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A36018 Protestant certainty, or, A short treatise shewing how a Protestant may be well assured of the articles of his faith Dillingham, William, 1617?-1689. 1689 (1689) Wing D1485; ESTC R1392 22,130 40

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from thence returning to recover as much as we can of that which we laid aside to try the Experiment And lastly for the new Demonstrations which some have lately advanced to prove the infallibility of Oral Tradition from the impossibility of its miscarrying and that what is this day declared for Apostolical Doctrine must needs have been always so declared because it cannot be imagined that those who delivered it one day for such should have forgotten what they had heard but the day before or that they would report that to others which they had not heard themselves This I say doth require and needs more Charity and good nature in an Adversary than it is like to meet withal out of their own Communion and but rarely there And really the Demonstration is so extraordinary that did not we see it made use of by themselves we might rather have supposed it to have been hatched by the heat and sweat of some Man's Brain who was no well-wisher to the Doctrines which it is brought in favour of But however that be I am confident that seven Cities will hardly contend for the honour of his Birth who had the felicity to be the first Inventor and for our selves we shall desire to be well assured not only of the goodness and infallibility of their Memories and of their Honesty who all along delivered these things but also of their due attention to and right apprehension of the things which they heard And also that Men of so good Memories might not likewise have so good Inventions or at least some of them as to light upon some private opinions of their own which they might impart unto others and which might insensibly in tract of time be spread abroad and so far liked by the generality that for the very agreableness of them to their Minds and conveniences for their Interests they might be worthy to be ascribed either to some extraordinary Spirit in the Author if known or else to the Apostles themselves And this be spoken without any worse reflection upon their Memories or Fidelity which have been shewn to be a very insufficient enumeration of the possible yea and probable causes of a miscarriage in Oral Tradition But this demonstration has convinced Protestants of this at least that as far as this is confided in Demonstration at present runs very low in the Church of Rome And to keep our Country People from being overmuch convinced by it we shall need only to put them to read a leaf in Chaucer where they may perceive that our Language notwithstanding daily use and Tradition is so much altered from what it was three hundred Years ago that what was then ordinarily spoken is now hardly to be understood But wherever the Romanists shall at length agree to place this their Infallibility nay though every one of their Communion might have it who would but pretend to it let them make the best use of it they can for their own private assurance and comfort But if they will needs make it Argumentative to convince others of the Divine Authority of what they deliver we hope they will first prove to us such their Infallibility by clear promises in Scripture or testimonies from Scripture or else by universal Tradition of the Churches of Christ concerning it or else shew us some unquestionable works of divine Power wrought in Confirmation I say not of their Doctrines but of their own Infallibility in testifying that the Doctrines were taught by Christ and his Apostles which is pretended to have accompanied the Tradition through all Ages and therefore the Miracles must run parallel with it and accompany it in a constant Succession to be the Credential Letters of the successive deliverers and reporters to the Men of each particular Generation For it seems a very unreasonable thing for any Disputant to require such a Postulatum to be granted him by his Antagonist that whatsoever he shall say is not only true but infallibly true which is such a begging of the Question as shews how poorly he is provided to give Men a just satisfaction and is as much as to say He is resolved never to dispute about any thing which he proposes I will add no more but only this upon the whole Master That while the Romanists do offer us more Certainty for the Scriptures being the Word of God than we need They cannot perform to us so much Certainty for those unscriptural Doctrines as we do justly require and expect before we entertain them So prone are some Men to dream of Supererogating while in truth they fall shamefully short of doing their necessary Duty FINIS A Catalogue of some Books Printed for Henry Mortlack at the Phoenix in St. Paul's Church-yard A Rational Account of the Grounds of Protestant Religion being a Vindication of the Lord Archbishop of Canterbury's Relation of a Conference c. from the pretended Answer by T. C. Wherein the true Grounds of Faith are cleared and the False discovered the Church of England vindicated from the