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A10133 Iacobs vovv, opposed to the vowes of monkes and friers The first volume in two bookes; of the Holy Scripture, and euangelicall counsels. Written in French by Mr. Gilbert Primerose, minister of the word of God in the Reformed Church of Burdeaux. And translated into English by Iohn Bulteel minister of the gospel of Iesus Christ.; Voeu de Jacob. English Primrose, Gilbert, ca. 1580-1642.; J. B. (John Bulteel), d. 1699. 1617 (1617) STC 20390; ESTC S112003 232,060 268

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will bee plaine Saint Peter said that it was not good for a man to marrie Christ refutes his saying by this syllogisme whosoeuer is such a one as that he is no Eunuch neither by nature nor by necessity nor by the gift of God that he be able to abstaine frō mariage with quietunes and with peace of conscience it is not good for such a one for the saluation of his soule to be without a wise but contrariwise it is expedient for him to marrie for there are but these three sorts of men that can commodiously liue out of the state of marriage but it is not giuen to all to be wiuelesse Now if it bee not expedient for them not to marry it is expedient for them to marrie and they ought and must marrie if they desire to bee saued Saint Paul who had in him Gods Spirit expounds the Lord● words after this manner y 1. Cor. 7.8 I say to the vnmarried and widdowes It is good for them if they abide euen as I. This is that which our Sauiour saith He that is able to receiue it let him receiue it and that which our Apostle said in the verse going before z 1. Cor. 7.7.9 Euery man hath his proper gift of God one after this manner and another after that He adds But if they cannot containe let them marry for it is better to marrie then to burne This is that which our Sauiour saith All men cannot receiue this saying It is expedient and good for them that are such to marrie VI. This therefore is a precept and no counsell but because there are two sorts of precepts the one common to all as to loue God practise righteousnesse c. the other particular to some onely according to the gift and particular calling of God as to sell all that we haue and to giue it to the poore to follow Christ The ancient Doctors doe call a precept a commandement giuen to all and a Counsell a particular Commandement made particularly vnto some according to Gods gift and calling which also they call sometimes Precept So the ordinary glosse calls this our Lords exhortation a Glossa in Mat. 19. vers 10. Non omnes capiunt id est non omnes implere possunt praeceptum continentiae A precept of continenci● So Saint Austin calls a Commandement the words of our Lord to the rich man Goe and sell that thou hast c. b August epist 89. quaest 4 cui dominus haec praecepit to whom saith he hath the Lord commanded these things and he repeates the same thing often in 89. Epistle the fourth question In like manner Saint Ierome c Hieron aduers Pelag. lib. 1. In qua praecipitur we must seeke the Euangelical perfection wherein this is commanded If thou wilt be perfect goe sell that thou hast c. It is an easie matter then to vnderstand Saint Austins words He distinguisheth betweene a precept and a counsell that is to say betweene precepts giuen to all and precepts giuen to some all they which will not keepe those shal be punished because they are directed and giuen vnto all but all they that do not these shall not be punished because they are not giuen to all but as concerning those to whō they are giuen how can they escape the iudgement of God if they doe not that which he commands which he counsels and requires them to doe and whereunto he exhorts them Let them call it what they wil that man which doth not the counsell of his God cannot be innocent nor guiltlesse as wee haue seene heretofore Moreouer Saint Austin puts among Counsels the abstinence from flesh and wine Chap. 11. §. 12. and how few are there among the orders of Friers that doe abstaine from flesh the Iesuites that are the most exact sect of them all doe they abstaine from it and is there any of them all that valew so much that greater glory that aureola in illâ parte that for it they would forgoe their wine d Psal 104.15 that maketh glad the heart of man let them tell me therefore if Christ hauing giuen this counsell with many others according to Saint Austin a counsell easier to be obserued then the rest they shall obtaine the greatest reward in doing the others and not intending to do this Lastly it appeares by this place that S. Augustine held that a Counsell is of things indifferent that is to say which are neither good nor bad but in as much as they are vsed well or ill to eate flesh and drink wine being a thing in it selfe wholly indifferent But Counsels saith c Bellar. de monach c. 8. §. vlt. Bellarmine are not things indifferent but acceptable to God and recommended by him which abstinence from flesh and wine is not because f Rom. 14.17 that the Kingdome of God is not meate and drinke but righteousnesse and peace and ioy in the holy Ghost It is therfore little to the purpose that they produce and alleage this place of Saint Austin which is not to the purpose VII But it is worse to the purpose that they tell vs that for a man to make himselfe an Eunuch for the kingdome of heauens sake is to abstaine from marriage thereby to merit a reward in heauen These good men would not bee debtors to God for God must needes remaine their debtor and must giue them alwaies some returne as hauing paid to God more then was due for the which hee is beholding to them Hirelings that would doe no seruice to God if they did not hope for a reward that keepe not the Commandements but to merit the reward of eternall life that keepe not the Counsels but to merit a greater glory in the life to come hirelings indeed who in doing seruice to God haue no other aime then themselues and if God giue them not the reward which they beleeue is due to them they will repent that they haue serued him and will blaspheme him before his face as vniust Not children who in seruing God haue no other scope nor ende then the glory of God who would bee contented to bee blotted out of his booke of life to be accursed and separated from Christ their deare Sauiour if it could bee possible if that could aduance his glory Hirelings worthy to be expelled out of the house of God as enemies of his grace who will reckon with God and binde him to giue them as a reward iustly due to them that which hee declares to be a free gift of his grace vnworthie that Christ should aduow and take them for his owne seeing that they depriue him of his glorie and attribute to themselues the reward which is not due which is not giuen but to his merit Let them not cry out The ancient Fathers The ancient Fathers The Ancient of dayes hath told me by Saint Paul more ancient then them all g Rom. 6.23 that the gift of God
