyed that roome in our Church Arch. Cranmer which your Grace now worthily possesseth in the dayes of that most godly yong Prince K. Edward the sixt employed a great part of his time and study for the effecting of that work and imparted his thoughts with the most principall persons and of rarest note in those dayes for their wisedome piety and credit among the people of God throughout Christendome Mr. Calvin understanding of his intent addressed his letters unto the said Archbishop and offred his service saying That might his labours stand the Church in stead Ne decem quidem maria it would not grieve him to saile over ten Seas to such a purpose But this proving a worke of much difficulty if not altogether impossible in mens eyes especially in those dayes to be brought about Vnity of doctrine in all Churches reformed the next course and resolution was that every Kingdome and free State or Principality which had abandoned the superstitions and Antichristian Religion of the Church of Rome and embraced the Gospell of Christ should divulge a Briefe of that Religion which among themselves was taught and beleeved and whereby through the mercy of God in Christ they did hope to be saved Which to Gods great glory and the singular benefit and comfort of all Churches both present and to come as the extant Harmony of all their confessions doth most sweetly record with no great labour was notably performed This worke of theirs told the Churches in those dayes and doth us and will informe our posterity that not only in every particular State and Kingdom but also throughout Christendome Ab initio reformationis ardebant amore veritatis omnes Politici Ecclesiastici Plebeii Jezler de diutur belli Euchar pag. 49. Vnity of doctrine in the Church of England in King Edward the sixt his dayes where the Gospel was entertained the Primitive and Apostolicall daies of the Church were again restored For the multitudes of them that did beleeve I speake both joyntly of all and severally of each reformed people not of every particular person fantastique false apostles and perverse teachers or professors in any Church who were not wanting even in the Apostles dayes touching the maine and fundamentall points of true Religion were then of one heart and of one soule and did think and speake one thing and live in peace 3. The said Archbishop for unto whom better after God and the King can we ascribe the glory of this worthy Act wrought this Vnity Vniformity of doctrine in this Kingdome in the Halcyon dayes of our English Iosias K. Edward the sixt of that name and the same doctrine so by his meanes established in the time of peace a notable work of peace like a manly heroicall and heavenly Captaine under our Generall Iesus Christ he resolutely even with his heart bloud and in the fiery torments afterwards confirmed in the dayes of persecution A certain learned man Anno 1552. speaking of the Religion here then professed and writing unto the Lords of our late Queenes Councell doth say he meaning the Papist his adversary who charged our Church with discord and disagreements about matters of Religion K. Edward the 6. Hee ought said he if hee had beene able to have brought out the publike Confession and Articles of faith agreed in K. Edwards time and have shewed any in England that professing the Gospel dissenteth from the same So esteemed he and with him many thousands of learned and judicious men of the doctrine then ratified by authority and professed in this Kingdome But those dayes of our Churches peace continued not long through our unthankfulnesse Q. Mary and sinnes neither on the other side was our persecution permanent through the goodnesse of God though for the time exceeding vehement and violent For nubecula fuit citò transiit It vanished away quickly as doe many raging stormes even upon the sudden yet not through the power of Gunpowder and treasons but through the force of ardent prayers unto the Almighty For arma ecclesiae preces 4. We find that Mr. Latimer that sacred The prayers of the persecuted Saints for the reducing of true Religion into the Realme F. Latimer and reverend Father addicted himselfe very seriously in those dayes unto the exercise of prayer and his principall and most usuall prayers were first for himselfe next for the afflicted Church of England and lastly for Lady Elizabeth that deceased King Edwards and Queene Maries sister For himselfe he prayed that as God had made him 〈◊〉 Minister and Preacher of his truth so hee might constantly beare witnesse unto the same and have the grace power to maintain it in the face of the world even till the houre of his death For the Church of England he prayed that God would be pleased once againe to restore the free preaching of the Gospell to this Realme and this with all possible fervency of Spirit he craved at the hands of God And for Lady Elizabeth that he would preserue and make her a comfort to his then comfortlesse people in England And the Almighty and our heavenly Father both heard and granted all and every of his petitions Mr. Gualter that learned painfull and excellent Divine at Tigure dedicating his holy and Christian Comments upon the lesser Prophets unto D. Parkhurst B. Parkhurst Bishop of Norwich who in the dayes of the forementioned Q. Mary voluntarily had exiled himselfe so farre as Switzerland for his preservation if it might be unto better times saith of the said Parkhurst that when he lived in Tigure Lady Elizabeth was ever in his mouth her Faith her wisedome her magnanimous spirit her virgineous and chaste behaviour he would
offreth it selfe by their ministery to the view of the whole world which afore did but peepe out at the Screene and what the things be which they of meane gifts doe see and our Fathers and the Martyrs Bishops and Preachers both in King Edwards dayes and afterwards knowne and acknowledged to be men of excellent parts either did not see at all or ouersee and what likewise the points of doctrine newly now reuealed their aternum Euangelium which without great danger may not be preached in England no more then the doctrine and Articles of the Church of England may be preached at Rome and for defence whereof they ought to afford euen their very liues were they so many as the haires of euery of their heads is and be they demonstrate themselues to be most childishly vaine and idle in their imaginations which they take yet to bee illuminations of the spirit 13. For all their doings The vncouth doctrine of the factious Brethren and discourses to say the best of them are but to erect a new which they tearme a true ministery and their Discipline among vs. Themselues doe say The controuersie betwixt them and vs is not as the Bishops and their wil-willers they would beare the world in hand for a Cap a Tippet or a Surplesse but for greater matters concerning a true ministery and regiment of the Church according to the word the one whereof that is a true ministery they shall neuer haue till Archbishops and Bishops be put downe and all ministers made equall the other also will neuer be brought to passe till Kings and Queenes doe subiect themselues vnto the Church and submit their scepters and throw downe their Crownes before the Church and lick vp the dust of the feete of the Church and willingly abide the censures of the Church that is of the Presbytery For as the Church is subiect vnto the ciuill magistrate in respect of his civill authority so must the Magistrate the King and Queene subiect themselues and be obedient to the iust and lawfull authority of the Church The ciuill magistrate is none officer at all of the Church For Church-officers be non Magnates aut Tetrarchae not gracious or honorable Lords but Ministers of the Church The Presbytery is the Church and euery Congregation or Church should and must in it haue a Presbytery This is the Light which indeed the Martyrs neuer saw the Religion which our Brethren striue for the Truth which they may not preach not childish doctrine like the Bishops Articles but the wise Gospel the maine and materiall points of Religion now in the dayes last of all yea after the eighth Thorow breaking of H. N. his Euangelium regni reuealed and for furtherance whereof they are to lend and spend euen all their liues if occasion be ministred 14. Strange and strong delusions First to take these and other such assertions for Truths and heauenly mysteries which are but the fancies of troubled braines not grounded nor truly gathered from Gods Word Next to teach one another and all their fauourers how they should be as ready and prepared euen for these matters to give other their liuings and to giue their liues were they as many as the haires of all their heads as Cranmer Ridly Latimer did and Parker Grindall and all other Preachers would and euery Christian man and woman should if they be called thereunto for the Apostolicall and Catholique doctrine of our Church which all Gods people doe know and the Brethren themselues as afore hath bin noted doe confesse is originally from God and his written Word These and many moe too many here to be recapitulated such phantasies of theirs or phrensies rather this first subscription brought first to light and yet happy had it bin for Gods Church and people they had neuer bin broached Of the second Subscription vrged an 84. 15. Semblably the next subscription called for by the last Archb. your L. predecessor an 84. discouered euen the very thoughts and desires of those Brethren before but now stiled faithfull Brethren which haue and doe seeke for the Discipline reformation of the Church Many Treatises afore but now and diuers yeeres ensuing they flew about and abroad like Atomies and by them the same things which afore but in a differing sort and in other words they publish For touching Church officers they name who and how many sorts they be of them viz. Doctors Pastors Gouernors Deacons and Widdowes no moe no fewer They say euery Church must be furnished with a Teacher and a Pastor as with two eyes with elders as with feet with Deacons as with hands Euery Congregation must haue eyes hands and feete and yet neither all nor at all any Congregation is to haue an Head answerable to those Feet Hands and Eyes The Doctor by their doctrine must be a distinct minister from the pastor and onely teach true doctrine and neither exhort nor apply his doctrine according to the times and his auditory nor minister the Sacraments For these things the pastor is to performe Which pastor also whensoeuer he administreth the Sacraments must necessarily make a Sermon or else he committeth Sacriledge And concerning discipline by their doctrine euery Congregation must haue absolute authority to admonish to censure to excommunicate and to anathematize all offending persons yea euen Kings and Princes if they be of the Congregation And no Prince but must be of some Parish and vnder one Presbytery or other alwayes Where this power is not in their iudgements one of the tokens of a true Church is wanting For this Discipline with them is a marke of the Church and numbred among the Articles of their Faith 16. This say they is the great cause the holy cause which they wil neuer leaue suing for though there should be a thousand Parliaments in their dayes vntil either they obtaine it or bring the Lord in vengeance and blood against the State and the whole land for repelling the same The Brethrens diuine conceipts of their Discipline The discipline is Gods holy yoke Gods scepter the kingdome and throne of Christ Our controuersie say they whether Iesus Christ shall be King or no. Againe the end of all our trauell is to build vp the walles of Ierusalem and to set vp thē Throne of Iesus Christ our heauenly King in the midst thereof the aduancing whereof is a testimony vnto vs that we shall haue part in that glory which shall be reuealed hereafter So learne we now from their said bookes learned and demonstratiue discourses which the Fathers and our forefathers neuer saw nor had learned both that their Discipline established and exercised is a visible marke of a true Church and to desire the aduancement of the same an inuisible token of an elect childe of God so as neither is that a Church at least no true Church where their Discipline is not neither they but titular Christians no true Christians indeed which either sigh or seeke not to
