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heaven_n bind_v earth_n loose_v 17,667 5 10.9453 5 true
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A60361 The compleat Christian, and compleat armour and armoury of a Christian, fitting him with all necessary furniture for that his holy profession, or, The doctrine of salvation delivered in a plain and familiar explication of the common catechisme, for the benefit of the younger sort, and others : wherein summarily comprehended is generally represented the truly orthodox and constant doctrine of the Church of England, especially in all points necessary to salvation / by W.S., D.D. Slatyer, William, 1587-1647. 1643 (1643) Wing S3983; ESTC R38256 385,949 1,566

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and Spirit sonus testimonii for it as in the 12. Section of the Creed is also more fully demonstrated 44. But is not this power of the Priests and of the Church controverted or denyed Not unlesse by Schismatiques or no better then Novatian heretiques as the Fathers stile them and so by Arrians and other heretiques greater matters even to the Trinity it selfe could be controverted or denied and none but such false brethren can deny this for if we beleeve Scriptures credit the ancient Fathers or assent to the Church of England we shall finde it a truth uncontroulably asserted and undenyable 45. How show you or confirme you it To begin with the Fathers that as neerest the Apostles times best knew the Scriptures and meaning of them delivered from Christ and his Apostles and so best expositors of them saith Saint Augustine Qui confiteri vult ut inveniat gratiam quaerat Sacerdotem scientem solvere ligare if hee will be sure of pardon let him seeke out a Priest and make his confession to him for God who alone hath the prime and originall right of forgiving sinne hath delegated the Priests his Judges here on earth and given them the power of absolution so that they can in his name forgive the sinnes of those that humbly confesse unto them but as the Scribes said once Is not this blasphemy if any Schismatiques amongst us shall say Is not this Popery we may well answer with holy Job or bid them take his counsell cap. 8. v. 8. enquire of the former generations aske of the Fathers and they shall tell thee the Fathers too pious to speake blasphemy too ancient to be suspected of Popery these may informe us farther herein 46. What ancient Fathers else With Saint Augustine take Saint Chrysostome in his 5. Hom. on those words of Esay I saw the Lord sitting on a Throne what is comparable saith he to that power of the Priest to whom Christ said Whatsoever ye binde on earth shall be bound in heaven and whatsoever yee loose on earth shall be loosed in heaven heaven waits and expects the Priests sentence here on earth for the Priest sits Judge on Earth and the Lord follows the servant and what the servant bindes or looses Clave non erran●e that the Lord confirmes in heaven words most cleare for the formall judiciary absolution of the Priest nothing more plaine and Saint Jerom the supposed Patron of that opinion that holds the Priests power only declarative and so in effect none at all speakes yet home in his Epistle ad Heliodorum de vita solitariâ saying God forbid that I should speake a word amisse against the Priests Qui sacro ore Corpus Christi conficiunt in the holy Eucharist meant per quos nos Christiani sumus in baptisme qui claves Regni Coelorum habentes quodammodo ante diem judici judicant by remitting and retaining of sinnes where he that can but construe Judicant needs no further Comment of his words so Saint Grogory the Great 26. Hom. in Evangel Apostoli Principatum supremi judici sortiuntur ut vice Dei quibusdam pecea●aretineant quibusdam relaxent the Apostles and in them Priests are made Gods Vicegerents on earth in his name to retaine or forgive sinnes not declarative only but judicially animarum judicios siunt as he goes on speaking made judges of the soules of men casting the obstinate downe to the gates of hell by the fearefull power of excommunication and lifting the penitent into heaven I by the blessed power of absolution and he no better then a Novatian with Saint Ambrose in Psal. 38. that denies it as Saint Cyprian and many other Fathers also shew too pious to speak blasphemy and too ancient to be suspected of Popery as a foresaide and thus the Fathers enform us 47. But put all out of doubt how shew you it by Scripture If we looke to Matth. 18. 18 and John 20 and 23. there is plainly a power of remitting sinnes first propounded and promised and after fully performed and given or granted to the Apostles and the Priests their successors or as it were conferred and confirmed to them by our blessed Saviour saying Whose soever sinnes ye remit they are remitted c. which cannot bee otherwise understood for how ever some would faine expound it of preaching onely as those of the Novation straine or of baptizing as some others would guesse yet plaine it is both these they had power to doe before as Matth. 10. 7. Goe preach c. as John 4. 2. the Disciples baptized c. but this power most emphatically here delivered with a ceremony after his resurrection and so received where seene John 20. 22. he breathed on them as it were infusing that power and investing it on them and them in it he bad them receive it and joyneth to it that commission so amply saying Receive ye the holy Ghost whose sinnes ye remit c. which word of receiving the power could not bee properly used by him there if they had beene endued with it before as they were with power to preach and baptise though perhaps not in so ample a measure enabled to doe it this the genuine sense and thus the Fathers and all best Writers interpret it the peculiar power given as Gods deputed Judges on earth in his name to pardon and absolve the humbly penitent of their sinnes 48. Is this the tenet also of our Church It is for so in the second exhortation before the Communion the penitents are exhorted to come to some discreet and learned Minister of Gods word by his Ministery to receive comfort and the benefit of absolution to the quieting of their conscience so likewise in the forme of absolution prescribed by our Mother the Church for the visitation of the sicke after confession to the Priest he thus absolveth by the authority committed to me I absolve thee from all thy sins in the name of the Father c. 49. But here some may say at the time of death indeed in articulo mortis it may be more convenient though not else If so then it is enough and as much as we need desire for a good Christian will and ought so to prepare himselfe as if every day were the day of his death because nescit quando Dominus veniet and he should by this reason be thus often or alwaies prepared so all the holy Fathers teachus as our Saviour himself and from a glimmering of this light the very heathen could say omne crede diē tibi deluxisse supremum thus then by this rule wee should not only allow it but the frequent use of it as perhaps the best Christians best know the use comfort and necessity of it they having to bee feared but hard and seared consciences that neglect or despise it or at least that find no need of the use or comfort and benefit in the use of it being so great a quiet well understood to a troubled consience of