with the same spirit they haue been written with all which is the spirit of charitie a pure spirit a cleane spirit but it supposeth that which is false that this spirit is in none but in those that preach the Gospell that is Pastors and Ministers But let vs see his proofes It is written in the Scripture Ascende in montem in qui Euangelizas that is to say Get thee vp into the mountaine of vertue thou that preachest Scripture The Text ſ Esai 40.9 in Isaiah is thus word for word O Zion that bringest good tidings get thee vp into the holy mountaine O Ierusalem that bringest good tidings lift vp thy voice with strength lift it vp bee not afraide say vnto the Cities of Iudah behold your God The Apostles were to receiue power from aboue in the Citie of Ierusalem and from thence were to publish and spread the Gospell in all Iudea and Samaria and vnto the vttermost parts of the earth And this is that which the Prophet hath prophecied of and foretold by this Apostrophe not to the preachers of the Gospell but to Sion and Ierusalem who was to be honoured with this priuiledge according as the same Prophet had more plainely and perspicuously described saying t Esay 2.2.3 It shall come to passe in the last daies that the mountaine of the Lords house shall be established in the top of the mountaines and shall be exalted aboue the hills and all nations shall flow vnto it for out of Zion shall goe forth the Law and the word of the Lord from Ierusalem The question is not here then of any mountaine of vertue but of the Citie of Ierusalem builded on mountaines and of the mountaine of Sion which God should lift vp on high and exalt it aboue the hills on that day The Author of the Pastorall Letter saw this and therefore left at the tip of his pen the word Sion and left it out the Text bearing Ascende in montem in qui Euangelizas Sion But suppose the Allegorie were good and that the mountaine of Sion were the mountaine of vertue What shall it not bee permitted to any to get vp into the mountaine of vertue but to those that preach the Gospell shall all the rest remaine in the vallies of vices But the Prophet saith of all Christians x Esay 2.3 Many people shall goe and say come ye and let vs goe vp to the mountaine of the Lord and Dauid demaunds y Psal 15.1.2 Lord who shall dwell in thy holy Hill he is answered He that walketh vprightly and worketh righteousnes c. And there is no exception all are called to it It was said vnto all the Iewes by the Prophet Haggai z Haggai 1.8 Goe vp to the mountaine and bring wood and build the house This mountaine if wee receiue the allegorie of Saint Hierome is that of the Scripture all of vs therefore must go vp to it according to the exhortation saying a Hier. in Agg. cap. 1. Let vs goe vp to this reasonable mountaine and to euery probleme seeking fit wood in the testimonies of the Scriptures let vs cut it and build therewith the house of God within vs. V. The second Allegory is taken from the Mount Sinai Pag. 5. vnto the which saith he no beast may approch that is to say no carnall sense and meaning the people also was not permitted to approch the mountaine onely Moses Behold their faire and well pregnant speculations the mountaine that Isaiah speakes of is that of Sion that on the which Moses mounted is that of Sinai this in Arabia that in Canaan distant the one from the other in situation and different in spirituall signification b Heb. 12.18.22 Yee are not come vnto the mount that might bee touched and that burned with fire nor vnto blacknesse and darkenesse c. but yee are come vnto mount Sion And our Author of the Pastorall Letter makes one of these two and speakes of these two as if they were but one that is his first slippe and error he makes the one and the other the mountaine of vertues and both together the mountaine of Scriptures as if vertues and Scriptures were one and the selfe same thing The Scriptures doe giue precepts of vertue and one must bring the vertues of a pure spirit and of charity in the reading of the Scriptures The Scriptures are in the diuine bookes the vertues are in our hearts therefore the mountaine of vertues is not the mountaine of Scriptures that is his second slip His third error is in that he considers not that the Scripture was giuen in the mountaine and brought by Moses to all the people who did commaund him to reade it and therfore the mountaine was not the Scripture for the people was forbid to come neere the mountaine and was commanded to approch the Scripture and to reade it He did not consider that the mountaine of Sinai was at that present time the throne of the Iustice of God terrifying the consciences of men by his Law and therefore forbidding the people to approch it vnder paine of death And that the Christians freed and deliuered from the terrours of the mountaine of Sinai are come vnto the mountaine of Sion which is the throne of Gods mercie comforting the consciences of men by his Gospell Then speakes hee but little to the purpose yea nothing at all of the mountaine Sinai seeing now wee Christians know no other then that of Sion that is his fourth error followed with a fifth grosse fault that he did not marke that Moses alone went vp to the mountaine when God did dictate his Law because God had ordained him c Gal. 3.19 a Mediator betweene him and the people and would giue authoritie vnto his Ministery in admitting him by a special priuiledge to come to the mountaine which the people might not look at afarre off without great ●eare and trembling The words of God are manifest to this purpose L●● saith hee d Exod. 19.9 I come vnto thee in a thicke cloude that the people may heare when I speake to thee and beleeue thee for euer Finally all his slipps and errors are ful of absurdities and inconueniences for if they only and alone ought to reade the Scriptures which doe approch the mountaine Moses alone should reade them because hee went vp alone The e Exod. 19.24 Priests ought not then to haue reade them for they went not vp to the mountaine and none might reade them now adaies because Moses had not an ordinarie Priesthood to the which any can succeed f Bella. de verb● Dei lib. 3. cap. 4. §. 2. as Cardinall Bellarmine confesseth but an extraordinarie ordained specially by God for the constitution of a new Common-weale and Church of Israel Why doth Moses therefore g Deut. 31.9 10 11. command the Priests to keepe the Scripture and to reade it And why do the Popes the Cardinals and Bishops with the rest
