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A10250 Propositions and principles of diuinitie propounded and disputed in the vniuersitie of Geneua, by certaine students of diuinitie there, vnder M. Theod. Beza, and M. Anthonie Faius ... Wherein is contained a methodicall summarie, or epitome of the common places of diuinitie. Translated out of Latine into English, to the end that the causes, both of the present dangers of that Church, and also of the troubles of those that are hardlie dealt vvith els-vvhere, may appeare in the English tongue.; Theses theologicae. English Bèze, Théodore de, 1519-1605.; La Faye, Antoine de, 1540-1615. aut; Penry, John, 1559-1593. 1591 (1591) STC 2053; ESTC S101754 189,778 296

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indeed from all aeternitie or els because they will haue the fleshe of Christ to be taken out of the substance of the Godhead or as some do nowe affirme because all the proprieties of the Deity were poured into the humane nature when the worde was incarnate or to be briefe by what other dotage soeuer they goe about to obscure the coaeternall generation of the Sonne Defended by IOHN HENRY SCHINTYER of Tigurine THE FOVRTH SORT OF PRINCIPLES CONCERNING THE HOLY GHOST HITHERTO CONCERNING THE PERSONS of the Father and the Sonne it followeth now that we speake of the holie Spirit 1 VVHereas the word SPIRIT is diuersly taken in the scriptures we in this doctrine do vnderstand by the holie spirit the third person in Trinitie 2 The holie Spirit is that Essentiall and working power who is essentially subsisting in the Father and the Son from whome the whole Deity wherein also they doe subsist being communicated vnto him after an vnspekable maner though he procedeth or if we may so speake is as it were breathed yet is he not at all seperated in respect of this his proceding but is in regard of the maner of his being distinguished from the persons of the Father and the Sonne And therefore he is not without cause reckoned the third person in nomber seing in consideration of his being hee is referred vnto the Father and the sonne yet not as vnto two beginnings but as vnto one 3 The Deity thus communicated by issuing and proceeding is not multiplied in substance seing he is most simple and single Whence it is that the holie Ghost in regard of his person is and euer hath bin coessentiall and coaeternall with the Father and the sonne and in regarde of his substance is that one onely true God in himselfe Wherevpon also the name of God is sometimes personally attributed vnto him The holy Ghost is therefore to be worshipped by the one and the same faith and inuocation that the Father and Son are 4 And although the works of the Trinnitie which they cal outward or external are vnseperable yet in the effecting of them wee are to obserue a distinction not onelye of the persons but also of the personall actions 5 The proper and the peculiar action of the holie Spirit in all the workes of the Deity bee they naturall and ordinary or els extraordinary was and is to effect in his time and maner those things which the father from all aeternitie hath decreed in his owne wisdome that is in his Son and the Son hath ordered and disposed to come to passe 6 Yet is not the holy spirit any instrumental cause affording his helpe as a seruaunt vnto the Father or the Son but working together with them without any inferioritie or inaequallitie 7 But the power and working of the holy spirit is especiallie seene in the planting and gouerning of the Church In which particular respect he is called the holie spirit even because that he who is most holie doth stirr vp and nourish all the holie motions that are in the elect For he it is by whose inspiration all the holie prophets haue spoken it is he that giueth eares to heare and a hart to beleeue who appointeth Pastors and doth enable them with necessary gifts who stirreth vp the slouthfull and being the true comforter indeed doth comfort the afflicted soule By whome those that are borne againe of him do cry Abba father he also formed the fleshe of Christ in the wombe of the virgine and did most aboundantlie anoint his humane nature to conclude it is he by whose strength we stand vntill we overcome Wherefore we doe abhor and renounce the SABELLIANS who confound the persones with the substance of the Godhead the ARRIANS and the MACEDONIANS who deny the holie Ghost to bee coessentiall with the Father and the Son the GRECIANS of later time who affirme that hee doth onlie proceed from the father and those also who by the holie Ghost will haue nothing els to be ment saue certaine motions and inspirations onely together with those who deny that he is to be invocated by the one and the selfesame faith with the Father and the Sonne and to be briefe we detest all those that any waies oppugne the Deity of the holy Ghost either in his substance or person Defended by IOHN IAMES COLER of Tygurine THE FIFT SORT OF PRINCIPLES CONCERNING THE ATTRIBVTES OF GOD IN GENERALL HITHERTO WE HAVE SPOKEN OF GOD both as far as wee are able to attaine vnto bee the light of nature also as he is laied before vs in the holy Scripturs to be three in person and one in substance now it followeth that we intreat of his attributes wherby in a sort we are taught what maner of God he is 1 ALthough there be no composition in God nor yet any accidentall qualitie seeing hee is a substance most single and euery way one yet to the end that according vnto our capacitie we might vnderstande what a God hee is he himselfe in the scriptures is accustomed to attribute vnto himselfe many things as qualities 2 By attributes in this place then we vnderstande the essentiall proprieties of the Deity which are attributed vnto him in the scriptures 3 These things are so attributed vnto him that notwithstanding they place nothing in him that is cōpoūd or diuers from his substance but look whatsoeuer they point him out to be the very same he is in his owne most simple substance 4 For both these proprieties and also their actions doe in very deede differ no whit from the substance of the Godhead but onely in some consideration we are to holde them diuers both from the diuine substance and also the on from the other 5 Now these things are attributed vnto the Deity sometimes substātiuely somtims adjectiuely as they speak that we may thereby knowe him to be a being that subsisteth indeede and that he is such a one not by participation and imperfectlie but of himselfe and that most perfectlie 6 Of attributes we make two kinds the one is of them which are so proper vnto the Deitie that they can bee in no sort communicated vnto creatures neither haue they anie other respect vnto creatures saue that by them the Deitie is distinguished from creatures of this kind are aeternity simplenes vnmeasurablenes omnipotencie 7 The other kind is of those who although simply and as far as they are in the Deitie they cannot be communicated yet creatures may be partakers of them not properly but by analogie and a kinde of agreement and that not essentially but in regarde of qualitie and but in part neither such ar wisedome goodnes and the rest of that kind Therefore OSIANDER erred grosly whoe taught that the essentiall righteousnes of God was communicated vnto vs and at this day their error is intollerable who recalling back again the blasphemie of EVTYCHES holde that al the proprieties of the Deitie were powred by personall vnion into the flesh which
therefore feare not but his power and his wrath is against all them that forsake him Briefelie that thou maiest profite by this booke I craue of thee to take this paines in it bestow an hower a day in the reading thereof and in so doing after the first time thou maiest well read it ouer once euerye moneth The which course if thou shalt take I dout not but in one yeare thou shalt so benefite thy selfe as there shall be no point of waight in religion wherof thou shalt not be able to resolue thine owne conscience and also to edifie others according vnto thy calling in verye good measure But in anie case take heede that thy knowledge gotten by reading rather encrease then diminish thy care in the hearing of the word preached And thus thou mayest exspect for the blessing of the Lord vnto whom I betake thee my selfe and all his now and euer Amen GROVNDS AND PROPOSITIONS OF RELIGION propounded and disputed in the vniuersitie of Geneua by certaine students of diuinitie there and determined by M. THEODOR BEZA and M. ANTHONIE FAIVS professors of diuinitie FIRST CONCERNING GOD. 1 SEing that the whole summe of all wisedome and felicitie doth consist in the true knoledge of God it is most meet that all our endeuors should be spent in seeking to attain vnto that knowledge as far as we may be capable of it 2 Not that a full a perfect knowledge of his Majestie who is far greater then the capacitie of men and Angels can reach vnto may be any waies comprehended within our vnderstanding but that wee should bend all the powers of our soules and bodies to knowe that one God who is the author and giuer both of soule and body 3 And although humaine reason bee able to affoord vs some proofs wherby we may be taught that there is a God and but onely one and whereby also his attributes may bee in some sort made knowen vnto vs. Yet notwithstanding those proofes are more sure and strong yea and altogeather the most vndoubted which for this purpose are fetched and drawen out of Gods word that is out of the sacred writings of the holie Prophets and Apostles contained in the old and new Testament 4 For howbeit that the knowledge of God which is deriued from the consideration of his workes and power hath many notable vses yet is it nothing comparable with that light which is gotten from the holy Scriptures both because this knowledge reuealed by the word doth wholie flow and proceede from God him selfe and also in asmuch as God in this his written woorde hath manifested howe and after what manner he will be knowen and worshipped of men Now whether there be a God or no we are to be so farre from making any question thereof that wee are bound most firmely with all our hearts without all wauering and doubting to beleeue that point And therfore we auouch that the rauing madnes of all Atheists who make a question whether there be a God or no ought not so much to be confuted by words and reason as it ought to bee cleane rooted out of the societie of men by the Magistrat and the stiffe maintainers of it taken from amongest men For though al men by nature as it is now corrupt be void of the true God neuerthelesse there are certaine motions and sparks of the knowledge of God imprinted in the mind of euery man which cannot altogeather be put out And as these motions doe testifie that man was borne to worshippe God So vnles a more full light bee joyned vnto them they leaue man straying and groping in the darke and are smallie or nothing behoofull vnto him Therefore as the knowledge which man hath by nature is not altogeather of no vse vnto saluation so is it verie farre from being of it selfe sufficient therunto It bereaueth them indeede of all excuse who quench that small lighr of nature though neuer so corrupt which is left in them 5 True it is indeed that he who goeth beyond al bounds can in no wise be defined and that that exceeding brightnes of God which no man can attaine vnto cannot bee comprehended by our darknes yet hee may be as it were shadowed out by this discription and so wee may say that God is hee who hath his beeing in himselfe whose nature is of himselfe inuisible without beginning without ending infinite incomprehensible indiuisible vnchangeable no bodily substance but a being most pure most simple and euery way most perfect wise mightie good iust mercifull free who hath created all things of nothing c. And therfore we do detest the multitude of Gods acknoledged among the Gentils the grosnes of the * Heretiks so called because they held God to haue a body and members like a man Anthropomorphites the furie of the Manichaeis and all such like And here it is to be obserued that those things which are attributed vnto God by the former Epithites and attributes are not to betaken as qualities inhaerent in him for we are to knowe that there is nothing in God which is not God himselfe 6 As where it is sayd that God is iust good merciful c. That is so to bee vnderstood as if hee were said to be iustice goodnes and mercy it selfe And therefore although that when we speake of God we must not conceiue of him as hauing any liknes or affinitie with the nature of man or of any creature yet such is the excellencie of the Lorde and mans weaknes that when wee speake of his Majesty we are enforced to vse borrowed speaches from creatures And herein hee is so far from disliking of vs that he himselfe descending as it were into our capacitie doth euery where thus speake of himselfe Defended by SAMVEL AVIENVS of Berne THE SECOND SORT OF PRINCIPLES CONCERNING THE HOLY AND VNSEARCHABLE TRINITIE 1 THat knowledge of God which we attaine vnto by his written word doth far surpas al that whatsoeuer it be whereunto the light of nature doth or can lead vs. 2 For that God is one in substance and three in persons is no where els to bee learned saue onely out of the worde The truth of which Doctrine it setteth downe most clearlie and vndoubtedly but so as it leaueth the reason thereof as a matter altogeather vnsearchable and a mysterie not to bee sought out by humain arguments but to be reuerenced and embraced by faith onely 3 These words Trinitie Essence or Substance Person and Coessentiall though they bee not in expresse syllables the word a Heb. 1.3 Person onely excepted to be found in the Canonicall Scriptures yet notwithstanding they were not without just causes brought into vse by the godly auncient Fathers neither are they to be rejected as adding any thing vnto the word but rather to bee still profitablie and wholsomelie retained in the Church 4 By the word TRINITY we vnderstand the nōber of the persons contained in the diuine essence which is one onely 5 By
