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A69010 Institutions of Christian religion framed out of Gods word, and the writings of the best diuines, methodically handled by questions and answers, fit for all such as desire to know, or practise the will of God. Written in Latin by William Bucanus Professor of Diuinitie in the Vniuersitie of Lausanna. And published in English by Robert Hill, Bachelor in Diuinitie, and Fellow of Saint Iohns Colledge in Cambridge, for the benefit of our English nation, to which is added in the end the practise of papists against Protestant princes.; Institutiones theologicae. English Bucanus, Guillaume. 1606 (1606) STC 3961; ESTC S106002 729,267 922

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13.32 Col. 3.4 which is begun in this life and shal be perfected in the other b Philip. 3.12.13.14 The vnperfect church is wherein the one of these two partes is altogither wanting or is lesse forcible So the companie of the Corinthians who denied the resurrection to come the companie of the Galathians who affirmed that Christs merit onely was not sufficient for our Iustification before God are by Paule called Churches but vnperfect as a building or a bodie that is vnperfect in some parts or limmes is not a body or building so absolutely as that which hath all the parts it should haue 3 In respect of age and condition The church of Israell which was vnder the law like a pupill vnder his tutor vntill it increased in age that is vntill the comming of Christ and the Christian church now at full groweth after Christs comming wherein that Tutorship of the lawe ended are deuided Although both be one if we consider not the enioying but the law of libertie it selfe c Gal. 4.1.2.3 4 In respect of the subiect one is called a particuler church gathered togither out of the people of the Iewes onely before the comming of Christ which is called the Israelitish and Iewish church likewise an other is called Catholique that is the vniuersal church mentioned in the Apostles creedd. Why is it called the Catholique church 1 Bicause it is the church of all ages and worlds and hath alwaies bin is and shall be one and the same and for euer 2. Because the partition wall being broken downe which was placed betweene the Iewes and Gentiles it is cloased againe into one body and is euer gathered from among all kinde of men and people neither is it tyed to any one certaine people or place as to the linage of Iacob or to Ierusalem a Math. 28.19 Gal. 3.28 Ephes 2.14 Reu. 21.13 Rom. 9.10 11. Chapter 3. By reason of one and the same faith which is common to all belieuers and therefore according to the sincere profession thereof the fathers haue iudged Churches either catholique 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or hereticall and schismaticall opposing the word catholique not onely to heretical but to scismaticall as appeareth by their disputation against the Nouatians and Donatists who challenged the name of a church to themselues onely How is the catholique church againe deuided 1 In respect of places or of parts for there is one Catholique Church in heauen another in earth that euer perfect absolute glorious and pure vndefiled not hauing spot or wrincle holy and blamelesse whereof Reu. 7.9 b Heb. 12.22 23. Ephe. 5.27 This euer vnperfect as touching the knowledge of God and faith and as touching sanctitie of maners not without wrincle and spot through fault of the members of the same Church 1. Cor. 13.9 We know onely but in part Whereupon that which is in heauen is called Triumphant which consisteth on the faithfull departed who haue gotten the victorie ouer all their enemies and doe triumph in Christ but after the Resurrection they shall haue a full triumph And that which is on earth is called the Church militant which consisteth of the faithful yet liuing who as yet striue and wrestle with Sathan the relickes of the flesh and with the world and is subiect to the Crosse whose compleat armour is described Ephe. 6.13 2 In respect of the adiuncts the Catholicke Church is inuisible which containeth the true members of Christ onely or the Elect or whole number of them who belong to Christ Therefore called inuisible onely in regard of men 1 Because true faith which is the conclusiue difference of a Church and whereby a Church is that which it is hath his being in the heart and so is inuisible neither can it certainely bee discerned but by God the searcher of the heart and by them in whom he is who is indued with true faith c Ro. 2.20 Act. 1. ●4 1. Cor. 2.11 No man knoweth what things are in a man but the spirit of man that is in him 2. Tim. 2.9 The Lord knoweth who are his 2 And seeing it consisteth of the Elect it must needs be inuisible because no mans Election is manifest albeit wee may probably coniecture that this or that man is indued with Faith or Charitie 3. Because the greater part of the Church triumphant is in heauen inuisible to mortal men But the Church takē Synecdochycally that is in part of it selfe or a particular Church is visible which is iudged by the notes of outward profession which come in the eies and sight of men without any difference betweene the faithfull and the Hypocrites yet vnknowne but yet openly professing though not beleeuing the doctrine of the Church b Luk. 3.17 And the visible Church on earth is compared to a net cast into the Sea wherein are contained fishes good and badd a Mat. 13.47 And to a flowre in which there is mingled wheat and chaffe Hence is it that many are said to be of the visible Church who are not of the inuisible Church 1. Iohn 2.19 And many are said to be in the house which are not of the house and againe many out of the house who neuerthelesse are of the house Aug. in Iohn Homil. 45. 3 In respect of the course of times There is on ancient Catholicke Church or of the Olde Testament which was from the beginning vntill Christ was exhibited and that eyther without the Lawe or vnder the Lawe An other new of the new Testament or vnder grace which is since Christ was exhibited especially since his Ascension into heauen and is gathered together of diuers nations and since Christ was exhibited it is called by way of excellencie the Christian Church c Eph 2.13 Act 11.26 Which againe in regard of times is called eyther the Primitiue 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 d 2. The. 2 13. which was ordained by the Apostles and their Disciples or the Successiue Church which succeeded that Primitiue and the same hath lyen long buried in Poperie but in this age from the yeare 1517. it is called the Reformed Church or the Church that is gone out of the mudde of Poperie 4 In respect of places on earth the Catholicke Church is diuided into Dioces and particuler Churches gathered togither in diuers parts of the world and into Parishes and household assemblies which are parts of that Vniuersall Church according to which it hath diuers names e Reu. 2.18 1. Cor. 1 8 Rom. 16.5 1. Cor. 16.19 Math. 18.20 Phil. 2 which particulers doe make one bodie of the Church For as in a Pomegranate many graines inwardly diuided as it were by celles are vnited vnder one barke outwardly So the holy Church contayneth an innumerable number of people that professe Christ whom the vnitie of faith couereth As also it is but one sea which taketh diuers names by the distinction of diuers Regions 5 Againe the Visible Church is eyther in the multitude as
antiquitie of errour 2 The broad way leadeth to destruction and many there bee which goe in thereat Math. 7.13 3 Hierome saith They are not the sonnes of the Saints which possesse their places but which doe their workes And succession auaileth not where there is no succession of faith and doctrine neither is succession to be tied vnto one seate vnto one place or vnto one Church for God can raise vp Pastors diuers waies and in diuers places as shal seeme best to himself Moreouer they succeed the Apostles who being lawfully thereunto called doe discharge their dutie in the Church faithfully although not in a continuall succession from the Apostles Besides God is wont when the Church is in a desperate estate to raise vp ministers after an extraordinarie manner And Tertul. lib. de praescriptionibus saith that faith ought not to be tried by the persons but the persons by faith And Ambrose de poenit lib. 1. cap. 1. They haue not Peters inheritance which haue not the faith of Peter 4 Miracles are to be iudged by Doctrine not Doctrine by miracles also there are some to be throwen into hell which haue wrought miracles in Christ name Math. 7.23 5 Also the diuel hath a Church euen frō Cain to the worlds end 6 Neither is vnitie of it selfe a note of the Church except it be ioined with faith and true doctrine a Eph. 4.3 for as there is one Church of God so is there one Babylon of the diuels saith Augustine the godly also may in some points disagree b Act. 11 2 7 The Apostle 2. Thess 2.9 saith that Antichrist shall come by the effectuall working of Sathan and that God will send an effectuall working of errour to those that loue not the truth that they should beleeue lies 8 Doctrine is the onely witnesse of holinsse Euen Sathan can transforme himselfe into an Angell of light and true holinesse floweth from a true faith 2. Cor. 11.14 Act. 15.9 Although an Angell or a Saint come downe from heauen and bring not true Doctrine he is to be reiected Gal. 1.8 And that saying of Christ by their fruits ye shall know them Math 7.20 The fathers will not haue to be vnderstood of manners but of false opinions and false interpretations 9 But the gife of prophecying is not perpetuall in the Church for that place of Ioel cap. 2.18 Doth describe the state of the Church what it should be in the time of the Apostles and of the Primitiue Church onely Act. 2.17.18 And diuels also and false Prophets may foretell some things to come c 1. Sam. 18 19 Deut. 13.2 Num. 33 7 24.3 Ioh. 11.51 10 Temporall felicitie was rather woont to bee contrarie vnto the Church d 2 Tim. 3 12 11 True Doctrine is the cause that there is one holy Apostolicke and Catholicke Church 12 Christ shewed no signe of them but said said expresly My sheepe heare my voyce Iohn 10.27 Doth the Church cease to be a Church by reason of some blemish or fault in doctrine and administration of Sacraments No as long as it keepeth the foundation which is Christ or saluation by Christ and the truth in the chiefe especiall and principall articles of faith a 1. Cor. 3.11 12.13 And the errour which a few in the Church doe hold is not the errour of the whole Church b 1. Cor. 15 12 Is euerie one bound to ioyne himselfe to the assembly of that Church which hath those true notes He is bound to this or that congregation as farre foorth as lieth in him if it be knowne to him if he can to adioine himself therunto and to professe himselfe a member thereof indeed and finally to reuerence the holy communion of it and to loue and frequent the meeting together therof c psa 27.48 42.2.5 84.1 Esai 60.8 Heb. 10.25 35 39 1. Cor. 11 21 22. For such a meeting together is the Schoole of the holy Ghost wherein is taught the word of God which is the phisicke of the soule a cleare glasse wherein appeareth the face of God the Epistle of Almightie God to his Creature wherein he hath declared vnto vs his will The meanes whereby the way of saluation is knowne by which saluation is obtained faith is nourished and kept neyther is it sufficient to haue the Scripture at home and there to read it for when Paule Ephes 4.11 saith He gaue some to be Apostles some Pastors and some teachers c he saith not he left the Scripture that euerie one might read it priuately but hee ordained a ministerie whereby some certaine men might teach others true religion But from other companies of men wherein heresie or manifest idolatrie is publikely receiued and taught and the foundation and principall point of saluation is not maintained namely Iesus Christ a good man ought to separate himselfe as hee would flie from Babylon d Isa 48.20 Ier 51.6 45 Reu. 18.4 1 Ioh. 5.21 Iohn 10.5 1 Because the Apostle 1. Cor. 5.11 Forbiddeth vs to be consorted with fornicatours or idolatours or couetous persons with drunckards or raylers or extortioners so as that we must not so much as eate with them much lesse be partakers of their euill works 2 Because there is no fellowship betweene Christ and Beliall betweene light and darknes 2. Cor. 6.15.16.17 3 Because the promises of God and benefits of Christ doe belong to Gods Church onely chap. 7.1 and therefore without the Church there is no saluation But this is to be vnderstood of the Catholicke Church because that we may obtaine saluation it is necessarie that we be ioyned with Christ but the meaning is not that those which are out of this or that particuler Church cannot be saued For although we liue among Turkes yet are we the members of Christ and of the Catholicke Church if wee haue faith 4 The same is confirmed by the example of the godly fathers who sequestred themselues from the congregation euen of the Idolatrous Israelites ordained congregations peculiar to themselues where they might worship God purelie a Gen 12.7 13 18 26 25. c. 33 20 1 King 3.2 c. 18 24 2. King 4 38 Psa 16.4 Hereupon saith Nazianzen most sweetly 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I seeke Noahs Arke that I may eschew the wofull destinies Can the Church erre from the truth or fall away there from If the Church be vniuersally and in that sort as we haue before said considered as the inuisible company of the Elect triumphant in heauen and militant on earth the Church triumphant surely without doubt cannot erre because she is vtterly freed from sinne and errour the Church Militant also in the Prophets and Apostles through a singuler priuiledge in doctrine erred not and as long as she cleaueth fast vnto Christ her Sauiour and Teacher by faith and is gouerned by his Spirit and as long as she heareth the Bridegroomes voyce and followeth the written word of God as a Lampe