Imputation of Schism and the most important particular Controversie between us and those of the Church of Rome throughly examined By Edward Stillingfleet D. D. and Dean of St. Paul's Folio The second Edition Origines Britannicae Or the Antiquity of the British Churches with a Preface concerning some pretended Antiquities relating to Britain in vindication of the Bishop of St. Asaph By Edward Stillingfleet D. D. Dean of St. Pauls Folio The Rule of Faith Or an Answer to the Treatise of Mr. J. S. Entituled Sure Footing c. By John Tillotson D. D. To which is adjoyned A reply to Mr. J. S.'s third Appendix c. By Edward Stillingfleet D. D. Octavo A Letter to Mr. G giving a true Account of a late Conference at the D. of Pauls A second Letter to Mr. G. in answer to two Letters lately published concerning the Conference at the D. of Pauls Veteres Vindicati In an Expostulary Letter to Mr. Sclater of Putny upon his Consensus Veterum c. wherein the absurdity of his Method and the weakness of Reasons are shewn his false Aspersions upon the Church of England are wiped off and his Faith concerning the Eucharist proved to be that of the Primitive Church Together with Animadversions on Dean Boileu's French translation of and Remarks upon Bertram An Answer to the Compiler of Nubes Testium Wherein is shewn That Antiquity in relation to the Points in Controversie set down by him did not for the first five hundred Years Believe Teach and Practice as the Church of Rome doth at present Believe Teach and Practice together with a Vindication of Veteres Vindicati from the late weak and dis-ingenuous Attempts of the Author of Transubstantion defended by the Author of the Answer to Mr. Sclater of Putney A Letter to Father Lewis Sabran Jesuit in answer to his Letter to a Peer of the Church of England wherein the Postscript to the Answer to the Nubes Testium is vindicated and Father Sabran's Mistakes farther discovered A second Letter to Father Lewis Sabran Jesuite in answer to his Reply A Vindication of the Principles of the Author of the Answer to the Compiler of Nubes Testium in Answer to a late pretended Letter from a Dissenter to the Divines of the Church of England Scripture and Tradition compared in a Sermon Preached at Guild-Hall Chappel Nov. 27. 1687. By Edward Stillingfleet D. D. Dean of St. Pauls the second Edition A discourse concerning the Nature and Grounds of the Certainty of Faith in Answer to J. S. his Catholick Letters by Edward Stillingfleet D. D. Dean of St Pauls The Council of Trent examined and disproved by Catholick Tradition in the main Points in Controversie between us and the Church of Rome with a particular Account of the Times and Occasions of introducing them Part I. To which a Preface is prefixed concerning the true Sense of the Council of Trent and the Notion of Transubstantiation By Ed. Stillingfleet D. D. Dean of St. Pauls
might have been done by some other Man So that I might fold up what hath been said into this form of Argument That which pretending to be revealed by God and penned by his Assistance hath been owned by his special Providence and which having manifest Characters of of Divinity shining in it hath been owned believed and attested by all the Churches of Christ in all Ages as the Word of God revealed by him and penned by the infallible guidance of the Holy Ghost and containing the Doctrine of Christ and his Holy Prophets and Apostles That is the Word of God revealed by him and penned by the infallible Guidance of the Holy Ghost and doth contain the Doctrine of Christ and his Holy Prophets and Apostles But the Holy Scripture pretending to be revealed by God and penned by his Assistance hath been owned by his special Providence and having manifest Characters of Divinity shining in it hath been owned believed and attested by all the Churches of Christ in all Ages as the Word of God revealed by him penned by the infallible Guidance of the Holy Ghost and containing in it the Doctrine of Christ and his Holy Prophets and Apostles Therefore the Holy Scripture is the Word of God revealed by him and penned by the infaillible guidance of the Holy-Ghost and doth contain in it the Doctrine of Christ and his Holy Prophets and Apostles And if all Men would be brought to have such a certainty as these Arguments are in themselves apt to produce in well disposed Minds they must needs think themselves under the highest obligations to provide for the Salvation of their Souls by following the Directions prescribed in the Holy Scriptures in order thereunto And for the number of Canonical Books in Scripture we have the like uniform Testimony of the Churches of Christ in all Ages ever since the Epistle to the Hebrews was received by the Latin Church and the Apocalypse by the Greek Church Which two Books do not add any Article of Faith necessary to Salvation which was not contained in those other Books which were before that time universally received But every faithful Soul hath a far greater Certainty of the Holy Scriptures being the word of God than hath been hitherto mentioned which I shall shew when I have considered the second Proposition which is this That all the Articles of Faith which