that of God reuealed in the Scripture so the priuate iudgment is inferior to the ministerial for it comes not out in publike with a publike calling and authoritie but keepes and containes it selfe in the conscience for her rest and peace and doth not extend or spread her selfe further then the calling of him which hath receiued this gift of God This is common to all true Christians who being all spirituall man haue receiued and had of God the eyes eares taste heart and iudgement of the spirituall man to see heare taste know iudge loue and affect the things of God z 1. Cor. 2.15 The spirituall man faith the Apostle discerneth and iudgeth all things euery Christian is spirituall he which is not spirituall is no Christian for to be a Christian is nothing else then to be spirituall euery Christian therefore knoweth and discerneth the things of his saluation Christians are the sheepe of our Lord Iesus As therefore a naturall sheepe can by the principle of nature make choise of that herbe which is the most wholesome to her and in feeding passe by that which is contrary to her nature so the spirituall sheepe by the principle of grace can iudge betweene the true passages and places vnto the which she is brought and led by her true shepheard and the bad pasture wherewith the stronger would infect and poyson her This doctrine is of Christ Iesus and of his Apostles Christ hath said that a Iohn 10.4.5 the good shepheard putteth forth his owne sheepe and goeth before them and the sheepe follow him for they know his voice and a stranger will they not follow but will flee from him for they know not the voyce of strangers The Apostle requires of all men that b Heb. 5.14 they haue their senses exercised to discerne both good and euill he exhorts them saying c 1. Cor. 14.20 Brethren be not children in vnderstanding howbeit in malice be ye children but in vnderstanding be men d 1. Thess 5.20 Proue all things hold fast that which is good Saint Iohn tells them that it is their dutie e 1. Iohn 4.1 Beloued beleeue not euerie spirit but trie the spirits whether they are of God because many false prophets are gone out into the world They will not place the particulars in the pulpit to preach but they place them at the chaires foote to heare with iudgement and discerne between the true Doctor and the false seducer to follow that man and to take heed of this man according to Christs admonition f Matth. 7.15 Beware of false prophets which come to you in sheepes clothing but inwardly they are rauening w●lues yee shall know them by their fruits He presupposeth therefore that they shall haue iudgement to know them but this iudgement being a gift of God a gift grace not of nature a gift proper vnto the spirituall man vnknowne to the naturall the Apostle prayes to God to giue it vs g Phil. 1.9.10 I pray that your lo●● may abound yet more and more in knowledge and in all iudgement that yee may approue things that are excellent that ye may be sincere and without offence till the day of Christ VII Iudge we then of what spirit are they which of spirituall sheepe would deforme vs and transforme vs into brutish sheepe and destituted of reason doe prohibit vs to speake of the things of our God Creator Father and Sauiour but as they list Let vs compare their spirit with that of Christ and of the Apostles Christ would that we should iudge of him by the Scriptures and not simply by his saying said vnto the people h Iohn 5.39 Search the Scriptures And these would haue vs to iudge of them by their bare saying and not by the Scriptures do blame and condemne vs for the diligent search of the Scriptures The Apostle said to the Corinthians i 1. Cor. 10.15 I speake as to wise men iudge yee what I say These feare nothing so much as vnderstanding men to keepe and deteine the world in ignorance they crie out it is not for you to iudge of what we say If the spirit wherewith Christ and the Apostles were guided ●●d led was the holy Ghost what manner of spirit can this be which leader these men A spirit which would make vs like to painted clouds in a Church or like vnto those little court-cupbord gods of whom it is written k Ps ●15 5 ● They haue months but speake not eyes haue they but they see not they haue eares but they heare not noses haue they but they smell not they haue hands but they handle not feete haue they but they walke not neither speake th●y through their throat they that make them are like vnto them so is euery one that trusteth in them And therefore the spirit of darkenesse who detaines the Christians in darkenesse to the ende he may draw and bring them to the gulfe of outward darknesse with himselfe as it is written l Io. 3.19 20. 21 This is the condemnation that light is come into the world and men loued darkenesse rather then light because their deeds were euill for euery one that doth euill hateth the light neither commeth to the light lest his deeds should be reproued but he that doth truth commeth to the light that his deeds may be made manifest that they are wrought in God Let him therefore that will walke in darknesse As for vs that m Ephes 5.8.11 were sometimes darknesse but now we are light in the Lord we will walke as children of light and will haue no fellowship with the vnfruitfull workes of darkenesse but rather reproue them reioycing and taking pleasure in the light of the Scriptures without and in the direction and conduct of the holy Spirit within vs vntill n Iames 1.17 the father of lights who by his grace o Col. 1.13 hath deliuered vs from the power of darknesse and hath translated vs into the kingdome of his deare sonne p Phil. 1.6 finishing that good worke which he hath begun in vs q Col. 1.12 make vs meete to be partakers of the inheritance of the Saints in light r 1. Iohn 3.2 where wee shall bee like to him and shall see him as he is Amen The ende of the first Booke OF EVANGELICALL COVNSELS The second Booke CHAP. I. I. The Iewish Church hath been of old troubled by false prophets who pretended the name of the word of God and laid claime to it in their false lies II. Saint Peter prophesied that the like should happen vnto the Christian Church by false doctors III. Of this number are they which exalt with puffing words the Monasticall life IIII. Making the people beleeue that it is grounded vpon Euangelicall Counsels whereas there is no such Counsell in the whole Scripture THe Church of the Iewes was very much troubled abused and seduced in her time by the false prophets They saith God
