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A13839 A synopsis or compendium of the fathers, or of the most famous and ancient doctors of the Church, as also of the schoolmen Wherein is clearely shewed how much is to be attributed to them, in what severall times they lived, with what caution they are to be read, and which were their perfections, which their errors. A treatise most necessary, and profitable to young divines, and delightfull to all such whose studies in humanity take from them the leisure, though not the desire of reading the fathers; whose curiosity this briefe surveigh of antiquity will in part satisfie. Written in Latin by that reverend and renowned divine, Daniel Tossanus, chiefe Professor of Divinity in the University of Heidelberge, and faithfully Englished by A.S. Gent.; Synopsis de patribus. English Tossanus, Daniel, 1541-1602.; Stafford, Anthony. 1635 (1635) STC 24145; ESTC S118496 31,571 108

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the Fathers or other men were injustice and contumely against the holy Ghost himselfe especially since our Faith doth not consist in wisedome or in the words of men but in the power of God or in the evident proofes of the holy Ghost 1 Cor. 2. 8. Wherefore Saint Austine writeth thus against the Donausts lib. 2. cap. 3. Quis nescit sanctam Scripturam Canonicam tam veteris quam novi Testamenti omnibus posterioribus Episcoporum literis ita praeponi ut de illa omnino dubitari et disceptari non possit Episcoporum autem literis quae post confirmatum Canonem vel scriptae sunt vel scribuntur a doctioribus libere reprehendi et particularia Concilia a plenariis et haec quoque a posterioribus emendari Who knoweth not the holy Scripture Canonicall as well of the old as New Testament so farre to excell all the writings of the later Bishops as that there needs no doubt or dispute thereof and that the workes of Bishops which have beene or are now written after the confirmed Canon may bee freely reprehended by the more learned and that particular Councels may be amended by Generall and these also by the Successive 9. Moreover Whereas many complaine of the obscurity of the Scriptures wee ought to make no scruple thereof there being greater obscurity lesse purity and certainety in the writings of men as plainly manifest the almost infinite Commentaries upon Peter Lombard and not a few animadversions of the Sorbonists upon him Cum it a sit temperata Scripturae obscuritas they be the words of Saint Austine lib. 3. de Doct. Christ ut facile quis se possit expedire modo cum similibus et apertioribus locis Scripturae locum obscuriorem conferamus et imprimis oculos a scopo non dem●veamus et quod in uno idiomate non intelligimus ex alio cognoscere studeamus Whereas the obscurity of the Scriptures is so temper'd that wee may easily explaine it if we conferre the obscure place with places more open and perspicuous especially if wee move not our eyes from the scope and what wee understand not in one tongue wee study to know by another 10. Lastly the Fathers have often erred as also the Schoolemen as the Papists themselves confesse but that the Scriptures are voyd of all error no Christian doubteth 11. It is enquired therefore whether there bee any need of reading the Fathers and ancient Doctors and if it bee needfull how much wee ought attribute to them 12. To read the Fathers profitably no man forbiddeth but it is not necessary to reade them all neither are they promiscuously to bee read by all persons neither to the same proper end that wee read the Scriptures 13. They are not presently to bee accounted the writings of the Fathers that are fathered on them As for example Some things passe under the name of one Dionissius Areopagita others under that of Origen whereof part were forged by idle Monks part were falsly attributed to those Fathers as also many Legends of Saints Neither hath every man such light and knowledge of the Scriptures as may enable him to judge of the Fathers whom wee reade not as Foundations of our Faith 14. Civitas Dei saith Austin lib. 19. de Civit Dei c. 18. dubitatîonem Academicoram tanquam Dementiam detestatur credit Scripturis sanctis veteribus et novis quas Canonicas appellamus unde fides ipsa concepta est qua justus vivit per quam sine dubitatione ambulamus The City of God detests all the doubts of the Academicks as meere madnesse She beleeves the sacred Scriptures both old and new which are called Canonicall from whence Faith it selfe is derived wherby the Just shall live by which wee walke with full assurance 15. Wherefore Christ and the Apostles when they taught did not cite the Rabins nor any Father before them but Moses and the Prophets nor was it in vaine decreed in the third Councell of Cartharge that nothing should be read in the Church but the Canonicall Scriptures 16. But the Fathers are read and are often cited in the Schooles partly that wee may see the consent of the ancient Church concerning