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A95924 Theoremata theologica: = Theological treatises. Octo theses theologicæ: eight theses of divinity. 1. Animæ humanæ productio: Production of mans soul. 2. Puræ Dei prædestinatio: Divine predestination. 3. Verum ecclesiæ regimen: The tru [sic] church regiment. 4. Prædictiones de Messia: Predictions of Messias. 5. Duæ Christi genealogiæ: Christs two genealogies. 6. Apocalypsis patefacta: The revelation reveled. 7. Christi regnum in terra: Christs millenar reign. 8. Mundi hujus dissolutio: The worlds dissolution. / Complied or collected by Rob. Vilvain. Price at press in sheets 3 .s. Vilvain, Robert, 1575?-1663. 1654 (1654) Wing V397; Thomason E898_1; ESTC R3206 418,235 540

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Press but with this difference or dissonance Dictio Praeconis tenues cito transit in auras Scriptorum at remanent dogmata saepe diu A Preachers wordst ' empty Air turn again But Writers works oftimes doo long remain Al Men are apt to er but the modest ready to acknowledg and amend it if detected or displaied as I vow in presence of our great God freely to doo if any shal fairly shew it nor ever wil be found a Beast perversly to persevere therin I wil serv no Person Sect or Faction for fear favor or flattery but only deliver my privat personal Judgment how weak or worthless soever sincerely according to verity or verisimility This such as know my constant resolut disposition wil easily beleev but others may take it on trust til they shal hav time to try the contrary Al the Theses are too redious but ther prolixity consists more in multitud of matter then words for I could hav made the Work twise so voluminous with half the toil but doo study brevity to spare the Readers Purs and Pains The Speculations are somwhat sublime but stile facil and familiar fit for vulgar understandings Let every one take or leav and take al in good part Farewel Rustica Ruricolae Fabrique Fabrilia tractent Tangere nec Medicos dogmata sacra decet Let Clowns the Plow and Smiths their Forge attend Nor should Phisitians to things sacred bend Articuli Fidei Anglicae 39 Articles of our Faith THE Articles of Religion concluded in Convocation and confirmed by Act of Parliament under Queen Elizabeth Anno 1562. but ratified or reestablished under King James by the same duple authority Anno 1604. which are here presented to satisfy or gratify al lest men like Lynces should seem sharp sighted to look into the Confessions of other Reformed Churches abroad and Lamiae or blind Beetles at home in being ignorant of our own Principles and Doctrins the general Catalog of which follows in order 1 Of Faith in the holy Trinity 2 Of the Word which was made Man 3 Of Christs descent into Hel. 4 Of his Resurrection 5 Of the holy Ghost 6 Of the Scriptures sufficience to salvation 7 Of the old Testament 8 Of the three Creeds 9 Of original birth-sin 10 Of free wil. 11 Of mans justification 12 Of good works 13 Of works before justification 14 Of super trrogation 15 Of Christ alone without sin 16 Of sin after Baptism 17 Of Predestination and Election 18 Of obtaining salvation only by Christ 19 Of the Church 20 Of the Churches authority 21 Of general Councils 22 Of Purgatory 23 Of ministring in the Congregation 24 Of speaking ther in an unknown toung 25 Of the Sacraments 26 Of the Ministers unworthines which hinders not their effects 27 Of Baptism 28 Of the Lords supper 29 Of the wicked who doo not eat Christs Body and Blood 30 Of both kinds 31 Of Christs Oblation finished on the Cross 32 Of Priests marriage 33 Of Excommunicat Persons how they are to be shunned 34 Of the Churches Traditions 35 Of ●omilies 36 Of Consecrating Bishops c. 37 Of the Civil Magistrat 38 Of Christians goods which are not common 39 Of a Christian mans Oath The Particulars insu Article 1. THere is but one only tru living God everlasting without body parts or passions of infinit power wisdom and goodness maker and preserver of al things both visible and invisible in unity of which Godhead ther be three Persons of one substance power and eternity the Father Son and holy-Ghost Article 2. The Son who is the Word of the Father begot of him from everlasting the very eternal God of one substance with the Father took mans Nature in the womb of the blessed virgin of hir substance so that two whol perfect Natures the Godhead and Manhood were joined in one Person never to be severed wherof one Christ consists perfect God and very Man who suffered was crucified dead and buried to reconcile his Father to us and be a sacrifice not only for Original guilt but also for al actual sins of men Article 3. As Christ died for us and was buried so 't is to be beleeved that he went down into Hel. Article 4. Christ truly rose from death and took again his body with flesh bones and al things pertaining to the perfection of Mans Nature wherwith he ascended into Heaven and ther sits til he shal return to judg al men at last day Article 5. The holy Ghost proceding from the Father and the Son is one substance majesty and glory with the Father and Son very eternal God Article 