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A13629 The reasonablenesse of wise and holy truth: and the absurditie of foolish and wicked errour Terry, John, 1555?-1625. 1617 (1617) STC 23912; ESTC S118354 27,907 56

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ioine to their faith vertue to vertue knowledge to knowledge temperance to tēperāce patience to patience godlines to godlines brotherly kindnes to brotherly kindnesse loue 2. Pet. 1. 5. For saith he if faith want knowledge it is a blind credulity and not a cleere eie wherewith we see God heauēs happinesse albeit it be a farre off v. 9. And if it bee not accompanied with all these divine graces it is an idle fruitlesse fancie vers 8. and not a true working and fruitfull faith Gal. 5. 6. But if it bee accompanied with these divine graces then it proueth it sufficiently to be the faith of Gods elect Tit. 1. 1. and assureth al such as are indued therewith that they are effectually called to the estate of grace and are elected to everlasting life vers 10. And verily even by the light of nature it is recorded that the Graces goe hand in hand and will in no wise part company and by the light of Prophesie it is further iustified that they are as a most pretious and golden chaine Ez. 16. 11. the linkes whereof cannot be severed How then can a true faith being one of the principall vertues that are by Christ infuled into the hearts of all true Christians Eph. 6. 16. Ioh. 6. 19. be severed from the societie of the residue of the divine graces of the spirit of God Doth not the Apostle plainly avouch that wee are all the sonnes of God by faith in Christ Gal. 3. 26. Ioh. 1. 12. and therefore renued into his image in righteousnesse and true holinesse Are wee not by faith vnited vnto Christ Eph. 3. 17. and at one with God Rom. 5. 1. How then can it be a neare companion with blindnesse and ignorance or with vnrighteousnesse and sinne For what communion can there be betweene light and darknesse what concord betweene righteousnesse and vnrighteousnesse 2. Cor. 6. 14. But there is so great an agreement betweene faith and loue and the residue of the divine graces of the spirit of God that S. Austin doth place them in the definition of faith as if they were the very essence thereof For what is it saith he to beleeue in God but to loue God and to loue God that is to loue God with a double loue Aug. in Ioh. tr 29. So. in Ps 77. To beleeue in God is to cleaue to God to worke that which is good together with him that worketh good in vs. Wherefore let all such as make profession that by faith they ioyfully imbrace the covenant of mercy in Christ and yet are carelesse in the performance of all holy duties nay which turne the grace of God into wantonnesse Iac. 4. and vpon a presumptuous opinion of the infinitie of the mercy of God and merits of Christ doe loose the raines to all manner of wicked and corrupt affections Let them all knowe that howsoeuer in word they make profession of the faith of Christ yet in their deeds they denie the same Tit. 1. 16. For how doth he say that he beleeueth in Christ who doth not that which he commandeth him to doe Cyp de simpl praelat How then can hee that doth contrary to that which God commandeth say that he beleeueth in Christ and is partaker of the covenant of grace For vnto the vngodly saith God VVhat hast thou to doe to declare mine ordinances and to take my covenant in thy mouth Ps 50. 16. So Ier. 7. 9. Will yee steale murder commit adulterie sweare falsely c. and come and stand before me in this house whereon my name is called as if yee were my seruants whereas yee cloth your selues with the Divels livery and doe such works as belong to his service Will yee say that yee are deliuered from the slauerie of sinne yet pollute your selues with all maner of abominations How shall we saith the Apostle that are dead to sinne liue any longer therein Rom. 6. 2. Surely if Christs death doth deliuer vs from the guilt of our sinnes it will first deliver vs from the dominion of our sinnes and if Christs resurrection shall raise vs vp to be partakers of eternall life it will first raise vs vp to newnesse of life 1. Cor. 25. 34. Apoc. 20. 6. For vndoubtedly a wise and an holy faith whereby we liue to God Gal. 2. 20. must go before our glorification iustification also For whom God electeth in Christ before all worlds to those by an inward and effectuall calling he giueth a wise and an holy faith whereby they are made the sonnes of God Gal. 3. 26 are renued vnto his image in righteousnes true holines that so resembling their heauenly father hee may take them for his owne deare children Now whom he thus calleth them he iustefieth for by faith we must be first engraffed into Christ before wee can haue interest in his righteousnesse whereby wee are iustified and then them whom he iustifieth he also glorifieth Rom. 8. 