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A10966 A treatise vpon sundry matters contained in the Thiry nine Articles of religion, which are professed in the Church of England long since written and published by Thomas Rogers. Rogers, Thomas, d. 1616.; Rogers, Thomas, d. 1616. Faith, doctrine and religion professed in England. 1639 (1639) STC 21233; ESTC S1674 207,708 274

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that which is said by our Saviour Christ and his Apostle Iames. Our Saviour saith Sweare not at all neither by heaven for it is the throne of God nor by the earth for it is his footstoole nor by Ierusalem for it is the Citie of the great King nor by thine head because thou canst not make one haire white or black but let your communication be yea yea nay nay a Math. 5.34 So the Apostle Saint Iames Before all things my brethren saith he sweare not either by the heaven or by the earth or by any other oath but let your yea be yea and your nay nay lest ye fall into condemnation b Iames 5.12 All Churches doe and some in their publike writings condemne vaine rash and idle oathes c Conf. Helv. 2. c. 5. Basil ar 11 Adversaries unto this truth This declareth many sorts of men to be very impious as The Wantons which for pleasure and the covetous worldlings who for gaine and profit blush not to take the name of God in vaine by idle rash and usuall oaches Next the Basilidians a Philast Helchisaites b Euseb ex O● v. d. l. 8. c. 38. Priscillianites c Bulli. con●● Anath●p l. 2. cap 4. and Family of Love d Ramscis con who for ease and to avoide trouble and persecu●ion dread not to sweare and forsweare themselves Thirdly the Papists whose common guise is to sweare either by Saints or Idols or by God and creatures together e Pet. de Soto Math. conf p. 40. a. Fourthly the Puritanes who use to sweare though not by God c. yet as wickedly using horrible imprecations as I renounce God God damne me or as Hackets manner was God confound me f Conspir fer pretend refer p 5. Lastly the Banisterians who deeme it Hypocrisie for one Christian to reprove another for common and rash swearing which are but Trifles in their opinions g Vnfold of Banist errors 2. Proposition A lawfull Oath may be given and taken according to the Word of God in justice judgement and truth The proofe from Gods Word THe truth of this doctrine appeareth plentifully in the holy Scriptures For in the same there be both Commandements that we must and may and formes prescribed how we shall sweare For the first Thou shalt feare the Lord thy God and serve him And shalt sweare by his name saith Moses Again thou shalt sweare a Deut. 9.13 22.11 The Lord liveth and thou shalt cleave unto him and shalt sweare by his Name b Ibid. 10 20. And touching the other sweare may we not either by Baal c Ierem. 12.16 or by strange gods d Iosh 27.7 or by the Lord and by Melchom that is by Idols e Zeph. 1.7 or by any creatures f Matth 5.34 But our Oathes must bee made in the name of the Lord g Deut. 6.13 as The Lord liveth h Ier. 12. ●6 and all is to be done in truth judgement and righteousnesse i Ier. 4 2. and when the magistrate calleth us thereunto k Exod. 22.8 1 King 8.31 All Churches joyne with us in this assertion and some testifie the same in their publike writings l Confes Helv. 2. ar 16. 1.2.30 Gal. ar 40. Basil ar 11. sect 1. Aug. ar 16. The Errors and adversaries unto this truth Many be the adversaries one way or other crossing this truth For 1. Some condemne all swearing as did the Esseies who deeme all swearing as bad as forswearing a ●ard of s●●●ons 2 part and doe the Anabaptists which will not sweare albeit thereby both the glory of God may be much promoted and the Church of Christ or Common weale furthered b Conf● Basil ar 11 sect 1 2. Others condemne some kinde of Oathes and will not sweare though urged by the magistrate but when themselves think good So the Papists no man say they ought to take an Oath to accuse a Catholike a Papist for his religion c Test Rhem. an Act. 23.12 and such as by Oathes accuse Catholikes that is Papist are damned d Ibid. So the Puritanes oftentimes either will take none oath at all when it is ministred unto them by authority if it may turn to the molestation of their Brethren e Hook of eccles pol. praef or if they sweare finding their testimony will be hurtfull to their cause they will not deliver their ●●nds after they be sworne f D. Su●cliffe ans to Iob Throk p. 46. b. 3. Others having taken the Oath do foulely abuse the same as the knights of the post like the Turkish Seiti and Chargi g Pol. of the Turk emp. c. 24. p. 74. who for a Ducket will take a thousand false Oathes afore the magistrate as also the Iesuites who in swearing which is little better then forswearing do viti scientia that is cunning and equivocations h Quod lib p. 34. 68 Garnets arraign as also doe they who conscionably and religiously keepe not their faith such are the forenamed Papists For they say an Oath taken for the furtherance of false religion as they take the profession of all Protestants to be i Test Rhem. an Act. 20 12. bindeth not k Iurament●m propter falsam religionem prestatum non obligat Bap. Frickl●r de jure magist p. 11. Againe Faith ●s not to be kept with Heretikes l Conc. Constan Which assertion little differeth from the opinion of some Puritanes who teach that promise or Faith is not to be kept when as perhaps by the not erecting of Presbyteries in every Parish Gods honour and preaching of his Word is hindred m Geneva an Matth. 2.12 One of them hath delivered that if the Prince do hinder the building of the Church the people may by force of armes resist him Ans to the Abstract p. 94. Subjects be discharged from their Oath of Alleageance and may gather forces against their liege Soveraigne if hee enterprize any thing to the hurt of his Realme or of the Romish religion was a determination of the Sorbonists in a certaine conventicle of theirs at Paris n Mercur. Gal. lobelg l. 2. p. 89. And that Magistrates by their subjects may be brought under to obedience of Lawes was a conclusion of certaine Scottish Ministers in a private Conventicle of Edinburgh o Bucchan rerum Sotic l. 17 p. 202. Seditiosi non sunt qui resistant principibus politicum aut ecclesiasticum statum perturbantibus Nam qui resistit Principi seditiosus non est sed seditionem tollit saith a Frenchman p Euseb Philadelph dial 2. p. 57. yea saith an Englishman whose works by T.C. are highly approved and commended Hunc tollant vel pacificè vel cum bello qui ea protestate donati sunt ut regni Ephori vel omnium ordinum conventus publicus q Dud. Fen. S. Theo. l. 5. c. 13 Subjects may not respect their Oathes made unto such Princes which trouble the state of the Church or Common-weale Finally whatsoever Princes be good or bad if they be women say some oathes or alleageance then are not to be kept Their words be these First aswell the States of the kingdome as the common people They ought to remoove from honour and authority that monster in nature so call I woman in the habit of man yea a woman against nature raigning above man Secondly if any presume to defend that impiety they ought not to feare first to pronounce and then after to execute against them that is to say against women governours the sentence of death If any man be afraid to violate the oath of obedience which they have made to such monsters let them be most assuredly perswaded that as the beginning of their oathes proceeding from ignorance was sinne so is the obstinate purpose to keepe the same nothing but plaine rebellion against God r Against the regim of women 2. blas p. 53. b. Lastly of all whereas every Minister of the Word and Sacraments at his ordination doth sweare to obey his Diocesan in all lawfull matters certain Gentlemen of the Puritan faction writ thus unto the Bishops of the Church of England and printed the same viz. The Canon law is utterly voyd within the Realme and therefore your Oath of Canonical obedience is of no force and all your Canonicall admonitions not worth a rush ſ The Gentlemens demands vnto the Bishops printed ann 1605. p. 76. D. Hilar. contra Constanti●● August Non recipi● m●●ndarium veritas nec patitur Religi● impietatum The truth admits no lye neither can Religion abide impiety 1 Tim. 1. v. 19. Vnto the King everlasting immortall invisible unto God onely wise be honour and glory for ever and ever Amen FINIS
l Turon l. 8. c. 10 at Paris and Orleance by the direction and appointment of Childeb●rt m Magdeburg eccl hist Con. 6. cap. 9. were kept and holden And never yet had there bin a Councell either Generall or nationall or whatsoever I onely except the councels held by the Apostles and Apostolicall men in a troublesome state and time of the Church there being then no Christian Princes and Emperors to countenance the truth neither begun or ended to the glory of God but it hath bin I say not called onely but confirmed also by some godly Emperour King or Queene This in effect is granted by all reformed Churches n Conf. Helv. l. ar 26. 2. c. 30 Bohe c. 16. Belg. ar 36. Saxon. ar 23. Wittemb c. 35. Suevica in perorat The errors and adversaries unto this truth This assertion hath beene oppugned and that diversly both by the Papists and Puritanes For the Papists they say Emperours and Kings be the Pope his Summoners but of themselves are no absolute and powerfull commanders and callers of Councels a Hard. confut par 5. cap. 6. sect 3. There ought no Councell to be kept without the determinate consent of the Bishop of Rome b Harding No Councell ever yet had firme and lawfull authority which was not confirmed by the Bishop of Rome c Duraeus con Whitak lib. 2. Cardil in def Concil Triden disp 1. The Popes of Rome and not Christian Princes have the authority and power of making lawes ecclesiasticall and of calling Councels d Test Rhem. an Matth. 16. And the Puritanes doe think that private persons without the leave or privity of Princes may summon assemblies about Church causes at their pleasures and consult about the publike affaires of the Church Of this mind was Beza e Per placet autem mihi quod de conventu absque ulla principum aut civitatum authoritate privatim instituendo scribis Beza epi. 68. p. 292. and be the disciplinaries both of South f Witnesse their Classicall assemblies at Commencements Faires c. See Discipline grounds and North Britaine g The approbation or disallowance of a generall assembly hath beene and should be a matter and cause spirituall and alwayes cognosced and judged by the Church as Iudges competent within this Realme say certaine Scottish Ministers in their letter unto the Lords of the Kings privie Councel in Scotland which letter is printed in the said Lords declaration c. published an 1606. and printed by Robert Barker Others adversaries to both Puritanes and Papists are of mind that were the Pope a good man as hee is nothing lesse hee might and hee being wicked other good Bishops though subject unto Kings and Emperours may summon Councels at their discretion An error of Scelneccerus h Analyct pag. 35. The Muscovites have a fancie that since the seventh generall Councell that was neither Prince nor Pope nor any other men else have power to call a generall Councell i Surius comment an 150 1. pag. 30. 2. Proposition Generall Councels may erre The proofe from Gods Word GEnerall Councels consisting first of men who may erre nothing more easily for all the imaginations of mans heart are onely evill continually a Gen. 6.5 even from his youth b Gen. 9.21 but God onely is true and all men are c Psal 116.11 yea and every man is a lyer d Rom. 3.4 Next of men differing in yeares riches learning judgement calling and authority whereby distractions of opinions often doe arise Thirdly of many men whereof the wicked be for number commonly the major part and the better in outward countenance of the world Lastly of men not all nor alwaies either grounded with Gods holy Spirit and Word or gathered together in the Name of Christ none of found judgement in Religion doe doubt but they may erre If Paphnutius had beene absent at Nice that Councell had erred e Sozom. lib. 1. c. 33. If Hierome had been away at Calcedon that Councell had erred f B. Iewel dec fol. 58. At any time if some be beleeved be the Pope of Rome not present at such meetings either per se or per Legatum by himselfe or his Legate no Councell but must erre g Rosien contra Luther Therefore Councels may erre That which one Councell doth establish another will disanull They will not wee must think revoke that which is well decreed Therefore Councels may erre h Test Rhem. an Ioh. 16.13 The adversaries unto this truth Therefore erre doe the Papists which say that the holy Spirit is director to all Councels and That Councels cannot erre 3. Proposition Generall Councels have erred even in things pertaining unto GOD. The proofe from Gods Word COuncels both generall and particular have erred and that in matters of Faith a Conf. Wittemb cap. 33. For in the holy Scriptures we finde that it was ordained if any man did confesse that Iesus was the Christ hee should be excommunicate b Iohn 9.22 12.42 which could not be but by a Councell A councell was gathered to suppresse Christ and his doctrine c John 12.47 A councell consulted how they might take Iesus by subtilty and kill him d Math. 26 3 4 e Marke 14.53 55. A councell sought for false witnesse to put him to death By a councell Iesus was bound led away and delivered unto Pilate f Mark 15 1. A councell judged our Saviour Christ to be both a deceiver g Math. 27.63 and a blasphemer h Luke 21 71. A councell corrupted the Souldiers and willed them to tell a lye i Mat. 28.12 13 A councell withstood Peter and Iohn and commanded them that in no wise they should speake or teach in the name of Iesus k Acts 4 5 6.18 A councell both caused thr Apostles to be beaten and commanded them also that they should not preach in the name of Iesus l Acts 5.40 In ancient writers of credit we may reade how contrary to Gods Word by councels Arrianisme hath beene confirmed as by the councell of Ariminum m D. Hieron in vita Damasi Papae By councels the traditions and bookes of foolish men have beene made of equall authority with the Word of God as by the Councell of Trent n Ses 4. decr 1. By councels hath beene established both the adoration of images as by the second councell of Nice and the Invocation of creatures as by the Tridentine councell o Brev. Rom. ex decr S. ● Concil Trid. ●●●icu● edit 5. By councels the authority of Princes hath bin impaired and the Pope and Clergie advanced above all earthly Princes as by the Councell of Lateran p Concil Later c. 5. apud Innocent The consideration of the premises and the like mooved S. Hilarie to call the Synode of Mediolane The Synagogue of the malignant q Hilar. epist ad Const
