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A74986 An antidote against heresy: or a preservative for Protestants against the poyson of Papists, Anabaptists, Arrians, Arminians, &c. and their pestilent errours. Shewing the authors of those errours, their grounds and reasons, the time when and occasion how they did arise; with general answers to their arguments taken out of holy scripture and the ancient fathers. Written to stay the wandering and stablish the weak in these dangerous times of Apostasy. / By Richard Allen, M.A. sometime Fellow of Penbrooke [sic] Colledge in Oxford. Allen, Richard, b. 1604 or 5. 1648 (1648) Wing A1045A; Thomason E1168_2; ESTC R208803 57,457 159

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not his power it is Gods grace that makes us his servants not our own will More testimonies might be brought but whom these few will not suffice thousands more will never satisfie Cui pauca non sufficiunt plura non proderunt Concil Arausic cap. 25. Object But if it be so God may seem unjust to require that of us in his Law that we are not able to perform Sol. Not at all for in our first Creation God gave us sufficient abilities which we lost by our own voluntary fault according to that Eccles 7. God made man upright but they have found out many inventions It is not unreasonable then or unjust with God to require his own of us again though we have prodigally lost or mispent it Object If man hath no power in himself to do good to what end then are exhortations admonitions precepts promises or any preaching Sol. They are not in vain but the means ordained of God to soften our hearts and bend our wills to his Will St Paul saith God worketh in us both the will and the deed and yet ceaseth not to exhort us unto both Our Saviour invites us often to come unto him and yet faith No man can come unto me except the Father draw him Ioh. 6.44 CHAP. VII Of Christ his Person Truth IN this miserable and forlorn plight the merciful God left us not to our selves hopeless and helpless but sent his Son to take our nature upon him that being perfect God and perfect man he might fully satisfie for our sins and redeem our souls from death and hell Errours The enemies of Christ are of two sorts 1. The enemies of his person 2. The enemies of his office Of the first sort were Simon Magus Cerinthus Marcion Samosatenus Arius Nestorius and such Monsters whereof some denyed his Divinity others his Humanity Some the purity of his conception others the truth of it some confounded the two Natures denying their distinction others denying their union divided the person of one making two some said he took tne body but not the soul of man others that he took an aetherial or spiritual not a true body and such like They are seconded at this day by the unbeleeving Jews Turks and all Mahometans Antitrinitarians New-Arians Anabaptists Familists Socinians particularly by Mr Paul Best and others who deny the Divinity of Christ affirming That he was but a meer man some fear not to say He was a sinful man some That he was God but not from everlasting the Son of God but not before his incarnation God by merit office or excellency of gifts not by nature and generation The Anabaptists say he brought his flesh with him from heaven and took it not of the Virgin The Familists turn the Incarnation of Christ into an Allegory holding That every one of their family is Christ and the taking in of their belief is the Incarnation Having discourse once with one of them he would not say Christ came or was come but is now come in the flesh Christ is now come in my flesh said he and now I speak Christ speaks to you So also Mr Erbury By flesh saith he is not meant the humane nut are but the coming of Christ is the manifestation of the Godhead in the flesh of Saints Antidote Against these hellish Blasphemies we oppose these heavenly Truths First That our Lord Jesus Christ is very God Isai 9.6 Vnto us a child is born c the Mighty God Rom. 9.5 of whom Christ came who is God over all blessed for ever 1 Tim. 3.16 God manifest in the flesh Rom. 1.4 Declared mightily to be the Son of God c. Secondly Christ is very man and had a true body taking flesh of the Virgin Mary therefore often called the son of man And 1 Tim. 2.5 The man Christ Jesus Isa 7.14 A Virgin shall conceive and bear a Son Mat. 1.20 She was found with child by the Holy Ghost Gal. 4.4 He was made of a woman 1 John 1.1 The Word of Life which we have heard which we have seen with our eyes and our