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A57283 A vindication of the reformed religion, from the reflections of a romanist written for information of all, who will receive the truth in love / by William Rait ... Rait, William, 1617-1670. 1671 (1671) Wing R146; ESTC R20760 160,075 338

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Religion to reproach and stumbleth many The Iews are hindred to come in by their superstitious worship The Eastern Church which is the most ancient agreeing almost with us in all doctrinals as their Confession of Faith emitted by Cyrill the Patriarch of Constantinople testifieth is much offended at their Church dividing way We are vexed with their plots blots underminding courses They sowe cockle amongst our wheat and tares in our field while men sleepe Of all men on Earth in any visible incorporation pretending to Christianity they have made the greatest breach in the Catholick Church and taken the tittle to themselves contrar to all reason The Paganes perceiving our breaches are hardened in their blind way When their were not so great breaches in the Christian Church Chrysostom on the Galatians bringeth in the Gentile speaking thus Vellent fieri Christianus sed nescio cui adhaream multae sunt inter vos pugnae seditiones tumultus nescio quod dogma eligam quod praeseram singuli enim dicunt ego verum dico i. e. I would be a Christian but know not to whom I shal adhere there be such differences amongst you I know not what to choose what to preferre every one saith he hath the truth on his side For this we are derided by Iews and Gentiles and the Church of Christ is divided This ob●●●tion may be soon solved by these who adhere to the Scrip●●re sensed by sound antiquitie But to them who are without it maketh a great muster and is a mountaine in the way which none have towred up more then the Romanists by craft and might they have stated a faction and fixed a Schism in the universal church Is it not high arrogance that a town in Italy and a pettie Prince there should make a monopolie and obtrude their ware pro arbitratu imperio sub poena anathematis upon all the Christians in the world what have we to do with an Italian Prince and who gave him right over us Albeit these rents made in the church by secular interests be matter of mourning yet there be a providence in it and this is permitted by the wisdom of GOD that these who are approven may be made manifest 1. Cor. 11. 19. Vt sides habendo tentationem habeat probationem as saith Tertull. contra Haeres cap. 1. Divina veritas calida oppositione agitatur ut adversus illos adversarios desendi possit considerari diligentius intelligi clarius praed●cari constantius ab adversariorum motis quaestionibus discendi existat occasio Divine truth is cunningly opposed that it may be defended more vigorously considered more attentively understood more clearly preached more instantly and that from the questions of adversaries we may have the more occasion of learning truth Saith Aug. de civit DEI. lib. 16. cap. 2. It is noted by Historians that in the tenth Centurie called the unhappie Age there were no Heresies started not opposed they were then asleep and cared neither for truth nor errour Setiousness about these matters was at that time suspended Yet it was infelix seculum it had been better for some that the tares had appeared and then trysted with speedie opposition Albeit evil be not good yet sometimes bonum est malum esse as Aug telleth us in his Enchiridion it is good that evil be qui bonus est non sineret malū esse nisi omnipotens etiam de malo faceret bene He would not suffer evil to be if he being Omnipotent could not bring good out of it VVe are not therefore to cast away our confidence nor become despondent albeit Poperie encreaseth Papists way hold The only wise Lord knoweth why it is so how to order this broken condition for good VVhen they like the old Pagans at Rome who fathered Portenta Gnosticorum aliorum Haereticorum the absurdities of Gnostickes and other Hereticks upon the orthodoxe Christians as Church Historie telleth us blot our doctrine worship with all the reproaches which malice can devise who can tel but the holie providence of GOD may bring us out amongst the pots with our feathers like yellow gold And he who worketh manie of his workes by mean instruments may put such to it that his strength may be perfected in weakness I have contrar to my designe engaged into this debate and do acknowledge that I am a weak sinful man my inclination is averse from janglings and I have had more satisfaction in going about the work of my Calling in practicals of Religion nor ever I had in penning or publishing this debate But what could I do Adversaries invaded the flock pursued me within the ports when my back was at the wall and I had no purpose for warre stealed the sheep out of my bosome and averred considentlie that they were sed with rot-grasse in stead of wholsome food Should I not in this exigence defend with such weapons as the Lord would afford It may he said that the adversarie is stronge at home and