Selected quad for the lemma: lord_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
lord_n day_n reason_n sabbath_n 12,233 5 10.0568 5 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A12800 Cassander Anglicanus shewing the necessity of conformitie to the prescribed ceremonies of our church, in case of depriuation. By Iohn Sprint, minister of Thornbury in Glocester-shire, sometimes of Christ-Church in Oxon. Sprint, John, d. 1623. 1618 (1618) STC 23108; ESTC S117795 199,939 306

There are 13 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

2. 3. 4. Fourthly Iesus Christ preferring the healing of the sicke a greater duety before the strict keeping the Ceremoniall rest a lesser duty and commanding a kind of seruile labour viz. the carying home of a bed in some case vnlawfull Io. 5. 8. 9. proueth it not onely by a peculiar reason proper vnto himselfe that hee is Lord of the Sabbath and therefore might ouerrule in this case Mat. 12. 8. But euen by reasons of Common equity namely First because it is lawfull by not strictly keeping ceremoniall rest to doe morrally well on the Sabbath day omitting sacrifice to doe mercy Mat. 11. 12. Secondly because the end is superior to the meanes for the Sabbath was made for man not man for the Sabbath Mar. 2. 27. 4 Fourthly because it is contrary to the inspired examples in the Scripture which are of common equity and reason and to the practise of the faithfull Saints of God namely besides the forenamed examples of the Priests of the Apostles of Dauid of our Sauiour first of Salomon who in a case of necessity did offer vpon another Altar then the Altar appointed for the worship of God because it was not able to receiue the offrings 2. Chro. 7. 7. but was to little for that end 1. King 8. 64. Whereas they were to offer sacrifice and to burne incense vpon one onely Altar in the Temple 2. King 23. 12. It being a Type of Christ the only sacrifice and mediator Heb. 13. 10. 2. of Hezekias who to set forward the mayne and substantiall worships of God did admit of many to the Passeouer albeit they were not ceremonially sanctified but legally vncleane and did not receiue the same as it was written in the Law nor according to the purification of the Sanctuary yet with a true heart seeking the Lord they were accepted namely in a case of superiour reason 2. Chron. 30. 17. 18. 19. 20. Thirdly of Paul who to saue his life a greater duety did with his owne hands cast away into the Sea the good creatures of God which otherwise should haue beene preserued and so for that cause neglected a lesser duety Act. 27. 30. Fourthly of the inspired Apostles of Christ who as before is noted did practise on themselues Act. 21. 26. and vpon others Acts 16. 3. and did aduise Act. 21. 23. 24. yea ordaine inioyne and command the practise of Iewish ceremonies as circumcision shauing purifying abstayning from blood and strangled meate and that as a duty good and necessary Act. 15. 28. which to auoide and not to vse was a duety required of God which to vse and practise in other cases was reprooued by the holy Ghost Acts 15. 10. and 21. 21. Gal. 4. 9. 10. 11. and 2. 12. 13. 14 and 5. 2. 3. 4. Colo. 2. 20. 21. 22. 23. and were needlesse shadowes Col. 2. 20. Ordinances of the world Col. 2. 20. Commandements of men turning from the trueth Col. 2. 12. Titus 1. 14. Impotent and beggarly rudiments Gal. 4. 9. 10. And of sundry perillous and perniciouse effects yet this they did admit albeit the violation of a duety to doe a greater duety of superior reason namely to procure the vnity of brethren Act. 15. 2. 4. 6. 7. 24. The wyninng of strangers to the faith 1. Cor. 9. 19 20. And to propagate the Gospell 1. Cor. 9. 23. To preuent the scandall of weake beleeuers Act. 16. 3. and 21. 20. And the danger of interruption or depriuation of the Ministery by the violent Iewes persecution Act. 21. 12. 24. 27. 28. Thus is the first point confirmed to the which doctrine sundrie godly learned men euen so many as I haue reade of this point doe also consent both in the same words and proofes viz. * vid. Caluin in Mat. 12. 1. 3 fol. 260. Vrsin cat part 3. fol. 707. immediat ante praecept 1. impress Cantabridg anno 1585. Piscator in Mat 12. 1. 2. 3. in analisi fol. 190. in obseruat ad eundem locum fol. 205. 106. 107 Idem in obseruat in Mat. 9. 13. fol. 156. Idem in obser ad Mat. 15. 3. 4. 5. 6. fol. 243. Polan syntagm Theolog. lib. 9 c. 29 fol. 4077. 4078. Martyn in summula verbi dei cap. 2. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. fol. 47. 48. de-calogo Mr. Perkins vol. 1. of his workes treatise of conscience Cap. 2. fol. 520. Yet to this poynt or proposition howsoeuer firme it bee in it selfe as hath appeared and is approoued by the best diuines yet some obiections haue beene layd against it which I will heere set downe Ob. Where it is sayd in the former proposition when two dueties doe meete at one time it is obiected that they cannot bee dueties both at once For if they were both dueties they would both bind and so a man must needes commit a sinne seeing hee is straitned betweene two dueties and must omit the one this therefore is not well proposed Ans The mentioning of these two duties meeting together at one time in our practise doeth not intend that they doe both of them bynd the conscience at the same instant but they are called dueties as they are considered apart being both workes are commanded of God in two seuerall commandements Which two workes being dueties considered apart doe sometimes offer themselues to our practise at one instant As to heare a Sermon at the Church on the Sabboth and to tend a sicke person ready to die at home at the sametime both are duties being cōsidred apart but meeting together and offering themselues to our practise at one time there is indeede but one duety because both cannot be performed in one instant In which case the greater worke is the duety the lesser bindes not for that present In like case for a minister to refuse inconuenient ceremonies albeit it be a duty being cōsidered apart from the duty of preaching the word yet when it meeteth with the duty of preaching so as preaching the word will not stand with refusing inconuenient ceremonies this refusing of ceremonies bindeth not the cōscience but leaueth to be a duty There are not two duties at that instant but only one which is to preach the word of God In which case the refusing of inconuenient Ceremonies is no duety neither is their practise a sinne yea the practise of them is a duety if otherwise they cannot preach the Word this obiection therefore needeth not Obiection The doctrine included in that point or proposition is not true because there may be a greater duetie neglected for the performance of a lesser which may then be done when the performance of the lesser keepeth him frō sin as for example A Preacher enioyned to preach naked ought to neglect preaching Besides it is contrary to the rule of the Apostle Rom. 3. 8. The least euil must not be done that the greatest good may be performed For when I cannot doe it without sinne it is no duety and therefore you should propose the matter thus It is necessary to performe
Greeke and Latine Churches the euidence hereof as namely in Clemens Alexand. Tertull. Cyprian Basill Ambrose Hierom Augustine and others And for the latitude of this varietie it stretched very farre euen ouer the whole face of the Christian world Iraeneus in Euseb 5. 24. and Firmilianus in Cyprian Epist 75. doe shew the great difference and varietie of ceremonies betweene the Churches of Ierusalem and Rome that is of the Easterne and Westerne parts of the world and of the seuerall Prouinces among themselues And Augustine to Casulan Epist. 86. and to Ianuar. Epist 118. 119. declareth the difference of customes and rites in the Citie of Rome and Millaine and in multitude of other places of his dayes Quae diuer sorum locorum diuersis moribus saith hee innumerabiliter variantur Epist. 119. cap. 19. in as much as for the varietie thereof Socra 5. 22. affirmeth that a man could scarce finde two Churches retaining and following one order in both places and for the multitude thereof hee saith that to set downe in writing the diuers and innumerable ceremonies and customes dispersed throughout Cities and Countries would proue a very tedious piece of worke and hardly nay impossible to bee performed A taste whereof in both hee giueth largely in that place together with his censure The like doe Sozomen 7. 19. who mentioneth other diuersities The reasons of which varietie and number if wee would giue we must distinguish of their qualitie for if they were conuenient ceremonies rightly deduced out of the generall grounds of Gods Word their varietie and difference proceeded from the lawfull libertie which God hath left vnto all Churches to order and appoint fit ceremonies for themselues as they see to be most apt to further their owne edification if they were more studiously commended by them then was meet it was as Sadeele saith vt viam Schismaticis obstruerent De verb. Dei script cap. 5. fol. 32. Or if otherwise they were inconuenient friuolous and needelesse and as many of them proued to be euident occasion of following superstition contention The cause of them in generall is alleadged by Martyr Loc. com class 2. cap. 5. § 17. to bee this that the diuell did presently begin to sow his tares vpon the good seede which was sowed by Christ and his Apostles the particular reasons wherof shall be shewed in that which followeth 2 Touching the kinde and qualitie of the Ceremonies and traditions vsed by the Primatiue Churches if we would examine the particulars wee should finde them to haue beene farre more scandalous and hurtfull then ours can bee imagined to bee not onely in their abuse which I will note in the next member but also in their nature which to mention onely is to make euident as for examples sake I will giue instance of some part Touching Baptisme they vsed THe annointing of the Baptized Tertul. contra Marcion lib. 1. Distinc. 11. cap. 5. de consecr Dist. 4. cap. 87. 90. This Ceremonie signified vnto them that they were Christians and Champions fighting and contending for God Tertul. and was commended as Apostolicall Basil de spir sancto cap. 27. The putting of milke and hony into the mouthes of the Baptised commended as proceeding from the Apostles Tertul. contra Marcion de coron milit In some places also wine and milke without hony Hierom. contra Lucifer The arraying of the Baptized in a white garment Tertul. ibid. de consecratione dist 4. canon 91. 92. in token that they did put on innocency and puritie ibid. out of Ambrose and Rabanus The crossing of the childe in Baptisme Tertul. de resurrect carnis Caro signatur vt anima muniatur August tract 118. in Ioan. serm 55. saith that they vsed it in euery Sacrament and that else Baptisme was not performed after the rites and manner vnlesse the signe of the Crosse were made in the childes forehead To dippe the childe three times in token of the Trinity Basil de spir sancto cap. 27. Sozomen 6. 