established which at the Kings first arriuall among vs was so much desired by the Brethren And finally being the same let vs not doubt but perswade our selues that we shal find the Antichristian Church of Rome too the same which for the same doctrine and for none other cause persecuteth al Christian Churches but ours of England especially with sword fire and power in most horrible yea and hellish manner the effect of whose hatred against vs as we have often seene so especially had we felt the same the next yeere after our Kings ratification of these Articles had not our euer mercifull God most miraculously detected both the Treason and Traitors Ann. 1605 For which his fauours his holy Name be glorified of vs and our posterity throughout all generations The Brethren no changelings 36. So our Church is the same But the Brethren the faithfull and godly Brethren too the same now which they haue also beene If they be then will they not deny which An. 72. they writ that we hold the substance of religion with them nor which An. 602. they published and is afore remembred that the true Faith by which we may be saued and the true doctrine of the Sacraments and pure worship of God be truely taught that by publike authority and retained in the booke of Articles And in this Confession I pray God they may constantly perseuere Howbeit euen these men which in a generality doe allow the doctrine of our Church being called by authority to acknowledge their assent vnto every Article thereof in particular they doe not a little debase the estimation of this doctrine of ours and shew themselues but too apparent and professed dissentors from the same And though all of them doe and will approoue some yet not one of them will subscribe vnto all and every of the Articles For vnto the articles of religion and the Kings supremacy they are willing to subscribe And they may subscribe as afore hath beene noted vnto such of them as containe the summe of Christian Faith the doctrine of the Sacraments But vnto the same Articles for number 36. agreed vpon in this Conuocation at London an 62. they neither wil nor dare nor may subscribe For neither the rest of the Articles in that booke nor the Booke of common prayer may be allowed no though a man should be depriued from his ministery for it say the said brethren in a certaine Classicall decree of theirs The late Polititian is not afraid to mooue the high and most honorable Court of Parliament that Impropriation may bee let to Ferme vnto incumbent ministers viz. which faithfully preach in the Churches the true doctrine of the Gospell according to the Articles of Religion concerning faith and Sacraments meaning that such Ministers as preach the same doctrine if they proceed to the rest of the Articles concerning either Conformitie in externall and ceremoniall matters or Vniformitie in other points of doctrine contained in that booke should not be partakers of that benefit or of Benefices Impropriate 31. If it be demanded what the causes may be Why the Br. will subscrib vnto some but not vnto all the Articles why they will vnto some but will not vnto all or why they will vnto those Articles which concerne Faith and the Sacraments but will not vnto the rest subscribe The reasons thereof be two whereof The one is for that in their opinion there is no Law to compell them to subscribe vnto all For say the Brethren resiant I know not where Wee have alwayes beene ready to subscribe to the Articles of Religion concerning the doctrine of Faith and of the Sacraments which is all that is required by Law Also the Brethren in Deuonshire and Cornewall We are ready say they to subscribe to the third which concerneth the Booke of Articles of Religion so farre as wee are bound by Statute concerning the same viz. as they concerne the doctrin of the Sacraments and the confession of the true faith And the 22. London Brethren tell King Iames to his head how the Subscription which he calleth for is more then the Law requireth Their other reason is because as the Lincolnshire doe say sundry as the London Brethren affirme many things in that booke be not agreeable but contrary to Gods Word 32. If these things be true which they doe alleadge surely then are those men to be chronicled for the Faithfull the godly and innocent Brethren indeed whom neither present Benefices can allure nor the angry countenance and displeasure of a King even of the puissant powerful King of great Brittaine can force to doe anything at his becke and pleasure either against Law or for which there is no law and who had rather to forgoe all their earthly commodities liuings yea and to goe from their charges and ministery and to expose themselues their wiues and children to the miseries of this world grieuous for our flesh and blood to endure then to approue any thing fob true sound by their hands which is opposite or not agreeable to the reuealed will and Scriptures of God But if these allegations of theirs be but weake and sinfull surmises or rather apparantly most false scandalous and slanderous imputations to their Prince their mother Church and this State then doubtlesse as they euen Christians now liuing cannot but take them so ages to come will euerlastingly note and censure them both for disloyall Subiects that so traduce a truly and most Christianly religious King ill deseruing children that so abuse their honorable and reuerand Fathers and superiours of State and authority turbulent spirits not peaceable men which raise such broiles troubles and diuisions in the Church and Kingdome the issues whereof no tongue can foretell and are fearefull being thought of without cause and finally neither faithfull nor godly Preachers but vngodly broachers of vntruthes and slanders and the very authors and fautors of horrible confusion and faction in Gods Church whose peace they should seeke and promote euen with their dearest blood 33. Since the Statute for Vniformity in rites and doctrine was first enacted moe then 35. yeeres haue passed in all which space neither the Brethren now being nor the Brethren afore them liuing haue hitherto shewne of the 39. Articles for names and titles Which for number How many the Articles be which Ecclesiasticall Ministers necessarily must how many which they may not or need not vnlesse they list subscribe vnto which I am sure they or some of them at one time or other would have expressed had the Law fauoured there recusancy and they bin able to have justified their Maxime which is That they are not compellable by subscription to approoue them all Againe since the first establishment of that Statute Law the most reuerend Fathers and truly reformed Ministers of this Church sound for iudgement profound for learning zealous for affection sincere for religion faithfull in their Churches painefull in their charges more
THE CATHOLIKE DOctrine beleeued and professed in the Church of England 1. Article Of Faith in the holy Trinitie There is but 1 one liuing and true God euerlasting without body parts or passions of infinite power wisedome and goodnesse 2 the Maker and preseruer of all things both visible and inuisible 3 And in vnitie of this God-head there be three persons of one substance power and eternitie the Father the Sonne and the holy Ghost The Propositions 1. There is but one God who is liuing true everlasting c 2. God is the Maker and preseruer of all things 3. In the vnitie of the God-head there is a Trinitie of persons 1. Proposition There is but one God who is liuing true euerlasting without bodie parts passions of infinite power wisedome and goodnesse The proofe from Gods Word THat there is but one God who is c. is a truth which may be gathered from the all-holy and sacred Scripture and is agreeable to the doctrine of the reformed Churches For both Gods Word giueth vs to know that God is one and no more a Thou shalt have none other Gods before me Exod. ●0 3. the Lord our God is Lord onely Deut. 6.4 Who is God beside the Lord Psal 18 31. Hath not one God made us Mal. 2.10 There is none other God but one 1 Cor. 8.4 liuing b Mine heart and my flesh rejoyce in the living God Psal 84 2 Yee are the Temple of the living God 2 Cor 6.16 For a long season Israel hath been without the true God 2 Chr. 15 3. The Lord is the Lord of truth he is the living God and an everlasting King Ier. 10.10 This is life eternall that they know thee to be the onely very God c. Ioh. 17 3. Ye turned to God from idols to serve the living true God 1 Thess 1.9 and true God c everlasting d O my God c. thy yeere endur from generation to generation c. thy yeeres shall not faile Psal 102.24 26 27. He is the living God and remaineth for ever Dan 6.16 without body parts or passions e O Lord my God thou art exceeding great thou art clothed with glory and honour which covereth himself with light as with a garment c Psal 104 1 c God is a Spirit Ioh. 4.24 The Lord is the Spirit 2 Cor. 3.17 He is not a man that he should repent 1 Sam. 15.29 I will not execute the fiercenesse of my wrath I will not return to destroy Israel for I am God and not man Hosh 11.9 of infinite power f The sound of the Cherubins wings was heard into the utter court as the voyce of the Almightie God when he speaketh Ezek. 10.5 I will be a Father unto you c. saith the Lord Almightie 2 Cor. 6.18 We give thee thanks Lord God Almightie Rev. 16.17 wisedome g Great is our Lord and great is his power his wisedome is infinite Psal 147.5 To God onely wise be honour and glory for ever and ever 1 Tim. 1.17 To God I say onely wise be praise through Iesus Christ for ever Amen Rom. 16.27 and goodnesse h Praise ye the Lord because he is good for his mercy endureth for ever Psal 106.1.107.1 108. 1 c. and Gods people in their publike confessions from Ausburgh i Art 1. Heluetia k Confes 2. ar 2. Bohemia l c 3. France m art 1 Flanders n art 2. and Wittembergh o c. 1. testifie the same Errors and adversaries vnto this truth Then impious and execrable are the opinions of Diagoras and Theodorus who flatly denyed there was any God a Deos 〈◊〉 dubita●a● Protagoras nullos esse ●ma●ue D●agoras Theodotus Cyreniacus pu●●v●runt M. ● Ci● de Nat Deo l. 1. Of Protagoras b Protagoras Deos in dubium v●cauit Diager a● exclusit Lactan. de fal Rel. cap. 2 and the Machiuillian Atheists which are doubtfull whether there be a God Of such as fained unto themselves divers and sundry gods as did the Manichies c Aug. contra Manich. l. 2. c. 1 2. the Basilidians d Clemen Alex. 〈◊〉 l 5. the Valentinians e Valentinus triginta Deorum praed●cator saith Cyril Catech. 6. the Messalian heretikes f Epiph Exod. 32. the Gentiles and heathen people whereof some in place of God worshipped Beasts vnreasonable as the AEgyptians did a Calfe g an Oxe Cats Vulturs and Crocodils h Gand. M. ●rula de mirabi l 3. c. 56. The Syrians a Fish i Piscem Syrae venerantur Cic. de Senect Merula de mirabl l. 3. c. 48. and Pigeons k the Persians a Dragon l Histor of Bel. some as Gods have adored men vnder the names of Iupiter Mars Mercury and such like m Gods are come downe to vs in the likenesse of men and they called Barnabas Iupiter and Paul Mercurius c. Then Iupiters priest c. Acts 14.11 c Who knowes not that the City of the Ephesians is a worshipper of the great goddesse Diana Act. 19.35 and some even at this day for God doe worship Kine the Sunne and what they thinke good so the inhabitants of Baly in the East Indies n Voiage of the Holland ships Of the Anthropomorphites which ascribed the forme and lineaments of man vnto God o Theodoret l. 4. c. 10. thinking God to be like vnto man Of such as put their trust and confidence to be reposed in God alone either in men liuing as doe both the Persians in their Soldan p Tu es nostra fides inte credimus will the Persians say unto the Soldan P. B●zarus rerum Persic l. 1 ● and the Papists in their Pope who with them is God q Panormit C. quanto Abbas their Lord and God r Extravag Ioan. 22. of infinite power ſ Extravag de transl epist Quanto or in Saints departed this life as doe the same Papists both in their S. Francis whom they tearme The glory of God prefigured by Esay when he said Holy Holy Holy t Alcar Francisc lib. 1. c. and in their Thomas Becket whom they say God hath set ouer the workes of his hands u Horae B. virginis Ma. secundum usum Sarum pa. 15. or in Beasts vnreasonable as doth the Mordwite Tartar x Russe Common-weale c. 19. or finally in riches and other senselesse creatures as doe the Atheists and irreligious worldlings 2. Proposition God is the Maker and preserver of all things The proofe from Gods Word THat the world and all things both visible and inuisible therein both where made and are preserued by the Almighty and only power of God are truthes grounded vpon the holy Scripture and agreeable to the confessions of Gods people For touching the creation of the world we reade that in the beginning God created the heauen and the earth a Gen. 11 c. c. He made heaven and earth
no sect euer erred or were out of the way to heauen a fancy of the Rhetorians k D. Aug ep ad Quod vult 1. Proposition No man euer was is or shall be saued but onely by the name or Faith of Iesus Christ The proofes from Gods Word This we cannot but acknowledge to be true if also we beleeue the Scriptures which say that Among men there is giuen none other name vnder heauen whereby we must be saued a Acts. 4.12 Through Iesus Christ his name all that beleeue in him shall receiue remission of sinnes b Acts 10.43 In thee viz. Christ Iesus shall all the Gentiles be blessed c Gal. 3.8 And this is the Faith and confession of the reformed Churches d Con● s Helv. 2. ar 10 11. 2 cap. 11.13 Basil ar 4 Bohem c. 4.10 Gal. ar 13.16 17 Belg. ar 17.20 21.22 August an ar 3. Saxon. ●r 3. Wittemb c. 8. Suc vica ●r 9. sect 2. they revolted The errors and adversaries unto this truth Many wayes this truth very heretically is oppugned For Some teach that we are saved not by Christ but as the Valentinians said by the labour of their hands and by their own good works a Iren lib. 1. as Simon Magus boasted by his faire Helene b Iren. as Matthew H man● he●d by other meanes and that all persons which worshipped Christ are abominable Idolaters c Holinsh chro fol. 299. as N●userus and Silvanus beleeved by Mahomet d ● za resp ad repetit Io. And. Cal. p. ● and therefore he revolted from Christianity unto Turcisme Others confesse that wee are saved by the name of Christ but either not by the right and true Christ for they said themselves and every of themselves were Christ and in old time did Saturnius e Epiphan● Manes f Euseb l. 7. c. 31. Desider Burd●gal and Eudo de Stella g Genebr chr l. 3. p 358. 