abroad but the Lord on high is more mighty then the noise of many waters So farre as I am concerned I rather would choose to fall in the field nor turne my back or by sinful silence suffer the truth to be over-laid and stifled To some this may seem a light matter and needless worke yet if all be well understood it will not be found such The found of a testimonie for the truth in the case of subversion is an ominous du●ie if it were for no other end but this to leave a vvitness not to be involved in the shout Eveti● Minister of the Gospel is bound within his station to promove Gospel intorests to which Popery is highlie prejudicial to convince convert confute gain-sayers to confirme the weak and undeceive the simple I am much mistaken if this be superflous worke seeing it is one of the ends of our Calling It is to be r●●●sited indeed that by debates for our just possession past prescriptiō we should be diverted from more comfortable and edifying worke seeing ordinarlie this way is so unsuccesful that few adversaries once engageing use to yeeld and will rather act their partes to defend one errour with another ne videantur ●rrasse nor with divine Aug make a retractation VVhich evidenceth much pride and unmortified self-love but very smal respect to the Gospel Yet cura officii i● ours and our● even●us belongeth to the Lord who will make a good account of all his affaires cause the f●ot of adversaries slidalin due 〈◊〉 Now Sir seeing I resolved upon these considerations to publish this Vindication following the custō I have sheltered i● under the Patro●iny of your Name so much valued for Religiō Vertue When Hierō wri●teth to Dardanus he calleth him Christianorum nobilissime nobilium Christianissime I will not make use of that compellation to you I know ye love not so well words to proclaim you good as those which may make you better It may be said
use of that element ordained by Christ our Lord and joyned with a true faith because the defect of faith doth prejudice the integritie of the Sacrament 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. We believe that Baptism is a Sacrament instituted by the Lord which unless a man hath received he hath not cōmunion with Christ from whose death buriall and glorious Resurrection the whole vertue and efficacy of Baptism doth proceed Therefore in the same forme wherein our LORD hath cōmanded in the Gospel we are certain that to those who be Baptized both Original and Actual sins are pardoned so that whosoever have been washed In the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost are regenerate cleansed justified But concerning the repetitiō of it we have no cōmand to be Re-baptised therfore we must abstaine from this incōvenience 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. We beleeve that the other Sacrament was ordained of the Lord which we call the Eucharist For in the night wherein he was betrayed taking b●ead and blessing it he said to his Apostles Take ye ●at this is my Body and when he had taken the Cup he gave thanks and said Drinke ye all of this this is my Blood which was shed for many do this in rem●mb●ance of me And Paul addeth for as often as ye shall eat of this Bread and drinke of this Cup ye do shew the Lords death this is the pure and lawful institution of this wonderful Sacrament in administration whereof we confess and profess a true and real presence of Christ our Lord but yet such ●● one as Faith offereth ●o us not such as devised Transubstantiation teacheth For we belive the faithful do eat the Body of Christ in the supper of the Lord not by breaking it with the teeth of the Body but by perceiving it with the sense feeling of the Soul sith the Body of Christ is not that which is visible in the Sacrament but that which Faith spiritually apprehendeth and offereth to us from whence it is true that if we believe we do eat and partake if we do not believe we are destitute of all the fruit of it We believe consequently that to drink the Cup in the Sacrament is to be partaker of the true Blood of our Lord Iesus Christ in the same manner as we affirmed of the Body for as the Authour of it commanded concerning his Body so he did concerning his Blood which commandment ought neither to be dismembred nor maymed according to the fancy of mans arbitrement yea rather the institution ought to be kept as it was delivered to us When therefore we have been partakers of the Body and Blood of Christ worthily and have communicated intirely we acknowledge our selves to be reconciled united to our head of the same Body with certaine hope to be coheires in the Kingdome to come 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. We believe that the Souls of the dead are either in blessedness or in damnation according as every one hath done for as soon as they remove out of the Body they passe either to Christ or into hell for as a man is found at his death so he is judged and after this life there i● neither power nor opportunity to repent In this life there is a time of Grace they therefore who be justified here shal suffer no punishment