way of exclusion by that which hee comprehends not and positiuely by that which he comprehends he retaines not the things of the Spirit of God the mysterie of the Crosse of Christ the great things which God hath done to vs the things which God will haue vs to doe i Mat. 16.17 Flesh and bloud reueale not these things but the Father which is in heauen k 2. Cor. 3.5 And we are not sufficient of our selues to thinke any thing as of our selues but our sufficiencie is of God He comprehends the things of God as things which are not of God l 1. Cor. 1.23 We preach saith the Apostle Christ crucified vnto the Iewes a stumbling blocke and vnto the Greekes foolishnesse Behold the distribution and diuision of a man that hath no excellencie in himselfe but his soule either he is a Iew and Christ is a stumbling block vnto him or elsen Greeke and Christ is foolishnesse vnto him He vnderstands the things which are displeasing vnto God vnderstands not those things which are pleasing vnto him God said of his people m Ierem. 4.22 My people is foolish they haue not knowne me they are sottish children and they haue none vnderstanding they are wise to doe euill but to doe good they haue no knowledge VVhat would he then say or what would not he say of them which are not his people Before the Floud n Gen. 6.5 God saw that the wickednesse of man was great in the earth and that euerie imagination of the thoughts of his heart was onely euill continually After the Floud he said * Gen. 8.21 The imagination of mans heart is euill from his youth Heere is no place for cauilling hee saith not some imagination of the thoughts but euery imagination of the thoughts hee sayes not that this imagination of the thoughts is for the most part euill but that it is altogether euil yea more plainely that it is onely euill and that not by respits and pauses but continually The reason is the naturall man is onely flesh the Scripture saies that he is flesh that he is in the flesh that is to say that he is corrupted yea drowned in corruption euen vnto the very highest part of his soule which is his vnderstanding as the Apostle speaketh of Infidels that o Tit. 1.15 their minde and conscience is defiled p Col. 2.18 and vainely puft vp by their fleshly mindes This is all that their good wit and spirit serues vnto to make them swel and puffe vp with presumption as Toades do with venome for as for God q Rom. 8.7 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The carnall minde is enmitie against God for it is not subiect to the Law of God neither indeede can be Christ Iesus speaking of these things saith r Mat. 6.22.23 The light of the body is the eye if therefore thine eye be single thy whole body shall be full of light but if thine eye be euill thy whole body shall be full of darkenesse If therfore the light that is in thee be darkenes how great is that darknesse The Lord teaching vs by these words that if the minde and vnderstanding which is the light of the soule be darkenes man cannot thinke will say doe any thing which is good and iust for the will to will well must be ruled by the minde vnderstanding well and the bodie to doe well must bee gouerned by the will willing well that which is good Now the Scripture saith of the vnregenerated man that ſ Esay 48.4 his neck is as an iron sinew and his brow brasse VVhat is harder then iron or brasse such is the will of man but the iron is tractable and plyant to the hammer the fire can mollifie it and make it pliant it can bee framed and fashioned in diuers formes by the hammer It is not so with mans will it cannot bee softned wherefore the Scripture compares it vnto a stone and by such a comparison declares that it is inflexible vnto good as a stone that breakes but neuer bowes t Ezech. 36.26 A new heart will I giue you and a new Spirit will I put within you and I will take away the stonie heart out of your flesh and I will giue you an heart of flesh Our heart is naturally so inflexible to godlinesse that God promiseth not to correct it or strengthen it but to take it away and to giue vs in stead of that an heart of flesh a pliable heart a heart framed and fashioned to the obedience of his commandments He promises to change the whole nature not in regard of the substance of it but in respec of the euill qualities thereof which are ours and make vs saplesse and without life when question is of the things of God in stead of which he will put in vs holy qualities by the which hee will fashion vs and transforme vs to his will After this sort our will is described priuatiuely and exclusiuely God hath described it also positiuely saying u Ier. 17.9 The heart is deceitfull aboue all things and desperately wicked In a word all they that are out of Christ Iesus are termed by the holy Ghost x Ephes 2.1 dead in trespasses and sinnes and by consequent destitute of all principle of mouing and of spirituall life what knowledge soeuer they haue of this life and what dexterity industrie and addresse soeuer they shew in the things of this world and therefore wee must not thinke it strange if the Apostle calls all of vs y Ephes 2.3 children of wrath Let a man iudge now if those that are such naturally vnapt vnto all good inclined naturally vnto all euill they that are the obiect of Gods anger can bee called good to begin nay to think any good thing To be good trees we must be taken away from our stock and stemme plucked out from the old Adam transported and transplanted in a new soile grafted into the free Oliue tree in corporated in Christ Iesus who hath pronounced this sentence z John 15.5 I am the Vine ye are the branches he that abideth in me and I in him the same bringeth forth much fruit for without me ye can doe nothing They that are not regenerated are not grafted into Christ the meanes of the vnion of the Elect with Christ is his Spirit and these are a Iude 19. sensuall hauing not the Spirit Some of them may haue and haue the Spirit bridling and restraining them staying and repressing the boyling and surging of their flesh as it is happened vnto many Heathen which haue been esteemed vertuous men because God willing to preserue the states and families of this world by good order and ciuill gouernement gaue them the gift to hide their vices but none of them euer had the sanctifying spirit to mortifie their flesh It is the priuiledge of the members of Christ Iesus of those that in him are made by grace the childrē of God
