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A97309 The whole body of Christian religion, by Hieron. Zanchius. Translated out of Latine by D. Ralph Winterton. Zanchi, Giralamo, 1516-1590.; Winterton, Ralph, 1600-1636. 1659 (1659) Wing Z7; Thomason E1897_1; ESTC R209936 137,419 420

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grow together in it And we make no doubt or question at all but all this was instituted and appointed by God for our weaknesse and ignorance and for the imbecillitie of our faith that it might be supported not onely by the Word but also by the outward signes Forasmuch as faith it is by which properly it comes to passe that we embrace and lay hold on Christ and grow up together in him DOCT. V. That where the Words of institution are not recited there is no Sacrament And that without the use thereof the outward signes are no more then what they are of their own nature ANd as we believe that the signes are added unto the Word not for superstition but for the greater confirmation of our faith so also we confesse that the Word is necessarie in the administration of the Sacraments not for incantation but for to stirre up faith in our hearts And thereupon when the Words of Institution are not so recited or rehearsed as that they may be heard and understood for the stirring up of faith There we deny any true Sacrament to be and conclude that without the due lawfull use thereof the outward signes are no Sacraments but merely that which they are of their own nature and no more For by the Word onely are the outward elements or signes set a part for an holy use which setting apart is by many called the Consecrating or Sanctifying thereof And so they become Sacraments according to that of St Augustine August The Word is added unto the element and so it becomes a Sacrament But yet so must it be added that it may be understood and believed DOCT. VI. That the Sacraments are not bare and naked signes THerefore we believe that the Sacramentall signes are not onely bare notes or marks to distinguish us from all other people which are aliens and strangers from the true Church nor yet onely badges or cognizances of Christian societie by which we may make profession of our faith and give thanks unto God for the great benefit of our redemption But also that they are instruments by which whilst the actions and benefits of Christ are represented unto us and recalled unto our memorie the promises of God are sealed unto us and faith also stirred vp in our hearts the holy Ghost also ingrafting us into Christ and preserving us being once ingrafted and making us every day more and more to grow up into one with him that so being indued with greater faith towards God more ardent charitie towards our neighbour and the gift of true mortification of our selves we may leade a life as near as it is possible according to the most perfect pattern of Christ's life in all Spirituall joy and gladnesse till at length we received up to live with him in heaven a most holy happy and blessed life for ever and ever DOCT. VII What the Sacraments of the New Testament are WE confesse also with St. Augustine August De Doctrin Christ lib. 3. cap. 9. that the Sacraments by Christ delivered unto us are for number few for performance most easie for understanding most full of majesty First For number few because they are but two onely Baptisme and The Lords Supper Secondly For performance most easie because there is nothing in Baptisme or in the Lords Supper which may not easily be performed and received nothing troublesome nothing unpleasant nothing strange or abhorring from the manners of men Last of all For understanding most full of majestie because although the things which are seen with our eyes are vile yet the things signified and represented unto our minds to be understood thereby and to be considered are most full of majestie divine and heavenly pertaining unto everlasting salvation DOCT. VIII That for the worthy receiving of the Sacraments there is need of faith and understanding FRom whence also we come to understand that for the worthy receiving of the Sacraments the action of the mind also is required attention and faith whereby we may understand and apprehend what is thereby signified and exhibited unto us as also Christ himself teacheth where concerning his Supper he saith a Luke 22.19 This do in remembrance of mee And the b 1 Cor 1.42 Apostle duely waighing and considering with himself the Words of Christ expounds them at large Whereunto belongeth that also Lift up your hearts For there are set before us things majesticall heavenly and divine to be understood by the mind and to be received by faith DOCT. IX That the thing it self of the Sacrament is seriously and truely set before all although all do not truely partake thereof but the elect and faithfull onely BUt although all men come not to the receiving of the Sacraments with true faith and understanding Yet as the visible signes are exhibited unto all that do professe the name of Christ so also we believe that the things themselves which by the Sacraments are signified are also seriously and truely by Christ offered unto all and therefore that by reason of the infidelitie and unbelief of those which receive onely the visible signes nothing at all is detracted from the integritie perfection of the Sacraments Forasmuch as that dependeth onely on Christ's Institution and the truth of his Words DOCT. X. That whilst the Sacraments are administred the holy Ghost worketh effectually in the faithfull and therefore that they do not onely receive the bare visible signes but also partake of the thing thereby signified BUt again although whilst the Sacraments are administred the Spirit of Christ worketh not effectually in all men as neither doth he whilst the Word is preached but all through their own fault because they bring not with them faith and understanding Yet we believe neverthelesse that he worketh effectually in all the elect and believers forasmuch as he conferreth and bestoweth faith upon them by the preaching of the Word and every day more and more confirmeth them in it by the receiving of the Sacraments and bringeth them to have communion with Christ and causeth them to grow up together in it And therefore we confesse that they are in Baptisme truely washed from their sins and purged by the virtue of Christ's bloud and that in the Supper they are nourished and fed with the body and bloud of Christ DOCT. XI That Christ is the Authour and true dispenser of the Sacraments ANd as we acknowledge onely one Authour of the Sacraments So also we acknowledge one onely true dispenser of the same to wit our Lord Iesus Christ who dispenseth indeed the outward elements and visible signes by the ministerie of man Instrumentally but himself doth truely and properly communicate the matter it self of the Sacraments or the thing signified by himself and his holy Spirit efficiently According to what Iohn the Baptist said that he indeed did Baptize a Matt. 3.11 with water but Christ with the holy Ghost And therefore as it is lawfull for no man to institute and
we break is it not the communion of the body of Christ The breaking and the receiving the blessed bread he calls the communion of the Lord's body because they which eat thereof with actuall faith in the Lord himself grow up together in communion with the Lord himself and with his flesh and bloud Even as they also which with faith embrace the word preached by the Apostles b 1 Iohn 1.3 have also fellowship with the Apostles and that fellowship is with the Father and his Son Iesus Christ DOCT. II. A confirmation of the former FOr as Baptisme is an instrument to inchoate and begin this communion because thereby we are born again in Christ So the Supper was instituted to perfect the same because therein we are fed with the flesh and bloud of Christ that we may grow up in him a 1 Cor. 12.13 For as the Apostle saith by one Spirit are we all Baptized into one body and have been all made to drink into one Spirit DOCT. III. That the furthering and increasing of our communion with Christ is the chief end of the Lords Supper THe Lords Supper was indeed instituted for many other ends to wit that being admonished both by words and signes representing the Lords death and the effusion of his most precious bloud we might call to mind and thankfully acknowledge the great benefit of our Redemption For what saith the Apostle b 1 Cor. 11.26 As often as ye eat this bread and drink this cup ye do shew the Lords death till he come To these ends therefore serveth it that we may be confirmed in our faith about the remission of our sins that we may be nourished unto the hope of a blessed resurrection that we may be stirred up to give thanks unto God for so great a benefit and to repent us of our sins and last of all to renew our covenant made with God openly and in the presence of the whole Church But because all these tend to no other end but this that we may be more and more united unto Christ and become one with him and that a Gal. 2.20 he may live more effectually in us and we in him b Eph. 5. ●0 being made flesh of his flesh and bone of his bones Therefore we doubt not but the Supper was chiefly and principally instituted for the increasing and furthering this our union and communion with Christ in which is perfected and consummated our salvation Whereunto also serveth the bread and wine being bodily nourishments That we may know it for certain that what the bread and wine is for the nourishing of our bodyes and the preserving of this naturall life such also is the flesh and bloud of Christ for the feeding of our souls and the maintenance of our Spirituall life DOCT. IV. Why the bread is called the body of Christ FRom whence also we may learn why Christ calleth this bread his body Not so as if it were either properly his true body or as if his body were included in it or so as if it were but a bare and naked signe of his body which was broken and crucified for us But because it is a Sacrament thereof and Sacraments as St. Augustine saith are often called by the names of those things whereof they are Sacraments and so is made an instrument of the holy Ghost for the communicating unto us the true body of Christ and for the confirming us in the communion thereof As also the Apostle for the same reason speaking of Baptisme called it not a signe of regeneration but the very laver of regeneration without doubt because a Eph. 5.26 with the washing of water by the word as by a fit and convenient instrument Christ by the effectuall working of his Spirit doth inwardly wash cleanse and regenerate us DOCT. V. That the bread is but improperly and figuratively called the true and substantiall body of Christ WHerefore we doubt not but in the words of the Supper the true and naturall body of Christ is predicated of the bread especially seeing that for explication sake there is added b Luk. 22.19 Which is given for you So that this is a most true saying the bread is Christs body to wit that true boby which was given for us but this is improperly and figuratively seeing that in very deed the bread was given for us but the true body of Christ whereof the bread is a Sacrament DOCT. VI. That the body of Christ is not in the bread really and properly FRom hence also we are confirmed in our opinion that as the bread is not properly the very body of Christ but a Sacrament thereof so likewise the body of Christ is not really and properly in the bread For in Sacraments the things themselves whereof they are Sacraments are not really included although they sometimes receive the names thereof As it appeareth plainly in Baptisme without all controversie in which no man saith that either the bloud of Christ by which we are washed from our sins or regeneration it self is included For neither in the word of the Gospel are included really those things which thereby are declared Now the Sacraments are the visible word But neither did Christ say My body is in this that is in the bread but he used another farre different manner of speaking to wit This that is This bread is my body Now if any one list to be contentious and say that the sense is all one It will follow that if the body of Christ be really in the bread the bread likewise is really properly and substantially the body of Christ which if it be impious once to affirme then cannot the other be affirmed without great impietie And yet we deny not but that Sacramentally it may be so according to the sense in which we say that in the word of the Gospel is remission of sins life and salvation which thereby are declared and offered unto us But forasmuch as by such manner of speaking the vulgar sort are commonly drawn to superstition we judge it fitting to abstain altogether from them and we hold it most mete to use such formes of words as we find recorded in the sacred Scripture DOCT. VII That in the Supper not onely the signes but also the things themselves signified are distributed NOw without all manner of controversie this we hold for a sure position and a certain truth that although the very body and bloud of the Lord are not that is exist not in their own substance and really and properly in the bread wine but in heaven Yet together with the distribution of the bread and wine the very flesh and bloud also are truely offered unto all to be eaten and to be drunk But how Not simply but as the one was delivered unto death for us and the other poured forth for the remission of our sins For the words of Christ in a Iohn 6.51 Iohn are manifest concerning the eating of his flesh
and the drinking of his bloud if any man will have life in him and consonant and agreeable unto the words of Christ are the words of the Apostle also saying b 1 Cor. 11.27 Whosoever shall eat this bread and drink this cup of the Lord unworthily shall be guilty of the true body and bloud of the Lord. Neither do we doubt but as Christ openly commanded the bread to be eaten so also not long after where he said this is my body he secretly commanded that also to be eaten no lesse then the bread but yet each after it's own manner DOCT. VIII That none but the faithfull do truely eat the true flesh of Christ BUt yet notwithstanding the flesh of Christ is in the Supper offered unto all to eat we believe that they are the true faithfull onely which do truely eat thereof And that for these reasons First because they onely have communion with Christ and so also with his flesh and bloud but others have not neither are they made partakers thereof when they receive the bread Secondly because they onely have the Spirit of Christ by the power of whom alone the flesh of Christ is truely communicated Thirdly because they onely bring faith with them without which there can be no true receiving and eating thereof For neither doth Christ himself truely and really exhibit his true body but to them who as truely believe that his body was delivered unto death for them and his bloud poured forth for their sins as they believe that those words are true THIS IS MY BODY DOCT. IX That Hypocrites eat the body of Christ Sacramentally MEan while we deny not but that even Hypocrites themselves void of true and justifying faith when they receive and eat the bread as the Sacrament of the Lords body may be said in some sort to eat the true body of Christ to wit Sacramentally but not truely and really As the Apostle in like manner saith that all the Corinthians which were Baptized with water were also sanctified and justified to wit Sacramentally as we declared before although they were not all truely made such DOCT. X. That of those that eat there are three sorts and so divers manners of eating FRom whence we are taught that there are three sorts of men of whom there may a question be made whether they eat the flesh of Christ or no. The first is of thē which receive the bread as common bread and not as a Sacrament And these eat not the body of Christ in any sort but are true Capernaites and their eating is merely carnall The second is of them which contrarily eat not the bread at all but yet not out of contempt but believe the Gospel onely and their eating is merely Spirituall The third and last sort is of them which not content onely with believing the Gospel receive the bread also not simply as the first as if it were bare and common bread but as the Sacrament of the Lords body whereupon they may be said also to receive and eat Sacramentally But forasmuch as this may be done by the true Godly as well as by those which are hypocrites and ungodly but yet after a different manner the one sort eating also by faith and the other without true faith Therefore also we say that the ungodly and hypocrites eat onely Sacramentally but the true Godly both Sacramentally and truely and Spiritually and so unto salvation DOCT. XI That by faith onely the true body of Christ is eaten BUt whereas we say that the faithfull onely receive the true body of Christ not Sacramentally onely but also truely we understand it of eating not with the mouth of the body but the mind and Spirit endued with faith and that by the operation of the holy Spirit effectually working in us and applying Christ wholly unto us For it is the food of the mind as a Cyprian Serm. de Coena Cyprian speaketh and not of the belly And as Christ speaketh and St. Augustine expounds it b Ioh. 6.36 It is the Spirit that quickeneth the flesh profiteth nothing And the Apostle teacheth That c 1 Cor. 12.13 by one Spirit we are all Baptised into one body and have been all made to drink into one Spirit And if all our true union with Christ is by the holy Spirit although he with his body be in heaven and we on earth It is necessarie also that the eating be after the same manner For what is it to eat but to receive and unite the food unto thee for the nourishment of that part for which it is appointed Now the flesh of Christ as we said before is the food of the mind and not of the belly Neither truely do we eat the body of Christ any otherwise but as it was delivered to death for us made without bloud as the words do sound and the breaking of the bread doth represent unto us and also as the passeover and other sacrifices were wont to be eaten But now the body liveth and cannot be without bloud As at the first Supper it was neither dead nor without bloud To say then that properly that body doth passe into our bodyes and that by the mouth it is no lesse then sacriledge To what end also is this that as the bread is distributed without the wine and the wine without the bread so also the body without the bloud and the bloud apart without the body is given in the Sacrament of the Lords Supper But that we may understand that the body and bloud in their very substance and as they are in heaven do not passe through our mouthes but are received onely by a faithfull remembrance stirred up in us effectually by the holy Spirit For this is the thing which the Lord required saying a Luk. 22.20 This do in remembrance of me And again b 19. This is my body which is given for you For in so speaking he required faith of them by which they should believe this and by believing eat that is apply it to themselves for the food and life of their souls Wherefore we are verily perswaded that they do truely and not imaginarily eat the flesh of Christ whosoever believe that it was delivered unto death for an expiatorie sacrifice to cleanse them from their sins and so believing embrace with a faithfull mind and apply it unto themselves And whosoever thus eat the body of Christ as dead we doubt not but they are more and more joyned and knit unto it now being living and quickning according to the promise of Christ who having first said c Ioh. 6.56 He that eateth my flesh afterwards added dwelleth in me and I in him DOCT. XII That the opinion concerning the eating of Christs body corporally is not to be admitted as being vain and improfitable Furthermore forasmuch as this manner of eating the flesh of Christ to wit by faith is certain and saving and that other feigned manner of eating by the
