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A46991 A collection of the works of that holy man and profound divine, Thomas Iackson ... containing his comments upon the Apostles Creed, &c. : with the life of the author and an index annexed.; Selections. 1653 Jackson, Thomas, 1579-1640.; Oley, Barnabas, 1602-1686.; Vaughan, Edmund. 1653 (1653) Wing J88; Wing J91; ESTC R10327 823,194 586

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that day to believe them if we speak properly and absolutely without reference to their former incredulity Our meaning is they shall do more then believe them for they shall feel them Nor can we say properly that the Elect after the resurrection shall believe the articles of faith seeing all agree that of these three principal vertues Faith Hope and Love onely Love shall then remain The reason is that which you have heard alreadie because evident knowledge must be excluded from the nature of faith and belief and the godly shall then clearly see Christ face to face and fully enjoy the fruit of his Passion which now they onely believe 11 As for certainty We may not exclude it from the nature of belief unlesse this speech be warily understood For the certainty of the Articles of our Faith ought to be greater then the certainty of other knowledge for we must believe them although they be contrary to the capacity of our understanding for even this must we believe that many things as all supernatural things surpasse the reach of our understanding Yet this we may safely say that the certainty of the articles of our belief as of Christ his death of his and our resurrection cannot be so great to us in this life as it shall be in the world to come when we shall evidently know them This rule then is infallible That the knowledge of any thing is more certain then the belief thereof although the belief of some things as of Christ his Passion be more certain then the knowledge of other things as namely then the knowledge of humane sciences So then out of this it is evident that belief taken generally doth neither exclude all certaintie nor necessarily require any seeing some belief hath a kinde of certaintie adjoyned with it and some cannot admit it Wherefore it remaineth that Assent is the essence of belief in general I say such an assent as is not joyned with evidency 12 This Assent may be weaker or stronger and so come nearer unto or be further from certainty according to the nature of that object whereunto we give assent or according to the nature of that whereupon our belief is grounded or lastly according to our apprehension either of the object or that which is the ground of our assent Excesse in the first of these to wit in certaintie or stabilitie of the object doth rather argue a possibility of firmer belief or more credibility not more firm or actual belief For as many things are more intelligible then others and yet are least understood of many so many that are most credible are least believed 13 Excesse in the second of these whence the assent of belief may be strengthned that is in the ground of belief doth rather argue a stronger hypothetical belief then any absolute belief unlesse the apprehension or conceit of this ground be strong and lively In ordinary reports or contracts it skils not of what credit the partie be unto whose credence or authority we are referred for the truth of any promise or report unless we have good inducements to think that he did either say or promise as we were told If we be not thus perswaded by some apprehension of our own we give onely conditional assent unto the report or promise and believe both with this limitation if he say so whose credit we so esteem But if we can fully apprehend that he said so we believe absolutely 14 As in science or demonstrations it is requisite both that we know the true cause of the effect and also that we apprehend it certainly as the true cause otherwise we have onely an opinion so in true and absolute belief it is requisite that we have both a sure ground of our belief and a true apprehension of that ground otherwise our belief must needs be conditional not absolute It remaineth therefore that we set down first the nature of the objects that may be believed secondly the several grounds of belief and thirdly the manner of apprehending them albeit in some the apprehension of the object it self and the ground of belief are in a sort all one as in that belief which is not grounded upon the authoritie of the teacher This rule is general Wheresoever the objects are in themselves more credible the ground may be more strong and the apprehension more lively so men be capable of it and industrious to seek it and equal apprehension of such objects as are more credible in themselves upon such grounds as are more firm makes the belief stronger then it could be of objects lesse credible or upon grounds lesse firm Caeteris paribus every one of these three First Greater credibility of the object Secondly Surer ground of belief Thirdly more lively apprehension of the object or ground encrease belief 15. For the Objects of belief whence this assent must be distinguished they are either natural or supernatural but first of that which is natural The 〈◊〉 of natural belief are of two sorts either scibilia or opinabilia either such things as may be evidently known in themselves but are not so apprehended by him that believes them or else such things as we can have no evident or certain knowledge of but onely an opinion And of this nature are all the monuments of former ages and relations of ancient times in respect of us which are now living all future contingents or such effects as have no necessary natural cause why they should be nor no inevitable let or hinderance why they may not be as whether we should have rain or fair weather the next moneth whether such or such Nations shall wage war against each other the next year These matters past and contingent which are not yet but may be albeit they agree in the general nature of opinabilia that neither of them can be exactly known but onely by opinion believed yet both differ in that which is the ground of our assent or belief The ground or reason why we believe things past as that Tully lived in Julius Caesars time or that the Saxons inhabited this land is the report of others The ground or reason why we believe future contingents is the inclination or propension which we see in second causes to produce such effects or the coherence betwixt any natural or moral contingent cause and their possible or probable issue As if we see one Kingdom mighty in wealth and at peace and unitie in it self bearing inveterate hate to another or if we know that the one hath suffered wrong not likely to be recompenced and yet able in politick estimation to make it self amends we beleeve that such will shortly be at open hostilitie one with another Or if we see the air waterish we believe it will shortly rain Yet are not the grounds why we believe things past and the grounds of believing future contingents alwayes so opposite but that they may jump in one and conspire mutually for the strengthning of belief
common reason and cannot but command the Assent of every sanctified Mind That such Men are most likely to have the Meaning of Gods Spirit which walk according to Gods Spirit and seek not their own Gain Glory or pleasure but Christs Glory his Will and peoples Good and such again are most likely to use greatest sincerity in delivering the Truth which they know without partiality or respect of persons Again men are bound caeteris paribus to Believe them best and Obey them most of whose skil and sincerity in dispensing the Mysteries of faith they have had most comfortable and spiritual Experience For the Article of Gods providence binds us hereto and wils us to reverence our Fathers in Christ either such as by his Word first begot faith or nourished it in us more then others Thus much concerning this point I have thought good to insert in this place because the true and sincere Practise of Obedience according to that measure of Truth or Belief which men have though but imperfect is the excellentest Means for attaining the clear sight of Divine Truth and that perfect Measure of sanctifying Belief which in this life can be looked for as shall God willing afterwards appear CAP. X. Wherein this Conditional Belief differeth from the Romans implicite Faith That the one is the other not subordinate to Gods Word or Rule of Faith 1 AS this Opinion of conditional Assent unto Divine Truthes not absolutely known for such holds the Mean betwixt the two Extreams or contrary Errours above mentioned So is this conditional Assent it self a Mean betwixt that absolute Belief which all acknowledge to be necessarie in some principal Points of Christian Faith and that implicit Belief which the Romish Church exacts in all points whatsoever Our Assent unto many Articles of Faith is actually and expresly absolute The implicit Belief of the Romanists is but potentially or rather vertually and implicitely absolute This conditional Belief hitherto mentioned not so much as potentially much lesse implicitely or virtually absolute That properly is Believed by an implicite Faith which is not actually and expresly Assented unto in the particular but yet is so essentially and immediately contained in some general Article or Point of Faith absolutely or expresly Believed that this Particular likewise is Assented unto in grosse whilest we Assent to it and may be as absolutely as expresly and distinctly Assented unto as the General when it is once explicated and unfolded In this Sense we say the Conclusion is implicitely contained in the Premisses the Corollarie in the Theorem or the immediate Consequent in his necessarie Antecedent For he that grants One of these absolutely must upon the same terms grant the Other at the first proposal of it unto him But this conditional or reservative Belief may be of such Points as are not certainly and infallibly contained in any Principle of Faith absolutely expresly actually or infallibly acknowledged much lesse so essentually and immediately contained in any that a man cannot absolutely grant it but he must absolutely Believe them And albeit off-times they may be infallibly deduced from known undoubted Principles of Faith yet is not the deduction so immediate as can be made clear and evident to all Capacities at least not at the first sight without any further increase of Knowledge in Spiritual Matters And before the deduction be made as evivident and apprehended asinfallible as are the general Articles whence they are deduced the Particulars deduced from them may not be so infallibly and absolutely Believed as the Generals are The Papists besides their Explicit Belief of some few main Points demand an Implicit Belief of as many Particulars as the Church shall propose so as whatsoever the Church shall propose with them once proposed admits no conditional Belief all must be Absolute albeit the parties Believing cannot discern any necessary or probable deduction of the particulars from general Points absolutely and expresly believed It is enough that they know them to be proposed by the Church For once Believing Whatsoever the Church saith is most Infallible which is the main Article of Roman Faith no man can denie any particular proposed by it to be infallible more then he can deny the Conclusion for certain after he hath granted the Premisses for such Consequently to these Positions they make the Visible Church the Rule and Mistresse of mens Faith as they speak For albeit a man at this present think otherwise of many Points of greatest Moment then the Church or Pope doth or though he think not at all of many things which they in time may propose unto him yet after they have proposed either a contrarie Opinion to that which his Conscience tels him is Gods Word or a new and strange Position which he never thought of he must without more ado Believe both absolutely and expresly and so finally retract extend enlarge abridge direct and frame his Faith according to that Rule or Standard which they shall set him Hence God willing shal appear the Madness of some great Schollers among them who holding the Church to be such a Rule of Faith would perswade us if we would be so simple that their last Resolution of Faith is not into the Churches Authoritie but into the Scripture For nothing can be resolved beyond it rule to make the Churches authority such an absolute authentick unquestionable rule of faith as the Papists do and withal to seek the resolution of any point of faith further then it or to derive it from Scripture doth argue such a medley of Folly Impietie as if some gullish Gentleman desirous to prove the Antiquitie of his House should draw his Pedigree from Adams great Grandfather and yet hold the Records of Moses for most undoubted and true which affirm Adam to have been the first Progenitour of all Mankind Whether they seek to resolve their Faith into the Scriptures acknowledged by us and them or into other Unwritten Revelations pretended for Divine Truths their Folly will still appear the same so long as they hold that impious and blasphemous Opinion making the Churches Authoritie such a Rule of Faith as hath been said Their Injuries and Contumelies unto Gods written Oracles as hath heretofore been intimated are especially Two First they deny them to be any intire Rule for the number of Precepts Secondly they make those very Precepts which are acknowledged for Divine insufficient for the establishment of true Faith unto themselves without the Churches Authority We acknowledge them every way sufficient for the Edification of Christs Church in Faith and Manners and consequently both to our Positions and the Truth we teach that all Matters of Faith must be finally resolved into these Divine written Verities which for this reason we acknowledge the only Infallible Rule of Faith The Meaning of which Assertion is here to be further explicated that so the Truth may be maintained against their Objections CAP. XI In what Sense we
