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A74986 An antidote against heresy: or a preservative for Protestants against the poyson of Papists, Anabaptists, Arrians, Arminians, &c. and their pestilent errours. Shewing the authors of those errours, their grounds and reasons, the time when and occasion how they did arise; with general answers to their arguments taken out of holy scripture and the ancient fathers. Written to stay the wandering and stablish the weak in these dangerous times of Apostasy. / By Richard Allen, M.A. sometime Fellow of Penbrooke [sic] Colledge in Oxford. Allen, Richard, b. 1604 or 5. 1648 (1648) Wing A1045A; Thomason E1168_2; ESTC R208803 57,457 159

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divine authority of credit sufficient in and of themselves to be beleeved without the testimony or approbation of any man or men If the Scriptures be the Word of God then who dares deny their authority refuse what they command or do what they forbid But the Scriptures are the Word of God For First The pen-men that wrote them were called and sent of God they were assisted of God confirming their doctrine with mighty signs and wonders beyond any humane power or skill and they were inspired of God teaching and writing though themselves simple and unlearned most high and divine mysteries above the reach of any natural wit and such as the very Angels of Heaven desired to look into Secondly The doctrine or matter that is written is 1. Heavenly and divine about heavenly and divine things 2. It is most certain and true all things that were foretold most certainly came to pass and though they were written in several places ages and times by several persons of several arguments yet all the books of holy Scripture from the beginning to the end do most sweetly accord or agree together as the dictates of one and the same Spirit of truth Thirdly The effects of this heavenly doctrine are divine and wonderful as never any writings in the world did produce the like For though it be contrary to humane reason and most cross to our natural lusts and affections yet it works and wins so upon men both powerfully and sweetly that it wooes and weans men not only from the world but also from themselves It discerns the thoughts comforts the heart enlightens the mind convinceth the conscience and makes such a change in the whole man that it makes him a new man transforming and conforming him to the image of God in true holiness all most sure arguments of a divine Spirit Fourthly It hath made a thorough conquest of the whole world by the endeavors of very weak and silly men bringing mighty Nations in obedience unto Christ maugre all opposition that could be made against it a plain demonstration that it is the Word of God and not of man and it hath continued and been preserved even to admiration though a world of counsels have been taken and attempts made to destroy it Fifthly The testimony of the Church in its due place is to be esteemed as not a little moving the consent and confession of Christians in all ages but especially the sufferings of holy Martyrs in defence of the same Sixthly The testimony of the Holy Ghost to our hearts and consciences puts all out of doubt this doth not only perswade but most certainly assure us that the Scriptures are the Word of God it imprints a firm belief of it in our hearts called the sealing of the Spirit Eph. 1.13 Lastly The holy Scriptures give testimony of themselves 2 Tim. 3.16 All the Scripture is given by inspiration of God 2 Pet. 1.21 Holy men of God spake as they were moved by the Holy Ghost And the Prophets always delivered their message with Thus saith the Lord The Mouth of the Lord hath spoken it The Scriptures then are of supream and soveraign authority above the Church and greater then the Church by so much as the authority of God is greater then the authority of men The Scriptures for the matter or substance were before the Church even that immortal seed whereof the Chu●ch sprang and grew and is still the ground whereon it stands the pillar whereby it is supported Ephes 2.20 The pillar and ground of the Church is the Scripture Irenaeus l. 3. cont Haer. c. 11. The authority of him that spake it is sufficient to confirm it Theodor. in Ezek. c. 34. The Scripture is to be judg in all matters of concroversie Isa 8.20 To the Law and to the Testimony Joh. 5.39 Search the Scriptures for they testifie of me Acts 17.11 The men of Berea searched dayly the Scriptures whether those things were so as Paul spake Secondly The Old Testament is not abrogated or grown unprofitable but together with the New is still necessary for our instruction 2 Tim. 3.16 All Scripture the Old Testament as well as the New is profitable for instruction Joh. 5.39 Search the Scriptures saith our Saviour i. the Old Testament for then there was no other Our Saviour spake many things out of the Old Testament to confirm the doctrine of the New therefore it is of as great authority Object But the Law and the Prophets were until John since that time the Kingdom of God is preached Luk. 16.16 Sol. They were until John and