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A17191 A most godly and learned discourse of the woorthynesse, authoritie, and sufficiencie of the holy scripture also of the cleerenesse, and plainnesse of the same, and of the true vse thereof. Wherin is discussed this famous question: whether the canonical scriptures haue authoritie from the church, or rather the church receiue authoritie from the Scriptures. By occasion wherof are touched the dignities and duties of the church, touching traditions, with aunswere to all obiections. Translated out of Latine into English, by Iohn Tomkys: and dedicated to the right honorable Sir Richarde Pipe, knight, lorde maior of the citie of London.; De scripturae sanctae praestantia. English. Tomkys, John.; Bullinger, Heinrich, 1504-1575. 1579 (1579) STC 4067; ESTC S112817 96,469 260

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will is to bee celebrated both heree in the euerlasting life Therfore it is godlinesse diligently to collect with thankful minde to cōsider all the giftes all the riches wherewith the Church is adorned enriched Shee hath the sōne of God for her head spouse and sauiour vnto whom she is maried in faith shee hath the ioyfull newes of the Gospel she hath the holy Ghost for her gouernour shee hath the ministerie prolonged by the Fathers the Prophetes Christ the Apostles which haue most plentifully bestowed vpon her as vpon a riche treasure house as saith Irenaeus all things apperteyning to trueth that euerie one which will may drawe forth of her the drinke of life shee hath Pastours authoritie to call Ministers for the setting forth and conseruing of the gospel of whom it is writtē How beautiful are the feete of thē which bring good tidings of peace bring good tidings of good things Shee hath excellent gifts vnderstanding the inerpretation of doctrine giuen by diuine inspiration shee hath also the administration of Sacramentes a certaine iurisdiction of her own lawes of her owne The holy Scripture adorning her with marueilous prayses calleth her thoroughly ●re The paradise of the great worke●n The citie of the holy king cleare as ●e dawning of the daye bright as the ●orning beautifull as the Moone elect the Sūne who smelleth of ointments ●tandeth at the right hande of the king ●cked with imbrodered gardes of diuers ●●lours who hath no obscure thing and 〈◊〉 through Christ altogither most white Therefore because the sweete name of the Church is ful of worthinesse re●erence herevpon it cōmeth to passe that ●anie eloquent learned men doe with ●ately plentiful gorgious speache ex●ll amplifie exaggerate the maiestie ●reheminence authoritie dignitie ther●f so that they doe affirme that she hath ●orce and power aboue the written word ●f God thinke that Christians ought ●o giue place to her in all thinges For ●herevpon the aduersaries of the trueth gather that the Church is more ancient than the Scripture that the Scripture hath her authoritie from the Church that the Church of the Fathers continued 2449. yeares before anie thing was written touching religion Also that the Church of the new Testament was gathered togither many yeres with the liuely voyce of the Gospell before any thing was written by the Apostles And because the Church receiued the Scripture allowed it by her owne iudgement that the authoritie of the Church which receiued and allowed is greater than the authoritie of the Scriptures which were receiued and allowed And therefore that the authoritie of the Church is not only not inferiour not only equall but rather superiour and better knowen than the authoritie of the scripture For the Church hath approued the chiefest scriptures to be Canonical whiche approbation they neither had of thēselues nor of their authours Otherwise what cause is there why wee should receiue the Gospell of S. Marke whiche sawe not Christ and yet not receiue the Gospell of Nicodemus which nowe also is extant who notwithstanding both saw Christ and was his schollar Moreouer why is the Gospell of Luke the disciple admitted the gospel of Bartholomewe the Apostle reiected Truelie they haue ●r authoritie not from the authours ●n whome they come but from the ●●urch No holy Scripture doth shewe 〈◊〉 the rest of the Scriptures which we ●e are canonical and worthie credite 〈◊〉 cōsent of the Church hath made them ●benticall So that Augustine saieth ●ll I would not beleeue the Gospell ●re it not that the authoritie of the ●tholicall Church doeth moue mee ●o And especially because there were ●e in times past which both reiected ●o written gospels the Euangelistes ●o which wrote them sticking forsooth ●ought false religion to Christ only who ●ither wrote him self neither comman●●d to be written but to be preached and ●●lled his doctrine not scripture that is 〈◊〉 say writing but the Gospell that is to ●y ioyfull newes But if wee giue place ●rein to the Church as by right wee ●●ght al to giue place vnto her why then ●ould we not also giue place vnto her in ●e matter of the holy Sacramentes in ●●her pointes That the Apostles did ●rite certaine things not that their wri●●ngs shold rule our faith religion but ●at their writings should rather serue our faith and religion And that it is not to be thought that the Apostles were able to comprehend in their Epistles al the preceptes and mysteries of our faith and of christian doctrine that Christ and his Apostles in so many yeres preached much more than could be cōprehended within the narow roome of the bokes of the new testament And that therefore so short an abridgemēt of the gospell was put in writing that the greatest part thereof as a rich treasure might be left to the traditions fastened in the inward bowels of the church That therefore many things are to be beleeued which are not written that the constant sentence of the church ought to be accepted as the gospel that therefore in matter of doubt in anie raised cōtrouersie the authoritie of the traditiō of the church is more effectuall to cause credit to be giuen to proue certainly then the scriptures because the tradition is more euident and plaine altogether vnflexible when as contrarilie the Scriptures be oftentimes very obscure and do suffer them selues to be wrested applied to a diuers meaning yea to that meaning which any shall presume with him selfe ●efore hand easily to be shifted of with 〈◊〉 craftie exposition And that therefore the common sentence of the tradition of the church is the certaine and inflexible ●●le of the Scriptures And to be briefe ●hat the exactest squier paterne rule of ●●ith is not the scripture but the iudgement of the Church That the saying of Christe is If hee will not heare the church let him be to thee as an heathē man a Publicane That the church is the piller ground of trueth and that ●he can not erre because Christ promised to her the holy Ghost which shoulde leade her into al truth S. Paul exhorteth vs saying Brethren stand fast holde the ordinances which yee haue bene taught c. To be brief they go about to proue by the testimonie of the Prophete Hieremie that this is the propertie of the doctrine of the newe testamēt which first was published by Christ and afterward by the instruction of the holy ghost was preached by the Apostles spread abroad throughout the whole world wherby God would haue it to be knowen frō the doctrine of the olde testament that it should neither bee ingraued in tables of stone nor written with inke and paper That the Apostles were commāded by Christ to preach not to write Finally they dispute much of the briefnesse insufficiencie flexiblenesse ambiguitie and
diuerse not an other but one and the selfe same For although they wrote not all thinges yet had they an especial care that what they deliuered by tradition might bee manifestly inferred foorth of those thinges which were written by them selues or in other holy Bookes of Scripture Otherwise diuers superstitions might be bragged off euery where as receiued from ancient time as deliuered by the Apostles which can be knowen by none other meanes but because they are not agreeable to the Scriptures whereby as by a rule and squire all traditions constitutions and rites ought to be examined and tried because the Churche doeth not binde the consciences of the faithful vnto her constitutions but onely so farre foorth as they doe agree with the commaundements of our Lord Iesus Christ For she knoweth that it is written Thou haste charged that we shall diligently keepe thy commaundements The xxi Chapter That the doctrine which the Apostles taught by liuely voice which they deliuered in writing is all one that this is the fourme of the traditions of the Apostles if they agree with the holy Scriptures WWhereas I haue boldely affirmed that it is one and the selfe same doctrine which the Apostles taught whether it were by liuely voice or by Epistles it may bee proued both foorth of the holy Scriptures and by the testimonies of the Fathers and is also manifest by the consent of the Church It is a tradition of Paule that a woman haue her head couered in the Church and that Christians which are poore laboure with their handes and liue not idlely But whereas he professeth these traditions to be his owne doeth he propose them nakedly and simply to the Churches both without proofe and iudgment onelie vnder this title he wil haue them receiued bycause they be the traditions of the Apostles Not so but he goeth about to approue and confirme them by effectuall reasons yea and by proofes drawen forth of the Scripture and giueth the Church leaue to iudge of them The same Apostle writeth also in an other place that all things be doone honestly and in order We haue therefore the forme of the traditions of the Apostles foorth of these Namely if they agree with the holye Scriptures if they be confirmed by substanciall reason by aptnesse of edifying by the example of Churches by comlines and order And we also ought to examine the traditions of the Church by the very same proofes But now a dayes when as testimonie forth of the holy Scriptures is required touching any thing or when a reason should be yeelded concerning abuses and superstitions Antichristes haue alwayes in their mouth It is a tradition you may not inquire of it But the traditions which are proposed vnto vs are to be examined by the rule of God his word neither would Paule that they should otherwise be beleeued And let our aduersaries doe this also if they woulde haue their traditions to take place And it is the consent of the Catholike church that the Apostles did not deliuer to the Church such things as are straunge and disagreable to those thinges which are contained in the Canonicall Scripture Cōcerning the which thing I wil allege some moste euident testimonyes of certaine olde writers Irenaeus declareth that the very same Gospel which the Apostles preached with liuely voice they did afterwarde deliuer vnto the Church in the Scriptures by the will of God that this written Gospell might be the ground and piller of our faith euen of that true liuely faith which the Church learned of the Apostles and distributed to the children Therefore the Apostles taught nothing by liuely voice contrarie to those things which they haue comprehended in the Scripture of the new Testament The saying of the same Irenaeus in Eusebius is worthy memory where he sheweth that Polycarpe preached those thinges which he had learned of them who had seene the woorde of life themselues 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is to saye all agreable to the Scriptures This surely is a golden saying of Irenaeus which also declareth certaine sentences of olde writers touching traditions and doeth fully agree with that fourme of traditions whiche wee haue taught foorth of Paule The Apostles taught many things with liuely voice Apostolike men receaued them beeing so taught which afterwarde they deliuered ouer againe to their disciples but Irenaeus saith that those thinges were all 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 agreable to the Scriptures Therefore by the testimony of Irenaeus the Apostles deliuered nothing to the church by liuely