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A47629 A treatise of divinity consisting of three bookes : The first of which handling the Scripture or Word of God, treateth of its divine authority, the canonicall bookes, the authenticall edition, and severall versions, the end, properties, and interpretation of Scripture : The second handling God sheweth that there is a God, and what he is, in his essence and several attributes, and likewise the distinction of persons in the divine essence : The third handleth the three principall works of God, decree, creation and providence / by Edward Leigh ... Leigh, Edward, 1602-1671. 1646 (1646) Wing L1011; ESTC R39008 467,641 520

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he praised God Joseph was no King aud therefore had no Scepter to fall down before In the Hebrew Gen. 47. for top we read head which by a Metaphor signifies the top because the head is the end and highest part of man and consequently of any thing else And for staffe we now read in the Hebrew bed which fell out because the word mittah there extant pricked with other Vowels signifies a staffe for in the Hebrew matteh is a staffe and mitteh a bed The Septuagint whom the Apostle followes read it matteh and so translated it staffe otherwise th●n w● now read it in the Hebrew Text. If we follow the Hebrew Text as it is now extant the sence will be That Jacob because he could not raise his body out of his bed therefore he bowed his head forward upon his beds head and so worshipped God Bez● speaking of the divers Latine translations of the New Testament onely he saith of the v●lgar Latine that he followeth it for the most part and preferreth it before all the rest Maxim● ex parte amplector claeeris omnibus antepono He speakes of the new Testament onely and of that Latine translation of the new Testament in comparison of all other Latine translations which were before him as Erasmus Castalion and such like These plac●s may serve to shew that the vulgar Latine is corrupt no Book being entire or free fron errour Isidore Clarius Brixianus praef●●t in Biblia a great learned man of their own affirmeth that it hath 8000 places in which the sense of the Holy Ghost is changed Since the Councell of Trent 2 Popes have set forth this vulgar Edition diversly which of these shall be received as authenticall How often doe the Papists leave the vulgar in all their controversies when it is for their advantage so to doe it is a matter ordinary with them and needlesse to be proved There is no Edition Ancienter then the Hebrew if the Latine have been used a 1000 yeares in the Church the Hebrew hath been used almost 3000 yeares the Chaldee Arbicke Syriacke and Greeke Editions also have beene used above a 1000 yeares and so should be authentique by the Papists argument Having spoken of the authority of the Scriptures the Canonicall Books and the Authenticall Editions I now goe on to treate of the end of the Scripture its adjuncts or properties fitted to that end and the Interpretation of Scripture The end of the Scripture comes next to be considered of this I have spoken somewhat afore but shall now inlarge my selfe The end of the Scripture is considered 1. In respect of God 2. In respect of us In respect of God the end of the Scripture is a glorifying of him by it we may learne to know love and feare him and so be blessed The glory of God is the chiefe end of all things Prov. 16. 4. In respect of us The end of the Scripture is 1. Intermediate temporall edification which is fitly referred to 5 principall uses the two first respect the mind the other three the heart will and affection It is profitable for Doctrine it serves to direct to all saving truth nothing is to be received as a truth necessary to salvation but what is proved out of Scripture Where that hath not a tongue to speake I must not have an eare to heare Hoc quia de scrip●uris non habet autoritatem eadem facilitate contemuitur qua probatur Hieron 2. Reproofe or Confutation to refute all errours and heterodoxe opinions in Divinity By this sword of the Spirit Christ vanquished Satan Matth. 4. 4. 7. 10. by the Scripture he opposed the Jewes John 5. 45. 46. 47. and 10. 34. by this he refuted the Scribes and Pharisees Matth. 9. 13. and 12. 1. Luke 10. 25. 26. 27. Matth. 19. 34. and 21. 12. 13. the Sadducees Matth. 22 29. By this Austin refuted the Pelagians Irenaeus the Valentinians Tertullian the M●rcionites Athanasius the Arrians In comitijs Vindelicorum cum episcopus Albertus aliquando legeret Biblia referente Luthero in Sermon Convival interrogasset quidam è consiliarijs quid libri hic ●sset nescio equidem respondet qualis sit liber sed omnia quae in eo lego nostrae religioni planè sunt contraria 3. Correction of iniquity setting streight that which is amisse in manners and life 4. Instruction to righteousnesse Instruunt Patriarchae etiam errantes Basil saith the Psalmes are a common Store house and Treasury of good Instruction The Title of the 32 and some other Psalmes is Maschil that is a Psalme of instruction 5. Comfort in all troubles Psal. 19. 8 and 119. 50. and 92. the Greek word for Gospell signifieth glad-tidings The Promises are the Christians best Cordials as Gods Promises are the rule of what we must pray for in faith so they are the ground of what we must expect in comfort 2. Ultimate and chiefest our Salvation and life Eternall John 5. 39. and 20. 31. 2 Tim. 3. 15. It will shew us the right way of escaping hell and attaining Heaven It will shew us what to beleeve and practise for our present and eternall happinesse This was Gods aime in causing the Scripture to be written and we shall find it fully availeable and effectuall for the ends for which it was ordained by God CHAP. VIII THe properties of the Scripture fitted to that end The properties which the Scripture must have for the former end are these It is 1. Of Divine Authority 2. True and Certaine 3. The rule of faith and manners 4. Necessary 5. Pure and Holy 6. Sufficient and Perfect 7. Perspicuous and Plaine 1. It is of Divine Authority and so greater then all exception It is Divine 1. In its efficient cause and Originall which is God the Father dictating in his Sonne declaring and publishing by his holy Spirit confirming and sealing it in the hearts of the faithfull He wrote the Decalogue immediately with his own finger and Commanded the whole Systeme and all the parts of Scripture to be written by his servants the Prophets and Apostles as the publike Actuaries and Pen-men thereof therefore the authority of the Scripture is as great as that of the holy Ghost who did dictate both the matter and words those speeches are frequent the Lord said and the mouth of the Lord hath spoken 2. In the subject matter which is truth according to godlinesse certaine powerfull of venerable antiquity joyned with a sensible demonstration of the Spirit and Divine presence and with many other things atte●●ing its divine authority Whence it follows that the authority of the Holy Scriptures is 1. Infallible which expresseth the minde and will of God to whom truth is essentiall and necessary 2. Supreame and Independent into which at last all faith is resolved from whi●h it is not lawfull to appeale By which singular authority the Scripture is distinguished
Pastor in the Old Testament had such authority much more the chiefe Priest in the New Sol. This one pastor signifieth neither the High Priest in the old Law nor the Pope in the New but Jesus Christ the High Shepheard for our soules Ob. Matth. 16. 19. Christ saith to Peter to the● will I give the Keyes of the Kingdome of Heaven therefore the Pope hath authority to expound Scripture Sol. First by the Keyes here is meant Commission to preach the Gospell not authority of interpreting the Scriptures When the Gospell is preached the Kingdome of heaven is opened to the beleevers and shut to the unbeleevers 2. That authority of the Keyes was not committed to Peter onely but to the other Apostles also Matth. 28. 18. 19. There is a twofold judgement 1. Of discretion 1 Cor. 10. 15. 2. Of authority as the Parllament judgeth Capitall crimes If the Papists understand the word Judge to ●ignifie Discerning as when we judge of meates by the taste every faithfull person ought to pray unto God for grace to judge to discerne and to know the true sense of the Scripture But if by judging they understand to pronounce decrees definitive and infallible judgements touching the sence of the Scriptures thereby to bind other mens consciences there is no man in the world that hath that power See Moulin● Buckler of Faith We have a more compendious way to come to the understanding of the Scripture It were too long when we doubt of any place to stay till we have the generall consent of the Pastors of the Church or to expect a generall counsell or to goe up to Rome But the word of God is amongst us the Scriptures themselves and the Spirit of God opening our hearts doe teach us how to understand them And yet we say not as the Papists falsely charge us that we allow every private mans interpretation of Scripture refusing the judgement of the Pastors of the Church Panoruitan saith the opinion of one godly man ought to be preferred before the Popes if it be grounded upon better authority of the Old and New Testament 2 Pet. 1. 20. No prophesie of the Scripture is of any private interpretation Stapleton saith interpretation is private either ratione personae when the man is private or ratione medij when it is not taken out of the context and circumstances or ratione finis when it is for a false end Now private interpretation in regard of the person if it be publike in regard of the meanes is not forbidden for it is lawfull for one man with Scripture toti resistere mundo saith the Glosse of the Canon-Law the meaning of this place is that the Prophets were no Interpreters or Messengers of their own minds but Gods The Catholickes hold saith Chamier meaning still by that Title the Protestants that the Scripture is to be interpreted by private labour and industry viz. of Augustine Jerome Chrysostome but not in a private sense that is in a sense arising from the braine of the Interpreter It is true saith Cartwright against the Rhemists that the Scriptures cannot be expounded of every private Spirit nor which is more of any private spirit nor yet of all private spirits together but onely of those which are inspired of God viz. the Prophets and Apostles which are here opposed unto private Interpretation And therefore it is evident that the exposition of the Scripture ought not to be fetched from Ecclesiasticall either Fathers or Councels which speake not by inspiration but from the Scriptures themselves what he meaneth he declareth in the next verse where he sheweth the reason of his saying namely that it must be interpreted as it was written and by as high authority Seeing therefore it was first spoken by holy men which spake as they were led by the holy Spirit and were inspired of God it followeth that it must be interpreted by the same authority The interpretation therefore that is brought but of the Apostles and Prophets is not private although it be avowed by one man onely On the other side that interpretation which is not brought from thence although it have the allowance of whole Generall Counsels is but private This is a principall meaning of our Saviour Christ when he willeth that we should call no man father or Master in the earth that is in matter of doctrine we should depend upon the authority of no man nor of all men in the earth but onely upon Christ and upon God Our reasons by which we prove that the chiefest judgement and authority of interpreting Scriptures is to be given not to the Church but to the Scriptures themselves and the Holy Ghost 1. That which onely hath power to beget faith that onely hath the chiefest authority of interpreting Scripture and of determining all controversies concerning faith and religion but the Scriptures onely and the Holy Ghost have this force Rom. 10. 17. the Holy Ghost onely can infuse saving faith into our hearts which is called by the Schoolemen infusa fides The faith which we have from the Church is acquired and sufficeth not to a certaine perswasion 2. The Scriptures cannot be interpreted but by the same Spirit wherewith they were written that spirit is found no where but in the Scripture whosoever have promises from God to understand the Scripture may interpret it but so have all the faithfull 3. Christ himselfe makes the Scripture a Judge John 12. 48. and still appealed to it 4. Although the Fathers were men indued of God with excellent gifts and brought no small light to understanding of the Scriptures yet learned men in our dayes may give a right sense of sundry places thereof which the Fathers saw not yea against the which perhaps they consent Hath any man living read all the Fathers nay have all the men living read them nay can they shew them can they get them I had almost said can they name them In the exposition of those words Tu es Petrus supra hanc petram almost every one of the Fathers at least the most part of them and the best expound it of Peters faith yet the Papists understand it non de fide sed de persona Petri. Here they dis-agree themselves from the Fathers John 10. 16. by the title of one Shepheard Augustine Chrysostome Jerome Cyrill Theodoret Theophylact Euthimius Rupertus Cyprian and other Fathers agree that Christ is there designed but Stapleton saith the Pope is there meant In the division of the Law they goe cleane contrary to the greatest part of the Fathers For they divide the Commandements as we doe but the Papists make the two first one and the tenth two 2. They have no Father to countenance them in this but Augustine There were no writings of the Fathers for a time many of them wrote 400 yeares after Christ but some 500 and 600 yeares after Christ what rule had they before that time of interpreting
reliquos Scripturae libros pert●xi Voet. Biblioth Theol. l. 1. c. 14. 4. For Popish Expositors Aquinas is esteemed by the Papists as the Oracle of the Romish Schoole whom for his profound learning and search into the mysteries of all Divinity they sirnamed Angelicall He was the first thorow Papist of name that ever wrote and with his rare gifts of wit learning and industry did set out Popery * most Maximo altissimo ingenio vir cui ad plenam absolutamque totius tam divinae quam humanae eruditionis gloriam solus defuit linguarum eloquentiae usus quem aeruditi istius saeculi ut pote sublimioribus studijs intenti neglexere Sixtus Senensis vide plara ibid. Luther on 9 of Genesis chiefely commends Lyra for following the literall sense Nicolaus Lyranus vir tanta tamque pura vera germana sacrae Scripturae scientia praeditus ut in illa exponend● nullum habeat illius temporis parem Rainoldus de lib. Apoc tom● 1. praelect 21. Ex antiquioribus tanquam universales communes commentatores habiti fuerunt Lyrasnus Glossa Voetius in Biblioth Theol. Jansenius eruditus moderatus Interpres Cajetane went over all the Scripture saving the Canticles and Prophets which dying he left begun and the Revelation quam de industria attingere noluit He was both a learned moderate Papist as Chamier and Whitaker both shew He was chiefely intent on the literall sense and that according to the Hebrew truth of which tongue he had little knowledge but had by him those that were skil'd in the Hebrew who would interprete ad verbum not onely exactly but superstitiously and often absurdly which often drew the like expositions from the Cardinall There are now 5 Papi●s joyned together in severall Volumes on the whole Scripture Immanuell Sa Estius Gagneius Tirinus and Menochius the last of which Grotius commends in his Preface to his Annotations on the Old Testament Estius doth excellently on all the Epistles Maldonate doth well on the Evangelists but was a most supercilious writer and no marvell since he was for his Country a Spaniard and his profession a Jesuite Masius hath written learnedly on Joshua Quanta vir ille linguae Graecae sed preaesertim Hebrae●cae Rabbinicae Syriacae cognitione fuerit imbutus nemini docto opinor incognitum Morinus l. 1. exercitat 9. c. 6. and exercit 1. c. 4. Andreaeas Masius linguae Hebraicae Syriacae peritissimus atque in lectione Rabbinica egregiè exeroitatus The Popish Postils are the burden of many Camels as Lipsius speakes of the Bookes of the Law and are fitly s●iled by godly Divines pigrorum pulvinaria Vide Zepperi Artem Habendi Audiendi conciones sacras l. 1. c. 4 p. 38 39. c. Ministers to all the meanes formerly mentioned for the interpreting of Scripture must adde a conscionable practise of what they know and must in all humblenesse of minde seeke the peoples edification The meanes to be used by the people to understand the Scripture and find out the sence and meaning of it 1. If they be learned they may make use of most of the former meanes prescribed to Ministers 2. Such as are unskilfull and know not how to make use of those meanes are 1. Diligently to read the Scripture in which are to be considered 1. Antecedent preparation that they come to the reading and studie of the Scriptures with Prayers and greatest reverence relying on the Divine promises for the inlightening of their minds by the Holy Ghost The Scripture may well be called the Revelation of Christ. Rev. 1. 1. See Rev. 5. 5. 2. The adjuncts of reading which are 1. Chiefest attention in reading and a pious disposition and spirituall frame of the heart that they may not understand onely but cordially affect what they understand 2. Application of all things to the Examination Correction and amendment of their own lives 3. Diligent Meditation 4. Conferring of it with others and Catechizing 2 They ought to have recourse to those that are more skilfull then themselves and to consult with the best Commentaries and Expositions of the Scripture and read them judiciously We teach of our Meanes that they all together doe make a perfect way whereby we may finde the right sense of the Scripture Our Adversaries prescribe this method and course to be taken in expounding of Scripture which consists in 4 rules The generall practise of the Church the Consonant interpretation of the Fathers the decrees of generall Councels lastly the rule of faith consisting partly of the Scriptures partly of traditions unwritten In all these meanes the Pope is implicitely understood for the rule of faith is that which the Pope approves the practise of the Church is that which the Pope observes the interpretation of the Fathers is that which the Pope follows the determination of Councels what the Pope confirmes so that the Pope must interprete all Scripture But divers reasons may be alleaged to shew that the true interpretation of Scripture is not to be sought for from the Popes of Rome 1. Because the Popes of Rome have frequently and grossely erred in interpreting of Scripture as in the 8th of the Romanes 8. v. those that are in the flesh cannot please God that is those that are married said Siricius the Pope Innocent so expounded those words John 6. unlesse you eate the flesh of the Sonne of man and drinke his bloud you shall have no life in you that he thence concluded that there is no salvation without receiving the Eucharist and that it is to be given to Infants Pope Boniface interpreted Luke 22. 38. of the temporall and spirituall sword delivered to the Pope 2. Because the Popes of Rome doe differ among themselves in Interpreting of Scripture as Matth. 16. 18. Some Pop●● say rightly that by the Rock Christ or the confession of faith given by Peter concerning Christ is meant others interprete it of the person of Peter the Apostle others expound it to be the Romane Seat or Chaire 3. Because many of the Popes of Rome have not onely erred but been grosse wicked Hereticks Liberius the Pope about the yeare 350 was an Arrian and subscribed to the unjust condemnation of Athanasius and afterward as an obstinate Hereticke was deposed Honorius the first was a Monothelite he held that Christ had but one will and so but one nature and for this heresie was condemned in 3. Generall Councels Some Popes were Atheists as Leo the tenth who called the Gospell fabulam de Christo. One cals the Pope that great Heteroclite in religion another saith The Pope is the worst of Cardinals who are the worst of Priests who are the worst of Papists who are the worst of Christians For Counc●ls Gregory the Pope did reverence the 4 first generall Councels as the 4 Evangelists But if these foure generall Councels be of equall authority with the
foure Evangelists the Popes authority as Papists say being above the authority of the Councels it followeth that his authority is greater then the Evangelists then which what can be more blasphemously spoken We say the true interpretation of Scripture is not to be sought from generall Councels 1. Because even universall Councels have erred the Chalcedonian Councell one of the 4 so much magnified by Pope Gregory in rashly preferring the Constantinopolitane Church before that of Alexandria and Antioch Those that condemned Christ were then the universall visible Church Matth 26. 65. John 11. 47. See Act. 4. 18. 2. Generall councels have beene opposite one to another that of Constance to the other of Basill whereof one setteth downe that Councels could erre and so also the Pope and that a Councell was above the Pope the other affirmeth the quite contrary 3. There were no Generall Councels after the Apostles for 300 yeares till the first Councell of Nice when yet the Church had the true sence of the Scriptures 4. The generall Councels interpreted Scripture by Scripture as Athanasius and Ambrose teach concerning the first Councell of Nice 5. Because they cannot be so easily celebrated to declare any doubtfull sense of Scripture They have expounded but few places of Scripture neither is it likely the Pope will assemble them to expound the rest The Papists say that the Scripture ought to be expounded by the rule of faith and therefore not by Scripture onely But the rule of faith and Scripture is all one As the Scriptures are not of man but of the Spirit so their interpretation is not by man but of the Spirit likewise Let Councels Fathers Churches give their sense of the Scripture it 's private if it be not the sense and interpretation of the Spirit Let a private man give the true sense of the Scripture it 's not private because it 's Divine the sense of the Holy Ghost and private in 2 Pet. 1. 20. is not opposed to publike but to Divine and the words are to be read no Scripture is of a mans own interpretation that is private contrary to Divine The word is interpreted aright by declaring 1. The order 2. The summne or scope 3. The sense of the words which is done by framing a Rhetoricall and Logicall Analysis of the Text. In giving the sense three Rules are of principall use and necessity to be observed 1. The literall and largest sense of any words in Scripture must not be imbraced farther when our cleaving thereunto would breed some dis-agreement and contrariety between the present Scripture and some other Text or place else shall we change the Scripture into a Nose of wax 2. In case of such appearing dis-agreement the Holy Ghost leads us by the hand to seek out some distinction restriction limitation or figure for the reconcilement thereof and one of these will always fit the purpose for Gods word must alwayes bring perfect truth it cannot fight against it selfe 3. Such figurative sense limitation restriction or distinction must be sought out as the word of God affordeth either in the present place or some other and chiefely those that seeme to differ with the present Text being duly compared together The end of the first Booke THE SECOND BOOKE CHAPTER 1. OF GOD. HAving handled the Scripture which is principium Cognoscendi in Divinity I now proceed to Treate of God who is principium essendi or thus the Scripture is the rule of Divinity God and his workes are the matter or parts of Divinity This Doctrine is 1. Necessary 1. Because man was made for that end that he might rightly acknowledge and worship God love and honour him 2. It is the end of all divine Revelation John 5. 39. 3. To be Ignorant of God is a great misery being alienated from the life of God through the Ignorance that is in them 2. Profitable Our welfare and happinesse consists in the knowledge of God Jer. 9. 23. John 17. 3. the knowledge of God in the life to come is called the Beatificall vision 3. Difficult God being infinite and our understanding finite betwixt which two there is no proportion who knowes the things of God save the spirit of God A created understanding can no more comprehend God then a Viall-glasse can containe the waters of the Sea His wisdome is unsearchable Rom. 11. Job 11. 7. and 26. 13. Euclide answered very fitly to one asking many things concerning the Gods Coetera quidem nescio illud scio quod odêre curiosos Simonides being injoyned by Hiero to tell him what was God required a dayes time to be given him before he answered and at the end of that two when they were expired foure still doubling his time for inquiry till at the last being by Hiero asked a reason of his delayes he told him plainely that by how much the more he thought of God by so much the more he apprehended the impossibility of declaring what he was We know God per viam eminentiae negationis causationis 1. All perfections which we apprehend must be ascribed unto God and that after a more excellent manner then can be apprehended as that he is in himselfe by himselfe and of himselfe that he is one true good and holy 2. We must remove from him all imperfections whatsoever he is Simple Eternall Infinite Unchangeable 3. He is the Supream cause of all There is a threefold knowledge of God 1. An implanted knowledge which is in every mans conscience a naturall ingraffed principle about God O anima naturaliter Christiana said Tertullian 2. An acquired knowledge by the Creatures Psal. 19. 1. That is the great Booke in evey page whereof we may behold the Diety Praesentemque refert quaelibet herba Deum 3. Revealed knowledge of faith spoken of Heb. 11. 6. and this is onely sufficient to Salvation The Heathens had the knowledge of God in a confused manner Rom. 1. 19. 21. and 2. 14. a practicall knowledge 15. v. which shew the worke of the Law written in their hearts not the gracious writing promised in the Covenant the light of nature is not sufficient to bring man to Salvation onely in Judah is God known 76. Psal. 1. 2. and 147. 19. See I●hn 14. 6. and 11. 27. Ephes. 2. 11. 12. The Heathen might know Gods nature and attributes that he was the Creator of the world that by his providence he did preserve and rule all things but they could not by the most industrious use of all natures helpes attaine unto any the least knowledge of God as he is mans Redeemer in Christ they knew not the truth as it is Jesus Ephes. 4. 21. In God we will consider 1. His Nature 2. His workes In his nature two things are considerable 1. That he is 2. What he is That God is is the most manifest cleare evident ungainsayable truth in the world It is the first verity