then not abrogated but swallowed up of a greater light the Old Testament is the same Gospel that is in the New the same Spirit same Christ Christ yesterday to day and the same for ever Heb. 13.8 Yesterday under the Law to day under the Gospel and the same still The Old and New Testament give mutual light and testimony one to another the one foretelling those things that the other testifies are really and truly come to pass Thirdly The Scriptures of the Old and New Testament are perfect and sufficient of themselves without any other help or supply to instruct us in the means of salvation We are forbidden to add to or diminish any thing from it Deut. 12.32 Rev. 22.18 19. And if a part were so perfect that it needed no addition how much more the whole Psa 19.7 The Law of the Lord is perfect converting the soul Joh. 20.31 These things were written that beleeving we might have life everlasting and what can be desired more 2 Tim. 3.15.17 The Scriptures make us wise unto salvation they make the man of God perfect This perfection of the Scripture excludes tradition For what shall be added to that which is perfect or what supply needs to that which is sufficient of it self Tradition is either written or unwritten 2 Thes 2.15 Written Tradition is the Scripture it self Unwritten Tradition if it be agreeable to the Scripture is included in the same and so to be received as the Scripture it self if it be against or contrary to the Scripture it is to be rejected as the fruit of some lying spirit and not the Spirit of God for as much as that Spirit of truth cannot contradict the written Word whereof himself was the Author Fourthly In all necessary points of faith the Scriptures are plain and easie enough to be understood so that the simple and unlearned may and ought to read them Prov. 6.23 The Commandment is a lamp or candle and the Law is light Psa 19.7 8. The testimony of the Lord is sure and giveth wisdom unto the simple the Commandment of the Lord is pure and giveth light unto the eyes Psa 119. Thy Word is a lanthorn unto my feet and a light unto my paths And if it be a light it must needs enlighten others and cannot be hid but only to them that are lost not that the Scriptures themselves are hidden dark and obscure but
Serpent through all his turnings and windings from the primitive times to this present to observe the subtile ways and methods he hath used to note by what steps and degrees he hath from time to time insinuated himself into the very bosom of the Church spreading this deadly poyson over all its Members and every point of Doctrine so that the true Religion at this day lays gasping and labouring for life is a work too great for so small a volum The first Instrument he found fit for this purpose was Simon Magus of whom we read Acts 8. how he bewitched the people of Samaria This Sorcerer is the Father of all Hereticks and his Heresie the cursed womb from whence sprang that numerous brood that now covers the face of the earth and hath raised the devil a mighty Kingdom At this day it is divided though not against it self in two main provinces the Mahumetan in the East in the West the Antichristian of the one the Turk is Viceroy of the other the Pope is Vicar Vnder these two Generalissimoes all those enemies of Christ are listed both the enemies of his Person and the enemies of his Office among whom though there be a seeming difference yet indeed there is a secret league like Sampsons Foxes their heads look contrary ways yet they are all Foxes and joyned together by the tails These are the Foxes that spoyl the Lords Vineyard and do more hurt by secret fraud then the wild Boar by open force Baalam a false Prophet did the Israelites more hurt then the Amorites with all their Armies And that Heretick Arrius did the Christian Church more hurt then the Savage Emperours did with all their Legions No marvell then we are so often warned in holy Scripture to beware of these Seducers and false teachers because they creep in unawares Jude 4. They bring in their Heresies privily and insinuate themselves with fained words 1 Pet. 2.1 3. They have a form of godliness 2 Tim. 3.5 And with their fair outsides get within us surprise and lead us captive And therefore we had need be very wary and never more need then now for Seducers wax worse and worse deceiving and being deceived 2 Tim. 4. They compass Sea and Land they fill Town and Country and not only creep into houses but up into high places so bold they are grown Now as Iannes and Iambres withstood Moses so do these resist the truth men of corrupt minds of no judgment concerning the Faith 2 Tim. 3.8 But that they proceed no further here are discovered their Errours that being seen they may be shun'd and avoided And though here be not discovered all which is almost impossible yet here are if I mistake not the principal whereunto the rest are but accessory The end of this small work is to furnish the weaker sort with general answers out of Gods own Word to the Arguments of the Adversaries and with plain Reasons if not sufficient to defeat the enemy yet enough I hope to defend themselves that they may be provided for them whensoever they be encountred by them lest being unprepared at unawares they be led away with the Errour of the wicked 2 Pet. 3.17 These are the first fruits of a larger harvest if it be accepted being but a handful taken out of a heap Imprimatur James Cranford March 28. 