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A01637 The summe of Christian doctrine written originally in Latine by John Gerhard ... and translated by Ralph Winterton ...; Aphorismi succinct et selecti. English Gerhard, Johann, 1582-1637.; Winterton, Ralph, 1600-1636. 1640 (1640) STC 11769.5; ESTC S4062 111,557 338

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marrie one another 42 But between the Wife and the Kindred of the Husband as also between the Husband and the Kindred of the Wife there is such Affinitie that they may not marry one another 43 Therefore according to the Constitutions of all Lawes in a right Line Prohibition extends it self Infinitely 44 In a Collaterall ●ine by the Provinciall Lawes Prohibition is extended to the Third degree 45 And it respects not onely Consanguinitie but also Affinitie 46 And it is good counsel vvhich is given by Ictus That in joyning together in matrimonie we are not onely to consider what is Lawfull but also what is Honest 47 The Principall end of marriage is the propagation of mankind and of the Church consequently 48 The Lesse-Principall ends are That the Man and the Wife may be mutuall and faithfull helps the one to the other and that they may be a Type of Christ and his Church 49 The Accidentall end is The avoiding of fornication 50 For what before the fall was instituted for an Office or Duty after the fall became an Help or Remedie 51 Before Matrimonie not without good reason there must go Betrothing 52 Which is the Promise of future Marriage 53 After Betrothing there may be a Separation for sundry causes● vvhich are to be judged in the Consistories by godly learned and prudent men 54 In generall we say that Refusals may be made for more causes and reasons then Divorces may 55 For many things may hinder Matrimonie to be contracted vvhich cannot dissolve it vvhen it is contracted 56 Matrimonie is dissolved by Death and by Adulterie 57 By Adultery the very Knot of Matrimonie is dissolved insomuch that the party innocent may marrie again 58 Hierome thinks that the Adulteresse may not be retained Augustine thinks that she may not be dismissed and put away But we go in a middle vvay 59 If one party forsake the other and go away out of malice the Magistrate doth well in providing and taking care for the partie innocent 60 But still we must remember Christs Exclusive That there is no other just Cause of Divorce but onely Adultery 61 A Statute speaking Exceptively is not extended to other causes Bald. Lib. 28. C. de Adult 62 Inhabilitie of body for the use of Matrimonie doth not make a Divorce but it shevves that no true Matrimony vvent before 63 It is proved by this Argument Because that Inhabilitie happening after marriage doth not admit of a Divorce 64 We may judge the like concerning any errour in the Substantialls 65 Violence is counted equall to Desertion 66 That Matrimonie is to be dissolved for Heresie we do not hold neither do we grant it 67 Virginitie is Subordinate to Wedlock for chastitie in both states is pleasing unto God 68 The Apostle preferres Virginitie before Wedlock to wit in idoneous and fit persons which have the Gift of Continencie not absolutely but in some respect by reason of troubles which follow those that are married and the circumstances of times 69 The yoke of Virginitie is not to be imposed upon any against their wills for all are not able to bear it 70 Therefore it is free for all to marrie But as for those that burn it is necessarie 71 If the Spirit voluntarily make thee a Virgin then art thou a Virgin indeed There is no need of a Vow or any Coaction 72 If thou art a Virgin upon Coaction before God thou art no Virgin neither doth thy Vow profit thee 73 Virginitie of Body vvithout Virginitie of Mind is but Hypocriticall 74 Which is not to be compared vvith Holy Wedlock but is to be put farre after it 75 It profits nothing to keep the Body Impolluted without and to have the Mind Fuming and Flaming with lusts within 76 What doth it profit to have the Flesh sound and the Mind corrupted 77 And yet what one of a thousand is there of those that Vow Virginitie which keeps his body altogether impolluted 78 But certainly there is not any that hath his Mind free from the burning of lust within 79 Paul himself that great Apostle would here make no Law nor cast a snare upon any man 80 It were to be wished therefore that they which cannot contain themselves would not give up their na●● to Virginitie and vow to live a single life It is