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A64611 The summe of Christian religion, delivered by Zacharias Ursinus first, by way of catechism, and then afterwards more enlarged by a sound and judicious exposition, and application of the same : wherein also are debated and resolved the questions of whatsoever points of moment have been, or are controversed in divinitie / first Englished by D. Henry Parry, and now again conferred with the best and last Latine edition of D. David Pareus, sometimes Professour of Divinity in Heidelberge ; whereunto is added a large and full alphabeticall table of such matters as are therein contained ; together with all the Scriptures that are occasionally handled, by way either of controversie, exposition, or reconciliation, neither of which was done before, but now is performed for the readers delight and benefit ; to this work of Ursinus are now at last annexed the Theologicall miscellanies of D. David Pareus in which the orthodoxall tenets are briefly and solidly confirmed, and the contrary errours of the Papists, Ubiquitaries, Antitrinitaries, Eutychians, Socinians, and Arminians fully refuted ; and now translated into English out of the originall Latine copie by A.R. Ursinus, Zacharias, 1534-1583.; Parry, Henry, 1561-1616.; Pareus, David, 1548-1622. Theologicall miscellanies.; A. R. 1645 (1645) Wing U142; ESTC R5982 1,344,322 1,128

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so much the more vehemently is his wrath kindled and the punishment is more aggravated whereupon are those sayings The wickednesse of the Amorites is not yet full Gen. 15.16 Mat. 23.35 That upon you may come all the righteous bloud c. Answ 2. We deny also the Minor For although God suffer originall sin that is the corruption and guilt of nature to passe unto all posterity yet together with this he of his meer mercy doth set bounds and limits for sinne that the posterity may not alwaies pay for the actuall sins of their ancestors or imitate them and that it may not be of necessity that the children of evill Parents should be evill or worse or more miserable then their Parents Object 7. The sonne shall not beare the iniquity of the father Ezek. 18 20. Therefore it is injustice that Adams posterity should beare the punishment of the sin of Adam Ans True it is the son shall not beare the iniquity of the father or shall not satisfie for his fathers mis-doing but with this condition If himselfe approve not or fall not into the same but disliketh and avoideth it But wee justly beare the sinne of Adam Foure causes for which Adams posterity abideth the punishment of his sin 1. Because wee all approve of the offence and imitate the same 2. Because the fault is so Adams that it also becometh ours for wee were all in Adam when hee sinned and therefore as the Apostle witnesseth We all sinned in him 3. Whereas Adams whole nature was guilty and wee as a part of him proceed out of his substance and masse Rom 5.19 we cannot but be guilty also our selves 4. Because Adam received the gifts of God to be imparted unto us on that condition if himselfe did retaine them or lose them unto us if himselfe lost them Whereas then Adam lost them he lost them not only in himself but in all his posterity also Object 8. All sin is committed with the will but Infants want will Therefore they commit no sin Answ 1. We grant this argument if it proceed on actuall sin not on originall which is the corruption of nature Ans 2. We deny the Minor because Infants want not the faculty and power of will and though in act they will not sin yet they will it by inclination Repli on the first answer The corruption and defects of nature rather deserve pardon and commiseration then punishment and reprehension as Aristotle testifieth in these words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Eth. 3. cap. 5. No man reprehendeth the defects of nature but originall sin is a defect of nature Therefore it deserveth not punishment Answ The Major is currant in such defects of nature as are gotten not by negligence or misdemeanour as if a man become blind either by nature or by some disease or stroke he is rather to be pitied for it then upbraided But such defects as are procured by some misdemeanour 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as originall sinne was these all men worthily reprove as Aristotle himselfe there addeth But every man checks such a one as becometh blinde through wine-bibbing or any other mis-behaviour And thus much touching originall sinne Of actuall sin and the rest of the distinctions of sin and of the causes and effects of sin What actuall sin is ACtuall sin is every inward and outward action which was repugnant to the Law of God as well in the understanding will and heart as in outward actions and the omitting of those things which the Law commandeth as to thinke to will to follow and to doe evill or not to know not to will to flye to omit that which is good Hitherto belongeth that division into sins of commission or fact and sins of omission The second division of sin THe second division of sin is thus Reigning sin There is reigning sin and sin not reigning Reigning sin is that in which the sinner maketh no resistance by the grace of the holy Spirit and is therefore subject to everlasting death unlesse he repent and purchase pardon by the death of Christ Or sin reigning is all sin which is repented of and which is not resisted by the grace of the holy Spirit and for which not onely according to the order of Gods justice but also for the thing it selfe he is guilty of eternall punishment who hath it Of this it is said Rom. 6.12 1 John 3.8 Let not sin reigne in your mortall bodies Also He that committeth sin that is to say he which of purpose sinneth and delighteth therein is of the Divell where John speaketh of Reigning sin It is called Reigning 1. Because we pamper it and become slaves unto it Two causes why reigning sin is so called 2. Because it hath rule over man and maketh him guilty of eternall damnation Such are all sins in the unregenerate and some also in the regenerate as errours in the foundation of faith and slidings and fallings against their conscience wherewith a sure confidence of remission of sins and true and lively comfort cannot consist unlesse they repent for that they very regenerate may run head long into reigning sin the dolefull falls of those most holy men Aaron and David doe sufficiently declare Sin not reigning Sin not reigning is that which the sinner resisteth by the grace of the holy Spirit and is therefore exempt from eternall death because he repenteth and obtaineth remission by Christ Such kind of sins are all the defects inclinations wicked desires and many sins of ignorance omission and infirmity which remaine in the faithfull as long as they are in this life which notwithstanding they acknowledge bewaile and hate in themselves yea they resist them and pray daily that they may be forgiven them through Christ their Mediatour saying Forgive us our debts and therefore in these they hold fast and imbrace faith and consolation in their Saviour and Redeemer If we say wee have no sin we deceive our selves 1 John 1.8 Rom. 7.17 Rom. 8.1 Psal 19.12 and there is no truth in us It is no more I that doe it but the sin that dwelleth in me There is no condemnation to them that are in Christ Jesus which walk after the Spirit Who can tell how oft hee offendeth Lord cleanse thou me from my secret faults That vulgar distinction of sinne into Mortall and Veniall sin may be reduced unto this distinction of Reigning Mortall and Viniall sin and not reigning sin For although all sin in his proper nature be Mortall that is deserveth everlasting death yet Reigning sin may most fitly so be called wherein whosoever persevereth finally perisheth Now it becometh Veniall that is to say it effecteth not everlasting death when in the regenerate resisting it by the grace of Christ it waxeth not reigning not that of it selfe it deserveth remission or that it is not worthy of punishment but because it is by grace through Christs satisfaction pardoned unto them that
