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A71096 The verity of Christian faith written by Hierome Savanorola [sic] of Ferrara.; Triumphus crucis Liber 2. English Savonarola, Girolamo, 1452-1498. 1651 (1651) Wing S781; ESTC R6206 184,563 686

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the Preface Page 3. line 23. read thus S. Augustine who as D. Field lib. 3. de Eccles fol. 170. asserteth was c. p. 6. l. 9. for dere r. desire p. 12 l. 20. r. pure offering In the Book p. 13. l. 15. for when r. whom p. 50. l. 11. for one r. or p. 82. l. 24. r. adorning p. 85. l. 10. for reserue r. referre p. 89. l. 16. r. probable p. 98. l. 7. r. retractations p. 124. l. 14. r. virtue and power p. 125. l. 6. for divens r. divers p. 127. l. 11. r. bosome p. 128. l. 20. for the r. them p. 130. l. 9. r. too p. 133. l. 9. leave out a. This Golden Treatise is fitly divided into five Parts From the begnining to the fifth Chapter the Authour delivers a generall and a regular way to discern the true Faith from heresie by Vniversality and Antiquity and satisfies the objections to the contrary From the fifth to the eleventh he treats of the causes why God suffers heresies where he brings in the fall of Origen and Tertullian and of some hereticks Photinus Apollinaris and Nestorius and sets down their heresies and the Catholick doctrine opposite unto them From the eleventh to the fifteenth he shews the duty of atrne Catholick in keeping the depositum of faith and carefully avoiding all Novelties From the fifteenth to the Recapitulation he treats of the subtilty of hereticks in alledging the Scriptures The Recapitulation conteins the substance of the former discourse Vincentius Lirinensis FOR The Antiquity and Vniversality of the Catholick Faith against the prophane Novelties of all Heresies THe holy Scripture of God saying and warning us in this sort Ask thy Fathers and they shall tell thee thy elders and they shall report unto thee And again Accommodate thy ears to the words of wise men Likewise My sonne forget not these speeches but let thy heart keep my words Deut. 52. Prov. 22. 3. It seemeth unto me a stranger of this world and the least of Gods servants that it shall by his gracious help be a matter of no small profit to set down in writing what I have of holy Fathers faithfully received being a thing very necessary for mine own infirmitie having alwaies therby in readinesse how by daily reading thereof I may help my weak memory Vnto which labour not onely the profit to be reaped by the worke but also the very consideration of the time and opportunitie of the place moued and inuited me the time because reason it is that seeing it consumeth and bereaueth us of all humane and earthly things we should also take out of it something which may auaile us to life euerlasting especially seeing the terrible iudgment of God which we expect drawing neere upon us doth seriously inuite and prouoke us to increase our studies and exercises in religion and the fraudulent dealing of new Heretickes requireth much care and attention The place because having forsaken the company and troubled of the world and chosen a solitary Abbey in a little town for mine abiding where I may without any great distraction of mind put in practise that which is sung in the Psalm 45. Be vacant and see that I am God With which reasons also accordeth the purposed end and resolution of my whole state of life in that I have by the help of Christ after long and divers stormes induced in the watres showded my self in the harbour of a religious life a secure port for all states of men where contemning the blasts of varity and pride I may pacifie God with the sacrifice of humility and so escape not onely the shipwrack of this present life but also the fire of the next But now in the name of God will I set upon that which I have taken in hand that is to set down i● writing such things as our forefather have delivered and committed to our charge using herein rather the fidelity of a reporter then the presumption of an authour meaning yet to keep this rule in my writing not copiously to lay forth all but briefly to handle each necessary points neither that in fine and exact words but in easie and common speech in such sort that most things may seem rather touched then declared Let them write delicately and penne curiously which trust ●● either upon witte or moved with respect of duty enterprise any 〈◊〉 action but for me it is sufficient the for helping my memory or rather forgetfulnesse I have gathered 〈◊〉 ther this Commonitory which ●● withstanding by Gods grace I 〈◊〉 daily endevour by little and little calling to mind such things as in times past I have learned to correct and make more perfect And this have I thought good to forewarn that if happily this work of mine passing forth fall into the hands of Censurers they do not over hastily reprehend in it that which they understand present promise to undertake with future correction better to polish and mend CAHP. I. INquiring therefore often with great desire and at●●●ion of very many excellent holy and learned men how and by what means I might assuredly and as it were by some generall and ordinary way discern the true Catholick faith from false and wicked Heresie To this question I had usually this answer of them all that whether I or any other desired to find out the fraud of Hereticks daily springing up and to escape their snares and willingly would continue safe and sound in religion that he ought two manner of wayes by Gods assistance to defend and preserve his faith that is first by the authority of the law of God secondly by the tradition of the Catholick Church Here some man perhaps may ask that seing the Canon of the scripture is perfect and most aboundantly of it self sufficient for all things what need we joyne unto it the authority of the Church her understanding and interpretation The reason is this because the scripture being of it self so deep and profound all men do not understand it in one and the same sense but diverse men diversly this man and that man this way and that way expound and interpret the sayings thereof so that to ones thinking so many men so many opinions almost may be gathered out of them for Novatus expoundeth it one way Photinus another Sabellius after this sort Donatus after that Arius Eunomius Macedonius will have this exposition Appolinarius and Priscillian will have that Iovinian Pelagius Colestius gather this sence and to conclude Nestorius findeth out that and therfore necessary it is for the avoiding of so great windings and turnings of divers errours that the line of expounding the Prophets and Aposties be directed and drawn according to the rule of the ecclesiasticall and Catholick sense Again in the Catholick Church we are greatly to consider that we hold that which hath been beleeved every where alwayes and of all men for that is truly and properly Catholick as the very force and nature of the word doth declare which
that hath been said in the former two books WHICH being so it is now time that in the end of this second book we recapitulate touch in few words the Summe of all that which in these two commonitorie books hath been spoken VVe saied in the premisses that this alwaies hath been and at this day is the custom of Catholikes to try and examine true faith two manner of waies First by the authoritie of the divine scripture secondly by the tradition of the Catholick Church not because the Canonicall scripture is not as to it self sufficient for all things but because very many expounding Gods word at their own pleasure do thereby bring forth and hatch up divers opinions and errours And for that cause it is necessary that the interpretation of the divine Scripture be directed according to the one onely rule of the Churches understanding especially in those questions upon which the foundation of the whole Catholick religion doth depend Likewise we said that in the Church we were to consider the consent both of universality and antiquity so that we be neither carried away from sound unity to schism nor yet cast headlong from antiquity of religion into the dangerous gulf of heretical novelties We said also that in antiquity we were diligently to observe and seriously to consider two things unto which all those that will not be hereticks must of necessity stand The first is that which hath in old time been determined by all the Bishops of the Catholick Church by authority of a generall Councell The second is that if any new question did arise in which the determination of a Councell were not to be found that then we ought to have recourse to the sayings of the holy fathers but yet of these only who in their time and place were approved masters being such as lived and dyed in the unity of the communion and faith And whatsoever we knew that they beleeved and taught with one mind and consent to judge and take that without all sctuple to be the true and Catholick Religion of the Church And least any man might think that we saied this rather of presumption then of any authority of the Church we gave an example of the holy councel holden almost three years thence at Ephesus a City in Asia in the time of the right horourable Consuls Bassus and Antiochus in which disputation was had of constituting and