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A12062 The triall of the protestant priuate spirit VVherein their doctrine, making the sayd spirit the sole ground & meanes of their beliefe, is confuted. By authority of Holy Scripture. Testimonies of auncient fathers. Euidence of reason, drawne from the grounds of faith. Absurdity of consequences following vpon it, against all faith, religion, and reason. The second part, which is doctrinall. Written by I.S. of the Society of Iesus. Sharpe, James, 1577?-1630. 1630 (1630) STC 22370; ESTC S117207 354,037 416

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differ in the extension of it for we affirme this grace to be extended offered and giuen sufficiently though not effectually to all so that all and euery one of reason haue sufficient meanes and ability to know God by Faith and to loue him by Charity so far as is needfull for their saluation They affirme their spirit to be restrayned offered and giuen only to the elect faithfull whome they make all one and that all others neither haue nor can haue it but are by the absolut will and decree of God debarred from it therby made incapable of it 3. We differ in the manner of operation of it for we affirme that grace doth worke or cooperate with vs and we with it so that the grace of God and our Free-will as two concurring causes though Grace the more principall do ioyntly effect and produce euery good worke of Faith Hope or Charity or the rest in vs whereby our good works haue of grace that they are diuine supernaturall and of our selues that they are voluntary and free of both that they are meritorious of more grace present in vs and of glory in heauen to come to vs. They doe attribute so much to the worke of their spirit in them that they take away all cooperation of our free-will in vs wherby they make man as dead without all action or operation to any spirituall and good workes make the spirit so●e whole worker of all in man Fourthly We differ in the nature and permanency of this grace or spirit for we acknowledge grace to be an inherent quality permanent guift infused into our soule which doth enlighten enable our vnderstanding to giue assent by faith to the diuine mysteries proposed and inspire our will to be sorrowfull by contrition for our sins committed which guift once infused is not so permanent perpetuall but that the habit of Charity is lost by mortall sinne against Charity the habit of Hope by desperation against hope the habit of faith by infidelity against faith They or many of thē deny all infused guifts of faith hope charity or the rest admit only a transeunt motion or operatiō of the spirit which working in man without mans cooperation when what how and in whome it pleaseth is neuer totally or finally lost after it be receaued doth make a man alwayes faythfull and beloued of God and doth giue that vertue to all his workes though neuer so bad that they make them gratefull and acceptable to him so that according to them no worke of a faithfull man though neuer so bad can make any enmity betweene God him God neither imputing it as an offence to him nor man incurring the displeasure of God for it Fiftly We differ in the effect and operation assigned to it for we assigne the function and office for example Of the guift of faith to be the eleuation enabling of our Vnderstanding to giue assent to what is reuealed by God deliuered in scripture or tradition and proposed by Church authority Of the guift of hope to be the inflammation of the soule to loue God as our chiefest end to desire him as our greatest Good to hope for him as our good absent and to delight in him as our good present Of the guift of charity or grace to be the forgiuenes of our sinnes the sanctification of our soule adoption to be the sonnes of God title and right to the kingdome of heauen and a valew dignity of merit to our good workes They assigne to their priuate spirit a double effect the one of proposing the obiect the other of working in the subiect In respect of the obiect it proposeth to them what they are to belieue and why they are to beleeue it and how they are to know both In respect of the subiect it workes in them say they a firme and infallible assurance of all the former thinges belieued so that they stand sure and certaine not only of the Scripture the sense of it and of their doctrine and verity of it but also of their spirit that it is of the Lord and of their saluation that it is as due to them as it is to vse Caluins owne words due to Christ and that they can no more loose heauen then can Christ nor be no more damned then can Christ In which they attribute to their priuate spirit all the reason of credibility exteriour and all the operation interiour both in the will and vnderstanding which they haue of the certainty of all their faith and saluation By all which is apparent that as they made it the sole ground foundation which is in the former part at large proued on which their faith is built so they make it the sole meanes as is here proued and the totall cause materiall formall finall and efficient both exteriourly reuealing proposing and persuading and interiourly working or rather deluding them in the obstinacy rather then certainty of their supposed faith And this priuate spirit and this effect of it is that which they rest vpon and that which in this second Part we intend by the assistance of Gods grace to confute and disproue THE PRIVATE SPIRITS INTERPRETATION OF HOLY SCRIPTVRE Deciding of controuersies iudging of mysteries of Fayth cōfuted by holy Scripture CHAP. II. Out of 1. S. Iohn 4. 1. S. Paul 1. Tim. 4.11 Act. 20.30 2. S. Pet. 2. describing this Spirit SECT I. THE holy Ghost in holy Writ borh foreseeing and also forshewing to vs the abuse of this priuate spirit the better to forewarne vs of it to arme vs against it doth not only in generall as it doth many other abuses but euen in particuler and as it were on set purpose both plainely decipher and describe it also fully confute and condemne it Out of it therefore we will draw our first arguments of confutation and by it conuince of falsity this deceitfull and deceauing spirit And first to begin with the new Testament for the more full instruction of our selues and the plainer confutation of this spirit I will for one proofe conioine in one argument the testimonies of the chiefest Apostles that is of S. Iohn S. Peter and S. Paul First S. Iohn 1. epist chap. 4 v. 1. doth plainely giue admonitions against this spirit 1 Belieue not euery spirit 2 but try the spirits if they be of God Secondly both S. Iohn and S. Paul doe giue the reasons why we should not belieue but try these spirits S. Iohn v. 2. Because many false spirits are gone out into the world S. Paul 1. Tim. 4.11 Because in the last tymes certaine shall depart from the fayth attending to spirits of errour and doctrine of Diuells Againe 2. Cor. 11.14 For that Satan himselfe doth transfigure himselfe into an Angell of light that is doth make shew of workes of piety iustice and deuotion thereby to allure men by opiniō
the soules in purgatory or in the way and in danger as the soules of men liuing some are meere intellectuall as God and Angells others more sensuall as beasts others rationable mixed of both as man some alwayes without bodyes as Angels and Diuels others alwayes with bodyes as beastes and birdes others sometymes with body and sometymes without as the soule of man liuing or dead before and after resurrection 3. According to the effect and operation S. Bernard distinguishes six kindes of spirits 1. Diuine of God the spirit is God 2. Angelicall of Angels he hath made spirits his Angells which alwayes worke good 3. Diabolical of the Diuell he sent immissions by euill Angells 4. Carnall of the flesh puffed vp by the sense of the flesh 5. Worldly of the world you haue not receaued the spirit of this world which worke alwayes bad 6. Humane of man the spirit of man which is in man which of all is indifferent and when it is assisted with grace is good when stayned with sinne is bad To which may be added the spirit of truth and of lying the spirit of wisedome and giddines and the spirit of the knowledge of truth and errour of which is spoken before cap. 2. Of which spirits for our purpose these chiefly are to be noted that is the spirit of God of Angells of Diuells and the spirit of the soule of man dead in heauen in hell or in purgatory and of man liuing according to the dictamen either of our naturall reason or of the light of diuine fayth and grace And thus much of the variety and differences of the nature of spirits which are to be discerned Secondly we may note that these seuerall sortes of spirits haue seuerall sortes of operations in man and do seuerall wayes manifest and shew themselues in him and to him for as in the naturall life of man besides the powers vegitatiue and sensitiue by which he liues and moues God and Nature hath prouided certaine more subtile spirits that is the vitall spirits in the hart which passing through the arteries do help to vitall operation as nutrition and augmentation and sensible spirits in the braine which passing through the veines do assist to the sense of feeling touching and the rest so also in the spirituall life of a Christian man besides the permanent guifts of the Holy Ghost and habits of faith hope and charity infused in Baptisme and Pennance togeather with grace God doth communicate also certaine extraordinary helpes and guifts to the soule which as certaine beames of his diuine light and sparkles of his celestiall loue assist and enable it to a higher knowledge of God and good thinges and to a more perfect practise of vertue and perfection and these are diuine illuminations inspirations or visitations and visions which are of two sortes the one meere spirituall and internall the other sensible and externall The first sort of spirituall motions arise immediatly from foure heads 1. From God who illuminating the Vnderstanding with a heauenly light clearely to discerne what is true or false what good or bad inflaming the will with an ardent desire to loue sincerely him and his goodnes and to doe his holy will and commandement and enabling the rest of the faculties with an inuincible fortitude to performe couragiously what is to his greater honour glory doth when or how he pleases and by meanes and in tyme best fitting as prayer meditation reading or such spirituall practises speake instruct and direct the soule by speciall illustrations inspirations and confortations 2. From the good Angell who by good cogitations and motions exciting the dulnesse and drowsinesse conforting the infirmity and weaknes of the soule and conseruing the same from danger of enemies is alwayes ready to assist vs in prayers and good workes and to defend vs from all occasions and temptations 3. Frō the Spirit of grace which with the light of fayth flame of charity inhabiting in vs doth continually knock at the dore of our heart and in our sleep awakes vs in our sicknesse strengthens vs in our distraction so recollects vs that with alacrity we may proceed in all exercises of piety and with facility ouercome all assaults of our enemy 4. Frō the Dictamen of reason and light of nature which pricked forward by the synderesis of a good conscience doth as a Preacher continually exhort and moue to a prosecution of good and an auersion from euill and as a Maister doth still direct and instruct vs how to behaue our selues in our combat against the law of sinne and the Angell of Sathan which make continuall opposition against it all which as a vigilant watchman doe still watch at the superiour part of the soule to wit the Memory Will and Vnderstanding eyther by an infused light or by species formed and framed in the phantasie and do inwardly knocke awake admonish and incite our soule to the knowledge of truth the operation of God The other sort of Spirits is sensible and visible by visions and apparitions and these are sometymes Imaginary presenting inwardly to the phantasie and imagination a shew and apparition either of wordes spoken or of persons appearing in their own person or in some other like to thē or in some figure representing them others sometymes are Visible and corporall seene heard or felt in some corporall body formed and framed of the ayre and assumed moued by a spirit which in them speakes walkes and exercises sensible actions as though it were a true and liuing person both which kindes happened often to the Patriarches and Prophets of old and to many in these later tymes sometims waking sometymes in their sleep and are both of them either by way of Oracles as S. Augustine calles them when some graue person appeares and fortells what is to be done as did Onias and Hieremy to Iudas Machab●us or by way of visions when thinges haue the euent indeed as they appeare in shew as happened to S. Peter who saw an Angell whē indeed the Angell did free him out of prison or by way of Dreames when apparitions of mysteries are shadowed in figures not vnderstood in sense and signification such as was Pharao his Eares of corne and Nabuchodonoz●r his Statua All which whether interiour or exteriour though they be properly diuine of God and good Angels of which is frequent mention and examples both in the old and new Testament yet because they are sometymes diabolicall of the Diuell who by suggestions and illusions doth imitate them and sometymes naturall dispositions or diseases of body whose affections and imaginations are not much vnlike to them And because of the later sortes that is visions and apparitions of which is the greatest difficultie examples in scripture and ancient histories for I will forbeare latter tymes are many and authenticall how sometymes God sometymes Angells sometymes Diuells
expounded by their priuate spirit containes all the articles of their fayth We Catholiks do professe to belieue first al that which haue been wrot by the Apostles or Prophets in holy Scripture that in the whole bookes of Scripture as anciently they were by a Councell of Carthage S. Augustine others receaued all in that sense as it was by ancient Church expounded 2. all that which hath been by the same Apostls deliuered to posterity by word of mouth and tradition 3. all that which hath beene declared to vs out of Scripture or Tradition by definition of generall Councells 4. all that which by continuance of practise hath beene by holy Church euer reuealed 5. all that which by vnanimous consent of holy and learned Doctours Fathers and Saints hath beene belieued in this we differ and haue the aduantage for the articles we belieue Secondly for the formall obiect of finall resolution of Fayth they belieue what they belieue eyther for that their sense doth so perceaue it or for that their reason doth so persuade it or for that their priuate spirit doth so suggest it and so they make their sense or their reason or their owne priuate spirit and phantasie the formall motiue and finall resolution of their Fayth We belieue what we do belieue for that God hath reuealed it and that not a new and to some one in particuler but anciently to the Apostles and by them generally to all their successours and by successiō to vs so that our doctrine and our beliefe of it is grounded not vpon any our owne sense our owne reason our owne priuate conceit all most fallible and most subiect to illusion and deceit but vpon Gods diuine reuelation as he is the prime verity and verity it selfe and that not newly but of ancient euer since Christ reuealed that not personal made to me or one alone but Apostolical first reuealed to the Apostles themselues that not priuate to euery one seuerally but generall to all faithfull vniuersally that not interrupted at certaine tymes by fits and to certaine persons made knowne but continued by succession at all times by all faithfull and in all places receaued that not fallible without ground subiect to priuate illusion but most infallibly grounded vpon diuine reuelation and Church proposition subiect neither to be deceaued nor yet do deceaue and in this we differ and haue the aduantage for the meanes of Fayth eternall Thirdly for the inward assistance of Gods grace and the cooperation of it they challenge only certayne motions or flashes of a fickle spirit which whether it be by illumination or illusion whether of grace or nature whether supernaturall of God sensuall of nature or diabolicall of Sathan they haue no meanes to discerne or ground to be certaine and by it as dust by a whirle wind they are carryed vp and downe in a round without freedome reason or operation of their owne to what fancy and conceit it violently wheels and forces them We are assisted and enabled by the diuine guift of an internall and permanent spirit or habit of faith which infused into vs and alwayes remayning in vs is at any instant ready with vs and the cooperation of grace in vs to worke both a pious inclination of the will to dispose it without obstinacy obediently to consent and also an actuall assent of the vnderstanding illuminating and enabling it firmely to assent to what is reuealed and proposed Also we admit and receaue besides this habituall Grace other actuall and diuers motions of grace and of it some either excitant first to excite moue vs or adiuuant to assist vs being moued some either operant which workes in vs without vs and our cooperation or cooperant which workes in vs togeather with vs and our cooperation with it some either sufficient by which we are enabled to be conuerted or efficient by which we are actually conuerted And in this we differ from them and haue the aduantage for the meanes of faith internall both for the will and vnderstanding Fourthly for the credible testimonies and motiues of persuasion which may in reason persuade any man prudently to accept any religion as worthy of credit They haue not any which may either induce any which was neuer of it nor reduce any which are fallen from it or establish any who are entred into it that their faith doctrine and religion is credible as is before proued We haue many those forcible reasons perswasions and credibilities which may in prudence persuade any Pagan neuer admitted to it or Heretike reuolted from it or Catholike setled in it that our faith doctrine religion and Church may and ought prudently to be accepted is credible and worthy of beliefe We haue Vnity with the ancient and primitiue Church with the learned and holy Doctours and Fathers with the holy Saints and Martyrs whose faith and life we professe to imbrace imitate We haue Vnity with one head our chiefe Bishop and Pastour whose definitiue sentence doth resolue our doubts doth decide our controuersies doth end our contentions in faith and manners We haue Vnity of faith among our selues all of vs though distant in place though different in manners though contending for temporall state or dominion yet liuing and agreeing in obedience to one spirituall Superiour in vnity of one faith in conformity of one seruice sacraments and ceremonies We haue Sanctity and Holynesse both of doctrine which giues holy precepts and rules to auoid sinne for the loue of God feare of hel to seeke perfection by mortification internall supressing our selfe-will selfe-loue and selfe-conceit and externall taming our passions affections with pennance of fasting watching discipline and the like And also of Good life by frequent exercise of prayer meditation contemplation by dayly practise of pennance of patience in persecution by perfect resignation to holy Obedience Pouerty Chastity We haue Miracles those frequent apparent of prophesying curing of all diseases raising dead dispossessing of Diuels the like all wrought in confirmation either of our faith or sanctity all for the conuersion of Pagans and Heretikes of which in all ages tymes we haue many memorable of most nations now Christian conuerted to our Religion We haue Vniuersality not only of Name by retayning the title of Catholikes by which we are vsually distinguished from al sects no sect doth vsurpe it to distinguish them one from another but also of Place as being generally dispersed in all the parts of the world Europe Asia Africa America and also of Tyme as being reputed the old Religion and being indeed so old as haue byn yeares since Christ his Apostles who institued and imbraced it We haue continued Succession and Ordination of Prelates and Bishops manifestly orderly deduced