A Treatise of DIVINITY CONSISTING OF THREE BOOKES The First of which Handling the Scripture or Word of God treateth of its Divine Authority the Canonicall Bookes the Authenticall Edition and severall Versions the End Properties and Interpretation of Scripture The Second handling God sheweth that there is a God and what he is in his Essence and severall Attributes and likewise the distinction of Persons in the Divine Essence The third handleth the three principall Workes of God Decree Creation and Providence By EDWARD LEIGH Esq. Master of Arts and one of the Members of the House of Commons 2 Tim. 3. 16. All Scripture is given by inspiration of God and is profitable for doctrine for reproofe for correction for instruction in righteousnesse John 7. 3. And this is life eternall that they know thee the onely true God and Jesus Christ whom thou hast sent Psalm 111. 2. The workes of the Lord are great sought out of all them that have pleasure therein LONDON Printed by E. Griffin for William Lee and are to be sold at his shop at the Turkes-head in Fleetstreet neere Ram-alley 1646. June 9. 1646. I Have perused this excellent and learned Treatise of Divinity with much pleasure profit and satisfaction and finding it to be very sound judicious and profitable I doe allow it to be printed and published John Downhant TO The Right Honourable THE LORDS and COMMONS Assembled in PARLIAMENT Right Honourable I Intended the Dedication of this Treatise to the Parliament before I had the happinesse to be a Member of so Honourable a Society Who are so fit to Patronize a worke concerning God his word and workes as the Parliament of England and such a Parliaments who have heard more of God and his will and seene more of his wayes in lesse then a lustre of yeares then many precedent Parliaments have in severall Ages Arduous and important matters concerning Church or State have been the daily Theme of your serious debates Queen Elizabeth once in her progresse visiting the County of Suffolke all the Justices of Peace in that County met her Majesty having every one his Minister next to his body which the Queen tooke speciall notice of and thereupon uttered this Speech that She had often demanded of her privy Councell why her County of Suffolke was better governed than any other County and could never understand the reason thereof but now She her selfe perceived the reason it must needs be so said Shee where the word and the sword goe together You did Honourable worthies neare the beginning of the Parliament cause a Synode of Reverend and Able Divines to be called to advise you in Church-affaires God hath sent unto you as Jeremie speaketh all his servants the Prophets choice men out of every County as you your selves were elected out of many to be serviceable to you in the great worke of Reformation You have had the benefit of their faithfull advise of their fervent Prayers and diligent labours When did any Parliament enter into so solemne a League and Covenant to reforme themselves and Kingdome when were there so many dayes of Humiliation kept so generally in England when was there such a constant daily Lecture of worthy men in Westminster-Abbie before In the Parliament held 5 E. 3. so many excellent lawes were made as it was called bonum Parliamentum I hope as you are now in Prayers and Print stiled the Repairers of the breach and restorers of paths to dwell in so future Ages will honour you with the title of Optimum Parliamentum When in the Councell of Constance talke was Ministred touching the reformation of the Spiritualty and some said quòd oporteat incipere à Minoritis the reformation must begin at the Friers no said the Emperour Sigismond Non à minoritis sed a Majoritis incipienda est reformatio meaning the reformation ought first to begin with the Pope and Cardinals and Bishops and so discend after to the inferiours Some Emperours were called Great for their goodnesse religion makes a Nation or person honourable Rom. 9. 4. compared with 3. 2. That was a worthy Speech of a Germane divine writing to Oecolampadius Veniat verbum domini submittemus etiamsi nobis essent sexcenta colla As Queene Elizabeth passed in Triumphall State through the Streets of London after her Coronation when the Bible was presented unto her at the little-Conduit in Cheape-side she received the same with both her hands and kissing it laid it to her breast saying that the same had ever beene her chiefest delight and should be the rule by which She meant to frame her Government You have likewise covenanted to reforme the Church according to the word of God the best Rule both for a Personall and Ecclesiasticall Reformation There is a double generall subject of reformation 1. Corrupt persons 2. Corrupt things You have cast out a scandalous Ministry labour to settle I beseech you in all the three kingdoms Pious able Preachers Christ the great Reformer of his Church Mal. 3. 2 Matth. 3. 12. specially purgeth the Sonnes of Levi Mal. 3. 1. because he hath appointed them the office of purging others secondly the ordinances of God must be both Pure and Perfect in a compleate Reformation You have cast out a great deale of rubbish O that the House of God might be built It was a blemish upon some of those reformations mentioned in Scripture that the high places were not taken away and that their reformation needed a further reformation God did much honour King Edward a Childe and Queene Elizabeth a woman in making them the beginners of a blessed reformation O that the Lord would be pleased by you to perfect what they begun that Christs government worship and discipline might be set up in the three Kingdoms In the times of our troubles peace and truth have beene joyned together in our Prayers and Capitulations O let them never be separated I will reveale unto them the abundance of peace and truth Jer. 33. 6. and the same Prophet complaines that there were none valiant for truth in the earth Buy the truth and sell it not saith Salomon contend earnestly for the faith which was once delivered to the Saints Amicus Socrates Amicus Plato sed magis amica veritas You have covenanted to extirpate heresies and whatsoever is contrary to sound doctrine In your first Declaration there is this memorable passage It is farre from our purpose or desire to let loose the golden reines of Discipline and government in the Church to leave private persons or particular congregations to take up what forme of divine service they please for we hold it requisite that there should be through-out the whole Realme a conformity to that order which the Lawes enjoyne according to the word of God God hath done great things for you and by you and therefore he expects great things from you It was a noble resolution in our Josiah Edward the 6th
15. 1. Heb. 8. 11. I●hn 14. 26. and by intell●ctuall visions Num. 12. 6. to the phantasie God revealed his will by imaginary visions to Prophets awake and by dreames to Prophets asleepe Gen. 40. 8. 41. 8 9. Acts 16. 10 10. 3. Num. 14. 4. to the senses God revealed his will and that either by vision to the eye or lively voyce to the Eare Gen. 3 9. 4. 6. 15. 4 5. Exod. 20. 1 2. 3. 1 2 3 33. 17. And Lastly by writing This Revelation was sometimes immediate by God himselfe after an unspeakable manner or by meanes viz. Angels Vrim Thummim Prophets Christ himselfe and his Apostles The written word forthematter contained in it is called the word of God Rom 9. 6. for the manner of Record the Scripture John 10. 35. 2 Tim. 3. 16. 1 Pet. 2. 6. or Scriptures Matthew 22. 29. John 5. 39. Romans 15. 4. 2. Pet. 3. 16. By an Antonomasie or an excellency of phrase as the most worthy writings that ever saw the light Sometimes with an Epithite the holy Scriptures Rom. 1. 2. 2 Tim. 3. 15. the S●riptures of the Prophets Rom. 16. 26 Some thinke th●t Enoch the seventh from Al●m wrote but Jude 6. 14. speak●th onely of his prophesying which might rather be by word of mouth then writing because our Saviour citing Scripture ever gives the first place to Moses and undertaking by the Scriptures to prove himselfe to be the Messiah that he ought to suffer began at Moses Luke 24. 27. No doubt if there had beene any more ancient then Moses our Saviour would have alleadged it because all the Scripture that was before him was to give testimony of him Of the authority of the Scripture The Author of the Scriptures was God himselfe they came from him in a speciall and peculiar manner commonly called inspiration which is an act of Gods Spirit immediately imprinting or infusing those notions into their braines and those phrases and words by which the notions were uttered 2 Tim. 4. 16. All Scripture is given by Divine inspiration or by inspiration of God Prophesie came not of old time by the will of men but holy men of God spake as they were moved or carried by the Holy Ghost 2 Pet. 1. 21. They did not write these things of their own heads but the Spirit of God did move and worke them to it and in it 2 Sam. 23. 2. The Spirit of the Lord spake by me that is did immediately guide me and tell me what matter to utter and in what words Stephen saith they resisted the Holy Ghost when they did disobey the Scriptures The Holy Ghost by the mouth of David and the mouth of Esay spake Acts 1. 16. 28. 25. The Inscriptions of many Propheticall bookes and Epistles Apostolicall run thus The word of the Lord which ●ame to Hosea Amos Joel Paul Peter JAmes a servant of God and an Apostle of Christ. The proeme that is set before divers prophecies is this Thus saith the Lord and the Prophets inculcate that speech the mouth of the Lord hath spoken it because they would take off the thoughts of the people from their own persons and lift them up to consideration of God the chiefe author It is all one to say the Scripture saith Rom. 4. 3. 10. 11. 11. 2. Gal. 4. 30. 1 Tim. 5. 10. and God saith Rom 9. 25. Heb. 4. 3. 8. 5. 13. 5. and the word Scripture is put for God speaking in the Scripture the Scripture saith to Pharaoh Rom. 9. 7. and the Scripture hath shut up all men under sinne Galat. 3. 22. for which in another place God hath shut up Rom. 11. 32. All other disciplines were from God and every truth whosoever speaks it is from the holy Ghost but the Scripture in a singular manner is attributed to the Holy Ghost he immediately dictated it to the holy men of God The efficient principall cause then of the Scripture was God the ten Commandements of which most of the rest is an exposition were writen after a secret and unutterable manner by God himselfe therefore they are called the writings of God Exod. 32. 16. Secondly all the rest which was written though men were the instruments was done by his appoinment and assistance Exo. 17. 14. Esay 8. 1. Jer. 30. 2. The Scripture is often attributed to the holy Ghost as the Author and no mention is made of the Pen-men Heb. 10 15. The Prophets and Apostles were the Pen-men of the Scripture whose calling sending and inspiration was certainly divine for whatsoever they taught the Church of God or left in writing they learned not before in the Schooles 1 Cor. 2. 13. The Divine authority of th● word may be defined a certain dignity and excellency of the Scripture above all other sayings or writings whatsoever whereby it is perfectly true in word and sence it deserves credit in all sayings narrations of things past present and to come threatnings and promises and as superiour doth binde to obedience if it either forbid or command any thing 1 Tim. 1. 15. 2 Pet. 1. 19. John 5. 39. Heb. 6. 18. Rom. 1. 5. 2 Cor. 10. 5 6. 13. 3. 12. 12. Gal. 1. 1 12 13. though the things in mans judgement seem unlike or incredible or the Commandements hard and foolish to the carnall minde Hereticks have laboured to prove their corrupt and damnable opinions out of the Scripture and have received some bookes if not all as Divine The Turkes at this day so esteem the five books of Moses as they will kisse such patches of Paper as they finde having any part thereof written in the same Aristaeus an Heathen when he had determined to have disputed against Scripture confesseth that he was forbidden by God in a dreame Plato is termed Moses Atticus Moses speaking Greeke The holy Scripture in it sel●e is Divine and Authenticall though no man in the world should so acknowledge it as the Sunne in it selfe were light though all the men in the world were blind and could not or would not see it but in respect of us it is Divine and Authenticall when it is acknowledged and esteemed so to be The Scripture is the word of God written by holy men as they were inspired by the holy Ghost divinely containing all Divine truth necessary to salvation for the edification and instruction of Gods Church thereunto and for the glory of God That the Scriptures were from God may appeare by reasons contained in or cleaving to the Scripture 1. From the excellency of their matter which is Heavenly the divine and supernaturall matter contained in it It telleth us of such things as doe farre exceed the reach of mans reason and which it was impossible for any man to counterfeit and faine and which being told are so correspondent to reason
to thy face curse God and die and that Psal. 14. 1. Some answer thus these places are historically inspired not dogmatically Another question is whether preaching be not divinely inspired as well as the word written The Preaching of the Prophets and Apostles was divinely inspired but the preaching of our Ministers no further then it agrees with the word Some say the Scriptures are but a device of mans braine to give assistance to Magistrates in civill government Nothing is more repugnant to prudence and policy What policy was it in the Old Testament to appoint circumcision to cut a poore child as soon as he came into the world Two and twenty thousand Oxen were spent at the dedication of one Altar to sacrifice so many Oxen and Sheep such usefull creatures Christ chose silly illiterate men to propagate the Gospell This serves for information of our judgement and assures us of divers truths 1. That the Scriptures are for themselves worthy to be believed they have authority in and of themselves not borrowed from any persons in the world by which they binde the consciences of all men to receive them with faith and obedience for their Authors sake alone and the divine truth which shines in them though they should not be commended unto men by any authority of any creature Such as is the authority of the Authour of any writing such is the authority of the writing it selfe for all the strength of the testimony depends upon the excellency of the person which gives the testimony now God is the authour of these writings Thus saith the Lord therefore such authority as he hath such must they have a supreme highest authority which borroweth from none and is subject to none So this acknowledgement of their originall teacheth that we must not believe them for the authority sake of any man or men for Gods word can borrow no authority from men John 5. 34. I receive not testimony from man saith Christ that is need no mans testimony As the first goodnesse is to be loved for it selfe so is the first truth to be believed for it selfe saith Aquinas And as Christ by himselfe could demonstrate that he was the Messias so the Word by it selfe can prove that it is the Word of God We affirme that the Scriptures are known to be of God by themselves the Papists maintaine that we cannot be certaine of the Scriptures divinity by any other argument then the testimony of the Church which say they doth infallibly propound unto us what is to be believed what is not to be believed and Hermanus saith that the Scripture is no more worth then Aesops Fables without the testimony of the Church As in other Sciences there are alwaies some principles per se nota indemonstrabilia whence other things are proved so in Divinity all conclusions in point of beliefe and practice are proved by the Scripture The Scriptures prove themselves by their own naturall light manifesting their divine originall whence they are and their right meaning how they must be understood They are like light primum visibile which maketh all other things manifest and it selfe too by it own proper qualities 1. The Church rather depends on the Scripture which is an object not principle of Divinity the Church ought to be subject to Christ Ephes. 5. 24. the Scripture is the word of Christ Col. 3. 16. 2. All the words of the Scripture are words of truth Dan. 10. 21. some words of the Church are words of error Esay 1. 21 24. 3. 8 9. 5. 13. But the authority of him that speaks alwaies truth is greater then of him who sometimes lies ergo the authority of the Scripture is greater then that of the Church Goodnesse it selfe cannot deceive wisdome it selfe cannot be deceived God is both Titus 1. 2. The voice of the Scripture is the voice of God 2 Tim. 3. 16. but the voice of the Church is the voice of men Acts 14. 14. 15. 17. 17. 30. 3. Faith and a firme consolation in temptations ought to relie on a sure that is a divine foundation for every humane testimony is uncertaine 4. In vaine shall we dispute against the wicked concerning Religion and divine truth if we shall say it comes from God because we affirme so 5. This is proved by Scriptures John 5. 34 35. Christ in his humiliation did not receive the testimony of John much lesse will he receive the testimony of others now he is glorified John 5 34 35 36. 1 Cor. 2. 4 5. 1 John 5. 9. 6. The authority proving is greater more certaine and more knowne then the conclusion proved by the ●ame Autoritde probans is greater then probata The Papists to prove the authority of the Church flie to the Scriptures For I demand whence doe we understand that the Church erres not in delivering the Canon of the Scripture they answer it is governed by the Holy Ghost and therefore cannot erre in its decrees But how appeares it that it is so governed alwaies they answer God hath promised it and then they alleage those places to prove it Ob. The Church is ancienter then the Scripture because it was before Moses ergo it hath greater authority Sol. 1. The Prophets and John Baptist were ancienter then Christ yet not of greater authority 2. Consider the word 1. quoad formale externum as written and clothed with words so the Church was before the Scripture 2. quoad formale internum the matter and sence or meaning so the Scripture was more ancient than the Church because the Church is gathered and governed by it 1 Pet. 1. 23. John 17. 20. JAmes 1. 18. Semen semper sobole illa cujus est semen antiquius esse necesse est In the thing it selfe the being and substance of the word was before the Church although in this circumstance and manner of being it was after Ob. 2. Non erederem Evangelio nisi me commoveret Ecclesiae Catholicae authoritas saith Augustine Sol. These words saith Whitaker are so well known to the Papists that one can hardly exchange three words with them but they will produce them It is true indeed that we may at the first be much moved to receive and hearken to the Scriptures because the Church gives testimony of them as the woman of Samaria by her speeches of Christ was a meanes of moving the Samaritans to believe but when the men of Samaria had heard Christ himselfe speake they believed in him more for his own words then the womans John 4. 39 41. In which sence those words of Austin so frequently quoted by the Papists are to be interpreted Austin spake this of himselfe being a Manichee when he was a Manichee he was first moved by the authority of the Church to believe the Gospell His meaning is that he had never believed the Gospell if the authority of the Church had not
been an introduction unto him not that his faith rested upon it as a finall stay but that it caused him so farre to respect the word of the Gospell to listen unto it and with a kind of acquisite and humane faith to believe it that he was thereby fitted to a better illumination by force whereof he might more certainly believe it to be of God But that the testimony of one Father in one place in a matter of such consequence should be of that force it is strange We deny not the ministery of the Church as an externall meanes to move us to imbrace the word of God but we deny the authority of the Church to be the principall meanes When we call the Scriptures Canonicall we call them not so passively because they are received into the Canon by men and accepted of but actively because they prescribe a Canon and rule to us The office of the Church in respect of the Scripture stands in foure things 1. To distinguish Canonicall Scripture from that which is not Canonicall although the determination of the Church be not the onely or chiefest cause why the Apocrypha are rejected 2. To be a faithfull keeper of those books which are inspired by God like a notary which keepeth publique writings 3. To publish declare and teach the truth as a cryer with a loud voyce ought to pronounce the Kings edicts but to pretermit adde or alter nothing Matth. 28. 19 20. Acts 8. 35. 1 Tim. 3. 15. This Church here is not that Church which the Papists make to be the Judge of controversies neither the Church representative which is a generall Councell nor the Church virtuall which they imagine to be the Pope but the Church Essentiall the congregation of all faithfull believers the House of God as he calleth it The Apostle here speaks of a pillar not more Architectonico understanding by it some essentiall piece of the building but more forensi such a post or pillar on which Tables and Proclamations use to hang. In old time the Gentiles used to write their Lawes in Tables and so hang them upon pillars of stone that the people might read them as Proclamations are nailed to posts in market Towns The Apostle describing the Church likeneth it to one of these pillars whose use was to shew what hung thereon It is pillar not because it holds up but holds forth the truth 4. To interpret the Scripture by the Scripture Since many things in Scripture are doubtfull and hard to be understood without an Interpreter Acts 8. 31. it doth belong to the Church to expound the same to interpret and give the sence Nehem. 8. 8 9. Luke 24. 27. provided that this exposition be by the Scriptures Some of the Papists say that the Church may condere artioulos fidei facere canonicum quo ad nos and though they talke of Councels and Fathers yet all is as the Pope concludes The testimony and tradition of the Church especially the Primitive Church is necessary to know that the Gospell of Matthew is divine Scripture by an historicall and acquired faith to know this by a divine and infured faith besides the authority of the Church the matter character and contents of every booke and comparing of it with other Scriptures doe serve as an inward cause to produce the said infused faith Ob. We are sent to the Church to determine all controversies 1 Cor. 11. 16. Sol. Controversies are either dogmaticall concerning faith or rituall concerning true order the proposition is about these not the first Secondly from this fundamentall truth that the Scripture is immediately from God the basis indeed of all religion 1 Cor. 15. the wickednesse of the Church of Rome is farther to be condemned which will not suffer the Scriptures to be read in their Churches but in an unknowne tongue nor in private by the common people without speciall leave and certaine cautions from their superiours Of old they would not suffer them to be read at all of late they are forced to give licences to some and they teach them that they should not make the Scripture judge of the doctrine and practice of the Church but the doctrine and practise of the Church must be the interpreter and judge of the meaning of the Scripture that is they must take the Scripture to meane none otherwise whatsoever it seem to say then what is agreeable to that which the Pope doth teach and practice There cannot be a surer signe of a bad cause then that it feares to be tried by the writings which it selfe cannot deny to be written by God for correction for reproofe for instruction in righteousnesse Some Papists are more modest herein as Bellarmine l. 2. de verbo Dei c. 15. Catholica Ecclesia statuit ne passim omnibus concedatur Scripturae lectio some more rigid as Huntly and Hosiua The Papists object the obscursity of Scriptures as an argument to hinder lay-men from reading them and account it a matter of profanation to allow men women and children and all promiscuously the use of the vulgar translation and thinke they will rather be hurt then benefited by them taking occasion of erring from them Hosius urgeth that give not holy things to dogs cast not Pearles before Swine to prove the people must be barred from reading of the Scriptures It is Pope Innocents glosse a beast might not touch the mount a lay-man might not meddle with Scripture Lindan saith nihil noxae inferretur in Ecclesiam salv● traditionis fundamento if there were no Bible and another Scriptura citius faciet Haereticum Lutherarum quam Catholicum Because we will have all proved by Scripture and make that the compleat rule for what we believe or doe in all Theologicall matters they call us Scripturarios Scripturemen and atram entarios Theologos and so to carry or read a Bible is matter of scoffe we may stile them in Tertullians phrase Scripturarum Lucifugae Traditionaries Saint Gregory who is blessed in their Church exhorteth a lay-man to the serious study of the Scriptures that thereby he might learne the will of God alledging that the Scripture is the Epistle of God unto his creature Quid est autem Scriptura sacra nisi Epistola omnipotentis Dei ad Creaturam Greg. lib. 4. epist. 40. ad Theodorum medicum Proving further that obscurity of Scripture is so frothy an argument for perswading any devout Christian not to read them that it should rather incite them to greater diligence therein and therefore he elegantly compares the Scripture to a River wherein saith he there are as well shallow fords for Lambs to wade in as depths and gulphs wherein the Elephant may swim Chrysostome held it a thing necessary for all men daily to read the Scriptures Audite quaeso saeculares comparate vobis Biblia animae pharmaca Saint Jerome did exhort divers women thereto and commended
the Reformed Church with one consent admit this Epistle for Canonicall Vide Polani Syntagma I light upon an old Dutch Testament of Luthers Translation saith W●itaker against Raynolds with his preface wherein he writeth that JAmes his Epistle is not so worthy as are the Epistles of St Peter and Paul but in respect of them a strawen Epistle his censure I mislike and himselfe I thinke afterwards seeing these words in a latter edition are left out It is nowhere found in Luthers workes that he called the Epistle of JAmes inanem stramineam Edmund Campian was convicted of falshood about that in England where when he had objected that he could finde no such thing at any time in the Bookes he produced Some in the preface of the German edition say that Luther wrote that it cannot contend in dignity with the Epistles of Paul and Peter but is strawie if it be compared with them Which judgement of Luther we approve not of and it is hence manifest that it was disliked by him because these words are found in no other edition from the yeere 1526. Luthers disciples now hold that it is Canonicall and Apostolicall and they answer the arguments of those that are opposite thereto as we may see in the exposition of that Article concerning the Scripture by that most learned and diligent man John Gerard. Gravitatem ac zelum Apostolicum per omnia prae se fert saith Walther We may reply against the Papists who often object this opinion of Luthers that Cajetan their Cardinall denieth the Epistle to the Hebrews to be Canonicall yea which is far worse he affirmeth that the Authour thereof hath erred not onely in words but in the sence and meaning of the Scriptures Nay Cajetan saith Whitaker rejected JAmes second of Peter and second and third of John and Jude It consists of five Chapters Pareus and Laurentius have done best on it First of Peter This Epistle is called in the Title Catholicall because it is not written to any one person as that of Paul to Timothy Titus and Philemon nor to any one particular Church as those of Paul to the Romans Corint●s but to the converted of the Jewes dispersed here and there as appeares by the inscription It consists of five Chapters Gerhard Laurentius Gomarus and Dr Ames have expounded both these Epistles Bifield hath interpreted part of the first Epistle Second of Peter Some in the Primitive Church doubted of its authority and the Syriack hath it not but the Church generally allowed it and many reasons may perswade that it is Apostolicall and was written by Peter 1. Because the Authour of It expresly calleth himselfe Simon Peter the Apostle of Jesus Christ. He wrote it in his old age to confirme them in the doctrine which before he had taught them 2. It s inscription is to the same Jewes that the former viz. dispersed by the Romane Empire and converted to Christ whose Apostle Peter was 3. It shewes an Apostolicall spirit 4. It s stile and composition is agreeable to the former Epistle 5. The Authour of this Epistle witnesseth that he was a Spectator of the transfiguration in the mount Chap. 1. v. 16. now Peter together with JAmes and John were present with Christ. 6. He makes mention of the Former Epistle Chap. 3. v. 1. 7. He cals Paul his deare brother Chap. 3. v. 15. It consists of three Chapters First of John consists of five Chapters Second and third of John They were also in times past doubted of by some as Erasmus Cajetan but there are good reasons to prove them Canonicall 1. Their Authour cals himselfe an Elder so doth Peter 1 Pet. 5. 1. by which name an Ecclesiasticall office is often signified but here age rather now it is manifest that John came to a greater age then the rest of the Apostles 2. The salutation is plainly Apostolicall Grace mercy and peace 3. In sentences and words they agree with the first Epistle 4. The Fathers alledge them for Johns and reckon them among the Canonicall bookes Each of these Epistles is but a Chapter Jude This Epistle also in times past was questioned by some but that it is Apostolicall first the inscription shews the Author expresly cals him a servant of Christ and brother of JAmes 2. The matter it agreeth both for words and sentences with the second of Peter of which it containes as it were a briefe sum and recapitulation That the writer of the Epistle doth not call himselfe an Apostle is of no moment to infringe the authority thereof for the judgement of the writer is free in that case that Title was specially used by Paul and Peter JAmes and John quit the same Title yea Paul in his Epstles to the Philippians Thessalonians and Philemon doth not call himselfe an Apostle and yet those Epistles were never doubted of It is but one Chapter Willet and Mr Perkins have done well upon it Revelation It is called according to the Greeke Apocalyps and according to the Latine Revelation that is a discovery or manifestation of things which before were hidden and secret for the common good of the Church Eusebius l. 3. c. 17. saith Domitian cast John the Evangelist into a fornace of scalding Oyle but when he saw he came forth unhurt he banished him into the Isle Pathmos where he writ this Revelation This booke describeth the state of the Church from the time of John the last of the Apostles untill Christs comming againe and especially the proceedings pride and fall of Babylon the great whore with all the Kingdomes of Antichrist The holy Ghost therefore foreseeing what labour Satan and his instruments would take to weaken and impaire the credit and authority of this above all other Bookes wherein he prevailed so far as some true Churches called the truth and authority of it into question hath backed it with a number of confirmations more then are in any other Booke of Scripture First the Authour of it is set in the forefront or face of it the Revelation of Jesus Christ Chap. 1. vers 1. who professeth himselfe to be the first and the last vers 11. so in the severall Epistles to the Churchs in severall stiles he challengeth them to be his Thus saith he 1. that holdeth the seven starres in his right hand 2. He which is first and last which was dead and is alive 3. Which hath the sharpe two edged Sword 4. Which hath eyes like a flame of fire and his feete like brasse 5. Which hath the seven Spirits of God and the seven starres 6. He who is holy and true who hath the key of David 7. He who is Amen the faithfull and true witnesse the beginning of the creatures of God Secondly the instrument or pen-man his servant John the Evangelist the Apostle the Divine who for the farther and more full authority of it repeateth his