beleeve and is not imputed to them unto condemnation according as it is said Rom. 8. ● There is no condemnation to them which are in Christ Jesus c. And in this sense the distinction of Mortall and Veniall sin may be retained but by no meanes in that sense in which it is used of the Popes Favourites as What the Papists take Mortall and Veniall sin to be if that were Mortall sinne which for the grievousnesse thereof deserveth eternall death that Veniall which for the lightnesse thereof deserveth not eternall death at Gods hands but some temporall punishment onely I had rather in stead of Mortall and Veniall sin use the names of Reigning and Not reigning sin Why the names of Mortall and Veniall sin are impertinent and to be rejected 1. Because the names of Mortall and Veniall sin are obscure and doubtfull For all sins are Mortall and John also calleth Mortall sin or sin to death the sin against the holy Ghost 2. Because the Scripture useth not these termes especially the name of Veniall sin 3. Because of the errours of the Papists who terme Veniall sins those which are light and deserve not eternall paines whereas the Scripture saith Cursed is every one that bideth not in all c. Deut. 27.26 James 2.10 Rom. 6.23 He which faileth in one point is guilty of all The wages of sin is death Whosoever shall break one of these least commandements and teach men so he shall be called the least in the Kingdome of Heaven In a word every sin is in his owne nature Mortall to wit it deserveth everlasting death but it is made Veniall that is it accomplisheth not death eternall in the regenerate by grace through Christ Object 1. But the Elect fall not from grace Answ Finally they doe not But they who sin mortally and doe not repent perish This falleth not to the Elect that they should fall finally but before the end they fall easily and often Object 2. The will of God is unchangeable but hee will the salvation of the Elect Therefore it is unchangeable Answ I grant that it is true concerning the purpose and counsell of God but not concerning our affiance which we have of the remission of sins for our comfort standeth not together with errours which are contrary to the foundation and with sinne committed against our consciences For then are wee said to have remission of our sinnes when wee apply these benefits to our selves Now in Christ Jesus ye which once were farre off are made neere by the the bloud of Christ Ephes 2.13 Hosea 2.23 I will say to them which were not my people Thou art my people And they shall say Thou art my God The Elect may sin against their consciences yet not to death Object 3. Hee that is borne of God sinneth not Therefore the regenerate sinne not Answ 1. He sinneth not to death For the Elect do not wholly forsake God albeit they sinne against their consciences but they retaine still some beginning of true godlinesse by which as by sparkles they are stirred again to repentance as David Peter and others 2. He sinneth not as he is regenerated but he sinneth as long as he abideth in this life sinne not reigning in him and yet sometimes reigning too as he is not regenerated by the Spirit of God but is as yet carnall Regeneration but begun in this I●fe For regeneration or the renuing of us to the image of God is not perfected in an instant but is begun onely in this life and in the life to come is at length finished For so doth John himselfe pronounce of himselfe and all the Saints in this life 1 Epist cap. 1. If we say that we have no sin we deceive our selves and the truth is not in us If we acknowledge our sins he is faithfull and just to forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from all unrighteousnesse This is therefore the meaning of John that the regenerate indeed doe sinne but yet not so that they make much of their sinne or doe so at any time yeeld and assent to evill desires that they cast away all love of godlinesse and repent not For alwaies in the regenerate there remaineth some remnant of a regenerate nature which causeth either a strife against sin or else true repentance that is it suffereth them not to sin to death or everlasting destruction or wholly to forsake God And this consolation so long they enjoy as they know themselves to be regenerated that is as they keep faith and a good conscience Object 4. 1 John 3.9 1 Pet. 1.23 It is said His seed remaineth in him neither can he sin because hee is borne of God And being borne anew not of mortall seed but of immortall by the word of God who liveth and endureth for ever If therefore the seed of Gods word never dieth in them that are borne anew they ever remaine regenerate and ever retaine grace neither ever fall into reigning sin The regenerate in this life may and doe oftentimes lose the grace of God in part but not in whole Answ 1. The regenerate may lose and doe often lose grace and the holy Spirit as concerning some gifts sometimes mo sometimes fewer although they lose it not if we respect all the gifts For there abideth in them some beginning or print of true faith and conversion which although when they yeeld to evill inclinations or desires it is so oppressed and darkened that it neither can be knowne of others neither confirme them of the grace of God and their own salvation for the present yet it suffereth them not wholly to forsake God and the knowne truth and to cast away their purpose of embracing by faith the merit of the Son of God Psal 51.10 12. So David prayeth Create in mee a cleane heart O God and renew a right spirit within mee Againe Restore me to the joy of thy salvation He had lost therefore cleannesse of heart rightnesse and newnesse of spirit and the joy of salvation which he beggeth of God to be restored unto him and yet did he not wholly want them for otherwise he would not have asked neither would he have looked for from God this renewing and restoring 2. The seed of God that is the word of God working true faith and conversion in the Elect abideth and dyeth not in the regenerate as concerning their conversion and finall perseverance how ever they fall often grievously before their end 1 John 2.19 If they had been of us they would have continued with us Object 5. Mat. 7.17 Man in this life is not simply good and therefore his works are not alwaies good A good tree cannot bring forth evill fruit Answ It cannot as it is good For if it be simply good all the fruit thereof is good which shall come so to pass in the life to come But if it be partly good and partly evill such is the
fruit also which we have triall and experience of in this life Heretofore it hath been said All sins mortall in their own nature but pardonable by the grace of God Psal 32.5 Pro. 24.16 That all sins are in their owne nature mortall Against this sentence some oppose that which is said I will confesse my wickednesse unto the Lord and thou forgavest the punishment of my sin And A just man falleth seven times and riseth againe Whence they gather that there are some sinnes the committers whereof continue still just and therefore deserve not eternall death But they reason amisse from that which befalleth to sinne but by an accident to that which is by it selfe in sin For it is true indeed that there are many sins for which the Saints doe not lose holi●●sse and righteousnesse neither become obnoxious to the wrath of God But this cometh to passe not by the smalnesse or nature of the sin whatsoever it be but by the grace of God who doth not impute neither will punish with eternall death those sins which yet in their owne nature deserved it This doth the Prophet most evidently shew in the same Psalme Psal 143.2 when he saith Blessed is he whose wickednesse is forgiven Enter not into judgement with thy servant for in thy sight shall none that liveth be justified Object 2. Mat. 5.22 It is said Whosoever is angry with his brother unadvisedly shall be culpable of judgement And whosoever saith unto his brother Racha shall be worthy to be punished by the Councell And whosoever shall say Foole shall be worthy to be punished with hell fire Whence they conclude Seeing Christ himselfe maketh degrees of punishments and sins so that of these former hee threatneth hell fire but unto the third onely therefore there are some sins smaller then those which deserve eternall punishment But the answer unto this is manifest out of the words themselves which is that Christ doth not speak of civill judgements and punishments when he mentioneth Judgement and a Councell For he doth not here speak of the civill order but disputeth against the corruptions of the Pharisees concerning the true meaning of Gods Law and concerning the judgement of God against both inward and outward sins For neither can nor ought to be punished by the Magistrate with corporall punishment either such gestures as signifie