Imper and S. Augustine to write unto Maximinus Neither ought I to object against thee the Synode of Nice nor thou against me the Synode of Ariminum r D. Aug. contra Max. lib 3. and Nazianzene openly to pronounce that He never saw any good end of a Councell ſ Naz. ad Pro. cop epist 42. and The French Kings Embassadour to say unto the Chapter of Trent that scarcely any good at all or very little came by Councels unto the State of Christendome t Orat. Synod Legat. regis Fran. an 1562. and Cornelius Bishop of Bitonto to breake out into these words in the face of the Councell at Trent I would that with one consent we had not altogether declined from Religion unto superstition from faith unto infidelitie from Christ unto Antichrist from God unto Epicurus u B. Jewels dvf. par 1. fol. 39. The adversaries unto this truth This notwithstanding the Papists doe continue in an opinion that Councels cannot erre x Test Rhem. an Joh. 16.13 4. Proposition The things ordained by Generall Councels are so farre to be embraced and beleeved as they are consonant to Gods holy Word The proofe from Gods Word GEnerall Councels we simply condemne not yet doe we not ground our faith upon any Councell but onely upon the written Word of God Therefore in generall Councels whatsoever is agreeable unto the written Word of God we doe reverently embrace but whatsoever is contrary unto or besides the will of God revealed in the holy Scriptures we doe carefully avoid And so are wee commanded to doe even by God himselfe Whatsoever I command you take heed you doe it thou shalt put nothing thereto nor take ought there-from a Deut 12.33 Walk ye not in the ordinances of your fathers neither observe their manners c. I am the Lord your God walke in my Statutes and keepe my Iudgements and doe them b Ezek. 20 18 19. Though that we or an Angel from heaven preach unto you otherwise then that which wee have preached unto you let him be accursed As we said before so say I now againe If any man preach unto you otherwise then that yee have received let him be accursed c Gal. 1. ● 9. And so think the Churches reformed with us d Conf Helv. 2 c. 18. Bohe. c. 1 Gal. ar 5. B●lg ar ● Wit●●m● c. 33. The aduersaries vnto this truth Contrary hereunto are the opinions of the Papists For of them Some doe think that the decrees of Councels doe binde all nations as Pope Hormisda decreed they should Some as Pope Gregory the great supposed that some Councels and namely the Councell of Nice of Constantinople Ephesus and Chalcedon a Greg. 1. l 1. epi. 24. l. 2. epist 49. some as Campian b Campian 12● 4 thought that all Councels were of equall authority with the Word of God Others as the Guisian faction in France be resolved in matters of religion to follow the footesteps of their ancestors though Gods Word and a thousand Councels decree to the contrary c Calvin epist Bulling 1231. 22. Article Of Purgatorie The Romish doctrine concerning 1 Purgatory 2 Pardons worsh●pping and adoration as well 3 of images as 4 of reliques and 5 also of Invocation of Saints is a fond thing vainely invented and grounded upon no warranty of Scripture but rather repugnant to the Word of God The Propositions The Romish doctrine concerning 1. Purgatory 2. Pardons 3. Worshipping and adoration of Images 4. Reliques 5. Invocation of Saints is a fond thing and not warranted by the holy Scripture nor consonant but contrary unto the same 1. Proposition The Romish doctrine concerning Purgatory is fond and not warranted by the holy Scripture nor consonant but contrary unto the same The proofe from Gods Word IT is granted as well by the Romish or false as by the true Church that none uncleane thing can enter into the Kingdome of God And because all men either have been or be still uncleane therefore they must be purged from sinne But in the manner of purging them who are unpure they do greatly differ For the true Church looking into the Word of God doth finde that we are sanctified or made cleane in divers respects diversly as by Baptisme a Christ loved the Church gave himselfe for it that he might sanctifie it and cleanse it by the washing of water through the Word Eph. 5.25.26 by the Word preached b Now yee are cleane thorow the word that I have spoken unto you John 15.3 by the blood of Christ c The blood of Jesus Christ his Son cleanseth us from all sin 1 John 1.7 and by the Spirit of God d Ye are washed ye are sanctified ye are justified in the name of the Lord Jesus and by the Spirit of our God 1 Cor. 6. ●1 and that in this life and not in the other world For in the sacred Scripture there is mention but onely of two wayes one leading unto destruction the other bringing unto life e Mat. 7.13 14. of two sorts of men whereof some beleeve they are saved some beleeve not and they are damned f Matt. 16.16 Joh. 3.18 and of two States one blessed where Lazarus is the other cursed where Dives doth abide g Luke 16. A third way or sort or state cannot be found in the Word of God And therfore the Purgatory in another world both denied hath alwayes beene by the Greeke Churches h Alphons de haeres l. 8. de Indulgentiis Polydor. de Inventor l. 8. c. 1. Cons Helv. 2. c. 26. Gal. ar 24. Sax. ar 11. Aug. ar 11. Wittemb cap. 25. and neither is nor will be acknowledged by any of Gods reformed Churches in this world as their Confessions doe testifie The adversaries unto this truth Erronious therefore and not warrantable by Gods Word concerning Purgatory is the doctrine both of the old Heretikes the Montanists who thought there was a purging of soules after this life a Tertul. de cot militis De Anima in si●● and of the new and renued Heretikes the Papists For They think it to be unsound doctrine and not sufferable in any booke for Christians to deliver that it is unpossible for godly and faithfull men or women to be punished after they be dead Therefore deleatur say they Blot out such doctrine b Pu●ari pios post mort●m impossibile deleatur l●dex expurg p. 26. They teach by their Catechismes that to doubt whether there is a Purgatory or no is a breach of the first Commandement c Vaux catech chap 3. Thus doe they pray for the soules of the faithfull as they fancie boyling in the torments of Purgatory Avete omnes animae fideles quarum corpora hic abique conquiescunt in pulvere Dominus Iesus Christus qui vos nos redemit suo preciocissimo sanguine dignetur vos à poenis liberare c. that is
〈◊〉 9. none of which the Familists doe use or allow of 38. Article Of Christian mens goods which are not common The riches and goods of Christians 1 are not common as touching the right title and possession of the same as certaine Anabaptists do falsely boast Notwithstanding 2 every man ought of such things as he possesseth liberally to give almes to the poore according to his ability The Propositions 1. The riches and goods of Christians as touching the right title and possession of the same are not common 2. Every man is to give liberall almes to the poore of that which he possesseth according to his ability 1. Proposition The riches and goods of Christians as touching the title and possession of the same are not common The proofe from Gods Word AGainst community of goods and riches be all those places which are infinite of the holy Scripture that either condemne the unlawful getting keeping or desiring of riches which by Covetousnesse a If any one that is called a brother be a fornicator or covetous c. with such one eate not Covetousnesse let it not be once named among you as it becommeth Saints Eph. 5.3 Theevery b Let none of you suffer as a Theefe c. 1 Pet. 4.15 Extortion With a brother that is an extortioner eate not 1 Cor. 5.11 Neither theeves nor covetous persons nor Extortioners shall inherite the Kingdome of God 1 Cor. 6.10 and the like wicked meanes many doe attaine or doe commend liberality d It is a blessed thing to give rather then to receive Acts 10.35 yea and that thing ye do unto all the Brethren throughout all Macedonia 1 Thes 4.10 If a brother or a sister be naked and destitute of daily food c. notwithstanding ye give them not these things which are needfull to the body what helpeth it Iames 2.15 16. Frugality e If there be any that provideth not for his owne namely for them of his houshold he denieth the faith and is worse then an Infidell 1 Tim. 5.8 free and friendly lending f From him that would borrow of thee turne not away Matth. 5.42 And lend looking for nothing again Luke 6.35 honest labour g Let him that stole steale no more but rather let him labour c. that hee may have to give unto him that needeth Eph. 4.28 Wee warned you that if there were any which would not work that he should not eate 2 Thes 3.8 and lawfull vocations to live and thrive by h Ye know that these hands have ministred unto my necessities and to them that were with me Acts 20.34 We laboured day and night because we should not be chargeable unto any of you 1 Thes 2.9 wee tooke not bread of any man for nought 1 Thes 3.8 All which doe shew that Christians are to have goods of their owne and that riches ought not to be common Of this iudgement be the reformed Churches i Confess Helv. 3. c. 29. Gal. ar 40. Belg. ar 36. Aug. ar 16. Wittemb c. 21. The adversaries unto this truth Of another mind were the Esseis a Heyden des urbis Hierosolym l. 3. c. 3. the Manichies b D. Aug. de mor. eccles Cat. lib. 1. the Pelagians c Magdeb. eccles hist Gen. ● fol. 586. the Apostolikes d D. Humfr. de Romanae curiae praxi p 39. exl Epiphan and Fratricellians e W. Tho. desc of Italy p. 59. and are the Anabaptists f Sleidan com lib. 6. and Family of Love g Display H. 3 b. Among the Familists saith H.N. none claimeth any thing proper to himselfe for to possesse the same to any owednesse or privatenesse For no man c. can desire to appropriate or challenge any thing to himselfe either yet to make any private use to himselfe from the restward but what is there is free and is also left free in his upright forme h H. N. Spir. laud. c. 35. sect 34. 1. Proposition Every man is to give liberall Almes to the poore of that which he possesseth according to his ability The proofe from Gods Word VNto liberality towards the poore according to our ability we are in the holy Scriptures provoked 1. By the commandements from God by his servants the Prophets a Deut. 15.11 Prov. 5.15 16. Eccles 11.1 2. by his Sonne our Saviour b Matth. 5.42 c. 6.2 3 c. Luk. 9.30 c. and by his Apostles c Rom. 12.13 1 Cor. 1.62 2. By sweet promises of ample blessings d Eccles 11.1 The liberall person shall have plenty and he that watereth shall also have raine Prov. 11.24 Hee that stoppeth his eare at the crying of the poore he shall cry and not be heard Prov. 1.13 3. By threatnings of punishments to the covetous and stony-hearted He that giveth unto the poore shall not lack but he that hideth his eyes shall have many curses Prov. 28.27 4. By the examples of the best men viz. the Apostles and Primitive Church f Acts 11.19 20. Rom. 15.15 1 Cor. 8.1 2 3 c. 2. Cor. 6.2 c. So the Churches g Conf. Helv. 2 c. 2. 3. 28 29. Sax. ar 21. Wittemb c. 18. The adversaries unto this truth Of strange minds therefore and impious are First the Anabaptists which would have no man either to give or receive For all things in their opinion should be common as afore also hath bin said and none among them be either poore to receive or wealthy to minister any almes a Bale myst of Iniq. p 53. Secondly the hypocriticall sectaries who are bountifull only to those which side with them Such were first the Publicans in our Saviour his dayes b Mar. ● 46.47 and after them the Manichies who would minister neither bread nor water unto any hungry and pyning begger unlesse he weare a Manichean c Homini mendico esurienti nisi Manichaeus sit panem aut aquam nō porrigunt Manic D Aug. de Mor. Manc l. 2. And such are the Family of Love who say they are not bound to give almes but to their owne sect and if they doe they give the same to the devill d Dispi H. 7. b. 39. Article Of a Christian mans oath As we confesse that 1 vaine and rash swearing is forbidden Christian men by our Lord Iesus Christ and Iames his Apostle So we judge that 2 Christian Religion doth not prohibit but that a man may sweare when the Magistrate requireth in a cause of faith and charity so it be done according to the Prophets teaching in justice judgement and truth The Propositions 1. We may not sweare vainely and rashly 2. A lawfull oath may be given and taken according to the Word of God in justice judgement and truth 1. Proposition Wee may not sweare vainely and rashly The proofe from Gods Word THE better to avoid vaine and rash oathes and swearing it is good to have in remembrance
offreth it selfe by their ministery to the view of the whole world which afore did but peepe out at the Screene and what the things be which they of meane gifts doe see and our Fathers and the Martyrs Bishops and Preachers both in King Edwards dayes and afterwards knowne and acknowledged to be men of excellent parts either did not see at all or ouersee and what likewise the points of doctrine newly now reuealed their aternum Euangelium which without great danger may not be preached in England no more then the doctrine and Articles of the Church of England may be preached at Rome and for defence whereof they ought to afford euen their very liues were they so many as the haires of euery of their heads is and be they demonstrate themselues to be most childishly vaine and idle in their imaginations which they take yet to bee illuminations of the spirit 13. For all their doings The vncouth doctrine of the factious Brethren and discourses to say the best of them are but to erect a new which they tearme a true ministery and their Discipline among vs. Themselues doe say The controuersie betwixt them and vs is not as the Bishops and their wil-willers they would beare the world in hand for a Cap a Tippet or a Surplesse but for greater matters concerning a true ministery and regiment of the Church according to the word the one whereof that is a true ministery they shall neuer haue till Archbishops and Bishops be put downe and all ministers made equall the other also will neuer be brought to passe till Kings and Queenes doe subiect themselues vnto the Church and submit their scepters and throw downe their Crownes before the Church and lick vp the dust of the feete of the Church and willingly abide the censures of the Church that is of the Presbytery For as the Church is subiect vnto the ciuill magistrate in respect of his civill authority so must the Magistrate the King and Queene subiect themselues and be obedient to the iust and lawfull authority of the Church The ciuill magistrate is none officer at all of the Church For Church-officers be non Magnates aut Tetrarchae not gracious or honorable Lords but Ministers of the Church The Presbytery is the Church and euery Congregation or Church should and must in it haue a Presbytery This is the Light which indeed the Martyrs neuer saw the Religion which our Brethren striue for the Truth which they may not preach not childish doctrine like the Bishops Articles but the wise Gospel the maine and materiall points of Religion now in the dayes last of all yea after the eighth Thorow breaking of H. N. his Euangelium regni reuealed and for furtherance whereof they are to lend and spend euen all their liues if occasion be ministred 14. Strange and strong delusions First to take these and other such assertions for Truths and heauenly mysteries which are but the fancies of troubled braines not grounded nor truly gathered from Gods Word Next to teach one another and all their fauourers how they should be as ready and prepared euen for these matters to give other their liuings and to giue their liues were they as many as the haires of all their heads as Cranmer Ridly Latimer did and Parker Grindall and all other Preachers would and euery Christian man and woman should if they be called thereunto for the Apostolicall and Catholique doctrine of our Church which all Gods people doe know and the Brethren themselues as afore hath bin noted doe confesse is originally from God and his written Word These and many moe too many here to be recapitulated such phantasies of theirs or phrensies rather this first subscription brought first to light and yet happy had it bin for Gods Church and people they had neuer bin broached Of the second Subscription vrged an 84. 