we Protestants do believe and profess are recorded in the Holy Scriptures as taught by Christ and his Holy Prophets and Apostles and there contained either in express Words or in Principle from which they may be firmly deduced and concluded Now having such an assurance as I have shewn above that the Holy Scriptures are the Word of God we have built the Articles of our Faith upon this Rock and shall be ready to receive any more which we can be convinced to be contained in it but no other till we have good assurance that they have been revealed from God some other way For divine Faith must be founded on a divine Testimony But for the better clarifying of our Thoughts and Apprehensions in this our second Inquiry it will not be amiss for us to distinguish 1. Of the Assent given to those Articles which must be alway an Assent of divine Faith but a divine Faith is sometimes Explicit and express when we do actually apprehend and conceive of the Proposition which we assent unto whether it be expresly laid down in Scripture or we plainly see it to be deduced from what is there laid down But sometimes it is implicite and vertual only as when we assent unto some general Proposition actually apprehended though we do not distinctly consider the particulars included in it and in like manner when we assent unto some Principle laid down in Holy Scriptures though we do not actually apprehend those other Truths which have a necessary consequential Dependance on it we are said to believe these latter also implicitly and as it were in semine because we do expresly believe that which implies or infers them For instance when I assent unto this General God knows the Hearts of all Men I do implicitly assent unto this God knows my Heart though perhaps I may not have as yet particularly assented unto it And so when I assent unto this that Christ was true Man I do vertually assent unto this that Christ had a reasonable Soul because it may be firmly inferred from the former though I have not yet actually inferred it or assented to it 2. Of the necessity of such assent which is diverse according to the diverse Nature and import of the matters to be believed Some are necessary to be believed and done necessitate medii or else we shall never be Saved Some things are necessary necessitate Praecepti only that is without the Belief and doing whereof we sin For the first sort they are such things without the believing and doing whereof God has determined never to save a Man for both our Salvation and also the means and terms of it depend wholly upon God's Good-will and Pleasure and therefore we must take our Measures of such Necessity from God's revealed Will only And from that we learn that God has afforded greater Discoveries of things to be believed in some Ages than in others and given greater abilities and advantages to some Men than to others and acordingly doth require more things to be believed and more explicit Faith of them from some Men than from others unto which by his Providence he will bring them and not save them without such a belief of such Truths And as for the latter sort if they be necessary to be expresly and explicitly believed though we sin if we do not so believe them being sufficiently propounded unto us and we having abilities to apprehend them yet upon a sincere Repentance the Non-belief of them shall not prejudice our Salvation But in many things if we do but use our best endeavours to attain the knowledge of them having a readiness to believe and obey whatsoever we can get a particular Knowledge of to be the Will of God such an implicit Faith and readiness will be accepted for the Deed as if we had expresly believed them Now for such things are necessary to be explicitly believed by all Men with a Divine Faith or else they cannot be saved They are not many and are all contained in the Scriptures and may be clearly learned from thence by any ordinary Capacity The Ancients made account they were all comprised in the Apostles Creed the Lords Prayer and the ten Commandments and Bellarmine himself confesses that they are all contained in the Scriptures omnia sunt scripta quae sunt omnibus necessaria Lib. 4. De verbo Dei non scripto cap. 11. And that they are so will be evident to any one that will examine the Particulars And therefore they may be clearly learnt from thence and we may be as much assured of them as of any thing which we