a sumptuous ●ower and ● great word which all cannot receive Bern. Serm. ad Cler. 81 I know no woman and ye● I am no Virgin Cassianus cites this saying out of Basil Lib. 6. de Spir. fornic 82 A good man useth Wedlock well But an evil man useth neither Wedlock nor Virginitie well 83 Christ who is the Bridegroom of the Church be present by his grace with all those that are married that they may lead a godly life and vouchsafe at length to bring us all unto the celestiall-Marriage Amen CHAP. XXIII ¶ Wherein are contained Theologicall Aphorismes concerning the foure last things Death the Resurrection the Judgement and the Place either of Eternall Joy or of Eternall Torment WE have seen the estate of Christs Church Militant here on Earth It remains now that we lift up our minds and elevate our thoughts to the consideration of the Church Tr●umphant in the Heavens 2 The Passage of the godly out of the Militant Church into the Church Triumphant is by the gate of Death In which consideration Gregorie Nyssen in his oration concerning Death wittily compareth it to a Midwife which brings us forth into another world unto a life truly so called 3 After Death follows the Judgement whose Forerunner is the Universall Resurrection It is appointed unto all men once to die but after this follows the Judgement Hebr. 9.27 4 They that have done good shall come forth into the resurrection of life and they that have done evil unto the resurrection of damnation John 5.29 5 Foure things there are which are called a mans last the consideration whereof should never depart out of our memorie and these are they Death the Resurrection the Judgement and the Eternall Mansion and habitation of the godly in Heaven and the damned in Hell 6 By the name of Death here we understand not the continuall Miseries of this present life 1. Cor. 15.31 Nor the Death of the Soul in trespasses and sinnes Ephes 2.5 Nor that Blessed Death by which being dead unto sinne that is freed and delivered from the dominion thereof so from damnation we live unto God Rom. 6.2 Nor that Eternall Death or second death of the damned Revel 2.11 7 But we understand the Death of the Body which is the separation of Soul from Body the privation of carnall life and the passing away of the little World 8 He that Dies unto Vices before he dies the Death of the Body doth not die an Eternall Death when he dies the Death of the Body Sphinx Phil. Cap. 36. 9 By the gate of Sinne Death entred into the World and so passed upon all men Rom. 5.12 10 Which Death
that they digresse from the opinion of their predecessors for they held the Essentiall conversion of the Bread and Wine into the Body and Bloud of Christ they do also involve and intangle themselves in very great difficulties 40 For whosoever saith that one substance is converted into another when it onely succeeds in the place thereof he abuseth names 41 Who ever said that Nothing vvas transubstantiated into Heaven or that the Day is transubstantiated into Night 42 But if the Body of Christ is made of the Bread after the same manner as Wine vvas made of Water it followes That the Essence of the Bread is converted into the Body of Christ that the accidents of the Bread do perish that the Masse-Priests by the same power do turn the Bread into the Body of Christ as Christ turned the Water into Wine And so they become the Creatours of their Creatour and Makers of their Maker Stella Clericorum 43 It vvas a Sacrament that Christ vvould institute and not a New creation It was the Communion of his Body and Bloud by the externall Elements of Bread and Wine that Christ would institute and not the Transubstantiating of them into an heavenly matter 44 And that it may appear hovv little or no foundation there is for Transubstantiation in these Words of Christ This is my Body We vvill pas● by all others and heare onely vv●● Biel the Compiler of School-Divin●tie saith concerning this matter 45 Thus saith he Lib. 4. Sent. Di● 11. q. 1. Art 3. Dub. 1. All Affirmati●● Propositions in which the Terms s●●nifying Bread and Wine are put int● Nominative case are false As Brea● is the Body of Christ That which Bread is was shall or can be the B●dy of Christ. He disputes upon th● Hypothesis of Transubstantiation Again Those Propositions are tr●● in which the Term à Quo or From whence that is the Bread and th● Wine is expressed by the Ablative c●● with a Preposition Ex or De Of ●● From or the Term ad Quem or Whereunto that is the Body and Blou● of Christ is expressed