hands have handled He had a true body then his humanity was obvious enough to all the senses If Christ be not God why do you adore him It is plain Idolatry to worship Christ if he be not God Cyril Alexand Cont. Eunom The second Nicene Councel Charged Nestorius with Idolatry because he affirmed Christ was a meer man yet adored him S. Paul condemns serving the creature Rom. 1.25 and yet professeth himself Servant of Jesus Christ Rom. 1.1 Therefore Christ is no meer creature or man Ambros lib. 1. de fide ad Gratian August c. 7. Arrians then Socinians Mr. Best and the rest that deny Christ to be God and yet grant that he ought to be adored what do they differ from Turks and Pagans that worship the creature Rom. 1.22.25 Professing themselves to be wise they become fools and change the Truth of God into a lye This then is Argument enough against the Arrians Socinians c. to prove the diety of Christ because according to their own divinity he ought to be served worshipped and adored The Heathen that knew God and yet glorified him not as God Rom. 1.21 And the Arrians Socinians c. that glorifie Christ as God and yet acknowledg him not for God are a like vain in their imagination and their foolish heart is darkned CHAP. VIII Of Christ his Office Truth THe Office of Christ being God and man is to mediate between God and man and reconcile them together again God who is angry for sin and man who is guilty of sin This Office is three-fold For 1. as a Prophet he doth instruct his Church 2. As a Priest he makes satisfaction and intercession for it 3. As a King he gathers and governs it Adversaries are those that affirm 1. Errours That Christ is Mediator only in respect of his divine nature So Osiander 2. That he is Mediator in respect of his humane nature only So Stancarus And of this opinion are the Papists who most wickedly set up other Mediators also besides Christ even Saints and Angels whom they pray unto to intercede for them But the Papists are enemies to every part of his Office 1. To his Kingly Office in that they make the Pope head of the Church 2. To his Priestly Office in that they set up other Mediatours and Intercessours besides Christ and other satisfaction for sin besides that which he hath made 3. To his Prophetical Office in subjecting his holy Word to the Authority of the Church Judgment of the Pope a sinful man and equalizing traditions and humane inventions with the same Against these Errours we teach Antidote and are taught 1. That there is but one God and one Mediator between God and man the man Christ Jesus 1 Tim. 2.5 He maketh intercession for us Rom. 8.34 Heb. 7.25 The Saints do not hear us or know our wants Isai 63.16
and used many ways and manifold sleights to elude this sacred truth but all drive at this one end even to spoil if it were possible our Saviour Christ of his Divinity and so destroy at one blow the whole body of Christianity The Antidote we shall divide into three doses or propositions 1. That there are three persons in the eternal Godhead c. sc Father Son and holy Ghost 2. That the Son is God everlasting equal with the Father 3. That the holy Ghost is God everlasting equal with the Father and the Son 1. That there are three persons in the Godhead c. Gen. 1.26 And God said let us make man in Our Image Gen. 3.23 And the Lord God said behold the man is become as one of us Isa 6.8 And I heard the voyce of the Lord saying whom shall I send and who will go for us I plainly expressing the unity of essence and Vs the plurality of persons Gen. 19.24 And the Lord rained upon Sodom and upon Gomorrah fire and brimstone from the Lord out of heaven Hosea 1.6 7. God said unto them I will save them by the Lord their God So Zech. 2.8 9. 3.2 Psa 2.7 the Lord said unto me thou art my son Gen. 1.2 The Spirit of God moved upon the waters Mat. 3.16 17. 28.19 The Father Son and Holy Ghost are plainly and distinctly named So 1 Ioh. 5.7 There are three that hear record in heaven the Father the Word that is the Son and the Holy Ghost We see how this sacred truth which at the beginning was more obscure in every age grew clearer and clearer like the morning light till it came to perfect day first a plurality of persons is intimated then a Trinity is expresly named and lastly a plain difference or distinction is made of divers persons one speaking of or to the other and both are called the Lord of hosts and Lord God So Iob. 8.17 18. The witness of two men is true I am one c. plainly making his Father and himself two Ioh. 