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A07350 The English catechisme explained. Or, A commentarie on the short catechisme set forth in the Booke of common prayer Wherein diuers necessarie questions touching the Christian faith are inserted, moderne controuersies handled, doubts resolued, and many cases of conscience cleared. Profitable for ministers in their churches, for schoole masters in their schooles, and for housholders in their families. By Iohn Mayer, Bachelour of Diuinitie.; English catechisme Mayer, John, 1583-1664. 1622 (1622) STC 17733; ESTC S100659 485,672 636

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descent c. doe rather import somewhat added to his death and buriall the more currant exposition is to make it a seuerall and different Article or Parcell of our Sauiours performances and so wee will now consider in the remaining interpretations That branch of the first interpretation auouching that our Sauiour did sometime in triduo mortis really descend in soule into the place of the damned is most literall naturall and agreeable to the words no way lyable to tautologie nor repugnant to the analogie of Faith but consorting with the plaine termes of Scripture and testimony of ancient Fathers In this sense the Church of England in the first times of reformation Artic● 37. seemeth to vnderstand and interpret this Article both by insisting vpon the direct words in the booke of Articles of Religion where the truth realty of Christs descent into hell is auouched in the same manner with the realty of his death c. as also by the explanation thereof in the larger Catechisme authorized by our Church called Nowels Catechisme The end of such descent might well bee to triumph ouer Satan in his owne dunghill and dungeon and withall there to vpbraid vnto the damned spirits of obstinate men what a gracious and glorious Sauiour they had neglected Though some be of another minde in this point yet I see no coactiue reasons out of Scripture or otherwise brought by them against this plaine literall construction And caeteris paribus why should not the authority of our Mothr the Church of Englād ouer sway For my part in my priuate opinion I haue much inclined to the fifth interpretation applying this descent into hell parabolically to the dismall apprehension of Gods wrath lying heauy vpon the soule of Christ and representing the paines of hell due to vs. The reasons that perswade that our Sauiour vnderwent such inward sufferings in his soule are First if hee had not suffered extreame torments in soule besides what he suffered by sympathy through bodily pangs hee must either haue been weake and ouer-yeelding or else haue dissembled being without sorrow Sixt. Sennensi Bibl. Patrum li. 6. Annot. 35. when hee expressed so great sorrow as one saith that Hillary sometimes held but afterwards recanted making a sound confession of his faith for if Christ did not truely suffer wee are not truely redeemed or else the Saints of God which are by infinite degrees more weake then Christ God and Man must bee acknowledged to haue had more courage and magnanimity when they haue been vnder extreame torments then he had For before his passion vpon the crosse he was very heauy much troubled Math. 26.38 verse 39.40 in so much as hee said My soule is very heauy euen vnto the death and prayed three times if it were possible that the cup might passe from him at what time also his passion was noted to be so great that he sweat with paine and his sweat was like drops of bloud Luc. 22.43.44 and an Angel appeared from heauen comforting him whereas weake men haue by Gods assistance ioyfully prepared themselues and haue beene ready to meet with the most extreame bodily torments Againe in the time of his passion what a wonderfull deale of feare was he surprized withall when hee cryed out My God my God why hast thou forsaken me Luk. 24.46 yea and he cryed againe the second time and gaue vp the ghost whereof mention is made also in the Epistle to the Hebrewes verse 50. In the dayes of his flesh hee did offer vp prayers and supplications with strong cryings and teares to him that was able to saue him from death Heb. 5.7 and was also heard in that which hee feared whereas weake men haue beene vnder cruell tormentors hands with vndaunted courage to the astonishment of the beholders Now there is no Christian but will acknowledge that Christ was ten thousand times more able to indure any tormēts then any of the most cōstant Martyrs that haue suffered for his name and if hee were without all comparison more able to beare whence could it happen that he was pressed with such sorrow heauinesse and feare but for that hee alone suffered more then all Martyrs if all their sufferings were put together euer since righteous Abel to this day And how could hee suffer more but in his Soule wherein hee felt the wrath