15. Semblably the next subscription called for by the last Archb. your L. predecessor an 84. discouered euen the very thoughts and desires of those Brethren before but now stiled faithfull Brethren which haue and doe seeke for the Discipline reformation of the Church Many Treatises afore but now and diuers yeeres ensuing they flew about and abroad like Atomies and by them the same things which afore but in a differing sort and in other words they publish For touching Church officers they name who and how many sorts they be of them viz. Doctors Pastors Gouernors Deacons and Widdowes no moe no fewer They say euery Church must be furnished with a Teacher and a Pastor as with two eyes with elders as with feet with Deacons as with hands Euery Congregation must haue eyes hands and feete and yet neither all nor at all any Congregation is to haue an Head answerable to those Feet Hands and Eyes The Doctor by their doctrine must be a distinct minister from the pastor and onely teach true doctrine and neither exhort nor apply his doctrine according to the times and his auditory nor minister the Sacraments For these things the pastor is to performe Which pastor also whensoeuer he administreth the Sacraments must necessarily make a Sermon or else he committeth Sacriledge And concerning discipline by their doctrine euery Congregation must haue absolute authority to admonish to censure to excommunicate and to anathematize all offending persons yea euen Kings and Princes if they be of the Congregation And no Prince but must be of some Parish and vnder one Presbytery or other alwayes Where this power is not in their iudgements one of the tokens of a true Church is wanting For this Discipline with them is a marke of the Church and numbred among the Articles of their Faith 16. This say they is the great cause the holy cause which they wil neuer leaue suing for though there should be a thousand Parliaments in their dayes vntil either they obtaine it or bring the Lord in vengeance and blood against the State and the whole land for repelling the same The Brethrens diuine conceipts of their Discipline The discipline is Gods holy yoke Gods scepter the kingdome and throne of Christ Our controuersie say they whether Iesus Christ shall be King or no. Againe the end of all our trauell is to build vp the walles of Ierusalem and to set vp thē Throne of Iesus Christ our heauenly King in the midst thereof the aduancing whereof is a testimony vnto vs that we shall haue part in that glory which shall be reuealed hereafter So learne we now from their said bookes learned and demonstratiue discourses which the Fathers and our forefathers neuer saw nor had learned both that their Discipline established and exercised is a visible marke of a true Church and to desire the aduancement of the same an inuisible token of an elect childe of God so as neither is that a Church at least no true Church where their Discipline is not neither they but titular Christians no true Christians indeed which either sigh or seeke not to
desired his Majesty to take them out a new Lesson as did the 71 Brethren of Suffolke are not to be liked Neither can we extoll the goodnesse of our God sufficiently toward our King and us all for inspiring his royall heart with holy wisedome to discerne these unstayed and troublesome spirits and inabling his Highnesse with power and graces from above to decree orders and directions for the generall benefit and peace of the whole Church neither suffered he his eyes to sleepe nor his eye-lids to slumber nor the temples of his head to take any rest till he had set them downe afore all other though never so important and weightie affaires of the Crowne and Kingdome King James patronizeth the Doctrine and Religion countenanced by Queene Elizabeth 26 My selfe have read and thousand thousands with an hundred thousand of his Subjects besides have either read or heard of Proclamations after Proclamations to the number of sixe or seven at the least of bookes and open speeches of his Majesty uttered in the Parliament House and all of them made vulgar within a yeare and little more after his happy ingresse into this kingdome and taking the administration of this most famous nourishing Empire upon himself whereby the doctrine in this Land allowed publikely graced and imbraced of all sorts at his entrance into the Realme hath bin not onely acknowledged to be agreeable to Gods Word sincere and the very same which both his Highnesse and the whole Church and kingdome of Scotland yea and the Primitiue Church professed but also by his authoritie Regall and paramont as one of the maine pillers supporting his Estate ratified to continue and all hope either of allowing or tolerating in this kingdome of any other doctrine religion or faction whatsoeuer opposite or any way thwarting the Faith and confession of the Church of England in most plaine pithy and peremptory words and speeches cut off The yeere 92. was not more famous for the Vniformity of doctrin in religion then concluded then the yeere 1604. Domii incarnati An. 1604. is memorable and will be for seconding the same neither got the Clergie in those dayes more credit in composing the Articles of our Vnitie in Faith then did the last Conuocation whereat your Grace then Bishop of London was present and President in ratifying the Acts and Articles of their Antecessors neither was Q Elizabeth more honoured in establishing them at the first then is our K. Iames renowned and more and more will be for approouing vnder the great Seale of England the late and last Constitutions and Canons Ecclesiasticall 27. Subscription the third time vrged Whereby no person shall hereafter bee receiued into the ministery nor neither by Institution or Collation admitted to any Ecclesiasticall liuing nor suffered to Preach to Catechize or to be Lecturer or Reader of Diuinitie in either Vniuersitie or any Cathedrall or Collegiat Church Citie or Market towne Parish Church Chappell or in any other place in this Realme except c. and except he shall first subscribe to these three Articles c. Whereof the third is that he alloweth the booke of Articles of Religion c. Nor any licenced to Preach Reade Lecture or Catechize comming to reside in any Diocesse shall be permitted there to Preach Reade Lecture Catechize or minister the Sacraments or to execute any other Ecclesiasticall function by what authoritie soeuer he be thereunto admitted vnlesse he first consent and subscribe to the three Articles Neither shall any man teach either in publike schoole or in private house except he shall first prescribe to the first and the third Articles simply c. Neither shall any man be admitted a Chancellor Commissary or Officiall to exercise any Ecclesiasticall jurisdiction except c. and shall subscribe to the Articles of Religion agreed upon in the Convocation in the yeare 1562. c. And likewise all Chancellours Commissaries Registers and all other that doe now possesse or execute any places of Ecclesiasticall jurisdiction or service shall before Christmas next in the presence of the Archbishop or Bishop or in open Court under whom or where they execute their offices take the same Oathes and subscribe as before he said or upon refusall so to doe shall be suspended from the execution of their Offices untill they shall take the said Oaths and subscribe as aforesaid 28. In which Constitutions the wisedome of his Highnesse sheweth it selfe to be excellent who indeed as exceeding necessary both for the retaine of peace in the Church and preventing of new doctrine curious speculations and offences which otherwise daily would spring up and intolerably encrease calleth for Subscription in testimony of mens cordiall consent unto the received doctrine of our Church but exacteth not their Oathes as some doe much lesse Oathes Vowes and Subscription too but onely in a particular respect and that of a very few in publike office as our neighbours have done Againe he requireth Subscription but not of civill Magistrates not of the Commons as else where some doe not of every man yea of women aswell as of men as did the persecuted Church at Franckeford in Queene Maries daies not of Noble Gentlemen and Courtiers as in Scotland was Enacted in our Kings minoritie but only of Ecclesiasticall Ministers Teachers and spirituall Officers or of those which would be such Of the Subscription called for and so doe the reformed Churches in France and Germany at this very day Last of all his Majestie calleth for Subscription unto Articles of Religion but they are not either Articles of his own lately deuised or the old newly turkened but the very Articles agreed vpon by the Archbishops and Bishops of both Prouinces and the whole Clergie in the Conuocation holden at London and that in the yeere of our Lord God 1562. a Cant. 2.127 and vnto none other euen the same Articles for number thirtie nine b Ibid. no moe no fewer and for words sillables and letters the very same vnaugmented vndiminished vnaltered 29. And being the same the whole world is to know that the Church of England is not in religion changed The Church of England settled and constant in her Religion or variable like the Moon nor affecteth noueltie or new lessons but holdeth stedfastly conscionably that truth which by the Martyrs and other Ministers in this last age of the world hath bin restored vnto this kingdome and is grounded vpon Gods written Word the onely foundation of our Faith And being the same all men again may see that we are still at Vnitie both among our selues at home and with the neighbour Churches abroad in all matters of chiefest importance and fundamentall points of religion though our aduersaries the Papists would faine beate the contrary into the common peoples heads And being the same there is now as also from the first restauration of the Gospell among vs there hath beene an Vniformitie likewise of doctrine by authoritie
profitable many wayes of as tender consciences euery way as any of these Brethren combined according both to their bounden duties and as they are perswaded to the very purport and true intent of the said Statute have alwayes both with their mouthes acknowledged and with their pennes approued the 39. Articles of our religion for truthes not to be doubted of and godly Yea and the Brethren too themselues which now so scrupulously when they are orderly called thereunto doe hold backe their hands and will subscribe but choisely vnto some of them euen they with their mouthes which is equiualent and all one have that according to the Statute or else their liuings be void vpon the first entrance into all and singular their ecclesiasticall benefices openly both read and testified their consent vnto the said Articles for number euen nine and thirty acknowledging them I say all of them to be agreeable to Gods word whereof the people in their seuerall charges be ready witnesses to testifie so much before God and the world 34. Againe of these Brethren that will subscribe but vnto which they please of these Articles there be some who faine would beate into mens heads if they could tell how to make it credible that the Doctrine of our Church is altred from that it was in the raigne of Q. Eli. But this assertion being too grosse egregiously vntrue A late deuice of the Br. to shunne subscription no waies iustifiable they secondly give out and report so industrious be they to inuent new shifts to cloak their inueterate and rooted pertinacy how the purpose if not doctrine of our Church is of late altered from that it was And therefore though they can be well content to allow of the old doctrine and ancient intention yet vnto the old doctrine and new Intention of our Church they cannot subscribe might they either gaine much or lose whatsoeuer they have thereby Besides this new Intendement contrary to the old purpose if not doctrin of our Church is become now the maine and principall obstacle why they cannot subscribe vnto the booke of Common prayer and booke of Ordination as earst they some of them foure times have done when aswell Intention as Doctrine of our Church was pure holy Lastly they seeme not obscurely to intimate vnto the State that were they sure or might be assured that the purpose of our Church were the same which it was neither varied from the doctrine they would be prest and as ready euen foure if not forty times moe to subscribe vnto the forementioned bookes of Common prayer and of ordination as aforetimes they did when they were out of doubt the Intention of our Church was correspondent to her Doctrine that it was found and good I haue foure times subscribed saith a Brother to the booke of Common prayer with limitation and reference of all things therein contained not vnto the purpose onely or doctrine onely but unto the purpose and doctrine of the Church of England Yet cannot the same man with a good conscience so much as once more subscribe which formerly and that with a good conscience had subscribed foure times His reason is Because the purpose if not doctrine of our Church to which he referred his subscription appeareth to him by the late Canons booke of conference and some speeches of men in great place and others to be varied somewhat from that which he before not without reason took it to be The purpose and Doctrine of our Church continue the same 35. The purpose of our Church is best knowne by the doctrine which she doth professe the Doctrine by the 39. Articles established by Act of Parliament the Articles by the words whereby they are expressed and other purpose then the publike Doctrine doth minister and other Doctrine then in the said Articles is contained our Church neither hath nor holdeth and other sense they cannot yeeld then their words doe impart The words be the same and none other then earst and first they were And therefore the sense the same the Articles the same the Doctrine the same and the purpose and