30. A sanctifying faith is then the first of all the proper and peculiar gifts that God bestoweth vpon all those to whom he vouchsafeth to giue an honourable place in his house and family 1. Cor. 6. 11. Tit. 3. 5. 6. 7 a greater also then iustification it selfe For it is a greater blessing to be delivered from the being and bondage of sinne then from the guilt and punishment thereof for that the one is a farre greater evill then the other The making of an impious a iust man as Thomas A quinas teacheth is the greatest of all the workes of God So S. Austin writing vpon these words of our Sauiour Christ greater workes then these shall they doe saith that it is a greater worke of an impious man to make a iust man then to create heauen earth Aug in Ioh. tract 72. For in the creating of all things of nothing as there was nothing to further so there was nothing to hinder the work seeing nothing hath no activitie but in the recreation or regeneration of man there is not onely no furtherance in the natural Non ent is nullae sunt qualitates man but a great hinderance resistance Wherefore it is not without cause that the faithfull recording in what danger they were by reason of their sinnes before their regeneration and sanctification doe greatly reioice and say The right hand of the Lord hath shewed forth his mightie power the right hand of the Lord hath advanced me Aug. confes l. 4. c. 3. Wherefore seeing an holy faith which is accompanied with all the residue of the graces of sanctification is the greatest of all the peculiar gifts of God even such an one as whereby we haue not only an entrance into the estate of grace Rom. 5. 2. but are preserved there by to eternall salvation 1. Pet. 1. 5. wee ought to imploy our first and our chiefest care for the obtaining and preseruing of the same And that so much the more for that not only God is principally
THE REASONABLENESSE OF WISE AND holy truth and the absurditie of foolish and wicked Errour ECCL 7. 27. I haue compassed about both I and mine heart to knowe and to enquire and to search wisdome and reason and to knowe the wickednesse of folly and the foolishnesse of madnesse MATTH 11. 19. But wisdome is iustified of all her children AC OX AT OXFORD Printed by Iohn Lichfield and William Wrench Printers to the famous Vniversitie 161● TO THE RIGHT REVErend Father in God ARTHVR Lord Bishop of BATH and WELLES Vice chancellour of the Vniversitie of Oxford and Warden of New Colledge IOHN TERRY wisheth all increase of that Glory and Vertue wherevnto you are called by our most glorious holy Lord. 2. Pet. 1. 2. MY duety bindeth me right Reuerend and my very Good Lord to offer vp to God for you the sacrifices of thankesgiuing and prayer Some of the Heathen offred sacrifice to the sunne rising for benefits to come and other to the Sunne setting for such as were already receaued VVherefore it being a great shame for a Christian to be out gone in any good dutie by an Heathen I cannot but offer vp to our most blessed Sauiour Christ the true Sonne of righteousnesse the sacrifice of thanksgiuing first for causing such a bright starre as your Lordship is to appeare aboue our Horizon in the west and secondly for causing you to set with leauing much good to that Colledge whereof my selfe was once a member And how can I also but offer vp prayer to God first that the fresh memorie of your renowned learning and religious life may instill such a sweet influence of celestiall grace into the hearts of all the members of that societie that they may bee effectually stirred vp to walke in your waies and to devote themselues by your example to the publike good as secondly I am to beseech him that walketh in the midst of the seauen golden Candlesticks and holdeth the starres in his right hand that he would hold vphold you long to his owne glory and to the edification and comfort of his people among whom hee hath now placed you to hold out the word of life And thus commending you to God the Father of light and to the word of his grace the most worthie instrument thereof with all humble thanks vnto your Lordship for your louing acceptance of this small paper present I rest Your Lordships in all Christian loue and dutie JOHN TERRY IOHN 17. 