of God which is vnsupportable to men and Angels Heereto is added this reason also Arg. 2. Christ did sustaine the person of the faithfull who without him were all subiect not onely to bodily sufferings and death but to the euerlasting death of the soule now the only way whereby God is pleased to deliuer vs heerefrom is by sending Christ to bee in our stead and more or lesse to suffer that which wee for sinne should haue suffered wherefore it ●s said Hee was made sinne for vs that knew no sinne 2. Cor. 5.21 that wee might be made the righteousnesse of God through him And Hee tooke flesh that he might destroy through death him that had the power of death Heb. 2.14 that is the Diuell Therefore Analogie inferreth that as the Lord Iesus suffered for vs in body so hee suffered in his soule also and thereby hath perfectly redeemed vs in both but how and by what particular passions hee suffered in soule is not reuealed and therefore by vs vnutterable Only wee must know that how great soeuer his passions were hee did in the end ouercome them all and by the way though hee feared sweat blood and cryed out through want of present sense and apprehension of the vnion with the diuine nature yet the diuinity was neuer separated from Christ Iesus but supported him and made him conquerour ouer all when hee seemed to be ouercome The Meditation also vpon these suffering of our Sauiour is very needfull profitable to vs. First the remembring Christs passion in his soule 1. Duty By the remembrance of Christs sufferings to feare to sinne is an antidote to preserue vs from sin For though thou be so stout-hearted as that no bodily punishments can scarre thee from following thy will and resolution in wickednesse yet doe but behold Christ in his spirituall conflict with Gods wrath due to sinne sorrowing sweating sweat of bloud comfortlesse and crying out vpon his Father without hope and it will make thee to tremble to thinke am I forward to commit that which doth thus anger the King of Heauen that hee would not shew any countenance nor fauour that hee would no whit spare nor regard his owne beloued Son standing in the roome of sinners though his grones and cryes went vp to Heauen O then if I doe thus if I rot in the dregges of my sinnes how shall I indure his anger how regardlesse will hee bee of mee when I shall in my need cry for mercy Surely I shall with Esau be sent away empty Heb. 12.16 though I seeke the blessing with
most horrible stench Psal 115.4 5. Thirdly consider how they are derided and mocked that bow before Images The Psalmist euen as if hee should set forth the vanitie of babes and children about their puppets made of clouts so doth he ascribe the Heathen Their Idols are siluer and gold mouthes haue they and speake not eyes and see not eares and heare not and noses and smell not c. They are like vnto them that make thē and so are al they that put their trust in them that is they haue euen as little wit and reason as they And Esay mocketh them thus Esay 28.9 saying Both the Countrey-man and the Noble-man boweth himselfe to the worke of his owne hands And againe Esay 46.6 They bring forth gold out of the pouch and siluer is weighed in the ballance they hire a founder who maketh thereof a God for them they carry him they beare him vpon the shoulder and set him in his place c. ●●n 35.4 Fourthly consider how greatly the worshipping of Images or Idols for they be all of one bastard brood hath been impugned by all holy men from time to time Iacob when hee had once knowledge that some of his houshold fauoured and kept images hee tooke them away and hauing ready no other meanes to destroy them he hid them vnder an Oake where they might neuer come to light againe Moses was so much moued at the golden calues as that he could not bee quiet vntill that hee had broken them in pieces Exod 32 30. Vers 28. beaten them to pouder caused the people to drinke them and destroied three thousands of them by the sword of the Leuites Iosiah did burne with such zeale against these idolaters 2. Kings 2.3 2. Kings 28. as that hee put them to death and burnt their bones vpon the altars of Baal Hezekiah spared not the very brazen Serpent being worshipped but brake it in pieces though at the first there was an holy vse thereof The Christians of the Primitiue Church were at so great defiance with image-worshipping that they would not eate of the meate offered to idols they would rather choose to die then that the world should haue the least occasion to thinke that they consented to the worshipping of Idols When the manner was amongst the heathen to weare a garland vpon their Emperours birth-day for the superstitious honouring of him the Christians hauing garlands offered them carried them in their hands and refused to put them vpon their heads and being asked the reason because said they we are Christians and thus they