without interruption of persons or chang of doctrine by a perfect enumeration of successours Apostles and Apostolical Seas vntill this present tyme these our present Prelates Patriarches and Popes We haue the rare examples of millions of Martyrs Confessours Virgins who haue with their bloud life defended and honoured our confessed Faith Doctrine the strange punishments of persecuting Pagans Iews Heretikes who haue with their sword and cruelty opposed and persecuted it In all which we differ from them and haue the aduantage of them in credible motiues 5. For infallible proponent cause as they do not require or assigne any yea as before do expresly reiect all chiefly the true that is Church authority so they cannot produce any which either can be a proponent cause or if it could is yet either infallible or so much as credible for them selues and their Religion For their scripture is not to them a proponent but if it were true scripture a reuealing cause because in it is reuealed truth of which reuelatiō there is need of a proponent cause to declare which is scripture which is among many the true sense of it Their priuate spirit which yet they make their proponent cause is so farre from being either infallible or credible that it is not only most fallible and subiect to deceaue yea and actually doth deceaue and hath deceaued so many but also most incredible without any apparence of probability eyther to them who haue it or to others who follow it that it can be true or direct and declare any truth at all We haue a proponent cause so certaine and infallible which is Church authority that it hath for the infallibility of it the predictions of Prophets the promises of Christ the declaration of the Apostls the confirmation of miracles the approbation of holy Fathers the practise of all antiquity what not all to proue the verity and infallibility of it in directing and declaring to vs what and why we are to belieue And in this proponent cause also we differ and that principally from the Protestants and so haue the aduantage prerogatiue ouer them in the externall meanes and so in all the meanes required to fayth For the priuate spirit in particuler if it were a sole necessary ground meanes of fayth as the Protestants without ground suppose it if euery Christiā lawfully might necessarily ought to rely vpon it which yet none can for the certainty of his Fayth Religion if it were a secure ground to build vpon and a certaine meanes as it is not to attaine to true fayth and saluation yet with as great reason yea with more probability might we Catholikes both chalenge it rely vpon it then the Protestants may or cā And 1. for the certainty of the spirit that they haue infallibly the spirit of God more then we what can they chalēge for it more then we What certainty can they claime more then we If they alleadge their bare word say they haue it we can alleadge ours and say also we haue it If they alleadge Scripture say they haue it for them we also can alledge the same and say we haue it for vs yea and had it before them for that they had what they haue of it from vs. If they alleadge they haue the true sense of Scripture for them and their priuate spirit we can alleage we haue the same and the same meanes to attaine it as they many of vs haue as great learning and knowledge in tongues as they as great a care and desire of truth as they as diligent paines and industry as they as feruent prayer and deuotion to find and obtaine it as they If they alleadge the sense and feeling of this spirit within them we can alleadge and feele as much sensible deuotion and more spirituall as many inspiratiōs illuminations these more certain as great promptnes and readines to obey Gods motions that with more humility then they yea in all these we haue and can alleadge more then they 1. The conformity in iudgement with the ancient Fathers Councels and Church with whome we agree 2. The direction and authority of our holy Mother the spouse of Christ our Church which we obey 3. The subordination and vnion of our selues with our Pastours Superiours of the Church to whome we are subiect subordinate And all this haue we more then they all making vs more certaine then they all better grounded then they So that we may confidently say with the Apostle In quo quis audet audeo ego VVhat they dare we dare what they can we can what they may chalenge for the probability of their spirit we can may chalenge the same yea more then they plus ego with more reason and probability vpon better safety security In the certainty therfore of this spirit if it be secure we are equall with them yea many degrees aboue them Secondly For the necessity of hauing the true spirit of God in vs and the efficacy or effect of the operation of it with vs we Catholikes are so far from denying either that we hould a necessity and that absolute of both affirming that as a principle of our faith that no person whatsoeuer cā truly and duly belieue any article of faith much lesse al nor do any one worke auailable to saluation much lesse saue his soule without the special presence assistāce of the grace or spirit of God in him In as much therfore as concerns the necessary being and working of this spirit of grace of God in vs in some thinges we and the Protestantes agree in other we differ We agree 1. In that both of vs graunt and require an operation and assistance of this spirit of God not only to true faith but also to good life 2. In that both of vs do graunt require this operatiō to be so necessary in euery one that neither right faith nor vpright life can be attained or performed but by it that as the prime principal cause and agent 3. In that both of vs do graunt require this necessary and operating spirit to be so priuate particuliar internall in euery one that it hath an effectual operation or cooperation in him that so effectual that to it is attributed the effect of our conuersion saluation And thus farre we agree Thirdly We differ frō them in these 1. In the name vsual manner of appellation for we cal it the grace of God which as before is of diuers sortes some gratis giuen as the guift of languages cures c. some iustifying as Faith Hope Charity some actuall as excitant adiuuant operant cooperant sufficient effectual the rest before mentioned They call it the spirit or priuate spirit or motion of God as inspiring and working whatsoeuer good is wrought in them 2. We
contrary to S. Paul who doth assigne for one of the guifts of gratiae gratis giuen which is not common to all the guift to discerne spirits thereby also do open gappe to all confusion and dissentiō and thus faile not only in the meanes how but also in the persons by whome spirits are to be tryed Out of all which I reason thus That spirit which we are forewarned not to belieue which is to be tryed by another spirit and that spirit by another in infinitum That spirit into which Sathan transfigureth himselfe deceauing many and making many false Prophets and rauenous wolues That spirit which brings in Sects of perdition drawing many out of the Church which causeth so many to blaspheme the way of truth to walke in concupiscence to contemne dominion to allure vnstable soules to promise liberty to speake proudly to depraue Scriptures to turne from the Commandement and to draw disciples after it That spirit which cannot be discerned whether it be the spirit of God man or the Diuell whether of truth or falshood of wisedome or giddines and in regard it hath so great similitude in effect and operation one with another That spirit I say cannot be an infallible rule and iudge to interprete Scripture iudge of fayth decide controuersies and direct euery man in the way of his saluation this is euident and needs no proofe But such is the priuate spirit which euery priuate person and sect-maister challenges to himselfe as is before proued and by experience confirmed in that euery Heretike ancient or late hath by force of it separated himselfe from Gods Church broached so many blasphemous opinions contemned so highly all Church-authority promised licentious liberty of the Ghospell depraued so fowly holy Scriptures and drawne so many into perdition after them all which shall more at large afterwardes be confirmed Therefore it doth follow that this priuate spirit cannot be a rule of fayth able to assure and secure euery one in his beliefe and saluation And thus much of the first proofe out of Scripture against this priuate spirit Out of 2. Pet. 1.20 making the same spirit authour and interpreter of Scripture SECT II. THE second proofe is out of S. Peter who 2. Pet. 1.20 prouing the power and present cōming of Christ first by the eye-witnesse of some in his Transfiguration next by a more firme testimony in respect of the Iewes that is the holy Scripture which he commends for the effect which is to lighten as light in a darke place and for the authour which is the Holy Ghost hath among the rest these wordes Vnderstanding this first that no prophecy of Scripture is made by priuate interpretation for not by mans will was prophecy brought at any tyme but the holy men of God spake inspired with the Holy Ghost In which wordes S. Peter makes first a serious premonition Vnderstanding this first as a point of principall and important consideration Secondly he layes downe his assertion in wordes plaine powerful against this priuate spirit That no prophecy of Scripture that is no sense and meaning of Scripture for so are they called some Prophets because they did expound the secret hidden mysteryes of Scripture and foretell the ioyes of heauen to the iust as S. Ambrose and S. Anselme with all others do expound it is made by priuate interpretation that is according to S. Chrysostome Not by the spirit which many bragge of as the spirit of God but falsly pretending it do speake that which is their owne According to S. Clement Not according to the proper vnderstanding of our owne wit Yea according to Caluin Not by our owne proper sense for what we produce out of it is prophane The sense therefore according to the plaine wordes and generall consenting interpretation of all is No priuate spirit of any priuate man expounding Scripture according to his owne priuate sense and proper conceit and fancy is a fit meanes to interpret Gods holy word of which thirdly he giues this reason because not by mans will or by any selfe seeming humane conceit was prophecy brought at any tyme that is the sacred and holy sense of Gods holy word neuer at any tyme brought forth and penned but the holy men of God the Prophets and Apostles spake and dictated what they wrote inspired with the Holy Ghost that is Because the Holy Ghost was the author of the wordes and sense of holy Scripture in the mouth and handes of those who first penned it Therfore must the same holy Ghost be the expositour of the sense of it in the mouthes of them who rightly vnderstand it And this to be the true sense of this place witnesse besides the former testimonies not only the Rhemists Bellarmine and others but also Caluin himselfe saying The spirit which spake by the Prophets is the only interpreter of himselfe Out of which place and wordes I inferre first that as the true text of Scripture it selfe so also the true sense and meaning of it is a meane and ground of Christian religion first and principally to be knowne Secondly that this true sense is not to be made by any priuate interpretation of the priuate spirit of euery priuate person Thirdly that it is to be made by the same spirit of God which was the first authour and dictatour of it And out of this inference and euidence of wordes I argue thus That spirit which must be the true and infallible interpreter of holy Scripture is and must be the same which was the first author and writer of it as is heere proued but that spirit which first wrote the text of holy Scripture was not a guift or spirit communicated to euery priuate person though faythfull but only to the Prophets and Apostles the first and prime pillars and Pastours of Gods Church as is euident Therefore this and the same spirit or guift which is giuen to expound the same scripture is not a spirit giuen to euery priuate belieuer but only to the Pastours and pillars of Gods Church who as they are the successors of the former first pillars and Apostles so also they receaue the same spirit to interprete the same Scripture which their Predecessours wrote As therfore the true spirit resided chiefly in the first Pastours pillars of Christs Church to write holy Scripture so also the same spirit resides chiefly in their succeeding Pastours and Prelates to expound it and not in euery faythfull and simple belieuer who can only read it Out of 1. Cor. 12.18 prouing the interpretation of of Scripture to be a guift gratis giuen not common to all faythfull SECT III. THE third proofe is taken out of those places of Scripture which attribute this guift of interpreting Scripture not gratiae gratificanti or to iustifying grace which is common to all faythfull belieuers and adopted children of God but gratijs gratis
datis or graces freely bestowed which are speciall to some persons only and those not alwayes Saints holy men For which we may note that S. Paul 1. Cor. 12.18 of the 9. guifts of the Holy Ghost which there he recounts and of which foure to wit 1. curing diseases 2. working miracles 3. prophecy of future euents 4. discerning of spirits are transeunt motions and fiue to wit 1. Wisedome 2. Knowledge 3. Fayth 4. Kindes of tongues 5. Interpretation of languages are according to Deuines permanent habits of these I say doth S. Paul assigne 5. both them and their proper function to be about the deciding or explicating of matters of beliefe interpreting of holy Scripture that is 1. Wisedome which is to explicate the high mysteries of the Trinity Incarnation predestination and the like 2. Knowledge which is to explicate either matters of manners what we are to do and how to liue or mysteries of fayth by examples comparisons and philosophicall reasons 3. Fayth which is eyther without feare to professe and preach what is belieued or by contemplation to penetrate and explicate the deep mysteries of beliefe 4. and 5. to wit Kindes of tongues interpretation of languages which is to explicate obscure and hard places of Scripture to interprete hymnes and prophecies in strang languages and to translate the Scripture into other tongues All which in their seuerall function and in diuers manners are imployed in discerning iudging and interpreting of mysteries of fayth difficulties of scripture Secondly we may note that these guifts doe not necessarily depend and follow vpon iustifying Grace and so are not common to all faythfull or true children of God but are speciall guifts graces bestowed some vpon one person some vpon another euery one as the spirit of God pleases v. 11. not all vpon euery one This is apparent first out of the text which sayth That to one certes by the spirit is giuen the word of VVisedome to another the word of Knowledge to another Fayth to another Interpretation of languages to another Grace of doing cures of miracles of prophecy of tongues of discerning of spirits v. 8.9.10 c. Againe Are all Apostles as heades Are all Prophets as eyes Are all Doctours as tongues Are all miracles and hauing the grace of doing cures as handes Do all speak with tongues Doe all interprete the Scripture as Maisters no surely For he hath giuen some not all to be Apostles Some not all to be Prophets Other some not all to be Euangelistes Other some not all to be Pastours and Doctours to the consummation of the Saints into the worke of the ministery c. Eph. 4.11 Secondly the same is apparent by the comparison of this mysticall body with a naturall body which also the Apostle vseth v. 14. c for as all members haue not the same operation but some haue one some another the eyes to see the hands to worke the feet to walk the head to discourse so in the mysticall body all and euery one though faythfull haue not the same and all guiftes but some one some another as some haue the guift of cures some of miracles some of tongues so also some haue the guift of Wisedome Science and Interpretation but all haue not euery one of them therfore some must as Maisters teach some as Scholers learne some as heades direct and instruct some as members be directed and instructed so that as all members are not one member so neither hath one member all operations or functions but according to diuision of graces is also diuision of ministrations and operations v. 4. Out of which it doth follow first that the guift of interpretation of holy Scripture and explicating of high mysteryes of fayth is a guift not generall and common to all the faythfull as depending and following necessary vpon Fayth or grace but speciall and particuler to some as gratis giuen to whome it pleaseth God to giue it Secondly that all faythfull and iust persons cannot be directed by this extraordinary guifte in their iudgement of fayth decision of controuersies and interpretation of scripture because it is not giuen to euery iust man as is proued not yet only to the iust but sometymes to the vniust as to those who cast out Diuells in our Sauiours name and yet he knew them not that is did not approue and commend them And out of these I argue thus To interprete Scripture and decide Controuersies of Fayth is a guift not giuen generally to all the iust or faithfull by vertue of their iustification but extraordinarily bestowed vpon some only as a grace gratis data but the priuate spirit according to the Protestant doctrine is a guift giuen to all and euery faithfull by vertue of their iustification not gratia gratis data to some therefore the Protestant priuate spirit cannot be a guift giuen to interprete in euery one the holy Scripture and iudge of all controuersies of fayth The Maior is the doctrine of the Holy Ghost The Minor is the doctrine of the Protestants And so the conclusion following out of both is most certaine Out of Ezech 13. describing in false Prophets this priuate spirit with the effects punishment of it SECT IIII. THE fourth proofe is out of the Prophet Ezechiel who chap. 13. doth describe and decypher to vs 1. This priuate spirit what it is 2. the persons in whome it is 3. the effects which it worketh 4. the punishment which ensues vpon it Therefore he describes that spirit to be the same with this priuate spirit that is The spirit of their owne hart which the Prophets follow v. 3.2 This spirit is in the men-prophets The Prophets of Israell that prophecy v. 2. in the women-prophets The daughters of the people which prophecy v. 17. both of them being the people of God and chosen Israelites 3. The effects of it are 1. Blindnes they see nothing v. 3. 2. Vanity They see vaine thinges 3. Lyes They diuine lyes saying Our Lord sayth whereas I haue not spoken v. 7. chap. 22.28 saying Peace and there is not peace v. 10. 4. Fraud which as Foxes in the desertes v. 4. tyed by the taile of malice and seuered in the heades of doctrine doe destroy the vinyards of Christ Cant. 2. as dawbing of a wall made by the dawbers of clay or morture but without temper of chaffe or straw v. 11. As cushions and pillowes made by delicious women and layd vnder mens heades to lull them in security and catch their soules In both which with faire exteriour shew and hopefull promises they deceaue the people feeding some with a security of future good terrifying others with danger of future euill that they might kill the soules that is denounce that they shall be killed who dye not and viuificate the soules that is declare that they shall liue which liue not lying to the people that belieue lyes v. 19.4 The
