Selected quad for the lemma: faith_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
faith_n church_n scripture_n tradition_n 15,184 5 9.5685 5 true
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A57667 Pansebeia, or, A view of all religions in the world with the severall church-governments from the creation, to these times : also, a discovery of all known heresies in all ages and places, and choice observations and reflections throughout the whole / by Alexander Ross. Ross, Alexander, 1591-1654.; Haestens, Henrick van.; Davies, John, 1625-1693. 1655 (1655) Wing R1972_pt1; Wing R1944_pt2; ESTC R216906 502,923 690

There are 23 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

and twelfth Centuries 5. Of the Albigenses and other Sects in the twelfth Century 6. The Sects of the thirteenth Century 7. The Sects of the fourteenth Century 8. Of the Wicklevites 9. The opinions of the fifteenth Century 10. The opinions of the sixteenth Century to wit of Luther and others 11. Of Sects sprung out of Lutheranisme 12. Of Protestants 13. Of the other opinions held this Century 14. The chief heads of Calvins Doctrine 15. Of other opinions held this age 16. Of divers other opinions in this age and the causes of this variety and confusion in the Church The Contents of the ninth Section THe first original of the Monastical life 2. The first Eremites or Anchorites 3. The manner of their living 4. Their Excesses in Religion 5. The preheminence of the Sociable life to the Solitary 6. The first Monks after Anthony 7. The rules of Saint Bafil 8. Saint Hieroms order 9. Saint Austins order 10. If Saint Austin instituted his Ermites to begge 11. Of Saint Austins Leathern Girdle used at this day 12. The institutions and exercises of the first Monks 13. Why religious persons cut their hair and beards 14. Whence came that custome of shaving 15. Of the Primitive Nuns 16. Of what account Monks are at this day in the Roman Church 17. How the Monks and Nuns of old were consecrated 18. The Benedictine order 19 Of the orders proceeding from them 20. Of Saint Bennets rules to his Monks 21. The Benedictines habit and dyet 22. Rules prescribed by the Council of Aix to the Monks 23. The Rites and institutions of the Monks of Cassinum 24. The manner of electing their Abbots 25. The Benedictine Nuns and their rule 26. Of the Laws and Priviledges of Monasteries The Contents of the tenth Section OF new religions orders sprung out of the Benedictines and first of the Cluniacenses 2. Of the Camaldulenses and Monks of the Shadowy Valley 3. The Sylvestrini Grandimontenses and Carthusians 4. The Monks of Saint Anthony of Vienna the Cistertians Bernardines and Humiliati 5. The Praemonstratenses and Gilbertines 6. The Cruciferi Hospitalarii Trinitarians and Bethlemites 7. The Johannites or first religious Knights in Christendom 8. The Templars 9. The Teutonici or Mariani 10. The Knights of S. Lazarus Calatrava and S. James 11. The orders of Mendicant Friers and first of the Augustinians 12. Of the Carmelites 13. Of the Dominicans 14. Of the Franciscans 15. Of things chiefly remarkable in the Franciscan order 16. Of the Knights of the Holy Sepulchre and Gladiatores 17. Of the Knights of S. Mary of Redemption of the Montesians of the order of Vallis Scholarium and Canons Regular of S. Mark 18. Of Saint Clara S. Pauls Eremires and Boni homines 19. The servants of S. Mary Coelestini and Jesuati 20. The order of S. Briget 21. The order of S. Katharine and S. Justina 22. The Eremites of S Hierom S. Saviour Albati Fra●ricelli Turlupini and Montolivetenses 23. The Canons of S. George the Mendicants of S. Hierom the Canons of Lateran the order of the Holy Ghost of S. Ambrose ad Nemus and of the Minimi of Iesu-Meria 24. The orders of Knight-hood from the year 1400 namely of the Annunciada of S. Maurice of the Golden Fleece of the Moon of S. Michael of S. Stephen of the Holy Spirit c. The Contents of the eleventh Section OF religious orders and opinions from the year 1500. til this day 2. The order of Jesuits 3. Of their general rules 4. Of their other rules 5. Of their rules for Provosts of houses Rectors of Colledges c. 6. Of their rules for Travellers Ministers Admonitors c. 7. Of their priviledges granted by Popes 8. Of other orders in the Church of Rome 9. How Abbots are consecrated at this time 10. Wherein the Christian orders of Knighthood differ 11. Of other orders of Knighthood besides the French 12. Of the orders of Knight-hood in Germany Hungary Bohemia Poland c. 13. The orders of Knight-hood in Italy 14. Of the Christian Military orders in the East The Contents of the twelfth Section THe opinions of the Anabaptists and wherein they agree with the old Hereticks 2. The Tenets of the Brownists 3. Of the Familists 4. The Adamites and Antinomians 5. The Religion of the Socinians 6. Of the Arminians Tenets 7. Of the Church of Arnhem and the Millenaries opinions 8. Of many other Sects at this day amongst us 9. The opinions of the Independents 10. The tenets of th● Presbyterians where by way of a Catechisme is delivered their whole doctrine concerning the Ministry Episcopacy Presbytery Lay-Eldership Deacons Civil Magistrates the Election of Ministers Ordination power of the Keyes Excommunication 11. Divers erroneous opinions which have been lately revived or hatched since the fall of our Church-government c. The Contents of the thirteenth Section THe Doctrine of the Church of Rome concerning the Scriptures 2. Their tenets concerning predestination the Image of God original and actual sin and free will 3. Their opinions concerning the Law of God concerning Christ Faith Iustification and good works 4. Their Tenets concerning pennance fasting prayer and alms 5. Their opinions concerning the Sacraments and ceremonies used in those controverted 6. What they believe concerning the Saints in Heaven 7. Their Doctrine concerning the Church 8. What they hold concerning Monks Magistrates and Purgatory 9. Wherein the outward worship of the Church of Rome consisteth and first part of their Masse 10. Their dedication of Churches and what observable thereupon 11. Their consecration of Altars c. 12. The Degrees of Ecclesiastical persons in the Church of Rome Their sacred orders office of the Bishop and what colours held sacred 13. Wherein the other parts of the Masse consisteth 14. In what else their outward worship doth consist 15. Wherein consisteth the seventh part of their worship and of their holy days 16. What be their other holy dayes which they observe canonical hours and processions 17. Wherein the eighth part of their worship consisteth their Ornaments and Vtensils used in Churches dedicated to Christ and the Saints their office performed to the dead The Contents of the fourteenth Section OF the Eastern Religions and first of the Greeks 2. Of the Church dignities and discipline in the Greek Church at this day 3. Of the other Nations professing the Greek Religion chiefly the Moscovites and Armenians 4. Of the Monks Nunnes and Eremites of Moscovia 5. Of the form of service in their Churches 6. How they administer the Sacraments 7. The Doctrine and Ceremonies of the Russian Church at this day 8. Of their Marriage and Funeral Ceremonies 9. Of the profession of the Armenians 10. Of the other Greek Sects namely the Melchites Georgians and Mengrelians 11. Of the Nestorians Indians and Jacobites 12. Of the Maronites Religions 13. Of the Cophti 14. Of the Abyssin Christians 15. Wherein the Protestants agree with and dissent from other Christian Churches The Contents of the fifteenth Section REligion is
lyable to be censered as a brother Hence King Vzziah was excommunicate by the Priest Azariah and Theod●sius the Emperor by Ambrose Q. Will it follow that there must be no excommunication because Christ will not have the Tares plucked up till the Harvest A. 1. No for Christ speaketh there of Hypoc●its which cannot be plucked up by the Church because she knoweth them not but in the great Harvest they shall be pluckt up by the Angels at his command who knows the secrets of the heart 2. If the place be meant of Hereticks they are not to be plucked up at such times as may endanger the Churches peace but they must be left to a convenient time when the Church may excommunicate them without danger or else left to the judgement of the great day 3. All Tares cannot be pluckt up whilest the Church is here Militant for there will be found still some Tares amongst the Corn some Goats among the Sheep a Iudas among the Apostles as there were Cananites and Iebusites among the Israelites 4. Christ by this condemns their rashnesse who presently go to pluck up and flye to excommunication before they use reproofe and admonition Q. Can the Minister exclude any man from the Kingdome of God A. 1. He cannot by his own power but by the power of him whose Minister he is 2. He cannot exclude any man from Heaven but he can pronounce and declare that such a man is excluded thence Q. Can the delivering of a man over to Satan be a means to save his spirit A. Yes accidentally for God can draw good out of evil and light out of darknesse thus the bufferings which Paul suffered by the Angel of Satan caused him to pray heartily it is the special work of Gods mercy to save our souls by affliction and misery Q. Can an excommunicate person be accounted as a Brother A. Yes for excommunication takes not away true Brotherly love and affection an excommunicate person may be shut out of Heaven but not out of hope we may exclude him out of our Society but not of our ●owels of compassion and mercy we draw the Sword of excommunication against him not to kill but to cure him Who would be more fully resolved of these Presbyterian Tenets let him read their own writings Q. How many Erroneous opinions in Religion have been lately revived or hatched since the fall of our Church government A. It were almost endlesse to number every particular it may suffice that I shall name more then one hundred of the most ordinary and latest received of them which are 1. That the Scriptures are a humane invention insufficient and uncertain and do not contain half of his revealed will 2. That they are all allegoricall and written according to the private spirit of the pen-men and not as moved by the Holy Ghost And that the Old Testament is now of no force 3. That reason is the rule of faith 4. That Scripture binds us no further then the Spirit assureth us that such is Scripture 5. That Scripture should not be read to a mixt Congregation without present exposition 6. That God is the Author of the pravity and sinfulnesse of mens actions 7. That Turks Jewes Pagans and others are not to be forced from their opinions 8. That God loves a crawling worme as well as a holy Saint 9. That Gods will not sin is the cause of mans damnation 10. That man was a living 〈◊〉 before God breathed into him and that which God breathed was a part of his divine essence 11. That God is the onely Spirit and that Prince of the aire who ruleth in the children of disobedience 12. That the soul dieth with the body 13. That reprobation cannot be proved out of Scripture 14. That there is no Trinity of persons in God 15. That every creature is God as every drop in the River is water 16. That Christ is not essentially but nominally God 17. That Christ was polluted with original sin 18. That Christ was true man when he created the world yet without flesh 19. That Christ died onely for sinners and not for unbelievers for sins past before our conversion but not for sins done after conversion 20. That no man is damned but for unbeliefe and that man can satisfie for his own unbeliefe 21. That Heathens have the knowledge of Christ by the Sun Moon and Stars 22. That the end of Christs comming was to preach Gods love to us and not to procure it for us therefore did not obtain life for the Elect but a resurrection only and deliverance us from death temporal 23. That Christ preached not the Gospel but the Law for the Gospel was taught by his Apostles 24. That our unction is all one with Christs Divinity 25. That Christ with the Church of Jewes and Gentiles shall reigne one Earth a 1000 years in carnall pleasures 26. That the Heathens are saved without Christ. 27. That the Spirit of God neither dwells nor works in any but it is our own spirit which both works in the children of disobedience and sanctifies the Elect. 28. That God seeth no sin in his Elect. 29. That a man baptized with the Holy Ghost knows all things as God doth 30. That we may be saved without the word prayer Sacraments c. 31. That there is no inherent sanctification in believers but all is in Christ. 32. That Adam had died though he had not sinned 33. That we have no original sin nor is any man punished for Adams sin 34. That Gods Image consisteth onely in the face which Image was never lost 35. That men who know the Gospel are of themselves able to believe 36. That one man is not more spi●itual then another 37. That we have no free will not so much as in our natural estate 38. That the moral Law is of no use among Christians 39. That we are not justified by faith and that neither faith nor holinesse nor repentance are required in Christians 40. That the childe of God can no more sin then Christ himselfe can 41 That there should be no fasting days under the Gospel 42. That God doth not chastise his children for sin 43. That God loves his children as well when they sin as when they do well and therefore Abraham in denying his Wife sinned not 44. That Gods children ought not to ask pardon for their sinnes for though they have sin in the flesh they have none in the conscience 45. That the body of iniquity is the great Antichrist mentioned in Scripture 46. That men shal have other bodies given them in the resurrection and not the same they had here on Earth 47. That Heaven is empty of souls till the resurrection 48. That Infants shall not rise at all yet Beasts and Birds shall rise againe 49. That after this life there is neither Heaven nor Hell nor Devil but Hell is in this life in the terrours of conscience 50. That there is no true Ministery nor Church
the Image of God original and actual sin and free will 3. Their opinions concerning the Law of God concerning Christ Faith Iustification and good works 4. Their Tenets concerning pennance fasting prayer and almes 5. Their opinions concerning the Sacraments and Ceremonies used in those controverted 6. What they believe concerning the Saints in Heaven 7. Their Doctrine concerning the Church 8. What they hold concerning Monks Magistrates and Purgatory 9. Wherein the outward worship of the Church of Rome consisteth and first part of their Masse 10. Their dedication of Churches and what observable thereupon 11. Their Consecration of Altars c. 12. The Degrees of Ecclesiasticall persons in the Church of Rome Their sacred orders office of the Bishop and what colours held Sacred 13. Wherein the other parts of the Masse consisteth 14. In what else their outward worship doth consist 15. Wherein consisteth the seventh part of their worship and of their holy days 16. What be their other holy-days which they observe canonical hours and processions 17. Wherein the eighth part of their worship consisteth their ornaments and Vtensils used in Churches dedicated to Christ and the Saints their office performed to the dead SECT XIII Quest. 1. WHat is the Doctrine of the Church of Rome at this day and first of the Scriptures A. Though they maintain the same Scriptures with us the same Commandments the Lords Prayer and the three Creeds of the Apostles of Nice and of Athanasius yet in many points they differ from other Churches which briefly are these 1. They hold that Apocrythal Books are for regulating our faith and manners of equal authority with the Canonical Scripture such are Iudith Tobias third and fourth of Esdras the Book of Wisdom Ecclesiasticus Baruch the Epistle of Ieremie the thirteenth and fourteenth Chapters of Daniel the Books of Macchab●es and that part of Hester which is from the tenth verse of the third Chapter 2. They preferr the vulgar Latine Edition to the Hebrew and Greek Texts 3. They hold that there is no necessity to translate the Scripture into Vulgar languages 4. That the Scripture is not to be read of Lay-people except of such as are discreet judicious and learned and are authorised by the Ordinary 5. That the Masse is not to be celebrated in the Vulgar tongue 6. That the sense and interpretation of the Scripture depends upon the Churches approbation 7. That the Scriptures by reason of their difficulty and obscurity are not fit to be read by the Laity or to be judges of controversies 8. That the Scriptures have four different senses namely the Literal Allegorical Tropological and Anag●gical which are to be expounded according to traditions written and unwritten according to the practise of the Church the consent of Fathers and interpretation of Councels confirmed by the Pope 9. That the Scriptures are not of absolute necessity for the being of a Church seeing there was a Church from Adam to Moses for the space of two thousand years without any Scripture being onely guided and instructed by traditions without which the Scriptures are not perfect as not containing all Doctrines necessary to salvation Q. 2. What are their Tenets concerning predestination the Image of God Original sin and Actual and Free-will A. 1. They hold election mutable because the Elect may totally fall from faith and righteousnesse 2. That sin foreseen was the cause of reprobation in respect of the positive act of condemnation and some of them hold that foreseen works were the cause of election 3. concerning the Image of God they hold that it consisteth most in charity and that this is Gratia gratum faciens Grace which makes us acceptable and that it is a habit infused whereas they say that Gratia gratis data is the gift of Miracles 4. That man in the state of innocency did not stand in need of any special assistance by which he might be excited to good workes 5. That original sin is not in the understanding and will but in the inferiour part of the soul onely which they call the flesh that concupiscence and ignorance are onely infirmities and remainders of original sin That the Virgin Mary was without original sin That Infants dying in original sin onely are punished with the paine of losse not with the paine of sense That original fin is taken away by baptisme and that in the regenerate it is remitted and not imputed or to be called a sin but onely as it is the cause and punishment of sin that some actual sins are of their own nature veniall and some mortal That the sin against the holy Ghost is pardonable 6. They hold that in free-will is required not onely a liberty from coaction but also from necessity that an unregenerate man can by his own strength without Gods special help perform some moral good in which there may be no sin found That an unregenerate man hath freedom of will in matters of salvation though not without the help of grace so that he may hinder or further his conversion and may by his natural power cooperate with grace Q. 3. What are their opinions concerning the Law of God concerning Christ faith justification and good works A. 1. They divide the two Tables so that they make but three commandements in the first and seven in the second making one commandement of the first two and two of the last They hold that Idols and Images are not the same and that the Images of Christ and of the Saints may be worshipped without Idolatry That equivocation may be used in some cases and an officious lye 2. Concerning Christ they hold that he was not ignorant of any thing and that he did not attain to knowledge by learning That he descended truly into Hell in respect of his soul and there preached to the Fathers in prison and delivered them from their Limbus so that they had nor as yet entered into Heaven till Christ by his death had opened the gates thereof which Adam shut by his sin That Christ did merit by his sufferings not onely for us but also for himself that glory which he enjoyes after his Ascension 3. Concerning faith they say that Historical miraculous and saving faith are one and the same that the special application of the promises of grace belongs not to faith but to presumption That faith hath its residence onely in the intellect and not in the will That faith is an assent rather then knowledge That justifying faith may be totally lost in the regenerate That true faith may be without charity That we are not justified by faith alone That man by the natural strength of free-will can prepare himself for future justification being assisted by the holy Spirit In his preparation are contained these acts namely Fear Hope Love Repentance a purpose to receive the Sacrament a resolvtion to live a new life and to observe Gods Commandements 4. Concerning justification they say that the first is