17. Sanctifie them with thy truth thy word is truth THis Chapter containeth a most divine and heavenly prayer of our most blessed Saviour Christ wherein hee requesteth of his Father that hee would by the gracious word of his Gospell make more and more manifest the glorious worke of mans redemption For that hereby he and his father should be most glorified and all such as his father had giuen him should be made partakers of life everlasting For this is everlasting life saith he to know thee the only true God and whom thou hast sent videlicet to accomplish the worke of the redemption of all the elect Iesus Christ For the cleere doctrine of the Gospell laying open the glorious worke of mans redemption doth make manifest the light of Gods countenance shining in Christ and doth giue vnto all that are truely lightned therewith the holy eie of sauing faith whereby they assuredly apprehending and most certainely beleeuing the vnspeakable loue of God towards them that do cleaue vnto Christ and are made one with him and by him haue communion and fellowship with God and so are made partakers of life everlasting And verily the true sauing faith wrought by the Gospell is nothing else but such a sure and certaine knowledge of Gods vnspeakable loue in Christ as is accompanied with all manner of holy and heavenly graces And therefore as v. 8. our Saviour testifieth that he had given his Fathers words to them which he had giuen vnto him and they had receaued them and had surely knowne that hee came from the Father had beleeued that the Father had sent him so in this verse hee prayeth to his Father that the would sanctifie them with the truth that was contained in the same word In the which petition of our Saviour Christ we are to obserue these two points first the thing that our Saviour requesteth at his Fathers hands that hee would bestow vpon all those that he had giuen him which is Sanctification Secondly the meanes whereby it is wrought which is the truth of his owne word Sanctifie them with thy truth thy word is truth Now the sanctification that our Saviour here prayeth for is not maymed wanting any essential part but totall and whole even such a sanctification as doth sanctifie the minde with sauing knowledge faith the will and the affections with all other graces and gifts of the holy Ghost and so doth sanctifie the whole man Neither is this whole and total sanctification bestowed onely vpon some principall persons in the Church of Christ but even vpon the meanest also As the Apostle testifieth 2. Cor. 3. 18. Wee all saith he behold as in a mirrour the glory of God with open face there is the subiection action obiect clerenesse of faith and are changed into the same image from glory to glory as by the spirit of the Lord there is the inseparable effect of sauing and sanctifying faith one and the same in substance though not in circumstance in all the faithfull And verily how can it otherwise bee but that all such as by faith are engraffed into Christ Rom. 11. 17. should immediatly be made good trees so consequently be enabled to beare good fruit Mat. 7.17 How can it otherwise be but that all such as by the linely word of God Heb. 4. 12. are quickned to a liuing faith Gal. 2. 20 should shew themselues to be aliue to God Rom. 6. 11. by the exercise of al holy and godly works For nature is never idle much lesse grace Gal. 5. 6. and therefore as the body without the operatiue spirit is dead so faith without workes is dead also Iac. 3 26. And therefore the same Apostle in the same chapter willeth Natura est nunquam otiosa all such as lay claime to a true faith to make proofe thereof by their good workes after the example of Abraham the father of the faithfull For after that he had shewed himselfe readie at the commandment of God to offer vp in sacrifice his most deare sonne Isaac then he made it manifest that he so firmely apprehended by an assured faith the incomprehensible loue of God in Christ Eph. 3. 19. towards himselfe that he preserred it before his most intire loue towards his own most deare sonne and then was the Scripture fulfilled Abraham beleeued God and it was imputed to him for righteousnes Wherefore it was not without cause that S. Peter writing to such as had obtained like pretious faith with himselfe willeth them to
effectuall arguments and reasons for the rooting vp of all errors and vntruths for the opening confirming of all doctrines of faith and godlinesse and for the edifying of the spirituall Scriptura est ●ons rationalis temple of God Let vs saith S. Hierome ascend into the reasonable mount and seeking of the testimonies of Scripture choice and fit timber for every severall point of doctrine let vs cut it downe and there with build the house of wisdome Hier. in Hagg. Neither doth this word of God minister choice timber onely for the building vp of the Lords Temple but all maner of wholsome food also for the sustenance of all such as are of the Lords houshold For in it there is both milk for children strong meat for such as are men Heb. 5 12. The principles of this word are the childrens milke which is by S. Peter called a doctrine standing 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 vpon so sure and sound reason that hee that rightly apprehendeth the same cannot bee deceaued 1. Pet. 2. 