709. and of late yeares as Basil David George h Hist David Georgii and in England first one Iohn Moore i S●ow and afterward William Hacket k Conspit for pretend refor● the former was whipt for the same at Bethlehem in the second of Queene Elizabeth the other hanged and quartered in Cheap side Ann. 1591. Or by the true Christ but either distinguish betweene Iesus and Christ saying Iesus was one man and Christ another as did the Marcionites l Philaster Or say there be two Christs one revealed already in the dayes of Tiberius the Emperour who came for the salvation of the Gentiles another yet to come for the redemption of the Iewes so tho ght the same Marcionites m Tertul. l. 4. contr Marc. Nestorius held also there were two Christs whereof one was very God the other very man borne of a woman n Vincen. Li● adv haereses Or publish how 〈◊〉 ●e were saved by the true Christ till the 15. yeare of the foresaid Tiberius an heresie of Manes and his company o Epiphan Others besides as the Family of Love understand all things written of Christ allegorically and not according to the letter of Gods Word For they teach that whatsoever is written of Christ must in us and with us be fulfilled p H.N. proph of the Spi. c. 7. sect 3. Others have thought yea have spoken blasphemously of the constant and holy Martyrs who for the Name of Christ gave their lives in England in the raigne of Queene Mary some saying They were starke fooles as did Christopher Vitel a chiefe Elder in the Family of Love q Ans to the Fam. let l 3. a. others as West phalus and Morbachius that they were the Divels martyrs r Sturmius an●● ap 4. par 3. p. 189. 19. Article Of the Church 1 The visible 2 Church of Christ 3 is a congregation 4 of faithfull men in the which 5 the pure Word of God is preached and the Sacraments be duly ministred according to Christs ordinance in all those things that of necessitie are requisite to the same As 6 the Church of Ierusalem Alexandria and Antioch hath erred so also 7 the Church of Rome hath erred not onely in their living and manner of ceremonies but also in matters of Faith The Propositions 1. There is a Church of Christ not onely invisible but also visible 2. There is but one Church 3. The visible Church is a Catholike Church 4. The Word of God was and for time is before the Church 5. The markes and tokens of the visible Church are the due and true administration of the Word and Sacraments 6. The visible Church may and from time to time hath erred both in doctrine and conversation 7. The Church of Rome most shamefully hath erred in life ceremonies and matters of faith 1. Proposition There is a Church of Christ both invisible and visible The proofe from Gods Word A True saying it is The Lord onely knoweth who are his For to man the Church of Christ is partly invisible and visible partly The visible are all the Elect who be or shall be either in heaven triumphing or on earth fighting against the flesh the world and the Divell These as members of the Church are said to be invisible not because the men be not seene but for that their faith and conscience to Godward is not perfectly knowne unto us The members of the visible Church are some of them for God and some against God all of them notwithstanding deemed parts of the Church and accounted faithfull so long as they make no manifest and open rebellion against the Gospel of Christ All this we gather from the holy Scripture where mention is made of the Church invisible and triumphing Rev. 2.26 28. and 3.5 12. and 7.14 15. invisible and militant in the Epistles of St. Paul a Gal. 4.29 Eph. 6.10 c. 2 Tim. 3.12 Peter b 1 Pet. 5.9.10 and book of St. Iohns Revelations c Rev. 1● 7 11 17 17.14 also of the Church visible and mixed with good and bad by the Parable of the Sower d Matth. 13. of the Marriage e Matth. 22. and of the Vrgins f Matth 25. as also by the saying of our Saviour Christ g Have not I chosen you twelve and one of you is a divell John 10. and of S. Paul h For he knew who should betray him therefore said Ye are not cleane John 13.11 In a great house are not only vessels of gold and of silver but also of wood and of earth and some for honour and some unto dishonor 2 Tim. 2.20 Confess l. Helv. 1. ar 14. 2. c. 17. Bohem. c. 8. Gal. ar 27. Belg. ar 27. August ar 7. Saxon. ar 11. Wit ar 32. Su●vica ar 15. The Churches beare witnesse hereuntoi. Errors and adversaries unto this truth This truth hath many adversaries whereof S me ●en un●● our Christ the Savi●ur of mankinde and so thinke his
the day of Iudgement Pope Iohn the 23. denies the soules immortality k B. Jewel def fol 6 5. i Gerson ser 1. Pasch And some worldly prophane and devilish Atheists For Sixtus 4. builded a Male stewes l Acts Mon. Paul 3. received a monethly pension for 45000. whores at Rome m D. Sparke against Id. Albine p. 399. Leo the 10. made a Fable of the Gospel of Christ n Smeton contra Hamilt p. 104. Hence it proceeded that Rome hath bin called Babylon both by S. Augustine o De civit Dei lib. 18. and Hierome p Praes lib. de Sp. S. and by Pope Pius 5. was said Magis Gentilizare quàm Christianizare rather to Gentilize or to be a City of Heathens rather then of Christians q Chr. Franck. praef ad Paradox St. Bernard said how the Romans in his time were hatefull unto heaven and earth yea and hurtfull unto both wicked against God rash against holy things and seditious among themselves r De consid ad Eugen. Genebrard himselfe an Antichristian Romanist writeth that 50 Popes successively and within the space of 150 yeeres departed from the vertue of their Elders and shewed themselves Abjurers of Christianity and Apostataes rather then Catholike Bishops a Chron. lib. 4. p. 817. The Pope was proclaimed Antichrist at Rhemes by the Councell there under Hugh Capet b Arnolph in Con● Rhem. inter opera Bernardi Errors and adversaries unto this truth What the Papists are then it appeareth whose doctrine as hath beene shewne is that the Church of Rome neither hath nor can erre Erraverunt aliae ecclesiae saith Di. Stella other Churches as Antioch Alexandria Constantinople c. have erred sed nunquam ecclesia Romana but the Church of Rome never yet erred c Stella in Lu●a 9. fol. 430. Id constanter negamus saith Costerus the Iesuite wee constantly denie that Christ his Vicars and Peters successors the Bishops of Rome have either taught heresies or can propound errors d E●chirid controvers c. 3. de summo Pontif. p. 136. God preserveth the truth of Christian Religion in the Apostolike Sea of Rome e Test Rhem. an Matth. 23 2 and it is not possible that the Church meaning the Church of Rome can erre or hath erred at any time in any point say the Rhemists f Ibid. an mar p. 164. 20. Article Of the authority of the Church 1 The Church hath power to decree Rites or Ceremonies 2 and authority in controversies of faith And yet it is not lawfull for the Church 3 to ordain any thing that is contrary to Gods Word 4 neither may it so expound one place of Scripture 5 that it be repugnant to another Wherefore although 6 the Church be a witnes and a keeper of holy Writ yet as it ought not to decree any thing against the same so 7 besides the same ought it not to enforce any thing to be beleeved for necessity of salvation The Propositions 1. The Church hath power to decree rites or ceremonies 2. The Church may not ordaine what rites or ceremonies she will 3. The Church hath authority to judge and determine in controversies of faith 4. The Church hath power to interpret and expound the Word of God 5. The Analogie of faith must be respected in the exposition of the Scripture 6. The Church is the witnesse and keeper of Gods written Word 7. The Church may not enforce any thing to be beleeved as necessary unto salvation that is either contrary or besides the Word of God 1. Proposition The Church hath power to decree rites or ceremonies The proofe from Gods Word THE Churches authority to decree rites or ceremonies is warranted in the Word of God first by the example of the Apostles who did ordaine rites and ceremonies among other things that In the Church men should not be covered a 1 Cor. 11.4 7 14 c. Women should keepe silence b 1 Cor. 14.34 and be covered c 1 Cor. 11.5 A knowne tongue understood of the common auditorie should be used d 1 Cor. 1.24 with other things e 1 Cor. 22.2 3 4. Next by the generall and binding commandement of God himselfe who at all times will have every thing in the Church to bee done unto edifying f 1 Cor. 14.26 honesty and by order g Ibid. v. 40. as being not the author of confusion but of peace h Ibid. v. 33. All Protestant Churches confesse the same i Confes Helv. 1. ar 13. 2. c. 22 23 24. Basil ar 10. Bohem. c. 15.17 Gal. ar 32. Belg. ar 32. Aug. ar 4.57.15 Saxon. ar 20. Suev c. 8.14 Wittemb c. 27.31 Errors and adversaries unto this truth This power being given by the supreme Authority unto the Church they doe greatly offend which doe condemne either generally all d R H. on Psal 122. or particularly some rites and ceremonies orderly and lawfully established of the former sort are e Such a one was that Scottish Minister which said unto the head of K. Iames how he would hold conformitie with his Majesties ordinances for matters of doctrine but for matters of ceremony they were to be left in Christian liberty unto every man This D. Barlow reporteth in the summe of the Confer p. 21. 1. The Family of Love who say of themselves how they are a free people a H N. Sp. land c. 31. ss 6. in bondage unto no creature nor to any created thing b Ibid. cap. 40. sect 7. they have no severall dissenting or variable religions or ceremoniesc. 2. The Brownists who teach that every Christian is to joyne himselfe unto that people among whom the Lords worship is free and not bound or withholden with any jurisdiction of this world 3. The Puritants whereof some would have all matters of ceremonies to be left in Christian liberty unto every man Others would have both temples to bee left without Service Sermons and Sacraments and Princes to ●e scarred with the feare of uproares and sedition and all because they would be freed from the obedience unto ceremonies not impious of themselves imposed by the Church the Father of these men was Illyricus of whom Melancton writeth f Ep. ad Pium. Lect. p. 455. Of the latter kinde be 1. The Family of Love againe who utterly dislike our Churches or Temples also our Liturgies and formes of serving our God and finally our designed times of meeting together for the worship of God Our Churches they blasphemously terme common houses and so we terme Brothel-houses or the stewes g H. N. Speland c. 5. l 5. Our Lyturgies and manner of serving of God they call foolishnesse of taken on services h Ibid. false seducing Gods services i H N exhor c. 15. sect 2 3. of no man to be ordained k Ib. cap. 16. sect 14. nor to be obeyed or used when they are established l
profitable many wayes of as tender consciences euery way as any of these Brethren combined according both to their bounden duties and as they are perswaded to the very purport and true intent of the said Statute have alwayes both with their mouthes acknowledged and with their pennes approued the 39. Articles of our religion for truthes not to be doubted of and godly Yea and the Brethren too themselues which now so scrupulously when they are orderly called thereunto doe hold backe their hands and will subscribe but choisely vnto some of them euen they with their mouthes which is equiualent and all one have that according to the Statute or else their liuings be void vpon the first entrance into all and singular their ecclesiasticall benefices openly both read and testified their consent vnto the said Articles for number euen nine and thirty acknowledging them I say all of them to be agreeable to Gods word whereof the people in their seuerall charges be ready witnesses to testifie so much before God and the world 34. Againe of these Brethren that will subscribe but vnto which they please of these Articles there be some who faine would beate into mens heads if they could tell how to make it credible that the Doctrine of our Church is altred from that it was in the raigne of Q. Eli. But this assertion being too grosse egregiously vntrue A late deuice of the Br. to shunne subscription no waies iustifiable they secondly give out and report so industrious be they to inuent new shifts to cloak their inueterate and rooted pertinacy how the purpose if not doctrine of our Church is of late altered from that it was And therefore though they can be well content to allow of the old doctrine and ancient intention yet vnto the old doctrine and new Intention of our Church they cannot subscribe might they either gaine much or lose whatsoeuer they have thereby Besides this new Intendement contrary to the old purpose if not doctrin of our Church is become now the maine and principall obstacle why they cannot subscribe vnto the booke of Common prayer and booke of Ordination as earst they some of them foure times have done when aswell Intention as Doctrine of our Church was pure holy Lastly they seeme not obscurely to intimate vnto the State that were they sure or might be assured that the purpose of our Church were the same which it was neither varied from the doctrine they would be prest and as ready euen foure if not forty times moe to subscribe vnto the forementioned bookes of Common prayer and of ordination as aforetimes they did when they were out of doubt the Intention of our Church was correspondent to her Doctrine that it was found and good I haue foure times subscribed saith a Brother to the booke of Common prayer with limitation and reference of all things therein contained not vnto the purpose onely or doctrine onely but unto the purpose and doctrine of the Church of England Yet cannot the same man with a good conscience so much as once more subscribe which formerly and that with a good conscience had subscribed foure times His reason is Because the purpose if not doctrine of our Church to which he referred his subscription appeareth to