by the Accus●tive case with a Preposition So the these Propositions if they be foundin● Scripture are true Of Bread is mad● the Body of Christ Of Wine is made th● Bloud of Christ and these likevvise a● true if they be found in Scripture Bread is changed converted or Transubstantiated into the body of Chris● c. So saith Biel. 46 Therefore down falls all their work vvhich for the rearing up of their tower of Transubstantiation they build upon these vvords of Christ For there is not any place to be found in Scripture vvhere Christ saith Of this bread is made my Body Of this Wine is made my Bloud 47 Upon their Transubstantiation ●he superstructure is The Reposition or laying up Circumgestation or carry●ng about Adoration or worshipping of the externall Elements Therefore we may passe the same judgement upon them 48 The second Sacramentall action ●s the Distribution before which goes Fraction or breaking of the ●read 50 Whether the bread be broke before the blessing or after it matters not much if so be that it be distri●uted 51 For the breaking of the bread ●oth not constitute a peculiar Sacramentall act but it is an act of the Minister preparing it to be distribu●ed 52 Again It neither addes to nor ●akes from the integrity and perfection of the Sacrament whether the externall Elements of bread and wine be given into the hands or put into the mouthes of the Communicants 53 For we are alwaies to distinguish between the Thing and the Manner of the thing Giving and the Manner of giving 54 The Third Sacramentall action is eating and drinking which hath not respect unto the bread onely and apart or to the vvine onely and apart but unto that Bread which is the communion of the Body of Christ and to that Wine vvhich is the communion of the Bloud of Christ 1. Cor. 10.16 55 This eating is neither merely naturall nor merely spirituall but Sacramentall depending on the Sacramentall union of the bread and body of Christ 56 As therefore the Sacramentall union by which in the true and lavvfull use the body of Christ is united vvith the bread and the bloud of Christ is united with the vvine So also the Sacramentall eating and drinking depends on the institution of Christ vvho is true and omnipotent but it cannot be comprehended by humane reason neither must it curiously be searched into 57 If then thou opposest the spirituall eating to the naturall carnall physicall locall and Capernaiticall then rightly do vve say that the eating of the body of Christ with the bread is spirituall 58 But if by spirituall eating thou understandest that vvhereof John speaketh in the sixth chapter that appertaineth to the fruit of the Supper and therefore undoubtedly not to the essence thereof 59 The end of the Holy Supper is set down in these vvords of Christ Do this in remembrance of me 1. Cor. 11.24 60 Which remembrance hath respect unto the words foregoing to vvit How that body is eaten in the Supper vvhich was delivered to death for us and that bloud is drunk which on the altar of the crosse was poured forth for our sinnes 61 From vvhence it appeareth that the primary and principall end of the Holy Supper is the confirming of our faith 62 Which comprehendeth in it these fruits That in the true and saving use of the Holy Supper the promise of the forgivenesse of sinnes is sealed unto us That the grace received in Baptisme ● confirmed in us That the covenant of friendship and reconciliation between God and Man is renevved in us That vve are again ingrafted into Christ and That vve are fed vvith incorruptible food by faith unto everlasting life 63 To speak all in few vvords These taken and drunk by us make Christ to abide in us and us in him Hilar. El de Trinit 64 The bread in the Eucharist is called by Ignatius The Medicine of immortalitie and an Antidote against the poison of sinne By Basil it is called The viaticum or viand of eternall life and an Apologie which is well accepted before the judgement-seat of God By Damascen it is called The pledge of the kingdome and the life to come 65 Lesse-principall ends we may reckon up many For by the use of this Sacrament we approue unto God our Obedience unto Christ our Thankfull remembrance of his great benefit unto Men our Repentance our Consent in doctrine and our earnest studie and desire after Love and Charitie 66 But that this mystery is either a Propitiatorie or Impetratorie sacrifice this vve utterly deny 67 For there is but one Priest of the New Testament one Propitiatorie sacrifice one oblation 68 Unto the use of the Holy Supper are to be admitted onely Christians and such Christians as can trie and examine themselves 1. Cor. 11.28 69 From hence is to be understood what we may judge of notorious sinners vvhich vvill not