voice which might dissent frō the Scriptures Wherfore if the Papists wold haue vs to receaue and reuerence as Apostolike the traditions which they haue vndertaken to defend let thē shewe their 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 agreablenesse with the Canonicall Scripture And if they can not shew this let thē with shame acknowledge their vanitie For no traditions are to be esteemed necessarie for saluation which are not proued firmly and strongly forth of the scripture For Tertullian saith We haue no neede of curiositie after Christ nor of inquisition after the Gospel When we beleeue we desire nothing beyond our beliefe For this wee beleeue first that there is nothing which we ought to beleue more Wel saith Ierom the sword of God which is the liuely worde of God striketh those things which men of their owne accorde finde forth and faine as it were by the tradition of the Apostles without the authoritie testimonies of the scriptures And Augustine pronounceth a curse against all Angels and men which shall preach vnto vs any thinge either of Christe or of his Church or of any other thing which pertaineth vnto faith or to our life besides that which we haue receiued in the scriptures of the lawe and of the Gospel We alleged lately more testimonyes of the Fathers which the diligent Reader may consider in their place VVe haue therefore by the tradition of the Apostles preached none other Gospell then that whiche is contained in the canonicall Scripture and that by the saide Scripture wee may iudge which be the traditions of the Apostles If our aduersaries did reuerence the consent of the Church with al their heart as in woordes they take vppon them would they dispise it at their pleasure with such impudencie They brag of their tradition vnto the Churche as though they came from the Apostles which euen by their own witnesse can be proued by no Scriptures Are they so senselesse and blockishe that they vnderstand not what the Catholike consent doth pronounce touching them Wee lastely heard that such like traditions are to be stroken with the sword of God his worde and that the preachers thereof are subiect to the curse and to be sente into the tentes of Heretikes O foolishe and miserable louers of darkenesse O blasphemous corrupters of the Scriptures when will you waxe wise when will you acknowledge your errour when
doting and fabulous deuises into the Churche and did not erre himselfe onely from the sinceritie and purenes of the faith but gaue occasion of erring to many woorthie men also For Irenaeus Tertullian Apollinarius Victorinus Lactantius and many other famous and woorthie men as Hierome witnesseth imbraced this doting toy of the thousande yeares as a tradition of the Apostles Good God what men became companions of this errour pretending as Eusebius saieth the antiquitie of the errour of so woorthie a man euen of Papias their guide Beholde whether the authority of traditions not written once receiued may leade vs out of the way O laudable agreement of traditions with the Scripture spoken of by Policarpe an Apostolicall man also whiche kepte him in the kinges highe way Therefore this deceite and guile of vnwrittē traditions stuck in the church which gaue occasion of going out of the right way euen to them which seeme to defende the Churche which may be proued by many examples whereof I will recite one or two which are plaine The fame of Clement of Alexādria is great in all antiquitie And hee was a man which both most diligētly searched forth and greatly reuerenced vnwritten traditions Wherefore he sayeth that the labourer which is sent foorth into the Lordes haruest hath a double husbandrie 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 vnwritten written And hee yeeldeth this reason why hee searched other traditions touching the doctrines of faith beside the Scripture because forsooth the Lorde did not reueale to manie those thinges which did not belong to manie 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Secretes saieth hee are committed to woorde not to writing Also Mysteries are deliuered mystically And in his fifth booke of Stromates hee disputeth at large that euen as the Philosophers did so hide certayne secretes touching their doctrines that they shoulde not bee knowen to all men so doeth the Apostle also reteining that auncient conceyling say Wee speake wisedome among them that ●re perfect Hee citeth also foorth of a ●ertaine Apocriphall Gospell this pre●ept of the Lorde My mysterie is mine owne and the Sonnes of mine house But if it may please you to compare the one with the other you ●hall finde that these are the very selfe same thinges whiche in Irenaeus and Tertullian the Valentinians Carpocratians and other Heretikes alledge for the defence and confirmation of their doctrines Therefore although this iudgement in Heretikes were then grauely repressed by Irenaeus and Tertullian yet Clement his talke doeth shewe that the infection stucke in the Churche to the posteritie And Clement doeth extoll in many woordes a certayne kinde of Gnostikes whom in these woordes hee describeth That is the knowledge which maketh a true Gnostike which commeth deliuered without writing by succession to a few from the Apostles This description of Clement is to be noted For although the heresie of the Gnostikes were condemned in the Church yet certaine seedes of this plague remained in the Churche and that in greate men Therefore Clement doeth magnifie vnwritten traditions and doeth not onely make them equall with the Scriptures but see whither this rule of traditions doeth lead him out of the way yea casteth him downe headlong I wil report of manie thinges a fewe whereby it shall appeare howe perilous a thing it is to followe 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 thinges vnwritten He intermedleth the Gospel with the decrees of Philosophie and maketh it equal with the lawe of god For saith he as the law was an instruction for the Iewes to Christ so was philosophie for the Greekes also And he attributeth power to iustifie to both as well to the lawe as to Philosophie which is most manifestly against the doctrine of Paule He ●enieth that men committing sinne after ●aptism ought to be receiued into grace ●hich also is contrary to the doctrine of ●e Gospel and the consent of the Catho●●ke Churche Hee yeeldeth place to re●entance after this life in his sixth booke ●e contendeth in manie wordes that the ●reekes were saued through Philoso●hie which iudgement if we do imbrace 〈◊〉 not Christ dead in vaine according to ●e doctrine of Paule Is not Christ be●●me vnto vs of none effect and doe wee ●t fal from grace to make short he reue●ceth many doting toyes as traditions 〈◊〉 the Apostles Loe whither they fall ●hich wil be wise beyond the scripture Origen his witte than the which ●here was skant any other among the fa●hers of the Church either more fine or ●ore excellēt was depraued by this Clement who had vnwritten traditions in so ●reat admiratiō For he hath stuffed full his bookes euerie where with straunge ●octrines which hee had receiued from Clement vnder the title of the traditions of the Apostles wherevppon he is so often noted reprooued and nipped both of the olde writers and of the newe Hierom calleth Origen his doctrines impoysoned But from whence supped he his poyson but from the instruction of Clement And by whom was Clement deceiued but by the admiration studie and reuerence of suche traditions In deede the Apocriphall booke of Hormas the Pastour doeth teache that in the interpretation o● Scripture wee must departe from the letter and searche foorth the allegorie Clement receiued this as a tradition of the Apostles and deliuered it to Origen vnder the same title Herevppon was kindled an incredible desire in this man to transforme the Scriptures into allegories with the infection of the which disease it is woonderfull howe hee corrupted afterwarde the mindes of all doctours For after they had once tasted the sweetnesse of allegories as of a more loftie vnderstanding they vaunted themselues immoderately and brought euery thing to allegories so that euerie one thought that he might lawfully say what he woulde herein And this euill did not stay it selfe within the East but inuaded Afrike Italie France and Spayne also So by a little and a little the purenesse of Christian Theologie was transformed into a certaine Philosophie And wee may thanke suche traditions for this fruite And Epiphanius was a great boaster of such traditions who sometime alledgeth thinges vnder this title which are taken foorth of Apocriphall writers What neede many woordes Whosoeuer haue beene bewitched with the admiration of suche like traditions they haue all turned from the purenes of the Apostles doctrine vnto strange opinions vnsauorie follies So that these traditions seme vnto me to be like the meteorologicall fire which will burne nothing which naturall Philosophers call leaping goates For as that fire appeareth in the night ouer moist fēnie places leadeth trauellers in the night out of their way if they meruayle at it and bee afrayde to beholde it vppon the which fraude it is called in Duitche Droechliecht deceitfull lighte euen so the Ghost or phantasticall appearance of Tradition leadeth them which haue it in admiration out of the way from trueth and throweth thē into errours And this
at the last shewe it selfe againe Nowe since Augustine teacheth that in those things which are plainly sette forth in Scriptures may bee founde all things that conteine faith and maners of liuing that is to say hope charitie ●hat wickednesse is it to accuse the ●cripture of darkenesse Hee did not 〈◊〉 which sayde Thy worde is a Lan●erne vnto my feete and a light vnto ●ny pathes Also The Testimonie of ●he Lorde is sure and giueth wisdome ●o the simple Againe I haue more ●nderstanding than my teachers for ●hy testimonies are my studie I am ●iser than the aged because I keepe ●hy commandements Also Peter say●th We haue also a right sure worde ●f prophesie wherevnto if you take ●eede as vnto a light that shineth in ● darke place ye do well vntill the day ●awne and the day starre arise in your ●eartes And will they call the Scrip●ures so obscure intricate and harde wherevnto Peter ascribeth clearenesse ●s vnto those which are able to guide vs ●ertainly that we go not out of the way ●o not in the greatest darkenesse in the worlde For that Gospel which the Lord commanded to be preached to eue●ie creature hath hee also promised to make knowne to euerie creature if one will aske it Therefore those thinges which concerne saluation are so aptly plainly and abundantly proposed expoūded and repeated in the Scriptures euerie where that for the vnderstanding thereof the onely declaration of the Euangelistes and continuall reading of the rest of the bookes of Scripture may suffice a minde lightened with the light of fayth without the which no poynt of Religion can bee soundely vnderstoode and willing to obey god Whiche two namely fayth and her companion the studie of obedience are verie necessarie for the right vnderstanding of those thinges whiche belong to Christ as these woordes of the Lord doe well shewe My doctrine is not mine but his that sent mee If anie will doe his will hee shall knowe of the doctrine whether it be of GOD or whether I speake of my selfe Also Howe can yee beleeue whiche receiue honour one of another and seeke not the honour that commeth of God only If our Gospel be hid it is hidde in them that are lost In whom the God of this world hath blinded the mindes ●f them which beleeue not least the ●ight of the Gospel of the glorie of Christ should shine vnto them 2. Cor. ● In deed I do confesse that euery one ●an not easily aptly expound the scrip●ures and I will that the consente of Churches haue their place in determi●ing and ending the questions of fayth ●ut yet so that it be not disioyned frō the Scripture without the which the authoritie of the church hath litle strēgth And ●orsomuch as all points of religion must ●e tried proued by the testimonies of ●cripture as lately we haue declared it must necessarily follow that among all things which concerne religion the said testimonies are most certaine cleare Herevpō it resteth that the holy fathers cōmend the scripture vnto vs because of ●he light the clearnes the certaintie the plainnes therof so farre off are they from complaining that it is vncertaine intricate hard apt to be applied both the ways Very wel said August When disputatiō●s had of an obscure matter if the certaine and cleare instructions of holie Scriptures doe not further the cause man his presumption ought to stay it selfe doing nothing by declining to either part What place I beseech you shall this sentence haue if God his truth haue not firme and constant certaintie in the Scriptures yea and such certaintie as cannot be battered with any engines Therefore doeth he afterward conclude that he doeth beleeue that nothing is necessarie to be knowen for saluatiō which hath not most cleare proofe in the scriptures We will yet adde herevnto a few testimonies concerning the plainnesse and easinesse of the Scripture Cyrillus contra Iulianum libro septimo answering this obiection That the Scripture hath a base and common stile and manner of speaking saieth That the thinges therein contayned might bee knowen to all little great they are profitably vttered in familiar speach so that they should not passe the capacitie of anie Vnto the which saying Lactantius agreeth who saith What cannot God the framer of the minde and of the voice and of the tongue speake eloquently nay rather his will was of his singuler prouidence that those thinges which be diuine shoulde want painted and fine speach that all might vnderstande what he spake to all And Basilius in Hexameron Homil 3. saith The doctrine of the truth is common in speache but stable and firme in knowledge Chrysostomus Homil. 