read or hear And as for those other Matters which are further necessary for some Men to their Salvation they are also contained in the Holy Scriptures for else they were not propounded sufficiently to beget a divine Faith for there is no where else a divine Testimony to be found and then they could not be necessary for their Salvation And then for such things as are necessary to be believed only because else we Sin they also must needs be sufficiently proposed in the Holy Scriptures so as that using our best endeavours we may be sufficiently assured from thence of their Truth and divine Authority otherwise they would not be Obligatory But we may and do attain to such assurance by a diligent use of the means which God hath appointed and is wont to bless for that purpose viz. By the due and diligent reading and hearing of the Word with Prayer to God for the direction of his Holy Spirit by comparing of Scripture with Scripture and with the Analogy of Faith and particularly with those necessary Truths whereof we are already convinced and the rest of God's Image in our Souls and by consulting with others especially Ministers who were ordained by God to be the helpers of our Faith and by the Conscientious practising of what we have already attained to the knowledge of By these means used according to the abilities which God hath given all Men may be assured of all such Matters as are needful for Faith and Godliness but some Men may receive a greater Satisfaction and Confirmation therein who are able to search and add the concurrent Exposition of the ancient Orthodox Churches of Christ and the Fathers of the Primitive times agreeing among themselves and with the Holy Scriptures Would Men but make use of such means as these and embrace the Truth when it offers it self in the use of them none would wrest some obscure passages of Scripture to their own Destruction there being other places plain enough from which they might learn the Truth and their own Duty were they but truly humble and desirous to know it Nor would others have any pretence to keep the Scriptures from the People because of their obscurity But we may well suppose that those who do so do it rather because the Scriptures are too plain and express against their corrupt Doctrines and Practices What else should make them so unwilling to trust the People with the second Commandment and hide all the rest of the Scriptures even their very Pater noster in the dark Lanthorn of an unknown Tongue And here I do not expect to be asked how the common People can become assured that they see or hear that they are Letters and Words which they see and hear and words of such a Language and Signification because such mincing would be accounted triffling Altho' to dis-believe ones Senses is no new thing in the Pyrrhonian Philosophy But if we be asked how such People can be assured that their English Bibles agree with the Greek and Hebrew from which they have been Translated We hope our Neighbours will let us know the Secret how themselves are ascertained that what their Priest tells them in English by word of Mouth is agreeable I say not to the Originals but to their Latin Bible or that there is any true authentick Copy of it extant in the World and that the Popes have done correcting and altering its infallibility or confuting their own and how they are certain that it is true which the Priest tells them was done or said at Rome by some-body he knows not who nor when which yet he requires them to believe And then we may use the same or a better Method and hope they will not charge us with Uncertainty But in the mean while if we can have but a moderate Certainty from Sense Reason and humane Testimony concerning such things as these which serve only to propound and hand the object to our Faculties we shall then be better able to assure our selves of the Truth contained in the Letter and learn from whom it came by looking into it than by laying hold on the hand that brings it And for the Certainty which we have concerning the matters of our Faith though we dare not pretend to any subjective Infallibility yet it is as great a Certainty as God was pleased to allow the Church of the Jews before our Saviour's coming which was sufficient in its self both as to proposal of the Object and the Medium inducing Assent to have wrought Divine Faith in them and to have saved them We read that our Saviour sent them to the Scriptures and when they sought for signs from Heaven He did peremptorily reject them No sign shall be given them And when the rich Man in Hell desired on behalf of his Kinsmen on Earth that Lazarus might be sent to testifie to them what Lazarus saw and himself felt Our Saviour puts words into Abraham's Mouth to check his Error Luk. 16.29 They have Moses and the Prophets let them hear them and then adds If they hear not Moses and the Prophets neither will they be perswaded though one rose from the Dead Yea though himself spake by an infallible Spirit and wrought so many Miracles yet he saith to the Jews If ye believe not his Writings how shall ye believe my Words Joh. 5.47 Agreeable unto which St. Peter tells us 2 Pet. 1.19 That the word of Prophecy is more sure than the Voice which came from Heaven which he had heard for indeed the Glory which accompanied that did so astonish him that he knew not what himself said Mark 9.6 And those who heard the Voice from Heaven in answer to our Saviour's Prayer John 12.29 were so far from being edified or convinced by it that some of them said It Thundered And therefore let us content our selves with the Certainty which God hath given us by his written Word especially having the Types enucleated and Prophecies fulfilled by Christ's Appearing and the Law of God Expounded by our Saviour's Doctrine and having better Assistances for the understanding of the Scriptures than ever the Jewish Church enjoyed And thus much of the Certainty which we have of our Faith from such Considerations as may pass in Argument between Man and Man which I do aver to be abundantly sufficient for any prudent Man to act upon who I am sure would upon less certain Grounds think himself bound to make more hazardous Attempts if he were in but half the danger of losing his Life that he is now in of losing his Soul to all Eternity and therefore it affords a Man a sufficient external Motive of a prudent Belief and Ground to follow it with his utmost Endeavours And therefore if Men be not wrought upon hereby the fault will be found to be in themselves alone And if any shall blame this Certainty as insufficient we may reasonably expect from them that they do not require us to believe any Doctrines