indangered their liues as witnesseth Tertullian who wrote his booke de corona milit●s of the Souldi●rs Garland in the defence of them When Iulian the Apostata had cunningly brought the Christians to cast euery man a graine of Incense into a C●ns●r of fire wherein perfume was made to idols they vnderstanding his deceit came and cast downe his gold wherewith hee had hired them and offered themselues to martyrdome to expiate this heinous offence Dan. 3 2. Fifthly consider that the meanes which haue been vsed to establish Image-worshipping are altogether carnall euen as Nebuchadnezzars golden Image had so many of all sorts to fal downe before it First the violent and peremptory command of the most haughty King Secondly the acceptation and flattring of Nobles and Officers Thirdly the glittering and alluring matter of which Images are made viz. Gold and Siluer Fourthlie their outward forme and beautie being most curiously wrought and apparreld Fiftly most grieuous penalties threatned to those that refuse to bow themselues Sixthly inchanting musick of all sorts And therefore the thing it selfe was sutably carnall and diuellish and all such of the like sort which are inticed by these fleshly meanes or compelled through feare to fall downe before images 3 Ki●● of Idolatry to serue God according to our owne phantasies 3. The third kind of outward idolatry is to serue God according to our owne phantasies either by a kind of worship which wee our selues haue inuented or other men for vs meerely out of their owne braines or by resting in the work done bodily and outwardly or lastly by seruing God without repenting vs truly of our sinnes For all these are abuses in Gods seruice and he is hereby made an Idoll As for the first most true it is that not onely the whole Church but also euery particular Church hath libertie and power to ordaine conuenient Rites and Ceremonies for the better furnishing and commending the outward seruice of God Caluins iudgement concerning Ceremonies Caluins iudicious resolution herein I preferre before a thousand ouer hasty disrobers who would haue all outward worship stripped starke naked he in his Instituts lib. 4. cap 10. Sec. 30. Dominus totam verae iustitiae fummam c. God hath in the Scriptures euidently set downe the whole summe of true righteousnesse and al the parts of his worship without omitting any thing necessary to our saluation But as for outward discipline and ceremonies it pleased him not to prescribe in particular what we should follow in asmuch as hee foresaw that this dependeth vpon the diuers estate of times and knew very well that one forme and fashion in those externals would not fit all ages In this case therefore wee are to haue recourse vnto the generall Rules namely of order decency and edification which maxims are to bee diuersly accommodated according to the manners of euery people and age as shall be most auailable for the good of the Church Thus in effect Caluin which me thinks should allay the vehement rashnesse of some who peremptorily conclude that in Gods seruice no externall Rite gesture or habit is to bee imposed or admitted without expresse authority of scripture But as this strict shutting vp the gates against al ceremonies deuised by man is a kind of nice superstition so on the other side to set open all doores to breake downe all barres and hedges by neglect of these generall rules and hand ouer head to take vp from Iew or Pagan whatsoeuer occurreth this adorneth not but ouercloudeth and polluteth the sincere worship of God in spirit and truth Verily it is no lesse then a fantastique Idolizing to obtrude vpon Christian people as parts of Gods worship a loade of duties and performances inuented and imposed without either special or general warrant out of the booke of God Which if they were instituted as circumstances tending to decency and edification and as vpon occasion abrogable the presumption were lesse but being thrust vpon the Church as doctrines and performed by the people as part of the Essence of Gods worship surely they aduance not but rather euacuate the worship of God Esay 19.13 Matth. ●5 In vaine doe they worship mee saith the Lord teaching for doctrines the precepts of men It is vanitie then and idolatrie which is daily practised in the Church of Rome where traditions of men are receiued and followed