1. in Iohannem speaking of the Gospel written by saint Iohn saith His doctrine is clearer than the Sunne and plainer And Ambrose sayeth Paule in most points doth expound himselfe in his owne words that he which intreateth of him can finde nothing of his owne which hee may adde or if hee would say anie thing he shal rather vse the place of a Grammarian than of a disputer I cease to recite more testimonies touching the plainenesse and easinesse of the scriptures for what needeth it Truely it is an horrible blasphemie to say that the holy ghost hath so doubtfully set forth this his doctrine which is the onely and true wisdome vnderstanding of the church that it must bee expounded by man his wisdome and left it so obscure that it must bee made plaine by man his cunning This is no lesse absurde then if a man shoulde goe aboute to mende the brightnesse of the Sunne by lighting of Torches Yea holy scripture of it selfe being set foorth of the perfectest doctour of all were able to make a man wise vnto saluation as Paule preacheth But that I may at the last come to the conclusion Forsomuch as all doctrines of Religion are to bee examined and determined by the iudgement of Scripture all questions of faith are to be defined by the same and all poyntes of Religion are to bee tried and proued by the testimonies thereof Truely it cannot bee doubted that the authoritie of the vniuersall Church doeth stand and depende chiefly of the oracles and authoritie of holie Scripture and that the testimonies of GOD his woorde are especiallie to be required in all things which are set foorth in the name and authoritie of the Church The .vij. Chapter Wherevpon the Scripture is called canonicall Also testimonies of the Fathers touching the most excellent authoritie thereof THe name of Canonicall Scripture is of great r●nowne which wel proueth and confirmeth whatsoeuer we haue hitherto spoken of the authoritie perfection and suffici●ncie thereof Aristotle disputing in his Politikes whether it be better to gouerne a common wealth according to the lawes written or according to the will of the gouernours vseth the woorde 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Therefore as the
is necessarie for vs to folowe the holie scriptures and in nothing to depart from their determination Ambrose de officiis lib. 1. saith We may vse as we will those things which we finde not in holy scripture In the commentaries vpon the 86. Psalme which are set foorth in Hierom his name wee reade these wordes The Lorde shall rehearse it in the scripture of his people and of the Princes which were in her Howe shall the Lorde rehearse it Not by woorde but by writing By whose writing By the writing of his people that is to say by the holy scripture which is read to all people that is that all may vnderstande it Plato wrote not to the people but to a few for scantly three men vnderstand him But these that is to say the princes of Christ wrote not for a few but for all the people not that a few might vnderstande but that all might vnderstande And he sayth by the writing of his Princes that is to say of the Apostles and of the Euangelistes of them which were in her See what he sayth which were not which are that the Apostles onely excepted what thing else soeuer shall be sayde afterward might be cut off and not haue authoritie Therefore although any one be holy after the Apostles although he be eloquent let him not haue authoritie Because the Lorde rehearseth it in the Scripture of his people and of the Princes which were in her Cyrill or whether it be Origen in Leuiticum cap. 5. sayeth If thou canst not finishe all the flesh of the sacrifice the second day thou shalte eate none of it the thirde day c. I saith he doe suppose that by this space of two dayes may be vnderstanded the two Testamentes wherein euerie woorde which pertayneth to GOD may be sought for and discussed and all knowledge of thinges may be learned foorth of them And if there be any thing ouer the which holy Scripture cannot determine that none other thirde Scripture ought to be brought in for authoritie of the knowledge I coulde bring more suche like sayinges foorth of the Fathers but I trust I haue throughly satisfied the indifferent Reader with these Therefore all the sayinges and writinges of men whatsoeuer they be are to bee examined and tried by the lawe and by the Prophetes and by the Apostles writinges as in the moste certayne balaunce and so haue the moste holie Fathers iudged one and all For greater is the authoritie of Canonicall Scripture then of anie man of anie Byshoppes of anie Synode yea or of all the Churche Neither can the authoritie of the vniuersall church although it be gathered together whollye into one place foorth of all her members which euer were or be or in yeares to come shall bee deserue cre●ite in anie thing without the testimonies of Scripture So that Panormitane sayde neither foolishely nor falsely More credit is to be yeelded to one Laie man alledging the scriptures then to a general Councell representing the vniuersall Church if it bring no scriptures vnto whom Iohn Gerson agreeth when as he saith That the consent and voice of one learned man alleadging the scripture fittly is to be preferred before a generall Councell And it is prooued by the example of the Nicen Synode which had receiued the superstitious law of the single life of priestes had not Paphnutius onelie withstoode it Therefore if the disputations of the Fathers or their sentences or their expositions of the Scriptures doe disagree with the Canonicall Scripture and rule of fayth there is no cause why any shoulde obiecte their authoritie vnto vs For if the contētion be touching learning holinesse and auncientnes the Prophets and the Apostles of Christ be more learned more holie and more auncient Neither is there anie cause why anie shoulde obiect vnto vs the consent of many Churches in this or that opinion For the consent of Christ of the Prophetes of the Apostles yea and of the Patriarches in sincere religion and in the holy sense of religion reuealed manifestly to vs by the Scriptures is more to bee esteemed from whose godly and religious iudgement wee must neuer departe But if anie reckon vp manie and whole kingdomes whiche haue beene of this or that opinion wee oppose against him the laboures of Paule one holie Apostle who filled the greatest partes of the worlde with the simple sense of the Gospel euen from Hierusalem and the coastes rounde aboute vnto Illiricum And forsomuch as by Augustine his authoritie generall Councels must be sometime corrected by the later and those assemblies which are to bee corrected muste needes bee in errour it followeth that all the authoritie of the Churche and of Councels stayeth it selfe by the Canonicall Scripture vnto the which onelie GOD his will is that this happines is peculiar that in it there is none errour The ix Chapter That the Canonicall Scripture hath the chiefe perfection of her authoritie from the holie Ghoste and of herselfe And contrarily that the Churche receiueth her authoritie from the Scripture HEtherto we haue yeelded many reasons for the most excellent authoritie of the Canonicall Scripture Nowe the question is from whence the scripture hath or receiueth this most excellent and perfecte authoritie or by whom the Canon was made whervnto the Canonical bookes pertayne The Papistes saie that the Scripture hath her authoritie from the Churche and that therefore the authoritie of the Churche is greater then the authoritie of the Scriptures As though the worde of GOD which endureth for euer were subiecte to mens decrees or as though GOD his truth shoulde intreate men to authorize it It is not so The woorde of GOD is of it selfe moste sure and needeth not the propping vppe of men but holdeth vp all thinges Heauen and earth shall passe away but my wordes shall in no wise passe away The Scripture receiueth her strength or authoritie chiefely from GOD from whom it was reueiled that is to say that it came not by the will of men but that the men of GOD beyng mooued by the holie Ghoste both spake and wrote whom beeyng chosen and elected for this office GOD adorned with manye and sundrie myracles and diuine testimonies So that there is no doubte at all but that those thinges were geuen from GOD by inspiration whiche they wrote and sette downe And the selfe same spirite which hath caused these thinges to bee written assureth vs that they are not the inuentions of men And when the spirite of GOD doeth herein witnesse to our spirit seale vp the Scripture in our heartes the faythfull soule doeth marueilously reioyce and is greatly confirmed Therefore we being illuminated by the vertue of the spirit doe not nowe beleeue either through our own iudgement or through the iudgement of other that the Scripture is of God but doe most certainlie perswade our selues aboue mans iudgement none otherwise then if wee