whereof they cannot give us a greater Certainty at least as great as this But besides all this every true Believer who hath a true saving Faith which is the Gift of God alone infused into him and wrought by the Operation of the Holy Ghost hath a further Certainty of what he believes For the Object to be believed being offered and brought home to his Faculties by the Preaching of the Word the Holy Ghost makes the Ordinances effectual for the working of Saving Faith in the Hearts of all who are ordained to Eternal Life by clearly shining upon the Truths proposed to them out of the Holy Scriptures in which respect it is called a Spirit of Revelation and by opening strengthning and raising their Understanding by a Special Donum intellectus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to the owning and acknowledging of the Truth in which respect it is called a Spirit of Wisdom Eph. 1.17 by which they are enabled clearly to discern and fully to assent unto those Divine Rays and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 wherewith its self hath invested Divine Truth in the Scriptures by a kind of spiritual Sensation as the Eye doth unto Light and Colours or by a kind of Spiritual Intelligentia whereby it assents unto this Object as a First Principle in Credendis un-induced by any preceding Process of Ratiocination which is a Fides divina Principiorum And from it will be produced a Divine Faith to the Conclusion which may be inferred from it that so much of the Holy Scripture is the Word of God. Much after the same way by which those to whom the Word of God was immediately revealed were assured of its being the very Word of God and not any illusion which was offered to them But as the Matter there was new and to be by them offered to the Faith of others there were added miraculous Works of a Divine Power to accompany the Revelation into the World which might give Assurance that the Words because the Works did proceed from God and this Divine Working was to be observable by others to whom those Messengers were sent whereunto their own Senses might give Testimony of the Works done and their Reason That they must needs proceed from a supernatural Cause But now the Conviction here being but for the Person of the Believer in order only to his particular Salvation both the Illumination of the Mind Illustration of the Object and the powerful Workings which are here upon the Conscience accompanying it are all transacted within the Precincts of the Soul and intended no further only as they may be reported by him unto others and then they will have the force of an human Testimony of what has passed within himself And this cannot be called a private Spirit for it is the same Holy Spirit which opens the Hearts of all who receive the Word by a divine Supernatural Faith necessarily required for their Salvation and it works this Conviction and Assent not immediately at least ordinarily but by the means of that same word which it had before revealed by others for the common good of the Church and the common Salvation of all of them that believe Such an assurance as this is cannot be wrought but by God himself and therefore it is Supernatural Faith. And to shew that this is no singular Opinion but the common Doctrine owned and taught by the Learned of both Communions I shall mention only two Testimonies of each one Aquinas secunda secundae Qu. 8. Art. 4. in Corpore speaking of the donum intellectus saith that it illustrates the Mind of a Man enabling it to know a certain supernatural Truth His words are illustrat mentem hominis ut cognoscat veritatem quandam supernaturalem And in the same place ad tertium he saith of the same special gift of Understanding that it is never wanting unto Holy Men in things necessary to Salvation Nunquam se subtrahit sanctis circa ea quae sunt necessaria ad salutem The other is that of Archbishop Lawd in his Conference with Mr. Fisher the Jesuite where Paragraph 16. he hath these Words But if by Faith they mean the Habit or Act of divine infused Faith by which Vertue they do believe the credible Object and thing to be believed then their Speech is true and confessed by all Divines of all sorts For Faith is the Gift of God of God alone and an infused Habit in respect whereof the Soul is meerly recipient And therefore the sole Infuser the Holy Ghost must not be excluded from that work which none can do but He. For the Holy Ghost as he first dictated the Scripture to the