Church 2. We grant that the Apost●es living and preaching and the Canon of the New Testament being not yet sealed their Gospell delivered viva voce was no lesse a rule of faith and worship then the writings of Moses and the Prophets 3. We doe not reject all the traditions of the Church for we embrace certaine Historicall and Ceremoniall ones but we deny that opinions of faith or precepts of worship can be confirmed by unwritten traditions 4. We call that an opinion of faith to speake properly and strictly when a Proposition is revealed by God which exceeds the capacity of nature and is propounded to be beleeved as necessary to be knowne to salvation Fundamentall opinions are those which by a usuall and proper name are called Articles of faith 5. What is not in respect of the matter an Article of saith may be a Proposition to be beleeved with a Theologicall faith if you looke to the manner of revealing as that the Sunne is a great light the Moone a lesse Gen. 1. 16. that Rachel was beautifull Leah bleare-eyed The Papists doe not cease to accuse the Scripture of imperfection and insufficiency as not containing all things necessary to salvation The Councell of Trent sess 4. decret 1. Saith that the truth and discipline is contained in libris scriptis sine scripto traditionibus The Papists generally divide the word of God into the word written and traditions They affirme that there are many things belonging to Christian faith which are neither contained in the Scriptures openly nor secretly This opinion is maintained by the Papists but it was not first invented by them The Jewish Fathers did use the traditions of the Elders and it hath been said of old Marke 7. 5. Matth. 5. 21. for their errours and superstitions yea at length they affirmed firmed that God gave to Moses in mount Sinai the Scripture and the Cabala or a double Law the one written the other unwritten The Tridentine Fathers session 4th doe command Traditions to be received with the same reverend affection and piety with which we embrace the Scripture and because one Bishop in the Councell of Trent refused this he was excluded In the meane space they explaine not what those traditions are which must be so regarded none of them would ever give us a list and Catalogue of those Ordinances which are to be defended by the authority of unwritten traditions not of the word committed to writing onely they affirme in generall whatsoever they teach or doe which is not in the Scripture that it is to be put into the number of Traditions unwritten The cause of it selfe is manifest that at their pleasure they might thrust what they would upon the Church under the name of Traditions Vide Whitak de Script controviae quaest Sexta c. 5. See also Moulins Buckler of Faith p. 51. Lindan the Papist was not ashamed to say that it had been better for the Church if there had been no Scripture at all but onely Traditions For saith he we may doe well enough with Traditions though we had no Scripture but could not doe well enough with Scripture though we had no Traditions Baldwin saith a Testament may be either scriptum or nuncupativum set downe in writing or uttered by word of mouth But a nuncupative Testament or Will made by word of mouth without writing must be proved by solemne witnesses The solemne witnesses of Christs Testament are the Prophets and Apostles Let Papists if they can prove by them that part of the Testament of Christ is unwritten Because our Adversaries doe contend for Traditions not written hotly and zealously against the totall perfection of the Scripture that they might thrust upon us many points by their owne confession not contained in Scripture and usurpe to themselves irrefragable authority in the Church it shall not be amisse largely to consider of this matter And 1. to enquire of the signification of the words Greek and Latine which are translated Tradition and then to come to the matter which is controverted between us and the Papists The Greeke word signifying Tradition 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which in the new Testament is used only in these places Matth. 15. 2. 3. 6. Marke 7. 3. 5. 8. 9. 13. 1 Cor. 11. 2. Gal. 1. 14. Col. 2. 8. 2 Thess. 2. 15. and 3. 6. and in the vulgar Latine is rendred Traditio Matth. 15. 2. 3. 6. Marke 7. 3. 5. 8. 9. 13. Gal. 1. 14. Col. 2. 6. 2 Thess. 2. 15. and 3. 6. and praecepta 1 Cor. 11. 2. Whereto the Rhemists translation which seemeth to be but a bare translation of the vulgar Latine doth wholly agree using the word Tradition every where excepting 1 Cor. 11. 2. where they use the word precepts but set in the margent the word Tradition Arias Montanus in his Interlineall translation doth render it traditio Beza doth commonly expresse it by the word traditio In the English Geneva Bible we translate it by the word instruction tradition calling mens precepts traditions the Apostles doctrine Ordinances or instructions not that we feared the word tradition but because we would not have the simple deceived as though the unwritten verities of the papists were thereby commended or as though we had some honourable conceite of them and what we did herein the signification of the word doth give us free liberty to doe in our last English Translation we use the word tradition as often as the vulgar Latine or the Rhemists have done not that we were driven by feare or shame to alter what was done before but because we would cut off all occasion of carping at our translation though never so unjust First we contend not about the name tradition the word may lawfully be used if the sense affixed thereto be lawfull 2. All traditions unwritten are not simply condemned by us 3. The Apostles delivered by lively voyce many observations dispensable and alterable according to the circumstances of time and persons appertaining to order and comelinesse onely we say that they were not of the substance of Religion that they were not generall concerning all Churches 4. We receive the number and names of the authors of Books Divine and Canonicall as delivered by tradition but the Divine truth of those Books is in it self clear and evident unto us not depending on the Churches authority The Books of Scripture have not their authority quoad nos from the approbation of the Church but winne credit of themselves and yeeld sufficient satisfaction to all men of their divine truth whence we judge the Church that receiveth them to be led by the Spirit of God yet the number authors and integrity of the parts of those Books we receive as delivered by tradition 5. The continued practise of such things as are neither expressely contained in Scripture nor the example of such practise expressely there delivered though the grounds reasons and cause of the necessity of such practise be
the Gospell doth declare evidently that he taught nothing but that which is contained in Scripture seeing the Apostle defineth the Gospell which he preached to be that which is contained in the Scriptures Fifthly That the Thessalonians had some part of Christian doctrine delivered by word of mouth that is by the Apostles preaching at such time as he did write unto them and some part by his Epistles the Text enforceth us to grant But that the Church at this day or ever since the Testament was written had any Tradition by word of mouth necessary to salvation which was not contained in the Old and New Testament we will never grant The Papists doe commonly abuse the name of Tradition which signi●ieth properly a delivery or a thing delivered for such a matter as is delivered onely by word of mouth and so received from hand to hand that is never put in writing but hath his credit without the Holy Scripture of God as the Jewes had their Cabala and the Scribes and the Pharisees their Traditions besides the Law of God For the justifying of our translation it is true that we alter according to the circumstances of the place especially considering that the word Tradition which of it selfe is indifferent as well to that which is written as to that which is not written hath been of us and them appropriated to note forth onely unwritten constitutions therefore we must needs avoide in such places as this the word Traditions though our last translation useth it where the simple might be deceived to thinke that the Holy Ghost did over commend any such to the Church which he would not have committed to writing in the holy Scriptures and in stead of the word so commonly taken although it doe not necessarily signifie any such matter we doe use such words as doe truly expresse the Apostles meaning and the Greeke word doth also signifie therefore we use these words Ordinances or Instructions Institutions or the doctrine delivered all which being of one or neere sence the Greek word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 doth signifie and the same doth Tradition signifie if it be rightly understood Ob. 1 Tim. 6. 20. O Timothy keep that which is committed to thy trust By the name of pledge saith Bellarmine not the Scripture but the treasure of unwritten doctrine is understood Depositum say the Rhemisis is the whole doctrine of Christianity being taught by the Apostles and delivered their successors Sol. Though other learned men interprete this pledge or gage to be the gift of the holy Ghost yet we willingly acknowledge that it is to be understood of the doctrine of Christianity as that which hath best ground both by circumstance of this and conferrence of other places Whence we inferre that the doctrine of truth is not the Churches d●crees but the Lords given to the Church to keepe onely wherewith the title of a pledge cannot stand unlesse one may lay to pledge a thing in his own hands since in Popery the Church her selfe maketh the doctrine which her selfe taketh to pledge Herein they handle it like a pledge that they lock it up fast where the people of God for whose use it is given to be kept cannot come unto it What had become of the Law of God if others had not been more faithfull keepers of it then the Priests to whom the principall Copy thereof written with the singer of God himselfe was committed There are some points of faith not contained in Scripture neither in the Old nor New Testament therefore it is not perfect In the old Testament no doubt but the females had some remedy whereby they might be purged from originall sin as well as the males circumcision was instituted only for the males the Scripture mentions not what was instituted for the females In the new Testament the perpetuall virginity of Mary the mother of Christ. Two things are considered in circumcision 1. Signum 2. Res signata or the end and use of the signe Sol. The thing signified or efficacie of the outward signe of circumcision was common both to Males and Females the very institution of circumcision teacheth that for it was a signe of the Covenant the Covenant belonged to all which were of the seed of Abraham if they renounced it not Although there were no decision of the other point out of the Scripture yet would it not thence ●ollow which the Jesuits pretend that some necessary point of Christianity wanted the ground of holy Scripture it being sufficient for us to know that she was a Virgin when our Saviour Christ was borne of her as the Prophets did foretell Yet as Chamier saith well we beleeve that she continued a Virgin all her life time for in those things saith he which are not properly de fide we hold the authority of the Church is great if it contradict not Scripture or produce no other absurdity Vide Riveti Apologiam pro virgine Maria l. 1. c. 15. Helvidius would gather from those words 1 Matth. 25. untill and first borne that Mary after had Children by her husband The word till doth not import so much See Gen. 8. 7. and 28. 15. 1 Sam. 15. 35. 2 Sam. 6. 23. Matth. 28. 20. He is called the first borne in Scripture which first opens the wombe whether other follow or no. 7. The Scripture is plaine and Perspicuous The Perspicuity of the Scripture is a cleare and evident manifestation of the truth delivered in it It is Perspicuous both in respect of it selfe and us 1. In respect of it selfe as appeares 1. In the things delivered which although they seeme obscure for their Ma●esty and dignity yet they carry the light of truth before them therefore the Scripture is frequently termed a light Psal. 19. 8. and 119. 105. Deut. 30. 11. Prov. 6. 2. 2 Pet. 1. 19. 2 Cor. 4. 3. 4. 6. the Scripture is a most bright light There are 2 things in Gods revealed will verbum rei the word and res verbi the mystery The Scriptures are hard if we looke to the mystery but not if wee looke to the word as for example the Scripture teacheth that there is one God in three persons the words are plaine and easie every man understands them but the mystery contained in those words passeth the reach of man we may well discerne these things to be so though we cannot fully conceive how these should be so 2. In the manner of delivering or kind of stile which is fitted to the things and persons shewing the greatest simplicity both in words either proper or figurative and in the cleare sence and mos● perspicuous propriety of signification viz. that one which is called literall and Grammaticall 2. In respect of us because the Scripture is to us the principle meanes and in●●rument of faith every Principle ought to be by it selfe and in its own nature knowne and most Intelligible and there being 3 degrees of
the Evnuch and Luke 24. 45. also the divers expositions of old and New writers The first place is directly against them for teaching that it is the gift of Gods Holy Spirit obtained by Prayer to understand the Scripture the Spirit through Prayer being as well obtained by the simple as learned sort yea rather by them then the others it followeth that the reading of them belongeth to the simple as well as unto the learned The like answer serveth for the place of Luke 24. 45. for by that abuse of the place they may wring the reading of the Scriptures from all men even Ministers or the word commanded to attend the reading of them since they of whom they say that they understood not the Scriptures were Ministers of the word and that in the highest and most excellent degree of Ministery in the world which was the Apos●leship The cause o● want of understanding then was this the Spirit of God was not given because Christ was not glorified which can have now no place Besides that in saying they understood not the Scriptures concerning the suffering and glory of Christ it must needs be understood comparatively that they did not cleerly paricularly and sufficiently know them For that place in the 8th of the Acts it is to be understood comparatively viz. that a man faithfull and already gained to the truth as this Eunuch was cannot understand the Scriptures by the bare reading of them so well and throughly as when he hath one to expound them The Lord which helped the indeavor of the Eunuch searching the Scriptures by sending of Philip will never suffer those which seek him in carefull reading of his word to goe away ashamed without finding that which they seeke for in directing unto him some lawfull sufficient ministery to instruct him by The mystery of the Gospell then indeed fulfilled remained notwithstanding unpublished to the world by the Apostles which is now by their preaching and writings laid open and made more manifest The Eunuch which professed that he could not understand the Scripture without an Interpreter did notwithstanding busie himselfe in reading of it The multitude of Commentaries was not so necessary because the Scripture might have beene understood without them although they deserve singular respect amongst all those that are desirous to understand the Scripture who write learned and elaborate expositions on the Scripture That was a witty speech of Maldonates on Luke 2. 34. Nescio an facilior hic locus fuisset si nemo eum exposuisset Secondly These Commentaries are publisht that the Scriptures may better and more easiely be understood 3. The Papists confesse that the Articles of the Apostles Creed being necessary for all are easie Yet there are many commentaries of the Ancients upon the Creed as Ruffinus Augustine Cyrill Chrysostome Chrysologus and of Papists also Some Scriptures are hard for the matter which they handle as are the Books of Daniel Ezechiel Zachary or throng of much matter in few words as are in the Old Testament the Poeticall Books wherein no doubt the verse hath caused some cloud and amongst them the Proverbs from the tenth Chapter and the Prophesie of Hosea CHAP. IX Of the Interpretation of Scripture THis question divides it selfe into 3 parts First concerning the divers senses of the Scripture Secondly to whom the chiefe authority to expound Scripture is committed Thirdly what meanes must be used in the interpretation of Scripture 1. Of the divers senses of Scripture The Interpretation of Scripture is 2 fold One of the words which is called version or Translation this hath been handled already 2. Of things which is called explication the finding out of the meaning of any place which is more Theologicall the other being rather Grammaticall And this signification of the thing they commonly call the sence Nehem. 8. 9. Interpreting Scripture is 1. Ancient Nehem. 8. 8. 2. Honourable Marke 4. 34. The Scripture hath often two senses one of which the latter Divines call Literall Grammaticall or Historicall another mysticall or Spirituall The sense of the Scripture is that which God the Author of the Scripture in and by the Scriptures gives to men to know and understand The right expounding of Scripture consists in 2 things 1. In giving the right sense 2. In a right application of the same 1. Cor. 14. 3. The Literall sense is that which the letter it selfe or the words taken in their genuine signification carry And because the genuine signification of the words is that in which the Author useth them whether speaking properly or figuratively therefore the literall sense is subdivided into plaine and simple and figurative which ariseth from the words translated from their naturall signification into another as where Christ saith 10. John 16. I have other sheep which are not of this fold whereby he understandeth other people besides the Jewes The mysticall of spirituall sense is that in which the thing exprest in the literall sense signifieth another thing in a mystery for the shadowing out of which it was used by God The waters of the Floud with which the Arke was upheld signified Baptisme by which the Church is saved under the new Covenant as the Apostle teacheth 1 Pet. 3. 21. that History Exodus 12. it is a Passeover unto the Lord is spoken figuratively the other words properly The mysticall sense is the bones of Christ were no more broken then of the Paschall Lambe which did signifie Christ. The Papists say the literall sense is that which is gathered immediatly out of the words the spirituall which hath another reference then to that which the words doe properly signifie The last they subdivide into Allegoricall Tropologicall Anagogicall they say that the Scripture beside the literall sense may have these also The Allegoricall sense is when the words of the Scripture besides the plaine historicall and literall meaning signifie something in the new Testament which belongs to Christ or the Church as Gal. 4. besides the truth of the story of the bond and free-woman Saint Paul applyeth it unto the two Testaments Tropologicall when the words and deeds are referred to signifie something which belongs to manners as Paul 1 Cor. 9 teacheth from that place Deut. 25. thou shalt not muzle the mouth of the Oxe that treadeth out the Corne that things necessary are to be allowed to Pastors Anagogigall when words or deeds are referred to signifie eternall life as Psal. 94. I sware unto them they shauld not enter into my rest this is litterally understood of the rest in Can●an but applied by Paul 4 Heb to life eternall Becanus saith as there are 3 Theologicall vertues Faith Hope and Charity so there are 3 mysticall sences The allegoricall answers to faith the Anagogicall to hope the Morall to Charity Jerome saith he excelled in the literall sense Ambrose in the Allegoricall Augustine in the Anagogicall Gregory in the Morall The Papists erre three wayes in
this Subject 1. In that description which they make of the literall sense 2. In that they hold there are divers literall sences of one place 3. In their division of the mysticall sense into Allegoricall Tropologicall Anagogicall First that is false which Bellarmine saith Literalis sensus est quem verba immediatè prae se ferunt What then shall the literall sense of those words be Psal. 91. 13. Let them shew the Lion which Christ did tread o● and what shall be the literall sense of those places Esay 11. 6 7 8. and 65. ult And what literall sense shall those words of Christ have Matth 5. 29. Origen though otherwise he allegorized much interpreted that place according to the letter but foolishly That therefore is rather the literall sen●e which ariseth from the words whether properly or figuratively taken as for example this is the literall sense of those words the Seed of the woman shall breake the Serpents head viz. Christ shall over come Satan and subdue all his force and power although the Devill neither be a Serpent nor hath a head 2. We hold that there is but one true proper and genuine sense of Scripture viz. the literall or Grammaticall whether it arise from the words properly taken or figuratively understood or both For that there should be divers literall sences of one and the same place is against the truth the Text and reason 1. The truth because of one and an Individuall thing there is one constant truth and not various verum unum convertuntur 2. The Text because it draweth away from its one true sense 3. And lastly reason because this is the chiefest reason in explaining the Text that the true literall sense of it may be found out The literall sense then can be but one in one place though a man may draw sundry consequences à contrarijs à similibus 3. We doe not altogether reject the third for we hold there are Allegories Anagogies and Tropologies in the Scriptures yet these are not many and divers senses of the Scripture but divers collections from one sense or divers applications and accommodations of one sense Besides the Tropologies and Anagogies are unfitly opposed to an Allegory since they are certaine kindes of it Haec nominum curiosa distinctio ex Scholarum potius morosiuscula diligentia quam ex ulla eorum vocabulorum necessitate Itaque Salmero agnoscit esse quid novum à p●sterioribus patribus tr●ditum Chamierus tomo de Sensu Literali mystico l. 15. C. 1. Galat. 4. the Apostle saith not that there is a double sense but that it may be Allegorically applied which is Historically set downe There is then but one sense of the place part whereof consisteth in the Story part in the Allegory So that the whole sense is contained in them both So for the second example of the Tropologicall there is not a twofold sense of that place but one generall sense that as the mouth of the Oxe was not to be muzled so the Minister of the Gospell must be provided for Likewise of the Anagogicall kinde it is not one sense to understand the rest of C●naan another the Kindome of God but there is one whole sense that as they for their Idolatry were deprived of the Land of promise so we should take heed least by our disobedience we lose the hope of the Kingdome of heaven So we conclude that those are not divers sences but one sense diversly applyed The literall sense is the onely sense of the place because out of that sense only may an argument strongly be framed wherefore seeing Allegories and Tropes doe no conclude they are not the sences of the place and Allegories devised beside the sense prove not though they may illustrate It is manifest that is alwayes the sense of the holy Ghost which is drawne from the very words But we are not so certaine concerning any mysticall sense unlesse when the holy Ghost himselfe teacheth us as for example it is written 11. Hosea 1. Out of Egypt have I called my Sonne and Exod. 12. 46. Ye shall not breake a bone of him It is evident that the first place is understood of the people of Israel the latter of the Paschall Lamb. Who durst have applyed those things to Christ unlesse the Holy Ghost had first done it and declared his minde and meaning to us viz. that sonne in the first place doth not onely signifie the people of Israel but Christ also and by bone in the latter place not onely the bone of that Lambe but of Christ also is understood Secondly To whom the chiefe authority to expound Scripture is committed It was decreed in the Councell of Trent that Scripture should be expounded as the Church expoundeth it and according to the common and unanimous consent of the Fathers If the Fathers agree not the matter is referred to a generall Councell if there it be not determined we must have recourse to the Pope and his Cardinals We say also that the Church is the interpreter of Scripture and that this gift of interpreting resides onely in the Church but we deny that it belongs to certaine men or is tyed to a certaine place or succession of men The Ministry of judgement the Lord hath given to his Church 1 Cor. 2. 15. and 10. 15. 1 John 4. 1. Act. 15 16 2 Cor. 14. 29. 31. 32. but the Soveraignty of judgement he hath reserved to himselfe The Holy Ghost is the Judge and the Scripture is the sentence or definitive decree We acknowledge no publike Judge except the Scripture and the holy Ghost teaching us in the Scripture He that made the Law should interpret the same 1 Cor. 1. 12. 1 John 2. 27. Arguments brought by the Papists for their opinion Ob. 1. They object that place Exod. 18. 13. 26. Sol. Moses was a Prophet indued with singular wisdome adorned by God with extraordinary gifts sent immediately by him and commended by divine Testimonies to the people the Pope is not so He had chiefest authority from God over all the Israelites but the Pope hath not so over all Christians Moses his authority was extraordinary no man succeeded in his place I●shua was a Captaine onely or Judge in Civill things Aaron onely a Priest to administer in things sacred But Moses exercised both functions Ob. 2. They urge that place Deut. 17. 9. Sol. Here the Civill Magistrate and the Judge are joyned together as v. 12. If it will follow hence that the Pope must be Supreme Judge in all Ecclesiasticall matters the Emperour ought to be as well in Civill 2. The Pope doth not hold the same place among Christians that the High-Priest did among the Jewes For he was the chiefest having all the rest of the Priests subject to him but the Pope is one amongst all having Collegues many Bishops as at first or a few Patriarkes as after Ob. 3. Eccles. 12. 11. If the chiefe