The differences between the Church Triumphant and the Church Militant ALthough the Church Triumphant and Militant are but one and the same Church yet it is easy to be understood what a great deal of difference there is between them For besides that this Militant Church doth consist onely of men whereas the Triumphant hath the blessed Angels also annexed and present here we have need of the preaching of the word the administration of the Sacraments and discipline concerning life and manners which things have no place in heaven Again from that are excluded all the ungodly and hypocrites but in this there are good bad mixt together And again those our brethren which are in heaven being now at liberty do triumph over their enemies and rejoyce with exceeding great joy being present with the Lord and beholding him face to face But we must still wrestle with flesh and bloud with the world with sin and with Satan the Prince of this world and we see here but darkly as in a glasse being absent from the Lord. And last of all it is so alwayes one the same that it is neither divided into parts nor subject to any change neither of which can be said truely of the Church Militant DOCT. III. That the Church Militant is in such sort one and the same and that Catholike that yet notwithstanding it is not with it alwayes after one and the same manner and besides it is distinguished into divers particular Churches WE therefore acknowldge that although the Militant Church alwayes was and is one and the same and that Catholike because it alwayes had from the foundation of the world and in all places one and the same Head which is Christ who knitteth and uniteth unto himself into one body all the elect gathered out of every nation Yet it neither was nor is with it alwayes after one and the same manner and besides it is distinguished into many particular Churches being as many and divers members thereof according to the varietie of times places and people For in the earthly Paradise before sin it was with it after one manner after sin and before the floud and in the time of the Patriarchs after another under the Law after another under Grace after another and in the time of Christ amongst the Iews onely after another and after Christ's glorification after another being by the Apostles gathered out of Iews and Gentiles and that not in one place but in many nor out of one people but many nor retaining at all times and in all places the same ceremonies In which respects we are wont to say that it was one before Christ and another after and that the Church of the Old Testament but this of the New and that again we reade was wont to be called the old people and this the New And as concerning particular Churches we read of one at Rome another at Corinth another at Ephesus and others in other places DOCT. IV. That the Catholike Church being but one consists of many particular Churches AGain although for many and divers respects already signified there alwayes have been and yet are many and divers and particular Churches Yet we acknowledge that as concerning the substance there alwayes hath been but one and the same consisting of them all and that Catholike and Apostolike and Holy One Because it alwayes was and is gathered into a Eph. 1.23 one body under b 4.4 Eph. 1.22 one Head Iesus Christ by c Eph. 4. ● one and the same Spirit And because there is d 5. one faith of all and one confession of the faith Catholike Because it is extended to all times and places and consists of all kinds of persons and people Apostolike Because it was e Eph. 2.20 founded upon the foundation which the Apostles laid that is Iesus Christ and built upon the doctrine of the Apostles which was also the doctrine of the Prophets from the foundation of the world and Holy Not as if it had no sin but because inasmuch as it is ingrafted into Christ and endued with the gifts of repentance and faith therefore no sins are imputed unto it but it hath obtained free pardon of them all and again because it is made partaker of Christ's Spirit sanctifying and regenerating and further because the righteousnesse and holinesse of Christ is imputed unto it in which regard it is said to be a Eph. 5.27 without spot or wrinkle that is in Christ her b 23. Head and husband DOCT. V. How it may be known concerning particular Churches whether they be true Churches or no. AS concerning particular Churches we believe that it may be known whether they be true Churches gathered together in the Lord by this if they have their building according to the will of the Lord Iesus that is on the c Matt● 28.19 preaching of the Gospel the administration of the Sacraments instituted and ordained by Christ and the d 20. keeping and observing of his commandments We therefore acknowledge those for the true Churches of Christ in which first of all the pure doctrine of the Gospel is preached heard and received and so received and that onely that there is neither place nor care given unto any other which is contrarie thereto For both these are the properties of the flock or sheep of Christ both to a Ioh. 10.4 hear the voyce of their own sheepherd and b 5. not to follow a stranger And again in which the Sacraments instituted by Christ are as farre as it is possible to be done rightly and duely administred and received that is according to Christs institution and where also such Sacraments as are but the inventions of men are not received And last of all in which the Discipline of Christ hath place that is where both publikely and privately by c Matt. 1 8 15 c. Tit. 1.9 admonitions corrections and where need shall require by excommunications also but yet out of charitie care is taken for the keeping and observing of Christs commandments that so all men may live a sober righteous and godly life to the glorie of God and the mutuall edification of one another For where wickednesse and all manner of uncleannesse in life goes openly unpunished and notorious offences contrarie to the doctrine of Christ scape without censure there we believe that some good and godly men may be found but that a godly and Christian congregation is there we believe not For this the Lord himself saith a Iohn 13.35 By this shall all men know that ye are my disciples if ye love one another But what love can be there where no care is had that according to the doctrine of Christ when brethren sin they may be corrected and repent be gained unto the Lord and saved DOCT. VI. From what succession of Bishops it may be demonstrated that some Church is Apostolike SO also we acknowledge that from the perpetuall succession
to beget the Sonne is so proper to the Father that it can neither be attributed to the Sonne nor to the holy Ghost And again to be begotten cannot be attributed but to the Son onely and so likewise in the rest So also to be most simple eternall infinite every where present simply omniscient simply omnipotent simply good and the rest of like sort are so proper unto God that they cannot really or truely be communicated to any creature in such matter that it can be for instance sake good by an infinite goodnes or omnipotent by an infinite power c. As God is DOCT. IV. That the Essentiall Properties in God do not really differ from his Essence FOr we acknowledge that in God by reason of his simplicitie his Essentiall Properties do not really differ from his Essence and therefore that they cannot without this be communicated to any creature And therefore that no creature is or can be truely said to be simply for 〈…〉 sake omnipotent good just 〈…〉 As also our Lord Iesus speaking of one attribute taught us concerning all Matth. ●● 17 saying There is none good that is simply but one that is God DOCT. V. That nothing is or can be simply such as God is unlesse it can be simply God also WHerefore whosoever hold that any created substance could ever be made or can now or hereafter be made partaker of the divine attributes or properties by which it may become such as God is as for example simply omnipotent c. They must also necessariny confesse that the same is or may be coessentiall with God For as much as even the Sonne himself is not simply Almightie but as he is coessentiall with the Father and so likewise the holy Ghost DOCT. VI. The confirmation of the foregoing doctrine FRom whence also we understand how it comes to passe that whereas the Sonne is no lesse Almightie then the Father and so in like manner the holy Ghost yet we say not that there are three Almighties Symbol Athan. but confesse with Athanasius and the whole Church that there is onely one Almightie because they have all one and the same essence Seeing then that no thing created hath one and the same essence with God but another and that farre diverse How can any created thing be made Almightie Or if any thing by the communication of Gods Almightie power could be made Almightie it must needs follow that there are more Almighties then one which we count it blasphemie once to affirme DOCT. VII Heresies and Errours condemned THerefore we condemne and detest all heresies which have rose up against this article of our Faith and being fetcht back from hell have been condemned by the Holy Fathers in lawfull Councills viz. The Heresie of Cerinthus Ebion Valentius Marcion Manichaeus Arius Eunomius Sabellius Prax Fotinus and such like as Servitus and the Tritheites which hold that there be three Gods as likewise the blasphemies of the Iewes and Turks and also all Heresies which have been broched by the divel either against the Unitie of the Godhead or against the Trinitie of Persons and further such as either deny the Sonne to be true and eternall God and so the holy Ghost also or else confound the Persons and say that they are but one and the same but yet for divers respects called by divers names viz. Father Sonne and holy Ghost And to conclude we condemne also the errours of those who separate the essentiall Properties of God from his divine essence which they seem to us to do whosoever do teach that they may be communicated to any creature without the communication of essence or indeed rather which teach that they are communicated already CHAP. III. Concerning Gods foreknowledge and Praedestination DOCTRINE I. That God foreknew and foresaw all things from Eternitie WE believe that God Acts 15.18 from the beginning of the world yea even from Eternitie according to his infinite wisdome foreknew all things to come both the good which he would do and the evil which he would permit to be done so farre forth that nothing did or could lye hid from him And we doubt not but all things Hebr ● 13 whatsoever have been are shall or may be although they never come to passe are and have been alwayes naked and open in his sight DOCT. II. That God in his eternall counsel praedetermined all things and praeordained them to the best ends NEither do we believe onely That God foresaw all things and hath them ever present in his sight but also that in his most wise and eternall counsel he hath before determined all things Acts 4.28 whatsoever did or do concerne the creation and goverment of the world as also the gathering together of his Church out of the sinfull ofspring of Adam and likewise their redemption and salvation and further that of his infinite goodnes he hath before ordained all the evil which in his wisdome he purposed to suffer and permit to the best ends insomuch that there shall not an hair perish Luk. 21.18 Matt. 10.30 or fall from our head without the will of our heavenly Father DOCT. III. That God hath predestinated some men unto life and others unto death WHerefore we make no doubt of this That God out of men to speak nothing of the Angells whom at the creation he made all righteous in Adam but foresaw that they would all sin likewise in him Ephes ● 3.4 hath in Christ chosen some that they should be holy and without blame before him in love and hath also predestinated them unto eternall life of his meere grate and according to the good pleasure of his will Rom 9.22 but in his just judgement hath not vouchsafed to give his grace unto others as being the vessels of wrath fitted for destruction That in those his infinite mercie but in these his justice might be made known unto the world to his owne glorie DOCT. IV. That the Election of the Saints is of Gods mere Grace FOr as our Vocation unto Christ T it 3.7 Eph. 2.9 and our Iustification in Christ is merely of Gods grace and not of our works So also we hold that the predestination of the Saints is merely of grace because it was made in Christ That no flesh should glorie in his presence Ephes 1.3 1 Cor 1.29.31 but that he that gloryeth should glorie in the Lord. DOCT. V. That we are predestinated not onely to the end but also to the meanes WHereupon we believe also Eph. 1.3.4 that seeing God in Christ hath chosen us before the foundation of the world that we should be holy and without blame before him in love We are predestinated not onely to the end which is eternall life and glorie but also to the Meanes tending to that End and especiall Faith whereby we are ingrafted into Christ and Regeneration also and true Repentance by which we are made in Christ a new creature
expresseth by the name of Heaven Earth and they were all exceeding good Prov. 16.4 And we believe likewise that he ordained them for the use of man and for his own glorie And therefore we acknowledge both the Sonne and the holy Ghost to be Creatour of the world as well as the Father For as much as the Father the Son and the holy Ghost is but one and the same God DOCT. II. That the Heaven is distinguished from the Earth and that the Heaven of the blessed doth differ from the other Heavens NEither do we mingle Heaven and Earth together 2 ●●r 22.2 Matth. 6.10 nor make a confusion of the Heavens one with another but according to the holy Scripture we make a distinction as we see the elements and all kinds of creatures animate and inanimate to be distinguished And further we confesse that the Heaven in which the souls of the blessed live with Christ and the bodyes of all the godly shall which Christ also calleth his a Iohn 14.2 Fathers house and b Luk. 23.43 Paradise and which the Apostle calleth c Heb. 11.10 A citie which hath foundations whose builder and maker is God We confesse I say that this Heaven differeth from the other Heavens but much more from Earth and Hell Unto this Heaven also the Apostle alluded when he said 2 Cor. 12.2 That he was caught up to the third Heaven to wit above the Heaven of the aire and above all the visible and moveable orbs DOCT. III. That all the Angels were created good although they did not all stand fast in the truth WE believe also That the Angels were all created good and righteous being substances spirituall and immortall and indued with understanding and free-will although they did not all stand fast in goodness and righteousness Iohn ● 44 and the Truth as our Lord Iesus speaketh but did many of them from the very beginning sinne of their own free-will and so became the enemies of God and all goodness the enemies of all mankind and especially of the Church of God liars and speaking lies of their own murderers devils evil spirits and 2 Pet. 2.4 that therefore they were cast down to Hell and delivered into chaines of darkness to be reserved unto judgement DOCT. IV. The causes or reasons why many of the heavenly Spirits were permitted to sinne and became evil ANd this was not without cause permitted by the wisedome of God as we are taught in holy Scripture For besides that God would have his justice and judgement made known unto them as likewise his anger and wrath against sin by what creature soever committed he hath also appointed to use them as his instruments to a 1 King 21.22 tempt us and exercise our faith and patience in b Eph. 6.12 spirituall combats and all to further our salvation and to conclude He would have them to be the executors and administrators of his justice judgements against mans wickedness that as many as c 2 Thes 2.12 will not believe the truth whereby they may be saved should follow the d Tim. 4 1. doctrines of devils giving heed to seducing spirits and e 2 Thes 2 11. believing lies and so f 12. be damned DOCT. V. That the good Angels were by the grace of God preserved in goodness that so they might become God's ministring Spirits for our good AGain we believe That g D 10. innumerable of the celestiall spirits were by the grace of God in Christ preserved that they might not sin with the rest but persist in truth and obedience and that so they became Gods messengers and h Heb 1.14 ministring spirits for the good of his elect to defend and protect them against the devils and to promote the Kingdome of Christ And they do so love us and wait upon us that they do exceedingly i Luk. 15.10 rejoyce for our salvation But they will k Revel 22.9 not be worshipped of us by any means but put us in minde that God onely is to be worshipped and that they are but our fellow-servants with whom we shall also live a blessed and eternall life as the Angels of God in heaven Matth. 22.30 DOCT. VI. That man was created after the Image of God WE believe That after that all other things were created at last man also was a Gen. 1.26 27. created after the Image and likenesse of God his body being b 2 7. formed out of the earth but his soul which is a spirituall and immortall substance being made of nothing and c ibid. inspired by God into his body Not long after a wife also was by God given unto him d 2.22 made of his bone as concerning the body and created after the Image of God DOCT. VII Wherein especialy that Image of God consisted BUt we believe that the Image of God consisted in this especially That as God is the absolute Lord of all things So unto man were e G●● 1.28 Psal 8.6 7 8. all things made subject that he should have dominion over the fowles of the aire the fishes of the sea and the beasts of the land insomuch that he was the king of all the lower world And again more especially in this That as God is most holy and righteous So also man was f Eccl. 7.29 created upright at the first that is g Eph. 4 24. in righteousness and true holiness as the Apostle doth interpret it DOCT. VIII That Adam had free-will before his fall HEreupon we believe that man in his first estate had not onely this libertie that he could will nothing against his will which libertie hath alwayes remained in man and still remaineth but also that he was indued with such power from above that if he would he might have not sinned and so not have died but have persevered in righteousness and have escaped death Insomuch that his losse of both is to be justly attributed unto himself and not unto any other DOCT. IX Heresies and Errours condemned WE condemne therefore the Valentinians Alarcionites Manichees and as many as have taught or have left any thing in writing behinde them against this article of our Christian faith whether they feigned the world to be made by some other God then the Father of Christ or whether they held that all things that are good were made by one God that is good and all things that are evil by another that is evil For how can he be God which is not the chief and soveraigne good and the onely maker of all good things We condemne also all those which hold that the soul of man was made of the substance of God or which deny it to be immortall and alwayes working or which make the Image of God to consist onely in the dominion over his creatures or last of all which deny that the first man was created by God at the first with free-will truely so