6. Holy Scripture contains al things necessary for Salvation so that whatever is not read therin nor may be proved therby is not required of any man to be beleeved as an Article of Faith or be thought needful to salvation By the name of holy Scripture we understand thos Canonical Books of the Old and New Testament whos authority the Church never doubted of and the other Books as saint Jerom saith the Church reads for exemple of life and instruction of maners but doth not apply them to stablish any Doctrin All the Books of the new Testament as commonly received we receiv and reput them Canonical See their names and number in the holy Bible Article 7. The old Testament is not contrary to the New for in both everlasting life is offred to mankind by Christ who is the only Mediator between God and Man being both God and Man Therfore they are not to be heard which fain that the old Fathers looked only for transitory promises though the Law given of God by Moses touching Ceremonies or Rites doo not bind Christians nor the civil precepts of necessity to be received in any Christian Commonwealth yet no Christian man whatever is free from obedience of the Commandements caled moral Article 8. The three Creeds Nicen Athanasius and that commonly caled the Apostles ought throughly to be received and beleeved for thes may be proved by most certain warrants of Scripture Article 9. Original sin stands not in imitating Adam as the Pelagians vainly talk but is the fault and corruption of every mans Nature that is ingendred of Adams ofspring wherby man is far gon from original Righteousnes and inclined to evil so that the flesh lusteth against the spirit and therfore in every person born into the world it deservs Gods wrath and damnationthis infection of Nature remains yea in the Regenerat wherby the lust of the flesh caled in Greek 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which som expound the wisdom som the sensuality som the affection som the desire of the flesh is not subject to the Law of God and though ther is no condemnation to them that beleev and are baptized yet the Apostle confesseth that Concupiscence hath of it self the nature of Sin Article 10. The condition of man after Adam's fal is such as he cannot turn or prepare himself by his natural strength and good works to Faith for
Mankind so by propagation al Mankind proceds out of one and as that sin overspreads the whol Man so both parts being infected must needs be propagated Again as this sin is seated specialy in the Soul so 't is chiefly propagated according to Natures cours Hence three points rest to be proved 1. That original sin passeth only by propagation as Scriptures universaly testify By one man death passed upon al becaus al sinned in him and 't is imputed to his Posterity becaus al were in him as the Root or Stock and al descend out of him so his sin becoms ours both by imputation and propagation but by the first becaus of the last For 't is not anothers sin imputed which is not ours but that made ours by propagation actualy which before was only potentialy This is cleer by the Antithesis between the first and secund Adam as in one al dy so in Christ shal al be made aliv The one being Root of Mankind in whom al are by Nature the other Head of the Elect in whom they are al by Grace Such then are deceived as deem Adams sin only imputed like Christs righteousnes sith this last is the Creators voluntary Institution and work of meer Mercy but the first a necessary operation of the Creature and work of Justice So the Antithesis holds tru thus As in Christ we fulfilled the Law suffered death and attained salvation being members of his Body by Grace So in Adam we eat the forbiden fruit becam Satans bondslaves and were in state of damnation being al members of his Body by Nature So Christ derivs his righteousnes to his Children by spiritual regeneration as Adam did his sin to al Men by natural generation Ergo as Christs righteousnes is not imputed but by means of regeneration wherby we becom members of his Body So Adams sin cannot be imputed but by generation wherby we descend from him as his members If Adams sin be simply imputed becaus we are Men as he was who received or lost for himself and al Mankind then must it be imputed to Christ as Man so wel as to us which is not so for our sinning in him and being sinfully propagated from him makes us liable which Christ was not becaus sanctified in the womb by the holy Ghost at first conception but al els derived from him and his sin to us through one anothers loins 2. Original sin cannot be propagated unles the whol Man and both Parts be which necessarily flows from the premisses for except the whol Man descends from him the whol cannot be infected sith neither Soul nor Body alone is the subject of sin but the Person Or if the whol be not the subject 't is not properly sinful The Law likewise is given to the whol and the Person punished or rewarded 3. The whol Man cannot be propagated unles the Soul be sith the whol consists of its parts To say the Soul coms from Adam quoad existentiam unionem non quoad essentiam is sly Sophistry not