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A68103 Ladensium autokatakrisis, the Canterburians self-conviction Or an evident demonstration of the avowed Arminianisme, poperie, and tyrannie of that faction, by their owne confessions. With a post-script to the personate Iesuite Lysimachus Nicanor, a prime Canterburian. Baillie, Robert, 1599-1662. 1640 (1640) STC 1206; ESTC S100522 193,793 182

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Burtoun he was rewarded with the losse of his eares and perpetuall prison The booke which he inveighed against let bee to bee recalled is openly excused in print at his Graces direction as containing no evill but only innocent retorications (n) Heylens answer page 123. As for the book in tituled the Femal glory you finde not in it that I see by your collections any thing positively or dogmatickly delivered contrarie unto any point of doctrine estabished and received in the Church of England Some swelling language there is into it and some Apostrophees I perceive by you to the virgin Mary which if you take for invocations you mistake his meaning no invocation hitherto in point of doctrine Yea M. Dow with his Graces licence pronounceth that book to bee free of all poperie and that upon this reason because the author professeth his tracing the steps of Doctor Montagow whom all England must know to be above all suspition of poperie (o) M. Dow page 54. In all these panegyrick straines of Rhetorick for such for the most part they seem rather than positive assertions Stafford hath not deviat so much to the one extreame as M. Burtouns marginall hath to the other in scoffing and calling her the new great goddesse Diana And if it bee true that he hath not digressed in any particular from D. Montagu the B of Chichester as M. Burtoun makes him affirme I dare boldly say M. Burtoun will never be able too finde the least point of Poperie in it For it is well know that Bishop hath approved him self such a champion against Rome that they who have tryed his strength durst never yet come to a second encounter CHAP. V. The Canterburians avovv their embracing of the popish heresies and grossest errours THE nature of heresie is so subtilized by our faction that so farre as in hew lyes it is now quite evanished in the aire and no mo heresies are to be found on the earth With the Socinian Remonstrants they exeeme all tenets controverted this day among any Christians from being the Subject of heresie For they tell us that the belief of the doctrines uncontraverted by all is sufficent for salvation (a) Pottar cites from Causabon these words Put by controversies these things wherein al sects universally doe agree are sufficient for salvation And howsoever some of them will be content to count the Sociniam Arianisme and Macedoniansme to bee true heresies yet as wee shew before all of them do cleare the Popish errours of this imputation Alwayes not to strive for words our assertion is that the grossest of the Roman errours which in the common stile of Protestants wont to go for heresies are maintained by the Canterburians for catholicke trueth For to cleare this cast over the books of Bellarmine and see if his grossest tenets be not by them embraced In his first tome his errours about the Scriptures imperfection and doctrinall traditions seemes to be most weightie In his second beside these alreadie named his defence of the monastick vowes of Limbus Patrum and Purgatorie are verie palpable In the third his ascribing too little too the Sacramenst of the Old Testament and too much too the Sacraments of the New his making all infants in baptisme too be regenerat and all non-baptized too bee damned his corporall presence of Christs bodie on the altar his sacrifice of the Masse auricular confessiō extreame unction are very grosse corruptions In the last tome his errours about faith justification merit free-will are among the chiefe In all those consider how farre our partie is long agoe declined to the left hand Begin with Scripture and traditions The reformed churches in the harmonie of their confessions lay all down one common ground They joine with Rome in setting up traditions in prejudice of Scripture for their mutuall consent the Scriptures absolute perfection wiehout the help of any doctrinall tradition Hold me once this piller the whole edifice of the reformation must fall To batter downe this fort the Papists plant two engines One that there is diverse Apostolicke and ancient traditions both rituall and dogmaticall which beside Scripture with a divine faith must be firmely beleeved An other that Scripture must not be taken in any sense by us but that wherein the ancient fathers of the church have understood it or the present church do take it In both these very dangerous corruptions our partie joynes with Rome They glorie (b) Heylens antid Lincoln