shall not be so But they woulde haue vs to departe from the most manifest meaning of the place and to receiue I knowe not what maner of interpretations The Lawe of God forbiddeth the setting vp of Images to be woorshipped but they will haue Images to be and to be woorshipped in Temples and in Oratories Paule sayth Let no man iudge you in meate or in drinke And yet they brought in the superstitious choyse of meates so that they accompt it an offence more haynous than adulterie to eate fleshe on the Friday or in Lent. The Scripture decreeth that wee are iustified by fayth without woorkes but they by their exposition contende that wee are iustified by woorkes I beseech you is this to in●erprete the Scriptures or to shift them of What man is there so blinde which seeth and perceiueth not that ●heir gloses be altogether cleane con●rary to the text They haue adiudged his power of interpreting the Scriptures ●o be as it were their owne of right and ●o them onely appertaining that they ●ay at theire pleasure bring into the Church strange iudgementes and vnknowen doctrines and that they may as shall seeme best vnto them fight against the woord of god For their right of authenticall interpretation will take awaie all scruple Neither can there be anie testimonie obiected to the contrarie be it neuer so cleare be it neuer so strong but they will by one meanes or by an other shift it of For they will verie easely escape by one cauill or an other because against all contrarie reasons this shal be a brasen walle Thus the church iudgeth If anie man haue say they the interpretation of the Church of Rome touching any place of Scripture although he neither knowe nor vnderstande whether it doe or how it may agree with the words of Scripture yet hath he the verie word of god Nowe the interpretation of the Church of Rome shal be Behold heere are two swoordes that is to say the Bishoppe of Rome hath the administration of either swoorde both of the spirituall and politique Elizeus by a miracle made bitter waters sweet by casting salt into them that is there must be in the Churche exorcised water and hallowed salte whose efficacie we must beleeue to be of great force against the Diuell and against sinnes This doe in the remembrance of me That is Priests must offer in the Masse the body and blood of the Lord for the quicke and the dead If thou reclaime that these be corruptions not interpretations thou shalt heare them say The Church so vnderstādeth these places And wilt thou reiect the interpretation of the Church Therefore no man maie presume to gainesay this Dictatourlike Pretorlike power of interpreting which doubteth not thus to peruert the wordes of Scripture according to their owne opinions The Priests Scribes Pharisies of the Iewes in times past dealt none otherwise but Christ that true Priest hath confuted their wicked and peruerse interpretations God commāded in the Law Honour thy father and thy mother but the Priests moued through couetousnesse set this commandement at large and weakned it by absoluing the children from the burden of nourishing their Parentes perswading them to offer daintie and fatte oblations which might profite their parentes more than foode The Lorde hath gainsayde them and witnessed that the commaundement of GOD is corrupted and made of none effect by this craftie interpretation They did also dispense with oathes and taught that some oathes were strong some weake and here the Lorde opposed himselfe also against their false expositions and confuted their interpretations They taught also that the Lawe of God is fulfilled by outward discipline if men doe conforme them selues therevnto by outwarde woorkes onely But Christ laying away their peeuish gloses hath declared that the Lawe doeth not onelie require outwarde workes but also godly and holy motions of the minde Therefore let the Lawe of proouing interpretations remaine inuiolated neither muste wee yeelde to all maner interpretations without iudgement For the Church hath the right and libertie to iudge as sayeth Paule Let the other iudge My purpose was saith Ierome not to drawe the Scriptures to my wil but to saye that which I vnderstoode the Scriptures would For it is the duetie of a Commentatour to expound not what hee will him selfe but what he meaneth whome hee doeth interprete Otherwise if he shall speake contrarie things he shall not be an interpreter but his aduersarie whome hee taketh vpon him to expounde Truely wheresoeuer I doe not interprete the Scriptures but speake freely of mine owne iudgement let him reprooue me that will. Thus much hath Ierome Certainly you shall neuer finde in the Fathers that the Scriptures are hereby to be vnderstoode because this or that Councell did thus or thus interprete them And Augustine in his bookes of Christian doctrine doeth sette foorth verie manie wayes of interpreting the Scriptures and yet doeth he neuer bind vs either to Councels or to the Churche The .xviij. Chapter Of the saying of Christ If he will not heare the Church let him be vnto thee as an heathen man and a Publicane THey which seeke a certaine Lord-like gouernment of all religion vnder the counterfeit colour of the Church because they see little aide or none in the Scripture holde forth before vs the masking visard of the Church as a Gorgons heade that wee being amased therewith might rashly imbrace all manner of decrees all kinde of traditions and interpretations which please them onelye without examination without inquisition and without doubt Therefore that they may call vs backe from the Scripture to the constitutions of the Church they saye That Christ sayde If he will not heare the Church let him be vnto thee as an heathen man and a Publicane Although Christ in that place intreated not of the exposition of Scriptures but onelie of brotherly correction yet wee graunt that the Church is to be heard so farre foorth as she iudgeth answereth and speaketh foorth of GOD his woorde But if she vtter the deuises of men and traditions onely we ought to passe by her with deafe eares especially when shee proposeth thinges contrarie to GOD his worde For this saying of Paule standeth fast Though an Angel from Heauē preach anie other Gospel let him be accursed And the saying of Ierome is That is the doctrine of the holie Ghost which is set foorth in the Canonicall Scriptures against the which if Councels decree anie thing I count it wickednesse To be briefe we doe inclose the Church in the worde of the Lord which ought to bee set before her eyes as a sure and certain rule Neither can the church in so greate varietie and multitude of sectes and Heresies condemning one an other be declared by any other meanes because men are euerie where because euerie one will sweare that the Church is with them as lately
foorth of Augustine and Chrysostome wee haue declared What saye you to this that the same Christ the Lorde will hereby chiefly haue his disciples and so consequently and vndoubtedly his church also knowen and esteemed if they keepe his sayings faythfully and obserue them And doeth plainly witnesse that they are cast off which will not keepe his doctrine and followe it As for this power aboue the Scriptures which these felowes claime vnto themselues by their subtile Sophistrie the auncient Fathers neuer knewe nor sought as lately we haue shewed Constantine the Emperour commaunded the Fathers when as they were assembled in the Nicene Councell that they should define the controuersie of the one and selfe same substaunce of the father and the sonne foorth of the Propheticall and Apostolicall Scriptures And yet none withstoode him there saying that the Churche ought to discusse the controuersie by her owne absolute authoritie because shee was not subiect to the Scriptures but had them rather in subiection vnto her Neither did they complaine that the Emperour did anie whitte at all debase the Churche when as hee made her subiect to the rule of the Scriptures And how will these men bring the Scriptures in subiection to the authoritie iudgement and censure of the Church seeing Christ our Lorde doeth not saye that the Churche is iudge of his Doctrine but pronounceth rather that his doctrine shall be iudged of all mankinde in generall And thus maye wee vnderstand that Christe is not to bee iudged by men with what title soeuer or prerogatiue they bee adorned but all mankinde to bee iudged by him according to the Doctrine of his worde The .xix. Chapter Of the saying of Paule The Church is the piller and ground of the trueth THey say that the Church is the piller and ground of truth and that it can not erre The Apostle speaketh not of the Church of anie one time or place but of the Catholike Church of al times and places which also conteineth the Prophets and all the Apostles with all their doctrine and Christ the Lorde himselfe as the chiefe and euerlasting heade and therefore her onely head This Church is the piller and grounde woorke of the trueth of the Prophetes and Apostles doctrine VVherefore we also following Augustine doe confesse that we are mooued by the testimonie of this Churche which also before wee sayde rather to beleeue the Gospel then the Popes and their Decrees and all their Councels But the Church of anie one time or place especially after the Apostles is not the piller and grounde of the trueth but so farre foorth as shee hath the word of God with her preacheth it reteineth it conserueth it and not because she strengthneth it being weak or maketh it to be of authoritie being vnconstant much lesse because she vsurpeth vnto her self a censours rod ouer it or setteth downe any thing concerning it after her owne iudgement Therefore as she speaketh foorth of God his worde she erreth not neither can she erre but either speaking or doing without it she not only can erre but doth erre But these men whilst they cloke their tyranny with the beautifull title of the Church faine vnto vs a Churche which although it ordeine any thing beside or against God his worde yet erreth not And therefore would they that shee should rather be beleeued then the worde of god But whilst they stay them selues vpon this opinion they differ as much as may be from the olde fathers and from the consent of the Catholike Church For the fathers in their councels did alwayes confirme their decrees by the testimonyes of Scripture And although they yeelded no small honour to councels yet ●n the greatest controuersies they did not ●o much appeale vnto councels as to God ●is oracles which are the Scriptures Heereof Augustine is witnesse which would not that the authoritie of the councell And this which Hilarie wrote long agoe may much more truely be applyed to our times For the greeuous and perilous errour in many and the fall of many although it doe vnderstande it selfe yet through shame to rise presumeth authoritie to it selfe hauing this impudencie of the number that wheras it erreth it would haue it esteemed wisedome and where as it erreth with many it affirmeth it to bee the vnderderstanding of the trueth whilest lesse errour is supposed to be in the trueth The xx Chapter Of the saying of Paule Brethren stand fast and holde the ordinaunces which ye haue beene taught whether it bee by our preaching or by our Epistle I Had almoste passed ouer the place of Paule whiche the defendours of superstitions obiect vnto vs as a moste strong and an vnanswearable argument And it is thus 2. Thes 2. vers 15. Therfore brethren stand fast and holde the ordinaunces which yee haue beene taught whether it be by our preaching or by our Epistle By this place it is manifest say they that all things which are necessarily to be holden are not comprehended in the writinges of the Apostles but that those thinges also which beeing deliuered by the Apostles with liuely voice are come vnto vs by traditions are to bee receiued with like reuerence and affection of godlines But when as they can not prooue that those traditions which they defende bee Paules they are woorthy to be laughed at and very foolish whilst they will holde vp their stinking piller of their superstitions by the testimonie of the Apostles And when Paule wrote this Epistle the Canon of the Scripture of the newe Testament was not yet made Which when it was once made by the authoritie of the holy Goost as we haue lately taught after the making thereof we make men the authours of thinges to bee beleeued not without the great reproche of the same spirit Wherfore in this matter we must consider with great heede that which Paule wrote aboute the ende of his life concerning the sufficiencie of the Scriptures when as hee sayth All Scripture is giuen by inspiration of God is profitable to doctrine to reproue to correction to instruction which is in righteousnesse that the man of God may be perfect instructed to all good woorkes For if the Scripture make the man of God instructed perfecte and throughlye furnished to euerye good work than doth it not leaue him to be instructed to be made perfect and to bee thorowly furnished by traditions in any good worke Wherefore so ofte as they bring in a worke which they contend to be good or any thing necessary to be beleeued which can not be proued foorth of the holy Scriptures I had rather say that that which they bring in is not good or profitable then to pronounce otherwise of the moste excellent authoritie of the Scripture than the Apostle hath appointed concerning the same What saye you to this moreouer that the doctrine which the Apostles taught whether it were by preaching or by Epistle was not contrary not