Apostles so did he not leave the Church in general nor the true Members of it in particular without Grace to believe what himself had revealed and made credible So that Faith as it is taken for the vertue of Faith whether it be of this or any other Article though it receive a kind of Preparation or occasion of Beginning from the Testimony of the Church as it proposeth and induceth to the Faith yet it ends in God revealing within and teaching within that which the Church Preached without For till the Spirit of God move the Heart of Man he cannot Believe be the Object never so credible Thus far he and to the same purpose he produces St. Augustine Aquinas Canus and Stapleton And this is truly a Divine Faith not only as it is given to a Divine Testimony as the Object and as induced by a Divine Testimony as the Medium or motive of Assent but also as it is infused into the Soul by God as the Author and Giver of it and it cannot be but that the Special Providence of God that guides Men unto Salvation should concern it self to bring all such without fail to the knowledge and Belief and such knowledge and Belief of all those Truths without the Knowledge and Belief whereof he hath determined not to save them But as for any other Men they do never savingly believe And as to other Matters the same special Providence will certainly give them such Assurance of them as he shall think needful for his own Glory and Service and for their Obedience Comfort and Salvation who dispenseth to all Men freely such Measures of Gifts and Graces as it pleaseth him Phil. 3.15 And for the ordinary extent of such Assurance it may be further considered That the Assurance which a Man hath of necessary Truths will reach unto many more Truths which have consanguinity or necessary connexion with them as Causes or Consequents or else by vertue of the Penning and Context As we see an whole Board fastned by a Nail driven in one Place because of the continuity of the Parts and a Seal confirming an whole Indenture though affixed but to one part of the Parchment And thus a Testimony of the Holy Scripture concerning some particular part of it self being the Word of God will take in very many others Thus have we considered
in the general what Certainty we have or may have of all the Articles of our Christian Faith which we do hold to be all contained in the Holy Scriptures or else may by good Inference be deduced from it both what Certainty a Professor may have within himself and also what Certainty he may give of it unto others or receive of them in dispute or by way of Perswasion And as for such Articles in Particular it is neither consistent with the designed brevity of this Paper nor indeed needful to shew where every one of them is contained in the Scriptures or how deduced thence this being already done to every ones Hand in the many excellent Writings and particularly in the Catechisms and Systems of the Christian Faith written both formerly and of later times by learned Men of both Communions whereunto private Persons may have recourse if they have not yet attained sufficient Knowledge and Satisfaction therein by hearing the Word Preached and Reading the Holy Scriptures PART II. BUT besides the Articles of Faith which we in common have received from the Holy Scriptures there are divers other Matters and Articles offered by the Church of Rome as necessarily to be believed by us which she tells us were also delivered and taught by Christ and his Holy Apostles and ought to be received and believed by us equally with those contained in the Holy Scriptures which are not expresly contained in them but have been delivered and conveyed down from Hand to Hand to those very times by word of Mouth or some other way Which are therefore called Traditions or traditional Doctrines from this particular way of conveyance distinct from the Holy Scriptures which is also called Tradition in an active Sense And for the Doctrines themselves which they offer to us if they were really taught by Christ and his Apostles we grant they must needs be infallibly true and the Word of God and attested so to be by the self same Miracles which they wrought to confirm their other Doctrines But we must have good assurance that these were taught by them which we can never have if they contradict those recorded in the Holy Scriptures to have been taught by them whereof we are so well assured already which yet many of them manifestly do Therefore let us see what Grounds or Arguments are offered to us for the Proof that these Doctrines were indeed taught by Christ and his Apostles And these Proofs must at least be equal to those by which we are ascertained that the Holy Scriptures are the Word of God else we cannot be obliged to receive these out-lying Doctrines with equal Faith and Certainty which they tell us is due unto them as those recorded in Holy Scriptures For our Satisfaction herein we are offered Infallible Tradition as is pretended that is that some Men have in all Ages to this present day been infallibly guided by the Holy Ghost to deliver these Doctrines to their Successors and infallibly to testifie that they were taught by Christ and his Apostles