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A10250 Propositions and principles of diuinitie propounded and disputed in the vniuersitie of Geneua, by certaine students of diuinitie there, vnder M. Theod. Beza, and M. Anthonie Faius ... Wherein is contained a methodicall summarie, or epitome of the common places of diuinitie. Translated out of Latine into English, to the end that the causes, both of the present dangers of that Church, and also of the troubles of those that are hardlie dealt vvith els-vvhere, may appeare in the English tongue.; Theses theologicae. English Bèze, Théodore de, 1519-1605.; La Faye, Antoine de, 1540-1615. aut; Penry, John, 1559-1593. 1591 (1591) STC 2053; ESTC S101754 189,778 296

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the Sonne of God tooke vpon him 8 For whatsoeuer is not the diuine essence thervnto the essentiall attributes of the Deitie cannot be communicated 9 The actions furthermore which we said to be also attributes of the Deitie wee deuide both into those which they call remaining because they doe so continue in the Deitie that worketh as they bring forth no worke out of the doer of which sort are prouidence and predestination and also into those which may be tearmed passing that is those which leaue some worke out of the doer or doe inferre a suffering vnto some thing as are creation and redemption 10 As for the attributes which haue their names from the effects proceeding from God vpon the creatures thogh they seeme to haue had their beginning in time as where God is called the Creator redeemer c. yet wee denie that either they put any change in God or do agree vnto him by way of accident Defended by IOHN CASTOL of Geneua THE SIXT SORT OF PRINCIPLES CONCERNING THE OMNIPOTENCY OF GOD. THE ATTRIBVTES OF GOD IN GENErall haue bene dealt with now some of them in speciall are to be handled 1 THe omnipotencie of God is that very immeasurable and infinite essence of God which is communicable vnto no creature alwaies doing neuer suffering and which cannot decist to be that which it is 2 This being in deed but one may yet in diuerse considerations be said to be manifolde 3 For the omnipotencie is one way considered when we speake of it as God doth alway worke in him selfe it is another way regarded in respect that God worketh out of him selfe and can worke innumerable thinges if it pleaseth him 4 For wee hold that God is omnipotent in as much as besides that he is able to do whatsoeuer he will he can both will and do innumerable things which hee will neuer either will or doe We do therefore condemne them who say that God is for no other cause omnipotent but in as much as hee can without exception worke whatsoeuer can bee either spoken or imagined And we doe dislike of them who thinke that God is in that respect onely called omnipotent because he can do onely whatsoeuer he will For his power is in it selfe infinite whereas his will is as it were bounded within the verie act of will 5 Now we hold that God cannot do any of these things which either are repugnant vnto his personall proprieties as that the Father cannot bee begotten neither the Sonne begotten or are contrarie vnto his essence as to be finite or which implie a contradiction of which sort it is to make that a bodie shall bee truly naturall and yet neither to haue quantity nor to be contained in any place Brieflie we denie that God can doe any thing which if they were done might shew him to haue defects and weaknes in him as to die to lie to sinne c. 6 And as by faith we beleeue according vnto the Scriptures and the Creeds appointed in the church that God only is omnipotent so we do professe and publish the same with our mouth 7 For it is no lesse repugnant vnto his nature that there should be many omnipotents then that there should be many Gods Whence it is that Christian Religion doeth not acknowledge in God distinct into three persons three omnipotents but one omnipotent Now concerning the humane nature of Christ although it be vnited vnto the deuine in the person of the Sonne who is but one yet as it is not therefore made God so is it not properlie made omnipotent but it retained even it own infirmities before it was glorified wherein it might suffer and dye for vs and now being glorified although it be free from all infirmities and glorious yet is it not in it selfe made omnipotent Defended by WILLIAM MO●NES of Niuerse THE SEVENTH SORT OF PRINCIPLES CONCERNING THE KNOWLEDGE THAT IS IN GOD. I VNto the treatise of Gods omnipotencie is to be joined the declaration of the knowledge that is in him being a doctrine verie necessarie to the end that the true God may bee seuered from the false and that from it we may take counsell and consolation II Now this science or knowledge is considered both in it selfe simplie when the question is what and of what sort it is and also in respect of the things that it doth know III By this knowledge we meane an absolute and a most cleare knowledge in God both of himself and of all things created whereby he doth not onlie know all things to bee but also the reason why they are so And this knowledge is different from all the sight that men and Angels haue not by comparison that it is greater and theirs lesser but altogether in the whole nature of it The which difference wee discerne by these notes 1 That this knowledge is essentiall and euen the vnderstanding essence of God 2 That it ariseth not from the outwarde senses or from the notions that the vnderstanding doth apprehend by reasoning by joining things together and by deuiding or yet from the report of any other no not from the knowledge of principles and causes that are of themselues formed in the vnderstanding 3 That it is neither any habite nor action nor any thing different from that verie thing that doth vnderstand that is from the essence of God seeing it is moste simple 4 That it vnderstandeth all things at once 5 That it is most certaine 6 That it is alwaies the same IIII Now in respect of the things