hereafter but they who being not justified do dye are appointed for everlasting punishments By which it is evident that the fiction of Pargatory is not to be admitted but in the truth it is determined that every one ought to repent in this life and to obtaine remission of his sins by our Lord Iesus Christ if he will be saved And let this be the end 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. This compendious and brief Confession of us we conjectur will be a contradiction to them who are pleased to slander maliciously accuse us and unjustly persecute us But we trust in our Lord Jesus Christ and hope that he will not relinquish the cause of his faithful ones nor let the rod of wickednessly upon the lot of the righteous Da●id in Constantinople in the Moneth of March 1629. CYRILL Patriarch of Constantinople Courteous Reader thy favour is desired in some escapes of the Press these which are but literal not altering the sense pardon and pass by these which are more gross amend as followeth In Epist Ded. Page 5. Line 10. Read callida l ●0 for way hold Read waxe bold In the Epistle to the Reader p. 8. l. 2 for Church r. Christ p. 16. l. ult for the r. the●e p. 18. l. 12. for calumnies r. calamities page 19. line 27. for perswaded read disswaded page 21. line 17. for δ● r. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 26. l. 5. for 17 r. 14. In the Debate p 8. l. 13. for although all r. Apocryphal p 19. l antep del lay p. 33 l. ult r. proceed p. 34. l. 17 for Paliner r. Parmen p 37. l. 21 for a r. the. p. 46 l. antep r. Praxeam p. 48 l. 6. r. conjuncta p. 69. l. 25. for tradition r. citation p. 88. l. 23. r. lament p. 103. l 20. del Thirdly p. 107. l. ● r mortalitate p 121. l. 13. r. were made p. 129. l. 18. r. breasts p. 130. l. 19. for of r. in p. 138 l. 19. r. statue p. 160. l. 9. for according to r. accordingly p 161 l. penul● r. non continentur p. 175. from l. 10. to 17. read all that period in p. 177. l. 1. for that r. not p. 234. l. 20 adde or as some 23. p. 268. l 23. r. let them testifie p. 270 l. 25. r. comminations p. 284. l. 17. r in company p. 284. l 5. r. none can In some copies though but in few there will be found these errours in Ep. Ded. p. 2 Peope for Pope p. 3. l. 9. Sacraments for Sacrament l. 20. modestly and humbly for modestie humilitie p. 4. l. 17. underminding for undermining l. 18. teares for tares in pres of the Greek Confession twise δ for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 If any testimonies be repeated that is to be imputed to the Impunger not to the Defender A DIALOGUE Betwixt a Papist and a reformed PROFESSOUR who protesteth against the Errours of Popery written for information of the Simple who love the truth that they be not ensnared by the temptations of the time PAPIST QUESTION I SEEing this Age is so controversall how shall it be discerned who hath the Truth PROTE ¦ STANT Answer A By the Scriptures The written word of God is the only infallible determiner of faith and manners It hath livine Autho●ity heavenly Majesty to a right discerner it maketh spirituall impress●ons on the so●l to it as chief judge on Earth all ●●●eals should be made Is 8. 20. To the ●●w and the Testimony Papists Reply To this Answere a Papist replyeth that it is not satisfying and rendereth five reasons why the Scipture cannot be
alleadge for this that the books of Scripture like the Sun shew themselves to be such to him who hath the spirit But I would ask at such why the Rev. St. James Epistle the second of St. Peter and two of St. John did not shew themselves to be Scripture to Luther that spiritual man and the Protestants very first Apostle in the work of reformation in the end you say Let any judge whither it be safest that the revealed will of God be your rule and determiner or the dictats of self contradicting creatures Where you seem to rubbe on Catholicks But Sir this toucheth not them at all for they profess not to believe self-contradicting creatures but the unanimous consent of Councils and fathers or the Catholick Church known to be the only Church established by Christ and his Apostles and by the continued succession of Popes Bishops and Pastors the unity universality and gifts of miracles in all ages c. Which Christ hath called the ground and pillar of truth 1. Tim. 3. 15. and against which he assureth us the gates of hell shal not prevail Math. 16. 18. and which he hath commanded us to hear otherwise to be holden as heathens and publicans Math. 18. 17. so you see that the written word maketh the Church our judge which we should obey and that ye who make so much of the written word do not believe it when ye do not obey her And here I remarke that Protestant Ministers and preachers deceive the people in that they ground their faith on the written word only and Roman Catholicks say they on humane tradition and their Churches authority which being composed of men is subject to errour Whereas the contrar is true for Roman Catholicks believe nothing which the written word believing both the tradition of the Church and Apostles doth not expresly warrand As for the Church what is more expresly said then what I have cited both to prove that we are bound to hear her Mat. 18. 