truth by the Scriptures I answer This is a very silly shift indeed for are not the Scriptures translated the very Scriptures of God as well as the Originalls If there be difference of translations it is no more but as if the same history written in a strange tongue should be tolde in English by diuers some expressing it after one manner some after another Now for this little difference in words no man I suppose will say that no certainty can be had of the truth of the thing told by such as are vnskilfull of that tongue but that he may the rather perceiue the truth because they all agree in the matter which they interpret Yet this is not the onely thing that bringeth them to the knowledge of the truth but to the first beginning of knowledge As the people of Samaria were brought first to beleeue in Christ by the report of the woman with whom he had talked but afterwards they professed that they did beleeue not because of her words Iohn 4.42 but for that they had heard him themselues so they acknowledged the truth at the first because they finde it so written in translations but afterwards because they are certified by the Spirit and their faith is not built vpon men as the Church of Rome doth slanderously alledge thus pulling themselues by the eare Obict 5 The Familists and Brownists If it be still further obiected that this iustifieth those inordinate heady persons the Brownists Anabaptists Familists c. for that in simplicitie seeking for the truth in the Scriptures they do find it to be the doctrine taught amongst them and cannot find ours to be so I answer that they doe fouly deceiue the world vnder the colour of simplicity and religion for that they seeke not the truth but to bring the truth to the fauouring of their conceipts as may easily appeare to such as shall obserue their insolent carriage and lewdnesse which they follow vnder the pretence of conscience Moreouer as Gamaliel well noted vnto the Councell gathered against the Apostles Acts 5.38 If this cousel or this worke be of men it will come to nought but if it be of God yee cannot destroy it So may it be sayd of them If they were of God they should at some time or other haue flourished but in that their worke comes to nought it is a signe that it is of man For they haue long troubled the world and yet they are at this day almost none As their fighting hath beene for shadowes and about no substance so haue these fantasticall Enthusiasts themselues as shadowes vanished away Obict 6 Of Lutherans and Caluinists Lastly if it be obiected that yet it wil remaine doubtfull notwithstanding this rule of the holy Scriptures whether the Lutherans or Caluinists so called be the true Church of God because they both propound vnto themselues to find out the truth hereby both are content thus to be brought to their triall and both do almost flourish alike I answer That howsoeuer the Lutherans be grieuous enemies vnto their brethren especially some more harsh and hot-spirited amongst them yet we doe thinke so well of them in regard of the points wherein we consent together as that wee hold them to be the true Church of God also The onely thing that misleadeth them is that they are addicted too much Iurare in verba Magistri that is to sticke to Luthers teaching who no maruell though he could not see to reforme all things himselfe alone and so were ouertaken with some small errours If they be not so charitably affected vnto other reformed Churches the Lord rectifie both their iudgements and affections in his good time 1. Duty To ●r●quent the Word Preached Now follow the duties of this faith The first is diligently to frequent the preaching of Gods word and duely to read it because it is Gods voice whereby he calleth vs into the company of his people it is that whereby we must finde out his Church it is that by searching whereof we must finde eternall life 1 Peter 2.2 as saith our Sauiour To this S. Peter exhorteth As new-borne babes desire the sincere milke of the word for this the Bereans are commended vnto this all are by the Prophets and Apostles vrged as hath beene already shewed Other writings without this are but as pits that wil hold no water Wherefore as thou louest thine owne soule suffer not thy mouth to be musled by any massing Priest or thine eyes to be turned herefrom for feare of seeing as ●ue did that which may turne to thy destruction nay looke warily into this word pray heartily that thine eyes may be opened to see the truth lest by turning away thou come to destruction and know it not Ioh. 3.20.21 He that is in the truth seeketh not to haue the mouthes of all others stopped but is willing to let euery man speake and so it will appeare the better that the truth is with him If there be any then that cannot abide that others should bee heard but only themselues what shal we thinke of these men but much more if they cannot abide their chiefe witnesse of which they bragge to be heard speaking Surely we will say their matter is naught it cannot bee otherwise And what shall we thinke then of the Romanists which straightly tie their people from reading any Aduersaries writings yea from the holy Scriptures the chiefe witnesse of the truth Their matter must needes be naught and their workes euill as our Sauiour teacheth He that euill doeth hateth the light neyther commeth to the light l●ast his deede should be reprooued but he that doth truth