called CHAP. VI. Concerning Gods Providence and his governing the world DOCTRINE I. That the world and all the things which are therein are governed by Gods Providence WE believe that God after that he had created all things so rested from his work that nevertheless he never ceased neither yet doth cease to guide a Wisd 14.3 govern and look after the world and all the things that are therein as well small as great but especially mankind in generall and every man in particular So that b Matt. 10 29 30 not any thing happens or is done in the world which is not guided and c governed by his Providence DOCT. II. That God governeth his Church after a more peculiar manner ALthough all and every thing is subject to Gods Providence yet we believe that he hath a more especiall Wisd 14.3 care of his Church and that he guideth governeth it after a more especiall manner as likewise the wills and actions of all and every one of his elect For as much as he after an especiall manner d Rom. 8.30 calleth justifieth and sanctifieth them but not all and further e Philp. 2.13 worketh in them both to will and to do of his good pleasure and further saith f 2 Cor. 2.16 I will dwell in them but g Acts 14.16 not in all and at length bringeth them unto everlasting life but suffers others in his just judgement to walke in their own wayes and run on headlong to destruction Whereupon we are commanded to h 1 Pet. 5.7 cast all our care upon God for he after a peculiar manner careth for us DOCT. III. That God ordinarily governeth the world by second causes ANd this we learn also out of holy Scripture That although God by himself without any coadjutor yea sometimes contrary to ordinarie meanes bringeth to passe many decrees of his divine Providence yet there are farre more which he ordinarely useth to bring to passe by the ministerie of second causes both in the government of whole world in generall and the Church in speciall For a Hos 2.21.22 I will hear saith the Lord I will hear the heavens and they shall hear the earth and the earth shall hear the corne and the wine and the oyle and they shall hear Iezreel DOCT. IV. That the meanes unto the end are not to be neglected and that God in his Providence willeth the one as well as the other FRom hence we gather That although we are certain God careth for us yet the meanes which God hath appointed for the salvation of the soul and body are not to be despised neither must we tempt God but follow the Apostle who although he was fully perswaded of the saving of all that were in the ship with him when the saylers began to think how to shift for themselves said to the Centurion and to the souldiers except these abide in the ship Act. 27.31 ye cannot be saved For God which hath appointed to every thing it 's own end he also hath appointed the beginning and the meanes by which to come unto that end DOCT. V. That in respect of God all things come to passe necessarily and in respect of us many things contingently WHereas God in his Providence doth conserve and also move the second causes which he is wont to use in the government of the world every one in it's own nature and some of these are destinated by their own nature to the producing of certain effects and again some are not We understand and confesse that although in respect of God a Matt. 10.29.30 Exod. 21.13 without whose foreknowledge and will nothing in the world comes to passe all things are necessarie yet in respect of us and the second causes they are not all necessarie but most of them are contingent For what can be more casuall contingent then this That b Deut. 19.5 when a man is hewingwood the head of his axe should fly out of his hand and kill the traveller that passeth by And yet the Lord saith that it is he which killed him And again our Lord Iesus Christ died for us voluntatily and yet it is said It was necessarie or c Luke 24.46 Thus it behoved Christ to suffer In like manner Herod and Pilate condemned Iesus with full and free consent of will And yet the Apostles say that d Act. 4.28 they did no more then what the hand and counsel of God had determined before to be done DOCT. VI. That God is not the authour of sin which is committed in the World ANd from hence also we understand and confesse That although many wickednesses are committed in the world whilst God moveth all things yet they cannot be imputed to him and his Providence For e Acts 17.28 God moveth indeed all things and giveth power unto every thing to work but he instilleth no sinfull qualitie unto any man whereby he worketh after an evil and sinfull manner As therefore the earth which affordeth sap to the bad trees as well as to the good is not to be blamed if a bad tree bring forth bad fruit So much lesse can God justly be said to be the authour and cause of our sins although he a Heb. 1. ● by the hand of his providence sustain support move and govern all things yea the very ungodly themselves b Acts 17.28 In him saith the Apostle we live and move and have our being To wit such as we are such are we moved by him unless he of his grace do alter and change us DOCT. VII That the secret counsels of God in the governing of the world are by us to be adored with reverence and not with curiositie to be inquired into BUt as concerning the secret and wonderfull counsels of God whereby we see innumerable things to be done whereof we can neither give nor know any reason Let us admire and adore them with what reverence we ought being assured of this That c Matth. 10 29 30 nothing in the world is done without the will of God And that the will of God is a Rom. 9.14 so just that it is the most certain rule of all justice And therefore we must alwayes keep in mind that saying of the Apostle uttered with great admiration b Rom. 11.33 O the depth of the riches both of the wisedome knowledge of God! How unsearchable are his judgements and his wayes past finding out And again c Rom. 9.14 Is there unrighteousness with God God forbid And yet d Rom. 11.36 Of him and through him and to him are all things To whom be glory for ever Amen DOCT. VIII Errours condemned THerefore we condemne all impostors and deceivers and all those Philosophers which either quite take away Gods Providence out of the world or else deny that he looketh after humane affaires and small matters And those also we condemne which abusing Gods Providence contemne and neglect the
within the compasse of their dutie which how profitable it is for the commowealth in generall and for every man in particular who knows not Thirdly and lastly whereas men found by dayly expeperience that they did alwayes sinne against this perfect Law and did feel that they could not keep it as they ought and so became more more every day subject to the wrath of God and guilty of eternall death From hence it came to passe that despairing in themselves and of their own strength they did the more ardently desire and long for the coming of their Redeemer and Deliverer and therefore the more they came to the knowledge of their sins and their own weakensse and the more sensibly they felt the wrath of God by the Law the more they did hunger and thirst after righteousnesse and fitted and prepared themselves for the receiving of Christ by faith So it is most true which the Apostle saith in both places a Rom. 3.20 By the Law is the knowledge of sin and b Gal. 3.24 The Law is our School-master to bring us unto Christ DOCT. IX That the Law at this time hath the same uses even in those which are regenerate ANd we believe that the foresaid uses of the Law abide and continue as long as we live in this world not onely in the unregenerate as was said before but even in the regenerate also For whereas our minds are overclouded with darknesse and our memories are slippery that we cannot either perfectly understand the things of God or understanding them keep them in remembrance Need we have of the Law of God to be our glasse wherein we may every day behold and see and certainly understand what is the will of God that we should do And again Whereas our hearts are not perfectly purged from all corruption So that they are not fully bent to doe the will of God but still a Gal. 5.17 The flesh lusteth against the Spirit Necessary it is for us to have the Law of God by the tenours and comminations thereof to keep us from falling into sin and by the promises thereof to incite us unto obedience and to follow after righteousness And thirdly and lastly For as much as there is b 1 Io●●●8 no man so far forth sanctified but that he sinneth and hath sin dwelling in him which makes us weak and feeble to every good work and alwayes prone to that which is evil Therefore the Law is usefull and profitable for us that thereby coming to the knowledge of our sins and manifold weaknesses we may more and more every day acknowledge how impossible it is that we should ever by our own works be justified and saved and further so much the more ardently-hunger and thirst after Christs righteousness embrace him by faith And so the Law although it can never justify us yet it may bring us every day nearer nearer unto justification by bringing us unto Christ that justifieth DOCT. X. That the Morall Law as concerning the substance thereof was not abrogated by Christ FOr we know and believe that the Law as concerning the substance of Doctrine and those wholesome and saving uses whereof hath been spoken was not be abrogated by Christ and therefore was not abrogated but onely as concerning the curse and condemnation For a Rom. 8.1 There is no condemnation to them which are in Christ Iesus who walk not after the flesh but after the Spirit Yet further in respect of the curse and condemnation it self the Law alwayes was and still is usefull and profitable unto them which yet are not in Christ for as much as it drives them unto him that they be not condemned DOCT. XI Errours condemned WE therefore condemne those which cast out of the Church this Law as unprofitable and not usefull nor belonging unto Christians And again those which teach that a man may either totally or partially in whole or in part be justified by the Law whereas the Law rather was given a Gal. 3.22 to conclude all under sinne and to bring them unto Christ who alone b Iohn 1.29 taketh away the sinnes of the world And this is our brief confession concerning the Law which was delivered by Moses and expounded by the Prophets which fitteth prepareth disposeth and bringeth men unto Christ who is c Rom. 10.4 the end of the Law as the Apostle witnesseth CHAP. XI Concerning Christ our Redeemer DOCTRINE I. The summe of our faith concerning the Person and Office of Christ our Redeemer THerefore a Gal. 4.4 When the fulnesse of the time was come in which the promise of Redemption which was made unto the first man was to be fulfilled by the second God sent forth The eternall Father his Sonne onely begotten and eternall and therefore true God of the same nature with the Father made of a woman alone without the seed of man and therefore true man but without sinne and therefore true Christ made under the Law and therefore also circumcised that he might with most perfect obedience fulfill the Law for us all becoming obedient unto his Father even unto death to wit for us for being without sinne himself 5. he deserved not to die To redeem them that were under the Law them that were c. Therefore all the elect To redeeme them to wit by his obedience death and a Act. 10.28 bloud shed that is a sacrifice of infinite virtue and a price of redemption of the greatest efficacie for it was the bloud of God To redeeme them I say from their sinnes unto the former image of God and so unto the former image of God and so unto perfect righteousnesse and from death likewise unto eternall life and from the kingdome of Satan unto the Kingdome of God That we might receive the adoption of sonnes and so at length be received unto the full and perfect possession of an heavenly inheritance as sonnes and lawfull heires and to conclude a Eph. 1.10 That he might gather together in one head all things both which are in heaven and which are on earth and that he might make them cleave fast unto him b Eph. 1.12 to the praise of his glorie DOCT. II. That Christ our Redeemer is both true God and true Man WE believe therefore that Iesus Christ is c Iohn 1.14 the onely begotten Son of God and therefore his Son by nature coessentiall with the Father and d Mic. 5.2 coeternall true God and Lord Jehova and we believe that the same Iesus Christ is also true man of the seed of e Matt. 1.1 Abraham and David conceived of the holy Ghost without the help of man in the wombe of the Virgin f Hebr. 4.15 without sinne born of her having a true humane soul and mind being made like unto us in all things sinne onely excepted So that he is true g Athanas in Symb. God of the substance of his Father begotten
great that first indeed What Christ is or doth according to his divine nature that is all-Christ the Son of Man said to be or to do and again What Christ is or doth or hath suffered according to his humane nature That is all-Christ God Son of God said in holy Scripture to be to have done and to have suffered As in that place where it said a Acts 20 2● God that is Christ Man and God hath purchased the Church with his own bloud whereas the force of the purchase pertaineth unto the Deitie or Godhead and the pouring out of bloud onely unto the humanitie or Manhood Yet both these Actions are joyned together in one and both are attributed unto the whole Person of Christ although they were and are distinguished For although the natures be distinguished yet are they coupled together in the Person of Christ which is but one Yet further Christ as Mediatour never did or doth any thing according to his humanitie whereunto his divinitie did not and doth not cooperate or work together and again he did nothing according to his divinitie whereunto his humanitie did not consent and willingly agree And therefore well did the Fathers in calling the operations or actions of Christ as Mediatour operatious Theandricall that is of God and Man In the second place As the force of the union which is between the Father and the Son is so great that he doth nothing neither communicateth unto the world any good but by the Son In like manner so great is the force of the Hypostaticall union of the two natures in Christ that there flowes unto us no grace no salvation no life from the Deitie but by the humanitie apprehended of us by faith so that it is altogether necessarie that he be coupled unto the flesh of Christ whosoever will be made partaker of eternall life according to that of our Saviour a Iohn 6.13 Except eate the flesh of the Son of Man the have no life in you And in the last place by the force of the said union it is effected that we cannot worship and adore the Deitie in Christ without worshipping and adoring also the humanitie in him and again That both the humane and divine nature are to be worshipped and adored of us altogether with one and the same manner of worship and adoration according to that a Hebe 1.6 And when he bringeth in the first begotten into the world he saith And let all the angels of God worship him him that is the whole Person God and Mau together whereas yet the humane nature by it self and in it self merely considered neither can nor ought to be worshipped For God onely is to be worshipped But it is not any union but the Hypostaticall union of the divine and humane nature which effects this that we have said Wherefore although God dwelleth in his Saints yet are not they to be worshipped or pray'd unto as is the Man Christ Great therefore surely we confesse is the union whereof we speak but yet such is the union that it excludes all confusion and transfusion For if the union between the Father the Son and the holy Ghost in one essence then which union there neither is nor can be imagined a greater take not away the distinction of Persons neither can this union of natures and so of properties and actions in one Person take away the distinction or bring in a confusion thereof DOCT. XII That unto Christ as Man was given indeed the greatest power that could be but yet finite as also other gifts WE believe further that as Christ as he is God is simply omnipotent and simply wise and so also in his other Atrributes So as he is man there was given unto him power and knowledge fárre surpassing yea almost by infinite degrees the power and knowledge of all creatures both in heaven and on earth but yet finite and so likewise all other gifts and virtues as charitie prudence fortitude justice grace truth and the rest whereof the Prophet Isaiah speaketh a Isa 11.2 And the Spirit of the Lord shall rest upon him c. and Iohn the Evangelist who testifieth that he was b Iohn 1.14 full of grace and truth and Luke c Luk. 2.25 And Iesus increased in wisedome and stature and in favour with God and Man For which cause he is by the Apostle said to be d Eph. 1.20 set at Gods right hand in the heavenly places e 21. Farre above all principalities and powers and again Iohn saith f Iohn 3.34 God giveth not the Spirit unto him by measure and again the Apostle g Coloss 2.3 In him are hid all the treasures of wisedome and knowledge Whence it cometh to passe that as he is Man he knoweth all things and can do all things which belong unto his office but as for those things which no created substance can do but God alone those he doth by the power of the Deitie yet not without the consent and as it were the supplication of the humane nature insomuch that to all the actions of Christ as he is God concerning our salvation his soul in some manner is alwayes added by the love desire and will thereof As likewise in all which he did as Man the Deitie alwayes concurred even in his death and passion not that the Deitie suffered but that it willed the death passion of Christ and gave unto his death and passion infinite power and efficacie to expiate and purge away our sins To conclude in a word concerning the natures of Christ together with their union and properties we believe whatsoever was set down and concluded by the Nicene Councill and that of Constantinople and that of Ephesus and that of Calcedon agaist Arius Apollinaris Nestorius Eutyches as also what was defined and determined in the sixt Synod against the Monothelites DOCT XIII That the actions of Christ are of two kinds and that what we read that Christ did or suffered was all done and suffered by him according unto truth and not according to outward appearance onely NOw to passe from the Person of Christ and his natures and the union of the natures unto his actions and office peculiarly We believe first as there are two true natures in Chrst whereof each had and hath it 's own true and essentiall properties conjoyned indeed as the natures also are united but not confounded So likewise that there are two kinds of actions which we read that our Lord Iesus Christ partly hath already performed and partly doth not yet cease to performe and that some of these actions flow from the Deitie and others from the humanitie and that they were partly and partly are so conjoyned and yet so distinct that each form as Leo speaketh doth alwayes work with the communion of the other The Word still doing that which is proper to the Word and the flesh exequuting that which belongeth unto the flesh And again as the works
