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 true_a visible_a 19,269 5 9.3685 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
A00596 The Fisher catched in his owne net Featley, Daniel, 1582-1645. 1623 (1623) STC 10732; ESTC S120857 13,298 32

There are 5 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

to wit Whether the Protestant Church c. and Whether the names c. Ergo. M. Fisher. Conclude any thing syllogistically D. Featly D. Featly You your selfe make the first part a question by it selfe for at the margent ouer against the first part Whether the Protestant Church was euer visible you write I will answer it was not Which words can haue no Grammaticall construction if you refer them to both parts or at all to the latter part to wit Whether the names can be shewed M. Fisher. Let vs heare a Syllogisme D. Featly In this copulatiue proposition which you offer for a question and require me to proue either you denie both parts or one onely if both I am to proue both one after the other if one only then you grant the other A copulatiue is not true vnlesse both parts be true doe you denie both or one onely M. Fisher. I say they are but one for the latter part is to expound the former for I meane by visible so visible that the names of such visible Protestants may be shewed D. Featly This is to confound two distinct questions in one For a Church may haue been visible and yet the names of such visible professors not now to be shewed M. Fisher. They are my words and I am best able to expound my owne meaning D. Featly An exposition which the construction of the words will not beare is not to be receiued But the construction of the words will not beare this your exposition Therefore it is not to be receiued And is a coniunction copulatiue and must adde somewhat to that which goes before It is all one as if you should expound the words of the Apostle Prouide honest things before God and men before God that is before men M. Sweet What need you stand so much vpon this if there were visible men certainly they may be named Name your visible Protestants and it sufficeth Name visible Protestants in all ages D. Featly It seemes you are nominals rather then reals you stand so much vpon naming will you vndertake to name visible Papists in all ages If neither you nor we can name visible professors of our Religions in all ages for ought I know the best way for vs is to be all naturall men D. Featly This is the right reason of a naturall M. Sweet If there were visible Protestants in all ages certainly they may be named D. Featly That is a non sequitur for the reasons before named by me What say you to a people of Africa who if we may beleeue Plinie haue no names at all M. Boulton Yet they haue descriptions and may be knowne by some periphrasis D. Featly What say you then to the heretickes called Acephali who are so called because their head and author cannot be named nor particularly described yet the Author was a visible man Are all visible mens names vpon record Are all the records that were in former times now to be produced Here diuers of Mr. Fishers companie called Names names names D. Featly What will nothing content you but a Buttery booke you shall haue a Buttery booke of names if you will stay a while Here diuers of the auditors wished Dr. Featly not to proceed any further in the disputation vnlesse Mr. Fisher would suffer him according to the lawes of all disputation first to conclude the first part of his copulatiue question and then the second yet D. Featly desirous to bring the disputation to some better issue before he left it was content to yeeld to M. Fishers vnreasonable demand and conclude both parts of the copulatiue question in one Syllogisme D. Featly That Church whose faith is eternall and perpetuall is so visible that the names of some professors thereof may be shewed in all ages But the faith of the Protestant Church is eternall and perpetuall Ergo. M. Fisher. Faith eternall who euer heard of faith eternall Saint Paul saith that faith ceaseth D. Featly You haue a purpose M. Fisher to cauill you know my meaning well enough by the terme perpetuall to wit that Christian faith which hath continued from Christs first publishing it till this present and shall continue vntill his second coming The Church which holdeth this faith you beleeue shall be so visible that the names of the professors thereof may be shewed in all ages But the Protestant Church holdeth this perpetuall faith Ergo. M. Fisher. Your argument is a fallacie called petitio principii D. Featly A demonstration à causa or à priori is not petitio principij But such is my argument Ergo. Is it not a sounder argument to proue the visibilitie of the professors from the truth of their faith then as you do the truth of your faith from the visibilitie of professors Visible professors argue not a right faith Hereticks Mahumetans and Gentiles haue visible professors of their impieties yet will it not hence follow that they haue a right beliefe On the contrary we know by the promises of God in the Scripture that the Church which maintaineth the true faith shall haue alwayes professors more or lesse visible M. Sweet You ought to proue the truth of your Church à posteriori for that is to the question and not à priori D. Featly Shall you prescribe me my weapons Is not an argument à priori better then an argument à posteriori This is as if in battell you should enioyne your enemie to stab you with a knife and not with a sword or dagger I will vse what weapons I list take you what buckler you can M. Fisher. A proofe à posteriori is more demonstratiue then à priori Here Mr. Fisher sheweth his Academicall learning in preferring a demonstration à posteriori before that which proceedeth à priori Is not a demonstration of the effect from the cause more excellent then of the cause by the effect From this place and so forward it was agreed by the disputants that the Arguments and Answers should be taken by one common writer and that the Opponet D. Featly should set his hand to each seuerall Syllogisme and the Respondent M. Fisher to his seuerall Answers D. Featly That Church which is so visible as the Catholicke Church ought to be and as the Popish Church is pretended by M. Fisher to be is so visible that their names may be produced and shewed But the Protestant Church is so visible as the Catholik Church ought to be and as the Popish Church is pretended by M. Fisher to be Ergo. M. Fisher. I denie the minor D. Featly That Church whose faith is eternall and perpetuall and vnchanged is so visible as the Catholike Church ought to be and the Popish Church by M. Fisher is pretended to be But the faith of the Protestant Church is eternall perpetuall and vnchanged Ergo the Protestant Church is so visible as the Catholicke Church ought to be and the Popish Church is pretended by M. Fisher to be M. Fisher.