which the Eucharist is covered signifying how Christs body was wrapped up in fine linnen for as linnen is first washed then wrung and lastly dried so must our souls be first washed in tears then wrung by repentance and lastly dried by the heat of the love of God Organs are also used in Churches to excite the minde and to stir up devotion Yet in the Popes Chappel there are none perhaps to shew that he needs no such helps Their Altars are inclosed with railes to keep off the people for the Priests only have accesse to them they were anciently places of refuge and are covered all the year except in the passion week then they are stript to represent Christs nakednesse on the crosse Ordinarily the Altar is placed towards the East yet in the Church of Antioch it was placed towards the West On the Altar s●ands the Pixis or Ciborium which keepeth the Host for strangers sick persons and travellers but it must not be kept above seven dayes least it mould therefore the Priest must eat it himselfe and put in a fresh one They have Fonts called Baptisteria of stone in which the water of Baptisme is consecrated by the Priest who poureth oyle into it he also by breathing and by certain words exorciseth the evil spirit Salt is consecrated and put into the childs month to shew that he must have spiritual Salt within him Then the Priest layeth his hand on the childs head in sign he is reconciled and made a member of the Church Then he signeth his forehead with the sign of the crosse that hereafter he may not be ashamed of Christ crucified He puts his finger into his eare and into his nostrils also with spittle saying to his right eare Epph●ra that is be thou opened to shew that by nature we are deaf in spiritual things as was that man whom Christ after this manner cured in the Gospel The touching of the Nostrils sheweth that the child must remember his vow in baptisme so long as he hath breath in him Then he anoints the Child two times that he may renounce the devil and all his works c. The breast is first anointed then the shoulders to shew the strength of our love and faith in the Trinity and that withall we must be wrestlers against all spiritual wickednesse The childe is three times dipe in the water and in some places onely sprinkled to shew Christs three days burial and our faith in the Trinity After baptisme the child is anointed by the Priest on the forehead with chrisme and cloathed in white to signifie he must cast off the old man and be cloathed with innocency Antiently those that were baptized at Easter wore white all that week which they laid aside the Sunday following called therefore 〈◊〉 in 〈◊〉 this also signified the glory of the resurrection Then a wax candle burning is given him to shew the light of faith and knowledge that should be in him and with which he should be ready to meet the bridegroom Then the Godfathers are instructed concerning their duty to the Child Q. 28. What other Vtensils have they in their Churches A. They have three viols or flaggons for oyl which the Priest carrieth on the day of the Lords Supper one holds the oyl of the Catechumeni the second is for the Chris●me and the third for the oyl of the sick With the Chrisme the baptized are anointed on their crown and they that are confirmed on the forehead and so are they who be ordained The Catechumeni and 〈◊〉 are anointed with single oyl They have also in thei● Churches holy water pots which by some are called 〈◊〉 by others Situlae and Aqu●nina●ia and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 This pot must be of Stone or Marble at which is tied with a chaine the holy water spunge with this salt water they are 〈◊〉 that enter into the Church because antiently they wasted before they entered into the Temple to shew that with pure and sancti●ied minds we must come before God They have also Bells which they 〈◊〉 with water and consecrate with certain prayers these have suceeded the Trumpets used by the Jewes to 〈◊〉 together the Assembly They have also Altars which they anoint and consecrate holy Reliques whereof many doubtlesse are supposititious and false therefore no new Reliques are to be received without the Bishops approbation nor to be honoured without the Popes authority And because the Altar represents Christ therefore the Priest after Masse in sign of reverence and subjection kisseth the Altar by which also he sheweth the great desire the Church hath to enjoy Christ when she saith Let him kisse me with the kisses of his mouth The Vestry is the place where the sacred Vestiments of which we have already spoken are kept Here the Priest before Masse puts on his holy garments this place they say represents the Virgins Womb in which our great high Priest put on the garment of our humane nature that in it he might offer the true propiatory sacrifi●e to God his Father for the sins of the world They make also every part of their material Temple to have a mystical signification The Quire represents the Church triumphant the main body the Church militant the Porch or great Door is Christ by whom onely we have accesse to the Father the Windows are the Scriptures which give light to the spiritual Church the Pillars are the Apostles by their Doctrine supporting the Church the Pavement is Humility and faith the Cover is Gods protection the Tower with the Bells are the Prelates which ought to be eminent in their conversation and sounding in their preaching the Cock on the top thereof is to put them in minde of their vigilancy the Lights that shine continually in their Churches are to signifie our good works which should shine before men Q. 29. What office do they perform to the dead A. They have a peculiar office or service for the dead in Purgatory which some perform every third day that they might be partakers of Christs resurrection who overcame death that day some again every seventh day that they may attain to the eternal Sabbath or rest in Heaven whereof Gods resting from the works of Creation on the se●enth day was a type Others perform this office the thirtieth day because the Israelites mourned for Moses and Aaron thirty days Others again the fortieth day because Ioseph and his brethren bewailed Iacob forty days Others the fiftieth day because the fiftieth year is the Jubilee or year of liberty which they wish these imprisoned soules may partake eternally Others perform this office yearly and make it anniversary but if this day fall upon Sunday or any other solemn festivity then it must not be kept nor put off till the next day as the feasts of the Saints are but must be kept the day before that the souls may the sooner partake the fruits of our devotion No
Clavigeri Cruciferi 341. Hospitalarii 342 c. See Monks Ordination in the beginning of the world 2. P. PAllas the Sun 523 Pan the Sun 521 Pegu its religion 82 Persecution an enemy to Christistianity 183 Persians their ancient religion 68 c. Persius his notable saying 107 Peru its religion 114 c. Festival dayes 115 c. the Peruvians beliefe of the departed souls 116 Philippinae their religions 89 c. Phoenicians their religion and discipline 67 Poor Pilgrims 323 c. Pilgrims vide Orders Pluto the Sun 526 Polyphemus the Sun 522 Poverty threefold 309 Presbytery the doctrine and tenets thereof 394 c. the office of Presbyters 395. and 398 among the Jewes 412. their power to excommunicate 414 Priapus the Sun 518 Priests and Levites among the Iewes 6. among the Mexicans 108 c. the dignity of Priests and their necessity 535 c. among the Greeks Romans and elsewhere 536 c. Princes should be careful of Religion 503 c they must not dissemble in Religion 509 c. Proserpinae the Sun 526 Protestants 236 c. wherein they agree with and ●●ssent from other christian Churches 496 c. Q. QVakers their opinions 381 c. other opinions of theirs 383 c. wherein the absurdities and impieties of their opinions consist 384. R. RAnters characterized and their opinions 387 c. Iohn Reeve and Lodowick Muggleton their opinions 379 c. Religions of the Northern countries near the pole 73 c. Of the nations by West Virginia and Florida 104 c. of the Northern neighbours of Congo 101 of the African Islands 101. of new Spain 105 c. of the parts adjoyning to Iucatan 111 c. of the Southern Americans 112 c. of Paria Guiana and Debaiba 113. of Asia 1 2 3 4 c. of Africa 94 c. of America 102 c. of Europe 121 of Greeks and Romans ibid c. of Germans Gauls and Britains 148 etc. of Danes Swedes Moscovites and their neighbours 151 c. of the Scythians Getes Thracians Cymbrians Goths etc. 153 c. of the Lithuanians Polonians Hungarians etc. 154 etc. of the Mahumetans 162 etc. of Christians 181 etc. by what engines battered 183. pestered with diversity of opinions 239 c. of the Greeks Religion at this day 478 etc. of Moscovia 481 etc. of Armenia 489. of the Melchites 490. of the Georgians ibid. etc. of the Circassians 491. of the Nestorians ibid. etc. of the Indians and Iacobites 492. of the Maronites ibid. etc. of the Cophti 493. etc. Abyssins 494. etc. Religion the ground of government and greatnesse 500 etc. the foundation of all Commonwealths 501 etc. most re●quisite in Princes and Governours 503 etc. one Religion to be taught publickly 505 etc. different Religions how and when to be tolerated 506 etc. dissimulation in Religion rejected 509 etc false Religions why blessed and the contem●ers punished 5●1 etc. religious policie and ceremonies 512 etc. mixed Religions 514 etc. what Religion most consonant to natural reason 516 etc. Religion how supported 535 etc. Religion which is best 538 etc. Romans their old Religion 122 etc. their chief Festivals 123 etc. their chief gods 125 etc. their Priests 128 etc. Sacrifices 129 etc. their Marriage rites 130 etc. their Funeral rites 131. Roman Church different from others about the Scriptures 429. about Predestination Gods image and sinne ibid. etc. about the law of God Christ Faith Justification and good Works 430 etc. about Penance Fasting Prayer and Almes 432 etc about the Sacraments 433 etc. and their ceremonies in those controverted 434 etc. about the Saints in heaven 435 etc. about the Church 436. etc. about Councils Monks Magistrates and Purgatory 438. etc. the outward worship of the Roman Church and first part of their Masse 439 etc. Roman Acolyths their offices 440 Romanists their manner of dedicating Churches 443 etc. and what observable thereupon 444 etc. their consecration of Altars etc. 446 etc. the degrees of Ecclesiastical persons in the Church of Rome 448 etc. their sacred Orders 449 etc. office of the Bishop 452 etc. and what colours held sacred 453 etc. the other parts of the Masse 454 etc. other parts of their worship 457 etc. their Festival dayes 458 etc. their Canonical houres of prayer and observations thereon 464. etc. their processions and observations thereon 467 their Ornaments and Utensils used in Churches dedicated to Christ and the Saints 472 etc. their office performed to the dead 475 etc. Russians see Moscovites S. SAtans stratagems vide miracles Old Saxons worshipped their gods under divers shapes and formes 149 etc. Scythians their old Religion 69. Sea how worshipped 143. Sects sprung out of Lutheranisme 231 etc. Sects of this age 376 etc. Shakers vide Quakers Siam its Religion 81 etc. Simon Magus and his scholars vide Hereticks Sociable life preferred to the solitary 247 etc. Socinians their tenets 366 etc. Solomons Temple vide Iewes etc. Soule its immortality believed by the idolatrous Pagans 86 etc. its immortality and life after this believed by the Americans 109. by the Brasilians also 113 etc. Spain vide New Spain Sumatra its Religion 90 etc. Sun how worshipped 139 etc. the Gentiles chief and onely God 516 etc. his divers names and worship ibid. etc. superstitious Sun worship 530 etc. how painted and worshipped by the Northern Nations 533 etc. Syrians their gods 65 c. T. IOhn Tany vide Theaurau Iohn Tartars their old Religion 69. c. their diversities of Religions 72. c. Thesurau Iohn his opinions 377. c. Titbonus the Sun 523. Trinity acknowledged by the Americans 109. denied by Simon Magus and his scholars with others besides Iewes and Mahumetans and why 185. etc. Turlupini 319. V. VEnus all one with the Sun 524 etc. Virginia its Religion 103 etc. Vulcan the Sun 523. W. VVIckliffe's opinions 226. etc. Z. ZEeilan its Religion 90. FINIS APOCALYPSIS OR THE REVELATION Of certain notorious Advancers OF HERESIE Wherein their Visions and private Revelations by Dreams are discovered to be most incredible blasphemies and enthusiastical dotages Together with an account of their Lives Actions and Ends. Whereunto are added the effigies of seventeen who excelled the rest in rashness impudence and lying done in Copper Plates Faithfully and impartially translated out of the Latine by I. D. IS London Printed by E. Tyler for Iohn Saywell and are to be sold at his shop at the sign of the Grey-hound in Little-Britain without Aldersgate 1655. TO THE Excellently Learned EDWARD BENLOVVES OF Brenthall in Essex Esquire c. Worthy Sir I Have here presumed to present you with a strange and bloody Tragedy of Hereticks and Enthusiasts written in Latine by a most elegant pen by one who hath concealed his name as I conceive out of this reason that living near the times and places of this representation it might have proved dangerous to him to have published it Here you have Religion brought upon the stage in very strange disguises nay they make her
Episcopacy how different from Presbytery Magistrates office Presbyters among the Iews Ministers called Presbyters How to be elected Presbytery their power to excommunicate Excommunicate persons their condition The prophets Pharisees c. could not excommunicate Why Christ did not excommunicate Iudas Excommunication and excommunicate persons considered Divers erroneous opinions which have been lately revived or hatched since the fall of our Church-government Church of England depl●red Church of Rome different from other Churches about the Scriptures See Bellarmin Eckius Pighius and the other writers of controversies in the Romane Church Romane Church different from others about Predestination Gods Image and Sinne. See the above named Authors and the Catechism of the Councel of Trent Romanists differ about the Law of God Christ Faith Iustification and good works See the Catechism of Trent with Bellarmin and the other writers of controversies Differ about Pennance Fasting Prayers and Almes See the authors above named Differ from others about the Sacrament See the former authors Ceremonies used in the five controverted Sacraments See besides the above named authors Eckius in his homilie upon this subject Roman Church differeth from others about the Saints in Heaven Of these passages see Thomas in his summes Gregory de Valentia Bellaranine and the others above named Church of Rome their doctrine concerning the Church See the above named authors Romanists differ about Councils Monks Magistrates and Purgatory Who would see more at lenght the Doctrines of the Church of Rome let him read the above named authors and withall Baronius Bonaventura P. Lombard Canus Canisius Cassander Alphensus de Castro Coccius Genebrard Gerson Gretzerus Suarez Turrianus Vasquez Hugo de S. Victore and others The outward worship of the Roman Church and first part of their Masse Acholyths their offices Of these particulars see Stephanus Durantus de ritibus Ecclesiae Gul. Durandus his rationale Alcuinus de divinis officiis Innocent 3. de myster Missae Hugo de Sanct. Victore de offic Eccles. in specul Ecclesiae Berno de offic missae and divers others Romanists their manner of dedicating of Churches What observable thereupon But of this subject concerning dedication read Durandus Durantus Turrecremata Hostiensis Hugo de S. Victore de Sacram. Hospinian Raibanus Ivo c. Their consecration of Altars c. See the former Authors The degrees of Ecclesiastical persons in the Church of Rome Their sacred orders Of these passages see Innocent 3. l. I. Myst. Missae c. 58. Stephan Eduensis de sacr altari● c. 10. Amalar. Fortunat l. 6. de Eccles. offic c. 19. l. 2. l. 3. Rab. Maurus l. I. de instit cler c. 18. Alcuin de divin offic Alexand de Ales Part 4. Quest. 26. Hugo de S. Victore l. 2. de sacram Part 4. Besides the Councils of Rhemes of Lateran of Braccara and divers others See also Guliel Durand l. 2. c. 10. Office of the Bishop What colours held sacred See Durands Rationale L. 3. c. 18. The other parts of the Masse Of these and other Ceremonies see the above named Authors and Gabriel Biel decanone Missae Other parts of their worship See Durandus and Durantus Days Festivall in the Church of Rome Festival days of Christ. Of these and other Ceremonies see the afore named Authors See the authors above named Their canonical hours of prayer and observati●ns thereupon Of these hours Cassianus speaketh Rabanus Maurns Isidor Amalarius Fortunatus Rupertus Tuitiens c. See Gabriel Biel in can missae Navarr de orat et hor. can Durandus in rationali Durantus de ritibus Ecclesiae c. Their Processions and observations thereon Of these things see the forenamed writers Festival days of the Saints But of these passages see the Roman Martyrology Baronius Surius Durandus Fasti Mariae Lippelous c. Their ornaments and utensils used in Churches dedicate to Christ and the Saints See Innocent 3. L. 2 de myst missae Rab. Maurus de instit eleric Amalar. Fortunat de eccles officiis Isidor de eccles officiis Alcuin de celeb missae D●●antus c. Of these and many more See Durandus in his Rationale and the other writers above named Their office performed to the dead Gre●k Religion at this day See the Councel of Florence Boterus Chytraeus Brerewood Ieremy Patriarch of Constantinople in resp ●d German Possevin de reb Mosc●v c. Greeks their Church dignities and discipline at this day See the above named Authors and the Letters of Stephen Gerlochius to Crusius An. 1575. Moscovites their Religion and discip●in See the above named Authors and withall the History of Russia by G. Fletcher Possevin de reb Moscov Sigism de Moscovia Guaguin descrip Moscov c. Monks and Nuns in Muscovia See the above named Authors Moscovites their Church service See the 〈◊〉 of Russia Their Sacraments See the above named Histories Their Doctrine and Ceremonies See Fletcher Boterus Les Estats du Monde and other relations of Moscovia Their Marriages Their funerals See the above named writers Armenians their Religion See Baronius Borerus Chytraeus Boemus Vitriacus his Oriental History the Armenian Confession c. Melchites Georgians Mengrelians Circassians See Bellonius his observations Boterus Chytraeus de stat Eccles. Thomas ● Iesu. Brerewood Prateolus de Sectis c. Nestorians Indians their Religion at this day Iacobites In Bibliotheca Fatrum Baronius c. See the above named Authors Maronites their Religion See the above named Authors and withal Possevin apparat sacr Thomas a Iesu. de conver Gent. Vitriacus Histor. Orient Tyrius de bello sa●ra c. Cophti of Egypt See the above named Authors with Bar●nius and Thevets Cosmography of the Levant c. 48. Abyssins their Religion Protestant Church its agreement with and dissent from other Christian Churches Religion the ground of government and greatnesse The Foundation of all Common-wealths Religion most requisite in Princes and Governers they should be carefull of it But one Religion to be allowed publickly Different Religions how and when to be tolerated Princes must not dissemble in Religion Dissimulation in Religion rejected False religions why blessed and the contemners punished Ceremonies in Religion Mixed Religions Idolatry condemned Gentiles worshipped the Sun under divers names and shapes Their Religion most consonant to natural reason Sun the Gentiles chief and onely God Apollo the Sun Mars the Sun Adonis the sun Atys the sun Priapius the sunne Liber the sun Apis the sun Moloch the sun Abraxas the sun Mithra the sun Iupiter the sun Mercury the sun Bel c. the sun Belenus the sun Hercules the same with the sun Pan the sun Polyphemus the sun Endymion the sun Ianus the sun Minerva the sun Pallas the sun Vulcan the sun Nemesis the sun Tithonus the sun Venus the sun Moon the same Luminary with the sun Moon her properties Pluto the sun Prosepina the sun Charon the sun Cerberus the sun Gentiles acknowledge but one Deity Gentiles their superstitious fear Gentiles their Deities