the divine nature DOCT. VII As the first union so likewise the second is made by the power of the holy Ghost NEither doubt we but that the Son of God our Lord Iesus Christ as in the first union by the power of his Spirit he assumed and took upon him our flesh and bloud for he was conceived man by the holy Ghost and that without sinne for which cause also he is called the a 1 Cor. 15 4● Heavenly Man so also in the second he gives us his flesh and his bloud and communicates himself wholly unto us and by this communion so knits conjoynes and incorporates us unto himself by the efficacie of his Spirit that still the bond that knits Christ unto us and us unto him is the same Spirit which Spirit as it effected in the wombe of the Virgin that the Son of God became flesh of our flesh and bone of our bones So also by working in our hearts and incorporating us into Christ it effecteth likewise that we by the participation of the body and bloud of Christ become flesh of his flesh and bone of his bones especially when it stirreth up faith in us whereby we embrace and lay hold on Christ and acknowledge him to be true God and Man and so a perfect Redeemer and Saviour DOCT. VIII That our union with Christ is in such sort Spirituall that it is notwithstanding true and reall SO believe we this other union also no lesse almost then the former if I may so speak to be Spirituall that yet it is true and reall For by the Spirit of Christ we though here on earth are really and truly joyned with the body bloud and soul of Christ now raigning in heaven and with his divine nature abiding in us insomuch that this mysticall body which consisteth of a 1 Cor. 12.12 Christ as the head and the faithfull as the members thereof is sometimes simply called Christ So great is the conjunction of Christ with the faithfull and the faithfull with Christ that it is not amisse in some sort to say that as the first union was of two natures in one Person so also this of many Persons as it were into one nature according to these texts of Scripture b 2 Pet. 1.4 That you might be partakers of the divine nature and We are members of his body of his flesh and of his bones DOCT. IX The Confirmation of the opinion fore-going How close and near this union is FOr as in man the soul which is one and the same and all in every part as well in the head and every particular member as in the whole body together causeth all the members to be united and grow together into one body under one head So also by the power of Christ's Spirit which is one and the same in Christ and in all the faithfull it cometh to passe that all of us being both in body and minde knit together into one Spiritually become one and the same body with Christ our head one body I say mysticall and Spirituall because it is connected and compacted together by the most secret bond of the same Spirit CHAP. X. That this union forasmuch as it is made by the holy Ghost cannot be hindred by any distance of place FRom whence it followes that this true and reall union though Spirituall of our bodyes and souls with the body and soul of Christ cannot be hindred by any no not the greatest distance of place because it is made by the efficacie of that Spirit which reacheth from earth even up to heaven and higher then so and knitteth together the members of Christ here on earth with the head in heaven sitting at the right hand of the Father conjoyning them together in one so closely and nearely as the soul of man doth the armes legs hands and feet and the other members with the head into one body though the man should be so great and tall for stature that having his feet set in the Centre of the earth his head should reach to heaven even to the ninth spheere So great is the virtue and power of the soul How great then is the virtue and power of the holy Ghost who is true God and omnipotent DOCT. XI That the holy Ghost by whom this union is made is given by Christ at the preaching of the Gospell and the administration of the Sacraments WE believe further that this Spirit by which Christ knitteth himself unto us and us unto himself his flesh with ours and ours with his is communicated by Christ at his own pleasure and according to his grace when and where and after what manner it pleaseth him but ordinarily at the preaching of the Gospell and the administration of the Sacraments A visible testimonie whereof there was in the infancie of the Church when as we read those which received the Gospell and were baptised or on whom hands were laid beside the invisible grace of regeneration received also sundrie and sensible gifts of the Spirit DOCT. XII That this union is the principall end of the Gospell and Sacraments FRom whence we easily gather what is the principall end of the preaching of the Gospell and the administration of the Sacraments to wit this Our communion with Christ the Son of God who for us was made flesh who suffered died for us but now raigneth in heaven and communicateth salvation and life to his elect and chosen Our Communion with Christ I say here inchoate and begunne but hereafter to be perfected and finish'd in heaven that further by this our true and reall connexion conjunction with his flesh and bloud and his whole Person we may at length be made partakers of eternall life which was purchased by him and resideth or abideth in him DOCT. XIII That this union is not imaginarie nor made by participation of gifts onely but also by communication of substance BUt for this cause do we call this our present incorporation with Christ true reall and substantiall to meet with the errour of those which think that the union which we hold is but onely imaginarie and therefore false or if true that then it is onely by the participation of Spirituall gifts and the grace of Christ without the communication of the substance of his flesh bloud DOCT. XIV That this union is made by no other means but onely by the holy Ghost and by faith BUt again lest any should falsely imagine that we hold this union to be made with the flesh of Christ either as if it were here really present upon earth by any Physicall or naturall contact whether grosse or subtill as all siensible things are united with the sense some after a more grosse and others after a more subtill manner Or else with the same flesh as it is abiding in heaven by Species in the minde which the Philosophers call Intelligible as all things Intelligible are united with the Intellect which receiveth them by certain images and mentall
abide in them So neither can we from Christ our head foundation tree and vine unlesse we be truely ingrafted into him by the holy Spirit and be made flesh of his flesh and bone of his bones And they do us great injurie that therefore say we deny the true participation of Christ's flesh and bloud and hold onely the participation of his gifts and benefits because we do not admit that which ought not to be admitted that Christ true body doth really passe through our mouthes into our bodyes As if the communion which is made by the holy Spirit and by faith were not true and essentiall whereas nothing can more nearely joyne divers substances and natures together into one then the holy Spirit As we see it in the incarnation of the Son of God and the creation of man compounded of soul and body Certainly if the communion with the body and bloud of Christ which is made by the Spirit onely and by faith be not true and saving unlesse the body bloud passe through our mouthes into our bodyes Christ hath not provided well for his Church And further he would have the same to be made at the receiving of the Gospell as also in Baptisme As a 1 Iohn 1.3 Iohn witnesseth of the first and the b 1 Cor. 12.13 Apostle of the second This is our confession concerning communion with Christ in generall and concerning the dispensation of salvation and life which is in Christ Iesus DOCT. XIX Errours condemned WE therefore disallow and mislike the errour of those which teach that by the opus operatum or performance of the outward work without faith and true union with Christ remission of sins may be obtained and salvation communicated unto men But we condemne for blasphemie the doctrine of those which teach that remission of sinnes and salvation may be obtained by works not commanded by God but invented by men and those such as are full of superstition and idolatrie We condemne likewise those which making no account of the ministerie of the Word teach that salvation may be had as well without as by the hearing of the Word and the receiving of the Sacraments and likewise those which contend that the children of infidells as well as the faithfull in their mothers wombes are made partakers of Christ's benefits CHAP. XIII Concerning the Gospell and the abrogation of the Law by the Gospell FOrasmuch as the Gospell in the first place and then also the Sacraments to wit Baptisme and the Lords supper are the outward instruments and meanes by the lawfull use and administration whereof our Redeemer and Lord Iesus Christ is wont to offer and dispense unto the would the benefit of redemption and remission of sinnes and communicate himself unto us his chosen by the power of his Spirit and likewise incorporate us into himself and so make us really partakers of salvation and life which he hath in himself Therefore we have studied and endeavoured briefely and plainly to declare unto the Church of God what is our faith and belief concerning them DOCTRINE I. What the Gospell is AS concerning the Gospall then according to the signification received and used in the Church we believe that it is none other but the heavenly Doctrine concerning Christ preached by Christ himself and his Apostles and contained in the books of the New Testament declaring unto the world most wellcome and joyfull tidings to wit that mankind by the death of Iesus Christ the onely begotten Son of God is redeemed so that for as many as repent and believe in Iesus Christ free pardon and forgivenesse of sinnes salvation and eternall life is prepared For which cause it is worthily called by the Apostle the Gospel of our salvation Eph. 1.13 DOCT. II. That the Gospel was indeed promised by the Prophets but published by the Apostles FOr though this mysterie was revealed unto the Fathers even from the beginning of the world and the Prophet also spoke concerning it yet they preached promises Evangelicall that is of the Gospell which the Iews retained amongst themselves rather then the Gospel it self which was to be published to all nations For they prophesied and foretold that which was to come but did not declare any thing present or past As the Apostle teacheth in the Epistle to the a Rom. 1.2 Romanes and Peter in his first b 1 Pet. 1.10 Epistle DOCT. III. That the Fathers by faith in the promises concerning Christ the Redeemer to come were saved as well as we which now believe the Gospell YEt we doubt not but that the Fathers which believed the promised of the Gospel concerning the coming of Christ and his breaking the Serpents head were saved as well as we which now are saved by faith in the Gospel declaring unto us that Christ is come and that he hath redeemed the world As the Apostles abundantly teacheth both in other places and especially in the Epistle to the c Rom. 4.3 Romanes concerning Abraham and in the d Hebr. 11.1 Epistle to the Hebrews concerning all others That it is high blasphemie to say that the Fathers had onely promises of earthly things and that they received them but not heavenly as remission of sins and eternall life For what the Gospel is to us properly taken the same were the promises of the Gospel to them that is a Rom. 1.26 The power of God unto salvation to every one that believeth DOCT. IV. That the Doctrine of the Gospel for the substance thereof is most ancient yea eternall FRom whence we understand that the Doctrine of the Gospel as concerning the substance thereof is not new but most ancient being preached to the Fathers even from the foundation of the world That the Gospel not without good reason is called by Iohn the b Revel 14.6 Everlasting Gospel DOCT. V. What the parts of the Gospel be and how many THe Gospel may be reduced to three heads concerning our duty The first is c Act. 20.21 Repentance towards God The second faith toward our Lord Iesus Christ The third care a Matt. 28.20 to observe all things whatsoever Christ hath commanded us DOCT. VI. The explication of the opinion fore-going FOr the Gospel propounding and setting before us Christ with the full grace and mercie of God with full expiation and remission of sins with perfect salvation and eternall life requireth onely three things of us The first is that grieving heartily and truely for the sins committed in the whole course of our life past we desire of God even from our hearts and souls to change and renew our minds wills and affections to the obedience of his divine will earnestly studying for it and begging it of him by our prayers The second is that by faith laying hold on Christ with all the treasure of his merits we believe certainly without all manner of doubting that all our sins of the grace and mercie of God for Christ's sake onely are
concerning ubiquitie a thing odious to God and his Church fetcht out of the distinction of the School-men but contrarie even to the opinion of the School-men had then nothing at all helped them And this is our belief and confession concerning the communion the true eating and the true presence of Christ's body DOCT. XVIII What rites and ceremonies are to be used at the celebration of the Lord's Supper COncerning the rites and ceremonies to be used at the celebration of the Lords Supper this onely we say That those are most to be approved which come nearest to the practice of the Apostles CHAP. XVII Concerning faith hope and charitie DOCTRINE I. That faith is very necessarie unto our communion with Christ and so that we may be made partakers of salvation FOr the ingrafting us into Christ and the furthering our communion with him the holy Spirit indeed useth externall meanes and instruments to wit the word of the Gospel and the Sacraments But yet unlesse by the same Spirit there be stirred up in us faith whereby we may embrace Christ offered unto us with all his treasures we must confesse that those outward meanes and instruments are not at all profitable unto us to salvation And therefore we doubt not to say that faith is necessarie to unite us unto Christ and to make us partakers of his benefits DOCT. II. What is understood by the name of faith BY the name of faith we understand not any humane opinion or perswasion concerning God and concerning Christ Eph. 1. ● but the gift of divine wisdome and prudence stirred up in our hearts by the holy Spirit upon the hearing of the word whereby giving assent unto all the word of God revealed in the holy Scripture and the Gospel most especially which brings us joyfull tidings of our redemption wrought by Christ we do therein truely understand God and his will Christ our Mediatour and his benefits we do certainly know and most lovingly embrace them we do upon a firme confidence which we conceive of the mercy of God and his infinite love towards us call upon him whereby we are as it were set on fire and inflamed to love him again and are forced as it were to performe faithfull service unto him and constantly throughout the whole course of our life glorifie him by our good works and deeds of charitie towards our neighbour DOCT. III. The confirmation of what hath been said concerning faith FOr true faith is not from the wit of man or naturall ingenie but it is the a Phil. 1.29 gift of God neither is it given unto all but to b Tit. 1.1 Act. 13.28 the elect onely neither is it onely an opinion uncertain and doubtfull but c Heb. 11.1 the substance of things hoped for firme and sure and a most certain evidence of things not seen neither cometh it by the hearing of humane reason but d Rom. 10.17 by hearing the word of God and relyes onely on the authoritie of Gods word and promise neither is it an hypocriticall and feigned assent but sincere and e ● Tim. 1.15 out of a pure heart neither is it a temporarie perswasion f Matt. 13.21 during for a while but constant and perpetuall although it be often weakened by our sins neither is it blind and rash but the onely g Eph. 1.8 wisdome whereby we know God and Christ and heavenly things and Christian prudence whereby we are taught not to abuse that knowlege of God but to use it to a right end neither is it a Iam. 2.20 dead but living and b Gal. 5.6 working by love DOCT. IV. That faith cometh not all at once but hath it's increase from time to time BUt although the faith of the elect never faileth totally and altogether but ever liveth yet we never knew it so perfect and complete in any but that every day it stands in need of increase for which the c Luk. 17.5 Apostles themselves prayed and we also at all times ought to pray DOCT. V. That confession of the truth cannot be separated from true faith WE believe also that true faith cannot consist without a willingnesse and readinesse to confesse the truth ingenuously as occasion is offered d Rom. ●0 10 For as the Apostle saith With the heart man believeth unto righteousnesse and with the mouth confession is made unto salvation Wherefore we condemne libertines and others of the same mold and stamp who think that it is free for them in every place and in all companie to dissemble the truth and to fit themselves for all religions DOCT. VI. That hope ariseth from faith WE believe also that hope ariseth from faith and that faith is the foundation thereof according to the Apostle a Heb. 11.1 Faith is the substance of things hoped for For therefore do we hope for things to come and through patience assuredly expect them because we have the promise of God which we believe and whereon we rely DOCT. VII What hope is NOw hope is the gift of God whereby what good things God hath promised though yet neither had b Rom. 8.24 nor seen we do through patience waiting on the mercy of God for the onely merits of Iesus Christ so assuredly expect as we do certainly believe DOCT. VIII From whence ariseth the certainty of hope FOr the hope of us Christian men ariseth not from humane promises neither is it nourished by humane merits nor relyeth it thereupon but being supported and upheld by the onely truth of divine promises confirmed unto us many wayes and sealed in our hearts as likewise by the almightie power of God which promiseth declared in generall towards all believers but most especially manifested in Christ at what time he raised him up from the dead and exalted him above all heavens to sit at his right hand and again by the obedience of Christ alone on whom we believe and in whom we trust it doth certainly and constantly expect the complement or accomplishment of our salvation to wit the resurrection from the dead the glorious coming of the great God and our Lord and Saviour Iesus Christ and a full and plenarie possession of an heavenly inheritance DOCT. IX That from faith ariseth also love and charitie WE believe also that true charitie ariseth from true faith for faith worketh by love and thereby is declared the efficacie of faith St. Paul teacheth that the a Gal. 5.6 faith in Christ which is most available is that which worketh by love and to this purpose saith St. Iohn b 1 Iohn 4.2 He that loveth not knoweth not God Therefore we do not acknowledge them for brethren whosoever boast of their c Iam 2.15 16 faith and yet have not charitie For d 26. faith without works is dead DOCT. X. That charitie is the gift of God WE believe also that even charitie it self is the gift of God whereby we are so affected that with all our