some bitternesse or contempt or bad affections if they have not accompanying them an endevour to doe any man injury Now whereas in the third place hee nameth hell fire hee doth not exempt the other two kinds of sin from eternall punishments but signifieth that the third shall receive a sharper punish●●nt at Gods hand then the other Object 3. It is said Every sin and blasphemy shall be forgiven unto men Mat. 12.31 but the blasphemy against the holy Ghost shall not be forgiven unto men neither in this world nor in the world to come Hence they will gather That some sinnes are forgiven in this world some in the world to come that is in Purgatory and some are never forgiven of which these be Mortall but the others Veniall in their owne nature Answ 1. But Neither here neither else-where doth Christ teach that some sins are forgiven in the world to come Sins are remitted in this world only For that all other sins are forgiven not in the world to come but in this world both Christ signifieth in this place and the Scripture else-where teacheth because it is certain that sins are not remitted but only to those who repent No sin which may not be remitted except the sin against the holy Ghost But hee denieth that the sinne against the holy Ghost is remitted either in this world or in the world to come that he might more significantly expresse the deniall of pardon to it 2. Whether they say forgivenesse to be in this world or in the world to come yet this standeth immoveable that it cometh not of the nature or corruption of the sin but of free mercy for Christs sake And if every sinne be so grievous that it could not be purged but by the bloud of the Son of God then doubtlesse they doe great despite and contumely unto that bloud who so extenuate any sin as to deny that it deserveth eternall punishment unto which the death of the Son of God is equivalent 3. Even by their owne confession there are many mortall sins which notwithstanding are forgiven in this life Wherefore either they must make all these to be even in their owne nature Veniall or they will never prove out of this place that the ●●nalnesse of the sin is the cause of forgivenesse Object 4. It is said The wrath of God is revealed from heaven against all ungodlinesse Rom. 1.17 And Know yee not that the unrighteous shall not inherit the Kingdome of God 1 Cor. 6. ● Out of these and the like places they gather that seeing they are mortall sins which shut men out of the Kingdome of God and all sins do not so therefore there are some sins which in their owne nature are not mortall But they conclude more then followeth by force of reason For that some sins are Veniall there is no doubt All sins shut men out of the Kingdome of God were they not remitted by the grace of God 1 Cor. 3.15 but that cometh by grace remitting those sins which without remission would shut men doubtlesse from the Kingdome of God Object 5. It is said If any mans work burne he shall lose but he shall be safe himselfe neverthelesse yet as it were by fire Therefore say they some sins cast men into fire that is into some punishment but not eternall This also we grant not in respect of the nature of sin but in respect of pardon which befalleth to those who hold the foundation which is Christ For to build on the foundation wood and stubble that is to patch the Word of God with unnecessary questions humane opinions and traditions which often are occasions of Schismes in the Church and often of Idolatry and errors it is not so light a sin as they deem it who doit but deserveth eternall malediction except remission be made by the Son of God as it is declared in the Revelation Chap. 22. Object 6. It is said A high Priest taken from among men is bound to offer for sinnes Heb 5.1 as well for his owne part as for the peoples Ans This place sheweth that the sins of the Priest are not Veniall by themselves or of their owne nature but for the sacrifice of Christ which was signified by the typicall sacrifices and therefore it quite and cleane overthroweth the opinion of our adversaries For if all sins even of a righteous Priest are in the sight of God so great that they cannot be purged but by the death of the Son of God it necessarily followeth that they of their owne nature deserved everlasting death Ob. 7. It is said
When lust hath conceived it bringeth forth sin Jam. 1.15 and sin when it is fini●●ed bringeth forth death Here say they James saith that there is one sin finished when as the will upon deliberation consenteth to evill lust another not finished when a man sinneth without deliberation and to sin finished he ascribeth that it bringeth forth death We answer that the consequence of this is not o● force because that a property which belongeth to divers kinds when it is ascribed to one kind it followeth not thereof that it is to be removed from the other Actuall sin is an effect of Originall sin and a cause of death which though purchased by Originall yet is aggravated by Actuall For S. James distinguisheth the kinds or degrees of sins Originall and Actuall and saith that death followeth after Actuall not as if death did not follow after Originall but because that actuall is a middle between Originall sin and death as a cause of this and an effect of that and doth aggravate death or punishment which already was purchased by Originall sin Neither doth he chiefly speak of the degrees of punishments but of the cause and originall of them to be sought in the corruption of our owne nature Object 8. It is said Jam. 3.2 In many things we sin all Hence our adversaries will prove That the sins of the just are Veniall because they fall either into few sins or into no mortall sins To this as also to most of that which hath gone before we answer that the sins of the just who by faith retain or receive righteousnesse are Veniall not of their owne nature but by grace Gods justice is not at variance with his mercy though it judge the least sin worthy of eternall death Object 9. God is not cruell but mercifull n●●●her light in his love but constant Wherefore he doth not for every light sin judge a man worthy of eternall punishments Answ But they imagine that the judgement of God concerning sinne is at variance with his mercy which two are not at variance but do very well agree For God is in such wise mercifull as he is also just Now the justice of God requireth that hee judge all even the least offence and contempt of his majesty worthy of eternall damnation This judgement against every sin the mercy and constancy of Gods love doth not take away but for the shewing and declaring thereof it is sufficient that hee rejoyceth not at the destruction of them that perish and that for testimony thereof he inviteth all to repentance and forgiveth them who repent their sins which by themselves were worthy of everlasting death that is hee punisheth them and causeth satisfaction for them not in the sinners but in his owne Son sent to take flesh by punishment answering and satisfying his justice Object 10. It is said Mat. 5.19 Whosoever shall break one of these least commandements and teach men so he shall be called the least in the Kingdome of Heaven This they interpret after this sort That he who both by sin and teaching doth against the Law is fallen from the Kingdome of God and not he who in teaching subscribeth to the Law although sometimes he doth a little contrary to that he teacheth But the opposition or contrariety which Christ addeth But whosoever shall observe and teach them the same shall be called great in the Kingdome of God doth shew that Christ in the former part of the speech doth understand those who breake that is violate the Law which they teach so that the meaning is Although one teach well and yet violate one of these commandements which the Pharisees terme the least that is of the commandements of the Decalogue hee shall find these commandements so not to be the least but the greatest as himselfe thereby shall become the least that is in no place in the Kingdome of God Albeit it be granted unto them that in the words of Christ to teach so is the same that to teach contrary to the Law yet can it not at all be gathered thence that they alone shall be the least in the Kingdome of God who by teaching and sinning break the Law and not they also who by sinning only and not teaching Christ calleth them the least not as in his owne judgement but as in the judgement of the Pharisees and so he imitateth them in thus