1648. AN ANTIDOTE Against HERESIE CHAP. I. Of the holy Scriptures THe holy Scriptures of the Old and New Testament are the very Word of God Truth written by holy men as they were moved by the Holy Ghost and contain all things that are necessary to be known or beleeved to eternal salvation being sufficient of themselves to instruct the Church or people of God thereunto By holy Scripture we understand only those books that were anciently accounted and are now received by the Church of England for Canonical Adversaries and Errours Errours that oppose this truth are many but may all be reduced to these three heads 1. Are those that enlarge the Canon of holy Scripture adding many things to it that are not of it 2. Are those that diminish the same denying some parts and taking some books from it 3. There be those that refuse and re●ect the whole debasing and despising the Authority of the holy Scriptures and esteeming no better of them then of humane writings 1. Of this latter sort were anciently Simon Magus Montanus and such deceivers and they are followed at this day by the Anabaptists who call the written Word a dead letter and ground their new doctrines upon revelations dreams and visions whereunto they give such credit that at Sangal a Town of Switzerland one of them cut of his brothers head pretending a revelation or command from heaven so to do Sleidan Comment l. 6. By this art Mahomet brought his damnable religion in credit with the world for having the falling sickness he pretended it was a trance wherein he received revelations fr●m heaven and by the same art Muncer Becold Cnipperdolling and other false Prophets of the Anabaptists in Germany seduced a world of poor miserable people to their own destruction The Papists say the Scriptures are of no more credit and authority then meer Fables without the Testimony and approbation of the Church and take them quite away from the reading of Lay-people as dangerous and hurtful and have burnt not only the books of Scripture but bodies of men too for having them in a known tongue such bitter enemies they are to the Word of God 2. There be others that deny not the whole but diminish only the Canon of holy Scripture refusing some parts and rejecting some books 1. The whole New-Testament as the Jews do Or 2. all the Old Testament as the new Libertines do who affirm it is abrogated the Socinians who say it is unnecessary and may well be spared 3. And there be others that enlarge the Canon of holy Scripture adding many things to it that are not of it so the Papists do not only traditions or unwritten verities as they call them but fabulous legends also and written lyes upon a pretence of want and defect in the Scriptures as not containing all truths necessary to salvation nor sufficient to instruct us thereunto without a supply of Apochryphal books traditions and divers humane inventions Antidote The Scriptures are the only touchstone to try and discern Truth from Error by and are called a Testament because they are testis mentis the witness of Gods most holy will against all adversaries then and their errours we affirm First that the Scriptures of the Old and New Testament are the very Word of God of sufficient authority and credit without the Church or any humane testimony to establish any point of doctrine and decide any controversie of Religion For such as the authority of the author of any writing is such is the authority of the writing it self but God is the Author of holy Scripture therefore the Scriptures are of
Abraham is ignorant of us and Israel doth not acknowledg us Eccles 9.5 The dead know not any thing Job 5.1 Call now if there be any that will answer and to which of the Saints wilt thou turn If Paul were a Mediatour then the rest of his fellow Apostles were so too and if there be many Mediatours then S. Paul's saying 1 Tim. 2.5 doth not hold good that there is but one Mediatour c. August lib. 2. Cont. Epist Parmen cap. 8. Christ is Mediatour according to both natures according to his humane he suffered and dyed by the power of his divine he overcame death and rose again without his humane nature he could not suffer without his Divine to give price and value to his sufferings he had not satisfied therefore it is said God purchased his Church with his own blood Acts 20.28 Both natures did work in this Office of Mediatourship each of them doing his own proper work and yet both together producing but one common effect CHAP. IX The Death of Christ. Truth THe Office of Christ as Mediatour consists of three parts whereof his Priesthood is principal and of his Priesthood that oblation he made of himself upon the Cross whereby as the only Sacrifice for sin he pacified the wrath of God and redeeming our souls from eternal death purchased for us the favou● of God and life everlasting Errours