him by the late Canons booke of conference and some speeches of men in great place and others to be varied somewhat from that which he before not without reason took it to be The purpose and Doctrine of our Church continue the same 35. The purpose of our Church is best knowne by the doctrine which she doth professe the Doctrine by the 39. Articles established by Act of Parliament the Articles by the words whereby they are expressed and other purpose then the publike Doctrine doth minister and other Doctrine then in the said Articles is contained our Church neither hath nor holdeth and other sense they cannot yeeld then their words doe impart The words be the same and none other then earst and first they were And therefore the sense the same the Articles the same the Doctrine the same and the purpose and Intention of our Church still one and the same If then the purpose be knowne by her Doctrine and Articles and the true sense by their very words needs must the purppose of our Church be the same because her Doctrine and Articles for number words syllables and letters and every way be the very same And so our Churches intention in her publike Doctrine and Articles reuealed being good at the first it is so still For her purpose continuing one and the same cannot be ill at the last which was good and so beleeued and acknowledged even by the Brothers subscription at the first or good in good Queene Elizabeth and ill in illustrious King Iames his dayes 36. If the premisses sufficiently explane not the constancy of our Churches purpose in professing religion sincerely Neither the Doctrine nor purpose of our Church altered then cast we our eyes vpon the Propositions which she publikely maintaineth and if we find them the same which euer they have beene then need we not doubt the Brethren themselves being Iudges but the Articles againe their sence the Doctrine purpose and Intention nf the Church of England the Proposition interpreting as it were the said Articles is the very same it ever was Now that Propositions pregnantly and rightly gathered and arising from the articles be the same for substance vnaltered though vpon good considerations some few bee added to the former and all of them approued for true and Christian by the lawful publike allowance of our Church the Booke here ensuing plainely will declare and so demonstrate withall not the Doctrine onely but intention also of our Church to be the same and not changed and being vnchanged the books then of common prayer and of ordination too considered in the purpose and intention of the Church of England and reduced to the Propositions as the Brethren would haue them be well allowed and authentically approued and the said brethren with as good conscience now againe and afresh may subscribe vnto all the Articles euen concerning the Booke of common prayer and of ordination aswell as of the kings supremacy and of Religion as afore often and alwayes they did 37. For my selfe most reuerend Father in God what my thoughts be of the religion in this Realme at this instant professed and of all these Articles if the premisses doe not that which here followeth will sufficiently demonstrate Twenty yea 22 yeeres agoe voluntarily of mine owne accord altogether vnconstrained I published my subscription vnto them my Faith is not either shaken or altred but what it then was it still is yeeres have made those haires of mine gray which were not and time much reading and experience in Theologicall conflicts and combates have bettred a great deale but not altered one whit my judgement I thanke God Nothing have I denied nothing
gaine-said which afore I deliuered The Propositions are and yet not many moe the method altered quotations added both for the satisfaction of some learned and iudicious friends of mine requesting it at mine hands and for the benefit both of the common and vnlearned and of the studious and learned Reader The whole worke expresseth aswell my detestation and renunciation of all aduersaries errors opposite crossing or contradicting the doctrine professed by vs and protected by our King or any Article or particle of truth of our Religion as my approbation of that truth which in our Church by wholesome Statutes and Ordinances is confirmed There is not an heretike or Schismatike to speake of of any speciall marke that from the Apostles time hitherto hath discouered himselfe his opinions vulgarly in writing or in print against our doctrine but this heresie fancy or phrensie may be here seene against one proposition or other The Sects and Sect-masters aduersaries vnto vs either in the matter or maine points of our doctrine or Discipline to one of our Articles or other wholly or in part which here be discouered to be taken heed of and auoided are many hundreds 38. This and whatsoeuer else here done either to the confirmation of the truth or detestation of heresies and errors I doe very meekely present unto your Grace as after God and our King best meriting the patronage thereof My selfe am much the whole Church of England much more bound vnto your Lordship yea not wee onely now liuing but our successors also and posteritie shall have cause in all ages while the world shal continue to magnifie Almightie God for the inestimable benefits which we have shall receiue from your selfe your late Predecessors D. Whitegift Grindall Parker Cranmer of famous honourable remembrance Bishops of our Church Archbishops of the See of Canterbury for this uniforme doctrine by some of your Lordships drawne and penned by all of you allowed defended and as agreeable to the Faith of the very Apostles of Christ and of the ancient Fathers correspondent to the Confessions of all reformed Churches in Christendome and contrariant in no point unto Gods holy and written Word commended unto us both by your Authoritie and Subscriptions Now the all-mercifull God and heavenly Father which so inspired them and your Lordship with wisedome from above and inabled you all to discerne truth from falshood and found religion from Atheisme idolatry and errors vouchsafe of his infinite goodnesse to encrease his grace more and more upon your Grace to his owne glory the Churches benefit and your owne everlasting comfort And the same God which both mercifully hath brought and miraculously against all hellish and divellish practices of his and our enemies continued the light of his truth among us give us all grace with one heart and consent not onely to embrace the same but also to walke and carry our selves as it beseemeth the Children of light in all peaceablenesse and holinesse of life for his Sonne our Lord and Saviour Christ his sake At Horninger neere S. Edm. Bury in Suff. the 11. of March Ann. 1607. Your Graces poore Chaplaine alwayes at Command THOMAS ROGERS Constitutions and Canons Ecclesiasticall Anno 1604. VVHosoever shall hereafter affirme that the Church of England by Law established under the Kings Majesty is not a true and an Apostolicall Church teaching and maintaining the Doctrine of the Apostles let him be excommunicated ipso facto and not restored but onely by the Archbishop after his repentance and publike revocation of this his wicked error Can. 3. VVhosoever shall hereafter affirme that any of the 39 Articles agreed upon by the Archbishops and Bishops of both Provinces and the whole Clergy in the Convocation holden at London in the yeare of our Lord God 1562. for the avoiding of diversities of opinions and for the establishing of consent touching true Religion are in any part superstitious or erroneous or such as he may not with a good conscience subscribe unto let him be excommunicated ipso facto and not restored but onely by the Archbishop after his repentance and publike revocation of such his wicked errors Can. 5. Whosoever shall hereafter separate themselves from the Communion of Saints as it is approved by the Apostles rules in the Church of England and combine themselves in a new Brother-hood accounting the Christians who are conformable to the Doctrine Government Rites and Ceremonies of the Church of England to be prophane and unmeete for them to joyne with in Christian profession let them be excommunicated ipso facto and not restored but by the Archbishop after their repentance and publike revocation of such their wicked errors Can. 9 The Titles of the thirty nine Articles with the Pages where to finde every of them in this Booke Articles 1 OF faith in the holy Trinity Page 1 Articles 2 Of the Word of God which was made very man Page 7 Articles 3 Of the going downe of Christ into Hell Page 15 Articles 4 Of the Resurrection of Christ Page 17 Articles 5 Of the Holy Ghost Page 21 Articles 6 Of the sufficiency of the Scriptures for salvation Page 26 Articles 7 Of the Old Testament Page 33 Articles 8 Of the three Creeds Page 39 Articles 9 Of Originall or birth sinne Page 41 Articles 10 Of Free-will Page 47 Articles 11 Of the Iustification of man Page 50 Articles 12 Of good workes Page 56 Articles 13 Of workes before Iustification Page 56 Articles 14 Of workes of Supererogation Page 59 Articles 15 Of Christ alone without sinne Page 62 Articles 16 Of sinne without Baptisme Page 65 Articles 17 Of Predestination and Election Page 69 Articles 18 Of obtaining salvation onely by the Name of Christ Page 82 Articles 19 Of the Church Page 86 Articles 20 of the Authoritie of the Church Page 98 Articles 21 Of the Authoritie of generall Councels Page 112 Articles 22 Of Purgatorie Page 118 Articles 23 Of Ministring in the Congregation 131 Articles 24 Of speaking in the Congregation in such a tongue as the people understand not Page 141 Articles 25 Of the Sacraments Page 142 Articles 26 Of the unworthinesse of the Ministers which hinder not the effects of the Sacraments Page 160 Articles 27 Of Baptisme Page 165 Articles 28 Of the Lords Supper Page 170 Articles 29 Of the wicked which doe not eate the Body and bloud of Christ in the use of the Lords Supper Page 178 Articles 30 Of both kindes Page 179 Articles 31 Of the oblation of Christ finished upon the Crosse Page 181 Articles 32 Of mrariage of Priests Page 185 Articles 33 Of Excommunicate persons how they are to be avoided Page 189 Articles 34 Of the traditions of the Church Page 193 Articles 35 Of Homilies Page 194 Articles 36 Of Consecration of Bishops and Ministers Page 196 Articles 37 Of the civill Magistrate Page 201 Articles 38 Of Christian mens goods which are not common Page 215 Articles 39 Of a Christian mans Oath Page 217 FINIS
we must not beleeue in the holy Ghost saith Bredwell writing against Glouer p. 102. among us at home Some affirme the holy Ghost to be but a meere creature as did Arius h Theod. l 5. c. 10. the Semiarians i Philast the Macedonian heretikes k Soz. l. 4. c 27. the Tropickes l Athan. Ochinus m Zanch. de El par l. 2. c. 5. Some haue assumed the style and title of the holy Ghost unto themselues as did Simon Magus n D. ●ren Montanus o Eus I. 5. c. 18. and Manes p Chry des S. Some have given the title of the holy Ghost vnto men and women so Hierax said that Melchisedech was the holy Ghost q Epiphan Simon Magus tearmed his Helene the holy Ghost r Epiphan The Helche said the holy Ghost was a woman and the naturall sister of Christ ſ Epiphan Many Papists and namely the Franciscanes t Alcar Fr l ● blush not to say that S Francis is the holy Ghost 2. Proposition The holy Ghost is of one substance maiesty and glory with the Father and the Sonne The proofe from Gods Word THE holy Ghost eff●cted the incarnation of Christ a Mat 1.18 10. Luke 1.35 teacheth all things b Ioh. 14.26 leadeth into all truth c Ioh. 26.13 giueth vtterance to his seruants d Acts 2.4 and gifts unto his people e 1 Cor. 12.8 placeth Rulers in the Church and Ouerseers to feede the flocke of God f Acts 20.28 sealeth the Elect vnto the day of redemption g Eph. 4.30 aswell as the Father and the Son and these three viz. the Father the Word and the holy Ghost are one h 1 Iohn 5.7 Therefore is the holy Ghost of one substance maiesty and glory with the Father and the Sonne And this was the beliefe of the ancient Fathers I beleeue say they in the holy Ghost the Lord and giuer of life c. who with the Father and the Sonne together is worshipped and glorified who spake by the Prophets i Symb. Nicen. The Godhead of the Father of the Sonne and of the holy Ghost is all one the glory equall the maiesty coeternall Such as the Father is such is the Sonne and such is the holy Ghost c. And in this Trinitie none is afore or after other none is greater or lesse then another But the whole three persons be coeternall together and coequall k Symb. Ath. The very same doe all reformed Churches beleeue and confesse l Confes Helv 1. ar 6 2. c. 3. Basil ar 1. Bohem. c. 3 Gal ar 1. Belg. ar 1. Aug. ar 1 Wittemb c. 1 2. Sucrica ar 1. The Errors and adversaries unto this truth The premisses doe make Against the Tretheites which affirme the holy Ghost to be inferiour unto the Father a Zanch de 3. E● par 2 l. 5. c. 1 Against the Arrians who said the holy Ghost was inferior to the Sonne b Aug. contr Mar. A●rian Against the Macedonian heretikes who held the holy Ghost to be but a minister and servant of the Father and the Sonne c Ruffin l. 1. c. 25. yet of more excellent maiesty and dignity then the Angels d Niceph. l. 9. c. 17. Against many erroneous spirits which deliver the holy Ghost to be nothing else but The motion of God in his creatures as did the Samosatenians e Confess Aug. 5. ar 3. A bare power and efficacy of God working by a secret inspiration as the Turkes f Pol. of the Tur. Emp. 3. c. and certaine English Sadduces doe imagine * Hut●● inson in his Image of God c. 24. p 112 ● The Inheritance allotted to the faithfull g H. N. in his In●●ruct praef se●● 7. and the being or vertuous estate of Christ h Idem in his Spir. and praef sect 14. as dreameth H.N. The affection of charity or Love within vs an error of Petrus Lombardus i Sen l. 1. dist sect 5. 