speaking transgresse it The first reason is in the very words of Christ because he calleth those commandements the least by a figure of speech called Imitation which are the greatest and the breach whereof whether it be committed in deed or in doctrine or in both God judgeth worthy the shutting out of his Kingdome even by our adversaries confession that is the whole Decalogue which the Pharisees did set behind their traditions The second reason is in the words which Christ addeth For I say unto you Except your righteousnes exceed the righteousnes of the Scribes and Pharisees ye shall not enter into the Kingdome of heaven In these words Christ sheweth that a far other righteousnesse is required by the Law of God then the Pharisees thought of and that those sins also are so great that they shut men out of the Kingdome of heaven which the Pharisees accounted either for light or no sins as to be angry with thy brother unadvisedly to say unto him Racha or foole to be troubled with an evill affection or desire of revenge for even these things also he saith are to be avoided if we will avoid hell fire and be the children of our heavenly Father Therefore he saith Whosoever looketh on a woman to lust after her Mat. 5.28 hath committed adultery with her already in his heart And Whosoever hateth his brother is a man-slayer and yee know that no man-slayer hath eternall life abiding in him 1 John 3.15 And therefore not they only which commit the greater sins but they also who commit the lesser cannot escape everlasting death but by the satisfaction of Christ imputed to them But as our adversaries accuse this sentence of too much rigour Sin made veniall unto the repentant by grace for the intercession and satisfaction of Christ That all sinnes are by themselves of their owne nature Mortall that is deserve eternall death so also the other sentence That sins are made Veniall to those that repent which of their owne nature are Mortall they reprehend as too gentle and repugnant to Gods justice because to call that Veniall which is Mortall is contrary to truth and justice But the answer is ready That God if we respect the nature of sin adjudgeth all sin worthy of everlasting death and giveth pardon to none but of free grace for the intercession and satisfaction of his Son our Mediatour The third division of sin THere is sin against the conscience and sin not against the conscience Sin against the conscience Sin against the conscience is when a man knowing
Our sacrifices differ from Christs three waies 236. How sacrifices and sacraments differ 400. A propitiatory sacrifice cannot be without bloud 461. Save Saviour Vide Jesus How the whole three persons may be said to save 221. 222. Christ is our most perfect Saviour 223. Why all men are not saved by Christ and why onely the faithfull 132. Scriptures Their authority depend not on the Church 5. 6. Objections against this answered 6. 7. Arguments shewing the certainty of Scriptures 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. Why no doctrine but the Scripture is to be received into the Church 12. It is the rule of faith ibid. The difference of it and other mens opinions 13. The Scriptures sufficiency proved by the Ancients 14. Objections against it answered ibid. c. The Papists objection of the Scriptures obscurity answered 18. 19. Some places of Scripture more darke then other some confessed and instanced 19. Three points observable in the interpretation of Scriptures 20. 438. Not the Church but the holy Ghost is Judge of the Scriptures 21. Six waies of deciding doubts in Scriptures 21. 22. Servant Whence the word is derived and what it signifies 269. Shamefastnesse What it is 603. Silence What 612. Simplicity What. 612. Sinne Vid. Wickednesse What sinne and what manner of sin the first sin of man was pag. 45. It consists in six things pag. 45. 46. What were the causes of its first sinne ibid. c. and effects 47. The cause of its permission by God with excellent uses of it 47. 48. How we know that sin is in us 48. What sin is 49. A two fold nature of it ibid. Two proofes that corrupt inclinations are sinnes 50. What originall sin is ib. 51. proofes of its being derived to posterity ibid. Foure causes why Adams posterity abideth the punishment of his sinne 53. Whether Infants sinne seeing they want will 54. Actuall sin what ibid. Of reigning sinne and why so called ibid. of mortall and veniall sin that Popish distinction 55. The Elect may sin against conscience yet not unto death 55. All sinne mortall in its owne nature 56. Of sin against and not against conscience 59. Of the sin against the holy Ghost what and why unpardonable 59. 60. Sin what it is of it selfe 62. The vertues of the unregenerate are sins by accident ibid. What the causes of sinne are 64. An order in the causes of sinne ibidem Foure pretended causes of sin 65. God no cause of it ibid. It ariseth from man himselfe 66. It s beginning is from the Devill 67. GOD is the causer of sinne not as sinne but as punishments ibid. The proper ends of sinne ibid. Sinne is a naturall property of man corrupted 71. The fearfull effects of sinne 72. 73. All sinnes not equall 73. God in sinne though he be the mover of the wicked will yet he is not the mover of the wickednesse in the will 80. Three causes why God is said to permit sinne 201. The Question of Gods being thought to be the cause of sinne decided 209. 210. 211. c. Sin is not of the nature of mans fl●sh but by accident only 275. The Article of remission of sins 361. Sit. Sitting Why it is said Christ sitteth at the right hand of God 321. 322. Vide Hand of God Slandering What. 611. Sonne Vide Christ How Christ can be called the onely begotten Sonne of God when wee also are called his sonnes 238. 246. Divers sorts of sonnes ibidem How Christ is the onely and first begotten Sonne of GOD. 239. How the naturall Sonne of God 239. 244. and co-eternall 244. 245. Christ so named before he tooke our flesh 245. The onely begotten Sonne of God 246. The Sonne hath all things from the Father not by grace but by nature 260. Hee doth all things with the Father as the Father doth ibidem Arguments against the Sonnes Divinity answered 264. 265. Why the Sonne is called Lord and why Our Lord. 268. How the Sonne was conceived by the holy Ghost 270. Soule Whether immortall 365. sundry places of Scripture alledged against the immortality of the soule 366. The Elects soules estate separated from the body 369. Spirit Vide holy Ghost The divers names which are given in the Scripture to the Spirit 341. Suffering Vide passion pag. 290. 291. 292. c. Whether Christ suffered according to both natures 293. why hee suffered under Pontius Pilate 294. why on the Crosse 295. Ancient types of that death ibidem Superstition Who are superstitious 540. Supper Vide Sacraments What the Lords Supper is 426. 427. It s manifold names 427. Its ends 428. How Baptisme and the Lords Supper differ 429. What it is to eate the flesh of Christ in the Lords Supper 430. who ought to approach to the Lords Supper and who not 462. what the wicked receive in the Lords Supper 463. Three causes for which the wicked are said to eate unto themselves condemnation 464. The right and lawfull use of it 465. Who are to be admitted to it 466. Vide Passeover page 467. c. Reasons against the reall presence 477. Suspicion What it is 611. Foure roots of good and evill suspicion 612. Swearing Of right and lawfull swearing 568. Whether lawfull to sweare by the creatures 569. By whom wee must sweare 570. Five causes why we must sweare by GOD alone 570. 571. Two principall causes of swearing 573. Vide Oathes T. TEmperance What it is 603. Temptation What it is with its kinds 650. What it is to leade into temptation 651. Testament The Old and New Testament in what they agree and how they differ 126. Thanks Thankfulnesse Why the knowledge of our thankefulnesse is necessary 35. 36. What mans thankefulnesse is and what Christian Thankefulnesse is 498. 560. the danger of omitting of it or being cold in it 560. 561. Transubstantiation Of it very largely and learnedly 448. 449. c. And Consubstantiation 450. Trinity What it is 172. Heretikes Objections answered that say that they are not named in the Scripture 173. The number of persons in Trinity ibidem Six strong proofes of the three persons in Trinity 174. How distinguished 175. Their order ibidem Their Attributes Effects and Operations what 175. 176. The doctrine of the Trinity necessary to bee held and maintained in the Church 177. Heretikes opposing that doctrine 178. Truth Six waies whereby we are taught the truth of GOD in Scripture 162. Truth what 610. V. UBiquitaries Their opinion refuted by many strong Arguments 477. 478. c. Three pestilent weeds that grow in their Garden 318. Vertue Two causes why the vertues of Ethnickes please not God pag. 44. The vertues of the Vnregenerate are sinnes by accident 62. The difference betweene the vertues of the Regenerate and of the Vnregenerate 63. Unchangeablenesse Gods unchangeablenesse proved 157. 158. Union The similitude of mans body to declare our union with Christ 234. Of the union of Christs two Natures and what it is in Nature what in Person 278. 279. W WIckednesse Whence the