he addeth c But he that is Spirituall judgeth or discerneth all things and another place b 15. It is God which worketh in us both to will and to do of his good pleasure d Phil. 2.13 DOCT. VI. That the regenerate man is not onely moved by the holy Ghost to work but is himself also an Agent OUt of the writings of the Apostles and by other testimonies of the holy Scripture we are taught and confesse that the regenerate are so moved by the holy Ghost that yet themselves also are Agents and that in them God so worketh both to will and to do that yet they themselves are those which both will and do For they are not stocks or beasts but men endued with a minde whereby they understand and a will whereby they will and whereby they command other faculties and power both of soul and body to put in execution those things which are good DOCT. VII That the power of Free-will in the regenerate is still infirme and weak in such sort that we continually stand in need of Gods fresh supply and assistance and cannot do all that we would BUt because our regeneration is but onely inchoate or begun and not as yet perfect so that whereas we before were flesh altogether but now consist partly of Spirit and partly of flesh which still fight within us one against the other in such manner that the good which we would that we cannot do but do serve with our mind the Law of God and with the flesh the Law of sin Therefore we believe what also we find by experience that there is still much slaverie in the regenerate much blindnesse in the minde and understanding much pravitie in the heart and affections and many weaknesses and infirmities in all the powers of soul and body So that we dayly stand in need of a new supply of Gods grace whereby our mindes may be more and more illuminated our wills corrected and reformed and our powers to that which is good increased and perfected And therefore as long as we are here in the flesh our Free-will is never truely and perfectly free that is having by it's self sufficient power to eschew that which is evill and do that which is good especially when as the events also of all things are not in our power but in the hand of God and it is further necessarie that all those things come to passe or be done not what we have thought upon but whatsoever a Act. 4 2● his hand and his counsell have determined before to be done DOCT. VIII That God doth so rule and govern the mindes and wills of the godly that even in the conflict of temptations and the flesh he suffereth them not altogether to fall away from him YEt still this we hold that as many as are truely ingrafted into Christ they have their mindes and wills endued already with the holy Spirit and that for Christ his sake they are by God so ruled governed and sustained that although he suffers them to be weakened sundry wayes and by divers tentations yet he never suffers them b Ier. 32.40 Luk. 22.32 Rom. 8.35 totally and finally to fall away sinking under their tentations and so at length perish everlastingly DOCT. IX Errours Condemned WE therefore condemne all those whosoever either deny or extenuate Regeneration holding that a man regenerate is as impotent and unable to that which is good and as mere a slave to sin as he was before his Regeneration contrarie to divers and those also most cleare testimonies of Scripture concerning the freedome of the regenerate from the slaverie of sin and their freedome also to that which is good to say nothing of the injurie which is done unto the holy Spirit which both dwelleth and also worketh in us And again we condemne those which will have a regenerate man so to be freed from all the slaverie of sinne but he cannot sinne any more at all We condemne them I say because they hold that which is contradictorie unto the word of God throughout the whole Scripture and contrarie also to dayly experience For although we are not suffered to sin unto death yet it is most certain that we commit many sins which of their own nature are worthy of death Neither do we like their opinion which in the regenerate man do so farre forth extenuate the power of the Spirit and again do amplifie the reliques of the flesh that they say the operation of the Spirit is oftentimes by the strength of the old man quite extinguished and further teach that even the regenerate man himself may altogether fall away from the grace of God and so perish everlastingly Whereas God by his Prophet contradicts them saying a Ier. 32.40 I will put my feare in their hearts that they shall not depart from mee and the Apostle affirmeth that b 2 Tim. 2.19 the foundation of God standeth sure c. And again c Philip. 1.6 He which hath begun a good work in you will perform or finish it untill the day of Iesus Christ CHAP. XXI Concerning good works DOCTRINE I. That those which are ingrafted into Christ have also from thence both to live themselves and also to shew forth the works of life unto others and that this is the chief end of being ingrafted into Christ AS the vine-branch from the vine draweth not onely for it self sap and nourishment whereby it self liveth but also that whereby it bringeth forth fruit unto us So also we believe that the Saints and godly upon earth have also from Christ into whom they are ingrafted not onely life whereby they live themselves but also wherewith all to shew forth the fruits of good works to the glorie of God and the edifying of the Church For the Lord himself saith a Ioh. 15.5 I am the vine ye are the branches He that abideth in me and I in him the same bringeth forth mach fruit Whereunto also is very pertinent that of the Apostle a Eph. 2.10 We are his workmanship created in Christ Iesus unto good works which God hath before ordained or prepared that we should walk in them DOCT. II. What we understand by the name of good works NOw by the name of good works we understand all those actions and works which according to the prescript of the will of God revealed in his word out of a b 1 Pet. ● 5 lively faith in Christ and so c 1 Tim. 1.5 out of a pure heart are performed of the regenerate by the holy Spirit For as d Rom. 14.25 Whatsoever is not of faith is sinne so whatsoever works are done out of a e 1 Tim 1.5 lively faith and a pure heart and a good conscience good works they are necessarily Wherefore we hold that the works which are done by the ungodly without faith and the word of God and the leading and guidance of the holy Spirit howsoever they may have a glorious
of Bishops in a Church yet not any succession be it what it will but such as hath also the continuation of the Apostles doctrine We acknowledge I say that it may be truely demonstrated from such a succession that such a Church is Apostolike As of old the Church of Rome and the succession of the Bishops thereof even unto the times of Irenaeus Tertullian Cyprian and some other insomuch that those Fathers did not without cause appeal thereunto and to other such like in their accustomed citations of the Heretikes of their time But as on the one side as concerning those Churches in which the Apostles doctrine together with Christian discipline and the right administration of the Sacraments is retained pure although they were not planted by the Apostles neither can show the perpetuall succession of their Bishops without interruption even from the Apostles time yet we do acknewledge them for Churches truely Apostolike and say with Tertullian and others of the Fathers that they are so to be acknowledged So on the other side what Churches were planted and watered by the Apostles themselves although they can demonstrate unto us the continuall succession of their Bishops without any the least interruption yet if they cannot demonstrate unto us as well the continuation of the Christian and Apostolike doctrine as the succession of their Bishops we may acknowledge and confesse that they have been indeed Christian and Apostolike Churches but that they are such now we cannot acknowledge For as it is not the cap or the hood that makes a Monke as it is in the proverb but pietie and sanctitie of life So neither is it the succession of Bishops but the doctrine of Christ and Christian Religion that makes a Church truely Christian DOCT. VII That not any consent whatsoever but onely that which is in the doctrine of Christ sufficeth to evidence that some are true and Christian Churches SO also we conceive that it cannot be evinced from any kind of agreement of Churches amongst themselves that they are the true Churches of God seeing there ha's been the greatest unity and concord even in the Synagogues of the Iews and the assemblies of the Turks as also heretofore in the conventicles of the Arrians and Donatists but we judge them onely to be demonstrated as such from their consent in the purity of Christian Doctrine and true piety For when the Apostle saith I beseech you 1 Cor. 1.10 brethren by the Name of our Lord Iesus Christ that ye all speak the same thing and that there be no divisions among you but that ye be perfectly joined together in the same mind and in the same judgements he meanes in that Lord Iesus Christ by whose Name he did request them to that unanimitie DOCT VIII That the being of Churches is not destroyed by every kind of dissension that may arise in them NEverthelesse we are not so unjustly rigid against those wherein there is not a perfect harmonie and the same judgement concerning all particulars as therefore to deny them to be Christian Churches Because as any kind of concord do's not constitute a Church so neither does every dissension whatsoever destroy it provided this fundamentall principle that there is such a person as Christ true God and true Man the true and perfect Saviour be firmely acknowledg'd and so the whole summe of Apostolicall Doctrine which is delivered in the Creed be received with universall assent DOCT. IX The same further asserted FOr as reprobates and hypocrites do not hinder Churches from being truely such by their being members of them so likewise those dissentions in the Churches which are raised either by wicked men or amonst the godly themselves through the weaknesse of the flesh or ignorance are not sufficient to abolish them which is attested by the Apostle when speaking concerning the ministers of true Churches he saith that upon the same foundation some do build gold silver pretious stones but others wood stubble hay And in the Epistle to the Philippians Chap. 3. vers 15.16 having first explained the summe of Christian Doctrine and exhorted them all to prosist in the same he subjoines But if any thing ye be otherwise minded God shall reveal even this unto you Neverthelesse whereto we have already attained let us walke by the same rule let us mind the same thing For otherwise if where ever discords happen to arise touching Religion there are not to be acknowledged any true Churches then were not the Corinthians in the time of St. Paul the Church of Christ since not onely many schismes distracted them while one professed I am of Paul another I am of Cephas and a third I am of Apollo but also strange contests and controversies about Religion had fill'd them with feuds and animosities So also will it follow in Galatia for in those Churches soon after they had been excellently planted and constituted by St. Paul there crept in many seducers by whom divers heresies were sowed among them In a word it must be concluded from thence that there never were any either in the East or West that could be truely said to have been Churches because they were never free from contentions not onely raised between the Catholicks Hereticks which had degenerated from Catholicks but even among the holy Fathers themselves as Histories abundantly witnesse insomuch that the Christians by reason of those dissensions and sects us'd to be derided and mocked by the unbelieving gentiles upon their Theaters as we have experience of the like usage at this day from the Turks and Iews upon the same cause But as in the primitive Church it did not follow from those disagreements of the Christians that they were not therefore the people of God so neither can it with equity be otherwise reputed of us but that we have reason to affirme the contrary to be thence deducible it being the property of the good wheat viz. of the Gospel by which the Churches are gathered to Christ that where that is sowne the enemie Satan should soon after scatter his tares in the same field Neither indeed were the champions of darknesse as Simon Menander Ebio Cerinthus Valentinian and other the like plagues heard of any where more or sooner then in the Church that upon the first preaching of the Gospel of Christ Besides that the Church at present in the world could not truely be termed the Church Militant had it not enemies both within and without wherewith perpetually to encounter DOCT. X. That the peace of the Church is not to be disturbed or schismes raised upon every difference in doctrine or ceremonies MOreover we do not approve that any man should make a separation from his own Church or disturb the peace of the Churches and infringe brotherly love much lesse that one Church should condemne another for every difference in doctrine or ceremonies where the foundation is retained as heretofore Victor Bishop of Rome when he went about to excommunicate the Churches
pay your life for your refusall DOCT. XVII That whoso hath departed from the Romane Church hath not thereby broken the unity of the Church and forsaken the body of Christ FOrasmuch therefore as we are accused of Apostacy from the Catholick Apostolick Church of Christ and censur'd to have broken the unity thereof in regard we refuse to communicate any longer with the assemblies of the Romane Church in their wicked superstitions and Idolatrous worship but choose rather to follow the old doctrine worship and discipline revived through divine mercy by the servants of Christ we protest before God and his Angels and the whole Church to the end of the world that they do a high injury not to us alone but even to the holy Ghost and all the primitive Church since we have neither done not do any thing in this particular whereunto we have not been commanded by the holy Ghost and taught by the Fathers and likewise inform'd of by the Popish Doctors themselves DOCT XVIII The same confirmed FOr our Lord giveth particular advertisement a 1 Cor. 5.11 2 Cor. 6.14 c. Tit. 3.10 Rom. 16.17 that weeschew communion with idolaters and obstinate apostates and hereticks in their idolatries and heresies b C. 24. q. 1. c. 24 and 26. and q. 3. c. 9. Nor have the Fathers taught otherwise as they are produced for witnesses hereof even in the Decree it self then that if not onely any man but any Church do reject the faith and retain not the principles of Apostolicall Religion preached by the Apostles nor persist in the doctrine of Christ it is to be deserted And it is certain C. 24. q. 1. c. 9. the Roman Church which flourished in the dayes of the ancient Fathers was then extolled so much by them and stiled the holy Church and the Mother of the Churches for no other cause then for that it held stedfastly the doctrine received from the Apostles when most part of the rest had departed from it But in these dayes what doctrine and worship they professe and how much they have in many particulars degenerated is sufficiently known Wherefore we again protest that we have separated from the present Roman Church onely upon inducement from the word of God and in obedience to the command of God therein and in that respect deemed it necessary to depart from the idolatries of this most corrupted Roman Church that we might no longer continue in apostacy from the Catholick and Apostolick Church but at length return into her bosome DOCT. XIX That we have not absolutely departed from the Roman Church but onely in some particulars FOr we have not forsaken the Roman Church generally and in all regards but onely in those things wherein she is fallen from the Apostolick Church and from her self the ancient and pure Church Nor have we departed from her with any other mind then of returning to her and renewing communion in her assemblies in case she would reforme and resume her former purity Which that it may at length come to passe we pray unto the Lord Iesus with our whole souls For what can be more desireable by every pious man then that where we were born again by Baptisme there also to live unto the last so it be in the Lord I Hierome Zanchie with my whole family do declare this to the whole Church of Christ to all eternitie DOCT. XX. That the whole Catholick Church is not suffer'd to fall into errour but that all particular Churches may erre BUt we believe and acknowledge that this Catholick Church which we have described above is so governed by the Spirit of Christ that he will never suffer all of it to erre at the same time because he alwayes preserves the light of truth in some pious persons and by their ministry keepes it pure to the end of the world and propagates it to succeeding ages Whereunto we do not doubt to apply that of St. Paul 1 Tim. 3.15 that the Church is the pillar and ground of the truth because there is no truth out of the Church but it is constantly preserved in it seeing there is alwayes some assembly found great or small in which the word of truth is preached But we conceive the matter is farre otherwise in the case of particular Churches which are alwayes mixt of good and bad For first in these assemblies either the pure word of God is preached or errours are taught with it But where there is no ministery of the word at all there we acknowledge no Church If therefore false tenets be preached together with the truth how can it be affirmed that such assemblie cannot erre when it erres manifestly But if the pure word of God be taught yet the hypocriticall reprobates who believe not doe alwaies erre seeing they reject the light of truth and walk in darknesse and of such there is almost ever the greatest number in all places Neverthelesse the godly although they are never suffered by Christ so to erre as to persevere in errour and perish Mat 24.14 since Christ saith the Elect cannot be seduced even by the miracles and wonders of Antichrist namely to the end unto destruction yet they may erre both severally and many together and that not only in point of manners but also in the doctrine of faith as is apparently evidenced by the holy and Ecclesiasticall histories and what hath hapned even to the godly and religious Bishops and to their Churches in the East and West DOCT. XXI The confirmation of the precedent assertion St. Peter indeed erred at Antioch and sundry persons in the Church of Corinth and very many in those of Galatia being seduced by false Apostles fell into hainous errours although they were not long after reclaimed from their errours by the Apostle Gal. 2.11 c. 1 Cor. 11 c. Gal. 1.6 c. Psal 119.176 David also teacheth that even the sheep of Christ may erre when he saith I have gone astray like a lost sheep And why is the ministry of the word in the Church necessary for all the faithfull if they are not lyable to errour Therefore since all even godly men have often erred severally and do frequently erre in some particular Church and that true and pure too and that hypocrites never have the gift of true faith by which to understand that which is right with what reason can it be said of any particular Church that it is impossible for it to erre And with much lesse can it be affirmed of those which are estranged from the truth and in which lies and the Spirit of iniquitie and grosse darknesse do prevaile Certainly they that are so qualifi'd cannot be the true Churches of Christ if the Church be the pillar and ground of truth Wherefore we conclude 1. Tim. 3.15 that every particular flock and all the severall sheep thereof are so farre incapable of erring as being lead by the holy Spirit they give eare onely to