seriously discussed may suffice to satisfy the Reader that in their iudgement this priuate spirit is an vnfit Interpreter of holy Scripture and an vnable iudge to decide matters of Fayth Secondly we may note that though none of the ancient Fathers did in particuler write of this subiect nor yet on set purpose confute it yet these sayinges and sentences of theirs sought and picked out as so many dispersed flowers of their seuerall gardens and coupled togeather as into one nose-gay may serue for a taste of their generall opinions iudgement in this matter especially since their assertions were neuer contradicted nor their persons euer censured by any for them Thirdly we may note that those Fathers who doe either attribute this prerogatiue of interpreting Scripture to the Church or Pastours of it as the most cyted by Bellarmine before quoted doe or derogate the same from all humane and proper wit and iudgement as some of these heere cyted in their words do do both of them as much as if in expresse tearmes they had done it condemne this priuate spirit and power of it as incompetent for a Iudge of Fayth 1. because they who interprete Scripture and assigne the Fathers Councells or Church for approued and authorized Iudges in this case must needs condemne those who forsake them and oppose themselues and their iudgement against them which all they doe who rely vpon their priuate spirit and prefer their iudgement of it before the iudgement of the Church and Fathers 2. Because all who are guided by this priuate spirit and rely vpon it doe in effect rely vpon their owne iudgement and opinion and so either erroneously mistaking themselues or abusing the spirit do insteed of the spirit of God make their owne conceit fancy or imagination the iudge and vmpire of all These being supposed we will descend to particulers and cyte some of these Fathers and their testimonies in thei● seuerall ages First therefore to begin● 〈◊〉 the first age of the Apostles to descend downe 〈◊〉 S Clement the scholer of S. Paul and coetaneall with the Apostles sayth It is to be obserued that when the law of God is read it ought not to be read or vnderstood according to the meaning of euery mans owne wit for there are many thinges in holy Scripture which may be wrested to that meaning which euery one volūtarily presumes to frame to himselfe but this cannot be Loe the sense which euery ones wit and iudgement which they call their spirit presumes to frame cannot be a true and infallible sense of Scripture In the second age Irenaeus a Doctour and Martyr whō S. Hierome calles Virum Apostolicum an Apostolicall man speaking of the Heretiks of his tyme sayth Euery one sayth that his owne fiction which he hath deuised of himselfe is wisedome that he vndoubtedly vnspottedly and sincerely doth know the hiddē mysteries These Heretikes made the inuention of their own braine the vndoubted spirit of wisedome to vnderstand the hidden mysteries of Fayth Tertullian speaking of Heretikes who differ among themselues sayth Euery one doth tune what he receaues according to his owne liking in the same manner as he who taught them made it according to his owne liking Againe shewing that diuersity of doctrine brings corruption of scripture he sayth They who are resolued to teach otherwise then the Church must change the meanes of doctrine that is scripture since how came the heretikes to be strangers and enemies to the Apostles but by the diuersity of doctrine which euery one according to his owne liking either made or receaued Againe VVho are rauenous wolues but subtill senses and spirits that lye close to molest the flocke of Christ VVho are false Prophets but false Preachers VVho are false Apostles but adulterous Ghospellers Againe He is to be counted an Heretike who forsaking that which was first doth choose to himselfe that which was not before Againe Heresy is called in Greek of Election by which one chooseth to beginne or follow it therefore S. Paul sayd that therefore an Heretike was damned because he chose to himselfe that for which he is damned It is not lawfull for vs to introduce any thing vpon our owne opiniō nor to follow that which others introduced vpon their owne opinion And he calles Adams sin an Heresy because he chose it rather vpon his owne then Gods election Heere are deceitful spirits euery one 's owne spirit liking will purpose resolution opinion and election described to be that which makes men Heretikes and strangers from God rauenous Wolues false Prophets and adulterous Ghospellers and damned Heretikes and changes the sense of Scripture Out of which the same Tertullian affirmes That heresy is a matter of humanae temerity not diuine authority which alwayes so amends the Ghospell vntill it corrupt it That all doctrine is true not which came from a priuate spirit but which agrees with the Apostolicall mother and originall Churches and that is without doubt to be held which the Church receaued from the Apostles the Apostles from Christ Christ from God all other doctrine is preiudicated as that which sauoureth against the verity of the Church of Christ. Againe That to deale with Heretikes by Scriptures is but to turne ones stomacke or breake his braine to loose his speach by contending to rayse choler by hearing their blasphemy since what the most expert Scripturist can alleadge they will deny and what he denies they will defend eyther by denying Scripture or by adding or detracting from it Valentinus sayth he receaued that which was most for his purpose and formed the Scriptures to his owne opinions but not his opinions to Scripture And so as S. Augustine saies They contend not for the true meaning of Scripture but for their owne opinions making that which is the opinion of their owne to be the meaning of Scripture In the third age Clemens Alexand. in his learned bookes Stromatum which he wrote according to Baron anno 204. shewing not only that Heretikes alleadge Scripture but also how they vse it sayth Though they who follow heresies presume to vse the propheticall Scriptures yet they neither vse all of them nor these they vse entirely but choosing those sayings which are doubtfull they draw them to their owne priuate opinions This is one of the chiefest sleightes of this their priuate spirit to wrest doubtfull sentences to their owne aduantage make that which is vncertaine in it selfe certaine and a point of Fayth In the same age S. Cyprian that Doctor suauissimus Martyr beatissimus as S. August calles him speaking of some whome the Diuell leades from one blindnes of the world to another darkenesse of errour sayth They call themselues Christians and while they walke in darknes they thinke they are in light the Diuell flattering and deceauing them who transfigures himselfe into an Angell of light
a fountaine incorrupted a Doctour among the Interpreters of Scripture as a Sunne among Planets as the greatest of the Fathers the worthiest Deuine that euer Gods Church had This great Doctour and Saint sayth Heresies haue no other origen then this that euery Heretike prefers his owne opinion drawne from his owne proper spirit before the commō opinion of the Church Againe Nothing makes them Heretiks but this that misvnderstanding the Scriptures they obstinatly defend their owne opinions The holy Scripture is dangerous to these who will wrest it to their owne peruerse hart who whē they ought to liue according to the will of God they liue according to their owne will and they will haue that to be the meaning of Scripture which is their owne when that which is the Scriptures ought to be theirs Againe Thy truth O Lord is neyther myne nor this mans or that mans but all mens whom thou callest publickly to the communiō of it and whereby thou dost terribly admonish vs that we seeke not to haue truth priuate least we be depriued of it for whosoeuer doth challenge to himselfe that which thou dost propose to be enioyed by all and will make that proper to himselfe which is common to all that man is driuen from the common to his owne proper that is from truth to falsehood Wherupō he reprehends the Pelagians because they vnderstood the Scripturs according to their own priuate sense the Donatists because eyther by too much louing their owne opinion or enuying their betters they went so farre vpon their diabolicall presumption as sacrilegiously to separate holy communion and bring in schisme or heresy and the Manichies You see that your worke is to take away all authority from Scripture and make euery mans mind and conceit authour of what is to be belieued or not to be belieued in holy Scripture that is that you will not subiect your selues to Scripture but will make Scripture subiect to your selues Thus doth S. Augustine condemne this spirit for that it doth prefer it selfe and owne opinion before the commō iudgement of the Church doth falsely interprete Scripture doth draw the meaning of Scripture to its owne wil yea the will of God to the same And he condemnes the Pelagians Donatists and Manichies for that by it they expounded Scripture and deuided themselues from the communion of holy Church With S. Augustine agrees Cyrill of Alexandria Heretikes should do well if they would seeke the true sense of Scripture and not turne all according to their owne will And with them both Vincentius Lyrinensis If any would seems a Prophet or Maister that is maister of spirituall thinges let him chiefly desire vnity and equality that is that he do not prefer his owne opinion before others nor doe departe from the generall opinions of all men Because all doe not take the holy Scripture in one and the same sense some do interprete one way others another way the same sentences so that as many senses are made as there be men Therefore it is very necessary by reason of many turninges and windinges of errours that the line of Catholicall and Apostolicall interpretation be directed according to the rule of the Ecclesiasticall and Catholike sense Heere is aduise giuen not to wrest all to our owne liking and spirit but to keep vnity and direct the interpretation of Scripture according to the rule of Catholike sense After all these Venerable Beda the honour of our Nation in the eight age sayth As the Prophets did write deliuer and speake not their owne wordes but the wordes of God so also the Reader of them must not vse his owne proper interpretation least he decline from the sense of the truth Therfore we affirme that no man presume to expound Scriptures according to his owne pleasure What more plaine I will adde to these the testimonyes of Luther and Caluin vttered in confutation of others but against themselues Luther x speaking against Swenkfeldius sayth It must not trouble vs that some do glorify of the spirit and little esteeme the Scriptures But sayth Luther good friend the spirit goes this way that way I also was in spirit and haue seene spirits if I may glory of my owne perhaps more then they shall see in a yeare and my spirit doth shew it selfe in something where theirs is yet in a corner Note that the Swenkfeldians and the Caluinists agree in that both of them rely on the Spirit and make it the ground of their Fayth they differ in that the former refuse scripture and rely only on the spirit these later admit scripture but both for canon and sense of it subiect it to their spirit so that the spirit in the one reiects scripture in the other it censures and Lordes it ouer scripture Whether is worse let any be iudge Caluin also speaking of the same Swenkfeldians sayth If that spirit was good it would be the same with the spirit of the Apostles and ancient faythfull people but their spirit would not be iudg without scripture so say we If Caluins or the Caluinist spirit were true it would be the same with the spirit of the ancient Church and Fathers Also against the Vbiquitarians he sayth Satan hath bewitched their mindes with horrible witchery c. And Satan by turbulent spirits doth endeauour c. Mans hart hath so many secret places of vanity is subiect to so many holes of lyes is couered with so much fraudulent hypocrisie that it often deceaues it selfe Againe Many false Doctours belye or counterfeite the title of the spirit many mad men start vp who rashely make ostentation that they are endued with the spirit of God They are fooles who amazed at the honourable title of the spirit dare not enquire after the matter it selfe Many braggo of the spirit yet speake in their owne priuate name goe out in their owne name vtter out of their owne sense Thus do these Patrons practisers of this priuate spirit wound themselues in thus stabbing the same in their aduersaries For what they affirme against them is verified against themselues But what can these Spiritualists as we may call them say to all these testimonies of Fathers Or rather what shall we say to them about the same I conceaue nothing can be sayd better then that which S. Augustine in the like case of originall sinne sayth against the like Heretikes the Pelagians for hauing cyted most of the Doctours before his tyme both of the Greeke and Latin Church as Irenaeus Athanasius Cyrill Nazianzen Chrysostome Basil Olympius Reticius fourteene more whose workes are not now extant as Eulogius Ioannes Ammonianus Porphyrius Fidus Zozimus Zoboenus Nimphidius Cromatius Iouinus Eleutherius Clematius all greeke Doctours and Cyprian Hilary Ambrose Innocentius yea Hierome of his owne tyme all Doctours of the Latin Church and all to proue originall sinne and
is doubtfull difficult whether they informe them or assist only in them how and of what matter they doe make and frame them how and what operation or motion they exercise in them whether any vitall or externall operations as of eating or drinking or any sensual or external as of hearing or seeing or any internall as of passion or affection or any intellectual as of discoursing and discussing of sinning and meriting how they illuminate one another the higher the lower how they present visions and cogitations to men whether to their phantasie only by the phantasie to the soule or imediately to the superiour part of the soule also Of the Diuels great difficulties be made how they fell frō grace by what sinne of pride or enuy into what place of hell only or the aire earth also in what number more then the blessed or fewer how they are tormented with materiall fire and how they carry their tormēts with them while they torment others and yet the fire torments not those others in whome they are how they enter possesse and torment men in what number by whole legions in what manner with such instruments of tortures how they frame and assume bodies whether of dead men of beastes and the like or made of the ayre how they can abuse women and beget children how they cause thunders lightenings stormes how they tempt men oppose the Angels hate God and all good how they are deuided into orders Hierarchies how a subordination and confusion stands among them with many such like Of the soules departed are many difficulties as whether in person Samuel himselfe or a Diuell for him appeared before Saul whether Moyses from Limbo and Elias from Paradise before Christ whether their apparitions be internall only to the phantasie and imagination or externall corporally to the senses also If internal whether the soules can or Angels for them do produce these phantasies If externall whether their apparitions be personal in their own presence or representable by Angells for them If personall in their owne presence whether the soules in Purgatory ōly or those in heauen and hell also do in presence personally appeare If all of them whether present in their own bodies in which they liued or in others by them assumed If in assumed and made bodies whether made by themselues or by Angels for them If in bodyes made by Angells whether they can informe and giue life or els inhabite giue only motion to them If only motion what quantity they can moue greater then their owne body was or lesse to what distance further off or neerer By what vertue naturall or superadded they can moue them What operation they can exercise in them whether naturall of working mouing or vitall also of eating and sleeping or sensual also of delectation or auersion and which is most intellectuall of reasoning speaking If they vse reason whether they know what is done on earth how they know it by reuelation from God or by relation from Angells or by Species or formes of their owne retayned of old or acquired anew Whether they vnderstand where they are and what they doe Whether they in Purgatory can by prayer and satisfaction be freed Whether they who are in heauen or hell can increase their ioyes or paines With many more such like Of all which if one should aske any ones priuate spirit or the diuers spirits of diuers ones and seeke for a certaine resolution of them what answere would their spirit affoard Or what agreement would be among them or their answers or what certainty can be builded vpon any of them Surely such is the difficulty in all these and many more doubts that let any one spirit of one man or many spirits of many men resolue them the hearer shall find such opposition in their resolution and so great difficulty in discerning which of these is a good spirit which a bad which vision is imaginary which corporall which effect is of God which of the Diuell which is to be belieued and followed which to be forsaken and abhorred that he shall find himselfe more doubtfull then before and deeper plunged in difficultyes the further he proceeds in inquiries And thus much of the first reason of difficulty to discerne the difference of spirits Of the difficulty and vncertainty of the rules of discerning Spirits SECT III. THE second difficulty of discerning these spirits ariseth vpon the variety and multiplicity of the rules meanes which on the one side men holy learned experienced after much practise of deuotion great labour of study long experience of tyme either by illumination frō God or by diligence industry or by subtility of obseruation haue made obserued and in large Treatises left to posterity for the discerning of these Spirits And which on the other side are so vncertaine and doubtfull that what by the infirmity of man to discerne them what by subtilty of the euill spirit to deceaue in them few can with any certainty and infallibility rely and depend vpon them First therefore for my owne and the Readers instruction I will set downe the rules out of diuers and large treatises collected which vsually are giuen for discerning these spirits and next shew the grounds and reasons of the vncertainty and fallibility of them and out of both inferre the insufficiency and inability of euery mans priuate spirit to make an infallible estimate and iudgment of them and therby to rely for himselfe and his estate of saluation vpon this his spirit and the opinion of it SVBDIV. I. Rules to discerne which are good spirits and which are bad AND first for the meanes signes or rules of discerning these spirits good or bad though there be no great difficulty or vncertainty in discerning spirits which are euill as the spirit of the Diuell and his instruments the flesh and the world for that the good spirit of God of an Angell or of grace cannot suggest those wicked cogitations nor performe those vnlawfull actions which the bad spirits both can and do as for example they can neither lye deceaue blaspheme nor persuade heresy infidelity periury and sacrilege nor commit vncleanesse and lewdnesse by way of Incubi or Succubi nor obey Inchaunters Magicians Witches for wicked vses nor worke and leaue in good soules doubts troubles and despaire of God saluation neither vse they to appeare in horrible and deformed shapes of beasts and monsters All which and such like are proper to the bad spirit sufficient rules signes to discerne him by these fruits and effects Yet because the bad spirit the Diuell both can and doth often counterfeit and in shew performe the same exteriour actions which the good spirit doth as by examples shall afterward be shewed therefore I will propose only the Rules and signes which are giuen for the discerning of the good spirits of which is the most difficulty and vncertainty and
of their motions illuminations and inspirations First therfore for the discerning of the good spirits vnder which title I include all sortes of motions which come imediatly either from God or from Angels or from grace the difference of which doth not much import since they are all good and of God mediatly or immediatly the rules and signes to discerne them are taken some from the obiect matter which is proposed some from the manner circūstances how it is proposed some from the fruits and effects which it worketh The rules and markes drawne from the obiect matter are First that the good spirit inspires moues only to verity and true faith not to falsity and heresy nor to any thing which is contrary to the grounds rules of true faith And so whasoeuer is contrary to faith and the grounds of it as scripture tradition Church Councels consent of Fathers is not from the good but the bad spirit Secondly that it moues only to matter of piety and sanctity and to nothing contrary to good life and manners or to the law of God or naturall reason Therefore what is sinne impiety by commission or omission against reason or grace is from the bad not the good spirit Whereuppon it follws that as the Prophet saith the spirit of God is Corne and Fire a Hammer because it nourisheth strengthneth with verity vertue as Food it enlightneth enflameth with illuminations and inflāmations as Fire and beateth mollifieth with contrition mortification as a Hammer but the spirit of Sathan is as a Dreame and Chaffe because it followes things apparent not true things vaine and not solide things that tend to ill not to good Wherfore when it proposes things either true or good it is neither to be belieued in the one nor followed in the other because in the end and application it doth deceaue and brings danger in both Thirdly that it moues sometimes to these verities and vertues as to know loue and follow God in generall only leauing the application and particulers to the direction of others for the matter the manner the tyme the place or the like as it did S. Paul to be a Christian leauing him to Ananias to be instructed what he should belieue and do And Iephta to make a vow according to the Prophet Isay who yet by his owne spirit as faith S. Ambrose choosing the particuler erred and did amisse Fourthly that when it moues in particuler to extraordinary works as for example of pennance fasting as it did S. Antony Simeon Stelites S. Katherine of Siena to fast many weekes and monthes or of obedience as it did Abraham to offer in sacrifice his sonne and others to walke on the water set vpon Lyons or the like or of martyrdome as it did some Virgins and Martyrs to cast themselues into the water or fire to preuent tentation or confound the Tyrants al which it did for the fuller triall of the persons the greater honour of God or more edification of others When I say God moues or inspires to these extraordinary workes then ordinarily he doth it with that sense of certainty that he leaues no doubt of it in the soule with that vehemency of motion that the soule presently proceeds to execution with that subtility of attention that in the operation the soule can hardly attend to any thing els but that which is good and of God The rules and markes drawne from the manner of proceeding of the spirit are First That when the spirit doth worke any good motion immediately in the superiour part of the soule as in the Vnderstanding reuelations and illuminations of truth In the wil inspirations and inflammations and ardent desires of good In the Memory attention and adhesion to God in the same manner as it doth the habits of faith hope charity and the rest all without any mediatiō or ministery of any species in the outward senses or of phantasies in the interiour imaginatiō to which the power of the bad spirit is limited that then it is the spirit of God which somtimes enters in knocking at the dore of the soule by holy vocations and admonitions to call it from sinne to grace frō vice to vertue somtimes hauing got entrance doth worke labour in the soule either inlightening the darkenesse or inflaming the coldnesse or moistening the drynesse or righting the crookednesse or mollifying the hardenesse or awaking the drowsinesse or curing the sicknesse reuiuing the senslesnes which it finds in the same Somtims it proceeds so far as now to infuse a copious light of knowledge reuealing secret senses of scripture deep mysteries of faith high points of contemplation now to instill a pleasant dew of consolations and comforts in spituall practise and of content and sweetnes in enduring afflictions now to perfume it with a fragrant odour either of the incense of Deuotion or of the myrrhe of Mortification or of the sweet sent of all heroicall vertues and perfections wherewith the soule is rapt as it were out of the sense of bodily feeling vp to a glimpse to a taste to a sweetnes to an vnion with God so farre that it is no more where it liues but where it loues now wholy absorpt rauished and inflamed and transformed into God and God into it All which are a signe of the spirit of God Secondly that the spirit of God thus setled in the soule doth as it were with two eyes looke out abroad into all things That is with the one of pure intention which seeks not our owne honour profit pleasure and content in any thing but God and his honour glory and praise in all our words actions visitations consolations or desolations The other of discretion which proceeds in measure not going further in any practise then our ability will extend In weight valewing things of necessity before things voluntary of iustice before charity of obligation before supererogation In degree first mouing then walking then running and lastly flying and that by step to step from the botome to the top imbracing first the feet next the knees then the hands so to the face and presence of our Sauiour In order contenting our selues with wayes ordinary plaine facill vsuall and commodious to our selues others not aspiring to works effects extraordinary high prodigious miraculous beyond reach of our reason and without benefit to any And in all it perseuers proceeds with vigilancy and diligence without stop interruption or retiring in the course of vertue and perfection The rules and signes drawne from the effects and operations of this Spirit are That the spirit of God for the most part hath and doth cause such a spirituall sauour and taste in the soule where it is that as a man is knowne by his voice and visage as hony is discerned by the taste sweetnes So the motions illustrations and the voice