that it doth know wee affirme that God doth know al things by himself of himself 1 Himself properly and most fullie 2 All things past present and to come euen those things that are casuall 3 Yea and such things as neither are nor euer shal be 4 Euen euill things 5 Yea infinite 6 And euen all the motions of the will and their issues 7 And not onely by a generall knowledge of generall things but euen by a most exact and perfect of euerie particular V This knowledge which in respect of things to come is called praescience or fore-knowledge is not the cause of the existence of thinges although there is nothing to come to passe which God did not fore-know that it should come VI This knowledge either in whole or in part can no creature be capable off Defended by IOHN FLORIDVS of Angieu THE EIGHT SORT OF PRINCIPLES CONCERNING THE VVILL OF GOD. 1 THe discourse concerning Gods will which is most of al to be sought into for our saluation followeth that which is concerning his knowledge 2 By the worde WILL in God wee vnderstand both the diuine essence which doth imbrace and delite in that chiefe and soueraigne good which it hath in it selfe and also in respect of the thinges that God will haue done wee meane the verie action of will 3 And in this latter regard it is also considered two manner of waies either as it is a decree certaine
elect in particuler are common vnto all the Saints in respect of the vse which is the communion of Saints in this life 15 Yea and the vse of these graces if it may be ought to reach euen vnto them that are without as farre as the glorie of God and the edification of the Church doth permit both because often times many of the elect lie hid amongst them and also because wee must bee like our heauenly Father who maketh his Sunn to rise vpon the good and bad 16 This Communion begun here vpon earth shal then after that those thinges which belong vnto the vse of this life are abollished be perfected in that aeternall kingdom when as faith being chaunged into a full knowledge hope into the injoying of the thinges hoped for and charitie being made perfect God shall be all in all his Saints Now the Communion of Merites either amongst the Saints liuing heere togeather or betweene the Militant and the Triumphant church is both most false and also blasphemous as also the very opinion of merrites is a meere forged vntruth Defended by IOHN WTENBOGAERT a Low-country man of Vtrick PRINCIPLES CONCERNING THE WORD OF GOD. LII 1 VVE haue dealt in the former principles with the Church and it hath bene said that the notes of the true Church were the Word of God and the Sacraments now wee will deale with these notes and first of all with the former of them 2 The word of God which is the first note wee cal in this place not whatsoeuer GOD hath spoken but those things onlie which the Prophetes and Apostles inspired by Gods Spirite haue in times past as taught by worde so committed to writing those things which being comprehended in the bookes of the ould and new Testament are as yet vnto this day after so manie warres slaughters ouerthrowes extant in Gods Church in which bookes God hath declared both what he will haue vs to know cōcerning him and what is to be done of vs. 3 God onelie is to bee acknowledged the authour of these bookes whence the whole Scripture is said by PAVL to bee giuen by the inspiration of God and is also called the word of God And therefore it is vnlawfull to call into question or to refuse anie thing that is contained therein as also to bring in anie thing that is not written in the same Detestable therefore was that peruersnes of the Marcionites Manichaees the Valentinians and of all such as refused either all or some of the bookes of the newe Testament 4 These writings by the singular prouidence of God haue long since beene brought by the Church into a certaine order and Cannon that they might bee discerned from counterfaite yea and all other bookes and that they should bee a rule of faith and obedience that should haue credite of it self and hence they are called Cannonicall Other bookes whosoeuer haue beene the authours of them though they contain manie wholsome profitable things are yet but accounted the writings of priuate men neither haue they their credite of themselues but as far as they agree with the former bookes and no otherwise They therefore both haue and at this day doe most greuouslie offend who take away this difference and affirme that the bookes of the APOCRYPHA are to haue no lesse credite in the establishing of Religion then the Cannonical Scripture of which number are the Tridentine conspiratours 5 This Scripture we acknowledge to be cannonicall and authentick not so much by the common consent of the Church as by the testimonie of the Spirite of God who teacheth vs that they are to be embraced as beeing most vndoubtedlie true and such as haue proceeded from Gods own mouth 6 Now these holie books do whollie containe al those thinges that are needfull for our saluation in somuch that it is altogether vnlawfull to exspect for anie supplie of this doctrine for the Scripture as PAVLE doth expreslie teach is able to make the man of God absolute Most greeuous therefore is their errour who thinke that the liuelie and the sauing knowledge of God is to be else where sought then in the written word and doe therefore thrust vnto vs their vnwritten falshoods out of the which they will haue necessarie arguments to bee drawne in the cause of faith and religion 7 The naturall and proper interpretation of this holy Scripture is to be drawne from the analogie of faith and the conference of places For that which is darcklie in one place is in an other clearelie taught that which heere is shortlie is elsewhere largelie set down and so the Woord is the rule and the interpretour of it selfe They are deceauers therefore who say that the right and authoritie of expounding the worde of God is in their power as though it were lawfull for them to interpret anie place as they think good 8 