appointmentes of God and the comming of his beloued Iesus Christ our Lorde and that his generation which is of the virgin and his passion and his resurrection from the deade and his ascention in the fleshe into Heauen and his comming from Heauen in the glorie of the Father to finishe all thinges and to raise vp againe all fleshe of mankinde that vnto Christ Iesus our Lorde and GOD and Sauiour and King according to the will of the inuisible Father euerie knee may bee bowed of thinges in heauen in earth and vnder the earth and that euerie tongue may confesse him and that he may doe iust iudgement in all and that he may cast the Angels of spiritual wickednesse hauing transgressed and beeing become Apostataes and also vngodly and vniust and wicked and blasphemous men into eternall fire And that hee maye bestowe as a gift incorruption vpon the iust and vpright hauing kept his commandements and continued in his loue some frō the beginning and some by repentance giuing them life and may cloth them with euerlasting clearenesse Where as the Church hath receiued this preaching and this faith as wee haue before sayde being dispersed into the whole worlde she doth diligently keepe as dwelling in one house and in like maner beleeueth these things euen as hauing one soule and one heart agreeably preacheth and teacheth and deliuereth the same as possessing one mouth For although there be vnlike speaches in the worlde yet the vertue of the tradition is all one and the verie same Neither do those Churches which are founded in Germanie beleeue otherwise or teach otherwise nor those which are in Spain nor those which are in Frāce nor those which are in the East nor those which are in Egypt nor those which are in Lybia nor those which are placed in the midst of the worlde but as the Sunne being the creature of God is all one the selfe same in the vniuersall world euen so the light also that is the preaching of the truth shineth euery where lighteneth all mē which are willing to come to the knowledge of the truth Neither doeth he which excelleth in speach among thē which gouerne the Church say any other things but these For no man is aboue his maister neither hath hee which is weak in speaking lessened the tradition For seeing that the faith is al one the selfe same neither he which can say much maketh it more nor he whiche can saye lesse maketh it lesse Thus farre Ire This is therfore the tradition of the Apostles this is the true antiquitie of the Church this is the catholike consent And this is worthie to bee considered that hee affirmeth that those which were most eloquent among them which gouerne the Churches will say none other thinges but these Therefore so oft as the Papistes fable touching other trifles they are to be iudged to depart from the tradition of the Apostles from the vnitie of fayth and from the Catholike consent And Irenaeus rehearseth in the next Chapter as it were the common places which the Pastours of the Primitiue Church were accustomed to handle And of what matters did they then dispute Of Purgatorie Of the worshipping of Images Of holie water and of other Popishe trifles Not so Of what then Of the Apostacie of the Angels which transgressed of the fall and disobedience of the first men of the temporall and heauenly and earthly promises of the diuerse appearinges of GOD of the difference of the Testamentes why GOD concluded all thinges vnder vnbeleefe that hee might haue mercie vpon all of the cause of the incarnation and passion of the woorde why the Sonne of God came in the last times and not in the beginning of the calling of the Gentils of the ende of the worlde of the resurrection of the fleshe and of other questions of the like sorte drawen foorth of the middest of the Scripture Whereby it is plaine that nothing was accustomed to bee handled then in the Churche beside the Scriptures Againe the same Irenaeus sayth lib. 3. cap. 4. Forsomuch therefore as there be so great proofes we must not still seeke this truth among other which we may easily receiue from the church considering that the Apostles most plentifully layed vp in her as in a riche storehouse all thinges which appertayne to the truth that euery one that woulde might take foorth of her the water of life For she is the entraunce of life and all others are theeues and robbers for the which cause wee must auoyd them and must loue with great diligence those things which are the churches and to holde fast the tradition of the trueth For what and if any man reason of any small question ought hee not to haue recourse to the most auncient Churche wherein the Apostles were conuersant and to take from them touching the present question that which is certaine and verie playne But what and if the Apostles had not left vnto vs the Scriptures ought we not to folowe the order of the tradition which they deliuered to them vnto whom they committed the Churches vnto the which ordinaunce many nations of those barbarous people which beleeue in Christ doe assent hauing saluation written in their heartes by the spirite without character or ynke and keeping diligently the olde tradition beleeuing in one God the maker of heauen and earth and of all thinges which are in them through Christ Iesus the Sonne of God ▪ which for the most tender loue towarde his owne workemanshippe Man sustained that generation which was of the Virgin he himselfe of himselfe vniting the manhood to the Godhead and suffering vnder Pontius Pilate and rising againe and in clearnesse receiued in glorie to come the Sauiour of them which are saued and the iudge of them which are iudged and sending into eternall fire the counterfeiters of the trueth and the dispisers of his Father and of his comming They which beleeued this fayth without writing as touching their speache are barbarous but as touching their iudgement and custome and conuersation throughe their fayth are most wise and please GOD walking in all vprightnesse and chastitie and wisedome Heere hast thou agayne the true and auncient tradition of the Apostles described by Irenaeus whiche deliuereth nothing without and beside the Scripture but containeth the summe of the whole Scripture Nowe it remayneth likewise that wee heare Tertullian bearing witnesse of the tradition of the Apostles also The rule of faith saieth he is euen this whereby wee beleeue that there is but one God and none other but the maker of the worlde which brought all thinges foorth of nothing by his worde first of al sent foorth that that woorde was called his sonne in the name of the same God was diuersely seene of the Patriarches was alwayes hearde in the Prophetes was lastly brought by the spirite and power of God into the Virgin Marie was made fleshe in her wombe and was borne man of her
is that worthie wisedome which hitherto hath filled the mindes of the blinde Iewes with most foolish knowledges and hath caused worthie men otherwise in the Church and a great multitude folowing them to departe from the truth and to goe out of the way So that it is a most sure way to examine all traditions by what title so euer they be commended according to the rule of Scripture that that which hath not authoritie by the Scriptures may be by the same facilitie contemned whereby it is prooued as Hierome his saying well warneth vs. For the counsell of Chrysostome is wise which sayth Therefore the Lord knowing that there would come such a confusion in the last dayes doth commaund that the Christians which are in Christianitie willing to receiue the strength of the true faith shoulde runne to nothing but to the Scriptures otherwise if they shall regarde anie thing else they shall be offended and perish Againe Ierome sayeth The sworde of GOD striketh other things which men finde and deuise of their owne accorde without the authoritie and testimonies of the Scriptures as though they came by the tradition of the Apostles Therefore at all times and in euerie doubtfull matter we must flie to the Scripture which executeth the office of the chiefe Iudge in euerie controuersie of Diuinitie to whose sentence all traditions all Churches all Councels all deuises of men ought to stand and from the which it is not lawfull to appeale to anie other nor to depart from the worde of God and to giue our selues greedily to the traditions of men For he which heareth the scripture heareth the holy Ghost the authour of the Scriptures and reuerenceth him and contrarily he which despiseth the iudgement seate of the Scriptures and the iudgements giuen in the Scriptures will not quiet himselfe therewith despiseth the spirite of God and vseth himselfe more reprochfully against him than can be vttered And he which will not suffer himselfe to be led as it were by the hand by the guiding of the Scripture foorth of the thornes and briers of doubtes errours superstitions corruptions abuses is verie well worthie to wander out of the way he knoweth not whether to stray perpetually The Conclusion I haue prooued by a verie large and contentious disputation that the holie Scripture is God his worde wherein is inclosed a full and a perfect summe of heauenly wisedome Neither is there any thing necessarie to saluation which is not set forth in the Scriptures For if there had beene any thing needfull to be knowne God would not had omitted it since his will was to teache vs thereby not to the halfes but fully whatsoeuer his pleasure was that wee should know and which hee knewe to bee profitable for vs This is the onely foundation and piller of the liuely faith this is the sure bulwarke against the deceites of errours Foorth of this ought Heresies to bee confuted foorth of this ought doctrines chiefly to be discerned foorth of this ought definitions of fayth and assertions to be taken The Scripture is of most cleare and pearelesse authoritie so that all godly and faythfull vnderstanding ought to serue it And it is the Catholike consent of the Fathers yea and of all the Church that the Canonicall Scripture ought to bee preferred before all Churches all Councels although they bee generall all Traditions Decrees deuises writings of all men although they excell in learning and holinesse The Church doeth so reuerence and adore the fulnesse perfectnesse and soundnesse of the Scripture that she doeth accurse as wicked and false witnesses of God as detestable authours of offences Heresies and dissentions as proude vaine and fallen from the fayth so many as do preach beyonde the scripture Yea and she suspecteth euerie reuelation euerie prophecie euerie Tradition to bee briefe euerie rule of faith which is not grounded in the Law and the Prophets and the Gospel And the high perfection of the chiefe authoritie of the Scripture doeth not depende of the Church or of any testimonie of man but chiefly of the witnesse of the holy Ghost For the allowing of this doctrine went before the Church which was called sprong and increased by the worde and which is stayed vp by the doctrine of the Prophets and Apostles as by a ground worke or proppe Although we doe not denie that the authoritie of the Church is then of some weight when as it consenteth and agreeth with the authoritie of the Scripture both for this purpose that the scriptures may be beleeued and also for this that the Scriptures may be well vnderstanded But the Church doeth not make newe articles of the fayth or a newe interpretation but is a witnesse and a restorer of the true and incorrupt meaning deliuered in the Scriptures and by the voice of the Apostles and carieth before her the light of the woorde to put awaye the darkenesse brought into the Scriptures by Heretikes And this is the care of the Church alwayes to confirme by Scripture whatsoeuer shee appoint For shee doeth reuerently acknowledge that her authoritie doeth staye it selfe by the woorde and doeth depende of the woorde For the Scripture is a plaine sure and infallible note of the Church For in the Scripture and no where else in so great varietie of sectes and repugnancie of opinions is the Church to bee sought knowne and prooued and by it to bee esteemed Where the Scripture is heard there is the Church there doe the sheepe knowe the voyce of the sheepheard And if the doctrine of trueth bee buried the Church vanisheth forthwith from mens eyes Neither doeth the Church reigne ouer our fayth neither doeth shee require to bee beleeued but so farre foorth as shee speaketh the woordes of god For when as shee doeth confesse that shee receiueth her authoritie and credite from the Scripture onely shee submitteth her selfe obediently to the holie Scriptures Therefore whatsoeuer shee affirmeth or denieth whatsoeuer shee appointeth or commaundeth or disappointeth or forbiddeth shee woulde haue it knowne and beleeued that shee bringeth foorth therein not her owne or anie other mans or creatures but the wordes and sense of God but of Christ Therefore the Church doeth not erre for she followeth her owne iudgement in nothing but euery where and in all thinges obeyeth Gods worde wherein there is no darkenesse no errours And if she do otherwise this saying of Scripture is true Let euerie man be a lyer and God onely true In deede the Church is the piller and ground of truth because she is keeper of sounde doctrine and publisheth it to them which come after least it should faile in the worlde And that is the holie and diuine Scripture which the consent of the Church doeth allowe and approoue but this consent and this approbation is not the deuise of man but a necessarie confession and a testification expressed by the force of the truth which doeth not bring to passe that the authoritie of the