setting down rules of faith ● and least there might by chance some prophane Novelty creep in as happened at that persidious meeting in Ariminum this was reputed and thought the most Catholick holy and best course to be taken by the judgement of all the Bishops there present which were almost two hundred in number that the opinions of those Fathers should be brought forth of whom it was certaine that some of them had been Martyrs divers Confessours all to have lived and died Catholick Priests that by their authority consent and verdict the old religion might be rightly and solemnly confirmed and blasphemous prophant novelties condemned which being so done worthily and justly Nestrius was judged to have taught contrary to the old Catholick religion and blessed Cyrill to have maintained holy and sacred antiquity And to the end nothing might be wanting which procureth credit we put down also the names and number of these Fathers although not remembring their order according to whose tonsent and uniform doctrine both the texts of holy scripture were expounded and the rule of Gods word established Neither will it here be superfluous for memory sake to repeat them all once agam These then be the names of them whose works were cited in that Councell either as judges or else witnesses S. Peter Bishop of Alxandria a most excellent Doctour and blessed Martyr S. Athanasius Bishop of the same sea a most faithfull teacher and famous Confessout S. Theophilus Bishop also of the same City a notable man for faith life and learning next after whom succeeded venerable Cyrill who at this present doth honour the Church of Alexandria And that no man happily should suspect that this was the doctrine of one City or of one Province to the former there were adjoyned those two lights of Cappadocia Saint Gregory Bishop and Confessour of Nazianzene St. Basil Bishop and Confessour of Cesaria and also another Saint Gregory Nyssen worthy for his merit of faith conversation integrity and wisdom of such a brother as Basil was And for proof that not onely the Greek East Church but also the Latine and West were alwayes of the same opinion the letters of Saint Felix Martyr and Saint Julie both Bishops of Rome which they wrote unto certaine men were there read And that not onely the head of the world but also the other parts should give testimony in that judgement From the South they had blessed S. Cyprian from the North S. Ambrose Bishop of Millan These then be the holy Fathers agreeing with that sacred number of the ten Commandements which were alleadged in the Councell of Ephesus as Masters Councellours Witnesses and Judges whose doctrine the blessed Synod holding following whose counsell beleeving whose testimony obeying whose judgement without spite without presumption without favour pronounced and gave sentence concerning the rules of faith And albeit a farre greater number of Fathers might have been set down yet was it not necessary because it was not requisite that time should be spent with multitude of witnesses and further no man doubted but that those ten did little differ in opinion from all the rest of their fellow Bishops After all this we set down the worthy sentence of Cyrill which is to be found in the Ecclesiasticall acts of that Councell For when the Epistle of S. Capreolus Bishop of Carthage was read who intended nothing else nothing else desired but that novelty might be overthrown and antiquity defended Bishop Cyril spake and gave his definition in this sort for I have thought good not to omit it here these then be his words in the end of the acts of that Councell And this epistle quoth he of the venerable and rel gious man Capreolus Bishop of Carthage shall be ad oyned to the faith of the Councels acts whose opinion is plain and perspicuous for he desireth that the doctrine of the old faith may be confirmed and new opinions superstuously invemed and impiously spread abroad may be reproved and condemned To which all the Bishops with one consent cried out This we speake all this we teach all this we desire all What I beseech you said they all what desired they all surely nothing else But that that which was of old time delivered might be still retained and that which was newlie invented might speedilie be rejected After that wee had admired and highly commended the great humilitie and holinesse of that Councell in which were so many Bishops almost the greater part of whom were Metropolitans of such erudition of such learning that they were
Very necessary it is being thus fore-warned of God that before all things we take great heed not to be perverted and seduced by erroneous teache●s or false Prophets but on the contrary do diligently preserve our faith the light of our souls the root foundation of al goodness with our which it is impossible to please God as S. Paul saith Wherin we can take no better course no way more sure then to repair to the time of the primitive Church when the bloud of Christ was yet fresh bleeding in mens hearts when the Gospel was instantly preached firmly beleeved sincerely practised confirmed by miracles established by the death of so many Martyrs especially being exhorted hereunto by the holy scriptures for as by them we are admonished of the dangers and troubles of the later dayes so are we for a preservative against them sent to ancient times to conduct us to Gods true religion Stand saith the Prophet leremy Chap. 6. upon the way and inquire of the ancient paths which is a good way walk in that and you shal find rest for your selves Solomon likewise in his Proverbs admonisheth us in this sort Do not passe the ancient bounds which thy Fathers have set down Chap. 22. And in Ecclesiasticus Ch. 8. Do not set light by the report of thy elders for they have learned of their forefathers because of them shalt thou learn understanding and in the time of necessity shalt thou give answer To the end therefore gentle Reader that thou be not carried away with the sweet benedictions of those licentious masters with which the later times according to the predictions of the Apostles should be much pestered nor seduced with the erroneous doctrine of those false Prophets and false Christs of which the son of God the true Prophet and true Christ hath forewarned us and that thou mayest find out a good way to walk in and keep thee within the ancient bounds set down by our forefathers and by their report learn wisdome and understanding I am to request thee to vouchsafe the reading of this old Father newly translated and I nothing doubt but thou wilt give that censure which the Queen of Sheba gave of the wisdome of Solomon 3. Reg 10. The second reason which set me forward was for that I find this book not written against some one or a few particular false teachers as St. Augustine and divers ancient learned Doctours did against the Arians Pelagians and such like but against all heresie or erroneous doctrine whatsoever which is a thing of so great importance as I know not what can be devised more What gold were too much or what treasures too dear for that medicine which had virtue to cure all diseases False doctrine and heresie is a great sore a canker more pestilent then any corporall infirmity whatsoever seeing this worketh onely the temporall destruction of our body but that causeth death both of body and soul everlasting In other books we find the confutation of some speciall point of false doctrine in many the overthrow of divers but to destroy all at one blow and those each so contrary to themselves so distinct for time so divers for place so many for number is a property peculiar onely to this most excellent treatise and therefore it may fitly be compared to that miraculous pond whereof we read in the Gospell John 5. which cured all diseases for as that water moved by the Angell cured whatsoever infirmity of him that first entred in so this book written no doubt by the motion of the holy Ghost hath force to cure any such as is corrupted with erroneous doctrine or to preserve him from all infection if he vouchsafe to enter in that is to read it to consider and weigh diligently what is said and discoursed of The reason why this book hath this rare quality in my opinion is because it sheweth the right way of expounding Gods divine Scripture in which so many to the great danger of mens souls do so greatly go a stray and therefore as David overthrowing Golias the chief Champion of the camp put all the Philistins to flight 1 Reg. 17. so no marvell though this ancient Authour discovering the false expositions and glosses of sacred Scripture the principall pillar of all poisoned doctrine overthroweth also all wicked heresie The third and last motive which incouraged me to this labour and ought partly to move thee to the reading is the brevity of the work the finenesse of the method the eloquence of the stile and therefore if long and large volumes do little please this is short which cannot cause dislike if confusion be ingrate full a methodicall order can not but like thee if a stile harsh and course fitteth not thy taste then I trust that which is fine pleasant and delicate will content thy humour Onely I am to crave pardon that my rough and rude English nothing answereth his smooth and curious Latin And therefore I could wish thee if skill