I distinguish the maior That Church whose faith is perpetuall and vnchanged so as the names can be shewed is so visible as the Catholik Church ought to be and as M. Fisher pretends the Romane Church to be I grant it That Church whose faith is perpetual and vnchanged yet so as the names cannot be shewed in all ages is so visible as the Catholick Church ought to be and as Mr. Fisher pretends the Romane Church ought to be I denie it To the minor I apply the like distinction and consequently to the conclusion in the same maner D. Featly What answer you to the conclusion also This is a straine of new Logicke Mr. Fisher. Tolle distinctionem D. Featly A strange distinction of the eternitie of faith by professors to be named and not to be named What are professors nominable or innominable to the eternitie of faith M. Fisher. Conclude that which I deny That the Protestant Church is so eternall as the names of all visible Protestants in all ages may be shewed D. Featly That Church whose faith is the catholicke and primitiue faith once giuē to the Saints without which no man can be saued is so perpetuall as the names may be shewed in all ages But the faith of the Protestant Chruch is the primitiue and catholik faith once giuen to the Saints without which none can be saued Ergo the faith of the Protestant church is so perpetuall as the names may be shewed in all ages M. Fisher. I answer to the minor If this proposition be taken simply in it selfe I absolutely deny it but if this proposition be considered as it must be as related to the first question and the end thereof I further adde that it is not pertinent to that end for which the whole dispute was intended to wit to shew to those who are not able by their owne abilitie to find out the infallible faith necessary to saluation without learning it of the true visible Church of Christ and consequently the visibilitie of the Church is first to be shewed before the truth of doctrine in particular shall be shewed D. Featly First what speake you of those who are not able by their own abilities to find out faith is any man able by his owne abilitie without the help of diuine grace 2. What helpeth the visibilitie to confirme the truth of the Church Visibilitie indeed proues a Church but not the true Church Here M. Fisher alledged some words out of D. Field of the Church supposing thereby to iustifie his former answer whereunto D. Featly promised answer should be made when it came to their turne to answer now he was by order to oppose M. Fisher. D. Featly The summe of your former answer was that the minor of my former Syllogisme was both false and impertinent It is neither false nor impertinent Ergo your answer is false and impertinent And first it is not false M. Fisher. I answer to the antecedent That it is both false and impertinent but I adde that for the present it must first be proued to be pertinent or else it diuerteth vs from the chiefe end of our dispute which was as I said before That infallible truth may be learned of the true visible Church and not the true visible Church by first finding euery particular infallible truth and by that to conclude which is the true visible Church D. Featly I proue that the minor is pertinent That minor proposition which together with the maior doth necessarily and directly inferre the conclusion of the minor last denied is pertinent to the probation of that minor denied But the minor proposition of the third Syllogisme doth necessarily and directly inferre the conclusion of the minor last denied Ergo the minor of that Syllogisme is pertinent Note that M. Fishers answers to euery one of these Syllogismes were penned by him verbatim with the aduice of M. Sweet and one other aduising priuatly and amending what they thought fit which breeding much delay irksome to the hearers and the Opponent then saying You are very long M. Fisher. A stander by said Let him alone for he and his learned councell are not yet agreed M. Fisher. I distinguish the maior That minor proposition which together with the maior doth necessarily and directly inferre the conclusion of the minor in such manner as it may serue for that purpose to which the whole dispute is ordained I grant it to be pertinent But if it do inferre the conclusion yet not in such maner as it may serue for that purpose for which the whole dispute was ordained I denie the maior Here the disputants iarred and so the writer ceased yet that which followeth was then deliuered by them D. Featly That minor which together with the maior inferres the proposition last denied the whole processe hauing been per directa media is pertinent to that purpose to which the dispute is ordained But this minor together with the maior directly and necessarily inferres the Proposition last denied the whole processus hauing been made per directa media Ergo it is pertinent to that purpose to which the dispute is ordained M. Fisher. Your media in your Syllogismes were directa but they tended