Gospell concerning remission of sins for the merits of Christ 26. Neither doth this stick in the braine but it is rooted in the heart Rom. 10.11 because With the heart we beleeve unto righteousnesse 27. Hence the Apostle defineth faith to be the subsistence of things hoped for because it makes these objects of our hope as it were really present in our hearts and minds 28. And the evidence of things not seene because it subdues mens minds and hearts causing in the one a sure assent to those things and in the other a sure confidence 29. Hence Austine de Fide Symbol c. 1. Let us professe that Faith with our mouth which we carry in our heart 30. That faith which sticks only in the braine without assurance in the heart or which doth not worke by charity it is a vaine and dead faith and the peculiar faith of hypocrites and Devils 31. For to beleeve that God is God and that Christ is Christ will no more help thee then to beleeve that Venice is a rich City in which notwithstanding thou hast never a house 32. This saving faith by which we beleeve to righteousnesse Popery shakes by divers wayes and plucks it up out of mens hearts 33. It makes saving faith not a knowledge but ignorance with an implicite assent to those things which the Church beleeves The Assertion All these Themes by which the nature of justifying and saving Faith is explained the Jesuit neither did shake nor did he go about to do it but some of them he so indeavours to elude with lyes and calumnies that he hath so much the more exasperated the ulcers of Popery First he saith That Parry lyes in saying that what Popery teacheth is contrary to the Apostles definition to wit that Christian Faith is a knowledge But indeed the Jesuit lyes in saying that Parry did object this against Popery So much of the Assertion of the Secular Theme was found among Parrie's blotted papers but the rest of his papers were lost in the plundering of his Library by wicked hands at Heidelberge Follow the rest of the Themes 34. That saving Faith is a confidence of Gods mercy this it condemneth for Herefie 35. It contends that justifying Faith is separable from love and from all spirituall and morall vertues 36. It will not yeeld that there is any certainty of Faith but that it is conjecturall such as opinion is 37. Of which no man can be assured with himselfe that he hath it except in opinion 38. Much lesse can any man certainely confide of the grace of God of remission of sins of justification and salvation 39. Because it is alwaies joyned with anxiety feare of deception and doubting 40. Which indeed is not faith raising a sinner but opinion tormenting wavering consciences 41. For the Locusts of the bottomlesse pit were to torment men five months 42. But also it is a doubting accusing God of a lye and blaspheming 43. Popery then is fallen from faith and hath overthrowne faith to it selfe and friends in shaking so many wayes that faith by which we beleeve unto righteousnesse 44. Thirdly to overthrow the ground of salvation concerning justification by faith by the imputed righteousnesse of faith and merit without workes is to fall from the faith of the Gospell and to overthrow salvation Rom. 3.28 45. For the Apostle saith We conclude then that man is justified by faith Rom. 4.6 Rom. 5.1 without the works of the Law 46. And Blessed is the man to whom God imputeth righteousnesse without works 47. And Being justified by faith we have peace with God 48. And By the righteousnesse of one man to wit Christ Rom. 5.18 grace hath abounded to all men to the justification of life 49. And Gal. 2.16 Gal. 3.10 Knowing that man is not justified by the works of the Law but by the faith of Christ Jesus 50. But whosoever are under the works of the Law or will be justified by works are under the curse 51. This foundation is diversly overthrowne by Popery 52. It denies against the Apostles words that man is justified by faith without works 53. It Anathematises those that beleeve that they are justified by the imputation of Christs righteousnesse without works 54. It teacheth that we are not justified by faith but are disposed to justification 55. It teacheth that charity which in the Saints is as cold almost as ice it is so far from being perfect is the habit of perfect righteousnesse 56. It teacheth that men are justified by the perfection of their vertues or good works 57. That which was the faith heretofore of Philosophers and Pharisees is at this day the faith of the Turks and Jews the name of Christ being changed 58. It teacheth that Christ hath merited for us power to merit that it is in us to merit life eternall by this power flowing from Christs merit 59. So it blasphemes Christs merit substituting instead of it their owne proper merits 60. So whilst it goeth about to elevate men to heaven being puft up with the pride of their owne merits it tumbleth them downe to hell which is common to it with the Alcharon and Thalmud 61. Therefore Popery by pulling and shaking the ground of salvation about justification of sinners before God by so many wayes is fallen from the faith of the Gospell and hath overthrowne salvation to it selfe and friends 62. Fourthly To defend false doctrines impious blasphemous repugnant to holy Scripture and the foundation of faith is to fall from faith and to overthrow salvation 63. Popery defends innumerable such stuffe besides what is now said take these few examples 64. It defends corruption by Adams fall or originall sin not to consist in any evill quality nor to be a sin but the punishment of sin and such a defect as is the crookednesse of the finger or leg that it is not against but besides the Law which is directly against Scripture affirming Gen. 6.5 8.21 Every imagination of mans heart to be evill from his youth upward 65. Another falshood it teacheth in saying Some sins of their owne nature to be veniall and to be pardoned rather then punished against this Scripture The wages of sin is death Rom. 6.23 66. Another falshood is this That the naturall mans free-will is not the servant of sin against this Scripture You were the servants of sin Rom. 6.20 67. And that they can co-operate with the first grace against these Scriptues When you were dead in your sins Ephes 2.5 Rom. 8.7 The wisdome of the flesh cannot be subject to the Law of God 68. And that of two hearers of the Word the one beleeves because he was willing the other beleeves not because he would not co-operate with grace against this Scripture 1 Cor. 4.7 What hast thou that thou hast not received 69. And this falshood that the grace of God by which we are said to be saved is a generall influx indifferent which