which is indeed a very great and liberal offer if they can but make it good and too great an offer not to be suspected and therefore we had need to consider it well lest so great a matter if rashly rejected should involve us in Infidelity or if blindly swallowed should prove a Sluce to let in upon us an Inundation of Men's Dreams and Fictions pretending Commission from our Blessed Saviour and his Holy Apostles And that we may the better judge of this Matter let us distinctly consider first the Tradition and then the Infallibility And here it is something surprizing and entertaining to find that some Men after they have to shew the necessity of Tradition told us that without it such and such particular points of Faith cannot be proved from Scripture should yet attempt to prove the same when they come to treat of them in Retail from several Texts of Scripture For instance Bellarmine de verbo Dei non Scripto Lib. 4. cap. 4. Quarto necesse est nosse extare libros aliquos vere Divinos Quod certe ex Scripturis nullo modo haberi potost i. e. That it cannot be known from Scriptures that there are any Books extant in being which are truly Divine and yet the some Man Lib. 1. De verbo Dei cap. 2. can argue in this manner Scripturas certissimas autem atque verissimas esse nec humana inventa sed oracula Divina continere 40. Testis est ipsa Scriptura cujus vera praedictiones Verum igitur est quod dicitur omnis Scriptura divinitus inspirata 2 Tim. 3. Verum quod dicunt omnes Prophetae haec dicit Dominus That the Scriptures are most certain and most true and contain not any human Inventions but the Divine Oracles Fourthly The Scripture it self is Witness-whose Predictions are true therefore that is true which it says All Scripture is of divine Inspiration and that is true which all the Prophets say Thus saith the Lord. Nor can it be pretended to be an Argument ad homines since they are never like to convince us of any thing from Scripture which they themselves have told us cannot be proved from Scripture But it seems such a Disputant as Bellarmine can prove that which cannot be proved or rather it shews how little they dare rely upon their own Traditions and how gladly they would beg a little Credit for some others of them by rubbing their Copper Coin against the Gold of Scripture and how little they matter it if they may but advance the reputation of their Traditions though they contradict both the Scripture and themselves also But they offer us Tradition for Proof and why may we not allow Tradition for good Proof that such Points of Doctrine were taught by Christ and his Apostles as well as we have done for the Scriptures being the Word of God But till they can bring us as good Tradition for these as that for the Scripture was they ought not to blame us as unfair and partial if we do not receive them Let them shew us the unanimous Comsent of all the Churches of Christ ever since the Apostles time attesting Matters which they judged to be of universal concernment for our Salvation and let this Testimony and Tradition concerning these things be collaterally corroborated by as evident Beams of Divinity resulting from the things themselves and then we shall be ready to pay a like Assent unto these Doctrines as we do unto those which are contained in the Holy Scriptures But if the Tradition for these exotick or exoterick Doctrines be not to be found in the first and purest Ages of the Church but they have been kept under ground by the Disciplina Arcani as we are told for so many hundred years together and if they have since been rejected by many Churches and are apparently the private Interest of one particular Church and that none of the best which teaches them What reason
Bag together It seems very unworthy of the whole Blessed Trinity to assert that the Holy Ghost that holy Dove which was wont to inhabit only those Candida tecta of pure and sanctified Souls and to move and inspire only Holy Men of God 2 Pet. 1.21 under the mosaick Dispensation should now in times of a more plentiful effusion of its Grace and Holiness under the Gospel take up its residence in and give out Oracles from such impure Sinks of Sin Error and Ignorance as many of those who have pretended to this infallible Guidance are confessed to have been That the Holy Spirit who is so apt to be grieved by the resisting of his Motions and even by corrupt Communication Eph. 4.29 should digest things so contrary to his holy Nature and not withdraw from such a Soul Or can it be imagined that the Holy Jesus would ever by his Promise oblige the Holy Spirit to such an Office And for those few others among them who were holy and good Men we must be well assured that they were true Bishops but whether they were duly elected and ordained or so much as Baptised their Doctrine of the Priests Intention being necessary to a Sacrament makes it impossible for us to know and for one that is not so qualified such Assistance is not claimed or pretended to And as for Councils being infallible the claim allows it only to General Councils Which certainly may best of any pretend unto it from the Promise as being supposed to be the universal Church represented