the ground of all Government and Greatnesse 2. By divers reasons it is proved that Religion of all Common wealths and humane societies is the foundation 3. That Princes and Magistrates ought to have a special care in setling and preserving of Religion 4. That one Religion onely is to be allowed in a Common wealth publickly 5. In what Respects different Religions may be tolerated in private 6. A Christian Prince may not dissemble his Religion 7. Why God blesseth the professors of false Religions and punisheth the contemners thereof 8. False Religions are grounded upon policy and what use there is of Ceremonies in Religion 9. The mixture and division of Religions and of Idolatry 10. How the Gentile Religion in worshipping of the Sunne seems to be most consonant to natural reason with divers observations concerning Sun-worship and the knowledge the Gentiles had of a Deity and the Vnity thereof with some glimmering of the Trinity 11. That the honour maintenance and advancement of a Priest-hood is the maine supporter of Religion 13 That the Christian Religion is of all others the most excellent and to be preferred for diver reasons being considered in it selfe and compared with others with an exhortation to the practice of religions duties which is true Christianity The Contents of the First Section Of the Church Disciplin Sacrifices Ordination Publick place Buildings first erected for Divine Service and days of Divine Service bef●re Moses 2. Of the Church Government under Moses difference of the High Priests from other Priests 3. Of the Church Government from him till Solomon 4. Of the Government after Solomon till the division of the Tribes 5. Of Solomons Temple and the outward splendor of the Iewes Religion 6. Of the Office of the Levites of the Prophets Scribes Pharises Nazarites Rechabites Essenes Sadduces and Samaritans 7. Of the ancient observation of their Sabbath of the observation of their Passover of the feasts of Pentecost Tabernacles new Moons of Trumpets and of Expiation of their Sabbatical year and their Iubilee 8. Of their ancient Excommunications how God instructed them of old and of the maintenance allowed by the Iews to their Priests and Levites 9. Of the Government after the Iews were carried captive into Babylon 10. Of the Iewish Church Government at this day their Prayers Sabbaths Feasts Book of the Law Passover what observable thereupon and whether to be permitted among Chirstians in the exercise of their own religion and wherein not to be communicated with by Christians 11. Of the Iewish preparation for morning prayer Fast in August Beginning of their new year Feast of Reconciliation Ceremonies in reading of the Law 12. Their Church Officers Feast of Dedication and of Purim Fasts Marriages Divorcements Circumcision Redemption of the first born their duty toward the sick and ceremonies about the dead SECT I. Quest. WAs there any Religion Church Government of Discipline in the beginning of the World Answ. Yes For then was the Word preached and Sacraments administred We read of Sacrifices offered by Cain and Abel and likewise the distinction of clean and unclean beasts By Faith Abel sacrificed Heb. 11. Noah's sacrifice was pleasing to God Gen. 8. This could not be will-worship for such is no wayes pleasing to God it was therefore according to his Word and Commandement There was also Excommunication for Adam and Eve for their disobedience were excommunicated out of Paradise which was then the type of the Church and every soul not circumcised the eighth day was to be cut off from the people of God Gen. 17. The Word then being preached for God preached to Adam in Paradise and doubtlesse he preached to his Children out of Paradise the Sacraments administred and Excommunication exercised which are the three main points of Church discipline it follows there was then a Church and Church Government Q. Was there then any Ordination A. Yes doubtlesse for God is the God of order nor was it fit that he who mediated between God and the people by preaching prayer and sacrifices should thrust himselfe into that office without ordination therefore God ordained Adam he some of his Children as Cain and Abel and whereas Gen. 4. we do not read that Cain and Abel did sacrifice but only brought their Offerings to wit that Adam might offer them up to God for them it argueth that as yet they had not received ordination and its likely that ordination then was performed by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or Imposition of hands which custome the Jewes retained in ordaining their Levites Num. 8. 10. and after them the Christians in ordination of Ministers Act. 6. 6. 1 Tim. 5. 22. which ceremony the Gentiles used in Manumission of their servants and the Jewes in ordination of their Synedrion or the Judges imposed their hands so Moses and Ioshua laid their hands upon the 70. Elders and Moses is commanded by God to lay his hands upon Ioshuah the Son of Nun Numb 27. 18. Q. Was there then any publick place of Sacrificing A. Yes upon the same ground that God who is the God of order will have all things done in his Church with order and decency the meeting also together in one place to hear and pray and offer sacrifice did maintain amity amongst Gods people Besides we read Gen. 25. 22. that Rebecca when the children strugled in her womb did not stay at home but went to wit to the publick place where Gods worship was to enquire of the Lord and because in this place God used to shew his presence to his people by some outward signe it was called Gods presence therefore Gen. 4. 16. Cain went out from the presence of the Lord that is he was excommunicate out of the Church but we must not conceive that as yet there were any material buildings for Gods service for in the beginning men conceived it unfit to include God within the narrow bounds of a material Temple whom the Heaven of Heavens cannot contain therefore they worshipped him in the open air either upon hills for they thought low places were unbeseeming the most High God hence they called every hill Gods hill or else if they were necessitated to sacrifice on the sea shore or in some low plain they made their Altars so much the higher which from their altitude they called Altaria and these places of Divine worship they named Templa from contemplation The very Gentiles thought it unfit to confine the Sun their chief God to a narrow Temple seeing the whole world was his Temple and after they had built Temples for their Deities they would have them for a long time to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or open-roofed Q. Why were the Groves and high places condemned in Scripture A. Because they were abused both by Jewes and Gentiles to superstition idolatry and all uncleannesse therefore God commands them to be cut down Exod. 34. 13 Deut. 7. 5. 12. 3. 16. 21. Iosiah destroyed them 2. Kings 23.
and are still great obstacles to their conversion But Christian Princes must be careful that they be not suffered to blaspheme Christ or abuse his Church for they are keepers of both Tables and they do not carry the sword in vain they should also use all the gentle means they can to bring them to the knowledge and love of Christ by instructing them in the grounds of Christian Religion but violence must be avoided for faith cometh by perswasion not by compulsion neither must their infants be forcibly baptized against their Parents consent but when they come to years of discretion they should cause them to be instructed in the principles of Christianity nor must their Parents be suffered to hinder them but whilest they are infants they must not be baptized against their Parents will because that were to take away the right of paternity which parents have over their children both by the Laws of God of Nature and of Nations besides the children of Jewes who are enemies of Christ cannot be comprehended within the Covenant and therefore are not capable of the sign of the Covenant till they be of years and if then they embrace Christ they are included in the Covenant and so made capable of the seal thereof Besides the forced baptism of Jewish children would be a great scandal to Christian Religion which would be traduced as a violent way to force infants to receive that of which they had no knowledg nor could give their consent to and so these children when they come to years of discretion might justly repudiare that Religion which was forced on them when they had neithe knowledge of it nor gave consent to it Q. In what things must not Christians communicate with Iews A. They must not eat nor drink nor bath nor cohabit together nor entertain friendship and familiarity least by these means Christians should be infected with their errors and superstition or least they should seem to countenance their wicked opinions 2. Christians must not serve Jews in any kind of service for then they will brag that they are the Lords of the world and Christians their slaves besides it is unseemly that the children of the free born for so we are being made free by Christ should serve the sons of the bond woman for they are true Israelites and the sons of Abraham who have the faith and do the works of Abraham who are Israelites not after the flesh but after the spirit 3. Christians must not employ Jews for their Physitians for this were to engage them besides we know out of Histories how dangerous such Physitians have proved to Christians who by reason of their inveterate malice make no conscience to poyson them but rather think they are bound to do so 4 Christians must take heed how they traffick with Jews least they be cheated by them or least they partake of the sins and superstition of the Jews by selling them such wares as they know they will abuse to their superstitious worship 5. Let not Christians borrow money of Jews except they mean to be undone by them for they have ever been and are to this day unconscionable Extortioners 6. Christians ought not to read their blasphemous books but to suppress and burn them for by them our blessed Saviour in his person offices preaching miracles is highly dishonoured and his Church traduced therefore Pope Gregory the ninth about the year of Christ 1230. caused the Thalmud in which Christian Religion is so much blasted to be burned which was performed accordingly by the Chancellor of Paris and about the year 1553. Pope Iulius the third commanded that all the Jewish blasphemous books with both the Thalmuds should be searched out and flung in the fire and that their estates should be consiscared who did harbour or read print or write such wicked books or bring them from forraign parts into Christian Territories Q. How many days do the Jews spend in their Easter solemnities A. Eight the two first and the two last are wholly kept with great Ceremony the other four are but half holy days all this time they sup-plentifully and drink strenuously till it be midnight but they drink up four consecrated cups of Wine two before supper and two at or after supper each of these cups is accompanied with a prayer and the last with execrations against Christians at supper they eat the other halfe Cake and keep open all night their doors and gates as being perswaded that then they are safe and secure from all danger and that they are ready to entertain Eliah whose comming they expect then During this time they eat up the whole three cakes mentioned before and have divers disputations about what work is fit to be done that time full of ridiculous subtilties If during this time they find any leaven in their houses they touch it not but cover it till they burn it Now because they are not certain which is the true fourteenth day of the Moon when they begin their Easter they keep the second day as solemnly as the first and because they know not the true seventh day therefore least they should mistake they observe also the eighth day after which day they bring leaven into their houses again the men fast three times after to expiate for their intemperance during the feast and for the space of thirty days they neither marry nor both nor cut their hair because Rabbi Akibha lost by death all his Disciples being eighty thousand between Easter and Pentecost Q. How do they now observe their Pentecost A. Pentecost so called in the new Testament from the fifty days between Easter and that feast in the old Law it is called the feast of Harvest and of first fruits Exod. 23. 16. because then their Harvest began and the time they offered their first fruits of the Earth The Jews are very exact in numbring each week and day from Easter to Pentecost praying continually that God would bring them home againe to Ierusalem that in their own Land they might offer to him their first fruits as Moses commanded them They keep two holy days at Pentecost because they know not which is the true day They produce their Law twice and by five men they read so much as concerneth that festivity They strow their Houses Synagogues and streets with grass fil their windows with green boughs and wear on their heads green Garlands to shew that all places about mount Sinai were green when they received the Law They eat that day altogether white meats of milk to shew the whitenesse and sweetnesse of the Law They make a Cake or Pye having seven Cakes in one to signifie the seven Heavens into which God ascended from mount Sinai Q. How do they keep the feast of Tabernacles A. This third great feast which was kept anciently in Booths or Tents made up of green boughs in memory of the forty years peregrination in the De●art is now observed by
Anthropomorphites and the Manichees They rejected the Books o● Moses made God with a humane shape taught that the world was made by evil Angels and that Micha●l 〈◊〉 Arch-angel was incarnate They condemned Image worship and despised the crosse because Christ died on it They held the churches baptism to be the baptism of Iohn but their own to be the true baptism of Christ they slighted the Church Liturgy and taught there was no other Resurrection but from sin by repentance they held also that men might dissemble in Religion At Antwerp one Taudenius or Tanchelinus being a Lay-man under took a Reformation● teaching that men were justified and saved by faith onely that there was no difference between Priests and Lay-men that the Eucharist was of no use and that promiscuous copulation was lawful The Petrobruss●ans so called from Peter de Bruis of Antwerp held that baptism was needlesse to Infants and likewise churches were uselesse that crosses should be broken that Christ was not really in the Eucharist and that prayers for the dead were fruitlesse One Peter Aballard taught that God was of a compounded Essence that he was not the author of all goodnesse that he was not onely eternal that the Angels helped him to create the world that power was the property of the Father Wisdom of the Son Goodnesse of the holy Spir●● He denied that Christ took our flesh to save sinners or that the feare of God was in him he said that the holy Ghost was the soul of the world that man had no 〈◊〉 will that all things even God himselfe were subject to necessity that the Saints do not see God that in the life to come there should be no feare of God and that wee are in matters of faith to be directed by our reason His chief disciple was Arnoldus Brixienfis who denied also temporalties to the Clergy Gilbert Porr●●anus Bishop of Poytires taught that the Divine Essen●● was not God that the Proprieties and Persons in the Trinity were not the same that the Divinity was not incarnate in the Son He rejected also merits and lessened the efficacy of baptism The Henricians so called from one Henry of Tholouse a Monk and somented by Henry the Emperor taught the same Doctrines that Peter de Bruis did and withal that the church musick was a mocking of God The Patareni taught ●lso the same things The Apostolici so named from saying they were Apostles immediatly sent from God despised marriage all meats made of Milk the baptising of Infants purgatory prayers for the dead invocation of Saints and all Oaths They held themselves to be the onely true Church One Eudon gave himself out to be the judge of the quick and dead The Adamites started up again in Bohemia The Waldenses so called from Waldo of Lions who having distributed his wealth professed poverty he rejected images prayers to Saints Holy days Churches Oyl in Baptisme confirmation the Ave Mary au●icular confession indulgences purgator prayers for the dead obedience to Prelates distinction of Bishop and Priest Church Canons merit religious orders extream unction miracles exorcisms Church musick canonical hours and divers other Tene●● of the Church of Rome They held that Lay-men might preach and consecrate the Bread and that all ground was alike holy They rejected all prayers except the Lords prayer and held that the Eucharist consecrated on the Friday had more efficacy then on any other day That Priests and Deacons falling into sin lost their power in consecrating and Magistrates in governing if they fel. That the Clergy should possesse no tempor●lties that the Church failed in Pope Sylvesters time They rejected the Apostles creed and all oaths but ●ermitted promiscuous copulation and taught 〈…〉 man ought to suffer death by the sentence of any Judge Q. 5 What were the Albigenses and what other Sects were there