page 8● sect 2. Things that have beene generally in the Church of Christ are generally conceaved to have been derived-from Apostolical tradion without any speciall mandat left in Scripture for the doing of them Praying directlie towards the East is conceaved to bee of that condition why may wee not conclude the like of setting up the altar along the wall Many things come into our minde by a successionall tradition for which wee can not finde an expresse command wich yet we ought to entertaine ex vi Catholicae consuetudinis of which traditions there are many which still retaine their force among us in England This Church the Lord bee thanked for it hath stood more firme for apostolical traditions than any other whatsoever of the reformation Samuel Hoards sermon page 15. Wee yeeld that there are apostolical traditions rituall and dogmaticall which are no where mentioned or enjoined in the Scriptures but delivered by the word of mouth by the apostles to their followers for some of which these are reputed the number of Canonciall books The Apostles creed the baptisme of infants the fast of Lent the Lords day the great feastivals of Easter and Whitson day beside these we confesse there are and have bene many ancient Ecclesiastick traditions from which as foundations grew those noted practices of not fasting on the Sunday of adoring towards the East prostration before the altar of signing the baptized with the crosse of exorcifing the partie baptised and putting a white garment upon them of receiving the Eucharist fasting of mixing water with the wine of sending it to such as were absent of eating the consecrat bread in the Church or carrying it home of crossing themselve● when they went out or when they went in when they went to bed or whe● theyr ose when they sat down to meat when they lighted Candles or had any businesse of moment to doe that ceremonies and rites of this nature are unde● the power of the Church to ordaine we generally grant to our adversaries White on the Sabboth page 97. The reformed Churches reject not all traditions but such as are spurious superstitious and no consonant to the holy Scripture but genuine traditious agreeablee to the rule of faith derived from the apostolicall times by a successive current and which have the uniforme testimonie of poins of antiquitie are received and honourd by us Now such are these which follow the historicall tradition concering the number integritie dignitie and perfection of the
the Apostles dayes to be fallible and subject to errour Wee did indeed in our Covenant promise to abstaine from the practise of these novations wherby yee had long keept our poore Church in a flaming fire till a generall Assemblie hath brought them to the touch stone of a new triall When the Assemblie of Glasgow had passed this tryall upon them according to our desire we embraced the Synodick Sentence and resolve to adhere thereto because we finde it agreeable to cleare reason else be sure that all the Assemblies of the world should never have obliged our consciences to have beleeved any thing which to us did appeare erroneous Such an inslaving of mens consciences was a part of your tyrannie among us No orders from your hands could be extorted till a man had sworne and subscribed simple obedience to all your decrees not only past but to come An expression of any condition of consonancie to the word of God or any other such limitation was a certaine note of Puritanisme and disaffection to the present government Yea such an infallibilitie ye wont to ascribe to a few of your Bishops let be generall Assemblies that ye made a Canon for the excommunication of all who should be bold to affirme the least errour in any of their workes whether of Canons Leiturgie Homilies● or any thing else The Service-booke Episcopacie other corruptions which the King hath cōmanded us to abjure are still defended by our opposits that came through their holy hands What here ye cavill at our reiection of your manifold corruptions of the doctrine and discipline of our Church as if we did set up so many new articles of Faith as ye did lately errours which now we doe reiect is not worth a reply But that open declaration which here ye make of your great affection towards the articles of Perth Episcopacie bookes of Service and Canons and great disaffection to the very confession of Faith made by King Iames we cannot passe without observation The inclination of your mind to these articles we did truely suspect by many probable signes But that with your patron Canterburies permission ye should so soone have beene licenced to put these your thoughts in print wee did not expect Yee will we hope hereafter esteeme it no calumnie nor want of charitie in us to avow that notwithstanding our Assemblies ordinance and the Kings Majesties command with the consent of his Counsell to