the principall Heads of Doctrine after they were first constituted by the sacred Scriptures and partly that we may know the History of the Church and discerne her inclination who as witnesseth Eusebeus lib. 3. Hist cap. 29. after the Apostles times remained not long a Virgin nor long retained her faith incorrupted partly also that wee may accommodate to our use the many pious admonitions and consolations savouring of the very spirit of Martyrdome together with the many elegant similitudes comparisons as somewhere saith Erasmus 17. And wee reade so that wee may try all as admonisheth Saint Hierom in epist ad Minerium Meum est prepositum Antiquos legere probare singula retinere quae bona sunt et a fide verae Ecclesiae Catholicae non recedere It is my purpose to reade the Aneients to prove every particular to retaine that which is good and not to fall from the Faith of the true Catholike Church 18. The same in a manner writes Saint Austine to Bishop Fortunatianus Neque enim inquit quorumlibet Disputationes quamvis Catholicorum et laudatorum hominum velut Scripturas Canonicas habeee debemus ut nobis non liceat salva honorificentia quae illis debetur hominibus aliquid in eorum Scriptis reprobare atquerespuere si forte inveniamus quod aliter senserint quam veritas habet Talis ego sum in Scriptis aliorum tales volo esse inttllectores meorum Neither saith he ought wee to have the Disputations of any in the same esteeme with the Canonicall Scriptures although they bee men truly Catholike and praise-worthy nor to lose the freedome paying the reverence due to them of censuring their writings if wee finde any thing in them not consonant to Truth Such am I in the workes of others such would I have the understanders of mine 19. Wherefore the madnesse of them is great who without choyce would simply admit all the sayings of the Fathers which often contradict each other and as often digresse from the Truth 20. Lapsus est a fide et crimen maximae Superbiae saith Saint Basil in oration de confession fidei velle a Scripturis recedere veleas solas cum agitur de side molle admittere Christus enim ait suas oves suam vocem audire non alterius It is a falling from the faith and a crime of the highest Arrogancy to forsake the Scriptures or when Faith is our Theme not to receive them onely For Christ saith His Sheepe heare his voyce not anothers 21. Wherefore Saint Austine when Cyprians authority was urged against him concerning Baptisme of Heretickes answered that hee held not the Epistles of Saint Cyprian for Canonicall and when Saint Hierome had cited three or foure Fathers touching the reprehension of Saint Peter by Saint Paul hee replyed that hee also
could quote the Fathers but hee had rather appeale to the sacred Scriptures 22. For it is certaine that Saint Cyprian dissented from the Church about the Baptisme of Heretickes and that Tertullian being bewitch'd by the Montanists wrote some Tracts against the Tenents of the Church as also that Saint Lactantius and others were too much addicted to the opinions of the Chiliasts and Platonists and as true it is that many things are ascribed to the Fathers falsely which savour neither of their stile faith nor piety as shall bee shewed in its proper place 23. Moreover it is most sure that Councels have often erred and that those things which had beene well constituted by some Councels were overthrowne by others Yea and in the Nicene Councell it selfe an unjust sentence had beene pronounced against the marriage of Priests had not one Paphnutius an old man opposed it In that Councell also there was an over-hard Canon written against them who after a Confession of faith once made did fight for their Princes 24. Not without reason therefore is that of Panormitanus a Doctor of the Common Law De Elect. cap. significasti Magis credendum Laico si Scriptaras adferat quam Papae et toti Concilio si absque Scripturis agant We owe a greater beleefe to a Lay man producing the Scriptures than to the Pope and a whole Councell if they determine any thing without them 25. They erre therefore who would have the common opinion passe for a Law preferring the multitude of humane Testimonies before the Scriptures 26. But some will say Heretickes beleeve not the Scriptures and therefore we must have recourse to the authority of the Fathers To which I answer that they will lesse beleeve the Fathers and the Church as appeareth in the Ecclesiasticall History by the Arians and Nestorians who after the Councels of Nice and Ephesus and the crees of the Fathers became more obstinate than before 27. Whereas therefore the Evangelicall Divines of Wormes anno 57. when they affirmed the holy Writ onely to bee the Judge of Controversie being asked thereupon whether or no thereby they meant to take away all authority from the Fathers answer'd that they willingly would receive the Fathers which lived in the first 500. yeares after Christ it is not so to be understood as if they did simply