full is he of Scripture Fathers and Schoolmen Concerning my self I can say no more but this for I know not how to complement I am and ever shall be in all hearty affection Your servant RALPH WINTERTON ¶ To the Translatour of Gerhards Aphorismes DO Let the Antichristian Clergy keep Their Owl-ey'd Laitie pris'ners in the deep And horrid shades of everlasting night Whil'st thy clear beams and more illustrious light Disperse these clouds of Language display The close-drawn Curtains of thy new-born day Shine forth bright Lamp and chase these shades of night Truth seeks no corners Errour baulks the light Ed. Benlowes ¶ To the Reader concerning the Authour and Interpreter of this Book BEhold choice Aphorismes here like rings beset With Pearls lockt up in this rich Cabinet If worth not number doth commend the store Viewing but one me thinks I need no more Yet in this volume many hundreds dwell And every one 's a volume to live well Each leafe's a perfect book each line is such Each part 's enough yet not the whole too much Gerhard his Aphorismes like starres do shine Thou giv'st them lustre let me cal them thine Most bright themselves by thee they shine most bright As if the sun had borrow'd greater light Apollo needs not to renew his fame Who twice is made immortall by thy name Dove William son Fellow of Kings Colledge Upon the Golden Chain of divine Aphorismes AS no such Maladie so no such Balm Like that which can the souls distempers calm What soul is not diseas'd How hard to find A salve to cure diseases of the mind This Winterton hath found Who but he knew That such an herb in Gerhards Herball grew No Empirick no Chymicks daring Heart Who sets poore Nature on the wrack of Art Descri'd such med'cines Sure in this he can Approve himself a true Physician Each Aphorism's an antidote to thee ' Gainst the old Serpents sting the book may be A Garden richly stored in which place Grows the true Hearts-ease and the Herb of grace These now translated are because 't is ghest That plants translated ofttimes thrive the best He then undoubtedly thrice happy is Who being immur'd from men can chuse out this Garden to be his prison Who would disdain Thus to be fetter'd in a Golden Chain Robert Newman Fellow of Kings Colledge MOst men that put forth Books have this main art First for their Credit then their better Mart With Title fair with fine Inscription To deck their work their onely Minion This man forsooth with Antalthea's Horn Doth of his Book the Frontispice adorn This writes A Honycombe A third doth call His works the Pandects as comprising all The Muses here the Reader waiting stand There is an Enchiridion for his hand Such Titles serve to please the Readers eye And strangers do invite the books to buy But yet alas within what do they find Scarce ought that can content or ease the mind The Pandects having all cannot the Will The Enchiridion scarce the Hand doth fill The Hony cloyes The Horn is quickly dry At best The Muses do but sweetly lie Take then into thy hands Gerhard divine Who saving doctrine hath in every line He in his text more truth doth comprehend Then others Titles vainly do pretend In him all Authours are both new and old Fathers and School-men faithfully caroll'd If all these Authours severally do please How then shall he who joyntly hath all these Henry Whiston Fellow of Kings Colledge WHo list to glance a gentle look Upon The Golden Chain this book As in a Crystall first may see The secrets of Eternitie Such as in Time should come to passe Decreed by God before Time was Such as transcend the Hearts desire And onely Silence can admire But next doth entertain the fight An Embleme of our wofull plight He that ere long Heav'ns darling was Gods Archetype Mans Looking-Glasse Which being dimm'd Nature no more To its first brightnesse could restore He that enjoy'd so rare a Blisse Made happy with a Paradise Behold him now cast out from thence Disrob'd of milky Innocence Poore naked man naked alas Who onely cloth'd with fig-leaves was But Jesse's Branch our souls arraid And wrapt our sinnes in mercies shade Since when is ceast that fatall strife Of tree of Knowledge and of Life One Book contains them let one breast Reade Know enjoy Eternall rest Thomas Page Fellow of Kings Colledge ¶ The