the word essence in this doctrin is ment that which in deed is one and of al things most singular or single wherein the seuerall persons being euery one of them the whole the same essence do subsist being distinguished in their peculiar proprieties These persons are the Father the Sonne and the holy Ghost 6 The Persons in the Deitie are the whole and the verie same substance of the Deitie distinguished the one from the other by their peculiar or respectiue incommunicable proprieties 7 The proprieties whereby the persons are distinguished are the diuers maner of being that they haue in the Deitie whereby the substance of the Godhead is no wise deuided assunder nor the persons of the same essence seperated but yet so distinguished as the one of them cannot possiblie bee the other 8 The diuine Essence the Deitie or Godhead God are essentiallie the one and the same 9 These persons are sayd to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or coessential not because they are only of like essence and substance as we see the particulars of the same kinde to bee but inasmuche as they are indeed the one and the selfe same simple essence of which sort nothing that is created can be And therefore the persons of the Deitie cannot without blasphemie be said to bee onelie cohaerent togeather in substance or onely of like substance 10 Amongst these persons distinguished indeed by their respectiue proprieties although there be an order yet is ther not any degree whence either any inferioritie inequalitie or confusion may arise Therefore wee conclude that there are indeed three persons in nomber yet but one Godhead and one GOD in regard of substance 11 The proprietie of the person of the father is to be vnbegotten and to beget The proprietie of the sonne is to be begotten of the father The proprietie of the holy ghost is to proceed from the father and the sonne Wherefore in conclusion we do from our hearts detest all the blasphemies that both old and new heretiks haue maintained contrary vnto this doctrine Defended by IOHN CHEROPONTIVS of Neocome THE THIRD SORT OF PRINCIPLES CONCERNING GOD THE FATHER AND GOD THE SON SEING WE HAVE DEALT CONCERNING God one in substance and three in persons it followeth nowe that we speake in order of euery one of the persons 1 THe word GOD is sometimes taken particularly for the person of the Father because that the persons of the Son and of the holy Ghost are referred vnto the father as it were vnto a certaine original of their being wheras the father receiueth his being of none but doth communicat it both with him selfe and also with the other two persons 2 God the Father was alwaies God and alwaies the Father and therfore it fell not as a property vnto him that being meerely God at the first he shoulde be afterwarde made God the Father but as he is God from all aeternitie so he is the Father from all aeternitie 3 God the Father after an vnspeakable manner of generation begat his onely Sonne by communicating his whole essence with him the which maner of begetting is shadowed out by a kind of similitude where the son is in the holy scripture named the Wisdome the Power the a Coll 1 15 Image the b Heb. 13. brightnes and the ingrauen forme of his person 4 And after this sort wee are to conceaue but not curiously to scan the similitudes of the fountaine the streame that issueth from it of the Sunne and the Sunbeames of the light that proceedeth from light of the water the vapors that arise out of it of the tree and the branches of the mind and the speach that is inwardlie conceiued of the seede and the budde and to be briefe of al such similitudes as the Fathers haue broght to manifest in some measure though not perfectly to lay open this mistery Which they accounted a matter to be reuerenced adored not curiously and prophanely to be sifted and waded into 5 And althogh this diuine maner of begetting doth neither cutte into parts nor multiplie the essence of the Deity which Deity is not a thing that onely may be conceaued in thought hauing no other being or existence as are the generall kinds and sorts of things created but is in deede a most single and a most pure infinite self-being yet doth it multiplie the persones but so as it doth in no wise seuer the one of them from the other 6 The Father therefore is an other person in number then the Son and in like sort the Son is another person then the Father And yet is the Deity neither deuided nor multiplied when the Son is said to be God of God And euen as in substance he is the one and the selfe same with the Father so is he in his person so distinguished from the Father that hee is and remaineth in him still 7 The Father and the Sonne then are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is the one of thē in the other or neither of them seuered from the other by any distance of place Yet is the Son more properlie sayed to be in the father then the father in the sonne by reson of the dignitie as it were of the Fatherhood Hence also it is that the Son personally distinguished from the Father is in many places of the Scripture called God 8 Out of these things it apeareth what we are to beleeue concerning the person of the Sonne to wit that in regarde of his substance absolutely considered hee is that one onelie true God vnto whome doe agree whatsoeuer may be attributed to the diuine substance considered in it selfe but in regarde of the maner of his being that is in respect that hee is the Sonne or as far as hee is personally considered then we are to beleue that hee is not of him selfe but of the Father yet coaeternall and coessentiall with the Father 9 Wee do condemne therefore the Tritheits by whome not onely the persons which also wee graunt are nombred but euen the substaunce of the Godhead wherein also they place an inaequality multiplied In like sort we condemn the SABELLIANES who holding a contrary errour doe not soe much as nomber the persons and in stead of the royall notions whereby the persons are distinguished the one from the other do bring in only a certaine difference of their effects and names We do also condemne the ARRIANS who rob the Son of his essentiall Godhead And the EVNOMIANS who haue forged the inaequalitie of the persons Togeather with the followers of SAMOSATENVS and SERVETVS and all other fanaticall spirites who affirme the person of the Son to haue taken his beginning with his humane nature because as they hould before that time either the Worde was not the Sonne or was nothing els but a shape or a forme conceaued in Gods minde of the humane nature that should afterwarde be borne or was onely predestinate and appointed to be but not being
VERITAS CASTITAS PROPOSITIONS AND PRINCIPLES of Diuinitie propounded and disputed in the vniuersitie of Geneua by certaine students of Diuinitie there vnder M. THEOD BEZA and M. ANTHONIE FAIVS professors of Diuinitie WHEREIN IS CONtained a Methodicall summarie or Epitome of the common places of Diuinitie TRANSLATED OVT OF Latine into English to th●… end that the causes both of the present dangers of that Church and also of the troubles of those that are hardlie dealt vvith els-vvhere may appeare in the English tongue AT EDINBVRGH Printed by Robert Walde-graue printer to the Kings Maiestie Anno Dom. 1591. Cum Priuilegio Regali TO THE RENOVMED AND NOBLE LORD THE LORD NICHOLAS EARLE of Ostrorog c. IT hath bene long since the complaint of verie many that those whome they call the Schoolmen and Disputers haue giuen the studies of the holie Scriptures not onely a great stroake but euen a deathes wounde And therfore it will seme wonderfull it may bee vnto some that the custome of disputing touching diuine matters is retained in these Churches and Schooles which are reformed acording to the pure word of God For to dispute of euery matter will some say is blame-worthie neither can it be lawfull to call euery thing into question but only such matters as being doubtfull and vncertaine in their own nature may be argued one boath sides according as the opinions and iudgements of men do vary and disagree of which sorte there are many thinges in Philosophie which do so moue the mindes of men with a kinde of probability that it may be iustly doubted whether the things be as they seeme or no. But Diuinitie is grounded vpon such a sure and certain foundation that there is no place left therein vnto doubting and questioning For he himselfe spake that is not PYTHAGORAS but IEHOVA by his Prophets and Apostles in his word written by them teaching therein the onely truth of those matters which neither eie hath seene eare hath heard nor euer enterd into the harte of man and which they whome God loueth and who loue him againe do obtaine of the mercifull Lord not by reasoning but by beleeuing and leading an holy life This reason hath so preuailed that many godly graue men haue either from their hartes as beeing of this iudgement or for some other cause abstained from this course of disputing touching diuine matters For godlines say they is to bee taught and learned according vnto the plaine and simple maner of Fishermen and not by the subtilties of ARISTOTLE and that doubting of the ACADEMICKES who as AVGVSTINE saith hold that men are to bee without all hope of finding the truth beeing an opinion that maketh men wauering and changeable ready to holde any thing and to beare any face and countenance is to be vtterly remoued from the Church wherunto you may adde as the Apostle admonisheth vs that we take heed lest any man spoil vs by philosophy neither indeed can it be denied but that in the very first beginning of the Church there was a very sore blowe giuen vnto religion by those who being swollen vppe by the pride of humaine reasonings would rather submit Christ vnto their iudgements then themselues vnto his maiestie So that TERTVLLIAN long since iustlie named the Philosophers to be the Patriarches of haeresies Now in the ages following that wound was not onely not healed but made greater and grieuouser by those who mingling the Schoole Philosophy with Diuinitie did make the Ladie and Mistres to bee at the commandement of the seruant and handmaide For the craft of Sathan was such that whilest those who being otherwise good men did endeuour by the light of disputation to cleare the truth against errors they themselues falling into far greater darknes drewe others after them For why should wee not so account of those questionarie maisters as they call them Whereunto if vnto any other that which AVGVSTINE allegoricallie spake out of the eight Psalme concerning curious men may be most fitlie applied The most earnest and obstinat studie saith he of all curious men who seeke vaine and transitorie thinges is like vnto the fishe that walke through the pathes of the Sea the which pathes doe as soone vanish away and decay as the water cōmeth againe together after it hath giuen place to any that passe or swimme thorough it Thus far AVGVSTINE For what is more curious and more intricate or brier like then so many not so sound as subtil questions diuisions distinctions and solutions of these men whoe stand gnawing vpon the bones of argumentes as TERTVLLIAN saith Verely that which is set downe in the Fables touching IXION rauishing the cloude in stead of IVNO whence the CENTAVRES were begotten who killed one another may be verie aptlie applied vnto these men For the bare shadow in steed of the solide truth being taken holde vpon and apprehended by them hath altogether drunke vp and