real or rational for then Man contributs but the worst part not the whol nor half Nor is it tru that Adam is caus of the union but rather God if he creats the Soul Nor if the Soul be infused can any tel how long time after conception during which space the Woman works alone But if the whol Man be said properly to proced from Adam becaus the body doth much more may it be verified to com from God becaus the Soul doth so the union rather to be ascribed to God as the noblest suprem Agent then to Man the baser and inferior If then the whol Man and both parts be not propagated it results that we were in Adam wherin we are not viz. the Person that we sinned in him without that without which he could not sin viz. the Soul That the whol Man was in Adam yet never cam from him That we lost in him which we never had of him viz. original righteousnes That he shal stil be ful of Souls which he never had That the whol person proceds from him yet not that which makes the whol 4. Christs Soul was not created but his whol Humanity taken from the Virgin for his birth life death are curiosly and circumstantialy recorded by the Evangelists but no Soul creation which they would not omit being so pregnant a proof that he was without sin if it was created pure Nor is any Souls creation since Adams specified in Scripture Christ is caled the seed of the Woman and Davids seed according to the flesh which imports the whol Humanity as opposed to his Deity but if his Soul was created the imputation of Adams sin to al Men must be likewise l●able to him as Man Ad hereto That the Soul and Body as 't is in al others were conceived at once for the divine Nature being immediatly united to the Soul and by it to the Body the Soul must be produced in the moment of conception with the Body or els the Deity was first united to a brute Body which is brutish to imagin The truth is his Soul being united with the Body into one Nature at first conception becam one Person with the eternal Word by a miraculous working of the holy Ghost who purified the Womb that the Birth becam exempt from sin So his whol Humanity Soul and Body was deduced from Adam and separated from the Virgin by the holy Ghost But a Soul cannot be produced by Natures ordinary cours no more then a Body without concurrence of both Sexes Souls yet being performed by supernatural power 't is a tru Soul and so is the Body both which joined in one Person make a perfect Man as Eve was a very Woman though taken out of Man and Christ tru Man taken only out of Woman For in Mans quadruple production ●● a duple concordance Adam made immediatly by God without Man or Woman Eve mediatly out of Man without Woman Christ immediatly out of Woman without Man but al els mediatly by both 'T is said the holy Ghost sanctified part of the Virgins substance assumed by the Godhead to make Christs Person which terms are tru if wel understood For by part of hir substance is meant the whol Nature or both parts not Body only whereof his Humanity was framed By sanctifying is not meant clensing that portion from sin but consecrating it to that holy purpos indowing it with gifts fit for so divine union yet was it free from sin or rather never sinful by reason of this union For al substances were created exceeding good and depend immediatly on God Nor is sin essential to Mans Nature but accidental cleaving to the person by Adams fal and not properly in the substance of Human Nature Nor are evil actions or affections stiled simply sinful but the Man sith sin consists not in any pravity of matter but in the corrupt Wil or intent of the dooer Nor is ther any Law to punish parts or substances
somthing of Man which is predestinated whom it pleased the Almighty to make more excellent then any of his visible Creatures to consist of Spirit and Flesh being inferior to Angels and superior to Beasts for he is a Rational free Creature yet not so absolutly sufficient of himself and wholy independent to be under none which is proper soly to God but free in his own Nature to wil or nil chuse or refuse and rule his own acts wherby he was capable of holines or sin obeying or disobeying to doo good or evil and therby a subject of Prais or Punishment Bounty or Justice which no Creature can properly be that is not perfectly free in Wil and loos at liberty from al necessary restraint Ob. Som opposits object that Adam haply had such perfect Free-wil but by his Fal that absolut liberty to al things is lessened and to Spirituals lost Ergo c. Sol. 