Translatour to the Reader THis book when first I read it pleas'd me well I sought another There was none to sell When others read it they were of my mind They sought as I for what they could not find Had not it been by me interpreted For ought I know it might have perished Was 't not great pity that a book so good By English men should not be understood I challenge nothing but what is mine own Had not one been I never had it known 'T was Mr. Carew that did give it mee I in plain English Reader give it thee He lov'd good books and often turn'd them ore I think no young man of his time had more He liv'd as if he lookt alwayes to die And died to passe to immortalitie I flatter not A dead man I commend Who godly liv'd and made a godly end He 's now with God in blest eternitie But late was one of our Societie He was my friend whilst we did live together And once my friend he is my friend for ever Reader this book was Gerhards Carews Mine Now 't is a common good therefore Thine The Contents of this Book in Verse BEfore Time was here are Divine decrees Fulfill'd in Time and after Promises To be fulfill'd when Time shall cease to be And in its place succeed Eternity Reader Behold the Worlds Nativity And Adam in his happy Infancy He was created at the first Upright His Understanding filled was with Light His Will with God's did hold Conformitie And his Affections kept good Harmonie Yet such he was that he might sta●d or fall He fell We feel 't In him we perisht all His Understanding Will Affections All Lost what they had at their Originall His Understanding was depriv'd of Sight And Darknesse did succeed in place of Light His Will fell from the first Conformitie And tended altogether to Obliquitie His jarring did Affections disagree And Discord did break off their Harmonie His Body which disease none knew before Let in diseases now at every Pore His Body made Immortall for to be Became now Subject to Mortalit●e And thus he was depriv'd of Endlesse joyes And plung'd into Eternall Miseries By Nature such are we which from him come Blind Crooked Froward from our mothers wombe Conceiv'd in sinne Born in iniquitie Acting in Life a Sinfull Tragedie We for our Parts deserve no other due But Death and that of Soul and Body too But God of his mere Mercie promised The Womans Seed should break the Serpe●●s head He gave his Law a Glasse for man to
before we are born Bern. in Med. cap. 2. Col. 1190. 51 Evil concupiscence in which the power and force of originall sinne doth chiefly appear is not onely the punishment and cause of sinne but it is also sin it self 52 For there is in it disobedience and rebellion against the dominion and law of the mind Aug. lib. 5. contra Julian cap. 3. 53 Neither hath the vice of evil concupiscence place in the inferiour faculties of the soul onely but also in the superiour 54 For the will of a man not yet regenerate is prone to evil and to vanities 55 Amongst the works of the flesh these are reckoned Heresies Idolatrie Strife Variance c. Gal. 5.20 56 From whence we may gather evidently That the Flesh is to be taken for the whole man such as he is since the fall without the grace of God and regeneration 57 By Originall sinne the whole nature of man was most intimately and inwardly corrupted But yet we must distinguish between the vice and the very substance of man For the substance of man is the good work of God and Nature 58 Sinne is an evil Adjunct or evi● present with me saith S. Paul Rom. 7.21 Therefore it is not any thing consisting or subsisting of it self 59 Men are conceived in sinne Therefore they are not very sinne i● self 60 The whole man is the subject o● originall sin with all the powers of th● soul and members of the body 61 Originall righteousnesse was no● onely an equall and just temperamen● of the body but also a rectitude of al● the powers of the soul and an intrinsecall ornament 62 So Originall sinne which succeeded in the place of originall righteousnesse is not any diseased qualitie of body but an infection of all the powers of the soul 63 For Habit and Privation are to be considered with reference to the same Subject 64 This evil is propagated by carnall generation 65 Therefore Man since the fall is flesh because he is born of flesh John 3.6 He is by nature the child of wrath Ephes 2.3 By being born then he contracts sinne for which he becomes the childe of wrath 66 Whosoever therefore are born of parents according to carnall generation are also guilty of originall sinne 67 Therefore euen the children of the faithfull and those that are born again bring this originall sinne and pollution with them into this world 68 For it is Regeneration and not Generation that maketh Christians August 3. de peccat merit remiss cap. 9. 