2. Gods love fauour and vertue whereby he worketh in his children so thought Ochinus k Zanch. de 3. E. par 1 l 4. c 1. and Servetus l Zanch ib. l. 1. c. 2. 2. Proposition The holy Ghost proceedeth from the Father and the Sonne The proofe from Gods Word THe proceeding of the holy Ghost from the Father and the Sonne we gather from the holy Scripture which teacheth how The Father sendeth the Comforter which is the holy Ghost in the name of the Sonne a John 14.16 and the Sonne sendeth the Comforter the Spirit of truth from the Father b John 15.26 he proceedeth of the Father c Ibid. and is sent of the Sonne d John 16.7 So with us say the ancient Fathers and Christians He proceedeth from the Father and the Sonne e Symb. Nic●n The holy Ghost is of the Father and of the Sonne neither made nor created but proceeding So there is one Father not three Fathers one Sonne not three Sonnes one holy Ghost not three holy Ghosts f Symb. Athan. which is the faith of the moderne Christians g Confes H●● 1. c. 3. Gal. c. 3 Belg. ar 8. 11. Wittemb c. 3. Sucrica ar 1. The adversaries unto this truth This discovereth all them to be impious and to erre from the way of truth which hold and affirme That the holy Ghost proceedeth neither from the Father nor the Sonne but is one and the same person that Christ is as the Arrians doe a Basi serm de sp S. That the holy Ghost proceedeth from the Father but not from the Sonne as at this day the Grecians b Russe Commonweale ● 23 the Russians c Guagnin de relig Moscov the Moscovites d Father de relig Moscov maintaine That there is a double proceeding of the holy Ghost one temporall the other eternall an errour of Peter Lombard e T. Sent l. 1. distinct 14. uncontrolled hitherto and therefore well liked of the Papists 6. Article Of the sufficiency of the holy Scripture for salvation Holy Scripture 1 containeth all things necessary for salvation so that whatsoever is not read therein nor may be proved thereby is not to be required of any man that it should be beleeved as an Article of the faith or be thought requisite and necessary to salvation 2 In the name of the holy Scripture we doe understand those Canonicall bookes of the Old and New Testament of whose authoritie was never any doubt in the Church Of the names and number of the Canonicall bookes Genesis Exodus Leviticus Numbers Deuteronomium Ioshua Iudges Ruth The 1. Booke of Samuel The 2. Booke of Samuel The 1. Booke of Kings The 2. Booke of Kings The 1. Booke of Chronicles The 2. Booke of Chronicles The 1. Booke of Esdras The 2. Booke of Esdras The Booke of Esther The Booke of Iob. The Psalmes The Proverbs Ecclesiastes or the
ar 8. 2. c. in the iudgement of Gods people f Basil ar 2. Gal. ar 11. Saxon ar 11. Errors and aduersaries vnto this truth We stand therefore in this point Against the Papists who say that Originall sinne was not at all much lesse remained in the Virgin Mary a Concil Basil sest 6. Test Rhem. annot Rom. 5.14 Against Giselbertus whose doctrine is that Baptisme once receiued there is in the baptized no sinne at all either originall or actuall b Giselb lib. alte cat Synag eccles c. 8. Against the Family of Loue who affirme that the elect and regenerate sinne not c H.N. Document sent c. 2. sect ● c 13. sect 5 Against the Carpocratians whereof some boasted themselues to be euery way as innocent as our Sauiour Christ d Iren. l. c. 24. Against the Adamites both old e Epiphan and new f Aeneas Sylv. hist Bohe. c. 42. who said they were in so good a state as Adam was before his fall therefore without originall sinne Against the Begadores in Almaigne affirming they were impeceable and had attained vnto the very top and pitch of perfection in vertue and godlinesse g Carranza summa Concil 4. Proposition Concupiscence euen in the regenerate is sinne Concupiscence in whomsoeuer lusteth against the Spirit a Gal. 5.1 7. fighteth against both the soule b 1 Pet. 2.11 and the law of the mind c Rom. 7.23 and the●efore but that there is no condemnation to them which are in Christ Iesus d Rom. 8.1 it bringeth death damnation e Gal 5.17 21. Iam. 1.14.15 Mortifie therefore your members which are vpon earth saith S. Paul Coloss 3.5 vnto the Colossians fornication vncleannesse the inordinate affection euill concupiscence c. for the which things sake the wrath of God commeth on the children of disobedience And vnto all Christians S. Peter I beseech you as strangers abstaine from fleshly lust g 1 Pet. 3.11 To the same purpose is both the doctrine and Confessions of Gods people h Confess Helv 2. c. Saxon. ar 2 10. Errors and aduersaries vnto this truth Therefore we mislike their opinions as unsound which say that concupiscence either is no sinne at all or but a veniall fin the former was an assertion of the Pelagians Confess Aug ar 2. and is of the Papists that latter was one of Glouers errors Francis the Monke of Colen counted concupiscence no sin but said it was as naturall and so no more offensiue before God for man to lust then for the Sunne to keepe his course Petrus Lombardus saith that concupiscence afore Baptisme is both a punishment and a sinne but after Baptisme is no sin but onely a punishment Lomb l. 2. dift. 32. ● Catech Trid. praecep 9. The Church of Rome both teacheth that the power of lusting is not but the vse of wicked concupiscence is euill and numbred amongst most grieuous sinnes and decreeth how Concupiscence is no● sinne but proceedeth from sinne and inclineth vnto sinne d Concil Trid ses S. decreto de pec Or●g Glouer the Brownist said that the intemperate affections of the minde issuing from concupiscence are but veniall sins e Bred. detect ●9 1 9. 10. Article Of Free-will 1 The condition of man after the Fall of Adam is such that he cannot turne prepare himself by his owne naturall strength good workes 2 to faith calling vpon God wherefore we haue no power to doe good workes pleasant and acceptable to God 3 without the grace of God preuenting vs that we may haue a good will and working with vs when we haue that good will The Propositions 1. Man of his owne strength may doe outward and euill workes before he is regenerate 2. Man cannot doe any worke that good is and godly being not yet regenerate 3. Man may performe and doe good workes when he is preuented by the grace of Christ and renewed by the holy Ghost 1. Proposition Man of his owne strength may doe outward and euill workes before he is regenerate The proofe from Gods Word VVEE deny not that man not yet regenerate hath free will to doe the workes of nature for the preseruation of the body and bodily estate which thing had and have the bruit beasts and prophane Gentiles as it is also well obserued in our neighbour Church a Confes Helv. 2. cap. 9. Aug. ar 28. Saxon. 3.4 7. Besides man hath free will to performe the workes of Satan both in thinking willing and doing that which evill is For the imaginations of the thoughts of mans heart are onely evill continually b Gen. 6.5 evill even from his youth c Confes Helv. 2. c. 9. and 1. ar 9 Bohem. c. 4. A truth confessed by our brethren Aduersaries to this truth A false perswasion is it therefore that man hath no power to mooue either his body so much as vnto ourward things as Laur. Valla dreamed a Simon Pauli meth par 2. de lib. Ar. or his minde vnto sinne as the Manichies maintained affirming how man is not voluntarily brought but necessarily driuen to sinne b Aug. epist 28 2. Proposition Man cannot doe any worke that good is and godly being not as yet regenerate The proofe from Gods Word THE wisedome of the flesh is enmity against God for it is not subiect to the Law of God neither indeed can be They that are in the flesh cannot please God a Rom. 8.7 8. ● The naturall man perceiueth not the things of the Spirit of God for they are foolishnesse vnto him neither can he know them because they are spiritually discerned b 1 Cor. 2.14 No man can say that Iesus is the Lord but by the holy Ghost c 1 Cor. 12.3 We are not sufficient of our selves to thinke any thing as of our selues but our sufficiency is from God d 2 Cor. 3.5 Without me ye can doe nothing saith our Sauiour Christ e Iohn 15.5 Which is the confession of the godly reformed f Confes Helv 1. ar 9. 2. c. 9 Basil ar 2. Behem c. 4. Aug. ● ar 18. Belg. ar 14. The adversaries unto this truth Adversaries unto this truth are all such as hold that naturally there is free will in us and that unto the best things So thought the Pharises the Sadduces the Pelagians a August de pec mer. l. 3. and the Donatists b Idem contra Petil. cap 19. and the same affirme the Anabaptists c Zuing. contra Catabap and Papists For say the Papists Man by the forme and power of nature may love God above all things d Gab. B●el 3. sent dist 37. Man hath free will to performe even spirituall and heavenly things e Concil Trid. sess 6. c. 1. Men beleeve not but of their own free will f Test Rhem an Mat 20.16 It is in a mans free will to beleeve or not to beleeve
to obey or disobey the Gospell of truth preached g Ibid. annot marg p. 408. The Catholike popish religion teacheth free-will 3. Proposition h Hills quart 13. reas Man may performe and doe good workes when he is prevented by the grace of Christ and renued by the holy Ghost The proofe from Gods Word IN a man prevented by the grace of Christ and regenerate by the holy Spirit both the understanding is enlightned so that he knoweth the secrets and will of God and the mind is altogether changed the body enabled to doe good works To this purpose the Scriptures are plentifull I will put my law in their inward parts and write it in their hearts a Jer. 31.33 No man knoweth the Father but the Son and he to whom the Sonne will reveale him b Matth. 11.27 Luke 10.22 Blessed art thou Simon the Sonne of Ionas for flesh and blood hath not revealed it unto thee but my Father which is in heaven c Matth. 16.17 No man can say that Iesus is the Lord but by the holy Ghost To one is given by the Spirit the word of wisedome and to another the word of knowledge by the same spirit and to another faith by the same spirit and to another the gifts of healing by the same spirit and to another the operations of great works and to another prophecie and to another the discerning of spirits and to another diversities of tongues and to another the interpretation of tongues c e 1 Cor. 12.8 God purifieth mans heart f Acts 15.9 worketh in us both the will and the deed g Phil. 2.13 the spirit helpeth our infirmities for we know not what to pray as we ought c h Rom. 8.26 Such were some of you but ye are washed but ye are sanctified but ye are justified in the name of the Lord Iesus and by the Spirit of our God i 1 Cor. 6.11 Vnto you it is given for Christ that not onely yee should beleeve in him but also suffer for his sake k Phil. 1.2 And this doe the Churches of God beleeve and confesse l Confes Hol. 2. c. 9. Aug. ar 18 Bohem. c. 4. Saxon. ar 4. 11. Article Of the Justification of Man We are accounted righteous before God onely for 1 the merit of our Lord and Saviour Iesus Christ 2 by faith and 3 not for our owne works or deservings Wherefore that wee are justified by faith onely is most wholesome doctrine and very full of comfort c. The Propositions 1. Onely for the merit of our Lord and Saviour Christ are we accounted righteous before God 2. Onely by Faith are we accounted righteous before God 3. Not for our owne workes or deservings are we accounted righteous before God 14. Proposition Onely for the merit of our Lord and Saviour Christ we are accounted righteous before God The proofe from Gods Word BY Christ his bloud onely we are cleansed He is the Lambe of God which taketh away the sinne of the world a Joh. 1.29 We are justified freely by his grace through the redemption that is in Christ Iesus b Rom. 3.24 Wee are bought with a price c 1 Cor. 6.19 even with the precious bloud of Christ the Lambe undefiled and without spot d 1 Pet. 1.19 which cleanseth us from all sinne e 1 Joh. 1.7 By his onely righteousnesse we are justified By the obedience of One many be made righteous f Rom. 5.19 Christ is the end of the Law for righteousnesse unto every one that beleeveth g Ibid. 10.4 He of God is made unto us wisedome and righteousnesse and sanctification and redemption h 1 Cor. 1 30. and we are made the righteousnesse of God in him i 2 Cor. 5.21 And therefore from heaven we looke for the Saviour even the Lord Iesus Christ k Phil. 3.21 And this is the faith and confession of all Churches reformed l Confes 2. c. 15 Bohe. c. 6 Gal. ar 12. Belg. ar 22. August ar 4. Wittemb ar 5. Suevica c. 3. Errors and adversaries unto this truth This truth is neither beleeved nor acknowledged Of the Atheists who are neither perswaded of the life to come nor understand the mysteries of mans salvation through the merits of Christ Nor of the Pharises and their followers who think that by civill externall righteousnes we are justified before God m Matth. 5.20 Nor of Matthew Hamant who held that man is justified by Gods meree mercie without respect unto the merits of Christ n Holinsh Chro. f. 1299. Nor of Galeotus Martius which was of opinion that all nations and persons whosoever living according to the rules of nature should be saved and inherit everlasting happinesse p Jovius cleg doci vir p 57. Nor of the Turkes who thinke that so many as either goe on pilgrimage unto Mecha or doe kisse the sepulchre of Mahomet are justified before God and thereby doe obtaine remission of their sinnes d Lonic Tur. ●ist Com. 1. l. 2 par 2 c 14.15.18 Nor of the Family of Love who teach by the shedding of Christ his blood is meant the spreading of the Spirit in our hearts e Display in Allens confes Nor of the Papists whose doctrine is that 1. Though Christ hath suffered for all men in generall yet not onely each man must suffer for his owne part in particular f T●●t Rhem. ●n Rom. 8.17 but also that the works of one man may satisfie for another g Ibid. an Col. 1.24 2. They teach next that sinnes veniall are done away and purged by prayer Almes-deeds by the worthy receiving of the blessed Sacrament of the Altar by taking of holy water knocking upon the brest with holy meditation the Bishops blessing and such like h Vaux catech c. 4. by holy water and such ceremonies i Test Rhem. an Joh. 13.10 sacred ceremonies k Test Rhem. an marg p 258 as Confiteor tundo conspergor conteror oro Signor edo dono per haec venalia pono that is I am confest unto the Priest I knock mine heart and brest with fist With holy water I am besprent And with contrition all yrent I pray to God and heavenly host I crosse my forehead at every post I eate my Saviour in the bread I deale my dole when I am dead And doing so I know I may My veniall sinnes soone put away And sinnes mortall not by the merits of Christ onely but many wayes besides are clensed think the said Papists as by the merits of dead Saints namely of St. Mary the Virgin Threnosa compassio dulcissimae Dei Matris Per ducat nos adgandium summi Dei Patris The pittifull compassion of Gods best pleasing mother Bring us to the joyes of God the soveraigne Father l Horae B. Virg. S. Mar. secundum usum Sarum And of Thomas Becket Tu per Thomae sanguinem