fall and his originall misery since the same for these causes 1. That the cause and fountain of our misery being discovered it might not be imputed unto God 2. That the greatnesse of our misery might the more appeare For look how much more open and eminent our originall excellency is unto us so much more obvious and evident is our misery as also the benefit of our delivery is so much the more precious and honourable in our eyes by how much the greatnesse of the evils whence we are freed is more apparent OF THE CREATION OF MAN The speciall points touching mans Creation are 1 What manner of creature man was made by GOD. 2 To what end man was made by GOD. 1 What manner of creature man was made by God THis question is proposed even for the same causes for which the whole place it selfe is namely 1. That it may appear how man was created by God without sin and that therefore God is not the author of our sin corruption and misery 2. That we may perceive from what a heighth of dignity and honour into how deep a gulfe of wretchednesse and misery we are plunged through sin and thence may acknowledge the tender mercy and compassion of God who vouchsafeth to hale and pull us out of the same 3. That we further acknowledge our thankefulnesse for benefits heretofore received and our unworthinesse of receiving any heretofore 4. That wee may the more earnestly thirst after the recovery of the dignity and happinesse wee have lost and seeke it in Christ 5. That we may be thankefull unto God for the restoring of it Now what manner of creature man was fashioned by God in the beginning is shewed in the Answer of this sixth Question where it is said He made him good and to his own Image c. Which words require a more ample declaration Man therefore was created by God on the sixth day of the Creation of the world consisting of body and soule 1. His body was fashioned of a masse or lump of earth immortall if he stood still in righteousnesse mortall if he fell for mortality ensued on sin as a punishment thereof 2. His soule was made of nothing but immediatly inspired by God into his body and was an incorporeall substance understanding and imortall God breathed in his face breath of life Gen. 2.7 and man was made a living soule This was by God infused and united to an instrumentall body to inform or quicken it and together with it to make one person or Subsistent namely man to worke certain motions and actions proper unto man both externall and internall in the body and without the body by the ministry of the body and without the ministry of the body just holy and pleasing unto God 3. After the Image of God that is perfectly good wise just holy blessed and sole soveraigne of the creatures Of this Image of God in man more shall hereafter be spoken 2 To what end man was created THE Catechisme maketh answer That he might rightly know God his Creator and heartily love him and live with him blessed for ever and that to laud and magnifie his name Wherefore the last and principall end of mans creation is The glory and praise of God The glory and praise of God For God therefore created reasonable creatures Angels and men that being knowne of them he might be magnified for ever Man therefore was principally created to the knowledge and worship of God that is to the profession and invocation of his Name to praise and thankesgiving to love and obedience which consisteth in the performance of those duties which concern God and man For the worship of God comprehendeth in it all these Obj. Heaven earth and other creatures void of reason Psal 19. 146. are said to worship and magnifie God therefore the worship and praise of God is not the proper end why man was created Ans This reason hath a fallacy of equivocation or ambiguity Creatures void of reason are said to worship and praise God not that they understand ought of God or know and worship him but because they bearing certain prints and stamps of Divinity in them are the matter of Gods praise and worship which is properly performed by reasonable creatures For Angels and men by the beholding and contemplation of these Gods works disery in them the infinite goodnesse wisdome power justice bounty and majesty of God Rom. 1. 20. and are raised and stirred up to magnifie God by these his creatures And if God had not formed creatures of reason and understanding who might behold consider and with thankfull mind acknowledge his works and the order and disposing of things in whole nature other things which are void of reason might no more be said to praise and worship God that is to be the matter and occasion of praising him then if they never had bin at all Therefore that which David saith is spoken by the figure Prosopoeia or counterfeiting of some other person under that which is presented as Praise the Lord ye heavens sea and earth c. That is let Angels and men at the sight and view of these Gods creatures take occasion of lauding and magnifying his Name Many other ends are subordinated to this principall end For unto Gods worship is substituted The knowledge of God The true knowledge of him For God not being known cannot be worshipped And it is the proper work of man wherein eternall life consisteth to know and worship God aright This is everlasting life that they may know thee alone to be the true God John 17.3 To the knowledge of God is subordinate or next in order Mans felicity The felicity and blessednesse of man which is the fruition and everlasting participation of God and heavently blessings For out of these appeareth the goodnesse mercy and power of God Obj. The felicity and blessedness of man his knowledge and worship of God are qualities and properties in which or with which man was created that is they are a part of the Image of God and the forme or proper nature of man Therefore they belong unto the first Question which was What man was created and not to this Of the end of mans creation Answ They are a part of mans form and nature and they are mans end in a diverse respect in which there is no contrariety For God made man such a creature as being blessed and happy should know and worship him aright and again he made him to this end that thenceforth for ever he might be acknowledged and magnified by him and might continually communicate himself with all his graces blessings unto him Wherefore man was created happy holy and religious and ●●us was his form which he received in the Creation and moreover he was so created that he should so continue for ever and this was his end Therefore both these are fitly spoken to wit that man both is created holy
the will of God of set purpose doth expresly against the same Or it is a sinne committed of those who wittingly and willingly sinne as David wittingly committed adultery and murder contrary to the Law Sin not against the conscience Sin not against the conscience is that which we either not willing or not witting commit or which is indeed acknowledged to be sinne and is lamented of by the offender but cannot perfectly be avoided in this life such as is Originall sin and many sins of omission ignorance and infirmity For we omit many good things and commit evill being suddenly overcome and overtaken by infirmities as Peter of infirmity in imminent danger is overcome and denieth Christ wittingly indeed but not willingly therefore hee weepeth bitterly and loseth not utterly his faith according to Christs promise I have prayed for thee that thy faith faile not It was not reigning sin Luk. 22.32 much lesse the sin against the holy Ghost because he loved Christ no lesse when he denied him then when he bewailed his offence though that affection did not at that time for feare of imminent danger shew it selfe Such sin Paul acknowledgeth in himselfe and lamenteth it I doe not the good which I would but the evill which I would not Rom. 9.1 that doe I c. His blasphemy also and persecution and violence against the Church was a sin of ignorance For I did it ignorantly saith he therefore God had mercy on me 1 Tim. 1.13 This third division of sin and the definition of both sins Christ hath expresly delivered saying The servant that knew his Masters will and prepared not himselfe The proofe of this division of sin neither did according to his will shall be beaten with many stripes but hee that knew it not and yet did commit things worthy of stripes shall be beaten with few stripes Luk. 12.47 The fourth division of sin THere is sinne unpardonable or a sinne against the holy Ghost or a sin unto death What unpardonable sin or sin against the holy Ghost is There is also sinne pardonable or not against the holy Ghost or not unto death This distinction is deduced out of Matthew 12.31 Mark 3.29 1 John 5.16 Sinne unpardonable or sinne against the holy Ghost and unto death is a deniall and oppugning of the knowne truth of God and his will and workes of which mens consciences and minds are fully ascertained and convicted by the testimony of the holy Ghost not of feare or infirmity but of set purpose and hatred of the truth and of a despitefull malicious stomacke conceived against the same which sinne whosoever commit they are punished of God with a perpetuall blindnesse Perpetuall blindnesse an effect of it Why it is called unpardonable that they can never returne to God by true repentance in this life and by consequent can obtain no pardon It is called unpardonable not that by the grievousness thereof it exceedeth the worth of Christs merit but because he who offendeth herein is punished with sinfull blindnesse and hath not the