approve them in all things which the very Papists themselves doe not but comparatively that the corruption of Doctrine was lesse in those times than in the Ages following although there were not wanting who after those 500. yeares retained the Apostolicall Doctrine in many points as Fulgentius Vigilius Leo Bishop of Rome Bernard and Damascene himselfe especially if you consider the Doctrine of the person of Christ 28. It remaineth that we answer them who demand what is to be done when places are produced out of those first Fathers which seeme somewhat to confirme the opinions of the Papists or the errors of others as in prayer for the dead the sacrifice of the Masse Free-Will c. To this I answer First that proofes of opinions are to be derived from the Scriptures and the rule of Saint Paul to bee strictly observed 2 Cor. 13. Wee can doe nothing against the Truth but all for the Truth Secondly wee must compare many places together Thirdly wee must consider how and secundum quid any thing is spoken by the Fathers Fourthly we must distinguish the Authenticke books from the Bastard and supposed or suspected as are the bookes Hypognosticon of S. Austin and of Questions of the old and new Testament of a blessed life and many more not rellishing like the doctrine or stile of S. Austin as Erasmus and Iacobus Hermerus rightly observe THE SECOND PART Of the Writings of the Fathers whereof some are publike and some private CHAP. I. Of the Canons which they call the Apostles Canons and are wont to bee inserted in the first Tome of Councels in the beginning THere are certaine Canons publisht in the Greeke Tongue which they call the Apostles Canons some maintaining that they were collected by Clement the Successor of Saint Peter but it is manifest that Rapsody to have beene written long after the times of the Apostles for there are many things spoken of utterly unknowne to the Apostles dayes As of celebrating the Paschall Feast before the Vernall Aequinoctiall of gold and silver vessels sanctified of Clergy men and Lay-men c. Withall it is unjust that the Papists should object against and impose upon us those Canons which they themselves in many things observe not as the Canon of Clergy men taken in Tavernes to bee denyed the Communion of all the faithfull entring the Church who are commanded to heare and communicate the Scriptures as also the Canon that no Bishop or Priest put away his wife under the pretext of Religion c. Lastly in Gratianus himselfe Dist 16. those Canons by the authority of one Isidorus are numbred amongst the Apocripha although in another place by the authority of one Zephirinus they are simply received which contradiction the glosse cannot otherwise reconcile than by distinction of those Canons whereof some are Apostolicall and some suspected It stands otherwise with the Apostles Creed which hath authority above and is received before all other Confessions because almost all of it consists of the words of the Scripture it selfe and comes to us by Apostolicall Tradition See Cyprian and Ruffin in Symbol That Creed also is the Fountaine and Originall of all other Creeds For as Irenaeus rightly admonisheth lib. 3 cap. 1. Doctrina Apostolorum simpliciter pendemus nec cogitandum est alios doctiores aut sapientiores successisse Apostolis Wee meerely depend upon the Doctrine of the Apostles neither ought wee to thinke that any more wise or learned than they have succeeded them CHAP. II. Of Councels AFter the Apostles time there were Synods often assembled to decide Ecclesiasticall controversies and that before the Nicene Councell as about the Controversie concerning the Paschall Feast in the yeare of Christ 198. in Palestine and at Rome also against the Novatians at Rome and in Africa and against Paulus Samosatenus anno 278. to confute whose errour and blasphemy there is extant an excellent confession of Gregorius Neocaesariensis But those Synods before the Nicene were accounted but particular and provinciall because the persecution being so hot they could not conveniently call Generall Councels The Generall or Oecumenicall as Saint Augustine calls them are chiefly foure The first Nicene in the time of Constantine the great about the yeare 332. The first Constantinopolitane by Gratianus and Theodosius the elder anno 386. assembled against Macedonius and men of pneumaticall spirits The first Ephesine anno 435. called by Theodosius the younger against Nestorius The Chalcedonian in the reigne of the Emperour Martianus anno 456. In which were condemned Eutyches Abbot of Constantinople and Dioscorns Bishop of Alexandria To these foure universall Councels Beda and some others adde two more