18. and hold her authority infallible Math. 16. 18 and the house of God which is the pillar and ground of truth 1. Tim. 3. 15. Neither doth it avail you to say this is not said of the Roman Church which is not the universal Church but a particular one a strumpet c. For we speak not of any particular Church when we say that the Church is infallible nor when we say the Roman the Catholick do we understand the particular Church at Rome But that Church which professeth constantly the Romans faith spread in saint Pauls time through all the world As we call yet the Roman Empire that which hath its seat in Vien of Austria Yea Protestants calling their own the reformed Church cannot say but we have one Church on earth which Christ commanded us to hear constantly And if the reformed Church be the true Church then she must have taken the place from that church which was deformed and had fallen into an errour and so deserved no more to be called the pillar and ground of truth or to be heard Moreover the very pillars of the Protestant Religion grant all the world to be in an errour before themselves and so against the express written Word must deny the infallibility of any Church whatever For Calv. Instit lib. 4. cap. 18. saith they made all the Kings and People of the earth drunk from the first to the last and Hospinian epist 41. saith Luthers separation was from all the world White in his defence chap. 37. saith Popery was a leprosie breeding so universally in the church that there was no visible company of men free from it Jewel in his Sermon on Luke 11. The whole world Princes and people were overwhelmed by ignorance and bound by oath to the Pope which if it be true that the Church in former ages did erre the reformed Church may erre that themselves do not deny Thence it followeth clearly that the Protestant Church is not the house of GOD called the pillar and ground of truth that she is not Christs Church against which the gates of hell shal not prevail that none are bound to hear her in matters of faith being subject to errour And so Protestants may well desire men to read the Scripture and believe what they found there but not urge any man to follow their doctrine but in so far as they find it conforme to Scripture which all Roman Catholicks protest they do not As for traditions are we not commanded to hold them in the clear written Word 2. Thess 2. 15. Hold the traditions which ye have learned whither by word or our epistle Protestants read documents but documents by word and traditions are the same thing on which place Chrysost saith It is evident that the Apostle did not deliver all things by writ but many things by word which are worthy of credit as wel as the other That is Christs word as well as his writ therefore we call them divine and Apostolical traditions Aug. lib. 5. de Trinit cap. 23. speaking of rebaptization The Apostle saith he commanded nothing of it but that custom● which is believed to proceed from the Apostle is opposed against Cyprian in it as many things are which the whole Church holdeth and therefore are believed to be commanded by the Apostles though not written A●d in the first age saint Dennis chap. 1. speaking of the Ecclesiastick hierarchy saith These our chief captains of Priestly function did deliver to us the chiefest and supersubstantial points partly in written partly in unwritten institutions Epiph. Haeres 61. is of the same minde we must hold traditions saith he for the Scripture h●th not all things and Tertullian de praescrip grounds his faith on the authority of the Church and what tradition I believe saith he I received from the present Church the present Church from the primitive that from the Apostles the Apostles from Christ Here I hope you see you must either admit traditions as necessar in themselves and infallible in their authority or else disclaim both Scripture and Fathers All that Protestants can say either against the authority of the Church in general Councils or Apostolick traditions delivered by her is that all her decisions and traditions flow from men and so are not infallible But I answer neither were the Prophets Apostles Evangelists who penned the Scripture but men yet I hope their writtings are not fallible or subject to errour Because they were inspired directly and assisted by the Spirit of God The Fathers of the Church have to this day that promise verified to them Math. 28. 20. which was made as well to their successours as to themselves As for that some Protestante speak of an invisible Church composed of the Elect it is but a shift to delude the ignorant for as it is a Maxime of law Idem est non esse non apparere i. e. it is the same not to be and not to appear to be in the matter of any