consumed the iuyce and moisture of godlines so that there remaineth nothing for them but the dry and wythered barke and it hath brought forth so many controuersies and diuersities of opinions which teach and learne nothing els but brawles and partes taking that to recall so many mindes and contrarie iudgements that deadlie gore one another vnto concord and the right rule of reason concord and reason it selfe cannot suffice and bee able For as NAZIANZEN sayeth when as hauing once left faith we pretend the force and the abilitie of disputation wee do nothing els thereby but blot out the authoritie of the Spirit by questionings By the which vnsuccessiue and lamentable issue wee are earnestly admonished to betake our selues from their traine who vse over narrowlie and curiouslie to sift matters vnto the assemblie of those that are godlie and profitable hearers But yet this was the falt of these men who in diuinitie obserued not that rule That nothing shoulde bee too much which is exceeding profitable in ciuil affaires For it followeth not because they were over curious which is not to bee commended that therefore carefull diligence shoulde bee disliked or sluggishnes and securitie thought praise worthie But holie things as they are to be dealt in with great iudgment so they are to be handled with greater pietie for this latter is as it wer the soule the former being as the eie of diuinitie The orations of the Prophets the sermons of Christe the writings of the Apostles and especiallie the Epistles of PAVL do containe most sharp and graue disputations which can in no wise bee aptlie discussed but by the vse of reasoning Our Sauiour Christ him selfe disputed with the Doctors Pharisies Sadduces c. The same did PAVL with the Iewes with the Philosophers with the brethren The Fathers also disputed IRINEVS against the GNOSTICKES TERTVLLIAN against the MARCIONITES ATHANASIVS against the ARRIANES NAZIANZEN CYRIL THEODORET HILLARIE AVGVSTINE and many others almost against innumerable haeresies but so as their disputations wer not a bare exercise or a setting forth for a
vtterly denied that there were anie angels And ORIGEN likewise who with PLATO affirmed that those spirituall minds as often as they offended were fallen and thrust into bodies APELLES the heretick also who said that the bodies which the Angels tooke vpon them were neuer created and LACTANTIVS FIRMIANVS who dreamed that Angels were not presentlie at the beginning of the world appointed to guide and protect man In summe wee condemne all those who either make them coaeternall with God or attribute vnto them the worke of the Creation as did SIMON MAGVS CERINTHVS SATVRNINIVS and CARPOCRATES Defended by IOHN IAMES COLER of Tigurine PRINCIPLES CONCERNING MAN XII 1 SEing that man is the most excellent of all the visible workes of God for whose cause next vnto Gods all other things were created we holde it a matter belonging vnto a Diuine to entreat of the nature of Man 2 Man is neither the bodie nor the soule seuerallie considered but composed of both that is of soule and bodie joined together by a most straight and most louing band 3 The truth of Gods worde doeth witnes that there was but one man created at the first who was to bee the originall of all other men And so all those that proceded from him should be tyed together by a common bond of blood Wee doe then reject the opinion of such Philosophers as haue denied one certaine man to haue had his beginning first of all other 4 The bodie of that first man was formed by God of the dust of the earth that is as wee interprete it of the foure elements that it should not be a graue of the soule as PLATO thought but a most excellent and a most meete instrument to performe the faculties of the minde 5 Now in respect that this bodie was made of qualities repugnant one to the other it was mortall in the first creation of it for repugnancie or discord is the authour of dissolution yet by the appointment of God it was made immortall that it should be the habitation of the immortall soule but after the entrance of sinne into the worlde it returned vnto the former necessitie of mortality The PELAGIANS therefore do erre in holding that the bodies of men were naturallie subject vnto death and in attributing the cause of death to be onely the discord of the contrary qualities Other points that belong vnto the frame and beautie of mans body we leaue to be discussed by naturall Philosophers and phisitians As also manie things that they teach concerning the powers of the soule becaus we think it meet that we containe our selues within the bonds of diuinitie And now we will speak of the essence of the soule 6 The essence of the soule can scarce be knowne for it is not to bee perceaued by the instrument of any the senses of our bodies yet by the faculties and operations of it it doth in a sort open it selfe vnto vs. And therefore it is vsuallie described and pointed out after this plaine maner 7 The soule of man is an essence created according vnto the image of God infused into the bodie that man cōsisting both of bodie and soule should be capable to know and glorifie God 8 The soule of man is properlie trulie called a soule for that facultie which is in beasts and plants is by reason of the scarcity of words so called of the Latines For seeing the same doth not subsist of it self that it is nothing els but a power arysing out of the properties of the matter forme it scant retaineth the name of a being much lesse deserueth to be called a soule 9 The soule of man is of a spirituall and not of a bodily nature subsisting by it selfe not vnaduisedlie made of moates not a fire or anie other of the foure elementes or yet anie thing compact of the elementes not any number not an harmony not any facultie brought forth out of the matter brieflie not anie part cut as it were out of the Deitie but wiselie created of nothing after a manner vnknowne vnto vs by God who woorketh most freely 10 Now although it hath a beginning yet doeth it remain immortal not onlie because of it owne substance it is vncompounded and voide of al contrarieties and bodilie accidents but especiallie in asmuch as it is so created of God that of it selfe it can liue exist and continue for euer And it doth rather afforde life vnto the bodie than deriue it from the same The which wee doe beleeue in asmuch as it is proued vnto vs by the most sure testimonies of the holy scriptures rather then because it is demonstrated by philosophicall reasons Wee condemne therefore the MANICHAEES GNOSTICKES and PRISCILLIANISTS who haue said that the soule was of a double nature whereof the one was from a good beginning vz. a good God The other from an euill The SELEVCIANES HERMINIANES PROCLIANES who held that the soule was not made by God but by Angels The LVCIFERIANES and TERTVLLIANISTS who were of opinion that it was a bodilie substance and such as could fall off or be shelled from the bodie and remooue from one bodie to an other The ARABIANES and the NAZARITES who thought it mortall the ORIGENISTS who judged that all soules shoulde aeternallye liue in heauen and the APOLLINARISTS whose opinion was that one soule was begotten of another 11 Neither is the soule of the same nature and sort that the Angels are as ORIGEN thought who made onlie an accidentall and not a substantiall difference between Angels and the soules of men Now that essentiall difference although it cannot be easilie knowne is yet in some sort perceaued by this adjunct vz. that Angels can not be ordinarilie joined vnto bodies wheras the soules may Now the soule is also not onelie the first mouer of the bodie but euen the verie cheef and especiall forme of a man whereby first of all and of it selfe A man is that which hee is and for whose cause the bodie is so framed as it is to the ende that a most honorable lodging should be prepared for a most honorable ghuest 12 The soules of all men are not one as THEMISTIVS and the followers of AVERROIS thought but of euerie particuler man there is a perticular soule which can as naked and bare formes consist and remaine when they are seuered from the bodie as in deed they do for a time when as they being out of the bodie do expect the aeternall and indissoluble conjunction that they are to haue with the same 13 And seing that the form of euerie thing doth not onlie make vp the whole but also euery part thereof and no part can effect the office thereof except the forme bee present and seeing when the same departeth it ceaseth from doing wee do defend that common opinion out of AVGVSTINE vz. that the soule is whollie in the whole and whollie in euery part Although there be this diuersitie of the being of it in the whole and in the
partes as that it is first and of it selfe in the whole whereas it is in the parts but after a secondarie manner Defended by IOHN CASTOLL of Geneua PRINCIPLES CONCERNING THE FACVLTIES OF THE SOVLE OF MAN XV. HAVING SET DOWN WHAT WE ARE to beleeue according vnto the Scriptures concerning the essence of the soule of man nowe wee are to entreate of the powers thereof 1 GOD alone is a most simple and a most meere beeing And therefore although the essence of the soule be a spirituall and no bodilie substance yet it is endued with faculties agreeable vnto the nature of it which by their owne spirituall manner are inhaerent in the essence thereof as in their subject We do not therefore allow the opinion of the PERIPATETICKS who taught that the faculties of the soule doth not differ from the essence of it in deed but after a sort 2 And although the very essence and substance of the soule doeth by the grace of God continue without all change and alteration yet the powers thereof were created of a changeable nature 3 Now as man was created in one of his parts like vnto all other liuing creatures aswell in regarde of the substance of their bodies as of their naturall life though in a far more excellent state So it behoued that that other part of his should bee endued with faculties meet for the preseruation of the naturall life of his said bodie namely with the faculties of nourishing and the power of outward senses whereof whatsoeuer might be farther spoken wee leaue vnto Phisitians and naturall Philosophers 4 The other faculties are proper vnto the soule of man for the spirituall and immortall excellencie whereof it is also and not only for the very essence of the soule trulie said to be created according to the image of God 5 Yet in asmuch as the soule in bringing forth the effects of these proper qualities doeth vse the instrument of the bodie whereunto it is personallie vnited in this respect also man wholie considered but not in part may be truly held to be created after the image of God We do condemne therfore the dotage of the ANTHROPOMORPHITES who placing the image of God in the very bodie of man did therefore dreame that God was a bodilie substance as also the madnes of OSIANDER who referred the same vnto the incarnation of the world 6 These faculties we holde to bee two the vnderstanding which is also called the minde and the will or as sometimes they are called in the holie Scriptures the spirite and the soule taken in a more narrow signification 7 This Image considered these two faculties is expressed of PAVL by the names of righteousnes and true holines whereby hee declareth the agreement which it had with the patterne according vnto which it was created A wonderfull light being powred into the facultie of vnderstanding whereby it was endued with a most cleare knowledge and such as was obscured by no darknes of the true God and his diuine will And an inward force being ingraffed into the will whereby it was able to stirre vp it self by holy motions without all shew of resistance vnto that end for the which man was created the bodie to be short beeing framed in a most wonderfull decent sort to yeeld obedience most redily and without all wearisomnes vnto the soule when it moued the same 8 Vnto this agreeablenes of man with God and to the agreement and proportion that all the partes of man had among them selues was adjoined as it were another shining brightnes of the diuine Maiestie the dominion of all the inferiour creatures granted vnto man that by this meanes also man might shine here beneath as a president of the majestie and glory of God 9 To the execution of this gouernment there was giuen vnto man an exact knowledge not gotten by labour and vse but naturallie ingraffed in him both of the natures of all things that he was to gouerne and also of the best way to rule them Wherunto of the contrary side the good and right disposition and inclination which all the creatures that were vnder mans gouernment had to obey man was answerable the which harmony and agreement of the whole world MOSES doth expresse