all this Nation to subscribe the abjuration of these novelties yet that our poore Church is in great danger to be pestered againe with them all since the like of you are countenanced to print even to this day such ample defences of all these corruptions and to give to the Service-booke so high a commendation that if it be true our refusing of it cannot be but a high sinne against God and as you told us before an intollerable insolence before the King whom ye teach to discipline us for that fault with a strange punishment Ye will have that rejected Booke resumed and stuffed with a new supplement of more Romish stuffe and then quickly thrust upon us with this peremptour alternative either quietly to beare that Yoake or presently to be banished the Land As for Episcopacie ye will have us embrace it with as great faith as we doe the Bookes of Canonicall Scripture Yee alleadge that Scripture is for neither of the two that Tradition is for both and that Tradition is to be received with no smaller assent then a divine and undoubted faith albeit Canterburie your patron permitt you to print all these things yet upon your word in this place we must take him for an arch-enemie to all poperie In your eight paralell 8. Parallell The Canterburiās offer many more disgraces to Kings thē their opposits ye object to us the excommunication of Kings This is but your slander We goe not so farre in following of Ambrose course with the Emperour Theodosus as Bilson alloweth Of our moderation in this point we have given good proofe For in all the troubles which your faction first and last hath moved our Princes to bring upon us ye cannot say without a manifest lie that ever any of us had the least thought of putting upon them any Church censure What ye might doe if Kings were turned your enemies we know not only now when they are your benefactours farre above your deserving we see how coursly ye serve them they must as profaine laicks be kept far aback with railes from that holy place where ye the Lords priests with your consecrate and anointed bodies doe stand at the Altar Emperours must light downe from their horse and adore you they must acknowledge their Crownes to be so farre subiect to your Miters as a bodie is to the Soule or a man to God Supra cap. 3. M. N. Readily so base persons might get a whip of your Spirituall rod if once ye were firmly established in your Episcopall Thrones as long agoe ye would have beene if these turbulent Puritanes who still have beene rocking and keeping your Chaires in motion had beene put out of the world What thornes Bishops have beene in the sides of Kings especially in England the Chronicles of that Nation doe record and above all other Bishops these of Canterburie the mischivous conspiracie of one of them with Henrie of Darbie against his great Benefactour Richard the second ought never to be out of King Charles eye No passage of the English storie is more worthie of his meditation 9. Paralel We are nothing opposite to the power of Parliaments but wee make Parliaments to be meere cyphers In the ninth Paralell your scoffing and railing veine floweth after the old manner ye obiect our annulling of the acts of Parliament by the decrees of our Assemblie and the extending of the power of our Synods to many secular affaires Doubtlesse ye are the men who by your shoulders most carefully will under-prop the decaying power of Parliaments It grieveth much your Soules to see Parliaments slighted in any of their due rights Alwayes remember your owne and your brethrens Tenets whereby ye make all Parliaments but meere ciphers the arbitrarie Counsels of the Prince to which by his Letters he hath right to call what Commissioners he will and hold back whom he pleaseth with whom or without whom as he thinketh meet it is his owne only right to make to interpret to abolish Lawes to publish them by himselfe alone and command them by a meere Proclamation to be received by all the Subiects without the consent or advice of any man further then is his pleasure to crave This your brethren oft in formall tearmes Supra cap. 8. E. E. F. F. G. G c. and your selfe in the same page sets downe in effect What ye speak of our encroaching upon Parliaments is no wayes true only some evill acts of your evidently corrupted Assemblies whereto ye had obtained by your familiar arts of fraud and force the ratification