26. commended also as Apostolicall by Basil Turtul in other places they vsed to dippe the childes head onely and that three times Hierom. contra Lucifer cap. 4. and that in token and remembrance both of the Trinity as also of Christ his three dayes death and buriall in the graue as also of his resurrection which was performed the third day Tertul. ibid. de consecra dist 4. can 78. 80. 81. out of Augustine Hierom Gregorie in other places they dipped the childe but once onely Cyp. to signifie the vnity of Gods essence de consecr Dist 4. can 82. To Baptise only once in the yeere and that in the Easter holidayes Socra lib. 5. cap. 22. also three times in the yeere viz. on the dayes of Christs Natiuity Easter Whitsontide Zopper polit eccle lib. 1. cap. 12. fol. 76. They deferred the baptising of their conuerts two yeres after their conuersion to the faith Caranza summa concil in Elibert concil can 42. To absteine a weeke after Baptisme from washing Tertul. cont Mar. lib. 1. To renounce openly the Diuell and his Angels and to giue the Ministers the right hand Tertul. de coron milit commended by him as Apostolicall De consecrat dist 4. can 95. also Decre part 1. dist 11. cap. 5. ex Basil commended as Apostolicall To blesse the font with oyle ibid. Dist 11. cap. 5. ex Basil commended also by him as Apostolicall Touching the Lords Supper THey were accustomed to signe the elements with the signe of the Crosse for so was euery Sacrament signed August tract 118. in Ioan. Serm. 55. To mingle water with wine Cypr. l. 2. Epist 3. 63. and he calleth this Dominica traditio They also vsed onely water in steede of wine which persons so celebrating the Eucharist are in the fore alleadged place by Cypr. called Aquarij To giue the Eucharist to infants Cypr. serm de Lapsis To receiue the Lords supper euery day August Epist 118. cap. 2. thus it was receiued in Rome and in Spaine Hierom. Epist. ad Licin 28. in other places onely on the Lords day Socra 5. 22. In other places on Saturne day and the Lords day August Epist 118. cap. 2. To receiue the Lords supper in some places in the morning and that fasting but in other places after supper and that being well fed Socrates 5. 22. Cyprian lib. 2. Epist 3. Augustine Epist 119. cap. 6. commendeth the receiuing of the Lords supper fasting to be a tradition Apostolicall and that it was obserued in all the world They sent the Eucharist to other Churches for a token of their consent in the faith and of their loue to one another Eusebius 5. 24. They reserued part of the bread of the Eucharist and sent it to such as were absent Iustin Martyr The people caried the bread of the Eucharist home and kept it in a little boxe Cypr. de Lapsis Tertul. lib. 2. ad vxorem in other places they burned that which was left Origen in Leu. 7. Hesych in Leu.
8. They gaue the Eucharist vnto the sicke if they required it euen when they were speachlesse Euseb 6. 43. Decret caus 26. quaest 6. 7. 8. 10. They gaue the Eucharist vnto the Baptised immediately after Baptisme Crys Epi. 1. ad Innoc. Touching Prayer THese were their Ceremonies to stand in prayer and not to kneele and all the Dominicall or Lordes dayes Basil de Spiritu sancto cap. 27. Tertullianus de resurrectione carnis Hieron cont Lucif cap. 4. This Ceremony was done in token or signification of their resurrection and further to teach them that on the day of Christ his resurrection they ought to seeke heauenly things Basil ibidem August Epist 119. de consecrat dist 3. cap. 10. quoniam out of the Nicene Councell where it was decreed This was commended to bee an Apostolicall tradition Tertull. cont Marci de coron mil. To stand in prayer and not to kneele on all dayes betweene Easter and Whitsontide commended also as Apostolicall Basil Tertul. Hieron ibid. To pray towards the East and that for this cause and signification because we seeke to Paradise our old and auncient countrie and is commended and Apostolicall Basil ibid. To pray in some places by candle light Socrat. lib. 5. cap. 22. in the day time Hier. con vigil They did also weare a linnen garment or Surplesse in the worships of God Crys hom 83. in Mat. Hier. lib. 1. contra Pelag. and of this iudgement is Zanch. de redemp cap. 16. lib. 1. fol. 444. a. and citeth Hier. P. Martyr Loc. Epist. Hoopero fol. 1087. citeth Chrisostom and Cyprians examples out of Pontius Diacon and Saint Iohns Petalus out of Ecclesiastical Historie to prooue that the originall of the Surplesse was not of Antichrist Bulling and Gual in an Epistle doe cite Theodoret. hist. 2. 27. Socra 6. 22. Iohn the Euangelist his example out of Euzebius Pontius Diacon of Cyprian and Chrisostom It is cited by A. B B. C. Whitgift defence fol. 2618. Polanus citeth Hieron comment in Esec cap. 44. fol. 807. Zepperus citeth Chrysostome and Hieron shewing that they vsed them for a signe and admonition of honest and pure life de Polit. Eccl. lib. 1. cap. 12. the like doth Zanch. vt sup Touching dayes TO celebrate the dayes of Christs Natiuitie Passion Resurrection Ascension to heauen and descension of the Spirit or Pentecostin the remembrance of these things this was obserued in all the world August Epist 118. cap 2. Origen cont Celsum lib. 8. concil Agatheus can 14. 39. also the feast of the natiuitie of Iohn the Baptist ibid. can 14. To keepe Saturne day holiday and frequent the Ecclesiasticall assembly as on the Lords day Sozomen 7. 19. 6. 41. Socrat. 6. 8. To keepe the Fryday holiday vsing thereon the Ecclesiasticall assemblies in remembrance of Christ his passion as they did obserue the Lords day in remembrance of his resurrection this was commanded by Constantinus Magnus Sozomen 1. 8. Hist. tripartit 1. To celebrate Easter day on the foureteenth of Aprill in halfe the world namely in the Easterne part but on the Lords day in the Westerne part this was commended on either part to come from the Apostles which yet could not both bee true but the trueth is saith Socrates that the Apostles left no Lawes concerning dayes but left them as a matter free lib. 5. cap. 22. Touching fasting TO fast on Thursdayes all the yeere in remembrance of Christ his assention and on Fridayes in remembrance of Christ his Passion this was commended as an Apostolicall tradition Epiphanius cont haer in Epilogo To fast on Saturnedayes in some places in other places not Augustinus Epist. 118. cap. 2. Hieronymus ad Licin Epist To fast euery Lords day so they did at Rome Socrates ibid. this Augustine reprooueth in his dayes as an euill and scandalous thing in the Roman custome because it was vsed by the Maniches and enioyned to their followers in other places they would by no meanes fast on the Lords day Augustinus ibidem Hieronymus ad Lucif Tertull. de coron mil. To fast the time of Lent before Easter by some three weekes by some sixe weekes and by some seuen weekes Socrates 5. 22. Dist 4. cap. 5. This was commended also as an Apostolicall tradition by Ambrosius Hieronimus ad Marcell And by Epiphanius Haeres 75. 80. who sheweth that the Apostles inioyned that all men should eate in Lent nothing but Bread Salt and Water howbeit this is denied by Socrat. lib. 5. cap. 22. by affirming that namely the Apostles neither made nor left any lawes for fasting but left it also as a matter free the like doeth August Epist. 86. To fast from kindes of meate some from euery kinde of liuing creatures some eating onely fish and fowles of the ayre some not egges nuttes apples nor any kinde of fruit some onely dry bread some not so much as that Socrat. 5. 22. some onely bread salt and water Epiphan Haer. 75. Touching sundry other Ceremonies TO signe ones selfe with the signe of the Crosse ad omnem progressum at euery going abroad and comming home at putting on of apparrell putting on of shooes washing sitting lying downe c. Tertull. de coron mil. Dist 11. cap. 5. eccl ex Basilio commended to bee Apostolicall To make an offering yeerely for a mans birth day Tertullian cont Marcion lib. 1. de coron mil. commended as Apostolicall yet afterward abolished for Gentilisme To wash ones feete at a certaine season Aug. Epi. 119. cap. 18. The Temples were erected to stand East and West the Altars of the Church stood Eastward and some toward the West Socrat. 5. 22. III. Lastly concerning the effects of these Ceremonies and abuse of them It is also manifest that they farre exceeded our Ceremonies prescribed in their euill effect and were much more abused First in the Fathers themselues and next also in the people Touching the Fathers and Bishops of the Church some being simple and of small capacitie and shallow iudgement as Eusebius saith receiued traditions without any searching of writings as out of bare report Such one was Papias the hearer of S. Iohn and companion of Policarp who in this simplicity broached fabulous doctrine of the Chiliast error by whom Irenaeus others which were of the like opinion were deceiued namely by pretending and reuerencing of his antiquity Euseb 3. 35. such were Tertullian and Lactantius Some were indued as Caluin instit 4. 10. 18. and P. Martir noteth Loc. com class 2. cap. 5. § 20. Zanch. de redempt lib. 1. cap. 15. fol. 366. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 quadam with a certaine false and erronious zeale by being desirous to imitate the Iewish Ceremonies which they doe both confirme and iustifie out of Aug. cap. 20. de catechizand rudib and Caluin noteth that many of those Fathers were non satis considerati nimis curiosi ac cupid iquorum vt quisque posterior erat ita stulta aemulatione cum suis decessoribus certauit ne