obscurenesse of the Scripture and rolling in all their pointes of Rethoricke do goe about to proue the necessitie authoritie perfection certaintie plainnesse of vnwritten Traditions that is to say That we should fetch the rule of faith not from the worde of God but from the Traditions of the Church and that there is so much force in the Scripture as is granted therevnto by the consentes voyces of the Church The second Chapter The deceitfulnes of them is reproued which do diminish the authoritie of the Scripture wherevpon the authoritie of the Church doth depend I Do not denie that they which make these reasons are prompt wittie ●●arned and eloquent woulde to God ●●ey were all so vpright and gentle min●●d that they would put to their furthe●●nce rather to buyld vp the kingdome 〈◊〉 Christ then to defend the kingdome of ●●e Pope and that they woulde rather ●llowe the sincere doctrine of the Gos●ell then mainteine corruptions and ab●ses But whilest they are willing to gratifie these antichristian rulers they ●un on so farre through the heate of their contention that through their wicked cursed and prophane Rhetorike they ●laspheme and ●pise the holy Ghost For whē they do so beset and besiege the Scripture that they call it a Labyrinth in the which we may go out of the right way A nose of waxe which is apt to be bowed vnto either side A matter of controuersies A nourse garden of discentions obscure doubtfull intricate What is this if it be not a reproch agaynst the holy Ghost the authour thereof But the marke whereat they shoote is this that whereas they may bee perceiued oftentymes to haue decreed and ordeined farre otherwise in the Sacraments and doctrines then holy scripture can beare they are willing to mainteine that it was lawfull for them so to doe because the Church which maketh the holy scriptures to be of authoritie and credite can change therein whatsoeuer shall seeme good vnto her Therefore least the maiestie of the Scripture should let their lust they are not afrayde to diminish the authoritie thereof wherein they do seeme to imitate the craftinesse and naughtinesse of the auncient heretikes who being willing to eschew least they being pressed with the authoritie of the Scriptures shoulde bee ouercome presumed boldely to denie certaine bookes of the Bible to be canonicall reiecting them and with great disdaine disallowing them For when as they are reproued by the Scriptures sayth Irenaeus they do accuse the Scriptures as though they were not well handled neither be of authoritie and because they be diuersly spoken because the truth can not be found forth in them by those which know not the tradition Carpocrates Seuerus Cerdo Manes reiected as August witnesseth the bookes of the law although Tertullian report of Cerdo as also doth Irenaeus of Marcio that they reiected al the Euangelists but Luke Philaster reporteth that Cerinthus allowed Mathew onely We reade in Eusebius that the Seuerians disalowed Paul his Epistles and the Acts of the Apostles For they did suppose it to be an aduantage for the obteyning of victorie if they did condition that they whose dartes they saw were to be feared might bee throwne foorth of the campe of the Church before they should come to the battell Euen so also do these thinke that they shall triumph if they may most vnworthely slander the Scripture of vncerteintie imperfectiō ambiguitie obscuritie And euen as those old heretikes did cōtentiously affirme that the truth could not be founde by them which knewe not the tradition deliuered not by writing but by liuely voice in like maner do these also mainteine that the Apostles haue not comprehended in their writings all things which wee ought to beleeue and most obstinately contend that all things apperteyning to godlinesse are not conteyned in the Scripture that thou maist vnderstand that both the one and the other are inforced with the selfe same spirite of errour Wherefore we must withstand them by all meanes possible For it is a most hurtfull and perillous errour to holde that the credite of Scripture shoulde hang on the determinatiō of the Church which being granted Christ shall not be Christ nor the Gospel the Gospel neither shal we take the Apostles for the Apostles nor the writings of the Apostles for the Apostles writings but so farre forth as they be allowed in their Councels by their owne consents and iudgements Here truly must the seruāts needs be greater then the Lorde that the Lord may not be beleeued but onely so farre forth as his seruants will that he shall be belieued as though forsooth God his eternall and inuiolable truth shoulde be grounded and staied vpon the iudgement of men Neither is it lawfull nor sure to dallie in diuinitie as shall please mens deuises For the naturall man perceiueth not the things of the spirite of God and all the thoughts sayings deedes of men doe more resemble lying then truth for God onely is true Neither ●●e the argumentes strong and sounde ●hich these patrones of superstitions take for the defence of their opinion ●ut rather feeble and weake as in discussing and examining them shall appeare although the simple being delu●ed with the onely shew of truth be hol●en still in errours and superstitions and ●lienated from the truth But let not vs ●uffer our selues to bee brought to this passe that we graunt that the holy scripture hath receiued credite and authoritie from the Church seeing that the matter ●s farre otherwise For what authoritie or estimation soeuer the Church hath it ●ommeth wholy from the worde of God whereof also the Church hath the beginning Euen as Peter saith Ye are borne ●new not of corruptible seede but of ●ncorruptible by the worde of God which liueth and lasteth for euer And ●aul saith In Christ Iesus I haue begot●en you through the Gospel Therfore as is the daughter to the mother so is the Church to the Scripture And since we do all confesse that the Church is susteined by the foundation of the Prophets Apostles truly if the doctrine of the Prophets and the Apostles be the stay of the Church it must necessarily follow that the authoritie of the doctrine doeth excell the authoritie of the Church Neither is there anie cause that they shoulde cauill that the Church was 2449. yeres before Moses before the Scripture because they make Moses his bookes most ancient which in deede I do confesse in respect of those bookes which now are extant But how know they whether that ancient Church which was before Moses had written his Pentatenche had anie bookes of holy Scripture or none Moses doth cite the booke of the warres of the lord And in Iosua is the booke of the Iust cited And it may be that Noah Abraham Isaac Iacob wrote those things which did pertein to their times as Moses did afterward gather them togither and by
law written is the canon and rule of politike iudgements euen so is the scripture called Canonicall That is to say rule-like because it is the certaine and infallible canon and rule of fayth And the naming of it so is taken forth of the Scripture it selfe In the 19. Psal. Their sound is gone out into all landes Here the Septuaginte interpreted it by the Greeke worde 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but the Hebrue worde Kau signifieth a corde a rule a line To the Galathians the 6. And as manie as walke according to this rule in Greeke 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Peace be on thē and mercie To the Philippians the 3. Let vs proceede by one rule in Greeke 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ▪ And wisely doeth Paule warne vs to walke according to this rule for such is the lightnesse and inconstancie of men on the one side and their boldnes and desire of innouation change on the other side that they would oftentimes desire a new forme of religion were it not that they are inclosed within certaine boundes of doctrine as it were within certaine hedges And therefore is the Scripture called Canonicall because the Church maye vse it as a Canon that is to saye as a squire and rule and as a perfecte touchestone whereby euerie kinde of doctrine which is proposed to the Church may bee exactly tried From the which meaning Cyprian doth not dissent whose wordes are these Christian religion hath found that the ●ules of all doctrines flowe out of this ●cripture and that hence springeth ●ither returneth whatsoeuer Ecclesi●stical discipline conteineth The same Cyprian in the exposition of the Creede ●fter that he had rehearsed the canonicall ●ookes added These are they which the ●athers placed within the canon forth of the whiche they woulde that the ●roofes of our fayth shoulde be made ●nowen Also forth of these fountains of God his word must the cuppes be filled And Irenaeus sayeth that the verie selfe ●ame Gospel which the Apostles deliue●ed vnto vs by the will of God in the Scriptures is the foundation and piller ●f our fayth And Augustine teacheth ●hat the canonicall Scripture is the ●oundation of our fayth when as hee ●ayeth The Citie of GOD hath be●eeued the holie Scriptures the olde ●nd the newe which we cal canonical ●rom the which faith is receiued by the which the iust liueth throgh the which we walke without doubting so long ●s we are pilgrimes from God. Also He euen the sonne of God hauing spoken first by the Prophets then by himselfe afterwarde by the Apostles so much as he iudged sufficient ordeined also the scripture which is called Canonical being of most excellent authoritie which we credite in things wherin we may not be ignorant and yet of our selues are not able to attain the knowledge thereof Again in an other place The Canonicall authoritie of the olde and newe Testament confirmed in the Apostles time by the successions of Bishops and increasing of Churches is placed as it were aloft in a certain seat wherevnto euerie faythfull and godly vnderstanding should submit it selfe Therefore forsomuch as God hath established the Scripture to bee the foundation piller and rule of fayth and hath therefore placed it in a seate of most excellent authoritie and hath aduaunced it as the iudgement of the holie Ghost except we will bee dispitefull against God himselfe we must needes confesse that it is so perfect in euery point that there m●●y neither be added to it nor taken from it without doing of iniury to the holy ghost The rule and the squire saith Basil forsomuch as in them is no want to retaine their name admit no addition For addition agreeth therevnto wherin there is a defect and these thinges which bee vnperfect shall neuer bee rightly called by the name of a squire or rule And Theophilacte also sayeth A rule and a squire can