Neither are the expositions of auncient Doctors to bee receaued as vndoubted anie farther then they agree with the truth for PAVLE doth command vs that we giue eare or consent vnto none whosoeuer he be that teacheth anie other doctrine Wee cannot allow therefore of their opinion who wil haue the interpretation of the fathers as they call thē to haue credite of themselues 9 It is true indeed that some places of the Scripture remaine euen vnto this day so obscure and hard to bee interpreted as the verie best and most faithfull interpretours haue not agreed among themselues vpō their proper meaning but in these things euery man is to acknowledge his owne ignorance sluggishnes or some other fault and the Scripture is so plentifull that the one and the selfe same place can admit diuers interpretations and yet all agreable with the doctrine of faith 10 This notwithstanding is most certaine that the grounds and necessarie heades of Christian Religion are so clearely set downe by the Prophets and Apostles as the Spirite of God woorking in the Saincts they are manifestlie perceaued in the Church And therefore wee doe not agree vnto them who thinke the Scripture so obscure as it needeth to be made cleare by some other light Nowe this light they will haue without exception to bee drawne from that pretended Catholick Church that is either from the fathers from the Synods or from some long custome of time as though the Scripture had not beene vnderstood before either the Fathers or the Synodes were 11 This Word of God is to be dailie meditated vppon and all men of what estate soeuer they bee ought most diligentlie to read the same for no man is to be bereaued of that meanes whereby hee is to be instructed in the knowledge and the sure way of his saluation Wee cannot therefore but condemne the Papistes in this point also who holde it vnlawfull for laie-men as they call them to employ themselues in the reading of the Word 11 Now that the vnlearned and vnskilfull may with fruit bee conuersant in the reading heereof it is needfull that
the word committed vnto them and sometimes they do declare dictinct and peculiar functions in which sense we take them in the treatise following 7 Of these fiue the three first were temporarie hauing also euery one of them a distinct Ministerie and they were peculiarlie called Apostles Euangelistes and Prophets as being appointed for the planting of the Church throughout the worlde by the publishing of the newe couenant The other two callinges were perpetuallie to remaine vnto the last comming of Christ 8 The chiefe and most excellent of all these were the twelue Apostles vnto whose number PAVLE was afterward called as it were the embassadors of God who were elected and admitted neither of men neither by men but of Christ immediatlie that all of them being of equall authoritie amongst themselues should become the Maister-workman of the building whereabout they were to be imployed beeing strictlie tied vnto no certaine congregation 9 They therefore as they were lead by the inspiration of the holie Ghost or by some peculiar commaundement of God traueling thorow many countries preached the grace of Christ euerie where vnto all men the which they both confirmed with miracles and sealed by the administration of the Sacraments They also committed the churches which they had planted to be gouerned by their Pastors and Doctors as time and place would permit this office being faithfullie performed by them and they being called out of this life the Apostolicall calling also ceased 10 Hence it appeareth how vaine and detestable in all godlie eares is that voice of the Romishe Prelate who is not affraid to professe himselfe an Apostle by vertue of his tyrannicall succession and is not ashamed vnder the fayned pretence of PETERS Primacie to call himselfe chief or Prince of the Apostles amongst whome there was none either greater or lesser then other and euen the heade of the whole Church 11 It is out of controuersie that all those were called Prophetes who by the inspiration of Gods Spirit forsawe and fore-told things to come whose calling before the comming of Christ was when the Priests grew negligent to direct the faith of the Saints vnto the promised saluation and also both to raise vp the godlie to beat down the disobedient by their diuine reuelations So also at the beginning of the preaching of the Gospell they were called Prophets who were indued with a peculiar gift of reuelation or diuine wisdome wherwith God would at that time adorne his Church of this sort was AGABVS the foure daughters of PHILIP the Euangelist mentioned in the Acts of the Apostles and others vndoubtedlie not a few 12 Sometimes notwithstanding the woorde PROPHET and Prophesying in the Scriptures are taken in a manifold sense and signifie all those in generall who execute the function of the Pastor For in this sense the Apostle saith He that prophesieth aedifieth the Church exhorteth comforteth reproueth the contrarie doctrine 13 Vnder the name EVANGELISTS are vnderstood those whome the Apostles vsed as their companions and fellow labourers because they themselues were not sufficientlie able to performe euerie work in all the Churches of this sort was TIMOTHIE and TITVS SILVANVS and others 14 Now their office was to performe the worke begun or otherwise committed vnto them by the Apostles as it is manifest especiallie out of the Epistles of PAVLE to TIMOTHY and TITVS whose calling was also temporarie Those foure in like sort are called Euangelists in a more strict signification whose seruice the Lord vsed for the writing of the storie of the Gospell and describing the beginning of the Christian Church 15 There remaine two callings belonging to the Ministerie of the word to wit Pastors and Doctors who are distinguished from the former in a three-fold respect first in that they are not immediatlie but haue bene euer since the time of the Apostles ordained by the ministery of men according vnto that forme whereof wee shall speake