serveth rather to consult with the authour himself then to use the help of his rude interpreter otherwise for such as be not of so deep reading for whom especially I have taken this pain I am to desire that they nothing dislike the sovereign medicine for the wooden box nor the exquisite and rare gemme for the course casket These be the reasons Gentle Reader which especially moved me to the translating of this antient and learned Father I beseech thee as thou tenderest the salvation of thy soul that thou wouldest vouchsafe to reade him attentively in whom thou shalt see clearly as in a glasse the faith of our fore-fathers the religion of the primitive Church and in whom thou shalt find by Gods word and authority of sacred Scripture the madnesse of all Hereticks crushed in pieces and that in a short methodicall and eloquent Treatise The Holy Ghost which moved no doubt this antient learned Father to the writing of this Work incline and move thy heart to the diligent reading and sincere following of the same * ⁎ * An Advertisement in the reading of the XIII Chapter of the Verity of Christian Faith THe Reader is desired to take notice that wheresoever in this treatise the term Adoration is applied unto the Mother of God or to any other person or thing beside God himself it imports only Dulia that is such an inferiour degree of reverence and veneration as creatures may be capable of according to the severall degrees of excellency which is in them and according at the Word is frequently understood in Holy Scripture viz. Gen 23 7. 12. † 18 2. † 19 1. † 50 18. Acts. 10 25. Dan. 2 46. Matth. 2 2.8.1 Chron. 29 20. Exod. 3 15. † 33. 10. Jos 5 14. 15. Apoc. 19 10. † 22 9. and not to signifie that supream Honour and estimation which is incommunicable and proper onely to God Almighty and commonly called from S. Austin Latria Errata's in the Profit of Believing In
maintained without sin so neither impugned without some blot of offence CHAP. V. BUt some man will say why then doth God very often permit certain notable and excellent men in the Church to preach unto Catholicks a new Religion A very good question and such as deserveth a more diligent and ample discourse unto which notwithstanding I will not answer out of mine own head but with the authority of sacred Scripture and the doctrine of a notable Master in Gods Church let us then hear holy Moses let him give us the reason why learned men and such as for their great gift of knowledge are called of the Apostle Prophets be sometimes permitted to preach new Doctrine which the old Testament Allegorically calleth strange gods because their opinions are so observed and honoured of Hereticks as the gods were of the Gentiles thus then writeth blessed Moses in Deuteron 13. If there shall arise quoth he in the middest of thee a Prophet or one which saith he hath seen a dream that is some Master of the Church whose Disciples or followers suppose to teach by some revelation from God what then and shall foretell quoth he some sign or miracle and that shall happen which he hath said some great Master is here surely meant and one of so deep knowledge whom his followers imagine not onely to know things humane but also to foresee future and such as shall happen which is farre above mans reach as the scholers for the most part of Valentinus Donatus Photinus Apollinaris and such like did brag that their masters were What followeth And shall quoth he say unto thee let us go and follow strange Gods which thou knowest not and let us serve them What is meant by strange Gods but forrein errours which thou knowest not that is new and never heard of before and let us serve them that is believe them follow them What then Thou shalt not quoth he hear the words of that Prophet or Dreamer And why I pray you is not that forbidden by God to be taught which is by God forbidden to be heard Because quoth he the Lord your God doth tempt you that it may appear whether you love him or no in your whole heart and in your whole soul The reason then is more clear then day why the providence of God doth sometime suffer certain teachers and masters of the Church to Preach certain new opinions that your Lord God quoth he may tempt you And surely a great tentation it is when as he whom you think a Prophet a diseiple of the Prophets whom you esteem a Doctour and maintainer of the truth whom you have highly reverenced and most intirely loved when he suddenly and privily bringeth in pernicious errours which neither you can quickly spy lead away with prejudice of your old teacher nor easily condemn hindered with love to your old master CHAP. VI. HEre some man haply doth earnestly desire to see that proved by some Ecclesiasticall examples which by the authority of Moses hath already been avouched The demand is reasonable and therefore of reason not long to be deferred Wherefore to begin with those which are yet fresh in memory and to the world best known What kind of tentation think you was that of late dayes when that ungracious and cursed Nestorius suddenly from a sheep transformed into a wolf began to devoure the flock of Christ at such time as those which were spoiled commonly took him for a sheep and therefore were more subject to his cruelty For who would have easily imagined him to have erred whom every man knew to have been chosen with such judgement of the Empire who was so highly in grace with the Clergy so much beloved of all holy men so greatly in favour with the people who openly expounded the Scriptures and also confuted the pestiferous errour of the Jews why could not this man by such means easily perswade any that he taught aright preached aright believed aright who to smooth the way and make entrance for his own heresie persecuted and preached against the blasphemies of all others But this was that which Moses saith The Lord your God doth tempt you if you love him or no. And to passe over Nestorius in whom was alwayes more admiration then profit more fame then experience whom for some time humane favour had made greater then Gods grace exalted Let us rather speak of them which endowed with many gifts and men of great industrie have been no small tentation to Catholicks as amongst the Pannonians in our Fathers memory Photinus is recorded to have tempted the Church of Sirminum in which being preferred with the liking of all men unto the dignity of Priesthood for sometime he behaved himself very Catholickly but suddenly like that naughty Prophet or Dreamer of whom Moses speaketh he began to perswade the people of God committed to his charge to follow other gods that is strange and unknown errours which before they were not acquainted with But as this is usuall so that was very pernicious that he had so great helps and furtherance for the advancing of so great wickednesse For he was both of an excellent wit and singularly well learned and passing eloquent as he which both in disputation and writing was copious and grave in either language as appeareth by the Books which he wrote partly in Greek and partly in the Latine tongue But it hapned well that Christs sheep committed to his charge very vigilant and carefull in keeping the Catholick faith did speedily remember Moses warning and therefore albeit they admired much the eloquence of their Prophet and Pastour yet were they not ignorant of the temptation And therefore whom before they followed as the chief leader of the flock the same very man afterward they avoided as a ravening wolf Neither do we learne only by Photinus but also by the example of Apollinaris the danger of this ecclesiasticall tentation and therby also be admonished diligently to keep and retaine our faith and religion For this Apollinaris procured his auditours great trouble anguish of mind whilest the authoritie of the Church drew them one way and the acquaintance of their master haled them another so that wavering and tottering betwixt both they were uncertaine whether part was best to be followed But haply he was such a one as easely deserved to be contemned Nay he was so famous and worthie a man that in very many things he vvon credite to fast For who surpassed him in sharpnes of wit in exercise in learning how many heresies in many and great books hath he overthrown how many errors against the faith hath he confuted That most notable and great work of thirtie books in which with great waight of reason he confounded the franticke cavills of Porphirius doth give credit to my report and testifie the truth of my relation It were too long to rehearse up all his works for which he might have been compared to the cheefe pillours of Gods Church