new pieces never heard of which in the thirtie one yeare are set out by M. Aylward under the name of the English Martyrs as also that writ of Overall which Montagu puts out with his own amplifications in the thirtie six year These and the like pieces must in reasō be rather fathered on those who put them foorth then upon their pretended authors who readily did never know such posthume children or else did take them for such unhappie bastards as they were resolved for reasons known to them selves to keepe them in obscurity and never in publick to avow them as their owne In this Canon there are two parts most principall which the papists call the Heart and Head thereof (ſ) Innocent lib. 4. cap. 1. Ecce nunc ad summam Sacramenti verticem accedentes ad ipsum cor divini sacrificii penetramus The prayers of consecration and of oblation this head the English strikes off this heart they pull out of their book that the wicked serpent should not have any life among them But our men are so tender and compassionat towards that poor Beast that they will againe put in that Heart and set on that Head The consecration and oblation they will bee loath to want Consider then these mens changing of the English book towards both those the two incomparably worst parts of the whole Masse First the English scrapes out all mention of any consecration for however we delight not to strive with the papists any where about words yet in this place while they declare expressely that by consecration of the elements they do understand not the sanctification of the elements by the word and prayer but a secret whispering of certaine words upon the elements for their very Transubstantiation (t) Durand lib. 6. Dicimus illud non conserari sed sanctificari differt autem inter haec nam consecrare est consecratine transubstātiare sancti ficare est sanctum reverendumesficere ut patet in aqua benedicta Consecration in this place being so taken by the papists the English rejects it and will have nothing to do therewith but our men being more wise and understanding their owne ends put up in their rubrick in capitall letters formally and expressely their prayer of consecration 2. The Papists to the end that their consecratorie words may bee whispered upon the elements for their change and no wayes heard of the people who perchance if they heard and understood them might learne them by heart and in their idlenesse might pronunce them over their meales and so which once they say was done transubstantiat their ordinarie food into Christs bodie For the eshewing of these inconveniences they ordaine the consecration to bee made in the outmost corner of the church so far from the ears of the people as may be and for the greater securitie they ordaine their priests in the time of consecration both to speake low and to turne their backs upon the people For to remeed their wicked follies the English expressely ordained their communion Table to stand in the body of the church where the Minister in the mids of the people might read out openly all the words of the Institution But our men to returne to the old fashion command the table to beset at the East end of the Chancell that in the time of the consecration the priest may stand so far removed from the people as the furthest wall of the church can permit and as this distance were not enough to keep these holy words of consecration from the profaine eares of Laicks our booke hath a second Rubrick injoining expressely the priest in the time of consecration to turne his back on the people to come from the North end of table and to stand at such a place where hee may use both his hands with more decencie and ease which is not possible but on the Westside alone for on the South side the commoditie is just alike as in the North. On the East none can stand for the Table is joined hard to the Wall and whosoever stands at the West side of the Altar his back is directly to the people that are behinde him They say for this practise many things first That in the good holy Liturgie of Edward the sixth the priest was ordained to stand with his back to the people (u) Heylens antid pag. 45. and 46. The Church of Rome injoyneth the priest to stand in medio altaris with his face to the East and backe to the people But the Church of England at the north side of the Table albeit in King Edwards Lyturgie the priest was appointed to stand at the mids of the altar Againe that alwayes in the ancient church the priests stood in the uppermost end of the church divided from the people behinde them with railes and vailes and other distinctions (x) Supra saepe 3. That Scripture is the ground of this practise for so it was in the Jewish church the priest when wee went into the Sanctuarie to pray and offer incense for the people they stood without and never did heare what he spake nor saw what he did (y) P●kling alt pag. 99. The people might see the priest going into the Sanctuarie they might heare the noise of his bels himself his gesture his actions they saw not yet all this was done in medio Ecclesiae but not among the people in the outward or inward Court whereunto only the people were permitted to come If from this practice wee would infer with Bellarmine that the Priest in the consecration might speake in latine or in a language unknowne to the people since God to whom he