kept it perfectly or else he accuseth the most Iust of great malice That cannot he doe for he which keepes perfectly that which God commands him in this life is without sinne sinne being no other thing then the transgression of Gods commandements all which doe meete at one ende and abut vpon charitie b Hieron ad Rusticum epist 44. c. 4. Now there is none that is pure from sinne though his life had been but for a day saith Saint Ierome The Apostle himselfe doth openly confesse that he and all the Saints are tied to this vnauoidable necessitie of c Aug. de tempore serm 47. sinne saith Saint Austin and that doth hee confesse in the seuenth Chapter of the Epistle to the Romans as wee shall see in the fourth argument There is none then that keepes perfectly that which God commands him yea that can keepe himselfe all being tied to this necessitie of sinning by the flesh lusting against the Spirit and by the Law of their members warring incessantly against the Law of their minde and bringing them into captiuitie to the Law of sinne which is in their members d Rom. 7.23 Gal. 5.17 as the Apostle speaks This is more perspicuously set before our eyes by death which is saith the Scriptures e Ioshua 23.14 the way of all the earth f Heb. 9.27 it being appointed vnto men once to die It is therefore a manifest conclusion that all are sinners and by consequent all transgressours of the Commandements of God g Rom. 6.23 for the wages of sinne is death and the effect of death in the faithfull is the death of sinne h Rom. 6.7 for he that is dead is freed from sinne which made the holy Apostle to sigh and call after death i Rom. 7.24 O wretched man that I am who shall deliuer me from the body of this death Now Bellarmine not being able to name any one Saint who hath been in his life pure from sinne and saying notwithstanding that they can perfectly keepe Gods Commandements hee accuseth and chargeth them with a notorious malice for what is the cause that they haue not kept the Commandements was it ignorance that was in them Noe for they knew the Commandements was it impotencie that was in them No for Bellarmine saith that they could keepe the Commandements The salt was then only in their will for three things concurre together in the reasonable creature to the producing and bringing forth of a good worke knowledge will power Now to know and to be able to doe good and not to will the doing of it is the propertie of a malicious and peruerse spirit it is a malice altogether condemned as it is written k Iames 4.17 To him that knoweth to doe good and doth it not to him it is sinne Let this be farre from Saints And therefore we will correct the saying of Bellarmine and say that the Saints and faithfull haue the wil to keepe perfectly the Commandements of God but they haue not the power and strength to doe them and that will we verifie by Saint Paul saying of himselfe l Rom. 7.18 To will is present with me but how to performe that which is good I finde not And of vs all m Gal. 5.17 The flesh lusteth against the Spirit and the Spirit against the flesh and these are contrarie the one to the other so that ye cannot doe the things that ye would Lastly because that all which Bellarmine writes touching the diuers degrees of perfection commanded in the Law is maintained by him for the cause and defence of the Monkish state and life which he termes n Bellar. de monach c. 2. the state of perfection I would willingly aske Bellarmine himselfe or the most holiest Monke or Frier if seeing he thinkes he can keepe the Commandements of God he hath euer kept them If he saies that he hath kept them he is a lyar For hee that keepes the Commandements hath no sinne o 1. Iohn 1. ● Now if we say that we haue no sinne we deceiue our selues and the truth is not in vs. If he confesseth that he hath not kept them he confesseth himselfe to be a wicked and malicious man in that hee would not doe that which he could and by his owne confession is doubly the childe of hell p Luk. 12.47 For that seruant which knew his Lords will and prepared not himselfe neither did according to his will shall be beaten with many stripes VII The third argument is this If a man could keepe the Law he should haue no neede of a Mediatour q Gal. 2.21 For if righteousnesse come by the Law then Christ is dead in vaine They answere that Christ indeede should haue died in vaine if man could keepe the Law by his naturall strength and power but it is by grace that Christians keepe it and this grace hath been giuen them through the merit of the obedience and death of Christ which for this cause is not frustrate nor in vaine An answere iniurious to Christ and altogether false For if it were so our righteousnesse and saluation should be immediately of the Law and not of Christ and Christ should not be our Sauiour but onely an instrument by the which we are ayded and enabled to keepe the Law and by the obseruation of the same made our owne sauiours What blasphemie against the Sonne of God r 1. Cor. 1.30 Who of God is made vnto vs wisedome and righteousnesse and sanctification and redemption In as much as ſ 2. Cor. 5.21 God hath made him to be sinne for vs who knew no sin that we might be made the righteousnesse of God in him We are then righteousnesse as he is sinne he is sinne t August Encherid cap. 41. not his owne but ours not in himselfe but in vs euen so are wee righteousnesse not our owne but that of God not in our selues but in him And marke he hath beene made vnto vs righteousnesse by God it is not written that we are made righteousnesse by him Againe we are the righteousnesse of God in him it is not said that we are the righteousnesse of God by him as by an instrument So doth the same Apostle write that u Col. 2.10 we are complete in him and not complete in our selues by him he felt it so when being as then renewed hauing been alreadie yea a long time an Apostle and neere vnto death when hauing fought a good fight kept the faith and finished his course he writes from prison vnto his Philippians that x Phil. 3.8.9 he counted all things but lesse and dung that he might winne Christ and be found in him not hauing his owne righteousnesse which is of the Law but that which is through the faith of Christ to wit the righteousnesse which is of God by faith He would haue vs to thinke and feele it so when he wrote to vs in the person of the