not of much lesse Authority but in which almost nothing but the Decrees of the former Councels were establisht as that of Constantinople the fourth and sixth about the yeere 680. which condemned the errors of the Monothelites who averred that the Deity Humanity of Christ had onely one will and operation But Gregory the first Bishop of Rome erred who lib. 2. epist 10. writeth thus Quatuor Synodos sanctae universalis Ecclesiae sicut quatuor libros sancti Evangelii recipimus Wee receive the foure Synods of the holy universall Church as wee doe the foure Evangelists Gratianus writeth somewhat better in Decreto Canon 3. Sancta Romana Ecclesia post veteris et novi Testamenti Scripturas quas regulariter suscipit etiam quatuor Synodos suscipi non prohibet The holy Roman Church saith hee after the Scriptures of the old and new Testament which it regularly receives doth not forbid the admittance of the foure Synods Moreover these rules are to be observed concerning those foure Oecumenicall Councels Wee must beleeve the Scriptures for themselves because they have never erred in matters words or sentences but we beleeve the Councels not for themselves but for the Scriptures The certainety of the Symbols and confessions of Faith made by those Councels doth not consist in the authority of the men or the places but in the perpetuall consent of the whole Church from the time of the Apostles Councels have no power of making new Articles of Faith but onely to explaine them by Scripture and produce them against Hereticks Councels may bee ex●mined and searched what is in them agreeable to the Divine Word and what not For if to those of Beraea it were lawfull to examine the Doctrine of Saint Paul and conferre it with the Scriptures why may not wee examine the Councels since many of them contradictone another as the Nicene and the Ariminensian the Chalcedonian and the second Ephesian the sixt at Constantine-Poole touching the pulling down of Images and the second Nicene under Irenes against the defacers of Images Also many have erred as that of Carthage before the Nicene of the re-baptizing of Heretickes the Nicene concerning warfare the second Ephesian in defending Euryches although some great and famous men were present Leo Bishop of Rome epist 30. 31. saith that hee doth approve of the decrees of the Chalcedon Synod as farre as they concerne Doctrine but not those which were acted with Anatholius And the saying of Saint Austin lib. 3. cont Maximinus is very remarkeable Nec ego tibi Nicoenum Concilium nec tu mihi Arimin●●●e tanquam praeiudicaturus proferas nec ego huius authoritate nec tu illius detineris Scripturarum authoritatibus non quorumlibet propriis sed utrisque communibus testibus certemus res cum re ratio cum ratione decertet Neither saith hee will I with prejudice urge against thee the Nicene Councell neither doe thou prejudice against mee the Ariminensian neither am I tyed to the Authority of the one nor thou of the other Let us both submit our selves to the Authority of the Scriptures witnesses not proper to one but common to both Let one matter one reason contest with another But some Councels deliberated onely upon those things which appertained to the Ecclesiasticall policy as that of Spain and the Laodicenian Other Councels decreed partly some things holy partly many impious as the Lateran celebrated at Rome under Innocent the third where the prophane Doctrine of Transubstantiation was ranked with the Articles of our faith And so in the following Councels the state of the Church alwayes declining many Idolatries were established so that not without cause the Evangelical Churches have rejected their Authority and have appealed from them to the Antiquity of the Apostolicall Age. CHAP. III. Of the private Writings of the Fathers BEfore the Nicene Councell there flourished in the Church the two Disciples of the Apostles Polycarpus and Ignatius in their youth Auditors of Saint Iohn the Apostle But of these there are no writings extant except certaine fragments of the Epistles of Ignatius To them succeeded Irenaeus Bishop of Lions and Iustinus the Philosopher surnamed Martyr in the reigne of Antonius the Emperour Hierom in his Catalogue of the Ecclesiasticall Writers testifieth Irenaeus to have written many things but now there is only one Volume remaining consisting of five bookes against the Heresie of Valentinus and the like wherein there are excellent sayings of the cunning Arguments of Heretickes as also of the authority and consent of the Ecclesiastical Doctrine Among others this saying is very rife lib. 3. cap. 21. Christum pro nobis passum requiesconte verbo at crucifigi et mori posset The Word resting Christ suffer'd for us that he might be crucified and dye Irenaeus anno 70. was set forth at Geneva with the notes of Nicholas Gelasius who hath explained certaine things unfitly spoken as that in his third Booke Filium hominis commixtum verbo Dei The sonne of man is mixt with the word of God Also Mariam sibi et universo generi humano factam causam salutis Mary was made the cause of salvation to her selfe and all mankind which to say is blasphemy unlesse we consider her as the Organ through which our Saviour passed into the world There are extant both deserving and