assert with the Scripture that Marriage is honourable amongst all therefore they should not forbid it Their answer is that all should not be taken here absolutely for then a brother might marry his sister but only of persons not prohibited and their votaries are such Is not this a fig-leaf covering Incest is forbidden by the law of GOD. But where are Church men forbidden by GOD to marry it is honourable among them saith the written word who can bind men to the contrar of that which the Lord hath permitted and commanded The evasion about the Sacrament of the Supper is of the same kind when it is objected that Christ said expresly of the Cup drink ye all of it By all say they is meaned all Priests but not all Christians Is this to be endured with patience to see men tear so the sense of Scripture with sophisms If all relate to them as Ministers of the Gospel then they should have the bread only and all privat Christians should be barred for he who said drink ye all of it said likewise to the same all take eat Fourthly When they are challenged of Superstition and Idolarrie by breach of the second Command here there is a distinction not lacking betwixt the worship called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 reserved for GOD and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which they avowedly say should be given to images Saints c. And this they father on Augustin But these two words are promiscuously taken in Scripture and both of them given to GOD as shal be proved in its proper place Papists give 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to Images Reliques and Cross of Christ Thus they confound themselves When Iohn the divine would have worshipped the Angel doth he not forbid him Rev 22. 9. and say worship GOD Belike he knew not this distinction Is it not called will worship Col 2. 23. Then it is not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Neither doth Augustin make use of that distinction in the Popish sense he was farre from thinking that Religious worship should be tendered to Saint or Angel for he saith lib. de vera Relig. cap. ult Honorandi sunt propter imitationem non adorandi propter Religionem And epist 44. se●as inquit a Christianis ●ullum coli mortuorum He biddeth us praise the Martyres honour their memories follow their foot-steps sed DEVM Martyrum colite worship the GOD of Martyrs onlie This distinction then is groundless Is it not lamentable that men professing Christianitie should so hazard upon Idolatrie Superstition and will worship with a deceitful distinction which can neither satisfie reason nor conscience And dare any tender Christian think that such jugling work will be his peace in the day of distress and death What is this but a lie in the right hand Therefore let all who love and fear the Lord bewarre of that worship which standeth on such cogling distinctions Fifthly Their great refuge when they cannot mantain these absurdities is that we calumniat them mistate questions And if neither of these can serve then they alleadge that these are the opinions of some privat Doctors and not the judgement of their Church But in this vindication let all be assured that to my best uptaking nothing is fathered on this Adversary but what he saith directly or cōsequentially nothing brought against him but that which is either literally or interpretatively in the written word of GOD or human Authours Albeit it he notoriously known that Papists uphold their tottering Babel by lies murthers treasons deluding wonders by corrupting mutilating foisting embezeling diverse testimonies divine and huma●● as shal be made out hereafter yet we have not so learned Christ The truths of Christs Gospel need not such proppes and we are not allowed to lie for GOD. It is a meer evasion to cast over what they cannot make good on their privat Doctours For the decrees of the council of Trent to which now they profess adherence are purposly contrived in many particulars like the Delphian oracles and when they lurke under ambiguities what way shall they be found out but by their Doctours who are the expositors of their tenets Beside there be few or none of them cited whose books are not approven by Censurers appointed for that effect the tenour of whose testimonie is that such books contain nothing contrar to the Catholick faith of the Church of Rome Is not this equivalent to a Council statute Do they not impu●●●●ur Doctours Calvine Luther c notwithstanding of 〈…〉 Confessions of faith whereof they cannot be ignorant They deal not only so with their own writters but also with the Fathers as some hard Masters use their servants if they ●lease their humours they will keep them if not they will dismisse them it may be with a stain betwixt termes Yea they deal worse with such testimonies as rellish nor their taste for they dispatch and gelde them also Their Monastries have not occasioned the murther of more infants nor their Golders by the index expurgatorius have the death of true testimonies which now being overlaid cannot see the light Shal not the GOD of truth make inquisition for these crimes in due time Surely he will arise and have mercy on Zion for some are yet living who take pleasure in her stones and favour the dust thereof Thirdly The third Engyne which th●se Engyneers use is the colour of antiquitie and