in this twelfth Century A. These not long after the Waldenses swarmed in the Province of Tolouse and were overthrown by Simon Earl of Montferrat these taught that they were not bound to make prosession of their faith they denyed p●rgatory prayers for the dead the real presence private confession images bells in Churches and condemned the eating of flesh egges and milk The Romish writers affirm that they held two Gods that our bodies were made by Satan that the Scriptures were erroneous all oaths unlawful and Baptisme needlesse They rejected the old Testament and marriage and prayers in the Church they held there were two Christs a good born in an unknown Land and a bad born in Bethlehem of Iudea That God had two Wives of which he begot Sons and Daughters and more such stu●● as may be seen in the above named authors The Cor●erij held the Petrobrussian Tenets and withall that the Virgin Mary was an Angel that Christs body was not glorified in Heaven but did putrifie as other dead bodies and so should remain after the day of judgement● They taught also that the souls should not be glorified till the Resurrection Ioachimus Abbas taught that in the Trinity the Essence generated the Essence which opinion was condemned in the general Councel of Lateran under Innocent the third not long after started up Petrus Iohannis who maintained the errour of Ioachimus and withal taught that the reasonable soul was not the form of man that the Apostles preached the Gospel after the literal not after the spiritual sense that grace was not conferred in baptisme that Christs side was pierced with a Lance whilest he was yet alive which is directly against the words of Saint Iohn therefore this opinion was condemned in the councel of Vienna he held also Rome to be Babylon and the Pope to be Antichrist Q. 6. What opinions in Religion were professed the ●●●teenth Century A. Almaricus a Doctor in Paris taught that if Ad●m had not sinned there had been no procreation nor distinction of Sex This was condemned in the councel of Lateran under Innocent the third He held that the Saints do no wayes see God in himselfe but in his creatures He denyed the Resurrection Paradise and Hell also the real presence invocation of Saints Images and Altars He said that in the Divine minde might be created Ideas He transformed the mind of a ●ontemplative man into the Essence of God and taught that charity made sin to be no sin David Dinantius taught that the first Matter was God which was to make God a part and the meanest part of all his creatures Gulielmus de sancto amore taught that no Monks ought to live by alms but by their own labours and that voluntary poverty was unlawful the same doctrine was taught by Desider●us Longobardus affirming it a pernicious opinion that men should leaue all for Christ. Raymundus Lullius taught that in God were different Essences that God the Father was before the Son that the holy Ghost was conceived of the Father and the Son 〈◊〉 the Doctrine of the Church is that he proceeds
this life our sinnes are still inherent in us though they be not imputed to us that wee are justified by faith without works and that faith is never without charity that the best of our works deserve damnation that here we may be assured of our justification and salvation that the Church Liturgy ought not to be read in Latin but in the vulgar tongue that faith is a more excellent vertue then charity that there is no merit in us that in this life we cannot possibly fulfil the Law that to invocate the Saints to worship Images and Reliques or the Crosse is Idolatry that usury is not altogether unlawful that Lent and other set Fasts are not to be kept that there be onely two Scaraments Baptisme and the Lords supper and that the Sacraments cannot justifie or confer grace that the Baptisme of water is not of absolute necessity nor depends the efficacy of it from the intention of the Minister nor ought it to be administered by private men or women in private houses That Christ is not corporally in the Eucharist that in the want of Bread and wine other materials may be used and that Wine alone without Water is to be used that there is no Transubstantiation nor ought to be any adoration of the Bread that the ●up should be administred to all that Extream Unction was onely temporary in the Church that the Clergy ought to marry He rejected also the Church-Hierarchy and Ceremonies and exorcisms Penance also Confirmation Orders Matrimony and Extream Unction from being Sacraments Q. 15. What other opinions in Religion were held this age A. Servetus a Spaniard who was burned at Genev● taught with the Sabellians that there was but one Person in God and that there was in Christ but one nature with Eutychees he denied the holy Ghost and Baptisme to Infants which he would have to be deferred till the thirtieth year of their age He held also that God was Essential in every creature Brentius a Lutheran taught that Christs body after its ascension is every where whence sprung up the Vbiquitaries Castelli● a School-Master in Geneva held that the Canticles was not Scripture but a Love Ballade between Solomon and one of his Concubines One Postellus taught that men of all Sects and Professions should be saved by Christ. O●iander held that we were justified not by ●aith but by the Essential righteousnesse of God which he said was the formal cause of our justification One 〈◊〉 a Ma●tuan taught that Christ justified us not as he was God but as he was man Amsdorphius wrot a Book to prove that good works were pernicious to salvation One George Mai●r taught that Infants could not be justified for want of good works Iohn Agric●●● affirmed that the Law was altogether needlesse and that Christians were not tied to the observation thereof Hence sprung up the Antinomians One Steunbergetus in Mor●via denyed the Trinity the Divinity of Christ the holy Ghost and Virginity of Mary he rejected also Baptisme and the Lords day affirming we had no command in Scripture to keep that but the Sabbath onely One O●inus taught that ●olygamy or multiplicity of Wives was lawful One Valentinus Gentil●● of Naples denied the Trinity and rejected the Creed of Ath●●●●ius One 〈◊〉 of Cracovia in ●oland denyed also the Trinity and th●●ty of Essence and taught that neither the Second nor Third Person were God that Satan was created evil that mans intellect is eternal that our free will was a passive power moved necessarily by the appetite that God was the Author of sin and that the will of man in sinning was conformable to the will of God that it was not adultery to lie with another mans Wife that we must belive nothing but what is evident to sense or reason that the same body which dieth riseth not again that the soul perished with the body that there should be no care had of burial that separated souls could not suffer corporeal fire and that God being a Spirit should not be invocated by our mouth but by our heart One Swenkfeldius taught that the Scripture was not the Word of God nor that our faith depended on it but it rather on our faith That Christ brought his body with him from Heaven That Christs humanity became God after his ascension that every man was endowed with the same essential vertues of justice wisdom c. which were in God That the power and efficacy of Gods word preached was the very Son of God In Moravia there started up some professors called Nudipedales because they went bare-footed these in imitation of the Apostles forsook houses Lands Businesse and Children and lived together in common avoiding the society of other people Another Sect sprung up which called themselves Free Men teaching that they were freed from obedience to Magistrates from Taxes Tythes and other duties that after baptisme they could not sin That they were not onely like God but already deified And that it was lawful among themselves but no where else to have women in common Q. 16. Were there no other opinions held this Century A. Yes many more so vain and luxuriant are the wits of men in finding out many inventions and shaping to themselves forms and Ideas of Religions every one esteeming his own the best and as much in love with his own imaginations as Narcissus was with his shadow in the Water or Dercalion with his own picture Some reject Scriptures others admit no other writings but Scriptures Some say the Devits shall be saved others that they shall be damned others that there are no Devils at all Some hold that it is lawful to dissemble in Religion others the contrary Some say Antichrist is come some say not others that he is a particular man others that he is not a man but the Devil and others that by Antichrist is meant a succession of men some will have him to be Nero some Caligula some Mahomet some the Pope some Luther some the Turk some of the Tribe of Dan and so each man according to his fancy will make an Antichrist Some onely will observe the Lords day some onely the Sabbath some both and some neither Some will have all things in common some not Some will have Christs body onely in Heaven some everywhere some in the Bread others with the bread others about the bread others under the Bread and others that Christs body is the bread or the bread his body And others again that his body is transformed into his divinity Some wil have the Eucharist administred in both kinds some in one some not at all Some will have Christ descend to Hell in respect of his soul some onely in his power some in his divinity some in his body some not at all some by Hell understand the place of the damned some Limbus Patrum others the wrath of God others the state of the dead others the grave Some wil make Christ two Persons some give him but
or upon Asses And whereas they could not agree about the form measure and colour of their habit for Saint Francis in this determined nothing the matter is referred to Pope Iohn 22. who leaves it to the arbitrement of their General and Provincial Ministers At this day they wear a long coat with a large hood of gray or hair-colour bare-footed and girded with a cord 4. Such vertue hath been held in a Franciscan Garment that divers Princes have desired to be buried in it thinking thereby to be safe from the Devil So we read of Francis the second Marquesse of Mantua of Robert King of Sicily and divers others who have by their last will ordered that they might be interred in a Seraphick habit And yet we read that Francis h●mself died naked because he would be like Christ who hung naked on the crosse 5. I read of divers Schismes among the Franciscans about the form of their habit one I finde in the time of Crescentius de Esey● their sixth General Minister Anno 1245. Some among them bragging much of the Spirit would not live after St. Francis rule but after their own accouting themselves the Saints These despised a long habit and would go in short cloakes Another schisme they made in the Province of Narbon Anno 1315. after the death of Pope Clement 5. during the vacancy of the Popedom almost two years These Monks chose their own Ministers and Governours and flung away the habit of their order as profane wearing short Garments imprisoning and excommunicating the Obedientes Pope Iohn 22. condemned these Minorities as Hereticks and the Fratricelli starting up at that time condemned the same Pope of Heresie for saying Christ and his Disciples had a common stock among them whereof Iudas bore the bag Another Schisme they had about the year 1352. some petitioned the Pope for leave to live after the letter of Saint Francis his rule and not after the glosse as they all did They obtain four places to reside in and in each of them twelve brothers But these aiming at liberty rejecting the rule of their order and wearing short undecent Garments were suppressed by Pope Innocent the sixth Another rupture was among them during the Schisme of the Church begun by Vrban the sixth who sat at Rome and Clemens at Avinion for the Minorites of England France and Spain chose them one General and those of Italy Germany and Hungary another An. 1431. they divided themselves into Conventuales and Observantes these despising the Conventual Prelates chose their own Govenours calling the others profane and impious These touch no money eat no flesh and wear no shooes they multipled exceedingly in all parts chiefly in Italy They were confirmed by the Councel of Constance and divers Popes 6. Francis prohibited his Monks to meddle with Ecclesiastical preferments to be called Lords or Masters to hear confessions to eat flesh to wear rich apparell and to dwell in sumptuous houses Bonaventure their eight General ordered that they should continue singing till the Epipha●y Glory to thee O Lord who wast born of a Virgin c. He taught them also to exhort the people to salute the Virgin Mary at the ringing of the bell after the Completory in memory of the Angel saluting her that hour Pope Gregory the eleventh limited the power of the Minorites Protectors that they should not meddle with any except he disobey the Pope and Church apostatize from the faith and forsake his rule Honorius the third decreed that no Minorite should ever forsake his order The Minorites obtained this favour that they might make Masters of Divinity among themselves where of Alexander de Ales was the first 7. The Franciseans did increase so fast in all parts that from the year 1211 till the year 1380. being the space of 169. years there were erected in Christendom above 1500. Monasteries of this order Sabellicus recordeth that in his time were Ninety thousand Minorites The cause of this increase was partly their diligence and sedulity in making Proselites partly their priviledges and partly their pretended sanctity and mortification but chiefly their incredible miracles and visions of Saint Francis which are obtruded on the peoples beliefe as his five wounds his bearing of Christ in his arms his mansion in Heaven next Christ and much other stuff to this purpose with which their Legends are fraught 8. There be three sorts of poverty among the Mendicant Friers one is to have nothing either in common or in propriety and this is the Franciscan poverty which is the greatest of all another is which the Dominicans professe that is to have nothing in property yet some things in common as books cloathes and food The third is and the least to have some things both in common and in property but onely such as necessity requires for food and rayment and this is the poverty of the Carmelites and Augustinians Q. 15. What were the Knights of the holy Sepulchre ●nd the Gladiatores A. These ascribe the original of their order to Saint Iames our Lords brother and son of Alphaeus but it s more likely that this order began when Ierusalem was taken by Godsrey of Bulloigne at this day it is quite extinct When Ierusalem was taken by the Soldan these Anno Christi 1300. with all the other religious Knights of Christendom were driven out of Syria yet the care of the holy Sepulchre which these Knights had charge of was committed to the Franciscans by the Soldan who of all the Christian profession suffered none to stay in Syria and Ierusalem but the Armenians Syrians Georgians Greeks and Franciscans the Pope allows eight of this order with a Christian Knight who is their Guardian to keep the Sepulchre The manner of installing the Knights of the Sepulchre was this The Knight after preparation being brought within the Sepulchre where Hymnes are sung and prayers said declares kneeling that he is come to be made Knight of the most holy Sepulchre of our Lord that he was nobly descended and had means sufficient to maintain him withall promiseth to hear Masse daily to expose his life and estate against the Infidels to desend the Church of God and Ministers thereof from their persecutors to avoid unjust Wars Duells filthy Lucre and such like to maintain peace amongst Christians to shun oppression perjury rapin blasphemy and all other grievous sins Then the Guardian laying his hand on the Knights head bids him be a stout faithful and good souldier of our Lord Iesus Christ and of his holy Sepulchre Upon this he gives him a pair of guilded Spurs with a naked Sword signing him three times with the crosse and bidding him in the name of the Trinity use this Sword to his own and the Churches defence and to the confusion of the enemies thereof then the Sword being sheathed is girt to the Knight by the Guardian the Knight riseth and bending his knees and bowing his head over the Sepulchre is by
that their office of preaching and administring the Sacraments was the same out of 1 Pet. 5. 2. the power also of ordination they prove to have been in the Presbytery 1 Tim. 4. 14. which Hierom calls the Ecclesiasticall Scnat Isa. 3. and Ignatius Epist. ad Magnes the Apostolicall Senat. And that in ruling there is no difference they prove out of Hebr. 13. 17. and 1 Th●ss 5. 12. but because much hath been written in defence of this opinion by the Presbyterians of England France Scotland Netherlands and divers parts of Germany I have therefore out of their writings reduced the whole sum of their Doctrine and Discipline into 95. Questions or a short Catechisme by way of Question and Answer Quest. What is the Ministery of the Gospel Answ. It is the dispensation of Divine mysteries manifested by Christs coming in the flesh Q. How many parts hath this Ministery A. Three to wit the preaching of the Gospel the administration of the Sacraments and the exercise of Church Discipline commonly called the power of the Keys and of binding and loosing Q. wherein consisteth Church Discipline A. In two things to wit in Imposition of hands and in correction of manners Q. Are all Church Ministers properly Ministers of the Gospel An. No for they are properly Ministers of the Gospel who preach and give the Sacraments but Deacons who look to the poor and Deaconisses are onely Ministers of the Church not of the Gospel Q. Are Prophets in the New Testament and Ministers of the Gospel the same A. No for Philip's four daughters were Prophetesses yet not Ministers of the Gospel Many of the Laity had the gift of Prophesie which were not Ministers of the Gospel Q. Are Presbyters and Priests all one A. No for he is a Priest that offers Sacrifice but Presbyter is an Elder which sometimes is called a Bishop as Act. 20. mention is made of many Bishops that is many Elders or Presbyters The Apostles also are called Elders 1 Pet. 3. Presbyter Bishop and Pas●our are taken for the same office Act 20. we read also of many Bishops in Philippi Phil. 1. which is meant of many Elders the Apostle useth promiscuously the word Bishop and Presbyter Tit. 1. for indeed Bishops or Pastors ought to be Elders that is excell others both in years and knowledge Q. were the 70. Disciples subject or subordinate to the 12. Apostles A. No for though they were called later than the Apostles yet I find not that their power in working miracles in preaching in administring the Sacraments in ecclesiastick discipline was lesse or subordinate to the Apostles for both were immediately called by Christ and equally subject to him without subordination or subjection to the Apostles no more than of old the Prophets were subject to the High Priests Q. Is the Ordinatio● of the Church of Rome lawfull A. Yes for neither Husse Wickliff Luther and other worthy men who forsook the errors of the Romish Church did ever reject her ordination no more than they did her Baptisme She retains the faith of the Trinity the two Testaments the Sacraments or Seals of the Covenant the two Tables of the Law therefore though she be a wife of fornieations as the Church of Iuda sometime was yet she may bring forth sons to God Q In what things did the Apostles differ from their successors A. 1. The Apostles were immediately called by Christ but their successors by men 2. The Apostles were sent abroad into all the world but their successors were confined to peculiar places 3. The Apostles Doctrine was the rule and Canon by which their successors must frame their Sermons 4. The Apostles were the first that gave the Holy Ghost by imposition of hands as for preaching administring the Sacraments and discipline in these they agreed with their Successors Quest. Who founded the first Christian Churches A. The Apostles either immediately as Peter and Iohn founded the Church of Samaria Acts 8. 