a feeble Primacy the Pope had in those times besides his possibilities and actuality of erring euen in Catheàra being so countermaunded reprooued and disobeyed by such incomparable Churches and teachers Secondly how dangerously the Papists put the iumpe of all their sempiternall expectations vppon the credit euen of the greatest clerkes which so vntruely falsly and corruptly relate the recordes of antiquity Next for the effect and abuse of these things in the people wee may easily see that if the fountaines bee troubled the streames cannot bee cleere as may appeare by that which followeth Many things commaunded in the holy Scriptures and of very holsome and good vse were lesse respected and cared for then many light matters whereof they ouerbouldly presumed August Epist 119. cap. 19. Many of them neglected and swallowed great things placing opinion of religion and shewing great diligence in following or practising such things as had in them small profit Hieronymus in Mattheum cap. 23. Many of them were obserued to bee troublesome to others by being caried on with a contentious obstinacy others by a superstitious timorousnesse about such trifles as neither were comfirmed by authority of the holy Scripture nor by the custome of the Church in generall neither serued for any profit to the amendment of life and manners August Epist 118. cap. 3. As for example they were very superstitious and precise in bearing about certaine little peeces of the Gospels and of the wood of the crosse istiusmodi rebus and in the like things and vsque bodié factitant doing it euen to that day hauing the zeale of God but not according to knowledge straining at a gnat and swallowing a Cammell Hieron in Matt. cap. 23. They were maruelous precise in their fastings for on their fasting dayes they would eate no oile nor bread but figges pepper nutts dates flower hony pistachia all herbes and fruits growing in the garden delicias and other delicates they would not drinke water but they would haue instead thereof sorbitiunculas delicatas delicate suppings and the Iuice of herbes pressed out and that not in a cup but in the shell of a Sea-fish they sought famam abstinentiae in delitijs commendation of their abstinence by vsing delicates Hierom. calleth these things ineptiae superstitiones Ieiunium superstitiosum in Epist ad Neapot They censured such as dined on the Sabbath soberly and did not fast as the manner of some places was that namely they were in the flesh and could not please God that they were wicked persons belly mongers and that they sauoured of the flesh and of death and their voice was this recedant a me iniqui viam eorum esse nolo and they separated from them Aug. Epist 86. ad Casulanum They would not serue God in a temple once abused to Idolatry neither eate any herbes growing in the garden nor drinke any water running from the fountaine of an Idoll-temple Idem Epist 154. Publicol They would more sharpely reprooue a man qui per octauas suas terram nudo pede tetigerit Who during the time of their octaues should touch the ground with his bare feete then a man which was with wine starke drunke Idem Epist 119. cap. 19. Some of them did absteine from eating flesh with such a mind as that they iudged those persons vncleane which did eat thereof This Augustine writeth out of the report of Ianuar. Epist 119. cap. 20. and giueth his censure thereof that namely apertissimé contra fidem sanamque doctrinam est In a word many of them out of their owne fancies or from the custome of other places did cause such litigious questions about these matters vngrounded in the Scripture and vnprofitable in their nature that they thought nothing right which they did not themselues August Epist 118. cap. 3. And thus in part we see a small glimse of the state of the Primatiue Church of Christ which we commonly account and is heere extended from the daies of the Apostles vntil the time of S. Augustine or there about For afterwards the same which then was clouded declined vnto darke night and we will descend no lower knowing that iust exception might be taken at it in this argument Now in the next place we will giue a taste of the doctrine and practise of the Fathers and the faithfull in the middest of these corruptions that we may see how the doctrine of suffering depriuation for inconuenient ceremonies farre more for number and worse for qualitie then ours are pretended hath by them beene proposed and practised Touching their doctrine of this point thus they taught That the Apostles driftin their writings was not to set downe Canons and Decrees concerning Feasts and Holidaies or such like Ceremonies of the Church but to set downe a president of pietie good life and godly conuersation Socrat. 5. 22. Seeing there is no man able to shew any president or record in writing of fasting daies or the like traditions it is euident that the Apostles did leaue free choice and libertie to euery Church at the discretion thereof without feare compulsion and constraint to vse that which seemeth good and commendable for it selfe ibid. the like doth Augustine Epist 86. speake of fasting They obserued three sorts of Traditions or Ceremonies in the Churches of their times First such as Christ left to his Church expresly set downe in the Canonicall Scriptures which Augustine calleth an easie yoke and light burthen very few for the number very easie for the obseruation very excellent for signification he mentioneth onely baptisme and the Lords Supper whereby hee hath knit together the society noui Populi of the new Church Secondly such Traditions or Ceremonies in the Churches of their times as are not written but deliuered and are obserued throughout the whole world supposed to proceed from the Apostles or from the prescription of generall Councells whose authority was wholesome quoth he to be esteemed of such as the dayes obserued yeerely to the memoriall of Christ his passion resurrection asension and descension of the holy Ghost commonly called Pentecost or Whitsontide Thirdly such as in diuers parts and places of the world are obserued diuersly as for example that some doe fast on the Sabboth others doe not so some doe daily receiue the Communion other receiue it on certaine dayes In some places it is celebrated on all dayes without exception other where onely on Saturne dayes and on the Lords day Et si quid aliud huiusmodi animaduerti potest totum hoc genus rerum liberas habet obseruationes August Epist 118. cap. 1. 2. Ianuar. That there ought of necessity one faith to be spread ouer the whole Church as the soule within the members albeit this vnitie of faith be celebrated and solemnized with diuers obseruations by which diuersity that which is true in the substance of faith nullo modo impeditur is no way hindred because all the beautie of the Kings daughter is within but the outward Ceremonies
which are diuersly obserued are as vpon her garment August Epist 86. That the difference and variety of fastings or of dayes obserued in diuers Churches or Ceremonies of like nature doth not interrupt or impaire but commend the vnity and consonance of faith so saith Irenaeus Euseb 5. 24. the like is in Distinct 12. cap. 3. scit Sancta That if their be any matter of this quality which is contrary to the grounded obseruation of Christ and his Apostles It must be reduced to the doctrine practise of Christ and his Apostles againe though their predecessours of simplicitie or ignorance had erred which by Gods mercy might be pardoned to them in which case men ought not to obserue what any man before them did thinke fit to be done but what Iesus Christ who is farre before all did performe himselfe Cypr. Epist 3. lib. 2. Legantur plura That Ceremonies and Traditions such as fasting on a certaine day as on the Lords day after that they haue beene vsurped and abused by detestable and damnable Heretikes as that was by the Maniches ought not to be obserued but disused for the scandall thereof Aug. Ep. 86. Casul That all such Ceremonies and Traditions which are not contained in the holy Scriptures neither established by general Councels neither vniuersally obserued in the Church but are varied innumerable waies in diuers Churches which either for number did ouerload the Church with a seruile burthen or for whose continuance there could not be giuen a sound reason albeit it doe not appeare that they be contra fidem yet vbi facultas tribuitur sine vlla dubitatione resecanda existimo They ought without staggaring to bee cut off when conueniently they may saith Augustine Epist 119. cap. 19. Ianuario That these cautions in establishing of Ceremonies being obserued such Ecclesiasticall Traditions as do no hurt vnto the faith are so to be obserued as they are deliuered of the auncients neither ought the opposite custome of some ouerthrow or preiudice the custome of other dist 12. cap. 4. Illud out of Hier. Epist 28. ad Lucinum In the which Epistle hee concludeth also thus Vnaquaeque prouincia abundet in sensu suo Touching Ceremonies let euery Countrey abound in their owne sence presupposing their former caution that therein they impaire not the faith That whatsoeuer is inioyned in any Church which is Neque contra fidem neque contra bonos more 's neyther opposite against faith neyther yet good manners is to beholden as indifferent and to be kept according to their custome with whom wee liue August Epist 118. cap. 2. Ianuar. That in matters whereof the Scripture hath determined no certainty the custome of Gods people is to be followed August Epist. 86. That there is no rule or discipline better or more fit for a graue and prudent Christian then to doe after that manner as he seeth to be performed in that church to the which it falleth out that he shal come Aug. Epist. 118. This is to be vnderstood of such Ceremonies as before he saith are not contrary to faith nor manners for of such hee expresly speaketh and then also he presupposeth a true Church That into whatsoeuer Church a man shal come he ought to obserue the customes or Ceremonies which hee findeth there to be in vse if he will not giue scandall to others neither receiue scandall from other This was the counsell of Ambrose to Augustine on the behalfe of his mother Monica Ego verò saith Augustine de hâc sententia etiam atque etiam cogitans ita semper habui tanquam eam caelesti oraculo susceperim Epist 118. cap. 3. That vpon occasion of refusall of these matters Cauendum est ne tempestate contentionis serenitas charitatis obnubiletur August Epist 86. The law of charity must moderate this controuersie That if disputation bee once admitted on the one side from the diuers custome of some Churches to condemne others in these Ceremonies there will arise interminata luctatio a boundlesse strugling or contention which with toile of ianling will produce no conclusions of any certaine truth Agust Epist 86. That if on the other side men do labour to ground their particular Ceremonies on the authoritie of the Apostles thence also commeth interminabilis contentio generans lites non finiens quaestiones an in determinable contention breeding strife without deciding of the question Idem ibid. That it was most euidently opposite to faith and to sound doctrine for Christians about the vsing or not vsing of these things to censure one another in respect of their standing in true grace by iudging one another to be vncleane August Epist 119. cap. 20. Thus of their doctrine Now of their practise ALthough the teachers of diuers Churches did vary very much in the iudgement practise of diuers Ceremonies as for example in the obseruation of fasting some fasting one day some two some more some fortie as Euseb 5. 24. as also in the celebration of the daies as of the daie of Easter some obseruing it on the Lords day as the Westerne Churches did some keeping it on the foureteenth of the moneth both sides deriuing their practise from the Apostles Socrat. 5. 22. yet for all this difference they were at vnitie one with another thus writeth Irenaeus to Victor Eusebius 5. 24. they were not at discord one with another neither fell they out Socrat. 5. 22. they varied not among themselues about these trifling matters Euseb 5. 24. they perswaded not one another vpon either side to practise other then they did Euseb 5. 24. they vsed not a word of discord about this matter ibid. they did not euer excommunicate one another for this difference Euseb 5. 24. they did communicate on with another for all this difference Socrat. 5. 22. they parted when they met one from another in peace Euseb 5. 24. they neuer deuided the Communion of the Church neither brake they asunder the bonds of amitie Socrat. 5. 22. nor depart from their mutuall Communion Sozom. 7. 19. but all of them in their variety held fast the bond of loue and vnitie Euseb 5. 24. and the reason is well added and expressed by Sozom. 7. 19. for they held it quoth he a friuolous thing and that deseruerdly for those to be mutually separated from the benefit of eithers Communion Qui in praecipuis religionis capitibus consentirent which agreed in the chiefe and fundamentall points of religion For neither saith he shall you finde the same traditions in all Churches alike in euery point albeit they agree among themselues and to proue this hee fetteth downe a multitude of differences of diuers Churches both of discipline and Ceremonies They sharpely reproued such Euseb 5. 24. and bitterly inueighed against them Socrat. 5. 22. as troubled the Church by attempting to compell other Churches from their owne auncient custome to their practise and for threatning them with excommunication for not obeying their admonition as before we noted They regarded not