pretence to closs walking and austerities The Church of Rome to which the Apostle Paul did write is indeed ancient whose faith was spoken of through all the world But Poperie as it is now dogmatised is a late invention plastered with antiquitie like the Gibeonites bread And so far from rendring men closs walkers that it is highlie prejudicial to Gospel interests For ex natura operis it turneth men loose and unfaithful to souls yea its pompous secular way is verie unsuitable to the simplicitie and self-denyal required in the Gospel this is soon proved The great pillar of the Romish Religion is the Popes pompous supremacie and infallibilitie In this saith Bell. prefat de Pontifice the summe of their Religion consisteth Consider Reader which of the Apostles did so empyre it Not Peter that he forbiddeth and calleth himself a fellow Elder 1. Peter 5. 1. Not any Church man for manie Centuries thereafter For Gregory who was Bishop of Rome anno 600. curseth the name of universal Bishop which Iohn Bishop of Constantinople usurped and saith epist lib. 4 Rex superbiae prope est he meaneth Anti. Christ Et sacerdotum ei praeparatur exercitus in this he prophecied truelie Estius in lib. 4. sent dist 47. being puzled with this testimonie saith that by universal Bishop Gregory meaned onlie sole Bishop who excluded others This is a meer forgerie for there were manie Bishops at that time in the Greek Church beside Iohn of Constantinople so he was not solus Episcopus But giving not granting this to be the sense of the
Christ following diligently the means appointed thereto by GOD himself to wit reading hearing the Word preached receiving the holy Sacrament of the Supper as GOD shal give opportunitie meditation prayer spiritual conference Hosea 6. 3. 2. Peter 3. 17. Beware of looseness and all prophanness in conversation for it is righteousness with GOD to punish practical Atheists by giving them over to speculative Atheisme whereby they are hardened in their wicked courses And silly women led away with diverse lustes are easie led captive and detained in errour by seducers whose doctrine hath complyance with their loose way of living 2. Tim. 3. 6. Secondly Bewarre of prejudice against reformed Ministers or Prosessours where this entereth it maketh the evil eye and if the eye be evil the whole body is dark Matth. 6. 23. Some alleadge that the pupil of a Witch eye is inverted by malice Certainly the understanding of any man is in hazard to be thus perverted That which made Porphyre Iulian and other Apostats fall away from the truth was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 prejudice and passion It is reported of an Indian that being wronged by the Spainard when some were instructing him about Christianity and the way to Heaven he refused to be a Christian because he heard that the King of Spain was walking in that path in this he was Pagan like Let Christians be ashamed to speak or do so If men in this controversal age have done or suffered injuries for the Lords sake let none of these things make you wronge the truth of GOD your own consciences or the Mother Church which did bear or foster you Alace what evil hath the Gospel of Christ done to you Wherein hath it weatied you whose Oxe or Ass hath it taken testifie against it if ye dare Why then will ye wronge the Master for the Servants sake and hate the truth because ye love not some who profess to adbere to it Is it imaginable that such back-sliding courses will afford you comfort in the end of the day when the silver corde is loosed and the pitcher broken at the well Were it a good defence for treason to say to a King some fellow subjects have wronged me How easily might he return this shal ye therefore wrong my law It may be your wronge is supposed not real and admit it be so indeed two blacks makes not one white ye should remember the oath of alleag●●nce So will the King of Kings challenge Apostats and say why departed ye from the truth Was this the way to right your wronges whereunto was ye baptized Why gadde ye abroad to change your way This is baseness belovv a Christian or any man of honour Thirdly Let all lovers of truth love one another dearly and entertaine the unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace This is a sence against foes forbear and forgive one another let the stronge bear with the weak and if in all things ye cannot be like minded which is rather to be w●shed nor expected here yet be kindly aff●ctioned And whereunto ye have attained walk by the same rule and if in any thing ye be otherwise minded the Lord will reveal that in due time and teach you that which ye see not When breaches are amongst sincere Christians who fear the Lord and his goodness the adversarie who waiteth for their halting casteth oyle on the flame and with jeering warmeth his hands at the fire All the wilde beasts of the wilderness enter in at those breaches and are readie to take away the wine-press and devour with open mouth the tender Vines Josephus de Bello Judaico telleth us that the Romans of old overcame Jerusalem easily because the chief