5 6. Peter the Church of Caesarea Acts 10. 44 45 Paul the Church of Corinth 1. Cor. 3. 6. and 4. 15. and the Church of the Galathians Gal. 4. 19. or else immediately by their Deputies or Evangelists as Banabas founded the Church of Antioch Acts 11. 22. Q. Had any Apostle power or jurisdiction over the rest A. No but they were all of equal power and authority whence it follows that neither the Pope should usurp any power over other Patriarches nor Bishops lord it over their fellow Bishops or Presbyters for these I take here for one except by consent for a time a superintendency be given for quieting of troubles in the Church which perhaps was given to one of the Apostles it may be to Peter whilest they lived together at Ierusalem before their dispertion but if so it was onely temporary and by consent Q. Was it the chief office of the Deacons i● the Primitive Church to prea●h the word A. No but to take care of the poore of Widows and Orphans and to attend on the Tables that is on their Love Feasts called Agapa of which burthen they desired to be eased who preached the Word as not being able to do both yet we read that Stephen Acts 6. 6. 8. 10. did preach but indeed in that place it is more likely that he disputed in the Iewish Synagogues than preached in the Temple and if he had preached it will not follow that the Deacons office is to preach for this act of Stephens was extraordinary as having an extrorpinary measure of the spirit and so we read that Philip another Deacon of those seven-preached in Samaria Acts 8. 5. but this he did as being an Evangelist in Caesarea Acts 21. 8. not a Deacon in Ier●salem Q. Doth the ●are then of the poore rely upon the Deacon A. The care of collecting the charitable benevolence for the poore and distributing of the same relyes upon the Deacon but the care of exhorting to benevolence of recommending the poore of inspection into the Deacons fidelity and industry relies upon the Presbyter from which the Apostles exempted not themselves Q. Did the Apostles in all the Churches which they planted appoint Presbyters and Deacons A. Yes otherwise they had left these Churches as sheep without shepheards or ships without Pilots to be devoured by wolves and to be swallowed by the waves of confusion Heresies and Schismes therefore Paul having preached the Gospel in Crete and having setled some Presbyters there he gives order to Titus to set up Presbyters in every Town and it is unlikely that Paul who had continued at Corinth a year and six months Acts 18. 11. would leave that Church destitute of Presbyters and Deacons seeing the Lord testified to Paul in a Vision that he had much people in that City v●r 10. and writing to the Philippians he salutes the Bishops and Deacons there Q. Why did he not salute the Presbyters there also A. Because in that place a Presbyter is all one in effect with
sacerdos and in the Emperours of Rome that were also chief Pontifies and though Melchisedech was King and Priest and among the Iews Abraham was a Prince and a Priest Heli a Judge and a Priest the Machabees were Princes and Priests yet this was not ordinary for Abraham Melchisedech Heli were Types of Christ the Machabees by usurpation undertook both governments but ordinarily these Offices were distinct among the Iews therefore Moses who gave Lawes concerning the Priesthood did not exercise it himself neither did Ieshua David nor Salomon but on the contrary Saul and Vzziah were severely punished for medling with the Priests Office Saul for offering sacrifice lost his Kingdome and Vzziah was struck with Leprosie but among Christian these Officers are much more distinct for Christs Kingdome is not of this world and the Ministry is burden enough without other addition who is sufficient for it saith the Apostle besides it is Christs prerogative to be alone King and Priest of his Church Yet so far may the Magistrate meddle with the Ministry as to reform what is amisse both in their life and Doctrine examples hereof we have in Iehosaphat Ezechia and Iosiah and in Salomon too who deposed Abiathar the Priest Q. Was the Presbytery in use among the Iews A. Yes for besides the Civill Judicature which by Moses his appointment consisted of 70. men and had its seat in the City gates there was a spirituall or Ecclesiastick judicature kept in the Synagogues which judged of things holy and clean and discerned between holy and profane clean and unclean things and declared the Statutes of God and because of the Scribes among them they decided matters of their Civil Law Levit. 10. 10. This judicature consisted of Priests and Levites as also of the chief Fathers of Israel which we may call Lay or ruling Elders as we may see 2. Chro● 19. 8. Ichosaphat did not onely restore and reform from the Civil Courts called Sanhedrim in each City the chiefest whereof was at Ierusulem but also he reformed the Presbyteries or Ecclesiastick judicatures as may be seen there placing Amariah the chief Priest over these but Z●badiah ruler or Prince of the house of Iuda over the Synedria or Civil affairs called there verse 11 the Kings matters because the King was chief over these Courts as the High-Priest over the Presbyteries but afterward through the corruption of time These Courts were confounded and the Presbyteries did not onely judge de jure as anciently they used but also de facto even of life and death as in the time of the Matha●ees but under the Romans this power was taken from them for they neither could put Christ nor Paul to death as for Stephen he was stoned not by the sentence of the Court but in a popular tumult Q. How are these two Courts named in the New Testament A. The Civil Court is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Councell the Ecclesiastick Court is named the Synagogue Mat. 10. 17. The chief of the Synagogue was the High-Priest but of the Councel was the Judge Deut. 17. 12. Ierem●ah was condemned by the Synagogue Ier. 26. 8. but absolved by the Councel or secular Judges in the Gate verse 16. Q. Why are Ministers called Presbyters and Bishops but not Priests in the New Testament A. Because they were to be put in mind of their dignity and Function which consisteth in the care and inspection of their stcok not in offering of sacrifice which was the proper work of the Priest but ceased when Christ our propitiatory sacrifice was offered besides Christ would reserve this prer●gative to himself in being the onely Priest of the New Testament not after the order of Aaron which ended when he was sacrificed but after the order of Melchisedech which was in him to continue for ever without successor Therefore the Ministers of the New Testament are no otherwise Priests then they are Kings but these titles are common to all Christians who by Christ are made Kings and Priests to God the Father Q. How are Ministers to be elected A. They must be examined whether they be apt to teach and well reported of by them who are without Therefore Ti●●othy must not lay hands suddenly on any man 1. Tim. 5. 22. and 3. 7. Secondly the Bishop or Pastor must be chosen by all the Bishops or Pastors of the Province or by three at least as it was ordained by the Councel of Nice Canon 4. Thirdly the election of the Minister must be made known to the people as we may see in the sixth Canon of the Councel of Chalcedon Fourthly the people must give their approbation Acts 6. 5. therefore Saint Austin Epist. 110. presented his succcessor Eradi●s to the people for their consent Fifthly there must be imposition of hands a custome used not onely in the Christian Church 1. Tim 4. 14. and 5. verse 18. 〈◊〉 also among the Iews Num. 27. 18. Deut. 34. 9. Sixthly in the Reformed Churches the other Ministers give to him that is elected the hand of fellowship as Ia●s Peter and Iohn gave to Paul Gal. 2. Seventhly the new elected Minister subscribes the confession of faith and discipline of the Church which custome was used in the Churches of Africa Q. Are Romish Priests converted to our Church to be re-ordained A. There is no necessity of a new ordination for though their commission in the Church of Rome 〈…〉 the body and blood of Christ in the Eucharist yet they were ordained to preach the Word and to administer the Sacraments Which ordination is not nullified when they shake off the errors of Doctrine and preach the W●●d in purity 〈…〉 their ordination originally from the Pope or his subordinate Bishop but from Christ● neither must their Oath taken in ordination to maintain the Romish Doctrine hinder them from preaching the Word in purity for an unlawfull Oath must not be kept Therefore Luther and others who forsook the errors of Rome received no new ordination Q. Had the Presbytery power to excommunicate A. Yes and not the Bishop alone for Paul would not by himself excommunicate the incestuous Corinthian without the Presbytery or the Church gathered together 1. Cor. 5. 4. for indeed the whole congregation should have notice given them of the Excommunication that they may avoid the party exommunicated Q. Vpon what is this power grounded A. Upon Gods own practice who excommunicated Adam out of Paradise and Cain from his presence 2. Upon his command who prohibited the unclean from entring the Temple till they were purified and from eating the Passeover or commercing with Gods people who commanded every soul not circumcised the eigth day to be cut off from the people 3 Upon Christs words Whomsoever you bind on earth shall be bound in heaven 4. Upon Christs counsel forbidding to give that which is holy to dogs ●rto cast pearls before swine 5. Upon the Apostles practise Peter excommunicated Simon Magus in keeping him off
from imposition of hands Paul excommunicated the incestuous Corinthian and delivered over to Satan the two blaspheme●s Hymenaeus and Philetus 6. Paul will have the Corinthians purge out the old leaven and not to eat with such as are notoriously wicked pronounceth Maranatha against such as love not the Lord Jesus and Anathema against such as preach another Gospel than what the Galathians received and wisheth they may be cut off who trouble them And wills us to beware of such as cause dissention and strife and to reject an Heretick Iohn will not have us receive such men within our houses nor bid them God speed by all which it is apparent that excommunication is both ancient and necessary in the Church Q. May an excommunicate person be debarred from publick prayers and preaching A. Yes for though meat is not to be denyed to him that is hung●y yet we may justly refuse to feed him who is glutted and hath taken a surfet And Heathen or Infidel may be admited to hear the Word because he sins of ignorance which is cured by preaching but a wicked or profane brother who sins of wilfulnesse and perversnesse is not to be admitted to that which he despiseth for that pearl is not for Hogs and such by hearing the Word do but aggravate their own damnation Therefore Sain● Paul permits us to eat with an Infidel without scruple 1. Cor. 10. 27. but with a profane brother he will not have us to keep company 1 Cor. 5. 11. So we read in Tertullian that Cerdon the Heretick was not suffered to enter into the Church and Theodosius had the Church doors barred against him by Ambrose Yet in this case private exhortations and comminations are not to be neglected that the prodigal Son may be induced to return again to his Fathers house Q. May a man that is excommunicate remain still in the state of election A. Yes for the sentence of the Church is declarative onely and not effective and Election as the other gifts of God is without repentance Though Peter fell dangerously yet in his fall he was the childe of election for Christ prayed that his faith should not fail the tree in Winter may seem to be dead when it is stript of its leaves yet in the spring it revives again because the vital faculty lurking all that while in the root breaks out and shews its vertue upon the approach of the Sun So the Root of grace remains alive in the Godly though the Leaves be dead for which they are or may be excommunicate Q. If exc●mmunication was in use among the Jews why did not the prophets excommunicate notorious sinners nor the Pharisees excommunicate the Sadduces who were dangerous Hereticks nor the Priests and Elders of the people excommunicate Christ and his Apostles whom they accounted pernicious seducers A. The prophets had no Ecclesiasticall jurisdiction they were sent to preach against sin but not to excommunicate for sin The Pharisees and Sadduces were Sects different in opinions but had no Ecclesiastick Jurisdiction one over the other Though Christ and his Apostles were hated by the Priests yet the Priests durst not excommunicate them partly for fear of the people partly for fear of the Romans neither had Iohn Baptist any power to excommunicate the Pharisees Sadduces though he knew them to be a Generation of Vipers nor had he any reason to exclude them from his Baptisme seeing they came to confesse their sinnes Mat. 3. 6. Q. Why did not Christ excommmnicate Judas whom he knew to be unworthy of the Sacrament A. Because the sinne of Iudas was not yet known nor scandalous for though it was known to some of the Priests yet it was not known to the Disciples and though it was known to Christ as he was God or else by revelation as he was man yet it was not publickly known and though it had been publick yet without admonition conviction and condemnation he should not have been Excommnnicate Therefore Christ bids them all eat and drink but yet by this he doth not give way that such as are notoriously and scandalously wicked should be admitted to the Sacrament without repentance especially obstinate despisers of admonition but onely that such as are admitted though Hypocrites should not refuse to eat and drink Q. May the Presbytery excommunicate any man for his absence Answer If his absence be prejudiciall to Church or State or joyned with obstinacy he may be excommunicate for being absent but if he be absent upon unavoidale occasions or upon the certain knowledge that he hath of the prejudicate opinion which the Presbytery hath of him he may absent himself till they be better informed Thus Chrys●stome absented himself from the Synod of Constantinople because he knew that The●philus Bishop of Alexandria and Epiphanius of Cyprus before whom he was convented were enemies to his cause therefore he was injuriously by them for his absence condemned Q. How many sorts of excommunication were there Answ. Three 1. Of those that were kept off a while from the Sacament they were called 〈◊〉 2. Of them who were excluded from the Sacraments but not for any certain time these were named Excommunicati 3. Of them whose condition was desperate they were named Anathematisati which decree of excommunication or Anathema was de●ounced rather against the Doctrine then persons of men of whom we should not despair while they live and being dead are not in our power yet I find the persons of Iulian the apostate of Arrius the Heretick and some others were Anathematised Q. Was excommunication used onely among Christians A. No for the Iewes had this punishment among them as we may see Ioh. 9. in casting the blinde man out of their Synagogue and threatning to do the like to those that should professe Christ which Christ also foretold to his Disciples This kind of spiritual punishment was most strictly observed amongst the Esseens Ioseph de bell Iudaic. l. 2. c. 7. for not onely did they excommunicate notorious sinners but suffered them also in the time of their excommunication to starve for want of food This punishment also was in use among the Gentiles For the Druides among the Ga●les used to debar from their Sacrifices scandalous livets as Casar witnesseth de bell Gall. l. 6. and Devoveri Diti or Diris was a kind of excommunication among the Romans Q. What benefit hath the Church by excommunication A. By this the Word Sacraments and other things are kept holy and vindicated from profanation Swine are kept off from treading upon Pearles and Dogs from tearing us the sheep are kept within their fold the lost sheep is recovered the prodigal Son is brought home the reputation of the Churches holinesse is kept up and all occasion of obloquie cut off the body is preserved by cutting off the gangrened member and the tree prospers by lopping off the withred branches and the contagion is stayed from creeping further which without this remedy