They teach finally that by good works our sinnes are purged g Petrus a Soto asser cath de bonis oper 12. Article Of good workes Albeit that workes which are the fruits of Faith and follow after justification cannot put away our sinnes and endure the severity of Gods judgement 1 yet are they pleasing and acceptable to God in Christ 2 and do spring out necessarily of a true and louely Faith insomuch that by them a lively Faith 3 may be as evidently knowne as a tree discerned by the fruit The Propositions 1. Good works doe please God 2. No work is good except it spring from Faith 3. Good workes are the outward signes of the inward Beliefe 1. Proposition Good works doe please God The proofe from Gods Word THough God accepteth not man for his works but for his deare Sonnes sake yet that good works after man his justification to please God is a cleare truth every where to be read in the holy Scripture For God hath commanded them to be done a Mat●h 5.16 Joh. 15.12 Phil. 2.14 c. 1 Thess 4.3 c 2 Tim. 2.19 and requireth righteousnesse not onely outward of the body b Jam. 2. but also inward of the minde c Mat. 5.22.28 Acts 24.16 and hath appointed for the vertuous and godly rewards both in this life d Matth. 5.5 Marke 10.29 30. 1 Tim. 4.8 and in the world to come e Math. 7.21 10. ●● Luke 14.13 14. Rom. 2.10 and to the wicked punishments spirituall f Es● 59.1 2 John 9.32 1 Joh. 3.21 corporall g Deut. 28.15 c. Jer. 5.25 Rom. 13.2 and of body and soule eternall in the pit of hell h Matth. 10.33 Matth. 21.41 c. 1 Cor. 6.9 10. Heb. 12.14 c. 25. Rev. 21.8 And this is beleeved and acknowledged by the Churches i Confes Helv. 2 c. 1.6 Basil ar 8. Bohem. c. 7. Gal. ar 7. Belg. ar 24. August ar 6. 26. Saxon. ar 3.5 6. Wittemb c 7. Suevica c. 4. The errors and adversaries unto this truth This truth is oppugned by adversaries of divers kinds For Some hold that seeing man is justified by Faith hee may live as he listeth as the Libertines Some thinke that to attend upon vertue and to practise good workes is a yoke too heavie and intolerable as the Simonians k Iren. Theo. Some utterly cast off all grace vertue and godlinesse as did the Basilidians l Iren. l. 1. c. 23. the Aetians m Epiph. l. 3. the Circumcellians n Aug. cont Pet. l. 1. c. 14. and doe the Machivilians and Atheists Some permit though not all manner yet some sinnes so allowed was both whoredome and uncleane pollutions by the Carpocratians o Cl. Alex str l. ● Epiphan and Valentinians p Theodor. and is of the Iesuites q Spar. disc p. 13. and Papists r Constit Othonis de 〈◊〉 cub Cl●r removendis and perjurie in the time of persecution by the Basilidians ſ Phila. Ir●n Helchesaits Eus l. 6. c. 38. Priscillianists August Henricians x D. Bernard sup Can. ser 65. and Family of Love y Display H. 5. b. and violating of promise yea and oathes made unto Heretikes z Concil Const ses 19. Cochlaeus hist Hussi 112. p. 75. as they call them by the Papists Some as the Turkish Priests called Seiti and Cagi take it to be no sin but a work meritorious by lyes swearing yea forswearing to damnifie Christians what they can p Pol. of the Turk Emp. c. 24. Much like unto these are the aequivocating Iesuites in deluding and deceiving Protestant Princes and their Officers by their doubtfull speeches even when they are sworne to answer plainly and truely by their lawfull Magistrates Some suppose that God is pleased with lip-service onely and outward righteousnesse as the hypocriticall Pharises or Pharisaicall hypocrites q Matth. 7.23 6. Proposition No worke is good except it spring from faith The proofe from Gods Word ALL which man doth is not pleasing unto God but that only which proceedeth from a true faith in Iesus Christ so saith God in his Word a Rom. 3.8 They that are in the flesh cannot please God In Iesus Christ neither Circumcision availeth any thing neither uncircumcision but faith which worketh by love b Gal. 5.6 Vnto the pure all things are pure but unto them that are defiled and unbeleeving is nothing pure c Tit. 1.15 Without faith it is impossible to please God d Heb. 11.6 And although the works of the Beleeving do please God yet are they not so perfect that they can satisfie the Law of God Therefore even of the regenerate and justified saith our Saviour Christ Pray forgive us our debts e Matth. 6.22 say We are unprofitable servants f Luke 17.10 and S. Paul We know that the law is spirituall but I am carnall c g Rom 7.14 Wee which have the first fruits of the spirit even wee doe sigh in our selves c. and have infirmities h Rom. 8.23 Ye cannot doe the same thing that ye would i Gal. 5.17 Which is the faith and confession of the Churches k Confes Helv. 1. cap. 16. Basil ●● 9. Bohem. c. 7. Gal. ar 22. Belg. ar 24. August ar 26. Saxon. ar l. 5.6 Wittem c. 7. Sucv c. 4. Errors and adversaries of this truth Therefore we mislike and condemne the opinions of the Valentinians and Papists The Valentinians say that Spirituall men doe please God which are themselves onely not by Faith but onely by their knowledge of divine mysteries and naturall men doe please him by their bodily labour and upright dealing a Iren. l. 1. c. 1. The said Valentinians fained three sorts or degrees of men the first Spirituall who through bare knowledge the next Naturall who by labour and true dealing shall be saved the third they call Materiall men utterly uncapable of divine knowledge and religious speculations who must perish both in soule and body b Epiph. The Papists teach that They onely are not good works which God commandeth but they also which be either voluntarily done of our selves or enjoyned us by Priests c Tapp p. 188. They are good workes and acceptable before God which are done without faith d Andrad de fide lib. 3. Workes of themselves without respect unto Christ please God e Tapp p. 189. Men perfectly may keepe the Lawes of God f Tapp ibid. in which error also be the Anabaptists g Bulling cont Anaba l. 4. c. 3. and Family of Love h Display l. 6. a. 3. Proposition Good works are the outward signes of the inward Beliefe The proofe from Gods Word MAny are the reasons why good workes are to be done in part cited afore pag. 49. yet not the least cause is that men may be knowne what they are For the Scripture saith and
sheweth that thereby are knowne the good trees from the bad i Matth. 7.16 the wheat from the chaffe k Matth. 3.12 the true disciples from the false c John 13.35 the sonnes of God from the children of Satan d Luke 6.36 Eph. 1.1 1 Joh. 3.10 the regenerate from the unbeleevers Iam. 2.18 1 Pet. 1.17 Eph. 4.17 Hereunto the Saints and Churches doe subscribe f Confess Helv. 2. c. 16. Basil ar 8. Bohem. c. 7. Gal. ar 22. Belg. ar 2. Saxon ar 3. Wittemb c 7. Su●vica c. 4. Errors and adversaries unto this truth The faithfull shew their works yet neither to have them seene of men as did the hypocriticall Pharises Mat. 6. 7. nor thereby to merit heaven as doe the Pharisaical Papists whose doctrine is that Good works are meritorious Test Rhem an Rom 2.6 1 Cor. 3.8 2 Cor. 5 10. Heb. 6.20 Jam. 2.2 Good works as Contrition Confession and Satisfaction done in penance not onely doe merit but are besides a Sacrament for to attaine reconciliation with God and forgivenesse of sinnes i Concil Trid. sess 4. c. 3. Life eternall is due unto good workes by the justice of God k Concil Trid. sess 6. can 42. 13. Article Of Workes before Justification Workes done before the grace of Christ and the inspiration of his Spirit 1 are not pleasant to God for asmuch as they spring not of Faith in Iesus Christ 2 neither doe they make men meet to receive grace or as the Schoole Authors say deserve grace of congruity yea rather 3 for that they are not done as God hath willed and commanded them to be done we doubt not but they have the nature of sinne The Propositions 1. Works done before justification please not God 1. Workes done before justification deserve not grace of congruity 3. Workes done before justification have the nature of sinne 1. Proposition Workes done before justification please not God The proofe from Gods Word BEfore men doe please God a Matth. 7.16 nothing that they doe can please him But men please not God being not renued and justified by the Spirit For before men be regenerate they are not grapes but thornes not figs but thistles not good but evill trees b Matth. 12.33 Luk. 6.43 not lively but dead boughes c John 15.4 not engraffed but wild Olives d Rom. 11.17.23 not friends but enemies e Rom. 5.10 not the sonnes of God but f Eph. 2.3 the children of wrath which bring forth no good fruit As the Churches also acknowledge g Confes Helv. 2. cap. 15. Aug. ar 20. The Errors and adversaries unto this truth Hereby the vanity of them is perceived which thinke before mans justification his deeds doe please God such are the Papists and were the Basilidians The Papists teach that Works done without faith doe please God a Andrad de Fide lib. 3. Good workes not in respect of Christ onely but in themselves considered please God b Tapp p. 189 The Basilidians placed the dooers of civill and philosophicall righteousnesse performed without faith in Christ in the very heavens e Clem. Alex. strom lib. 2. 2. Proposition Workes done before Iustification deserve not grace of congruitie The unregenerate not yet justified have nothing in them to moove God to be gracious unto them and being as they are old Eph. 4.22 not new creatures enemies b Rom. 8.10 not favourers of godlinesse The children of wrath Eph. 2 2. not of God sinners Rom. 5.8 nor vertuously bent Infidels Tit. 1.15 ● and not beleevers of congruity deserve no grace at Gods hands which is the faith too and confession of other Churches Confes Helv 2. c. 16. Bohem. c. 7. Belg. ar 23. Aug. ar 4.20 Saxon. ar 3. 8. Witt. ar 5. Errors and adversaries unto this truth This overthroweth the Popish assertions concerning merits of congruity Test R●●m an Act. 10.2 and that by good workes man is justified before God and made heire of eternall life Concil Trid. sess 6. c. 10. As evill works deserve hell fire so eternall happinesse is deserved by good works c And rad●le Fide lib. 6. 3. Proposition Workes done before justification have the nature of sinne The proofe from Gods Word VVHatsoever men doe not yet justified before God it is sinne for of such persons the best workes which they doe even their Fasting a Wherefore have we fasted and thou seest it not we have pu●ished our selves thou regardest it not Esay 58.3 Did you fast unto me Zach. 5.7 They have their reward Matth. 6.16 praying b Hee that turneth away his care from hearing the Law even his prayer shall be abominable Prov. 28.9 Almes-deeds When thou prayest be not as the hypocrites c. they have their reward Matth 6.5 Take heed that ye give not your almes before men c. they have their reward Matth. 6.1 2. sacrificing unto God d Will I eate the flesh of Bulls or drinke the bloud of Goats Psal 50.13 Bring me no more oblations in vaine incense is an abomination unto me c. Esa 1.13 Hee that killeth a bullock is as if he slew a man hee that sacrificeth a sheepe as if he cut off a dogges neck hee that offereth an oblation as if he offered swines bloud hee that remembreth incense as if he blessed an idoll Esay 66.3 prophesying and working of miracles even in the name of Christ e Lord Lord have we not by thy name prophesied and by thy name cast out devils and by thy name done many great works Then will I professe to them I never knew you depart from me ye that work iniquity Matth. 7.22 23. yea all their actions whatsoever f Whatsoever is not of faith is sinne Rom. 14.23 Vnto them that are defiled and unbeleeving is nothing pure but even their minds and consciences are defiled Tit. 1.15 Without faith it is impossible to please God Heb. 11.6 are abominable before God g Confess Helv. 2. c. 15 16. Bohe c. 7. Belg. ar 23. August ar 4.20 Saxon. ar 3. 8. Wittemb ar 5. The adversaries unto this truth Erred therefore hath the Councel of Trent in pronouncing them accursed which hold that all workes of man whatsoever done before his justification are sinne a Concil Trid. sess 6. c. ●● 8. 14. Article Of workes of Supererogation Voluntary workes besides over and above Gods Commandements which they call workes of Supererogation cannot be taught without arrogancie and impietie For by them men doe declare that they doe not onely render unto God as much as they are bound to doe but that they doe more for his sake then of bounden duty is required whereas Christ saith plainely When yee have done all that are commanded to you say Wee be unprofitable servants The Propositions 1. Workes of Supererogation cannot be taught without arrogancie and impiety 2. Workes of Supererogation are the