Rule of Life shall inlighten them unrepented of no other Rule or Authoritie shall teach them the way to Life 4 Since we thus grant that the Scriptures may be Obscure to most men by their own default but perspicuous to others free from like fault or Demerit it remains we further enquire whether the same Scriptures do not most plainly set down First the Causes why they are so Obscure to some and Perspicuous to others Secondly the Remedy or means how their Obscurity or difficulty may be prevented If they plainly teach these two Points this is a sure Argument that they are if not that they cannot be so excellent a Rule of Faith as we acknowledge them For this very Point That the Scriptures in respect of diverse Persons are Obscure and Perspicuous though Obscure to none but through their own Default is a Principle of Christian Faith and therefore must be plainlie set down in the absolute complete Rule of Faith And to omit others in their due place to be inserted what can be more perspicuonsly taught either by Scriptures or other Writings than this Truth God giveth grace to the Humble and resisteth the proud or this He will confound the Wisdom of the Wise or such as Glory in their Wisdom These and like Rules of Gods Justice in punishing the proud and disobedient hold as true in the search of Scripture as in any other matter yea especially herein Thus were the Scribes and Pharisees men of extraordinary skill in Scriptures blinded in the most necessary Points of their Salvation though most plainly set down in Scriptures For what could be more plainly set down then many Testimonies of their Messias Many places of far greater Difficultie they could with Dexteritie unfold how chanced it then they are so Blinded in the other They were scattered in the proud Imagination of their hearts and glorious conceits of their Prerogatives in being Mosis Successours and in their stead simple and illiterate but humble and meek spirited Men raised up to be infallible Teachers of the Gentiles to unfold those Mysteries of Mans Redemption which the Scribes and Pharisees could not see with evidence of Truth to enlighten the sillie and ignorant and convince the Consciences of their learned proud Oppugners By their Ministerie Prophetical and Mosaical Mysteries became a Light unto the Gentile whose life had been in the shadow of death whilest a Veil was laid before the hearts of the most learned Jewes so that even whilst the Sun of Righteousnesse which enlightens every man that comes into the World did arise in their coast and ascend unto their Zenith they groap their way as men that walk in dangerous Paths by dark-night 5 Was the Scripture therefore no Rule of Faith unto these Jews to whom it was so Dishcult and Obscure Or is it not most evident that this Blindnesse did therefore come upon Israel because they hated this Light being carried away with Lowd cries of Templum Domini Templum Domini as the Papists now are with The Church The Church And for words of supposed Disgrace offered to It onely upon a Surmise that Christ had said he would destroy and build It up again brought to seek the destruction of the Glory of It even of the Lord of Glory Thou that wouldest make others beleave the Pope is such dost thou beleeve the Scriptures to be Infallible How is it then whilest thou readest Gods Judgements upon thy Brother Jew thou doest not tremble and quake lest the Lord smite thee also thou painted wall with like Blindnesse seeing thou hast justified thy brother Pharisees stubborn Pride wilfull Arrogancie and witting Blasphemie in oppugning Scriptures And as for all such whose hearts can be touched with the terrour of Gods Judgements upon others in fear and reverence I request them to consider well whether one of the greatest Roman Doctours were not taken with more than Jewish madnesse in mistaking Scripture in it self most plain and easie who to prove the Scriptures Obscurity to be such as in this respect it could not be the Rule of Faith alledgeth for his proof that place of the Prophet And the vision of them all is become unto you as the word of a Book that is sealed up which they deliver to one that can read saying Read this I pray thee then shall he say I cannot for it is sealed 6 The Prophet relates it as a wonder that they should not be able to discern the Truth What Truth an obscure or hidden Truth Impossible to be understood This had been a wonderfull Wonder indeed that men should not be able to understand that which was Impossible to be understood Wherein then was the true Wonder seen In this that they whose eyes had formerly been illuminated by the evidence and clearnesse of the Divine Truth revealed by Gods Messenger should not be able to discern the same still alike clear and perspicuous but now to be shut up from their eyes as appeareth by the similitude of the sealed Book whose Character was legible enough but yet not able to be read whilst sealed A man might as well prove the Sun to be dark because Polyphemus after 〈◊〉 had put out his eye could not see it as the Scriptures by this place to be Obscure The Prophets words entire are these Stay your selves and Wonder they are blind and make you blind they are drunken but not with wine they stagger but not with drink For the Lord hath covered you with a spirit of slumber and hath shut up your eyes The Prophets and your chief Seers hath he covered And the vision of them all is become unto you c. And more plainly Therefore the Lord said because this people come near me with their mouth and honour me with their lips but have removed their heart from me and their fear towards me was taught by the precepts of men doth he not mean the Blind Obedience of Modern Papists as well as ancient Jews Therefore behold I will do a marvellous work in this People even a marvellous work and a wonder For the Wisdom of the wise men shall perish and the understanding of the prudent man shall be hid The Lord himself foretels it as a wonder that this People should be so ignorant in the Word of God and yet will the Jesuite make us beleeve the Word of God is so Obscure that it cannot be unto us the Rule of Faith when as without the knowledge and light of it not which it hath in it self but which it communicates to us there is no Vision no Knowledge in the Visible Church but such wonderfull Darknesse as the Prophet here describes 7 Let the Reader here give sentence with me whether it were not wonderfull Jewish Blindnesse or wilfull Blasphemie in Valentian so confidently to avouch that the Veil which Saint Paul saith is laid before the Jews hearts was woven a great part out of the Difficulty of Scriptures such Scriptures as the
anus Christiana quae non sciat Christum natum incarnatum fuisse Saint Pauls Cospel was sufficiently known in this mans Sense of his words because there is neither Christian childe nor old wife but knows that Christ was incarnate and born Too many I fear of his and his fellows catechizing know Christ no otherwise then old Wives or little Children know ordinary matters or Stories past that is only by old Wives Tales lying Legends or Tradition And on this fashion and better did the Jews Know Moses and Believed on him yet did they neither Know Him nor his Doctrine as they should have done nor in such a Sense as the Scripture useth this word Knowledge Such as he would have us content our selves withall is rather blindnesse then Knowledg and makes a man never a whit the better Christian but a greater Hypocrite 2 Let Bellarmines Answer stand thus far for true that the Knowing of Christ and Belief of the Gospel are manifest to all that are not given over to Jewish Blindnesse And what it is to Know Christ or believe the Gospel in Saint Pauls Phrase by Gods assistance we shall further explicate in the Articles following To Know Christ was all Saint Paul desired because it contained all Knowledge of Scriptures and whether Saint Paul did not desire to Know Scriptures or whether he had not his Desire herein 〈◊〉 Christian Consciences judge 3 And because I must conclude this Point as I promised with this Testimony of Saint Paul Beloved Christian whosoever thou art that shalt read these Meditations ask Counsel of thine own Heart Consult with thy Conscience consider well and give Sentence betwixt me and this Romish Doctor what kind of Knowledge Saint Paul here meant whether an Implicite or Hear 〈◊〉 Knowledge of Christ and his Kingdom in grosse or an expresse distinct true Knowledge raised from Moses and the Prophets consonancy with the Gospel of Scriptures necessary to Mens Salvation in their several Courses of life I 〈◊〉 not wrong thy Judgement so much as to seek Arguments or Authorities of Expositors for thy information in this plain undoubted ca●e It shall sussice to rehearse the Words of that Law about whose Sence we now contend and by which we must be tried from the twelfth verse of the third to the sixth verse of the fourth Chapter of the second to the Corinthians 4 Seeing then we have such trust we use great Boldnesse of Speech and we are not as Moses which put a Veil upon his face that the Children of Israel should not look unto the end of that which should be abolished Therefore their minds are hardened For until this day remaineth the same Covering untaken away in the reading of the Old Testament Yet was the Old Testament the only Scripture in those times easie to be understood but for this Veil And this Veil as the Apostle adds verse the fourteenth put away these Scriptures then which were so difficult to the Jew are Easie to all that are in Christ by whose death the Veil was rent and that Light which shone on Moses face as the Sun upon the Eastern skie in the dawning was fully manifested to the Inhabitants of the earth since the Sun of righteousnesse did appear For the publishing of the Gospel is the putting away of the former Veil But for the Jewes even until this day saith the Apostle When Moses is read the Veil is laid over their hearts Neverthelesse when their hearts shall be turned unto the Lord the Veil shall be taken away For this Doctrine of Saint Paul as often hath been said was in their Hearts and in their mouthes Deut. 30. 14. The Apostle concludes Now the Lord is the Spirit and where the Spirit of the Lord is there is Liberty Liberty indeed in respect of that Servitude which was under the Law then they were Servants because they knew not their Masters will John 15. 15. but since the Ministry of the New Testament We all behold as in a Mirrour the Glory of the Lord with open face Verse 18. Out of our Apostles discourse this is most evident that it was the Glory of his Ministry and Evidence of Doctrine which made him so consident in the execution of this Function God saith he hath made us able Ministers of the New Testament not of the Letter but of the Spirit 2 Cor. 3. 6. And this compared with the Ministry of the Old did far exceed it in Glory and Perspicuity as he proves from the sixth verse to the eighteenth 5 The judicious Reader though not admonished would of his own accord observe how the Apostle takes Clearnesse and Perspicuity as an Adjunct of the New Testament's Glory the Jesuites quite contrary would make the Scriptures Dignity and Majesty Mother of Difficulty and Obscurity But because it was so much more glorious and perspicuous then the Ministery of the Old Testament was The Apostle infers 2 Cor. 4. 