gift of repentance For because it is a peculiar kind of sin a peculiar kind of punishment is also inflicted thereon namely finall blindnesse and impenitencie And without repentance Mat. 12.32 Mar. 3.29 there is no remission Whosoever shall speak against the holy Ghost it shall not be forgiven him neither in this world nor in the world to come And Whosoever blasphemeth against the holy Ghost shall never have forgivenesse but is culpable of eternall damnation Why it is called thy sin against the holy Ghost It is called sinne against the holy Ghost not as if the holy Ghost might be offended by any man and not the Father also and the Son but by an eminent significancy of speech because it is in a speciall manner committed against the holy Ghost that is against his proper and immediate office or operation which is the enlightning of their minds Why it is called a sin unto death 1 John 5.16 It is called sin unto death by John not that this alone is mortall or deserveth death but by an emphaticall significancy of speech because it especially deserveth death and all they who commit this sin assuredly die therein because none of them repenteth of it Therefore John will that we pray not for it because forsooth in vaine the remission thereof is craved at Gods hands The Scripture elsewhere speaketh of this sin as Hebr. 6.4 5 6 7 8. chapt 10.26 27 28 29. and Tit. 3.10 11. Certaine Rules to be observed touching the sin against the holy Ghost It is not in every reprobate The sin against the holy Ghost is not found in every reprobate person but in those only who are lightned by the holy Ghost and convicted in conscience of the truth as Saul Judas c. Object Every unpardonable sin is a sin against the holy Ghost because Christ saith The difference between other sins pardoned and this sin against the holy Ghost that the sin against the holy Ghost is unpardonable but finall perseverance in whatsoever sin without repentance is remitted to no man And therefore it is a sinne against the holy Ghost and by a consequent all that perish sinne against the holy Ghost Answ The ambiguity of unpardonable sin maketh foure terms in this Syllogism For in the Major it signifieth that kind of sinne which is never remitted to any because whosoever commit it whether at the end or before the end of their life they persevere in it even to the end without repentance But in the Minor it signifieth not a certaine kind of sinne but all their sinnes who repent not which indeed are not remitted to them because they persevere in them to the end without repentance and they are unpardonable not before the end but in the very end of their life yet are they remitted to others who persevere not in them but repent For perseverance in sin is nothing else then the sinnes themselves which are continued unto the end and therefore this is the meaning of the Minor Sins in which men persevere without repentance unto the end are not pardoned them who persevere in them but now all men doe not persevere in them as they persevere in the sin against the holy Ghost even whosoever once fall into it And Christ in this speech sheweth not for what sins men are punished with everlasting death For it is certaine that it befalleth for all sinnes of which men repent not but he sheweth what sinnes are such as whosoever doe commit them they doe never repent This he affirmeth of no kind of sin but onely of blasphemy against the holy Ghost It is not every Reigning sin Every sin against the holy Ghost is Reigning sin and sin against conscience but not contrariwise every Reigning sin sin against the holy Ghost For it may fall out that some man either ignorantly or else wittingly and willingly may patronize some errours
and sanctification John 3.5 Except a man be borne againe of water and of the Spirit 2 Cor. 3. ●8 c. Wee are changed into the same image from glory to glory as by the Spirit of the Lord. The governing of the actions and whole life of the godly As many as are led by the Spirit of God Rom. 8.14 they are the sonnes of God They were forbidden of the holy Ghost to preach the word in Asia Acts 16.6 Comforting in temptations The Comforter is the holy Ghost John 14.26 whom the Father will send in my name Acts 9.31 The Churches were edified and multiplyed by the comfort of the holy Ghost I will powre upon the house of David the Spirit of grace and compassion Zech. 12.10 The strengthening and preserving of the regenerate against the force of temptation even unto the end The Spirit of strength shall rest upon him Isa 11.2 John 14.16 Ephes 1.13 Hee shall give you another Comforter that hee may abide with you for ever In whom also yee are sealed with the holy Spirit of promise The pardoning of sins and adopting the sonnes of God Yee have received the Spirit of adoption Rom. 8.15 ● Cor. 1.17 1 Cor. 6.11 Where the Spirit of the Lord is there is liberty Yee are justified in the name of our Lord Jesus and by the Spirit of our God The bestowing of salvation and life everlasting John 6.63 It is the Spirit that quickeneth If the Spirit of him which raised up Christ from the dead dwell in you Rom. 8.11 hee that raised up Christ from the dead shall also quicken your mortall bodies because that his Spirit dwelleth in you Judgement and sentence against sin John 16.8 When the Comforter shall come he shall reprove the world of sin Mat. 12.23 The blasphemy against the holy Ghost shall not be forgiven unto men His divine honour Equall and the same honour is given to the holy Ghost which is given both to the Father and the Son To no creature but to God alone is to be given divine honour that is honour proper to God only But this is given to the holy Ghost Therefore hee is God equall with the Father and the Son 1 John 5.7 There are three which bear witnesse in heaven the Father the Word and the holy Ghost and these three are one The holy Ghost therefore is the same true God with the Father and the Son Goe and teach all nations baptizing them in the name of the Father and the Sonne and the holy Ghost By this testimony wee are taught Mat. 18.19 1. That wee are baptized also into the name faith worship and religion of the holy Ghost 2. That the holy Ghost is authour also of baptisme and the ministery In like sort also we beleeve and put our trust in him Let not your hearts be troubled I will pray the Father John 14.1 16. and hee shall give you another Comforter that hee may abide with you for ever That sin which is committed against him is not remitted therefore wee sin against him We are his temple Ye are the temple of the holy Ghost 1 Cor. 3.16 and the Spirit of God dwelleth in you The Apostles in their Epistles wish unto the Churches grace and peace from the holy Ghost The communion of the holy Ghost be with you Cor. 13.13 Object 1. Hee that is sent is not equall with him that sendeth The holy Ghost is sent and the Father and the Son send him Therefore the holy Ghost is not equall with the Father and the Son Ans We deny the Major For Christ that is sent may be equall with him that sendeth for Christ also being sent of the Father yet is equall with the Father this sending doth not betoken any servile subjection Object 2. He that receiveth of another is not equall with him that giveth The holy Ghost receiveth of the Father and the Son Therefore he is not equall with both Ans The Major is true of one that receiveth of another but a part and not the whole but the holy Ghost receiveth the same and whole essence of the Father and the Son Again it is true of him that receiveth in time or successively but the holy Ghost receiveth before all time Thirdly to the Minor we say that he received as touching the ordaining and sending of him unto us to teach us immediately but this sending establisheth and confirmeth his equality because it is a divine work and the ordaining of him to teach us immediately doth not lessen but strengthen his equality Obj. 3. The Father made all things by the Son therefore he made the holy Ghost by him also Answ The Father made all things by the Son John 1.3 that is all things that were made because it is said And without him was made nothing that was made But the holy Ghost is not made but proceedeth from the Father and the Son Three proofs that the holy Ghost is consubstantiall with the Father and the Son IIII. That the holy Ghost is consubstantiall that is one and the same true God with the Father and the Sonne is proved by these reasons 1. Because hee is the Fathers and the Sons