'T is granted but with Proviso That God foreseing this fal and loss with intent not to prevent it prepared sufficient Graces of his powerful Spirit to repair or restore what was decaied by giving a new Command or Covenant fit for Mans infirm wounded Wil and thos Graces of his holy Spirit which he would be stil ready to supply by preventing assisting protecting and preserving if he be not wanting to his duty For Gods Wisdom is not so weak to make such a noble Creature only for shew to Angels or to set him in the World for a day or two and banish him for ever into Hel fire under the slavery and tyranny of Rebellious Fiends of his own free Decree without foresight of any deserts good or evil which is the Manichees error horrid to conceiv of so gracious a God who created him purposly to be the subject of his righteous Judgment 'T is a tru saying If ther be not the Grace of God how shal he sav the World If no Free-wil in Man how shal he judg it We must so defend the one as not destroy the other which wil wel consist together Hence it folows That a just Decree before al time what shal be doon to every one at end of time cannot possibly be conceived to be made but by Gods simple Prescience of every Mans works rendring to ech accordingly Now becaus that Decree passeth from a Soveraign Lord of absolut Wil who wil be Debtor to none but al to him it folows also that this foreknowledg on which the Decree is founded must needs be according to our utmost capacity Gods natural simple intelligence of al things while they were but as possible before any Decree made for their being To which knowledg when his omnipotent Wil was joined an ●m●t●ble inevitable Decree passed like Laws of Medes and Persians that things should be as now they are necessary or continge it means or ends causes or effects such as Prescience previously apprehended so every Mans salvation is soly from God and others perdition wholy from themselfs which divine Prescience neither furthers nor hinders The disput is not of predestinating al things that are and rejecting the rest but only of Angels and Men in what maner or order som were ordained to life and al els reprobated this proceds from Gods simple knowledg which preceds Predestination not from that of Vision or sight which is of things that either hav had or shal hav being which folows and is founded on it By this God understood if he would endu som Creatures with Reason and a free Nature 1. He should best shew forth in them his Wisdom goodnes mercy justice fidelity and al his sublime properties 2. That such Creatures wil vary in their choices som cleaving to good som to evil as Men are moraly virtuous or vitious which he foresaw not only in general but every particular person if created and put to trial yet it rested in his free pleasure to creat and try or hinder their choices 3. That of such whom he knew would prevaricat if permitted free he might justly punish them for disobeying or could fit means to restore and reconcile them yet decreed neither 4. He conceived it juster or equitabler to punish rebellious Angels being created individual and most intellectual but to spare Men in mercy being to multiply their kind and made more frail specialy if seduced by subtle Spirits 5. He foreknew if he should ordain sufficient means to rais al Men lapsed that som would gratfully receiv his bounty to their salvation and others wilfully or ingratly reject it for the pleasure of sin to their perdition holding stil the determination what to doo or permit in his ful power 6. He knew if he should condemn the contumacious and favor such as returned to him he should deal justly with the one mercifully with the other and judg al righteously Al thes things with every circumstance as they are in being from beginning of the World to the end God understood as under condition or supposition it he should pleas to put them in execution which after du deep deliberation in his eternal counsil to speak stil after our shalow apprehension his divine Wil and Wisdom was to pronounce this mighty Word or Decree Fiant let them be He could in a moment hav framed millions of Worlds but proceded gradualy to perfect this one in six dais that his Majesty might be the more magnified whos Wisdom Justice Mercy Grace Goodnes Power and Dominion be glorified through al generations Thes are the Lutheran or Arminian Principles who make simple Prescience the basis of Predestination which if indifferently weighed with a single impartial ey wil not seem half so hainous as 't is prejudicatly proclamed in Pulpits and Pamphlets Let Tertullian put the perclos 'T is no good nor solid faith L●de Exhert Castit which refers al to Gods Wil and absolut decree flattering the world with saying al is doon soly by it but we must understand ther is som power in us which God expects to accomplish our salvation For to say God hath determind of us without any reflexion on our works is to make a Pillow for som Mens sloth and prepare a precipice for others despair He sleeps too securely that thinks to carry his happines in a Wallet we must ever work or shal never receiv wages for doubtles God wil recompens according to every Mans works Calvinists both Ante and Postlapsarians ascribe Predestination to Gods pure pleasure by absolute antecedent Decree without respect of foreseen demerits in his simple intelligence whos principal proofs shal be produced in heaps to shun prolixity Ob. Touching divine Decree in temporal things Job saith Joh. 14 5. Mans dais are numbred or determined and bounds appointed Ps 139. 16. which he cannot pass So David in thy Book are al my members Writen So Christ not a Sparow shal fal on the ground without Mat. 10 29 30. your Father and the hairs of your head are al numbred Ergo al depends on divine Decree Sol.