Scriptures The Fathers were given too much to allegorizing Cajetane therefore in the Preface of his Commentaries upon the Books of Moses saith that the exposition of the Scripture is not tied by God to the sense of the Fathers therefore he admonisheth his readers not to take it ill if he somtime dissent from the stream of the Fathers 4. The doctrine of the Church must be examined by the Scriptures Act. 17. 11. If Pauls doctrine much more may the decrees of the Pope Church Councels be examined by the Scriptures 5. The interpretation of the Scripture is a gift freely given by God for the edification of the Church Rom. 12. 6. 1 Cor. 12. 10. therefore it is not tied to a certaine kinde of men but common to the faithfull 6. The faithfull are commanded diligently to try and examine every doctrine 1 Thess. 5. 21. 1 John 4. 1. which cannot be altogether done without interpretation 3. What meanes must be used in the interpretation of Scripture The end of the Scripture we heard was to direct the Church to all saving truth The meanes to be used for the attaining of that end by the Minister is diligent Study and humble Prayer by the people attentive reading hearing Prayer and meditating First the teachers must Pray earnestly to God for his spirit to inlighten them Matth. 7. 7. 8 9. Rom. 15. The Scriptures are understood by that spirit that dictated them Secondly The Pastors and teachers of the Church must diligently and painefully study the Scriptures giving themselves to read compare place with place John 5. 39. search the Scriptures it is a metaphore taken from such as search for Gold and Silver Oare in the earth who will search and sift and breake every clod to finde out the Gold Salomon useth the same metaphore Prov. 2. 4. and to this diligence in searching doth the Apostle exhort Timothy 1 Tim. 4. 13. This diligence is often exprest in Scripture in the old Testament by the phrase of meditating in the word Josh. 1. 8. Psal. 1. 2. Thirdly they must labour for a competent knowledge in the originall tongues the Hebrew and Greek in which the Scripture was written that so they may consult with the Hebrew Text in the old and the Greeke in the new Testament and see with their owne not anothers eyes 4. They should likewise be expert in all the liberall Arts especially in Grammer Logicke Rhetoricke generall Philosophy and History All the Treasures of wisedome and knowledge are hid in the Scriptures the treasures of naturall Philosophy in Genesis of Morall Philosophie in Exodus Deuteronomy and Ecclesiastes of the Politicks in the Judicials of Moses and the Proverbs of Solomon of Poetry in the Psalms of History in the Books of Chronicles Judges and Kings the Mathematickes in the dimensions of the Arke of the Temple of the Metaphysicks in the Books of the Prophets and Apocalyps 5. They must consider 1. The severall words 2. The Phrases In the severall words they must consider 1. Whether the word be taken properly or tropically and that they may the better understand the words an inspection 1. Of Lexicons is needfull some of which observed the order of the Alphabet but so as they distinguished betweene the roots and the Derivatives as Pagnine hath done for the Hebrew and Stephanus for the Greek The best Lexicons for understanding the Hebrew Text are Buxtorfe Avenarius Forster Schindler Mercer on Pagnine and Brixianus his arca Noae for the Greeke are Stephanus Budaeus Scapula my owne two I hope may be usefull for understanding both Testaments 2. Of Concordances some much extoll Buxtorfe for the Hebrew Kirchers is a very usefull one both for the Hebrew and the Septuagint Stephanus for the Greeke is the best Cottons Concordance as it is now inlarged by Newman is esteemed the best for the English See Dr. Featlies and Dr. Gouges Prefaces to it commending it and shewing the use of Concordances in generall They must 1. Consider the Text exactly in it selfe the Grammer of it must be sifted the nature of every word by it self and the alteration it admits in diversity of construction 2. The Rhetoricke whether any word leaving the proper signification receiveth a borrowed 3. Above all the Logicke as to know what he proveth and by what 2. Compare paralell places and obscurer with plainer To interprete that place this is my body make use of that other The Bread which we breake is the Communion of the body of Christ because both places are not onely concerning the Eucharist but also one and the same kind 3. Make use of Paraphrases and versions among which the Chaldee and the Septuagint for the Old Testament the Syriacke and the Arabicke for the new excell For the knowledge of the phrase they must proceed the same way and to understand the better both the words and phrases they must diligently consider of the scope and circumstances of the place as the coherence of that which went before with that which followes after and of the matter whereof it doth intreat All expositions ought to agree with the Analogie of faith Rom. 12. 6. Analogie is eitherof faith comprehended in the Doctrine of the Creed L. P. Command Sac. and gathered out of evident places of Scripture or of the Text by the coherence of antecedentia consequentia by the propriety of the phrase 6. The Jewish expositors the Ancient Fathers and other Interpreters Ancient and Moderne Popish and Protestant are usefull for the right understanding of the Scripture if they be read with judgement Not many but a few and those the best commentaries are to be consulted with of the Hebrew Interpretes and Rabbins two were most learned R. David Kimbi and Rabbi Aben Ezra saith Dr. Rainolds The pure Masters of the Hebrewes saith Mayerus in Philologia Sacra are specially Maymonides Rabbi David Kimchi wise Aben Ezra Rabbi Salomon Jarchi although the last two much favour Talmudicall dreames The Cabalists and many of the Rabbines are very fabulous and men in a burning fever cannot dreame of things more ridiculous then some of the Rabbines have seriously written and taught saith Muis against Morinus Vide Spanhem Dub. Evangel parte tertia Dub. 21. Dub 129. Glass Philol. Sac l. 2. partem primam Tract 1. Thalmud liber fabulosissimus Chamier Abarbanel hath done well of the greatest part of the Old Testament Scriptor famosissimus saith Buxtorfe of him in Decalogo Yet he was unknowne it seemes to Mercer and Drusius for neither of them mention him The Jewes say of Rabbi Moses Ben-Maymon that from Moses to Moses there arose not such a Moses He was the first of the Rabbines that ceased to doat Maimonides antiquus celeberrimus inter Judaeos Scriptor Capellus de Literis Ebr. Mr. Gregory stiles him the very learned Maimon The Church of God is much beholding to the Hebrew Rabbines being great helps unto us for understanding
of peace yet they needed such a one as consists in the continuance of that peace which they had before The Lord hath now so fully reaveled himselfe and his excellencies vnto them and his love and favour the necessitie of their being obedient that they cannot but continue to obey and serve him they were not so farre inlightened and sanctified at the first creation but that thē in respect of themselves there was a possibilitie of sinning as well as of theirs that did sinne but now they are so confirmed by the cleare sight they have of God that they cannot be willing to sinne against him The Angels which abode in the truth are called good Angels not onely in respect of the righteousnesse which God bestowed upon them at their creation but also in respect of the obedience which they performed and their confirmation in that good estate The causes why they abode still in the truth are the firme and unchangeable decree of God 1. Tim. 5 21. his free grace Phil. 2 13. wherewith they were holpen and their owne free choise of will cleaving firmely unto God The ninth and last question concerning Angels is How can they be happy in enjoying Gods face and yet be on the earth Matth. 18 10. By heaven there is not meant the place but their heavenly estate and condition now though thy goe up and downe doing service yet this hinders not their happinesse for they doe not this with distraction and these things are appointed as meanes for the end viz. enjoying of God and as the soule is not hindred in its happinesse by desiring the bodie againe so it is here 1. Wee should imitate the Angels 2. It shewes us how much wee are beholding to Christ no Angels could love us if it were not for him How much are we to love God who hath provided helps for man especially Christ who tooke our nature upon him not that of Angels Gods Angels are our Angels to defend and keep us God hath committed the care of us to these ministring Spirits 3. It shewes the wofull condition of the impenitent when Christ shall come with all these Angels when those great shoutes shall bee come thou swearer drunkard how terrible will this be The more potent God is in himselfe and in his ministers the more wretched are they and the surer is their destruction 4. This confutes the Papists in three errours 1. In that they hold nine orders of Angels They are distinguished ratione objectorum et officiorum in respect of the object and massage they goe about 2. They would have them worshiped but the Angell forbad John 3. They say every one hath his good Angell to keep him so Bucan thinkes in his common places 2. The Saduces who said there was neither Angell nor Spirit Acts. 24 8. but held good Angels onely to bee good thoughts and evill Angels to be evill lusts and affections There names offices actions apparitions shew plainely that they are not bare qualities but true substances It serves for instruction 1. To see the blindnesse erroneousnes of mankind in that a great number of men of learning and wit and parts good enough and that such as lived in the Church and acnowledged the five bookes of Moses to be divine should yet make a shift to winke so hard as to mainaine that there were no Angels What falsehood may not the Devill make a man entertaine and defend and yet seeme not to denie the Authoritie of Scripture If a man confessing Moses writings to be true will yet denie that there be either Spirits or Angels which are things so plainely revealed by Moses that a man would account it impossible to receive his writings and not confesse them But if God leave man to the Deuill his owne witte he wil make him the verier foole because of his wit he will erre so much the more palpably by how much he seems better armed against errour euen as a mans owne weapon beaten to his head by a farr stronger arme will make a deepe wound in him Se wee our aptnesse to run into and maintaine false opinions and let us not trust in our owne wittes but suspect our selves and seeke to God for direction Secondly Let us learne humilitie from this and by comparing our selves with these excellent Spirits learne to know how meane we be that we may be also meane in our owne esteeme So long as a man compares himselfe with those things and persons which are baser then himselfe he is prone to lift up himselfe in his owne conceit and to thinke highly of himselfe but when he doth weigh himselfe in the ballance with his betters he begins to know his owne lightnesse The Lord hath set us men in the midst as it were betwixt the bruite beasts and the celestiall Spirits we doe so farr exceed them as the Angels exceede us as for bodily gifts the beasts in many things goe beyond us some are more strong swift have more excellent sight smell then wee but in few things doe we equall the Angels They are swifter and stronger then we and their excellēt reason goes beyond ours in a manner as the understanding which is in us excelleth the fancie of the beasts they know a thousand things more then we doe or can know One Angell can doe more then all men can speake more languages repeate more histories in a word can performe all acts of invention and judgement and memorie farre beyond us Thirdly Since God hath made Angels to serve and attend him should not we that are farre Inferiour to them be content also to serve him yea exceeding glad and thankfull that he will vouchsafe to admit us into his service Doth he need our service that is served with such ministers and messengers Let us frame our selves to obedience and doe Gods will on earth with all readinesse and cherefulnesse seeing there is soe great store of more worthy persons in heaven that doe it An Angell will not esteeme any worke too difficult or base why should wee Fourthly The Angels which waite about the throne of God are glorious therefore the Lord himselfe must needs excell in glorie Esa. 6 1 2. Ezek. 1 28. Of the Devils or evill Angells The Angels which persisted in the truth are called good Angels Luke 9 26. but those which revolted and kept not the law were called evill Angels or evill Spirits Angels of darknesse Luke 8 20. and 19 42. and Angels absolutely 1 Cor. 6. because they were so created of the Lord. In respect of their nature they are called Spirits 1. King 22 21. Matth. 18 16. Luke 10 20. In respect of their fall they are called evill Spirits 1. Sam. 18 10. Luke 8 2. uncleane Spirits Matth. 10 1. Zach. 13 2. not so much because of their instigation to lust as because their natures are defiled with sinne lying Spirits 1. King 22 22. John 8 44. Devils Levit. 17
1. p. 74 Preaching whether it be divinely inspired as well as the word written l. 1. p. 25 Predestination what it is l. 3. p. 4 5 Predictions the truth of the Scriptures predictions proves it to be of God l. 1. p. 14 15 The difference betweene the predictions of the true Prophets and those of the Heathen l. 1. p. 15 Prescience what it is in God l. 2 p. 67 Properties of the Scripture l. 1 p. 130 to 171 Proverbs why so called and who best expounds them l. 1. p. 55 56 Providence that there is a Providence l. 3. p. 125 What providence is the extent of it l. 3. p. 125 126 The kinds of it l. 3. p. 127 128 The degrees and parts of it l. 3 p 128 129 Psalmes how called and divided by the Hebrews l. 3. p. 54 55 The chiefest part of Scripture and often quoted in the new Testament ibid. Who best interprets the Psalms ibid. Pure the Scripure is pure and holy l. 1. p. 136 137 138 R RAine what it is the usefulnesse of it l. 3. p. 50 51 52 Rainbow the cause of it and what the colours in it signifie l. 3. p. 52 Reading all are commanded to read the Scriptures l. 1. p. 32 33 What reading of the Scriptures is l. 1. p. 35 36 It may be the instrument of regeneration ibid. How the Scripture is to be read l. 1. p. 36 37 The Papists will not suffer the Scriptures to be read by the people l. 1. p. 303 Religion not a humane invention l. 2. p. 131 Reprobation what and the object of it l. 3. p. 10 Reveale God re●●aled his will three waies to our fathers l. 1 p. 7 8 We must now expect no further revelation l. 1. p. 65 Revelation why so called l. 1. p. 81 The subject of the Booke it is Canonicall l. 1. p. 81 Difficult l. 1. p. 82 83 Who best interpret it l. 1. p. 83 Rivers their originall and use l. 3. p. 59 Romans that Epistle is an Epitome of Christian Religion l. 1. p. 73 Who best interpret it ibid. How we may most profitably read it l. 3. p. 11 Rule the Scripture is the rule of faith and life l. 1. p. 132 133 134 Ruth why so called and who best expound it l. 1. p. 50 S SAmuel why so called and who best expounds both books l. 1. p. 50 51 Scripture the rule of Divinity l. 1. p 7 The rule of faith and life l. 1 p. 132 133 134 VVhy it is called Scripture and the divers Epithites given to it l. 1. p. 8 The authority of the Scripture l. 1. p. 8 to 25 The description of Scripture l. 1. p. 11 It was no device of mans brain l. 1. p. 25 It hath its authority from it selfe not the Church l. 1. p. 25 to 31 The Scriptures are to be read by the common people l. 1. p. 30 to 35 It crosseth humane wisdome l. 2. p. 14 VVho contemne and unreverently handle the Scriptures l. 1. p. 39 40 41 What parts of Scripture have been questioned l. 1. p. 65 66 75 79 80 Some titles and Subscriptions are not part of Scripture p. 66 Whether any bookes of the Scripture be lost l. 1. p. 116 117 Sea the largenesse and usefulnesse of it l. 3. p 60 to 63 Sence of Scripture what it is l. 1 p. 171 172 173 Septuagint Translation l. 1 p. 96 97 Ship the materials and uses of it l. 3. p. 65 Simple God is most Simple l. 2 p. 26 27 Soule its excellency l 2. p. 10 It is Immortall l. 3. p. 117 118 Spirit God is a Spirit l. 2 p. 23 24 Consectaries of it l. 1. p. 25 26 Starres their nature and usefulnesse l. 3. p. 74 Sunne the name nature and usefulnesse of it l. 3. p. 70 71 Syriack Translation l. 1. p. 98 T TEmptation how Gods temptations and Satans differ l. 3. p. 112 Testament why the Scripture is called a Testament l. 1. p. 34 The Scripture is distinguished into the books of the old and new Testament l. 1. p. 44 The Bookes of the old Testament were written in Hebrew ibid. Of the new in Greek l. 1. p. 62 63 The Books of the old Testament how divided l. 1. p. 45 47 The new Testament how divided and who best expounds it l. 1. p. 62 The number of the Bookes both of the old and new Testament l. 1. p. 46 Theology what it is l. 1. p. 2 Thessalonica the chiefe City in Macedonia l. 1. p. 74 Who best interprets the Thessalonians ibid. Thunder what it is l. 3. p. 45 A great worke of God and the use of it l. 3. p. 45 46 47 Timothy what it signifieth who best interprets both the Epistles l. 1. p 74 Titus what it signifieth like the first to Timothy who best expounds it ibid. Traditions what they signifie l. 1. p. 150 151 153 The severall kinds of them p. 155 Reasons against the Popish Traditions l. 1. p. 153 154 The Papists arguments for Traditions answered l. 1 p. 158 159 160 Translate the Scriptures ought to be translated into vulgar tongues l. 1. p. 33 34 Vulgar Translation is very faulty l. 1. p. 122 123 124 Trees their nature and usefulnesse l. 3. p. 68 to 71 Trees of life and of knowledge of good and evill why so called l. 3. p. 122 123 Trinity There are three distinct Persons in the Trinity l. 2 p. 126 to 132 True The Scripture is True and certaine l. 1. p. 131 132 God is True l. 2. p. 94 95 96 97 V VErsion The severall Versions of Scripture l. 1. p. 94 95 96 Vertues what in God and man l. 2. p. 78 79 Vulgar whether the Vulgar Latine be Authenticall l. 1. p. 122 123 It is very faulty l. 1. p. 123 to 127 W WAter the use of that Element l. 3. p. 36 37 Will what it is and what in God l. 3. p. 68 69 Winds are a great worke of God l. 3. p. 53 54 Wisdom what it is God is most wise l. 2. p. 64 65 66 Word why the Scripture is called the Word and why the Word of God l. 1. p. 8 Works the Workes of God divided l. 3. p. 1 2 Wrong sin wrongs God divers waies l. 2. p. 75 76 Z ZEchary why so called and who best expounds it l. 1 p. 61 Zephany why so called and who best expounds him ibid. FINIS * Quia de advisamento ●ssensu consilij nostri pro quibusdam or dui●s urgentibus negotijs nos Statum d●fensionem Regni nostri Angliae Ecclesiae concernentibus ●uoddam Parliamentum nostrum apud Civitatem Westmonasterium tertio die Novemb●is proximo teneri ordinavimus Jer. 7. 25. and 35. 15. * Those Gentlemen of the House and others that live neere Westminster may heare 500 Sermons yearly at least one every Morning and foure every Sabbath Foxe in his Booke of Martyrs Speeds Chronicle Chap. 24. p. 858. * Jer. 9. 3. Jude 3. v.
hundred thousand witnesses of the Seas rising up in walles Deut. 4. 3. See Matth. 27 45. * See D. Willet on Exod. 7. 9. what a miracle is and how true and false miracles differ and D. Prideaux on Psal. 9. 16. the distinction between miracles signes prodigies and Portenta out of Aquinas To which testimony these things give weight 1. To them were committed the Oracles of God Rom. 3. 1. 2. They have constantly professed the truth in great misery whereas by the onely deniing thereof they might have been partakers both of liberty and rule 3. Notwithstanding the higk Priests and others persecuted the Prophets while they lived they yet received their writings as Propheticall and Divine * Vide Cr●ii observat in novum Testamentum cap. 15. In the two Dominions of France and the 17 Provinces within the space of little more then fi●ē yeeres under Charles the ninth of France and Philip the second of Spaine two hundred thousand suffered as Martyrs * See Foxes martyrologie Meteranus de rebus Belgicis and Fullers profane state of the Duke of Alvap 440. * A martyranswered Bishop Bonn●r My Lord I can not dispute but I can die for the truth John Jones said when he had a cap wherein were many painted devils with the title Haeresi●cha Shall I grudge to weare this paper cap for Christ who were a Crown of Thorns for me Videtis punctiones sed non unctiones You see their sufferings but not their rejoycings Omnis Christ anus mortis contemptor Photinus * In the primitive times they were wont to call martyrdome by the name of Corona martyrii the Crown of martyedome and Stephen the Protomaryr had his name in Greek from a Crown Erant 〈◊〉 ●●rquentibus fortiores Cyprian a Non poena sed caus● facit martyrem * Lib. 2. c. 25. Meminerunt Mosis Didetus Siculus Strabo Plinius Ta●itus qu●que pos● eos Dio●ysius Longinus de for●●is sublimitare Jamnia aatem mambris qui in Aegypto Mosi restiterunt praeter Talmun●ieos Plinim Apulrius Gr●e de veris. relig Christ. * Credite me vobis folium recitare Sybillae Bish. Andrews in his large exposition on the 10 Commandements a Vide Spanhem Dub. porte secunda Dub. 34. S●ct 6 7. b Exerci● 1. ad A●nal Bar. Esay 8. 20. Psalm 19. The Authors often testifie that they speake not of themselves or by any humane instinct but from Gods command and the Spirit inspiring * Christ commends Moses the Prophets and Psalmes by which names are meant all the bookes belonging to the Canon of the Hebrews * The holy Ghost inwardly witnesseth in the hearts of the faithfull that the Scriptures are the Word of God 1 John 2. 20 27. 1 Cor. 2. 10 11 12. 12. 3. John 16. 23. 14. 26. Esay 51. 16. Esay 59. 21. Rom. 8. 10. 1 John 3. 8. 1 John 2. 20. Fides Christiana non acquiritur sed in sunditur * Leviculum est quod objiciunt qui contra sentiunt Si omnis Scriptura Divinitus sit inspirata sequiuurum inde etiam Gra●corum Gemilium Scripturas esse divinitus inspiratas●nam ut buon resp●●det Theop●y lactus oportebat eos novi●●e quod Paulus ante dixerat sacras literas nosti Rive● Isag. ad Script Sac. a Aliud sanè Prophetas hoc vel illud scripsisse aliud verò scrips●●e ut Prophetas Sp●n●emi●s * Nothing crosseth humane wisdom more then the Scripture Authoritas sine 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Scripturae Illud authenticum dicitur quod sibi sufficit quod se commendat sustines probat ex se fidem ac authoritatem habet Whitakerus * Every principle is known by it selfe The Scripture is the primum credendum the first thing to be believed we must believe it for it selfe and all other things for their conformity with it a Eccius reckons this among hereticall assertions major est Scripturae quam Ecclesiae authoritas b Nisi Deus hominibus placuerit non erit Deus said Tertul. in Apol. if God please not man he shall not be God as truly and certainly as God is God so truly is the Scripture the Scripture Spiritus sanctu● Spiritus veritatis loquitur semper in Scriptura in Ecclesia verò quandoque spiritu● 〈…〉 Thes● 3. l. 11. * See Chamiers sixth booke de Canone divers Chap●r●● and M. Pembles 〈◊〉 Vindic●agra●i● p. 207 to 22● a Superst●us mihi ●eb●r videtur oprum qu●●ade● sollicite illud quoad nos in●uisiver 〈◊〉 quia ●e cogitari quidem protest 〈◊〉 corum librerum autorilos nisi quoad 〈◊〉 Cham. * Matth. 28. 20 18. 20. John 15. 26. 16. 13. b Scriptura est velipsa scriptio literarum per lineas certas victura vel ipse doctrina per 〈◊〉 Scripturas significata in iis literis conienta Scriptione fatemur Ecclesiam esse antiquiorem sed negamus esse antiquiorem ea doctrina quae significatur eascriptione Chamier Tom. 19. l. 1. c. 22. * Fuit Scriptura ante M●●sen materialiter non formaliter Quibus le●●is verbis adeo exultan● quasi reperissent id quod pueri in fabase reperisse ●lamitant tamsue confidenter ae si ad plenum vict●riac fructum sola ●riump●i gloria deesset Chamierus * So Musculus Calvin Peter Martyr and Whitaker expound those words observe the composition of the word is signifieth to more with other things a G●rson saith be taketh the Church for the Primitive Church and that Assembly which saw and heard Christ. * Ecclesia non habet magisterium supra scripturas sed ministerium circa Scripturas There are two causes why the Apocripha are cast out of the canon 1. Externall the authority of the Church decreeing and the quality of the Authours 2. Internall the stile the fabulous and wicked things Chamier a Ecclesiae idest Romano pontifici vel soli vel cum Conoilio magisterium tribuunt summum adeo ut solennis sit apud eas formula indicet magister fidei Amesius b D. Chalonero credo Ecclesiam Catholicam Ecclesia dicitur Fundamentum met aphoricè imptopriè fundamentum secundarium * Rivet and D. Preston De sensu horum verborum vide Ca●●ronis myro●●ecium Colla●ionem Rainoldi cum ●art● c. 8. p. 557. c An allusion saith Bedell to the bases and pillars that held up the veile or curtains in the Tabernacle That distinction of authoritative in● se but not quoad nos is absut'd because the authority the Scripture hath is for and because of us * Dr. White of the Church The Spirit witnesseth the Scripture to witnesseth the Church sub-witnesseth b Vt olim Caligula occlusis omnibus horreis publicam populo inediam famem ita illi obturatis omnibus fontibus verbi Dei sitim populo miserabilem induxerant Illi homiminibus famem ut ait Amos Propheta sitimque attulerunt non famem panis non sitim aquae● sed audiendi verbi Dei Iuellus
especialy Camierus de Canone l. 15. c. 4. Plato Aristotle Euclid have their nodos and the Scriptures have their 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2 Pet. 3. 16. in them are darke sayings Psalme 78. 2. Riddles Ezek 17. 2. Parables M●t. 13. 35. Mysteri●s Mat. 4. 13. Mr. Greenhill That is a very difficult place 1. Cor. 3. 15. See Laurentius Augustin saith thisis one of the places of which Peter speaketh 2 Pet. 3. 16. and that Heb. 6. 4. 1 Pet. 3. 19. the last Luther saith is one of the obscurest places in the new Testament Vide Tarnovium in exercitat Bib. Cameronis Myroth Evang. * See Laurentius and D. Featly on the place in the last large Annotations on the Bible Augustinus de Doctrina Christina lib. 2. c. Sexto Ita Scriptu●as dicit a Deo temperatas ut locis ap●●ti●ribus fa●●i 〈…〉 fasti●ia de●er ge●e●tur Idem Augustinus ait nos aper●s Scripturae locis pas●i obscuris exer●eri Apo● 5. 1. 4 65. M. Burroughs on ●6 of Isaiah v. 10. Bellarm. l. 3. de verbo Dei c. 1. Psal. 19. 9. 119. 115. 2 Pet. 1. 19. c Genebra●dus testatur aliqu●s de tota Scriptura locum interpretari nec l●quitur de nostris sed aut suis aut antiquis Hieronymus quidem a partè est ●jus opinionis Lyranus alii ●ulti Whitakerus M. Durant Dr. Halls peace-maker sect 15. Ob. Sol. 8 Act. 31. * There was a time when the Scriptures were read without Commentaries and there was a time when they were hardly understood with Commentaries Dr. Ames Cartwrights Letter to Mr. Hildersham for the Study of Divinity * The interpretation of the Scripture is necessary in the Church of God 1 because it is commanded by Christ John 5. 39. 1 Cor. 4. 1. 39. 2. It is commended to the faithfull by the Holy Ghost 1 Thess. 5. 19. 20. 3. I● conduceth much to the edification of the Church 1 Cor. 14. 3. 4 It was used by Christ and his Apostles Luke 4. 16. and 24. 27. Marke 4. 34. * Glassius Phil. Sac. l. a parte 1ª Tract 1 Literalis * sensus est is que● Sp. Sanctus autor Scripture intendit Chamierus R●inoldus de lib. Apoc. Est ille literalis sensus qui proximè per ipsa verba sive propria sive figurata sunt sign ficatur velut Glassius quem intendit proximè Spiritus Sanctus Am●ma * Sensus secundarius diversus à liter●li simili● tamen Chamier Not the Letter but the right sense and meaning of the Scripture is Gods word John 19. Litera gesta docet quid cre●as allegoria Moralis quid agas quo tendas anagogia * In Manuali Controvers c. 1. de Script quaest 3. * Origenes sio Paradi●●●n ter●●strem allego rizat ut historiae au●erat veritatem dum pro arbori●us Angelos prost● minibus vi●●utes Caelestes 〈◊〉 ru●●icas pelliceas Adae Evae corpora humana interpretatur Bellarminus ex Hieronymo Concedit Bellarminus ex solo literall sensu pe●i posse argumenta efficacia To prove any matter of faith or manner no sense must be taken but the literall sense Aquinas * Chamierus tomo 1● de Scripturae sensu l. 15. c. 3. * Confundunt Pontificij sensum scripturae cum applicatione s●nsu accommodatione ejus ad usus Apostolicos 2 Tim. 3 16. dum vel cum literali mystico sensus alios i●troducunt vel mysticum subdividunt in all●goricum tropologicum anagogicum totidem diversos sensus in Scriptura dari contendunt confundendo heterogen● sensum applicationem sensus Sp●nhem Dub. Evang parte tertia Dub. 66. Theologia Symbolica non est argumentativa This is good reasoning the Oxes mouth muh not be muxled ergo the Minister must be maintained because it is part of the sense The Fathers were too much addicted to Allegories Jerome sometimes went out of the way through a likeing of Allegories as a great reader and follower of Origen who handled the Scriptures too licentiously Rainolds against H●rt Sess. 4. * Judicium est triplex 1 Direction●● quale habet Minister 2 lurisdiction●● quale habet ecclesia 3 Discretionis quale habet privatus ut Act. 17. 10. Dr. Prid. There is Judex Supremus and judex Ministerial●s visibilis but not supremus and judicium practic● discretion●● which is left to every one B. Downam Primo Non sequitur à lege ad Evangelium Secundo non sequitur ● Mose ad Episcopum Romanum qui hic non eundem lorum tenet inter Christianos quem Moses inter Judaeos Chamierus * Hieronymus in locum a●t Etsi plures verbum Dei doceant unus tamen est illius doctrinae author nempe Deus ubi Manichaeos refellit qui unum statuerunt authorem veteris Testament alterum verò novi Alij Spiritum volunt esse hunc unum Pastorem ut Vatab●us Alij Christum ut Mercerus Papam nulli praeterquam ●nsulsi Papistae Whitake●us Interpretes omnes de Deo expo●●uerunt cum veteres tum recentes etiam Papistae Chami●ru● * Cap significast de Elect. Review of the Councell of Trent l. c. 8. p. 45. * Deum atque homines testamur cum plurima nobis in Papis●o displiceant ●um hoc omnino intolerandum videri quod Scripturas quilibet apud eas doc ●or culas ita sibi in manum ●radi●as arbitretur ut eas sursum de●rsum versare queat quid libet inde con●ecturus suo arbitrio suo in quam arbitri● suo marte quidlibet excogitans comm●ntans Ita enim even●t ut qui maximè prae se ferant detestari privatum spiritum ij hu●c ipsi indulgeant omnium maxima * Enimverò quis docuit prophetiam illam ex Psalmo 72. adorabunt ●um omnes reges terrae omnes gentes servient ei impletam ess●● L●o●e ●eci●o Chamietus tomo 10 de Sc●pturae interpretatione l. 16. c. 1o. vide Cameronem ad 2 Pet. 1. 20. Matth. 23. 8 9. 10. Matth. 17. 5. Soli scripturae vel spiritui in scriptura loquenti competunt requisita summi Iudic●●que tria sunt 1º ut certo sciamus veram esse sententiam quam pronunciat 2. Vt ab illo ad alium judicem non liceat prov●care 3. Vt nullo partium 〈◊〉 ducatur Wendelinus in Prolegom Christ. Theol. c. 3. * Cathedr●m●●in c●lo habet qui ● corda doce● Aug. Luke 10 21. 22 Jer. 31. 33 34. Convenit inter nos adversarios Scripturas intelligidebe●e ●o spiritu quo ●actae sunt id est Spiritu Sancto Bellarm. l. 3● de verbo dei c. 3. 11. Dr. Rain against Hart. * The number of Ancient Fathers whose workes are yet extant who lived within Six and Seven hundred yeares after Christ are recorded to have beene about 200. Bishop Mor●on of the Masse l. 7. c 6. The Fathers wrote some things 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to confute the adversaries with whom they had to deale and in these they erre sometimes