2. whereby he doth distinguish it from the principles of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2. Pet. 1. 16. all other religions which being not Logicall but Sophisticall as happely hauing in them a shew but not the substance of sound reason cannot but deceaue and destroy all such as drinke downe the venomous poison thereof Now if the first rudiments of the word of God stand vpon such sound reason that they cannot deceaue then the stronger meat thereof which is all such reasons and arguments which are set downe for the further lightning and strengthning of these principles must needs bee of greater light and strength And so no doubt they are seeing they are of power to make the mē of God which are long exercised therein able so throughly to discerne betweene good evill errour and truth that they can both purely and zealously performe vnto the Lord that reasonable service 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is acceptable vnto him Rom 12. 1. The which reasonable service what is it else but the puritie of a true saith and of all oather divine vertues with all holy workes that issue from them all Ioh. 6. 29. 1. Tim. 6. 11. Now faith as the Apostle defineth it Heb. 11. 1. is the ground of things hoped for the demonstration of things not seene which principally are the vnspeakable loue and goodnesse of God demonstrated not onely in the worke of the creation Rom. 1. 20. but especially in the worke of the redemption 2. Cor. 3. 12. For this is such a demonstration of Gods vnspeakable goodnesse and loue that as Austine saith it doth convince the iudgement 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and after a sort force the minde to yeeld her assent thereto Aug. in Ioh. hom 79. 95. So God loued the world saith out blessed Saviour that he gaue his only begotten Sonne that whosoever beleeueth in him should not perish but haue life everlasting Ioh. 3. 16. So Saint Iohn In this appeared the loue of God towards vs in that God sent his only begotten sonne into the world that wee might liue through him Ioh. 4. 9. And againe Herein is loue not that we loued God but that God loued vs gaue his Sonne to be an attonement for our sinnes And againe in the very next verse If God so loued vs c. As if hee would haue vs throughly to vnderstand that such a person giuen for such persons to worke such a worke is such a demonstration of Gods loue that the like is no where to be found no not in all the Bookes of Aristotles Demonstrations When I was here a scholler I heard a most reverend Father namely Mr. Fox preaching on these words of the Apostle If one bee dead for all then we were all dead 2. Cor. 5. 14. say here is such an ergo that all the Schooles cannot shew the like And yet this ergo demonstration whereof we now speake is a more forceable ergo a more compelling demonstration as the same Apostle teacheth in the former part of the same verse For verily if we could attaine to all riches of the full assurance of vnderstanding to knowe the mystery of God even the Father and of Christ Col. 2. 2. Then we should attaine to the full assurance of faith Heb. 10. 22. even to the full assurance of Gods loue If wee were able to comprehend with all Saints what is the breadth length depth and height of the loue of Christ that passeth knowledge then should wee bee filled with all fulnesse of God Eph. 3. 18. In the meane season all such as haue attained to some measure of this faith which is grounded vpon so strong demonstration are called by S. Chrysostome hom 9. in Epist ad Coll. sheepe indued with reason for that they are or should bee able to giue 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 answer to every one that asketh them a reason of the hope that is in them 1. Pet. 3. 15 And verily all such Christians as rightly vnderstand the grounds of their faith are esteemed by the Apostle to bee worthie of the name of reasonable men whereas all that doe not are by him branded with the note of men wicked and vnreasonable Furthermore saith he bretheren pray for vs that the word of the Lord may haue a full current be glorified as it is with you and that we may be delivered from vnreasonable and evill men for all men haue not faith 2. Th. 3. 1. Neither is this first and principall part of Gods seruice only grounded vpon most sure sound reason but also the other part thereof consisting in the exercise of all holy works proceeding from al the divine graces and gifts of the holy spirit of God For if they be not done after that manner and by the inducement of such reasons as God in his word requireth Deus non exigebat quae siebant sed propter quod fiebant Tert. 1 3 cont Marc. them to be performed they are not allowed and approued of Christ Mat. 6. 