partly by the ministry of others BUt we understand a double sort of government whereby Christ rules his Church one by which he by himself and by his Spirit without any cooperation of men raignes internally in the minds of believers and worketh in them both to will and to do Phil. 2.13 and consequently all in all Eph. 1.23 and leads them to what is good and defends them from evil against Satan the world and all their enemies Another by which he so governes the Church as not to disdain to make use of the ministry and care of others as Angels and men especially to the well fare of the Church according to the Apostles saying concerning Angels That they are ministring spirits Heb. 1.14 sent forth to minister for them that shall be heires of salvation and likewise concerning men 1 Cor. 3.5 We are the Ministers of God by whom ye believed For even as in man the head of it self by the power of the mind which principally resides and acts in it doth rule the whole body in such manner as yet to make use of every member for the benefit of the whole so also Christ performeth the office of head of the Church in the government thereof and that not for his own sake or that he hath need of our ministry but he doth it in regard of our necessitie together with the manifold advantages and honour it receives thereby DOCT. III. The difference between the ministry of Angels and men BUt we admit a difference between the ministry of Angels and that of men in that they are not sent either to teach in the Church or to administer the Sacraments but to perform other offices and those for the most part invisible and not alwayes or ordinarily nor to all but when and to whom it seems best to God but the ministry of men is both manifest and perpetuall and belongs to all DOCT. IV. That it is not without great reason that Angels are not appointed to teach in the Church but men MOreover we conceive that it is not without great reason and wisdome ordained by God that Christ should teach in the Church not by Angels but by men aswell because we are more ready to suffer our selves to be familiarly instructed by such as our selves then by spirits of a strange nature and unwonted majesty as for that we might otherwise be with more ease deceived by Satan pretending a mission from God and transforming himself into an Angel of light which two reasons are not the least in our judgement why the Son of God when he assumed the office of a Teacher in the Church would be made man our brother and familiar Heb. 4.15 and like unto us in all things sin onely excepted whereunto that may be referred also Heb. 2.12 I will declare thy name unto my brethren in the midst of the Church will I sing praise unto thee and that Heb. 1.1 In these last dayes he hath spoken unto us by his son to wit when he was made man and conversed familiarly in the Church DOCT. V. That there are two sorts of men chiefly whose ministry Christ useth to the government and protection of his Church ALthough in all this great body of the Church there is no member which Christ doth not imploy to some benefit of the other members and consequently of the whole body according as St. Paul teacheth 1 Cor. 1● 7 yet in the mean while we confesse there are two principall sorts of men whose ministry and help he useth to the government and preservation of the Church as in the first place the Teachers and other ministers of the word and Sacraments and charges Ecclesiasticall and next pious Princes and Magistrates Neverthelesse we do not confound their functions one with another but acknowledge them to be not onely distinct but of a much divers nature amongst whose differences this is not the least that the ministry of Teachers is alwayes necessary for the Church but that of the civil Magistrate is not so since the Church never was destitute of the former but hath oftentimes wanted and may want the latter DOCT. VI. In what things the Ecclesiasticall ministry is principally imployed BUt as the summe of Christian Religion confists in three things namely in faith in Christ in continuall repentance that is in the mortification of our flesh and lusts and in the quickning of the spirit and lastly in love towards our neighbour so also we conceive there are three principall parts of the Ecclesiasticall ministry first to teach and preach the word of the Gospel and likewise to administer the Sacraments and offer the publick sacrifices of praise to God next to watch over the flock to observe the conversation of every one to be diligent in the correction of wickednesse and to take care that every one as a true Priest present himself a living sacrifice Rom. 12.2.1 holy and acceptable to God and lastly to undertake the care of the poor and sedulously to endeavour that nothing be wanting to any one DOCT. VII That according to the three parts of Ecclesiasticall ministry there are appointed three orders of Ecclesiasticall ministers SO likewise according to these three parts of Ecclesiasticall ministry above-mentioned we see in holy writ three especiall orders of Ecclesiasticall ministers appointed by the Lord the first whereof is chiefly imploy'd in those things which appertain to the exciting and cherishing of faith in Christ such are the Teachers and Pastors which administer the word and Sacraments in the congregations of the faithfull the second in those things which are peculiarly ordained for the exciting of repentance in the brethren such are the Elders and Overseers of manners who undertake the care of discipline and use all their endeavours that every one live Christianly and piously to the glory of God and edification of the Church of which the Apostle treateth in severall places but chiefly in the Epistle to Timothy 1 Tim. 5.17 19. according as that place is expounded by St. Ambrose and all the best interpreters but the third especially manageth those things which appear to belong to charity as the taking care of the poor and sick Rom. 16.1 1 Tim. 3.2 12. Phil. 1.1 such are the Deacons spoken of in the Acts and otherwhere frequently by St. Paul DOCT. VIII That some ministers are ordinary and perpetuall others extraordinary and called onely for a time MOreover of Ecclesiasticall ministers especially of those which are to preach the word and undertake the care of the whole Church we understand there are two principall kinds One of those which the Lord Iesus doth ordinarily adjoine fellow-labourers with himself in the gathering teaching and ruling of his Church and consequently as his will is should be perpetuall in that charge who are wont to be called ordinary ministers such were the High Priests and Levites in the Church under the Old Testament and in the new the Teachers and Pastors The
be done rashly and imprudently therein or every man make his own pleasure his law but that all things be done in a due manner a 1 Cor. 14.26 to edification without injury to any whilest b Rom. 2.24 the name of God be blasphemed through us among the unbelievers DOCT. XXVII That they who are set over the Churches ought to take care that the children of believers be brought up in Christian Religion and instructed either in good literature or an honest profession TO what we have already said is conjoyned the care of children Therefore we believe it necessary for the perpetuall preservation of the Church that not only every private person do indeavour the education of their children in true piety and Christian manners either to good learning or some honest profession but also that the Church do undertake the cure of this a Faire to the end they may be in time rendred profitable both to Church Commonwealth to which effect do conduce as well publick Schools of literature and the exercising honest professions as Ecclesiasticall Catechising and institutions DOCT. XXVIII That Ministers with their families are to be supported with competent and befitting stipends WE also believe that the Church cannot be rightly govern'd unlesse the Ministers be liberally suppli'd with all things necessary to a seemly sort of living both for themselves and their families seeing no man is able to discharge his duty unless he be provided wherewith to live and our Lord saith a Math. 10.10 The labourour is worthy of his reward as the b 1 Cor. 9.7 c. 2 Tim. 2.17 c. Apostle writeth largely of this matter in sundry places demonstrating to the full that Ministers who serve the Church ought to receive from the Church it self whatsoever they have need of for this present life and that they have right to demand the same so far it is from a sin in them to receive them as some do unreasonably pronounce it Neverthelesse a 1 Tim. 3.8 with the Apostle we highly condemne coveteousnesse in all persons and especially in Ministers as likewise on the contrary we disapprove prodigality teaching that neither of these vices is to be cherished or endured DOCT. XXIX That the goods of the Churches are not to be imbezell'd but distributed to the support of Ministers and other godly uses MOreover whereas many gifts have by the liberality of Princes and other good men been heretofore and are still in some places conferred on the Churches we judge it meet that where Churches are possest of such gifts diligent care be taken that they be not wasted nor converted to profane much lesse to sacrilegious uses nor when so converted be permitted and conniv'd at but that they be distributed only to the ends they were intended to namely to pious uses Yet we approve that a Deut. 14. ancient partition of Ecclesiasticall goods so as one part thereof goe to the godly Bishops that is the Teachers and Ministers of the word and their families another part to students deputed to the Ministry of the Church and to all that serve therein a third part to poor people and strangers and a fourth to the reparation of Churches and Schools to which part belong not only the houses of Ministers Teachers and Students with their Libraries and all instruments and necessary to Churches and Schools but also Hospitalls and houses of charity for stranger and other like places where those persons dwell of whom the Church ought to take a peculiar care DOCT. XXX Of the manner of Christian Temples what tongue habit and ornaments are to be used in them what Festivals ought to be observed to whom Prayers are to be made and that rites ceremonies ought to be arbitrary free saving those which have been appointed by Christ or his Apostles BUt for that this reason is not the least why believers doe and ought to live together in the same Cities Towns and Villages as far as possible they may namely to the end they might not only cherish their commou faith by holy communication daily amongst themselves in private and exercise mutuall charity in Christian offices but also that they might in certain places and times assemble together to praise and call upon God publickly to hear his word partake the Sacraments and perform the publick works of charity toward the poor which things cannot be done without speech and rites and ceremonies therefore we declare our opinion of them also in brief after this manner Seeing it is out of all doubt that all things ought to be done in the Church to edification all appearance of superstition removed from it we conceive that true piety and the edification of the Churches do require First as concerning Places that if old and profained Temples be allow'd of they should be purg'd from all Idols and from the reliques and footsteps of all idolatrie and superstition For a 2 Cor. 6.16 what agreement hath the Temple of God with Idols Secondly that no Language be used but such as is understood by the whole Church For what edification can arrive to the Church from an unknown tongue The Apostle also expressely commands b 1 Cor. 14.21 them to keep silence in the Church who speake in an unknowne tongue unlesse the interpretation be added thereto Thirdly that all loosnesse in apparell all vanity and every such ornament which is more beseeming the profane Theaters of the Gentiles then the sacred Temples of Christians and condure more to the delighting of the flesh then edifying of the Spirit be abolish'd But that all things be performed in the Churches with the highest reverence and modestie as in the sight of God and Angels And although we conceive not that the form of apparell which Ministers ought to wear either in or out of the Ministry is to be so much Contended about as thereby to disturb the peace of the Churches yet where the simplicity of the Apostolike times is nearest approached unto and immitated those Churches are judg'd most worthy to be commended Fourthly that every Lords-day the Church be assembled into one holy Congregation since we see that even from the times of the Apostles to these present that day hath bene consecrated and sanctified to a sacred rest Next to the Sabbath-day we cannot but approve the sanctifying of those daies wherein the remembrance of the Nativity of our Lord Jesus Christ of his Circumcision Passion Resurrection Ascension into Heaven and sending of the holy Ghost upon the Apostles was celebrated by the old Church Upon other daies as every Church shall judge it expedient they may congregate the people to an assemblie to hear the word and receive the Sacraments c. a Col 2.16 But this with care that all superstitious observation of d●●es be avoided Fiftly that prayers be poured forth to God alone and to Jesus Christ without invocation either of Angels or Saints departed as the Prophets and Apostles
other is proper to Ministers and persons design'd to Ecclesiastical offices which is therefore wont to be call'd the discipline of the Clergie DOCT. XXXVII The particulars of general Discipline THe common and popular discipline consists chiefly in these particulars First as to the ground-work that when any one is received into the Church that he learn to know God Christ call upon him understand what his commands are This is performed by Catechising whereby the summe of Christ an Religionis taught being thus instructed he is to professe his faith before the whole Church and to promise obedience to Christ and his Church according to the doctrine of the Gospel Rom. 10.10 Mat. 28.20 Secondly because not to proceed in the way of God is to relapse therefore to the end the godly may make good progresse in piety they ought to meet together in holy Assemblies at appointed times and places and apply themselves to the hearing of the word of God to joyn in Prayer with others and exercise charity towards the poor by contributing their offerings liberally Thirdly in regard that in this progresse we oftentimes fall some more grievously and with greater scandall to the Church others lesse hainously therefore there is another particular consisting in the Censure of manners Matt. 18 15. c. 1 Tim. 5.20 to wit that every one do submit himself to their Censure even to the end of his life and admit of brotherly correction And if any one happen to fall into some notorious offence manifest to the Church and being reproved do not repent thereof for which reason he deserves to be suspended from the Sacrament for the time untill he give publick testimony to the Church of his true repentance such a brother is to be excommunicated from holy things and bound neverthelesse upon his repentance he is to be loosed received again into favour be admitted to communion This is the first kind of discipline the end whererof is that every one might live unto God and at last die in the Lord Jesus DOCT. XXXVIII The particulars of Clerical Discipline ALlthough all persons as well Ministers as Lay-men as they call them be subject to this kind of Christian discipline yet amongst the Fathers there was added to it a certain peculiar discipline of the Clergy who are concern'd not onely to guide for others with the word but with the example of their lives and diligent dischargeing of their duty The particulars thereof are chiefly these First that they abstain from many things which otherwise may in some manner be tolerated in the laity Such are divers delights of the flesh splendid equipage costly banquets rich houshold stuffe wicked servants and the like Secondly that they withdraw themselves from all those businesses of this life which hinder them from performing their charge which principally consists in the due officiating in holy duties preaching the Word and exercising the discipline of manners such businesses are Warfare Merchandise Law-imployments bartering keeping of publick Victualling-houses and all sordid professions courses Thirdly that they give themselves more diligently then the laity to the reading and study the holy Word and endeavour to attain such arts and languages as are advantageous to the understanding of Scripture and moreover