1 2. Therefore seeing we have this Ministery of the New Testament so glorious and perspi●uous as we have received mercy we faint not but have cast off the cloak of shame and walk not in craftinesse neither handle we the Word of God deceitfully for why should any when it will approve it self but in declaration of the Truth approve our selves to every mans Conscience in the sight of God What Proof could he make to their Consciences but only from the Evidence of that Truth which he taught and his Sincerity in teaching it These two would bind all such as made any conscience of their wayes to admit his Doctrine Whence he infers in the very next words verse 3. If then our Gospel be bid c. Briefly refuting all the Romanists Objections in this Argument before they were conceived punctim even to an hairs breadth For this would have been their common place had they lived in Saint Pauls time You may boast and say your Doctrine of the New Testament is evident and manifest but what wise man will believe you when a great many as good Schollers as your self think the contrary most true Unto this Objection of the Jews then of the Jesuites now of Satan both now and then and alwayes frequent in the mouth of Hell our Apostle answers directly as from his Doctrine we have done all the Jesuites Arguments If the Gospel be hid as indeed to some too many it is Yet it is hid only to them that perish whose Minds the God of this World hath blinded that the glorious Gospel of Christ which is the Image of God should not shine unto them 6 The Gospel then did shine yet not to Blinded eyes to whom then only to such as were indued with the Spirit of Liberty seeing the New Testament as he said was the Ministry of the Spirit of which these Jews were not partakers because they followed the Letter or Outside of the Law and had Moses Writings as children Lessons they understand not at their Tongues end not in their Hearts SECT
adversary or accuser he himself bearing the name of adversary likewise in his ●itle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a second foundation in shew subordinate in deed and consequence quite contrary to that which the Prophets and Apostles have laid eternally priviledged if we may believe his followers from those spurnings of men from which the pretious stone of Sion was not exempted 22 To collect the sum of late Romanists comments upon their Churches supposed fundamental Charter Their confession of Christ come in the flesh and made head stone in the corner though conceived in form of words Orthodoxal enough proves only this but this abundantly to all the world that the Pope their supream head sits in the Temple of God whose circumference in respect of men who cannot search other mens hearts is defined by this Confession Their attributing the title of Rock or Fundamental supportance of that spiritual house unto this head proclaims unto all the world that he sits as God in the Temple of God shewing himself that he is God For the Hebrew 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 equivalent to the Sy●iac 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in that sence they take it as assording such impregnable supportance or fortification against the powers of hell world or flesh is oftner by their own vulgar latin rendred Deus then Petra or Rupes which it directly signifies because considered with these circumstances or effects it is rather a glorious Title of the Godhead or Derty it self then a particular attribute taken from some divine propriety communicable to Gods servants in the Abstract 23 Lastly unto me their common exposition of Christs speeches unto S. Peter suggest this argument more then demonstrative that the Papacy is lead by the spirit of great Antichrist in that no doctrine of Devils can more directly contradict or more shamefully deny the vertue and power of Christ come in the flesh nor more peremptorily disanul or cancel his promise there made unto his Church then Jesuitical comments upon it do Christs promise was a promise of life and saving health a full assurance of eternal happinesse to all that should be truly built upon that Rock which Peter confessed or which they say Peter was They make the tenure of this glorious covenant to be no more but this that Peters successours and such as will build their faith upon them speaking ex Cathedra as upon Rocks invincible shall be indefectible in points of Christian faith and manners howsoever even these Rocks themselves may be for life and conversation as wicked as Annas or Caiphas or other blinded guides of the Jewish Synagogue that crucified our Saviour 24 Thus by a pretended successive perpetuity of Peters Faith they utterly abolish that lively Faith whereby he confessed Christ which is alway included as a necessary condition without which none can be capable of that glorious promise but with it all are made immediate heirs of salvation Or to speak more plainly none may expect the least portion of Peters blessing without Peters Faith nor can that be in any but such as are born of God Everyone saith S. John that is born of God over cometh the world and this is the victory that overcometh the world even our faith And again who is he that overcometh the world but he which Believeth what Peter had confessed that Jesus is the Son of God And our Saviour himself to whom his father had given power over all flesh that he should give eternal life to all given him by his father tels us that this Life Eternal must grow from that root of Faith which first did branch in Peters mouth but must be so planted as it grew in him in every heart endued with sure hope much more in all such as ●ay challenge to such preheminency or Prerogative of Faith or Hope as Peter had This is life eternal that they may know Thee saith Christ speaking of his Father to be the Only Very God and whom thou hast sent Jesus Christ so then God manifested in the flesh was the Rock of salvation whereupon the Church is built he that rightly knows and so believes this truth hath life eternal dwelling in him 25 But shall such a Faith as may be severed from Charity shall such a knowledge of Christ as may be in them to whom Christ shall say Depart from me I never knew you I say not make any so impregnable a Rock but so fasten any to that Rock so impregnable as the gates of hell shall not be able to dispossesse him of eternal life Whiles we produce the late cited or other testimonies alike pregnant to condemn the Pontificians for denying Justification only by Faith they think themselves fully acquitted with this solution that our assurance of salvation relies not upon Faith as alone but as it is the Foundation of Charity and accompanied with other Christian vertues We never taught us shall be shewed in that controversie that Faith unlesse thus attended could with true confidence plead our cause before God which yet though thus attended It only pleads But here our adversaries must be contented to take their payment in their own coin For if no man can be justified or made heir of salvation it is unpossible any should be a lively stone or living member much lesse a supream head or sure foundation of that spiritual house alwayes victorious over death and hell without a Faith so appointed as in the former case they require without a Faith as clearly testifying Christ dwelling in men by works flowing from it as their edification upon him by an Orthodoxal form of words Whosoever is destitute of a faith thus bearing fruit unto salvation is so far from being a Rock or sure foundation for others to build upon that he himself if we may believe our Saviour Mat. 7. 26. builds all his hopes upon the Sand Whosoever heareth these my words and doth them not shall be likened unto a foolish man which hath builded his house upon the sand and the rain fell and the flouds came and the winds blew and beat upon that house and it fell and the fall thereof was great Not every one therefore that saith unto our Saviour as Peter did thou art Christ the son of the living God but he that expresseth his faith and hope by works answerable to Christs conversation in the flesh and his Fathers will shall enter into the kingdom of heaven because he only is built upon that Rock which the floud-gates of hell cannot undermine or overthrow For whosoever saith our Saviour heareth of me these words and doth the same I will liken him to a wise man which builded his house on a rock And the rain fell and the flouds came and the winds blew and beat upon that house and it fell not for it was grounded upon a Rock 26 Let the Jesuite either produce any Heresie broached since our Saviours Incarnation or frame a conceit of any but Logically possible before his coming unto
he was Fellow and partly when he returned President I never heard to my best remembrance one word of Anger or dislike against him I have often resembled him in my thoughts with favour of that honourable Person be it spoken to him whose name sounds very near him who being placed in the upper part of the World carried on his Dignity with that Justice Modesty Integrity Fidelity and other gracious plausibilities that in a place of Trust he contented those whom he could not satisfie and in a place of Envie procured the Love of them who amulated his greatnesse and by his Example shewed the preheminence and security of true Christian Wisdom before all the sleights of humane Policie that in a busie time no man was found to accuse him So this good Man in that inferiour Orb which God had placed him demeaned himself with that Christian Innocencie Candor Wisdom and Modesty that malice it self was more wary then to cast any aspersions upon him I shall willingly associate Him to those other Worthies his Predecessors in the same Colledge all living at the same time To the invaluable Bishop Jewel Theologorum quas Orbis Christianus per aliquot annorum centenarios produxit maximo as grave Bishop Goodwin hath described him the greatest Divine that for some former Centuries of years the Christian World hath produced To the famous Mr. Hooker who for his solid Writings was sirnamed The Judicious and entitled by the same Theologorum Oxonium The Oxford of Divines as One calls Athens The Greece of Greece it self To the learned Dr. Reinolds who managed the Government of the same Colledge with the like care honour and integrity although not with the same austerities He willingly admitted and was much delighted in the acquaintance and familiarity of hopeful young Divines not despising their youth but accounting them as sonnes and Brethren encouraging and advising them what Books to read and with what holy preparations lending them such Books as they had need of and hoping withall that considering the brevity of his own life some of them might live to finish that work upon the Creed which he had happily begun unto them This was one of the special advises and directions which he commended to young men Hear the Dictates of your own Conscience Quod dubitas ne feceris making this the Comment upon that of Syracides In all thy matters trust or beleeve thine own soul and bear it not down by impetuous and contradictious lusts c. He was as diffusive of his knowledge counsel and advice as of any other his works of Mercie In all the Histories of learned pious and devout men you shall scarcely meet with one that disdained the World more generously not out of ignorance of it as one brought up in Cells and darknesse for he was known and endeared to men of the most resplendent Fortunes nor out of melancholy disposition for he was chearfull and content in all estates but out of a due and deliberate scorne knowing the true value that is the vanitie of it As perferments were heaped upon him without his suit or knowledge so there was nothing in his power to give which he was not ready and willing to part withall to the deserving or indigent man His Vicarage of St. Nicholas Church in New-Castle he gave to Mr. Alvye of Trinity Colledge upon no other relation but out of the good opinion which he conceived of his merits The Vicarage of Witny neer Oxford after he had been at much pains travail and expence to clear the Title of the Rectory to all succeeding Ministers when he had made it a Portion sitting either to give or keep he freely bestowed it upon the worthy Mr. Thomas White then Proctor of the University late Chaplain to the Colledge and now Incumbent upon the Rectory A Colledge Lease of a place called Lye in Gloucestershire presented to him as a gratuity by the Fellows he made over to a Third late Fellow there meerly upon a plea of Poverty And whereas they that first offered it unto him were unwilling that he should relinquish it and held out for a long time in a