not ad directum finem D. Featly This is a B●ll Mr. Fisher. Media directa yet not ad directum finem that is direct and not direct for media are said to be directa only ratione finis M. Sweet Is there not a fault in arguing called transitio à genere in genus when a man by arguing quite leaues the maine question and subiect D. Featly I acknowledge that transitio à genere in genus is a fault in disputing but I neuer heard that the inference of the effect by the cause was transitio à genere in genus such was my argument For faith in a right beleeuer produceth profession and confession thereof which makes a visible member and the like profession of many members a visible Church Where the cause is perpetuall the effect must needs be perpetual Therefore where the faith is perpetuall the profession thereof must needs be and consequently the visibilitie of the professors thereof Is this transitio à genere in genus A stander by M. Sweet you once learned better Logicke in Cambridge then you shew now Here againe those of M. Fishers side calling for names D. White said Where are your names D. White This is nothing but an apparent tergiuersation You will not answer any argument directly nor suffer vs to proceed in our arguments and therefore I require you Mr. Fisher according to the order mentioned in the beginning for each partie to haue an houre and a halfe that you now oppose and suffer me to answer Proue by Christ and his Apostles or by any of the Fathers for the first 600 yeares these present tenets of the Roman Church viz. 1. That all power of order and iurisdiction in respect of the Churches is to be deriued from the
THE FISHER CATCHED IN HIS OWNE NET M.DC.XXIII THE OCCASION AND ISSVE OF THE LATE CONFERENCE HAD BETWEEN Dr. White Deane of Carleil and Dr. Featly with Mr. Fisher and Mr. Sweet Iesuites was this as followeth EDward Buggs Esquire about the age of 70 yeares being lately sick was solicited by some Papists then about him to forsake the Protestant faith telling him there was no hope of saluation without the Church there was no Catholik Church but theirs and to beleeue the Catholike Church was the Article of his Creed and by it could no other Church be meant but the Church of Rome because it could not be proued by all the Protestants in the kingdome that they had any Church before Luther This Gentleman being much troubled in his mind with these and the like suggestions who all his life time had bin and professed himselfe a religious Protestant became now more sicke in minde then body and if by Gods mercifull goodnesse he had not recouered of this sicknesse it is to be feared hee had falne both from his Mother Church and his former faith as some of the nearest of his owne blood to his great griefe haue lately been seduced by like inticements After his recouery being much troubled in mind with these former suggestions of the popish Priests he repaired to Sir Humfrey Lynde Knight who by reason of his alliance and long acquaintance vvith him gaue the best satisfaction he could to his said cousin Mr. Buggs who seemed to take content in such his conference and to be well satisfied by him in all points But the Popish Priests and Iesuites not desisting to creepe in further where they had once made a breach perseuering still in questioning him where his Church was before Luther Whereupon he repaired againe to Sir Humfrey Lynde and required some further satisfaction of him concerning that demand And thereupon Sir Humfrey Lynde tolde him it was first in Christ and the Apostles consequently also conspicuous in the primitiue Church for 600 yeares after Christ after which time some errors crept into the Church as diseases into a mans body so that the Church which Luther and we acknowledge was in generall the same Christian Church as his body was the same substantiall body being now well and lately sicke though different in the qualities And for the better strengthening of his mind the said Sir Humfrey Lynde inuited him to his house in the countrey thereby the better to preuent the daily sollicitation of those dangerous seducers And after his returne to London the said Sir Humfrey Lynde going to Mr. Buggs his house in Drury lane to visite him found Mr. Fisher the Iesuite there where after some debates about Religion and the visibilitie of the Church Mr. Fisher called for pen and inke and set downe this question in terminis thereby adding vnder his hand that he would answer vpon it negatiuely as chalenging and expecting opposers deliuering also the paper into the hands of the said Sir Humfrey Lynde who vpon view of it answered that it was an historicall question and not so proper for disputation But Mr. Fisher. vrging it Sir Humfrey told him if he would go to Dr. Whites where formerly he had been the said Doctor would easily resolue those doubts Which being refused by the Iesuite the said Sir Humfrey did then returne him his paper againe and so left him About two dayes after Mr. Buggs repaired to