said to be digged Psalm 21. From this unity of Person I say it proceedeth by reason of like mystery that when the flesh of the Word of God was born of his pure and immaculate mother we do most Catholickly believe that God himself the Word was born of the Virgin and most impiously the contrary is maintained Which being so God forbid that any one should go about to deprive the holy Virgin Mary of the priviledges of Gods favour as her especiall glory For she is by the singular grace of our Lord and God her son to be confessed most truly and most blessedly to have been the mother of God but yet not in such sort as impious hereticks imagine and suspect who affirm that she is to be reputed in name onely and appellation the mother of God as she forsooth which brought forth that man which afterward became God as we say such a woman is the mother of a Priest or Bishop not because she brought him that then was either Priest or Bishop but by generating that man which afterward was made a Priest or Bishop not in that manner I say the blessed Virgin is to be called the mother of God but rather because as hath been said that most holy mystery was finished in her sacred womb wherein by reason of a singular and one onely unity of person as the Word in flesh is flesh so man in God is God CHAP. IX BUt now what hath already been said touching the foresaid heresies or concerning the Catholick faith let us in few words and compendiously for memory sake repeat them over again that thereby with more facility they may be understood and with greater certainty retained Accursed therefore be Photinus not admitting the fulnesse of the Trinity and affirming our Saviour Christ to have been onely man Accursed be Appollinaris maintaining in Christ corruption of changed divinity and bereaving him of the propriety of perfect humanity Accursed be Nestorius denying God to have been born of a Virgin teaching two Christs and so abandoning the faith of the Trinity bringing in a quaternity But blessed be the Catholick Church which adoreth one God in perfect Trinity and likewise worshipeth equality of Trinity in one Divinity so that neither singularity of substance confoundeth propriety of Persons nor distinction of Trinity separateth unity of Deity Blessed I say be the Church which believeth in Christ two true and perfect substances but one onely person so that neither distinction of natures doth divide the unity of person nor unity of person doth confound the difference of substances Blessed I say be the Church which to the end she may confesse Christ alwayes to be and to have been one acknowledgeth man united to God not after our Ladies delivery but even then in his mothers womb Blessed I say be the Church which understandeth God made man not by any conversion of nature but by reason and means of person and that not a fained and transitory person but substantially subsisting and permanent Blessed I say be the Church which teacheth that this unity of person hath so great force that by reason thereof by a mystery strange and ineffable she ascribeth unto man the proprieties of God and attributeth to God the proprieties of man For by reason of this unity of person she confesseth that man as he was God descended from Heaven and God as he was man was made upon earth suffered and was Crucified Blessed therefore is that venerable happy and sacred confession and comparable to those supernall praises of the Angels who do glorifie one onely Lord God yet with a triple Hagiologie For this is the principall reason why the Church teacheth the unity of Christ lest otherwise she should exceed the mystery of the Trinity And let this suffice touching this matter spoken by way of digression hereafter if it please God I will intreat and declare these points more copiously Now to return to our former purpose CHAP. X WE have said in the premises that in the Church of God the errour of the master is a great tentation to the people and the more learned he were that erred so much the greater was the tentation Which we shewed first by the authority of holy Scripture afterward by the examples ecclesiasticall of those men which for some time were reputed and accounted sound in faith yet at last fell either into some other mans error or els coined a new heresie of their own This surely is a great matter profitable to be learned ●●d necessary to be remembred which once again we must inculcate and make plain by great store of examples that all Catholicks may know that with the Church they ought to receive Doctours and not with Doctours to forsake the faith of the Church But I suppose that although I could bring forth many to shew this kind of tentation yet there is almost none which can be compared to the tentation of Origen in whom were very many gifts ●o rare so singular so strange that in the beginning any would have thought that his opinions might have been believed of all men For if life procureth authority he was a man of great industry of great chastity patience and labour if family or learning who more noble being of that house which was honourable for Martyrdome himself afterward for Christ deprived not of father onely but also spoiled of all his patrimony and so much he profited in the mysteries of holy poverty that as it is reported for the confession of Christs name he often indured much affliction Neither was he only adorned with these gifts all which afterward served for tentation but was indued also with a force of wit so profound so quick so elegant that he far excelled almost all other whatsoever A man of such wonderfull learning and erudition that there were few things in Divinity in humane Philosophy haply nothing which he had not perfectly attained who having gotten the treasures of the Greek tongue laboured also about the Hebrew And for his eloquence what should I speak of it whose talk was so pleasant so delectable so sweet that in mine opinion not words but hony flwed from his mouth What things were so hard to beleeve which with force of argument he made not plaine what so difficult to bring to passe which he made not to seem easie But perchance he maintained his assertions by arguments only Nay without question there was never any Doctour which used more examples of sacred scripture But yet happelie he wrote not much No man living more yea so much that in mine opinion all his works are so far from being read over that they can not possiblie all be found who not to lack anie furtherance to learning lived also untill he was passing old But yet perchance unfortunate in his scholers What man ever more happie having trained up and been master to infinite Doctours to Priests without number to Confessours and Martyrs Now who is able to prosecute with words in what admiration
unwary youth feeling the sweetnes may nothing feare the bitter confection This devise also practise they which upon noxious hearbs and juyces write the names of good wholsome medicines whereby almost no man reading the good superscription any thing suspecteth the lurking poyson The self same thing likewise our Saviour crieth out to all Christians Take ye heed of false prophets which come to you in sheeps cloathing but inwardly are ravening Wolves Ma. 7. What is meant else by sheeps clothing but the sayings of the Prophets and Apostles which they with sheep-like sincerity did weare like certaine fleeces of that immaculate Lamb which taketh away the sins of the world And what is to be understood by ravening wolves but the cruell and destructive opinions of hereticks which alwayes trouble the sheep-folds of the Church and by all means possible teare in pieces the flock of Christ But to the end they may more craftily set upon the sheep of Christ mistrusting nothing remaining stil cruel beasts they put off their wolvish weed and shroud themselves with the words of scripture as it were with certain fleeces whereby it hapneth that when the silly sheep feel the soft wooll they little fear their sharp teeth But what saith our Saviour By their fruits you shall know them That is when they begin not only to utter those words but also to expound them not only to cast them forth but also to interpret them then doth that bitterness break out then is that sharpness espied then is that madness perceived then is that fresh new poison ejected then are prophane novelties set abroach then may you see straight-way the hedg cut in two the old fathers bounds removed the Catholick doctrine shaken and the Churches faith torn in pieces Such were they whom the Apostle sharply reprehendeth in the 2. Epistle to the Cor. Chap. 11 For such false Apostles quoth he are crafty workers transfiguring them selves into the Apostles of Christ What is transfiguring them selves into the Apostles of Christ but this The Apostles alleaged the examples of scripture they likewise cited thē The Apostles cited the authority of the Psalms they likewise used it The Apostles used the sayings of the Prophets and they in like manner brought them forth But when that scripture which was alike alleadged alike cited alike brought forth was not alike in one sense expounded then were discerned the simple from the craftie the sincere from the counterfeit the right and good from the froward and perverse and to conclude the true Apostles from those false Apostates And no marvel saith S. Paul For Sathan himself transfigureth himself into an Angel of light it is no great matter therefore if his ministers be transfigured as the ministers of Justice Wherefore according to Saint Paul whensoever either false Apostles or false Prophets or false Doctours do bring forth the words of holy Scripture by which they would according to their corrupt interpretation confirm their errour there is no doubt but that they follow the crafty slight of their master which surely he would never have invented but that he knoweth very well that there is no readier way to deceive the people then where the bringing in of wicked errour is intended that there the authority of the word