that no man can see just cause to call them into question as the doctrine of creation of all things in six daies the doctrin of the fall of our first parents the story of the delivering Israel out of Egypt of the delivering of the Law and ten Commandements the doctrine of the incarnation of Christ Jesus of the resurrection of the dead of the last judgement of the life to come and of the immortality of the soule for though this last was taught also by Philosophers yet it is so doubtfully and unperfectly handled by them in comparison of the delivering thereof in Scripture that it is apparent it was another Spirit which guided the teachers of it here then they were guided withall What Angell could ever have found out such an admirable temper and mixture of mercy and justice together as the Gospel revealeth in the reconciliation of God with man God in giving and establishing his law useth no other preface but I am the Lord Exod. 20. nor conclusion but I the Lord have spoken it upon his absolute authority without other reasons to perswade commanding what is to be done though it be contrary to our natures forbidding what is to be left undone though pleasing to us he promiseth things incomprehensible requiring faith he relateth and teacheth things strange above likelihood above mans capacity and yet will have them to be believed to be understood There is nothing in the Law against reason or common equity A Jesuit reports in his History that when his fellows came first to preach in the East-Indies the Gentiles and Indies there hearing the ten Commandements did much commend the equity of them See Sir Walter Raleighs History 2. It teacheth the nature and excellency of God and the works of God more clearly and distinctly than any other writings nay then any without God could have contrived viz. That there are three persons and one God that God is infinite omniscient omnipotent most holy that he created all things that he doth by a particular providence rule all things that he observes all mens actions and will call them to account and give every man according to his works that he alone is to be worshipped and that he must be obeyed in his word above all creatures 3. It requireth the most exact and perfect goodnesse that can be such as no man could ever have conceited in his braine and yet such as being taught and revealed the conformity of it to right reason will enforce any well considering man to acknowledge it to be most true and needfull for example that a man must love God above all and his neighbour as himselfe that he must keepe his thoughts and cogitations free from all the least taint of sinne that he must lay up his treasures in Heaven not care for this life and the things thereof but all his study and labour must be to provide well for himselfe against the future life that he must not at all trust in himselfe nor in any man but onely in God and that he must doe all he doth in Gods strength that he can deserve nothing at Gods hand but must looke for all of free favour through the merits and intercession of another 4. The end of the Scripture is Divine viz the glory of God shining in every syllable thereof and the salvation of man not temporall but eternall These writings lead a man wholy out of himselfe and out of the whole world from and above all the creatures to the Creator alone to give him the glory of all victories therefore they are from him and not from any creature for he that is the Authour of any writing will surely have most respect of himselfe in that writing The Scriptures manifest Gods glory alone Jerem. 9. 23 24. 1 Cor. 1. 31. ascribe infinitenesse of being and all perfections to him Nehem. 9. 6. The doctrines precepts prohibitions and narrations tend to the setting forth of his glory and bring solid and eternall comfort and salvation to their soules which follow their direction They make us wise unto salvation 2 Tim. 3. 15 23. shew the path of life Psal 16. 11. Guide our feet into the way of peace Luke 1. 79. Christ John 7. 18. proves that he came from God because he sought not his own glory but the glory of him that sent him 5. Another reason is from the difference of these writings from all other whatsoever in regard of their phrase and manner of writing All other writings use perswasive and flourishing speeches these command and condemne all other Gods all other religions all other writings and command these onely to be had in request and esteem and acknowledged as the will of God without adding or diminishing requiring every conscience to be subject to them and to prepare himself to obedience without any further objecting or gainsaying and to seeke no further then to them for direction Both the simplicity and Majesty of stile shew it to be from God the wonderfull plainnesse and yet glorious Majesty the simplicity because it is plaine in no wise deceitfull and because it describes great matters in words familiar and obvious to the capacity of the Reader the Majesty since it teacheth so perspicuously the chiefest mysteries of faith and divine revelation which are above humane capacity Whether we read David Esay or others whose stile is more sweet pleasant and rhetoricall or Amos Zachary and Jeremy whose stile is more rude everywhere● the Majesty of the Spirit is apparent There is an authority and Majesty in them above all other writings of other authors the Scriptures command all both King and people Jerem. 13. 18. 1 Sam. 12. ult and bind the heart to its good abearing Jerome could say as oft as I read Paul it se●mes to me that they are not words but thunders which I heare Junius reading the first Chapter of John was stricken with amazement by a kind of Divine and stupendious authority and so he was converted from Atheisme as himselfe saith in his life Johannes Isaac a Jew was converted by reading the 53. of Esay Our Saviour spake as one having authority not as the Scribes So this booke speaks not as men it simply affirmes all things without proofe other authors use many arguments to confirme the truth of what they say Therefore Raimundus de Sabunda hence proves that he who speaketh in the Bible is of that authority that his bare word ought to be believed without any proofe whereas Galene Atheistically urged it the other way The Socinians reject all things in Religion which they cannot comprehend by reason The Philosophers called the Christians by way of scorn credentes Julian derided the Christian beliefe because it had no other proofe then thus saith the Lord. 6. Another argument is taken from the experience of the truth of the predictions and prophesies thereof For seeing it is generally confessed that onely the Divine essence can certainly foresee
these writings come from God We should receive it with reverence believe it with confidence exercise our selves in it with diligence and delight practice it with obedience Reading the Scripture is a rehearsing out of the booke such things as are there written barely without any interpretation It is to be done publikely as it was in the Synagogues of the Jewes who had the reading of the Law and Prophets amongst them the Prophets were read in their eares every day saith Paul and after the lecture of the Law and the Prophets in another place We honour God more by a publique then a private reading of it 2. Privately the godly Jewes of Berea did search the Scriptures and the King is commanded to read in the Law Some good Divines hold that the Scriptures barely read though preaching be not joyned with it may be the instrument of regeneration since the doctrine of the Gospell is called the ministration of the Spirit Psal. 19. the law of the Lord converteth the soule it is so when not preached but the word of God is made effectuall by the Spirit more often more ordinarily to beget a new life in the preaching that is the interpreting and applying of it then in the bare reading 1 Tim. 4. 13. Matth. 28. 29. Christs custome was as we may collect out of Luke 4. where one instance is recorded to make us conceive his ordinary practice when he had read to interpret the Scripture and often to apply it Let us all learn constantly to exercise our selves in the writings of God which if we strive to doe in a right manner we shall attaine true knowledge of the way to Heaven and also grace and help to walke in that way If the Lord should deny to any man the publique helps of preaching and conference yet if that man should constantly reade the word praying to God to teach him and guide him by it and strive to follow it in his life he should finde out the truth and attaine saving grace the word would illighten and convert but if God afford publique preaching and interpretation we must use that too as a principall ordinance Let us all reade the Scripture 1. With hearty prayers to God to direct us and open the sence of it to us Psal. 119. 18. JAmes 1. 5 17. and with a resolution to put in practice that which we learne Jam. 1. 25. Matth. 7. 24. and we shall finde the word read Gods power to our edification and salvation Onely a Spirituall understanding can discerne an excellency in the Scripture Nunquam Pauli mentem intelliges nisi prius Pauli spiritum imbiberis 2. Diligently attend unto reading 1 Tim. 4. 13 15. John 5. 39. Search the Scriptures whether the Greeke word be a metaphor from hunting dogges or from diggers in mines both import diligence It was a solemne speech used in holy actions hoc age The passions of the Martyrs may be read when their anniversarie daies are celebrated Whence the name of Legends Chamier 3. Orderly that we may be better acquained with the whole body of the Scriptures We should reade on in Chronicles and Ezra and other places wherein are nothing but names and Genealogies to shew our obedience to God in reading over all his sacred word and we shall after reape profit by that we understand not for the present though it will be convenient to begin with the new Testament as more plain before we reade the old 4. With faith Heb. 4. 2. The word of God consisteth of foure parts 1. History 2. Commandements 3. Promises 4. Threats All truths taught in the History of the Scripture ought to be believed As that the world was made of nothing onely by the word of God Heb. 11. 3. and that the bodies of men howsoever they died shall rise againe at the last day Job 19. 26. 2 All precepts Genes 22. 6. Abraham went doing that commandement though strange 3 All promises as that God could give Abraham when he was 100 yeeres old a seed and posterity which should be as innumerable as the Stars in the Firmament Genes 15. 5. and that by Sarah an old and barren woman Gen. 17. 16. Abraham and Sarah believed it Rom. 4. 20 21. Heb. 11. 11. 4. Threatnings as that Gen. 6. 13. 17. though unlikely Noab believed it 2 Pet. 2. 5. because God had said it Heb. 11. 7. and that Jonah 3. 4. the people of Nineveh believed v. 5. In narrando gravitas in imperando authoritas in promittendo liberalitas in minando severitas Spanhemius or at de officio Theologi 5. Constantly Cyprian was so much delighted with the reading of Tertullian that he read something in him every day and called him his Master Da Magistrum Let Gods command the examples of the godly and our owne benefit quicken us to a frequent reading of the holy Scriptures Mr Bifield hath a Kalender shewing what number of Chapters are to be read every day that so the whole Bible may be read over in the yeere The number of Chapters while you are reading the old Testament is for the most part three a day and when you come to the new Testament it is but two sometimes where the matter is Historicall or Typicall or the Chapters short he hath set down a greater number The Martyrs would sit up all night in reading and hearing After we have read and understood the Scripture we must 1. give thanks to God for the right understanding of it and pray him to imprint the true knowledge of it in our hearts that it may not fall out 2. We must meditate in the word of God now understood and so fix it in our minds One defines meditation thus It is an action of the soule calling things to mind or remembrance and discoursing of them that they might be the better understood retained affected and possessed It is as it were every mans preaching to himselfe and is a setting ones selfe seriously to consider in his mind and apply to his owne soule some necessary truth of Gods word till the mind be informed and the heart affected as the nature thereof requires and is the wholesomest and usefullest of all exercises of piety This is to ingrast the word into ones soule to give the seed much earth this is to bind it to the Tables of our heart and to hide it in the furrows of our soules this is to digest it and make it our owne 3. We must apply to our owne use whatsoever things we reade and understand the precepts and examples of the Law to instruct our life the promises and comforts of the Gospell to confirme our faith It serves for thankfulnesse 1. that now we have the Scripture the world was a long time without it it was the more wicked because they had no canon of Scripture We are not like to erre by tradition as former ages have done 2. That we have so great a
God shall destroy him with the Spirit of his mouth idest verbo suo Beza God hath consecrated the word to this purpose the end of it is not onely to save but destroy being the savor of death to some and it is a fit instrument for such a worke Antichrists strength is in mens consciences onely this will pierce thither Heb. 4. 12. God useth the word for the destruction of Antichrist these waies 1. It discovers him his doctrine his errours 2. It hardens him 3. It condemneth him and passeth sentence against him CHAP. III. 2. The Bookes of Scripture FRom the Divine flowes the Canonicall authority of the Scripture The bookes of Scripture are called Canonicall bookes say some from the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which word is used 2 Cor. 10. 13. Phil. 3. 16. Gal. 6. 16. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 marke the double emphasis this notable Canon because they were put into the Canon by the Universall Church acknowledged to be divinely inspired by it and also are made a perfect Canon or rule of all doctrine concerning religion credendorum agendorum of faith and manners of all things which are to be believed or done toward salvation But Cameron thinks it is not termed Canonicall because it is a rule for that booke saith he is called Canonicall which is put into the Catalogue which the ancients called a Canon of those writings which are esteemed Divine Becanus saith they are called Canonicall both because they containe a rule which we ought to follow in faith and manners and because they are put into the Catalogue of Divine bookes The conditions of a Canon are these 1. It must containe truth or be an expresse form and image of truth which is in the divine mind 2. It must be commanded sanctified and confirmed by Divine authority that it may be a Canon to us in the Church These bookes were sanctified either commonly all of both Testaments by the testimony of the Spirit and Church and Canon it selfe or the books of the old Testament were specially and singularly confirmed by word signes and event as the Pentateuch but the Propheticall books and Hagiographa before their carrying into Babylon by extraordinary signe the cloud and vaile in the Temple 1 Kings 8. 10. Levit. 16. 2. and Gods answer by Ephod Urim and Thummim Exod 28. 30. after their carrying away into Babylon by singular testimonies of events The books of the new Testament are confirmed by the Sonne of God revealed in flesh by his sayings and deeds Heb. 1. 2. and by the powerfull ministery of the Apostles by signes vertues and miracles Marke 16. 20. There is a threefold Canon in the Church Divine Ecclesiasticall and False The Divine Canon is that which properly and by itselfe is called the word of God immediately inspired of God into the Prophets and Apostles This according to the divers times of the Church is distinguished into the old and new Testament 2 Cor. 3. 6 14. this is a common division of the sacred Bible among Christians as in the version of Tremelius and Junius Testamenti veteris novi Biblia sacra and the Geneva gives that title to their Bible La Bible qui est toute la Saincte Escriture du viel novean Testament Austin thinkes they are better called Vetus novum Instrumentum Heinsius Grotius vetus novum Foedus vide Grotii Annotat. in libros Evangelii A Covenant is an agreement between two a Testament is the declaration of the will of one It is called in regard of the forme convention and agreement betweene God and man a Covenant in regard of the manner of confirming it a Testament For 1. in a Testament or last will the Testators mind is declared so is the will of God in his word therefore it is called a Testimony often Psal. 19. 119. l 2. Here is a Testator Christ a Legacy eternall life Heires the elect a writing the Scripture Seales the Sacraments 3. Because it is ratified by the death of Christ Heb. 9. 16 17. The Bookes of the old Testament are the holy Scriptures given by God to the Church of the Jewes shewing them what to believe and how God would be worshipped The new Testament containeth the bookes which treate of salvation already exhibited and Christ already come in the flesh All the bookes of the old Testament were written originally in Hebrew because they were committed unto the Hebrews Rom. 3. 2. except what Daniel and Ezra wrote in the Chaldee The Jewish Church receiving them from God kept them and delivered them to posterity Many grave Authours hold that the Hebrew was the first Tongue and mother of all the rest and it may probably be collected from the names of our first parents It was called Hebrew saith Erpenius not from Heber of the posterity of Sem as Josephus Jerome and others thinke when it is manifest that he rather spake Chaldee then Hebrew because Abraham the Patriarke which drew his originall from him was a Chaldean but it was so called saith Erpenius as all the Rabbines Origen and others testifie from the Hebrews which people arose from Canaan It is honoured with the title of the holy Tongue saith the same Erpenius because the most holy God spoke it to his Prophets delivered his holy will written in it to the Church and because it is very probable from the opinion of great men that holy men shall use it with God hereafter in Heaven vide Buxtorfium de Linguae Hebraeae origine Antiquitate Sanctitate There are many Hebraismes also in the new Testament many words and phrases rather used according to the manner of the Hebrews then the Greeks by which it is mauifest that the same Spirit was the Authour of the old and new Testament The knowledge of the Hebrew much conduceth to the learning of those famous Orientall Tongues the Chaldee Syriacke Arabicke and Aethiopicke by reason of the great affinity which they have with their mother The bookes of the old Testament may be divided severall waies in respect of the stile some were written in prose some in verse in respect of time some were written before their being taken captives into Babylon as Samuel Esay H●sea and many others some in the Captivity and some after as Haggai Zachary Malachy The Hebrewes divide the Bible ex instituto Esdrae into three speciall parts 1. The Law the five Bookes of Moses 2. The Prophets 1. The former Joshua Judges two bookes of Samuel and two of the Kings 2. The latter 1. Greater three 2. Lesser twelve 3. The Hagiographa for want of a more speciall name by which title all the rest are understood and they are eleven Our Saviour himselfe mentions this most ancient distinction Luke 24. 44. calling all the rest of the bookes besides the Law and Prophets Psalmes All the Scriptures of the old Testament in other places are comprised in the Law
name at least thrice saying I John Chap. 1. 9. 21. 1 2. 22. 8. whereas in the Gospell he never maketh mention of his name there he writes the history of Christ here he writes of himself and the Revelations declared to him Thirdly in the last Chapter are five testimonies heaped together v. 5 6 7 8. 1. Of the Angels 2. Of God himselfe the Lord of the holy Prophets 3. Of Jesus Christ behold I come shortly 4. Of John I John heard and saw all these things 5. The protestation of Jesus Christ vers 18. Fourthly the matter of the Booke doth convince the authority thereof seeing everywhere the Divinity of a Propheticall spirit doth appeare the words and sentences of other Prophets are there set downe part of the Prophesies there delivered are in the sight of the world accomplished by which the truth and authority of the whole is undoubtedly proved there are extant many excellent testimonies of Christ and his Divinity and our redemption by Christ. Fifthly The most ancient Fathers Greeke and Latine ascribe this Booke to John the Apostle Theophylact Origen Chys●stome Tertullian Hilary Austin Ambrose Irenaeus To deny then the truth of this booke is contra solem obloqui to gainsay the shining of the Sunne it selfe The Chyliasts abuse many testimonies out of this Booke but those places have been cleared long agoe by the learned as bearing another sence See Dr Raynolds conf with Hart Chap. 8. p. 406. Calvin being demanded his opinion what he thought of the Revelation answered ingenuously he knew not at all what so obscure a writer meant Se penitus ignorare quid velit tam obscurus scriptor Cajetan at the end of his Exposition of Jude confesseth that he understands not the literall sence of the Revelation and therefore exponat saith he cui Deus concesserit It consists of 22 Chapters the best Expositors on it are Ribera Brightman Pareus Cartwright Dent Forbes Mode Simonds 1. The Scriptures written by Moses and the Prophe●s sufficiently prove that Christ is the Messiah that was to come the old Testament may convince the Jewes which deny the new Testament of this truth John 5. 39. They that is those parts of Scripture written by Moses and the Prophets there were no other Scriptures then written The 53 Chapter of Esay is a large history of his sufferings We have also another Booke or Testament more clearely witnessing of Christ the Gospel is the unsearchable riches of Christ Ephes. 3. 8. So much may suffice to have spoken concerning the Divine Canon the Ecclesiasticall and false Canon follow CHAP. V. SOme Hereticks utterly abolisht the Divine Canon as the Swingfeldians and Libertines who contemned all Scriptures the Manichees and Marcionites refused all the Bookes of the old Testament as the Jewes doe those of the new as if they had proceeded from the Divell Some diminish this Canon as the Sadduces who as Whitaker and others hold rejected all the other Prophets but Moses some inlarge it as the Papists who hold that divers other Bookes called by us Aprcrypha i. hidden doe belong to the old Testament and are of the same authority with the other before named and they adde also their traditions and unwritten word equalling it with the Scripture both these are accursed Rev. 22. 18. But against the first we thus argue whatsoever Scripture 1. is divinely inspired 2. Christ commandeth to search 3. To which Christ and his Apostles appeale and confirme their doctrine by it that is Canonicall and of equall authority with the new Testament But the holy Scripture of the old Testament is divinely inspired 2 Tim. 3. 16. where he speakes even of the Bookes of the old Testament as is gathered both from the universall all writing viz. holy in the 15 verse and from the circumstance of time because in the time of Timothies infancy little or nothing of the new Testament was published 2. Christ speakes not to the Scribes and Pharisees but to the people in generall to search it John 5. 39. this famous elogium being added that it gives testimony of him and that we may finde eternall life in it 3. Christ and his Apostles appeale to it and confirme their doctrine by it Luke 24. 27. Rom. 3. 21. Acts 10. 43. 17. 11. 20 43 26. 20. the new Testament gives testimony of the old and Peter 2 Pet. 1. 19. of Pauls Epistles The Ecclesiasticall Canon which is also called the second Canon followeth to which these Bookes belong Tobit Judith first and second of the Machabees Wisdome Ecclesiasticus Baruch Additions to Daniel and Hester for these neither containe truth perfectly in themselves nor are sanctified by God in the Church that they may be a Canon of faith and although abusively from custome they were called Canonicall yet properly in the Church they are distinguished from the Canonicall by the name of Apocryphall The false Canon is that which after the authority of the Apocrypha increased was constituted by humane opinion for the Papists as well as we reject for Apocryphall the third and fourth Booke of Esdras the prayer of Manasses the third and fourth of Machabees as Thomas Aquinas Sixtus Senensis Bellarmine and so the Councell of Trent confesse when they omit these and reckon up the whole Canon The state therefore of the controversie betwixt us and the Papists is whether those seven whole bookes with the Appendices be Sacred Divine Canonicall We doe not deny but many of these especially Wisdome and Ecclesiasticus are very good and profitable and to be preferred before all humane Tractates but that they are properly and by an excellency Canonicall and of infallible truth out of which firme arguments may be drawne that we deny Those Bookes which the Jewes of old and the reformed Churches now reckon for truely Canonicall in the old Testament are received all even by our adversaries for Canonicall without any exception 2. for the Canonicall Bookes of the new Testament there is no controversie between us and so far we agree but in the old Testament whole Bookes are reckoned by them for Canonicall which we hold Apocryphall The reason why these Bookes at first were added to holy writ was this the Jewes in their later times before and at the comming of Christ were of two sorts some properly and for distinction sake named Hebrews inhabiting Jerusalem and the holy Land others were Hellenists that is the Jewes of the dispersion mingled with the Graecians These had written sundry bookes in Greeke which they made use of together with other parts of the old Testament which they had in Greeke of the translation of the 70 when they now understood not the Hebrew but the Hebrewes received onely the 22 Bookes before mentioned Hence it came that the Jewes delivered a double Canon of Scripture to the Christian Church the one pure unquestioned and Divine which is the Hebrew Canon the other in Greeke