dutifull opposition He used all his power friendship and importunity with them till at length he prevailed to surrender it Many of his necessary friends and attendance have professed that they made severall journeys and employed all powerfull mediation with the Bishop that he might not be suffered to resigne his Prebendship of Winchester to a Fourth and upon knowledge that by their contrivance he was disappointed of his resolution herein he was much offended that the Manus mortua or Law of Mortmain should be imposed upon him whereby in former dayes they restrained the liberality of devout men toward the Colledges and the Clergie But this was interpreted as a discurtesie and dis-service unto him who knew that it was a more Blessed thing to give then to receive But that which remained unto him was dispersed unto the Poor to whom he was a faithfull dispenser in all places of his abode distributing unto them with a free heart a bountifull hand a comfortable speech and a cheerfull eye How disrespectfull was he of Mammon the God of this world the golden Image which Kings and Potentates have set up before whom the Trumpets play for Warre and slaughter and Nations and Languages fall down and worship besides all other kinde of Musick for jollity and delight to drown if it were possible the noise of Bloud which is most audible and cries lowdest in the ears of the Almighty How easily could he cast that away for which others throw away their lives and salvation running headlong into the place of eternall skreekings weeping and gnashing of teeth If it were not for this spirit of Covetousnesse all the World would be at quiet Certainly although the nature of man be an apt soil for sin to flourish in yet if the Love of money be the root of all evil it could not grow up in him because it had no Root and if it be so hard for a rich man to enter into the Kingdom of God and the narrow gate which leads unto Life then he that stooped so low by humblenesse of minde and emptied himself so neerly by mercifulnesse unto the Poor must needs finde an easier passage Doubtlesse they that say and do these Things shew plainly that they seek another Countrey that is an heavenly for if they had been mindfull of This they might have taken opportunity to have used it more advantageously His Devotions towards God were assiduous and exemplarie both in publick and private He was a diligent frequenter of the publick Service in the Chappel very early in the Morning and at Evening except some urgent occasions of Infirmity did excuse him His private Conferences with God by Prayer and Meditation were never omitted upon any occasion whatsoever When he went the yearly progresse to view the Colledge Lands and came into the Tenants House it was his constant
with other stand mutually affected how both subordinate to the absolute immutability of that one everlasting decree Want of resolution in these points as far as my observation serves me hath continually bred an universal threefold want of care and vigilancie for preventing dangers in themselves avoidable of alacrious indeavors to redeem time in part surprized by them of patience of hearty submission to Gods will and constant expectation of his providence after all hope of redemption from temporal plagues long threatned by his messengers is past For here we suppose what out of the fundamental principles of Christian religion shall in good time be made evident that in all ruinated states or forepast alterations of religion from better to worse there was a time wherein the possibility of misfortunes which afterwards befel them might have been prevented a time wherein they might have been recovered from eminent dangers wherewith they were encompast a time after which there was no possibility left them of avoyding the day of visitation never brought forth but by the precedent fulness of iniquity but alwaies necessarily by it In the discussion of these and other points of like nature because more depending upon strict examination of consequences deduced from the undoubted rules of Scripture then upon authorities of antiquitie skill in the tongues or any other learning that required long experience or observation I laboured most whilest those Arts and Sciences which are most conducible to this search were freshest in my memory And could I hope to satisfie others in all or most of these as fully as I have long since done my self I should take greatest pleasure in my pains addressed to this purpose But would it please the Lord in mercy to raise up some English writer that could in such sort handle these points as their use and consequence or necessity of present times requires succeeding ages I am perswaded should have more cause to bless the day of his nativity then of the greatest States-mens or stoutest Warriors this land hath yielded since the birth of our Fathers this day living It shall suffice he to begin the offering with my mite in hope some learned Academicks for unto them belongs the conquest of this golden fleece will employ their Talents to like publick use What I conceive shall be by Gods assistance unfolded in as plain and unoffensive terms as the nature of the subject will bear or my faculties reach unto partly in the Article of Gods providence partly in other discourses directly subordinate unto it Lastly for the full and perfect growth at least for the sweet and pleasant flourishing of lively Faith one of the most effectual means our industry that can but plant or water attains unto would be to unfold the harmony betwixt Prophetical predictions and Historical events concerning the Kingdom of Christ and time of the Gospel a point for ought I know not purposely handled by any modern writer except those whose success cannot be great until their delight in contention and contradiction be less Notwithstanding whatsoever I shall find good in them or any other without all respect of persons much more without all desire of opposition or occasion of contention a matter alwaies undecent in a Christian but most odious and lothsom in a subject so melodious and pleasant I will not be afraid to follow intending a full Treatise of the divers kindes of Prophecies with the manner of their interpretations before the Articles of Christs Incarnation Passion and Ascension These are the especial points which for the better confirmation of true Christian faith and rectifying perswasions in matters of manners or good life are principally aimed at in these meditations The main obstacle the Atheist stumbles at is the Article of the bodies resurrection Whose passive possibility shall by Gods assistance be evidently demonstrated against him by the undoubted rules of nature whose Priest or Minister he professeth himself to be That de facto it shall be the Scriptures whose truth ere then will appear Divine must assure us Nature cannot though thus much were in some sort known and believed by many natural men from traditions of the ancient or suspected from some notions of the law of nature not quite obliterated in all sorts of the heathen as shall in that Article God willing be observed But why our Assent unto this and all other Articles in this Creed being in good measure established the momentary hopes or transitory pleasures of this world should with most in their whole course of life with all of us in many particular actions in private and secret temptations more prevail then that exceeding weight of glory which Christian hope would fasten on our souls to keep unruly affections under hath often enforced me to wonder and wonderment hereat first moved me to untertake these labors if by any means I may attain unto the causes of this so grievous an infirmity or find out some part of a remedy for it Doubtless had the heathen Philosophers but known or suspected such joyes as we profess we believe and hope for or such a death or more then deadly torments as after this life ended we fear their lives and manners would as far have surpassed the best Christians now living as their knowledge in supernatural mysteries came short of the most learned that are or have been in that profession and yet whatsoever helps any Christian or heathen had for encreasing knowledge or bettering manners are more plentiful in this then any precedent age so that the fault is wholly in our selves that will not apply medicines already prepared as shall God prospering these proceedings be declared in the last Article of this Creed For controversies betwixt us and the Romish Church besides such are directly opposite to the end and method proposed I purposely meddle with none of that rank some as that of the Churches infallibility undermine the very foundation others as the doctrine of merit and justification the propitiation of the Mass unroof the edifice and deface the walls of Christian faith leaving nothing thereof but altarstones for their idolatrous sacrifices For this reason have I built with one hand used my weapon with the other laying the positive or general grounds of Faith against the Infidel or Atheist in the first Book and gaurding them in the second by the sword of the Spirit against all attempts of Romish Sanballats or Tobiahs who still labor to perswade our people the walls of Christs Church here erected since our fore-fathers redemption from captivity unless supported by their supposed infallibility are so weak That if a Fox should go upon them he should break them down In the third which was at this time intended but must stay a while to bring forth a fourth I batter those painted walls whose shallow foundations are discovered in the second The other controversies about the propitiatory sacrifices of the Mass Merits and Justification I prosecute in the Articles of Christs Passion and
all in this present argument may the truth of that usual Axiom best appear Dimidium facti qui benè coepit habet What 's well begun is well-nigh done If God shall enable me rightly to unfold the contents and meaning of this first word Believe I may justly presume the one half of this intended work to be finished in it seeing it is an essential part of every Article in the Creed such a part as if it be understood amisse we cannot possibly understand any one proposition of this whole confession aright I shall not therefore seem tedious I trust unto the judicious Reader although I be somewhat long in unfolding the nature and conditions of belief the divers acceptions and degrees of the same with the means how it is or may be wrought in our hearts Whether we speak of the Act and operation of believing or of the disposition and inclination of the minde whence this operation proceedeth it skilleth not much he that knoweth the true meaning of the one without any further instruction may know the other And because the Act or Operation is more easie to be known let us begin with the most common and general that is with the best and most usually known acception or notion of belief CAP. I. Of Belief in general TO believe a thing is to assent unto it as true without any evident certainty of the truth thereof either from our sense or understanding 2 That belief is an assent that to believe is to assent all agree but what more besides assent is required to some especially to Christian belief is much controversed among Divines of which God willing in the Articles following 3 That evident certainty either of sense or understanding must be excluded from the assent which is properly called belief is evident and certain by our usual and common speech Thus whiles we demand of him that relates any thing unto us for true as news or the like whether he know his relation to be certainly true or no if he neither have immediately heard nor seen the things which he relates but have onely taken them at the second hand his usual answer is Nay I know not certainly but I verily believe they are true for divers reasons and credible reports but if he had either seen or heard them himself he would not say I believe but I know they are most true For evident certainty doth drown belief 4 Yet is this evident knowledge whether sensitive or intellectuall to be excluded onely from the thing it self which is to be directly believed not from other things that are linked or united to it by nature 5 That which we evidently know may oft-times be the cause why we believe some other matters that have affinity with it As he that seeth it very light in the morning when he first openeth his eyes may probably believe the Sun is up because he evidently seeth the air to be light But no man if you should ask him the same question would say that he believed the Sun was up when either the heat thereof doth scorch his face or the beams dazle his eyes for now he knoweth this truth directly