charitie and concord others to discipline of manners and sanctitie of life the people of God must bee instructed by the diligence of Ministers and vnderstand how they may apply themselues to euery of them with fit and competent obseruation Muscu Loc. part 2. de traditionibus § 6. fol. 31. That if any man hath so profited in Christs religion that himselfe can receaue either no profite or very small from any on tradition yet if this tradition bee so fitted as that it may serue for edification vnto the vnskilfull multitude hee ought to obserue that Ceremonie with that study of charitie whereby such as are perfect are debters to the more imperfect so farre forth that they harme them not by their example in those things wherein they are bound in the whole study of their life to profit them Musculus ibid. That when men vnder the colour of the study of perfection cannot indure any imperfection either in the body or members of the Church then are they admonished that the diuell attempteth to puffe them vp with pride and to seduce them with hypocrisie Caluin aduersus Anabaptist art That where the foundation remaines entire albeit there remaine behind some stubble error or corruption in doctrine externall policie manners or Ceremonies there we may and ought bee present at Sermons and receiue the Sacraments and exercise or hold charitie and peace with our brethren yet so as making manifest our more sound doctrine and perswasion of these corruptions and farther to signifie that for these corruptions wee will make no schisme Zanch. in Philip. 1. fol. 37. Idem confess cap. 24. § 10. fol. 207. Mornaeus de ecclesia cap. 20. fol. 32. and in respect of corruptios it were to be wished indeed that the church were pure and without spot yet if it be not we must vse patience else it is ineuitable that wee must needes make a priuate schisme which is most diligently to bee auoided of euery Christian man Wherefore those errors for which a man shall separate from the Church in which he is baptised and is conuersant must not be of any other sort but onely such as ouerthrow and violate the very substance of faith and articles of the faith either directly and clearely or in sence and consequence Danaeus Isagog part 3. cap. 13. fol. 148. Bucanus Loc. 41. qu. 22. That there are many things which are not to bee approued in the Church which are not worthy of contention Caluin Epist. 51. fol. 100. That there may and ought many things to be tollerated By tollerating them also we meane practising Beza Epist 8. which yet are not rightly commanded Beza Epist. 12. fol. 98. That many things must of vs be tollerated which is not in our power to reforme Caluin Epist 148. fol. 254. That albeit men must endeauour to purge the Church of corruptions which sprung vp out of superstition yet this exception must go along that certaine things although they bee not to bee approued yet must bee borne with all Caluin Epist 305. fol. 504. to Iohn Knox. That some rites and Ceremonies albeit not necessary are yet to bee tollerated or borne withall for concords sake Beza Epist 8. fol. 70. That as the maners of doting parents so the customs of our vnaduised country must bee endured yea the seruitude which is without impietie and that in matters of lesser nature in the Church must bee borne withall Harm confess § 11. fol. 860. Melanctho concil Thelog part 2. fol. 107. and that there is euer some kinde of seruitude of the Church more milde somewhere somewhere more hard howbeit more or lesse there is euer some Malanch ibid. fol. 92. And thus we see their iudgement and doctrine concerning Ceremonies in generall Now let vs see the generall practise of the Churches in these points Thus they speake thereof Albeit our Churches doe not equally obserue all Rites and Cerimonies with other Churches a matter which both cannot neither yet is necessary to be done that namely in all places of Christian assemblies one and the selfe same Ceremonies should bee vsed yet doe they not impugne or oppose themselues to any good and godly constitutions Neither are they so minded that they would raise vp any dissentions for the cause of Cerimonies albeit some of them might be iudged not very needfull so as they be not found opposite to God and to his worship and glory and to the true iustifying faith in Iesus Christ Harm confess § 17. fol. 214. Bohem. We the reformed Churches of these dayes hauing diuersitie of Rites in the celebration of the Lords Supper and in some other things yet in doctrine and faith we doe not dissent neither is the vnitie and societie of our Churches rent or diuided thereby But euer the Churches haue in these Rites as in things indifferent vsed liberty That which we the reformed Churches at this day do also vse ‖ Harm confess § 17. fol. 211. Heluet. Poster So much for the iudgment and practise of the Churches and of our classicall writers concerning Ceremonies in generall Now also we will consider of them in particular wherein we will giue notice of foure points First of the iudgment censure of our classicall writers touching these Ceremonies which are prescribed in our Church and the like and their aduice to others touching the practise thereof especially in a case of Depriuation Secondly the vse and practise of these ceremonies by the most excellent and worthy persons in this case Thirdly the reasons moouing them vnto this iudgement practise and aduice And lastly the obiections against these things especially in the case of Depriuation answered by them Touching their iudgement and censure of our Ceremonies I find them in a threefold difference For some of them doe approue sundry of our controuersed Ceremonies as fit and commendable Some againe do iudge of many of them as of things indifferent to bee vsed or not vsed euen as the Church shall thinke fittest for it selfe And lastly some there be who account them as things in many respects vnlawfull and inconuenient but yet in respect of greater inconueniences and namely of Depriuation doe holde them tolerable and excusable which difference if any man be desirous to make vse of he may discerne it in the reading and obseruing of them seuerally In the iudgement censure and aduice of the godly learned touching our Ceremonies we may obserue first what they thought in generall of the Common prayer Booke of our Church and of the Ceremonies therein contained Secondly what they thought concerning them in the seuerall particulars which are vsually excepted against Touching the Common prayer Booke in general BVcer In perusing the Common prayer Booke of the Church of England wherin he was set a worke by Bishop Cranmer I gaue God thanks who had giuen you to reforme these ceremonies vnto that purity I haue not found any thing in the Ceremonies of that leturgie which is not taken out of the word of God or at least is
Syntag. Tom. 2. lib. 9. cap. 35. fol. 4148. The Churches of the Low-countries make this Canon for themselues as holidayes shall bee abolished excepting the Lords day and the dayes of Christs Natiuity and Ascension howbeit if more festiuals be to be kept by the Magistrates command the Ministers must be admonished that they labour by preaching to turne the peoples idlenesse on those dayes into godly businesse or excercise Ex actis Synod inferior German Middleburgi anno 1581. canon 50. apud Schulbrig Anacrysi Fulk That other dayes also besides the Lords day may bee kept by the Churches ordinance for the assembly of Christians to the exercise of religion wee acknowledge But that any are simply necessary more then be of the Holy Ghosts appointing in the Scriptures we deny In Rhem. Test. ad Gal. 4. 10. § 5. fol. 603. Againe that any contention should arise for keeping or not keeping of the such feastes it is a fault in our time but yet such a fault as was very ancient as appeareth by the contentions of Victor and the Bishops of the East for the celebration of Easter and pursued with more bitternesse by Victor Bishop of Rome then by any of our time For he presumed to excommunicate as heretickes all such as would not keepe Easter after his manner Euseb 5. 25. wee acknowledge it was a very auncient custome of the Church to celebrate the memory of Martyrs as the Church of Smyrna doeth write in their Epistle Euseb 4. 12. For the remembrance of them that haue fought before vs and for the excercise and preparation of them that shall fight hereafter But your Popish manner of celebration is nothing like either in the forme or in the end for you keepe your holy-dayes as the Iewes did the feast of the Calfe wherefore it is written The people sate downe to eate and drinke and rose up againe to play In your Churches you solemnize them with idolatros worshipping of the creatures and their images out of the Churches with banquetting reuelling and idlenesse so that the people by your festiuities of Martyrs are not taught what true Martyrdome is nor prepared to suffer for Christ but rather to become Epicures whose belly is their God who glory in their shame c. In abrogating and retaining of feasts our Church hath vsed that libertie which Christians haue in obseruation of dayes To conclude we learne by many testimonies of the ancient Fathers how Christian solemnities may be kept that they bee not Iewish or Heathenish obseruations as when they are free from superstition idolatrie or opinion of holinesse in the times and when they be kept as things indifferent wherin the Church may vse her liberty to appoint or abrogate what is best for edification not to be seruilely bound to keepe thē of necessity as you the Papists defend that they are Fulk Rhemi Gal. 4. 10. § 5. fol. 603. 604. Also we shew the Christian liberty in respecting all dayes alike that are not discerned by the commandement of God As for the doung of your festiuities we condemne as open idolatry by manifest texts of scripture forbidding Gods honour to be giuen to creatures yet the dayes appointed by the Church for excercise of religion wee obserue and that without superstition Idem in Rom. 14. 