h 2. Cor. 2.11 1 Iohn 3.29 of which mariage the bridemen are the ministers of the word the friendes of the bridegroome are they i Iohu 3.29 that according to the world allure the bride betroath her and bring her dressed and adorned vnto the bridegroome k 2. Cor 2.11 l Exod 19 6. Reu 1.6 1 Pet. 2 5 9 11 The Elect stocke the royall Priesthood the holie People the People whome God challengeth as peculier to himselfe 12 The communion of saints by reason of the spirituall participation of Christ and all his benefites m 1. Ioh 1 8 1 Cor 1 9 Ephes 4 4 Rom. 12 5 13 Col 3 and of the mutuall communion of the giftes of the same Christ among the faithfull being one heart and one soule n Acts. 4 32 13 A flock of sheep and the sheepfold of Christ because it heareth and followeth his voice 14 The world taken in the better parte o Luk 12 32 Iohn 10 16 because it is the most noblest parte of the world and that the whole state thereof might be opposed to one people p Iohn 3 16 1 Iohn 2 2 2 Cor 5 19 15 A floare q Luk. 3 17 because as in a floare the sheafes are gathered with the straw and chaffe togither and after the threshing the wheat is discerned from the chaffe in the vanne So there are as well godly men as hypocrites assembled in the outward society of the church but straight way they are seuered by the outward preaching of the Gospell as with a vanne 16 The new Ierusalem r Gal. 4 26 Reu 3 12 and Sion ſ psalm 2 6 the kingdome of heauen or of Christ or of God 1. t Mat 5 19 20. because it is gouerned by God after an heauenly manner 2 because the Citizens thereof conteminng worldly thinges aspire vnto heauenly Last of all it is also compared to a Candlestick a Reu. 1.20 to a douehouse b Esa 60.8 to a Doue c Cant 2 2 14. 6.8 namely because these verses of the doue doe fittly belong thereunto No gall she hath yet groneth much nor hurts she with her bill Her tallents harmeles and her crop with cleane corne doth she fill To a small ship or boate d Luke 8 22 because while it is on earth it is like to a boate which one while is caried on the sea with a calme prosperous gale by and by the windes rising the waues swelling it is in danger whose Pilot is Christ whose watermē or mariners are the ministers To a field e Math. 13.24 and to a Plowed Land f 1 Cor. 3.9 to a drag net conteining fishes good and bad g math 13 47. to one singuler man h Ephes 4.13 to declare the vnitie thereof Lastly to a glasse in beholding whereof the very Angells doe good acknowledging the manifold wisedome of God in the agreement and repugnant concord of so manifold a multitude i Ephes 3 10 Why is it called an holie church 1 Because it is redeemed cleansed iustified and sanctified by the blood of Christ k 1. Iohn 1 7 Ephes 5.25 26. Heb 91 2 Because receiuing that benefite by faith through the holy Ghost it studieth holines and righteousnes by the which study the imperfect holines thereof is daily encreased but shall be perfected afterward in an other life l Rom 8.1 Ephes 5 26 27 Phil 3.12 All which are attributed to the church for the Elects sake onely m Rom 1,7 8 1. 1 Cor. 1.2 6.11 What is the finall cause of the church The true worship of God for it is elected chosen and ordained for the true seruice of God and to glorifie god both in this life and in the life eternall also n 1. Pet. 2 9 But the end whereto the church endeauoureth is God in whose presence there is fullnes of ioyes namely that heauenly inheritance which can neither perish nor be defiled nor corrupted o Psal 16.20 1 Pet 1 4 2 The verie perfection and absolute finishing of the church in that last day when all the elect shall be gathered togither from the foure windes and then at last we shall all grow vp in the vnity of faith and acknowledgment of the sonne of God vnto a perfect man and vnto the measure of the age of the fullnes of Christ Ephes 4.13 VVhat is the Effect or office of the church To heare the voice of her shepeheard to flie from the voice of a stranger to belieue gods word and to obaie it to vse the sacraments lawfully to acknowledge to receiue and to imbrace only Christ for the shephearde for the teacher for the head for the spouse and for the sauiour lastly to exercise the keies receaued from Christ that is to keep diligētly the ministery of gods word a Iohn 10.5 1 Cor 11 23 mat 16.19 18.18 Iohn 20.23 Heb. 13 17 What is the fruite and vse of the article of the church 1 That we should desire nothing more then to abide in it without which there is no saluation 2 That we being assuredly perswaded we be the citizens thereof should nothing doubt of our saluatiō grounded in christ frō whōe we cā no more be plukt thē his mēbers may be torne rēt a sūder 3 That we may perceiue that those promises perteine vnto vs saluation shal be in Sion God will for euer abide in the midst of Ierusalē that is in the church whereof mount Sion Ierusalem were tipes in times past least at any time it should be remoued b Ioel. 2.32 Addi 5.17 Psal 46.6 VVhat be the contraries to this doctrine 1 The enemies of the church which now then from Satās cāpe breaks out who like tyrāts by manifest strengh like Sophisters by corruptiō of doctrine like hipocrites by superstition like Epicures by leudnes of life do assault and fight against the church 2 The error of the prelates which exclude frō the church thē that are newly instructed infāts that are not yet entred in the sacramēts 2. which transforme the church into a ciuil kingdome that requireth a secular arme and into the greatest monarchy of the world wherin the Pope is chiefe ruler gouernour ouer all persons as well laymen as clergymen ouer Emperors Kings who hath authority in heauē in earth who is the vniuersal B. of the whole world 3. which teach that the church hath many heads that Christ indeed is the head of the church triūphāt but the Pope of the church militant which say that it is necessary to saluation to beleiue that the Bishop of Rome is ouer all churches or as it is in the article of Boniface the. 8. The greatest lord ouer all 4. which ty the catholick church not to the word onely but to a certaine place namely to the city of Rome to the Pope to the Bishops which make
INSTITVTIONS OF CHRISTIAN REligion framed out of Gods word and the writings of the best Diuines methodically handled by Questions and Answers fit for all such as desire to know or practise the will of God Written in Latin by WILLIAM BVCANVS Professor of Diuinitie in the Vniuersitie of LAVSANNA And published in English by ROBERT HILL Bachelor in Diuinitie and Fellow of Saint Iohns Colledge in Cambridge for the benefit of our English Nation to which is added in the end the practise of Papists against Protestant Princes PROV 16.16 How much better is it to get wisedome than gold and to get vnderstanding is more to be desired than siluer Printed at London by George Snowdon and Leonell Snowdon 1606. King Dauids Testament to his sonne Salomon ANd thou Salomon my sonne know thou the God of thy father and serue him with a perfect heart and with a willing mind for the Lord searcheth al hearts and vnderstandeth all imaginations of thoughts If thou seeke him he will be found of thee but if thou forsake him he will cast thee off for euer 1. Chron. 28.9 TO THE RIGHT HONORABLE AND hopefull young Lords Robert Deuoreux Earle of Essex sonne in Lawe to the most Honourable Thomas Earle of Suffolke and to Sir William Cecill Knight of the Bathe Lord of Cranborne sonne and heyre to the most worthy Lord Robert Earle of Salisbury grace and Peace RIght Honorable It hath pleased God to giue vs in this Church verie many remarkeable testimonies of his mercie whether we looke to the heauens aboue vs the earth beneath vs our Princes who rule vs our Pastors who teach vs our lawes which command vs or the singular mercies which we haue receiued or the fearefull iudgements which we haue escaped Our heauen is not brasse as it was in Achabs time a 1 K. 17 1 ● our earth is not barren as it was in Pharaohs time b Gen. 41 55 our Princes are not Lions as the princes of Iudah c Zeph 3.3 our Pastors are not wolues as were the shepheards of Israell d Math 7 15 our Lawes which commaund vs are not as the Lawes of Draco and our mercies receiued are Gods mercies our iudgements escaped are mens cruelties Yet of all the testimonies of Gods loue vnto vs this is and ought to be esteemed the greatest that we are come out of Babylon know God in Christ may read the scriptures heare Gods word be partakers of the sacraments pray in a knowne tongue worship the true God and that of mortall and sinfull men we are made the immortal and righteous children of God But because wee are so blinded with the loue of this world that we see not or perceiue not this note of Gods loue therefore the Apostle Iohn setteth an Ecce vpon it and saith behold what loue the father hath giuen vs that we should be called the sons of God e 1 Ioh. 3. ● Behold we therefore not the loue of Sampson to Delila f Iudg. 14.3 for that was a wanton loue nor the loue of Iaakob to Rahel g Gen 29.17 for that was a carnall loue nor the loue of Dauid to Ionathan h 1 Sam 18.3 for that was an humane loue but the loue of God to man the Creator to his Creature a good father to a multitude of prodigall and rebellious children Hee loued vs in our creation for he made vs men but more in our redemption for he mad vs saints he created vs with a word of his mouth he redeemed vs by the bloud of his sonne he created vs whē we were nothing hee redeemed vs when we were worse then nothing he created vs to liue before him on earth he redeemed vs to liue with him in heauen He created vs and so did he others he redeemed vs but did not redeeme others He hath not dealt so with euery nation neither haue the heathen knowledge of his lawes i Psal 147 ●● If there were in vs eyther Nobility of birth or comelines of beautie or correspondence of vertue or aboundance of riches our God might loue like vs for these as men doe affect and follow vs for these But since by discent we are Cananites k, EZ 16.3 by deformitie polluted in our owne bloud l. v. 6 by sin there is none that doth good no not one m Rom. 3 12 that our pouerty is such that we are poore naked and miserable creatures n Reuel 3 1● it is not our old birth but the new birth not our owne beautie but Gods bountie not our vertue but Gods grace not our goods but Gods goodnes by which we become Gods children If I were Right honorable as profound as Paule as eloquent as Apollos as deuout as Dauid and as zealous as the Prophet Elias was I could neither expresse the quantity of this loue it is so great nor the quality of this loue it is of such efficacy By this fauor of God we of seruants become sons o Gal. 4.4 of enemies frinds p Rom. 5.10 of diuorced espoused q Hos 2 20 of prophan priests r Reuel 1.6 of captiues kings ſ Reuel 5.8 of Cananites Israelites t Acts. 11.26 of heathens christians of inheritors of hell heires nay felow heires with Iesus Christ u Rom. 8 17. By this fauor we enioy the forgiuenes of sins peace of conscience ioy in the holy ghost protection of angels the communion of saints audience in praying acceptance in obeying security in life comfort in death and eternal glory after we be dead By this fauor we are written in Gods book receiue a new name incorporated into Christs body clothed with Christs righteousnes indued with Christs spirit and one day shall be partakers of his glory But as Augustine was swallowed vp by the admiration of Gods Maiesty so am I with the consideration of this mercy I say of this mercy which is giuen vs by the father purchased by the son assured by the holy ghost offered in the word sealed in the sacraments apprehended by faith tried by tribulation and though not deserued by vs yet reserued for vs in the highest heauens Is God our father behold our dignity are we his children learne we our duty The consideration of this dignity made Theodosius to thanke God more that he was a christiā then a King Moses to refuse the crowne of Aegypt x Heb. 11.24 Dauid to desire the place of gods doorekeeper y Psal 84.10 and Paul to make a base account of all things in this world z Philip. 3.9 The consideration of this duty made Abell to sacrifice his sheep a Gen. 4.4 b Gen 26. Abraham to sacrifice his son and the Romans to sacrifice thēselues c Rom 12.1 Ioseph to flie adultery d Gen 39.9 the three children to flie idolatry e Dan 3 16 Nehemiah to fly tyranny f Neh 5 15 and all Gods children to abandon impietie
g 1 Ioh. 3 4 Now then If we call him father which without respect of persons iudgeth according to euery mans work let vs passe the time of our dwelling heere in feare knowing that we were not redeemed with corruptible things as siluer and gold from our vaine conuersation receiued by the tradition of the fathers but with the pretious bloud of Christ as af a Lamb vndefiled and without spot h 1 Pet. 1 17 And surely God is our father though Abraham be ignorant of vs saith the Prophet i Isa 63.16 For he begetteth vs by the seed of the word a Iames 1 18 giueth vs a new name b Reuel 2 17 nourceth vs with the milke of the gospell c Hebr 5 12 instructeth vs in true religion d Ier. 31 33 teacheth vs euen ciuill conuersation e Coloss 4 5 prouideth instructors to teach vs more f M●t 28 20 yea he placeth vs in our callings g Gen 2 15 is an example of holines h 1 Pet. 1 16 correcteth vs when we sin i Prov. 3 11 trieth our obedience k Gen. 22.2 exerciseth our patience l Iob. 1 16 deferreth our petitions m Math 15 23 and pitieth vs vs when we be in misery n Psal 103.13 Hee as a good father prouideth for vs in this life o 1 Pet 5.7 protecteth vs against wrongs p 2 K. 6.16.17 is sory when we sinne q Psal 81.13 glad whē we do wel r Prov 10 1 admonisheth vs of dangers ſ Reuel 18.4 beareth with our wants t Psal 103 9 10 heareth our cries u Ioh 15 16 and for our sakes is good vnto others x Gen. 39.3 To conclude this he loueth vs all but most of all such as feare him most y Gen 6.8 he is not ashamed of vs in our poorest estates z Hebr 15 19 he blesseth vs as Iaakob did his children a Gen 49 2 and like good father Abraham all that he hath belōgeth vnto vs b Gen 25 5 God is your father you see your dignity men thinke it a great dignity to be borne of the bloud royal to descend of ancient families to be blazoned by gentry to stand before princes to be honored and enriched in this world to cōmand many to obey few to be called the sons of nobles and so it is indeed But say that we could draw our pedegrees not from the conquest but from the flood yet we might as well descend of cursed Cham as of blessed Sem. But if we can draw our pedegree from the line of Christ it is better then to deriue it from the line of princes To this end Iuuenall said well Tota licet veteres exornent vndique cerae Atria nobilitas sola est atque vnica virtus Though all thine house about with ancient armes be set As sole and sure Nobilitie see that thou vertue get And better another In relligione vera virtus In virtute vera nobilitas True vertue is in pietie In vertue true nobilitie But Prudentius best of all as I once writ to an honorable family * To the Honorable House of the Mon●ag●●● Generosa Christi secta nobilitat vir●t Cui quisquis seruit ille verè est nobilis He noble is that comes of Christ his race Who serues this Lord he surely is not base Wherfore as Ambrose said to Auxentius so giue me leaue to say to you saith he Quid honorificentius quam vt imperator Ecclesiae filius dicatur What honor can be greater then that the Emperor should be called the son of the Church Of the Church nay say I that noble men should be called the sons of God I haue spoken of our dignity but what is our duty by this we must learne to admire this mercy of God the father to adore this loue in God the sonne to keepe this assurance in god the holy ghost and that the more fauors he hath shewed to vs the more we are indebted to him By this we must learne to haue this adoption written in our hearts sealed in our consciences to esteeme it the greatest blessing in the world By this we must learne to loue him who thus loued vs for amante non amato nihil est miserius and to loue all such as belong vnto God for he that loueth him which begate loueth also him who is begottē a 1 Iohn 5. In a word are we Gods childrē we must loue his house not sell our inheritance desire to bee with him pray onely vnto him depend vpon his prouidence be patient with his corrections content with his allowance and as glad to see his great name honored as we would be sory to see the Kings name abused And to conclude this point as Menedemus tutor to a kings son said vnto him Remember that thou art the kings son so say I Remember that you are the King of Kings sonnes so that you must neither think speak nor do any thing but that which becomes the sons of God I had almost forgotten the greatest duty we liue at this day among pseudocatholick professors who loue an Idoll more thē God the Pope more then the King Italy more then England who vse all equiuocatory means to draw disciples after them are we sons therfore depart frō amongst thē b 2 Cor 6.17 18 saith the Apostle separate your selues touch none vncleane thing and I will receiue you yea I will be a father vnto you and ye shall be my sons and daughters saith the Lord God almighty Let vs therfore separate light from darknes God from an Idoll the Israelites from the Cananites the pretious from the vile c Ier. 15.15 the beleeuer from infidels and Protestants from Papists Let them returne vnto vs but let not vs returne vnto them who in superstition are heathenish in tradition Iewish and in treason diuelish I am the bolder right honourable to write of this argument because I doe write vnto the sons of nobles that therby I may stirre vp your pure minds to vse all diligēce to become as great by grace as you are by nature as Honorable in the Church as you are in the common wealth that as you are the children of mighty men on earth so you may be the children of the Almighty God in heauen If I did present this booke to some great Counsellor of State I would haue vsed the art of Brachyography sh●rt vvriting ●l●ng speach but since I am bold to make choice of you who as yet liue vnder the coūsel of others I hope it wil not be offēsiue to vse this Polylogye Habet hoc proprium generosus animus saith Seneca vt excitetur ad honesta It is proper to a noble mind to be excited to honest actiōs Whē Luke did so it was wel liked of noble Theophilus d Acts ●1 ● whē Paul did so it was wel