of God should be pretended But some will say how prove you that the Devill useth to alledge the Scripture Such as doubt thereof let them reade the Gospel where it is written Then the devill took him up that is our Lord and Saviour and set him upon the pinnacle of the Temple and said unto him If thou be the Sonne of God cast thy self down for it is written that he will give his Angels charge of thee that they may keep thee in all thy wayes in their hands shall they hold thee up lest perhaps thou knock thy foot against a stone Mat. 4 How will he think you handle poor silly souls which so setteth upon the Lord of Majestie with the authority of Scripture If thou be quoth he the Son of God cast thy self down Why so For it is written quoth he we are diligently to weigh the doctrine of this place and to keep it in mind that by so notable an example of the Scripture we make no scruple or doubt when we see any alledge some place of the Apostles or Prophets against the Catholick Faith but that by his mouth the Devil himself doth speak For as at that time the head spake unto the head so now the members do talk unto the members that is the members of the Devil to the members of Christ the faithlesse to the faithfull the it religious to the religious to conclude Hereticks to Catholicks But what I pray saith the Devil If thou be the Sonne of God quoth he cast thy self down That is to say Desirest thou to be the Son of God and to injoy the inheritance of the kingdome of Heaven Cast thy self down that is Cast thy self down from this doctrine and tradition of this high and lofty Church which is reputed to be the Temple of God And if any one demand of these Hereticks perswading them such things how do you prove and convince me that I ought to forsake the old and Universall Faith of the Catholick Church straight wayes is ready at hand For it is written and forthwith he will alledge you a thousand Testimonies a thousand Examples a thousand authorities out of the Law out of the Psalms out of the Apostles out of the Prophets by which expounded after a new and wicked fashion he would throw headlong unfortunate souls from the Tower of the Catholick Church into the deep dungeon of wicked Heresie Now with these sweet promises which follow Hereticks do wonderfully deceive simple men For they dare promise and teach that in their Church that is in the conventicle of their communion is to be found a great and speciall yea and a certain personall grace of God So that whosoever be one of their crew they shall straightwayes without any labour without any study without any industry yea although they never seek nor crave nor knock have such speciall dispensation that they shall be carried up with the hands of Angels that is preserved by Angelicall protection that they never hurt their foot against a stone that is that they never can be scandalized But some man will say If the Devil and his Disciples whereof some be false Apostles false Prophets and false Teachers and all perfect Hereticks do use the Scriptures cite their sayings bring forth their promises what shall Catholick men do How shall the children of the Church behave themselves How shall they in the holy Scriptures discern truth from falshood To which I answer that They must have great care as in the beginning of this Treatise I said holy and learned men taught me that they interpret the Divine and Canonicall Scripture according to the Tradition of the Universall Church according to the rules of the Catholick
doctrine in which likewise they must of necessity follow universality antiquity and consent of the Catholick and Apostolick Church And therefore if at any time a part rebell against the whole novelty against antiquity the dissention of one or a few seduced with errour against the consent of all or the farre greater part of Catholicks in that case let them preferre the integrity of universality before the corruption of a part and in universality let them also preferre the religion of antiquity before profane novelty and again in antiquity let them preferre before the temerity of one or a few the decrees of a generall Councell if any be or if no such be found let them take that which is next hand that is to follow the opinions of many and great learned Doctours agreeing together All which faithfully soberly diligently observed and kept by Gods grace we shall without any great difficulty discover the errours of new upstart Hereticks CHAP. XIV HEre I perceive in order it followeth to shew by examples how the profane novelties of Hereticks are by bringing forth and comparing the old Doctours opinions agreeing together to be found out and condemned which ancient consent of holy Fathers is not so carefully and diligently to be sought for and followed in every small question of the Scripture but onely and that especially in the rule of faith neither yet alwayes nor all Heresies are after this sort to be impugned but onely such as be new and upstart to wit at their first springing up and before they have as hindred by the shortnesse of time falsified the rules of the antient faith and before the poyson spreading farre abroad goeth about to corrupt the Fathers works But those heresies which have already got ground and be of some continuance are not this way to be dealt withall because by long tract of time they have had opportunity to steal truth And therefore such kind of profane schisms and heresies which be of longer standing we must not otherwise convince but either onely if need be by the authority of the Scriptures or els avoid and detest them being already convicted and condemned in old time by generall Councels of the Catholick Church Therefore so soon as any infectious error begineth to break forth and for her defence to steale certain words of holy scripture and craftily and fraudulently to expound them straight-wayes for the right understanding thereof the Fathers opinions are to be gathered togither by which let any what soever new and therefore prophane doctrine growing up with out all delay be dejected speedily condemned But those Fathers opinions only are to be conferred togither which with holinesse wisdome and constancy lived taught and continued in the faith and communion of the Catholick Church and finally deserved tody in Christ or happily for Christ to be martyred whom notwithstanding we are to beleeve with this condition that whatsoever either all or the greater part with one mind plainly commonly and constantly as it were a Councell of Doctours agreeing together have decreed and set down receiving it from their ancestours holding it for their time and delivering it to their posteritie let that be had and accounted for undoubted for certain and firme truth And whatsoever any although holy and learned although a Bishop although a Confessour and Martyr hath holden otherwise then all or against all let that be put aside from the authoritie of the common publick and generall faith and reputed amongst his own proper private and fecret opinions least with great danger of eternall salvation we do according to the custome of sacrilegious Hereticks and Schismaticks forsake the trueth of the universall faith and follow the novell errour of some one man The holy Catholick mind of which blessed Fathers least any man think that he may rashly contemne The Apostle sayeth in his first epistle to the Corinthians And some verily hath God set in his Church first Apostles 1 Cor. 12. of which himself was one Secondly Prophets as Agabus was of whom we read in the Acts cap. 11. Thirdly Doctours which novv are called Tractatours vvhem also this Apostle some time narneth Prophets because their office vvas to expound and declare to the people the mysteries of the Prophets these therefore disposed and placed by God at divers times and sundry places agreeing and consenting all in one mind in Christ touching the understanding of the Catholick faith whosoever contemneth doth not contemne man but God and that we disagree not by any means from the perfect and true unitie of those Fathers the same Apostle doth earnestly beseech all Christians saying I beseech you brethren that you say all one thing and that there bee no Schismes among you but that you be perfect in one sense and in one knowledge 1 Cor. 1 And if any man separate himself from the communion of their opinion let him hear that saying of the same Apostle He is not the God of dissention but of peace ch 14. that is not of him that leaveth consent and unity but of them that remain in peace and agreement As I do quoth he teach in all the Churches of the Saints that is of the Catholicks which therefore be holy because they continue in the communion of the faith And least happily any one should contemne others and proudly require onely to be heard onely to be beleeved straight after he saith What hath the Word of God quoth he proceeded from you or hath it onely come unto you And least this might be taken as spoken slightly he addeth If any quoth he seemeth a Prophet or spirituall that is a master in spirituall matters let him be a zealous lover of unity and peace in such wise that he neither preferre his own opinion before the judgement of others neither leave or forsake the sense and common consent of all men The commandements of which things he that is quoth he ignorant of that is he that learneth not those things which he yet knoweth not or contemneth those which he knoweth he shall not be known that is he shall be thought unworthy whom amongst such as be united in faith and equall humility God should regard and look upon a greater evil then which I doubt whether any man can invent or devise which yet notwithstanding according to the Apostles commination we see to have fallen upon Julian the Pelagian who either contemned to be joined at all in opinion with his fellows or else presumed to separate himself from their societie and communion But now it is time to bring forth the example which we promised how and after what sort the judgement and opinions of holy Fathers were gathered togither that according to them by the decree authority of a Councell the rule of faith might be set down which to the end that I may more commodiously do I will here make an end of this commonitorie and so take another beginning for declaring of those things which do follow A Recapitulation of all