Intention of our Church still one and the same If then the purpose be knowne by her Doctrine and Articles and the true sense by their very words needs must the purppose of our Church be the same because her Doctrine and Articles for number words syllables and letters and every way be the very same And so our Churches intention in her publike Doctrine and Articles reuealed being good at the first it is so still For her purpose continuing one and the same cannot be ill at the last which was good and so beleeued and acknowledged even by the Brothers subscription at the first or good in good Queene Elizabeth and ill in illustrious King Iames his dayes 36. If the premisses sufficiently explane not the constancy of our Churches purpose in professing religion sincerely Neither the Doctrine nor purpose of our Church altered then cast we our eyes vpon the Propositions which she publikely maintaineth and if we find them the same which euer they have beene then need we not doubt the Brethren themselves being Iudges but the Articles againe their sence the Doctrine purpose and Intention nf the Church of England the Proposition interpreting as it were the said Articles is the very same it ever was Now that Propositions pregnantly and rightly gathered and arising from the articles be the same for substance vnaltered though vpon good considerations some few bee added to the former and all of them approued for true and Christian by the lawful publike allowance of our Church the Booke here ensuing plainely will declare and so demonstrate withall not the Doctrine onely but intention also of our Church to be the same and not changed and being vnchanged the books then of common prayer and of ordination too considered in the purpose and intention of the Church of England and reduced to the Propositions as the Brethren would haue them be well allowed and authentically approued and the said brethren with as good conscience now againe and afresh may subscribe vnto all the Articles euen concerning the Booke of common prayer and of ordination aswell as of the kings supremacy and of Religion as afore often and alwayes they did 37. For my selfe most reuerend Father in God what my thoughts be of the religion in this Realme at this instant professed and of all these Articles if the premisses doe not that which here followeth will sufficiently demonstrate Twenty yea 22 yeeres agoe voluntarily of mine owne accord altogether vnconstrained I published my subscription vnto them my Faith is not either shaken or altred but what it then was it still is yeeres have made those haires of mine gray which were not and time much reading and experience in Theologicall conflicts and combates have bettred a great deale but not altered one whit my judgement I thanke God Nothing have I denied nothing
THE CATHOLIKE DOctrine beleeued and professed in the Church of England 1. Article Of Faith in the holy Trinitie There is but 1 one liuing and true God euerlasting without body parts or passions of infinite power wisedome and goodnesse 2 the Maker and preseruer of all things both visible and inuisible 3 And in vnitie of this God-head there be three persons of one substance power and eternitie the Father the Sonne and the holy Ghost The Propositions 1. There is but one God who is liuing true everlasting c 2. God is the Maker and preseruer of all things 3. In the vnitie of the God-head there is a Trinitie of persons 1. Proposition There is but one God who is liuing true euerlasting without bodie parts passions of infinite power wisedome and goodnesse The proofe from Gods Word THat there is but one God who is c. is a truth which may be gathered from the all-holy and sacred Scripture and is agreeable to the doctrine of the reformed Churches For both Gods Word giueth vs to know that God is one and no more a Thou shalt have none other Gods before me Exod. ●0 3. the Lord our God is Lord onely Deut. 6.4 Who is God beside the Lord Psal 18 31. Hath not one God made us Mal. 2.10 There is none other God but one 1 Cor. 8.4 liuing b Mine heart and my flesh rejoyce in the living God Psal 84 2 Yee are the Temple of the living God 2 Cor 6.16 For a long season Israel hath been without the true God 2 Chr. 15 3. The Lord is the Lord of truth he is the living God and an everlasting King Ier. 10.10 This is life eternall that they know thee to be the onely very God c. Ioh. 17 3. Ye turned to God from idols to serve the living true God 1 Thess 1.9 and true God c everlasting d O my God c. thy yeere endur from generation to generation c. thy yeeres shall not faile Psal 102.24 26 27. He is the living God and remaineth for ever Dan 6.16 without body parts or passions e O Lord my God thou art exceeding great thou art clothed with glory and honour which covereth himself with light as with a garment c Psal 104 1 c God is a Spirit Ioh. 4.24 The Lord is the Spirit 2 Cor. 3.17 He is not a man that he should repent 1 Sam. 15.29 I will not execute the fiercenesse of my wrath I will not return to destroy Israel for I am God and not man Hosh 11.9 of infinite power f The sound of the Cherubins wings was heard into the utter court as the voyce of the Almightie God when he speaketh Ezek. 10.5 I will be a Father unto you c. saith the Lord Almightie 2 Cor. 6.18 We give thee thanks Lord God Almightie Rev. 16.17 wisedome g Great is our Lord and great is his power his wisedome is infinite Psal 147.5 To God onely wise be honour and glory for ever and ever 1 Tim. 1.17 To God I say onely wise be praise through Iesus Christ for ever Amen Rom. 16.27 and goodnesse h Praise ye the Lord because he is good for his mercy endureth for ever Psal 106.1.107.1 108. 1 c. and Gods people in their publike confessions from Ausburgh i Art 1. Heluetia k Confes 2. ar 2. Bohemia l c 3. France m art 1 Flanders n art 2. and Wittembergh o c. 1. testifie the same Errors and adversaries vnto this truth Then impious and execrable are the opinions of Diagoras and Theodorus who flatly denyed there was any God a Deos 〈◊〉 dubita●a● Protagoras nullos esse ●ma●ue D●agoras Theodotus Cyreniacus pu●●v●runt M. ● Ci● de Nat Deo l. 1. Of Protagoras b Protagoras Deos in dubium v●cauit Diager a● exclusit Lactan. de fal Rel. cap. 2 and the Machiuillian Atheists which are doubtfull whether there be a God Of such as fained unto themselves divers and sundry gods as did the Manichies c Aug. contra Manich. l. 2. c. 1 2. the Basilidians d Clemen Alex. 〈◊〉 l 5. the Valentinians e Valentinus triginta Deorum praed●cator saith Cyril Catech. 6. the Messalian heretikes f Epiph Exod. 32. the Gentiles and heathen people whereof some in place of God worshipped Beasts vnreasonable as the AEgyptians did a Calfe g an Oxe Cats Vulturs and Crocodils h Gand. M. ●rula de mirabi l 3. c. 56. The Syrians a Fish i Piscem Syrae venerantur Cic. de Senect Merula de mirabl l. 3. c. 48. and Pigeons k the Persians a Dragon l Histor of Bel. some as Gods have adored men vnder the names of Iupiter Mars Mercury and such like m Gods are come downe to vs in the likenesse of men and they called Barnabas Iupiter and Paul Mercurius c. Then Iupiters priest c. Acts 14.11 c Who knowes not that the City of the Ephesians is a worshipper of the great goddesse Diana Act. 19.35 and some even at this day for God doe worship Kine the Sunne and what they thinke good so the inhabitants of Baly in the East Indies n Voiage of the Holland ships Of the Anthropomorphites which ascribed the forme and lineaments of man vnto God o Theodoret l. 4. c. 10. thinking God to be like vnto man Of such as put their trust and confidence to be reposed in God alone either in men liuing as doe both the Persians in their Soldan p Tu es nostra fides inte credimus will the Persians say unto the Soldan P. B●zarus rerum Persic l. 1 ● and the Papists in their Pope who with them is God q Panormit C. quanto Abbas their Lord and God r Extravag Ioan. 22. of infinite power ſ Extravag de transl epist Quanto or in Saints departed this life as doe the same Papists both in their S. Francis whom they tearme The glory of God prefigured by Esay when he said Holy Holy Holy t Alcar Francisc lib. 1. c. and in their Thomas Becket whom they say God hath set ouer the workes of his hands u Horae B. virginis Ma. secundum usum Sarum pa. 15. or in Beasts vnreasonable as doth the Mordwite Tartar x Russe Common-weale c. 19. or finally in riches and other senselesse creatures as doe the Atheists and irreligious worldlings 2. Proposition God is the Maker and preserver of all things The proofe from Gods Word THat the world and all things both visible and inuisible therein both where made and are preserued by the Almighty and only power of God are truthes grounded vpon the holy Scripture and agreeable to the confessions of Gods people For touching the creation of the world we reade that in the beginning God created the heauen and the earth a Gen. 11 c. c. He made heaven and earth
and although there is no condemnation for them that beleeue are baptized yet the Apostle doth confesse that 4 Concupiscence and Lust hath of it selfe the nature of sinne The Propositions 1. There is Originall sinne 2. Originall sinne is the fault and corruption of the nature of euery man c. 3. Originall sinne remaineth in God his deare children 4. Concupiscence euen in the regenerate is sinne 1. Proposition There is Originall sinne The proofe from Gods Word IN the holy Scripture we find of Originall sinne the cause the subiect and the effects the cause thereof is Adams fall a R●m ● 15 1 〈◊〉 1● 21 partly by the subtill suggestions of the diuell b Gen. 3.4 partly through his owne free will and the propagation of Adam his corrupted nature vnto his seed and posterity Except a man be borne againe he cannot see the Kingdom of God saith our Sauiour Christ c 2 Co● 11.3 As by one man sinne entred into the world and death by sinne and so death went ouer all men forasmuch as al men haue sinned saith S. Paul d Ioh 3●3 As new-borne babes desire the sincere milke of the Word that ye may grow thereby saith S. Peter e 1 Pet. ● 2 And S. Iames f Iam. 1.18 Of his own will begate he vs with the Word of truth that we should be as the first fruits of his creatures And the fore-mentioned Apostle Paul againe g Eph. 2.1 3 4 ● You that were dead in trespasses and sinnes c. were by nature the children of wrath as wel as others But God which is rich in mercy through his great loue where with he loued vs euen when we were dead by sins hath quickened vs together in Christ c. The subiect thereof is the old man with all his powers mind will and heart For in the mind there is darkenesse and ignorance of God and his will h Matth 12. ●4 Rom. 6 7 1● or 2.14 1 Iohn 3.1 5.19.20 Matth 5.29 and in the will and heart of man there is concupiscence and rebellious affections against the Law of God Acts 7 39. and 15 9. Rom. 1 ●1 ●am 1.13 14. And the effects of this Birth or Originall sinne are first actuall sinnes they both inward as vngodly affection and outward as wicked lookes prophane speech and diuelish actions k Matth. 15.19 next an euill conscience l 1 Iohn 3 2● which bringeth the wrath of God m Rom. 1.18 Col. 3.5.6 death n Ioh. 8.24 Rom. 5.12 Iam 1.15 and eternall damnation o Rom. 5.18 All Churches of God beleeue this and some in their publike confessions testifie so much p Confess Helv. 1. ar 8 2 c 8. Bassi ●r 2. Bohem. c. 4. Gal. ar 9 11 Belg. ar 15. August ar 1. Saxon. ar 2. Errors and aduersaries vnto this truth Thus armed with authority and forces from the Word of God and assisted with the neighbour Churches we offer battell 1. To the Iewes q Fr Laut 2. 2. Villa nim de forma Second on l. 1. c. 13. Carpocratians Clem. Alex. str●m lib 3. and Family of Loue Display in All●ns con● who flatly deny there is any originall sinne 2. To the Papists which say that Originall sinne is of all the least sinne and lesse then any veniall sinne Originall sinne is onely the debt of punishment for the sinne of Adam and not his fault Originall sinne is not properly sinne all this hath Ruardus Tapperus Tapp tract de pec Orig. Such as are infected onely with Originall sinne are free from all sensible punishment Th. Aquin. l. 4. ●●st 1 ● q ● ar 2. 3. To Florinus and Blastus who make God the Author of sinne x ●onfess He●● 2. c. 8. ex l. 〈◊〉 4. To the Sabbatarians among vs who teach that The Life of God in Adam before his fall could not continue without a Sabbath y Sal. doct 1. booke p. 15. The Sabbath was ordained before the fall of Adam and that not onely to preserue him from falling ●●i● but also that being holy and righteous still he might have bin preserued in the fauour of God which D. B. deliuereth in his Sabbath doctrine Ibid. 2. booke pag 182. 5. We are also aduersaries to the like curiously affected who enquire Whether it was Gods Will that Adam should fall Whether God enforced our first parents to fall Why God stayed not Adam from falling c. 2. Proposition Originall sinne is the fault and corruption of the nature of e●●ry man c. The proofe from Gods Word ORiginall sinne is not the Imitation of Adam his disobedience For the Scripture speaketh of no such thing neither doth Gods people so thinke and some Churches by their extant Confessions with vs deny the same as the Church in France Con●●●● Gal ●● ●0 and the Low-countries b Conf●ss Belg●ar 15. but it is partly the Imputation of Adam his disobedience vnto vs c Rom. 5.12 16 Confess Aug. a● 2. Saxon. ar 1 2 Witt. c. 4. and partly the fault and corruption of mans nature d Rom. 3.23 7.18 Eph 1.3 as the Churches also acknowledge e Confess Hel● 2 c 8 Gal. ar 10 Bohe. c 4 Aug. ar 2. Saxon ar 2. Wittemb c. 4 The errors and aduersaries vnto this truth Aduersaries vnto this truth are The Pelagians f August de pr●meritis c. ● 2 3. and Family of Loue g Display in A●lens conf who say that Originall sinne commeth not by propagation but by Imitation Such as ascribe Originall sinne in no sort vnto man but either vnto God as did the Hermogenians Tertull. or vnto the divell as did the Valentinians i August The Manichies who preached that this sinne is another and a contrary substance within vs and proceedeth not from our corrupted nature k August de haeres The Apollinarians who held originall sinne to be from nature f Athan de incar Christi The Papists who affirme that some persons and namely the Virgin Mary g Concil Trid sess 5 decr de pec Orig. Alb. Mig ● 74. super Euang. Mistu● est c. Paulus de Palacio in Mat. c. 11 p. 46 3 is free from this Originall sinne 3. Proposition Originall sinne remaineth in God his deare children The proofe from Gods Word I Allow not that which I doe for what I would that doe I not but what I hate that doe I saith S. Paul a Rom. 7.15 The flesh lusteth against the Spirit and the Spirit against the flesh so that ye cannot do the same things that ye would b Gal. 4.17 Euery man is tempted when hee is drawne away by his owne concupiscence and is enticed c Iam. 1.14 Dearely beloued I beseech you as strangers abstaine from fleshly lusts which fight against the soule d 1 Pet. 2.11 Nothing is more true e Confes Helv 1.