Secondlie in that they are tied vnto a certain congregation lastlie because the Lord hath ordained both these functions to be perpetuall in the Church 16 The proper the peculiar function of the Doctor is to teach the doctrine of true Religion by the faithfull interpreting of the Scriptures to defend the same against the gainsayers and to gouerne the Ecclesiasticall schooles 17 Nowe the Ministerie of Pastors as of the Priest in times past consisteth in three points First not onlie in the simple laying open of the propheticall and appostolicall doctrine which wee sayd to bee the office of the Doctors but also both in the priuate and publick aplication therof by sinceare and diligent teaching reproouing correcting and instructing Next in the administration of the Sacraments which are come in place of the legall rites brieflie in conceauing publick prayers which is not the lest part of the Ecclesiasticall ministerie 18 The administration of the worde also is committed vnto the Elders peculiarlie soe called whome Paul doeth especially expresse by the name of gouerners but not simply to that end for the which it is committed vnto the Pastors and doctors For they doe not administer the worde either publicklie vnto the whole congregation or priuatlie vnto some but haue authoritie to administer the ecclesiasticall censures together with the Pastors by reprouing rebuking and binding if necessitie so require those who by due tryal are found to walk inordinatly in the Church being such as cannot be otherwise amended which is don not that sinners should perish but contrariwise that being humbled at least by shame they may returne into the right way 19 These together with the Pastors though distinguished by their function as wee said are some times called by a generall and common name of Bishoppes overseers rulers and that in respect of the flocke which they are to rule and gouerne 20 DEACONS peculiarlie so called are those who haue the charge both of the receauing and also of the orderlie distribution of the almes and the administration of the rest of the Church-goods and the applying of them to the necessitie of the poore other holie vses amongst which number in times past were reckoned the companie of widdowes beeing appointed especiallie for the manifold necessities of the poore 21 Nowe it is vnlawfull for anie man to intermeddle with these holie functions except he be rightlie called a lawfull calling is that whereby according to the order instituted by Christ anie man of whose life and doctrine there hath bene a diligent and a precise examination had is by the Church whereunto he is appointed the name of God beeing in all singlenesse and sinceritie called vpon chosen as it were by the voice of the holie Ghost speaking in the mouth of the Church 22 In these kindes of elections whether they be done at once in the same tenour time and place which vse being at the first in a holie sort practised in the Church was afterwarde made dangerous by couetousnesse and ambition or in diuers actions times and places it
therefore feare not but his power and his wrath is against all them that forsake him Briefelie that thou maiest profite by this booke I craue of thee to take this paines in it bestow an hower a day in the reading thereof and in so doing after the first time thou maiest well read it ouer once euerye moneth The which course if thou shalt take I dout not but in one yeare thou shalt so benefite thy selfe as there shall be no point of waight in religion wherof thou shalt not be able to resolue thine owne conscience and also to edifie others according vnto thy calling in verye good measure But in anie case take heede that thy knowledge gotten by reading rather encrease then diminish thy care in the hearing of the word preached And thus thou mayest exspect for the blessing of the Lord vnto whom I betake thee my selfe and all his now and euer Amen GROVNDS AND PROPOSITIONS OF RELIGION propounded and disputed in the vniuersitie of Geneua by certaine students of diuinitie there and determined by M. THEODOR BEZA and M. ANTHONIE FAIVS professors of diuinitie FIRST CONCERNING GOD. 1 SEing that the whole summe of all wisedome and felicitie doth consist in the true knoledge of God it is most meet that all our endeuors should be spent in seeking to attain vnto that knowledge as far as we may be capable of it 2 Not that a full a perfect knowledge of his Majestie who is far greater then the capacitie of men and Angels can reach vnto may be any waies comprehended within our vnderstanding but that wee should bend all the powers of our soules and bodies to knowe that one God who is the author and giuer both of soule and body 3 And although humaine reason bee able to affoord vs some proofs wherby we may be taught that there is a God and but onely one and whereby also his attributes may bee in some sort made knowen vnto vs. Yet notwithstanding those proofes are more sure and strong yea and altogeather the most vndoubted which for this purpose are fetched and drawen out of Gods word that is out of the sacred writings of the holie Prophets and Apostles contained in the old and new Testament 4 For howbeit that the knowledge of God which is deriued from the consideration of his workes and power hath many notable vses yet is it nothing comparable with that light which is gotten from the holy Scriptures both because this knowledge reuealed by the word doth wholie flow and proceede from God him selfe and also in asmuch as God in this his written woorde hath manifested howe and after what manner he will be knowen and worshipped of men Now whether there be a God or no we are to be so farre from making any question thereof that wee are bound most firmely with all our hearts without all wauering and doubting to beleeue that point And therfore we auouch that the rauing madnes of all Atheists who make a question whether there be a God or no ought not so much to be confuted by words and reason as it ought to bee cleane rooted out of the societie of