1. 1. Cor. 13. 1. For that may bee said of all good workes which Tertullian avoucheth of the Iewes sacrifices Viz that God did not in them require the thing done but the reasons for the which they were to be done so God doth not require our bare workes but will haue them done vpon such reasons and motiues as they ought to be done So then the very rudiments and principles of this word of Christ are reasonable milke the service therein prescribed is a reasonable service and the faith therein commanded is grounded vpon a most strong demonstration and the workes therein required are squared by the squier of exact reason and the persons that embrace this faith are only and alone esteemed to be endued with right reason therefore we rightly conclude that this word of Christ set downe in the holy Scriptures of the Prophets Apostles is the only vnerring word of
Moizare that is deliver many doctrines set downe by Moses for that hee had taken them out of him So these Sybille did Prophetizare because they had receaued these prophesies either out of their books or by tradition from the old Patriarks For as Sampson said vnto his guests that were at his wedding when they gaue him the right sense of his riddle which lie had proposed vnto them If yee had not plowed with my heifer yee could not haue found out my riddle Iud. 14. 18. So may wee as truely say that if the heathenish Prophets and Prophetesses had not consulted with our Prophets they could not haue delivered these Oracles The which is evident by this that when they were consulted by their greatest friends concerning events that were presently to come to passe they deliuered their Oracles in doubtfull sentences which might be expounded divers waies for that they were not able to deliver any certaintie thereof As Aio te Aeacides Romanos vincere posse And Craesus halim penetrans magnam pervertet opum vim Whereas our Prophets not only delivered the certaintie of the events of divers battles when they were ready to bee vndertaken as Iud. 4. 9. and 7. 9. 1. Sam. 30. 8. 1. Reg. 20 13. But also many other events many hundred yeares before they fell out As namely the deliverance of the Iewes out of the captivitie of Babylon and the particular king by whom it should bee accomplished even Cyrus king of the Medes Persians Isa 44. 45. The which prophesie as Iosephus reporteth Antiq. Iudaic. l. 11. c. 1. Cyrus reading and perceauing himselfe to be named therein some 200 yeares before he was borne and appointed to such a worke gaue liberty to the Iewes to returne to their-owne country and to build their temple and he gaue them backe the vessels thereof which had beene carried away by the king of Babylon For he vnderstood that the God of the Iewes was the true God because he had foretold such an event a long time before it was to come to passe As it may appeare by his owne words Ez. 1. 2. Thus saith Cyrus King of Persia the Lord God of heauen hath given me all the kingdomes of the earth and hath commanded mee to build him an house in Ierusalem which is in Iudah Who is among you of all his people with whom his God is Let him goe vp to Ierusalem which is in Iudah and build the house of the Lord God of Israell he is the God which is in Ierusalem Here then wee may perceaue by evident reason set downe in the Scriptures that the heathen haue and therefore still may be convinced to acknowledge him to be the true God who hath revealed himselfe in those bookes of the Prophets and Apostles and that those bookes are the authenticall word of the true all seeing and well working God And verily even the most profoundest mysteries of those bookes may bee iustified by evident reason to the heathen themselues to be the doctrines of truth proceeding from the true God as it may appeare by the bookes of these notable lights in the Church of Christ ' D. de Plessis de veritate Christianae religionis Zeged in locis com Keckerm in Syntagm Theolog. Neither must the doctrines of our Christian religion bee by reason evicted against the Gentiles but also against all Schismatiks Heretiks For albeit all these or at the least the most of them acknowledge the holy Scriptures to proceed from God yet seeing this word of God consisteth not in the letters but in the sence not in the reading but in the vnderstanding not in the leaues of the speech wherein it is delivered but in the root of the reason whereon it is grounded and seeing all Schismatikes and Heretikes be the words that are produced against them never so plaine and pregnant yet peruert and corrupt the right sense and meaning of them how can the right sense be iustified against all such persons but by cleere and evident reasons For if one testimonie bee produced to cleere another they will pervert the sense of the one as well as of the other And if the testimonies of the ancient Fathers yea of generall Councels bee alleaged against them either they will pervert the meaning of them aswell as they did the meaning of the Scriptures or else they will flatly refuse to subscribe to their autoritie The truth hereof was fully knowne vnto S. Austin who for his learned confuting of many heretikes was called the Hammer wherewith heretikes were knocked Malleus haere●●corum in the head For hee writing against Maximinus the Arrian l. 3. 