and from the West and from the North and from the South and shall sit at the Kingdome of God Luke 13.28 The promise is made unto you and to your children and to all that are a farre off c. Acts 2 3● In every nation he that feareth God and worketh righteousnesse is accepted with him Acts 10.35 and that the Church as it hath been from the worlds beginning e Rev. 13.8 so shall it continue to the end f Matth. 28.20 And this is the confession of the Churches g Confess Helv. 2. c. 17. Bohem. c. 8. Belg ar 27. Wittemb ar 32. Errors and adversaries unto this truth Vnsound be they inreligion therefore which have and doe as it were tye the Church to a certaine a Aug lib. 2. con Pet. c 15. country as the Donatists did to Africa a people as the Iewes to themselves b Clenard op lib. 2. 190. persons place calling or time as doe the Papists To certaine persons when they sey The Church is founded upon Peter and his successors c Confess Petrocenien c. 29 All that will be saved must of necessity be subject to the Bishop of Rome d Bonifac. c. 8. Vnam extra de major obed The true Church is united to the obedience of the Pope of Rome e Bel. de eccl milit c 2. To a certaine place when they sey The Church of Rome is the Catholike Church f Test Rhem. an 1 Tim. 345 The Church of Rome is the mother of faith g Jus canonic distinct 22. To a certaine calling by their Petrus à Soto to Bishops and Prelates h Pet à Soto asser p. 133. To a certaine time as when the said Papists affirme how The time was when holinesse was only in the Virgin Mary i Cost r. enchir con when faith rested onely in the Virgin Mary k Disput Concil Basil Acts and Monu in K.H. 6. f. 7. 96. when all the faith was lost save onely in our Lady l Festival ser 4. post festum Palmarum It is a bold assertion also and very presumptuous of Apostata Hill that in England all men were Papists without exception from the first Christening thereof untill the age of King Henry the eighth 4. Propositon m Hil●qua●t 1. reas p. 5. The Word of God was and for time is before the Church The proofe from Gods Word FOrasmuch as the visible Church of Christ is a Congregation of men either in the eyes of God or in the judgment of the godly faithfull it followeth that the Word of God must be afore the Church for time as likewise the authoritie For time because Gods Word is the Seed the faithfull the Corne a Luk. 8.11 12 and the Children b 1 Pet. 1 1● Gods Word is the Rocke or Foundation c Math. 16 1● Eph. 1.20 the Faithfull the House d Eph. 2.21 For authoritie also the Word is before the Church because the voyce of the Church is the voyce of man who hath erred and may erre from the truth but the voyce of the Word is Gods voyce e 2 Tim. 3.10 2 Pet. 1.21 who cannot deceive nor be deceived Of this judgement be the Churches reformed f Conf. Helv. 1 ar 14. 2. c. 13.17 Bohe. c. 1.8 Gal. ar 7 Bolg ar 3.7 Saxon ar 1.11 ●●●ev ar 1. The adversaries unto this truth This maketh to the strengthning of us against those Popish assertions o● Viguerius and such like viz. that the Church was before the Word for time and is above the Word for authoritie a Viguer In ad Chr. Theo. 10. sect 3. v. 10. fol 83. a. 5. Proposition The markes and tokens of the visible Church are the due and true administration of the Word and Sacraments The proofe from Gods Word THere is the visible Church of Christ where the Word of God sincerely is preached and the Sacraments instituted by our Saviour are duely administred Hence it is that our Lord and Saviour calleth them his mother and his brethren which heare the Word of God and doe it a Luke 8.21 and saith He that is of God heareth Gods Word John 8.47 also My sheepe heare my voyce c Iohn 10.27 and How shal they heare without a Preacher saith S. Paul d Rom. 10.14 Likewise the Apostle S. Iohn He that knoweth God heareth us hee that is not of God heareth us not e 1 John ● 9 Again they are of the world therefore speak they of the world and the world heareth them f Ib●b v. 5. And touching the Sacraments first of Baptisme Goe therefore and teach all nations baptizing them in the Name of the Father and the Sonne and the holy Ghost teaching them to observe all things whatsoever I have commanded you g Matth. 28.17 20. We have been baptized into Iesus Christ h Rom. 6.3 yee are washed ye are sanctified i 1 Cor 6.13 By one Spirit are we all baptized into one body k 1 Cor. 11.13 Next of the Lords Supper The Lord Iesus in the night that hee was betrayed tooke bread and when hee had given thanks hee brake it and said Take eate this is my body which is broken for you this doe in remembrance of me After the same manner also he tooke the cup when he had Supped saying This is the New Testament in my blood this doe as oft as ye drink it in remembrance of me l 1 Cor. 11.23.24 25. Luke 22 1● The Christians in all reformed Churches acknowledge these things m Conf Helv. 1. ar 14. and 2. cap. 17 Bohe. c 8. Gal. ar 27.28 Saxon ar 11. Wittemb ar 12. Suev ar 13. Some and they also many of them very godly men adde Ecclesiasticall discipline for a note of the visible Church But because the said Discipline in part is included in the markes here mentioned both we and in effect all other wel ordered Churches over-passe it in this place as no token simply of the visible Church Neither tye we the Church so strictly to the signes articulate that wee think all those to be without the Church and no Christians which neither doe heare the Word ordinarily and publikely read and preached nor participate in the Sacraments if so be they would and yet can neither heare the one nor receive the other as it falleth out sometimes especially in the times of blindnesse and persecution The errors and adversaries unto this truth Wee renounce therefore as altogether unsound and Antichristian the opinions 1. Of the Papists who both denie the pure preaching of Gods Word and the administration of the Sacraments among Protestants to be the markes of Christ his visible Church a Petrus a Soto assert de Eccl. and affirme the tokens hereof to be Antiquity Vnity Vniversality Succession c. as doth Stapleton b In his Fortresse Bristow c In his Motives Bozius d De
in iudgement are the Papists For first they maintaine That the Pope of Rome hath the power to iudge all men and matter but may be iudged of no man a Dist 40. c. Si Papa to decree without controulement against the Epistles of S. Paul b C●● Ruinus to dispence even against the new Testament c Panorm fixtra de diuortris and to giue the sense and meaning of the holy Scripture to which sense or interpretation of his all and every man without contradiction must yeeld and obey d H●rvae● de potestate Papae Next they publish and hold that the power to iudge of religion and points of doctrine is either in Bishops onely as some of them do thinke e The mysteries of religion are committed to the trust of Bishops p ●bi tantum solendum est q●nd ad m●●● f●●ma● vitam per●●net the common people are onely to know that which pertaineth vnto ●anne is and good behauiour saith Fryer La●●nc a Villavincence de forman conci●● lib. 1. cap. 10. Nec gratia nec 〈◊〉 ●or a i●●a v●rtus ●o qu●enda●st in memoe i● vel minist●● Ecclesie gr●●ter publican professionem sid i● It is sufficient for the members and Ministers of the Church to make open profession of the faith more is not required of them neither grace to iudge of doctrine nor any other inward vertue saith Petru● à So●● 4 Ter● ca ●●de Ec. The common and faithfull people may in a generality refuse and forsake all new doctrine dissenting from that which they haue learned and embraced Non autem vt doctrinam in particulari ex causis fundam m●●●● s●●s examini ●t sic proprio iudicio discu●●nt quid ●rum quid sassum sit But they haue none authority to examine any doctrine in particular from the very causes and grounds and thereby search out what is true what false quod proprium est Ecclesinum ●●ag ●●●is this they must leaue to the masters of the Churches to whom properly it b●longeth saith Stapl or in their Clergy only as others deeme An●d●ae van Matth 7. and in the Church of Rome onely as all of them suppose g Sacrae scripturae ●●●sus na●vus indubitatus a● eccl●si● 〈◊〉 a est p●●n●dus saith the forementioned Pe●rus à So●● The natiue and true sense of the sacred Scripture is to be fetcht from the Catholike Church of Rome Ass●r ●●●th de E●c The whole Church throughout the world knoweth that the holy Church of Rome hath power to iudge of all matters n●que cuiquam ●ebit de eius judicio iudicare ●●●the● is at lawfull for any man to give any sentence of her iudgement ●●la 9. q C●n●●ia 4. Proposition The Church hath power to interpret and expound the Word of God The proofe from Gods Word TO interpret the Word of God is a peculiar blessing giuen by God onely to the Church and company of the faithfull though not to all and every of them For No man knoweth the Son but the Father neither knoweth any man the Father but the Sonne and he to whom the Sonne will reveale him a Matth. 11.27 It is given to you to know the secrets of heaven saith our Sauiour vnto his disciples but to them it is not given b Mark 13.11 The manifestation of the Spirit is given to every man to profit withall For to one is given by the Spirit the Word of wisedome c. and to another prophesie c 1 Cor. 12.7 If any thing be revealed to another that sitteth by let the first hold his peace saith S. Paul vnto the Church at Corinth d 1 Cor. 14 30 Ye haue an oyntment from him that is holy and yee have knowne all things c ye need not that any man teach you saith the Apostle Iohn e 1 Iohn 2.20 21 27. Hereunto subscribe the Churches in Helnetia f Confe Helv. 2 cap. 2. Wittemberg Confess Wit tomb c●p 30. Boheme h Confes Bohe cap. 1. The Errors and adversaries unto this truth Many sundry are the adversaries vnto this truth whereof Some thinke that to expound the Word of God is so easie a matter as any Student endued with a good naturall wit by diligence and industry of his owne may doe the same Some teach how to interpret the Scriptures is too hard a thing for any mortall man to attaine vnto so did Iohannes de Wassalia a Aeneas Syl. and doe many Anabaptists Some though they acknowledge that diuers haue the gift to open the sense of Gods Word yet that some say they are not the knowne Preachers and writers in the reformed and Christian assemblies whom the Family of Loue in scorne doe tearme the Scripture-learned For saith the said Family It is meere lyes vntruth c. whatsoever the Scripture-learned through their knowledge out of the Scriptures institute preach and teach b H.N. euang c. 33. sect 11. 12. 13. They preach the letter c. but not the Word of the liuing God c Idem i. ex hor. cap 16. sect 18. but themselves onely have that gift neither every one of the Family but the illuminate Elders For to them it is giuen to know the truth d Idem in his Prov. c. 21. sect 2. and they are the Elders of the Godly-vnderstanding and of the manly-wisedome the e Sp. land cap. 7. sect 10. Primates or principals in the light f 1 Exhor cap. 14. sect 1. Some doe suppose that to interpret the holy Scriptures is not so much a speciall gift of God vpon some chosen persons as an ordinary power annexed to the state and calling of Popes Bishops and Clergy men g See the proposit next immediate aforegoing Others be so farre from giuing the people of God not being of the Clergy power to expound as they will not suffer them to reade nor so much as to haue the Scriptures by them in a vulgar tongue except it be their owne most corrupt and barbarous translation which but of late yeeres neither and that in part too is granted by the Papists but in place thereof they thrust vpon the Laity their most idolatrous and blasphemous Festiuals Legends Rosaries Horaries and Psalteries of our Lady as falsly they called her 5. Proposition The analogy of faith must be respected in the exposition of the Scripture The proofe from Gods Word FOrasmuch as no prophesie is of any priuate motion a 1 Pet. 1.20 and whatsoever interpretation man giueth if it agree not to the analogy of faith which St. Paul gave in commandement to be obserued b Rom. 12.6 is priuate interpretation speciall heed is to be had that one place of Scripture be so expounded as it agree with another and all to the proportion of Faith The Churches reformed approoue this assertion by their subscriptions c Confes Helv. 1. ar 2. 2. c. 2 Gal. 1. ar 7. Sax. ar 1.