Spirit But the divine essence cannot be multiplied as neither can another be created nor the same divided Therefore the selfe-same and the whole must needs be communicated to the holy Ghost which is the essence of the Father and the Son From both which the holy Ghost proceedeth as the Spirit of God in God and of God 2. There is but one true God The holy Ghost is true God therefore the holy Ghost is that one and the same true God with the Father and the Son consubstantiall with both 3. There is but one Jehovah that is but one divine essence or being one essentially who alone is of none but himselfe communicateth his being to all things and preserveth it in them The holy Ghost is Jehovah * See 〈◊〉 ●6 1 34. Heb. ●7 8 9 10. Lev. 16.11 12. and 2 Cor. 6.16 Deut. 9 2● Isa 63. Psal 95.7 Heb. 3.7 Isa 6.7 Act. 28.25 1.16 4.24 25. therefore he is the same with the Father and the Son God consubstantially with both Object Hee that is of another is not consubstantiall with him or is not the same with him of or from whom he is The holy Ghost is of the Father and the Sonne Therefore hee is not the same with them or consubstantiall Answ The Major is true in creatures but not in God 2. There is an ambiguity in this terme to be of another He that is of another and hath not the same or whole essence is not consubstantiall But the holy Ghost hath the same and whole essence and therefore it followeth only that he is not the same person Therefore by inverting the argument we answer that he who is of the Father and from the
which we are bound to God or by which God doth binde man to himself 102. By Cicero likewise Religion is that by which we are carefull by reverend Ceremonies to adore that supreme Nature which we call God 103. Religion differs from superstition saith Lactantius because Religion is a true worship superstition is a false one 104. Religion then given to creatures or to any thing besides God is false which the Scripture calls Superstition and Idolatry 105. For Idolatry is a fictitious or superstitious worship of God 106. Of which there are two principall kindes one is when a fictitious deitie is worshipped that is when instead of the true God or besides him religious worship due to God alone is exhibited either outwardly or inwardly to any thing that is existent or but fained 107. This is forbid in the first Commandement Exod. 20.3 Thou shalt have no other Gods but me 108. Such was the Gentiles Idolatry in their Religious worship of feigned gods inwardly by trusting in them outwardly by Ceremonies and erecting of Statues to them 109. Such Idolatry is covetousnesse with the Apostle when with inward confidence we worship money instead of God 110. The other Idolatry is errour in the kinde of worship when a worship is devised to be exhibited to God which either he hath not commanded or hath prohibited that is when we devise Statues and Ceremonies for him 111. This is forbid in the second Commandement Thou shalt make to thy selfe no graven Image c. Exod. 20.4 5. Deut. 12.30 31. 112. Which is expounded in Deuteronomy Do not seeke after the gods of the Gentiles saying As these Gentiles have worshipped their gods so will I. Thou shalt not do so to the Lord thy God for every thing that is abhomination to the Lord they did unto their gods which I hate 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 113. For what is properly will-worship in respect of the manner becomes Idolatry in respect of the object 114. For to worship God with a strange worship is to give him another will then he hath therefore it is to feigne another God or to worship an Idoll instead of God 115. Such Idolatry it is when God is painted and is fained to be worshipped in that picture 116. Such also is the worshipping of God by Statues and Images of creatures celestiall or terrestriall put up for the honour of God or of his Saints whether that worship be devised to be terminated or bounded within the Statues or Saints or to be emanent and transient to God 117. Against both these God speaketh Deuteronomy 4.15 16. thus Take heed to your selves for you saw no similitude in the day that the Lord spake to you in Mount Horeb lest you defile your soules and make to your selves any graven Image the similitude of any figure the Image of male or female c. 118. In the New Testament especially when God will be worshipped in spirit and truth wee are strictly commanded to flie from Idolatry and every kinde of superstition Beware of Idols Flee from Idolatry and every kinde of superstition 1 John 5.21 1 Cor. 10.7 Colos 2.8 Let no man seduce you with will-worship 119. All Idolaters are directly excluded from the kingdome of God Be not deceived neither whoremongers nor Idolaters shall inherit the kingdome of God Without are whoremongers Idolaters and witches 120. But Popery for now a thousand yeares is altogether made up of filthy superstitions and by impure Idolatry is every day more and more profaned 121. Who is able to reckon up the infinite vaine and impious superstitions to which daily men give themselves in Popery with great devotion to pacifie Gods anger to merit pardon for sins to redeeme sinnes and the paines of hell and purgatory devised to in rich the Priests Such are Prayers and watchings for the dead their yeerely septimes and trentals the treasure and suffrages of the Church for Purgatory pilgrimages to the Images of Saints to holy places to the bones and reliques of Saints their fraternities religious dedications of Churches and Altars their exorcismes consecrations of Images and graves the baptising of Bells using of God-fathers to that purpose the choise of meats their quarterly and Lent fasts their religious and consecrated cloathes canonicall houres devoute processions perambulations bacchanals consecrations of Priests anointing of the s●ck exorcising of Chrismes and Fonts clipping and shaving their hooded coats surplesses and quirerobes candlesticks consecrated waxe tapers lampes glasse viols torches tippets banners censers drums wafer coffers little bels holy waters with their exorcisings hallowed salt hallowed wafers exorcised herbs to chase away devils ringing of bels against thunder little Images of Saints wrapped up in clouts the Letanies of Saints confessions satisfactions rosaries consecrated palme branches Asses crowned with palmes kisses and adorations of the Crosse the Crosse laid up in the grave their Mattins at the Sepulchre their solemne tumults their wooden busling noise in the night the ridiculous ascending of an Idol instead of Christ upon the cieling of the Church their flinging downe of fire and water their carrying about of the consecrated host the innumerable Saints holy-dayes to be kept under paine of mortall sin indulgences washings of feet and of Altars the waxen Images of the Crosse their Agni Dei and innumerable such like toyes full of superstition Magick and Idolatry 122. Which the ambitious Bishops chiefly the Popes to please the people have borrowed from Gentilisme and that they might seeme to have the more divinity have transferred them from Judaisme to the Christian Religion all which our Saviour Mat. 15.9 Esay 29.13 14. in one word hath overthrowne saying In vaine do they worship me teaching for doctrines mens traditions 123. So much the more horrible is the Romish Idolatry in that it placeth in Temples Images and fictitious Statues to the most holy Trinity the most incomprehensible and invisible God which Images they worship with wax candles Incense geniculations groanings and vowes as religiously as they do God himselfe 124. That they hang up and againe crucifie Christ our Saviour now gloriously reigning in heaven and set up his Image of wood or stone in all their Churches and corners of their streets and high wayes to be worshipped devoutly by the faithfull under paine of death to the great scandall and mockery of Infidels 125. That they worship as devoutly the wood of the Crosse as Christ himselfe 126. That they account as sacred and venerable the signe of the Crosse in the forehead or in the aire or upon any thing as it is expressed by the finger against the power of the Devill and good for hallowing of themselves 127. That under the species of the Host they really offer sacrifice destroy that is kill and crucifie Christ being alive and glorious every day in the Host more wickedly then the souldiers did when they crucified him in his humility 128. That it exhibits the Host of bread being elevated in the Masse to be