Sir Humfrey Lynd and intreated him for his satisfaction to giue Mr. Fisher a meeting saying that Mr. Fisher had againe told him that he would maintaine what he had set downe and that our Diuines could not proue our Church visible before Luthers time Whereupon Sir Humfrey told him that Dr. White and Dr. Featly were to dine with him on Friday following and if after dinner Mr. Fisher would come thither with foure or six at the most they should be admitted for his sake and his wifes who by reason of such sollicitation were troubled in their minds and satisfaction should be giuen as occasion required And these were the true causes of the meeting as is before declared Vpon which Friday being the 27 of Iune 1623. Mr. Fisher Mr. Sweet Iesuites and some others with them came to Sir Humfrey Lynds house into a little dining roome where they found the aforesaid Mr. Buggs his wife and children and others of Sir Humfreys friends that had then dined with him together with some others also whose comming in as the said Sir Humfrey did not expect so he could not with ciuilitie put them forth his house but did instantly cause his doores to be locked vp that no more might enter in notwithstanding which his command some others also came in scatteringly after the Conference began A RELATION OF WHAT PASSED IN A CONFERENCE TOVCHING the visibilitie of the Church Iun. 27. 1623. DOctor White and Doctor Featly being inuited to dinner by Sir Humfrey Lynde and staying a while after had notice giuen them that Mr. Fisher and Mr. Sweet Iesuites were in the next roome ready to conferre with them touching a question set downe by Mr. Fisher vnder his owne hand in these words viz. Whether the Protestant Church was in all ages visible and especially in the ages going before Luther 2. And whether the names of such visible Protestants in all ages can be shewed and proued out of good Authors This question being deliuered to the parties aboue named and it being notified vnto them that there were certaine persons who had been solicited and remaining doubtfull in religion desired satisfaction especially in this point they were perswaded to haue some speech with the Iesuites touching this point the rather because the Priests and Iesuites do daily cast out papers and disperse them in secret in which they vaunt that no Protestant Minister dare encounter them in this point At the beginning of his meeting when the disputants were set Dr. Featly drew out the paper in which the question aboue rehearsed was written with these words in the margent viz. I will answer that it was not and demanded of Mr. Fisher whether this were his owne hand which after he had acknowledged Dr. Featly began as followeth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 To this vniuersall demand requiring rather an Historicall large volume then a Syllogisticall briefe dispute we answer 1. That although diuine infallible faith is not built vpon deduction out of humane history but diuine reuelation as is confessed by your owne Schoole-men and expresly by Cardinall Bellarmine Historiae humanae faciunt tantum fidem humanam cui subesse potest falsum Humane stories and records beget onely an humane faith or rather credulitie subiect to error not a diuine and infallible beliefe which must be built vpon surer ground 2. Although this question be grounded vpon vncertaine and false supposals for a Church may haue been visible yet not the names of all visible professors thereof now to be shewed and proued out of good Authors there might be
millions of professors yet no particular and authenticall record of them by name Records there might be many in ancient time yet not now extant at least for vs to come by yet we will not refuse to deale with you in your owne question if you in like maner will vndertake the like taske in your owne defence and maintaine the affirmatiue in the like question which we now propound vnto you here in writing Whether the Romish Church that is a Church holding the particular entire doctrine of the now Romanists as it is comprised in the Councell of Trent was in all ages visible especially in the first 600 yeares And whether the names of such visible or legible Romanists in all ages can be shewed and proued out of good Authors Here Dr. Featly reading this question through a mistake in stead of out of good Authors read out of Gods word Whereunto Mr. Fisher replied No I will proue it out of good Auhors Then said one that sat at the table By no means can Mr. Fisher endure to demonstrate his Church out of Gods word Dr. Featly God is a good Author Mr. Fisher but it is true I did mistake what say you to the condition will you vndertake to name visible Papists in all ages out of good Authors Mr. Fisher. I will so you proue the visibilitie of your Church Here an order was set downe that Dr. Featly should for an houre and a halfe oppose M. Fisher in this question and afterwards M. Fisher for the last houre and halfe should oppose D White in the