learned writings of Iustinus Martyr in Greeke Questions and Answers against the Gentiles about true faith and an Apology for the Christians to Antoninus In the second booke there is a memorable place of the Liturgy of the Ancient Christians out of which may bee proved how much the Papists degenerate from the custome of the ancient Church for thus hee saith Die qui Solis dicitur omnes tum qui in opidis tum qui in agris morantur in unum convenimus et ex Commentariis Apostolorum et Prophetarum Scriptis recitatur quantam licet Deinde ubi destitit qui recitat antistes orationem habet quae admonet hertaturque ad pulchrarum illarum rerum imitationem Postea omnes una surgimus et precamur Postquam autem à precibus destitimus profertur panis et vinum et aqua Tum antistes rursus precatur et gratias agit quanta potest contentione populusque acclamat dicens Amen et iis super quibus actae sunt gratiae unusquisque participat On the day called Sunday wee assemble together as well they which are in the Townes as those that dwell in the fields when as much as is convenient is recited out of the Commentaries of the Apostles and writings of the Prophets When the Reciter hath ended the chiefe Priest maketh an Oration which admonisheth and exhorts to the imitation of those faire things After this we rise altogether and pray prayers being ended there is brought forth bread wine and water Then the chiefe Priest prayeth againe and gives thankes with as great ardency as he can and the people cry Amen Then every one participates of
Scriptures which neglected they shall grope like one blinde in the darke and saile in a wide Sea without either North-Starre or Compasse Another Caution ought to bee that though the authority and consent of the Fathers in the Truth doe much confirme and comfort yet Faith is onely to bee builded upon the Apostolicall and Propheticall Scriptures as a foundation most firme For the Scripture as the only Queene and Empresse as Luther is used to say ought to have the soveraigne Command The third Caution is that in reading the Fathers wee doe not imitate those flatterers of ●ionisius Siculu who licking up the Tyrants spittle affirmed it to bee sweeter than Nectar To these I may liken such as without any exception embrace and magnifie indifferently all the Writings and Sayings of the Fathers These are the points about which at this day we combat the Iesuites the stoutest Champions the Pope hath and not as they labour to perswade the vulgar about the Fathers themselves or reverent Antiquity as if wee did plainely reiect them and after the Athenian manner were delighted with the novelties of Newes-tellers For first wee recall them to true Antiquity which is to be derived from the ancient of dayes and his revelations that so wee may refuse and condemne as new whatsoever Christ hath not taught us as Saint Ambrose adviseth us lib. 1. Officior Next wee distinguish betweene the ages of the Church and betweene Father and Father and demonstrate in one and the same Father what is authenticall what erroneous irreptitious and inserted by the Monkes Moreover when wee enquire after the Church we doe not seeke the degenerate and adulterate but the chast and holy Spouse of Christ And why may not wee say the same of the Roman Church at this day that Cicero in his Oration for his house said of the Roman people An tu populum Romanum esse putas qui constat ex iis qui mercede conducuntur qui impelluntur ut vim adferant magistrastibus optant quotidiè praecipiti furore caedem incendia rapinas O speciem dignitatis populi Romani quam scilicet reges quam nationes ex terrae quam gentes ultimae pertimescunt Dost thou thinke saith hee that to be the people of Rome which consisteth of those that are mercenary who are ready to offer violence to Magistrates that desire daily with a desperate fury fire rapes and slaughter Othe goodly dignity of the Roman people whom Kings forreigne Nations and the most remote inhabitants of the earth doe feare Wee doe indeed much esteeme that Roman Church whose faith is preached through the whole world we likewise reverence those Fathers and Bishops which are not commended to us by the onely authority and Canonization of Popes but by their owne purity of Doctrine Innocency of life and constancy in Martyrdome But it is well the Iesuits so distrust their owne cause that they dare not stand to the decision of the sacred Scriptures nor of the Fathers themselves except they bee mutilated and altered according to their will and deformed with many suppositious bookes Their Impudency this way clearely appeareth in their Index Expurgatorius not long since here published out of all which wee may easily collect that they retaine neither shame faith nor conscience nor any thing authenticke either in the Scriptures or Fathers but onely what is appropriated to their superstition and will-worship of Images Now most loving Auditors because it is much materiall to the Students in Divinity though all