the Diuinitie is present with the humanitie by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 circumstance and combination but not by personall vnion Therfore he denied that Marie was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the mother of God or brought forth God and affirmed that man not God was crucified of the Iewes 6. Eutyches heresie contrary to the former for he taught that the humane nature after the vnion was endued with the proprieties of the Diuinitie 7. Of the Manichees who auouched that Christ had but one onely will not two a diuine and humane will 8. Of the Vbiquitaries who attribute to the humanitie of Christ the essentiall properties of the Diuinitie altogether forgetting that saying He that taketh away the proprieties taketh away the nature and on the contrary He that attributeth the proprieties attributeth the nature and of whatsoeuer the Essence cannot be affirmed no more can the essentiall proprieties thereof be affirmed of the same Of the office of Christ How manifold is the office of Christ THreefold Propheticall Priestly Kingly as it is expressed Heb. 2.10 What is his Propheticall office It is that office whereby he hath reuealed to mankind the Gospell that is the secret counsell of the Father concerning the redemption of mankind by the Word by the holy Ghost by the Sacraments both by himselfe as also by the Ministers of the word Ioh. 1.18 Ephes 4.10.11 Shew some testimonies Deut. 18.18 I will raise a Prophet like you c. Esa 61.1 He hath sent me that I should preach the Gospell to the poore Math. 17.5 This is that my welbeloued Son in whom I am well pleased heare him For this cause he is called a Pastor a Esa 40..1 John 10.11 the publisher of peace b Zach. 9.10 Ephes 2.17 the most faithfull witnesse of God c Iohn 3.32 Reu. 1.5 which office he doth execute vntill the end of the world d Ephes 4.11 What is his Priestly office It is that whereby he is Mediator betweene God and man or that whereby he hath set himselfe a Mediator betweene God and men e 1. Tim. 25. Heb. 11.24 which agreeth to no man saue to Christ alone f Heb. 2.17 How many parts be there of this office Two his satisfaction whereby he fulfilled the law g Mat 5.17 Rom. 10.4 and paid the ransome for the sins of the world h Mat. 20.28 In respect of which part of his office he is called a Redeemer i Mat. 20.28 Gal. 3.13 and a Sauior k Esa 25.8.9 53.4.5.6 Iohn 3 17 1. Pet. 2.24 and a Lambe or a sacrifice l Esa 53.7 Ioh. 1.29.36 Reuel 13.8 And his intercession whereby Christ doth instantly desire that his sacrifice may continually preuaile with God his Father for the reconciliation of his elect m Rom. 8.24 Heb 7.25 According to which nature is Christ a Mediator and a Priest According to neither of them asunder but according to both his diuine and humane ioyntly together n Gen. 3.15 22.18 Dan. 9.17 2. Cor. 5.15 Heb 4.15 9.14 1. Because he is in one and the same person the same God man 2. Because he was after the order of Melchisedech without father as man and without mother as God 3. Because he must be partaker of them both that he might reconcile God to man and man to God as Irenaeus saith It was necessary by reason of his habitation with both that he should reduce both into loue and concord and procure that God should receiue man and that man should be restored to God 4. Because the workes of the Mediator are of him that is both God and man that God might accept them 5. Because none could satisfie Gods iustice but God none ought but man Was Christ Mediator before his Incarnation He was because in the foreknowledge predestination and acceptance of God the two natures were reputed as vnited and with him things done and to be done present and to come are all one Thus Heb. 13.8 Iesus Christ is to day yesterday and the same for euer So 1. Pet. 1.20 And as the Lambe is said to be slaine from the beginning of the world Apoc. 13. so the prayers then powred out for the Church in Gods acceptation may be said to be made How doth the Sonne make intercession to the Father Surely as a person but yet as man but so as that the dignitie of those prayers issue from the excellencie of his Diuinitie which in Christ is personally vnited with his humanitie Have you any pregnant testimonie concerning the Priesthood of Christ Psal 110.4 The Lord hath sworne and it shall not repent him Thou art a Priest for euer after the order of Melchisedech who was a type of Christ a Heb. 7.3 as were Aaron also and Isaac b Gen. 22.6.9 May the Ministers of the Gospell be called Priests They may but onely in two respects 1. Because they together with others are ingrafted into Christ and so farre forth as they be true Christians 2. Because they teach the Gospel and sacrifice men themselues and offer them vp a liuing sacrifice vnto God by the Gospell For this cause Paul testifieth of himselfe that he had offered a sacrifice when he had sacrificed the Gentiles by the Gospel that they might be an acceptable sacrifice vnto God being sanctified by the holy Ghost Rom. 15.16 Yet in no place in the new Testament the name of Priest is attributed peculiarly to the Ministers of the Gospell because Christ hath no copartners of his Priesthood What is the Kingly office of Christ It is that whereby he doth according to both natures wittingly and willingly moderate rule and gouerne the whole world Shew some plaine testimonies concerning this office Psal 2.6 He hath set his King vpon his holy mountaine Mat. 28.18 All power is giuen me in heauen and in earth Ioh. 13.3 All things are giuen me of my Father And for this cause he is called the eternall King c Esa 9.7 Psal 45.7 Luke 1.33 the King of righteousnesse d Heb. 7.2 the King of Kings e Reu. 7.2 How manifold is the administration of this office It is two-fold in this world Generall or powerfull whereby he rules all creatures by his power Speciall or of grace whereby he doth in speciall manner and peculiarly rule defend and gouerne his Church and doth enrich it here on earth and glorifie it in heauen In which respect he is also properly called a King f Psal 2.9 1. Because he hath redeemed his Church which Satan had inuaded g Psal 20. 2. Because he hath vanquished the prince of darknesse 3. Because he doth defend and make blessed all those that flie vnto him Who are citizens of this kingdome and what be the lawes The citizens are Christians so called of the King Act. 11.26 1. Pet. 2.3 the lawes are the word of God the enemies are sinne Satan hell death and the rewards are the things of this
alone On the contrary those Angels which be enemies to the truth and diuels do do their endeuour to chalenge vnto themselues the name of God and the worship of God Yet we do not denie but that we are to honor the good Angels by thinking well of them with loue reuerence obedience and imitation Ob. 1. Iacob called vpon an Angell Gen. 48 when he said The Angell that deliuered me out of all trouble blesse these children Answ Iacob did not meane any created but that vncreated Angell the Sonne of God who of his office is called that Angell This is plaine from the text for the same action is attributed to this Angell and to Iehouah to wit that he would blesse Ephraim and Manasses Ob. 2. Iob 19.21 Haue pittie vpon me haue pittie vpon me O my friends for the hand of God toucheth me By friends in this place Bellarmine saith that Augustine vnderstandeth Angels Bellarm. cap. 1. de Sanctorum beatitud ergo Answ It is plaine he meant his friends who came to visite him but yet vexed him with bitter and contumelious words Ob. 3. Iohn wished Grace to the Churches from the seuen Spirits Answ By seuen spirits we must vnderstand onely the holy Ghost who though one in person yet by communication of gifts so worketh as if he were many spirits Why would God vse the ministerie of Angels Not for any necessitie for he stands in need of nothing but of his good will to the end he might declare his goodnesse towards vs in that he hath giuen the Angels to be our seruants for his owne glorie and for our comfort because we see such excellent creatures to be created euen for our sakes and appointed for our seruice Againe both to beget and to preserue friendship betweene vs and the Angels vntill such time as we shall enioy their most ioyful companie in the heauens What is the reason that whereas the Angels were wont in old time to appeare often to the Fathers in the forme of men and to conuerse and talke with them familiarly now they do it no more Because now Christ being come in the flesh and sitting now at the right hand of the Father in heauen and hauing giuen his holy Spirit plentifully it is his wil that our conuersation should be in heauen and not with the Angels vpon the earth visibly Further because the Church of God had neede at the beginning of such confirmations from heauen but now the word of God is sufficiently confirmed Heb. 1.1 What vse hath the Church of the doctrine concerning Angels 1. That we might acknowledge the endlesse loue of God and his fatherly care ouer vs who hath created such keepers for vs and giuen them charge ouer vs whereby we should learne to worship and to loue him Againe to the intent that we should walke comely and holily before the Angels who are witnesses and obseruers of our speeches and actions Lastly that we might be vpholden by faith in all aduersities and dangers knowing that that saying of Eliseus is most true 2. Kin. 6.16 that those which be with vs are moe then those which be against vs. What things be contrary to this doctrine 1. The errour of the Sadduces who affirmed that the Angels were nothing else but good motions or good thoughts which God putteth into our hearts and that they were not spiritual substances subsisting of themselues 2. Their error of whom we reade Col. 2.18 who deuised the worshipping of Angels 3. Of the Papists who affirmed without the warrant of the word of God that every man hath appointed vnto him two Angels one good another euill the one to vexe him the other to keepe him to whom he is giuen and that each of them is an inseparable companion of euery man The which errors are confuted by those things which haue bene spoken before The seuenth common Place of euill Angels or of Diuels Are there also euill Angels THere be which is not onely proued by testimonies of Scripture a Genes 3.1 Ioh. 8.44 1. Pet. 5.8 Iude 6. Reu. 12.9 but also by very experience and by the horrible and heauie effects of wicked Angels By what names are they called 1. Of their nature or spirituall essence they are called Spirits b 1. Kin. 22.21 Mat. 8.16 Luke 10.20 2. Of their office vnto which they were all created at the beginning they are simply called Angels c 1. Cor. 6.3 2. Pet. 2.4 Iude 6. of their knowledge giuen to them in the creation they are called * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 diuels because they haue great knowledge as may appeare in the historie of Adams fall and are very subtill d Deut. 22.17 Leuit. 17.7 1. Cor. 10.20 whence is the doctrine of diuels e 1. Tim. 4.1.6 3. From accident qualities that is such as they haue gotten to themselues by their owne free will they are called wicked f Luke 8.2 impure and vncleane spirits g Mat. 10.1 Zach. 13.2 and a lying spirit or the spirit of lies h 1. Kin. 22.22 Ioh. 8.44 of fornication i Hos 4.12 of maliciousnesse or giddinesse k Esa 19.14 Belial l 2. Cor. 6.15 without all order without yoke and gouernement or wicked which is good for nothing and as the chiefe that euill one and malicious as who should say he doth wholly give himselfe to malice and doth exercise himselfe in it m Math. 6.13 13.19 4. Of the effects they be called diuels or in the singular number a diuell n Ioh. 8.44 which name imports a backbiter because he doth continually accuse God vnto men and men vnto God yea man to man and man to himselfe that so he might turne God from men and men from God and men from men o Gen. 3.1.4.5 Job 1.9.11 2.3 he is also called Satan p Math. 4.10 which signifieth an aduersarie q 1. King 5.4 1. Pet. 5.8 and that Tempter r Marke 1.13 Act. 5.3 a spirit of diuination ſ Acts 16.16 the enemie of God of Christ and our enemie t Luke 10.19 and apolluon or destroying u Reuel 9.11 For the Scripture doth vse often to speake of the vncleane spirits in the singular number to note out that chiefedome of impiety which is opposite and contrary to Christ and his kingdome 5. They haue names from the diuers formes wherein they appeared hereupon he is called that great Dragon as also of his poisoned craft that old Serpent x Reu. 12.8.9 6. Of his power and pride which he exerciseth especially toward the reprobate hence he is called Beelzebub that is the king of flies y 2. Kings 1.2 Math. 12.24 the strong man armed z Mat. 12.29 a roring lion the prince of the world a Iohn 12.31 the God of this world b 2. Corin. 4.4 Lastly the prince and the princes and powers of the aire the gouernors of this world because they rule the wicked