sunne and men do generate a man it follows necessarily that a perfect Christian is the noblest cause and most perfect instrument of producing this effect Therefore the virtue of this instrument co-operating with Almighty God is not a falsity but a most supreme Verity but this virtue is Faith inflamed with a burning charity as I have shown our Faith therefore is most true CHAP. XIII The same confirmed by the wonderfull works of Christ and first by his Power VVE have proved now by the assistance of Almighty God the Verity of Christian Faith out of the manifest effects which daily are seen in the Orthodox Church and although there might be manifold other arguments brought to the confirmation of it yet having regard to my intended brevity I will argue onely out of those events of former Ages of the Verity of which the whole world is a sufficient witnesse Wherefore as Philosophers by the effects which they saw in naturall things were moved to search into the causes of things we in like manner setting before our eyes the triumph of Christ which we have heretofore described will most exactly as farre forth as the matter requires search into the causes of those effects And as the Philosophers contemplating the nature of things out of the greatnesse the wonderfull order and perfection of the whole world did conclude that the cause of it was Almighty God who was more powerful wise and perfect then all others whom they termed the first principle and mover of all things so we contemplating the triumph of Christ crucified will shew him to have been and to be beyond all comparison more powerfull then the feigned Gods of all other Religions and to have done greater things and produced perfecter effects then any and with an ineffable and infinite wisdome and goodnesse to have infinitely surpassed them Which done it will be clear that this God is the great Lord and King above all other Gods I will begin with the effects of his Power and placing his triumph before your eyes I argue in this manner Either this Jesus the crucified Nazarean whom the Christians adore is true God and first cause of all things or he is not if he be the disputation is ended because if he be God the Christians Faith and his universall Doctrine and Religion must be true if he be not it follows that Jesus the Nazarean was a most prodigious monster of a most inexcogitable pride and unheard of arrogance whilst being a pure creature and mortall man he would be esteemed as the onely supreme Deity and adored above all others whence we might justly tearm him the most lying and worst of all creatures nay even the most notorious of all fools for undertaking phane novelties set abroach then may you see straight-way the hedg cut in two the old fathers bounds removed the Catholick doctrine shaken and the Churches faith torn in pieces Such were they whom the Apostle sharply reprehendeth in the 2. Epistle to the Cor. Chap. 11 For such false Apostles quoth he are crafty workers transfiguring them selves into the Apostles of Christ What is transfiguring them selves into the Apostles of Christ but this The Apostles alleaged the examples of scripture they likewise cited thē The Apostles cited the authority of the Psalms they likewise used it The Apostles used the sayings of the Prophets and they in like manner brought them forth But when that scripture which was alike alleadged alike cited alike brought forth was not alike in one sense expounded then were discerned the simple from the craftie the sincere from the counterfeit the right and good from the froward and perverse and to conclude the true Apostles from those false Apostates And no marvel saith S. Paul For Sathan himself transfigureth himself into an Angel of light it is no great matter therefore if his ministers be transfigured as the ministers of Justice Wherefore according to Saint Paul whensoever either false Apostles or false Prophets or false Doctours do bring forth the words of holy Scripture by which they would according to their corrupt interpretation confirm their errour there is no doubt but that they follow the crafty slight of their master which surely he would never have invented but that he knoweth very well that there is no readier way to deceive the people then where the bringing in of wicked errour is intended that there the authority of the word of God should be pretended But some will say how prove you that the Devill useth to alledge the Scripture Such as doubt thereof let them reade the Gospel where it is written Then the devill took him up that is our Lord and Saviour and set him upon the pinnacle of the Temple and said unto him If thou be the Sonne of God cast thy self down for it is written that he will give his Angels charge of thee that they may keep thee in all thy wayes in their hands shall they hold thee up lest perhaps thou knock thy foot against a stone Mat. 4 How will he think you handle poor silly souls which so setteth upon the Lord of Majestie with the authority of Scripture If thou be quoth he the Son of God cast thy self down Why so For it is written quoth he we are diligently to weigh the doctrine of this place and to keep it in mind that by so notable an example of the Scripture we make no scruple or doubt when we see any alledge some place of the Apostles or Prophets against the Catholick Faith but that by his mouth the Devil himself doth speak For as at that time the head spake unto the head so now the members do talk unto the members that is the members of the Devil to the members of Christ the faithlesse to the faithfull the irreligious to the religious to conclude Hereticks to Catholicks But what I pray saith the Devil If thou be the Sonne of God quoth he cast thy self down That is to say Desirest thou to be the Son of God and to joy the inheritance of the kingdome of Heaven Cast thy self down that is Cast thy self down from this doctrine and tradition of this high and lofty Church which is reputed to be the Temple of God And if any one demand of these Hereticks perswading them such things how hath that crafty commander of the Arabians Mahomet done he never affirmed himself God true it is by his eloquence and power by his arms gifts and a luxurious licence of pleasutes he drew unto him a barbarous and unskilfull multitude and did not he give a most honourable testimony of Christ Assuming to himself nothing above humane forces and policy but such was not Jesus the Nazarean never did any mortall propose more difficult things to be believed and done then Christ did for he absolutely commanded the belief of a Trinity to wit the Father Sonne and holy Ghost the same one God three really distinguished persons which yet being identified in substance were one and the self
nobler effects to nobler causes for all causes must be perfecter then their effects now in humane affairs there is no nobler effect then a Christian life which consequently must proceed from the most noble cause now we see this wholly to flow from Christ whom therefore we must acknowledge to be the most perfect of all causes Secundary causes are the instruments of the primary or the First cause a Christian life therefore proceeding from Christ as from his cause we must confesse that Christ being a man crucified is the instrument of producing this excellent effect of Christian perfection now if Christ were not also God as he taught himself to be there could be no man more wicked and execrable and by this means Almighty God would use a most detestable instrument for the production of a virtuous life which is extremely absurd The cause being the measure of the effect by how much the perfection of the effect approaches nearer to the perfection of the cause and becomes more like unto it so much is it nearer its compleat and full perfection but we see the more like a man is to Christ Jesus in his life the more holy he becomes and in a manner Divine which were not possible unlesse he both were true God and his Faith most intirely true We know causes by their effects as we experience in medicines by their successe seeing therefore that Philosophers leave behinde them unto posterity the rules of a virtuous life and yet very few of them have attained unto any considerable degree of perfection notwithstanding great endeavours done to that