bestow their time in prayer and holy contemplations Fourthly that they promise obedience in all honest matters to the Bishop and his Metropolitan Fifthly that they use more vigilancy and care not only to the discharge of every their particular places but in all those things that appear to import the edification of the Church DOCT. XXXIX That from the necessity of discipline is confirmed the necessity of Synods THese are the principal parts of discipline without which there is no appearance how any Church can be duly governed and upheld But how is it possible this discipline can be in such places where the Ministers never convene together to know what is wanting or what irregularities are committed in the Church to denounce against evill-manners to judge of doctrines if any new happen to spring up lastly to deliberate of all things which concerne the welfare of the Church Wherefore we affirm that Assemblies of Ministers and Ecclesiastical Synods are very necessary to the right and safe government of the Church seeing no Politie no Commonwealth nor Kingdome can consist without their Senates Councils Parlaments and other conventions And it would be very acceptable to us if the ancient custome of the Churches which was ratified by a new constitution of the Emperour Justinian were recalled into practice namely that Synods should be assembled in every Province at least twice a yeare and at fit times a Council gathered of the most learned modest and prudent Ministers and Embassadours of Princes in all the Provinces that professe the Gospel which if ever is certainly extreamly necessary in these calamitous times wherein so many and such abominable heresies are brought back again from hell Wherefore with all our Soule we pray unto God the Father through our Lord Jesus Christ that he would raise up pious and valiant Princes such as Constantine Valentinian and Theodosius who by their authority may assemble such a Synod wherein themselves being present and ordering the same there may be brotherly and friendly consultation touching the happy agreement peace and safety of all the Churches out of the sacred Word and by the Spirit of God to the glory of God and the name of Christ and the safety and welfare of all the Elect. DOCT. XL. Errours THerefore we disapprove all such things as are repugnant to the aforesaid doctrine confirmed by holy Scripture and chiefly these following particulars 1. That the Church consists of men onely that Angels do not at all belong unto it 2. That the true Church which is the body of Christ consists not onely of the elect but also of reprobates and hypocrites and that these are true members of the Church 3. That the Church does so consist of the elect and truly holy that no hypocrites are conteined therein and that they are never in the holy writ included in the appellation of the Church 4. That the Church which was before the comming of our Saviour was not the true Church of Christ but onely the type of that which was to be gathered by Christ and his Apostles 5. That the Church of Christ hath two heads one invisible and residing in heaven namely Christ and another visible and ruling upon earth the Bishop of Rome with whom whosoever agreeth not in all things pertaining to Religion nor obeys him in all things he has no place nor name in the Church and cannot be saved 6. To affirm of any particular Church that it cannot erre in matter of faith 7. To confine the Church so to certaine places and persons as to say There onely is the Church 8. Not acknowledge them for Churches of Christ which although they had the fundamentals of faith yet doe not wholy
God expounded by the Word of God it selfe and understood agreeably to the first principles of faith or as they say according to the analogy of faith to the glory of God and salvation of his people For so we find it commanded by God and Moses and to have been observed by all godly Princes DOCT. VI. The explication of this opinion in particulars FIrst therefore we believe it the duty of a godly Magistrate to know out of the Word of God in general and the summe of the principles of faith what the true and Christian religion is and what the Apostolical doctrine whereunto the Churches are to be reformed to the end he do not any thing or presume to do any thing by the judgement of others onely but of his own certain knowledge in a matter of so great importance Secondly when this is known to take care that Ministers fit for that office be chosen called and ordained not guided therein by his own fancy and pleasure but by the rule of God's Word and examples Apostolical Thirdly to cause that by them the doctrine of Salvation deliver'd in holy writ be preached expounded and inculcated that the Sacraments be administred according to Christs institution and also that the discipline ordained by Christ be exercised Fourthly to see that schooles be erected in which laudable arts languages may be diligently taught and the students instructed in the summe of Christianity Fifthly to the end that Ministers and teachers may perform their charges and so true religion be preserved by them in the Church to take order that besides ordinary and private conventions there may be provincial Synods assembled at least twice a yeare Sixthly to have carefull oversight of the goods of the Church that they be layd out faithfully to their proper that is to truly pious uses and that all things necessary be supplyed to the Church and the Ministers of the same DOCT. VII That a pious Prince ought not to use all sorts of men of a different religion after the same manner TO proceed to the remaining duty of a pious Prince since there are divers sorts of men which a Prince may have under his dominion namely either absolutely unbelievers or such as do indeed professe the faith of Christ but are neverthelesse manifest Idolaters and apostates in many things from the Apostolical Church or obstinate Hereticks in some article of faith or only seduced into errour or lastly of sound opinions throughout We conceive a Prince ought not to proceed in the same manner towards all these distinct orders of men for some are to be accounted deare cherished and honoured some tolerated others not and some also even to be punished with death but none are to be suffered to blaspheme Christ or worship Idols and retaine impious ceremonies DOCT. VIII That all men ought to be subject to the higher powers and all powers even the highest to Christ and his word LAstly we believe that a Rom. 13.1 every soul that is every man none excepted and so every inferiour power ought to be subject to the superiour and higher but that the higher power no lesse then the inferiour and all other men to Christ the b Apoc. 17 14. 1 Tim. 6.15 King of Kings and Lord of all Lords For if it is the will of God that all should c Psal 2.12 kiss the Son and submit their neck themselves to his yoke discipline Wherefore we believe that it belongs to the true government and edification of the Church that Princes render themselves especially to be instructed admonished and corrected by the Word of God by which others may be incouraged to do the same and in case they refuse the Prince may with more freedome punish them and retain all in their duties DOCT. IX Errours 1 WE therefore condemn all despisers of Magistrates rebells seditious and enemies to the State they live in and whosoever either openly refuse or craftily detract to perform all duties they owe unto the Magistrate 2. Particularly we condemn the errour of the Anabaptists who affirm it unlawfull for a Christian man to be a Magistrate much lesse to use his authority over his Subjects in point of religion and that it is free for every one to follow what religion hee pleases and consequently that no man is to be compelled to the faith 3. We disapprove their judgement who attribute only the shadow of authority in religion to Magistrates and deny them the power to convocate Synods to deliberate touching religion to reform Churches and to ordaine according to the word of God such things as belong to the welfare of the people making them only impoured to execute the decres and determinations of the Bishops 4 But neither do we approve of such magistrates who without sufficient understanding of matter change religion at their pleasure condemning spoyling and prescribing the dissenters though unheard and who introduce Canons concerning religion not out of the Word of God but rather against it behaving themselves in the Church of Christ as Lords of the Churches not as the servants of God and refusing to submit their necks to the yoke of the Son of God whom we beseech God the Father the Lord Jesus Christ to indue with more knowledge of God and a better rectified understanding CHAP. XXVII Of the perpetuall remission of sins in the Church of Christ DOCTRINE I. That there is in the Church a perpetuall dispensation of remission of sins and that a perpetuall Ministry of the Word is ordained to that end WE have confessed above that as soon as any person is ingrafted into Christ by the holy spirit he does immediately obtain forgivenesse of all sins committed and partakes a new life from Christ the head and so becomes a living member of the Church But because even such as are the most holy in this militant Church do neverthelesse sin daily to the end of their lives and consequently have alwaies need of new pardon for their offences as likewise of new repentance and new faith apprehending remission of sins through Christ because faith repentance use to be stirred up by the ministry of the Word and Sacraments therefore we believe that remission of sins is perpetually dispensed in the Church and that the whole Ecclesiasticall ministry which is perpetually in the same is ordained in reference thereunto DOCT. II. What we understand by the remission of sins WHereas there are three things to be considered in sin the transient action the irregularity or deformity of that action and the fault remaining upon the sinner with the guilt of punishment coherent thereunto we understand that sin is then forgiven us when not onely the fault and irregularity is not imputed unto us but also the punishment and condemnation due unto us for the same is pardoned and we are acquitted from such guilt and liablenesse to justice seeing we are not said to forgive the offences of our brethren but when we free them from
faith we believe confesse that after pardon of sins obtained in the Church Militant here there remains nothing else to be expected by the dead but the resurrection of the body and life eternal DOCT. X. Errours WHerefore we condemn 1. that errour by which some teach that the offence being forgiven there yet remains the debt of punishment to he paid and that this punishment being no other then eternal death is by repentance changed into temporal punishments which are to be undergone either in this life or after death in Purgatory unlesse we be discharged from them by the help of Masses Indulgences and other suffrages 2. We condemn also their blasphemy who seek remission of sins and teach it to be sought otherwhere then in Christ Also such as maintain it possible to be really apply'd and partaken by them any other way then by a true faith and by the holy Ghost 3. We likewise condemn their sacrilegious doctrine who teach that all sins are not always forgiven to believers by God but that some are oftentimes retained which are further to be expiated by fastings almes prayers and other works of ours or by the oblations of others and sacrifices of Priests CHAP. XXVIII Of the state of souls after death and of the resurrection of the dead DOCTRINE I. That souls die not with the bodies nor do they sleep being separated from them or rest any where beside in Heaven or hell neither are they tormented in Purgatory WE believe that our souls do neither die with the body nor sleep when parted from them or remain waking in certain hidden places besides Heaven and hell nor that they are tortoured in that purgatory fire but that the souls of all men live even out of their bodies understand and will that the souls of the godly do reign in heaven w th Christ those of the wicked are tormented in hell with the Divels as the Lord teacheth of the first a Luke 16.5 When godly and mercifull men fail that is departed out of this life they that is their souls are received into everlasting habitations and in another place that they are b Luke 23.43 with him in Paradise but of these last by the c Luke 15 ●5 example of the rich Glutton that they goe into hell that is a place destinated to everlasting burnings as also we d Acts 1.25 read of Judas and are there tormented DOCT. II. That the places are different where the souls of the faithfull and where those of unbelievers live after the death of their bodies BUt seeing the state of faithfull and unbelieving souls is so different we believe that the places are different also into which they goe namely the eternall tabernacles in heaven and paradise appointed for the godly and a 2 Pet. 2.4 hell or the bottomlesse pit prepared for the wicked since the holy Scripture attributes unconceivable light to the one and the greatest darknesse to the other which Christ b Mat. 8.12 calleth utter darknesse and since the Lord saith that his will is that where himself is there those that believe in him be also apparently signifying that in that place where he is now with his body and soul there also shall be the faithfull first with their souls and in due time with other bodies also but unbelievers never with either so that we judge it the highest impiety to say that heaven is every where whereas it is in no place of Scripture assigned to the wicked but frequently to the godly alone as their proper and eternall habitation and for that it is necessary that bodies be circumscribed in some space after the resurrection and that souls be contained somewhere definitively as the schooles speak DOCT. III. That the end of this world will certainly come and all things shall be changed although the time it self be unknown MOreover although the time when the end of this world shall be is so unknown to us a Mat. 24.36 Act 1.7 Isa 24.23 and 65.17 and ● 22 Ps 102.27 Dan. 12.2 Mal. 4.1 2 Pet. 3.13 Apoc. 21.1 Iude 14,15 Mat. 24. Luke 21.5 c. that it is not possible to know it yet we believe that it will most certainly be and then not only the earth but likewise the heavens shall be changed and there shall be a new heaven and a new earth and all the dead even the wicked shall rise when Christ shall call to judgement the voice and trumpet of an Arch-angel and to the certainty of these things belongs that method of our Lord Iesus in having first foretold the desolation of Ierusalem and thereunto subjoyning a discourse concerning these matters to the end that by those things which we have seen befall Ierusalem we might believe that those which he then foretold of the end of the world will come to passe with the same certainty c. DOCT. VI. That all dead men shall at last be quickned and rise from their sepulchres WE believe therefore that a 1 Cor 15.2 as all men die in Adam so in Christ all even the wicked as to the body shall be made alive every ones soul resuming its proper body although we confesse some shall arise to eternall happinesse and others to eternall damnation Ioh. 5.29 according to the saying of Christ and they shall come forth that have done good unto the resurrection of life and they that have done evil unto the resurrection of damnation whence also the order of the resurrection is confirmed which the Apostle delivers in these words a Thes 4.16 And the dead in Christ shall rise first and then the rest DOCT. V. That there shall not be new bodies made for our souls but the very same shall rise which died FUrthermore we believe that there shall not be a new body framed to every soul but the same of every particular person that died as to the substance shall rise again but different in some qualities according to the Apostle's doctrine concerning the bodies of the godly a 1 Cor. 15 36.42 shewing by the example of the same grain that they are sowed one thing and arise another that they are sowed obnoxious to corruption but raised incorruptible c. and Iob testifyeth concerning his hope in this manner Iob 19.25 26 27. I know that my Redeemer liveth and that I shall rise again in the latter day upon the earth and that in my flesh I shall see God Whom I shall see for my self and not another and wine eyes shall behold him For we shall see Christ with our corporeall eyes in the clouds returning to us with his body and also reigning in heaven DOCT. VI. That from the example of our bodies after the resurrection it appears that the body of Christ is not every where WHereas the Apostle saith a Phil. ● 2● Christ shall change our vile bodies that they may be fashioned like unto his glorious body we believe that if the body of