and evidently in it self Nor is there any man that hath his right minde that will say he verily believeth twice two make four for this is evident and certain to ordinary capacities and he that onely believeth this knoweth nothing For what men know certainly and evidently they will not say they onely believe but know what they so know not they may truly and properly say they believe if their assent to it be greater then to the contrary 6 Some again distinguish this unevident assent which is properly called belief from other assents or opinions by the grounds on which it is built The ground of it in their opinion is Authoritas docentis the authority of the teacher or avoucher of the points proposed to be believed 7 This distinction in some cases is true but it is not necessary to all belief nor doth it fully and properly distinguish belief from other unevident assents or perswasions For even those assents or perswasions which seem most to rely upon authorities may be strengthened by other motives or inducements yea our belief or relying upon authorities usually alwayes if it be strong ariseth from experiment of our Authors fidelity and skil as shal appear hereafter For our present proceedings we take it here as granted or supposed that this word Belief as it is usually taken is more general then that Assent or perswasion which relies upon authoritie yet not so general as to comprehend these assents or perswasions which are evidently certain 8 It may be objected that the Apostle calleth evident knowledge belief when he saith The Devils believe there is a God and tremble For it should seem that the Devils know as evidently that there is a God as we do that the Sun did shine but yesterday or this morning For they once enjoyed the presence of God and saw his glory and since have had evident experience of his power 9 Of Gods Being no doubt they have evident certainty albeit of his other attributes their knowledge is not so direct nor evident but conjectural or a kinde of Belief Wherefore unto this place of our Apostle we may answer two wayes Either that under this word Belief he comprehends not onely their assent unto the Being or existence of the Godhead but their assent unto other Attributes of God which they know not so evidently and therefore may be said to believe them Or if he understand onely that assent which they gave unto the existence or Being of the Godhead he calleth this though joyned with evident knowledge a Belief in opposition or with reference unto the Belief of Hypocrites against whom he there speaks which was much lesse then this assent of Devils For albeit that which is greater in the same kinde cannot be properly and absolutely said to be the lesse as we cannot properly and absolutely say that four is three but rather contains three in it yet upon some reference of the greater unto the lesse contained in it or unto some other third we may denominate the greater with the name of that which is lesse in the same kinde as we may say of him that promised three and gave four that he gave three because three is contained in four So the Philosopher saith that Habitus est dispositio every habit is a disposition not absolutely and properly for it is more yet because it is more with reference unto that which is lesse or unto the subject in whom it is we may say it is dispositio that is it contains disposition in it albeit no man would say that habitus were dispositio if he should define it 10 And men usually object to such as scoff at matters of Religion that the day will come wherein if they repent not they shall believe the things which now they little regard Albeit they cannot be said in
For we would believe our former conjecture of war or weather a great deal the better if a cunning States-man should give judgement of the one or an Astronomer or some that we know very weather-wise his opinion of the other For now besides the probability of our own conjectures we have other mens authority to confirm our belief In both kindes either where the grounds of each are several or where both conspire together as the ground of belief or our apprehension of the ground is greater so our belief waxeth stronger Thus we believe the Roman stories of Caesars times more firmly then the relations of Herodotus concerning matters of Egypt or other countries because more Writers and they such as are lesse suspected of vanity or imposture do testifie the truth of Roman affairs 16 Other things which are credible or may be believed are as we said scibilia such things as may be exactly known by natural reason though not of the party which onely believes them for exact knowledge alwayes expels meer belief of the same thing in the same party That the Sun is bigger then the Earth or that the motion thereof is swifter then any Arrows flight may be known exactly by a Mathematician but ordinary Countrey-men such as are not rustically wayward do believe it evidently and exactly know it they cannot The ground of their belief in such a case is authoritas docentis And this authoritie of teachers or others upon whose assertions we relie consisteth partly in a perswasion of the teachers or relators skill in those matters which he teacheth or relateth and partly in his honestie fidelitie or veracitie in his dealings or sayings And as these are reputed greater so do we more believe him in these things which he avoucheth for true and relie more securely upon his authoritie For as we said before Caeteris paribus the certainty of belief encreaseth as the ground of belief doth both for the number of points believed and for the firmnesse of the belief it self If two of the same facultie teach us divers things whereof we have no other ground but their assertion we believe him better whose skill and fidelitie we account of better and the more the parties be that report or avouch the same thing the more we believe them if they be reputed skilful and honest And where the authoritie is the same both for extension and degrees yet we believe the things taught better from the better or more immediate apprehension of the authoritie As if Aristotle Euclide or Archimedes were alive and in that reputation for skill in their several professions which their works are in we would believe those conclusions which we heard them teach better than such as we had from them by others or as we said at the second hand For though the authoritie in both cases were the same yet should not our apprehension of it be so but more immediate in the former We see by daily experience how opinions onely grounded upon the authoritie of teachers for their skill in such matters well reputed of do enforce others especially inferiours in that kinde of skill to give an assent unto the same truth although they have good shew of reason to the contrarie As what Countrey-man is there but would think he might safely swear that the Earth were an hundred times greater then the Sun yet if an Astronomer of whose skill he hath had experience in other matters which he can better discern one whom he knew to be an honest plain dealing man not accustomed to cog with his friend should seriously avouch the contrarie that the Sun is bigger than the Earth few Countrey-men would be so wayward as not to believe their friend Astronomer Albeit his authoritie set aside they had no reason to think so but rather the contrarie And it were a signe of ignorant arrogancie if Punies or Fresh-men should reject the axiomes and principles of Aristotle usual in the Schools because they have some reasons against them which themselves cannot answer For reason might tell them that others their betters which have gone before them have had greater reasons to hold them then they can yet have to deny them This perswasion of other mens skill or knowledge will win the assent of modest and ingenuous youths unto such rules or Axiomes as otherwise they would stiflie denie and have wittie reasons to overthrow But albeit this assent which men give to conclusions they know not themselves but onely believe upon other mens asseverations may be very great as many Countrey-men will believe an Astronomer affirming that the Sun is greater then the Earth better then they will the honestest of their neighbours in a matter that may concern both their commodities yet if the relators or avouchers could make them conceive any probable reason of the same conclusions as if the Astronomer in the mentioned case could shew how everie bodie the further it is from us seemeth the lesse and then declare how many hundred miles the Sun is from us Mens mindes would be a great deal better satisfied and this assent or belief which formerlie did onely relie upon authoritie would be much strengthned by this second tie or hold-fast And if we would observe it There is usually a kinde of regresse betwixt our Belief of authorities and our Assent unto conclusions taught by them First usually we believe authority and afterwards the conclusions taught by it for the authorities sake But after we once finde experiment of the truth of conclusions so taught we believe the authority the better from this experimental truth of the conclusion 17 Out of all these acceptions degrees of Belief or Assent something may be gathered for better expressing the several degrees of true Christian belief which like Jacobs ladder reacheth from Earth to Heaven The first step whereof is belief or assent unto things supernatural The first general part SECT II. CAP. II. Of assent unto objects supernatural THings supernatural we call such as the natural reason of Man cannot attain unto or such as naturally can neither be known or assented unto as probable but are made known or probable by revelation Such are the mysteries of our salvation and the Articles of Christian Belief For no Article of our Belief if we consider them with all the circumstances and in that exact manner as they are proposed in Scripture to be believed could ever have come into corrupted mens cogitation unlesse God had revealed it unto him Seing then we cannot know them in any sort by humane reason and authoritie neither can humane reason or authoritie be the ground of our assenting to them it remaineth then that Authoritas docentis The word of God be the ground of our belief 2 Here then must you call to minde what we said before that authoritas docentis did consist in two things namely in the skill and fidelity or sincerity of the Teacher and by how much we know those to be greater by so much is
our assent or belief strengthned Now it is evident to reason that God is infinitely wise and therefore cannot be deceived whence necessarily it followeth that he knoweth and can tell us the truth Again it is evident that God is most just and true and therefore will not deceive us but will tell us the truth if he professe so Again we cannot conceive of God aright but we must conceive of him as omnipotent and full of power and consequently such an one as needs not in policie or jealousie of our emulating him in knowledge to tell us otherwise then he knows And therefore Aristotle reprehends the Poets for saying that the Gods did envie Men knowledge His resolution is in English to this effect That Poets should the Gods belie More like than Gods should Men envie 3 And if the Heathen were of opinion that the Gods did not envie Men knowledge then must they needs believe that if they taught them any they would teach them true knowledge Wherefore this must be laid down as a certain ground That whatsoever God teacheth us is most true Nor is there any admitting there were a God but would assent unto this But here is the difficultie How can we be assured that God doth teach us any of these things Or how shall we know that this we call Scripture is the Word of God If our apprehension of this ground be sure our faith is firm and absolute if our apprehension hereof be doubtful our faith must needs be unstable or at the best but conditional 4 Let us first therefore look what this conditional assent or belief doth binde us unto Although many that firmly beleeve whatsoever God saith is true either do not acknowledge or do not firmly believe that these Scriptures are the Word of God yet thus much in all sense and reason any natural man will grant there be great presumptions and probabilities why they should be taken for the Word of God And he that doth acknowledge but thus much doth by this acknowledgement binde himself to reverence them above all humane writings For all men naturally know that if they be Gods Word they are worthie all possible reverence Wherefore if a man suppose it only as probable that they are or know nothing to the contrarie why they may not be Gods Word he is bound to reverence and esteem them