effect nay in the great abundance of the most excellent of them none almost without the direction of Christian Faith have been able to effect any thing which yet we see in that short time and exactly to be brought to passe by Christian Discipline in the congregation of the faithfull in every sex and age and the reason is because in deed there is no comparison between Philosophicall documents and the rules of Christian life neither for Morality nor Religion For what is more admirable then that a most lewd and wicked man as we are taught by daily examples of all ages as soon as he hath truly converted himself unto Christ crucified becomes a new man of proud and envious humble and courteous of covetous and sordid liberall and bountifull of lewd and luxurious becomes continent and chaste and as it were with the principles of his Faith sucks in the respective antidotes for his particular vices and with a manifold interest recompences and repayes the debts of his former vices which never any sect of Philosophers hath attained unto whence it necessarily follows that Christ is the principall or instrumentall cause of it and a medicine which restores all morality and produces a most perfect life in his faithfull CHAP. VIII That Christian Doctrine containing the Grounds of Faith is from God THe reading hearing and contemplation of holy Scripture is the cause of Christian perfection and the substance of our Religion for the verity of Scripture is the object of Faith and therefore the arguments of Faith are those which are drawn out of holy Scriptures We know that in the understanding of man there is no determinate knowledge of future contingencies of which we can frame no acts nor science which made the most famous and learned of all Philosophers conclude that men could have no knowledge of future things subject to chance and to have it was proper onely to Almighty God who being eternall comprehends in his eternity all things the which are clearly laid open to his understanding and of the which men cannot arrive unto the knowledge unlesse they be revealed unto them by Almighty God seeing therefore that the holy Scripture almost every where but chiefly in the Old Testament doth foretell future contingencies which depend on mens free-will not onely in generall terms but most exactly intending unto particulars and that not those of one ten a hundred or a thousand years but hath foretold those of two three and four thousand years and not onely those which befell unto the Jews and those which were to be done by Christ his Spouse the Church but as it were foretold all the prosperities and adversities which should happen to almost all Nations as the Assyrians Chaldeans Persians Medes Greeks Romans and the rest and that just as it was foretold it most exactly came to passe we must necessarily confesse that the Scriptures came from God and were not written by the industry and wit of men and therefore those which as yet remain to be fulfilled are to be held most infallible as proceeding from the same Spirit who foretold those others which have so admirably beyond all imagination been accomplished And hence we clearly gather that Almighty God hath a most speciall care of men and exercises his divine Providence about humane affairs The foreseeing then of future contingencies appertaining onely to Almighty God humane industry and sagacity cannot so order and dispose such combination of affairs as the heroicall enterprizes and warlike exploits of famous men but oftentimes do beyond all expectation light on most unexpected and variable events God onely therefore can determine these actions of men so that they may be signs of what is to follow in future ages but we see how those things which are already brought to passe in the new Scripture or shall hereafter follow are deciphered and delineated under most proper types and figures in the Old Testament Nor can it rationally be said that those interpretations are vainly raised or feigned by Christians or composed without ground because in so great a variety of things and times in so manifold a composition of words and in so great a diversity of Authours and sacred Writers there could not be so exact an uniformity of the Old Law with the New unlesse some understanding and divine Providence had framed a correspondence of things which were to happen in their due times nor can it be said that it was done by chance for there cannot be found the least thing which is dissonant impertinent or discomposed but every thing with an equall tenour and most sweet harmony makes up the concord so that that which is obscurely toucht in one place in another is found manifest so as the whole Scripture may seem to explicate it self this if it be unknown to those which are ignorant of holy Scriptures it is farre otherwise with those who have enriched their understandings with the treasures gathered out of the most sincere fountain of Verity if therefore they desire to know the truth let them with piety humility and purity search into the same fountain of holy Scriptures and questionlesse they will be of our opinion Wherefore Allegoricall Exposition agrees onely to holy Scripture because this alone is that which hath descended from Almighty God as he exercised his all-seeing and celestiall Wisdome I call an Allegory not the fabulous Interpretations Poets
that we have no usuall names for these things and if I had framed any by-interpretation I should be lesse apt to be understood and if I should use any circumlocution I should be lesse quick and lesse ready in discoursing this onely I intreat and beseech thee to believe that howsoever I may erre I do it not out of any arrogancy or pride The Scripture is treated according to the history when it is declared therein what is written or what is done and what is not done but written onely as it were done According to the Etiology when it is shewed thereby for what cause any thing is either done or said According to the Analogy when it is demonstrated that the two Testaments the Old and the New are not contrary the one unto the other According to the Allegory when it is read therein that certain things that are written ought not to be understood according to the letter but according to the figure All these manner of wayes of alledging Scripture have been used by our Lord Jesus Christ and by the Apostles He cited Scripture according to the History when unto those that objected that his Disciples had plucked the ears of Corn upon the Sabbath day he answered Have ye not read what David did when he was an hungred and they that were with him how he entred into the house of God and did eat the loaves of Proposition or Shew-bread which it was not lawfull for him to eat neither for them that were with him but for Priests onely Mat. 12.1 3 4. 1 Sam. 21.6 Exod. 29.32 He alledged Scripture according to the Etiology when having forbidden the dismissing of wives for any cause but onely fornication unto the Pharisees who told him that Moses had given men leave to dismisse them having first given them a bill of divorce he said This Moses did for the hardnesse of your hearts Deut. 24.1 Mat. 19.8 for here a cause was rendred why that was well permitted by Moses for a time to the end that this which Christ commanded might seem to shew and demonstrate other times but to declare how the divine Providence hath with a certain wonderfull disposition ordered and composed the courses and order of these times it is a long work Now touching the Analogy whereby appears the accord and consent of both the Testaments what shall I say but that all those have used it unto whose authority the Manichees do give place when as they may consider with themselves how many things they are wont to say are thrust into the divine Scripture by I know not what corrupters of the truth which I alwayes thought to be an extream weak speech even when I heard and followed them neither was this my opinion onely but thine also for I well remember it and it was the opinion of us all who endeavoured to be somewhat more carefull and wary in judging then was the common people and multitude of believers And whereas they have expounded and declared unto me many things that did much move and trouble me namely those wherein they boasted and bragged oftentimes and that more abundantly because more securely as not having any adversary to resist and oppose them I think they have spoken nothing more impudently or to speak more mildly with lesse circumspection and more weaknesse then that the divine Scriptures are falsified and corrupted when as it ought but lately to have been done and yet they cannot convince it to be so by any copies that are now extant for if they did say that they did not think that they ought to receive those Scriptures at all because they are written by such Authours as they did not conceive to have written the truth their pretence of rejecting them would in some sort be more hidden and their errour more humane and pardonable for upon this ground they have rejected the book which is called the Acts of the Apostles at which their proceedings when I well weigh it and consider it with my self I cannot sufficiently wonder and admire for they wanted not onely humane wisdome herein but even a reasonable and an indifferent judgement for that