God so farre as it may be to his honour and glory The bad spirit desires much for its owne will pleasure all with importune and vnseasonable vehemency and perturbatiō That the good spirit moues to inward humility contempt of ones selfe and the more it increaseth in vertue the meaner conceit it workes of ones selfe and the better of others The bad spirit moues to outward humility in exteriour thinges that it may seeme humble and lowly but workes an inward conceit of ones selfe and willfullnesse in all actions and proceedinges That the good spirit causes one to confide much in God and distrust much in ones selfe The bad spirit causes one to esteeme highly of his owne conceit to presume much vpon ones owne force and litle to feare his owne state danger That the good spirit is willing to suffer much for Gods cause and the more it suffers the more it is contented The bad spirit murmurs and repines and is impatient at al crosses and afflictions and is disquieted and vexed against those by whome they are any way caused or procured That the good spirit is mercifull and compassionate shewing pitty and mercy where it may shew iustice seuerity The bad spirit is seuere fierce cruel and reuengefull euen vpon those who do subiect and humble themselues That the good spirit shews a respect and reuerence euen to the Saints seruants of God for the honour it bears to God and also to their Reliques and Images for the respect it beares to them The bad neglects both and refuses to giue any respect or honour to either That the good proposes the yoke of Christ as easy the grace of God as sufficient and superaboundant to keep his Commandements thereby to enable men to performāce thereof The bad proposes the performance of Gods commandements as impossible and Gods mercy as facill before sinne is committed thereby to allure to sinne his iustice as rigide and terrible after sinne be committed thereby to draw into desperation That the good spirit if it worke any miracles illuminate with any reuelations or reueale any secrets of the hart or euents to come doth do all peaceably without any extraordinary motions of sobbing sighing exulting or grieuing without ostentation of any such guift or grace moderatly without any vehemency of desire of them or conceit of ones selfe or contempt of others for them compassionatly without aggrauating of offences receaued or benefits exhibited and humbly with submission to the iudgment of superiour authority and with conformity to their censure and correction The bad doth all contrary it proceedes in perturbation without peace in vehemency without discretion in exagerations without measure in obstinacy without relenting in any thing from that which it once conceaues That the good spirit vses those wayes and spirituall meanes which God hath for that present age tyme and place accommodated as most fit for the spirituall good of soules then liuing Therefore as in former ages he prescribed the instinct of naturall reason in the law of Nature the vse of ceremonies in the law of Moyses and either strange guift of miracles and languages or ardent desires of martyrdome or rigide austerity of pennance in the primitiue ages of the law of Grace so now in these ages not communicating so frequently the guift of miracles nor affoarding so vsually the benefit of martytdome nor exacting so seuerely the former austerity of pennāce it moueth vs to a more zealous performance of these deuotions which in this tyme the Diuell more violently oppugnes to wit frequentation of Sacraments vse of meditation duties of obedience veneration of Saints visitation of Reliques and holy places and the like The bad spirit peruerts all this order it affects nouelty it seekes curiosity it followes after rarities it ayms at singularity it lookes for prodigiosities and contents it selfe with nothing but straines to extrauagancy it seemes to know all striues to do all seekes to go beyond all and flyes in his owne conceit aboue all both measure reason discretion That the good spirit keepes in all a tranquility of the mind with a conformity in all thinges to the will of God whether it be the rooting out of vices the planting of vertues the exercise of mortification and deuotion all conioyned with a pure iniention of not seeking ones owne but Gods honour and with a discreet moderation in being neither too credulous in belieuing all nor too obdurate in belieuing nothing but with aduice and temper to examin all and not rashly to receaue or reiect any The bad spirit runs in all the contrary race in some thinges it is troubled and disquieted with feares and scruples in others loose dissolute without care or conscience at sometymes feruent and headlong in deuotion beyond measure at others stupide and dull without sense or feeling in some practises of small importance violent vehement and impatient without reason in others of moment negligent carelesse and heedlesse without any esteeme or regard in purposes of good wauering and inconstant in iudgment of others credulous and temerarious All which omitting much which might be sayd more may suffice to discerne the multiplicity of signes of good spirits and the difference of them from bad It remaynes to shew that neither these rules to discerne good spirits from bad nor the difference betweene good spirits and bad are so certaine nor the applying them to euery particuler euent so easy that the spirit of euery priuate man can of it selfe proceed in it and securely rest himselfe vpon it SVBDIV. 3. The difficulty to iudge of these rules and differences of Spirits NOtwithstanding therefore that these rules signes of a good spirit and these differences from a bad be by spirituall men well and truly thus assigned and notwithstāding that it be true that they serue for good and morall directions to discerne those spirits and that any man may proceed probably in his iudgment vpon them yet that they neither are in themselues so certaine and infallible nor yet are for so certaine assigned that euery man may infallibly rely and rest vpon them without any further directour but that these both may and often do faile in many particuler euents and that many are deceaued in the vse and application of them is by these reasons heere briefly and by examples afterwardes more at large produced euidently proued First because such is the excellency both in nature and operation of these spirits especially Angells and Diuels aboue the nature and capacity of man and such is the weaknes and obscurity of mans vnderstanding in these sensuall organs of our corporall frailty and such is the inconstancy and vncertainty of euery priuate spirit in euery particuler person that admit these rules and differences were certaine yet neither is the vnderstanding of euery man so intelligent that he knowes them nor his spirit so quicke-sighted that it can discerne them
nor his art and cunning so skillfull that he can alwayes vpon euery occasion duly and infallibly apply them but that necessarily vpon ignorance errour or partiality and affection in many cases he may and must needes faile in them For as all sciences Law and Phisicke Mathematicke and Musicke Logicke and Rhetoricke with the like and all arts and trades of nauigation negotiation military or manufactory the rest haue their principles documents and these some of them demonstratiue and certaine which yet few or none can out of their owne wit industry without both a maister to teach tyme to learne apply and vse certainly in the practise of particulers so in this science of discerning of spirits which yet is so much more difficult then the former by how much the spirits are more subtil the operations more like the rules more vncertayne and the danger of erring more great a simple and vnlearned man may yea often many most learned and intelligent Doctours witnesse for example Origen Tertullian and all learned Heretikes ancient and moderne haue been grosly deluded and dangerously deceaued while insteed of the spirit of God of truth and of light they haue followed the spirit of Sathan errour and darkenesse and by it haue beene conducted not only themselues but also millions by their examples into the pit of perdition and damnation For as the Apostles being troubled with the storme of the sea when they saw our Sauiour walking vpon the water did thinke he was a Ghost so there be some who either vpon perturbation pusillanimity scrupulosity tentation or malice do imagine euery motion of God in themselues and euery vision reuelation or extraordinary worke or miracle in others to be either mere fancies imaginatiōs of man or else Ghosts and illusions of Sathan Others there be who on the contrary vpon too much leuity credulity of disposition or vpon too much weaknesse and infirmity of the braine or vpon too much pride and presumption of thēselues do conceaue euery idle imagination of their owne spirit and euery false suggestion of the spirit of Sathan to be a vision inspiration or illumination of Christ in which being perswaded that euill is good and good euill that darknesse is light and light darknesse that bitter is sweet sweet bitter they do sometimes belieue and adore a Ghost insteed of Christ other while neglect contemne Christ as a Ghost somtimes do belieue and preach errours and falshood as though they were truth otherwhile condemne truth and diuine verity as though it were Idolatry and superstition somtimes do imbrace vices sinnes as vertues otherwhile censure workes of zeale charity and humility as acts of passion basenesse and hypocrisy somtimes do giue credit to their fancies and imaginations of their owne or Sathans spirit as if they were the spirit of God otherwhile reiect the inspirations illuminations vocations of God as illusions of Sathan And thus while they walke in two extremes both a like perilous that is to neglect Christ as a Ghost and to follow a Ghost as Christ to refuse that which is of God as if it were of the diuel to follow that which is of the Diuel as if it were of God they belieue falshood and condemne truth they imbrace painted shadowed vices and contemne solid and true vertue and so follow Away which seemes to them iust but the later end thereof leads to death and are themselues those wicked VVho are so secure as though they had the workes of iust men And this is the first reason drawne from the infirmity of man why these rules cannot be to vs certaine and infallible The second reason is because such is the craft and subtilty of Sathan the wicked spirit that as he can transfigure and shew himselfe in the glory of an Angell so can he transforme his actions into the actions of an Angell and do the same which the Angels do Therfore whatsoeuer exteriour actions either of charity humility or piety deuotion mortification or other vertue a good man by the inspiration of God doth a bad man by the instigation of Sathan can doe the like In which though a difference will appeare in the intention and the end both which in the good are good and in the bad are bad yet in the exteriour action the Diuell can so cunningly carry himselfe and so craftily couer his intention that a quicke eye shall hardly of a long tyme discerne him In this manner hath he carryed himselfe in all or most Hereticks ancient and moderne couering himselfe vnder the veile of the honour of God zeale of soules verity of doctrine sanctity of life word of God and the like of all which in many of them he made a faire shew and thereby deceaued many Wherfore S. Paul foretels That many should come in later tymes who shall giue eare to spirits of errours and doctrines of Diuells And S. Chrysostome did affirme That all heresyes and all opinions of Heretikes are from the Diuell And S. Polycarpe did call Marcion the first-borne of the Diuell Thus doth Ioannes Cassianus auouch that himselfe was an eare-witnesse hearing the Diuel confesse that he was the authour of the heresy of Arius and Eumonius Thus doth Clemens Romanus Iustinus Martyr liuing in their tyme witnesse of Simon Magus that by the Diuell and magicke he was counted a God and had his statua to Simon the great God and that Menander his scholler deceaued many of Antioch by Magicke Thus Irenaeus auerres of Marcus Anaxilaus and others that by a familiar Diuell they did wonders and tell things to come Epiphanius of Carpocrates and the Gnostickes that they did by familiar Diuels and inchantments allure to lust dominiere ouer the people and make shew of wonders The like doth Theodoret of Basilides and Massilianus and Eusebius of Theodotus and Montanus Cyrillus of Buda Innocentius of Marcion Hierome of Priscilianus in Spaine Seuerus of one Anatolius who made himselfe first Elias then Christ and by counterfeit miracles deceaued Rufus a Bishop in the same countrey Caesareus affirmes of the Albigenses that by the Diuell they walked on the water to confirme their doctrine till a priest extraordinarily moued cast the Blessed Sacrament into the water at which they suncke and the B. Sacrament was by an Angell preserued Malmesbury and Baronius witnesse that Fuldo Bishop of Chartres saw the Diuell stand by Berengarius and as it were with his hand calling many to come to him Thus did the Emperour Maximiliā the first witnesse Bredenbach see the Diuell in a bodily shape sit on the shoulder of Luther at Auspurge anno 1518. and therby foretould what troubles should arise after his death Thus doth Luther confesse of himselfe that he had his doctrine of abrogating the Masse of the Diuell Zuinglius that he had his figuratiue doctrine from the spirit blacke or white he knew not
the Diuell that if he were Christ he should shew the Crosse on which he suffered he thereupon and at the signe of the Crosse vanished away and left him How he appeared to other two mentioned by Gerson and S. Bonauenture in the same forme saying I am Christ to whome the one shutting his eyes and saying I desire to see Christ in heauen not on earth and the other saying I am not worthy to see Christ because I am a sinnefull man the Diuell vanished How he appeared to S. Pachomius saying I am Christ and am come to thee my faythful seruant which the holy man by the perturbation of his mind perceauing to be a Diuel with the signe of the Crosse made him to vanish How to Valens a Monke he appeared like Christ accompanied with many Angells and caused him to come forth of his Cell and adore him left him so distracted and raging that they were forced to bind him Of examples of later tymes we read that he molested the holy man S. Ignatius in the founding of his Order of the Society not only interiourly by suggestions which he did at his study when by high and mysticall illuminations he withdrew his attention from his learning the Grammer rules to which he had seriously applyed himselfe but also by visible apparitions when at Manresa in his first entrance into a spirituall course he appeared in the forme of a beautiful person with many colours and eyes compassing the Crosse before which he prayed which S. Ignatius by the pensiuenes and perturbation of his mind discouering caused him by his prayer to vanish 2. That in the Alpes the Diuell hauing seduced a Priest who had the B. Sacrament about him to go in curiosity with him to see a wonder brought him to a pallace most beautiful pleasant where a Lady in a throne was presented by many prostrating themselues before her with rich guiftes vntill the Priest offering the B. Sacrament to her thinking it was our B. Lady she and all vanished away and left him in a strange place many miles distant from his habitation 3. Thirdly to an Hermite and a Religious man deceaued by him in Germany in a desart place to which they were carryed he appeared in the shape of Christ a King and our B. Lady a Queene both glorious set in a rich pallace vpon a shining throne with thousands of Angells and Saints about them and receaued al adoration from them till by the B. Sacrament which the Religious had in a Pixe offered to them al vanished away That he appeared to certaine women about Milan the yeare 1590. in the habit now of a Monke now of S. Vrsula with many Virgins with her and now of our B. Sauiour amōg whome he persuaded one to be Religious and leaue the world and would not desist till she tould him she would not do any thing without the aduice of her Ghostly Father And to conclude we read how while S. Norbert the foūder of the Praemonstratenses was meditating vpon the B. Trinity the Diuell appeared with three heads telling him that for his deuotion he had deserued to see the B. Trinity which by the perturbations of his mind he perceauing to be the Diuell defied him and so was rid of him All which with many more the Diuels apparitions and illusions in histories most authenticall recorded what are they but so many conuincing arguments to proue both the difficulty of discerning spirits and also the impossibility of euery priuate spirit to do it The difficulty to discerne Spirits proued by scripture SECT V. THE last reason to proue the difficulty of discerning spirits is authority which is a confirmation to all the former experiences and examples of holy Scripture and holy men placing the guift of discerning of spirits among the guifts of graces gratis giuen to some the discerning of spirits doth shew that as the rest of the guifts to wit miracles tongues prophesies and interpreting of Scripture of which before and the rest are rare extraordinary and giuen to few and that vsually and necessarily conioyned with grace or fayth in euery faithfull belieuer so also this of discerning spirits is in like manner a guift not cōmunicated to euery faythfull belieuer who hath the spirit of God but rarely and extraordinarily to some who haue the priuiledg of this benefite bestowed vpon them for the benefit of others For as it is proper to God both to be and to be called Ponderator spirituum The weigher and discerner of Spirits in the same manner as he is the knower of harts VVho only knowes the hartes of all the children of men so doth he communicate this guift to some speciall persons whome he makes as the Prophets cal them Proouers and strong proouers in my people who shall know and prooue their wayes in the same manner as in the common wealth are tryers of gold to discerne true from false And to these by a speciall prerogatiue he giues this guift that they may prooue spirits if they be good and try them as Gold is tryed in the fire and separate the precious from the vile declaring when it is good or a good Angell who knocks at the doore and when it is Sathan and the bad Angell who transfigures himselfe into an Angell of light And as this guift is rare giuen only to some so it is for the most part giuen to Superiours who are to direct others in the way of vertue and perfection amōg these to them who are men humble as Cassianus affirmes and very spirituall also because Not the sensuall man but the spirit of God perceaues the thinges which are of God These partly by long experience partly by wholesome documents partly by diuine inspirations attaine to this perfectiō of discercerning spirits By which is apparent that the science of discerning spirits is hard and difficult because it requires so speciall and supernaturall a guift which is so rare and extraordinary and that to speciall kind of persons for the good of others Which is also confirmed by the testimony of holy men who haue laboured much and beene experienced long in this science S. Bernard a man extraordinarily spirituall confesseth that he knew not VVhen the spirit entred or when it departed which way it came or which it went sometyms he could perceaue it to be present or to haue beene present but neither when it came or how it went Gerson a man learned who laboured and writ much about this discerning of spirits after much discussion sayth That it is a most hard thing to discerne among so many spirits since in diuerse and contrary spirits there is sush a similitude of inspirations Thomas à Kempis one much enlightned in spirituall affaires sayth Marke the motions of thyne own nature and my grace for in very contrary and secret manner these are moued and can hardly