5. § 2. fol. 480. Looke also Reu. 1. 10. Perkins He reproueth the Papists for dedicating many of their Holy-dayes to the honour of Saints and Angels whereas the dedication of ordinary and set dayes is a part of religious worship hee sheweth that it is the priuiledge of God to appoint an ordinary day of rest and to sanctifie it to his owne honour After Indeede the Church of England obserueth Holy-dayes but the Popish superstition is cut off For first we are bound in conscience to the obseruation of these dayes secondly neither doe we place holines in them thirdly but we keep them only for orders sake that men may come to the Church to heare Gods word fourthly and though we retaine the names of Saints dayes yet we giue no worship to Saints but to God alone fiftly and such dayes as contained nothing in them but superstition as the Conception and Assumption of the Virgin Mary we haue cut off Thus doth the Church obserue dayes with vs and no otherwise Indeed the ignorant multitude among vs faile greatly in obseruing of dayes For they greatly solemnize the time of the Birth of Christ and then they keepe few or no Markets But the Lords day is not accordingly respected and men will not be disswaded from following on that day On the Gal. cap. 4. 10. fol. 316. Touching sundry other Ceremonies some vsed in our Church others of much like nature vsed in other reformed Churches THe other Ceremonies which are vsed in our Church are thus by our classicall writers that haue written of them partly defended and excused The Ring in marriage with the words annexed In the name of the Father the Sonne and she holy Ghost This albeit some learned men condemne as the outward signe of a Popish Sacrament yet Bucer calls it admodum commodus ritus a very fit Ceremonie with this condition if it bee expounded to the people what all this may signifie which there he setteth downe Bucer Script Anglican in censura cap. 20 fol. 488. The Purification of women deliuered of childe now called more appositely The thankesgiuing for women deliuered some condemne it as Iewish yet Bucer giueth this censure and excuse for it Haec omnia Scripturis congruunt This Ceremonie is agreeable to the Scriptures with that which in the Common prayer booke is expressed He excepteth the offering of a white garment which is since abolished Bucer ibid. cap. 24. fol. 490. Priuate Communion to be giuen to the sicke Bullinger granteth that good men might admit of a priuate Communion to bee giuen to the sicke euen in these our dayes for a time to these which haue not as yet vnderstood the full vse of the Lords Supper yet hee would not haue this libertie graunted vnto all neither they that receiue it to hold it as viaticum a necessarie supplie to helpe them in the way to heauen Decad. 5. Serm. 9. fol. 498. a. Caluin alloweth it if there be some company of the kinred friends and neighbours of the sicke that the distribution thereof may bee performed according to the institution of Christ and withall if the action of this communicating be explained to the receiuers neither any different matter done from the common practise of the Church yet he would not haue this vsed commonly He holdeth it valdè periculosum huc illuc promiscuè deferre very dangerous for superstition and ambition or vaine ostentation to haue the Sacrament carried hither thither Epist. 360. fol. 625. Bucer holdeth it in our Church Scripturis satis consentanea sufficiently agreeable to the holy Scriptures for the consolation of troubled consciences if it bee receiued as the Lord appointeth Censura cap. 22. fol. 489. The
423. Name of Priest by the Latine word Sacerdos Heming ibid. Against which Ceremonies albeit the said Beza doeth by many pregnant reasons shew his dislike yet doeth he and Hemingius conclude them to be things of their owne nature adiaphora indifferent howsoeuer in vse inconuenient also the obseruators on the harmony of confessions doe mention other Ceremonies such as the vse of Ecclesiasticall discipline in Sect. 8. August obseruat 6. Of Excommunication in Sect. 10. Bohem. 3. in Sect. 11. Anglic. 1. Of Suspēsion in Sect. 17. Gallic 1. Of priuate Absolution in Sect. 8. Bohem. 1. and Saxon. 1. and Wirtemberg 1. and in Sect 11. Bohem. 8. Putting on of hands on the head of the baptised in Sect. 13. obseruat 1. Imposition of hands on the head of the Minister in Sect. 11. Heluet. prior obseru 2. All of the which they doe not simply condemne but doe leaue them to be done or not at the libertie of euery Church vpon two conditions First that the libertie of other Churches of different practise being kept entire not preiudiced Secondly that the inconueniences of such Ceremonies bee carefully preuented So that we see here the vnitie of iudgements of the godly learned to bee opposite vnto the doctrine of suffering depriuation for not vsing or conforming to our inconuenient Ceremonies or to the like Secondly also after the suruay of their iudgement we will take a view of their practise also what it hath beene in this respect In Geneua about Wafer-bread in the Lords Supper This Church in the reformation thereof vsed common bread in the Lords Supper and had abolished the vse of the Wafer-cake as also their fontes to be baptised in and all their holy dayes except the Lords day Now it fell out that the Church of Berne assembling a Synod required a restoring of these things vnto the Churches of Geneua Caluin Coraldus and Farell refusing to consent vnto them or to administer the Sacrament in such maner they were banished therupon the Citie of Geneua and within three dayes after their refusall were depriued of the vse of their Ministery in that place the great part commanding ouer the better Now in their absence sundry godly persons were so offended with this change from common bread to the Wafer-cake as that they thought best for them to abstaine from the Lords Supper and to separate from their Ministry rather then vse the same with the sayd Wafer-bread Whereupon Caluin seriò monuit ne ob istud 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 litem mouerent seriously admonished them that they would not raise contention about this indifferent matter which is set downe in his Epistle 17. fol. 37. 38. 39. 40. so saith Beza the vse of the Wafer-bread tooke place and was established about the which Caluin after he was restored to his Ministry againe Nunquam contendendum putauit minimè tamen dissimulans quid alioqui magis esset probaturus did not thinke it meete to contend yet not dissembling his minde what otherwise he did meane to approue Beza in vita Caluini anno 1538. In Germany about excommunication and discipline Bullinger There was neuer any contention about excommunication betweene our Church of Zuricke and the Church of Geneua most beloued of vs Apud Erast de excom fol. 365. also in another place In the meane space wee neuer condemned the Church of Geneua which hath her discipline albeit we haue none Ibid. fol. 350. About the Surplesse It being inioyned to the Ministers of Sueuia they vtterly relinquished their Ministery rather then they would conforme vnto it this practise did Melancthon and Pomeranus vtterly dislike and perswaded the Ministers of Marquesse Albertus dominions to conforme rather then to suffer depriuation which they yeelded vnto for the most part Consil Melancth part 2. fol. 91. About an Altar There is a history related of two great persons a Prince and an Earle the one a Lutheran the other a reformed Protestant The Earle supposing that hee had more iurisdiction in a certaine Church then the Prince had commanded an Altar in the Church to bee pulled downe and a table to be erected in the place The Lutheran Prince vnderstanding thereof commanded the table to bee taken downe and the Altar to bee againe set vp The Earle repeated his practise the second time so did the Prince at last the Earle in a matter of that nature let alone the Altar in the Church suffered the contentious Prince to haue his will Colloqu Mompelgart fol. 424. In the Low-countries about breaking bread of Lords Supper A certaine person was accused to the generall Synod of the Low-countries gathered at Midleborough 1581. That hee would not haue the bread in Lords Supper to bee cut as the manner is of those Churches but would haue it broken out into parts out of the whole loaues the which Ceremonie of breaking is doublesse the more agreeable to the institution of Christ who brake the bread Mat. 26. 26. and to the analogie it had to Christ his Passion whose body was broken 1. Cor. 11. 24. howbeit it was demanded of the Synod what was to be done and practised in this case It was answered by the Synod that they must remaine in the receiued custome of the Belgicke Churches and if any should doe against the custome they must be admonished to desist and leaue of that their practise In actis Syn. inferioris Germ. partic interrogat numb 76. apud Schul Anachrys Hierar l. 9. In America When Villagagno transported the French Coloniae into Brasil anno 1555. vnder direction and protection of Gasper Colignius Admirall of France there was a question on occasion moued touching the elements of the Lords Supper whether in defect of Wine and so of Bread of Wheate they might administer the Sacrament in the Bread of Rootes and common drinke of the Americans made also of Roots Hereof there was difference in iudgement some holding that it were better to abstaine from the Lords Supper then to administer or receiue it seeing Christ mentioneth expresly Mat. 26. 16. Marc. 14. 25. of the fruit of the Vine Others on the other side thought that our Sauiour speaking of Bread and Wine mentioned them onely as the common or vsual meat drinke not as determining those very elements To which cōtrouersie Ioan Lerius the reporter that was then present inferreth Albeit quoth he the greater part inclined to the latter iudgement yet because there was not so great scarcitie of the things questioned as then the controuersie rested to bee determined by further iudgement yet this peaceable disputation was cause of no kinde of discord among vs who by the grace of God remained most neerely knit in our affection in as much as I could willingly desire and wish that there were so good agreement betweene all those which doe professe the true Christian Religion as there was at that time among vs Ioan. Lerius Histor. nauigat in Brasil cap. 6. fol. 69. In England About Episcopal garments and