Wit c. 30 31 33. Suev ar 1. Errors and adversaries unto this truth Of another iudgement are many For Some do thinke the Scripture may be expounded in what sense and to what purpose men list as the Pharises a D. Iren. l 4. cap. 2 5. the Severians b Euf eccl hist lib. 4. c. 29. and Papists among whom there be which from this opinion doe tearme the most holy Word and Scriptures of God most reprochfully A ship-mans hose a Leaden rule a Nose of waxe c Pighius controuer 3. de Ec. Hierac l. 3. c. 3. Lindan praef Cens Colon. Some do mislike all interpretations written Commentaries vpon the Scriptures as vnnecessary and vaine such were Servetus Valdesius Coranus with others of late yeeres d Beza epi. 59. and are the Libertines Sowenkfeldians e Ibid. and Family of Loue f H.N. 1. exhor cap. 16 sect 4. Some depend wholly vpon visions and reuelations as did the Enthusiasts g Th●●d haeret fab l. 3. Nicholas Storch Thomas Monetarius the Anabaptists h D. Maior in Dom. 8. Post trinit homil fol. 440. and our late English reformer Hacket i Arthing sedu p 17. Some dislike of the literall and referre the Allegoricall sense of the Scriptures and thereby deuise what them list most monstrously from the Word of God as did the Origenists and doe the Libertines k Calv. contra Anabap. and Family of Love hence teaching one the other that the spirituall vnderstanding is the Word of God and that to embrace the literall sense is to commit Idolatary l Allens conf Some of every place of Scripture will have an exposition both Analogicall Allegoricall Historicall and Morall as the curious Thomists and Monks Some are addicted to an interpretation which they cal mysticall and propheticall as Brocardus Morelius and others Some are of mind that the Gospell or Euangelicall Word cannot be committed to letters and writing saith Lindanus m Lib. 2. c. 2. Some doe thinke as afore also hath bin shewed how that is the odde and onely true sense of the Scriptures which is made and given by the Church n Haeretici Scripturarum cognitionē intelligentione extra Ecclesiamponunt nos autem Papistae volumus Ecclesiae Romanae esse annexam nec ab ea separari patimur Stapl. antid Euang. in Ioan 19 21. p. 418 Sicut Christo Iudaei sic nos Ecclesia Romanae simpliciter credere debemus saith Stapleton Antid in Luc. 10.16 When the authoritie of the Church leaveth the holy Scripture then are they of no more account then Aesops fables W●lf Herman and Pope of Rome o Si Papam qui Christi vicarius est ac cius omnimodam potestatem habet in terris consulerent non erra●ent haeretici saith Stella in Lucaeus fol. 499. Some doe maintaine that as the Church in time doth alter so the interpretation of the Scripture also therewithall doth vary whereby that which in the Apostles time was a truth in these dayes shall be a falshood In which error was Cardinall Cusanus p Cusan ad Bohemos epist 2. 6. Proposition The Church is the witnesse and keeper of Gods written Word The proofe from Gods Word THough the Church hath authoritie to heare and determine in controversies of faith yet hath the Church power neither to iudge the Word of God nor to iudge otherwise then Gods Word doth iudge For it is said to the Church and people of God I beseech you brethren marke them diligently which cause diuisions and offences contrary to the Doctrine which you haue learned and auoid them a Rom. 16.7 Heare him b Math. 17.5 To him giue all the Prophets witnesse c Acts 10 43. Search the Scriptures d Iohn 5.39 whosoever transgresseth and abideth not in the doctrine of Christ hath not God e 2 Iohn 5.9 Ye are c. built upon the foundation of the Apostles and Prophets f Eph. 2.19 And of the holy Scriptures Thy word is the truth g Iohn 27.17 They have Moses and the Prophets let them heare them Luke 16.29 saith our Saviour Christ Wee have also a sure word of the Prophets saith Saint Peter i 2 Pet 1.19 And Saint Paul The whole Scripture is profitable to teach c k 2 Tim. 6.16 17. If any man teach otherwise and consenteth not to the wholesome words of our Lord Iesus Christ he is puft vp and knoweth nothing c l 1 Tim. 6 3 4. And so with vs the other Churches conceiue both of the Scriptures and Church m Confe Helv. 2. cap. 1. Bohe. cap. 1. Gal ar 5 Belg. ar 7. Wittemb ar 30 31 32 Sax. ar 11. yet all of vs doe grant that the Church as a faithfull witnesse may yea of necessitie must testifie to the world what hath been the doctrine of Gods people from time to time and as a trusty Recorder is to keepe and make knowne what the Word or God which it hath received is which truly hath beene performed afore the Word was written by the Patriarchs and after the same was committed to writing before Christ his incarnation by the Iews in Christ his life time n Luke 4.17 in the Primitive Church o Acts 13.27 Acts 15.21 2 Cor. 2.15 2 Cor. 8.18 From the Apostles time by the godly Christians thorow out the world Errors and adversaries unto this truth Be it farre therefore from us to thinke which the Papists doe not stick to write and say namely that The Church is to judge the Scripures and not the Scriptures the Church a Jo. Maria Verract●s Pighius in controvers de Ec. The Scripture is not of the essence of the Church Because without it a Church may be though not very well So said Card. Cusan b Card. Cusan ep 2. ad Bohe. The Scripture because in their opinion it is unperfect cannot obscure may not ambiguous ought not to be the Iudge So Lindan c Lind. l. 1. c. 1. Latomus d Contra Bucer Petrus à Soto e De S. Scrip. Pighius f Eccl. Hierar l. 1. c. 4. Coster g Enchir. de S. Scrip. c. 1. c. Hee is an heretike that cleaveth to the Scriptures So said Iacobus Hoestratus Again the carefull keeping of the holy Scriptures by Gods people from age to age and time to time declareth first how the mother Church of Rome is not the onely keeper of the holy writ and next that cursedly they doe offend which either as greatly esteeme the Ethicks of Aristotle as the Commandements of God the Odes of Pindar as the Psalmes of David h Aug. Polit. the works and bookes of men as the writings of God which the Councell of Trent doth i Ses 4. or before and above the Scripture preferre unwritten Traditions Hence Petrus à Soto Tradition saith he is both more ancient and more effectuall then the holy
All haile all faithfull soules whose bodies doe here and every where rest in the dust The Lord Iesus Christ who hath redeemed both you and us with his most precious blood vouchsafe to deliver you from paines c d Horae B. Virg. Mariae secundum usum S●r. They have ratified the doctrine of purged soules after this life in the Councell of Trent e Conc. Trid. d●●r de Purg. Ses 25. ses 6 can 30. It it further to be noted how the same Papists sliding backe from the truth of God have fallen into many noisome and divers opinions in the matter of Purgatory agreeing among themselves Neither about the place where Purgatory should be some placing the same in the bottome of the Sea f Eckius in Enchirid some neere unto the mount Hecla in Ireland some upon the mount Aetna in Sicil g Bernard de Bustis Rosar par 3. c. 2. others in the Center of the earth h Spec. pereg quaest doc 1. c. 3. q. 5. others in Hell whereof they make foure roomes the first of the damned the second of infants dying unbaptized the third Purgatory the fourth Limbus patrum whereinto Christ descended i Position Ing. de purgat and others in a minde tossed and troubled betwixt hope and feare k Lorich insti Cathol de 12. Fidei art Neither about the Tormentors there who are thought of some to be holy Angels l Albertus Roffensis of others to be very devils m S. Th. Morc Neither about the torments For some dreame how they are tormented there with fire onely as Sir Thomas Moore some with water and fire as Roffensis and some neither with fire nor water but with troublesome affections of Hope and Feare as Lorichius n Insti Catho ut supra Neither about the causes of Purgatory torments because that some doe thinke that onely veniall sinnes o Greg. dial l. 4. c. 39. Spec. pereg quaest dec 1. c. 3. q. 4 others that veniall and mortall sinnes too p Eckius posit 6. for which in this life men have done no penance are there purged Nor about the time which they that be tormented shall abide in Purgatory For some have given out how the poore soules there be continually in torments till the day of Iudgement as Dionys Carthusianus q De 4. Hom. noviss others as Durandus r De officio mort l. 7. doe thinke they have rest sometimes as upon Sundaies and Holidaies others are of mind that in time they shall be set free and at libertie because their punishment is but temporary ſ Spec. pereg quaest ut supra quaest 5. and others that at any time they may be delivered if either their friends will buy out their paines or the Priests will pray or say any Masse for them or the Pope will but say the word Nor finally about the state of soules in Purgatory For Our English Papists at Rhemes doe thinke the soules in Purgatory to be in a more happy and blessed condition then any men that live in this world t Test Rhem. an Apoc. 14.13 and yet say the same Rhemists that Purgatory fire passeth all the paines of this life v Ibid. an marg p. 431. Thomas Aquinas holdeth how the paines of hell fire and of Purgatory are all one nothing differ but that the one is but temporall and the other not so And others put in choyce either to tarry in Purgatory one day or to endure the miseries of this world an 100 yeares have chosen to suffer the troubles of this life an hundred yeares together rather then to abide the paines of Purgatory but one short Winters day x Cap. Quid in aliud dist 25. Therefore in this contrarietie of opinions some of them the Papists themselves cannot deny must be we say all of them are fond and contrary to the Word of God Besides they nourish most cursed and damnable errors as That all the soules of the faithfull separated from their bodies are not at rest That all sins in their owne nature be not mortall or deadly and that some deserve not everlasting torments They are purged in Purgatory That one sinfull man may save and satisfie the wrath of God for another and that easily by prayer saying or doing something for them That if friends in this world will doe nothing for the poore soules in Purgatory paines yet may the said soules come at length unto happinesse by abiding their deserved torments untill the last houre or day of judgement in Purgatory Finally that the Pope is God in that he can at his pleasure discharge guiltie souls both from the guilt of sinne and from the punishments due for the same 2. Proposition The Romish doctrine concerning pardons is fond and not warranted by the holy Scriptures nor consonant but contrary unto the same The proofe from Gods Word SVch hath been the exceeding mercy and love of God towards mankinde that as he hath purged us from all guiltinesse of sinne by the blood so hath he pardoned us from the everlasting punishment due for sinne by the paines of Iesus Christ For There is salvation in none other For among men there is given none other name under heaven whereby they must be saved a Acts 4.12 Through his name all that beleeve shall receive remission of sinnes b Act. 10.43 He hath purchased the Church by his owne blood c Act. 20.28 With his stripes we are healed d Isa 53.5 He that beleeveth in him shall neither be condemned e Joh. 3.18 nor ashamed f Rom. 10.11 Therefore Come unto mee all yee that are weary and laden and I will ea●● you c. and yee shall finde rest for your soules saith our Saviour Christ g Matth. 11.28 29. If thou shalt confesse with thy mouth the Lord Iesus and shalt beleeve with thine heart that God raised him from the dead thou shalt be saved saith Saint Paul h Rom. 10.9 Errors and aduersaries unto this truth This being the Doctrine even of God himselfe * Whereof see more Art 2. pr. 4. ar 11. pr. 1. ar 22. pr. 1. we may evidently perceive how not onely vaine but beside not onely besides but against the Word of God the Romish doctrine concerning pardons is For that doth teach us 1. To seeke salvation not at God alone but at the hands of sinfull men For would we have a pardon for the sinnes of fortie dayes A Bishop may give it For the sinnes of 100 dayes A Cardinall may grant it For all our sinnes committed or to be committed From the Pope we may have it Hence be his pardons if you respect time for 40. 50. 100. 1000. 10000. 50000. c. yeares of offences Homicide Patricide Perjury Sodomitry Treason and what not c. a Vide Taxam poenit 2. That we may be our owne Saviour So did that of Purgatory 3. How the precious