is the externall litterall sense of the words sometimes doth kill cause errour but the spirit that is the true sense which the holy Ghost intended doth quicken auaileth to saluation But that neither the letter nor the spirit can be a competēt iudge of controuersies is proued 7. Not the letter because the letter or the words in the bare literall sense are occasion of errour and heresy for so they were to the Iewes who in reading of Moyses the Law had the veile set ouer their eyes and vnderstood not Christ contained and signified in the Ceremonies of the law And so it hath beene to all Heretickes who forsaking the sense intended by the holy Ghost proposed by the Church and following the letter expounded by their owne spirit haue falsly vnderstood the scripture grosly fallen into errours Thus the letter deceaued Sabellius who expounding that of S. Iohn I and the father am one of vnity of persons not of substance falsly defended in the deity to be not three but only one person which had three names offices or properties of the father the sonne the holy Ghost creating redeeming and sanctifying mankind as the Patripassiās defended the Father to haue suffered on the Crosse as one and the same person with the sonne Thus the letter deceaued the Arrians who expounding that of S. Iohn The father is greater then I of Christ absolutly and completely as whole Christ not as man according to his humanity did thereupon deny Christ to be God equall to the Father Thus it deceaued the Macedonians who expounding that of S. Paul The spirit searcheth all things euen the profoundites of God concluded not as they ought that the spirit pierceth cōprehendeth all things as God but thus that he who searches doubts who doubts is ignorant who is ignorant is not God and so the holy Ghost who searches all is not God Thus it deceaued the Manichees who held the old Testamēt to be cōtrary to the new because for instance the old said that God created all things That God ceased frō labour the seuenth day That Man was created according to the Image of God And the new said the contrary that the Word created all things That God worketh vntill now And that you are of your father the diuell Not conceauing according to the spirit and true sense that God created all things by the word as by an Idaea that God rested from his worke of creation and yet worketh by conseruation that man was created to the Image of God by nature and of the diuell by malice Thus the Pelagians denying originall sinne to haue descended from Adam to vs literally interpreted that of Ezechiel The sonne shall not beare the iniquity of the father not only of sonnes who are not partakers but also of sonnes who are partakers of the iniquity of the father as all are of Adams sinne in whome all sinned and who receaued as head the promise of keeping or losing paradise by precept of for bearing or eating the apple for himselfe and his posterity after him Thus it deceaued others who applying literally that of S. Iohn The flesh profiteth nothing some in the Apostles time to the resurrection of the flesh others of late to the reall presence in the B. Sacrament the one therupon denyed the resurrection of all bodies the other the reall presence of Christs body both vpon one ground not distinguishing the spirituall from the carnall manner of one and the same body By which they might as well inferre that the flesh of Christ by his incarnation and passion profiteth no more then according to them it doth by his resurrection and manducation By which proofe of authority and examples it is apparent that the external letter of scripture cannot be iudge of controuersies That the internall sense of Scripture cannot be iudge is likwise proued because this true sense intended by the holy Ghost is often obscure hard and vncertaine as is certaine and before proued This obscurity breeds controuersies as experience dayly teaches and that these controuersies cannot be ended iudged by scripture-sense is proued 1. Because scripture-sense is the thing in question contention therfore is the thing to be iudged and decided not the iudge who is to giue iudgment and resolue the parties contending in iudgmēt As for example a question is about the sense of those words of the Gospel this is my body of those of the Creed He descended into hell Catholikes vnderstand them as the words import of the reall presence and of the locall descension both of Christs body Protestants expound them of a figuratiue presence by remembrāce of him in the sacrament and of an infernall suffering of hel-paines in his soule vpon the Crosse Now of these senses which is true which false the sense of the words cannot iudge betweene Catholicks and Protestants but some other iudge is necessary to confirme the one and confound the other so to end the controuersy 2. Because many places of scripture are so hard and obscure as the true sense of them cannot be truly discerned but by Church practise and tradition as for example whether those words of S. Mathew Teach all nations baptizing them in the name of the father and of the sonne and of the holy Ghost do proue a necessity of the vocall pronuntiation of these wordes for the forme of baptisme as all Protestants with vs do grant or require no more but a mentall intention it sufficing only to baptize in the name of Iesus as Act. 8.26 doth insinuate Whether those of S. Iohn Except a man be borne againe of water and the holy Ghost he cannot enter into the kingdome of God inferre a necessity of water for the matter of baptisme as the Lutherans with vs grant and the words import or that the water and the holy Ghost be all one as Caluin expounds Also why the Protestants should not inferre as well a precept and necessity of a sacrament of washing of feet out of those words of our Sauiour And you ought to wash one anothers feet after the example of Christ who did and commanded it as they do out of those of S. Mathew Eat yee drinke yee inferre a necessity of receauing vnder both kinds because our Sauiour did commanded the like Now these and such like require a Iudge to iudge of the sense and reason of them cannot themselues iudge and decide themselues to vs. By which is euident that neither the letter nor the sense of scripture can be a competent iudge of all controuersies of faith and scripture Lastly the same is proued by the analogy of a temporal Iudge in causes ciuill with an Ecclesiasticall Iudge in causes spirituall for as Controuersies aryse in ciuill causes the common-wealth so do they arise also in matters spirituall and
this preaching is deriued frō Mission according to that of S. Paul How shal they belieue him whom they haue not heard how shall they heare without a preacher how shall they preach except they be sent So that faith it by hearing hearing is by preaching of Pastours and preaching is by mission from the authority of Superiours Of which the reason is because faith is an argumēt or proofe of things that do not appeare either to our sense or reason but are aboue our vnderstanding and capacity therfore we cannot attaine to it by euidence of reason but by credit of authority To this authority that we may giue credit we must conceaue and heare it this hearing that we may be obliged to accept it must by Church-Pastors be proposed and preached to vs and this preaching that it may the better secure vs of it must be from lawfull mission by ordinary succession deriued and so lawfull mission from apostolical authority infallible preaching or proposition of Pastours and a pious disposition in vs to heare and belieue what is thus proposed are the meanes by which according to S. Paul true faith is attained But this priuat spirit quite ouerthrowes all this excellēt order and subordination ordayned by Christ Iesus proposed to vs by the holy Ghost For first it alone without any disposition of hearing without any proposition or preaching of Church Pastours without any authority of apostolicall mission and ordination teaches and directs in particuler euery one man woman or child which is true Scripture which is true sense of it and which is true doctrine collected out of it therfore euery one thus made faithfull by this spirit stands need neither of disposition to heare what is to be belieued nor of preaching to belieue what they heare nor of mission and ordination to secure them of what is preached because this spirit supplies the effect of all both ordination proposition and disposition of hearing therfore all order and discipline all subordination and subiection all sacraments or preaching are needlesse yea fruitlesse in Gods Church As this spirit secures alone so without Sacraments it sanctifies alone As it instructs all in faith so it corrects all in errours against faith And as it is directed by none but God so it is subordinate to none but God alone obliged to none obedient to none it is immediate as they which haue it imagine from God it wil be subiect only to God it will be directed only by God it alone inspires all what they are to belieue alone works all what they are to do and alone secures all that they cannot faile of their end and saluation and so alone to all is all in all that is the beginning progresse and end of all grace and goodnesse Thus is the spirit to them if you will credit them Secondly It alone hath warrant and commission power and authority in whomsoeuer it is whether he be yonge or old simple or wise vnlearned or learned secular or spirituall to examine censure to giue sentence and iudgment in any cause or Controuersy ouer any Pastour or Prelate vpon any Councell or Church particuler or generall present or past late or auncient For as Caluin and Kemnitius for example by the prerogatiue of this their spirit tooke vpon them to censure and correct by their Examine and Antidote not only the late generall Councel of Trent but also the auncient generall Councels of Nice Constantinople Chalcedon and Ephesus yea the whole Church of God and all Doctours in it for many ages togeather as is before shewed so euery bible-bearing Ghospeller who hath got but a tast of this spirit and can but read the Scripture in English will by the same prerogatiue of this spirit assume to himselfe the same authority to examine the same examiners to censure the same censurers and to iudge the spirit of the former iudges yea to examine censure and iudge all Pastours Doctours Fathers Councells and Churches and to determine which of them haue erred what sense of Scripture is to be preferred and what Fayth and Religion is to be imbraced All which as these new Protestant Maisters first practised vpon the ancient Fathers so these their new discipls haue learned to practise the same vpon them their maisters and do as well censure them as they did their Predecessours and that worthily for what they taught and practised against their Fathers is a iust punishment that their children should learne and practise the same against them That it cannot be a meanes of fayth which requirs credible testimonies SECT VI. FIFTHLY this fayth as it is obtained by piously hearing the infallible preaching of Pastours lawfully ordained and sent so also it requires besides diuine reuelation reasons and motiues of credibility forcible to moue the Vnderstanding to accept as probable this doctrine of Fayth thus by preaching proposed and by God reuealed for as before He that giueth credit quickly is light of hart And reasons of credibility such as are miracles sanctity vnity conuersions of Nations and such like before mentioned doe make a true fayth more credible according to that of Dauid Thy testimonies are made too credible But that this priuate spirit cannot giue any such credible testimonies or produce any probable motiue to conuince any one that it is a true spirit of God or a certaine meanes of faith is proued Because it cannot alledge any consent of people and nations nor any authority of miracles to vse S. Augustines words nourished by hope increased by charity and confirmed by antiquity such as confirmed S. Augustine in his faith it cannot alleadge any vnity which it causeth either with the head Christ or with his body the Church not any sanctity which it worketh by works memorable for piety or miraculous for power and vertue not any consent of vniuersality by which it hath been imbraced in all places at all times by all nations and persons no not in ancient time by any persons renowned for holinesse and learning not any succession of Pastours prelates doctours or saints who haue relied themselues their faith saluation vpon it it cannot produce any one euident either authority of holy scripture or any one tradition of apostolicall time or any one practise of auncient Church or any one decree of generall Councels or any one testimony of learned Doctours or any one probable much lesse conuincing argument of reason that either all or any one man must or may settle his beliefe in it interprete the Scripture by it rely his saluation vpon it deduce all resolutions of fayth all questions of Controuersies all doubts of Religion from it and giue peremptory iudgment and sentence of all Pastours and Prelates of all Saints and Doctours of all Churches and Councells of all doctrine and religion according to the suggestion of it which yet the precise Protestāts do both in doctrine professe and in practise performe That it cannot be a
God a Diuell LASTLY that this Protestant doctrine doth transforme God into a Diuell and so doth depriue him of his only and all goodnes and therby transpose him into the greatest and vilest euill that can be shall by these ensuing reasons appeare 1. It is the office or property of Satan to ●empt man to sinne yea as an aduersary to lay traps to ensnare man in sinne for which in greeke he is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a tempter or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 an entrapper or calumniator and in hebrew Sathan an aduersary and so he is called tempter is said to tempt vs and to temp the hart to lye to the holy ghost But this is more proper to God according to this Protestant doctrine then to the Diuell 1. Because God doth not only tempt and moue a man to sinne but which is more doth will ordaine and predestinate a man to sinne and to al the sinnes which are committed 2. Because God is not only our aduersary to oppose vs but so potently doth oppose vs in so weighty a matter as our greatest good that he directly excludes most from all felicity depriues most of all benefit of it debarres most from all meanes to attaine it entraps most in all the snares which may hinder their progresse vnto it the Diuell is but only his instrument to worke that which he wils and execute that which he before had designed against vs therefore God is more our tempter and aduersary then is the Diuell Secondly The office and property of the Diuell is to sow tares or ill weeds of sinne in the field of our hearts to choake vp all the corne of grace and goodnes the enemy comes and sowes tares But God doth this according to this doctrine more then the Diuell 1. Because God doth worke inwardly in the hearts of sinners doth excecate and obdurate the minds of men doth strike them with a spirit of errour giddinesse and madnesse and that not by permission but operation as Caluin in particuler affirmes 2. Because God doth will command and worke in vs all the sinnes which are wrought as the principall cause and mouer the Diuell being only as the instrument and that not free but forced not mouing but moued and not able to do otherwise then by God he is both commanded and compelled as before therfore the chiefe and principall sower of ill seeds and weeds of sinne is God not the Diuell Thirdly The office and property of the Diuell is to be authour of all sinnes in generall sinne is of the Diuell and of lying in particuler who speakes lies of himselfe and is a lier the Father of lies But this is more proper to God then the Diuell according to this doctrine 1. Because the Diuell did only in Adam by tempting him to eat the forbidden fruit remoue an impediment which did hinder ill to wit originall iustice by which the inferiour part was kept in order without rebellion to the superiour but God did by his will saith Caluin ordaine and decree the fall of Adam the ruine of all his posterity the miserable condition into which we are all fallen Therfore God was more properly the authour of Adams fal then the Diuel 2. Because the Diuell doth only tempt to sinne indirectly medially that is either obiectiuè proposing sinfull obiects to the phantasy that the will may consent and delight in them or dispositiuè by altering tempering the organs of the senses that the appetites may with more facility incline vnto them leauing alwayes a freedome of the will to dissent or assent but God according to Caluin doth not only by his ineuitable immutable decree and ordinance will and commād the same but also by his immediate effectual irresistable concourse operation to euery actiō of sin so works the act of sinne in man that he leaues in man neither any operation at all God working all nor any liberty or freedome God necessitating all who is thereby not only the permitter but the authour of all sinnes the authour as well of the adultery of Dauid the treachery of Iudas the hardnesse of Pharao the cruelty of Achab the incest of Absalom the reproach of Semei the idolatry of the ten Tribes of the Chaldean destruction of Iudea of the Iewes and Pilates condemning of Christ as he is of the conuersion of S. Paul Therefore God is more and truely the immediate worker of sinnes and lyes then the Diuell O diabolicall doctrine SVBDIV. 8. Obseruations vpon the former doctrine VPON good ground therefore did Castalio who as Caluins scholler best vnderstood his maisters mind not only by his writinges but from his owne mouth affirme that this doctrine of Caluin did transfer God into the Diuell and for the same forsooke both him and Geneua and writ against him and this his doctrine Truely did Peter Vermilius a Professour of Tigure affirme that this doctrine of Caluins is a libertine execrable sacrilegious abominable and altogeather diabolicall doctrine Iustly did the Tigurin Sacramentaries anno 1554 accuse Caluin for this doctrine of great impiety cause his bookes writ of this subiect to be rent in peeces by the Hangman and to be burnt publickly in the Market place by special Edict commanded that none should diuulge in their territories any so horrible and detestable opinions Vpon good reason do as yet the Lutherans in Germany so detest this doctrine that to cleare Luther of it they did expunge out of his works these words God doth worke euill in vs. And most worthily doe the same Lutherans generally disclaime both this doctrine and Caluin for it in so much as one of them Heshusius a great Superintendent affirmes that Caluin writ wickedly of the cause of sinne made God the authour of sinne and in his doctrine is horribly contumelious against God pernicious to man and makes not the Diuell but God to be the authoisr of lyes Another of them a Professour auouches that not God but the Diuell is authour of this predestination and the God of the Caluinists Out of which doctrine and sequels vpon it may be obserued 1. That neuer any doctrine of Atheist Pagan Iew or Heretike was so wickedly pernicious and abominable as this of Caluin and his followers is for though some made God idle as Epicurus others impotent as Lucianus others the authour of euill as the Cerdonists Marcionists and Manichees others miserable afflicting himselfe as the Thalmudists others no God at all as the Atheists Yet all these are more tollerable thē these Caluinists for it is not so ill to be idle as to be doing ill better to make God do nothing then to make him the worker of all wickednesse It is more tollerable to make God vnable to do good then to make him the authour and actour of doing ill to make him vnable to requit good then vniust to punish where