that promise The seed of the woman shall breake the Serpents head Gen. 3.15 belongeth to Christ and to all his members But they haue greater power against the reprobate therefore the Apostle saith Ephes 2.2 that the diuel doth finish his worke in the children of disobedience In what sense is Satan said 2. Cor. 11.14 to transforme himselfe into an Angell of light Not in regard of his substance but in regard of his counterfeting whereby with strange delusions appearances and superstitions he doth faine himselfe to be an Angell of light sent of God from heauen that so his counsels might be listened vnto Can they worke true miracles that is such as do agree with the very things themselues or onely counterfet Christ saith Mat. 24.24 There shall arise false christs and shal shew great signes and wonders And therefore sometimes they shew true signes that is such in truth as they seeme to be c Exod. 7.12 8.7 not by their owne power but vsing certaine hidden causes of nature and yet but lies because they are vsed to deceiue and to confirme a lie d Deut. 13.12 2. Thess 2.9 and indeed not worthy the name of miracles yet the most of them be meere illusions and deceits and legerdemaines like to those of Simon Magus Act. 8.9.10.11 For it is God alone that doth great wonders e Psal 72.18 136.4 to wit such as be done in truth and be wonders indeed whose cause is knowne to no mortall man and such as are done without deceit beyond the course of nature and without meanes and such as can by no meanes be effected by the course of nature and which are appointed especially to set foorth the glorie of God and to further mans saluation Wherefore doth God permit them 1. 2. Thes 2.10 That they who will not embrace the loue of the truth might beleeue lies 2. That the faith and patience of the elect might be proued Deut. 13.3 What be the effects and indeuors of wicked Angels What man is able to recken them all He is the enemie of God of Christ and of men and therefore doth take vnto himselfe the glorie of God whether it be by himselfe a Math. 4.9 or whether it be by his instruments to wit Antichrist and such men as challenge to themselues the honor of God b 2. Thes 2 4. He is the author of sinne for it sprang from him and he doth daily stirre vs vp to sinne that he might plunge vs with himselfe into the gulfe of eternall death c Ioh. 8.44 Heb. 2.14 he worketh effectually in the wicked d Eph. 2.2 2. Thes 2.9 he doth corrupt the word of God e Mat. 4.6 he soweth tares in the Lords field f Mat. 13.25 he raiseth vp heresies he prouoketh men to sundrie kinds of idolatrie he raiseth persecutions against the godly In commonweales he troubleth all with tumults and warres In the familie and priuatly he laboureth to trouble annoy and destroy particular men by sundrie meanes he vrgeth men to commit mischiefs and hainous sinnes He studieth as much as he can to hurt mens bodies he doth infect the elements and troubleth them for mans ruine and especially in this age wherin he knoweth the generall iudgement to approch he doth shew his rage more cruelly then euer before by lies and murthers and confoundeth heauen and earth together Do they take vnto them true bodies sometimes Sometimes they take vnto them counterfeit bodies as it is gathered out of the storie of the Witch who raised vp a spirit in stead of true Samuel g 1. Sam. 28.12 And sometimes true bodies as may be gathered out of the former Treatise touching good Angels For if good Angels haue taken vnto them true bodies there is no doubt but euill Angels are able also by Gods permission to take vnto them true bodies and appeare in them and speake to men and performe actions like vnto mens actions Whether are euill spirits besides that inward torment of mind wherewith they are tormented for euer punished also with that bodily fire of hell Christ saith plainely Mat. 25.41 that he will say to the wicked Depart ye cursed into euerlasting fire which is prepared for the diuell and his Angels Out of which place it is concluded that euill Angels besides that torment of mind wherewith they are vexed are also tormented with that infernall fire as though they were bound vnto it no otherwise then the soule being bound to the bodie suffers of the bodie but we must iudge that to be done after a wonderfull but yet after a true manner as Augustine saith For what purpose did almightie God ordaine them 1. To the end that by meanes of their temptations the godly might be exercised in humilitie and patience and so their saluation might be furthered a 2. Cor. 12.7 2. That by them as it were certaine tormenters he might punish the wicked as well with spirituall as bodily punishments In one word that God might vse their boldnesse to the enlarging of his owne glorie Whether do some men truly collect out of the Col. 1.20 where it is said that God doth reconcile all things to himself thorough Christ both which are in earth as also which are in heauen that therefore the diuels and the damned shall one day be saued Rather most falsly For by this word all we must vnderstand the whole bodie of the Church which is as it were diuided into two parts namely those which are in heaven by whom are simply vnderstood the faithfull that died before the comming of Christ and into those which are in earth by whom are vnderstood those whom Christ found liuing at his first coming or those which followed and liued since his coming as also Eph. 1.10 What is the vse of the doctrine concerning diuels 1. That we might be confirmed in the faith touching good Angels the kingdome of heauen and the blessed spirits because seeing the effects of contraries is contrarie if there be diuels and euill Angels then certainely there be good Angels and if there be an hell then certainely there is a kingdome of heauen 2. That we should be so much the more affraid to offend God because as Peter saith 2.2.4 If God spared not the Angels when they sinned but cast them bound in chaines into hell assuredly he knoweth how to reserue the vnrighteous against the day of iudgement to be punished 3. That we might be so much the more watchfull and stand vpon our guard and therefore should fight euen as it were for life and death with our spirituall weapons but especially with continuall prayers vnto Christ against so many enemies and spirituall wickednesses and that we should put on the whole armor of God that is that complete spirituall armour which the Apostle prescribeth Eph. 6.11.13 and 1. Pet. 5.9 What comfort haue we in that battell That we haue Christ not onely a conqueror and triumpher ouer the powers of hell
dying What then should haue become of man in the conclusion if he had not sinned should he haue euer liued vpon earth No but he should in the end haue remoued into heauen indeed without death which is the dissolution of the soule from the body but yet not without some change such as the Apostle speaketh of 1. Cor. 15.51 shall be in the bodies of the elect who shall be then liuing in the comming of the Lord they shall remoue hence into heauen What things be contrary to this doctrine The errour of the Pelagians who affirmed that man should haue died although he had neuer sinned against those speeches Gen. 2.17 and 3.3 Rom. 5.12 and 1. Cor. 15.21 The twelfth common Place of Mariage What thinke you of Mariage is it a diuine humane or politike constitution IT is diuine 1. because it was instituted by God in Paradise a Gen. 1.27 2.15 betwixt Adam and Eue in their innocencie they then bearing the true image of God 2. Because it was a type of that truly diuine and spirituall mariage which was to be betwixt Christ and his Church b Ephes 5.23 3. Because it was ordained for the propagation of the Church and for the further helping forwards the saluation of man It is also humane or politike or as I may say of humane constitution 1. because it was instituted for the propagation of mankind and ciuill societie vpon earth for in heauen they marry not but are like the Angels of God Mat. 22.30 2. Because for the most part it dependeth vpon the honest constitutions made by man for that purpose How proue you that mariage was instituted by God Gen. 2.18 God said that is in his most wise counsel decreed and ordained it is not good for man to be alone let vs make an helper or companion of his life like vnto him and when he could finde none for Adam before him God brought vpon him a dead sleepe and whilest he was asleepe and so being brought as it were into an extasie voide of griefe and was naturally ignorant what was done took one of his ribs and thereof made woman whom he brought vnto Adam who being led by the spirit of God did prophesie saying This is bone of my bone and flesh of my flesh she shall be called Ischa that is Vira Mannesse because she was taken out of man being as it were alter-ipse a second self For this cause shall man leaue his father and mother and cleaue vnto his wife and they shall be one flesh And after the deluge God confirmed mariage and blessed it saying Increase and multiply b Gen 9.1 At length the Sonne of God himselfe restored it being somewhat decaid c Math. 19.4.5.6 honoring the same both with his presence and miraculous gift d Ioh. 2.11 c. To conclude God not onely instituted mariage but also stirreth vp mutuall loue betweene the bride and the bridegroome and furdereth mariage e Genes 24.14 50 51. Whence it followeth first that mariages are not by chance or depending on mans arbiterment onely but are fatall and gouerned by Gods prouidence Secondly that mariage is a good and a holy thing Thirdly that it is to be vndertaken in the feare of God and inuocation for his direction But are not Moses and Paul contrary one to another where it is said Gen. 2.18 It is not good for man to be alone and 1. Cor. 7.1 g Gen. 2.18 It is good for man not to touch a woman h 1. Cor. 7.1 No for that Paul speaketh first of good which is profitable and not of honestie and he doth not oppose good vnto vice or sinne but vnto inconuenient Secondly because that in Genesis is vnderstood of the species or greatest part of mankind which wold decay if it were not continued and increased by mariage neither can a man liue chastly without mariage but Paul speaketh of certaine indiuidua or persons hauing the gift so as they can liue chastly without mariage for of others he saith It is better to marrie then to burne i 1. Cor. 7.9 But tell me whether Paul speaking of a virgin 1. Cor. 7.38 k 1. Cor. 7.38 and saying He that bestoweth her not in mariage doth better do meane that virginitie deserueth more the fauour of God then mariage He speaketh onely of some outward commodities of the single life for the present necessitie that is imminent persecutions l verse 26. and for that the vnmaried is more expedite and fit to teach to serue the Church to vndergo the dangers of his profession and the duties of piety with a better and freer mind m verse 32.34 and insinuateth more difficulty to be in mariage then in the single life as he speaketh concerning the maried Such shall haue trouble in the flesh n verse 28 and more distraction of thoughts and care for the things of this world o vers 33.34 and therfore that the single life is more profitable vnto him that hath the gift of continencie and lesse subiect to distractions and troubles and in this respect more blessed then mariage p verse 40. Notwithstanding the godly maried may also care for those things which belong vnto the Lord as Abraham Isaac Iacob Zacharias Iohn Baptists father and the like What is contrary to this doctrine concerning the efficient cause of Matrimonie The heresie of Montanus the Tatians Saturnians Manichees Marcionites Priscillianists Encratites who condemned mariage as the doctrine and worke of the diuell Pope Syricius differed not much from this heresie who called matrimonie vncleannesse of the flesh in which no man might please God Vnto all whom that saying of S. Paul is to be opposed 1. Tim. 4. 1. Tim. 4.1.2.3.4 Of the matter of Mariage Of how many and of what manner of persons ought Mariage to consist Of two onely one man and one woman for so saith the Lord Two shal be one flesh a Gen. 1.27 2.24 Mat. 19.5 and so many suffice for procreation of offspring But whenas the maried couples giue themselues mutually one to another they are both the second causes efficient and they also the matter of mariage What is contrary to this Polygamie not of hauing many wiues successiuely when one succeedeth another but of enioying more then one at one and the same time Gen. 4.19 which corruptiō of lawful mariage begun in Lamech of Cains race and was afterwards permitted vnto the Fathers not for wantonnesse but for increase of an holy seed both for that politick customes were at that time as also that God might thereby manifest his promise of an innumerable seede to spring of a few But Christ condemned it afterwards Mat. 19.8 5.32 saying It was not so from the beginning and declaring that who so putteth away his wife and taketh another committeth adulterie For that God being about to giue Adam a wife tooke not two or more but one ribbe out of
the throne of iudgement chaseth away all euill with his eies And of the gouernment of the Messiah Isa 16.5 In mercie shall the throne be prepared and he shall sit vpon it in stedfastnesse in the tabernacle of Dauid And in this sense sitting doth signifie a Royall or Iudiciall dignitie and authoritie But what doth it it signifie ioyntly Mat. 20● 2 or together to sit or to stand at the right hand of any man 1 In humane affaires by the figure Metonymia it signifieth to obtaine the next place of honor dignity to any man as Psa 45 9 Vpon thy right hand the Queene standeth in a vesture of gold siluer 2 To be a fellow and companion or copartner of the rule and Empyre 3 To giue helpe and aid as Psal 142.4 I looked on my right hand and beheld whether any stood by me that is to say to helpe me Metaphorically it is attributed to God to the Church to Christ himselfe As for God he is said to stand at the right hand of men when he doth helpe and succour them and protecteth them against their enemies and dangers as Psal 16.8 I haue set the Lord alwaies in my sight for he is at my right hand that I may not he moued-So is God the father in this sence said to stand at the right hand of Christ that is to say that he is in degree of honour and dignitie next vnto himselfe· Psal 45.10 The Queene 1. The Church doth stand at thy right hand namely at the right hand of Christ that is it standeth in the next degree of dignitie 3 Christ is said to b Mark 16.19 sit c Act. 7.55 stand and d Rom. 8.34 be at the right hand of God the father Is Christ said to sit at the right hand of the father properly or Metaphorically Not properly for it no way agreeth with his Deitie and although it may in the proper signification be attributed and applied vnto his other nature which is bodily yet it must not be imagined that that glorious body in heauen doth either continually sit or is moued or standeth although it be indeed limited and locall and as for the right hand of God much lesse is that to be taken properly seeing God is without a bodie as is alreadie said Seeing then Christ sitteth at the right hand of the father doth it therupon follow that the father sitteth on the leaft hand No indeed for the father is not limited and in euerlasting happines all is the right hand because there is there no miserie VVhat is therefore meant by this kind of speach In his exposition of the Creed Augustine taketh it for resting with the father in that euerlasting blessednes for this was conueniēt for Christ saith he after so many labours sustained after the crosse and after death to rest blessed in heauen not indeed idle for hee gouernes the Church and makes intercession for vs but yet without labour The same Augustine also calleth the right hand of the father that eternall and vnspeakable felicity Against the Sermon as Arius c 12. whereunto the sonne of man is attained hauing receiued immortalitie euen of the flesh 2 Damascen saith that Christ hath togither with his father equal glory of the diuinity which he had before all beginnings And in this sence the transitiue preposition to doth note only a personal distinction Lib. 4. cap. 2 and order of beginning but not any degree of nature or dignity for there is no such matter in the persons of the deity 3 But we say also that it is meant thereby that Christ hath obtained all power in heauen and in earth as he himselfe who is his owne best interpreter expoundeth it Mat. 28.18 by a phrase borrowed from a King or a Prince which hath a sonne and that an onely begotten sonne or a first begotten sonne whom at length he appointeth to be his heire and successor maketh to sit at his right hand that he may reigne with him may exercise the right of dominion ouer all things which appertaine vnto the kingdom of the cceed Chap. 4. Whereupon Saint Augustine saith thus By the right hand vnderstand the power which that man that was taken from God did receiue