blood of Christ was shed in vain For corruptible gold and silver with our owne deeds and works may and will save us if we will 4. That repentance is not of necessitie unto the salvation of man For without the same a popish pardon may save But without either a pardon from the Pope or such like or absolution of a Priest there is no salvation by the doctrine of the Church of Rome b See ar 25. p. 6. A further manifestation of the vanitie and impieties of the Romish pardons from a booke of the Papists intituled Horae beatissimae Virginis Mariae secundum usum Sarum Quicunque in statu gratiae existens dixerit devotè septem orationes sequentes cum septem Pater noster totidem Ave Maria ante imaginem pietatis merebitur 56. millia annorum Indulgentiarum Iohannes Papa 12. concessit omnibus dicentibus orationem sequentem transcundo per cemiterium tot annos indulgentiarum quot faerunt ibi corpora inhumata à constitutione ipsius cemiterii Oratio pro defunctis Avete omnes animae fideles quarum corpora hic ubique requiescunt in pulvere Dominus Iesus Christus qui vos nos redemit suo pretiofissimo sanguine dignetur vos à poenis liberare inter choros suorum sanctorum angelorum collocare ibiq●e nostri memores suppliciter exorare ut vobis associemur vobiscum in coelis coronemur Innocentius Papa 2. concessit cuilibet qui banc orationem sequentem de votè dixerit 4000. millia annorum indulgentiarum Ave vulnus lateris nostri Salvatoris c. Quicunque devotè dixerit istam orationem habebit 3000. dicrum indulgentiarum criminalium peccatorum 2000. millia dicrum venialium à Domino Iohanne Papa 22. concessarum ut in A●tidatorio animae habetur Quicunque orationem sequentem devotè dixerit promerebitur 11000 annorum indulgentiarū c Ave Domina sancta Maria mater dei regina coeli porta paradisi domina mundi lux sempiterna imperatrix inferni c. Ora pro me Iesum Christum dilectū filium tuum libera me ab omnil us malis ora pro peccatis meis Amen Whosoever being in the state of grace shall devoutly say the seven prayers ensuing with seven Our Fathers and as many Haile Maries afore the image of Piety shall thereby merit 56. thousand yeares of Pardons Pope Iohn the 12. hath granted to all persons which going thorow the Church-yard doe say the prayer following so many yeares of pardons as there have beene bodies buried since it was a Church-yard The prayer for the dead Haile all faithfull soules whose bodies here and every where doe rest in the dust The Lord Iesus who hath reedemed you and with his most precious blood vouchsafe to deliver you from paines and to place you in the company of his holy Angels and there being mindfull of us meekely to pray that we may both be joyned unto you and crowned with you in the heavens Pope Innocent the 2. hath granted to every one which devoutly shall say this prayer following 4000. yeares of pardons Haile wound of our Saviours side c. Whosoever devoutly shall say this prayer shall have 3000. dayes pardons of criminall sinnes and 20000. dayes of veniall offences granted by the Lord Pope Iohn the 22. as it is to be read in the Antidatory of the soule Whosoever devoutly will say the prayer following shall merit thereby 11000. yeares of pardons Haile Lady Saint Mary mother of God Queene of heaven the Gate of Paradise the Lady of the world the Light eternall the Emperesse of hell c. Pray unto thy beloved Sonne Iesus Christ for me and deliver me from all evils pray for my sinnes Amen 3. Proposition The Romish doctrine concerning Images is fond and not warranted by the holy Scriptures nor consonant but contrary unto the same The proofe from Gods Word Images are such an abomination to the Lord as to make them among all men odious he describeth the vanitie of them by his Prophets as that they are the doctrine of vanitie the worke of errors a Jer. 10.15 the teachers of lies b H●b 2.18 silver and gold the worke of mens hands c Psal 135.25 vanitie d Esa 41.10 c. they have a mouth and speake not eyes and see not eares and heare not e Psal 135.16 hands and touch not feet and walke not f Psal 115.7 2. He giveth a strait commandement Not to bow downe to them nor worship them g Exod. 20.5 1 Cor. 10.7 14. nor to make them h Exod. 20.5 Deut. 4.15 c. to flie from them i 1 Iohn 5.21 1 Cor. 10.14 yea to destroy both the images themselves k Deut. 7.5 12 2● ● the Idolaters l Deut. 17.2 3. and the Enticers unto Idolatry m Deut. 13.5 3. He commendeth greatly and praiseth such men as have destroyed images n 2 King 18.3 4. 2 Chr. 14.2 3. and not bowed unto Idols o Deut. 7.25 26. Ier. 5 1. 4. He finally curseth the Images p 1 King 19.18 Dan. 2. the Image-makers q Deut. 27.15 Esa 44. and the Image-servers or worshippers r Deut. 27.26 Psal 97.7 Esa 42.17 Hereunto with us the Protestant Churches every where doe subscribe ſ Conf. Helv. 2. cap 3 4. Basil ar 10.6.3 Bohem. c. 3.16 Gal. ar 1. August ar 12. Wittem c. 1.23 Suev ar 22. The adversaries unto this truth The Romish Church most fondly contrary to the word of God doth allow and not onely allow but publikely erect and not onely erect but adore a Dele statuas verserari potius quam statuarios stolid●m ●●t Index expurg p. 31. and not onely adore Images but doth accu●se and more then so condemne to the fire yea to hell fire as heretikes such persons as will not worship images and the Images too which is most abominable Of God himselfe even of God the Father and that in the likenesse of an old man with a long white Beard of the Son in the similitude of a man hanging on the Crosse of the holy Ghost in the shape of a Dove of the wholy holy and incomprehensible Trinitie with three Faces in one head b In hoe plerisque Christianis ●●hnicus philosophus religiosior qui etiā Trinitatis quae mente vix cōprehenditur figuras oculis ●ot poris aspectabilis Petri Rami verba in scholis physicis delcantur Index expurg pag. 149. Atque haec absurditas Patrem Filum Sp effigiantium Iacobitis à Nicephoro tributur G. Cassand consul p. 164. Also of God his creatures as of Angels alwaies with wings sometimes with a paire of ballance as S. Michael of men as of Moses as it were with hornes the Apostles with round orbes on their heads like Trenchers the blessed Virgin with frisled haire and costly garments And of other base things as Agnus deis of wax wafer cakes of flower Crosses of gold
c. and to call the people to repentance so teacheth Barrow l Ba. disco p. 36. 5. Proposition They must not be silent who by office are bound to preach The proofe from Gods Word As publikely to preach before men are sent is a grievous fault so not to preach being sent is a great sinne Hereunto beare witnesse 1. Our Saviour Christ whose words are these Surely I must also preach the Kingdome of God for therefore am I sent a Luke 4.43 2. Peter and Iohn who being charged to speake no more in the name of Iesus said Wee cannot but speake that which we have heard and seene b Acts 4.17 c. 3. Saint Paul For he saith Necessity is laid upon me and woe is me if I preach not the Gospell c 1 Cor. 9.16 17. 4. The Apostles of Christ For though they were beaten for so doing yet ceased they not to teach and preach Iesus Christ d Acts 5.42 5. All the Churches of God which be purged from superstition and errors e Conf. Helv. 1. ar 25. 2. c. 8 9. Bohem. c. 9. Gal. ar 15. Aug. ar 7. Wit ar 20. Suev ar 13. Errors and adversaries unto this truth Then as in a glasse they may see their faults Who maintaine how there ought to be no publike preaching at all as doe the Anabaptists a Bullin cont Anabap. c. 12. Which deprave the office of preaching as doe the Libertines saying that preaching is none ordinary meanes to come unto the knowledge of the Word b Wilkins against the Fam. of Love ar 14. p. 66. and especially the Family of Love who tearme the publike preachers in derision Scripture-learned c Theoph. against Wilk Licentious scripture-learned d Pat. of the prof Temp. good thinkingwise e H. N pr●ph of the Sp. cap. 2. sect 7. Ceremoniall and letter-Doctors f ●am let to the B. of Roc. Teaching-masters g H. N. Spi● l. c 25 and further say It is a great presumption that any man out of the learnednesse of the letter taketh upon him to be a Teacher or Preacher Againe It becommeth not any man to busie himselfe about preaching of the Word so and more too the Family Which take upon them the office of publike preaching without performance of their duty either through ignorance that they cannot worldly employments that they may not negligence h Idem 1. ●●b c. 10. sect 15. 16. that they will not or feare of troubles that they dare not preach the Word of God Yet thinke wee not which our Sabbatarians let not to publish that Every Minister necessarily and under paine of damnation is to preach at least once every Sunday i D B doct of the Sabbath 2 book p. 174. and Vnlesse a Minister preach every Sunday he doth not hallow the Sabbath day in the least measure of that which the Lord requireth of us k Ibid. p. 277. 3 Proposition The Sacraments may not be administred in the Congregation but by a lawfull Minister The proofe from Gods Word IN the holy Scriptures we reade that the publike Ministers of the Word are to be Administers of the Sacraments For both our Saviour Christ commanded his Disciples as to preach so to baptize a Matth 28.19 and celebrate the Supper of the Lord b Luke 22 1● 1 Cor. 11.24 25. and the Apostles and other Ministers in the purest times whom the godly Ministers and Preachers in these dayes doe succeed not onely did preach but also baptize c Acts 2 3● 41 8 12 13 40.41.16.32 33. John 1.25 1 Cor. 1 1● 16. and minister the Lords Supper d Acts 20.7 1 Cor 10. ●6 And hereunto doe the Churches of God subscribe e Conf. Heb. 2. c. 18 Bohem. c. 9. Gal. ar 2.5 31. Aug. ar 5. Wittem ar 20. Suev ar 13. In saying that none may administer the Sacraments in the Congregation afore he be lawfully called and sent thereunto we thinke not as some doe that the very being of the Sacraments dependeth upon this point viz. whether the Baptizer or giver of the Bread and Wine be a Minister or no. Neither is it the meaning of this article that privately in houses either lawfull Ministers upon just occasion may not or others not of the Ministery upon any occasion in the peace of the Church may administer the Sacraments The aduersaries vnto this truth T. C. 1 rep p. 113. Hereby we declare our selves not to favour the opinion that publikely Some may minister the Sacraments which are not meerely and full Ministers of the Word and Sacraments and so thinke both the Anabaptists among whom their King when it was after Supper tooke bread and reaching it among the Communicants did say Take eate and shew forth the Lords death their Queene also reaching the Cup said Drinke ye and shew forth the Lords death a Sucius com p 237. and the Presbyterians at Geneva where the Elder a Lay-man ministreth the Cup ordinarily at the Communion b Survay of dis c. 15 out of the Geneva lawes Some Ministers and namely the Puritane Doctors may not minister the Sacraments For say the disciplinarians the office of Doctors is onely to teach true doctrine c Lear. disc p. 17. but in our Church of England the Doctor encroacheth upon the office of the Pastor For both indifferently doe teach exhort and minister the Sacraments d Fru● Ser. on Rom. 12. p. 40 None though a lawfull Minister may administer the Sacraments which either is no Preacher e The administration of the Sacraments ought to be committed to none but such as are preachers of the Word Lear. disc p. 60. It is sacriledge to separate the Word viz. Preaching from the Sacraments Ibid. The preaching of the Word is the life of the Sacraments T. C. 1. rep p. 125. or when he ministreth them doth not preach f The unchangeable lawes of God he saith T.C. that none minister the Sacraments which doe not preach T.C. 1. repl p. 104 sect 3. Where there is no Preacher o● the Word there ought to be no minister of the Sacraments Lear disc p. 62. which be the errors of the Disciplinarians or Puritanes Publikely and privately too the Sacraments of Baptisme may be administred by any man yea by women if necessitie doe urge So hold the Papists For saith Iavell g Iavel Psal Ch. par fol. 559. in the time of necessity the minister of Baptisme is every man both male and female A woman be she young or old sacred or wicked Every male that hath his wits and is neither dumbe nor so drunken but that he can utter the words as well Pagan Infidel and heretike the bad as the good the Schismatike as the Catholike may baptize And yet usually in the civill warres both in France and in Netherland the Papists did rebaptize such children as of the Protestant not lay-men but ministers