we haue expounded namely of Ceremonies significatiue ordained by the Church not superstitiously but purely vsed This argument also hath Zanch. de redempt cap. 16. fol. 445. a. There is a great question saith hee in these our dayes about Ministeriall garments surely we read not that Christ and his Apostles did appoint any thing of this matter neither that they changed their garments either when they baptised or when they administerd the Lords Supper but neither did they forbid that men might not take other garments Wherefore it is liberum perse a matter free in it selfe to vse or not to vse other garments in the administration of the Sacraments Because if true Christians hauing the pure doctrine of Christ discipline in their Churches should enioine some speciall garment though abused by the Papists for the commendation of the Ministery to the simple people there is no Scripture forbidding a man to leaue such Christians to their iudgement But there are sundry Scriptures clearely teaching a man why he should leaue them to this their practise as Rom. 14. 1. Cor. 8. and 9. and many other places namely wheresoeuer we are taught of the libertie and good vse of the creatures not of meates onely but of all creatures else Hee giueth instance of a white garment vsed on the Baptized or Communicants of the Lords Supper Bucer Script Anglican fol. 708. Hoopero Because they which defend these things may pretend some honest and iust signification not strange from the Scriptures As touching the Surplesse the Ministers of the Church are Angels Mal. 3. 1. and the Angels alwayes for the most part appeared as apparelled in White garments Pet. Martyr loc fol. 1085. Hoopero Bucer will haue them signifie Caelestē puritatem candorē omniumque virtutū ornatū heauenly puritie and sinceritie and the ornament of all vertues Script Angl. fol. 682. so also fol. 707. 709. Againe What should let but that the Churches may vse this white Vesture or more Vestures to monish vs precisely of that diuine benefit of the light and dignitie of the heauenly doctrine which he giueth vs by the holy Ministery and by the which the Ministers themselues may bee the more mindful of their office c. Bucer in his Epistle to Io. Alasco at the end of the examination This reason also hath Zanch. Albeit a garment be a free thing saith he and numbred vp among matters indifferent yet for signification a linnen garment were more decent then a woollen for a Minister to vse in administring the Sacramēts for that it is the Impresse or type of innocencie and holinesse Hence in the Apocalyps white garments are giuen to the Saints Zanch. de redempt cap. 16. fol. 445. a. Because these Ceremonies are ancient and haue some good vse it was an old custome in the Church that such as administred the Sacraments should weare a white linen garment Zanch. ibid. ex Hieron cont Pelag. li. 1. The signe of the Crosse is vetustissima very ancient Beza Epi. 8. fol. 75. There was therfore some vse therof thogh since it hath bin horribly abused and there be small profit thereof Bez. Ep. 12. fol. 99. Kneeling at the Communiō hath a shew indeed of godly Christian reuerence and therefore might heretofore haue been vsed cum fructu with some profit ibid. fol. 100. Because if we proceed to disswade from these indifferent things as from pernicious and euill things we shall thereby condemne very many Churches not disagreeing from the Gospel and shall taxe too bitterly innumerable Churches which haue euer and are of old celebrated as most commendable and approued P. Mart. loc fol. 1086. Hoopero If agreemēt in doctrine might be procured between the Saxon or Lutheran Churches and ours there would be no separation made for Surplesses or Ceremonies of the like nature ib fol. 1127. Bucer hath also this reason If there be no liberty granted to the Churches of ordeining Ceremonies about the Lords Supper whereof they haue not the expresse commandement of Christ By this meanes will all Churches be condemned impiae audaciae of impious boldnesse For all Churches doe obserue in the Supper of the Lord such a time place and habit or site of body and besides doe admit womē to the Cōmunion of all which things they haue not onely no commandement of the Lord but they haue also his contrary example For our Lord did celebrate his Supper at night not in the morning in a priuate house not in a publike leaning with his Apostles and after the receiuing of the Pascall lambe notwithstanding Also hee admitted not the women among whom he had sundry his most holy Disciples Bucer Scrip. Anglic. fol. 807. 809. To this reason Pet. Martyr moueth an obiection The Church authority present or past ought not to be of that force that the truth of Gods Word be thereby wronged which albeit the world do fall about our eares in peeces ought to be kept inviolable It is true sed propter 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but for things indifrent I am resolute that by no meanes we may admit that either Churches should be condemned or that wee should lesse reuerently or honestly speake of them Ibid. fol. 1086. Because we must take heed lest these things which be of lesse importance through our contention may be the meanes or occasions that those things which should be esteemed of greater force and valew either cannot at all be brought vnto the Church or if they be once brought in they cannot be established with continuance Peter Martyr ibid. 1086. Because we must take heed of Satans accustomed sleights whereby he leadeth vs away from the care of necessary things to the immoderate carefulnesse of those things which may well be let passe and from searching out of the true doctrine of Christ to induce vs to those things wherein few can consent alike and finally by the which he kindleth in diuers men a zeale to purge those things which are without vs thereby to neglect our inward deformities Bucer Epist. ad Ioan. Alasco After at the ende of that Epistle This coulorable craft of Satan must be taken heed of by which often he effecteth this that wee reckon those things sinnes which are no sins and those that bee sinnes indeede wee seeme not to regard them in our selues or else against those sinnes which our consciences define to bee sinnes indeede we vse no such seuerity as we ought Because we should in this Realme take most godly heedfulnesse that wee further not vnawares the Diuels intents who throweth in among vs sundry questions and controuersies least wee should take in hand to handle the question of setting forward the doctrine of the Gospel and restoring of discipline and thereby to remoue all drones from Ecclesiasticall Ministeries Bucer in Ep. Io. Alascco Because things in themselues otherwise indifferent doe after a sort change or alter their nature when as by any command of lawfull authority they be either commanded or forbidden because they may not
actions that chiefly seemeth to conduce which is written by the Apostle vnto Titus All things are cleane vnto the cleane And vnto Timothy Euery creature of God is good But it is not necessarily required that we haue an expresse mention of euery particular and singular thing which we vse to doe This is sufficient in generall to know by faith that indifferent things cannot defile those which vse them with a sincere minde and conscience Loc. com inter Epist. fol. 1088. Hooper Obiect Bb. Hooper These Ceremonies are Aaronicall and Iewish an imitation of the Aaronicall Priesthood and therefore ought to be eschewed of all that loue Christ Answ Bucer 1. Though I admit your antecedent yet your conclusion followeth not for to imitate Aarons Ceremonies is not of it selfe vicious but onely when men vse them as necessary to saluation or to signifie that Christ is yet for to come to take flesh vpon him Epist. ad Ioan. Alasco Nothing can truely be said to appertaine to the Priesthood of Aaron so farre forth as it is abolished but that which is vsed with such like superstition as if it were now after Christ reuealed needfull to saluation or profitable of it selfe or whereby some occasion is giuen to a man to assume or to retaine this superstition with himselfe or of troubling the peace and quiet of Brethren Idem Script Anglican fol. 707. Hoopero 2 For a Rite or Ceremony to be Aaronicall adheareth or sticketh not to any of the creatures of God in no garment in no figure in no colour in no worke of God But in the minde and profession of such as abuse the good creatures of God to impious signification idem ibid. 3 If by no meanes it be lawfull to vse those things which were of Aarons Priesthood or of the Gentiles Then it is not lawfull for vs to haue Churches nor holy-dayes For there is no expresse commaundement by word in the holy Scriptures of these things It is gathered notwithstanding from the example of the old people that they are profitable for vs to the increase of godlinesse which thing also experience proueth Idem ad Ioan. Alasco Petre Martyr In the Law or Priesthood of Aaron there were 1. Sacraments whereby it pleased God to confirme and seale the promises of Christ to come all which I know are abolished that we must beleeue that Christ is alreadie giuen not to be giuen And seeing other seales of Gods promises are vnder the Gospell giuen by our Lord himselfe namely Bread and Wine we ought not to recall the antiquated signes 2 Howbeit there were some actions in the Law of that nature that properly they may not be said to be Sacraments For they made to decency to order and some benefit which I doe iudge may be recalled and retained as agreeable to the light of nature and furthering some profit to our selues Who knoweth not that the Apostles for the peace and more comfortable conuersing of beleeuers did command the Gentiles that they should abstaine from bloud and strangled Those things were out of question Aaronicall if you will comprehend all things generally which were in the Law Further no man is ignorant that Tythes are inioyned in innumerable places for the maintenance of Ministers besides if I might more diligently search and consider as the time now will not permit me I could finde out not a few things which our Church hath borrowed out of the law of Moses that from the first beginning of the Church And that I may not omit this one thing wee haue the festiuall dayes in memoriall of our Lord Resurrection Natiuitie Pentecost and death of Christ shall all these things bee abolished because they bee shadowes of the olde Law By these things I suppose you see B b. Hooper that all things appertaining to the Aaronicall Priesthood are not so abolished as that nothing thereof either may be retained or vsed by vs. Martyr loc inter Epist Hoopero fol. 1087. Obiect B b. Hooper These Ceremonies were of Antichrists inuention Answ Bucer The vse of such garments as the Surplesse were vsed Godly by the holy Fathers before the Pope became to be the Romish Antichrist Script Anglic. fol. 682. Cranmero Martyr I cannot easily grant that the diuersity of garments had their originall from the Pope seeing we reade in the Ecclesiasticall History that Iohn the Euangelist ware Petalum seu Lamina Pontificalis a kinde of garment proper to a Minister or B b. and Pontius the Deacon witnesseth of Cyprian the Martyr that when as he was to be beheaded he gaue his garment named Birrus to the executioners His garment called Dalmatica hee gaue to the Deacons and stood in his linnen garments And Christians when they were conuerted vnto Christ did as the Fathers witnesse change their garment and for a gowne did put on a cloake For the which when they were mocked of the Heathen Tertullian wrote a most