by the name of the goodnes that was in euery creature Defended by IOHN FLORIDES of Augiers PRINCIPLES CONCERNING FREE-WILL XVI THE FACVLTIES OF THE VNDERstanding and the will are alwaies accompanied with that power which is commonlie called Free-will whereof wee will now speake 1 FREE-WILL which the Graecians cal 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 if the force of the word be strictlie considered is giuen neither to man nor Angell nor yet shall euer bee granted but trulie and absolutely doth agree vnto God alone for he onlie is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2 Yet of this high and soueraigne authority there were certaine lineaments shadowed in Angels and men at their first creation when as both the one and other were endued by the Lord with vnderstanding will whereby they were made capable of knowledge and vnderstanding 3 For man is not onlie stirred to desire by a naturall liuelie motion but euen according vnto aduise or electiō which cannot be without either the true or the apparant knowledge of the thing it desireth 4 Such furthermore was the state of the first man before sinne that his vnderstanding and will did altogether agree with the wil of God and were wholly subject which is the cheefest libertie vnto his commandement without all resistance or strife that the affections had against the minde 5 At that time therefore man was in deed the Lord of his owne actions that is endued with free-will Yet because he was mutable and changeable both wayes he did so encline from good to euill that as AVGVSTINE saieth by sinning he lost both him-self and his libertie 6 Not that hee was turned vnto a stock and so bereaued of judgement and will For sinne hath not vtterlie abolished nature although it hath lamentablie polluted the same but such a libertie remaineth as can will nothing but what is euill and that euillie For whatsoeuer is done without faith is sinne 7 Now in things that are subject vnto vs as many actions both naturall and morall are free choise is left vnto man that he can either will or not will as he hath will either to speake or to hold his peace to studie or not studie and such like 8 But in supernaturall things as are to know God to loue him and to obey his will as we ought we are altogether weake and blinde or rather deade as PAVLE speaketh Wee do condemne therefore the PELLAGIANS who say that the force of will remaineth in vs vnblemished and that sinne may bee auoided by the meere light of nature And the PAPISTS also who holde that it is but blemished onely 9 For we acknowledge as the Scripture teacheth that wee are nowe our nature being corrupted dead in sinne the children of wrath and enemies vnto
infinite and immeasurable or vncircumscribed in a place or that it can bee in many places at once or euery where or yet any where indeed any otherwaies then as in a place 6 Yet as they are joyned togeather that is in respect of the whole wholie considered the word is trulie said to be this man and this man to bee the worde not that the one nature is transfused or turned into the other but because these two natures are one only subsisting person which the Schoole-men call the grace of vnion or vniting grace 7 In like manner although the essentiall properties of the one nature be not transfused into the other yet is the word said to be crucified and dead not in it self but in the nature that was assumed In like sort this man is saide to be Eternall Infinite Immeasurable and God himselfe not in it selfe but in the assuming nature or the nature that tooke flesh 8 The maner of speaking is called the communicating of properties the which in respect of Christ wholie considered is Reall or both in name and in deed but in consideration of the natures seuerallie considered it is verball or onely in name 9 The Deitie of Christ borroweth nothing of the humanitie which it assumed Whereas on the other side the humanitie subsisting in the Deitie is perfected by it 10 Nowe the humanitie of Christ is fullie indued with so great store of all qualities most excellent those onelie excepted which are so essentiall in God as they can be in no wise communicated with any creature and by the powring whereof the humaine nature should be swallowed vp and become the Godhead as in dignitie and glorie hee doth farre surmount all Creatures as being inferiour vnto the Deitie onelie The which fulnes of gifts the Schoolmen call grace habituall or fullie possessed 11 Now this exceeding vertue and power was powred by degrees vpon the flesh that was assumed not at the very moment of the vniting togeather of both natures In as much as it behooued Christ to take vpon him such flesh as was in deede subject to all our infirmities sinne excepted vntill that hee hauing fulfilled whatsoeuer was necessarie vnto our saluation had obtained a name aboue al names the Godhead onelie excepted Wee doe abhorre then both the NESTORIANS who deuide the person and the EVTYCHIANS who either confoūd the natures or mingle their essentiall proprieties 12 The glorifiyng of the humanitie of Christ which is ment in the Christian beleife by ascending into Heauen and sitting at the right hand of God hath neither abolished the essence nor the essentiall properties of a true body Defended by STEPHEN BLOIVS of Angiers PRINCIPLES CONCERNING THE OFFICE OF CHRIST XXI SEING THAT WE HAVE DONE ALREAdie with the person of Christ it followeth now that we deale with his office For these two are to be considered in him 1 MAnkinde by reason of sinne whereunto it wilfullie fell was altogeather loste in such sort as it could in no wise by it owne strength escape aeternal damnation 2 But God to the end that hee might affoorde a moste cleare testimonie of his mercie did appoint in his aeternal counsell to deliuer men from this miserie and calamitye And to the end that this might bee done without anie impeachment of his justice he appointed a Mediatour who should performe all these things that were required 3 Therfore seeing to auoide the curse of the lawe the lawe it selfe must bee fulfilled by men and this can by no meanes be performed by them it behooued the Mediator to effect this worke and not to ouerpasse the very least title of Gods Law The opinion of the PAPISTS therefore is very wicked in attributing anie other merite vnto any man saue onely the merite of Christs alone obedience 4 Furthermore seeing it behoued God which is moste just to punishe the sinnes of men that by this meanes his justice might be fulfilled and men could not vndergo the weight of Gods anger but they should bee euerlastinglie swallowed vp thereby It was the office of the Mediatour seeing he bare the person of all men to pay all their debts and to suffer punishment for them all They are againe most wicked who bring in any other Mediatour of satisfaction in the presence of God saue onlie this one 5 And as Christ was vnder the law represented by Prophets Kings and Priests so beeing exhibited in his time hee was annointed to bee a King Priest and Prophet In which three callings his whole office is contained 6 The Propheticall office of Christ is to teach men the will of God and clearelie to lay open vnto them his decree concerning the saluation of mankinde and so to put an end vnto al prophesies that is to fulfill all those things that were fore-tolde of him It is execrable wickednes therefore to burden the conscience of man with new commandements added vnto the worde or to impose anie lawe vpon the conscience and much more to adjoine vnto the Gospell new supplies of saluation 7 The Kingdome of Christ consisteth heerein namely that al his enemies beeing subdued vnder him as Sathan sinne and death he onelie may beare rule ouer his church defend the same and bestowe all thinges needfull therevpon 8 This Kingdome is not like vnto other Kingdomes that are earthlie but it is spirituall And therefore the Iewes are worthelie condemned with all others that thinke this kingdome to consist in a kinde of outward pompe majestie and magnificence And they are much more impudent then the Iewes themselues who will haue the tyrannie of the Romane Praelate to bee a visible representation of Christs kingdome 9 The office of Christs Preist-hood was by some acceptable Sacrifice to pacifie God being offended with vs And because no other Sacrifice could bee found meet and no other Priest worthie for this worke hee who was without all spot became both the Sacrifice and the Preist now also making intercession for vs in heauen Therefore the Papisticall Sacrifizing Preists are most grosse seducers who saye that in the Sacrifice of their Masse they offer Christ really both for the quick and the dead Defended by BERNARD CASANOVA of Bearne PRINCIPLES CONCERNING FAITH XXII HAVING DECLARED THESE THINGS which appertaine vnto the person of Christ it remaineth that we speak by what meanes Christ with all his benefites is applied vnto vs. 1 CHristian faith is that onelie hand whereby wee take hold or apply vnto our selues Christ being offered vnto vs with all his benefites that are necessarie vnto our saluation 2 This Faith wee doe first of all distinguish from that meere agreement of the vnderstanding whereby it commeth to passe that we beleeue all these things to bee true which are contained in the holie Scriptures the which agreement or assent wee affirme that it may arise from the light of nature also and the arguments that may be compassed by humane reason without anie peculier lightning of the holie Spirite seeing the verie vncleane Spirits themselues do
of effectuall Regeneration doth teach comfort raise and confirme vs in all our conflictes against Sathan ●…ill wee obtaine the crowne which is giuen of free gift though vnto these onely that do lawfully striue and ouercome Defended by HILARIVS FANTRAT an English-man of Guernzie PRINCIPLES CONCERNING MANS IVSTIFICATION IN THE SIGHT OF GOD. XXIIII 1 THat we may haue a sure foundation of aeternall life and may worship God in this life with a quiet conscience the doctrine of mans justification in the presence of God is very necessary 2 Iustification therefore is a free imputation of righteousnes made of God by and for Christ to saluation vnto euery one that beleeueth 3 But in asmuch as God is exceedingly mercifull and exceedinglie just and that his mercie doth not abolish his justice which remaineth vnviolated it behooued that his justice shuld be fullie satisfied before such time as he could poure forth his mercie vpon mankind and therefore that Christ should be God and man 4 For he who is onelie man cannot be able to sustaine the wrath of God nor on the other side hee who is onelie God because that God can bee subject vnto no kinde of suffering 5 Therefore God the Father beeing drawen in mercie woulde haue his onelye begotten Sonne at the appointed time to become true man without any confusion or mingling of the natures might reconcile men vnto God 6 The efficient cause therefore of the righteousnes imputed vnto vs is the mercie of God the Father and his free loue towards vs for he it is that saueth and justifieth 7 The materiall cause is Christ crucified and risen for vs where three thinges come to bee considered the one whereof consisteth in the punishments whereby hee hath most fullie satisfied for all our sinnes The other standeth in his obedience the fulfilling of the whole lawe by him for vs the third is the most perfect repairing and integritie of our nature in the flesh which Christ tooke vpon him wherby the filthines of our nature is couered that it commeth not into the sight of God 8 The formall cause is the verie imputation of Christs righteousnes by meanes whereof we are accounted to be freed from sinne just holie and heires of aeternall life 9 The instrumentall is of two sortes the one in respect of God that justifieth which is Christ himselfe the other in respect of vs that lay holde vpon imputation of righteousnes and the same is faith imbracing firmely the promises of the grace of God in Christ 10 The finall likewise is two-folde the one in respect of GOD and that is that hee might declare his righteousnes vnto men by partaking the same with them and also the glorye of his name the which hee maketh more cleare in the vessels of mercie the other in respect of vs that wee may at the length enjoy indeed that life which is laied vp for vs in the Heauens which now we possesse by hope onely 11 The effect inhaerent in vs as in a subject is that newe qualitie which is called inhaerent righteousnes or regeneration which in no wise doth absolue vs in the presence of God but is onely a most sure witnes of our engraffing into Christ and therefore of our free absolution in him 12 This righteousnes seeing it cannot bee giuen vnto anie saue onely vnto the elect by faith hath annexed vnto it the gift