neither abide to haue any thing put vnto them nor taken from them Therefore in the iudgement of Basil and Theophilacte either the Scripture shal be perfect and full or else not to be iudged worthie the name of Canonicall Yea and the scripture is the canon the rule and the squire wherby the holy fathers woulde haue all doctrines proued all questions of faith defined Neither haue they iudged any decrees or writings either of coūcels or of men although learned holy to be receiued by their owne authoritie This honour haue they yeelded to the canonicall scripture only that they iudged al things with the scripture hath set forth vnto vs to be receiued simply without reasoning euē because they are so written haue appointed the decrees and ordinances of all other men to be referred to the Scripture of God forth of it to be discerned as by their owne testimonies wee will forthwith more at large declare Therefore doe wee worthily reuerence the fulnesse and the authoritie of the Scripture whiche is as it were the highest lawe and as the Lawyers in their pleadings tearme it the definitiue sentence wherewith all men must content them selues The .viij. Chapter That the authoritie of the Canonicall Scripture is more excellent than the Councels the Fathers yea then the decrees and ordinances of all men AVgustine against the epistle which they call Fundament sayth Those thinges which are defined in holye scripture are preferred before al other things And that of right because the catholike Church of Christ that is to say the vniuersall Churche doeth acknowledge no booke as her owne wherein ●hee doeth certainely propose vnto the ●onnes of GOD the traditions of Christ ●nd of the Apostles but onely the Ca●onicall Scripture All other writings ●re none otherwise receiued by the Churche of GOD then so farre foorth ●o be of authoritie in the Churches ●nd among all Christians as the au●hours of them shall bee able to per●wade foorth of holie Scripture and ●y probable reasons And those things ●re probable whiche like excellente men and the brightnesse of woorthie ●ames pearseth the vnderstanding that ●hey seeme good but those thinges ●nelie are esteemed certayne and appro●ed in the Churche of Christe which ●re plainely and vndoubtedly conclu●ed foorth of the Scripture The Scrip●ure is as it were the Queene of all Coū●els of all Churches of all writers Nei●her haue the holie Fathers iudged anie ●hing more woorthie credite in the Churche than the Scriptures yea and whomsoeuer they tooke in hande to instructe in religion them did they alwayes sende after the example of Christ himselfe and of the Apostles to the lawe and to the writinges of the Prophetes and of the Apostles And to this meaning serue manie godlie sayinges of the Fathers whereof wee will noate some Augustine in his seconde booke and third Chapter touching Baptisme agaynst the Donatistes saith Who knoweth not that the holy canonicall Scripture as well of the old as the new Testament is contayned within her
reproue to witnesse and to set forth the holy Scriptures plainely yet doth she not require to be beleued but because she speaketh the words of god And the church hath iiii goodly offices about the Scriptures First shee keepeth safe the bookes of holy Scripture as a witnesse Secondly she preacheth and publisheth them Thirdly she discerneth them from counterfeites Fourthly shee interpreteth them And these functions proue not that the Church hath authoritie ouer the Scripture as many foolishly suppose For whereas the Church keepeth the scripture safe as a witnesse it cannot bee inferred thereby that it is lawfull for the Church to peruert or change anie thing in the holye Scriptures For so should she weaken the force of her testimonie and shew her selfe to be an vntrustie witnesse And this would be a corrupting and not witnesse bearing For the pure and simple fourme of the commandement sayth Ambrose is denounced by earnest testimonies to be kept A witnesse for the most part when as he addeth any thing of his owne deuising to the orderly report of things done staineth the whole credite of his testimonie by the lying report of the part Nothing must therefore be added although it bee neuer so good It is a common vse to committe publike and priuate euidences to recorders whome commonly men call Notaries to keepe and conserue with all diligence and yet no wise man will say that they may lawfully chaunge any thing that is conteined in them And it is not to be beleeued that the authoritie of the sayd Notaries is of greater strength than was their willes which requested that those things might be so recorded Neither is it any matter that the Churche receiued the worde of God deliuered by liuely voyce before it was committed to writing In deede the worde 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is to say vnwritten in time is before the woorde which afterwarde was written yet both were bestowed vpon the Church being of one authoritie and of like efficacie For the Scripture sayeth of the woorde written They haue Moses and the Prophets let them heare them And as it was then the duetie of the Churche to heare GOD speaking in the writinges of Moses and the Prophetes so is it nowe the duetie of the Church to heare Christ with all reuerence speaking in the writings of the Euangelists and Apostles to imbrace the instructiō of the spirite Although the honour of the Church be great that shee is chosen of God to be as it were the keeper and defender of this most excellent and worthie treasure yet maye the Churche by no meanes either wreith or change or corrupt those writings but ought as a faithfull keeper with chiefe care and prouision to keepe the bookes of holy scripture vncorrupted for them which shall come after The xiiij Chapter That the Church publisheth the worde of God. WE said that the second dutie of the Church about the Scripture is to publish and preach the wordes committed to her by god Wherein the Church is like to a crier who although he doe proclaime the Edictes and commandements of Princes Magistrates yet is he not aboue them or of equall authoritie with them but all his indeuour is to pronounce all things faithfully as he hath receiued them from the Princes and the Magistrates and if he doe otherwise he may worthily bee holden for a traitour Well sayeth Chrysostome For as the crier proclaimeth to all that are present in the stage so do we saith the Apostle proclaime publikely with this condition that we adde nothing but that we proclaime those thinges onely which we haue heard For this ●s the vertue of a crier to publish those ●hings truly which are committed to him not to adde any thing or to change or to take away Tertullian agreeth with Chrysostome saying We may not follow our owne appetite in deuising any thing of our selues nei●her may we choose any thing which ●ny other hath deuised wee haue the Apostles of the Lord for our authors who chose not any thing of their own ●udgement which they might bring 〈◊〉 but faythfully assigned to nations ●he doctrine receiued of Christ Therefore though an Angell from heauen preach otherwise we may call him accursed Let vs therefore auoyde them which intrude mens deuises and traditions as necessarie to bee obserued and beleeued let vs heare with all attentiuenesse the sincere preaching of the Gospel in the Church and reuerence it The .xv. Chapter That the Church discerneth the bookes of holy Scripture from Aprocryphal and counterfeit THirdly forsomuch as the Church is indued with the spirite of God we doe confesse that it is her function to discerne the sincere and true bookes of holy Scripture from the counterfeit and Apocryphal So hath the Church disallowed and reiected the Gospell of Thomas of Bartholomewe of Thaddee of the Nazarites of Nicodemus as also the actes of Peter the diuers reuelations of the Apostles the Booke of the Pastour and such like Contrarily shee hath allowed and receiued the foure Gospels which wee haue and the writings of the Apostles which in these dayes we reade in our Churches And although the conseruation of the assured bookes of the Prophetes and Apostles as of a certaine diuine Treasure be the singular worke and benefite of GOD notwithstanding both the diligence and authoritie of the church is to be acknowledged herein which hath partly giuen foorth her Testimoniall of the assured writinges and hath partly by her spirituall iudgement refused the writinges which are vnworthie and which agree not with the rest of the writinges of the Prophetes and Apostles Which was so much the more easie because as saith Augustine they wrote in suche a time wherein they were thought worthie to bee allowed not onely of the Churche of Christ but also euen of the Apostles who then remayned aliue But to discerne Bookes is not to bee of greater authoritie than are the sayde Bookes as some foolishly dreame For when as the King his letters be brought some gouernours of Cities and presidentes of Prouinces are able by vse and ciuill skill sufficientlie to iudge whether they be true letters or forged which are deliuered them in the Kinges name and yet may they not at their owne pleasure either change or wrest them when they shall perceiue that they are not coūterfeited or feigned And wee may not otherwise esteeme of the Church Who although she haue giuen foorth her faythfull testimonie to the bookes of holy Scripture and not to the workes of other who peraduenture did not onely digresse from the truth of the historie but also reported many things which are cleane contrarie to the olde testament and to the other Euangelists yet may shee not otherwise vnderstande or ordaine any thing then God hath defined and taught in these bookes of holie Scripture But if they which being lighted by the holy Ghost acknowledged the holy Scriptures to be the words of God
Church is greater or of like credite with the authoritie of the Scripture But the Church of the wicked which not onely heareth not God his worde but most cruelly persecuteth and killeth them which beleeue the Gospel besides this is grounded wholy vpō mens traditions declareth manifestly that shee is of him of whom it is written Ye are of your father the Diuel and the lustes of your father will ye doe he was a murtherer from the beginning abode not in the trueth because there is no truth in him For she is knowne what she is by the fruites of her Herodlike crueltie vanitie bewitchings and corruptions But the spouse of Christ heareth the voice of her bridegroome and submitteth her selfe to him as it is meete Her chastitie is not to bee withdrawne from the singlenesse of Christ as Paul witnesseth Therefore shee erreth not which followeth God his trueth for a rule from the which if shee depart shee is no longer a spouse but becommeth an harlot Therefore he which iudgeth that the definitions of the reuolting church ought to be heard without choise any exception compelleth the faithful Christ being denied and Gods trueth forsaken often times to sticke fast to iniquitie so that the iudgement of such a Church can in no respect be a most exact rule of fayth But the holie Ghost sayeth plainly of the Scripture that the man which bestoweth his diligent trauaile in the holie Scriptures becommeth learned to saluation which is prepared after this life then 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is to say perfect lastly furnished instructed and as Ambrose yeeldeth it thorowly appointed and prouided to euerie good worke Thou hast here gentle reader a treatise of the authoritie of the Scripture and of the Church penned by me verie grossely and almost rudely which God graunt it may recompence the largenes thereof with due commoditie and profite I could excuse the infancie and the disordered inditing thereof but that I feare to inlarge it by excusing the same Therfore I beseech the learned eares to pardon my baren want of eloquence the rudenesse of my style For I haue not written these things for the learned but being my selfe rude simple for the rude simple The Lord Iesus breake in peeces the moste hurtfull corde of contention with the spirit of trueth and of true concorde and pluck