book hath so many things which are like unto those which they do receive that it seems to me to be a great folly not to receive this also and if any thing displeaseth them therein presently to say it is salfe and put in now if they judge such a speech to be impudent as indeed it is why should they conceive those things to deserve any credit and esteem in S. Paul's Epistles and the four books of the Gospell wherein I know not whether or no proportionably speaking there be many more things then there could be in that book which they would have men believe to have been thrust in by falsifiers and corrupters But this indeed is my opinion which I request thee to weigh and consider with me with a very clear and peaceable judgement for thou art not ignorant how the Manichees endeavouring to bring in the the person of their authour Manicheus into the number of the Apostles do say that by him we have received the Holy Ghost whom our Lord promised to send to his Disciples if therefore they should receive those Acts of the Apostles wherein the comming of the Holy Ghost is evidently declared and set down Act. 2.2 they could find no ground to say why that was inserted and put in for they pretend I know not what corrupters of the divine books to have been before Manicheus his time and that they were corrupted by those that desired to confound the law of the Jews with the Gospel of Christ but this they cannot say of the Holy Ghost unlesse peradventure they will affirm that the corrupters could foretell things that were to come and thereupon did put into their books that which might be produced against one Manicheus who sometimes was to come and who should say and averre that he had sent the Holy Ghost but of the Holy Ghost we intend to speak more plainly hereafter but now let us return to our former matter for I think that I have sufficiently demonstrated and shewn that the historicall sense is to be found in the Old Testament and the Etiologicall and Analogicall in the New it remains that I shew also the Allegoricall therein Our Redeemer himself alledgeth in the Gospel an Allegory out of the Old Testament saying This generation seeketh after a sign and none shall be given unto it but the sign of the Prophet Jonas for as Jonas was three dayes and three nights in the Whales belly so shall the Sonne of man be three dayes and three nights in the heart of the earth Mat. 12.39 40. Jonas 1.17 And what shall I say of the Apostle Paul who also in his 1 Ep. to the Corinthians c. 10. to the 12. v. signifies that the history it self of Exodus was an Allegory of the Christian people that was to come Moreover Brethren I would not saith he that ye
even by the eyes of common people give me leave a little to consider with my self upon whose words I have believed that there was a Christ that being already guarded and fortified by such a faith I may give ear and hearken unto thee I perceive that I believed and gave credit unto none but to a setled and confirmed opinion and to a most renowned fame and report of people and nations these people also I see in all places to be in possession of the secrets and mysteries of the Catholick Church Why shall not I then chiefly enquire of them diligently what Christ hath commanded by whose authority being moved I have already believed that Christ hath commanded some profitable thing Wilt thou better expound unto me what Christ hath said whom I would not think to have been or now to be if thou didst recommend it unto me to be believed This therefore as I said have I believed upon a famous report of men confirmed with consent and antiquity but you who are both so few and so turbulent and so new it is certain you can produce and bring forth nothing which may deserve credit and belief And therefore what a madnesse is this in thee to say Believe them the known multitude of Christendome that we ought to believe Christ but learn of us Manicheans what Christ hath said Why so I beseech thee Verily if that known multitude should fail and could teach me nothing I should much more easily perswade my self that I ought not to believe Christ at all then that I ought to believe any thing concerning him of any others but of those by whose means I first believed him O mighty confidence or rather folly I will sayst thou teach thee what Christ hath commanded in whom thou art already perswaded to believe What if I did not believe in him at all couldest thou teach me any thing concerning him But sayst thou it behooves thee to believe What upon your warrant and recommendation No sayst thou for we do by reason lead those which do already believe in Christ Why then shall I believe in him Because it is a grounded report was it grounded upon you or upon others Upon others sayst thou Shall I believe them first and be afterwards taught and instructed by thee Peradventure I ought to do so were I not above all things admonished by them not to come at all unto thee for they say that you hold pernicious doctrines Thou wilt answer they lie How then may I believe them concerning Christ whom they have not seen if I may not believe them concerning thee whom they will not see Here sayest thou Believe the Scriptures But all Scripture if being new and unheard of it be alledged or commended but by a few and hath no reason to confirm it receives no credit nor authority at all but those that alledge it wherefore if you that are so few and unknown commend those Scriptures unto me I refuse to believe them besides also you proceed against your promise rather by commanding belief then giving any reason thereof Here again for the authority of Scriptures thou wilt call me back to the known multitude of Christendome and to common report Restrain at length thy obstinacy and I know not what unruly appetite of worldly fame and rather admonish me to seek out the chief rulers of this known multitude and to enquire for them diligently and painfully that rather I may learn something of them touching these Scriptures who if they were not I should not know whither any thing ought to be learnt at all or no. As for thee return into thy corner and lurking-hole and delude us no more under a shew and pretence of truth which thou endeavourest to take away from them unto whom thou grantefl authority and credit and if they also deny that we ought not to believe Christ unlesse an undoubted reason can be rendred thereof they are not Christians For certain Pagans do alledge that against us foolishly indeed but yet not contrary nor repugnant to themselves But who can endure that those men should professe that they belong to Christ who strongly affirm that nothing ought to be believed unlesse most evident reason can be given even unto fools concerning God and divine matters But we see that Christ himself as that history teacheth which they also believe desired nothing more principally nor more carnestly then that he might be credited and believed when as they with whom he was to treat about those affairs were not yet fit to learn and conceive the divine mysteries For to what other purpose did he work so great and so many miracles he himself also affirming that they were done for no other end but that men might give credit and beliefe unto him He led the simple sort of people by belief you lead them by reason he cryed out that he might be believed you cry out against it he commended those that did believe you blame and reprehend them But unlesse he had turned water into wine to omit his other miracles could men have been brought to follow him if he had done no such things but onely taught and instructed them Or is that word of his not to be regarded 1 Joh. 14.1 Believe God and believe me Or is he to be blamed for rashnesse in belief who would not have Christ come into his house because he believed that by his command onely his sick sonne could be cured Mat. 8.8 He therefore bringing a medicine which was to cure the most corrupt manners did by miracles winne authority by authority deserved belief by belief drew together a multitude by a multitude obtained antiquity by antiquity strengthened and confirmed Religion which not onely the most foolish novelty of hereticks endeavouring by deceits but neither the antient errour of the Gentlies being violently bent against it could in any part abolish or destroy CHAP. XV. Of the most cemmodious way to Religion VVHerefore albeit I am not able to teach thee yet do I not cease to warn and admonish thee that because many men will seem to be wise and it is not easie to discern whither they be fools or no thou beseechest the divine Majesty with very much earnestnesse and fervent desires with sighs and sobs or also if it be possible with weeping and tears to free and deliver thee from the evil of errour if thou desirest to lead a blessed and an happy life Which may more easily be brought to passe if thou wilt willingly obey his commands which he hath been pleased to have confirmed and strengthened by so great an authority of the Catholick Church For seeing that a wise man is by his mind so united unto God that nothing is interposed and set between them which may divide and separate them for God is truth and no man is to be accounted a wise man that doth not attain to the knowledge of truth we cannot deny but that the wisdome of man is interposed as a certain medium