contrary question for the visibilitie of the Romane Church M. Sweet Before you proceed to dispute I desire these conditions may be assented vnto on both sides 1. That all bitter speeches be forborne 2. That none speake but disputants Which conditions were well approued of by the whole companie D. Featly I desire a third to be added thereunto viz. that both the Opponent and Respondent be tied to Logicke forme M. Fisher. I hold not that condition fit because the companie vnderstands not Logicke forme D. Featly There are of the companie that vnderstand Logicke as well as you or I and the rest are men of vnderstanding and reason therefore I am resolued to keepe Logicke forme and expect from you direct answers M. Fisher. You your selfe confesse that this question is not to be handled Syllogistically D. Featly I said indeed that it required rather a large Historicall volume then a briefe Syllogisticall dispute the more you too blame to propound such a question and my taske the harder yet being propounded as a question I will keepe my selfe to Logicke forme But before I propound my argument I craue leaue in few words to lay open the vanitie of the vsuall discourse wherewith you draw and delude many of the ignorant and vnlearned You beare them in hand that there was no such thing in the world as a Protestant before Luther and that all the world before his time beleeued as you doe That your Church hath not been only visible in all ages and all times but eminently conspicuous and illustrious which is such a notorious vntruth that I here offer before all this companie to yeeld you the better and acknowledge my selfe ouercome if you can produce out of good Authors I will not say any Empire or kingdome but any Citie parish or hamlet within fiue hundred yeares next after Christ in which there was any visible assembly of Christians to be named maintaining and defending either your Trent Creed in generall or these points of Popery in speciall to wit 1. That there is a Treasury of Saints merits and superabundant satisfactions at the Popes disposing 2. That the Laity are not commanded by Christs institution to receiue the Sacrament of the Lords Supper in both kinds 3. That the publicke Seruice of God in the Church ought or may be celebrated in an vnknowne tongue 4. That priuate Masses wherein the Priest saith Edite bihite ex hoc omnes and yet eateth and drinketh himselfe onely are according to Christs institution 5. That the Popes pardons are requisite or vseful to release soules out of Purgatory 6. That the effect of the Sacrament dependeth vpon the intention of the Minister M. Sweet These are Scholasticall points not fundamentall D. White Those things which are defined in your Councell of Trent are to you matters fundamentall Whatsoeuer article denied makes a man in hereticke is fundamentall But the deniall of any of these makes a man an hereticke Ergo euery one of these articles is fundamentall To which argument nothing being answered D. Featly proceeded 7. That Extreme Vnction is a Sacrament properly so called 8. That we may worship God by an image 9. That the sacred Hoast ought to be eleuated or caried in solemne procession 10. That Infidels and impious persons yea Rats and mice may eate the body of Christ. 11. That all Ecclesiasticall power dependeth of the Pope 12. That he cannot erre in matter of faith 13. That he hath power to canonize Saints 14. To institute Religious Orders 15. to depose Kings c. which latter points and the like I leaue to D. White to maintaine against you when according to your promise you doe vndertake to name visible and legible Romanists in all ages M. Fisher. After you haue proued your Church visible in all ages and named the professors thereof I will satisfie you in your particulars D. Featly In the meane while name but one Father but one Writer of note who held the particulars aboue named for 500 yeares after Christ. To which instant demand of D. Featly nothing was answered Sir Humf. Lynd. M. Sweet proue me but this one point out of Saint Augustine namely Transubstantiation or satisfie such arguments as I shall bring you out of Saint Augustine to the contrary and I will promise you to go to Masse To which M. Sweet made no other then this answer That is not now to the question M. Fisher. I expect your argument D. Featly D. Featly There are two meanes onely to proue any thing by necessary inference to wit a Syllogisme and an Induction other formes of argument haue no force but as they are reducible to these I proue the visibilitie of our Church by both and first by a Syllogisme That Church whose faith is eternall and perpetuall was euer visible in the professors thereof But the faith of the Protestant Church is eternall and perpetuall Ergo. M. Fisher. You conclude not the question D. Featly There are two quaeres in your question first whether the Protestant Church were in all ages visible and secondly whether the names of such visible Protestants in all ages can be shewed I haue concluded in my Syllogisme the first Quaere M. Fisher. There are not two quaeres or parts in the question it is but one question D. White Where there are two propositions with two distinct vtrums there are two questions But here are two propositions with two distinct vtrums