commeth to the light that his deedes may be made manifest that they are wrought according to God 2 Duty To cleaue constantly to the Protestant Church●es The second dutie is to stick inseparably to the Protestant Churches as hauing the true and infallible markes of the Church of God viz. the word purely taught and the Sacraments rightly administred and to account all the faire shews of the Church of Rome in the antiquity vniuersality c. but as the whiting of Sepulchres which inwardly are full of rottennesse and dead mens bones For trees often times seeme a farre off to be men but come neerer and with better light and they are soone discouered what they be So the Church of Rome which is but a trunk or dead tree in respect of the liuing Church of God may seeme the Church by this diuine light and if we be held thus a farre off but come neerer and bring the light of Gods holy word and it will appeare as it is there being no page almost in the Scriptures but some way depraued by their false interpretations none of the Sacraments but so loaden with their superstitious ceremonies as that there is scarce any appearance of their first institution Wherefore whatsoeuer it shall cost vs though all our substance and liues yet let vs
Manich●es and Marcion some haue reiected the Booke of Psalmes as the Nicholaitans and Anabaptists some the booke of Iob as some Rabbins and some Daniel as Porphyrius some haue reiected the Gospel of Luke as Cerdon some all but Marke as Cerinthus some the Gospel of Iohn as the Alog● some all Pauls works as the Ebionites c. Concerning the second some haue made the Apocryphall Books of equall authoritie with the fore recited Scriptures as the Papists and others haue more boldly long since obtruded for Canonical the fatherlesse brood of other books vnto these as the third and fourth of Eldras and Appendix of Iob a Preface to the Lamentation the third and fourth of the Macchabees a Booke called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Booke of Enoch the Gospel of Thomas and of Matthias the acts of Peter And in the yeare 1120 a certaine new Gospell called Euangelium aeternum the eternall Gospell was found out being full of blasphemies but all these and the like are damnable presumptions plainly forbidden by the Lord saying Deut 4.2 Ye shal not put ought vnto the word that I command you neither shall ye take ought there-from and grieuously threatned Reu. 22.18 19. If any man shall adde vnto these things God shall adde vnto him the plagues that are written in this Booke and if any man shall diminish any thing God shall take away his part out of the Booke of life Now that the Books first aboue named are all Canonicall Scriptures and part of the word of God Epist Tom. 3. hath been acknowledged in all ages by the Christian Church Ierome writing to Paulinus of the study of the holy Scriptures doth both reckon vp all these bookes in particular and adioyneth to euery one of them a seuerall pithy commendation And vnto Leta he prescribeth an order of reading them with most safetie and profit As for the other Bookes Epist Tom. 1. which our Church adioyneth to the volume of the inspired Scriptures they are both entertained and in part publikely read in our Churches not as authentike Principles whereon to ground any doctrine but as wholesome precepts of moralitie and declarations of the estate of the Church in those times very profitable for deuotion and heauenly meditation Quest. 146. What speciall proofe is there making manifest that those Bookes of Scripture are the word of God Answ The antiquity of those books some of them being before all other bookes sundry times oppugned and sought to be burnt vp by persecutors and yet wonderfully preserued and by miracles from heauen confirmed is a manifest proofe that they came from heauen and are not of mans inuention That the ●oly Scriptures are Gods word Explan Amongst all arguments there is none of that force in the conscience of man that this is of being taken from the diuinitie of the holy Scriptures For let it appeare that they are of God and what heart dares doe any other but yeeld vnto them Now that they are of God may bee plainely prooued by sundry reasons First by their Antiquitie for the first and most ancient writings in the world concerning Religion must needs be Gods but these are the first and most ancient therefore must needs be Gods 1. That the most ancient are Gods Scriptures is plaine because otherwise either some other Instructor must haue beene before God or else God the Ruler of the whole world must haue beene without any thing recorded whereby the world ought to be ruled till that man had inuented something to gouerne man by both which are most absurd That the holy Scriptures are most ancient appeareth by the most ancient humane writers Orpheus the first of all writeth of the two Tables deliuered to Moses Whence