is no desert of ill It is lesse blasphemy to make two Gods the one authour of good and the other the authour of euill then to make one God and yet to make him the authour and worker of euill and of all euill to call him iust and yet to make him the punisher of that in others which he wills commandes and workes by himselfe to account him mercifull and yet vpon his meere will and pleasure without any cause or desert to ordaine create millions of men to eternall torments and damnation It was not so great impiety in the Iewes to make God mourn sorrowfull for the punishment he wrought on Hierusalem as it is in the Caluinists to make him well pleased with the vnreasonable tormenting of soules in hell to make it one of the chiefest attributes of Gods iustice to appoint men to sinne and then for that sinne to punish and damne them It is not so foolish to say with the foole there is no God at all as it is to say God is the Authour and worker of all wickednesse and yet the punisher and reuenger of the same for they by the light of reason will condemne and auoid thefts murders periuries iniustice as lying in their power to auoid but these will may by their owne principles practise and exercise them al as being by God forced and necessitated to them as wanting freedome to auoid them and as fearing no punishment for them Though therefore most wicked yet lesse wicked were the former opinions of Iewes Heretikes and Atheists then these of the Caluinists Secondly it may be obserued that no Caluinist can be certaine and assured either of any verity of Scripture or of any article of his Faith or of any assurance of his saluation by his priuate spirit for though he may imagine himselfe to be certaine of the sense of Scripture of the articles of his fayth and of the infallibility of his saluation that they are reuealed from God yet he may with all according to his principles of fayth imagine that God who reueales these may reueale tell him which is false for as God according to them is he who effectually procures the sinner to sin who as the principall cause vses the sinner as an instrument to commit sinne who incites compels and necessitates the sinner to sinne who phisically and effectually workes and causes the act of sinne so the same God according to them may procure and incite the Apostles and Prophets as his instruments compel and necessitate them as the chiefe authour and worker and produce in them as the principall agent lyes and vntruthes and so may by them in Scripture reueale an vntruth either of the beliefe of the mysteries of their fayth or of the certainty of their saluation What certainty therefore can they haue from God of reuelations they receaue from him or of any thing suggested by their supposed spirit as from him Againe God according to Caluin hath one will exteriour another interiour doth call exteriourly whome he withouldes interiourly speakes to them but to make them more deafe giues them light but the more to blind them doth teach them but to make them more dull doth apply to them a remedy but not to cure them for so are Caluins wordes If so then how can any be sure that the calling the speaking the light the doctrine and the motion of their spirit as they suppose of God is not rather to detaine then draw them rather to darken then lighten them rather to dull them then teach them rather to increase then cure their diseases Surely if the spirit of God may worke and doth more ordinarily worke the bad then the good doth more vsually make shew to call when he intends they shall not come doth more generally make blind then enlighten make obdurate then mollify make dull then teach and wound then cure And if God do more often intend bad thē good obduration then illumination damnation then saluation of most whome he cals inuites and makes shew of intending their good And if the greatest part of the world be thus by God deluded and deceaued then why may not or rather should not euery Protestant iustly suspect the same of himselfe Why may he not rightly feare that God intends one thing by his inward will and pretends another by his outward will that God doth worke errour and deceit in him rather then truth and verity That he is a lying spirit rather then a true in him Surely if God hath deceaued more then he hath taught truth darkened more thē he hath lightned obdurated more then he hath mollifyed woūded more then he hath cured and damned more then he hath saued iustly may euery one both suspect and feare that God may do the like to him sith no ground reason or motiue he hath of the one rather then of the other and no more assurance of his saluation among the lesser number then of his damnation with the greate● Thirdly it may be obserued that the God of these Caluinists and precise Protestants is not the same with the ancient Christians and present Catholikes but the one doth so farre differ from the other that the one of the Caluinists doth will decree and predestinate all sinnes which are committed by men and so makes man sinne by the will decree and predestination of God the other of the Catholickes doth will decree and predestinate only good works and all good workes and so doth make man to doe good workes according to the will of God and doth suffer him to do euill according to the man his owne will The one doth command vrge and compell Sathan to deuise sinnes and to sollicite men vnto it The other doth bind hould and hinder Sathan that he do not tempt man and doth ayde help and assist man that he be not by Sathan tempted aboue his power The one doth himselfe secretly incite moue necessitate man to sinne the other doth disswade deterre and enable man against sinne The one is the principall authour worker and effectour of all sinnes as sinnes and men only his instruments to do that sinne which he workes by them The other is no authour nor instrument nor worker at all of sinne as sinne but only the efficient cause of that which is good leauing man to be the deficient cause of that which is malice and sinne The one vpon his meere will because it is his pleasure without any demerit or sinne in man did ordaine predestinate and create most men to damnation and ordained and predestinated only some few to saluation The other created all men to saluation and had a will and desire that all should attaine to it and be saued and ordained none to damnation but vpon his foresight of their sinne by which they would deserue damnation The one did will appoint and decree the sinne of Adam and of all mankind for that end only that in
S. Paul with much more before noted as they call him if we cōsider his life and doctrine what it was while he belieued and imbraced the Catholicke faith and compare it with the same what it was after he made his reformation we shall clearly perceaue the fruit and effect of this their new Ghospel for life manners And first for his life before his reuolt he confesseth himselfe and it is confessed by his owne followers that He liued in his Monastery punishing his body with watching fasting prayer That he honoured the Pope of meere conscience That he kept chastity pouerty obedience Whatsoeuer he did he did it with a simple heart of good zeale for the glory of God fearing grieuously the last day and desirous to be saued from the bottome of his heart Which are his owne words But after he inuented his libertine Ghospell he confesseth himselfe and the same is confessed by his followers 1. For lust and sensuality that He esteemed nothing more sweet or louing vpon the earth then the loue of a woman if a man can get it That it was no more in his power to be without a woman then to be a man that the act of the flash is as necessary and more necessary no more to be stayed or omitted then to eat drinke sleepe purge make cleane the nose c. Wherupon he confesseth that I am burned with the great flame of my vntamed flesh I who ought to be feruent in spirit am feruent in the flesh in lust sloth c. Eight dayes are now past wherin I neither write pray nor study being vexed partly with the temptation of the flesh partly with other troubles But saith he it sufficeth me to know the glory of the riches of God and of the lambe which taketh away the sinnes of the world from him sinne cannot draw vs although we should commit fornication or kill a thousand times a day Vpon which his lust neither respecting his vow made to God of chastity which made it a sinne to commit any act of carnality nor the Imperiall law which made it losse of ones head nor the shame of the world at which all wondred many were ashamed scandalized nor the calamities of the time in which by the insurrection of the Boores or common people incited by him were killed to the number of one thousand and all Germany was in misery but impatient of staying so much as one night he secretly at night hauing present only Pomeran the Priest Luke the Painter and Apell●s the Lawyer without any communication with his friends the yeare 1525. coupled himselfe to one of the Runagate Nunnes enticed out of Nympsen by Leonard Koppen Katherine Bor● by name a beautifull yonge woman of 26. yeares of age who within few dayes after the mariage as Erasmus sayth was deliuered of a child and so as one fayth of him Luther was yesterday a Monke to day a Bridgroome to morrow a Husband and the next a Father Which was the first fruit and one of the principall motiues of Luthers Reformation But let vs heare his Examen of his owne conscience his confession of himselfe VVhat sayth he haue I done all this day Two houres cacaui too beastly to be englished three houres I eat and fower houres I was idle Againe VVe eat till death we drinke till death we eat and drinke till we be poore and go to hell cacamus ad mortem I sit heere senselesse and stupid in idlenesse praying little mourning nothing at al for the Church And laughing at the folly of S. Hierome Benedict Bernard and Francis who labouring to represse the heat of the flesh by praying fasting afflicting their bodyes he sayth He hath a more easy and ready way so that a wench be not wanting that is to haue a wench alwayes in the house which is the most present remedy for that disease and she as a woman ought to help a friend in that case And least he should be thought to do otherwise thē he taught his doctrine was according to his practise for he taught That to increase and multiply is not a precept but more then a precept which is not in our power to slippe or omit but more necessary then to eat drinke purge and sleep That the Husband shal say to his wife if thou wilt not come let the maid or another come and if that will not suffice dismisse Vas●hi and admit He●ter That As God seuerely prohibited ●o kill not commit adultery so much more did he command to marry For prayer and deuotion he taught That God hath promised to heare our prayers therefore after thou hast prayed once or twice thou must belieue thou art heard and so must pray no more least thou tempt God and abuse his patience in hearing thee And writing to a noble man he affirmes that If we pray often for the same thing we shew little trust in God and so with our incredulous prayer we more more offend God for to aske the same thing often it nothing els but to conceaue that before we were not heard so do pray against the promises of God Therefore we must not vse many words with God but let such short prayers as these suffice Help vs O God Father haue mercy on vs. c. That Papists do foolishly teach men to pray fast and do pennance only say thou that all thou canst do is nothing and this is to prepare the way for God though in the meane tyme thou do nothing but drinke Malmesy and walke vpon Roses and pray not word at all That when thou prayest whether it be standing or kneeling say boldly Lord I aske that thou heare me and I will that thou graunt my request and so it must and shal be and thus pray and no otherwise or els say thou I will neither pray to thee nor haue thee prayed vnto And lastly that No man can say Our Father except he ioyne with it curses and execrations for Our Father is not well sayd without banninges and cursings This was Luthers doctrine and manner of Prayer For other good workes and good life and both for obligation practise of them he taught 1. That only faith doth iustify and only that fayth which includes not not hath annexed Charity That Only fayth is necessary to make vs iust all other thinges being free and neither commanded nor forbidden That Fayth except it be without any the least good workes doth not iustify yea is no fayth 2. For good workes that This shal be a rule for vnderstanding of Scripture that wheresoeuer the Scripture doth commaund to do goods workes it is to be vnderstood to prohibit them That though the Papists bring heapes of Scripture as commending good workes yet I care not for them though they bring more Thou Papist art very
detractiue in euery one And on the contrary how we and our doctrine do honour attribut to the same God and Christ all worthy and due respect of veneration honour in all which as it is affirmatiue in it selfe so it is honourable to God and agreable to reason in all and euery particular point and opinion in controuersy First therfore for God they dishonour and derogate 1. From the blessed Trinity in that as before some of them do deny the distinction of the three persons some the vnity of one nature some the consubstantiality of the Sonne with the Father some the deity of the Sonne from the Father as God of God some the deity of the holy Ghost as God some the prayer Holy Trinity one God haue mercy vpō vs. We with the ancient Church acknowledge three persons and one God the second person God of God and consubstantiall with the father and the third person of the holy Ghost proceeding frō both the father the sonne in them one holy Trinity three persons and one God 2. They and their spirit derogate from the mercy of God in that according to them he is cruell and tyrannicall in that he will not haue all saued will not giue sufficient meanes to all to be saued hath willed appointed and ordained millions of soules to be damned and to sinne that for it he may damne them and accordingly torment thē for that sinne which he himselfe willed ordained wrought and compelled them vnto We and our Catholicke Church attribute honour to him and his mercy in that according to vs he would haue all saued giues to all sufficient meanes to be saued creates and ordaines all to be saued wils not the death and damnation of any nor doth damne any but those who for their owne fault and sinne by themselues willingly committed against him his good will and goodnesse do deserue 3. They their spirit do derogate from Gods goodnesse in that according to them he who is good al good yet is not pleased pacifyed worshipped or delighted with good works but doth will ordaine commande compell and necessitate bad works and so is the authour of all euill and all euill works in men and doth esteeme impute that which is wicked and sinfull in men for no sinne in them but accounts that which is bad good him that is wicked iust We our Catholik doctrine do attribute due honour to the same goodnesse of God in that according to it God hates detests forbids and punishes all sinne and sinfull actions conuerts sanctifies purifies and make cleane pure and iust all sinners by his grace duely disposing themselues so reputes them as they are become truely iust in that God is delighted pleased pacified and honoured by good workes which he doth will command and reward in man who according to his will by his grace workes them 4. They their priuate spirit derogates from his iustice in that according to their doctrine he is short of iustice in rewarding none who deserue well and do him seruice exce●ds all iustice in that he ordaines men to an eternall and intollerable paine who haue deserued none 2. In that he punisheth them for that which he himselfe not only willed and commanded thē to do but also wrought and effected in them 3. In that he creats and dignifies them with his gifts graces for that end that he may himselfe cruelly torture and torment them and that in hell for no other end but to shew his power iustice ouer them 4. In that he laies precepts vpon them which are impossible for them to performe and commands them to abstaine from that which himselfe forces them to do and wils them to practise that which he giues not power freedome or sufficient meanes to practise We and our Catholicke doctrine do honour and giue due respect to his Iustice 1. In that according to vs he rewards all who deserue well and punisheth none but those who deserue ill 2. In that he punisheth all for their owne fault which they themselues committed and none for that which himselfe willed 3. In that he created all to be saued and gaue them meanes sufficient to be saued in which he shewed his mercy and punisheth with hell those who would not vse those meanes in which he shewed his Iustice 4. In that he gaue precepts and made lawes easy gaue meanes to performe them sufficient punisheth only those who willingly breake them 5. They and their priuate spirit derogate from his omnipotency in that according to their doctrine he is not able to place one body in two places in the B. Sacrament nor two bodies in one place in his natiuity resurrection and ascension nor to draw a Cable rope or camell through a needles eye nor by his absolut power to worke any more thē already he hath wrought We and our Catholicke doctrine do attribut to his omnipotency that he is able to do all the former and what more he pleases to do which is not either wicked and so is against his goodnesse or not contradictory and so implies in it selfe an impossibility to be done And in these do the Protestants their spirit by their doctrine derogate from God and his Deity from his goodnesse his mercy his Iustice and his omnipotency and impute to him wickednesse cruelty iniustice and impotency In all which we in our doctrine do the contrary Secondly for Christ our blessed Sauiour they their doctrin of the priuate spirit do dishonour him derogate 1. From his felicity beatitude in this life denying him to be viator and comprehensor that is enduring the paine and miseries of mortall men in his body and enioying the felicity and blessednesse of glorious Saints in his soule In which we do honour him belieuing that from the first instant of his cōception his soule had in his body the same blessednesse as now it enioyes in heauen by the perfect vision fruition of God though by dispensation for our redemption the same did not redound to the glory of his body till after his resurrection 2. From his knowledge they derogate and dishonour him in making him ignorant and defectiue of knowledge in many things and as a scholler to haue profited in his booke and learning of sciences and trades as other children do In which we giue him the honour to haue had all the treasures of knowledge and wisedome to haue vnderstood all the perfection of all sciences and artes and to haue perfectly conceiued all things past present or to come by a diuine infused knowledge from the first instant of his conception in his mothers wombe Thirdly From his primacy and supremacy ouer his Church they derogate and dishonour him in that they deny him as a man sensible and visible to haue beene the head foundation of his Church and to haue had any perpetual visible monarchy
interpreted by Prophecy was not doctrine or mysteries of faith but either exhortation to piety for edification and consolation or of things secret as future euents or vnknowne faults or facts done by which the secrets of the heart of the infidell or idiot was made knowne and he conuinced and iudged of all therfore it makes nothing for doctrine of faith and interpretation of scripture 4. This manner of Prophecy howsoeuer and of whatsoeuer it was it was not independent and of it selfe free to interprete what and how it will but so that the rest doe iudge that the spirits of Prophets be subiect to the Prophets And so euery priuate spirit must be subiect to the iudgment of the Church and the Churches spirit Fourthly they obiect those places where it is said that All thy Childrē are taught of our Lord Al shal be docible of God Your selues haue learned of God I will giue my law in their bowels and I will write it in their heart All shall know me from the least to the greatest If any will do his will who sent me he shall vnderstand of the doctrine whether it be of God My sheepe do heare my voice do follow me Yow haue no need that any do teach you but as his vnction teacheth you of all things All these places I say do not either ioyntly altogether or particularly any one mention any priuiledge that euery one hath by the instinct of his owne priuate spirit to interprete holy scripture to decide deep mysteries of faith and to iudge of all controuersies of diuinity which is the point auerred by the Protestants denied by vs and in controuersy betweene both 2. In them is affirmed only that God will giue his inward guift of grace to all sort of persons so sufficiently that they may know him his truth and the true way to saluation and by the same may obserue his Commandements and come to be saued In which yet is neither excluded but rather supposed as precedent and an exteriour proponent cause the ordinary meanes of preaching by Pastours and of instruction by them and subordination to them But yet is not giuen to any one any power or priuiledge to preferre his owne spirit before the spirit of the whole Church or to censure the doctrine which is once adiudged by the same which among the rest this Protestant priuate spirit doth assume to it selfe For which we may note that it is one thing to haue faith sufficient for saluation another to haue the guift of infallible interpretatiō of scripture The former is a guift general to all the faythful though they be as yet little ones who only sucke milke though they be as yet carnal not spiritual thogh they be ignorant of many things and haue many thinges wanting to the perfection of their faith Yet they be sealed with the spirit of the promise the pledge of our inheritance haue the spirit of God dwelling in them and so haue the literall verity of all the former places verifyed in them The later is a guift peculiar and proper only to them who by place and function are spirituall and perfect haue their senses exercised to the discerning of good and euill And haue the guift of discerning of spirits and interpreting of speaches And these are they who as tryers and discerners of fayth interpreters of Scripture and haue the guift and power infallible to direct others in the doctrine of fayth who are ex officio the Pastours and Prelates of Gods Church and are as Bishops to rule to feed the flocke of Christ to exhort and reproue with all authority to controule rebuke them sharply that they may be sound in the fayth and to denounce to certaine not to teach otherwise And all by that power which God hath giuen them to edification and to reuenge all disobedience and to bring into captiuity al vnderstanding to the obedience of Christ This is the office of the Prelates and Bishops of Gods Church 3. This inward guift of grace or vnction of the Holy Ghost is only an efficient internall and cooperant cause and so necessary to mooue the vnderstanding and will to assent to that which as certaine is proposed but this iudge or interpreter must be an exteriour proponent cause which must deliuer to vs this sense as certaine which being proposed grace doth enable vs to belieue Now all these and such like places are meant of the interiour guift of grace which is necessary but not ordinarily sufficient without a precedent exteriour and proponent cause which is this infallible Interpreter of holy Scripture in Pastours of the Church Fifthly to those places where it is commanded not to belieue euery spirit but to proue the spirits if they be of God and to proue all thinges and hould that which is good is answered 1. That all and euery person of the body of the holy Church is not directed to make this tryall but only the chiefe that is the Pastours and Prelates as when a man is willed to discerne and see not euery member and part of the body is directed so to do but the chiefe members as the head which is to iudge and the eye to see to whose function it is proper and belonges or as when an Vniuersity is directed to examine and iudge of such a booke and doctrine not euery student but the chiefe Doctours of that faculty are so directed and willed so that not euery person and vnlearned party in the Church is to make this tryall of spirits but only Pastours and Prelates to whose function it is peculiar and proper to iudge and decide all such like questions and doubts 2. This tryall and iudgment is to be made not of questions doctrine already decided and determined by the authority of the Church but of such as are yet doubtfull and vndecided For that which is once determined by the generall consent of the Church or Councell is not againe to be examined and iudged by any priuate mans spirit for so the Decrees of Coūcells were both vaine endlesse that therfore is to be tryed which is not before both tryed and iudged and that by those who haue both ability and authority to do it which makes nothing for this priuate spirit which will both try what is before by any Councell iudged and will by euery simple vnlearned person try and iudge it Sixthly to that of 1. Cor. 2.15 The spirituall man iudgeth all thinges and himselfe is iudged of none It is answered that S. Paul to confound the Corinthians who standing vpon their humane worldly wisedome contemned his vnlearned manner of instruction affirmes that they being men sensuall can iudge only of sensuall thinges but he being spirituall and perfect in diuine wisedome can iudge both of things sensuall and spirituall and
so a spirituall man iudges of all thinges in generall that is both of spirituall thinges which are diuine and mysticall and also of humane thinges which are terrene and sensuall but a sensuall man iudges only of temporall thinges of the world and not of spirituall which are of God The reason therfore is de generibus singulorum that a spirituall man iudges of all sortes of thinges both diuine humane but not de singulis generunt that he can iudge in particuler of all kindes or spirituall thinges as when a man is sayd to eat of all thinges it is meant that he eates of all kinds of meat both flesh and fish not of euery particuler peece of both 2. Euery spirituall man doth iudge spirituall thinges but according to such rules and directions as euery thing is to be iudged that is thinges manifest and certaine he iudges according as they are iudged already and determined thinges vncertaine and obscure according to the rule of Fayth and the authority and testimony of Councels Fathers Tradition and Church as before is explicated not according to his owne selfe-seeming spirit and conceit in which his spirit is still subordinate to the spirit of Gods Church and directed by it 3. Because euery faithfull Christian is not alwayes spirituall that is perfect hauing his senses exercised in the discerning of good and euill for some haue need of milke and not of strong meat and euery one that is partaker of milke it vnskilful of the word of iustice for he is a child Therfore this iudgment especially of misteries of faith is not for al imperfect though faithfull Christians but only for persons spirituall that is perfect and vnderstanding in spiritual learning wisdome And so it makes nothing for the priuate spirits iudgment in euery faithfull Christian And because spirituall persons haue not euery one a spirit for all spirituall things for to one certes by the spirit is giuen the word of wisdome and to another the word of knowledge according to the same spirit and to another Prophecy to another discerning of spirits all which one and the same spirit worketh And all are not Apostles Prophets or Doctours nor worke miracles do cures or speake with tongues And because some mēbers are more some lesse honourable or base some more weake some lesse and some haue offices functions some more honourable some lesse some to see and direct others to walke and be directed euery one according to his nature function though one and the same spirit worke all these therefore all persons who are spirituall haue not all spirituall offices guifts but some the guifts of prayer and contemplation some of mortification and humiliation some of obedience patience others of discerning of spirits and others to whō by their office it belongs of iudging of faith and scripture as before And therefore though spirituall men iudge all things spirituall and temporall yet euery spirituall man doth not infallibly iudge and discerne euery spirituall thing no more then euery faculty of the soule as sensitiue vegitatiue or rationall doth performe all and euery function of feeling growing and reasoning but euery one his proper function And as the function of the eye is only to see and of the hāds to worke and the feet to walke so they who will giue the function of seeing and iudging of the sense of scripture and misteries of faith to euery person in the body of the Church do as much as if one should attribut the function of seeing to the handes and feet for as in a body naturall so in the body mysticall which is S. Pauls comparison some are principal members some inferiour so euery one hath his proper function in the Church as the bishops are eyes to discerne truth the princes are armes to defend the body and the people are the rest of the parts of the body to be directed The function therfore of one is not to be attributed to another but euery one in his place and degree is to exercise his owne function in his proper office and worke By which is apparent that those and such like places of scripture do make nothing for the authority and power of this priuate spirit in euery one to discerne and iudge of all places of scripture and misteries of faith except the Protestants as they attribut to euery spirit power to do euery thing so they will out of euery place of scripture inferre any thing so ex quolibet proue quodlibet as their spirit doth direct and teach them And thus much of the first manner of arguments or obiections drawne from the guift of the spirit of God and grace impertinently applied to proue this their priuate spirits authority Other obiections answered SECT III. THE second manner of obiections are drawne from the meanes which are prescribed in scripture for the due right Vnderstanding of holy scripture which are prayer meditation and diligent seeking enquiring out the true sense of scripture out of scripture and such like by which the Protestants seeme to backe much their spirits proceeding for so doth Caluin professe to imbrace that sense of scripture which by meditation annexed the spirit of God doth suggest by vertue of which spirit he contemns all what any humane wisdone can oppose For which they obiect that Dauid did meditat day night in the law of God That Timothy did from his Childhood learne the Scripture which might instruct him That S. Peter did will them to attend and looke into the propheticall word as to a candell shining in a darke place That S. Paul affirmes that faith faithful persons are built vpon the foundation of the Prophets and Apostles That they of Beroea did search the scriptures if the things were so as Paul did teach And that Christ did will the Iewes to search the Scriptures For all which we are to obserue 1. That these meanes are good and profitable but not sufficient of themselues for a certaine and infallible exposition of scripture for besides them is required the infallible assistance of the holy Ghost for an infallible sense of scripture to be relied vpō 2. That these meanes are to be vsed by those who haue power and authority to expound scripture to whom though they be necessary yet are they not of themselues either sufficient or infallible either to euery priuate person or to others without other helpes and assistances of the holy Ghost 3. That priuate persons when they vse apply duely these meanes may giue a probable exposition of scripture either for their owne consolation and confirmation in faith or for the edification and aduise of others but cannot rely vpon it either as a sole and solid foundation of their beliefe or as a generall rule for the true and certaine exposition of all the difficult and abstruse places of scripture For as S. Augustine saith such is the
profundity of holy scriptures that though his wit was better his leasure more and his diligence greater yet he might from his child-hood ti●l his old age profit in the vnderstanding of them not for that so much of them as is necessary to saluation is so hardly to be atteined but for that when once ones faith is grounded vpon them so many and manifold misteries remaine for the more intelligent proficients inuolued in the words and the ma●ter that the mo●t aged witty and industrious may say when he is become perfect then he begins For which elswhere he professes that he is ignorant of more things in scripture then he knowes Therfore only prayer meditation and study will not surfice for euery one to find out the true and certaine sense of euery place of Scripture which for euery one to assume to himselfe would not be a certainty of faith but presumption of pride And the same which is sayd of Prayer Meditation and study may be sayd of skill of tongues conference of originall texts and other places and of consideration of antecedents and consequents of phrases and the like Of which see Stapleton Which supposed the answere to all the former obiections is facile First Dauid did read and study the Scripture but he did it for his priuate consolation and meditation not for his foundation in fayth in which he was before grounded 2. Timothy did read and study them from his childhood but to learne the sense and meaning of them of his Maisters and teachers not to be iudge and censurer of them and that for his instruction in manners not for his doctrine of fayth which he receaued from his Ancestours not from his owne reading of Scripture 3. S. Peter did will them to attend to the propheticall doctrine but not to interprete it according to euery ones priuate spirit and proper interpretation which he forbids saying No prophesy of Scripture is made by priuate interpretation much lesse with a neglect of the rules and grounds of fayth or with a contempt of the Pastours and Superiours of the Church of God preferring its owne before their exposition 4. S. Paul affirmes that we must be built vpon the foundation of the Prophets and Apostles that is not only vpon the written word of the Apostles or Prophets for many had fayth and were Cittizens of Saints and Domesticals of God before any scripture or writing of the Apostles was extant and many built their fayth vpon the Apostles who writ nothing at all but vpon the doctrine and fayth reueiled to the Apostles and by them left by preaching or writing to posterity and as such by the Church proposed to vs. Out of which nothing can be inferred for making the scripture much lesse the priuate spirit interpreting it the sole or sufficient ground of Fayth Againe taking the foundation either for the doctrine or writinges of the Apostles and they who are built vpon it or for principall partes or for the body of the Church we may consider first the foundation of doctrine either in it selfe and so as being the truth reuealed it is the ground of fayth or in respect of vs as by vs it is accepted and so it relyes vpon the Pastours and Prelates of the Church by whome it is proposed to vs as reuealed and for whose authority we receaue it as reuealed Secondly we may consider the Church either as it is the whole body of all faythfull in all tymes especially after the Apostles and so it is built vpon the doctrine preached and written or as it signifies the first heads and directours of it to wit the Apostles and so it is built immediatly vpon Christ and the holy Ghost reuealing to them that doctrin and scripture which they haue left to posterity and which they preach and propose to vs and in this sense the Church that is the Apostles and first Pastours were before the doctrine was either preached or written by them so were the foundation of their doctrine and preaching of it to vs though to the rest of the faythfull the doctrine preached and written by them is the foundation vpō which their fayth is built Which answere doth not only cleare the Scripture for hauing any priuate spirit as Iudge ouer it but also declares how the Church is built vpon the doctrine of the Apostles or Prophets taking the Prophets eyther for the writings of the Prophets in the old Testament or for the Interpreters of the Apostles writing in the new and also how the Church in the sense before declared is the ground of the Apostolical and propheticall doctrine reuealed to the Church and the first Pastours of it and by them left to vs who receaue it from them and their authority and so from the Church 5. They of Beörea did search the scriptures whether those thinges were so as Paul declared that is not so that by searching the scripture they did make themselues and their spirit iudge of the Apostolicall doctrine preached out of scripture but so that either being nor yet fully conuerted and satisfyed they would with diligence and in humility enquire further of the doctrine preached which is alwayes permitted and aduised to all for otherwise he that giueth credit quickly is light of hart or that being satisfyed they would as Catholicke Doctours do search out conferre and vnderstand those places of scripture which Paul did alleadge and thereby the more strongly confirme themselues and better satisfy others in Fayth In which as they did proceed prudently and piously and we permit and aduise euery learned Catholike to do the like so they did no more make either their spirit or the Scripture interpreted by their spirit iudge of the Apostles doctrine then if one for searching the testimonyes of S. Augustine which are cyted by Bellarmine should therby be sayd to make himselfe iudge of Bellarmine his doctrine or as one searching the places cited by Caluin to see if they be as they are by him cited should thereby make himselfe iudge of Caluin and his doctrine Which to inferre out of their actions as it is absurd so is it to inferre that the Beröeans made themselues iudges of S. Pauls doctrine out of the Beröeans seeking out the places which S. Paul alleadged 6. Our Sauiour willed the Iewes to search the Scripture it is true but which Iewes to wit those who were learned and how Not so that he would make them and their priuate spirits iudges of Scriptures or the truth found in them but that he would haue them being yet incredulous studiously to informe themselues of him being the true Messias out of those Scriptures which they belieued already to be true and to beare true witnesse of the true Messias which is no more then to persuade any Protestant to read Scriptures Fathers and Catholike authours and out of them to informe himselfe of the verity of Catholike Religion which is to search out
life pag. 243. is iniurious to Christ as a Redeemer a Lawgiuer a Iudge a Priest makes him ignorant sinfull and damned pag. 247. Fathers how esteemed by S. Augustine pag. 67. Their consent a meane to interprete scripture pag. 126. Their authority how great 12● Their ancient Practice against Heretikes 227. Alleadged by Fathers and councells ibid. consulted about scripture pag. 138. Freewill takē away by Protest doctrine of Predestination pag. ●74 Absurdities following vpon the deniall of Freewill ibid. G GOd by Protestant doctrine made Author of sinne a Sinner only a sinner pag. ●77 A lyer and dissembler pag. 280. A Tyrant more cruell then any Tyrant 284. A Diuell a tempter to sinne and Authour of sin p. ●89 Gods of the Pagās how many how vicious how begot pag. 220. Men-Gods Women-Gods 2●1 Gods for euery thing The Gods of the Romans 2● Passions Beasts Hearbes made Gods pag. 223. Grace generall actuall necessary pag. 30. How Protestants and Catholikes agree differ about Grace pag. 31. And the effects of it pag. 32. Grace gratis and extraordinary pag. 40.378 Not giuen to all 380. Not a signe of Holines pag. 119. H K. HENRY the 8. how often he changed Religion pag. 157. Heresy what it worketh pa. 20.56 Why to be auoyded 48. The origine of it pag. 2.49.61.225 Begon by the priuate Spirit pag. 141. Compared with Idolatry pag. 218. Heretikes how they abuse Scripture 58. How deluded by Sathan 100.102 Examples of auncient Heretikes 10● Moderne 100.103 How discerned by Fathers by practice of the Rule of Fayth pag. 120.127 By Church practice confuted 1●5 Deceaued by women pag. 46. S Hierome commēded His saying against the priuate Spirit pag. 59. I IVdge as necessary in Fayth as in Lawes How far he is to be obeyed pag. 145.161 What properties are required in a Iudge and what to a Rule of Fayth by which he is to iudge pag. 146. Not the whole body of the Church pa. 147. Not secular Prines 148. Not the lay people 155. Not the Scripture 156. But Bishops and Prelats as is proued by scripture Church-practice are a Iudge pag. 162. L LAy-People not Iudges of Faith pag. 155. Lawes Precepts Instructiōs Exhortations all in vaine according to Protestant doctrine pag. 162. Luther against this priuate Spirit 65. His bad Life Lust Enuy Pride want of deuotion and good workes confessed pag. 339. Lutherans disagreemēt about Scripture-sense pag. 140. O OBiections for the priuate spirits authority answered pag. 378. Originall sin made to be Concupiscence pag 227. Absurdities that follow vpon Originall sinne remaining pag. 259. That the Church of Christ is a congregation of great sinners pag. 261. That the elect may commit as wel great sinnes as good workes ibid. That in vaine is all mortification and labour to ouercome all Temptations ibid. That great sinners may be perfect men and perfect Protestants pag. 261. That in vaine are al Lawes of Gods Church or Cōmon Welth. p. 6● All Consultatios exhortations all Case● or care of Conscience vaine ibid. P PAgans saued according to Protestants pag 242. Predestination to damnation a Protestant Principle and the effect of it pag 2●8 Absurdities that follow of it vz It makes men Atheists pag ●71 Desperat● Examples of both pag. ●72 Takes away Freewil in all sort of actions All desert of reward or payne 274. Makes God the Author of sin ●76 A sinner 277. Vide God And is the origine of Atheisme and liberty pag 27● Priests Pastors of the Church are interpreters of Scripture pag. 117. And the triers of Spirits pag. 1●7 118 Princes not Iudges of cōtrouersies and Fayth pag 148 They are sheep not Pastours proued by Fathers pa. 149. Absurdities that follow vpon making them Iudges of Fayth pag. 153. Protestants want all means of Faith to confute Pagans confirme Catholikes and reduce Heretickes pag. ●5 Want all credible Testimonies to the same pag 17. All Church infallible proposition 19. All pious disposition ibid. All infused Fayth pag. ●0 Obiects Materiall and formall ●1 All reuelation made to the Apostles pag. 23. Protestants relye vpon a motion of the priuate Spirit pag. 25. In what they agree with Catholikes pag. 30. And differ from them about the Spirit in the Name Vniuersality Operation Permanency and effect of it pag. 30. What they belieue of the Spirit pag. 30.31 How they make the Spirit Iudge and trier or Councells pag. 36. Protestants compared with false Prophets pag. 44. With Eliu Iobs friend 47. Protestants Faith Saluation how doubtfull as relying on the priuate Spirit p. 14● And more doubtfull then Catholikes ibid. Sects and diuisions among them 184 Protectants doctrine in the connexion of their electiō faith spirit Scripture-sense saluation pag. 205. Their Circle between scipture and spirit pag. 206. Betweene spirit and Fayth pag. 201. Betweene Election scripture-sense 21● How they make Scripture the sole meanes of Fayth and the spirit the sole meanes to know scripture 2●7 2●1 212. Protestants doctrine reduced to 4 heads that is Church-contempt sole Fayth originall sin and Predestination pag. ●26 Their doctrine of the certainty of saluation how contrary to Faith and inferring a Generall saluation of all pag 2●7 Their doctrine of Fayth what it is and how contradictory 243. Vide Fayth Not grounded vpon scripture 243.245 They are made Iust by sinne 244. Presume vpon Iustice without ground 245. Destroy all hope and charity 246. Teach good life not out of their owne principles 247 Make Christ no redeemer nor Phisitian of soules Vide Christ and pag. 247. c Their doctrine and scripture in how many points contra●y pag 280 How it leads to bad life to flouth lust and cruelty pag. 330. Derogates frō the honour of God of Christs saints Sacraments Grace c. p 350 Protestants Church of what kind of persons it consists 260. Their doctaine of sin and good workes pag 261. The bad life of the Protestant common people confessed in Germany pag. 335. In England 337 Of their Ministers 338. Of their Founders Luther Caluin Swinglius Iacobus Andreas c. pag. 344 Protestant Reformers most of them Friars Priests Breakers of the vowes of Chastity pag. 346 S SEcts and diuisions how many mong Protestants pag. 184. Selfe-opinion and conceite cōdemned pag. 50. Sinners perfect Protestāts pag. 261. Good members of their Church p. 261. Spirits diuers and doubtfull not sy to be discerned but by speciall gift pag. 35. By what Rule to be tryed ibid. By vniō with the Church not by Scripture pag. 36. By whome to be tryed that is by the Pastors not the people pag. 39. Spirits their variety and diuersity in nature cōdition operation pag. 70. Spirits vitall and naturall pag. 71. Spirituall motions their origine pag. 7● some spirituall some sensible pag. 73. Spirits of God of Angells of Diuells of soules departed how hard to be discerned pag. 74. Rules to discerne their motions pag. 83. Difficulty to iudge certainly of these Rules pag. 93. In