men by the Magistrat and the stiffe maintainers of it taken from amongest men For though al men by nature as it is now corrupt be void of the true God neuerthelesse there are certaine motions and sparks of the knowledge of God imprinted in the mind of euery man which cannot altogeather be put out And as these motions doe testifie that man was borne to worshippe God So vnles a more full light bee joyned vnto them they leaue man straying and groping in the darke and are smallie or nothing behoofull vnto him Therefore as the knowledge which man hath by nature is not altogeather of no vse vnto saluation so is it verie farre from being of it selfe sufficient therunto It bereaueth them indeede of all excuse who quench that small lighr of nature though neuer so corrupt which is left in them 5 True it is indeed that he who goeth beyond al bounds can in no wise be defined and that that exceeding brightnes of God which no man can attaine vnto cannot bee comprehended by our darknes yet hee may be as it were shadowed out by this discription and so wee may say that God is hee who hath his beeing in himselfe whose nature is of himselfe inuisible without beginning without ending infinite incomprehensible indiuisible vnchangeable no bodily substance but a being most pure most simple and euery way most perfect wise mightie good iust mercifull free who hath created all things of nothing c. And therfore we do detest the multitude of Gods acknoledged among the Gentils the grosnes of the * Heretiks so called because they held God to haue a body and members like a man Anthropomorphites the furie of the Manichaeis and all such like And here it is to be obserued that those things which are attributed vnto God by the former Epithites and attributes are not to betaken as qualities inhaerent in him for we are to knowe that there is nothing in God which is not God himselfe 6 As where it is sayd that God is iust good merciful c. That is so to bee vnderstood as if hee were said to be iustice goodnes and mercy it selfe And therefore although that when we speake of God we must not conceiue of him as hauing any liknes or affinitie with the nature of man or of any creature yet such is the excellencie of the Lorde and mans weaknes that when wee speake of his Majesty we are enforced to vse borrowed speaches from creatures And herein hee is so far from disliking of vs that he himselfe descending as it were into our capacitie doth euery where thus speake of himselfe Defended by SAMVEL AVIENVS of Berne THE SECOND SORT OF PRINCIPLES CONCERNING THE HOLY AND VNSEARCHABLE TRINITIE 1 THat knowledge of God which we attaine vnto by his written word doth far surpas al that whatsoeuer it be whereunto the light of nature doth or can lead vs. 2 For that God is one in substance and three in persons is no where els to bee learned saue onely out of the worde The truth of which Doctrine it setteth downe most clearlie and vndoubtedly but so as it leaueth the reason thereof as a matter altogeather vnsearchable and a mysterie not to bee sought out by humain arguments but to be reuerenced and embraced by faith onely 3 These words Trinitie Essence or Substance Person and Coessentiall though they bee not in expresse syllables the word a Heb. 1.3 Person onely excepted to be found in the Canonicall Scriptures yet notwithstanding they were not without just causes brought into vse by the godly auncient Fathers neither are they to be rejected as adding any thing vnto the word but rather to bee still profitablie and wholsomelie retained in the Church 4 By the word TRINITY we vnderstand the nōber of the persons contained in the diuine essence which is one onely 5 By
comming to be hidden from men so also hee would haue the time of their death for the very same cause to be vnknowen vnto them vnlesse that he openeth the same vnto some either by particular reuelation or by probable conjectures Defended by IOHN VALETONVS Albenatiensis Occitanus PRINCIPLES VPON THE ARTICLE OF THE BELIEFE CONCERNING THE FAITH IN THE HOLY GHOST XLIX 1 VVE doe in this Article confesse that the holy Ghost as being the third person in the Trinitie is to bee adored and worshipped by the same faith and inuocation whereby in the former Articles wee haue confessed that the Father and the Son beeing in order the first persons of the Trinitie ar distinctly to be acknowledged and worshipped 2 The holy Ghost in this place doth signifie that essentiall power who is essentially subsisting in the Father and the Son proceeding and distinguished equally from them both in regard of the manner of his being but in respect of his essence absolutely considered hee is GOD hauing that Deitie which is not deriued by propagation from an other Godhead but is one most single and of himselfe 3 Now seing the Father neither can be separated from his Co-aeternall and Co-essentiall wisedome neither co-essentiall power who is the holy Ghost can be seuered from that wisedome but doth depend of the Father and of his wisedome there is no question to bee made but that hee doth proceed from the Father and the Sonne as from one cause 4 Where the Sonne is saide to bee begotten of the Father and the holy Ghost affirmed to proceede from the Father and the Sonne it sheweth a difference between the wisdome that remaineth in the Deitie and the power that doth outwardlie shew it selfe by the effects 5 That which both the Schoole-men and also the ancientest Diuines amongest the Latines haue written concerning the holy Ghost as being a kinde of essentiall loue knitting the Father the Sonne togeather hath brought in to religion many intricate strange and dangerous questions 6 Although the works of the Trinitie which they call outward or externall are inseparable yet in the effecting of them there is a distinction to bee obserued not onely of the persons but also of the personall actions 7 The proper operation of the holie Ghost is to effect in deed in his time and manner those things which the father hath determined to dispose by his Sonne that