had afore beene baptized h So in Netherland were children rebaptized when the Duke of Alva there tyrannized Trag. hist of Antwerp The like Rebaptization was used by the Papists at Tholouse Towers and other Cities in France especially an 1561. See the Chr. of France The private Baptisme by private persons was also taught long since by the Marcionites and Pepuzians i D. Aug. ad Q●od vult c 27. Epiphan haeres 42. 4. Proposition There is a lawfull ministery in the Church The proofe from Gods Word GOd for the gathering or erecting to himselfe a Church out of mankinde and for the well governing of the same from time to time hath used yea and also doth and to the end of the world will use the ministery of men lawfully called thereunto by men A truth evident in the holy Scripture Iesus said unto his Apostles Goe and teach all Nations baptizing them c. and loe I am with you alway unto the end of the world a Matt. 28.20 Christ gave some to be Apostles and some Prophets and some Evangelists and some Pastors and teachers for the gathering together of the Saints for the worke of the ministery and for the edification of the body of Christ till we all meete together in the unitie of faith and knowledge of the Sonne of God unto a perfect man b Eph. 4.11 12 13. A truth also approoved by the Church c Conf. Helv. 1. ar 15. 2 c. 18. Boh. c. 8.9.14 Gal. ar 25.29 30 31. Bel. ar 30.31 Aug. ar 7. Sax. ar 11. Wittem ar 20. Sue ar 13.15 Adversaries unto this truth Oppugners of this truth are First the Anabaptisticall Swarmers who both tearme all Ecclesiasticall men The Devils ministers and also as very wicked doe utterly condemne the outward ministery of the Word and Sacraments a Althemar conciliat Loc. pugnan lo. 191. And next the Brownists b S.H. on Psal 122. who divulge that in these dayes No Ministers have the calling sending or authoritie pertaining to a Minister and that It will hardly be found in all the world that any Minister is or shall be lawfully called c Bar. diseo p. 104. such also be the Barrowists which say there is no ministery of the Gospel in all Europe 5. Proposition They are lawfull Ministers which be ordained by men lawfully appointed for the calling and sending forth of Ministers The proofe from Gods Word SAint Paul in the beginning of his Epistle unto the Galatians giveth us to observe the divers sending forth of men into the holy ministery whereof Some are sent immediately from God himself So sent was by God the Father both Iesus Christ a Joh. 10.21 and Iohn Baptist b John 1.6 by God the Sonne in his state mortall the twelve Apostles c Matt. 10.15 in his state immortall and glorious Saint Paul d Acts 9.15 This calling is speciall and extraordinary and the men so called were adorned with the gift of miracles commonly as were Iesus Christ and the Apostles but not alwayes for Iohn Baptist wrought none And they were also enjoyned for the most part as the Apostles to preach throughout the world e Matt. 28.20 howbeit our Saviour was limited f Matt. 15.14 Some againe were sent of men as they be who are sent of men not authorized thereunto by the Word of God and that to the disturbance of the peace of the Church sent in the Apostles time were the false apostles in our dayes be the Anabaptists Family Elders and law despising Brownists And some lastly are by men sent so in the Primitive Church by the Apostles were Pastors and Elders ordained g Acts 14.23 1 Tim. 4.14 who by the same authoritie ordained other Pastors and Teachers h 1 Tim. 22.5 Whence it is that the Church as it hath bin so it shall till the end of the world be provided for They who are thus called have power either to worke miracles as the Apostles had or to preach and minister the Sacraments where they will as the Apostles might but they are tyed every man to his charge which they must faithfully attend upon except urgent occasion doe enforce the contrary The calling of these men is tearmed a generall calling and it is the ordinary and in these dayes the lawfull calling allowed by the Word of God So testifie with us the true Churches else-where in the world l Conf. Helv. 1 ar 17. 2. c. 18. Boh. c. 9. Gal. ar 21. Bol. ar 31. Aug. ar 14. Wit ar 21. Suc. ar 13. The adversaries unto this truth This truth hath many waies bin resisted For there be which thinke how in these daies there is no calling but the extraordinary or immediate calling from God and not by men as the Anabaptists Familists and Brownists of whom afore The Papists albeit they allow the assertion yet take they all Ministers to be Wolves Hirelings Lay-men and Intruders who are not sacrificing Priests anointed by some Antichristian Bishop of the Romish synagogue a Concil Trid. sess 7. can 7. Either all or the most part of the Ministers of England saith Howlet b Howl 7. reas be meere Lay-men and no Priests and consequently have no authoritie in these things It is evident c. because they are not ordained by such a Bishop and Priest as the Catholike Church hath put in authoritie 6. Proposition Before Ministers are to be ordained they are to be chosen and called The proofe from Gods Word THough it be in the power of them which have authoritie in the Church to appoint Ministers for Gods people yet may they admit neither whom they will nor as they will themselves But they are both deliberately to chuse and orderly to call such as they have chosen This made the Apostles and Elders in the Primitive Church straightly to charge that suddenly hands should be laid on no man a 1 Tim. 5.22 To make a speciall choice of twaine whereof one was to be elected into the place of Iudas b Acts 1.23 By election to ordain Elders in every Church and by prayer and fasting to commend them to the Lord c Acts 14.23 and by laying on of hands to consecrate them d 1 Tim 4.14 To describe who were to be chosen and called For they are to be Men not Boyes nor Women e 1 Tim. 2.12 Men of good behaviour nor incontinent nor given to wine nor strikers nor covetous f 1 Tim. 3.2 nor proud g 1 Pet. 5.3 nor froward nor irefull h Tit. 17. nor givers of offence i 2 Cor. 6.3 finally men of speciall gifts apt to teach k 1 Tim 3. ● able to exhort l Titus 1.9 wise to divide the Word of God aright m 2 Tim. 2.15 bold to reprove n 1 Tim. 5.20 Titus 1.9 willing to take paines o Matth. 9.38 2 Tim. 4.2 watchfull to oversee p Acts 20.28 patient
to suffer q Acts 5.41 2 Tim. 4.7 8. and constant to endure all manner of afflictions r 2 Cor. 11.23 And this doe the Churches Protestant by their Confessions approve ſ Conf. Helv. 1. ar 25. 2. c. 18. Bohe. c. 9. Gal. artic 13. Belg. ar 31. Aug. ar 14. Wittem ar 20 Sue ar 13. The errors and adversaries unto this truth In error they remaine who are of opinion that The due election and calling of Ministers according to the Word of God is of no such necessity to the making of Ministers an erroneous fancie of the Anabaptists and Family of Love That women may be Deacons a Sigebert Elders and Bishops the former the Acephalians the latter the Pepuzians did maintaine A speciall care is not to be had both of the life and the learning of men or that wicked men of evill life ignorant men without learning Asses of no gifts loyterers which doe no good or favourers of superstition and idolatrie which doe great hurt are to be admitted into the ministerie They are causes which indeed are none to debarre men from the ecclesiasticall function as if men have beene twice married an error of the Russians b Liberus retum Mosco p. 20. b. be married c Coster Enc. controv c. 15. de coel sacerd have had certaine wives d Test Rhem. an 1 Tim. 5.2 have not received the Sacrament of Confirmation e Conc. Trid. sess 23. c. 4. have beene baptized of Heretikes f 1 quaest 1. vencum these may not bee Priests say the Papists or if either they have not been trained up in the family or be not Elders in the said Family of Love g Such ought not to busie themselves boot the Word H. N. document sent c. 3. sect 1. and 1. Exhort c. 16. sect 16. 24. Article Of speaking in the Congregation in such a tongue as the people understand not It is a thing plainly repugnant to the Word of God and the custome of the Primitive Church to have publike prayer in the Church or to minister the Sacraments in a tongue not understood of the people The Proposition Publike prayer and the Sacraments must bee ministred in a tongue understood of the common people The proofe from Gods Word THis assertion needeth small proofe For who so is perswaded as all true Christians of understanding are that what is done publikely in the Church by a strange language not understood of the people profiteth not the Congregation a 1 Cor. 14.6 9 14. edifieth not the weake b Ib. 17.26 instructeth not the ignorant c Ib. v. 9. inflameth not the zeale d Ib. 7.11 offendeth the hearers abuseth the people f displeaseth God g Mark 15 8. Ib. 11.16 bringeth religion into contempt h 1 Cor. 14.23 easily will thinke that where prayers be said i Conf. Helv. 2 c. 22. Wittem c. 27. Aug. de Missa artic 3. Suev c. 2● or the Sacraments administred in a tongue not understood of the vulgar sort neither is the Word of God regarded nor the custome of the purer and primitive Church observed This article no Church doth doubt of and very many by their extant Confessions doe allow Adversaries unto this truth But there is nothing either so true or apparant which hath by all men at any time bin acknowledged so contrary to this truth In old time the Ossens made their prayers unto God alwaies in a strange language which they learned of Elexus their founder a Epip haer 19. and the Marcosians at the ministration of Baptisme used certaine Hebrew words not to edifie but to terrifie and astonish the minds of the weak and ignorant people b D. Iren. l. 1 c 8. In these daies the Turks performe all their superstitions in the Arabian language thinking it not onely unmeet but also an unlawfull thing for the common sort of persons to understand their Mahometane mysteries c An. Genfraeus a●lae Tu● l 2. The Iacobite Priests doe use a tongue at their Church ministrations and meetings which the vulgar people cannot comprehend d Magd. eccl hist Gen. ● 2 c. 5. The divine Liturgie among the Russians is compounded partly of the Greeke and partly of the Selavonian language e Alex Guag de relig Mose pag. 2 ●0 The Papists will have all divine Service Prayers Sacraments and that thorow out the world ministred onely in the Latine tongue but which few men of the common people doe understand some of them holding that it is not necessary that we understand our prayers f Test Rhem. annot p 463. and that prayers not understood of the people are acceptable to God g Test Rhem. an Mark 21.6 and all of them maintaining that he is accursed whosoever doth affirme how the Masse ought to be celebrate onely in a vulgar tongue h Si quis dixerit lingu● tantū vulgari Missam cele●●an debere anathema ●it Conc. Trid. s●ss 21 cap. 9. 25. Article Of the Sacraments Sacraments 1 ordained of Christ be not only badges or tokens of Christian mens profession but rather they bee certaine 2 sure witnesses effectuall signes of grace and Gods good will towards us by which he doth work invisibly in us 3 and not onely quicken but also strengthen and confirme our faith in him 4 There bee two Sacraments ordained of Christ our Lord in the Gospell that is to say Baptisme and the Supper of the Lord. Those five commonly called Sacraments that is to say 5 Confirmation 6 Penance 7 Orders 8 Matrimony and 9 extreme Vnction are not to be counted for Sacraments of the Gospel being such as have growne partly of the corrupt following of the Apostles partly are states of life allowed in the Scriptures but yet have not like nature of Sacraments with Baptisme and the Lords Supper for that they have not any visible signe or ceremony ordained of God 10 The Sacraments were not ordained of Christ to bee gazed upon or to be carried about but that we should duly use them 11 And in such onely as worthily receive the same they have a wholesome effect or operation but they that receive them unworthily purchase to themselves damnation as Saint Paul saith The Propositions 1. The Sacraments ordained of Christ be badges or tokens of our profession which be Christians 2. The Sacraments be certain sure witnesses and effectuall signes of grace and God his good will toward us 3. By the Sacraments God doth quicken strengthen and confirme our faith in him 4. Christ hath ordained but two Sacraments in his holy Gospell 5. Confirmation is no Sacrament 6. Penance is no Sacrament 7. Orders is no Sacrament 8. Matrimony is no Sacrament 9. Extreme unction is no Sacrament 10. The Sacraments are not to be abused but rightly to be used of us all 11. All which receive the Sacraments receive not therewithall the things signified by the Sacraments 1. Proposition The