adulterate corrupted by the addition of certaine bookes written in those times when God raised up no more Prophets among his people Drus. praeterit l. 5. Annotat. ad Act. Apost c. 6. Jun. Animad in Bell. cont 1. l. 1. c. 4. l. 2. c. 15. sect 21. Tertul. in Apol. c. 19. They are called Apocryphall i. secret and hidden not because the names of the writers are unknowne by that reason Judges and Ruth should be Apocryphall but because they were not wont to be read openly in the Church of God as the Canonicall bookes but secretly and in private by private persons or because their authority was obscure and doubtfull with the Ancient These bookes our Church rejecteth as not written by Divine inspiration for these reasons All the Canonicall bookes of the old Testament were written by the Prophets but none of these bookes were written by any of the Prophets for 1. The last of the Prophets of the Jewes was Malachy Mal. 4. 4 5. between whom and John Baptist came no Prophet Marke begins with the same words almost with which Malachy ended a good argument to prove that the new Testament is next to the old But these Bookes were written by such who lived most of them after Malachy 2. All the Prophets wrote in Hebrew the language which the Jewes understood but the Fathers affirme and Papists acknowledge that most of these bookes were written in Greeke ergo being not written by the Prophets they are not Canonicall 2. All the bookes of the old Testament were committed to the Jewes and safely kept by them Rom. 3. 2. our Saviour Christ which reproved the Jewes for corrupting the sence of the Scripture did yet never reprove them for rejecting those bookes which were divinely inspired which sacriledge he would not have concealed yea our Saviour sendeth us unto the Scriptures as they received them John 5. 39. E●ras after the captivity is reported to have gathered all the Bookes of holy Scripture and safely to lay them up If the Jewes should have rejected or not received any bookes being Canonicall they had grievously erred which the Papists themselves will not affirme Yea there should have been some Canonicall Bookes which no Church received for besides the Church of the Jewes at that time there was none in the world The Canonicall Bookes of the old Testament were divided into Moses the Prophets and Psalmes with which agreeth the old distribution of the Hebrews into the Law Prophets and Hagiographa 3 There are two waies to know a booke to be Canonicall one by the testimony of some Prophet or Apostle the other by the certaine testimony of them which did live when the booke was published who did witnesse that the booke was written by some Prophet or Apostle But these bookes are known to be Canonicall neither of these waies they were rejected by the Jewes who lived in the times when they were written our Saviour Christ nor his Apostles never commend these Bookes unto us as endited by the Spirit They are cited by Christ and his Apostles for the confirmation of their doctrine All the Canonicall Bookes in generall John 5. 39. 10. 35. Rom. 16. 26. Luke 16. 29 31. Ch. 24. v. 25 27 44. The most of all in speciall Genesis Matth. 19. 4 5 6. Exodus Matth. 5. 21 27 33 38. Leviticus Gal. 3. 12. Numbers John 3. 14. Deuteronomy Acts 3. 22. Josh●a Heb. 11. 30 31. Judges Heb. 11. 32. Ruth Matth. 1. 3. First of Samuel Matth. 12. 3. Second of Samuel Heb. 1. 5. First of Kings Matth. 12. 42. Second of Kings Luke 4. 27. First of Chronicles Matth. 1. 3 7 10 13. Second of Chronicles Acts 7. 48. Ezra Matth. 1. 12 13. Job 1 Corinth 3. 19. Psalmes Acts 4. 25. Proverbs Heb. 12. 5 6 7. Esay Matth. 1. 23. Jeremy Heb. 10. 16 17. Ezechiel Matth. 25. 35. Daniel Matth. 24. 25. All the lesser Prophets Acts 7. 42. 15. 15 16. Hosea Matth. 12. 7. Jo●l Acts 2. 12. Amos Acts 15. 16. Jonah Matth. 12. 40 41. Micha Matth. 10. 35. Na●um Rom. 10. 15. Habacuc Rom. 1. 17. Haggai Heb. 12. 26. Zachary Matth. 21 5. Malachy Luke 1. 16 17. These bookes were not cited by Christ and his Apostles for confirmation of their doctrine Ob. If they be not Canonicall therefore because they are not cited then Na●um and Zephany are not Canonicall Aratus Menander and Epimenides prophane Poets are Canonicall because they are cited Acts 17. 28. 1 Cor. 15. 33. Titus 1. 12. Sol. They are not therefore not Canonicall onely because they are not cited but especially because they have not the characters of Divine Scripture 2 Nahu● and Zephany are implicitely quoted when the bookes of the Prophets are mentioned Acts 7. 41. 15. 15 16. The Poets are not cited as Canonicall but the Apostle applied himselfe to his hearers who did much esteeme their authority Some have well coucluded from Acts 10. 43. that the Apocrypha are not to be received as Canonicall Scripture because they testifie not of Christ. 4 Those bookes which containe manifest untruths coutrary to the Word of God and the books of holy Scripture were not inspired of God for as God is true so is his word John 17. 17 sweetly agreeeng with it selfe and every part with other these bookes commend false things as true and approve things evill as right Judith chap 9 v 2 commends killing the Sichemites against Gen. 49. 6 7. 2 Mac. 14. 42. Razis is commended for killing himselfe the fact is not onely related but commended also in these words nobly manfully and this commendation doth plainly shew that the Authour thereof was not inspired of God when the Donatists out of this booke urged that it was lawfull for them to kill themselves as Razis did Augustine then was forced to acknowledge that the authority of this booke was uncertaine and questionable and proves it by the judgement of the Jewish Church Christ and the Christians Manifest fables are told in some of them for true histories as that of Toby Judith Bell and the Dragon If any desire a particular con●utation of the severall Bookes of the Apocrypha I commend to his reading that learned Treatise of Dr Raynolds de libris Apocryphis who hath so exactly handled this subject that to write of it after him were to write Iliads after Homer or to draw a line after Apelles 5. The most ancient Fathers and Councels which lived the best and first 500 yeeres after Christ rejected the same bookes which we doe Jerome on Matth. 23. saith concerning a testimony cited out of the Apocrypha Hoc quoniam ex Scriptura nihil habet authoritatis eadem facilitate rejicitur qua profertur Because this hath no authority out of Scripture it may as easily be rejected as it is offered All that the Papists object for these Bookes in the generall is that the third Councell at Carthage the
Florentine councell and that of Trent doe approve the said Bookes to be Canonicall as also Augustine and Innocentius To which it may be answered 1. That the Councell of Carthage was but a Provinciall Councell and therefore it cannot binde the whole world Moreover in that Councell there are divers things which the Papists will not endure as in the 26 Canon there is a decree that no Bishop shall be called chiefe or universall Bishop no not the Bishop of Rome how should the Papists binde us with the authority of that Councell with which they will not binde themselves 2. The Latine Fathers judged these bookes fit to be read for example of life and instruction of manners but not for confirmation of faith or establishing any doctrine 3. These Bookes are not Proto Canonicall truely and properly Canonicall inspired by God containing the immediate and unchangeable truth of God sanctified by him and given to the Church to be a perfect rule of sound doctrine and good life but Deutero-canonicall or rather Ecclesiasticall as they are stiled In this sence Augustine and Innocentius are to be taken when they reckon these Bookes among the Canonicall 4. No Councell hath authority to define what Bookes are Canonicall what not seeing Bookes truely Divine receive authority from God himselfe and are to be esteemed of undoubted truth although all the world should barke against them These two Councels are of too late standing to oppose against the other ancient Councels which reject these Bookes The co●ncell of Trent was gathered and kept against all Civill and Ecclesiasticall right neither was there any forme of justice observed in it 1. It was not kept in a lawfull place for whereas it was intended against the Protestants and the Germans were the parties accused it ought to have been kept in Germany according to the request exhibited by the body of the States of Germany assembled at Noremberg this equity was not observed the parties accused being called into Italy 2. In that Councell matters were concluded and the sentence passed the adversary not being heard speake nor so much as present for the Protestants might not be admitted to hearing neither could they obtaine to propound their opinion in the Councell muchlesse to avouch it by lawfull reasoning Sleidan fol. 29. and yet were condemned against divine and humane law for they both forbid the condemning of any before he have lawfull liberty granted him to plead for himselfe 3. In that Councell the accuser and Judge were the same for the Pope did accuse the Protestants of heresie he did convocate the Coucell he by his Delegates was President and Moderator in it and so together was Accuser Judge and Witnesse whereas the reformation of the Pope was the thing in question Lastly all Councels ought to be free but in this Protestants might not propound their cause nor defend it neither might any thing be proposed but according to the mind of the Legates or otherwise then they approved no man had any voyce in the Councell but such as were sworne to the Pope nothing was there determined which was not first concluded of at Rome by the Pope in the Colledge of Cardinals and sent from Rome to Trent whereupon this Proverbe arose Spiritum Sanctum Roma p●r peram mitti Tridentum The Holy Ghost came to Trent packt up in a Cloke-bag We hope therefore since the Apocrypha are justly rejected out of the Canon that hereafter they will neither have the honour to be bound with our Bibles nor read in our Churches The Apocrypha was never received by the Church of the Israelites before Christ his comming nor of the Apostolicke and Primitive Church for more then 300 yeeres after as both Eusebius out of Origen and the Councell of Laodicea Can. 59. confirmed afterward by the sixth generall councell of Constantinople sheweth for the Greeke Church and St Jerome for the Latine CHAP. VI. Of the Authenticall edition of the Scripture NOw we must enquire which is the Authenticall edition of holy Scriptures it being necessary that this heavenly truth committed to writing should be delivered in some forme of words and in some language which may be understood Lawyers from whom the use of the word Authentique seemeth borrowed doe call those instruments and writings authentique which have a certaine and just authority in themselves A booke or writing is authentique either by divine or humane institution those are by Divine appointment and institution authenticall which have from God sufficient and absolute authority to command and approve themselves worthy credit and faith in as much as God himselfe doth approve thtm by humane institution such writings are held authenticall which by the opinion and sentence of learned men in their severall professions may be esteemed worthy credit and beliefe for themselves and for the truth in them There is a great diversity of editions of holy Scripture all cannot be simply and perpetually authenticall in of and for themselves without reference unto another no more then many draughts of the same Lease or Deed or copy of one pardon can be Some amongst many are authentique whence the others are transcribed yea it cannot be that there should be many but although there may be many counterpanes of the deed yet there is but one or two principall Deeds so amongst this great variety of editions one or more ought to be as principall and authenticall Thrre is a question betwixt the Church of Rome and the reformed Churches about the authentique edition of Scripture they say that the edition of the Bible in Hebrew and Greeke i● not authenticall but rather the vulgar Latine We hold that the vulgar Latine is very corrupt and false that the Hebrew for the old Testament and the Greeke for the new is the sincere and authenticall writing of God therefore that all things are to be determined by them and that the other versions are so far to be approved of as they agree with these fountaines The Tridentine Councell thus decreeth that in all sermons readings disputations controversies the vulgar Latine Translation should be taken for authentique before the Hebrew or Greeke and that no man should presume upon any occasion to reject it or to appeale from it When the Councell of Trent saith the vulgar Latine is authenticall it compares it with other Latine Translations not with the Hebrew Muis. Andradius the chiefest of the Divines at the Councell of Trent thinketh that the Councell of Trent did not meane either to condemne the Hebrew truth as he calleth it or to acquit the Latine Translation from all errour when they called it Authenticall but onely that the Latine hath no such errour by which any pestilent opinion in faith and manners may be gathered This saith Rainolds against Hart. ch 6. p. 202. Chamier tomo 1. l. 12. c. 2. The Rhemists in their preface to the new Testament translated by them prolixly
of the Interlineary version put forth by Arias Montanus for the finding out the sence and genuine signification of all the Hebrew and Greek words Amongst many and divers Latine translations there was one more common then the rest of the Old and New Te●●ament usually called the vulgar because it was of vulgar use and received by many Who was the Author of this Edition it is not manifest Some say it was more Ancient then that of Jerome Jerome wrote pure Latine being skilfull in the Latine tongue but the vulgar trans●ation is barbarous in many places Therefore Pagnine Maldonate Es●ius Sixtus Senensis Burgensis Valla Lindon deny it to be Jeromes that was translated from the Hebrew by the Greek and not by Jerome but by some uncertaine and unknown Authour saith Whitaker Bootius in the Index of his Sacred Animadversions ascribes it to Jerome Vide Whitakerum de Scripturis Quoest. secund controversiae Cap. Sexto Waltheri officinam Biblicam The Geneva translation for the French and our last translation for the English and Deodate for the Italian are the best which is now set out in English Diodatus noster in eximia Bibliorum Italicorum versione saith Spanbemius The question betwixt us and the Papists now cometh to be considered which of these Editions is authenticall that is which of it selfe hath credit and authority being sufficient of it selfe to prove and commend it selfe without the help of any other Edition because it is the first exemplar or Copy of divine truth delivered from God by the Prophets and Apostles This in respect of the old Testament is the Hebrew and in some Chapters of Daniel and Esra the Chaldee and in respect of the New Testament is the Greeke all other Editions are but of humane authority This proposition true in it selfe is yet divers wayes opposed by the Papists whose opinions may be set downe in three propositions 1. That the Hebrew and Greeke Text are corrupt and therefore not Authenticall for the fountaine is to be preferred before the streames if it come unto our hands uncorruptly The Book of Moses which by Gods Commandement was preserved in the Arke and that very Gospell written by Matthew those autographs saith Morinus are certainely the rule of all versions The second proposition is that the 70. Translaters were not so much Translaters as Prophets who wrote by divine inspiration so that their translation had been authentique if it had come to our hands purely and had not perished The third is that the vulgar Translation is of authentique authority and ought so to be received neither may any man presume to reject it upon any pretence they say it hangeth betweene the Hebrew and Greek as Christ did between the two Theeves To these 3. Propositions we oppose 3. which are most true and shall prevaile 1. The Hebrew of the old Testament and the Greeke of the new is the authentique Edition and the pure fountain of divine truth 2. The 70. were not Prophets but Translators 3. The vulgar translation neither is authenticall nor perfect neither ought it in any case so to be esteemed Reasons Proving that the Hebrew of the old Testament and the Greeke of the New are authenticall and pure To prove our first Proposition these arguments may be brought The Hebrew of the old and Greek of the New Testament are the very Scriptures which came immediately from God the very particular and individuall writings both for Character and stile of Speech yea the dialect as well as the matter of them is immediately by inspiration from from above and written by holy men as they were moved by the holy spirit what Edition therefore is worthy to be compared to this When we speake of the originall and authenticke Text of the Holy Scripture that is not to be so understood as if we meant it of the Autographs written by the hand of Moses or the other Prophets or Apostles but onely of the originall * or the primogeniall Text in that tongue out of which divers versions were derived according to the variety of tongues 2. For a long time before the Birth of Chirst the Hebrew was not only the alone authentique Copy but the only Edition which was extant in the world In the dayes of Moses the Kings of Israel and the Prophets before the Captivity what Edition of Scripture had the Church but the Hebrew what did the Jewes read in their Synagognes and in their solemne meetings but onely this Hebrew Edition After the time of Christ for the space of 600 yeeres the Hebrew Edition of the old Testament and the Greeke of the new were held Authentique and no other 3. If any thing be erroneous doubtfull lesse emphaticall or improper or if in the Articles of religion any doubt or difficulty arise which cannot be decided out of translations we must necessarily then have recourse to the Hebrew of the old and the Greeke of the new Testament as Augustine witnesseth and Jerome in lib. Contra Helvidium Beliarmine grants that sometimes we must have recourse to the Hebrew Greek fountaines 1. When in the Latine Edition there be any errours of the Scribe 2. When there are divers readings 3. When there is any thing doubtfull in the words of sentence 4. To understand the force and Energy of the word because all things are more emphaticall in the originall 4. If the authority of the authenticall Copies in Hebrew Chaldee and Greek fall then there is no pure Scripture in the Church of God there is no high court of appeale where controversies ri●ing upon the diversity of translations or otherwise may be ended The exhortation of having recourse unto the Law and to the Prophets and of our Saviour Christ asking how it is written and how readest thou is now either of none effect or not sufficient The Papists differ among themselves in this controversie about the corruption of the originals some of them say that the Hebrew of the old and the Greeke of the New Testament is not generally corrupted and yet is not so very pure a fountain that whatsoever differs from it is necessarily to be corrected by it Others say that the Jewes in hatred of the Christian faith depraved and much corrupted the Hebrew Text of the Old Tes●ament Which opinion as absurd is rejected by Bellarmine and is easily refuted I shall first lay down some reasons against the grosser opinion and also that of Bellarmines before I come to answer the particular objections of the Papists 1. Jerome and Origen thus argue if the Jewes corrupted the Hebrew Text of the Old Testament then they did this before the coming of Christ or after it not before his coming for there was no cause why the Jewes should do it and our Saviour Christ would never have suffered so grosse a crime to have passed without due reproof when he was not silent for lesser faults On the contrary our Saviour sendeth
intituled in the Canon thereof is easily answered Either they were Civill and common-wealth Stories whether the Reader is referred if it like him to read the stories more at large which the Prophets touched shortly or else they are contained in the Books of the Kings which are manifestly proved to be written by divers Prophets in their severall ages wherein they prophesied Salomons Books which he wrote of generall Philosophy fell away but all the other Books of the Scripture do still remain First they are all of God all whose works remain for ever therefore the holy Scriptures being not onely his handy-work but as it were the chief and Master-work of all other must have a continuall endurance Secondly they all are written generally for our instruction and more particularly for admonition and warning for comfort and consolation unlesse we will say that God may be deceived in his purpose and end wherefore he ordained them it must needs be that it must continue whatsoever hath been written in that respect Thirdly if the Lord have kept unto us the whole Book of Leviticus and in it the ceremonies which are abolished and whereof there is now no practice because they have a necessary and profitable use in the Church of God how much more is it to be esteemed that his providence hath watched over other Books of the Scripture which more properly belong unto our times Fourthly let us heare the Scripture it self witnessing of it own authority and durablenesse to all ages Moses thus writeth of it The secret and hidden things remain to the Lord our God but the things that are revealed to us and our Children for ever David also professeth that he knew long before that the Lord had founded his testimonies for ever-more But our Saviour Christs testimony is of all other most evident That heaven and earth shall passe but that his word cannot passe And yet more vehemently that not one jot or small letter prick or stop of his Law can passe untill all be fulfilled Rom 15. 4. therefore none of those which were written for that end are lost Origen in praefat in Cant. Canticorum Augustine l. 18. de civitate Dei c. 38. thought it could not neither stand with the Divine providence nor with the honour of the Church that any Canonicall Books and given for such to the Church should be lost Of this opinion are many worthy moderne Divines Junius Chamierus Tomo 1. L. 9. c. 5. Polanus Wendelinus Waltherus Spanhemius Cartwright Gerardus in exegesi loci primi de Scriptura sacra c. 6. Joh. Camero Tomo 3. in Praelectionibus de verbo Dei Cap. 15. Rivetus in Isagoge ad S. Script c. 6. in Summa Controversiarum Tom. 1. Tract 1. Quaest. 1. Altingi us But Chrysost. and Whitaker also Bellarmine l. 4. de verbo Dei c. 4. Gr●ther and Becanus hold that some Canonicall Books are lost I rather subscribe to the judgement of the former Reverend Divines who held the contrary The second question is whether the Scripture of the old Testament was punctata from the beginning or whether the Hebrew Text had Vowels or points from the beginning as now it hath Controversiam de punctorum antiquitate vel novitate inter viros eruditos disceptatam non attingo Sententia utraque suos habet assertores magni quidem nominis Cevalerius Buxtorsius Marinus Junius and other very godly and learned men have defended the antiquity of the pricks which to the Hebrews are in stead of Vowels and say that the Bibles were punctata in our Saviour Christs time and that he approved of the same Matth. 5. 18. others hold that the invention of the pricks and the Mass●reth is to be ascribed to the Tiberian Massorites who flourished about 500 yeares after Christs birth this opinion divers learned men have defended with most weighty reasons as Martinius in Technologia Luther Mercer Scaliger and Drusius Calvin upon the 11. of Zacharie Zuinglius in his Preface on Esay Raynolds in his censure of the Apocryphall Books But above all Capellus in his Book entitled Arcanum punctationis revelatum hath so strongly confirmed that opinion and hath so solidly confuted the reasons which are commonly brought to the contrary that he hath drawn some learned Divines to his opinion which before did stiffely adhere to the contrary opinion and left others very doubtfull He hath well answered that place Matth. 5. 18. l. 2. c. 14. But as Amana saith if any will not be moved from the other opinion that the puncta were invented by the Prophets which many godly Divines doe out of a good zeale stand for suum Cuique liberum sit judicium Vide Fulleri Miscell Sac. l. 4. c. 4. Mercerum ad Gen. 16. 13. Drusium ad difficuliora loca Genes Buxtor fij dissertationem de Ebraeorum literis Our Saviour saith Matth. 5. 18. that not one jot or prick of the Law shall perish whereby it should appeare that the Law and the Prophets for of both he speaketh immediately before had vowels pricks whereunto also belong all those places of Scripture which testifie of the clearnesse and certainty of the Scripture which could not at all be now if it lacked Vowels Yet this is not B. Vshers judgement as himselfe told me Non est improbabile argumentum ex Matth. 5. v. 18. Luc. 16. 17. ubi per 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 puncta accentus commodè intelligi posse docti opinantur inter quos Broughthonius in Daniel p. 45. Polanus Syntagm lib. 1. cap. 37. quamvis argumento illi nolimus insistere Voetius Tomo primo disputat de authoritate Scripturae Sine punctis legere saith Drusius paucis hodie Concessum Serarius de Rabbinis saith Elias Hutter a Lutherane writes thus è mille Praedicantibus ne unum quidem esse qui etiam punctatissina possit Hebraea legere nedum absque punctis CHAP. VII NOw I proceed to shew that neither the translation of the Seventy nor the vulgar Latine are anthenticall 1. The Greek translation of the Old Testament which is commonly ascribed to the Seventy Interpreters is not Divinely inspired The chiefe Pillars of the Primitive Church ranne into this errour whence sprung many other errours The Greek Fathers who were generally unskilfull both in Hebrew and Latine some few excepted were the lesse to be blamed here since they made use of no other Editions therefore they more confidently affirmed their own to be Authenticall Augustine Tertullian and many of the Latine Fathers whom divers Divines follow ascribed too much to the Seventy Interpreters Yet there was a controversie between Augustine and Jerome concerning their authority as is evident by both their Epistles Bellarmine is large in commending this version saying that it is most certain that those Interpreters did very well translate the Scripture and had the Holy Ghost peculiarly assisting them least they should erre