was conceiued in sinne VI. What honour is due to the Virgin Marie and other Saints VII Saint Paul hath not fully and perfectly kept the Law as he witnesseth Rom. 7. VIII He speakes of himselfe in the state of a regenerate man IX Saint Iames Saint Peter Saint Iohn haue not kept the Law X. The whole Church prayes for the remission of sinnes which are the transgressions of the Law REceiued a Gal. 3.2 ye the Spirit by the workes of the Law or by the hearing of faith It is the demaund which the Apostle makes to the Galathians which had receiued the holy Ghost by the preaching of the Gospell and not by the preaching of the Law for the Spirit is not of the Law but of the Gospell The Spirit was vnder the Law but it was not of the Law They that were clothed with the Spirit and had put on the Spirit vnder the rule and gouernement of the Law had this benefit from the Gospel which was as then promised vnto them as it is now exhibited and set forth to vs whence the Gospell is termed b 2. Cor. 3.8 the ministration of the Spirit the Law c 2. Cor. 3.7 9. the ministration of death and the ministration of condemnation We haue then now to see if the Spirit which is giuen by the Gospell and which is giuen more sensibly effectually and abundantly vnder grace then vnder the law according to Ioels d Ioel 2.3.8 prophecie hath giuen strength to any vnder the Gospell to keepe the Law so that he hath not failed and offended therein Zachari● and Elizabeth II. We will begin with the first Saint named in the Gospel who although hee was not of the Gospell notwithstanding hauing beene the father of him that was the fore-runner of the Gospell is brought in in the beginning of the historie of Christ Iesus adorned and graced with his wife with this great commendation e Luke 1.6 Hieron aduers Pelag. lib. 1. Hoc testimonio quasi impenetrabil● vteris clypeo that they were both righteous before God walking in all the Commandements and ordinances of the Lord blameles And this is the place whereof the Pelagians made vse as of an impenetrable buckler thinking they might very pertinently conclude by it that a man may bee without sinne and easily keepe the Commandements of God if he will vnto the which some added that that may be with the helpe of grace hauing left in writing f August 95. Etiam in hac vita posse esse hominem sine peccato non ab initio natiuitatis suae sed conuersione à peccatis ad iustitiam Hinc quod dictum est sine querela sine peccato dictum acceperunt non quidem negantes imò etiam con●itentes adiutorium gratiae Domini nostri non per naturalem spiritum hominis sed per spiritum principalem Dei that also in this life there might be men without sinne not from the beginning of their birth but by the conuersion from sinne to righteousnesse and from a bad to a good life and interpreting the word blamelesse as if it were to say without sinne not denying but confessing according to godlinesse the helpe of the grace of our Lord not by the naturall spirit of man but by the principall Spirit of God These are the very words of those of that time who being enemies of the grace of God and of the merit of Christ doe part and share out mans saluation betweene the grace of God and mans nature betwixt Christs merits and mans merits let them therefore heare Saint Austin refuting their heresie in the person of them and reprouing them that they haue not enough considered that Zacharie was a Priest and that all Priests were then bound by the Law of God to offer sacrifice first for their owne sinnes and then for the people That was his first argument He that was bound to offer sacrifice for his sinne was a sinner Zacharie was bound to offer for his sinne therefore he was a sinner in like manner all the Priests and all the people for they offered sacrifice for their sinnes and the sinnes of the people And therefore there were none at that time without sinne neither hath there been any since for hee adds It sufficeth vs that in the Church of God there is not one faithfull found in what progresse excellencie or righteousnesse soeuer he be that dare say that this request of the Lords prayer appertaines not to him forgiue vs our debts and tha● saith he hath not sinned lest he abuse himselfe and truth be not in him although he line blamelesse And concerning Zacharie Saint Ierom obserues that g Luke 1.18.20 Hieron aduers Pelag lib. 1. Idem epistol 44. ad Rusticum Denique Zacharias pa●er Ioannis qui scribitur iustus peccauit in eo quod non credidit statim silentio condemnatur he sinned in that he beleeued not and was incontinently adiudged to be dumbe and not able to speake What is it then to bee blamelesse h Aug. in Joan. tractatu 41. It is saith Saint Austin to be without crime it is to liue i Idem de gratia Christi lib. 1. c. 48. according to some approued and laudable conuersation among men whom none can iustly accuse And it is said that Zacharie and his wife haue had that righteousnesse before God because they deceiued not men by any dissembling but as they appeared to men so were they knowne to God and this is not said according to that perfection of righteousnesse in the which we shall liue and which is wholly vnspotted and perfect for the Apostle Paul himselfe hath said k Phil. 3.6 that according to the righteousnesse which is in the Law he was blamelesse in which law Zacharie hath liued blamelesse But the Apostle counted that righteousnesse but dung and l●sse in comparison of the righteousnesse which we hope after and whereof we ought to be a hungrie and adry to the end we may be one day filled and satiated with the sight thereof which is now in faith so long as the iust liue by faith III. The sonne followes the father namely Iohn Baptist Iohn Baptist of whom it was said before his conception l Luke 1.15 He shall be filled with the holy Ghost euen from his mothers wombe Certainely not to purge and cleanse him wholly of all spot of sinne but to make his ministerie the more commendable and praise-worthy by the extraordinarie and particular markes of the vertue efficacie and power of God dwelling in hi● from his first infancie For he himselfe confesseth himselfe a sinner saying to Iesus Christ m Mat. 3.14 I haue neede to be baptized of thee that is to say according to the interlineare Glosse n Gloss ordinar To be washt of originall sinne because thou art the Lambe of God which taketh away the sinnes of the world And according to Saint Chrysostome or whosoeuer is author