that he might come to be a Iudge who before came to be iudged For the father iudgeth no man but hath giuen all iudgement to the sonne that all men might honour the sonne as they honour the father Ioh. 5 22 What is then the sitting of Christ at the right hand of the father It is his exceeding glorious estate or the great high degree of Christs exaltation wherein he is placed by his father the truth of both natures still reserued in which estate Christ doth not only rest from labour and enioy vnspeakable glory and vnmatchable felicity but especially he is placed not only the head of the church but the king and gouernour of heauen and earth that togither with his father he may gouerne all things both in heauen and in earth all things created being subiect vnto him Whence doe you confirme this Exposition Out of the Psal 110.1 Sit saith the father to Christ on my right hand till I make thine enemies thy footstoole which Paul 1. Cor. 15.25 expounding saith He must raigne till he haue put all his enemies vnder his feet Therefore to sit is to raigne And Eph. 1.21 after the Apostle had said that Christ sitteth at the right hand of God in heauenly places he addeth for expositions sake that he is exalted aboue all principalities and powers and that all things are made subiect vnder his feet and that he is appointed head of the Church VVhat is the cause efficient The father by whose will and ordinance he sitteth at the right hand of the father Psal 110.1 Sit at my right hand And Ephe. 1.20 And God hath set him at his right hand in the heauenly places This sitting then is it of the whole person or onely of one of the natures namely of the humane Words phrases are to be taken according to the matter about which they are vsed For to sit at the right hand of the father doth declare two things For sometime it sheweth the great equalilitie of the diuine glorie maiestie power and honour sometime it signifieth the qualitie that is the high perfection and felicity of the flesh of Christ now that it is exalted vnto the right hand of God which the schoolemen call Habituall grace In the later signification therefore sitting is to be applied vnto the humane nature wherein the humane nature in Christ is more blessed then the rest of the creatures hath royal iudicial power ouer all creatures a Iohn 5.27 but in the former which is the chiefe and principal of the whole person because as the whole person was broght low so the whole also was exalted in the Resurrection ascending into heauen and sitting at the right hand of the father
administratiō of the Sacraments But yet the spirits are to be tried that is by a Metonymy those which say they are indued with the spirit of god whether they be of God 1. Ioh. 4.1 which cannot be done more certainly by any thing then by the scripture to which the Lord commandeth the triall of spirits to be conformed a Deut. 13.1 2.3 4 neither must we harken to the words of the false Prophets b Ier. 23 19 By what name were they wont to cal the definitions of Synods Canons which then especially haue authority are as lawes whosoeuer contemns violates them must vndergo the politicke punishmēt inflicted by the magistrate so soon as they are ratified cōfirmed by the chief magistrat but before they are not auailable by reason of politicall punishment although they be by reason of censure Do such constitutions bind the conscience before God No truly by themselues for that they are humane and mutable yet notwitstanding being once set downe to violate or contemne them with safe conscience no man can both in respect of scandalizing others as also by reason of contumacy but euerie one is tied faithfully to obserue them and that with a free conscience e 1 Cor. 10.28 29 but so as it may be done without scandall that is so that the weaker brethren be not offended and when vpon iust causes we be hindered sometimes it is lawfull to omit them our consciences being not offended VVhat is the ende of this power In generall the glorie of God and the edification of the Church to vs saith Paule 2. Cor. 10.8 13.10 is power giuen to edification not to destruction but the end of Synods is the assertion of the pure doctrine of God comprehended in his word against the heretickes and the constitution of Ecclesiastical gouernment in respect of the diuerse circumstances of time place and persons VVhat effect or vse haue they Order and Decencie d 1. Co. 4.40 Order whereby the presidents and publishers of the gospell haue a certaine rule in their actions and doe accustome their auditors to obedience and in a well gouerned estate of the Church peace and concord is kept Comelines whereby we may be incited by those helpes to pietie and that grauitie may appeare in the handling of pietie VVhat things are repugnant to this Doctrine 1 The errour both of those which ascribe to much and also of those which do attribute too little to the Church 2 The errour of the Nouatians or Catharists who deny pardon to those which are fallen by their confession or to those which are defiled with great offences 3 The Monarchie of the Papacie and tyranny which they haue arrogated to themselues in translating the kingdomes of the world 2 That tyrannicall voyce that the Pope of Rome ought to be iudged of no mortall man and that hee is aboue the councill 3 That vsurping and abusing the keyes and the power of remitting or retaining sinnes at his pleasure 4 That maioritie and supreme power which hee hath taken to himselfe by vertue of succession and of the Church when soeuer hee please in consigning the Canon of Scripture In interpreting the word of GOD and giuing the true sense of the Scripture in forging new Articles of our faith in making lawes and proposing traditions and establishing wicked decrees because as they say that the Bishoppe hath all lawes in the closet of his heart 5. All Ceremonies Popish rites and will-worship repugnant to the word of God 6 That errour that the Church is the rule of all things which are to bee beleeued when as on the contrarie the Scripture alone is the rule of faith 7. A wicked and superstitious opinion of necessity merit and worshippe in the obseruation of humane ceremonies 8. A foolish zeale of Moses law 9. That Sacriledge wherby they driue the laity from the reading of the word of God and doe prohibite Bibles to bee Printed in the vulgar tongue 10. Furthermore that Councils should be assembled and gouerned by the authoritie of the Pope and that such Councils cannot erre 11. That the Church ought to supply the defect of the word written by written traditions which is to attribute more authority and power to the Church then is meete 12 That the Church is eminent in generall Councils and that the trueth remaineth no where but amongst their Pastors 13. That the power of interpreting the Scriptures is in the Councils and that no man may appeale from them 14. That the approbation of the Scripture to be either Canonicall or Apocryphall dependeth on the iudgement of the Church 15. The contempt of constitutions simply for order and decency appointed in the Church 16. The errour of those who in Ecclesiasticall controuersies resting on their owne priuate iudgements opinions do disclaime Synods and all definitions deliuered by Synods The foure and fortieth common place Of the Gouernment and Iurisdiction of the Church where also of fasting What is the third part of Ecclesiasticall power IVdiciarie or Iurisdiction Ecclesiastical altogither to be distinguished from ciuill and is commonly called power and it is another part or kinde of the power of the keyes distinguished from the former for that the first whereof Mat. 16.19 and Ioh. 20.23 which is the office of teaching or of preaching the Gospell committed to the Pastors doth properly appertaine vnto them but this doth belong to the moral discipline of the Church and repressing of offencs commended to the Church which the Graecians cal 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is discipline correction institution wherof Christ speaketh Mat. 18.17.18 If a brother do not heare the Church let him be as a Heathen or Publican vnto thee verily I say vnto you whatsoeuer you shall binde on earth shall be bound in heauen and whatsoeuer you shall loose shall be loosed for the Church doth bind whom she doth excommunicate and she doth loose when she againe receiues men into her society VVhat is Ecclesiasticall gouer●ment It is an Ecclesiasticall Paedagogie instituted by the authority of the word of God whereby men being receiued into the familie of Christ they are guided to godlinesse and compelled not to commit any thing vnworthy the Christian profession but those which do offend and are inordinate are reproued chidden and corrected that they may returne into the right way and that euery one may do their dutie according to the direction of the Gospell How manifold is Ecclesiasticall gouernment Twofold Common vnto which all citizens of the Church ought equally to be subiect and proper which is peculier to the Clergie and doth solely appertain to the ministers of the Church to reteine them in their dutie and the common againe is twofold ordinary extraordinary now that is ordinary which alwaies hath the word of God and Apostolicall tradition for his rule and from which it doth neuer decline and is alwaies obserued in the Church How many parts bee there of ordinary
then the end of mariage is that there may be a Seminarie for both Church and common wealth to which end the Apostle warneth parents to bring vp their children in the discipline and feare of the Lord h Eph. 6.4 that so they may become profitable vnto the Church and common wealth But if you respect God immediatly as the author of mariage then the end therof is the glory of God that so they may learne to acknowledge feare and reuerence him who hath ioyned them together and that they may remember that their mariage is the most sweete image of that secret coniunction which is betweene Christ and his Church i Ephes 5.32 being begunne in this life by faith loue and obedience but shall be fully perfected in heauen What contrarieth this doctrine touching the ends of Mariage The Papists errour who say that God instituted mariage also to this end to be one of their seuen sacraments leaning vnto the vulgar interpretation which calleth that a sacrament which the Apostle nameth a secret mysterie k Ephes 5.31 3.3.6 but yet the same interpreter hath translated the same word also a Sacrament Eph. 3. and Colos 1.27 But note that Apoc. 17.5 the mysterie is retained See the Rhemish transl so calling the vocation of the Gentiles vnto the communion of Christ Let therefore the calling of the Gentiles be the eight Sacrament And yet herin they are against thēselues while they interdict their Priests frō this their sacrament calling mariage an vncleannes of the flesh wherein none can please God Surely a notable Sacrament which is defined to be the signe of a holy thing But the Apostle teacheth that the mysterie or sacrament whereof he speaketh is in the coniunction of Christ and his church Neither is our reconcilement with God confirmed by mariage which is the chiefest end of sacraments although it may in the image of nature be vnproperly called a Sacrament by which reason also many corporall things may by reason of some similitude be called Sacraments of spirituall and heauenly things for there is almost no corporall thing but may in this sort be called a Sacrament as a vine a way a gate salt l loh. 15.1 14.6 10.7.9 Mat. 5.13 c. What are the duties of maried couples They are twofold some common to them both othersome proper to either a part Which are common to both parties That they liue godlily towards God and honestly and chastly one with another be as one vnder God performe one to another mutuall loue faith and due beneuolence vse mutuall sufferance equity and consolation in enduring of common calamities and lastly to indeuor mutually not only to bring foorth and nource vp which euen beasts do but to bring vp and instruct their children in faith and true religion m Ephe. 6.4 1. Cor. 7.3 By what arguments ought maried couples to be stirred vp to the performance of these duties By such as are drawne from the institution and will of God and from the fruits of mariage it selfe For seeing they are one bodie and one flesh they ought not to be pulled asunder by any filthinesse one from another Secondly because God is the author of their coniunction n Mat. 19.6 Heb. 13.1 therfore they ought not to be separated Thirdly because mariage is honorable and holy o 1. The. 4.3.4 and the bed vndefiled therefore it ought not to be contaminated with any filthinesse or intemperancie Fourthly because the Apostle saith This is the will of God your sanctification that euery one keepe his vessell in holinesse and honor a 1. Thess 4.3.4 Fiftly because children are the fruite of mariage which ought worthily to procure mutual loue in mariage b Psal 128.3 therfore children are called filij filiae quasi 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 propter 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for that loue which they should cause betweene maried couples c Genes 30.20 and herof children are called the deare pledges of loue Which are the duties of either to other They are likewise two-fold some concerne the husband and othersome the wife Which are the husbands duties To instruct his wife in the true worship and feare of God d Deut. 11.19 1. Cor. 7.14 to be his wifes head to defend and cherish her as his own flesh e Eph. 5.23.8 louingly with an honest respect not tyrannically for Paul forbiddeth a man to be bitter to his wife f Coloss 3.19 nor vse her as his maide but as the fellow of his life and bed and mistris of the house with him seeing that Euah was taken out of his side and not out of his feete g Gen. 2.10.12 Gal. 4.28 Ephe. 5.25 Secondly that he prouide things necessary for his wife and family h 1. Tim. 5.8 comfort his wife deriuing part of the yoke and burden on himselfe regarding his wife as the weaker vessell i 1. Pet. 3.7 and therefore behaue himselfe decently and honorably towards her I meane with honest care and carefulnesse and not with contempt but prudently and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 according to knowledge as to one that is heire of grace to wit of eternall life Which are the duties of the wife towards her husband To honor him with due reuerence k Coloss 3.8 calling him Lord as Sara did Abraham l 1. Pet. 3.6 obeying her husband in all things in the Lord m Ephes 5.22.24 submitting her selfe vnto him not as a seruant but as the members to the head and not froward or imperious or like Xantippe the wife of Socrates neuer quiet What repugne this doctrine That monstrous hatred which Satan vseth to stirre vp betweene maried couples when they deale hardly with or forsake one another or else turne their loue into adultery Secondly in generall the filthinesse of the Nicolaites Gnosticks and Anabaptists who make their wiues common vnder pretext of religion Thirdly adulteries wandring lusts incests and whoredomes of the Papists and their single life without the gift of chastitie and necessitie 4 Contempt and dispraising of mariage and words or deedes leading to filthinesse VVhat ought to comfort the godly in marriage First that God is the author of marriage n Gen. 2.18 24.14 2 That being called vpon hee is assistant vnto those that are godly married mitigating their troubles as hee was to that of Cana in Galilie o Ioh. 2.2.2 3 That obedience patience the crosse the troubles in marriage are things pleasing God in them that beleeue as S. Paule witnesseth p Tim. 2.15 4 That marriage is the most sweete Image of that mysticall vnion betwixt Christ and his Church q Ephe. 5.32 Lastly the hope of the resurrection r Iob. 19.25 1. Pet. 3.17 and of the glorie to come is a most present and effectuall remedie against all troubles in mariage The thirteenth common place of Diuorce VVhat is the reason of the name of Repudium refusall