learned booke de Pallio of the cloake Besides Chrysostome maketh mention of the white garment of the Ministers of the Church Neither doe I thinke that you B b. Hooper are ignorant that there was giuen a Whitegarment vnto those that were admitted vnto the Church by Baptisme Wherefore it is cleere that there were some differences of vestures before the tyranny of the Pope was in force But admitte these things to The like answere and allegations doe Bullenger Gualt giue to the sam obiection Looke Whitgifts defence fol. 268. be the Popes inuentions I cannot perswade my selfe that the impiety of the Papacy is so great that whatsoeuer it toucheth it maketh so polluted and defiled as that the vse of such things may not be granted to good and Godly persons Martyr Hoopero fol. 1087. Looke more for answere hereto in the answere to the next obiection Obiect Bb. Hooper These things abused by Antichrist are so defiled that they may not be permitted to any Church howsoeuer knowing and worshipping Christ and acquainted with her liberty of all things Answ Bucer Surely I make great conscience to say thus much For 1. I see no Scripture whereby I may defend it 2. The Scripture doth euery where preach that euery creature of God is good vnto the good that is to such as doe truely beleeue in Christ and doe godly vse his creatures And that this creature of God is good not only in naturall effects as bread is good in the effects of feeding and strengthening our bodies and wine in the effects of drinking and heating vs but also it is good in diuers significations and admonitions For godly men doe stirre vp and nourish in themselues the remembrance and consideration of many of Gods benefits from euery thing which is a creature of God From hence are those things in the Psalmes and in the Songs of the Saints concerning the praise and celebration of Gods Name to the which all the works of God doe inuite them 3. What Scripture teacheth that there is such power giuen to the Deuill
or to euill men that by their abuse they can make any creature of God which is good in it selfe and good also in signification and admonition to be in it selfe euill and impious 4. Nothing can be said to be a rite of Antichristianisme but such whereby some profession of and communication with Antichrist is exercised or whereby such profession and communion is furthered Script Anglic. fol. 707. Hoopero Peter Martyr By this which you alleadge I see not how it may be firmely concluded that we may vse nothing which is vsually done in Popery surely wee must beware lest wee oppresse the Church of Christ with too much seruitude or bondage that namely it haue liberty to vse nothing which appertaineth to the Pope Surely our ancestors in the Primitiue times tooke the Idoll Temples and conuerted them into sacred houses in the which Christ may bee worshipped and the reuenewes which were consecrated to the Gods of the heathen to stage playes and Vestall Nunnes they translated for the maintenance of the Ministers of the Church when as these things did not only serue Antichrist but euen the diuell Further the verses of Poets which were consecrated to the Muses and to diuers of their Gods or vsed in Plaies acted on stages to appease their Gods forsooth the Ecclesiasticall writers vsed such of them as were fit comely and true and that by the example of the Apostle which did not disdaine to cite Menander Aratus and Epimenides and that in the very body of the diuine Scripture which hee deliuered and those wordes which were otherwise prophane hee fitted and applied diuino cultui to the seruice or worship of God vnlesse perhaps ye will say that the words of Paul which are written and set downe in the holy letters doe lesse serue to the worship of God then the visible words which are vsed in the Sacraments Besides who knoweth not that wine was consecrated to Bacchus bread to Ceres water to Neptune oyle to Minerua letters to Mercury songs to the Muses or Apollo and sundry other matters of this nature you may finde in Turtullian de corona militis who there is most of all in this argument Al which things notwithstanding we are not afraid to vse freely as well in holy as prophane vses albeit they haue beene dedicated to diuels or to Idols looke more in the former obiection in that which followeth Loc. com fol. 1087. Hoopero Obiect Bishop Hooper These Ceremonies ars notes of Antichrist and they that communicate with them doe communicate with Antichrist Answ Bucer 1. For any thing to be a note of Antichrist is not in the nature of any creature in it selfe for to that end nothing was made of God But it hangeth altogether of consenting to Antichrists religion and the professing thereof The which consent and profession being changed into the consent and profession of Christianity there can sticke in the things themselues no note or marke of Antichrists religion The vse of Bels was a marke of Antichristianity in our Churches when the people by them were called to Masses and when they were rung against Tempests Now they are a token of Christianitie when the people by them are gathered together to the Gospel of Christ and other holy actions why may it not then bee that the selfe same garment or other like Ceremonie may serue Godly with Godly men that was of wicked signification with the vngodly 2 Truly I know very many Ministers of Christ most Godly men who haue vsed Godly these vestures and at this day doe yet vse them so that I dare not for this cause ascribe vnto them any fault at all much lesse so hainous a fault of communicating with Antichrist for the which fault we may vtterly refuse to communicate with them in Christ 3 The Priests of diuels did celebrate in their sacrifices the distribution of bread and of the cuppe as Iustinus Martyr and Tertullian make mention what let is there why we may not vse the same Ceremonies also Obiect You will say wee haue a commandement of the Lord touching this Ceremonie Answ Very well And by the selfe same it appeareth that same thing to serue among the children of God to the seruice of Christ which the wicked abused in the seruice of diuels if the commandement of Christ bee added thereto But it is the commandement of Christ that in our actions we institute and vse all things so as comlinesse and order be obserued that faith may bee edified c. 4 Many things which the Antichrists haue made markes of their impiety may be tokens of the kingdome of Christ as the signes of Bread and Wine the water of Baptisme and the laying on of hands Preachings Churches Holy-dayes and many other things also these places of scripture are of a great scope The earth and the fulnesse thereof is of the Lord not of the Diuell not of Antichrist not of the wicked And againe the Sonne of man is Lord of the Sabboth and the Sabboth is made for man and not man for the Sabbath and all hings are pure to the pure and euery creature o● God is good nor can be defiled to good men by the abuse of euill men The word of God must bee followed in all respects as well in our priuate actions as publike For all things are to be done in the Name of the Lord Iesus and to the glory of God Then such libertie as we grant vnto our selues in our priuate vse of external things let vs not denie in publike Bucer Epist. Ioan. Alasco Hemingius Some are offended with our Ceremonies which they exclaime to bee Papisticall They say wee in the Denmarke Churches haue Priests Altars Surplesses Candles Images Exorcismes Signings with the Crosse plainly after the Papistical maner To these I answer that the true Church is to bee distinguished from the false by doctrine and worship not by Ceremonies which are per se adiaphora in their owne nature indifferent neither doe wee iudge indifferent Ceremonies of so great moment as that for them Schismes should be raised in the Church Let the sinceritie of Doctrine be retained and the pure Worship of God let other things serue partly for publike peace partly for the weakenesse of men and let vs leaue these things to the wisdom of our gouernors and let them determine of these matters Syntag. ad 4. leg decal § 33. 34. fol. 365. Obiect Bishop Hooper If ye grant so great libertie to Churches as that they may vse all things for holy significations and instructions we shall open a window to let in all manner of abuses Iewish Gentilish Antichristian yea Holy water Censing and innumerable matters of that kinde Answ Bucer This inconuenience neede not to bee feared at all For the Churches which I haue described and to the which I iudge that libertie whereof I speake cannot bee denied wil so temper whatsoeuer Rites or garments which they assume for their vse that they may serue to illustrate and not
obscure the Gospel of our Lord Iesus Christ Script Angli fol. 709. Hoopero P. Martyr 1. There is a measure to bee appointed in those things which they reuoke that the Church of the faithfull bee not burdened with these kinde of matters 2. Neither that Gods worship or the opinion of Relegion be placed therein as wee see in Popish holy water and in censing to haue been done 3. Further great care herein is to be vsed that Christian libertie bee not hereby indangered that albeit some olde Ceremonies bee restored yet they be not so restored or esteemed of as a necessary meanes to obtaine saluation But so ought such things as these are to bee tolerated that when they seeme lesse profitable they be remoued Loc. com fol. 1087. Hoopero Obiect Bishop Hooper Therefore by this graunt it is in the Churches libertie to communicate but once a yeere or very seldome To stand and behold the celebration of the Lords Supper and not to receiue and the like Answ Bucer These things I iudge to bee per se Papistica and the like to these for they are contrary to the word of God as there hee sheweth But those other circumstances of place time site or habite of the body in the celebration or receiuing of the Lords Supper of admitting women as well as men to the Communion of the forme and maner of publike prayer to God and of singing Psalmes as also of garments and other things appertaining to outward decencie I doubt not but the Lord hath giuen free power to his Church of appointing and ordaining concerning these matters such things as euery Church doth iudge to bee most expedient for the vpholding and increase of reuerence in the people towards all the holy ordinances of God Scrip. Anglic. fol. 708. Hoopero Obiect Bishop Hooper Thus by imposing of these Ceremonies spirituall tyranny will bee established on the conscience Answ P. Martyr I doe not thinke that tyranny is therefore brought in if some indifferent thing as the Surplesse whereof hee speaketh be vndertaken or intertained to be practised in the Church and be thereupon constantly obserued of many In these dayes wee doe so administer the Lords Supper in the morning as that we will not haue the Communion administred after dinner but who will call this tyrannicall which all of vs doe performe with like will one consent To me in truth it were much more pleasing that we did onely that which Christ practised