above all words or writings of man As for example If any Subject in this land should receive Letters concerning some lawful and indifferent request from any other his equal or fellow subject whom he had great reason well to respect suppose he certainly knew that they were such a mans Letters and no counterfeit yet if he should receive Letters in his Majesties name containing the same or other as reasonable request although he knew not so certainly that these were his Majesties Letters as that the others were some well-respected Subjects yet is he in dutie bound to use them with greater respect and reverence than the former The bare presumption and probabilitie that they were the Kings Letters doth binde him to enquire further whether they were his Letters or no nor were his fault excusable if he should shew any signe of disloyaltie or irreverence towards them until he knew that they were not such as their Title or superscription did import 5 He that hath but the same probabilitie that the Scriptures contain in them Gods own words as that Livie his Histories contain the Roman affairs must needs esteem of them infinitely above all humane works And This fruit hypothetical or supposed Belief may bring forth even in the unregenerate or natural man And what hath been said of reverence to the Scriptures upon this supposal is also most true of mans actions If men do but believe it as probable that the Scriptures are the Word of God this belief will procure many good moral actions and much amendment of life though not such spiritual perfection as God in his Word requireth And the reason of this assertion is evident For we see daily that men undertake actions of great difficultie and danger not so much according to the probabilitie of attaining some good as according to the greatness of that good which possibly may be attained So we see many that might live in ease at home with certaintie of moderate gains to undertake voyages to the West or East Indies only upon this resolution That if it be their luck or lot to be rich there they may have enough although the adventure be subject to great dangers and obnoxious to infinite casualties And many there be that will not usually lay out a penny but upon very fair ground of some gain or saving thrift who yet will be well content to venture a Crown or an Angel in a Lotterie where there may be some possibilitie though no probabilitie of obtaining twentie or thirtie pounds These and infinite other examples obvious to dailie experience may serve as a perfect induction of our general assertion That the meer possibilitie of obtaining some great and extraordinary good is of greater moment in s●●ying ●…ctions then certainty of accomplishing pettie desires or greatest probabilities of purchasing ordinarie commodities or delights To deduce then out of this general the particular we intended In the Scripture are promised to all such as love God and do his will far greater blessings then humane knowledge could ever have conceived The like is true in avoiding dangers ●… undertake matters of more difficultie and charges to prevent 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 mischances which may insue then they would do to escape some imminent but ordinarie danger or to release themselves from some smaller harms that alreadie have befallen them Could men consider these things seriously and account of them but as probable what is there in this life which in any reason they should not venture for the obtaining of so great a good Were men but probably perswaded that there were as the Scriptures and the Articles of our Belief tell us a life everlasting full laden with all the fruits of true life joy peace and all choisest pleasures without any annoyance how could they not be most readie and willing to spend this whole transitorie life whose dayes are but few and most of them evil full fraught with grief and distress in the service of God who would thus reward them Yea how could they not be desirous to lay down this life it self upon hope of obtaining such a life For this life compared to that to come hath not the proportion of a Farthing to whole Millions of Gold or all the treasures in this World Nor is the case herein like unto that of adventures or Lotterie where a man may venture his life or goods if he list but if he do not none calleth him to an account for not doing it But in the Scriptures everlasting torments grief and perpetual horror are threatned to all such as frame not their lives according to Gods will in them revealed
have acknowledged as much had be been in their place For why should he Any other might say he had the Spirit of God and that he was the Messias and what if Peter one of his Fellows late a Fisher-man did confesse him The Scribes and Pharisees principal Members of the visible Church deny him to be their Messias And how should they know his Words to be the Word of God unlesse the Church had confirmed them If Christ himself should have said in their hearing as he did to the Jews John 5. 46. Moses wrote of me consider his Doctrine and lay it to your hearts A Jesuite would have replied You say Moses wrote of you But how shal we know that he meant you Moses is dead and saies nothing and they that sit in his Chair say otherwise And verily the Scribes and Pharisees had far greater Probabilities to plead for the Infallibility of that Chair then the Jesuites can have for their Popes who had they been in the others place could have coyned more matter out of that one saying of our Saviour Mat. 23. 2. Sedent in Cathedra Mosis for the Scribes and Pharisees infallible Authority then all the Papists in the world have been able to extract out of all the Scriptures that are or can be urged for the Pope or Church of Romes Infallibilitie 4 The Scribes and Pharisees though no way comparable to the ●esuites for cunning in painting rotten or subtilty in oppugning Causes true and ●…nd could urge for themselves against such as confessed Christ that none of the Rulers nor of the Pharisees did Believe in him but only a Cursed Crew of such as knew not the Law John 7. 48. They could Object the Law was obscure and the interpretation of it did belong to them But could these pretences excuse the people for not obeying Christs Doctrine You will say perhaps they could not be excused because Christs Miracles were so many and manifest These were somewhat indeed if Christ had been their Accuser But our Saviour saith plainly that he would not accuse them to his Father And for this cause he would not work many Miracles amongst such as were not moved with the like already wrought lest he should increase their Sins If Christ did not who then had reason to accuse them Moses as it is in the same place did Moses in whom they trusted and on whom they fastened their Implicite Faith Moses of whom they thought and said We will Believe as he Believed Moses whose Doctrine they to their seeming stood as stifly for against Christs new Doctrine as they supposed as the Jesuites do for the Catholick Church as they think against Hereticks and Sectaries as they term us Why then is Moses whom thus they honoured become their chief Accuser because while they did Believe on him only for Tradition or from pretence of Succession or for the dignity of their Temple Church or Nation they did not indeed Believe Him nor his Doctrine For had they Believed his Doctrine they had Believed Christ For he wrote of Christ So he might thinks the Jesuite and yet write so obscurely of him as his Writings could be no Rule of Faith to the Jews without the Visible Churches Authority Yea rather they should and might have been a Rule unto them for their good against the Visible Churches Authority and now remain a Rule or Law against both to their just condemnation because the Doctrine of Christ was so plainly and clearly set down in these writings had they set their hearts unto them Even the Knowledg of Christ the Word of life it self was in their mouthes and in their hearts For that Commandment which Moses there gave them was That Word of Faith which S. Paul the infallible Teacher of the Gentiles did preach as he himself testifies Rom. 10. 8. If any man ask how this Place was so easie to be understood of Christ or how by the doctrine of Moses Law the doctrine of the Gospel might have been manifested to their Consciences my Answer is already set down in our Saviours Words Had they done Gods Will revealed unto them in that Law they should have known Christs Doctrine to have been of God 5 Had they according to the prescript of Moses Law repented them of their Sins from the bottom of their Hearts the Lord had blotted all their Wickedness out of His remembrance And their hearts once purged of Wickednesse would have exulted in his presence that had made them whole Faith would have fastened upon his Person though never seen before Not the Moon more apt to receive the Sun-beams cast upon it then these Jews hearts to have shined with the Glory of Christ had they cast away all Pride and Self-conceit or the Glory of their Nation but unto them as now they are and long time have been swollen with Pride and full of Hypocrisie Christs Glory is but as clear Light to sore or dim-sighted eyes They wink with their eyes lest they should be offended with the Splendor of it This Doctrine of Christ and Knowledge of Scriptures in points of Faith shall be most obscure to us if we follow them in their foolish pretences of their Visible Church most clear perspicuous and easie if we lay Moses Commandments to our hearts For Truth Inherent must be as the eye-sight to discern all other things of like nature CAP. XVIII Concluding this Controversie according to the state proposed with the testimony of Saint Paul 1 WE may conclude this Point with our Apostle Si Evangelium nostrum tectum est iis qui pereunt tectum est in quibus Deus hujus saeculi excaecavit mentes id est infidelibus ne irradiat eos lumen Evangelii gloriae Christi qui est imago Dei If the Gospel be Obscure or rather hid For it is a Light obscure it cannot be God forgive me if I used that speech save only in our Adversaries persons It is hid only to such as have the eyes of their mind Blinded by Satan the God of this World Of which Number may we not without breach of Charity think he was one who seeing the light and evidence of this place would not see it but thought it a sufficient Answer to say Aposiolus non loquitur de intelligentia Scripturarum sed de cognitione side in Christum The Apostle speaks not of understanding Scriptures but of Knowing and Believing in Christ It is well the Jesuite had so much Modestie in him as to grant this later that he spake at the least of Knowing Christ For if the knowledg of Christ be so clear to the godly and elect then are the Scriptures clear too so far as concerns their Faith For S. Paul wrote this and all his Epistles only to this end that men might truly come to the Knowledge of Christ But he meant of a perfect and true Knowledge not such as Bellarmine when he gave this Answer dreamed of ut neque sit puer neque