speaks understands all languages the elements upon which the consecratorie words are murmured (z) Scottish service the words of consecration may bee repeated againe over more either bread or wine understands none and the people for whom alone the vulgar language is used is put back from the hearing of the consecration we know not what in reason they could answer But this we know that the maine ground whereupon wee presse the use of the vulgar language not onely in the consecration as they call it but in the whole service of God I meane the warrant of Scripture they openly deny and for it gives us no ground but the old tradition of the church ( ) VVhite on the Sabbath pag. 97. Such traditions are those that follow the Service of the Chruch in a known language 3. When our priest is set under the East wall within his raile his back upon the people he is directed to use both his armes with decencie and ease what use heere can be made of the priests armes except it be for making of large crosses as the masse rubricks at this place doth direct We do not understand only we have heard before that they avow the lawfulnesse of crossing no lesse in the supper then in baptisme 4. The prayer which stands heer in
it For without a priest and an altar there can be no sacrifice There was a bloudie sacrifice than an unbloudy now a priest derived from Aaron then from Melchisedeck now an Altar for Mosaicall sacrifices than for Euangelicall now The apostles in the institution were appointed priests by Christ where they received a power for them and their successours to celebrate these holy mysteries Hoc facite is for the priest who hath power to consecrat Hoc edite is both for priest and people Ibid. pag. 17. Hee maintained at length that in the Lords Supper there is a true proper corporall visible and externall sacrifice 5. After the consecration and oblation they put to the Lords prayer with the Missals Preface audemus dicere Heere the Papists tell us that their Priest by consecration having transubstantiat the bread and by their memoriall of oblation having offered up in an unbloody sacrifice the body of Christ for the reconciliation of the Father doeth then close his quiet whisperings his poore pipings and becomes bold to say with a loud voice having Christ corporally in his hands Pater noster The English to banish such absurdities put away that naughty preface and removed the prayer it selfe from that place But our men to shew their Orthodoxie repone the prayer in the owne old place and set before it in a fair Rubrick the whole old preface 6. The first English prayer which stood before the consecration where the passages of eating Christs body and drinking Christs blood could not possibly by the very Papists themselves be detorted to a corporall presence yet now in our book it must change the place and be brought to its owne old stance after the consecration and oblation immediatly before the communion as a prayer of humble accesse The third part of the Masse I spake of was the communion Our changes in the communion see how heere out men change the English Booke The English indeed in giving the elements to the people retaine the Masse words but to preveene any mischiefe that could arise in the peoples minde from their sound of a corporall presence they put in at the distribution of both the elements two golden sentences of the hearts eating by faith of the Soules drinking in remembrance Our men being nothing affrayed for the peoples beliefe of a corporall presence have pulled out of their hands and scraped out of our Booke both these antidots 2. The Masse words of Christs body and blood in the act of communion being quite of the English antidots against their poyson must not stand in our Booke simplie but that the people may take extraordinar notice of these phrases there are two Rubricks set up to their backs oblidging every communicant with their owne mouth to say their Amen to them 3. The English injoines the Minister to give the people the elements in their owne hand ours scrapes out that clause and bid communicat the people in their own order which imports not onely their removall from the altar their standing without the raile as profaine Laicks far from the place and communion of the Priests but also openeth a faire door to the popish practice of putting the elements not in the profaine hands but in the mouths of the people 4. The English permit the Curate to cary home the reliques of the bread and wine for his privat use but such profanity by our Book is discharged The consecrat elements are injoined to bee eaten in the holy place by the Priest alone and some of the Communicants that day whose mouths hee esteemeth to bee most holy Yea for preventing of all dangers the cautele is put in that so few elements as may bee consecrat 5. Our Booke will have the elements after the