image in the place hereof namely of blindnesse impotencie vncleannesse vanitie and vnrighteousnesse so that since that came to passe man can doe nothing but sinne b Rom. 6.16 17. 7.23 How manie sorts are there of this corruption Two Originall and Actuall The first is the parent the last the miserable issue of the first The first a loathsome pudle and filthy Camarina the second a most grieuous plague the first is called Original or that which is borne and propagated together with vs c Ehes 2.3 Psal 51.7 The second is called actuall sinne or the same which our selues haue brought vpon vs and committed our selues These two notwithstanding are species subalternatae inter se Kindes subordinate one to another rather then opposing one another For the one of them is as it were a cause and roote whence the other as a fruite effect proceedeth which distinction of them is gathered out of Rom. 5.14 What vnderstand you by the name of Originall Sin It is that blemish and staine which is deriued from the first parent of all men according to the flesh vnto all his posteritie descended of him But what is deriued from Adam to his posteritie Both the formall and the materiall part also of sinne that is as the Apostle teacheth manifestly Rom. 5. from the xii verse to the end of the chapter not onely a depriuing of original righteousnesse a corruption of mās whole nature but also a guilt and obliging of them to eternall punishment in which Adam entangled himself all his posteritie that is The verie disobedience of Adam insomuch as it is imputed to vs all and hath therefore spred it selfe vpon al men though not by act yet by guilt imputation As Rom. 5.12 We are all pronounced to haue sinned in Adam as in the roote or a masse whereout all mankinde was framed we all being at that time in his loynes And verse 16. and 18. By one mans fall the guilt came vpon all to condemnation And vers 19 By one mans disobedience all are made vniust that is guilty of gods anger and eternall death Seeing Leuie is said to pay Tithes in Abraham because hee was in the loynes of Abraham Heb. 7.9 Why also is not Christ said to haue sinned in Adam Because hee was not borne in ordinarie manner of the seede of man but conceiued of the Holy Ghost therefore he became free and exempted from Originall sinne and from the guilt therof as also he did not pay tithes in Abrahams loynes but was represented in Melchisedecks person as being an eternall Priest not giuing but receiuing tithes VVhat is the cause that sinne is deriued and propagated from the father to the children The cause is the Law which God hath iustly made that man should be borne in such estate if man sinned euen as of a leprous father is borne a leprous sonne of a base father a base sonne of a poysonous serpent a serpent But is it righteous that the whole ofspring should be partakers of the punishment deserued by one It is most iust with God Yea amongst all nation it is receiued that what the heade doth in respect it is heade that is imputed to the whole bodie worthilie and children are spoyled of all their fathers goods because of their fathers rebellion For as the Lord of a Fee iustly taketh away from his vngratefull vassall and his posteritie the fee which before was graunted to him vpon certaine conditions so it is a deede of Gods Iustice in that he taketh from Adam and all his posteritie those good things which before were giuen to mankinde in their first parent Moreouer that which Christ hath done as heade of the Church and of all the elect is imputed to the Church and we are saide in Christ to haue kept the Lawe to haue beene deade buried and raised againe and to sit in the heauens Ephe. 2.6 and in many other places Therefore that which Adam hath sinned as head of mankinde that is rightly imputed to vs because whatsoeuer was done by him was supposed to bee done by all men and euery particular man and he represented his whole stock Therefore also did hee lose that which was committed to his keeping for his whole stock But by what meanes is this guilt and this blemish and corruption conueied to his posteritie The guilt by imputation as hath beene said but the corruption not by example onely or imitation or onely by ill custome but by propagation and generation Because Gen. 5.3 Adam is saide to haue begot Seth after his owne image that is a sinner a Rom. 15.12 Iob 14.4 15.14 Againe because little infants doe not sinne by example but are conceiued and borne in sinne b Psal 51.7 And the Apostle saith Ephes 2.3 That wee are all by nature the children of wrath by nature not by Imitation But let vs remember that saying We ought rather seeke what way to escape from that euill then search how it came vpon vs as wee must not so much enquire how a fire beganne but how it may bee quenched But why are children borne of Godly parents not sanctified by their puritie as well as they drawe corruption from them Because they descende from them not by spiritual but by carnal generation for their posteritie is borne of them not by grace but by nature For the guilt and corruption commeth from nature but iustification which is opposed to the guilt Sanctification which opposeth corruption is from supernatural grace Ioh. 1.13 The sonnes of God are not of bloud but of God And chap. 3.3 Except a man bee borne againe c. To whom is originall Sinne deriued To all whosoeuer descend of Adam the infants as yet in the mothers wombe not excepted a Psal 51.7 For although they haue not yet brought forth the fruites of iniquitie yet their nature is a certaine seede of sinne and therefore hatefull and abhomin●ble to God Rom. 5.14 Death is come vpon all for so much as al haue sinned But infants haue not sinned actually therefore they haue sinned Originally Is none amongest all mankinde excepted Onely Christ who though hee descended from Adam by a continued line and race b Luc. 3.23 Yet not in a naturall manner as other men and by meanes of mans seede but by the onely power of the holy Ghost hee was conceiued of the virgine Marie and sanctified from his first conception that hee might bee without sinne c Mat. 1.18 Luc. 1.35 Yet the children of the faithfull are holy 1. Cor. 7.14 If the roote bee holy the branches also are holy Rom. 11.16 They are holy in regard of their societie with the Church which we professe in the Creede to bee the communion of Saints Neither is forgiuenesse of sinnes and righteousnesse tied to propagation but to the grace and mercie of God or Gods most free election Secondly they are holy because they are comprehended in Gods couenant of which it is saide I
Act. 15.3.4 and in the Ecclesiasticall assemblie made by the people where in all one among another doe meete religiously to performe the seruice of God a or in the Pastors and Ecclesiasticall assemblie which consisteth of the principall and sit members of the Church and is gathered togither in the name of the whole Church whereof it hath charge to consult of Church matters in which sense Christ saith say vnto the Church Math. 18.18 c. But is there any visible Church seeing we say in the Creed I beleeue the Church and faith is of things which are not seene Heb. 11.2 2. Cor. 5.7 and Augustine saith it is an action of faith to beleeue what thou seest not for if thou seest it is not faith That which is said in the Creede is not meant of any one Church this or that but of the Catholicke Church that is of the whole bodie of the Church at what time soeuer it hath beene on the earth which for that it consisteth of the godly Elect which haue beene heeretofore from the beginning of the world which are at this present and which shall be heereafter vntill the worlds end being gathered together at once whom no man in this life can euer behold with his eies surely there is a Church beleeued and not seene because it is not of the fashion that it may be here wholy seene but onely in part 1 Because the glorie of the Catholike Church is inward Psal 45.13 The Kings daughter is all glorious within 2 Because it commeth not with obseruation b Luk 17 20 3 Because it worshippeth God in spirit and truth c Ioh. 4 23 4 Because the sense cannot iudge surely who they be that belong to the Catholicke Church 5 Because the principallest and greatest part thereof is in Heauen 6 Because it is a spirituall house d 1. Pet. 2 5 But the Church taken Synecdochically that is The particuler Churches are visible 1 Because the men whereof they consist are visible 2 Because the outward forme of them is visible and concerning the particuler Church or the Pastors thereof it is said Math. 5. Vers 14. A Citie that is set on a hill cannot be hid but it ought to be well knowne and excellent for pietie and life least it be an offence but at length after the resurrection all the whole Church shall be seene in heauen where she shall be knit together with her head Reuel 14.4 Is there or hath there beene alwaies a glorious visible state of Gods Church on Earth among all men and all the world ouer No surely for that being sometime oppressed by tyrannie as in the time of the tenne persecutions and after that vnder Antichrist it was hid in heresies errours as a sparke vnder the ashes as in the time of Arrius when as Ierome saith the whole world mourned exceedingly and wondered that it selfe was turned Arrian and it may often come to passe through the iust iudgement of God that there be none assemblie of men apparant which worship God publikely and visibly according to his word onely a Psal 74.3 Isa 49.21 as happened in the time of Elias the Prophet 1 King 19.10 when he said I onely am left that is not onely not a Prophet more but euen not one that worshippeth God and God answered I haue reserved vnto mee seuen thousand men that haue not bowed their knees to Baall And Reuel 12.6 when the Church of God is said to haue fled into the wildernes that is to haue lurked or laine hid from the sight of men by reason of the furies of Antichrist Therefore the state of the Church is at sometime more visible at sometime lesse neither is it visible vnto all nor alwaies after one fashion The inuisible Church doth eyther openly professe the faith or not professe it at all If she professe it then is she not the inuisible Church if she do not then is she not the true Church because she confesseth not the faith It is not requisite ●hat we should alwaies euerie where confesse our faith for that were to betray our selues vnto our enemies but when the cause occasion time and Gods glorie doe require Neyther did Elias make any such argument when God answered him I haue reserued vnto me seuen thousand men which haue not bowed their knees to Baall though they were vnknowne to him But where and how was the Church so many ages past in Popery seeing Popery is not the Church In that manner it was as Iohn foretold it should be Reuel 12.6 namely in the wildernes and in that manner as the Church of Israell was after the falling away of Ieroboam especially in the daies of Achab in the Apostaticall and false Church which worshipped Calues in Dan and Bethel whereunto the popish Church is altogether like As then Elias Elizaeus and seuen thousand men which bent not their knees to Baall were and lay hid in the wildernes so also euen many in the time of Poperie bent not their knees to Antichrist which verie argument Paule applieth to the Church of the Iewes in his time Rom. 11.3 May the Catholicke Church fall away By no meanes because there shall be no end of Christs kingdome a Luke 1.33 because the Catholicke Church is builded on a rocke And the gates of Hell shall not preuaile against it Math. 16.18 But some particuler Church may fall away and fall away in such sort that where there was a true Church there may appeare no true Church at all but a false and Sathan may preuaile against it as many examples teach to wit the Churches of the Ephesians Galathians and the like which haue ceased vtterly to bee nay particuler Churches may be brought to that smallnes that there may not bee any particuler Christian visible Church on the Earth publikely knowne And there is euer some number on Earth which worship Christ with an honest affection but this number is not euer visible ful of people glorious established in some visible place seat or succession but scattered heere and there obscure and vnknowne to men as Isaiah saith 1.9 and 10.20.21 The Lord hath reserued to himselfe a seed and remnant When began the Church to fall from the truth It is one thing for the Church to haue failed in some points and an other to haue falne away so as it should be vtterly abolished while the Apostles liued heretickes began to sow darnell in the Lords field to worke the mysterie of iniquitie and many Antichrists began to hee 2. Thess 2.7 1. Iohn 2 18. 2 The holy Bishops after the Apostles times through lacke of heede taking mingled many falshoods with the truth and left their errours to posteritie neyther did all faile at once and at one time This plague began by little and little to creepe farre and wide vntill at length it spread the whole world ouer But in the meane while the Church fell not vtterly away because God reserued to himselfe a