Believe their Infallibilitie most infallibly it could be no Rule of Faith but might be rejected till we see it evidently proved whereas they contend it should be the Rule of Faith unto all and by their own confession a main Article of their Creed but according to their Positions as we shall hereafter prove the onely Article of Christian Faith How destitute these their Assertions are of all Grounds of Reason or Rules of Nature hath been made evident There remain onely Two Pillars possibly imaginable for supporting this pretended Infallibilitie Tradition and Scripture Against Tradition all the Arguments they can heap against the Certainty of Scriptures stand good as shall hereafter God willing be shewed That no Argument can be drawn from Scripture to their succour albeit the later Jesuites have earnestly sought to scrape a many for better then Scrapings are not the very best they bring we are now to prove 7 That our Belief of Scriptures Truth and their true Sense by what Means soever we attain thereto must be infallible Both agree The Means that must infalliblie ascertain or prove their Divine Truth and true Meaning unto us say our Adversaries is the Churches Infallibilitie which likewise must be infallibly Beleeved otherwise it could not be the Rule of Faith or Belief infallible It shall suffice here once for all to admonish the Reader That as often as we mention Belief of Scriptures or the Churches infallibility in this Dispute we mean not any kind of Belief but that only which is infallible so likewise whiles we mention the Means or Proofs of either we understand onely Means or Proofs infallible whereon Faith may immediately relie as upon a Rule most sure and certain In all these we demand nothing but what our Adversaries most willingly grant From their grant we argue thus 8 If either the Scriptures can thus ascertain or prove the Churches Infalibilitie or It the infallible Truth of Scriptures to our Souls we must of necessity either Believe the one of these before the other The Churches Infalibility before Scriptures or Scriptures before It or both together without all prioritie of Belief or praeexistent knowledge of the one whence the Belief or knowledge of the other must spring The members of the Division are in the Proposal actually two but in the Disquisition will prove three To begin with the first 9 If they say we must believe the Scriptures to be the Word of God before we 〈◊〉 believe 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of their Church they overthrow their own and est ablish 〈◊〉 Postions For thus they make the Scripture a Rule of our Faith at the least In this one Article of the Catholick Churches Infallibilitie which by this Assertion we may and ought infallibly to believe because the Scriptures which we first infallibly believe do teach and prove it Hence private men should be taught by the Holy Ghost first to believe the Truth of Scriptures and for it the Churches Infallibilitie Wherefore the Scripture must be the immediate Rule of their Belief in the Article of the Churches Infallibility which to them is the generall Rule of Faith and so by consequence the Scriptures which to us are onely the Rule of Earth must be more then so to them even the Rule of their Rule of Faith But if the Scriptures may be the immediate and insallible Rule of their Belief in this one Article of the Churches Infallibility what reason possibly can be imagined why they should not be the infallible and immediate Rule of their Faith in all other parts or Articles of their Creed For I call Heaven and Earth Men and Angels to witnesse b●…xt ours and the Romish Church whether the Articles of Christs Incarnation his Death his Passion his Burial his Resurrection his Aseension his Intercession for us the Resurrection of the dead and Life everlasting c. be not to any mans Capacitie in the World much more plainly set down in sundry places of Scripture then the Infallibilitie of the present Romish Church in these words Peter feed my sheep Peter to thee 〈◊〉 give the ●…s of Heaven Thou art Peter and upon this Rock will I build my Church It seemed good to the Holy Ghost and us or in any place her sonnes can challenge for it Wherefore if the Holy Ghost teach us this Article of the Churches Infallibilitie immediately without the Churches infallible Authoritie which as we now suppose must be proved from the Scriptures first infallibly Believed then questionlesse he may and will immediately teach us the other Articles of our Creed and whatsoever necessary to Salvation which are more plainly and perspicuously set down in Scriptures without the help or assistance of the Churches infallible Authority which it is supposed to teach by places more doubtfull 10 Or if our Adversaries will hold it no Absurdity to say that the Holy Ghost may teach us the true Sense and Meaning of the fore-mentioned places of Scripture which seem to make for the Infallibility of the Romish Church as Petre pasce oves c. immediately without the help or assistance of the Churches Infallibilitie which is here the lesson supposed to be taught and refers all other Points of Faith or matters of Doctrine unto the Churches teaching immediately they are bound in Reason to shew a Scripture for this Assertion And besides they must perforce make the same comparison betwixt the Holy Ghosts immediate teaching and the Church or Popes immediat teaching which our Saviour Christ made between the Holy Ghosts extraordinary teaching which was to ensue his Glorification and his own immediate teaching before his Passion and as soon as the Holy Ghost hath once taught us the Meaning of these places which make for the Churches Infallibilitie that may be applied unto him in respect of the Popes Supereminencie in teaching which our Saviour Christ spake of himself and his own personall Instructions in the dayes of his Humility in respect of that 〈◊〉 ●ed Comforters Illuminations to be bestowed in abundant measure upon his Apostles immediately upon his Ascention For thus by their Assertions that Holy Comforter after that Lesson once taught Tues Petr●… should take his leave of faithfull hearts in the same termes our Saviour there did of his Disciples I tell you the Truth it is expedient for you that I go away For if I go not away the Comforter that Infallible Teacher on whose Authority your Souls must rest will not come unto you but if I depart I will send him unto you and again I have many things to say unto you but ye cannot hear ●oem now how●eit when He is come that hath the Spirit of Truth your infallible Teacher whose Tongue while he speaks ex Cathedra I must attend he will lead you unto all Truth for he shall not speak of himself but whatsoever he shall hear be shall speak he shall glorifie me for he shall receive of me and shew it unto you These words I say might be
greatnesse of authority is alwayes measured by the manner of obedience due unto it The Minor is as evident from the former reason Our obedience is more absolute and strict unto that authority from which in no case we may appeal then unto that from which we may in many safely appeal but by the Romish Churches doctrine there lies alwayes an appeal from that sence and meaning of Scriptures which Gods spirit and our own conscience gives us unto the Churches authority none from the Churches authority or meaning unto the Scriptures or our own consciences 7 Our Saviour Christ bids us search the Scriptures S. Paul try all retain that which is good S. John try the Spirits whether they be of God or no Suppose a Minister of our Church should charge a Romanist upon his allegiance to our Saviour Christ and that obedience which he owes unto Gods Word to search Scriptures trie Spirits and examin Doctrines for the r●tifying of his faith he wil not acknowledge this to be a Commandment of Scripture or at least not to be understood in such a sence as may bind him to this practise What follows if our Clergie charge him to admit it he appeals unto the Church And as in Schools simus and nasus simus is all one so in their language is the Church and the Church of Rome This Church tels him he may not take upon him to trie of what spirit the Pope is nor examin his determinations decisions or interpretations of any Scripture by other known places of Scripture or the analogie of faith acknowledged by all Unto this decree or sentence of the Church although he have it but at the second hand or after it have passed through as many Priests and Jesuites mouthes as are Post Towns from London to Edenburgh he yields absolute obedience without acknowledgement of farther appeal either unto Scriptures or other authority whatsoever further manifestation of Gods wil he expects none Let all the reformed Churches in the World or all the Christian World besides exhort threaten or adjure him as he tenders the good of his own soul as he wil answer his Redeemer in that dreadful day of final Judgement to examin the Church or Popes decrees by Gods written Laws his answer is he may not he cannot do it without open disobedience to the Church which to disobey is damnation of soul and body But O fools and slow of heart to believe and obey from the heart that doctrine whereunto ye were delivered Know ye not that to whomsoever ye give your selves as servants to obey his servants ye are to whom ye obey whether it be the man of sin unto death or obedience unto righteousnesse Of all Mankind are onely Roman Catholicks not bought with a price that they may thus alienate their souls from Christ and become servants of men that they may consecrate themselves by solemn vow to the perpetual slavery of most wicked and sinful men even monsters of Mankind CAP. V. That in obeying the Romish Churches decrees we do not obey Gods Word as well as Them but Them alone in contempt of Gods principal Laws 1 BUt the simple I know are born in hand by the more subtile sort of this generation That thus obeying sinful men they obey Christ who hath injoyned them this obedience unto such That thus believing that sence of Scripture which the Church their mother tenders unto them they do not believe her better then Scriptures because these two Beliefs are not opposite but subordinate that they prefer not her decrees before Christs written Laws but her interpretation of them before all private Expositions This is the only City of refuge left them wherein prosecuted by the former arguments they can hope for any succour but most of whose gates already have been all shortly shall be shut upon them 2 That they neither believe nor obey Gods Word whilest they absolutely believe and obey the Church without appeal is evident in that this Church usually binds men not unto Positive points of Religion gathered so much as from any pretended sence of Scripture expounded by it but to believe bare Negatives as that this or that place of Scripture either brought by their adversaries or conceived by such amongst themselves as desire the knowledge of truth and right information of conscience have no such meaning as the Spirit of God not flesh and bloud as far as they can judge of their own thoughts hath revealed unto them 3 But the Spirit may deceive private men or at least they may deceive themselves in their trial of Spirits They may indeed and so may men in publick place more grievously erre in peremptory judging private men because obnoxious to errour in the general erroneous in this particular wherein they ground their opinions upon Gods Word plentiful to evince it at least very probable reasons they bring many and strong whereunto no reasonable answer is brought by their adversaries whose usual course is to presse them only with the Churches authority which appears to be of far greater weight then Gods word unto all such as yield obedience to her negative decrees without any evidence or probability either of Scripture or natural reason to set against that sence and meaning of Gods Laws whereunto strength of arguments unrefuted and probable pledges of Gods Spirit undisproved have long tied their souls Do we obey God or believe his word whilst we yield obedience to the Church in such Commandments as to our consciences upon unpartial examination seem condemned ere made by the very fundamental Laws of Religion and all this oft-times without any shew or pretence of Scripture to warrant us that we do not disobey God in obeying them 4 But doth the Romish exact absolute obedience in such points as if it were possible they could be false may endanger the very foundation of true Religion without evident demonstration that their daily practise neither doth nor can endanger it Yes For what can more concern the main foundation which Christians Jews and Mahumetans most firmly hold then those precepts in number many all plainly and peremptorily forbidding us to worship any Gods but One or any thing in the Heaven or Earth but Him only The Romanists themselves grant that cultu latriae God alone is to beadored that so to adore any other is Idolatry and Idolatry by their confession a most grievous sin O how much better were it for them to hold it none or Gods Word forbidding it of no authority then so lightly to adventure the hourly practise of it in contempt of such fearful threatnings as they themselves out of Gods Laws pronounce against it upon such broken distoynted surmises as are the best they can pretend for their warrant 5 To believe Christs flesh and bloud should be there present where it canot be seen or felt yea where we see and feel another body as perfectly as we can do ought is to reason without warrant of Scripture but a