consecration covered with a Corporall the church linnings were never called Corporals any where till transubstantiation was born neither carried they that name in England till of late his Grace was pleased by the pen of his man Pocklingtoune and the like to disgrace them with that stile 6. The English will have the Ministers and people to communicat in both kindes our booke injoines the Priest to receave in both kindes but the people onely in due order This due order of the people opposite to the communion of the Priest in both kindes may import the removall of one kinde from the people so much the more may wee feare this sacriledge from their hands since they tell us that our only ground for communicating of the people in both kindes is stark nought that for this practice there may well be tradition but Scripture there is none (d) VVhit on the Sabbath pag. 97. Such traditions are those that follow the deliverie of the communion to the people in both kindes Montag orig pag. 396. Vbi iubentur in Scripturis infantes babtiZari aut in caena Domini subutraque specie communicantes participare de his possumus profiteri Nihil tale docet Scriptura Scriptura haec non praedicat Andrews stricturae p. 5. It can not be denyed but reserving the Sacrament was suffered a long time in the primitive church in time of persecution they were permitted to carrie away how great a part they would and to keep it by them and to take it at times to comfort them but for the sick it was alwayes sent them home were the distance never so great and against the time of extremitie it was thought not amisse to have it reserved that if the priest should not then be in state to go to the sick partie and there to censecrat it for him yet at least it might be sent him as in the case of Cerapion Pokling as we have heard made it one of the matters of that Churches glory that they yet doe retaine in their Chanchels the old Repositories Also that in diverse cases the ancient church did lawfully give to the people the bread alone that the Sacrament after the publick communion was oft reserved to be sent to the sicke to bee taken at privat occasions and laide up in the church in a publicke repositorie Now it is well knowne and the Papists presse this upon us when they would rob the people of the cup that the wine was not sent to the sicke in a farre distance from the church nor taken home by the people to bee used with the bread in the times of strait nor set up in the Church in the ciboir or repositorie These changes of the English Liturgie which the Canterburians have made in some few pages lying together of the Scottish service if they be either few or small your self pronunce the sentence The last Chapter containing the Canterburian maximes of Tyrannie ONe of the great causes of Protestants separation from Rome is the tyrannie of the Romish Clergie whereby they presse upon the very conscience of their people a multitude of their own devices with the most extreame and rigorous censures which can be inflicted either upon bodies or souls And for the
books of Canonicall Scripture the Catholick exposition of many sentences of Scripture the apostles creed the baptisme of infants the observation of the Lords day and some other feastivals as Easter Pentecost c. baptizing and administration of the Supper in holy assemblies the service of the Church in a knowne language the delivering of the Communion to the people in both kindes the superioritie of Bishops over Priest and Deacons in Iurisdiction and power of ordination and triumph above all other reformed churches that they do embrace doctrinall traditions for which in Scripture there is no ground And of this kinde they reckon out some of great importance such as are the baptisme of infants the sanctifying of the Sabbath the Apostles Creede the giving of the cup to the people praying in a known tongue our knowledge of Scripture to be Scripture the names and number of the Canonicall Bookes and their distinction from Apocrypha of this kinde they maintaine large as many as Rome For at the first word the● speake to us of six hundreth (c) Montag orig pa. 396. Vbi iubentur in Scripturis infantes baptizori aut in coena Domini sub utraque specie communicantes participare 600. sunt ejusmodi in rebus sacris à deo institutis ecclesiae mandatis usurpaatis ab ecclesia de quibus possumus profiteri nihil tale docet Scriptura Scriptura haec non praedicat among these traditions which we must embrace with an undoubted faith They reackon up the authoritie of the Bishopes above the Priests prostration before the altars worshipping towards the East crosse i● Baptisme crossing of our faces at all occasions the standing of a crucifix upon the altar and wha● else they please to urge for which they can get no Scripture warrant To this head they referre the verie customes of the Popish church in