he saith that he learned what he knew of God Linus wrote of the Tower of Babylon described by Moses c. making plaine heereby that the Bookes of Moses were long before any of their writings and so the most ancient in the world Hence it is that Tacianus affirmeth that it appeareth out of Berosus a Caldee Writer Tatiani Oratio aduersus gentes Moses fuit Baccho antiquior plurimis diis gentium Clem. Alexandr out of the writings of the Phoenicians and Annales of the Egyptians that Moses wrote long before Orpheus Linus Amphyon Homer or the most ancient Ethnickes Now the Bookes of Moses are in effect the whole Scriptures all that followeth tending onely to the further explanation heereof Wherefore the Scriptures are most auncient and consequently the vndoubted word of God 2. This is further prooued by the preseruation of the Scriptures in all ages other ancient Bookes being perished either in part or in whole but the holy Scriptures though more oppugned then any by persecutors who haue sought to blot out the memory of them yet are wholly preserued without diminution or corruption of any part of them Had they beene of man certainly it would haue happened vnto them as vnto many other humane writings which are most ancient which if they haue not perished yet they haue been falsified yea one complaineth that hee himselfe yet liuing to see it Fratribus rogantibus vt scriberem Epistolas scripsi has Apostoli Diaboli Zizanijs alia eximentes alia ad●icientes Dionysius Areo● pag. repleuerunt The Brethren requesting I wrote Epistles these the Apostles of the Deuill haue filled with tares adding some things and taking away othersome Now the holy Scriptures haue been singularly preserued heerein in the hands of the Iewes who haue misliked some things and forbidden them to be read as Daniel because he speaketh so plainly of the Messiah in the hands of the heathen as when at the request of Ptolomee they were translated by the Septuagint and in the hands of Heretikes who haue corrupted Fathers and Councels yet neuer durst but haue beene restrained from heauen from corrupting the Scriptures 3. This is further proued by the miracles which haue been wrought to confirme the Scriptures to be of God the Author of all true miracles of this sort are the miracles wought by Moses by the Prophets by Christ and by his Disciples For all these miracles doe plainly testifie of them that they were sent of God and if they were of God then the word by them set forth is the word of God 4. The same is proued by the prophesies contained in the Scriptures some being of things to come to passe many hundreds of yeares after as that the seed of the woman should breake the serpents head that Abrahams posterity should be numberlesse that they should be strangers 400. yeares that Josiah should burne the bones of Baals Priests where Ieroboam did sacrifice that the people of Israel should be in captiuity 70. yeares that Cyrus expressely forenamed should giue them leaue to returne and diuersly honour them c. From hence we may reason thus Those Scriptures which in their reuelations exceed all the vnderstanding of all creatures are vndoubtedly his who is aboue
remaine for euer seuered from the Church of Rome and as Philip said vnto Nathaniel concerning the Messias Come and see Ioh. 1.40 so let vs come and see by the markes the true Church of God and hauing found it amongst the Protestants though some be ready to thinke and say with Nathaniel Can any good thing come out of Nazareth Let vs lodge with it as the two Disciples did with Iesus all our dayes 3. Duty To be inwardly called Rom. 2.29 The third duty is not to rest satisfied with an outward calling vnto the true Church visible but to study and striue by attending vpon Gods ordinances to be inwardly called by being indued with a true faith which is to become a mēber of that which is the only Church before God For he is not a Iew that is one without according to the letter but he that is one within whose circumcision is of the heart 1 Cor. 9.27 all outward things will stand a man in no stead God may stil notwithstanding all these be displeased with thee and thou maist prooue a cast-away as the Apostle speaketh by his own example Dost thou beleeue therefore in word beleeue in heart and in truth also dost thou make cleane the out-side cleanse the inside also dost thou appeare to men to be a beleeuer O prouide that thou maist appeare such vnto the all-seeing eye of God 4. Duty to know the fundamentall points The fourth duty is to be wel acquainted with al doctrines of the foundation and that by comparing things written heereupon with the fountaine the word of God and not to hang vpon any mans sleeue lest if he fall into the ditch hee pull vs also after him For euery visible Church as hath beene shewed is subiect to erre Let vs therefore only follow the Church as it followeth Christ Iesus Take heed that in reading or hearing Rules of direction to be kept from errour thy mind be not forestalled with error thinke nothing conceiue nothing know and resolue vpon nothing vntill that thou findest it in the holy Scriptures Whatsoeuer thou hast learned hence walke still in humility be not puffed vp aboue others Pray heartily for the instruction of Gods Spirit and with Dauid looke vp to the Lord and say Lord open mine eyes to see the wonders contained in thy Law And lastly where the foundation is rightly layd where the substance of religion is held separate not thy selfe for trifles and by-matters for as the Apostle saith of meats and drinks that they neyther commend vs nor discommend vs before God so is it of all outward things they may be inconueniences but the greater is with Peter to goe from the company of our fellow Disciples for this is a degree to the deniall of Christ himselfe with the Israelites to goe vp to fight against the enemy Numb 14. without Moses and the Arke and ineuitably to thrust our selues vpon horrible destruction Quest 35. Which is the second thing that you learne to beleeue touching the Church Answ Secondly I learne to beleeue that Gods Church is holy that is sanctified and washed by water and the holy Ghost and such as daily proceedeth in holinesse vntill it come at the last to be presented before God without spot or wrinkle of sin Explan This thing is specially to be attended as another notable marke of the Church of God and lest any occasion of error be taken by them that seeke occasion the sense is first carefully to be opened which is 1. That the inuisible Church of God viz all true beleeuers are accepted for holy in Christ Iesus at the very first act of their conuersion vnto the true faith though before they were most vncleane by sin 2. That they are all indued with actuall holinesse through the operation of the holy Ghost viz. with a constant hatred and striuing against all sinne and with the loue of vertue and grace and with an earnest study and care to grow herein 3. That as they which are recouering from any dangerous disease that had brought them very low grow euery day stronger vntill they haue recouered their perfect health and strength and as children grow vp in stature and in the lineaments of their body till they come to be perfect men So doe true beleeuers grow in holinesse bringing forth daily more fruites hereof vntill that at the last in death all wickednesse be subdued and they be in holinesse perfected and so without spot or wrinkle presented before the Father 4. That euery true visible Church is holy also viz. in regard of the best members thereof though not in regard of the most or greatest therein 5 That howsoeuer the corruption of manners aboundeth yet the doctrine remaineth holy and pure reprouing these corruptions and vrging to all holines of conuersation For the grounds of holy Scripture setting forth all this 1. Proofe First that through faith all true beleeuers are accepted for holy in Iesus Christ at the very instant of their conuersion this appeareth plainely because that faith iustifieth that is Rom. 3.28 makes a man iust and holy Rom. 11.10 Gal. 3.17 faith ingrafteth into Iesus Christ and maketh vs partakers of his holinesse faith maketh that Christ dwelleth in our hearts Againe faith maketh vs to be the Sonnes of God for to such as beleeued in his name Ioh. 1.12 hee gaue power to be the sonnes of God it maketh vp the marriage betwixt Christ and vs that we become flesh of his flesh Eph. 5. and bone of his bone And what more can be said then to proue the holinesse of true beleeuers will any man deny any thing in Christ to be holy dare he say that the sonnes of God are not holy can it enter into his thought that the place where Christ dwelleth is not holy The Father imbraceth his Prodigall sonne at his very returne home vnto him the Master of the vineyard preferreth those that were called at the last houre of the day our Sauiour Christ receiueth the penitent theefe into Paradise the very day of his conuersion shall wee not thinke then that all these were holy which was not through any holinesse of their owne for they had done nothing but through their faith in Christ making his holines to be theirs 2. Proofe Secondly that they are endued with actuall holinesse the Apostle intimateth when he saith to the Romans that they were called to bee Saints and Saint Peter when in praise of Gods Church Rom. 17 1. Pet. 2.9 Eph. 2.9 1. Ioh. 3.3 he saith Yee are a chosen generation a royall Priesthood a● holy nation c And againe to the Ephesians Yee are Citizens with the Saints and Saint Iohn saith Hee that hath this hope purgeth himselfe euen as he is pure that hath called him Moreouer that all beleeuers are thus is plaine because they haue one common calling to be Saints whatsoeuer they shall plead at the last day if this be