Christ by vertue of the glory it received after his resurrection received the power of being every where then ours also will by reason of the same glory be every where which seeing it shall not be neither do we believe that the body of Christ however full of glory and majesty is now every where with its substance since it is finite and the glory thereof also finite especially for that he hath said that b Io● 17.24 he will that where he is there we should be also but we shall not be every where with our bodies DOCT. VII Errours FIrst we condemn the wicked dotage both of those Philosophers who taught the humane soul is mortall and 2. of those hereticks who imagin'd that the souls of men separated from their bodies did either sleep in certain secret places that is are deprived of all sense and operations of the mind or that they are awake indeed but rest untill they resume their bodies and then are either to be admitted into heaven or thrust into hell 3. Moreover we condemn those who dream that the souls of many of the godly are purged in a certain purgatory fire from the reliques of their sins and undergoe temporall pains 4. We disapprove their opinion who do not distinguish heaven where the godly shall be from hell where we read the wicked shall be but make the difference to consist only in this that some are made happy and others miserable although all be in the same place 5. But neither can we assent to them who say that the certain time month or year if not the the certain day and hour may be determin'd and known Act. 1.7 in which the Lord will come and put an end to to this world seeing Christ hath said It is not for you to know the times 2 Pet. 3 3. 6. We detest those Scoffers whom St. Peter mentions who think the world shall endure thus for ever and deny deride all life to come 7. We also condemn all those who reject the resurrection of the dead and also those who fancied we shall not have the same but other new bodies 8. We likewise condemn them who taught that bodies after the resurrection shall be so spiritual that like a spirit or ayre they can neither be seen nor felt such as some have attributed to Christ after his resurrection and others also impudently feign to have been changed into the divine nature so that it cannot be any longer termed a Creature CHAP. XXIX Of the glorious coming of the Lord Jesus to judge the living and the dead DOCTRINE I. That the dead being rais'd and the living chang'd at the coming of the Lord Iesus from Heaven Christ will immediately shew himself in the Clouds to be seen by all and all the faithfull shall goe meet him in the aire WE believe that at the coming of the Lord Jesus the resurrection of the dead being performed by the ministry of Angels they that are then alive shall not die but shall be instantly changed into the same condition with them that are raised and then Christ being returned from heaven to the Clouds to judge and passe sentence upon all will exhibit himself to be seen by all men and being attended with his Angels and appearing in his majestie and glory all the godly shall be translated from earth even to the heaven of the Clouds to meet him Mat 24.3 25.31 1 Thes 5.1 c. according as Christ himself and the Apostles have taught and left a recorded DOCT. II. That Christ will visibly move from place to place and so with a visible locall and finite body THerefore we believe that Christ will so return visibly as before he ascended from earth to heaven in the sight of his Apostles and that he will return from that heaven wherein he now is and which is consequently distant from the Clouds to which he shall descend and from the earth and so we believe he will descend with his natural body that it is necessary the same should be local and finite and therefore not ubiquitary seeing such a descending is by the holy Ghost described to the simple people as is not possible to be made without mutation of place DOCT. III. That the reprobate unbelievers shall not go unto Christ sitting in the clouds but remaining upon the earth shall heare the sentence of the Iudge BUt whereas the Scripture pronunces only of the godly that they shall be snatched up into the Clouds and goe meet Christ in the aire we believe that the wicked shall not go unto Christ but remaining under his feet heare the sentence of the Judge 1 Cor. 6.2 3. Goe ye Cursed into eternall fire all the Saints which shall be in the aire with Christ approving the sentence according to the opinion of the Apostle a that the Saints shall judge the world the Angels DOCT. IV. For what Causes that universall judgement is appointed WE believe that that judgement wherein Christ shall judge all being made visible to all is appointed chiefly for two reasons first to the end that those things which are now hid unto men aswell innocence faith and good conscience of the godly as the hypocrisie and crimes of the wicked may be layd open to the whole world and thereby it may most evidently appeare at the last how just the judgements of God have alwaies been whence that day is called by the Apostle a Rom. 2.5 the day of revelation Secondly that the recompense of good works promised to the good and of bad to the bad may be rendred fully to every one according to that of the Apostle We must all appeare before the judgement seat of Christ 2 Cor. 5.10 that every one may receive the things done in his body according to that he hath done whether it be good or bad whence it is called by the same Apostle c Rom. 2.5 The day of the righteous judgement of God DOCT. V. That eternall life which is given to the elect is called and is a reward but al together fully bestowed in no manner due to us saving through Christ FOr although what the elect shall then receive is the meer gift of God obtained by the merits of Christ alone yet we are not ignorant that it is and is truly called a reward seeing the Lord Iesus hath daigned to give it that term namely a free reward seeing even the good works of the godly all the causes from whence they proceed are the free gifts of God free election free redemption free calling faith justification regeneration forgivness of sins lastly the pardoning of the defects and weaknesses wherewith our good works themselves are attended on the other side the free imputation of the perfect obedience of Christ by which our imperfect is cloathed and rendred most acceptable to God so that it followes that if we will speak properly the reward is not due to us for our own works
sake consider'd in themselves but only for the imputed merits of Christ DOCT. VI. That judgement being ended the godly shall immediately be in heaven with Christ and the wicked in hell with the Devil and his Angels MOreover we believe that immediately after that judgement the godly shall follow Christ into heaven and the wicked with the Devils shall be thrust into hell Christ saying unto those Come ye blessed of my Father but to these Goe ye cursed into fire everlasting DOCT. VII That that day shall be most joyfull to the godly and therefore to be desir'd but to the wicked most sad and so intolerable to them even to hear of it SO we believe that last day will be to them who are grafted into Christ most happy and joyfull and that therefore it is beloved wished for by them and so ought to be desired and loved by us but the most unhappy and sad of all to the wicked whence it is no wonder that they hate that day 2 Tim. 4.8 and cannot endure the mention of it DOCT. VIII Errours 1. WE condemn those who deny that Christ is truly and really in his humane body to descend from heaven to the clouds and from thence to return into heaven with the elect but maintain that all this shall be without any mutation of place only by a sort of appearance as they call it and disappearance who are contradicted by sayings of Angels to the Apostles a Acts 1.11 As ye have seen him ascending into heaven so shall he come 2. We dissent from those who teach that works of godlinesse consider'd in themselves are the true cause for which eternall life is given and are the true deserts of the same the Apostle being of the contrary opinion and saying b Rom. 6 2● The gift of God is life eternall Neither do we approve the opinion of the C●iliasts concerning a thousand years wherein after judgement Christ shall converse with his elect in this world who shall live in the delights of the flesh but such as are seemly and shall beget issue but holy and at length be translated into heaven 4. We condemn and abominate their errour who hold that the fire into which the wicked are sent shall be in time extinct so that even all the devils that live happily in the kingdome of God contrary to the expresse words of Christ a Matt. 25.41 Go into eternall fire CHAP XXX Of life Eternall DOCTRINE I. That all shall receive eternall life who by their good works shall have testified that they were truly ingrafted into Christ and believed in Christ THerefore we believe that at last eternall life that is a full and perfect possession of life eternall shall be given in that last day to all who by the evident works of true faith and piety shall be openly declared before all Angels and men most clearly demonstrated and by the sentence of Christ the Iudge be pronounced to have been truly ingrafted into Christ by the holy spirit and so to have believed in God the Father in his Son Iesus Christ and in the holy Ghost to have been living members of the holy Church and to have had communion with all the Saints and to have obained remission of their sins the Lord himself teaching this who saith a Mat. 25 34 c. that he will say unto those that are on his right hand Come ye blessed of my Father enter into the kingdome prepared for you from the foundation of the world For I was an hungred and ye gave me to eat c. DOCT. II. The foregoing doctrine confirmed and that life eternall is given not in consideration of our works but through Christ in whom we are freely elected blessed and made the sons of God FOr in these words the Lord seemeth to have declared unto us that our good works are the evidences of our election blessing adoption and so of right an inheritance but that the cause for which we shall obtain life eternall and the possession of the kingdome of heaven is partly for that even before the foundation of the world that is before we had done any good that kingdome was freely prepared for us through Christ Eph. 1.3 partly for that we a have been blessed by the Father with all spirituall blessing in Christ and so called by grace justified obtained forgivenesse of our sins sanctified and adopted to be the sons of God through the same Christ and regenerated by his spirit whereby we are made coheirs of that kingdome Therefore forasmuch as the Lord will remember works of piety we do not question but he doth the same that it may be manifest to the whole world that we have truly been blessed elected just children of God to whom the inheritance was due according to that of the Apostle If children then heirs but that we are the children of God is declared by regeneration and regeneration by the effects of regeneration which are the works of faith and piety DOCT. III. That as the life of the godly shall be eternall so also the pains and fire of the wicked shall be eternall BUt as we believe that the children of God shall obtain life eternall so also we confesse that hypocrites and all the wicked shall goe into eternall fire never to be extinguish'd Mat. 25.48 and there be tormented for ever when Christ shall openly say Go ye into eternall fire DOCT. IV. That it can neither be express'd nor conceiv'd how happy that eternall life shall be BUt what that life is and after what manner and how great the felicity which is signify'd by the name of the kingdome of heaven we confesse ingenuously with the Apostle that neither eye hath seen it 1 Co● 2.9 nor ear heard it nor hath it entred into the heart of man being a thing greater and of more excellency then that it can be comprehended by human understanding and of such happinesse that greater cannot fall within our desires Therefore we simply believe we who are of Christ we are ruled by his Spirit who depend on his word and who place all our confidence of salvation in him that all shall be most happy and all shine like the Sun in the sight of God Mat. 13.43 1 Cor 11 12. Phil. 1.23 that we shall see God as he is and all live a heavenly and divine life with Christ and his Angels freed from all sin all misery all evil without any more sorrow without fear with out want or desire of any thing because God will be all in all 1 Cor. 15.28 Apoc. 22.3 4 c. and we shall see his face and in that city there shall be no night nor shall there be need of any candle or light of the Sun because the Lord God shall give us light and we shall reign for ever and ever with Christ Iesus our head Spouse Saviour Lord to whom praise honour and glory for evermore Amen FINIS THE CONTENTS OF THE CHAPTERS CHAPTER I. Concerning the Holy Scriptures which are the foundation of all Christian Religion Pag. 1. Chap. II. Concerning God the divine Persons and Properties Pag. 13 Chap. III. Concerning Gods foreknowledge and Pradestination Pag. 19 Chap. IV. Concerning Gods Omnipotency and will Pag. 26 Chap. V. Concerning the Creation of the world the Angels and the first estate of man Pag. 29 Chap. VI. Concerning Gods Providence and his governing the world Pag. 37 Chap. VII Concerning the Fall of man and originall sin and the fruits of it Pag. 44 Chap. VIII What free-will was left unto Man after his Fall Pag. 53 Chap. IX Concerning the Promise of Redemption and Salvation through Christ Pag. 61 Chap. X. Concerning the Law Pag. 65 Chap. XI Concerning Christ our Redeemer Pag. 77 Chap. XII Concerning the true dispensation of redemption salvation and life and therefore the necessitie of our union and communion with Christ Pag. 108 Chap. XIII Concerning the Gospel and the abrogation of the Law by the Gospel Pag. 131 Chap. XIV Concerning the Sacraments of the New Testament Pag. 143 Chap. XV. Concerning Baptisme Pag. 169 Chap. XVI Concerning the Lords Supper Pag. 178 Chap. XVII Concerning Faith Hope and Charitie Pag. 201 Chap. XVIII Concerning Repentance Pag. 209 Chap. XIX Concerning Iustification Pag. ●16 Chap. XX. Concerning the Free-will of a man regenerate and his power unto that which is good Pag. 232 Chap. XXI Concerning good works Pag. 242 Chap. XXII Concerning Invocation and swearing Pag. 252 Chap. XXIII Concerning the Church of Christ in general Pag. 258 Chap. XXIV Concerning the Church Militant Pag. 259 Chap. XXV Of the Government of the Church Militant and of the Ecclesiasticall Ministry Pag. 307 Chap. XXVI Concerning Magistrates Pag. 361 Chap. XXVII Of the perpetuall remission of sins in the Church of Christ Pag. 372 Chap. XXVIII Of the state of souls after death and of the resurrection of the dead Pag. 383 Chap. XXIX Of the glorious coming of the Lord Iesus to judge the living and the dead Pag. 392 Chap. XXX Of life Eternall Pag. 400
else unto the water DOCT. IV. That infants being the children of believing parents are to be Baptized WE believe also with all the ancient Church that to the Sacrament of Baptisme are to be admitted not onely those which are of ripe years which repent and confesse their sins and make profession of their faith in Christ but also infants being the children of such parents forasmuch as we are to judge that they also belong unto the Covenant according to the Apostles saying to this purpose a 1 Cor. 7.14 That the children of believing parents are holy especially considering that Christ in no place hath changed Gods commandment made unto Abraham concerning the sealing of the children also of the faithfull and believers with the seal of the Covenant yea more considering that Christ hath said expresly a Matt. 19.14 Suffer little children and forbid them not to come unto me for of such is the Kingdome of heaven DOCT. V. How far forth Baptisme is necessarie in the Church and how far forth necessarie for every one unto salvation WE believe that Baptisme is altogether necessarie in the Church as a Sacrament instituted by Christ and so farre forth necessarie that where it is not when it may there we cannot acknowledge the Church of Christ to be But in such manner do we think it necessary for every one unto salvation that yet if it so happen that any one for defect of a Minister and not out of contempt do depart out of this life without Baptisme we do not therefore believe that he is damned and swallowed up of eternall destruction For the children of the faithfull and believers are therefore saved because they are within the Covenant of God and so holy But they which are of ripe years are saved by true faith in Christ which certainly cannot stand together with the contempt of Christs commandments DOCT. VI. That Baptisme once rightly administred ought not again to be repeated WE believe farther that as circumcision was made in the flesh but once onely so Baptisme also which succeeded in the place of Circumcision once duely and rightly administred ought not again to be repeated Now we understand that it is duely and rightly administred when as according to Christs institution first the Doctrine of the Gospel is premised concerning the true God Christ and his office and then men are Baptised with water and that by a lawfull Minister a Matt. 28.19 In the name of the Father and of the Son and of the holy Ghost For Christ also died but once and was buried and we are b Rom. 6.3 4. Baptised into his death and c Col. 2.12 buried with him by Baptisme Neither do we reade that the Apostles ever rebaptised any but onely Paul and these were such as before had a Act. 19.5 not rightly been Baptised DOCT. VII That the power and vertue of Baptisme lasteth for ever ALthough we come unto the Sacrament of Baptisme but once Yet we believe that the thing it self of the Sacrament and the power and vertue thereof lasteth for ever that is our ingrafting into Christ and so the participation of his benefits the washing away of sins and regeneration which every day is more and more perfected in us by the holy Ghost For the Apostle saith that b Ephes 5.26 Christ hath cleansed the Church with the washing of water by the word c 27. that he might present it to himself a glorious Church not having spot or wrinkle d 1 Ioh 1.7 And the bloud of Iesus Christ cleanseth us eyery day from all sin And therefore we think that the faithfull and believers being content with the Sacrament of Baptisme once received ought dayly to be put in mind thereof and recall it to their memorie as also into whom they are Baptized and what God hath conferred upon them by Baptisme and again what they likewise have promised unto God That we may be all every day more and more confirmed in our faith and grow up together in our communion with Christ and be made more studious and diligent in the performing of our dutyes Neither is Baptisme ordained for the remission either of Originall sinne onely or the sinnes of our life past but also for all the sinnes of our whole life As our plucking out of the water is a signe of new life not for one day onely but for all the dayes of our life according to the saying of the Apostle a Rom. c. 4. We are buried with him by Baptisme for ever into death that like as Christ was raised up from the dead by the glory of the Father even so we also should walk for ever in newnesse of life We were but once washed outwardly with water but the bloud of Christ is an everliving spring which dayly washeth and cleanseth us from all sinne DOCT. VIII By whom Baptisme ought to be administred WE believe that by whom the Gospel is preached by the same also ought holy Baptisme to be administred For to whom Christ said a Mark 16.15 Go ye into all the world and preach the Gospel to the same also he said b Matt. 28.19 Go and teach all nations Baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the holy Ghost c 20. Teaching them to observe all things whatsoever I have commanded you DOCT. IX Errours condemned WE therefore condemne all heresies as well old as new which are or have been spread abroad concerning Baptisme contrarie to sound Doctrine either by Seleucus and Hermias which Baptized with fire or the Cerdonians and Marcionites which used another form of words then that which was prescribed by Christ and that in the name of another God then in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the holy Ghost Those which Baptised in the name of Iohn or any other The Cataphryges which Baptised even the dead together with the Donatists and Anabaptists which rebaptised all that come unto them Those likewise which deny that infants are to be Baptised and those also which deny that Baptisme to be true whereunto there is not added Exorcismes Spittle Salt and other ceremonies which are the meer inventions of men CHAP. XVI Concerning the Lords Supper BY what hath been delivered by us concerning our communion with Christ the word of the Gospel the Sacraments in generall and Baptisme in speciall it may be easily known what our faith and belief is concerning the Lords Supper DOCTRINE I. That the Sacrament of the Lord's Supper is an instrument used by the holy Ghost for the furthering of our communion with Christ and his Church WE believe that the Sacrament of the Supper is not onely a testimonie of our communion with Christ and so with his flesh and bloud and also with the whole Church but also an instrument used by the holy Ghost to confirme and further the same The Apostle saith as much a 1 Co● 10.16 The bread which