both from all prophane and Sacred writings and Paul honours it with this Elogie a faithfull saying and worthy of all acceptation 1 Tim. 1. 15. a more sure word 2 Pet. 1. 19. the Comparative for the Superlative in which there is no doubting and uncertainty but all things firme As God is I●hovah of himself so is his word autoritative of it selfe and is true and to be obeyed whether thou think it Scripture or no. There is no higher authority for thee to appeale to it is above opinions of men conscience and therefore it must determine all controversies 2. It is true and certaine verity is affirmed of the Scriptures primarily internally and by reason of it selfe which is called the truth of the object which is an ab●olute and most perfect agreement of all things delivered in the Scripture with the first truth or divine will of which the Scripture is a symbole and lively Image so that all things are delivered in it as the Holy Ghost hath dictated whence those honourable titles are given to it the Scripture is called a sure word 2 Pet. 1. 19. Psal. 19. 7. the Scripture of truth Dan. 10. ult words of truth Eccles. 12. 10. Yea truth it self John 17. 17. having the God of truth for the Authour Christ Jesus the truth for the witnesse the Spirit of truth for the Composer of it and it worketh truth in the hearts of those which heare it 2 Pet. 2. 2. The Apostle preferres the Scripture before the Revelation made by Ang●ls Gal. 1. 8. Christ commends the certainty of it above all other sorts of Revelation 1 Pet. 1. 19. above information from the dead Luke 16. 31. The word of God is not onely true but eminently true truth it selfe prima veritas and pura veritas The Scripture hath a twofold truth 1. Of assertion it containeth no errour 2. Of promise there is no unfaithfulnesse in it The first truth referres to the matter which is signified properly called truth or verity The second referres to the intention of the Speaker which is properly called veracite or fidelity the latter is implyed Psal. 19. thy Testimonies are sure and so the sure mercies of David the former is implyed in that the word is purer then Gold 7 times refined There are two signes of truth in the Scripture 1. The particularity of it it names particulars in genealogies dolosus versatur in generalibus 2. Impartiality toward friends and their adversaries the most holy men have their faults described they give due commendation to their adversaries The truth of Scripture is 1. More then any humane truth of sense or reason 2. Above all naturall reason as the doctrine of the Trinity the incarnation of Christ justification by faith in Christ. 3. A truth which evidenceth it self 4. The standard of all truth nothing is true in doctrin or worship which is not agreeable to this 3. The Scripture is the rule of faith and manners It is termed Canonicall generally by the Fathers of the word Canon which signifieth a rule because it containes a worthy rule of religion faith and godliness● according whereunto the building of the house of God must be sitted These properties saith Suarez are required in a rule 1. That it be known and easie the Scripture is a light 2. That it be first in its kind and so the measure of all the rest 3. It must be inflexible 4. Universall 1. It is a perfect rule of faith and obedience and able to instruct us sufficiently in all points of faith or doctrinals which we are bound to beleeve and all good duties or practicals which we are bound to practise Whatsoever is needfull to beleeve or to doe to please God and save our soules is to be found here whatsoever is not here found is not needfull to beleeve and practise for felicity Christ proveth the resurrection of the dead being an article of our faith against the Sadduces Matth. 22. 32. and the use of the Sabbath being a rule of life against the Pharisees by an inference made from the Scripture Matth. 12. 7. The Heads of the Creed and Decalogue are plainely laid downe in Scripture therefore there we have a perfect rule of faith and manners It is a rule 1. For faith Jerome in his controversie with Helvidius saith Credimus quia legimus non credimus quia non legimus We beleeve because we read we doe not beleeve because we doe not read Christ often saith have ye not read is it not written what is written in the Law Luke 10. 26. faith and the word of God must run parallel This we first beleeve when we doe beleve saith Tertullian that we ought to beleeve nothing beyond Scripture When we say all matters of doctrine and faith are contained in the Scripture we understand as the Ancient Fathers did not that all things are literally and verbally contained in the Scripture but that all are either expressed therein or by necessary consequence may be drawne from thence All controversies about religion are to be decided by the Scripture Deut. 12. 32. and 4. 2. Josh. 1. 7. Franciscus de S●lis a Popish Bishop saith the Gospell was honoured so much that it was brought into the Councell and set in the midst of them and to determine matters of faith as if Christ had been there 2. It is a perfect rule for our lives and practise Psal. 19. 11. and Psal. 119. 9. In the Scriptures there are delivered remedies against all vices and meanes are there laid down for the attaining of all vertues We must follow the Scriptures exactly and not swerve to the right hand or left a metaphore taken from a way or rule saith Chamier when Linacer a learned English man heard the beginning of the 5. of Matthew read Blessed are the poore in spirit c. he broke forth into these words either these sayings are not Christs or we are not Christians It is a perfect not a partiall and insufficient rule as the Papi●●s make it as God is a perfect God so his word is a perfect word if it be but a partiall rule then it doth not perfectly direct and he that should perfectly doe the will of God revealed in Scripture should not yet be perfect Secondly if the Scripture be a partiall rule then men are bound to be wise above that which is written that is above the Law and Gospell Regula fidei debet esse adaequata fidei aut regula non erit Whitakerus 1. All addition and detraction are forbidden to be made by any man to the word Deut. 4. 2. and 12. 32. Deut. 5. 32. Gal. 1. 8. 2. The Scripture is said to be perfect to beget heavenly and saving wisdome Psal. 19. 8. 2 Tim. 3 15 16 17. 3. Men in the matter of faith and Religion are sent to the Scripture onely 2. The Scripture is an Infallible rule Luke 1. 4. of which thou hast had a full assent Regularectè definitur
faith knowledge assent and full assurance these cannot consist without the perspicuity of the Scripture the divine promises also of writing the Law in our heart and concerning the spreading abroad and cleare light of the Gospell should be to no purpose if the Scriptures should not ●e plaine in things necessary to salvation All difficulty in understanding the Scripture ariseth not from the obscurity of it but from the weaknesse of our understanding corrupted by naturall ignorance or blinded by divine punishment and c●rse therefore it no more followes from thence that the Scripture cannot be an infallible and onely rule of faith and life because some obscure things are found in it not understood of all then that the Bookes of Euclide are not perfect elements of Geometry because there are some abstruse theoremes in them which every vulgar Geometrician can not demonstrate or that Aristotles Organon is not a perfect Systeme of Logicke because a fresh Sophister understands not all its subtilties More distinctly we say that the Scriptures are plaine and obscure in a threefold respect 1. They are plaine and easie to be understood by all men in Fundamentals and the Speciall points necessary to salvation as the Decalogue the Apostles Creed the Lords Prayer and the like unlesse by those whose minds the God of this world hath blinded if they be obscure in some lesse principall and circumstantiall matters there is need of interpretation that the meaning may be more clearely unfolded 2. A difference of persons is to be considered either more generally or more specially 1. More generally as they are elect and regenerate or reprobate and unregenerate to those the Scripture is plaine and pe picuous to whom alone it is destinated and whose minds the Holy Ghost will inlighten by the Scripture John 7. 17. Rom. 12. 2. 1 Cor. 12. 15. Psal. 19. 7. Matth. 11. 5. and 25. 25. Psal. 9. 10. 12. 13. 14. Yet the flesh and unregenerate part in them puts in impediments but that Ignorance is removed at last Luke 8. 10 The reprobates continue involved in perpetuall darknesse and blinded with Ignorance hypocrisie covetousnesse pride and contempt of divine learning even seeing they see not Psal. 36. 3. Esay 29 9. Jer. 5. 21. Esay 6. 9. 2 Cor. 3. 14. there is a vaile over their hearts 2 Cor. 4. 3. 4. which is the cause why is so many ages under the Papacy the Scriptures were not understood because they preferred a lye before the love of the truth 2 Thess. 10. whose Ignorance is a deserved punishment of that contempt which they shewed to the Scriptures and their authority 2. More specially the persons are distinguished according to the diversity 1. Of Conditions of life and vocations for so many places of Scripture are hard to this sort of men which are more easie to another neither is it required that all things be understood of all men the knowledge of more places is necessary in a Minister then in a Trades-man and Husband-man yet it is an 〈◊〉 Rule to every one in his Vocation 2. Of capacities and wits for every one hath his measure of gifts so among Ministers some understan● the Word more obscurely some more plainly yet it is to all a perfect rule according to the measure of Gifts 3 Of times all things are not equally obscure or perspicuous to all ages many things are better understood now then in times past as the prophesies and predictions of Christ and the times of the Gospell so in the Mysteries of the Revelation the exposition rather of moderne Interpreters then Fathers is to be received because in our times not theirs there is an accomplishment of those Prophesies and many things were more clearely knowne by them in those dayes the Ceremonies and Types of Moses his Law were better perceived by the Jewes then us God the Author of the Scripture could speak perspicuously for he is wisdom it selfe and He would speake so because he caused the Scripture to be written to instruct us to our eternall salvation Rom. 15. 4. and he commands us to seek in the Scripture eternall life We do not account the prophecy of Esay touching Christ which the Eunuch read to be a dark and obsure prediction but wee know it was cleare and plaine enough though the Eunuch a raw Proselyte understood not the meaning of it The Fathers proved their opinions out of the Scriptures therefore the Scriptures are more clear then the writings and commentaries of the Fathers To every one which readeth with humility and invocation of God the Booke of the Apooalypse the obscurest and hardest Booke to understand of all other blessednesse is promised which when it cannot be●all to any that understandeth nothing it is manifest that the promise of blessednesse includeth a warrant of understanding of it so much as is necessary to salvation We affirme that many places in the Scripture are very obscure and that either from the obscurity of the things as in the Prophesies of future things the event must interprete them as Daniels Prophecies of the foure Monarchies were in times past very darke but easier since when all things were fulfilled so the comming of Antichrist in the new Testament drew the Fathers into divers opinions so even yet there are many things obscure in the Revelation which are not accomplished So those things which are spoken of the Messiah in the old Testament are either not understood or not fully without the new Testament Sometimes the ambiguity of words breedes a difficulty as I and the Fathers are one the Arrians understood it of a union of will as when Christ prayed John 17. that the Disciples might be one Hitherto may be referred those places which are to be understood allegorically as the Canticles the first Chapter of Ezechiel 3. Some places are obscure from the ignorance of ancient Rites and Customes as that place 1 Cor. 15. 29. of Baptizing for the dead is diversly explained by interpreters both old and new There are six interpretations of it in Bellarmine l. 1. de purgatorio c. 8. Ambrose saith Paul had a respect to that custome of some who Baptized the living for the dead Piscator Bucane say the custome of the ancient Church is noted here who Baptized Christians at the Graves that so it might be a symbole of their beliefe and confession of the Resurrection of the Dead Tarnovius proves that that rite was not in use in the Apostles time Calvin interprets it of those who were Baptized when they were ready to die but Beza thinkes by Baptizing is understood the 〈◊〉 of washing the bodies before the Buriall Andreas Hyperius sheweth in a peculiar tract what various opinions there are about this place Voetius hath written a tract de insolubilibus Scripturae Estius and Dr. Hall on the hard places of Scripture Divers rea●ons may be rendred why God would have many things in the Scripture obscure and difficult 1. To
holy Scripture in many places as well of the New Testament as the Old 2. The Fathers Doctores scil probati antiquae ecclesiae qui scriptis suis fidem illustrarunt as Voetius speakes For the Fathers Jerome among the Latines and Origen among the Greekes were learned in the Hebrew saith Chamier Jerome was the chiefest among them for skill in the Hebrew Chaldee Greeke Latine tongue and the most diligent searcher of the Jewish affaires he spared no labour cost nor time that he might attaine to skill in that tongue He made use of the Jewes for that purpose and the skilfullest amongst them Whose labour he purchased with a great deale of Money this he often witnesseth of himselfe 5 times saith Morinus he made use of them That one labour of his deserveth eternall praise that he translated the Scripture out of the Hebrew into Latine That was a most laborious worke of Origens in gathering together divers Editions of Scripture 1. The Greeke of Aquila Symmachus the Septuagint and Theodosion into one Volume distinguisht by 4 Columnes called Tetrapla to which he after added 2 more one in Hebrew the other in Greeke Characters and called it his Hexapla at last he joyned two other Editions and then called it Octapla by them one might have compared the severall Greeke Editions together and with the Hebrew Text. It was said of him Vbi benè nemo melius Vbi malè nemo pejus Quod attinet ad Originem mea certè nihil interest quid ille senserit quem scio Theologum fuisse audaciorem quam saniorem Chamierus Salmasius Whitaker Sixtus Senensis and others say Origen was skilfull in the Hebrew He wrote so many Books that Jerome saith Quis nostrum tanta potest legere quanta ille conscripsit Vir tantae fuit eruditionis in genij ut ei parem doctissima Graecia faelicissim●rum ingeniorum parens nunquam habuerit Sixtus Senensis Bibliothecae sanctae l. quarto He saith much more there in his commendation Tantum in scripturas divinas habuerit studium ut etiam Haebraeam linguam contra aetatis gentisque suae naturam edisceret Hieronymus de viris illustribus Austen for the Latine Church and Golden-mouth'd Chrysosostome for the Greek Church were most famous He is abridged by Theophylact. A Father so Ancient so learned so godly so skilfull in the Scriptures saith Rainolds of Chrys●stome Austen for disputations Jerome for the tongues Gregory for Morals Augustine Vir supra omnes qui ante eum post eum huc usque fuerunt mortales admirabili ingenij acumine praeditus omnibus liberalibus disciplinis instructus Divinis scripturis longè omnium eruditissimus in earum explanatione ultra quam dici queat incomparabili subtilitate sublimis omnes Latinae ecclesiae scriptores scribendi labore lucubrationum multitudine superavit Sixtus Senensis Biblioth Sanct. lib. quarto Subtilissimus Pat●um Augustinus Dr. Prideaux lectione quarta Gregory Nazianzene for his excellencie in divine knowledge was sirnamed the Divine Irenaeus saith Capellus was almost the ancientest of all the Fathers whose genuine writings are extant He was Polycarpus his Disciple Tertullian was one of the Latine Fathers most Ancient and very neere the Apostles flourishing in the raigne of Severus the Emperour about 200 yeares after Christs Birth and not past one hundred after the death of John the Evangelist Jerome being urged with his authority said De Tertulliano nihil aliud respond●o quamecclesiae hominem illum non fuisse In Graecia celebres agnosco Patres Clementem Athanasium Cyrillum Damascenum Montacutius Analect Eccles. exercit 1. Sect. 6. Cyprian the Martyr was of great authority amongst all for his holinesse of life He was so diligent a reader of Tertullian that he intermitted no day but would call to have his Master meaning Tertullian given him Doctor Hall cals Lactantius the Christian Cicero Jerome cals him eloquentiae Tullianae Flievium Epist. ad Paul tom 1. and Mr. Selden de Dis Syris cals him Politissimum Patrum Sententious Tertullian grave Cyprian resolute Hierome * flowing Chrysostome divine Ambrose devout Bernard heavenly Augustine Bish. Hals 4th Decade of Epist. Epist. third One saith he that looks upon the Fathers works would think they did nothing but write he that looks on their devotions would thinke they did nothing but pray he that lookes on their learning would think they did nothing but read Bernard was a worthy man in the corrupt age in which he lived but Bernardus non vidit omnia say the Papists Bernardum non admitto ut pote recentiorem longè post confirmatam Romani Pontificis tyrannidem scribentem ex more errore sui temporis Chamierus de Canone l. 3. c. 3. c. 5. Dand● venia bonis illis sanctis patribus qui ignorantia linguarum multae saepe aliena à germana scriptura senserunt pia alioquin attulerunt 3. For Protestant Interpreters Calvin is not onely commended by our own writers but by the very Papists See Watson in his Quodlibets I would content my selfe among the new writers with Mr. Calvin who performeth best of all other that which he of himselfe professeth that a man in reading his expositions reapeth this benefit that for the shortnesse he useth he departeth not farre from the Text it selfe Cartw. letter to Mr. Hildersham Piscator hath done well in his Scholia on all the Bible He follows Junius for the Old Testament and Beza for the New and in his Aphorismes he follows Calvins Institutions Bucer also was an excellent Divine He hath written a twofold Exposition on all the Psalmes one more large and Paraphrasticall the other briefer and ad verbum Francis Junius the very Oracle of Textuall and Scholasticall Divinity as Dr. Hall cals him Epist. 7. Deead 1. Vatablus his Annotations upon the Old Testament and Bezas on the New are commended by Zanchie in his Miscellanies But Arnoldus Boot in his Jndex Autorum before his Animadversiones Sacrae saith Robert Stephens and not Vatablus was the Authour of those Scholia which are in Vatablus his Bible Quid hac phrasi denotetur optimè exposuit D. Beza suis in novum Testamentum nunquam satis laudatis notis Constantin L' Empereur in Dan. c. 2 v. 8. See more of him in Zanchies Epistles Amania Paulus Fagius Drusius Ludovicus Capellus Livelie Cameron Ludovi●us de Dieu have beene Great lights and by their skill in the tongues have excellently interpreted Scripture Peter Martyr Lavater Musculus Zanchie Pareus Rollock Rivet are sound Expositors Ex omnibus antiquis recentioribus medullam variarum interpretationum circa eos disceptationem collegit Willetus in hexaplis ad Genesin Exodum Leviticum Danielem Epistolam ad Romanos in libros Samuelis sibi dissimilis est compendio atque alia plane methodo commentatur optandum esset telam illam à Willeto tam faeliciter c●●ptam eadem methodo in
both visible and invisible CHAP. VI. GOd is exceeding Great 1 Kings 8. 42. 2. Sam. 7. 22. Psal. 95. 3. and 96. 4. and 99. 2. 3. and 145. 3. Tit. 2. 13. God is Great and greatly to be praised and who is so Great as our God He is Great 1. In his nature and essence 2. In his workes 3 In his authority His name is Great Jer. 10. 6. 11. Josh. 7. 9. his power is great Psal. 147. 5. His Acts are great Psal 111. 1. his judgements are great Exodus 7. 4. He is great in counsell Jer. 32. 19. and mighty workes Deut. 32. 4. There is a double Greatnesse 1. Of quantity or bulk and that is an attribute of a body by which it hath very large bodily dimensions as a mountain is a great substance the Sun a great body and this cannot be found in God who is not a body but an Immateriall essence 2. Of Perfection worth and vertue and that is abundance of all excellencies and largenesse of whatsoever makes to perfection of being and this is in God He is so perfect every way that he stands in need of nothing God is absolutely and simply Perfect because he hath all things which are to be desired for the chiefest felicity He is pefect 1. In the highest degree of perfection simply without any respect or comparison secondly he is perfect in all kindes 1. John 1. 5. John saith he is light in which there is no darknesse that is Perfect and Pure without the least mixture of the contrary the Authour and cause of all perfections in all the creatures they are all in him but more perfectly and in a perfecter manner God is most absolutely Perfect Job 22. 2. Psal. 16. 2. Matth. 5. 48. The words in Scripture attributed to God which signifie this are 1. Schaddai which is as much as one sufficient to help himselfe or one that gives nourishment to all other things and therefore Gen. 17. 1. when God was to make a Covenant with Abraham to leave all earthly things and so trust in him onely he brings this argument that he was such a sufficient God 2. Gomer The verbe is used five times in the Psalmes as much as Perfect from the effect because God doth continually preserve to the end 3. Tom. Job 37. 16. It signifieth both Simple and Perfect 4. Calil à Col. omnis that in which all good things are God is perfect 1. Essentially he is Perfect in and by himselfe containing in him all perfections eminently Matth. 5 48. He hath all needfull to a Deity 2. Nothing is wanting to him he hath no need of any other thing out of himselfe Job 22. 2. 3. Psal. 16. 2. 3. Originally he is the cause of all perfection what hast thou which thou hast not received Jam. 1. 17. 4. Operatively all his workes are Perfect Deut. 32. 4. A thing is Perfect 1. Negativè which wanteth nothing which is due by nature to its integrity 2. Privativè which wanteth no perfection and so God onely is Perfect 2. God is Great in his workes Deut. 4. 36. Gods Perfection stands in an Infinitenesse of goodnesse Matth. 19. 17. wisedome Rom. 11. 33. power Gen. 17. 1. perfect wisedome goodnesse righteousnesse moderation holinesse truth and whatsoever may possibly be required to grace and commend an action that is found in the whole course and frame of Gods actions the worke of Creation is a perfect worke he made all things in unsearchable wisedome no man could have found any want of any thing in the world which might be reasonably desired no man could have found there any evill thing worthy to be complained of The worke of Providence is perfect all things are carryed in perfection of wisedome justice and goodnesse So is the work of Redemption likewise Perfect The perfectest measure of justice wisdome truth power that can be conceived of doth shew it selfe forth in that work Reason Such as the work-man is such must the work be a perfect Artists workmanship will resemble himselfe The perfection of God is his incomprehensible fulnesse of all excellenci●s He is absolutely and simply perfect Ob. Why doth God use the help of others Sol. Not out of need as the Artificer his Instruments so that he cannot work with them but out of choyce and liberty to honour them the more Hence sometimes he will use no meanes at all sometimes contrary meanes to shew that they help not and that we should not rely upon them Ob. Why is there sinne in the world seeing God needs not any glory that comes to him by Christ and by his m●rcy in pardoning of sinne why doth he suffer it Sol. Because sinne is not so great an evill as Christ is a good and therefore God would not have suffered sinne if he could not have raised up to himself matter of honour God makes an antidote of this poyson Ob. How comes it to passe that God makes one thing better then he did at first as in the creation all things had not their perfection at first Sol. Those things were perfect ex parte operantis he intended not they should have any farther perfection at that time the essence of nothing can be made better then it is because it consists in indivisibili God makes not out graces perfect in us because he aymes at another end Gods Perfection hath all imperfections removed from it 2 Tim. 2. 13. Titus 1. 2. Jam. 1. 3. There be 6 imperfections found in every creature 1. Contingency 2. Dependance 3. Limitation 4. Composition 5. Alteration 6. Multiplication Now God is free from all these He is 1. a necessary essence 2. Independent 3. Unlimited 4. Simple 5. Unchangeable 6. Wholly one Three of these viz. Gods Simplicity unlimitednesse in respect of time and place and unchangeablenesse I have handled already I shall speak of the other three when I have dispatched this attribute of Gods Greatnesse or Perfection 3. God is Great in his Authority I have shewed already that he is Great in his nature and essence and also in his workes now his Greatnesse in Authority is to be considered He is a Great King he hath Soveraign absolute and unlimited Authority over all things they being all subject and subordinate to him for at his will they were and are created This is signified by the Title of the most High so frequently given him in Scripture He is the High and lofty one Isay 57. 15. 1. In respect of place and dwelling he is in heaven Eccles. 5. 2. above the clouds 2. In respect of essence he is High indeed unexpressibly high the high God Gen. 14. 22. the Lord most High Psal. 7. 17. 3. In respect of Attributes he hath more wisedome power justice mercy then all creatures 4. In respect of State and dominion he is exalted in Authority power jurisdiction he is above all as Commander of all God hath
they are divided ibid. Authenticall what it is l. 1 p. 91 Which are the Authenticall editions of Scripture l. 1 p. 92 100 101 102 Neither the Translation of the Seventy nor the vulgar Latine are Authenticall l. 1 p. 119 120 121 122 Authority of Scripture is Divine l. 1. p. 8 to 24. 130 131 B BEasts their usefulnesse l. 3 p. 81 to 85 Bees for what they are notable l. 3. p. 80 Bible why so called l. 1. p. 8. m. Who first distinguished the Bible into Chapters and Verses l. 1. p. 46 Blessed God is most Blessed l 2 p. 119 to 126 What Blessednesse is l. 2 p. 120 121 Blindnesse naturall and Spirituall l. 3. p. 42 43 Body taken three waies l. 2. p. 25 God is not a Body l. 2. p. 24 25 Bounty in God what it is l. 2 p. 83 84 85 86 C CAnon why the Scripture is called a Canone or Canonicall l. 1. p. 42 43 The condition of a Canon l. 1. p. 43 There is a threefold Canon in the Church l. 1. p. 43 44 83 84 Some abolish some adde to others diminish the Canone ibid. Which are the Canonicall Bookes of the old Testament l. 1. p. 48 to 60 Which of the New l. 1 65 66 67 Seven Epistles are called Canonicall and why l. 1 p. 77 78 Canticles why so called and who best expounds it l. 1 p. 56 Catholique why seven Epistles are so called l. 1. p. 77 78 Chaldee why some part of the old Testament was written in Chaldee l. 1. p. 93 94 The Chaldee Paraphrast l. 1 p. 94 95 96 Christ is God l. 2. p. 131 132 133 Chronicles why so called and who best expounds them l. 1 p. 51 52 Christall what it is l. 3. p. 53 Church it hath a fourfold office in respect of the Scripture l. 1 p. 29 The true Church hath given testimony to the Scripture in all ages l. 1. p. 20 21 We believe not the Scripture chiefly for the Churches testimony l. 1 p. 26 27 28 29 30 Clemency in God what it is l. 2 p. 77 Cloudes what they are a great worke of God l. 3. p. 47 48 49 Colosse the chiefe City of Phrygia l. 1. p. 74 Who best expound the Colossians ibid. Conclusion whether that of the Lords prayer be true Scripture l. 1. p. 115 Conscience what it is the testimony of it is strong to prove that there is a God l. 2. p. 6 Corinth famous for divers things l. 1. p. 73 Who best interpret ●oth the Corinthians ibid. Councell the Florentine and Trent Councels not lawfull Councels l. 1. p. 89 90 Creation what it is l. 3. p. 13 14 Taken strictly and largely ib. The efficient cause matter form and end of it l. 3. p. 14 17 19 20 Consectaries from it l. 3. p. 20 21 22 The workes of each day l. 3 p. 23 24 25 26 D DAniel why so called and who best expounds it l. 1 p. 58 59 Day what it is and the benefit of it l. 3. p. 40 41 42 Decree what the word signifieth and how it is defined l. 3 p. 2 How far it extends and the properties of it l. 3. p. 3 4 The kinds of it and the execution of it l. 3. p. 4 Devils their names and nature l. 3. p. 105 106 What the sinne of the Devils was l. 3. p. 106 107 Why they fell irrecoverably l. 3 p. 107 108 They are malicious subtill powerfull l. 3. p. 108 109 110 Some questions about the Devils l. 3. p. 110 111 112 113 114 Deuteronomy why so called and who best expounds it l. 1 p. 49 Dew what it is l. 3. p. 52 Divine why John so called l. 1 p. 69 Divinity that it is l. 1. p. 1 2 What it is l. 1. p. 3 4 The severall kinds of it l. 1 p. 2 4 How it is to be taught l. 1 p. 4 5 How to be learnt l. 1. p. 5 The excellency of it l. 1. p. 6 7 The opposites of it l. 1. p. 6 Dominion what it is Gods Dominion l. 2. p. 52 53 E EArth the Creation of it is a great worke l. 3. p. 31 32 It is firme and stable l. 3. p. 32 to 36 Earthquake l. 3. p. 33. m. Ecclesiastes why so called and who best expound it l. 1. p. 55 56 Election the severall acceptions of the word and how it is defined l. 3. p. 6 The object and end of it l. 3 p. 7 8 All are not elected l. 3. p. 9 Consectaries from Gods Election l. 3. p. 11 12 Element what it is and the number of the Elements l. 3 p. 31 32 Elephant whence derived his excellency l. 3. p. 82 83 End the Ends of the Scripture l. 1. p. 128 129 Ephesus a famous City l. 1 p. 73 Who best expounds the Ephesians l. 1. p. 73 74 Epistles why so called l. 1. p. 67 How they are divided and who best expounds them l. 1 p. 70 71 72 In what order they were written l. 1. p. 70 VVhich Epistles were doubted of for a time l. 1. p. 65 Esay an Evangelicall Prophet l. 1. p. 57 How often quoted in the new Testament and who have best expounded it l. 1. p. 57 Esther why so called and who hath best expounded it l. 1 p. 52 53 Eternall God is Eternall l. 2 p. 40 41 42 43 The world was not Eternall l. 3. p. 15 16 17 Evangelists who l. 1. p. 68 How they agree and differ l. 1 p. 64 65 VVho best expound them l. 1 p. 67 Exodus why so called and who are the best Expositors on it l. 1. p. 48 Expositors on Scripture who are the best among the Jewes Fathers Papists Protestants l. 1. p. 183 to 189 Ezekiel why so called and who hath best interpreted it l. 1 p. 58 Ezra why so called and who hath best expounded it l. 1. p. 52 F FAithfull God is faithfull l. 2. p. 97 98 99 Fire the qualities of that Element l. 3 p. 38 Fishes their nature and use l. 3 p. 75 76 77 80 81 Fowles their nature and use l. 3 p. 78 79 80 Frost what it is l. 3. p. 52 G GAlatians the subject of that Epistle and who best expounds it l. 1. p. 73 Ghost the Holy Ghost is God l. 2. p. 135 136 Glorious God is glorious l. 2 110 to 120 God how he is called in severall languages l. 2. p. 1. m. The knowledge of God is necessary profitable and difficult l. 2. p. 1 2 VVe know God three waies and there is a threefold knowledge of him l. 2 p. 2 VVhat the Heathens knew of God l. 2. p. 3 That there is a God l. 2. p. 3 to 16 VVhat God is l. 2. p. 18 19 How the word God is taken in Scripture l. 2. p. 19 The Names of God l. 2. p. 19 20 His Attributes what they be l. 2. p. 20 How they differ from Properties and what rules are to be observed in attributing them to God l. 2. p.