5.32.37 There is another that beareth witness of me sc the Father and Ioh. 14.16 17. And he will send you another Comforter even the Spirit of truth Here the word another puts a manifest and plain dif●erence between the Father Son and Holy Ghost so that there is another and ●nother i three distinct persons in the Godhead but not another and another ●hing for one single undivided essence is ●ommon to all three Joh. 15.26 The Comforter c. which cometh out from the Father Joh. 16.28 I came out from the Father Now by these emanations or comings out of the Son and Holy Ghost from the Father it is evident that they are distinct persons from the Father each of them having a true subsistence proper to himself And yet these three persons are but one essence three in one and one in three differing but not divided several but not sundered many and yet one all distinct for their persons all one for their nature substance or essence according to that 1 Joh. 5.7 and these three are one Object In this text we are to understand not an unity of essence but of consent or agreement as it is more plainly exprest v. 8. and these three agree in one Sol. In these two verses the Apostle opposeth the heavenly and earthly witness or the testimony of men and the testimony of God The earthly witness he calls the testimony of men in the plural number because they are three in number and though they agree in one yet they are not one but three different and distinct things The heavenly witness he calls the testimony of God in the singular number v. 9. knitting three in one because though they are three in number yet they are but one in nature three persons in one substance or essence and so three bear witness in heaven and yet all is the testimony but of one God Secondly The Son is God everlasting c. Isa Who shall declare his generation Joh. 1.14 18. 1 Joh. 4.9 The only begotten Son of the Father He is not a Son by grace either of Creation as the Angels or Adoption as the Saints are for then he were neither the only Son nor begotten To which of the Angels said he at any time thou art my son Heb. 1.8 No for though they are all the sons of God by Creation yet this is the only Son by generation and God hath no other The Son of God then cannot be a creature as wicked Arrians affirm because he is begotten for if he were made created or adopted then he were not the begotten Son nor the only Son because by creation and adoption God hath more sons then one Now begetting is always of the nature and substance of the parents and so this Son is begotten of Gods own substance therefore also called his Own Son Rom. 8.32 And because God is a most single essence that cannot be divided or communicate it self by parts therefore he hath not a part as the sons of men have but the whole substance of his Father and so must needs be one God with the Father He must needs also be coequal of the same power and majesty and coeternal too everlasting as the Father himself is everlasting because being both but one substance or essence they were never nor could be one without the other He is called in Scripture expresly God as Isa 9.6 The mighty God Tit. 2.13 The great God 1 Joh. 5.20 The true God Rom. 9.5 God over all Psa 40.7 Heb. 1.8 to the Son he saith thy Throne O God endureth for ever Such works are ascribed to him as agree only to God 1. The work of Creation Ioh. 1.3 All things were made by him Of Preservation Heb. 1.3 All things are upheld by him Mat. 9.2 Forgiveth sins Ioh. 10.28 giveth eternal life which none but God o● do and Ioh. 5.19 whatsoever the Father doth that the Son doth likewise The essential attributes of God are given to him as 1. Omnipotency Rev. 1.8 Eternity Isai 9.6 Omniscience John 21.17 He is equal with the Father John 5.18 Phil. 2.6 Divine worship is given to him which is due only to God Psal 97.7 Worship him all ye Gods Heb. 1.6 Let all the Angels of God worship him Which were plain Idolatry if he were a creature and John 5.23 the same honor is due to the Son that is due to the Father The Apostles profess themselves the servants of Jesus Christ Rom. 1.1 2 Pet. 1. 1. Jude 1. Rev. 1.1 We are commanded to trust in him Isai 11.10 Rom. 15.12 To beleeve in him as we do in God John 14.1 and Psalm 2. ●2 Blessed are all they that put their trust in him But Jer. 17.5.7 it is Cursed are all they that trust in man and make flesh their arm and whose heart departeth from the Lord It is apparent then that the Son is God equal with the Father Thirdly The Holy Ghost is