vppe by the roote and put away from all vs which professe his name the offence of discentions among vs that we may all speake one thing and be ioyned togither with one minde and iudgement in him to whome be praise honour and glorie for euermore Amen FINIS Certaine additions by the Translator AVgustine in his Booke Of the vnitie of the Church the 16. Chapter vrging the Donatistes saith Let them shew none otherwise but by the Canonical books of the Scriptures whether they haue the Church For neither doe we say that we ought heerevpon to be beleeued because we are in the Church of Christ because Melenitanus Optatus or Ambrose of Millane or other innumerable Bishopes of our fellowship commended that Church which we haue Or because it is preached by the councels of our fellowes in office Or because so great miracles either of hearings or of healings are wrought thorowe out all the world in holy places which our fellowship doeth frequent Or that men ought to departe from Donatus his side because such an one sawe a dreame and such an one beeing rauished in the spirite heard a voice Whatsoeuer of this sort are done in the catholike Church are therfore approued because they are done in the Catholike Churche the Catholike Church is not therfore made knowen because these things are done in her The Lord Iesus him selfe when hee rose from the deade and offered his body to be beholden with his disciples eyes and to bee touched with their handes yet leste they should thinke that they were any whit deceiued or deluded iudged that they ought rather to be confirmed with the testimonies of the lawe and Prophetes Psalmes shewing that those thinges were fulfilled concerning him which had bene foretolde so long before So did he commend his Church also saying that repentaunce and remission of sinnes should bee preached in his name c. He hath witnessed that this is written in the lawe and the Prophetes and the Psalmes this doe wee holde beeing commended by his mouth These bee the documentes of our cause these bee the foundations these bee the confirmations We read in the Actes of the Apostles spoken of certaine which beleeued that they searched the Scriptures dayly whether those things were so What Scriptures I pray you but the Canonicall Scriptures of the lawe and the prophets Hereunto are added the Gospels the Epistles of the Apostles the Actes of the Apostles and the Reuelation of Iohn Searche all these and picke out some manifeste Proofe whereby you may shewe that either the Church remained onely in Afrike or that shee should come foorth of Afrike But bring forth somewhat which needeth not an interpreter nor wherby you may be conuicted that it was spoken of an other matter that you goe aboute to wreast it to your owne sense Hierome to Mimerius and Alexander sayth Neither according to the scholers of Pythagoras is the preiudiciall opinion of the teacher to be wayed but the reason of the doctrine But if any of a contrary faction murmure saying Why should I read their e●clamations vnto whose opinions I doe not assent Let him know that I doe willinglie heare this saying of the Apostle Examine all things hold fast that which is good ▪ and the woordes of our Sauiour saying try ye the coine so wel that if there be any counterfeit money and haue not Caesar his image neither bee signed with the common coine it may bee reprooued And that that money which doth represent the face of Christe in the cleere light may be layed vp in the purse of our heart And a little after hee sayth My purpose is to reade the auncient Writers to try all thinges to holde those thinges which are good and not to departe frō the faith of the church Psal. 120.4 The prayse of the Church of Christ Irenaeus aduersus haeres lib. 3. ca. 4 Rom. 10.15 What the aduersaries gather of the authoritie of the Church August contra epist. Manichaeorum fundament cap. 5. Manie things say the aduersaries are to be beleeued which are not written Mat. 18.17 1. Tim. 3.15 Io. 16.7 13. Hierem. 31.33 Matth. 28.19 Mark. 16.15 Against the persons of the aduersarie Why they do attribute so much to the Church and derogate from the Scripture They do imitate herein the olde heretikes Irenaeus lib. 3. cap. 2. Augustin de haerisib ad quod vult Deum Tertul. lib. de haeresib Philaster lib. 1. Euseb Historia Ecclesiae lib. 4. cap. 29. It is a pernicious errour to contend that the authoritie of the scripture must
cap. 3. From whence the Scripture hath or hath receiued so great authority * Esaie 40.8 Mat. 2.4.35 * 2. Tim. 3.16 2. Pet. 1.21 Cantic 2.11 Confes lib 6. cap. 5. Iohn 8.42.43 Iohn 10.2 3 4 5. Cor. 2.14 15. ● Cor. 2.10 Ihon. 14.26 1. Iohn 2.27 1. Iohn 4.6 Confes li. 6. ca. 5. * Epesi 2.26 * Ephe. 2.20 An obiection of the aduersaries The canonicall scripture hath authoritie from the holy Ghost and imparteth it vnto the authours thereof c. Tertul. contra Marcionem li. 1. Iohn 20.30.31 2. Thes 3.17 18. Ambrosius Theodoretus Rom. 16.22 Rom. 16.24 1. Cor. 16.21.22.23 Gal. 6.18 Theodoretus Ambrosius 1. Tim. 6.21 2. Tim. 4.22 Ambrosius Tertullianus de praescriptione ▪ The Epistle of Peter 2. Pet. 3.15 1. Iohn 5.13 The Epistle of Iohn The Epistle of Paule to the Hebrewes The Epistle of Iames. Iohn 21.24 The testimonie of the Church concerning the scripture Siluianus de vero iudicio prouidentia Dei. lib. 3. All the authoritie which the Church hath hangeth on Gods worde Matth. 28.20 Matth. 18.20 Iohn 16.7 13. The Ministers of the Church must preach the worde of God onely Iohn 10.3 Exod. 7.17 Cant. 2.9 Chrysost in Psal. 95. Esaie 8.20 August de vnitate ecclesiae cap. 6. Luke 16.19 Galat. 1.8 Testimonies of the Fathers cōcerning this matter Tertullian Apo. 22 18. 19. August co●●a contra litteras Petil. an lib. 3. ca. 6. * Gal. 1.8 August de vnitate ecclesiae cap. 12. August in Tract de pastoribus Augustinus de bono viduitatis cap. 1. Gratian. Iohn Gerson Mat. 17.3 Mar. 9.4 Luke 9.30 Hierom. Basill Psal. 119. the 11 parte 6. ver Iohn 10 27. Iohn 10.5 Galat. 3.15 Basilius Moralium Regula 80. cap. 21. Rom. 14.23 Rom. 10 17. Theophilact Chrysost Origen Ambrose Iohn 14.6 An earnest and necessarie admoniton A briefe collection of the Fathers assertions alledged in this Chapter Iohn 8.47 Iohn 10.4 5 Ephe. 2.20 Ephe. 5.26 1. Pet. 1.23 * Mat. 3.2 Luke 17.21 God his worde is the chiefest marke whereby the Church is knowen August de vnitate ecclesiae cap. 3. Iohn 10.4 5. Augustinus de Pastoribus cap. 4. Iohn 10.27 Note Chrysost Mat. 24.16 * Or sacrament of thankesgeuing in the Lordes Supper * That is in the true profession of Christ his religion Augustinus contra literas Petil. lib. 3. cap. 6. The foure functions of the Church about the scripture The Church keepeth the Scripture as a witnesse Ambrosius de Paradiso cap. 12. A plaine and apt similitude Luke 16.23 The Church publisheth the scriptures Chrysost in Tit. Homilia 1. Tertul. de praescript Haeretic Marke The Church discerneth the counterfeit bookes from the true To discerne is not to be of greater authoritie A weake argument A false Maxim. The Summe Augustinus conttra Epistolam Manichaeorum Fundamenti cap. 5. Augustinus con Faustum lib. 28. cap. 2. The primitiue Church mooueth vs also to beleeue Gerson Tertul. de praescript Heret Irenae lib. 3. cap. 3. A Marime in Logike A deceitfull argument The true vnderstanding and interpretation of the scripture belongeth to the Church Irenaeus lib. 5. Apoc. 1.12 1. Cor. 3.12 The Catholike consent How interpretations must be tried Rom. 12.6 Gal. 1.8 Psal. 45.11 * Psal. 1.1 The interpretation of the Scripture is not in subiection to tyrants A Demonstration of the false interpreting of the Scripture Matt. 26.27 Mat. 14.23 Heb. 13.4 1. Cor. 7.9 Luke 22.25 Exod. 20.4.5 Deut. 5.8 9. Col. 2.16 Rom. 3.24 Gal. 2.16 Ephes 2.8 et 9. The interpretation of the Church of Rome Luke 22.38 4. Reg. 2.21 Luke 22.19 1. Cor. 11.24 Examples of false interpreting forth of the Gospel Exod. 20.12 Deut. 5.16 Matth. 15.6 Mat. 7.13 Mat. 23.16 17 18 19 20 21 22. Matth. 5. from the beginning to the ende 1. Cor. 14.29 Hieronymus in Apologia de lib. contra Iouinianū August in lib. de doctrina Christ Mat. 17.18 Christ speaketh not of interpreting the scriptures Gal. 1.8 Hieronym● Iohn 14.23 Iohn 14.24 Theodor. Histor Ecclesi li. 1. ca. 7. Iohn 12.28 1. Tim. 3.15 1. Tim. 3.15 How the church is the piller and ground of the trueth Howe the Chuch cannot erre Hilarius de Tritate lib. 6. 2. Thes 2.15 2. Thes 2.15 Paule in the 2. Thes 2. speaketh not of the traditions of the Papists 2. Tim. 16. and .17 Psalme 119. the first parte and 4. verse 1. Cor. 11.5 2. Thef 3.10 The traditions of Paule 1. Cor. 11.6 1. Cor. 11.13 1. Cor ▪ 4.140 A common refuge of Papists It is a Tradition You may not enquire of it Irenaeus lib. 31. cap. 1. Eusebius Ecclesiast●cae historiae lib. 3. cap. 20. Let the tradition agree with the Scripture Tertullianus lib. de praescrip Haereticorum Hieronymus in primo cap. Aggaei Augustinus contra literas Petiliani lib. 3. ca. 6. The Apostles ●eliuered nothing but what agreed with the scriptures What kinde of aduersaries and enemies Saint Irenaeus had Irenaeus lib. 3. cap. 2. Irenaeus lib. 3. cap. 1. Tert. de praescrip haeritic Which is the true tradition of the Apostles Iren. li. 1. ca. 2.3 Irenaeus sheweth what is the true Apostolike tradition What common places the Pastours of the Primitiue Church handeled Irenaeus li. 1. ca. 4 Irenaeus lib. 3. cap. 4. Here is declared againe foorth of Irenaeus which is the true auncient Apostolike tradition The testimonie of Tertul. touching the tradition of the Apostles lib. de praescript Haeret. The Apostles Creede Tertul. li. de praescripti Haeretico * The Sacrament of thankesgiuing 2. Thes 2.5 Irenaeus touching Paule his tradition lib. 3. cap. 5. lib 4. cap. 41. Augustinus cont l●teras Petiliani lib. 3. cap. 6. There be diuers kindes of Traditions The Scripture is a tradion Cyprianus ad Pompeium Iohn 1.8 Basilius contra Eunomium lib. 3. Matth. 28.19 The articles of our ●aith are a Tradition Irenaeus lib. 3. cap. 4. Tertullianus lib. de praescrip Haeret That which is deriued foorth of God his woorde is a Tradition Olde rites are Traditions What traditions were in olde time Tertullianus contra Marcione lib. 1. lib. de coron● militis * That is the Sacrament of thankesgiuing Hieronymus in Matthaeum cap. 25. Tertullianus lib. de velandis virginibus Distin 31. cap. Aliter The mariage of Priestes Augustinus ad Casulanum epist. 76. 1. Cor. 4.17 Cyprianus ad Pompeium 2. Thes 2.2 Three kinde of guiles wherby forgers are woont to deceiue .. Col. 2.81.2.3 2. Pet. 2. ●enaeus lib. 3. ●p 5. ●he shift of he●●tikes ●●enaeus lib. 3. ●p 2. 1. Cor. 2.6 Irenaeus lib. 1. cap 24. The heretikes called Carpocratians Tertullianus de praescrip Haereticorum Eusebius 5. cap. 28. Clemen Stromat 7. Papias Eusebius lib. 3. cap. 39. The Chiliastes helde this erronious opinion that the Sonne of God should raigne in the earth as a king a thousand yeeres after the generall iudgement with his elect in the holie citie which he should build Lactantius institutionum lib. 7. cap. 24. Papias seduced many worthie men by traditions Clement of Alexandria a fauourer of traditions Clemens lib. Stroma 5 1. Cor. 2.6 Irenaeus lib. 3. cap. 2. Tertul. de praescrip Haeretic Clemens lib. Strom. 6. Whether Clement is throwen downe headlong through traditions Clemens li. 1. Strom. lib. 2. Strom. lib. 3. Strom. lib. 6. Strom. Galat. 2.21 Origen depraued by traditions Hieronymus ad Auitum Pammachum Ocoeanum c. The allegorization of the scripture commeth from traditions Diuinitie transformed into Philosophie Epi. geuen to traditions A verie apte similitude Hieronymus Chrysost in Matt. cap. 23. Hieronymus in 1. Cap. Aggaei A briefe rehersall of all those things which haue bene handeled and disputed of touching the holie Scripture and the Church Rom. 3.4 1. Tim. 3.15 The malignant Church Iohn 8.44 2. Cor. 11.3 2. Tim. 3.15.16.17 Ambrosius August de vnitate Eccles cap. 16. * Iohn 20.27 * Luke 24.26 Acts. 17.11 Hieronymus ad Mimerium et Alexandrum 1. Thes 5.21 ¶ Imprinted at London at the three Cranes in the vine tree by Thomas Dawson for William Pounsonby 1579.