is his aeternall wisedome and to execute by the power of them both that is by the holie Ghost 8 Yet are we not to thinke that the holie Ghost dooth worke anie thing with the Father and the Sonne as an instrumentall or a ministeriall cause but without anie inaequalitie and immediatlie in respect of them both worketh all things together with them 9 The power thereof did then shew it selfe when as the world was to be created of nothing and afterward in his prouidence whereby he hath vnto this day and euer shall as long as the world standeth preserue the same both by ordinary and extraordinarie meanes 10 The effect thereof furthermore is to woorke in the harts of men which is done manie wayes for some he maketh apt and readie to practise morall vertues not by chāging but by repressing their naturall corruption others by his especiall power hee doth make meete to vnderstand and bring to passe great matters all which doe properlie serue for the conseruation of mans societie although that the effects of these guiftes are otherwhiles also behoofull vnto the Church 11 Sometimes also he goeth farther in bestowing vpon some the knowledge of his heauenlie truth with other supernaturall guifts as of Prophesie and healing to be brief he doth after a sort sometimes enlighten not the vnderstanding onlie but euen the will of some who yet are so in the Church as it will one day appeare that they were neuer true members thereof 12 Now his sauing power doth onelie manifest it selfe both in the congregation of his elect and also in euerye particular member of his mysticall bodie whence it commeth to passe that the Church alone is holie and the beleeuers onlie properlie called Saints 13 Hee dooth therefore in part bestowe the very same guifts vpon his elect whereof some of the reprobates are partakers but adioyning thereunto the grace of a good conscience and of perseuerance So the holie Prophetes and Apostles in times past haue left vnto vs by the inspiration of the holie Ghost the scriptures contained in the bookes of the olde and new Testament After this manner also manie haue beene indued with the guift of woorking miracles and all faithfull Pastors and Teachers haue bene in all ages bestowed vpon the Church and indued with necessarie guifts 14 Now the guifts whereby the holy Ghost doth properlie distinguish the church from the world are those vnrepentant guifts which hee bestoweth onlie vpon his elect namelie the effectuall enlightning of their minde and the guift of perseuerance the effect whereof is true faith applying Christ with all his benefites vnto the saluation of euerie one that beleeueth seuerallie whereunto is vnseparablie joined sanctification whereby wee are drawne sincearlie to loue God and our neighbour 15 That worke which was the most excellēt of al other namelie both the creation of the fleshe of Christ in the wombe of the Virgine and also his most perfect sanctification whereby his humanitie was annointed with all kinde of gifts that were meet to performe the office of the Mediatour proceeded from the same power Wee detest therefore all those who denie that the holie Ghost is to bee worshipped by one and the selfe same faith and inuocation with the Father and the Sonne those who hold that hee proceedeth onlie from the Father together with such as denie him to be coaeternall and coessentiall with the Father as the Macedonians the Arrians those who distinguish him from the Father onlie in name and not in person as the Sabellians those also who affirme him to bee but some created motion and power to be breif we detest al those that do anie wise withstand either the true coessentiall and coaeternal Deitie of the holie Ghost or his proceeding from the Father and the Sonne Defended by IOHN NISSOLIVS Semenensis Occitanus PRINCIPLES VPPON THE ARTICLE I BELEEVE THAT THERE IS A HOLY CATHOLICK CHVRCH L. 1 OMitting in this place the questiō whether there be a Church or no as an vnnecessarie point we will rather see what the Church is 2 The word CHVRCH taken from the common custome of publick affaires where the people beeing called by the voice of a cryer did meet together began euen from the verie time of the Apostles the name of Sinagogues being left vnto the Iewish conuentions to be applied vnto their meetings who embracing the voice of the Gospell were wont to haue publick assemblies for the vse of Religion 3 Now the thing it self signified by this word is drawn farther that is to expresse the companie of those who being raised vp from the
in regard of those things that appertain vnto the foundation of the gouernment of the Church as for the hard places that are in the word it interpreteth them both by conference of the scriptures and also according to analogie of faith 20 Nowe as touching those thinges which appertaine vnto outward order the Church in the feare of the Lord may therein consider what is most meete vnto time and place Wee doe condemne therefore those who dreame that euerie man whatsoeuer hee professe shall bee saued by his own Religion seeing out of the Catholicke Church there is no saluation And those who tie the Catholicke Church vnto one certaine place Those who bring vnto the Church the Academicall ●ncertainty Those who require a forme of perfection in the Militant Church Those who holde the personall succession absolutelie for an vndoubted note of the Church Those who haue by little and little transformed the Christian Presbyteries or Eldership that is the gouernment ordained by Christ the onely King and Monarch of his church into the image of the beast which was the olde Romaine Empire and that first by bringing in the dignity of Bishops next by apointing degrees amongst them and last of all by placing Antichrist at Rome vnder the title of the Ministeriall head Those who doe not measure the Church according to the word of God but the word according to the bare name of the Church Defended by DAVID PIOTAEVS of Geneua PRINCIPLES VPON THE ARTICLE I BELEEVE THAT THERE IS A COMMVNION OF SAINCTS LI. 