1. 14. saith I will not alleage the Councell of Nice to preiudice thee neither shalt thou produce the Councell of Ariminum to preiudice me I will not be bound to yeeld to the autority of the one nor thou to the authority of the other but by the autoritie of the Scriptures as by most indifferent witnesses not proper to either of vs but common to both Let matter with matter cause with cause reason with reason bee compared together let that prevaile which is the stronger and weigh most wherein there is the most weight And verily there is no other meanes to cleere the meaning of all testimonies humane and divine then by the light of cleere arguments and reasons Wherefore seeing that the power of the word of God consisteth in the right sense and meaning thereof which cannot be cleered without the light of reason without the sure apprehension thereof the people of God themselues cannot be edified therefore cleere arguments and reasons must bee produced for the cleering of all doctrines of faith and an holy life by all such teachers as seeke after the edification of the people of God The truth whereof is plainely confirmed by the vsuall practise of all preachers of the word of God Among whō it is most ordinary after the doctrines deduced out of their texts to cleere the same with varietie of reasons and then to drawe out the vses there of which are nothing else but particular doctrines by evidence of reason collected and gathered out of the generall And verily the true Christian faith is not an ignorant credulitie but an vnderstanding assent grounded vpon a sure knowledge even such a faith as was in the Apostles themselues the which they were to preach through out the whole world Luk. 1. 77. For of this their faith our Sauiour himselfe testifieth in this very chapter saying I haue giuen them the words which thou gauest mee and they haue receaued them haue knowne surely that I came out from thee and haue beleeued that thou hast sent me v. 8. The truth where of is plainly confirmed by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the words of S. Peter Ioh. 6. 69. Thou hast the wordes of eternall life we beleeue knowe that thou art the very Christ the sonne of the liuing God Neither is this vnderstanding faith proper
and peculiar to the teachers of the truth but to all the godly professors of the same For none come to salvation but by the knowledge of the truth 2. Th. 2. 10. 11. In which place knowledge and faith are ioined together as inseparable companions as Ignorance is set downe as a separatist from faith salvation in the former chapter of the same Epistle Now to knowe a thing is to knowe the reasons thereof Scire est per cau sas scire Wherefore the true Christian faith grounded vpon knowledge doth no otherwise worke in the faithfull a right assent to the severall doctrines of faith then by grounds thereof This truth is manifestly proued throughout the whole body of the sacred Scripture which teacheth that the true Christian faith is a wise and holy not foolish and wicked a seeing and not a blind a cleere and not a darke a manly and not a childish a reasonable and not a brutish perswasion Faith is a wise assent grounded vpon the wise doctrines of the word of God which are able to make vs wise to salvation by faith in Christ 2. Tim. 3. 15. And what is wisdome but a right apprehensiō of truth the reasons thereof by the testimonies of divine humane autors I haue saith Solomō the wise compassed about both I mine heart to knowe and inquire and to search wisdome reason Eccl. 7. 27. by the which manner of annexing the one to the other hee giueth vs to vnderstand that the one ariseth out of the other So Aristole the wisest of all Philosophers Prudence is an habit ioyned with right reason So Tully one of the wisest of all Orators Hee that doth best apprehend truth in every thing the reasons and grounds thereof is worthely to bee esteemed the most prudent and wise of all other Wherefore our Christian faith being a wise apprehension and assent vnto truth must needs apprehend the reasons whereon it is grounded The wisdome of the prudent saith Solomon is to vnderstand his way but the foolishnesse of fooles is deceit Prov. 14. 