of perseuerance although by their fault it seemeth sometimes to be ceased 13 Whence we gather that they who haue bene once endued by God with this righteousnes can neuer fal away from his grace and as for them that shall neuer bee partakers heereof they shall perish for euer We do therefore condemne those that gaine-say this Doctrine I The LIBERTINES and the EPICVRES who when they heare that man is not justified by workes nor by his owne righteousnes but by the righteousnes of another namelie by the righteousnes of Christ imputed by faith casting off all care of good workes haue endeuoured and daily do labour to bring a kinde of prophane and godles security ● into the Church II The PAPISTS who denie that wee are justified by Faith onlie but do attribute part of our justification vnto workes and such works as are meritorious III OSIANDER who held that man was justified by the essentiall righteousnes of God Defended by WILLIAM QVARCINVS Tarbiensis PRINCIPLES CONCERNING SANCTIFICATION XXIIII SEING THE EFFECT OF FAITH IS twofold Iustification and Sanctification it followeth that hauing spoken of the former we adioyn the latter vnto it 1 HEre first of al we do especiallie distinguish Sanctification whereof we are now to speak from that most perfite integritie which in Christ is imputed vnto vs as the effect is to be seuered from the cause and the fruit from the tree 2 To expresse this wherof we now speake there do occurre manie diuerse names in the holie Scriptures as are these especiallie in the new testament Sanctification regeneration newnes of life Baptisme taken passiuely Spirite mortification of the olde man and the quickning of the newe with other the like phrases which would be too long to be heere recited 3 Sanctification in this place we describe to be an effect proceding frō the holy Ghost working in the minds of the faithfull wherby by a little a litle euen vnto the end of this life as the naturall corruption is purged so the image of God is repaired in vs vntill after death it be perfitely finished in the other world 4 This guift as also all others which it bestoweth vpon vs dooth the holie Ghost whollie drawe from Christ in whome the Scripture giueth vs speciallie to consider in his death buriall and resurrection the subduing of that originall corruption of ours which was imputed vnto him whence it commeth to passe that wee deuide our whole sanctification into these three members mortification buriall of the old man and the rising againe of the new 5 The mortification of the olde man wee call the effect of that spirituall and most powerfull application of the death of Christ wherby our corruption receaueth a deaths wound so that it is no more so powerful to stirre vp in our minds wicked motions such as are contrary vnto Gods will 6 The burying of the olde man is also an effect of the spirituall application of Christs buriall whereby our olde man being alreadie wounded by that deadly stroke dieth by little and little vntill at the length after the death of this bodie it be brought to nothing For as the buriall of the bodie is a going forward of death so also the burying of the olde man is nothing els but a continuance still proceeding further and further of that mortification which went before 7 The raising againe of the new man is also an effect of the spiritual aplication of the resurrection of Christ wherby it commeth to passe that the new man is raised vp in vs that is that the qualities of our minde to wit our
the Angell witnessed he remained from the very moment of his conception a most pure consubsisting habitation of the eternall Sonne 15 For the holie Ghost when hee tooke the substance the Virgin did altogeather cleanse the said substance from all corruption before such time as hee turned the same into the seed of mans flesh 16 In this most pure flesh was placed also a most holie and a most pure soule that Christ alone shuld be that true holie one of the Lord making holie all his members for euer of whome the Leuiticall high Priest was onely a Type 17 Wee condemne therefore the Samosatenians who will haue Christ to be a bare man The Arrians and Seruetians who gaine-say his Coessentiall and Coeternall Deitie The Marcionites and the Manichaees who change the flesh of Christ into a bare shew The Schuengfeldians who attribute vnto Christ a heauenlie bodie The Appollinarists who affirme that the WORD was in stead of a soule vnto the flesh that was assumed The Nestorians who deuide the person The Eutychians who both confound the natures and mingle togeather their Essentiall properties The Monophysits who in steade of the vnitie of the person did place the vnity of the natures The Vbiquitaries who with EVTICHES do define the personall vnion by a Reall effusion of the properties of the Deitie into the humaine nature and with NESTORIVS doe define the same by the Co-operation of the natures and with the Monothelites to be onely a power proceeding as it were from God and man The Papists who affirme the Virgine Marie to haue bene conceiued without originall sinne and in mainetaining Transubstantiation do ouerthrow whatsoeuer they holde aright concerning the trueth of the fleshe of Christ and the personal vnion And their doctrine also who placing here vpon earth an essentiall Consubstantiation vnder bread and wine do strike vpon the same rocke of confusion Defended by DAVID PIOTAEVS of Lions PRINCIPLES CONCERNING THE NATIVITIE CIRCVMCISION AND BAPTISME OF CHRIST XLII IN THE FORMER PRINCIPLES WE HAVE doone with the conception of Christ now wee are briefly to deale with his Natiuitie 1 EVen as these words of the Creed of the Apostles conceiued by the holy Ghost do set forth the purifiyng of the seed of the Virgin to the end that the bodie of Christ might bee purely formed thereof So these wordes Borne of the Virgin Marie doe declare vnto vs the bringing forth of Christ into the world by the said virgin and so his Natiuitie 2 Wee say that Christ was borne when as the vsuall tearme of Child-bearing common vnto all other men being fulfilled the Virgin brought forth Christ that word of the Father and the Sonne of DAVID 3 For hee which was conceiued was also borne The Virgin Marie therefore is justly called the mother of God though she be not the mother of the Deitie And wee doe justlie condemne NESTORIVS who made a vaine distinction between the mother of Christ and the mother of God as being things opposite the one to the other 4 Of the sure perswasion of this Natiuitie wee reape a double profit the one that hence we learne that the word yet without the laying a side of his diuine nature or anie conuersion or mixture of the same hauing taken vppon him our flesh our soule and our minde that in all thinges sinne excepted he might be made like vnto his brethren began to be God and man The Arrians therfore are to be condemned who denie our Sauiour Christ to haue had an humaine soule and the Appollinaristes who deny him to haue had an humaine mind 5 The other that by this meanes wee might be assured that Christ according vnto the flesh is from those Fathers of whome Mary came that is from ADAM ABRAHAM and DAVID vnto whom it was peculiarlie promised that the Messias should come of their seed 6 Hee was also borne as it must needs bee according vnto the fore-telling of the Prophets of a Virgine that was vnknown of man because otherwise he could not be borne a pure man and so he himselfe should haue stood in need of a Mediator The Iewes therefore are to be condemned who holde against the Christians that it was not needfull that the Messias should be borne of a Virgine but that he should be the Son of some King or of some Prophet 7 The virginitie of Marie after her Child-bearing to wit that as it is most certaine that before her Childe-bearing she was vnknowen of man so also she remained a Virgin after the same vnto her dying day is religiouslie beleeued yet there is nothing expreslie found concerning this point in the holie Scriptures neither doth it belong anie-wise vnto the mysterie of our saluation 8 In this place we do not onelie refuse but vtterlie detest all filthie questions and such as are most vnagreeable vnto so holy a birth 9 Christ beeing an infant and bound in his swaddling bands after the maner of all other men that are borne cried in his swathes as also he did trulie sucke milke it behoued also that his bodie and his humaine wisdome though it made greater growth in him then in other men and his experience did grow as he did increase in yeares in so much as God would not haue the lawes of nature to bee broken in these things 10 Christ therefore at that time had a Childes bodie and afterward a mans finite and hauing the instrumentall parts thereof and therefore circumscribed in a place the which essentiall qualities of a true bodie hee neither did at any time nor euer will cast of They err therfore who teach that the bodie of Christ can be euerie where and yet his humanitie remaine still vnuiolated neither doth it followe thence that the natures are separated 11 That bodie euen vnto his death was subject vnto humaine infirmities and so of it selfe subject vnto corruption though it neuer felt the corruption of the Graue but after his resurrection he laid aside all those infirmities that were brought vpon man for sin and euen the naturall life it selfe Whence MANES is conuinced with MARCION and those whome they call DOKITAE who teach that Christ in deede neuer did or could suffer any thing and that he did onely beare men in hand that he suffered 12 This Natiuitie was the beginning of the open humiliation of Christ whereby he made himselfe of no reputation namely when taking vpon him the form of a Seruant he trulie came into this world euen as his death and buriall was the last part of the same 13 Furthermore in that he was circumcised ●nd baptized it was not done therfore because he in himselfe needed to be made cleane by them as though before he were poluted but that we should learne 14 First that the whole force both of the circumcision of the Fathers did and of our Baptisme dooth depend vppon him as beeing hee by whome the Sacraments are trulie made the signs of our reconciliation with God 15 Secondly that hee was the Sauiour and
comming to be hidden from men so also hee would haue the time of their death for the very same cause to be vnknowen vnto them vnlesse that he openeth the same vnto some either by particular reuelation or by probable conjectures Defended by IOHN VALETONVS Albenatiensis Occitanus PRINCIPLES VPON THE ARTICLE OF THE BELIEFE CONCERNING THE FAITH IN THE HOLY GHOST XLIX 1 VVE doe in this Article confesse that the holy Ghost as being the third person in the Trinitie is to bee adored and worshipped by the same faith and inuocation whereby in the former Articles wee haue confessed that the Father and the Son beeing in order the first persons of the Trinitie ar distinctly to be acknowledged and worshipped 2 The holy Ghost in this place doth signifie that essentiall power who is essentially subsisting in the Father and the Son proceeding and distinguished equally from them both in regard of the manner of his being but in respect of his essence absolutely considered hee is GOD hauing that Deitie which is not deriued by propagation from an other Godhead but is one most single and of himselfe 3 Now seing the Father neither can be separated from his Co-aeternall and Co-essentiall wisedome neither co-essentiall power who is the holy Ghost can be seuered from that wisedome but doth depend of the Father and of his wisedome there is no question to bee made but that hee doth proceed from the Father and the Sonne as from one cause 4 Where the Sonne is saide to bee begotten of the Father and the holy Ghost affirmed to proceede from the Father and the Sonne it sheweth a difference between the wisdome that remaineth in the Deitie and the power that doth outwardlie shew it selfe by the effects 5 That which both the Schoole-men and also the ancientest Diuines amongest the Latines haue written concerning the holy Ghost as being a kinde of essentiall loue knitting the Father the Sonne togeather hath brought in to religion many intricate strange and dangerous questions 6 Although the works of the Trinitie which they call outward or externall are inseparable yet in the effecting of them there is a distinction to bee obserued not onely of the persons but also of the personall actions 7 The proper operation of the holie Ghost is to effect in deed in his time and manner those things which the father hath determined to dispose by his Sonne that is his aeternall wisedome and to execute by the power of them both that is by the holie Ghost 8 Yet are we not to thinke that the holie Ghost dooth worke anie thing with the Father and the Sonne as an instrumentall or a