and deliuered to his Apostles but if some indifferent things be added I would not for this cause now that to sharpe contention be raised about it Loc. com fol. 1088. Hoopero Sarauia 1 Tyranny appertaineth to the Pope which vndertaketh the command ouer mens consciences and vnder penalty of eternall curse commandeth forbiddeth things in their nature indifferent which cannot be approued for three causes First because he placeth religion in such things whereby God is not worshipped Secondly because he asscribeth merit expiation of sins and satisfaction to them Thirdly because he hath no authority to exact these things of the people of God 2 Yet we must know that the iust commaundements of lawfull authority concerning things in their nature indifferent doth euen with God tye the consciences of men albeit the Magistrate and such as haue lawfull authority doe commit them to God as for example A Father commands his sonne to digge his field this sonne cannot with safe conscience disobey his fathers command that which was free vnto him before his fathers command when the commandement came is made necessary A Merchant desireth to transport certaine wares it is a thing indifferent but if the exportation of those wares be forbidden by the Princes Proclamation albeit the Prince respect not his conscience yet it is not a good mans part to carry out wares against the command of his Soueraigne albeit he may doe it secretly without any punishment the like I say of all other things whether they concerne the common affaires of our life or the externall comlinesse of diuine worship so as golden mediocrity be obserued Defens fol. 580. Obiect Bb. Hooper These Ceremonies are repugnant opposite vnto the Word of God they are impious superstitions Answ Caluin In the English Leturgy as you the English exiles at Frankford do describe vnto me I spy out many tolerabiles ineptias tolerable vnfit things By which two words I expresse thus much that there was not that purity which were to be wished which errors could not immediately the first day be corrected Cum nulla subesset manifesta impietas ferenda ad tempus fuisse Seeing there was therein contained no manifest impiety these things should haue beene borne withall for a time Epist 200. fol. 336. Bucer 1. In the Ceremonies of the English Leturgy or Booke of Common Prayer I haue not found any thing which is not taken out of the Word of God or at lest which is repugnant to it so it be fauourably vnderstood Bucer script Angl. in cens fol. 456. 2 I am not perswaded that there is in them the Surplesses any impious thing per se of themselues or in their owne nature so that godly men may not vse them godly Ibid. fol. 458. To make the vse of these garments impious in themselues I see no Scripture to allow it Ibid. f. 709. Hooper 3 As for my part if I thought that those Ceremonies and Vestures were impure of themselues I would not take vpon me in any wise the office of a Minister or Bishop vntill by ordinary authority they were taken away In Epist to Io. Alasco P. Martyr These garments are per se 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of themselues indifferent and doe make no man either godly or vngodly loc com fol. 1085. amico cuidam I doe not holde the vse of these garments to be pernicious or in their nature contrary to Gods Word but doe esteeme this vse of them omnino 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 altogether indifferent ib. fol. 1088 Hooper This difference of garments I thinke not fit to be vsed howbeit if other things which are prescribed vnto vs from Gods Word doe remaine entire I hold ths vse of these Vestures neither impious neither pernicious per se aut suâ natur à of themselues or in their nature Ibid. fol. 1089. Hoopero 2. I dare not condemne whomsoeuer I shall see vse these garments If I were so perswaded I would neuer haue communicated heere in England with the Church wherein such difference of garments is retained Ib. f. 1486. Hoopero Beza Of Surplesses They are not ex earum rerum genere of those kinde of matters which are per se impiae of themselues wicked Epist 12. fol. 98. Some men will say they are indifferent things I grant them verily so to be being considered in themselues Ibid. fol. 97. Caps and Surplesses verè media indifferentia truely indifferent Ibid. Epist 8. fol. 78. Round wafer bread kneeling at Communion non per se impia Ibid. fol. 77.
Signe of the crosse in Baptisme kneeling at the Communion are not per se Idololatrica matters of themselues Idolatrous Ibid. Epist 12. fol. 99. 100. Heming It is adiaphorum natur â a matter indifferent in nature to performe holy things as Baptisme and the Lords Supper in a linnen garment Enchirid. tit de Adiaph class 3. cap. 10. fol. 375. Zanch It is liberum per se a free matter of it selfe to vse or not to vse a linnen garment De redempt lib. 1. cap. 16. fol. 445. Bucan Indifferēt things are said to be such actions which are neither precisely commanded in the Law or word of God neither yet expresly forbidden to be done as to eate flesh or this or that kinde of meate or not to eate it on this or that kinde of day to be clothed in this fashion or colour or not to be clothed Loc. 33. quaest 13. fol. 382. Cartwright The Surplesse is a thing in its owne nature indifferent In the rest of the 2. reply fol. 262. Polanus The vse of a linnen garment is a thing indifferent In Ezec. 44. fol. 807. Obiect Your common prayer Booke is framed like the Romish Masse booke This obiection was made by such as Alexander Alesius calleth optimi veritatus studiosissimi Answ Alesius To this obiection albeit they giue answere which framed the Common prayer Booke themselues in the Preface of ceremonies yet we also may say truely that it is best in all changes and alterations as little to digresse or differ much from those things which are in vse as possible may bee because sodaine and great alterations are euer very perillous And it is much more safe to follow the commendable consent of some few then casting all away to begin and ordaine another altogether new The errors and faults of the Masse bookes are not therefore approoued if something be defended which those errors haue defiled so the errors be remoued Neither doth the Phisitian flatter the disease if presently he cut not off and cast not away the member which laboureth with a recouerable euill This whether ye call it wisedome or moderation or timorousnesse or whatsoeuer I say it neither serueth neither gratifieth the impiety of any but doth performe a necessary duety warily and circumspectly and with the feare of God and serueth God and the Church in professing and defending and keeping the heauenly trueth and doeth glorifie the Sonne of God which will be worshipped by holinesse and righteousnesse before God and adored by the holy Ghost This moderation will not content him that is more hot of nature yet let such a one looke what hee doth and whither he goeth Let him looke that he be not ouer-wise more then he ought to be wise Let him not cauill at other mens godly and temperate reasons neither let him insolently condemne others lesse stout and confident For all must stand before the tribunall of God to giue an account of the things they haue done Let not therefore the high minded too curiously pry into all the sayings and doings of the more humble Let him beare with some things let him slaunder none Let him not hope by wrangling or brauling that it is possible to giue helpe to things out of order but rather to all agreement making to bring two necessary affections one of knowing the state another of pardoning the faults Iudgement is a great and high thing This by how much the businesse is greater is by so much the more diligently intended and opinion is lesse rashly to be giuen The cause ought to be euident not ambiguous and of great weight and by no meanes to be dissembled for the which one brother should accuse another much lesse that it hold a right affection to condemne him Let euery one therefore looke that hee be not swift to speake but rather attentiue to know and inclined to pardon wheresoeuer he may lawfully do but of this sufficient Inter. Script Anglic. Buceri fol. 374. Obiect Bishop Hooper Holy significatiue signes are vnlawfull Answ Bucer 1. When as God by his word hath sanctified all things by our prayers and hath made all things pure to the pure what cause can wee alleadge out of the word of God to deny that God will not blesse the vse of such signes whereof we speake that it should not be effectuall to that Church to some commendation of the Ministrie and thereof also to some edification of the faith For how can it be but that hee which promised to blesse the workes of our hands which we take in his name wil deny his blessing to these signes seeing he hath no where forbidden such an vse of them as we haue expounded and hath made vs Lords of the Sabbath and all other things in the world In Epist. Ioan. Alasco 2. Let vs consider what the Holy Ghost teacheth of the signification of a womans vaile and couering of the mans head 1. Cor. 10. wherefore doeth hee particularely mention the bright garments of the Angels The Holy Ghost doeth nothing rashly and doeth by all creatures preach the saluation of his which consisteth in the faith of the Gospel Script Anglican fol 709. Hoopero Petre Martyr The Ministers of the Church are the Angels and Messengers of the Church as Malachy witnesseth and the Angels all wayes for the most appeared as apparelled in white garments This hee calleth honesta iusta significatio a Scripturis non aliena an honest and fit signification of the Surplesse not disagreeing or strang from the Scripture How shall wee depriue the Church of this libertie that it may not signifie some thing by her actions and Ceremonies so as the people of Christ bee not burdened with Ceremonies and better things be not hindered ye will say let them declare themselues to be Angels indeed let them not signifieit But this might be replied as well on Saint Paul when hee appointed among the Corinthians that a woman should haue her head couered a man haue his head open 1. Cor. 11. 5. for he only presseth the reason of signification to confirme this Ceremonie Now any man of the Corinthian Church might here reply vpon him thus let the man declare himselfe indeed to be the head of the woman and let the woman shew her selfe subiect to her husband by their deeds and life let them not striue to declare it by signes But the Apostle saw that euen this might profitably be done not onely that wee liue rightly but also that by words and signes we be admonished of our duetie Loc. com fol. 1089. Epist Hoopero Zanchius Albeit a garment linnen or wollen for a Minister be numbred among indifferent things yet for the signification magis deceret vestis linea quàm lanea a linnen garment were more decent then a wollen for a Minister to weare in the administration of the Sacrament for that it is the Symbole or type of innocencie and holinesse Hence in the Apocalips white garments are giuen the Saints De redempt cap. 16.