have not the meanes and faculty of reading the Fathers at least to know what is to be iudged and determined of them in generall and which were the most famous Fathers and Scholasticall Authors as also with what iudgment choyce they are to be read I thinke it wil neither be a service unacceptable nor unprofitable if in the end of these dogge-dayes and before the Mart now at hand I instruct you in the premises and contract the whole matter into as it were a Synopsis or abridgement Errata Page 2. line 3. read it●● p. 5. l. 4. r. litera● p. 8. l. 8. r. Academicorum p. 11. l. penu●● r. ●●lle p. 14. l. 1. r. Canon law p. 19. l. 13. r. A Doctrina p. 23. l. 13 r. Constantinople p. 24. l. 11. f. preiudice r. produce p. 27. l. 14. r. quantum p. 70 l. 12. r. Lazarum p. 71. l. 10. r. Masse p. 77. l. 2. r. taught p. 67. l. 7. r. Nestorius p. 71. l. 3. f. shall r. doth p. 72. l. 19. r. it is told u● p. 74. r. French p. 76. l. penult f. upon Bookes r. upon the sacred Writ A SYNOPSIS OR COMPENDIVM of the Fathers or of the most Famous and Ancient Doctors of the Church as also of the Schoole-men Generall Aphorismes containing certaine Rules by which we may judge in reading of the Fathers of their true Antiquity and Purity together with the Solutions of some Objections Aphorisme 1. THat true Antiquity is to bee sought after and magnified is the Common Tenent of all Pious People 2. For it is manifest that the Christian Religion is the most Ancient as deriving it Testimonies from the very beginning of the world 3. But this is not to be esteemed true Antiquity to understand Quid hic aut ille ante nos fecerit aut docuerit sed quid is qui ante omnes est Christus et qui solus via est veritas et vita à cujus praeceptis nullo modo recedendum est What this or that man did or taught before us but what he did who was before all even Christ himselfe who onely is the Way the Truth and the Life from whose Precepts wee ought not to digresse as saith Saint Cyprian ad Caecil lib. 2. epist 3. 4. Omnis quippe Antiquitas ct consuctudo sine veritate nihil aliud nisi Err●ris vetustas censenda est So that all Antiquity and Custome not grounded on the Truth is to bee accounted no other than an Ancient Errour as the same Saint Cyprian piously writeth to Pomp. against the Epistle of Stephanus 5. But the Ancient Truth God taught us by his Prophets and Apostles who though in condition they were men and indeed sinners yet in Doctrine which was revealed to them supernaturally by the holy Ghost not by the will of man wee know them rightly to bee fellow-Witneffes Ephes 2. 20. 2 Pet. 1. 20. 6. The Perfection of the Scriptures is easily proved by these two Arguments First That they are sufficient to instruct in those things that belong to salvation and to the full knowledge of the Truth Iohn 5. 39. Iohn 20. 30. 2 Tim. 3. 15 16. Secondly Because in Temptations Faith onely finds rest in the Testimonies of the sacred Scriptures having alwayes for its Object the Word of God revealed by the Prophets and Apostles which cannot bee said of any other Writings or Bookes whatsoever 7. To recall us therefore from the manifest Testimonies of the Scriptures to the Writings of
be our rule Also in his definitions quaest 98. Eos qui praesunt extra Scripturae Canonem nihil praecipere debere ne falsi Dei testes et sacrilegi inveniantur They saith he who rule the people ought to command nothing beyond the Canon of the Scriptures lest they befound false witnesses of God sacrilegious And in his Epistle of Apostasie to the Bishops of the West he complaines Semen Apostasiae spargi in illis ipsis Ecclesiis inquibus Evangelii doctrina primum per orbem manavit that the seed of Apostacy was sown in those very Churches whence the Doctrine of the Gospell was first spread through the world His works extant at this day are comprehended in three Tomes and are either doctrinall as Hexameron or of the world made in six daies eleven Homilies of the Divinity of the Sonne and that the holy Ghost is not a creature against Eunomius Where is to be understood that there were three Families of the Arians Arius held the Son to be equall to the Father but by grace not by Nature The Macedonians companions of the Arians affirmed the Sonne to bee like the Father but not the holy Ghost Eunomius held the Sonne to bee totally unlike the Father because the creature can by no meanes be like the Creator Saint Basil also wrote Sermons of the humane generation of Christ also of Baptisme Or his workes are expository as Sermons upon some of the Psalms a glosse upon the whole Psalter and the sixteene first Chapters of Esay Other of his works are Morall as his Sermons against drunkennesse of Wrath of Humility of Envy Also his Sermons called Asceticos or of the manners of Monks of those who aspire to an Angelicall Life The errours of S. Basilius are that hee too Hyperbollically extols fasting and a Monkish life though indeed hee describes such Monks as peculiarly exercise themselves in