marriage doth well but he that giueth her not in marriage doth better Item the widdow is happier if she so abide IF therefore these Counsels are giuen by God 7 7. Obiection Pag. 10. who will make difficultie to ioyne his Counsell with that of the eternall wisdome saith the Pastorall Letter grounding a false conclusion vpon a false exposition of Christs words a Mat. 19.12 There hee Eunuches which haue made themselues Eunuches for the kingdome of heauens sake He that is able to receiue it let him receiue it b Mat. 19.21 Goe and sell all that thou hast and giue to the poore We will therefore correct this conclusion and say If these Counsels are not giuen by God as it appeares sufficiently by the exposition of the foresaid places A Bishop one that esteemes himselfe Gods Ambassadour who therefore should counsell nothing say nothing but that which he hath heard of God should haue made difficultie yea should haue abstained from giuing Counsell in a matter that is not of his Commission Moses being asked touching things that God had not reuealed vnto him c Leuit. 24.11 as the punishment of the blasphemer d Numb 27.5 the succession of daughters in their fathers goods and possession where no male children are and such like things would neuer giue his iudgement and aduice much lesse giue any Counsell yea and much lesse ordaine any thing before he had asked Counsell of the Lord. The Prophets lesson is e Ezech. 3.17 Heare the Word at my mouth f Ierem. 1.7 whatsoeuer I command that thou shalt speake and their prophecying was nothing else but a repetition of the lesson of their God word by word to the people The Apostles lesson was g Mat. 28.19.20 Goe and teach all Nations teaching them to obserue all things whatsoeuer I haue commanded you Their practice was h 1. Cor. 11.23 I haue receiued of the Lord that which also I deliuered vnto you Their instruction to others was i 1. Pet. 4.11 If any man speake let him speake as the Oracles of God and these words say wee are wholly contained in the holy Scripture wherein there is no mention at al of Monkish Counsels and notwithstanding they that are not Prophets nor Apostles vsurping more then hath been permitted euen to the Prophets Apostles and Euangelists doe counsell vs to follow their Counsels doe exhort vs yea vrge vs to the obseruation thereof without God without Christ without Scripture pretending therein notwithstanding the Scripture and the name of eternall wisedome surely not without infolding themselues in impietie in cloaking with the name and title of eternall wisedome a doctrine which is altogether sensuall and earthly and calling the Counsell of God an intollerable yoke wherewith men haue charged the consciences of Saints set at liberty by our Lord Iesus Christ A Counsell notwithstanding that our Cardinal ioyneth with that of God and that if we beleeue him after the imitation of Saint Paul who speaking of virginitie saith II. 1 1. Cor. 7.25 Consilium autem do Pag. 10. tanquam misericordiam consecutus Yet giue I counsell as one that hath obtained mercy of the Lord. But Saint Paul confesseth that he hath not ioyned his Counsell vnto any counsell comming from the Lord writing these words which goe immediatly before Now concerning virgins I haue no commandement of the Lord. Wherefore hee ioyneth not his Counsell to Gods Counsell according to Saint Pauls imitation Hee will say that it sufficeth that he imitates Saint Paul and that Saint Paul saith I giue Counsell c. But I answere him that Saint Paul hath written in Greeke and saith 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is to say I giue my iudgement and not I giue Counsell His iudgement which he authorizeth by his fidelitie in the seruice of God by the mercy he hath obtained of the Lord to be faithfull by the Maiestie of the holy Ghost by whose inspiration he giues it l 1. Cor. 7.25 I giue my iudgement saith he as one that hath obtained mercy of the Lord to be faithfull III. An aduice therefore that he giues not as a priuat man neither also as one of the troupe of Pastors but as he that hath obtained mercy of God to be an Apostle and very faithfull in his charge as he who was according to the Lords promise guided by the holy Ghost into all truth to bee not able to erre in his aduice and iudgement m 1. Cor. 7.40 Now saith he I thinke also that I haue the Spirit of God n Arist ethic ad Nicomach lib. 6. c. 11. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Aristotle saith that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 aduice is a right iudgement of that which is seemely and right is that which is of a true man Among men who more true and vpright then an Apostle guided and inspired by the holy Ghost which is the Spirit of truth yea the truth it selfe Let them now shew me if a good and vpright aduice and iudgement giuen by an Apostle faithfull in his charge and office hauing authoritie of the Lord Iesus to bee heard without replying as guided by the holy Ghost into all truth can be reiected without punishment I argue therefore after this manner That which can not be reiected with impunitie is no Euangelicall Counsell according to that we haue heard heretofore that A Counsell not obserued hath no punishment Now the iudgement of the holy Ghost giuen by the mouth of a faithfull Apostle is such a one as that it cannot bee refused without punishment therefore such a iudgement is no Euangelicall Counsell But let it bee a Counsell it is a good Counsell giuen by the good Spirit of God to man to his creature to the work of his hands by the heauenly Father to his childe that is earthly IIII. A Counsell properly is of the inferiour to his superiour or of a man to his equall the superiour armed with power and authoritie counselleth not but commandeth that which hee iudgeth to bee right and good and if he vseth words of Counsell his meaning is that they take and keepe them as Commandements yea all the world knoweth that the prayers and intreaties of great men are commandements to all them that are vnder their power and authoritie Now God is the great of great ones the Lord of Lords and the King of Kings o Isa 40.22.23 It is he that sitteth vpon the circle of the earth and the inhabitants thereof are as grashoppers that bringeth the Princes to nothing and maketh the Iudges of the earth as vanitie It is he that is our Father and we are his children p Jsa 64.8 wee are the clay and thou our potter saith the Church vnto him and we all are the worke of thine hand He is our Lord and we his seruants our Shepheard and wee his sheepe our Redeemer and wee are q 1. Pe. 1.18.19 those whom he hath redeemed from our vaine conuersation receiued