ministeriall cause but without anie inaequalitie and immediatlie in respect of them both worketh all things together with them 9 The power thereof did then shew it selfe when as the world was to be created of nothing and afterward in his prouidence whereby he hath vnto this day and euer shall as long as the world standeth preserue the same both by ordinary and extraordinarie meanes 10 The effect thereof furthermore is to woorke in the harts of men which is done manie wayes for some he maketh apt and readie to practise morall vertues not by chāging but by repressing their naturall corruption others by his especiall power hee doth make meete to vnderstand and bring to passe great matters all which doe properlie serue for the conseruation of mans societie although that the effects of these guiftes are otherwhiles also behoofull vnto the Church 11 Sometimes also he goeth farther in bestowing vpon some the knowledge of his heauenlie truth with other supernaturall guifts as of Prophesie and healing to be brief he doth after a sort sometimes enlighten not the vnderstanding onlie but euen the will of some who yet are so in the Church as it will one day appeare that they were neuer true members thereof 12 Now his sauing power doth onelie manifest it selfe both in the congregation of his elect and also in euerye particular member of his mysticall bodie whence it commeth to passe that the Church alone is holie and the beleeuers onlie properlie called Saints 13 Hee dooth therefore in part bestowe the very same guifts vpon his elect whereof some of the reprobates are partakers but adioyning thereunto the grace of a good conscience and of perseuerance So the holie Prophetes and Apostles in times past haue left vnto vs by the inspiration of the holie Ghost the scriptures contained in the bookes of the olde and new Testament After this manner also manie haue beene indued with the guift of woorking miracles and all faithfull Pastors and Teachers haue bene in all ages bestowed vpon the Church and indued with necessarie guifts 14 Now the guifts whereby the holy Ghost doth properlie distinguish the church from the world are those vnrepentant guifts which hee bestoweth onlie vpon his elect namelie the effectuall enlightning of their minde and the guift of perseuerance the effect whereof is true faith applying Christ with all his benefites vnto the saluation of euerie one that beleeueth seuerallie whereunto is vnseparablie joined sanctification whereby wee are drawne sincearlie to loue God and our neighbour 15 That worke which was the most excellēt of al other namelie both the creation of the fleshe of Christ in the wombe of the Virgine and also his most perfect sanctification whereby his humanitie was annointed with all kinde of gifts that were meet to performe the office of the Mediatour proceeded from the same power Wee detest therefore all those who denie that the holie Ghost is to bee worshipped by one and the selfe same faith and inuocation with the Father and the Sonne those who hold that hee proceedeth onlie from the Father together with such as denie him to be coaeternall and coessentiall with the Father as the Macedonians the Arrians those who distinguish him from the Father onlie in name and not in person as the Sabellians those also who affirme him to bee but some created motion and power to be breif we detest al those that do anie wise withstand either the true coessentiall and coaeternal Deitie of the holie Ghost or his proceeding from the Father and the Sonne Defended by IOHN NISSOLIVS Semenensis Occitanus PRINCIPLES VPPON THE ARTICLE I BELEEVE THAT THERE IS A HOLY CATHOLICK CHVRCH L. 1 OMitting in this place the questiō whether there be a Church or no as an vnnecessarie point we will rather see what the Church is 2 The word CHVRCH taken from the common custome of publick affaires where the people beeing called by the voice of a cryer did meet together began euen from the verie time of the Apostles the name of Sinagogues being left vnto the Iewish conuentions to be applied vnto their meetings who embracing the voice of the Gospell were wont to haue publick assemblies for the vse of Religion 3 Now the thing it self signified by this word is drawn farther that is to expresse the companie of those who being raised vp from the
elect in particuler are common vnto all the Saints in respect of the vse which is the communion of Saints in this life 15 Yea and the vse of these graces if it may be ought to reach euen vnto them that are without as farre as the glorie of God and the edification of the Church doth permit both because often times many of the elect lie hid amongst them and also because wee must bee like our heauenly Father who maketh his Sunn to rise vpon the good and bad 16 This Communion begun here vpon earth shal then after that those thinges which belong vnto the vse of this life are abollished be perfected in that aeternall kingdom when as faith being chaunged into a full knowledge hope into the injoying of the thinges hoped for and charitie being made perfect God shall be all in all his Saints Now the Communion of Merites either amongst the Saints liuing heere togeather or betweene the Militant and the Triumphant church is both most false and also blasphemous as also the very opinion of merrites is a meere forged vntruth Defended by IOHN WTENBOGAERT a Low-country man of Vtrick PRINCIPLES CONCERNING THE WORD OF GOD. LII 1 VVE haue dealt in the former principles with the Church and it hath bene said that the notes of the true Church were the Word of God and the Sacraments now wee will deale with these notes and first of all with the former of them 2 The word of God which is the first note wee cal in this place not whatsoeuer GOD hath spoken but those things onlie which the Prophetes and Apostles inspired by Gods Spirite haue in times past as taught by worde so committed to writing those things which being comprehended in the bookes of the ould and new Testament are as yet vnto this day after so manie warres slaughters ouerthrowes extant in Gods Church in which bookes God hath declared both what he will haue vs to know cōcerning him and what is to be done of vs. 3 God onelie is to bee acknowledged the authour of these bookes whence the whole Scripture is said by PAVL to bee giuen by the inspiration of God and is also called the word of God And therefore it is vnlawfull to call into question or to refuse anie thing that is contained therein as also to bring in anie thing that is not written in the same Detestable therefore was that peruersnes of the Marcionites Manichaees the Valentinians and of all such as refused either all or some of the bookes of the newe Testament 4 These writings by the singular prouidence of God haue long since beene brought by the Church into a certaine order and Cannon that they might bee discerned from counterfaite yea and all other bookes and that they should bee a rule of faith and obedience that should haue credite of it self and hence they are called Cannonicall Other bookes whosoeuer haue beene the authours of them though they contain manie wholsome profitable things are yet but accounted the writings of priuate men neither haue they their credite of themselues but as far as they agree with the former bookes and no otherwise They therefore both haue and at this day doe most greuouslie offend who take away this difference and affirme that the bookes of the APOCRYPHA are to haue no lesse credite in the establishing of Religion then the Cannonical Scripture of which number are the Tridentine conspiratours 5 This Scripture we acknowledge to be cannonicall and authentick not so much by the common consent of the Church as by the testimonie of the Spirite of God who teacheth vs that they are to be embraced as beeing most vndoubtedlie true and such as haue proceeded from Gods own mouth 6 Now these holie books do whollie containe al those thinges that are needfull for our saluation in somuch that it is altogether vnlawfull to exspect for anie supplie of this doctrine for the Scripture as PAVLE doth expreslie teach is able to make the man of God absolute Most greeuous therefore is their errour who thinke that the liuelie and the sauing knowledge of God is to be else where sought then in the written word and doe therefore thrust vnto vs their vnwritten falshoods out of the which they will haue necessarie arguments to bee drawne in the cause of faith and religion 7 The naturall and proper interpretation of this holy Scripture is to be drawne from the analogie of faith and the conference of places For that which is darcklie in one place is in an other clearelie taught that which heere is shortlie is elsewhere largelie set down and so the Woord is the rule and the interpretour of it selfe They are deceauers therefore who say that the right and authoritie of expounding the worde of God is in their power as though it were lawfull for them to interpret anie place as they think good 8 Neither are the expositions of auncient Doctors to bee receaued as vndoubted anie farther then they agree with the truth for PAVLE doth command vs that we giue eare or consent vnto none whosoeuer he be that teacheth anie other doctrine Wee cannot allow therefore of their opinion who wil haue the interpretation of the fathers as they call thē to haue credite of themselues 9 It is true indeed that some places of the Scripture remaine euen vnto this day so obscure and hard to bee interpreted as the verie best and most faithfull interpretours haue not agreed among themselues vpō their proper meaning but in these things euery man is to acknowledge his owne ignorance sluggishnes or some other fault and the Scripture is so plentifull that the one and the selfe same place can admit diuers interpretations and yet all agreable with the doctrine of faith 10 This notwithstanding is most certaine that the grounds and necessarie heades of Christian Religion are so clearely set downe by the Prophets and Apostles as the Spirite of God woorking in the Saincts they are manifestlie perceaued in the Church And therefore wee doe not agree vnto them who thinke the Scripture so obscure as it needeth to be made cleare by some other light Nowe this light they will haue without exception to bee drawne from that pretended Catholick Church that is either from the fathers from the Synods or from some long custome of time as though the Scripture had not beene vnderstood before either the Fathers or the Synodes were 11 This Word of God is to be dailie meditated vppon and all men of what estate soeuer they bee ought most diligentlie to read the same for no man is to be bereaued of that meanes whereby hee is to be instructed in the knowledge and the sure way of his saluation Wee cannot therefore but condemne the Papistes in this point also who holde it vnlawfull for laie-men as they call them to employ themselues in the reading of the Word 11 Now that the vnlearned and vnskilfull may with fruit bee conuersant in the reading heereof it is needfull that