tertic Vide Gerhardi loc-commun de magistratu Zanchius tom● secund● Miscellin Cap. de Magistratu A●●tius hath written the H●story of Valmitius Gentilis put to death at Berne There was a Statute against Lollards in England and Hugonots in France Haeretitus ego●●●tion tu mihi See the Statute 10. ot Q Eliz. c. t. Propriè Heretici vocantur qui ea pertinaciter rejiciunt quae in Satris Scripturu docentur Dav. de judice controver Haeresis est error pugnans cum fundamento religionis Christianae isque pertinax Al●ingius Tomo secundo Problem Theol. par●e 2. Prob. 14. * Lib. 3. of the Church c. 3. See Dr Prideaux his sermon on ● Co● 11. 19. Errours are practicall or doctrinall onely fundamentall or circa-fundamentall or neither of the two * Arrius in Alexandria una scintilla suit Sed quoniam non statim oppressus est totum orbem ejus flamma populata est Aquinas a See M. Clarkes Sermons on Matth. 8. 13. and M. Cranfords Haereseomachia on 2 Tim. 2. 17. b Vbi supra Cum agitaretur de ista quaestione An morte mulctandi cogendi haeretici in Synodo quadam Londini perrogarentur singulorū sententiae surrexit quidam senex Theologus atque hoc planum esse asserit ex ipso Apostolo Haereticum hominem post unam aut alteram admonitionem devita De vita inquit ergo manifestum est haereticos istos homines post unam aut alteram admonitionem è vita tollendos Eras. Annotat. in Tit. 3. Rom. 13. 4. * Magistrates in the Scripture in th● Hebrew are called Masters of restraint Qui non vetat peecare cum potest jubet Seneca * Mr. Hildersham on Psalm ●1 As all blasphemous Hereticks Levit. 24. 16. so seducing H●reticks are to be put to de●th The whole 13 Chapter of Deutr●nomy is spent about the seducing of false Prophets Are not Moses morall Lawes of perpetuall equity and therefore to be observed in all ages Is blasphemy more tolerable in the new Testamen● Mr. Cotton on 16 of Rev. third Viall We are not obliged saith Beza to the Judiciall Laws as they were given by Moses to one people yet so far we are bound to observe them as they comprehend that generall equity which ought to prevaile every where 1. That there is Divinity Rom. 1. 18●19 20. 2 14 15. * Omne bonum est sui diffusivū ergo maximè bonum est maxim● sui diffusivum Vt se habet simile ad sim●le ita se habet magis ad magis Locus topicus 2. What Divinity is Theology if thou looke after the etymology of the word is a speech of God a●d he is commonly called a Theologer or Divine who knoweth or professeth the knowledge of Divine things Peter du Moulin L●●tanius de ira Dei 2. What Divinity is Titus 1. 1. 1 Tim. 6. 3. Col. 1. 5. 2 Tim. 2. 18. Theologia est doctrina de deo ac rebus divinis Divinity is the knowledge of God Theologia est scientia v●l sapienti● rerum divinarum divinitus r●velata ad Dei gloriam rationalium Creaturarum salutem Walaeus in loc Commun De genere Theologiae est quaestio quod idem ab omnibus non assignatur Nam illis arridet scientia aliis sapientia aliis prudentia Litem hanc dirimere nostri non est instituti etsi verè scientem verè 〈◊〉 vere prudentem cum judicamus qu● verus sincerus est Theologus Wendeli●●s Christ. Theol. ● 1. c. 1. 3. How Divinity is to be taught 1 Discenda est Theolegia imprimis tex●u alu 2. Systematica seu d●gmatica 3 elen●tica problematica Ve●tiu● Biblioth Theol. l. 1. c. 6. How Divinity is to bee learned Job 28. 1. 2. Mat. 7. 7. John 20. 21. * Hoc scrutari temeritas credere pietas nosse vita Beru Deut. 29. 29. Rom. 12. 3. 6 7. 2 Tim. 2. 23 Mat. 11. 25. * 2 Prov. 2. 8. 4 5. 8. 17. 33. 5. The opposites of Divinity 6 The Excellency of divinity a Paul cals it the excellency of the knowledge of Christ Phil 3. 8. Ps. 40. 8. Christ is the principall subject of the whole Bible being the end of the Law and the substance of the Gospel M. Perkins Quicquid est in suo genere singulare et eximium id Divinum b Agreeable to which is the French prove●● Ministre nè doit scavoir que sa Bible a Minister must know nothing but his Bible * Ps. 12. ● Mahomet would have had others believe that he learned the Doctrine of his Alcaron from the holy ghost because he caused a pigeon to come to his Eare. Origen saith of the Devills there is no greater tormēt to them then to see men addicted to the Scriptures ●um ●om 27. in hoc eorum omnis sta●●●a est in hoc uruntur incendio Of the Scripture c The Scripture is called the word of God Eph. 6● Pet. 1. 15. The counsell of God Acts 2● 27. The Oracles of God R●m 3. 2. The Law of G●d Psal. 1. 2. The minde of God Prov. 1. 23. d It is called word because by it Gods wil is manifested and made known even as a man maketh known his minde and wil by his words It is also said to be the word of God in regard 1. of the Author which is God himselfe 2 Tim. 3. 16. 2. Of the matter which is Gods will Eph. ● 93. Of the end wh●● is Gods glory Eph. 3. 10. 4. Of the efficacy which is Gods Power Rom. 1. 6. e So it is called the Bible or Booke by an excellency t is the onely Book As f August de civit dei l. 15. c. 23. * The principall Author of all Scriptures is God the Father in his Son by the holy Ghost Hos. 8. 12. 2 Pet. 1. God the Authour of the S●riptures Inspiration wh●t it is The Father hath revealed the Sonne confirmed and the holy Ghost sealed them up in the hearts of the faithfull * Acts 7. 50. 1 Cor. 11. 23. Exod. 4. 12. Deut. 18. 18. 2 Cor. 13. 3. John 1. 56. Heb. 1. 1. Ezech. 12. 25 28. Rom. 1. 2. Esay 58. 14● Evangelium dicitur sermo Christi 3 Col. 16. utroque respectu Authoris materiae Davonan●ius * Rainoldus in Apologia Th●sium de sacr● Script Eccles. * Tria concurrunt ut hoc dogma recipiam Scripturam esse verbum Dei. Esse quosdam libros ●anonicos divinos atque ●os ipsissimos esse quos in manibus habemus Primum est Ecclesiae traditio quae id affirmat ipsos libros mihi in manum tradit secundum est ipsoruus librorum divina materia tertium est interna Spiritus efficacia Episc. Dav. de Judic● Controvers c. 6. What the Divine authority of the Scripture is * Formale objectum fidei generaliter absolutè con●iderawum est divina revelatio in tota sua amplitudine accep●a seu divina author●tas cujuslibet
Canone l. 13. c. 9. Supersubstanti●lem 1. ad subst●ntiae nostrae Conservationem necessarium Em●n Sa. Omnes veteres laetini Scriptores panem quotidianum leger●●t it●que iuc●utè quidam nostro tempore i● vulgata Editione pro qu●tidi●o supersubstanti●lem posuerunt quod Corporis Cib● quem à nobl● peti probavimus minimè convenit Maldonatus Ja●●enius id●m serè 〈◊〉 harm cap. 41. Their own Dictiona●ies and Doctors expound the Greek word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 gratified or undeservedly accepted or whom Gods singular favour had made acceptable * Non habet ex hoc loco prudens l●ctor●●● Paulo conjugium esse Sacramentum non enim dicit Sacramentum sed mysterium hoc magnum est * Erasmus dicit●●n sit sacramentum o●im dubitatum erat à scholasticis Certè ex hoc loco non possit effic● nam particula adver ●a●iva ego autem satis indicat hoc mysterium ad Christum ecclesiam pertinere non ab maritum uxorem Marke 6. 8. Vide Salmerovem Rib●ram in loc P●aefat in nov T●st Doctor Fulke against Martin Vide Whitaker● Con●●versi●m primam quaest s●cundam c●p 10 11. 12. de Scripturis Sixtinus Amama ce●suram vulgatae versionis in P●ntateucho caepit t●lam pertexturus nisi morte fuisset praeventus Waltherus in officina Billica * God in Christ or God and Christ is the object of Christian religion without knowledge of Christ we can-not know God savingly John 11. 27. In jury onely is God knowne * 2 Tim. 3. 16. Rom 15 4. The word of God is profitable 5 wayes 1. For confirmation of true Doctrine or teaching men the truth 2. Reproofe of errour Rectum est index sui ob●iqui Quibus principijs veritas astruitur iisdem principijs falsic●s destruitur Tertullian c●ls the Scripture Macbaera contra haereses 3. Correction of ill behaviouur 4. Instruction in a good behaviour 5. Consolation in troubles Ro● 15. 4. 119. Psal. ●9 Vide Z●pper● A●tem hab●n●i 〈◊〉 conciones l. 1. c. 3. p. 34 35. * Divina autoritas Scripturae est Infallibilis veritas in verbu sensibus ob quam omnes sidem e● obedientiam deb●nt Altingius Exod. 32. 16. 2 Tim. 3. 16. 2 Pet. 1. 21. Heb. 11. 12 John 14. 26. * Divina auctoritas suam trabis originem una ex parte ex immediato Spiritus S. afflatu ex alter● ex sublimitate rerum qu●● exponi● Waltherus in officina Biblica Heb. 4. 12. * Matth. 5. 18. Scriptura est 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Fide digna pr●pterse credenda quia 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 est Divinitus inspira●a Hic illud Pythagoricum val●ta 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 We must take heed of beleeving Scripture to be the word of God because there is the greatest reason for it but for its divine authority Matth. 24. 35. * The materiall parts of Scripture are true Historicall narrations all the Histories there related are undoubtedly true that of the Creation fall of Christ. 2. Threa●enings the eternall torments in hell are sure as if thou w●st already in them 3. Promises the Scripture cals them the sure mercies of David 4. Predictions and Prophesies in Daniel Revelation as the downfall of Antich●i●t they speak therefore of things to come in the present tense O note thereby the certainty of the accomplish●●nt E●ay 9. 6. Apoc. 18. 2 * Ego in hajusmodi quo umli●et hominam scriptis libersum qu●a solis Canonicis scripturis debeo sine ulla recusati●ne consensum August de natura gratia c. 6. The essentiall forme of the word is truth in forming the whole and every part all Divine truth is there set down * Scrip●●ra Sancta appellatur Canonica totum ●jus corpus Canon Rationem nominis aut omnes aut ferè omnes esse testantur quia sit regula f●dei Chami●rus The Scripture is therefore called Cano●●call because it prescribes a ●ule of our faith and life Phil. 3 16. Gal. 6. 16. Tertullianus a●pellat Scripturam regulam veritatis Augustinus de d●ctrina Christiana l. 2. c. 8. ait in Scripturis inveniri omnia quae continent fidem moresque vivendi Advers Hel. Vid. cap. 9. Sacra Scriptura regula credendi certiffima tu●issimaque est Bellarm. de verbo Dei l. 1. c. 2. * Hoc primum Credimus cum credimus quodnihil ultra credere debemus See Mr. Anthony Burges on Marke 1. 2. 3 Deut. 5. 29. Esay 8. 20. * Verba Scripturae non sunt legenda sed vivenda Doctrinae sanitas servatur confirmando verum resellend● falsum vitae sanctinionia sugendo malum faciendo bonum Satis habet Scriptura quo veritatem doceat errorem redarguat iniquitatem corriga● instituat ad justiria● Nec haec uti●●ter praestat solum●odo quoe sophistarum cavillatio sed etiam sufficienter nempe ut perfectus sit homo c. Rainoldus * Deut. 17. 18. Esay 8. 20. Luke 16. 29. Acts 24. 14. Christians sh●ll be judged by that hereafter John 12. 48. 2 Thess. 1. 8. * Judaei do●em ex hoc loco 〈◊〉 reg●m sua manu sibi legem describere etiamsi al●is cum priva●us esset descripsisset Chamierus Reg●●● fidei est quasi causa exemplari● fidei quam vi●el●cet fides in omnibus sequi cui se conformare debet Formale objectum fidei est causa objectiva fidei s●u est principium propter quod formaliter princip●liter credimus B●ron contra Turnebu● Nos discamus ex verbo non tantum sapere sed etiam loqui B●z● Epist. 7. David Psal. 119 133. des●es that all h●s counsels thoughts manners actions might be directed according to Gods word The Scriptures contain 1 A neecss●ry doctrine viz. of the Law and Gospell Matth. 22. 37 John 13. 16. without which we cannot be save● Rom. 7. 7. it is 2. Necessary in respect of the efficient cause Jude 3. 3. Of the Forme Matth. 22. 19. 4. The end 20. John 31. * Writing doth a larger good to a greater number and for a longer time then speaking 102 Psal. 19. vox audita perit litera scripta manet To shew how much a more faithfull keeper record is then report those few miracles of our Saviour which were written are preserved and beleeved those infinitely more that were not written are all lost and vanished out of the memory of men * Among the Turkes Polylygamy is lawfull Theft was permitted among the Spartans * Literae sacrae di●untur 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 scripturae ut non solùm ● saecularibus profan●● literis sed etiam ● quibuscunque quae de sacris rebus agunt discernantur * Mahomet said his doctrine c●me from God but the bla●phemy and villany therein contained sheweth it came from Satan whereas the purity and perfection of the doctrine contained in the Scripture sheweth that it is from above Mahomet puts in some ingredients of the flesh gives them liberty to revenge themselves and to have
Greenhill on third of Ezek. v. 14. p. 316. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Analysis 1. Grammatica quae proprias 2. Rhetorica quae tropicas dictiones excutit 3. Logica quae scopum q●ae antecedentium consequentium seriem pr●bationumque vim indicat Altingius * Illum Graeci 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 vocant Latini post eos abijs Deum dix●re Galli I●ali Hispani mut●●to à Latini● nomine Dieu Dio Dios appellant Germani Angli Belgae Go●t vel God●um ●um nuncupant a Act. 17. 27. Rom. 1. 20. 21. * Ephes. 4. 18. There is no equall proportion between the facultie and the object Deum dignè aestimamus dum inaessimabilem dicimus Cyprian De Deo etiam dicere vera periculosum est Ruffin in exposit Symb. Things that excell in Scripture phrase usually are said to be things of God Psal. 36. 6. and 80. 10. John 3 3. * Some u●g● this what Moses was to the Jewes Christ in the new Testament that was Philosophie to the Heathens enough to save them Erasmus had much adoe to forbeare saying Sancte Socrates ora pro nobis But omnis doctrina Philosophorum ●ine Capite quia Deum ignorabant Lactantius extra ecclesiam nulla salus See Matth. 4. 16. 2 Cor. 4. 3. and Doctor Prideaux in his eighth L●●ure de Salute Ethnicorum To beleeve there is a God is the foundation of all Religion Caput est primum Divine legis ipsum Deum n●sse Loctamius It is a question whether ●man by the light of nature may know that there is a God Though this be denied by the Socinians yet those Scriptures Rom. 1. 19. and Psal. 19. heg seeme to prove it There are two kinds of Demonstrations or proofes 1. A demonstrating of the effects by their causes which is a proof ● priori Principles cannot be demonstrated à causa and ● priori because they have no superiour cause A demonstrating of causes by their effects which is a proofe drawne à posteriori So principles may be demonstrated All principles being Prima and Notissima of themselves are thereby made indemonstrable Quad sit D●us * The weightiest Testimony that can be brought to prove there is a God is to produce the Testimony of God speaking in his own word None other in the world can have equall authority John 8. 13. 14. Yet this Testimony is not allowed by the Atheists For as they deny that there is a God so they deny likewise that the Scripture is his word Atheomastix l. 1. c. 2. Nulla gens tam effera ac barbara qvae non cognoscat esse Deum Cicero de natura Deorum Epicurum ipsum quem nihil pudendum pudet tamen Deum negare pudet Mornaeus * Inveniuntur qui si●e rege sine lege vivunt qui sub diò degunt qui nudi serarum instar sylvas oberrant avia querunt obvia depascuntur Qui religion●● specie qui sacris qui numinis sensu planè carerent nulli inventi sunt nulli et●amnum inveniuntur Morneus de veritate Christianae relig C. 1. A Iove principium musae * The most pregnant and undeniable p●oofe of the God-head with the Heathen was the voyce of conscience The Scripture sheweth that the wicked were much terrified in their consciences after the committing of hainous sinnes R●m 2. 15. Is●y 57. 20. 21. Marke 6. 14. 16. So doth common experie●ce teach in Murtherers Theeves and the like Marke 9. 44. Act. 16. 25. Act. 12. 6. Psal. 3. 6. and 46. 1. 2. Si fractus illabatur orbis impavidum ferient ruinae Horat. Every effect hath its cause whatsoever is wrought or done is wrought or done by some thing which hath ability and fitnesse to produce such an effect seeing nothing can doe nothing and what hath not sufficiency to produce such and such effects cannot produce them Of whom there be workes and effects he is of God there be workes and effects therefore there is a God As God is to be felt sensibly in every mans conscience so is he to be seene visibly in the Creation of the world and of all things therein contained Man the best of the creatures here below was not able to raise up such a Roofe as the Heavens nor such a floore as the earth D●cter Preston Job 12. 9. Serviunt omnia omnibus uni omnia Mundi Creatio est Dei Scriptura cuius ●ria sunt f●lia Caelum terra mare The preserving and ordering of the world and humane societies in it the planting and defending of the Church A number of wheeles in a Clocke doe worke together to strike at set times not any one of them knowing the intention of the other therefore they are ordered and kept in order by the care of some wise person which knowes the distance and frame of each and of the whole An Army of men could not meet together at one time and in one place to fight for or against one City if the wisdome of one Generall did not Command over all A number of Letters cannot all fall orderly together to make perfect sence without some Composer Protogenes by the smallnesse of a line drawn in a Table knew Apelles the chiefest Artificer He that sees but the shape and ●ffigies of a man presently thinkes of a Painter * Hic compono canticum in Creatoris nostri laudem Si Humani corporla admirabilem constructionem intus extraque conspicimus ut omnia ibi etiam minima suos usus habeant nullo studio nulla industria parentum arte vero tanta ut philosophorum ac medicorum praestantissimi nunquam eam satis possint admirari Grotius The Sunne is moved by another by whom he is tyed unto such a str●ct and unalterable motion that Astronomers can surely tell unto the very minute all the Ecclipses that shall ever fall out so long as the world it selfe shall last Psal. 148. 6. * The Heathens called the Soule of man divinae particulam aurae a parcell of the Divine essence but that speech must be taken ●um grano satis Civill Eff●cts Politiae Leges probant mentemesse divinam intelligentem illas hominibus tum m●nstratem tum conervantem ne Diaboli impiorumodio machinationibus dissolutae corruant Deus enim est Deus ordinis Miraculous Effects Exodus 15. 11. 72. Psal. 18. and 136. 4. Isay 41. 23. A Miracle is a worke of infinite strength or omnipotency surpassing the whole power of created nature as to turne water into wine to multiplie seven loaves to the feeding and satisfying of 4000 men to give the use of sight to one borne blind to arise up a man indeed dead to cure a leprosie with the word The Brideling of wicked Spirits and men The Atheists third objection that Religion is but an humane invention Gen. 4. 3. 4. Gen. 3. 3. Matth. 15. 13. 2 Chron. 7. 5. * He sp●nds his whole second Booke about this reason The Greekes insinuate that all Arts come from God in