69 Men are made and not born Christians Tertull. in Apol. cap. 17. 70 Onely He was born without sinne who without the seed of man was conceived by the Holy Ghost in the wombe of the Virgin 71 He is not infected with the pollution of sinne who was born holy and sanctified from the sanctified wombe of the Virgin 72 To the participation of this priviledge and dignitie that is To be free from Originall sinne we do not admit the blessed Virgin herself 73 We say That the glorious Virgin Mary conceived by the Holy Ghost not That she was conceived by the Holy Ghost We say That a Virgin brought forth not That she was brought forth of a Virgin Bern. Epist 174. ad Lugdun 74 Some effects of Originall sinne are onely punishments some are both punishments and sinnes 75 Punishments are both Temporall and Eternall as sundry calamities innumerable swarms of diseases temporall death the wrath of God and eternall damnation 76 Punishments and sinnes both are evil motions of concupiscence damnable desires of the heart and an heap of actuall sinnes 77 The pravitie of originall sinne draweth us headlong into vice Cassi●dor in Psalm 118. 78 The number of these actuall sins are in respect of us altogether numberlesse For who can understand his errours Psalm 19.12 79 The bloud of Jesus Christ cleanseth all those that beleeve from all sinne both Originall and Actuall 1. John 1.7 80 With which we are sprinkled in Baptisme which is therefore called the holy and saving laver or the washing of regeneration Tit. 3.5 81 Unto which Regeneration Renovation or renewing is added as an inseparable companion though it be not altogether absolute and perfect in this life 82 For if there were a perfect renewing in Baptisme then would not the Apostle say That the inward man is renewed dayly Aug. 2. de peccat merit remiss cap. 7. 83 Knowing therefore the extreme corruption of our nature let us send up our prayers and sighs unto Christ our Physician to renew us every day more and more till at length we be perfectly renewed in the life to come which is eternall CHAP. X. Wherein are contained Theologicall Aphorismes concerning Free-will That is The Power which is left in man since the fall 1 THE Poyson of Originall sinne hath quite overrunne and inwardly infected all the powers and faculties of man 2 Whereupon there must needs follow great Detriment and Decrement or losse and decay in them all 3 The Powers and Faculties of man are chiefly to be estimated by the Reasonable Soul which was created after the Image of God 4 The Faculties of the Reasonable Soul are two a Mind to know and understand and a Will to elect and choose 5 From the concourse of these two faculties ariseth that which is commonly called Free-will 6 Which is a Facultie both of the Mind and the Will For the arbitrement or judgement is of the Mind and the Freedome or Libertie is of the Will 7 Libertie or Freedome is attributed unto the Will first having a respect unto the Manner of Working which is Free and Voluntarie 8 For it is not compelled or violently carried away by any Externall motion neither doth it work onely by a Naturall instinct but it hath an Internall and Free principle or cause of its own motion 9 This Libertie is a naturall and essentiall propertie of the Will 10 And therefore it was not lost by the fall 11 For the Will did not cease to be a Will by reason of the fall 12 This Libertie from coaction or necessitie is called Interiour Libertie or Libertie in the Subject 13 Therefore the Will of man in this respect is alwayes free though no● alwayes good August in Enchirid. cap. 30. 14 But yet the will of man is so free that still it must needs acknowledge the all-ruling power of God 15 And therefore it is not free from Law and Obligation 17 For God hath imprinted in the mind of man certain Naturall Motions the light and leading whereof the Will must follow 17 If it follows them it is free 18 For the True Libertie and Freedome is to serve God and to obey his Law 19 In which sense Tullies saying is very good in his Oration for Cluentius We are servants to the Laws that so we may be freemen 20 Therefore as in respect of Libertie or freedome from coaction man hath alwayes free-will yea since his fall 21 So in respect of Libertie or Freedome from