latter times for which they have no scribe in any write● let be in any Father (d) Montag orig page 276. Nihil est memoriae proditum quod ego quidem sciam hac dei apud vetustiores sive historicos sive patres prohabile tamen est hanc receptam ecclesiae consuetudinem de traditione vetustiore an t scriptis etiam patrum vetustiorib● nunc deperditis dimanasse Montag apar page 389. Ad me quod attinet quid à sanctis patribus per illa tempora inventum primo usurpatum nulla traditione priore commendatum nullo usu veterum ne quidem vestigiis leviter impressis consignatum per tot aunorum decursum ad nostra usque tempora sine contradictione descenderit non video cur non 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 vim suam obtineat authoritatem Absit enim ut universalis ecclesia vel in rebus de facto ecclesiasticis ritibus tam diu aberraverit Ibid. page 382. Meminerimus Tertullianum olim statuisse cum applausu de hujusmodi consuetudinibus si legem expostules scriptam nullam invenies sed traditio a praetenditur auctrix consuetudo confirmatrix fides observatrix Et Irenaeus quid autem si neque Apostoli reliquiss●nt nobis Scripturas nonne oporteret ordinem sequi traditsonis Idem antig page 42. That author sayes no more then is justifiable touching traditions for thus hee sayes The doctrine of the Church is two wayes delivered unto us first by writing then by tradition from hand to hand Both are of alike value of force unto pietie Yea all the injunctions of the Bishopes must be Ecclesiastick traditions whereto the conscience must submit no lesse then to the precepts of God (e) White in his examination of the dialogue presseth not only this testimonie of Austine Etiamsi Scripturae authoritas non subesset totius tamen orbis in hanc partem consensus instar precepti contineat nam alia multa quae per traditionem in Ecclesiis observantur authoritatem sibi scriptae legis usurpaverunt but also that of Eusebius Quicquid in sanctis Episcoporum consiliis decernitur id universum divinae voluntati debet attribui And this of Bernards Sive Deus sive homo vicarius Dei mandatum quodcunque tradiderit pari profecto obsequendum est cura pari reverentia suscipiendum ubi tamen Deo contraria non praecepit homo In the meane time Scripture must bee stiled the booke of hereticks (f) Montag orig page 353. Eusebius de Severianis hereticis loquens ait Hilege Prophetis Euang●liis utantur socrarum Scripturarum sensus sententias ut nostri salent purtani novatores pro suo arbitratu interpretantur Chounaei Colect page 31. Sensum Scripturarum ex patribus ecclesiae deductum traditum conseruatum in ecclesia approbatum quidni pro tali traditione agnoscamus in cujus veritate acquiescendum à qua minimè discendendum sit Montag orig page 318. Neque enim insanire solent sine Scripturis haeretici mirificè easdem ad suos 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 solent applicare defendendos persuadendosque a Lesbian rule (g) Montag apar page 382. Non ut nostri novatores de●dirant quibus quicquid est 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 respit 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ideo refigendum est ● vel ut amant loqui reformandum ad Dei verbum hoc est ad Lesbiam plane regulam ●ipsorum cerebrositatem amussitandum In no controversies no not in Sermons any use may bee made of it except so farre as we can backe our deductions from Scripture by consent of the ancient Fathers or present church (h) Pocklingtoun altare page 129. The godlie and learned Fathers of our church give strict charge to private preachers that they preach nothing in their preachings which they would have the people religiously to believe and observe but that which is agreeable to the doctrine of the old and new Testament and that which the catholick fathers and ancient bishops have formerly taught and collected from thence White upon the Sabboth page 12. The holy Scripture is the fountaine and living spring containing in all sufficiencie and aboundance whatsoever is necessarie to make Gods people wise unto salvation The consentient and unanimous testimonie of the true Church of Christ in the primative ages thereof is the canalis or a conduit pipe to derive and convoy to succeding generations the celestiall water contained in the holy Scripture Ibid. From Meisnerus hee sayeth Iniuriam nobis facit Beeanus scribendo nos docere solam Scripturam esse normam iudicem contraversiarum fidei imò spiritum sanctum seu judicem supremum praesupponimus ecclesiam ceu iudicem inferiorem libenter admittimus ideoque soli Scripturae officium iudicandi absque omni distinctione non assignamus Idem page 14. The ecclesiasticall storie reporterh of Nazianzen and Basille that in their studying the holy Scriptures they collected the sense of them not from their owne judgement or presumption but from the testimonie and authoritie of the