Church of Rome 2. That no Scripture sense or translation thereof is authenticall vnlesse the same were receiued from the Romane Church 3. That the Romane Church onely was and is the authenticall custos of vnwritten traditions 4. That all generall Councels were called by the sole authoritie of the Pope and that he might ratifie and disanull whatsoeuer pleased him in them 5. That the Pope onely had power to canonize Saints 6. That the Pope had or hath power to depose Princes Proue all or any of these and we will neither carp nor cauill about names but answer directly without all delayes cuasions or tergiuersations M. Fisher. When you D. White or D. Featly haue proued your Church to be visible in all ages and named visible Protestants then I promise you to proue the visibilitie of the Catholike Romane Church but that is not done by you yet D. Featly It had been done but for your delayes and tergiuersations answer briefly and directly to my former argument and I will descend to my induction and produce the names of such eminent persons as in all ages haue maintained the substantiall points of faith in which we differ from your Romane Church That Church whose faith is the catholike and primitiue faith once giuen to the Saints without which none can be saued is so visible that the names of the professors in all ages may be shewed proued out of good authors But the Protestant Church is that Church whose faith is the catholicke and primitiue faith once giuen to the Saints without which none can be saued Ergo. The maior is ex concessis What say you to the minor M. Fisher. I distinguish the minor D. Featly Vpon what terme do you distinguish M. Fisher. I distinguish of the proposition not of any terme D. Featly Here is againe another straine of new Logicke to distinguish of a proposition and apply the distinction to no terme howsoeuer I am glad to heare you distinguish and not simply to denie that the Protestant faith is the Catholike primitiue faith Mark I beseech you you that are present that Mr. Fisher demurres vpon the proposition his conscience will not suffer him simply to denie that the Protestant faith is the Catholike primitiue faith we simply and flatly and in downright termes denie that your present Tridentine faith is the Catholike primitiue faith M. Fisher. I answered you before that your minor is false and impertinent D. Featly I haue proued already that it is pertinent what say you to the truth of it M. Sweet This is to diuert the question the question is not now whether our faith or yours be the catholicke primitiue faith but the question now is of the effect to wit the visibilitie of your Church which you ought to proue out of good authors D. Featly May not a man proue the effect by the cause Is there no other meanes to proue the effect but by naming men and producing authors for it M. Sweet An effect is posterius the question is about an effect therefore you ought to proue it à posteriori D. Featly What a reason is this May not an effect be proued by his cause Must an effect be needs proued by an effect or à posteriori because an effect is posterius M. Sweet Leaue these Logicke disputes bring the names of your Protestants that is it we expect D. Featly If I should relinquish my former argument to which yet you haue giuen no manner of answer you Mr. Fisher would report that I was nonplussed as you slandered D. White in a former conference who I tell you M. Fisher is able to teach vs both Whereto Mr. Fisher replied nothing To preuent all such misreports to the wrong of either it was moued by the hearers that is should be written downe by the common writer of the conference that both the Disputants being willing to proceed D. Featly was defired by the companie because it was late to produce the names of such Protestants as were extant before Luther in all ages This being written and subscribed by them both D. Featly proceeded to his induction D. Featly An Induction is a forme of argument in which we proceed from enumeration of particulars to conclude a generall after this manner It is so in this and this sic de caeteris Ergo it is so in all According to this forme of arguing thus I dispute The Protestant Church was so visible that the names of those who taught and beleeued the doctrine thereof may be produced in the first hundred yeares and second and third and fourth sic de caeteris Ergo it was so in all ages First I name those of the first age and I begin with him who is the beginner of all our Lord and Sauiour Iesus Christ blessed for euer at whose Name all knees must bow both in heauen and earth and vnder the earth at which words all the companie expressed an holy reuerence after Christ I name