for it and agreeing fully with it though else we need not desire this neither it being without it so fully by the former proofes demonstrated 41. Yet if said to what end did he descend or what needed his descent how is it to be answered Though curious questions and such as this seeking into Gods secret determinations need no answer but reproofe it being our duties to rest in Gods revealed will without presumptuous seeking into his secret counsels as many gracelesse ones use to doe to their owne perdition such curious devisers thereby giving evidence of want of grace by their immodest seeking and presumption yet because this being used for an argument to overthrow all is well and sufficiently with warrant as before of holy Scripture for confirmation of this truth and retorted to the overthrow of the opposers error it may have a ful and plenary answer and solution 42. How shew you this As indeed if no end why or no need of it they conclude no descent so whereas to good end and great good occasions then great and good need of such descent to hell and consequently that he descended The reasons why many alledged by many principally these 1. As some say to binde the divell and power of darknesse but if nescio or non plene intelligo be set here it matters not 2. To fetch soules thence dixere patres but non audeo dicere 3. To suffer as Flaccus Illyricus indignam Christo whose consummatum est had abundantly on the crosse finished all satisfactory sufferings and overcome the bitternesse of them 4. To triumph or in triumph even when at lowest to manifest his glory and power there by holy men is beleeved 5. To convince the disobedient in the dayes of Noah as Saint Peter shewes ante or any the like since condemned by their owne conscience and convicted by testimony of his presence such his preaching there to be understood 6. To convince the gainesayers and to condemne the unfaithfull then alive denying herein the mighty power of God and his word of truth able to doe all things especially what promised as in the signe of the Prophet Ionah they looke for signes but no signe shall be given but that of the c. So here spoken as it were Come ye despisers and wonder c. 7. Comfort of faithfull and assurance of salvation in the very Son of God to whom heaven open and grave sanctified hell vanquished with all her power of sin and death so no power against them with whom Christ is si Deus nobiscum quis contra nos and he is Emanuell God with us 43. Are those the reasons then They are and thus is our assurance sealed hee went to the dead yet alive to the damned yet blessed to hell yet reigneth in heaven since impossible that he should be holden of either grave or hell for the Grave opened and sanctified Death swallowed in victory Paines thereof loosed Hell it selfe vanquished the power thereof subdued and triumphed over and he that sanctified the grave by his presence opened hell by his power which he vanquished in the gates or strength of it thought else impregnable and made it the gate and way of life by his resurrection opened and entred heaven by his ascension 44. What to be learned hence Our duty of religious care and thankfulnesse that in the meditation and remembrance 1. Of his extreame passions and torments in soule suffered for us 1. It may be an Antidote against sin that caused such sufferings and so sore displeased God 2. A motive to hearty sorrow and repentance for sin committed so great anger and punishment 2. His descent may make us by contemplation of his great humiliation for us to humble our selves that comming even to the gates of hell often by our deepe humiliation repentance and sorrow out of those deepes calling unto the Lord he may heare us from his holy heaven and by the merit and in the vertue of Christs descent save us from the eternall prison 45. What followeth The fifth Article or that part of it that concerneth the exaltation of our Saviour and first degree thereof his resurrection in these words The third day he rose againe from the dead SECT 8. The exaltation of Christ in the five sixe and seventh Articles A farther Analysis of the five six and seventh Articles of the Creed and first of the resurrection and time and types thereof as well as prophesies and other observations concerning the same wherein farther thè efficiency and mighty power by which it was wrought and performed and divers Types as of Adam Enoch Eliah and divers others are showne and remembred with some necessary lessons to be thence learned and uses to be made of the same The second degree of his exaltation in his ascention wherein the order and manner of it prophesies concerning reasons and end of it observed together with the time and divers apparitions of his before the time reasons of them and no lesse divers types thereof as Enoch Moses and Eliah prefiguring the excellency of it as wherein his triumph over death was most apparantly seene and shewne when he gave gifts to men even his holy Spirit and graces and the use to be made and fruit hence to us arising the the third degree of his exaltation in his session at Gods right hand in glory with the maner or figure of that speech declared and how it is to be understood with the distinction of it from the former and how great is that excellency of that his estate of glory and majesty and what we are to learne from the same 1. VVHat is the exaltation of Christ As his humiliation was his descent from his glory and humbling himselfe even to death and hell for our sinnes and to our salvation so this exaltation is his raising himselfe in the power of his divinity from death and hell to life and the height of glory for our happinesse and justification 2. What herein considerable That as by divers degrees he humbled himselfe from glory to the depth of humility so here by divers degrees from the lowest humility he ascended againe to the highest state of glory and as he came from heaven to earth so now he ascended from earth to the highest heaven 3. In what degrees seene In his resurrection as in this fifth Article the third day he rose againe from the dead In his ascension and session in glory in the sixth Article he ascended c. In his returne to judgement with power and great glory in the seventh Article from thence he shall come c. 4. What to be considered in the Resurrection 1. The time the third day 2. The action he rose againe from the dead Why the third day In Remembrance and regard of the Trinity in whose power he arose Conveniency of the time Foretelling and Prophesie Type of it Jonah 5. How conveniency of the time Only then and no sooner that it might appeare he was truely and