Scripture k Conf. Cath. de Eccles and Lindau The Scriptures would be of no validitie neither had continued till this day but for traditions l L●nd l. 1. c. 4 5. 7. Proposition The Church may not enforce any thing to be beleeved as necessary unto salvation that is either contrary or besides the Word of God The proofe from Gods Word YEe shall put nothing unto the Word which I command you neither shall yee take ought there-from a Deut 4.2 Put nothing unto his words lest he reprove thee and thou be found a lyer b Prov. 30.6 Though it be but a mans covenant when it is confirmed yet no man doth abrogate it or addeth any thing thereto c Gal. 3.15 If any man shall adde unto these things God shall adde unto him the plagues that are written in this book And if any man shall diminish of the words of the booke of this prophecie God shall take away his part out of the booke of life and out of the holy Citie and from those things which are written in this booke d Rev. 22.18 19. And so witnesse with us the Churches reformed e Conf. Helv. 1. ar 4. 2. c. 2. Basil ar 10. Bohem. cap 1. Gal. ar 5 Belg. ar 7. Saxon. ar 1. Wittemb c. 30.33 Sucvica ar 1. Whatsoever also is grounded upon Gods written Word though not by our common and vulgar tearmes to be read therein we doe reverently embrace which maketh us for doctrine to embrace the Consubstantialitie of our Saviour with the Father and the holy Ghost which the Arrians would not a Trinitie of persons in the Godhead which the Sabellians would never doe the justification by faith onely which the Papists will not the Baptisme of Infants and young children which the Anabaptists dare not and for discipline not to refuse of Church officers the names Archbishops Patriarches Primates Metropolitanes Suffragans Parsons Vicars c. of Ecclesiasticall censures the tearmes Suspension Excommunication of Ceremonies none at all which tend either unto order comelinesse or edification But from the heart we abhorre in matters both of doctrine and discipline whatsoever either agreeth not with the Canon of the Scripture or is not grounded thereupon Errors and adversaries of this truth Hence detest we both all the old heretikes and their fancies with the new prophets of Basilides the manifestation of Marcion the mysteries of the Manichies the Iobelaea of the Scythians the Symbonia of the Achontikes the Cabasa of the Iewes the Alcaron of the Turkes and also all new heretikes and Schismatikes with all their cursed opinions as first the Anabaptists and namely the Libertines and Davigeorgians and Family of Love and all the codeified Elders thereof as Henry Nicholas Eliad Fidelitas Christopher Vitell Theophilus the Exile and the rest Next the Papists whereof Some have commanded that all the Popes Decrees should be taken as confirmed by the mouth of God himselfe so did Pope Agatho the first a Gra. d. ● 16. Sic. Some write as Busgradus that if the Pope beleeve there is no life to come as some Popes have done we must beleeve it as an Article of our faith Some say if the Pope carry innumerable soules with him unto Hell yet he may not be judged so did the Pope Boniface the eighth b Decr. lib 3. cit 2. Crantz lib. 8. c. 36. Some as Bellarmine conclude that it is a point of faith to hold that the Bishop of Rome hath succeeded Peter in the universall regiment of the Church c Bellarm. de Pontif Rom. l. 2. c. 12. Others as the Iesuites perswade their Catholikes that the King of Spain their Catholike faith are so linked together as it is become a point of necessitie in the Catholike faith to put all Europe into the hands of the said King otherwise the Catholike religion will be utterly extinguished and perish d Spa● dis of the Eng. Ies d. 7. Others of them have published a new Gospel called Evangelium aeternum Spiritus Sancti which they say doth so far excell the Gospel of Christ as the kernell surpasseth the shell the Sunne the Moone and light darknesse The author whereof was one Cyrillus a Carmelite And lastly the Puritanes and all the speculations of Brown Barrow Greene Penry Marprelate T.C.E.G.R.H.A.C.I.B. with the new Sabbatarians and their fancies 21. Article Of the authority of generall Councels Generall Councels 1 may not be gathered together without the commandement and will of Princes And 2 when they be gathered together forasmuch as they be an assembly of men whereof all be not governed with the Spirit and Word of God they may erre and 3 sometimes have erred even in things pertaining unto God whorefore 4 things ordained by them as necessary unto salvation have neither strength nor authority unlesse it may be declared that they be taken out of holy Scriptures The Propositions 1. Generall Councels may not be gathered together but by the commandement and will of Princes 2. Generall Councels may erre 3. Generall Councels have erred even in things pertaining unto God 4. The things ordained by generall Councels are so farre to be embraced and beleeved as they are consonant to Gods holy Word 1. Proposition Generall Councels may not be gathered together but by the commandement of Princes The proofe from Gods Word GReat is the power and authoritie of Kings and Princes by the Word of God For as the defence of Religion is committed unto them so must they see that all men doe their duties That these things the better may be performed they are as just occasion is offered not as men under the power of others to summon but as supreme governours within their own territories and dominions to command all sorts of men to meete together and that either to the implanting of the truth where it is not or to the suppression of sin errors idolatry and superstition where or in whomsoever it doth arise or is rooted Such Councels were holden both in the time of the Mosaicall government by the commandement of the most godly Kings David a 1 Cor. 3.1 2. Salomon b 1 King 8.1 Asa c 2 Chr. 15.9 Ezechiah d 2 Chr. 29.4 and Iosiah e 1 Chr. 34.29 and since the Gospel hath bin received into Kingdomes and Common-weales by Christian Princes Kings and Emperors who gathered Councels both Generall as the Nicene was by Constantine the Great f Ruffi l. 10.1 1. Eus de vita Const l. 3. c 9. The Councell of Constantinople by Theodosius the elder g Theo. l 5 c. 6. the Councell of Ephesus by Theodosius the younger h Euang. l 1. c. 2 the Councell of Calcedon by Marcian i Leo ep 43.53 and Nationall and Provinciall so the Councell at Franckford Rhemes Turon Arelot and Moguntia by the will and commandement of Charles the Great k Aventin Carr●●z● summa Conc. Carion lib. 3. at Marison by Gunthranus
grace is universall and belongeth unto all so well young as old 2. Baptisme is unto us as Circumcision was unto the Iews But the Infants of the Iewes were circumcised Therefore the children of Christians are to be baptized 3. Children belong unto the Kingdome of Heaven a Matth. 13.14 and are in the covenant therefore the signe of the covenant is not to be denyed them 4. Christ gave in commandement that all should be baptized b Matth. 28.19 therefore young children are not to be exempted 5. Christ hath shed his blood aswell for the washing away the sinnes of children as of the elder sort Therefore it is very necessary that they should be partakers of the Sacrament thereof All Christian Churches allow of the Baptisme of Infants c Conf. Helv. 1 ar 21. 2. c. 20. ar 35. Belg. ar 34. Aug. ar 13. Sax. ar 13. Wit c. 10. Suc. cap. 17. The adversaries unto this truth The premises declare that They slander us which say that all Protestants deny the Baptisme of children to be necessary and this is Runagate Hils report a Hils quart reas 14. They erre which oppugne this truth as doe many persons but not after one and the same sort For Some utterly deny that Infants or young children are to be baptized so did the Pelagians b D. August de Ver. Apo. se de Bap par the Heracleans and the Henricians c Mag. eccles hist con 12. c. 5. and so doe the Anabaptists whereof said some how baptisme is the invention of Pope Nicholas and therefore naught d Bullin contra Anbap l. 1. others that baptisme is of the devill So thought Melchior Hoffeman e Ibid. l. 2 c. 13. so also doe the Swermerians a sect among the said Anabaptists f Althemar lo. pug co 131. the Servetians g Epi. minist Bern. in Cal epist fol. 118. and the Family of Love which doth hold that none should be baptized untill he be thirtie yeares old h Display H. 7. a. Others refuse to baptize not all but some Infants So denied is baptisme by the Barrowists unto the seed of whoores and witches i Bar. disc p. 9. by the Brownists unto the children of open sinners k Giffords reply by the Disciplinarians unto their children which subject not themselves as Dud. Fenner saith unto the discipline of the Church or obey not the Presbyteriall decre●● l Sacramentorum autem primum pro natura sua administrari debet vel infantibus vel adultis Infantibus autem i●s qui sunt liberi corum qui sunt intra Intra autem qui ecclesiae 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sc subii civat D. Fenner 5. Theol. cap. ult Others allow the Baptisme of Infants yet thinke those Infants not lawfully baptized which are baptized either by the now ministers of the Church of England as the Brownists doe thinke m R.A. confut of Brow p. 113. or by Protestant ministers as the Papists are of minde witnesse their rebaptizing of infants in France and in Netherland n See afore ar 25. p. 8. or by unpreaching ministers as the disciplinarian Puritanes doe hold o See ar 26. pr. 1. Declarent ubinam legerint tam necessario esse copulandam coelestis verbi praedicationem cum administratione Sacramenti ut nisi concio habeatur renascentium lavacro infans aspergi non possit And others are of opinion that none are to be baptized which beleeve not first Hence the Anabaptists Infants beleeve not therefore be not to be baptized Hence the Lutherans Infants doe beleeve p Querim ec p. 80. Hessius de 600. ar Pontif. lo. 16. Therefore to be baptized 28. Article Of the Supper of the Lord. 1 The Supper of the Lord is not onely a signe of the love that Christians ought to have among themselves one to another 2 but rather it is a Sacrament of our redemption by Christs death Insomuch that to such as worthily and with faith receive the same the bread which we breake is partaking of the Body of Christ and likewise the Cup of blessing is a partaking of the bloud of Christ 3 transubstantiation or the change of the substance of bread and wine in the Supper of the Lord cannot be proved by holy writ but is repugnant to the plaine words of Scripture overthroweth the nature of a Sacrament and hath given occasion to many superstitions 4 The Body of Christ in given and taken and eaten in the Supper onely after an heavenly and spirituall manner and the mean whereby the Body of Christ is received and eaten in the Supper is faith The Sacraments of the Lords Supper were not by Christs ordinance reserved carried about carried about lifted up or worshipped The Propositions 1. The Supper of the Lord is a signe of the love that Christians ought to have among themselves 2. The Lords Supper is a Sacrament of our Redemption by Christs death and to them which receive the same worthily by faith a partaking of the body and blood of Christ 3. The Bread and Wine in the Lords Supper be not changed into another substance 4. The Body of Christ is given taken and eaten after an heavenly and spirituall not after a carnall sort 5. To reserve carry about lift up or worship the Sacrament of the Lords Supper is contrary to the Ordinance of Christ 1. Proposition The Supper of the Lord is a signe of the love that Christians ought to have among themselves The proofe from Gods Word THE Supper of the Lord is a token of the love that Christians ought to have among themselves For which cause it is called the Lords Table a 1 Cor. 10.11 the Lords Supper b 1 Cor. 11.10 a Communion of the Body of Christ and they that partake thereof though they be many yet are but one bread and one body c 1 Cor. 10.16 17. This is the doctrine of all Christian Churches The errors and adversaries unto this truth d Conf. Helv. 2. cap. 21. Basil ar 6. Bohem. c. 13. Belg. ar 35 Saxon. ar 14. Suc. c. 18. So thinke not those men who either with heretike Hamant deny the use of the Lords Supper to be necessary a Hol. chron fol 1299. or with the Rhemists raile on it and the Protestants that use the same calling it a prophane and detestable table the Cup of divels b Test Rhem. an 1 Cor. 10.21 2. Proposition The Sacraments of the Lords Supper is a Sacrament of our redemption by Christs death and to them which receive the same worthily by Faith a partaking of the body and blood of Christ The proofe from Gods Word THE Sacrament of the Lords Supper is to all Christians a Sacrament of our redemption by Iesus Christ For This is my blood of the New Testament which is shed for many for the remission of sinnes a Matt. 26 28. this is my body which is given for you c.