and giue not that honour vnto the holy and sacred ministerie that is meete 7 The Symony of the Papists and their buying and selling of holy orders all neglect of law Diuine and Ecclesiasticall in the popish elections as namely that they haue no regard of learning or life but promote rude asses and those of most filthy wicked life They vse vaine ceremonies of annointing shauing wax candles and such toyes they attribute that to the ministerie of men which is only the worke of God alone they transforme the ordination of ministers into a sacrament They doe no more thinke of feeding the flock then a cobler doth of ploughing 8 In conclusion all the popish hierarchie and the primacie of the Pope of Rome contrary to the word of God First that from the authority of saint Paul they make Peter the Bishop of Rome Secōdly the Romane Bishops which would be thought to be the successors of Peter call thēselues indeede the seruants of seruants yet are not saluted by any other name then our most holy Lords they translate Empyres and Kingdomes and finally they vsurpe vnto themselues all gouernment pure and mixt they domineere in manner of Kings they boast of the patrimony of Peter vsurpe a double sword spirituall and temporall and yet haue neyther of both and chalenge vnto themselues power to draw all men to hell without cause and cause euen Kings to kisse their feete 3 They alleadge that the Priests of Moses law were a figure of the Pastors of the Church of Christ and their Masse-priests they tearme by a false name of Presbyters or Priests 9 All those proud and arrogant titles of the Antichristian counterfeit Cleargie of Patriarches Princes and such like 10 The errour of them which make an equalitie betweene the Ministers of the Gospell In holy functions they make no difference betweene those that are temporarie and those that are perpetuall they that acknowledge no Priestes but those that haue charge to teach publikely 11 Those that vsurpe that authoritie in the Church which was peculiar to the Apostles for this is that which the Apostle a complaineth to be then done by some who boasted themselues as if they were Apostles 12 The conceipt of Morellius concerning the bringing againe into the Church of the Democraticke policie 13 The subuersion of the christian ministerie the confusion of Ecclesiasticall offices the robbing of the Ecclesiasticall possessions the end whereof what it is like to be the historie of b Achan teacheth vs. 14 The sinne of those who make no difference betweene the distribution of the Churches stocke and the disposing of our publike goods which is a thing meerely ciuill but confound these two treasuries the naming of all which things is the confuting of them The three and fortieth common place Of the power and authoritie of the Church as also of Synods Is there any power of the Church YES there is 1. Because no family no honest societie no common-wealth and therefore not the Church which is the most excellent society of all can long stand or cōtinue without policy and gouernment 2 Because God hath prescribed lawes to his Church therefore he hath giuen power also to iudge according to those lawes 3 Because in ancient time the Priests and Leuites bare rule ouer Ecclesiasticall matters a Leuit. 14.3 Deut. 24.8 and the Synedry or Counsell for the administring of Gods behests was compacted of the Priests Leuites Lawyers or Scribes and the heads of families or the elders of the people b 2. Cro. 19.8 9.10.11 Mat. 5 22. Mat. 18.19 4 Because in the place of that Synedry or Counsell of the Synagogue Christ did ordaine c in the Christian Church an Ecclesiasticall Senate and the Apostles haue diligently retained the same d 1 Tim. 4.14 so as the Church hath alwaies had the like 5 Because the power of the keyes is committed vnto the Church 6 Because the preaching of the word would bee altogether vnprofitable vnlesse the Church had power to bridle the contemners of the same 7 Because as we must giue to Caesar that that is Caesars so to the Church that which is the Churches must be yeelded Mat. 22.21 By what name is it called Power authority Ecclesiasticall Iurisdiction the keyes of the kingdome of heauen Mat. 16.19 I will giue thee the keyes of the Kingdome of heauen So called by a Metaphore whereby is signified the power of a Steward in admitting in and keeping from comming into the house whom his master pleaseth a Esa 20.22 because the kingdome of heauen which is the Church is administred that is to say is opened to the beleeuer and shut to the vnbeleuer by the preaching of the Gospell yea euen heauen it selfe is propounded vnto vs as a mansion house vnto the which there is onely one entrance by Christ Iesus And to Christ faith only leadeth vs which the holy ghost doth create in vs by the ministery of the word and Sacraments which ministerie because it is committed vnto the Pastors therefore they are said to beare the keyes of the kingdome of heauen VVhat is the Ecclesiasticall power It is that power that is giuen to the Church to be exercised by those that are set ouer the Church to establish and preserue the puritie of the doctrine and of the worship of God decencie order holinesse of manners honestie aswel publicke as priuate in the Church and the members therof and that not of any liberty to commaund euery thing or at pleasure but by the prescript rule and according to the meaning of the written word of God for the saluation and edification of the Church VVhence or from whom is this power From God by Iesus Christ for if you looke vnto men by whom this power is administred it is onely a meere ministery But if ye looke vnto Christ it is a most high authority then which there is vpon earth none greater more profitable or more excellent But the efficacy of it is from the holy Ghost which worketh in the ministerie of the word Iohn 20.22 Receiue the holy Ghost c. Doth this Ecclesiasticall authority differ from the ciuil authority Yes indeed witnes Christ himselfe Luke 12.14 a 22.15 26. 2 Co. 10.4 They do agree indeed in the cause efficient for the author of both is God But they differ first in the matter For the matter of ciuil authority is a society of men and the preseruation therof for the leading of this corporal life vnder one the same magistrat But the matter of Ecclesiastical authority is a company of Christian men so farre forth as they are called of God and consecrated to lead a spirituall life in the true obedience of God Moreouer ciuill authority hath reference vnto 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is to say things earthly and transitory which belong to the vse of this life b 1. Cor. 6.3 Ecclesiastical authority is referred vnto things spirituall and those which appertaine to the
worship of God c 2. Cor. 10.1 6 2 They differ in the proper end For the ende of the magistrate is that he may keepe the societie of men in peace and quietnesse instruct them by good lawes preserue and keepe safe the bodies and goods of his Citizens and maintaine and defend their liues namely so farre forth as they are inhabitants of this world doe liue vpon this earth a Rom. 13.2.5 1 Tim 2 2 albeit euen by him God will haue that same 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of Religion to be preserued as 2. Chron. 15.13 King Asa made a law on this manner If any man seeke not the Lord God of Israell let him die But the direct end of the Pastors is that they may build vp gouerne instruct and teach the consciences of the Citizens of the Church by the word of God so farre forth as they are freemen of the kingdome of heauen and are in time to be gathered together in heauen b Eph. 1● 8 Phil. 3.20 Coloss 3.2.3 whence it is that the Ecclesiasticall authoritie is called Ius poli or the law of heauen and the ciuill authoritie is called Ius Soli or the lawe of the land or soyle 3 They differ in forme for ciuill authoritie for the most part is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and Arbitrarie and therefore Praetory or Dictatory consting in the pleasure of those vpon whom it is bestowed for they haue power of life and death and authoritie to make lawes But the gouernment Ecclesiasticall is onely 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ministratorie bounded within certaine limits and lawes by God himselfe the onele lawgiuer For the Church hath receiued lawes of beleeuing but she makes no lawes neyther can she alter those lawes she hath but must preserue and keepe them and hath no power but as a Deputie or Vicegerent and that at the wil of the Lord and doth onely as an Eccho resound and deliuer that vnto others which it hath heard God speaking in the scriptures a Malach. 2 6.7 Ezech. 3.17 Ier. 23.28 Mat. 28.20 4 They differ in the manner both of their iudgement and execution For the Magistrate iudgeth according to the lawes of man made by himselfe he himselfe weaueth the iudgement webb he condemneth the offender against his will yea though he denie that fact yet by the mouth of witnesses he condemneth him as truly guiltie b Deut 19 15. Mat. 18.16 But the Ecclesiasticall authoritie iudgeth onely according to the written word of God it weaueth not the webb of iudgement but summarily knoweth the whole matter through Charitie and by the mouth of the sinner himselfe and then when he hath confessed the matter then doth he know him as guiltie and exhorteth him to repentance c Mat. 15.25 16 1 Cor 5.4.5 2 Cor. 2.7 7.11 Moreouer the ciuill authoritie executeth iudgement with the carnall sword with fine with imprisonment marshall force with death it selfe the Ecclesiasticall gouernment executeth her decrees with the sword of the spirit that is the word of God namely with censures reproofe suspension and lastly excommunication a 2 Thes 3 14 1 Tim. 1.20 For that the Apostles did sometimes vse corporall punishment b Act. 5.5 13.11 it was a matter extraordinarie when the Magistrate was a wicked man So that the one doth not take away the other but establisheth it Of how many sorts is the Ecclesiasticall authoritie or gouernment Of three sorts the authoritie of Ministerie of Order and of Reproofe or Ecclesiasticall gouernment whereof hereafter in his proper place What is the power of Ministerie It is the authoritie or power of teaching in the Church not euerie thing but that alone which the Lord hath prescribed by his Prophets and Apostles and of administring those Sacraments which he hath instituted according to his ordinance and of blessing of mariages according to the perpetuall vse of the Church which power doth belong onely to the Pastors though oftentimes Deacons in these things haue supplied the Pastors roomes And this is that that is specially meant by the termes of the keyes and of opening and shutting c Mat. 16.19 And it is the former part of the keys for the later part belongeth vnto the discipline of excommunication What is the first part of these keyes Nothing else but the preaching of the Gospell committed vnto the ministers wherby is pronounced vnto the beleeuers free remission of sinnes through Christ and to the vnbeleeuers is denounced the reteining of their sinnes For that which Christ said vnto Peter Math. 16.19 I will giue thee the keyes of the kingdome of heauen whatsoeuer thou shalt binde or loose vpon earth shall bee ratified in heauen Saint Iohn thus properly expoundeth it Iohn 20.23 Receiue the holy Ghost whose sinnes ye remit they shall be remitted and whose sinnes yee retayne they shall be retayned in heauen How many Keyes are there Although there be but one ministerie of the word wherby sins are loosed and bound and therefore there is but one key to open and shut the kingdome of heauen yet notwithstanding in regard of the diuers obiects and effects the Key is accompted to be two fold one loosing or opening the other binding or shutting inasmuch as the same Gospell is the power of God to saluation to euery one that beleeueth Ro. 1.16 the sauour of death vnto death to euery one that doth not beleeue 2. Cor. 2.16 The loosing key is that part of the ministerie whereby remission of sinnes or absolution from sinnes in the name of Christ is pronounced vnto the beleeuers according to the word of God sometime publikely and sometime priuatly And so heauen is opened and the beleeuer is loosed and set at liberty by the preaching of the gospell from the bonds of sinne which hold vs in captiuity yea from death and euerlasting damnation and is declared to be an heire of life eternall a Luk. 1.77 Act. 2.38 Ioh. 20.23 The binding key is the other part of the Ministerie whereby the retention of their sinnes is denounced vnto the vnbeleeuers and disobedient and so heauen is shut vnto them they are bound that is they remaine captiued in the chaines of sinne and are adiudged vnto death and damnation vnlesse Repentance follow And those keyes are of such weight and efficacy that whatsoeuer is opened or remitted and likewse whatsoeuer is shut or retained in earth by the preaching of the Gospell is said also to be opened loosed and remitted and contrarily to be shut bound and reteyned in heauen according to that Luke 10.16 He that heareth you heareth me he that despiseth you despiseth me And Ioh. 7.18.36 Hee that beleeueth shall be saued he that beleeueth not is alreadie condemned So that indeed the key of the ministerie is but one but in vse double But he that beleeueth the gospell by the power of the holy ghost bringeth also faith which is as it were another key of the kingdome of heauen Whereon
beleeuer righteousnes or the washing away of his sins obtained by Christ his bloud to testify his adoption into the couenant of grace his engrafting into Christ the regeneration renuing of his nature or repentance vnto amendmēt by the grace of the holy ghost procured vnto him by the same bloud his communion or fellowship with Christ in all his goodnes and heauenly inheritance ioynt free denization among the citizens of the visible Church of the kingdom of heauen to be held of them in the number of the children of God to enioy the same priuiledges which they do To witnes also that being in like maner baptised he promiseth himselfe to be willing to be reckoned among the people of God to defie Sathan sin the world the flesh al false sects promiseth professeth that he wil liue to Christ to the glory of God Or thus baptisme is a sacrament or seale of the righteousnes of faith that is of our entrance or beginning of our incorporation with Christ of the forgiuenes of our sins of the gift of the holy ghost of regeneration whereby we are seale● vnto Christ incorporated buried with Christ that we die vnto sin by the power of the death of Christ that we rise againe to newnesse of life by the vertue of his resurrection a Rom. 6.3 4.5 1 Pet. 3.22 that we are bound to the true worship of God alone to innocency of life and vnity of the Church wheof it is called the stipulation of a good conscience b that is a mutuall obligation of God of man baptised of God witnessing that he receiueth the person baptised into grace and of the person baptised couenanting with God that he will duly worship and loue him wherof it commeth that none are admitted to the holy supper of the Lord but such as are first baptised because he must first be admitted into the church before he be nourished in the same c Mat. 28.19 Act. 2.41 Ioh. 4.1.2 Mat. 3.11 Ioh 3.5 7 Gal 3 27 1 Cor 6 11 10.2 Tit 3.5 Eph 5.26 How many fold is Baptismes Baptisme in specie or kind is one One Lord one faith one baptisme But seeing in baptisme not the water external actiō is to be considered only but also the inward operation of God in this respect Baptisme is twofold External which is also called the baptisme of water wherwith the minister of the word doth baptise and Internal which is also of the spirit wherby Christ only doth clense our hearts by his blood and giueth his holy spirit and yet the one is not to be separated from the other For the externall is a testimony of the internall that is the Baptisme of water is a pledg of spirituall baptisme and of inward washing and clensing which is done by the blood and spirit of Christ And therefore Christ is said 1. Iohn 5.6 to come in water in the spirit in blood VVho is the author or instituent cause of Baptisme God the father the sonne and the holie ghost 1. by the ministery of Iohn Baptist for it is certaine that Iohn was called of God and sent to baptise and preach repentance amongst the Iewes and therefore Christ saith the baptisme of Iohn was by a metonymie from heauen d Luk. 3.2.3 Ioh. 1.38 that is of God and not of men 2 Further Christ by his owne example confirmed baptisme when he suffered himselfe to be baptised of Iohn e Mat. 21.25 Mat. 3.15 And the whole trinity with most plaine and euident testimonie allowed the same in the baptisme of Christ 3 Besides Christ before his passion sent his disciples to baptise a Ioh. 4.1.2 againe after his resurrection he instructed the same his disciples their successors how to teach and baptise among all nations by this commandement Go thorough the world preach the gospell to euerie creature baptizing them in the name of the father and of the sonne and of the holy ghost Mat. 28.19 whereby it appeareth how greate the dignitie of Baptisme is with what reuerence it should be vsed What is the efficient cause The primarie and true efficient cause is Christ himselfe for he indeede it is who baptiseth vs properly truly into himselfe into his death and resurrection Ephes 5.18 It is Christ that clenseth his church with the washing of water in his word The secundary and instrumentall causes are the ministers for so saith Iohn I baptise you with water b Mat. 3 11 Christ commanded