respect of mans infirmity and Sathans subtility 93. Signes of good Spirits 89. Differēce betweene good and bad spirits ibid. How hard to discerne them by scripture pag. 109. Not to be discerned by all faythfull ibid. Spirituall maisters necessary pag. 111. Spirit of God the Interpreter as wel as the maker of scripture p. 38.39 Gods Spirit how it worketh in euery one and what it is 373. How it differs in Catholicke Protestant doctrine in the exposition of scripture and certainty of saluation pag. 37. Spirituall men how they iudge of all things ibid. Priuate Spirit the mother of all heresies pag. ● May be chalenged as well by Catholikes as Protestants pag. ●8 What it worketh pag. 30.34.38 Confuted by Scripture pa. 34. Why not to be belieued ibid. Why it cannot be a Iudge pag. 37. What it is in whome it is what it worketh how it is punished pag. 46. Is blind lying deceytfull pag. 44 Is confuted by scripture out of S. Iohn S Paul S Peter Exechiel Iob and other scriptures pag. 33.40.48.50 By Fathers in the six first ages after Christ pag. 55. A Puritā spirit described out of Iob pag 47 Is only a selfe opinion pag. 50. The priuate spirit cannot discerne the difficulties about the Spirit of good Angels soules diuels pag. 80. cānot discerne spirits good or bad pag. 112. cannot be meanes to interprete scripture 1●1 cānot explicate what bookes are scripture in what language figures what seeming contradictions what difficult places 131. Priuate Spirits exposition of scripture is against scripture false fallible contrary to the spirit of Gods Church and author of all heresies pag. 1●6 184 It cannot be a Iudge as not able to know be knowne pag 17● It wants authority 174. Infallibility 175 Certainty ibid. ●8● Duration immutability Visibility Vni●y pag. 178.188.176 Vniuersality warrant to be obeyed pag. 178. Priuate Spirit is the Protestāts sole groūd of scripture sense faith saluation pag. 182. Authour of al sects 184. Vpon what ground it relyes pag pag. ●87 Teaches directs Protestants all in all pag. ●91 Cannot oblige others to beleeue any thing 195. It can giue no credible testimonies of beliefe pag. 195. Cānot make a knowne and visible Cōgregation 188. Nor teach an entyre vniuersall Fayth pag· 186. T TEntations vaine to ouercome them by mortification or labour according to Protestāts pag. 26● V VNity wanting in the priuate spitit of Protestants pag. 178.188.176 Vniuersality also wanting in the same ibid. Visibbility a like ibid. W WOmen seducers of ancient and later tymes pag. ●●6 VVorkes neither hinder damnation nor help to saluation according to Protestants pag. ●61 FINIS Faultes escaped in the printing PAge 5. line 2. adde it pag. 6. l. 20. in read is pag. 24. l. 16. haue read hath pag. 26.29 is read as pag. 34. l. ●7 him read them pag. 63 l. 23. glorify read glory pag. 76. l. 21. adde to pag. 103. l. 22. adde her pag. 104. l. 30. dele to Ibid. l. 32. his read her pag. 107. line 33. after men adde of which first S. Paul 1. Cor. 12. pag. 117. l. 22. after force adde of reason pag. 121. l. 31. of read from pag. 123. l. 14. whome read them p. 129. l. 16. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 read 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ibid. l. 27 dele in pag. 136. l. 31. Act. 15 12. read Act. 13.21 pag. 152. l. 3. dele S. Ibid. l. 1● read were not thus pag. 163. lin ●4 dele and. pag. 174. lin 10. vnity read vntye pag. 183. lin 15. adde First pag. 187. lin penult Heretickes read Hereticke pag. 194. lin ● more read most pag. 198. lin 23. read knowne after and vnknowne as c. pag. 208. lin ●3 affection read assertion pag. 209. lin 22. therfore read before pag. 210. l. 13. the read their pag. 215. l. ●9 spirit read spirits pag. 216. lin 10. adde to be pag. 241. lin 7. read so it is true that euery ones sinnes c. pag. 24● adde euery one pag. 244. lin 2● least read best pag. 247. lin ●0 read lesse pardonable pag. 250. lin 16. dele and in the effect thereof pag. 255. lin 11. adde and confession pag. ●56 lin 2● one read onely pag. 259. l. penult now read new pag. 260 lin 25. pointed read painted Ibid. lin vlt. dele pit of pag 263. l. 11. read that he had no freewill pag. 269. lin 24. free read freedome pag. 270. lin 20. esteeme read esteemed Ibid. lin 28. his read thus pag. 288. lin vlt. dele stel pag. 293. lin 18. read tell him that which pag 296. lin 6. read in him sinne pag. 311. lin 22. adde to pag. ●14 lin 3. read need not Ibid. lin 33. read from euer pag. 320. lin 10. neuer read euer Ibid. l. 21. dele to pag. 324. lin 11. dele all pag. 329. lin 6. we read will pag. 330 lin 29. debauched read debased pag. 340. l. 21. read one hundred thou●and pag. 346. lin 14. read he is diuulged pag. 348. lin 4. dele by In the Margent PAg. 4. Mat. read Marc. Ibid. Ephes 2.10 read Ephes 2.20 pag. 5. Psal 24.25 read 92.5 Ibid. Philip. 2.33 read 2.13 pag. 11. Eph. 25.29 read Ephes 5.27 pag. 12. Matth. 20.10 read 28.19 Ibid. Matth. 15. read Marc. 16.15 pag. 15. confirme read conuert pag. 50. Iob. 12. read Prou. 1● pag. 60. Ep. ●6 read 60. pag. 65. read Tom. 7. cont Iulian l. 1. c. ● pag. 104. 3. Reg. 12. read 3. Reg. 22. pag. 182. Aug. serm 8. read 8● Other Faultes if any haue escaped it is desyred of the gentle Reader to correct them by his owne iudicious reading the Author being far absent from the Print and forced to commit the same to strangers Hierom. Six meanes or helpes to attain faith 1. The material obiect what we do belieue 2. The formall obiect or reuelatiō why we belieue (a) Ioan. 15.15 (b) Mat. 16.15 (c) Eph. 2.10 (d) 2. Thes 2 14. 3. The proponēt cause declaring the certainty of what and why we belieue 4 Credible Testimonies to conuince the Vnderstanding of the probability of fayth (e) Psal 25 Eccles 15.4 Luc. 24.25 The pious disposition of the will disposed by grace to giue consēt to the verity (f) Phi. 2.23 (g) Phi. 16. (h) Mar. 16.26 (i) Act. 28.24 (*) Matt. 23 37. The guift or habit of faith cocurring to the act of assent or beliefe (k) Heb. 11.3 (l) Rom. 1.17 (m) Ibid. (n) Rom. 10.10 (o) Rom. 5.1 (p) Ioan. 12.42 (q) 1. Cor. 13 24. (r) 1. Tim. 1.20 2. Tim. 2.17 (s) 1. Tim. 6.10 (t) 1. Tim. 10.19 (u) Heb. 6 5. The order manner of operatiō of rhe six meanes of fayth 1. Credible testimonies persuade 2. The churches authority proposeth 3 Grace inclin●th the will 4. The habit of faith enableth the Vnderstanding to belieue the articles reuealed and the reuelation of them How fayth is resolued Dispositiuè Directiuè Effectiue Formaliter (w) Ioan. 4.39 (x) Vers 42. Effects of Fayth The necessity of
Vincent Lyr. cap. 37. Heretikes Matth. 7. Vincent Lyr. cap. 36. 1. Cor. 11. Gal. 1.6 1. Pet. 2.3 Ambros ad Tit. 3. Hilar. lib 2. de S. Trinit Hier. Coment in 1. Gal. Authority of Pastours necessary to infallible exposition of scripture The people is to obey not iudge his Pastour (a) Heb. 13.17 (b) Philip. 3.16 (c) Coloss 1.6 (d) 1. Ioan. ● 7 (e) 1 Tim. 6.20 (f) Gal. 1. (g) Rom. 16 17. The means to find the true sense of Scripture 1. The rule of fayth proued (a) Gal. 6.16 (b) Philip. 3.16 (c) 1. Cor. 10.15 (d) Rom. 12.16 (e) Rom. 16.17 (f) Colos 1.6 (g) 1. Tim. 6.20 2 Tit. 1.3 (h) 1. Ioan. 1. (i) Gal. 1. (k) Act. 15. ● (l) 〈…〉 (m) 1. Pet. 1 1. By scripture Isa 7.9 Cypr. lib. con Iudae●s Nihil possunt Iudaei de scripturis intelligere nisi prius crediderint in Christum Isaias enim dicit Nisi credideritis non intelligetis August tract 27. in Ioan. Sunt enim quidam in vobis qui non credunt ideo non intelligunt quia non credunt Propheta enim dixit nisi credideritis non intelligetis per fidem copulamur per intellectum viuificamur prius haeraeamus per fidem vt sit quod viuificamus per intellectum Fides debet praecedere intellectum vt intellectus sit Fidei praemium Hier. ep ad Paulin. Lex spiritualis est reuelationeopus habet vt intelligatur reuelata facie gloriam Dei contemplamur Liber in Apocalypsi septē●gillis signatus ostēditur quem si dederis homini scienti literas vt legat respondebittibi non possum signatus est enim Quanti hodie putāt se nosce literas tenent signatum librū nec aperire possunt nisi ille aperuerit qui habet clauem Eunuchus cùm librum teneret cogitatione conauerit lingua volueret labijs personaret ignorabat enim quem in libris nesciens venerabatur venit Philippus ostendit ei Iesum qui clausus latebat in litera eadem hora credit Eunuchus baptizatus fidelis sanctus factus ac magister de discipulo (*) Aug. cont Faustum lib. 4. cap. 2. Non enim estis eruditi in regno caelorum id est in Ecclesia Christi vera Catholica quod si essetis de diuitijs scripturarum sanctarum non so●um noua sed etiam vetera proferretis (a) Iren. l. 3. cap. 3. (b) Euseb l. 7. c. 24. l. 5. cap. 15. (c) Socr. l. 7. cap 31. (d) Aug. de vera relig c. 5 (e) Tertul. de praescrip (f) Hier. d●al cont Lucif (g) Gregor Nazian lib. de Theolog. (h) Basil de Spirit sancto cap. 27. (i) Atha ep ad Epictet (k) Epiphan haeres 5. (l) Haer. 75. (m) Haer. 77 (n) Aug. ep 28. 105. (o) Aug. de peccat meritis lib. 3. cap. 5. (p) Lib. 1. cont Iul. c. 1 (q) Lib. 2. c. 7. 1. de Baptis (r) Iren. lib. 3. cap. 3. (s) Orig. pro●mi● de principijs (t) Aug. de haer ad Quod vult By reason Stapl. contr 6. lib. 11. c. 3. Vinc. Lyr. c. 2. Vt diuinū Canonem secundum Ecclesiae traditiones iuxta catholici dogmatis regulas interpretētur Quia scripturam sacram pro ipsâ sua altitudine in vno eodēque sensu accipiunt id circo multùm necesse est propter tātos tam varij erroris ā●ractus vt propheticae Apostolicae interpretationis linea secundum Ecclesiastici apostolici sensus normam dirigatur The Scripture consists of 2. parts 2. Cor. 3.6.7 Serm. 21. de tempore Heb. 4.12 Rom. 1.16 The Holy Ghost is not inherent in the letter of scripture Aug. lib. 12. Confess c. 18 de Genes ad literam The sense of scripture to be found by the rule of Fayth 2. The practise of the Church a meanes to interprete scripture Epiph. haeres 59. Basil de spiri sancto cap. 29 Theod haeret Fabul lib. 4. August cont Iulian. lib. 1. Aug. de bono perseuerant lib. 2. c. 22 23. 1. Cor. 10.25 1. Cor. 5.11 Aug. de Baptism contra Donat. l 2. cap. 7. Euseb lib. 5. cap. 27. The practise of the general Councells At●an epist. ad Aphros Concil Ephes epist ad Nest Vincent Lyr. cap. 41. Concil Calc à c. 5.6 Concil Const. à c. 4. Concil Nic. 2. à c. 10. The decrees of generall Councells a meane to interprete scripture Proued by the Councel of Nice Athan. ep ad Afric Episc By the Coūcel of Ephesus Other profitable rules of Fayth The priuate spirit cannot assure Which text is scripture Which bookes be scripture Stapl. princ fid doct Controu 5. lib. 9. c. 5.6 7. Which language the scripture was writ in Which sense is literall (a) Es 7. (b) Es 14. (c) Psalm 71. (d) Ioan. 6. VVhich is figuratiue and what figures are vsed (a) Ezech. 18 20. (b) Exod. 20.5 (c) Rom. 11.29 (d) 1. Reg. 15 11. (e) 3. Reg. 8.9 (f) Heb. 9 4 (g) Prou. 26.4 (h) Prou. 26.5.1 Wisd 1.13 (k) Eccles 10 15. (l) Math. 10.10 (m) Marc. 6.8 (n) Ioan. 5.31 (o) Ioan. 8.14 (p) Ioan. 20.1 (q) Marc. 16 2. (r) Rom. 3.18 (s) Iacob 2.20 (t) Gal. 1.10 (u) 1. Cor. 10 33. (w) Act. 9.7 (x) Act. 22.9 Nor explicate difficult places VVhich are in computation of tymes Gen. 11.12 Luc. 3.35 Act. 7.10 (a) Gen. 12.4 (b) Gen. 11.26 (c) Gen. 11.32 (d) Act. ● 4 (e) Gal. 3.17 (f) Act. 7.6 (g) Gen. 46.26 (h) Exod. 1.5 (i) Act. 7.14 (k) Gen. 23.10 Gen. 50.13 (l) Act. 7.16 (m) Gen. 93·8 (n) Act. 7.16 (o) Gen. 33.19 (p) Act. 7.16 (q) Gen. 33.19 (r) Genes 19 (s) Gen. 48.21 (a) 4. Reg. 8. ●● Which are in S. Paul Mat● 1.2 Luc. 3.36 Ioan. 19. Matth. 27. Marc. 15. Which many haue doubted of The priuate spirits exposition of scripture is Against scripture 2. Pet. 1.19 Vide Stapl. princ fid lib. 10. c. 4. pag. 36. Is false and naught Aug. l●b 12. Confess cap. 25. Veritas tua Domine nec mea est nec illius autalius sed omniū quos ad eius communionem publicè vocas terribiliter admonens nos vt nolimus eam habere priuatam ne priuemur ea nam quisquis id quod tu fruendum omnibus proponis sibi propriè vindicat suum esse vult quod omnium est à communi propellitur ad sua id est à veritate ad mendacium (a) Ephe. 4.3 (b) 2. Phil. 1 27. (c) 1. Cor. 14 35. (d) Ioan. 5.43 (e) Ioan. 8.44 Act. 20.30 (f) Ioan. 10.10 (g) Ioan. 3. (h) 1. Ioan. 4 2.6 (i) Ioan. 10.5 (k) 1. Cor. 11 (l) Deut. 11.28 Is vncertain fallible Is contrary to the spirit of the Church Calu. 3. insti 9. Luth. primo libro contra Regem Angl. VVhitak cōtrou 1. q. 7. cap. 7. Is the author of all heresies Stapl. princ doct l. 10. c. 4. Inferences That the Protestant faith is doubtfull That they rely not vpon scripture That
must needs by consequence hould so for the most part do hould that there are no infused and permanent guiftes or habits of fayth which concurre or help to our Iustification but that all is wrought by the motion of a transeunt spirit which motiō as it worketh according to them in them by it selfe only wholy all internall good workes without any cooperatiō of man or mans freewill so it is only a motion which worketh in whome it will when it will and how it will al and whatsoeuer it wil in man to his iustification and saluation by which it is euident that as in all their opinions they are neyther constant nor permanent but are wafted with euery wind of new doctrine and so fly from the beliefe of one thing to another so they are not guided by any permanent guift or quality but by certaine flashes motions of an vncertaine spirit which leads them from one vncertainty to another and so leaues them in al vncertaine 5. That the Protestants want the first of the eternall meanes or helps of Fayth that is the materiall obiects or articles of beliefe which are to be belieued as reuealed by Christ vnto the Apostles and by the Apostles left to their Successours and by them to vs and posterity is proued 1. Because they belieue many thinges as obiects of Fayth which are not reuealed eyther in Scripture or Traditions of which are many instances giuen in the former parte so do they not belieue many articles which are reuealed both in Scripture and Tradition for which cause they reiect all tradition and in it many mysteries of fayth which the Apostles left only by Tradition and refuse many partes of Scripture and that chiefly because they containe many points of doctrine which they will not belieue 2. Because as they admit many points of doctrine into the number of their articles of fayth which the ancient Church condemned for heresies as contrary to Apostolicall doctrine witnesse the ancient condemned heresies of Heluidius Vigilantius Arius Iouinian and others by them reuiued so they cōdemne many pointes of doctrine as erroneous superstitious or idolatrous which the ancient Church receaued for articles of Fayth as agreable to Apostolicall tradition witnesse all the poyntes of doctrine which the Magdeburgenses and others before cyted condemne as errours and staines in the ancient Fathers in euery age since Christ in both which they erre in the materiall obiects of Fayth as well in receauing condemned heresies for Apostolicall verities as in cōdemning receaued Apostolicall verities reuealed by Christ for erroneous heresyes 3. Because as they admit speciall Fayth only whose obiect is only their remission of sinnes and iustification for diuine Fayth by which they are iustified so all other fayth by which they belieue for example the B. Trinity Incarnation Passion and Resurrection and Ascension of Christ with the rest of the articles of faith vsually belieued they acknowledge for no other but for a general Faith common as well to the damned and Diuells as to them which faith in the Diuel and damned as it is no voluntary and free act proceeding from a pious disposition of the Will nor a diuine and supernaturall worke depending vpon any authority of God reuealing but a meere naturall and necessary act of knowledge● conuincing their vnderstāding eyther by force of experience or by euidence of reason or by apparent and euident notes of credibility or by some manifestly knowne testimonies of God of the verity of that which they belieue and tremble at so in the same manner their Faith of the same articles by their owne confession is not diuine but a meere humane fayth grounded vpon some generall receaued opinion or vpon some meere human authority and so what they conceaue of the generall articles of faith they do not receaue them as any articles of doctrine and supernaturall fayth but as generall receaued positions humane coniectures and their owne selfe-seeming and chosen opinions 6. That the Protestants want all diuine Reuelation for which as the formall cause and the finall resolution they should belieue al which is by God reuealed is proued 1. Because what they belieue they belieue not for that it was reuealed to the Apostles by the Holy Ghost eyther at Pentecost when it did visibly teach and confirme them or in successe of tyme when vpon occasion as at the conuersion of Gentils it did reueale to them all the mysteries euer after to be belieued which Reuelation made to the Apostles is the formall cause of fayth nor yet for that it is proposed to them by Church infallible authority as a condition necessary to know what is reuealed but for that it is reuealed to them a new by their owne priuate spirit from which they receaue all their directions and certainty both what is reuealed why it is reuealed and also by what meanes it is reuealed 2. Because the meanes by which Christ doth manifest and declare vnto vs his diuine reuelations they eyther plainely reiect or wholy subiect to their priuate spirit for the authority of traditions by which part of the diuine reuelations are deliuered to vs and the Proposition of the Church by which we are secured of the certainty of them they reiect and deny The authority of the Scripture which is an other meane by which God hath reuealed his truth and which they chalenge as the only means both of knowledge certainty of diuine reuelations they wholy subiect to their priuate spirit by which they are assured which is true Canon which is true edition which true trāslation which true sense of it And so for diuine reuelation they haue neyther any at all nor yet any meanes to know or attaine vnto it And thus much of the Protestants want of all the necessary helps meanes by which true and diuine supernaturall Catholike fayth is produced conserued and increased in the soule of euery faithfull belieuer and member of Christs holy body and Church How the Catholikes and Protestants differ in these six meanes and how the Protestants make their priuate spirit the only meanes of all SECT IIII. THE fourth consideration is to reflect vpon the aduantage which we Catholiks haue against the Protestāts and the difference that is betweene vs and them in these meanes of Fayth and how that the Protestants do substitute one only deluding and deceitfull meanes that is this their priuate Spirit in place of all the six former meanes of fayth And first for the materiall obiect they professe to belieue 1. only the doctrine which is reuealed in scripture 2. that only which is reuealed in that one parte of Scripture which they are pleased to accept as Scripture by their spirit 3. that only in that part of Scripture which is according to their precōceaued opinion so interpreted by their spirit so that Scripture alone and that not in whole but in part and that part of Scripture as it is