would infect others men by this are deterred from sinne by this also Gods anger is appeased and his judgement removed of averted and our communion with God is renewed and confirmed Therefore we are commanded Deut. 13. to remove the evil from amongst us and to depart out of Babylon and not to communicate with the unfruitfull works of darknesse Q. Are excommunicate persons members of the Church A. As they are excommunicate they are not members for how can they be members of the Church from whose Union and Society they are separated or how can Heathens and Publicans be members of the Church for such are excommunicate persons to be accounted yet in respect of their faith which is not quite extinguished and as they are subject to the external government of the Church they may be called members thereof Q. Are we Protestants justly excommunicate by the Pope A. 1. No for we are not Hereticks but Orthodox Professors 2. He hath no power to exclude us out of the Church who himself is scarce a member of the Church 8. T is no wonder that we are rejected by those who seem to be the onely builders whereas Christ himself the chief corner stone was rejected by the builders 4. By being excommunicate from Babylon we are made members of Ierusalem and indeed we had not been partakers of the true light so long as we remained in darknesse nor had we been the servants of Christ so long as we served Antichrist 5. No sooner had the Hirelings cast out Christs sheep out of the fold but Christ the true Shepheard found them out and brought them home with joy So the blind man Ioh 9. was no sooner cast out of the Synagogue but he was received and entertained by Christ. So we have gained Heaven by being excommunicate from Rome and Balaams curse is turned to a blessing Q. What hath Rome got by Excommunication A. Though she kept the world a while in awe and thereby got wealth yet by her excommuications she hath lost more then she hath got for she lost all the Eastern Countries when Pope Victor inconsiderately excommunicated the Eastern Churches about the matter of Easter What the Popes got by excommunicating the German Emperors and French Kings Histories can tell us they lost England by excommunicating Henry the eighth and his Protestant Children Q. Who are to be Excommunicate A. 1. Not Iewes and Turks but Christians for we are not to judge them who are without but if any be called a brother who is a fornicator c. 2. Not every sinful brother but he who sins of perversenesse after admonition for he doth wilfully by his sinnes separate himself from God therefore deserves to be separate from the Church by excommunication and consequently to be delivered over to Satan who reignes without the Church as Christ doth within and this delivering over is to the destruction of the flesh that is of the Old Man or body of sin but that the spirit may be saved that is that Grace or the New Man may be strengthened 3. A brother must not be excommunicate for every sin but for that which is publick and scandalous private sins are to be punished by him who knowes all secrets 4. A Brother must be excommunicate for his own sins but not for the sins of another every man must bear his own burthen therefore Bishop Auxlius was justly reproved by Saint Austin Epist. 75. for excommunicating the whole Family for the Masters offence alone Q. Can excommunication consist with Charity A. Yes for there can be no greater charity then to save the soul but the end of excommunication is to save the soul or the spirit it is charity to keep a man from blaspheming but Hymeneus and Alexander were delivered up to Satan that they might learne not to blaspheme 1. Tim. 1. it is charity to stay an Infection or Plague but excommunication is such a means therefore Paul wills the Corint●ians to take away the evil from among them f●r Kn●w you not saith he that a little Leven will sowre the whole lump 1. Cor. 5. It is charity to keep a man from eating and drinking his own damnation but unworthy eaters of the Sacrament eat their own damnation if they be not suspended or kept off by excommunication Q. Is the Civil Magistrate prejudiced by the censure of excommunication A. No for the weapon of the Magistrate is the Sword but the Minister useth onely the Word The end of the Ministers censure is to save the sinner The end of the Magistrates is to kill the sinner The Minister is content to receive the sinner into the Church again upon his repentance but the Magistrate regards not the repentance and sorrow of the Malefactor the Minister takes notice of many sinnes which the Magistrate doth not because they are such as trouble not the State as private grudges of Neighbours c. There be also Magistrates that wink many times at great sinnes as for example drunkenesse which the Minister should not forbeare to censure Q. May the Minister or Presbytery excommunicate any man without the consent of the Church A. No for excommunication or separation from the body of Christ is of that consequence that it concerns all to take notice of it but the Minister may suspend from the Sacrament without the Churches consent such as he knows are scandalous and profane and this he ought to doe though the Church should refuse to assent for he is commanded not to give that which is holy to Dogs nor must he suffer any of his stock to eat his own damnation this is to put the Sword into his hand that would kill himself which is to be guilty of his sin Qui no● vetat peccare cum possit jubet Q. From what things can we not be excommunicate A. 1. From the love of God in Christ Jesus our Lord no man can separate us for the foundation of God remaineth sure 2. Nor from the practise of those duties which are grounded on the Lawes of nature can we be hindered by excommunication such as are the duties of Husbands and Wives Fathers and Children Masters and Servants Princes and People therefore the Popes excommunication cannot loose people from their alleageance to their Prince 3. Nor can excommunicate persons be hindered from practising such things as are grounded on the Law of Nations such as traffique and commerce for an excommunicate person must be to us as a Publican and Heathen but with such the Iewes might have commerce and traffique 4. Excommunication doth not debar us from exercising the workes of charity for we are bound to feed the hungry and not suffer them to starve because they are excommunicate 5. Excommunication doth not debar us from hearing the word except we be scoffers of it Q. Is the Christian Magistrate subject to the censure of excommunication A. Yes for though he be a Father as he is a Prince yet he is a Brother as he is a Christian and therefore
of Christ upon the Earth 51. That none are damned but for rejecting the Gospel 52. That now many Christians have more knowledge then the Apostles had 53. That miracles necessarily attend the Ministry 54 That there ought to be no Churches built nor should men worship in consecrated places 55. That the Apostles were ignorant of the salvation to be revealed in the last days 56. That all men ought to have liberty of conscience and of prophesying even women also 57. That circumcision and the old covenant was onely of things temporal 58. That Paedobaptisme is unlawful and impious and that others besides Ministers may baptise and that a man may be baptised often 59. That the people should receive the Lords Supper with their hats on but the Ministers in giving it should be uncovered 60. That the Church of England is Antichristian 61. That there is no divine right to call or make Ministers that Ministers should work for their living and that Tythes are Antichristian 62 ●hat Christians are not bound to observe the Lord● day and that we should observe still the old Sabbath 63. That humane learning and premeditation is uselesse to preaching and that preaching should onely confist in disputing reasoning and conferring 64. That the Saints must not joyn in prayer with wicked men not receive the Sacrament with them nor with any member of the Church of England 65. That ●ublick prayers are not to be used but by such as have an in●allible Spirit as the Apostles had 66. That set hours of prayer are needlesse 67 That singing of Davids Psalmes or other holy songs except they be of their own making are unlawful 68. That wicked men ought not to pray at all 69. That all government in the Church ought to be civil not Ecclesiastical 70 That the power of the keyes is as well in six or seven gathered together as in the greatest congregation 71. That neither miracles nor visions nor anointing the sick with oyl are ceased 72. That in these days many are with Paul rapt up into the third Heaven 73 That the Magistrate is not to meddle with matters of Religion nor forms of Church government which if they do they are not to be obeyed 74. That there ought to be a community of Goods seeing all the Earth is the Saints 75. That a man upon slight causes may put away his wife and that one man may have two wives 76. That children ought not at all to obey their parents if wicked 77. That parents should not instruct their children but leave them to God 78. That Christians ought not to maintain Religion by the sword nor to fight for their lives and liberties no● to fight at all nor to kil any thing nay not a chicken for our use 79. That it stands not with Gods goodness to damn his own creatures eternally 80. That i'ts unlawful for a Christian to be a Magistrate 81. That man lost no more by Adams fall then the rest of the whole creation 82 That Christ hath not purchased eternal life for man more then for the rest of the creation and that he offered up himselfe a full and perfect sacrifice not only for man but for all that man kept even the whole creation 83. None are sent to hell before the last judgment 84. It is not the Law but the Gospel which threatens us with Hell fire 85. If God shew not mercy to all he is not infinite 86. Christians are not bound to meet one day in seven for publick worship 87. The Saints are justified not by Christs obedience but by the essential righteousness of God 88. A woman committeth not adultery in lying with another man if her husband be a sleep 89. That the Saints may put away their unbeleeving wives or husbands 90. There is no other seale but the Spirit the Sacraments are no seales at all 91. The Magistrate may not put to death a murtherer being a member of the Church till first he be cast out of the Church 92. The promises belong to sinners as sinners and not as repenting sinners 93. Apocrypha books are canonical Scripture 94. To use set forms of prayer even the Lords prayer is Idolatry 95. Bells Churches and Church-yards preaching in Pulpits in Gowns by an hour-glasse the names of our months and days are all idolatry 96. That the Apostles Creed is to be rejected as erroneous 97. That there ought to be no other laws among Christians but the judicial Law of Moses and that the Magistrate hath no legislative power at all 98. That all Learning Schools Universities Arts Degrees are to be rejected as pernicious 99. That Angels and Devils are not substances but meer qualities and that mens soules are but terrestrial vapours perishing with the bodies 100. That some in this life are perfect without all sin and need not pray for pardon 101. That in God there is some composition and corporiety and mutability also 102. That Christ took not his flesh of the Virgin Mary but that his body was created without all consanguinity with the first Adam 103. That God doth personally subsist in every creature 104. That the world is eternal 105. That the Lords Supper may be celebrated in Inns rather then Churches and that in the end of a feast 106. That the Devils have no sinne But I will leave these Divels though I could mention many more but that it delights not my selfe nor can it the Reader to be raking in such filthy mire and dirt These are some of the poysonous weeds which have too much of late infested our English Garden I mean the Church once admired both at home and abroad for the beauty of her Doctrine and Disciplin and envied of none but ignorants or men of perverse minds The Poet bewailing the ruins of Troy said Seges ubi Troi a fuit Corn grows where Troy stood but I may sadly complain that in stead of corn that is sound and wholsom doctrine which should be the food of our souls now grows Tares and Weeds that choak the good word with which we were formerly fed and might have been unto a life of glory everlasting if we had therein abode But least I should bring thee into danger by giving thee onely a fight of these Rocks and Precepices to prevent that I shall commend to thy serious perusal Master Wollebius his Abridgement of Christian Divinity which for the good of my country men I Englished Enlarged and cleared in obscure places and have now fitted for a second impression A book worthy to be written in Letters of gold and imprinted in the heart of every good Christian The knowledge therein contained by prayer and through the assistance of Gods spirit will root and establish the in every good word and work to the comming of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ which God of his infini●e mercy grant The Contents of the Thirteenth Section The Doctrine of the Church of Rome concerning the Scriptures 2. Their tenets concerning predestination
Oyle puts on his ●wle and so receives him into the Fraternity having vowed abstinence from flesh and perpetual chastity The Monks do not onely live upon their rents but they trade also and are great Merchants as for scholarship they have none Sergius is a great Saint ●mongst them to whom the Empress goeth sometimes in Pilgrimage They have divers Nunneries some whereof are onely for Noble mens Widows and Daughters whose stock the Emperor meanes to ex●i●guish They have E●emites also who go stark naked except about the middle they wear long hair and an l●on collar about their neck or middle The people esteem them as Saints and Prophets and whatsoever they say is received as Oracles even by the great Duke himselfe He thinks himself in great favour with God who is reproved or robbed of any part of his goods by them But of these E●emites there be very few in that cold country Q. 5. What form of Service have they in their Churches A. They have their Matti●s every morning the Priest attended by his Deacon in the middle of the Church calls on Christ for a blessing in the name of the Trinity and then repeats three times Lord have mercy upon us this done he marcheth into the chancel whither no man may enter but the Priest alone and there at the Altar he sayeth the Lords prayer and twelve times Lord have mercy upon us Then Praised at the Trinity The Deacon and people answer Amen Then he reads the Psalmes for the day and with the people turns to the Images on the wall to which they bow three times knocking their heads to the ground Then he reads the Decalogue and Athanasius his Creed After this the Deacon standing without the Chancel door reads a part of their Legend of Saints lives which is divided into so many parts as there be days in the year then he addeth some collects or prayers This Service lasteth about two hours all which time many Wax Candles burn before their Images some as big as a mans wast such are vowed and enjoyned by pe●nance They have about nine of the morning another service and on Festival days they have solemn devotion The evening service is begun like the marnings after the Psalmes the Priest singeth the 〈◊〉 in their Language and then all with one voice Lord have mercy upon us thirty times together and the boyes answer thirty times then is read by the Priest and on holy days sung the first Psalme and 〈◊〉 repented ten times Then the Priest reads some part of the Gospel which he ends with three Hallelujahs and withal that evening service with a collect for the day all this while the Priest standeth as the high 〈◊〉 The Deacon● stand without the Chancel whither they dare not come during service time The people stand together in the body of the Church for they have no Pews to sit in Q. 6. How do they administer the Sacraments 〈…〉 Eight days after the Child is born he is brought to the Church-porch where the Priest receives him and tells the witnesses their duties in the childs education after baptisme namely to teach him how to know God and Christ and withal what Saints are the chiefe mediators then he conjures the Devil out of the water and so after some prayers he plungeth the child three times over head and ears in a tub of warm water holding it necessary that every part of the child be dipped They use the same words that we do In the name of the Father Son and Holy Ghost and not By the Holy Ghost as some Hereticks have used Then the Priest lay●th oyl and salt mixed together on the Childes forehead on both sides of his face and on his lips praying that God would make him a good Christian c. This done the child being now made a Christian is carried from the Porch into the Church The Priest marching before who layeth him on a cushion before the feet of the chief Image in the Church to which he is recommended as to his Mediator After baptisme the childs hair is cut off wrapped up in wax and reserved as a relique in the Church The Russians use to re-bapbaptise their Proselyte Christians and in some Monasterie to instruct them in their religion first they cloath the new convert with a fresh Russian Garment then they crown him with a Garland anoint his head with oyl put a wax light into his hand and for seven days together pray over him four times a day all which time he is to forbear flesh and white meats After the seventh day he is washed and on the eighth day is brought into the Church and there instructed how to bow knock his head and crosse himself before their images The Russians communicate but once a year in Lent after confession to the Priest who calls them up to the Altar askes them if they be clean from sin if they be they are admitted but never above three at one time Whilest the Priest prayeth the communicants stand with their ●rms folded one within another then he delivereth to them a spoonful of bread and wine tempered together saying Eat this drink this without any pause Then he delivereth bread by it self and wine mingled with warm water to represent the water and bloc● that issued out of Christ side Then the Communicants follow the Priest thrice about the Altar with their folded arms At last after prayers the Priest chargeth them to make good cheer and be merry for seven days together to fast the next seven days after Q. 7. What is the Doctrine and Ceremonies of the Russian Church at this day A They hold that the Books of Moses except Genesis are not to be read in Churches and are of no use since Christs comming nor the Prophets nor the Revelation 2. They teach that their Church traditions are of equal authority with the word of God 3. That the Greek Church chiefly the Patriarch and his Synod have full authority to interpret the Scriptures and that their interpretation is authentick 4. That the Holy Ghost proceedeth not from the Son 5. They hold Christ to be the onely mediator of redemption but not of intercession this honour they give to the Saints chiefly to the Virgin Mary and Saint Nichola● who they say is attended upon by three hundred of the chief Angels 6. Their doctrine and practise is to adore the Images or Pictures of the Saints whereof their Churches are full and richly adorned 7. They teach that in this life there can be no assurance of salvation 8. And that we are justified not by faith only but by works also which consist in prayers by number on their beads in fasts vows almes crossings offerings to Saints and such like 9. They ascribe great power to auricular confession in doing away sin 10. They hold al to be damned that dye without baptism 11. Extream Unction is with them a Sacrament though not of such