5 The principall and chief end therefore of the holie Ministerie in respect of saluation was alwaies one namelie the laying open of Gods goodnes touching the saluatiō of men by meanes of the free couenant made in Christ onelie who both before and vnder the rudiments of the Law was shadowed and manifested in deed in the fulnesse of time 6 Yet of this holie ministerie both before and vnder the law there were three generall parts namely to teach to sacrifice to blesse as might be shewed by many testimonies of the scripture vnder the name of sacrifice we vnderstand all sorts of rites as vnder the name of blessing wee containe publike prayers 7 Of the holy doctrine there haue beene two kindes namely the law denouncing judgement and death the Gospell offering life freelie giuen vnto the repentant 8 Yet is it not properlie the lawe but the transgression thereof that doth kill 9 The Legall ceremonies were certaine appurtenances both of the law and the Gospell wherin as in a glasse were to be seene though in a contrary regard both the cursse of the law and also the blessing of the Gospell 11 The ministery of Moses notwithstanding compared with the ministery of the Gospell is for three causes called the ministery of death The one because that the lawe written was giuē by Moses whereby death was more manifestly layde before the eyes of sinners then euer before 12 The other because Moses did labor much more in setting downe the Lawe then in opening the promises of the Gospell that men might learne by the terrors thereof to frame thē-selues vnto the receiuing of perfecter things that were to be manifested at the time appointed and not place the hope of saluation in these rites Thirdly because the Lawe indeed dooth point out the disease that bringeth death but doth not heale it yea rather encrease the same through our falt in that it requireth of vs the execution of the Commandements and giueth vs not abilitie to performe them 12 But in the Gospell the picture whereof in a sorte was that externall worshippe of the Lawe God giueth by his holy spirite the abilitie to performe the promise of the same that is the power to repent and belieue And therefore the preaching of the Gospell is called the spirite ingraffed in our heartes but the Lawe is tearmed the dead letter that is a dead writing engrauen in Tables of Stone 13 Wherefore the Ministery not onely of the olde but also of the newe Testament was ordained not by men but by the Lord who both instructed and also called both the Patriarches and also Moses Aaron to exercise the same and afterwarde declared to Moses the rule and the forme thereof as hee would haue it executed among his people wherevnto it was not lawefull to adde or to detract any thing 14 And because the Lord fore-sawe the negligence and the wickednes of the Priests hee did therefore ordaine in the auncient Church both before and vnder the lawe not onely an ordinary which vnder the lawe was especiallie assigned vnto the Tribe of Leuy but also an extraordinary that is a Propheticall ministerie vnto whome the Priests and Kings themselues were to yeld obedience and whose office was to teach the whole people partly by a more exquisite exposition of the lawe and partly by terrifiyng the disobedient by fearfull Reuelationes of Gods judgments and comforting the godlie by most louing promises 15 Their ministerie was extraordinarie for although there were certaine colledges of Prophets when and as often as it pleased God yet were they not apointed by man neither did they leane vpon any ordinarie calling Briefly God did enspire with his Spirite whome it pleased him respecting therein neither sex nor calling 16 Both these Ministeries did the Lorde promise vnto his people by MOSES and withall shewed how false Prophets whome the people were to take heede of might bee discerned from the true whome they were to heare 17 The Lord ordained this Ministerie of men not that he was compelled thereto by any necessitie but that therby he regarded mans infirmitie 18 Yet he neuer vsed it in such sort as hee would giue his owne glorie therevnto that is the authoritie to performe those thinges which the diuine power alone bringeth to passe but he effecteth externall things onely by his Ministerie performing those thinges by his owne inward power alone which were declared vnto the senses of the hearers by the outward ministerie of men 19 Therefore hee performeth what he thinkeh good inwardlie in the vnderstanding and will of man when and as often as it pleaseth him even without the externall ministerie but he who ever neglecteth the ordinarie ministerie or by vnbeleefe doth seuere the inwarde force from the outwarde administration that man tempteth God sheweth himself vnworthie of his grace But as for those that any wise ascribe the proper worke of God vnto the ministerie of men they are to bee accounted meere superstitious and even plaine Idolators Defended by ARON CAPEL an English-man of London PRINCIPLES TOVCHING THE MINISTERS OF THE WORDE VNDER THE GOSPEL LXXIII 1 BEcause God by means of his Ministers from the beginning of the world vnto this day hath with the word of life sustained man being fallen the order both of time and doctrine requireth that seeing we haue in the former Principles spoken of the Ministerie which God ordained in his Church both before and after the law We now deale with that Ministery which Christ after the abolishing of the law appointed in these last times to be in the Christian Church 2 And to the end that the summe and the truth of the whole matter may be more clearely set downe we affirme first of all that there are three sortes of Ecclesiasticall functions to be gathered out of the holie Scriptures For some doe attend vpon the preaching of the word of which sort were Apostles prophets Euangelists and at this day Pastors and Teachers Others haue the ouersight of the gathering and right distribution of the Church goods The third sort doe watch ouer the manners of men in preuenting offences and preseruing the right gouernement of the Church 3 Christ therefore as the Son and the soueraigne Lord and gouernor of his Fathers house did not only perfectlie set downe the doctrine of the couenant but also declared by what callings hee would haue his Fathers house that is the Church to be gouerned 4 And therefore he himselfe as PAVLE saith gaue for the worke of the Ministerie and the knitting togeather of the Saints some Apostles some Prophets some Euangelists some Pastors and Teachers 5 Neither is it to bee inferred either that all these callings were ordained to bee perpetually in the Church or yet on the other side that all of them were to continue but onely for a time 6 Now all these names as also the name of Elders and Deacons are sometimes in a general signification attributed vnto al those who haue the ministery of
abolish the authority of the Eldership doe pretend that men arrogate vnto themselues the authoritie of God and Christ in retaining or remitting sinnes Hence also it followeth that those Ecclesiastical censures are of no force which are exercised by those who were not appointed by God to be judges in that cause and wherein either the lawfull triall of the cause hath not gone before or the sentence hath exceeded those bounds within the which God will haue the authority of the Eldership to be contained much more are their censures of no effect who vnder the false pretence of Gods name do judge contrarie vnto his word 27 This manner of confession either before the Eldership or Presbyterie is so far from procuring any discredite with men vnto the offender that contrariwise it restoreth the sinner who dooth repent vnto that dignity and excellencie amongst Christians whereunto they are promoted who are made the sonnes of God Defended by BARNARD MORLANVS of Bearne PRINCIPLES CONCERNING THE MAGISTRACIE LXXVIII WEE HAVE HITHERTO SPOKEN CONcerning that gouernment which is properlie spirituall and meerelie Ecclesiastick it followeth that wee now deale with that which is directlie Ciuill 1 SEing Ecclesiasticall discipline doth according to the word of God alone take order with offences and that there are manie stubborne and obstinat persons to be found who cannot be drawne vnto the way by anie admonitions or censures of the Church either in regarde of pietie or yet of common quietnes an other remedy was to be prouided whereby this vntamed brutish vnrulines of men might be healed 2 This remedie is in their hands vnto whome a kinde of supreame power hath euer since the beginning of the world bene ascribed and in whose power the soueraigne gouernment hath bene alwaies in making of those lawes wherby the ciuill societie of men should be maintained 3 It is manifest by the common consent of men who haue rightlie judged that good lawes and their maintainers and defenders haue bene the worke of Gods Prouidence that this Ciuill power was not iustituted by men for the hurt of man but ordained by God for the preseruation of mankind in such sort as the Lord doth vouchsafe Magistrats to be called ELOHIM that is Gods 4 Of these formes of gouernments there are reckoned vp three sorts especiallie a Monarchie which is the gouernement of one aboue the rest an Aristocracie where many of the nobilitie best sort haue the gouernment in their hands and a Democratie where the same consisteth in the power of the whole people The Anabaptists therefore are to be detested who despise al gouernmēt speake euil of the superior powers vnder the pretence of a kinde of imaginarie perfection which stādeth not in need of the gouernmēt of any mā Their cauill is also friuolous wherby they goe about to proue that we can haue no vse of the Magistracy becaus we acknowledge Iesus Christ for our Lord and King by whose spirit we are led wheras the inward power which the Lorde exerciseth by the vertue of his Spirite in the consciences of his children doth not onlie exclude that outward dominiō which belongeth vnto the Magistrate as vnto Gods Liuetenaunt but doth establish the same 5 We affirme that the dutie of the Magistrate dooth extend it self vnto both the Tables of Gods law or as the Apostle saieth that it is their dutie to prouide that their subjects may not onlie liue peaceablie but also religiously But in a diuers respect and manner 6 For in respect of the first Table it is vnlawfull for the Magistrates to inuent anie lawes touching Religion but their dutie is to see that the worship of God be vnderstood and practised by their subjects as it is fullie set down in the sacred bookes of both the Testaments which haue bene written by the Apostles Prophetes and Euangelists 7 The Magistrates also are bound if necessitie so require to compel such as are in the Ecclesiastical function vnto the godlie and carefull performance of their dutie they are much more bound to punish blasphemers and such as either broach haeresies make a departure from the Church by schismes or brieflie doe anie wise endeuour to ouerthrow the truth of the Gospell together with those who will not suffer themselues to be called into the right way by the Censures of the Church 8 And if anie controuersie doe arise concerning the truth of doctrine vnto the appeasing wherof an extraordinarie meeting of the Pastors the Doctors of the Church seemeth needfull It is the dutie of the Magistrate to call a Synode to gather the Ministers together thereunto and to see that the whole controuersie bee decided according to the holie Scriptures and being decided that it bee extinguished and vtterlie put out The Pope therefore dooth thrust his sickle vnto other mens corne who doth licentiouslie arrogate vnto himself this power of summoning Councels at his owne pleasure which was in times past justlie exercised by the godlie Emperours and Kings 9 Now touching the second Table the Magistrates are to see that by their just lawes they be the protectours and defenders of publick innocencie modesty and tranquillitie that they maintaine the good from the injuries of the euill men and vphold by their help and power such as are oppressed brieflie that they haue a regard of the cōmon goods of all their subjects 10 This cānot be performed by them except they be endued with power might wherfore they are to be armed with the sword to the end that they suffer not those sins to remaine vnpunished which God and the behoofe of the Common-wealth require to be punished 11 Hence also wee vnderstand that when necessitie so compelleth them and when they cannot otherwise defend the Dominions committed vnto their gouernement they may lawfullie proclaime warre both that they may thereby keepe vnder the seditious practises of the vnbrideled Domesticall disturbers of the common peace and quietnes and deliuer their Dominions from the inuasions or anie other the attempts of their forraine enemies 12 For the vpholding of this burthen they may lawefullie require tributes and subsidies of the people whome they gouerne The annuall reuenues furthermore whereby the Magistrates doe maintaine the honour and magnificence of their daily port and traine beeing thinges in some sort joyned with the dignitie of the Gouernement which they beare are to be paied vnto them 13 It is their dutie also to publish the lawes and edicts which seeme necessarie for the right gouernment of the ciuill pollicie according to the circumstances of time place and persons 14 No vnchāgeable rule of these laws by reason of the varietie of circumstances can be set downe saue onely this one namely that they be leaueled and directed vnto Gods glorie and to the good of the subjects Wee doe therefore condemne those customes lawes and constitutions which decline from this aeternall rule of the honour of God and loue towards our neighbor and do permit either theft stewes or any such