1 CHrist can be fruitfull vnto none but by participation 2 This participation is partly of Christ and partlie of of his benefites which doe flow from the participation of him 3 That therefore whereof wee are made partakers is partly substantiall and partly a quality 4 The Substantial things are both Christ himselfe God and man and also all those corporall things which are bestowed vpon vs together with Christ beeing participated vnto vs. The qualities are all those gifts both of the bodie and the mind which in him we receaue in this life and obtaine in the life to come 5 Now wee are made partakers of the Deitie of Christ onely in force and operation but of his humanity in verie deed as far as he is our brother 6 Nowe this participation by reason of the most strait bād and the vnspeakable efficacie therof not that the one substance doth touch the other is expressed by the names of vnion engraffing incorporation and such like 7 The same is for three causes called spirituall first of all because the true and the soueraigne cause thereof is that power and vnspeakable force of the holy Ghost the which notwithstanding the distaunce of place doth most trulie and most effectually joyne the Saints though here as yet vpon earth in a spiritual marriage with Christ that they may be flesh of his flesh bone of his bones althogh according vnto this flesh they are not vpon earth but in heauen 8 Secondly because again this conjunction with Christ himself according to the flesh is in regard of vs a worke not of the bodie but of the minde which receiueth Christ by faith 9 Thirdly because the end and the scope of this mutuall Communion is not to the end that a kind of monstruous bodie should arise from the vniting of his substaunce with ours but that in this life we shuld be gouerned by his Spirit and that in the life to come we should liue an aeternall and a heauenly life with him 10 Yet may this vniting bee called a corporall vnion in a sound meaning so that all ambiguitie and newnes of wordes be auoyded namely if that especiall thing which in this mysterie as before hath bin said we spiritually receiue by faith and that is the verie humanitie of Christ be considered Next if respect be had to the external means which the holy Ghost vseth to beget and nourish faith in vs namely both the outward word sounding in our ears and also the Sacramentall elements and rites that affect the rest of our senses 11 Out of this spirituall vnion ariseth that mysticall bodie wherof Christ is the head both in respect of his preheminence ouer the same and also because he doth wholie giue sense and motion therevnto Nowe all those that beleeue and are sanctified are called members vnder this head in which sense is the Church called by PETER the Citie the spirituall temple of God built of liuely stones whose foundation and cheife corner stone is Christ who sustaineth and beareth vp the whole building It is no lesse absurd therefore to suppose that there is a kind of fastning and a cleauing of Christs bodie within ours or of ours within his then it were to say that the bodies of the Saints do subsist one within another Seeing that the band of the Communion of Saints is the very same that the vnion is which they haue both with themselues and with Christ 12 Some of those things wherof we are made partakers in this mysterie are altogeather proper to the elect namelie Christ himselfe of whome none can be a member except he be indued with true faith true faith which is inseparablie joyned with true hope charitie and last of all that aeternall kingdome prepared from all aeternity according to the free purpose of God vnto the elect onelie Some also are after a sort as the Lord thinketh good common to the hypocrites and prophane by reason that they seeme to bee ingraffed into Christ as are the gifts of Prophesie of tongues and of healing togeather with manie other notable gifts of the mind and excellent benefites of this life the which as by the elect they are consecrated to God who is the giuer of them so are they prophaned by the wicked 13 Againe these gifts though not alwaies in the same measure are partly common to all the Saints as beeing necessarie to the saluation of all of which sort are the participation of Christ himselfe liuelie faith steadfast hope loue vnfained remission of sinnes and sanctification by the holie Ghost with suche like and partlye proper to euerie seuerall beleeuer the which the same holie Spirite doth distribute according to the diuers consideration of the callings of men vnto whome and in what measure hee thinketh good 14 Euerie one of the Saints seuerallie considered haue their peculier giftes both in regarde of the possession of Christ himselfe and also of his benefits as it is expressed in the similitude of the talents But in asmuch as there is one GOD and Father of all one Christ the Lord one Spirite whereof all the Saints are endued one faith one hope of the same calling one baptisme one kingdome of heauen and also because whatsoeuer graces bestowed vpon anie is therefore giuen that the vse of them may bee common vnto them all and so that they should be the one and the selfe same bodie of Christ therefore all the gifts bestowed vppon any of the