in confessing their sins only to God in rejecting purgatory and prayers for the dead in giving the Sacrament in both kindes and in unleavened bread and in tolerating Priests marriages in the same points also they agree with the 〈◊〉 or Christians of Egypt with the Abyssins Armenians and Maronites But the Protestants difher from the above named Churches in these subsequent points 1. They believe that the holy Ghost proceedeth from the Son 2. They use unleavened bread in the Sacrament 3. The English Protestants allow Confirmation 4. They hold that the blessed souls enjoy Gods presence and that the wicked are tormented in Hell immediately after their departure hence 5. They permit Priests after ordination to marry 6. They reject pictures as well as Massie-images 7. They observe not the Saturday 〈◊〉 Sabbath 8. They have but one Lent in the year 9. They make no scruple in 〈◊〉 of blood in these points the Protestants dissent both from the Greek● Melch●tes Georgians 〈◊〉 Circassiani Moscovites and other Sects above named They defer not baptisme till the eighth year with the Circassians they pray not for the dead nor give the Sacrament in a spoon nor divorce their Wives upon every light occasion with the M●scovites they affirm not two persons in Christ nor deny Mary to be the Mother of God nor reject the Councel of Ephesus and all other Councels after it with the Nestorians They defer not baptism till the fortieth day nor exclude Priests from second marriage with the Christians of Saint Thomas They do not ascribe one nature only one will and one operation to Christ nor do they use circumcision and a hot Iron in baptisme nor do they reach that Angels are composed of fire and light with the Iaoobites They give not the Eucharist to Insants they marry not in the second degree of consanguinity nor do they read the Gospel of Nicodemus with the Cop●ti They do not hold traduction of souls by seminal propagation nor baptize themselves every year nor suffer they their Ministers to live by mechanical labours with the Abyssins They use nor rebapti●ation nor fasting on Christmasse day nor abstain from eating of uncleane beasts prohibited by the old Law with the Armenians they do not hold that all souls were created together nor that parents ought to dissolve their childrens marriages when they please nor that Children should be made Sub-Deacons nor that Menstr●ous Women should be excluded from the Sacrament with the Maro●ites The Protestants do not celebvate their Liturgy in an unknown tongue as the 〈…〉 Iacobites Indians and Nestorians do who make use of the 〈◊〉 or Syriack language in their divine service which few understand nor with the Greeks Melchi●es Georgians Circassians and others do they use the ancient Greek tongue in their liturgies which these above named know not and yet make use of it in their Churches nor with the Boman Catholicks doe they read and pray in Latine but in their own vulgar languages which are intelligible by all in which point they agree with the Abyssins A●menians Moscovites Russians 〈◊〉 anciently called Illyrians Lastly Protestants differ from the Roman Catholicks in these points 1. Of the number of Canonical Books of Scripture of their sufficiency authority and interpreter 2. Of Christs descent into hel 3. Of the head of the Church and of the Popes supremacy 4. Of the true Catholick Church 5. Of their Clergy their orders immunities and 〈◊〉 6. Of ●he Monastical life vows and Evangelical Counsels 7. Of the power of the Civil Magistrate 8. Of Purgatory 9. Of invocation of Saints 10. Adoration of Images and Reliques 11. Sacraments their number efficacy and ceremonies 12. Baptisme its necessity effects and ceremonies 13. Transubstantiation and the consequences thereof 14. Of administring in both kinds 15. The sacrifice of the Masse 16. Auricular confession 17. Satisfaction 18. Indulgences 19. Extream Unction 20. Original sin 21. Free will Predestination and Grace 22. Justification Faith and good wo●k● 23. The Latine Service 24. Traditions Some other small differences there are and fewer there might be if men would be moderate on either side but the spirit of contention and contradiction hath hitherto hindered and will yet hinder the peace of the Church till the Prince of Pea●e our true Solomon who built this mystical Temple without noyse of Axes or Hammers put an end to all j●rrs and discords till he whom both the Winds and Seas do obey awake who now seemes to be asleep till he I say awake and rebuke the stormy winds and proud billows on which his ship is tossed to and fro that at last she may e●joy a calm time and some Halcyonian days and may cast Anchor in the safe harbour of tranquillity where we may finde our Saviour not in the Earthquakes Whirlewinds and fire of contention but in the 〈◊〉 and quiet voice of peace concord and unity which he left to us as a Legacy but we have lost it by our pride sacriledge ●nvy 〈◊〉 covetousness profanenesse and vain-glory The Contents of the Fifteenth Section Religion is the ground of all government and greatnesse 2. By divers reasons it is proved that Religion of all Common wealths and humane societies is the foundation 3. That Princes and Magistrates ought to have a special care in setling and preserving of Religion 4. That one Religion onely is to be allowed in a Common wealth publickly 5. In what respects different Religions they be tolerated in private 6. A Christian Prince may not dissemble his Religion 7. Why God blesseth the professors of false Religions and punisheth the contemners thereof 8. False Religions are grounded upon policy what use there is of Ceremonies in Religion 9. The mixture and division of religions and of Idolatry 10. How the Gentile Religion in worshipping of the Sun seems to be most consonant to natural reason with divers observations concerning Sun-worship and the knowledge the Gentiles had of a Deity the Vnity thereof with some glimmering of the Trinity 11. That the honour maintenance and advancement of a Priest hood is the main supporter of Religion 12. That the Christian Religion is of all others the must excellent and to be preferred for divers reasons being considered in it selfe and compared with others with an exhortation to the practice of religious duties which is true Christianity SECT XV. Quest. I. HAving now pass't through all Religions known in the World it remains that we make some use of what we have viewed let us know then to what end and purpose hath this View been taken A. First to let us see that there is no nation so barbarous or brutish except some particular fools who have said in their heart there is no God which hath not made profession of some Religion by which they are taught to acknowledge and worship a Deity For Religion is the pillar on which every Common●wealth is built so long as the pillar is stable and firm which is the foundation so long
Regum timendorum in pr●prios greges Reges in ips●s imperium est I●vis Horat. 10. If it were not for the force of Religion few Common-wealths could defend themselves what souldier would fight with that courage or expose his life to danger if he did not expect a greater reward a more durable garland hereafter then any they could expect here This made the Iewes so resolute against their neighbour Gentiles this animated the Romans against their enemies they fought Pro Aris for their Altars in the first place this animateth the Turks against Christians and these against the Turks Q. 3. Ought not then Princes aud Magistrates to have a special care in the setling and preservation of Religion A. Yes for no means is so powerful to establish and perpetuate their thrones and authority as Religion no Guard so strong as this no Castle so impregnable no Spur so sharp to stir and extimulate peoples affections towards the defence obedience reverence and maintenance of their Governours as Religion therefore the wise Roman Emperors took more pride and delight in the titles of Pius and Sanctus of Pious Holy Religious then to be stiled wife Fortunate Stout or Valorous and to let the people know what care they had of Religion they alone would be called Pontifices Maximi or chief Bishops There is no Epithet that the wise Poet gives to Aenaeas so often as that of Piety Pius Aenaeas pietate insignis armis insignem pietate virum c. Qun justior alter ●ec pietate fuit c. Virgil. That good Emperour Antoninus who succeeded Hadrian preferred the title of Pius to all his other honorable titles and as wise Princes have been chiefly careful of Religion to preserve it pure and uncontaminate so have they bin diligent in suppressing Atheists the chief enemies thereof for they saw that Atheisme did introduce Anarchy for he who is an enemy to God cannot be a friend to Gods Vice-Gerents therefore in all wel governed States they have been either put to death or banished as being enemies to government and humane society Wise Princes finde that as religion uniteth peoples affections to them so it makes them fortunate and successful in all their actions and undertakings never was there a more religious Prince then King David and never a King more successful against his enemies the like we may see in Constantine Theodosius Charles the Great and many others no lesse famous for their Religion than for their Victories and because wise Law-givers are not ignorant how much religion is prevalent with the people therefore they delivered them no Laws but what either they received or said they received from some Deity so Lyc●rgus gave out that his Laws were delivered to him by Apollo Minos received his Laws from Iupiter with whom he was familiar nine years together Zaleucus makes Minerva the Author of his Laws Numa ascribes his Laws to the Nimph Aegería with whom he had familiar conferences in the night And Mahomet will have his Laws backed by the authority of the Angel Gabriel such is the force of Religion that without this men would neither receive nor obey Laws for this cause God himself appeared often to the Patriarchs and came down in lightning thunder upon Mo●nt Sinai when he gave the Law Neither hath there been any more forcible way to appease tumults and popular seditions then the conceit of Religion When the C●ty of Florence in a civil dissention was washed with her own blood Francis Sodorinus the Bishop in his Pontificals having the crosse carried before him and accompanied with his Priests struck such an awe of Religion into the hearts of the Citizens with his very presence that they flung down their arms the like religious Stratagem was used by Iaddus the High Priest of the Jewes to obtain the favour of Alexander as he was marching against Ierusalem with his Army who was so struck with the Priests majestical presence and Vestiments that he both adored the Priest spared the City and conferred on it divers benefits The like respect and successe had Pope Vrban from Attila when he besieged Aquileia and many more examples may be alledged Q. 4. Are Pluralities of Religions tolerable in a State A. 1. Publickly one Religion onely is to be allowed because there is but one God who is the Object of Religion therefore as his Essence is most simple and indivisible so should his worship be because diversities of Religion breed diversities of opinions concerning God 2. As there is but one truth so there ought to be but one Religion for false Religions either teach to worship false Gods or else in a false manner to worship the true God therefore God himselfe prescribed to the Jews the rule and manner of his worship strictly commanding them not to alter any thing therein and Saint Paul sheweth That the Gospel which he taught was the onely true Gospel so that if an Angel from Heaven should preach any other Gospel let him be accursed Galat. ●3 As there is but one Church which is the ground and pillar of truth and one faith to lay hold on that truth and one spirit to lead the Church into the way of truth so there should be but one Religion which is the Doctrine of that truth 4. There is but one way to Heaven and life ●●ernal but the wayes to destruction are many therefore there ought to be but one Religion to conduct us in that way to eternal happinesse 5. Religion as is said is the Foundation of all States and Kingdoms therefore in one State or Kingdom there ought to be but one Religion because there can be but one foundation for one Building cannot have many Foundations 6. ●eligion is the band and cord by which the unity of the State is preserved if this band be broken into many pieces how can it binde the affections of people and preserve their unity either amongst themselves or with their Princes and Governours As therefore a City divided against it self cannot stand neither can that State subsist which is divided into different Religions which occasioneth diversity of affections and withall many jars and contentions 7. As in bodies natural contrary qualities cause destruction so in bodies Politick contrary Religions for if there be but one true Religion the rest must needs be false and what can be more contrary then truth and falshood so that the belly of Rebecca must needs be tormented where such opposite twins do struggle Hence proceed heart-burnings emulations strifes proscriptions excommunications and such like distempers by which the seamlesse coat of Christ is torne in pieces 8. Diversitie of Religions beget envy malice seditions factions rebellions contempt of Superiors treacheries innovations disobedience and many more mischiefs which pull down the heavy judgements of God upon that State or Kingdom where contrary Religions are allowed because whilest every one strives to advance his own Religion above the other all these distempers now mentioned must
needs follow We could instance the condition of the Iewes how they flourished whilest they adhered to the Religion prescribed them by God But when they admitted the Gentile Religions also among them they fell into all the mischiefs mentioned and God cast them off as a prey to their Enemies But we have sufficient and experimental proof of this in our neighbouring Countries of France and Germany what distempers and civil wars not many years ago have ensued upon the differences of Religion to the desolution and ruine of many Towns and Cities Tantum Relligio potuit suadere malorum Q. 5. May a State tolerate different Religions in privat A. 1. If they be such Religions as do not overthrow the fundamentals of truth 2. Nor such as impugne or disturb the government established in that State or Kingdom 3. If the professors thereof be such as are not factious ambitious or pertinacious but honest simple tractable obedient to Superiors having no other end in holding their opinions of Religion but Gods glory and satisfaction of their own conscience so far as they can conceive and withal are willing to submit to better judgements and to renounce their opinions when they are convinced to be erroneous in these regards I say a State may and wise States do tolerate diversities of opinions in Religion upon good grounds because as Solomon saith There is a time for all things under the Sun There will come a time when the tares shall be separated from the corne though the wise Husbandman suffers them to grow together a while The wise Physitian will not presently fall to purging out the noxious humours of a Cacochymicall Body for in some diseases nothing is more dangerous then precipitate and untimely Physick Chronical d●seases are not cured by Physick and motion but by time and rest The nature of man is such saith Seneca that he will be sooner led then drawn facilius ducitur quàm trabitur Stubborn and violent courses in reformation beget stubborn and violent opposition The warme Sun will prevail more with the traveller then the cold and boysterous winde the Goats blood will break the Adamant which the hardest hammers cannot do God also hath his times for calling of men to the knowledge of his truth some he calls at the nineth hour and some not till the eleventh Christ sends abroad his Disciples to preach and work miracles among the Iewes but into the way of the Gentiles they must not yet go till his ascension It falls out many times that the remedy is worse then the disease and while we go about to cure the State we kill it and instead of purging out the peccant humours of the body Politick we cast it into a Calenture or burning Feaver This was not unknown to that wise and good Emperor Theodesius who could not be perswaded by the Catholikes to extirpate or use violent courses against the Arrians but permitted them to enjoy their Churches and opinions knowing how dangerous it would prove to the State if the quietnesse thereof should be disturbed this had been to kindle the fire which was lately extinguished and to raise a con●●●gration in the Empire which could not be quenched without an inundation of blood this had been Camerinam movere or to awake a sleeping Dog For this cause though the Turk is zealous in his Religion yet he permits Christians Iewes Persians Aethiopians and others to enjoy their several Religions The like liberty is permitted in Germany France and other places for avoiding further mischief For this purpose that there may not be a breach of peace and disturbance in the government of the State The Turks and Moscovites inhibit all disputations in points of Religion upon pain of death The like inhibition was made by the Emperor and Princes of Germany after their Civil Wars that there should be no dispute or contention between the Catholickes and Protestants for indeed by such disputes Religion it self is weakned and the State indangered for if it be not tolerable to question Laws once established how can it be safe either for State or Church to call in question Religion once setled and confirmed by authority By questions and disp●tes the Majesty of Religion is slighted and that made dubious which ought to be most certain The objects and high mysteries of our faith are not to be measured by our shallow reason The many disputes about Religion commonly overthrow the practise of Religion which consisteth not in talking but in doing the one indeed is more easie then the other as Seneca saith Omnes disputare malunt quam vivere We had rather dispute of salvation then work it out with fear and trembling If Heaven could be obtained with wrangling and disputing a profane Sophister should sooner have it then a Holy Christian who knows that life eternal is not obtained by talking of but by walking in the ways of Gods Commandements But to return to our former discourse and to end this question as we began diversity of Religious with the limitations aforesaid may be connived at especially when it cannot be avoided without the danger and ruin of the State and the rather because the Conscience cannot be compelled nor faith forced There never was a wiser State than the Romans and more zealous in the worship of their gods 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 according to the custome and laws of their Nation yet they admitted the worship of Isis and Aesculapius forrain Deities and a Pantheon or Temple for all gods And though they abhorred the Iewes above all other people yet Augustus that wise and happy Emperor permitted them to exercise their own Religion Princes and Magistrates must like wise Ship-Masters rather strike Saile and cast Anchor then make Ship-wrack in a storme and rather saile back with safety then venture upon the Rocks in the Harbour with danger Praestat recurrere quàm male currere As Constans the Emperor and The●dosius the Great though Catholick Princes yet for quietnesse sake tolerated the Arrians So did Leo make an Edict of Union called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that all the different religions within his dominions might live peaceably and friendly together For the same cause Anastasius made a Law of Amnesty and accounted those the best preachers that were moderate Q. 6. May a Christian Prince dissemble his Religion A. 1. He may not because God abhorreth Hypocrisie condemneth a double heart and rejecteth such as draw neer to him with their lipps when their hearts are far from him Christ denounceth more woes against Hypocrisie then any other sin of those who are Wolves in Sheeps cloathing he will have us take heed and threatneth to deny those before his heavenly Father who deny him before men We are commanded to love God with all our heart with all our strength c which we do not if we dissemble He requires faithfulnesse truth and sincerity in the inward parts he abhorreth lia●s and deceitful men Shall we think it lawful