by tradition from our fathers not with corruptible things as siluer and gold but with the precious bloud of Christ as of a Lambe without blemish and without spot As many titles and names of God so many arguments for God against vs. r Isai 66.2 To whom will I look to him that trembleth at my word His Counsell is his word He is our Lord and Father ſ Mal. 1.6 A sonne honoureth his father and a seruant his master If then I bee a Father where is mine honor and if I be a Master where is my feare This honor and feare consists principally in that we obey his voice that we say vnto him with Samuel t 1. Sam. 3.10 Speake Lord for thy seruant heareth He is our shepheard and we are his sheepe and this is the marke of his sheepe u John 10.27 My sheepe heare my voice and I know them and they follow me Hee that heareth him not is none of his x Iohn 8.47 He that is of God heareth Gods words yee therefore heare them not because ye are not of God said Christ vnto the Iewes y 1. Pet. 2.9 We are a chosen generation a peculiar people saith Saint Peter and Saint Paul z 1. Cor. 6.19.20 Yee are not your owne for yee are bought with a price And therefore we ought not to haue any will but his whose wee are to follow it in all things If these Counsels depended on our wil we should be our owne against the Apostle and against the right whereby the slaue is subiect in all things to him that hath purchased him and is despoiled of all libertie and disposing of his owne will I appeale now vnto the conscience of the Author of the Pastorall Letter that he tell me vpon his soule if he thinke that God can Counsell a thing vnto man whereunto man is not bound to yeelde and render quicke and speedie obedience which hee may reiect without putting his soule in danger The clause of his conclusion sheweth euidently that he thinketh so For if he esteemes not his pretended Counsels to be Commandements If he beleeues that they may bee reiected without offending God with what equitie conscience hath he stormed and thundered against those yea made a seisure of the possessions of those that haue reiected them V. But whatsoeuer hee thinkes the truth shall bee alwaies one and the same and if hee will denie it shee will defend her selfe and will get her selfe credit against his credit Hee saith that Saint Pauls aduice and iudgement is a Counsell She saith euen by the mouth of Saint Paul that it is a Commandement for the Apostle hauing said both touching marriage and single life a 1. Cor. 7.17 As God hath distributed to euery man as the Lord hath called euery one so let him walke Which is an expresse Commandement and altogether necessarie in a Common-wealth and in the Church b 1. Cor. 7.25 he addes and so ordaine I in all Churches where he vseth a Greeke word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifying to ordaine and commaund precisely as it appeares by the 25 verse where he saith 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Concerning virgins I haue no Commandement of the Lord. This will more euidently appeare by a like manner of speech which the Apostle vseth in this very same Chapter vers 12. where being asked if the partie that beleeueth ought to remaine with the party that beleeueth not who is ioyned to him by mariage he saith but to the rest speake I not the Lord. For God had set downe nothing thereof in the old Testament and the Lord had not giuen any Commandement thereof to his Disciples because the religion was yet limited within the borders of Iudea there was not then any diuersitie nor difference of religion betweene the husband and the wife But the Gospell hauing been carried vnto the Gentiles it happened that one while the husband did imbrace it another while the wife the one or the other remaining an Infidell Now the aduice that the Apostle giues them is a formall and flat Commandement * 1. Cor. 7.12 If saith he any brother hath a wife that beleeueth not and shee bee pleased to dwell with him let him not put her away c. They are words of command the reasons which hee addes to his aduice doe witnesse it First The vnbeleeuing husband is sanctified by the wife Vers 14. and the vnbeleeleeuing wife is sanctified by the husband So that their mutuall coniunction and conuersation cannot defile the partie which beleeueth Vers 15. Secondly But if the vnbeleeuing depart let him depart a brother or a sister is not vnder bondage in such a case And then if the vnbeleeuing remaine and consents to dwell with the beleeuing the beleeuing is bound in such a case Thirdly God hath called vs to peace wherefore he that beleeueth ought not to disturbe the peace of the house Fourthly For what knowest thou Vers 16. O wife whether thou shalt saue thy husband Or how knowest thou O man whether thou shalt saue thy wife Now all are bound by Gods Commandement to doe all that which can saue a soule from death Vers 17. But as God hath distributed to euery man as the Lord hath called euery one so let him walke And who can denie but that euery one is bound to follow the gift and calling of God Behold how impertinent it is to conclude that the Apostles iudgement is a Counsell left to a mans deuotion and will and not a Commandement because it is he that hath giuen it first and that the Lord had said nothing thereof before him VI. Notwithstanding let vs see what this pretended Counsell is The Apostle saith d 1. Cor. 7.39.40 Cui vult nubat Beatior autem si sic permanserit secundum meum consilium puto autem quod ego spiritum Deihabeam The virgin is a● liberty to be maried to whom she will but she is happier if she so abide after my counsell I thinke also that I haue the Spirit of God This translation is the Authors of the Pastorall Letters translation wherein there is a notable falsehood for the Apostle speaketh here of a widdow The wife is bound by the Law as long as her husband liueth but if her husband be dead she is at liberty to be maried to whom she wil c. And the Author of the pastoral letter expoūds these words of a virgin that hath not the right and power to marrie her selfe to whom she will being vnder the fathers authoritie and power vnto whom alone the liberty of giuing her in marriage appertaineth as the Apostle declareth e 1. Cor. 7.38 Qui iungit virginem suam benè facit qui non iungit melius facit He that giueth her in marriage namely his virgin doth well but he that giueth her not in marriage doth better A Text alleaged by the Author of the Pastorall Letter against himselfe for