them saying baptise c Mat. 28.19 VVhether may ministers be truly said to baptise that is to clense from sinn and to regenerate No doubt they may for Christ did not restraine his commandement to the washing of water but in general termes said baptise them and Iohn 20.23 they are said to remit sins to beget againe or regenerat 1 Cor. 4.15 I haue begotten you againe in Christ by the Gospell And 1. Cor. 3.6 the Apostle saith that he ministred vnto them the spirit not the Letter but yet sacramentally that is so farre forth as he hath administred those sacraments by which as by instruments Christ himselfe doth wash and regenerate Whose office is it properly to administer Baptisme Theirs to whom the Ministerie of the word is commttted for to whom Christ said Preach the Gospell to them also hee said Baptise And Ephes 5.26 the Apostle conioyneth the washing of water with the word of the Gospell So Iohn Baptist and the Disciples of Christ Baptised who also preached the Gospell Whether may many Ministers baptise any one together They may not for none is said perfectly to baptise but hee who vseth these words saying I baptise thee and therefore that he may speake truly the same men must also administer water VVherin differ the Baptisme of Iohn Baptist and of Christ or his Apostles or those Ministers that followed them Not in the Author in substance in doctrine in signe or ceremonie neither yet in effect or signification For the same sacrament is instituted of God and the same forgiuenesse of sinnes and grace of the holy Ghost is signified offered and sealed whether it bee Iohn that administer or the Apostles or the suceeding Ministers a Luk. 1.3 2.3 The onely difference is touching the verie circumstance and maner of the manifesting of Christ for the same baptisme ia called Iohns because he baptised first and Christs because baptisme hath respect vnto him Again Iohn baptised into him which came immediatly after him that is into Christ who should shortly suffer rise again b Act. 19. ● But the Apostles after thē all Minsters now baptise into Christ that hath suffered and is risen againe VVhy doth Iohn say then Mat. 3.11 I baptise you with water and attributeth onely vnto Christ that he baptiseth with the holy Ghost and and fire Not that he denieth that forgiuenes of sins is giuen by his ministerie and the holy Ghost also for
Church ordained of Christ being euen now about to die for them which are full growne being alreadie baptized and examining themselues wherein by outward breaking of bread and powring out of wine into the cup is represented and as it were is set before the eyes of the faithfull the crucifying of the bodie and shedding of the bloud of Christ for vs and by giuing taking and vsing of those Elements the forgiuenesse of our sins gotten by the death of Christ the inward raking and spirituall enioying of his bodie bloud moreouer communion with Christ ful nourishmēt in Christ viuification and fellowship together with the rest of his liuely members is signified confirmed sealed to the faithful the memorie of so great benefits giuing of thanks is celebrated for the commendable vse of the faithfull assembled together that they may increase in faith and loue For as by baptisme we are borne againe so being borne again wee are fed and nourished by the Supper of the Lord and in Christ wee are as it were nourished and brought vp to life eternall Therfore when as Baptisme may once onely be administred the Supper of the Lord is to be vsed often because in it Christ is giuen vnto vs after the manner of meate but because meat and drinke doe goe away into nourishment they are often in our life time to be taken of vs. Furthermore the first example or patterne of that definition is the historie of the first Supper of the Lord expounded by Paul and of the rest of the Euangelists 1. Cor. 11.23 Mat. 26.26 Mar. 14.22 Luk. 22.19 What is the efficient principall cause of the Lords Supper The Lord himselfe who is the onely testator of the new Testament and the Authour of the Couenant of Grace and GOD the Redeemer in whome alone it haht pleased the Father to gather together all things Ephe. 1.10 And who is the way the trueth and the life Ioh. 14.6 the high priest Heb. 3.1 and the eternall King of the Church Psal 2 6. concerning whom alone the father cryed from heauen heare him Mat. 17.5 from whom it is called the Lords Supper therfore faithfully to be deliuered of the ministers reuerently to be handled neither is it to be depraued by adding minishing changing For Paul saith 1. Cor. 11.23 I haue receiued of the Lord that which I also haue deliuered vnto you namely by the reuelation of Iesus Christ Gal. 1.12 When hee was taken vp into paradise or the third heauen although this letteth not but that hee knewe very many peculiar sayings doings of Christ both from Ananias and also from other disciples of Christ which were eye witnesses and from Luke himselfe At what time was it instituted 1 Cor 1.23 In the yeare of the world 3995. of the age of Christ 33. of March 24. day which was Thursday in the euening surely that night wherein he was betrayed by Iudas vnto the Iewes was the Supper of the Lord instituted 1. First of all because of the figure going before that is to say of the eating of the Pascall Lambe or the legall solemne and Sacramentall Supper in place wherof Christ substituted the Supper Euāgelical Lu. 22.14.19 where that being performed a new institution of this in expresse words is put in the stead therof so the Apostle teacheth 1. Cor. 5.7 Christ our passeouer is sacrificed for vs. From whence it followeth that the Supper of the Lord is our Passouer For the same thing in both is signified namely Christ the true and immaculate sacrifice for the sins of the world there promised here exhibited The remembrance of the like benefite there of the deliuerance out of the bondage of Aegypt and of induction into the promised land here of freedome from the cruell slauerie of Sathan and of introduction into eternall life 2. Secondly because of his passion and death neate approching Dan 9.24 27 the remembrance of which benefit therein performed vnto vs he would set forth in this Supper 3 Thirdly that he might plainely shew a consummation and taking away of al Sacraments and Sacrifices of the Old Testamēt and manner of the Paschall lambe it selfe which he had eaten before with the Disciples 4. Forthly that he might signifie or giue to vnderstand that he came in the fulnesse of time Mat. 11.13 Gal. 3.24 Gal. 4.4 5. That hee might so much the more commend his Supper which being now about to dye he so earnestly commended vnto his Seeing that Christ hauing Supped distributed the Supper to the Disciples in the euening whether is it lawfull for vs to giue it in the morning and to them which are fasting It is lawfull because circumstances of time as both of sitting downe of apparrel and of a certaine number of Communicants doe not appertaine to any mysterie neither are they substantiall p●rt● of the Sacrament neither haue they expres commandement from God because Christ said not This doe yee hauing supped or sitting or standing or so many in number for Christ first did eate the Passeouer because he would after old things institute new But the Eucharist is more conueniently distributed in the morning 1. Because it is an easier thing at that time to haue a holy meeting together forasmuch as in the day time much businesse doth happen wherby men are lead away from holy things 2. Because at that time we are more sober and wee haue a more apt and attentiue minde to perceiue excellent thing Yet notwithstanding the ancient fathers in time of a fast beecause they did spend the whole day in prayers in Sermons and in holy hymnes did giue the Supper of the Lord a little before night And in the time of Augustine in many Churches of Africa as he reporteth the thursday before Easter that the action of Christ might bee the more resembled the Eucharist was giuen to the fathfull in the night and after Supper But this custome was taken away by the sixt Synod or generall Councill which was held at Constantinople Seing that Christ being about to celebrate the Supper abased himselfe to wash the Disciples feete and said vnto them I haue giuing you an example that ye should doe euen as I haue done to you Whether are we being about to communicate tyed to this precept concerning washing of feete Not a whit because Christ did not therfore washe the feet of the Disciples that they should alwaies imitate that fact in kind but that he might driue from them the dreame of a ciuill kingdome of the Messias whereabout they did striue and that hee might shewe in himselfe a perfect example of humilitie like as elswhere hee commaunded that they should shake off the Dust from their feete that they should not beare a staffe nor scrip with them by the way that they should salute no man by the way that they which fast should annoint their head Not that they should drawe these things to a strait obseruation of words but that by this
instituted that they may be hiding places of things signified but that they may bee effectual signes seales and memorials as the Scripture speaketh Aliud existentia aliud significantia saith Augustine that is being one thing and signifying another thing But meerely significatiue or relatiue that is wholy placed in this that according to Gods ordinance declared in the Sacramentall word these things in a mutuall respect reciprocall relation betweene themselues are one certaine thing for as Beda saith vppon Lu 22 Panis ad corpus Christi mysticè vinum ad sanguinem refertur that is Tho bread is referred to the body of Christ mystically the wine to the bloud and are offered to be considered and also to bee taken spiritually by faith the signes of them which doe lawfully administer the Supper but the things are giuen of the Father and Christ the son the holy Ghost working together with them Seing that Aristotle booke 5. chap. 6. of the Metaphysicks doth teach that there are fower kinds of them which are one In number figure generall Analogie which of these waies is the bread the bodie of Christ Neither in number nor figure nor generall kinde but in analogie or proportion and similitude for they are said to be one in proportion whatsoeuer are compared together betweene themselues as one thing to another according to proportion he saith What things soeuer are as one thing to another are said one in respect Therfore the bread and body of Christ or the bread of life are one thing in proportion because both of them doe giue sustenance that is nourishment and increase to a man but that to the bodie but this to the faithfull soule So the wine of the Lord and the bloud of the Lord are one in proportion because they quench thirst and doe refresh but that the bodie this the faithfull soule Whether can that supernaturall coniunction whereby the Deitie of Christ is personally conioyned with the humanity or that miraculous whereby God hauing taken some visible shapes disclosed himselfe to some men as when God is said to haue appeared to Moses in a flame of fire in a bush a Exod. 3 2 or when the holy Ghost descended vpon Christ in the shape of a Doue Mat. 3.16 or when it was giuen to the Disciples by the breathing of Christ and with firie tongues Iohn 20.22 Act. 2.3 take place here No because the the personall vnion and the Sacramentall vnion doe differ in the whole kinde and because the condition of that bread should be better then of all the faithfull men to whom the bodie of Christ is vnited not personally but only mystically Moreouer the body of Christ is one thing which cannot bee in many places God or the holy Spirit another thing which is euery where And besides we may not argue from that which is done against order by miracle to that which is ordinary in the Church of God of which sort is the Supper of the Lord according to his owne precept Doe this Finally neither that Doue which Iohn Baptist saw descending from heauen vpon Christ nor that breath wherewith he breathed vpon his Disciples nor the fierie tongues which sate vpon each of the Disciples were God or the holy Ghost essentially or had the holy Spirit in them but were signes of that spirit both in Christ and also in the Disciples Is it true in all things that those things which are ioyned by Gods ordinance in a peculiar manner are affirmed one of another as This man is God the Doue is the Holy Ghost No otherwise we might say truely in a man The soule is the bodie and in Christ The Humanitie is the Diuinitie and in a fired sword the sword is the fire or the fire is the sword which yet no man doth grant But it is true chiefly in the propositions concerning the person of Christ when as for the same substantial word they put in concrete words as wel this man as this God But the personall vnion is not placed in the Sacrament wherefore it cannot bee that that should be alike true This man is God that This bread is the body of Christ Moreouer in symbolicall and Sacramentall speaches as we read that the holy Ghost was seene of Iohn descending like a Doue because the Doue was the signe of the Holy Ghost and so we grant that the bread is the bodie of Christ But concerning a vessell of wine we say truely but yet figuratiuely This is wine seing that there are two substances their ioyned and as it were the thing contained in the thing containing as also of an Angell appearing in mans shape it might bee saide This is an Angell but as a thing in a place which that it cannot be said of the body of Christ in the bread hath beene alreadie proued at large Why therefore are the Sacramentall signes called Exhibitiue Because the Lord doth so truely exhibit and giue himselfe being the bread celestiall ●ucer comment vpon the Ephes and that of eternall life to those which are his like as he gaue truly to his Disciples the holy Ghost by the signe of the breath of his mouth or as by the touching of the hand hee gaue vnto many health of bodie and minde as sight by clay made of spittell as by circumcision of the flesh the circumcision of the heart and as by baptisme Regeneration For they which with a true faith doe communicate with the signes corporally doe receiue true confirmation and increase of the communion of the bodie and bloud of the Lord spiritually But Irenaeus saith that the Eucharist doth consist of two things of an Earthly and a Heauenly Rightly yet we must not thinke that it is compounded or whole altogether substantiall or some subsisting thing made of whole parts as a man of bodie and of soule and the bodie of an head and a trunke but it is a holy action or a diuine ordinance wherein at one time but not in one place diuers things are distinctly propounded and deliuered no otherwise then as a pledge being deliuered or the earnest of any thing the thing it selfe was wont to be deliuered also together To what purpose commaunded the Lord to make his Supper Not for an vnbloudy oblation of his body to God the Father for the sinnes of the quick and dead or for a Scenical representation of the death of Christ but for a commemoration of his death for he saith Doe this in remembrance of me that is to say to bee celebrated in the assembly of the faithfull to that end a Luke 22 19. to which purpose also serueth the words of Paule verse 26. declaring what that is In remembrance of me For as often as ye shall eate of this bread and drinke of this cup ye shew the Lords death vntill he come Verse 25. That is 1 Cor. 11.24 call to minde and speake of the whole obedience of Christ and all his benefits with a thankfull mind