fall of mankinde by the mercifull voice of God haue and will vnto the end of the worlde consent together in the profession of his true worship 4 Nowe in asmuch as all those who haue giuen their names to bee of this meeting haue not either doone the same vnfainedlie or shewed that constancie that had bene meet by reason that Sathan neuer ceaseth to sowe tares in the field of the Lord Hence it came to passe that men haue beene alwaies enforced to take the Church sometimes in a more generall sometimes in a more speciall signification 5 The Church therefore is generallie called the congregation of all those who professe true Religion whether they do it vnfainedlie and perseuere therein or hypocriticallie and fall away from the same In speciall it is taken for all those onelie whome God of his infinite mercie hauing elected before all worldes doth effectuallie call when he thinketh good in such sort as they being endued with true faith and perseuering vnto the end may be justlie accounted to be of Gods flock 6 Hence sprung that distinction of the visible and inuisible Church of the visible which is so accounted by the notes of the outward profession without any differēce betweene the faithfull and the close hypocrites of the inuisible which is restrained vnto those onelie who trulie and constantlie beleeue to the end therfore called inuisible because true faith can assuredly be discerned by none saue by the Lord and them in whome it is 7 This inuisible Church is only one as there is but one God the Father one Christ the Mediatour and head of his mysticall bodie one faith one hope by the holy Ghost and one aeternall life and it is therefore called Catholicke that is vniuersall both because it hath bene is and shall be alwaies the one and the same and also because GOD hath alwaies gathered them into one bodye out of all sorts of men and people as it seemeth good vnto his mercie whereas before the comming of Christ the Church was particularly called out of the nation of the Iewes onelie 8 And although God for many ages had seperated the Gentiles whome the Apostles therefore affirmeth to bee without God strangers from the couenant of grace frō the seed of ABRAHAM yet was there almost no age wherein he called not some of the Gentiles vntill that the particion-wall being broken by the preaching of the Apostles that promise made vnto ABRAHAM was accomplished namely that all the nations should be blessed in his seede because they were to become ABRAHAMS seed by Christ 9 The particuler assemblies of this bodie dispearsed throughout the world considered either generallie or speciallie as it is visible or inuisible are as it were the members that make vp one mysticall body 10 And this is that Catholicke Church whereof mention is made in the beliefe therfore called holie because it is by the holy Ghost seperated from the rest of the worlde and consecrated vnto God 11 This same Church is rightly deuided into the Militant and Triumphant By the Militant is vnderstood the company of the true beleeuing yet remaining vppon the earth and striuing with Sathan and the remnants of their fleshe By the Triumphant are meant those whose blessed Spirits are already gathered vnto the Lord euen vntil both the one and the other at that glorious comming of Christ hauing receiued their glorious bodies shall triumph with Christ their head for euermore 12 That holines wherby this Catholick Church which is also inuisible in that sense that we haue spoken is seuered from the world if it be considered in respect of the puritie of the doctrine of the truth is altogeather without spot or wrinckle Or if it be considered not as it is in it selfe but according vnto the beliefe that is yeelded vnto this true and wholsome doctrine we holde againe that the force of that truth is so great that it is alwaies declared and obeied in the Church vniuersally considered Wherefore the Apostle calleth the Church taken in this sense the piller and ground of truth 13 But if the Church be respected not vniuersally but particularlie that is according as it hath diuers assemblies here and there gathered togeather then indeed it may often come to passe that some particular Churches may err yea in some fundamētal points either in part or in whole yet so as the elect do alwaies returne vnto the way neither can those particular spottes that cleaue vnto it for a time make the vniuersal church to leese her naturall beautie 14 We confesse to speake nothing here of the corruption of manners that this may come to passe much more if wee seuerally consider the members of particuler Churches for such is the weaknes of mans judgement euen in the deare Saints of God that you cannot find any so indued with the perfect knowledge of the trueth but hee doth stagger in some things especially when the Lord being prouoked by the sinnes of men doth giue efficacie and force vnto the spirit of error 15 Although that the Catholicke Church can neuer fall away from the truth yet both the Prophets and Apostles together with the holy storie in generall both before and after the comming of Christ haue foretolde and these very times wherein wee liue doe testifie that it hath often come to passe that the greatest part of particuler churches and men falling away yea and striuing against the truth the light of the Church seemed for a time though not vtterlie yet in a manner to be cleane extinguished 16 The true markes therefore of the visible Church can not bee the multitude or personall succession but the doctrine truly taught out of the written word of God and the lawfull administration that is such as is agreeable vnto Gods ordinance of the Sacraments to wit of Baptisme and of the Lords Supper 17 These two notes doe depend vpon the lawful forme that is such as is prescribed in Gods worde of the holie Ministerie constituted as it ought to be But in asmuch as the Church sometimes is brought to that passe that not onely Wolues doe supplie the place of lawfull Pastors but also the whole forme of the ordinarie Ministerie is turned into a plaine confusion that somtimes the externall Ministerie being for a time altogeather broken of the church is extraordinarilie fed as it were in the wildernes therefore is not this marke simplie and absolutelie necessary to point out the Church here vpon earth 18 Now wheresoeuer the Doctrine of the Apostles is taught ther is no question to be made but that the church is there though there bee fewe that giue eare vnto the same with fruit 19 That therefore is a true Church be it vniuersall or particuler which heareth the worde of God contained in the writinges of the Prophetes and the Apostles in suche sort as it canne adde nothing therevnto detract nothing from the same nor chaunge anie thing therein either in respect of the Doctrine it selfe or