8. That is wisdome lightning the vnderstanding by meanes of true reason doth sanctifie it with truth as folly darkning it with ignorance leadeth it into errour both in matters of faith and of life and conversation For the foolishnesse of a man perverteth his waie Prov. 19. 3. for folly is the mother of wickednesse Eccl. 7. 27. Wherefore such as bee foolish shall not stand in Gods sight for he hateth all such as worke wickednesse Ps 5. 5. But the wise shall shine as the brightnesse of the firmament Dan. 12. 3. The foolish Virgins could not enter into the marriage because their lamps were gone out Mat. 25. 10. That is they made profession of the word of God which is a lanthorne to our feet and a light to our paths without the vnderstanding thereof For what is the word not vnderstood but a lampe without oile or a candle without light But the wise that had oile in their lamps that is rightly vnderstood the doctrines of Gods word were admitted into the marriage For they that truely knowe God shall bee Visio iustificans Visio glorificans knowne of him and they that now see him with the eye that iustifieth shall hereafter see him with the eye that glorifieth But they that knowe not God shall not be knowne of God 2. Thess 1. 8. Hos 4. 6. Prov. 1 22. And all such as see him not with the eye of faith shall never see him with the eye of glory Prov. 29. Fooles mad men may be Saints with foolish and mad Mahomet but the children of wisdome Mat. 11. 19 are the chil dren of the most wise God such as haue their minds and affections sanctified by wisdome are his Saints in whom are hid all the treasures of wisdome and knowledge Coll. 2. 3. Now if faith be a wise assent then it is not blind and darke but eyefull and cleere I saw saith Solomon the wise that there is more profit in wisdome thē in folly as the light is more excellent then darknesse Eccl. 2. 13. for a wise mans eyes are in his head but a foole walketh in darknesse Wisdome and faith are the sight of the eye of the mind and truth rightly apprehended and assented vnto is the light that leadeth in the' right way Morio 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 quasi 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 vnto God Ps 43. 3. But a foole vnbeleeuer is a blind and a darke man 2. Pet. 1. 9. For infidelitie and folly is the blindnesse of the mind and where these lead the will and affections there is a wandring from God seeing he that walketh in darknesse woteth not whether hee goeth Ioh. 12. 35. and there is a falling into the pit of all errors and sinnes seeing where the blind lead the blind both fall into the ditch Wherefore blessed are their eies who seeing see and doe perceaue hearing heare and doe vnderstand and so are converted so are saved Mat. 13. 16. And blessed are all not some but all beleeuers because they all behold as in a myrror the glory of God with open face are changed into the same image from glory to glory as by the spirit of God 2. Cor. 3 18. Neither doth our wise Christian faith bring onely sight and light to all that beleeue but also a behauiour fit for men indued with sound and right reason and de liuereth them from childishnesse brutishnesse also It is the propertie of a child to doe childishly When I was a child saith the Apostle I spake as a child I vnderstood as a child but when I was a man I put away childishnesse Non qu● eundū sed quo itur 1. Cor. 13. 11. So it is a propertie of a brute beast to goe not whether they should goe but whether others goe But the faithfull should not be children in vnderstanding but of a ripe age 1. Cor. 14. 20. Neither should they bee like the horse and mule in whom there is no vnderstanding Ps 32. 9. For children are childish and are led with such motiues as most prevaile with the affections and brute beasts are brutish and follow sense but the wise Christian beleeuer will take especially notice of such inducements as soundly informe the vnderstanding and are powerfull to rule direct the affections and senses in a right course Now by all these properties and effects of a true Christian faith it is evident that whosoever desireth to attaine therevnto must labour to vnderstand the severall reasons whereon the severall doctrines of faith are grounded that so he may bee enabled thereby to stand vpon the iust defence of his owne faith Thus much is Bellarmine himselfe forced to confesse in that hee maketh sanctity of doctrine which is the wisdome and reasonablenesse thereof to be a note of the true Church and of the right faith professed therein vpō that ground taketh exception against our