other places These emissary messengers of Christ or rather of Satan boyled over with their various opinions held marriages of no account and dreamed divers other things Some taught by parables and their own illusive dreams others acknowledged not him a Brother who defiled his Baptisme with sinnes others preferred the Baptisme of Iohn before that of Christ others taught that all Magistrates and whoever were unsatisfied with their Religion ought to be destroyed root and branch some would acknowledge nothing but their own visions and prophecies others that all the Prophets and Teachers that were departed this life should shortly rise again and should reign with Christ upon earth a thousand years and should receive a hundred fold for what ever they had left behind them Some of these men affirmed that they had communication with God some with Angels but the more discreet and wiser sort of men conceived that their conferences had been with the devill Hereupon the great Prophet Iohn Mathias upon whose account his most vain Apostles already proclaimed a Peace perceiving an occasion by this means of domineering in this world consecrated in his stead his disciple Iames Campensis a Sawyer Bishop at Amsterdam committing unto his charge the people to be seduced with the same zeal as he had begun These things being thus fairly carried he repaired to Munster to his Apostle and Ambassadour Iohn Buckhold whom he made Governour of the City who presently published these severe edicts That every man should bring his gold and silver and whatever were of greater importance into the common heap and that no man should detain any thing at his house for the receiving of which things so collected a place was appointed Though the people were not a little astonished at the rigour and severity of the edict yet did they submit thereto Moreover he forbad the reading of all books but the Bible all which that they ought to be burnt the divine authority had by him its witnesse commanded At this very time a certain Tradesman whose name was Hubert Trutiling had scattered some contu●●elious expressions concerning this great Prophet whereat he being immeasur●bly incenled even to the losse of all compassion caused the foresaid Trutiling to be brought into the Market place where he is accused and sentenced Whereupon he himself laying his violent hands upon this innocent man layes him along upon the ground in that posture he runs him through with a spear but finding by the palpitation that there was some remainder of life he made him be conveighed thence and taking a musket from one that stood by which was charged killed him intimating that he was commanded by God that is to say his own who was a murtherer from the beginning to do what he had done This noble exploit performed he took a long lance in his hand and hastily ran about the City crying out that he was commanded by God the Father to put to flight the enemy which at that time had closely besieged Munster Having taken the said weapon and running like a mad man upon the enemy he himself was run through by a souldier of Misna JOHN BuCKHOLD or JOHN of LEYDEN Agressusque nefas magnum et memorabile Regem Somniat abjecta forfice sceptra gerens THE CONTENTS IOHN BUCKHOLD his character his disputing and contention with the Ecclesiasticks concerning Paedobaptisme he succeeds John Mathias he comforts the people with a pretended revelation he makes Bernard Knipperdoling of a Consul to become common executioner Buckhold feigneth himself ●umb he ass●●●es the Magistracy he allowes Polygamy he takes to himself three wiues he is made King and appoints Officers under him his sumptuous apparel his Titles were King of Iustice King of the new Jerusalem his throne his Coi● and motto therein The King Queen and Courtiers wa●e on the people at a Feast with other ligressions The King endea●ours to raise ●●●●●tions abroad is happily prevented He suspects his own safety his large promises to his Captaines himself 〈…〉 one of his wives he feignes himself sick and deludes the people with an expectation of deliverance in the time of famine forgets community he is betrayed by his confident it brought prisoner before the Bishop who checks him his jesting answer and proposall ●e is put to a 〈◊〉 place is convinced of his offences his deserved and severe execution IOHN BUCKHOLD was a ●●●cher of Leyden a 〈◊〉 fellow eloquent very perfect in the 〈…〉 confident more ●●●geable then proteus a serious student of 〈◊〉 briefly a most ferrent Anabaptist This man being sent by Iohn Mathia● to Munster was a perpetual thorn in the sides of the Ecclesiasticks craftily ●i●ting them about the b●sinesse of P●●●●baptisme in which employment he spent nine whole moneths and most 〈◊〉 making his party good with them both as disputationand litigious contention while in the mean time he secretly spawn'd and scatter'd the doctrine of Anabaptisme as much as lay in his power About that time a certain unknown Preacher of the word of God 〈…〉 Stapreda of Meurs came to Munster who supplying the place of Ro●man●●s in preaching seduced him and tea●ened him with Anabaptisme and he also publickly anat●●matized P●dobaptisme This gave occasion of raising 〈◊〉 among the people they who before were only secretly instructed by Iohn Buckhold discover themselves openly to the world and lay aside all disguises of their intentions City they have their in most parts of the frequentmeetings indivers 〈◊〉 but all in the night time whereat the Magistrates being 〈◊〉 and offended prohibited their Conventicles and some they banished But they weigh not this any thing and being sent out at one gate they came in at another and lay concealed among those that were the favourers of their Sect. Hereupon the Senate caused all the Ecclesiasticks to assemble at the Palace to dispute the businesse of Paedobaptisme In this Assembly Rotmannus stood tooth and naile for the Anabaptists but those of the Reformation fully refuted their errors as the publick acts concerning that businesse do abundantly testifie At this very time the Ministers of the Church of Argentoratum signed and set out an account of their Faith in a printed Book Hereupon the Senate of Munster by a publick edict banished the Anabaptists out of the City which edict they persisting in contention opposed being now arrived to that rashnesse and impudence that they thrust a reformed Preacher one Peter Werthemius out of the Church Yea some of them rioting about the City whereof the Ringleader was Henry Rollius cryed out as they went Repent and be rebaptized otherwise will the heavy wrath of God fall upon you These things hapned about the end of the year M.D.XXXIII and the beginning of M.D.XXXIV Some honest-hearted and harmlesse men partly out of an apprehension of divine wrath as they made them beleive partly for fear of men suffered themselves to be washed in the l●ver of Anabaptisme For the Anabaptists
fiery torches if he be wicked if good they comfort him and defend his body in the grave till the day of judgment but the bodies of the wicked are knocked down nine fathoms under ground and tormented by their angry Angels the one knocking him with an hammer the other tearing him with an hook till the last day against this torment the Turks use to pray at the graves of the dead The women there do not accompany the dead to the grave but stay at home weeping and preparing good cheer for the Priests and others of the departed mans friends They believe that when the Corps hath been in the grave on quarter of an hour that a new spirit is put into it is set upon its knees and is examined by the foresaid Angels of his faith and works They believe also that it is a work of charity and conducible to the soul of the defunct if the birds beasts or ants be fed with the meat which they set on the graves of the dead Q. How far hath this Mahumetan Superstition got footing in the world A. Though it be not so far extended as Gentilisme yet it hath over-reached Christianity not in Europe where Christianity prevaileth but in Africa where it hath thrust out the ancient Christian Churches and erected the Half-Moon in flead of the Crosse except it be among the Abyssins and some small places held by the Spaniard or Portugal But in Asia it hath got deeper footing having over-run Arabia Turkie Persia some part of Mogols countrey and Tartaria onely here and there some smal Congregations of Christians are to be found In America indeed it is not as yet known Now the reasons why this Superstition is so far spread are these 1. The continual jars frivolous debates and needless digladiations about questions of Religion among Christians which hath made the world doubt of the truth thereof and takes away the end and scope of Religion which is to unite mens affections but the remedy is become the disease and that which should cure us woundeth us 2. The wicked and scandalous lives both of Christian Laity and Clergy for the Mahumetans generally are more devour in their religious duties and more just in their dealings 3. The Mahumetan Conquests have in those parts propagated their Superstition 4. Their religion is more pleasing to the sense then Christianity for men are more affected with sensitive pleasures which Mahomet proffers in his Paradise then with spiritual which are lesse known and therefore lesse desired 5. The greatnesse of the Turkish tyranny over Christians the rewards and honours they give to those that will turn Muselmen or Mahumetans are great inducements for weak spirits to embrace that religion for a Christian Runegado that will receive circumcision among them is carried about the streets with great joy and solemnity is presented with many gifts and made free from all taxes for which very cause many both Greeks and Albanians have received circumcision 6. The liberty which is permitted to multiply wives must needs be pleasing to carnal-minded men 7. They permit no man to dispute of their Alcoran to call any point of their religion in question to sell the Alcoran to strangers or to translate it into other languages It is death to offend in any of these which is the cause of much quietnesse and concord among them 8. They inhibit the profession of Philosophy among them and so they keep the people in darknesse and ignorance not suffering the light to appear and to detect their errors 9. They teach that all who live a good life shall be saved whatsoever his religion be this makes many weak Christians revolt from their holy faith without scruple or check of conscience for what care they whether they serve Christ or Mahomet so they be saved 10. They hold that after a certain time of torments in Hell the wicked shall be released from thence this doctrine is more pleasing to wicked men then Christianity which admits of no redemption from Hell nor any mitigation of eternal torments 11. Men are much taken with moral outsides whereby the Turks exceed Christians for they are more modest in their conversation generally then we men and women converse not together promiscuously as among us they are lesse sumptuous in their buildings lesse excessive and phantastical in their clothes more sparing in their dyet and altogether abstemious more devout and reverend in their Churches so that they will not suffer a piece of paper to be trod upon or lie on the ground but will take it up kisse it and lay it in some place out of danger and this is because the name of God and Mahomets Law is written upon paper they are also more sober in their speeches and gesture and more obedient to their Superiors then we are 12. There is nothing more pleasing to our nature then private revenge which by Christs Law is prohibited but by the Mahumetan Law is allowed for they are to hate and to kill their enemy if they can 13 Arianism had infected most of the Eastern Churches therefore it was no wonder if they received Mahomets Doctrine which was grounded upon Arius his Heresie 14. They suffer no man to blaspheme Christ but honour him and speak reverently of him so they do of Moses and Abraham which makes that neither Iews nor Christians are in those parts much averse from or violent against their Religion 15. They have been alwayes very zealous and diligent in gaining Proselytes and yet force no man For these and such like reasons let us not wonder at the great encrease of Mahumetanisme in the world Q. Of what continuance is Mahumetanisme A. Mahomet was born in the year of Christ 592. in the time of S. Gregory the Pope and Mauritius the Emperour according to Genebrard he lived 63. years of which he spent 23. years in spreading of his doctrine then died in the year of our Lord 655. Constance being Emperour and Eugenius the first Pope So that Mahumetanisme hath lasted already above 1000. years to the great oppression and vexation of the Church of Christ and to the eternal dishonour of Christian Princes who if they had spent but the tenth part of that blood against the Turks which they have shamefully and sinfully shed in their own private quarrels there had not been at this day any remainder of that damnable Sect which hath longer continued a scourge to the Church of Christ then ever any enemy did against Gods people of old For the Egyptians oppressed the Israelites scarce 200. years the Canaanites 20. years the Moabites 18. years the Philistines 40. years the Assy●ians and Chaldeans from the first to the last did not ●ex oppress Gods people above 300. years afterward they were oppressed by Antiochus Epiphanes 40 years the Christian Church from Nero till Constantine was afflicted about 260. years and afterward by the Goths and Lombards nere 300. years But this oppression of the Church by
Mahomet hath as I said lasted above a thousand years The reasons are divers as I have shewed in the former question to which may be added these 1. By this long persecution and tyranny of the Turks God will try and exercise the faith patience constancy and other vertues of his people which would corrupt and purrifie like standing water or Moab ●●tled upon the Lees not being poured from vessel to vessel How can the courage of a Souldier be known but in a skirmish or the skill of a Mariner but in a storm Marcet sine adversario virtus that tree saith Seneca is most strongly rooted in the ground which is most shaken with the wind Nulla est a●or fortis solida nisi in quam venti saepius incursant ipsa enim ●exatiane constringitur adices certius figit 2. God is pleased to continue this tyranny and power of the Mahumetans to the end that Christian Princes may love each other and stick close together against the common enemy that their military discipline might be exercised abroad and not at home For this cause the wisest of the Romans were against the utter destruction of Carthage fearing least the Romans wanting an enemy abroad should exercise their swords against themselves which fell out accordingly For the same cause God would not utterly destroy the Philistines Ammonites Moabites and other neighbouring enemies of the Iewes But such is the madnesse of Christians that though we have so potent an enemy close at our doores ready to devour us yet wee are content to sheath that sword into our owne bowels which we should imploy against the common foe 3. God will have this sword of Mahumetanisme to hang over our heads and this scourge to be still in our eyes that thereby wee may be kept the more in awe and obedience that if at any time we start aside like a broken bow we may returne againe in time considering God hath this whip ready and at hand to correct us Thus God lest the Canaanites among the Jewes to be pricks in their eyes and goads in their sides I will not saith the Lord drive out any from before them of the Nations which Joshua left when he died that through them I might prove Israel whether they will keep the way of the Lord to walk tberein c. therefore the Lord left these nations without driving them out hastily See Iudg. 2. 21 22. 3. 1 2 3 c. 4. God is content to continue this Mahumetan Sect so long because justice is exercised among them without which a State or Kingdome can no more stand then a tree without a root or an house without a foundation they are also zealous and devout in their way and great enemies to Idolatry so that they will permit no images to be painted or carved among them knowing that God is not offended so much against any sin as against idolatry which is spiritual adultery most destructive of that matrimonial conjuction between God and us 5. The Lord by the long continuance of Mahumetanism will punish the perfidiousnesse and wickednesse of the Greek Emperours as likewise the multitude of heresies and schisms hatched in that Church 6. This Sect of Mahumeranism is so made up of Christianism Judaism and Gentilism that it abates the edge of any of these nations from any eager desire of its extirpation The Contents of the Seventh Section The Christian Religion propagated 2. The decay thereof in the East by Mahumetanism 3. Persecution and Heresie the two great Enemies thereof 4. Simon Magus the first heretick with his Disciples 5. Menander Saturninus and Basilides Hereticks 6. The Nicholaitans and Gnosticks 7. The Carpocratians 8. Cerinthus Ebion and the Nazarites 9. The Valentinians Secundians and Prolemians 10. The Marcites Colarbassi and Heracleonites 11. The Ophites Cainites and Sethites 12. The Archonticks and Ascothyprae 13. Cerdon and Marcion 14. Apelles Severus and Tacianus 15. The Cataphrygians 16. Pepuzians Quintilians and Artotyrites 17. The Quartidecimani and Alogiani 18. The Adamians Elcesians and Theodocians 19. The Melchisedicians Bardesanists and Noetians 20. The Valesians Catheri Angelici and Apostolici 21. The Sabellians Originians and Originists 22. The Samosatenians and Photinians 23. The Manichaean Religion 24 The Hierachites Melitians and Arians 25. The Audians Semi-arians and Macedonians 26. The Aerians Aetians and Apollinarists 27. The Antidicomarianits Messalians and Metangismonites 28. The Hermians Proclianites and Patricians 29. The Ascites Pattalorinchites Aquarii and Coluthiani 30. The Floriani Aeternales and Nudipidales 31. The Donatists Priscillianists Rhetorians and Feri 32. The Theopaschites Tritheits Aquei Melitonii Ophei Tertullii Liberatores and Nativitarii 33. The Luciferians Jovinianists and Arabicks 34. The Collyridians Paterniani Tertullianists and Abelonites 35. The Pelagians Predestinati and Timotheans 36. The Nestorians Eutychians and their Spawn SECT VII Quest. WHat is the other great Religion professed in Europe A. Christianity which is the Doctrine of Salvation delivered to man by Christ Jesus the Son of God who assuming our nature of a pure Virgin taught the Jewes the true way to happinesse confirming his doctrine by signes and miracles at length sealed it with his blood and so having suffered death for our sins and rose again for our justification he ascended to his Father leaving twelve Apostles behind him to propagate this doctrine through the world which they did accordingly confirming their words with miracles and their own blood and so this light of the Gospel scattered all the fogs and mists of Gentile superstition at the sight of this Ark of the new Covenant the Dagon of idolatry fell to the ground when this Lyon of the Tribe of Iudah did roar all the beasts of the forrest that is the Pagan Idols or Devils rather hid themselves in their dens Apollo complained that his Oracles failed him and that the Hebrew child had stopped his mouth When it was proclaimed at Palotes by Thanas the Egyptian ship-master that the great god Pan was dead all the evil spirits were heard to howl and bewail the overthrow of their Kingdom Porphirie complained that the preaching of Christ had weakened the power of their gods and hindred the gain of their Priests The bones of Babylas so hindered Apollo that he could deliver no Oracle while they were there The Delphick Temple fell down with earthquake and thunder when Iulian sent to consult with the Oracle Such was the irresistible power of the two-edged sword which came out of Christs mouth that nothing was able to withstand it The little stone cut out of the mountain without hands smot the great Image of Nebuchadnezzar and brake it in pieces to the Doctrine of twelve poor weak fishermen did the great Potentates of the world submit their Scepters Thus the stone which the builders refused became the head of the Corner it was the Lords doing and its marveilous in our eyes The terrible beast which with his iron teeth destroyed all the other beasts is destroyed by