Ariadna's thread as now it is thought to guide us through the Labyrinth of errors Such was S. Peters love to truth that he would have so fastned it to all faithful hearts as none should ever have failed to follow it in following which he could not erre Doubtlesse had any such conceit lodged in his breast this discourse had drawn it out his usual form of exhortation had been too mild his ordinary stile too low This doctrine had been proclaimed to all the world with Anathema's as loud and terrible as the Canons of any Papistical Councel report 2 But he followed no such deceitful Fables when he opened unto them the power and coming of Christ whose Majesty as he had seen with his own eyes so would he have others to see him too But by what light By Scriptures What Scriptures Peter feed my sheep Nay but by the Light of Prophesie That is a Light indeed in it self but unto private spirits it is no better saith Valentian then a light put under a bushel unlesse the visible Church do hold it out Where did the visible Church keep residence in those dayes In S. Peter I trow How chances it then he saith not fix your eyes on mine that have seen the glory of the Lord and the Prophets light shal shine unto you If by his commendation and proposal it were to shine he had said better thus Ye do well in that you give heed unto me as to your only infallible teacher that must confirm you in the truth of Prophetical Writings and cause them shine in your hearts but now he saith 2 Pet 1. 19. Ye do well in that ye take beed unto the Prophets as unto a light that shineth in a dark place until the day-star arise in your hearts This light of Prophets illuminated the eyes of Peters faith albeit with his bodily eyes he had seen Christs glory For speaking comparatively of that testimony which he had heard in the Mount he adds We have also a surer word of the Prophets That the Lord hath been glorified in the Mount his Auditors were to take upon his Credit and Authority nor could he make them to see this particular as he himself had done but that Christ Jesus whom he saw glorified in the Mount was the Lord of Glory he had 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a surer testimony then his bodily sense the light of Prophets This then was the commendations of his flock that they looked upon it which shined as wel unto them as him to all without respect of persons that take heed unto it able to bring them not to acknowledg Peters infallibility but to the day-star it self whole light would further ascertain them even of the truth the Prophets and the Apostles taught For Christ is in a peculiar manner the first and the last in the edifice of faith the lowest and the highest stone in the corner refused by the master builders or visible pillars of the Jewish Church their faith was not grounded up on the Prophets whose words they knew not and not knowing them they knew not him but unto such as raise their faith by this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the true square and line Chist is both the Fundamental Rock which supporteth and the chief corner stone that binds the whole house of God and preserves it from clefts and ruptures 3 But lest his followers might look amisse upon this prophetical light rightly esteemed in the general S. Peter thought it necessary to advertise them not to content themselves with every interpretation or accustomary acknowledgment of their truth grounded on others relations reports or skill in expounding them or multitude of voices that way swaying This had been as if a man that hath eyes of his own should believe there was a Moon or stars because a great many of his honest neighbours had told him so A thousand witnesses in such a case as this were but private testimonies in respect of that distinct knowledge which every one may have that list That the Lord should preserve light in Coshen when darknesse had covered the whole face of Egypt besides seems unto me lesse strange but more sensibly true then before whilest I consider how in this age wherein the light of his countenance hath so clearly shined throughout those parts of Europe whence the Gospel came to us Ingolstade should still sit in darknesse environed with the shadow of death That her great professor Valentian born I take it within these fourscore years should grope at noon day as if he had been brought forth in the very midnight of Popery or died welnigh three hundred years ago Scarce Scotus himself not Ockam questionlesse though shut up in a prison where no light of any expositor had ever come could have made a more dunstical collection of the Apostles words then he hath done Saint Peter meant one of these Three First that there can be no certain or probable way of expounding Scriptures by our proper wit or industry or Secondly that one or other place of Scripture cannot be rightly expounded by human wit or industry but so compared they rightly may or Thirdly that the Scriptures cannot certainly and infallibly be expounded every where without the sentence of some other common infallible authority which in this respect is to be held as judge of faith in the Church The Apostle he infers did not mean the first or second ergo the third So as the force and wisdom of the Apostolical admonition is this No man by his private industry or study howsoever imploied either he thought not of the holy Ghosts direction or assistance or did not except it no not by any search of Scripture it self can certainly and infallibly understand the doctrine of Scriptures in controversies of which S. Peter in that place speaks not one word but it is necessary he learn this of some other publick authority in the church by which the Holy Ghost speaks publickly and teacheth all His reason follows more dunsticall then the collection it self For the Apostle straight subjoyns As the holy men of God did speak in Scriptures not by human authority but divine so likewise cannot the Scriptures be possibly understood by any human or private industry of this or that man but by some other authority likewise divine by which the holy spirit which is the Author of Scriptures may be likewise the most certain interpreter of Scriptures 4 Had another read thus much unto me and bid me read the Author or his works wherein it was found I should presently have named either Erasmus Moriae Encomium Frishlins Priscianus Vapulans or some such like Comedian disposed in merriment to pen some old Dunces part Cannot the Sun of righteousnesse infuse his heavenly influence by the immediate operation of his spirit or doth his influence want force without conjunction with this blazing Comet or falling star Was it not the authority of this spirit which made S. Peter himself to
as shall be declared in due place The place he means is where he disputes whether the Pope be bound to consult other authority besides his own or use any means to search the truth before he passe sentence ex cath●dra that is before he charge the whole Christian World to believe his decision This he thinks expedient but so far forth onely as if it please his Holinesse to enjoyn the belief of some particular point upon the whole World all must believe that he hath consulted Scripture and Antiquity as far as was requisit for that point as you shall after hear 2 That in such Controversies he includes The means of knowing Scriptures to be the Word of God is evident out of his own words in the fore-cited place For the knowledge of Scriptures he would have to be an especial point of faith yet such as cannot be proved by Scripture but by this living and speaking authority as he expressely contends in the eleventh paragraph of the same question His conclusion is If it be necessary there should be some authority though humane yet by divine assistance infallible to sit as Mistresse and Judge in all controversies of faith and not to be appropriated to any deceased as is already proved it remains that it be alwayes living in the Church alwayes present amongst the faithfull by succession he means of Popes Thus you see the present Pope must be Judge and Christ and his Apostles must be brought in as witnesses And yet whether there were such a Christ as Saint Matthew Mark Luke and John tell us there was or whether the Gospels which go under their names be Apocryphal and that of Bartholomews onely Canonical we cannot know but by the Popes testimony so that in the end he is the onely Judge and onely witnesse both of Christ the Apostles and their writings yea of all divine truths at least assisted with his Bishops and Cardinals Which Bellarmine though otherwise a great deal more wary then Valentian hath plainly uttered Unlesse saith he it were for the authority of the present Church of Rome he means the Trent Councel the whole Christian faith might be called in question so might all the Acts and Decrees of former Councels his reason was because we cannot know these Antiquities but onely by Tradition and historical relation which are not able to produce divine firme infallible faith 3 Thus whilest this great Clerk would dig a pit for the blind for he could not hope I think this block should stumble any that hath eyes in his head he is fallen into the middest of it himself by seeking to undermine us he hath smothered himself and buried the cause he was to maintain For if without the Trent Councels testification we cannot by divine faith believe the Scriptures or former Councels to be of Divine authority How can such as were born within these thirty yeers believe that Councel it se●t which ended above fourty years ago Few this day living were Auditors of the Cardinals and Bishops decisions there assembled not hearing them their saith must needs be grounded upon hear-sayes Again if it be true the Scriptures cannot be known to be divine but by the Authority of the present vi●ible Church If this Church do not viva vo●● confirme all Christians in this fundamental truth their faith cannot be divine but hu mane What the Pope or his Cardinals think of these points is more then any living knows unles●e they hear them speak and then it may be a great question whether they speak as they think Pope Alexander the sixths decisions should have been negative like the fools bolt in the Psalm T●er● is no God No Christ No Gospel for so his meaning might have been interpreted as they say dreams are by contraries seeing he never spake as he thought Lastly if the Trent Councel were so necessary for the confirmation of Scriptures and other Orthodoxal writings how detestable was your Clergies backwardnesse to affoord the Christian World this spiritual comfort For whether fear it were the Popes Authority should be curbed on meer sloth and neglect of matters divine that did detain them their shifts to put the Emperour off the Reader may sufficiently conjecture from Sepul veda at that time Chronicler to the Emperour in his Epistle to Cardinal Cont●r●● one of the Popes Legates in that Councel That my intermiss●●n of writing and silence in that question concerning the Correction of the ●ear hath 〈◊〉 so long I wish the fault had laid in my slouth or forgetfulne●● that I might have been hence oc●asioned to acknowledge and depreccate the blan●● rather then as no● I freely must impute the true cause to the negligence of your Roman● Priests whom I perceive to wax cold and to think of nothing lesse then of calling the Councel with hop● whereof as heret●fore I was excited so now ●●spair hath made me dull For I see well that such as are most bound to have a ●●gilant care o● the Churches publick welfare and not to foreslow any opportunity of increasing her dignity never so much as mention the Councel at this time as nec●ssary as alwayes usefull but when Christians either are al●caay or are lik●… be at viriance In one word never but then when there is sure hope it may b●… hinde●ed by their discord For when peace gets it turn and all is quiet not 〈◊〉 word of the Councel So as what they aime at by these unseasonable 〈◊〉 is so manifest as will not suffer the slon est capacity to live in doubt or s●●pition 4 This great Learned Antiquaries Learned advice in ●…●ile sent to the same Cardinall then imployed by the ●… cel was not to suffer matters Decreed in any former ●… assembled together to be disputed or called in question Sufferance hereof was in his judgement no lesle prejudicial to the State Ecclesiastick then unto the temporal it would be to permit malefactors traverse the equity of publick Lawes established and known after sufficient proof or confession made of Capital offences committed against them The marginal quotations of the Trent Councel compared with this grave admonition which had antiquitie-customes Canonical as the Authour urgeth to give it Countenance may serve as a perfect Index for our instruction with what prejudice the Bishops there assembled came to determine by whose manuduction or set rules they drew their supposed inerrable lines of life Now it is impossible any determination that takes it force from multitude of voyces should be either in it self more certain or more forcible to perswade others then are the motives or inducements that swayed the suffragants so to determine and these in this case could by Bellarmines reason be but historical perswasions or presumptions For no Jesuite I think will say these Bishops had the Popes sentence ex Cathedra to assure them before-hand what Councels had been lawfully called and fully confirmed or whether all the ancient Canons they afterwards reestablished were already as authentick and