This is meer obscurity fu● of contradiction as if the form of water in mixtils be less a form then formerly continuing stil the waters form yet cannot be caled water having changed its kind and becom another B●dy Therfore 't is truer that Elements forms receiv intension and remission which variation provs them to be accidents not substances and when their just temperament is taken away they transcend or are transmuted into new Kinds So thos are idle questions touching Elements essential forms or integrity in mixtils of generation and corruption in an instant as if a form were educed or perisht in a moment with many mo of like bran For water is made gradualy in time by changing its temperament so in mixtils Stone Apple Flesh corruption corns by depraving the temperament which if vitiated beyond the utmost degree of proportion a dissolution folows by breaking the bonds of union which is doon by mixture of qualities Repl. If the temperament be varied definitions of things must also be altered but they are alwais constantly the same til the forms be changed Ergo form is no temperament Sol. This is Childish for definitions are made of things intire or perfect and abstracted by imagination of the intellect but if things be considered as they are in nature definitions must be changed as nature varies Can fading Flowers rotting Apples putrifying Flesh or sickly Bodies retain the same definitions of sound Shal the essence be changed by mutation of accidents and not varied with them Let such as so think feed on corrupt carrion til they acknowledg ther is one definition of sound food another of putrid Flesh or let them languish so long til they learn to distinguish betwen Corpus sanum aegrum nutrum What is substantial or material in Elements and mixtils that remains invariable but al accidental or formal is changed generated and corrupted by degrees as temperaments alter according to which definitions must be changed Now touching Souls ther be three sorts Vegetant Sentient Intelligent but for better explication he premiseth som Aphorisms 1. Ther be three Principles of Bodies viz two constitutiv matter of subject and accidents or qualities and one transmutativ the contrariety of thos accidents or qualities 2. Matter is al that is substantial in natural Bodies 3. Matter is indifferent to receiv al accidents yet is not simply the fountain or root of al. 4. The origin of accidents and subjects is one viz. Creation and concreation 5. The accidents of matter are duple 1. Som which immediatly folow its essence and coexist with it as passiv power quantity or extension place and time or successiv duration of which matter is the fountain 2. Such as make existence in a specifical kind as al first and secund qualities which doo not inhere primarily by necessity of nature but at the Creators pleasure to distinguish kinds 6. Both thes qualities are impressed immediatly like light in the air needing no intermediat substance to unite them 7. As quantities inhere immediatly in the matter so the operations and powers of working flow directly from the qualities 8. Al first qualities light heat cold humidity siccity and sundry of the secund thicknes thinnes heavines lightnes fluidnes firmnes existed the first day of Creation 9. The material substance of Heaven wherof Philosophers know little is common with inferior Bodies being made of one chaos so are the first accidents but thos of the secund sort differ by the discrepant conjunction of first and secund qualities 10. Ther be three Elements Air Water Earth needful to mixtion and haply two wil serv 11. Thes Elements essentialy differ in their proper qualities given by God in the Earth are conjoined cold siccity density gravity consistence in the water cold moisture remisser density gravity fluidnes in the Air remiss heat weak moisture levity tenuity and fluidnes 12. Fire is only intens heat whether in Elements or mixtils but no Element Body or Substance 13. Heat in Air or Mixtils is partly implanted at Creation partly infused or introduced by the Sun Soil and Elementar Fire if any such be but the implanted soon decais without supply of infused 14. Composition is duple 1. Of Matter with both sorts of qualities as in the Heavens and Elements 2. Of Matter so qualified and new mixture of qualities arising from the other as in al Bodies els 15. The union of qualities in Elements is most simple but in Mixtils more compound as 't is said of Colors that whitnes and bl●●●●es are made with the various mixture of bright and dark but middle colors rise from the mixtures of whit and black 16. The measure and maner of al Temperaments is founded on the first Creation from which primary patern if nature dev●at in excess or defect a deformed Monster is bred 17. To beget a like is the property of al activ qualities in Inanimats and Animats as God bid them by his benediction to increas and multiply 18. The qualities doo so diffuse themselfs and beget others that they make the matter proportioned to exercise their forces or functions 19. The formativ faculty is founded on the very qualities which the more simple so much the more uniform configuration they produce but if compounded of divers qualities they make more diversity or difformity in figuring the material parts 20. Mixtion the less simple the more subtle for 't is a great Art to unite so many varieties of unlike qualities into one crasis or temper but the more compound the weaker becaus it consists of so many contrary qualities 21. Ther is a recripocal propagation of Temperaments in Animats viz. of the Seed and life of the Seed 22. The Prolifical power in the Seed proceds not from any spiritual substance inherent in it but only from a subtle temper of qualities in a pure spirituous matter 23. This energy is actualy in the Seed stil but asleep or unactiv til it meet with a fit Patient or rather Coagent to excite that virtu as the strong spirits which ly hid in Barly Wheat Plants Grain or Seeds are easily extracted by destillation 24. In Plants the Earth is a Womb to bring forth Seeds by supplying heat from the Sun and moisture from Soil wherby the Spirits in Seeds swel and extend the matter to fit proportion of several Figures 25 In Egbreeders Male and Female must concur to make them fertil but to hatch and inlifen them any heat natural or artificial if wel ordered wil suffice becaus the yelk is moist enough and needs only help of heat to rouz up the whits spirits 26. In perfect Animal-begetters both Sexes must actualy join to make one mass of Seed which being aptly mixd spirituous substance of that mass is blown up and augmented by heat of the Matrix and moisture of menst●ual Blood which begins to form the Birth and in fine brings 〈◊〉 to perfection 27. To the generation of living Creatures Seed is not simply necessary but a mixture of in●●fening qualities in