the true bloud of Christ our onely Saviour to the cherishing of the spirituall life in our soules And herein there is a goodly consent with the most of the reformed Churches and us d Confes Helv. 1. ar 22 2. c. 22. Basil ar 6. Bohem. c. 13. Gal. ar 36. B●lg ar 35. The aduersaries vnto this truth Iointly wee withstand the adversaries thereof whosoever as The Capernaites which thought the flesh of our Lord might be eaten with corporall mouthes The Synusiastes or Vbiquitaries a Aliq●● 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 augimus sed in c●ognatum delabimur 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 paru vino substantium equidem relinquendo sed corporale Christi corpus ita coaduniendo ut substantia substantiam vel localiter vel definitivè vel repletivè vel omnibus istis modis simul contineat quod ipsum prefecto nil est iliud quam Transubstantiationis quoddam quasi involuer c. Jezler de diutur helli Euchar. p. 8. which thinke the body of Christ is so present in the Supper as his said Body with Bread and Wine by one and the same mouth at one and the same time of all and every communicant is eaten corporally and received into the belly The Metusiastes and Papists which beleeve the substance of Bread and Wine is so changed into the substance of Christ his Body as nothing remaineth but the reall Body of Christ besides the accidents of Bread and Wine b After Consecration there is neither bread nor wine left in this Sacrament saith Vaux in his Catech. By the vertue of the words of Consecration the substance of bread is turned changed into the very Body of Christ and the substance of wine is turned into the Bloud of Christ the holy Ghost working by a divine power So that Christ is wholly under the forme of Bread and in every part of the Host being broken Christ is wholly Also under the form of wine every part ther●f being seperated Christ is wholly Canis catech c. 4. Romanenses introduxerunt 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 vos Lutherani 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ejus sororem plumorum errorum matrem 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Iezler de dintur belli Euchar. p. 31. b. The Symbelists Figurists and Significatists who are of opinion that the faithfull at the Lords Supper doe receive nothing by naked and bare signes 5. Proposition To reserve carry about lift up or worship the Sacraments of the Lords Supper is contrary to the ordinance of Christ The proofe from Gods Word The true and lawfull use of this Sacrament hath been afore set downe And therefore it may suffice us to be remembred how the Lords Supper was ordained that the bread should not only be broken and eaten a Math. 26.20 Marke 14.22 Luke 22.19 1 Cor. 10.16 11 2. the cup should only be given and drunken b Math. 26.27 Marke 14.23 Luke 22.17 1 Cor. 11.25 and all this is done in remembrance of Christ c Luke 22.19 1 Cor. 11.24 25 And so also testifie the Churches reformed d Confes Helv. 2. c. 21. Basil ar 6. Bohem. c. 13. Aug. de Missa ar 1. Sax. ar 14. Wittemb c 19 The adversaries unto this truth But contrary to the institution of Christ the Papists abuse this holy Sacrament For They reserve the same and not onely so but take it to be a Catholike a pious and necessary custome so to reserve it a Concil Trid. ses 3. c. 6. and besides they thinke every piece and particle of the Sacrament so reserved is the very bloud of Christ b Ibid. can 4. Sermons fol. 196. b. They carry it about both unto sick folks Hence saith the Festivallc. As often as any man seeth that body at Masse or born about to the sick he shall kneele downe devoutly and say his Pater-noster or some other good prayer in worship of his soveraigne Lord. And also thorow cities and townes For whensoever the Pope goeth any journey the sacramentall bread is carried before him on an ambling Iennet as the Persian Kings have before them carried their Orsmada or holy fire d See cerem Pontif. lib. 1. When the Pope goeth from one people to another he sendeth before him yea and sometime a day or two dayes journey his sacrament upon a horse carrying at his neck a little Bell accompanied with the scum and baggage of the Romane Court. Thither goe the dishes and spits old shoes caldrons and kettles and all the sculletie of the Court whores and jesters Thus the Sacrament arriveth with this honourable traine to the place whither the Pope is to come it there awaiteth his comming And when the master is knowne to approach neere the people it goeth forth to receive him So Cyp. Valera a Spaniard in his treat of the Pope and his auct p. 17. In Spaine even at this day in the time of the peace between the two mighty Kings of great Britaine and Spaine those English men as meeting the Sacrament in the streets will neither doe reverence thereunto nor goe aside nor turne into some house doe fall into the danger of the not holy but bloudy Inquisition e Act. of the peace c. an 1604. ar 2. in the end touching a Moderation c. They worship it and for the same have ordained a certaine set and solemne feast called Corpus-Christi-day on which the sacrament is borne about lifted up and most idolatrously adored f Trid. sess 3. c. 3. 29. Article Of the wicked which doe not eate the Body and bloud of Christ in the use of the Lords Supper The wicked and such as be voide of the lively faith although they doe carnally and visibly presse with their teeth as S. Augustine saith the Sacrament of the body and bloud of Christ yet in no wise are they partakers of Christ but rather to their condemnation doe eate and drink the signe or Sacrament of so great a thing The Proposition The wicked and such as be void of a lively faith doe not eate the Body nor drink the Bloud of Iesus Christ in the use of the Lords Supper The proofe from Gods Word SAint Paul doth shew how the Supper of the Lord is received of some worthily which doe examine and judge themselves a 1 Cor. 11.28 and discerne the Lords Body b Ibid. 29. as also doe abstaine from the table of divels How these doe participate of the body and bloud of Christ c 1 Cor. 10.31 it hath already bin shewed in the last mentioned article prop. 4. Againe of others the same is worthily received d 1 Cor. 11 38.39 that is to say which doe not examine themselves nor judge e Ibid. 38.31 neither discerne the Lords Body f Ibid. 26. and doe communicate at the Table of the Lord and at the Table of devils g 1 Cor. 10.21 These may receive the Sacrament but not the true body of Christ The reasons be for that
〈◊〉 9. none of which the Familists doe use or allow of 38. Article Of Christian mens goods which are not common The riches and goods of Christians 1 are not common as touching the right title and possession of the same as certaine Anabaptists do falsely boast Notwithstanding 2 every man ought of such things as he possesseth liberally to give almes to the poore according to his ability The Propositions 1. The riches and goods of Christians as touching the right title and possession of the same are not common 2. Every man is to give liberall almes to the poore of that which he possesseth according to his ability 1. Proposition The riches and goods of Christians as touching the title and possession of the same are not common The proofe from Gods Word AGainst community of goods and riches be all those places which are infinite of the holy Scripture that either condemne the unlawful getting keeping or desiring of riches which by Covetousnesse a If any one that is called a brother be a fornicator or covetous c. with such one eate not Covetousnesse let it not be once named among you as it becommeth Saints Eph. 5.3 Theevery b Let none of you suffer as a Theefe c. 1 Pet. 4.15 Extortion With a brother that is an extortioner eate not 1 Cor. 5.11 Neither theeves nor covetous persons nor Extortioners shall inherite the Kingdome of God 1 Cor. 6.10 and the like wicked meanes many doe attaine or doe commend liberality d It is a blessed thing to give rather then to receive Acts 10.35 yea and that thing ye do unto all the Brethren throughout all Macedonia 1 Thes 4.10 If a brother or a sister be naked and destitute of daily food c. notwithstanding ye give them not these things which are needfull to the body what helpeth it Iames 2.15 16. Frugality e If there be any that provideth not for his owne namely for them of his houshold he denieth the faith and is worse then an Infidell 1 Tim. 5.8 free and friendly lending f From him that would borrow of thee turne not away Matth. 5.42 And lend looking for nothing again Luke 6.35 honest labour g Let him that stole steale no more but rather let him labour c. that hee may have to give unto him that needeth Eph. 4.28 Wee warned you that if there were any which would not work that he should not eate 2 Thes 3.8 and lawfull vocations to live and thrive by h Ye know that these hands have ministred unto my necessities and to them that were with me Acts 20.34 We laboured day and night because we should not be chargeable unto any of you 1 Thes 2.9 wee tooke not bread of any man for nought 1 Thes 3.8 All which doe shew that Christians are to have goods of their owne and that riches ought not to be common Of this iudgement be the reformed Churches i Confess Helv. 3. c. 29. Gal. ar 40. Belg. ar 36. Aug. ar 16. Wittemb c. 21. The adversaries unto this truth Of another mind were the Esseis a Heyden des urbis Hierosolym l. 3. c. 3. the Manichies b D. Aug. de mor. eccles Cat. lib. 1. the Pelagians c Magdeb. eccles hist Gen. ● fol. 586. the Apostolikes d D. Humfr. de Romanae curiae praxi p 39. exl Epiphan and Fratricellians e W. Tho. desc of Italy p. 59. and are the Anabaptists f Sleidan com lib. 6. and Family of Love g Display H. 3 b. Among the Familists saith H.N. none claimeth any thing proper to himselfe for to possesse the same to any owednesse or privatenesse For no man c. can desire to appropriate or challenge any thing to himselfe either yet to make any private use to himselfe from the restward but what is there is free and is also left free in his upright forme h H. N. Spir. laud. c. 35. sect 34. 1. Proposition Every man is to give liberall Almes to the poore of that which he possesseth according to his ability The proofe from Gods Word VNto liberality towards the poore according to our ability we are in the holy Scriptures provoked 1. By the commandements from God by his servants the Prophets a Deut. 15.11 Prov. 5.15 16. Eccles 11.1 2. by his Sonne our Saviour b Matth. 5.42 c. 6.2 3 c. Luk. 9.30 c. and by his Apostles c Rom. 12.13 1 Cor. 1.62 2. By sweet promises of ample blessings d Eccles 11.1 The liberall person shall have plenty and he that watereth shall also have raine Prov. 11.24 Hee that stoppeth his eare at the crying of the poore he shall cry and not be heard Prov. 1.13 3. By threatnings of punishments to the covetous and stony-hearted He that giveth unto the poore shall not lack but he that hideth his eyes shall have many curses Prov. 28.27 4. By the examples of the best men viz. the Apostles and Primitive Church f Acts 11.19 20. Rom. 15.15 1 Cor. 8.1 2 3 c. 2. Cor. 6.2 c. So the Churches g Conf. Helv. 2 c. 2. 3. 28 29. Sax. ar 21. Wittemb c. 18. The adversaries unto this truth Of strange minds therefore and impious are First the Anabaptists which would have no man either to give or receive For all things in their opinion should be common as afore also hath bin said and none among them be either poore to receive or wealthy to minister any almes a Bale myst of Iniq. p 53. Secondly the hypocriticall sectaries who are bountifull only to those which side with them Such were first the Publicans in our Saviour his dayes b Mar. ● 46.47 and after them the Manichies who would minister neither bread nor water unto any hungry and pyning begger unlesse he weare a Manichean c Homini mendico esurienti nisi Manichaeus sit panem aut aquam nō porrigunt Manic D Aug. de Mor. Manc l. 2. And such are the Family of Love who say they are not bound to give almes but to their owne sect and if they doe they give the same to the devill d Dispi H. 7. b. 39. Article Of a Christian mans oath As we confesse that 1 vaine and rash swearing is forbidden Christian men by our Lord Iesus Christ and Iames his Apostle So we judge that 2 Christian Religion doth not prohibit but that a man may sweare when the Magistrate requireth in a cause of faith and charity so it be done according to the Prophets teaching in justice judgement and truth The Propositions 1. We may not sweare vainely and rashly 2. A lawfull oath may be given and taken according to the Word of God in justice judgement and truth 1. Proposition Wee may not sweare vainely and rashly The proofe from Gods Word THE better to avoid vaine and rash oathes and swearing it is good to have in remembrance