Adversaries to this truth are 1. Arrians and Socinians who affirm Th● Christ by his death did not satisfie for our sins 2. Papists who say That Christ by his death indeed satisfied for our sins and for the eternal punishment due unto us for them but for the temporal punishment we must satisfie out selves either in this life or else hereafter in purgatory 3. Arminians affirm That Christ dyed for all men as well those that perish as those that are saved for Cain and Judas as well as Abell and Peter From whence 4. Another riseth That a man whom Christ dyed for may perish The death of Christ being the consummation and total sum as it were Antidote of all his sufferings from his cradle to his grave is therefore commonly taken for the whole satisfaction that he made unto God for our sins To the Adversaries we say First That Christ by his death did satisfie for our sins Isai 53.5 8 10. His soul was made an offering for sin c. Mat. 20.28 A ransom for many 1 Cor. 5.7 A Sacrifice for us Rom. 4.25 He was delivered to death for our sins And 5.10 We were reconciled by his death 1 Pet. 2.24 He bare our sins in his own body on the tree Object But Micah 7.18 God forgives iniquity because he delights in mercy If Christ satisfie for sin how is it mercy Sol. Christs merits and Gods mercy stand and agree together very wel Christ hath satisfied and yet we are freely forgiven because God exacts nothing of us but of Christ It is free to us we payed nothing and though Christ made satisfaction yet still our sins are freely forgiven us because Christ himself for whose sake our sins are forgiven us was freely given us Secondly Christ satisfied not only for eternal but temporal punishment aso For otherwise 1. It could not stand with Christs all-sufficient Sacrifice who trod the wine-press of his Fathers wrath alone and none helped him Isai 63.3 if we must satisfie for some part our selves 2. It cannot stand with Gods mercy who forgives us freely for Christs sake 3. It cannot stand with his Justice when the fault is forgiven in exact any punishment but they confess Christ hath satisfied for the fault fully therefore in Justice there can be no punishment left for us to undergo Thirdly Christ dyed not for all but only for the elect Mat 1.21 He shall save his people John 10.15 I lay down my life for the sheep And 17.9 I pray for them I pray not for the world c. Fourthly A man that Christ hath dyed for can never perish John 10.15 And I give them eternal life and they shall never perish c. 1 Pet. 1.5 They are kept the Power of God unto salvation and what is able to controll that power Object But Christ is a ransom for all 1 Tim. 2.6 Dyed for every man Heb. 2.9 For the whole world 1 John 2.2 Sol. By world is meant the world of Gods Elect so it is taken John 6.33 and John 17.9 for the reprobate only By all understand all sorts and degrees of men all Countries and Nations not the whole multitude of mankind but the amplitude of grace only August Tract 45. in Joan. He spared not his own Son but delivered him for us all Rom. 8.32 For all whom for the elect as it follows v. 33. Who shall lay any thing to the charge of Gods Elect ●ld Cont. Donat. God was in Christ reconciling the world unto himself and the son of man came not to judg the world but to save it but the world is not reconciled unto God nor saved unless by world ye understand the Church which is both reconciled and saved Id. Epist. 48. Tom. 2. The whole world lyeth in wickedness i. the tares that grow all the world over And again Christ is a propitiation for the sins of the whole world i. for the wheat that likewise grows all world over CHAP. X. Resurrection of Christ Truth CHRIST did truly rise again from death and took his body flesh and bones and all things appertaining to the perfection of mans nature wherewith he ascended into Heaven and there fitteth at Gods right hand until he return again to judgment at the end of the world Errours David George the Father of the Family affirmed That Christs body was dissolved into ashes and so rose no more as of old Apelles said It was resolved into the four Elements whereof it was at first compounded 2. The Swenkfeldians affirm That it is quite layed aside 3. The Vbiquitaries That it is every where even as his Godhead is every where 4. There be at this day who affirm That it is in the Sun an old heresie of the Manichees and Seleucians who affirmed That Christ in his ascension left his body in the Sun taking their ground for it from Psal 19.5 He set his tabernacle in the Sun as they read It is no great matter to beleeve that Christ dyed this the Jews Heathen Antidote and all wicked men beleeve but the faith of Christians is the Resurrection of Christ August in Psal 120. This one point is the very lock and key of all Christian Religion For 1 Cor. 15.14 If Christ be not risen then is our preaching vain our faith is also vain we are still in our sins But Mark 16.6 He is not here he is risen 1 Cor. 15.4 He was seen of Cephas then of the twelve then of five hundred brethren at once Acts 2.31 Neither did his flesh see corruption Mark 16.19 He was received into Heaven and sate at