signified The signes are water and the sacramentall rites which are a dipping into the water and a taking out of the same againe whence washing doth follow The thing signified is the blood of Christ vnto the remission of our sinnes and that spirituall and deuine force whereby wee are regenerated which regeneration consisteth partlye in the abolishing of the olde man which decaieth by little little and partlie in the creating of the new which is to be perfected by degrees 6 The formall cause of Baptisme consisteth in the lawfull vse of the institution the especiall part whereof is the inuocation of the name of the Father of the Sonne and of the holie Ghost together with the rite either of dipping into the water or of the sprinckling of the same 7 For it is not greatlie materiall whether the person that is to be baptised be whollie dipt vnder the water or whether the water bee onelie sprinkled either vppon his head or his face Vaine therefore and void is that washing where either Baptisme is not done into the name of the Father the Sonne and the holie Ghost or water is not vsed 8 Those vaine questions that haue risen from that false absolute necessitie of Baptisme as whether it be lawfull to baptize with distilled water with vrin or stale or with sand where naturall water cannot be gotten wee reject as absurd and ridiculous neither thinke we that any contention ought to be made whether the water is to bee once or thrise applied 9 It is not lawfull no not for any Angell in heauen to ordaine any Sacramentall rites seeing the signification of them doeth respect the promise of grace For it is in the power of GOD alone both to promise what hee thinketh good and also to establishe his promises by what signes it pleaseth him 10 They did greatly offend therefore who not contented with the simplicitie of the Lordes institution thought that they could adorne Baptisme by adding curious rites thervnto where as of the contrarieside the Lord will haue the Sacraments of the newe couenant which are opposed vnto the olde to be therefore most few and simple to the end that wee should so much the more readilie be drawen from these corporall and sensible things to the consideration of spirituall and heauenly matters I Those innumerable added trifles therefore which haue presentlie growen into manifest superstition and wherof some were added by the Papists as chrisme spittle Tapers wee haue justlie abollished though they be of antiquitie as being will-worship II Now as touching Exorcisme if by that name be vnderstood not the solemne couenant of Christianitie but the conjuring of Sathan and Spirites wee altogeather refuse the same as being rashly and foolishly drawen from those that were possessed with Diuels to be applied vnto men that were in their right wits and to the infants of Christians III Yet did not these spots though filthie and loathsom and therefore to be carefully abollished anihilate Baptisme as long as the essentiall forme thereof remained 11 The first that the Lorde appointed to publishe this action was IOHN therefore called the Baptist but the Author hereof is properly Christ who onely hath this authority in the house of his Father 12 Nowe the outward administration of this Sacrament as also the simple preaching of the worde hee hath committed vnto Pastors lawfully called Their error therefore is very greeuous who commit this office vnto priuate men and much more greeuous who giue women leaue to intermeddle in this action in the cause of necessitie as they call it 13 ALTHOVGH they are not to be accounted to haue a lawfull calling who haue inuaded the places of true Pastors either by a common error or by long permission yet are they to be DISTINGVISHED from meere priuat mē Therefore Baptisme administred by them according to the forme appointed by Christ is to stand Yet are not they to be excused who now that the holy Ministerie is in some sort reformed doe as farre as in them lyeth confirme the false calling of these men by giuing their children to be Baptized of them 14 To the end in the mean time that all these things may bee lawfully done they are to be so performed in the Church as it may be vnderstood what is done therfore a certaine forme togeather with meet conuenient praiers is to be vsed in the vulgar tongue which may declare the originall vse and end of Baptisme Therefore also Baptisme is profaned by them who either administer the same without any exposition or depraue the administration thereof by some false worshippe or administer it in a straunge and an vnknowen tongue Although it be true Baptisme as long as that remaineth which is the chiefe thing therein namelie the signe and the right inuocation of the Father the Son and the holy Ghost for Baptisme doth neither depend vppon the faith nor yet is defiled by the sinnes of him that administreth it but is grounded onely vppon the ordinance of the Sonne of God 15 The Analogie furthermore of the signes and the things signified is manifest For the element of water vsed for the washing of the outwarde filthines doth most fitlie represent that blood which was shead for the taking away of the sinnes of the world and applied to purifie vs Briefelie that either dipping into or sprinckling of the water though it bee but done in a short space doth yet clearelie represent the first part of our regeneration that is the sealing of our inward and spirituall ingraffing into Christ his death and buriall whereby our olde man togeather with all our sinnes being by little and little brought to decay is altogeather buried Last of all in that hee who is baptized whether hee bee dipt vnder the water or sprinckled with the same doth yet rise again it laieth open as it were before our eies the remission of our sinnes and the rising againe of our new man 16 The proper end of Baptisme is that by this solemne and holy action wee might bee knowen by the testimony of men and Angels to bee in the number of the visible Church also that by meanes of this action the adoption of the elect might to their full assurance bee more more sealed by the holy Ghost in their hearts 17 The principall efficient cause heereof is the holie Ghost who in his good time doth inwardly performe that which by the word of promise accompanied with outward signes is declared vnto the mind Whence also may be gathered what are the effects of Baptisme 18 Now the instrumental cause of the efficacie of baptisme is the very same that maketh the worde alone to bee powerfull namly faith wrought by the holy Ghost throgh the hearing of the word in those that are of age I Their error therefore is intollerable who dreame that there is any diuine power either in the water or in the rites of Baptisme seeing that whole efficacie is solie the worke of the holie Ghost which can
bee communicated vnto no creature II Now whereas in the Scriptures and in the writing of the Fathers that is sometimes ascribed vnto the outwarde Baptisme which is properlie belonging vnto the inward or that vnto the signe which appertaineth vnto the thing signified or to the Minister which is proper vnto the holy Ghost alone this commeth to passe not because that that thing which is the onely worke of the power of God can bee any waies transferred to any other thing but that the truth of that which is signified by the Sacrament may in regard of God who promiseth be knowen to be alwaies present III They are also greatly deceiued who thinke that Baptisme was properly and chiefly ordained to the end that Christians might by that outward mark be discerned from all other people 19 Now the signes themselues haue no other force then of Sacramentall signification that is to call the thing signified not onely vnto our remembrance but also offer the same vnto vs to be receiued by faith 20 Seeing Regeneration wherof Baptisme is the pledge is onely begun in the Saints the jangling Sophisters doe greeuouslie erre who thinke that originall sinne which is the corruption of nature is altogether taken away by baptisme and that by the worke wrought that is by the verie action of Baptisme and that it is abollished from the verie same moment that Baptisme is receiued neither will they haue that fire of concupiscence which remaineth in those that are baptized to be accounted a sinne Defended by ANTHONY THYSIVS a Low-countrey man THE SECOND PART OF THE PRINCIPLES CONCERNING BAPTISME LIX WEE HAVE DISPVTED IN THE FORmer Principles touching the causes and effects of Baptism it followeth that wee deale with those things touching the same argument which wee referred vnto this Disputation 1 THe subject of Baptisme is hee who is baptized And all those are to bee baptized who in regard of likelihood are contained within the couenant of God 2 Now the infants that are the progenie of beleeuing Parents and also those who beeing of full age doe offer themselues vnto the church by making profession of their faith and yeelding their consent vnto the Doctrine therein prefessed are to be accounted within the couenant 3 We holde that they who are of full age are not to be receiued vnto baptisme before such time as they be instructed and haue yeelded a confession of their true faith together with a protestation that they will lead a better life Because for more assurance the confession of the mouth is to be required at their hands 4 Touching infants seeing our adoption doth not depend vpon our selues or vpon any outward thing but onely vpon the election of God which began to be manifested at our very conception by vertue of that couenant I will be thy God and the God of thy seed and againe I will be the God of those that feare me vnto a thousand generations And although that infants be not indued with actuall faith which is by hearing yet doe wee at this day justlie baptize as in times past they were circumcised the infants of the Saints because they are comprehended with in the couenaunt of aeternall life by meanes of the faith of their Parents 5 It maketh nothing against this point that al who are borne of faithfull Parents are not elected For if this reason might preuaile wee would hardly be drawen to admit those that are of yeares Seeing all that professe are not elected It is not our part to enquire into those secrete mysteries of God but wee may justlie presuppose that both all their children who professe Christianitie and all those also who being of full yeares doe make profession of true faith are elected vnto aeternall life 6 Whereas euery man is said to bee saued by his owne faith and not by another mans it is to be vnderstood onely of those that are of yeares and we cannot allow of the opinion concerning the actuall faith of infants But leauing vnto God his secrete judgements wee doubt not but that the faithfull Parents doe according vnto the condition of the couenant apprehend the promise both to themselues and also to their children 7 Now the Sacramental adding of the seale doth presuppose that which is sealed to be present indeed namely that the partie baptized is by likelihoode comprehended within the couenant 8 If no wel ordered Church did euer admit either Iews or Turkes being of yeares or any other the professed enemies of Christ vntill they had beene catechised and made open profession of Christianitie much lesse cann any receiue their children but with the manifest profanation of Baptisme 9 Touching Papistes wee are in some sort to thinke otherwise of them in asmuch as wee may justly presuppose that the Church doeth as yet remaine within the filthines of Poperie in respect of the elect that are in their time to be drawen out of that mire because that the seale of christianitie though defiled with many spots and staines hath continued among them in the substantiall forme thereof as also the doctrine of Christianitie in respect of the Trinity and the person of Christ And therefore we are of judgment that the children of Papistes may bee receiued vnto Baptisme if either one of the Parents do require the same or som man be present that wil promise their right bringing vp 10 It is a great error to tie saluation vnto the outward Sacramentes as though they were absolutelie necessarie therevnto which the Papistes themselues that are of anie sound judgement doe not altogeather holde And on the other side hee that despiseth the marke of the couenant is justlie guiltie of aeternall death And therefore it is not the want but the contempt of Baptisme that is damnable the which sinne as also all other may bee done away by true repentance 11 Now he cannot be accounted a contemner of Baptisme who wanted oportunitie to receiue the same lawfullie And therefore wee doe cast away these cases of necessitie and all the corruptions brought into the Church vpon this occasion as being the inuentions of men 12 The effects of Baptisme administred either vnto infants or vnto those that are of age is not to be tied vnto the verie time of the administration thereof For the seede both of the worde and also of the Sacraments lieth as it were buried in the earth as long as it pleaseth God to deferre his grace 13 Now seeing wee are baptized for our whole life after and that Christ doeth neuer cast away those that were giuen him it followeth that Baptisme is not to be itterated We doe therefore condemne Rebaptization neither can wee in this point allow of CYPRIAN and the Affricane Churches and especiallie of that false and dangerous opinion which holdeth that the remission of sins past is onely sealed by Baptisme whence it came to passe that some did very carelesly defer Baptisme vnto their last end 14 The Baptisme of IOHN and of Christ was one and the