piety and good workes to whom the Monkes of our times are as much unlike as Crowes to Swans By the singular providence of God it came to passe that the heresies of the Arians and Pelagians beginning to spring up in the same time almost there arose famous Doctors to confute them For Hieronymus Stridonensis Pannonius lived in part of the time of Saint Ambrose and Saint Basil He was brought up at Rome and was famous in the yeare 390. He travelled over the greatest part of Europe to conferre with learned men and at length chose himselfe a place of abode in Iudaea in the fields of Bethlem where he wrote many of those things which at this day wee enjoy Hee is painted with a Cardinals Hat whereas hee rather led a Monasticke life and those red Hats were given in ages long after to some certaine Priests of the Roman Church by Pope Paul the second ann 1460. as Platina testifieth The stile of S. Hierome is elegant for he was learned and a great Linguist Hee wrote many things whereof some are Expositions upon the Psalms and upon the greater and the lesser Prophets also upon Saint Matthew and some Epistles of Saint Paul as to the Galatians and Ephesians For the Commentary which goes under his name upon the Epistle to the Romans savours too much of Pelagianisme which hee ever opposed Other of his writings are Controversiall and Apologeticall as against Helvidius concerning the perpetuall Virginity of the Virgin Mary against Iovinianus and Vigilantius Also against the Pelagians and an Apology against Ruffinus Some againe are Paraeneticall or instructive as of the life of Clergy men and concerning the Institution of a mother of the Family Hee seemeth to have a wit somewhat Arrogant and fiery which appeareth not onely by his sharpe writings and Epistles against Saint Austin but also that sometimes hee accuseth the Apostle Saint Paul himselfe of rudenesse of stile and ignorance in the Greeke tongue Beza often complaines of his wresting the Scriptures especially against Wedlocke See the Annotations of Beza on 1 Cor. 7. 1 Tim. 3. 1 Pet. 3. But it is remarkeable that although hee was an enemy to Wedlocke yet in his Age both Bishops and Priests were married for so he writeth in cap. 6. ad Ephes Legant haec Episcopi et Presbyteri qui filios suos saecularibus libris erudiunt Let those Bishops and Priests saith hee read these things who instruct their children in secular bookes But he often with too much bitternesse inveighes against Vigilantius and Iovinianus for contending with him that Wedlocke and single Life were of equall merit as also that the Rewards of the Just were alike in that life and that no choyce was to be made of Meats if they were received with thankes-giving that the ashes of Martyrs were not to be adored nor the Vespers to bee celebrated at their Scpulchers that the Saints deceased pray not for us Hee contended unseasonably with Saint Austin concerning Saint Peter that he never erred and that hee was reprehended by Saint Paul not seriously but in jest Gal. 2. How much the state of the Church was disturb'd in those Times appeares by that Learned booke of Epiphanius Bishop of Cyprus which he wrote against 80 Heresies which worke is worthy the perusall for the variety of story contained in it Then also lived Theodoret Bishop of the City Cyrus in Persia who wrote five bookes of the history of the Church and Polymorphum where in three Dialogues most worthy the reading he defends the truth of both Natures in Christ against the Hereticks of his time In the time of Arcadius and Honorius Emperours lived Iohannes Chrysostomus whose Eloquence and Zeale farre exceeded his knowledge in the Scriptures Wherefore he excels more in morals than in Doctrines and Expositions For oftentimes hee philosophizeth too subtilly Yet is hee often cited by our Divines in the interpretation of Greeke words especially in the Epistles of Saint Paul Vulgarus Theophilactus was afterward his imitator and abreviator but an Authour lesse pure It was reprehensible in Saint Chrysostome that hee was too chollericke and free of speech by which hee incurred the great displeasure of many Aurelius Augustinus by Nation an African ought not to be accounted the last amongst the Doctors of the Church Hee was instructed in Rhetoricke at Carthage and was a follower of the Maniches nine yeares together Hee relates a great part of his owne life in his Confessions Afterward being often admonished by Saint Ambrose or rather converted by God upon the abundant teares and prayers of his mother hee turned into the right way and succeeded Valerius Bishop of Hippona in Africa about the yeare 390. He sustained many sharpe Conflicts with the Maniches Arians Donatists and Pelagians whom he confuted by learned writings and personally by word of mouth Hee dyed a little before the first Ephesine Councell when Hippone was besieged in the yeare of his Age 76. Gregory 1. Bishop of Rome had his workes in so great esteeme that hee thus writes lib. 8.