the twelue Apostles and Saint Paul and because there were few writers in the first age at least whose vndoubted works haue come to our hands I name onely I gnatius after the twelue Apostles and Saint Paul M. Fisher. These are enough for the first age Christ the twelue Apostles Saint Paul and Ignatius Here at the name of Ignatius some of M. Fishers side seemed very glad and confident saying We are sure enough that Ignatius is on our side D. Featly I meane not the new Ignatius Loyola but Ignatius the Martyr betweene whom there is more difference in qualitie then distance in time M. Fisher. Name of all the ages or else you do nothing D. Featly I cannot name all at once wil you haue me name men of so many ages with one breath will you haue me eate my whole dinner at a bit can I name twelue seuerally but I must name first one then two then three and so forward I name as I said before in the first age for our Religion our blessed Lord and Sauiour the Founder of all Religion the twelue Apostles and after them St. Paul and Ignatius the Martyr For the second age I name Iustin Martyr Clemens Alexandrinus and Saint Cyprian and I begin first with Christ his Apostles M. Fisher. You shall not begin with Christ and his Apostles D. Featly You are not to make my Induction I will begin with Christ and his Apostles where should I begin but in the first age and with the first of it shall I make a catalogue of the Christian Church according to the seueral ages and leaue out Christ and his Apostles in the first age Answer first to them and I will proceed to others M. Fisher. Name the rest in all ages and then I will answer you D. Featly First answer to the first age and then I will proceed to the second If you grant me the first age then I will proceed presently to the second otherwise I must stay in the first M. Fisher. Vnlesse you giue me a catalogue of names throughout all ages I will not answer D. Featly Will you not answer Christ and his Apostles in the first place M. Fisher. I will not before you haue named the rest D. Featly Will you not be tried by Christ and his Apostles That which Christ and his Apostles taught in the first age was taught by succeeding Christians in all ages this is confest on both sides But the doctrine of the Protestants was taught by Christ and his Apostles in the first age Ergo. Answer this Syllogisme if you will not answer my former Induction M. Fisher. I will not answer you any thing till you haue made your catalogue D. Featly Mr. Fisher I charge you as you will answer it before Christ himselfe at the dreadfull day of iudgement answer now vpon your conscience before all this companie whether you beleeue that Christ and his Apostles taught our faith or yours this is the maine point of all answer directly to my Induction Notwithstanding this deep charge M. Fisher still refused to answer to the argument of instance in Christ and his Apostles whereupon diuers thereupon expressing their distast at such refusall desired D. Featly to surceasse telling him that he ought not to talke any longer with such a one who refused to answer Christ and his Apostles And so the Conference brake vp This Conference though it tooke not that progresse which was desired by reason of the Iesuites tergiuersation not permitting Dr. Featly to come to the ripenesse of any argument yet it hath not bin fruitlesse for since that time the aforesaid Mr. Buggs came to Sir Humfrey Lynde and gaue him many thanks for the said meeting and assured him that he was well resolued now of his Religion that he saw plainly it was but the Iesuits bragging without proofes and whereas formerly by their Sophistical perswasions he was in some doubt of the Church he is now so fully satisfied of the truth of our Religion that he doth vtterly disclaim the Popish priests companie and their doctrine also Vpon Monday following M. Fisher and M. Sweet came vnsent for to the house of Sir Humfrey Lynde to know of him whether the parties that had formerly conferred would proceed or no who answered that if they might confer priuatly with leaue in some other place they would easily make good their cause and so they parted without further resolution of place or meeting Since which time notice being giuen by my Lord Bishop of Durham of his Maiesties pleasure that the truth of the late Conference should be certified to his Maiestie and further meetings staid a Romanist hath confidently auerred to Mr. Buggs that our side hath laboured to haue all future meetings touching this occasion forbidden because we durst not nor are not able to make good our assertions against them And this is the true relation of the Conference it selfe together with the occasion thereof and the effect which it produced FINIS D. Featly D. Featly A Romanist standing by The same Romanist standing by A Protestant sitting by Minor probatur All this was spoken but not committed to the writer Tollitur distinctio These words were also spoken but not set down by the writer