and thereby also impowered to conclude all by its Determinations But was there ever a true General Council besides that at Jerusalem Acts 15. whose Canons are recorded in the Holy Scriptures of which we are well assured that it was infallibly guided in decreeing as St. Luke was also in recording of its Canons but that Council tells us nothing of a successive Infallibility in the Church of Rome nor any thing of these its Doctrines And for all other Councils be they what they will all their decisions were to be guided by the Holy Scriptures and not to be received if contrary thereunto as the best and most ancient of them have professed and practised and so did the Holy Fathers own concerning them and acknowledge concerning their own Writings never pretending to give or admit of any infallible rule of Faith distinct from the Holy Scriptures And if they did not pretend to it but rather disclaim it we have little reason to believe others who pretend to it for them but rather to suspect that they do therein but serve their own private Interest And if we do but well consider the Pretence we shall find it clogged with so many Uncertainties that it can never make its way through them to give any tolerable Security to particular Christians which yet it is now made use of for 1. For first a private Christian may be convinced of Truths delivered in the Holy Scriptures and firmly believe them and yield Obedience to the Commands therein contained and be assured that in so doing he shall not fail to attain Salvation and not only morally and rationally assured but also have a Divine supernatural Faith thereof wrought in his Heart by the Gift of God and the Operation of the Holy Ghost as was shewed before Now either of these Convictions or Beliefs do bind the Man not to let go those Truths which he hath so believed whereof Christ will one day take an Account how they have been kept by him as he did of the Churches Revel 3.8.10 And therefore he must neither through Carelessness lose them nor through Cowardise deny them through Treachery betray them nor through Apostacy renounce or disclaim them Wherefore I see not how one that hath so believed the Truth can resign up himself to others and compromise his Faith to believe whatsoever they shall offer to him Since thereby he would trust his eternal Concernments in the Hands of Men foregoing that sure hold which God had given him on the sure word of Prophecy to which he ought to bind himself as unto a Rock or Mast But were that Lawful for him to resign up his Faith to the Decisions of a general Council yet before he could do it prudentially it were fit he should have good Assurance given him 1. That the Council whose Canons are offered to his Faith was really a General Council and duly elected by all that were to be represented and concluded by it But if he must suspend till the Church of Rome be agreed on a just list of general Councils I believe he may wait till Dooms-day for at present they fluctuate between Eight and one and twenty as they do for the Notes of the Church between Costerus his three and Bozius his Hundred 2 That the major number of Suffrages were always for the truth and had the infallible Guidance on their side and therefore that they were never contradicted by the greater number in any other such general Council and that the Canons made were the judgment of that major Part and not of the lesser 3. That these Canons which are now offered to us are the genuine Canons which that major part did then make and subscribe unto and not since counterfeited or corrupted and that here are all For Bellarmine and Baronius we see make no scruple to cashier a Canon out of an admitted Council if it be not for their turn upon pretence that the Pope consented not to that Canon though he did to all the rest and also that a like divine Providence hath watched over these Canons as hath done over the Holy Scriptures And yet further if the Romanists think by this Argument to produce in Christians an infallible Assent of a Divine Faith unto these Doctrines then the Priest who brings them to Mens Ears had need not only to be infallible in receiving and delivering them but also give Evidence that he is so by some unquestionable Miracle And yet after all this unless the faculty of the hearer be infallibly guided to assent unto it he will not believe infallibly for we find that many of the Jews did not so much as believe although they heard our Saviours Doctrine and saw his mighty Works All which and many more that might be named are so great Incertainties that they are sufficient to deterr any prudent Christian from ever parting with his present Security for a new one which is thus attended tho it were Lawful for him to do it But how much better is it a for a well-grounded Christian to keep his sure Footing on the Terra firma of Holy Scriptures than to commit himself to so great Uncertainty Which seems to be an adventure not much unlike the Methods of the new Philosopher who would perswade us to strip our selves of all the prejudices of Faith Sense Reason yea and of our very first notions that we may the better swim unto that rocky Truth That we have a Being and