Captaines within the walls fought eagerly amongst themseves and were so divided by the wrath of GOD that their animositie was greater against other nor the common adversarie this prepared the way for their sudden overthrow And when the Roman Eagles did slee to BRITTAIN the Historian Tacitus sheweth how they in this Isle were vanquished dum singuli pugnant universi vincuntur Little was left undone to the adversaries hand So the new Romanists take the same advantage against our Jerusalem therfore we should be the more diligent to endeavour by all Christian wayes that peace may be within her wals and prosperity within her palaces It would be well adverted that the enemie is at the gates therefore should be watchfully eyed in all our deportment Every time hath its own tryal and temptation the dispensation of this sinful time calleth for much consideration and they who understand the language of it may excel amongst their brethren and serve the generation best in the fear of the Lord. The Christians in Persia saith Theod lib. 5. h●st cap. 38. understood not the times wherein they lived therefore became a prey to their adversaries let not the enemie ger advantage least it be told in Gath and Askelon It was said of old amongst Pagans behold the Christians how they love one another and their adversaries were forced to commend them for sweet harm less carriage This is an ornament to profession and a guarde to the truths of the Gospel Therefore as ye tender the honour of the Lord and preservation of his truth live in love love the truth and peace follow peace and holiness this will at least damp adversaries Fourthly Labour to know experimentally the power of Christian Religion nothing will more solidly refute Poperie to you nor the kingdom of grace in power Poperie is a humane device full of pompous shadows which hath no concord with the light and life of the Gospel For the more shadow the less light The Northern-people from whom the Sun is remore are circled with shadows but these who have the Sun perpendicularly over them and are under it at the Noone-tyde have little or no shadow So if ye would decline the Popish groves live near the Sun of righteousness The Popish trash cannot please a reformed Christian Holy Augustin ep 119. complaineth that in his time the Church was pressed contrar to the merciful institution of Christ with such a servile burthen of ceremonies that the state of the Jews under the Law was more tolerable nor the condition of Christians seeing they were subject to the ordinances of GOD and not to humane presumptions If he had now lived and seen their gadie way what would he have said Surely this that the Romish Church is full of shadows therfore far from the Sun The best refutation of some points of Arminianisme is the power and efficacie of Gospel grace on the heart Will ever that man believe Free-will in its extent as it is taught by them to whom the Lord hath spoken with an high hand and determined for his dutie No verily Or will any of the Circumcision who worship GOD in spirit rejoyce in Christ Jesus and put no confidence in the flesh Be delighted with a burdensom bounde● of humane inventions or place worship in these It
to baptize Canon 100. ye allow it The Sacrament was administred in the primitive Church to all present and they who did not partake were appointed to remove Ite missa est exite foras qui non vultis accipere Sacramentum i. e. Go it is closed go forth ye that will not receive the Sacrament Now the words are muttered and administred before all They took with their hand and the bread was broken of old Now it is not for ye make whole wasers and put them into their mouth For fourthteen hundred years the Church appointed the Sacrament to be administred by bread and wine to the people all Christians of whatever judgement except Papists do so communicat as yet Petau de poenit pub lib. 2. sheweth that it cannot be denyed nisi ab homine insigniter supra omnem modum vel impudenti vel imperito i. e. Except by a man remarkably and above all measure either impudent or unskilful that this was the primitive practise yet the Council of Constance hoc non obstante and the Council of Trent decree the contrar The primitive Church heard nothing of the Popes universal supremacie or infallibility which now by you i● made Summa rei See Cyprian ep 55. ●● Cornelius Bishop of Rome and how he stileth him f●ater c. and he saith that they were formerly chosen to officiat Non sine consensu plebis not without the Popes consent ep 68. Ipsa plebs habet potestatem c. Is not this far from your imperious pompous way of Monarchy how then can you so boldly averre that ye have the unanimous consent of Councills and fathers for you when indeed ye do not regard them so much as we Hear your own Cornelius Mus † See D●lleus ubi supra ep Bi●ont in ep ad Rom. cap 14. Ego ut ingenue f●te●r plus uni summo pontisici crederem in his quae fidei misteria tangunt quam m●lle Hieronymis Augustinis Gregoriis Credo enim scio quod summus Pontifex in his quae fidei sunt errare non potest quia auctoritas determinandi quae ad fidem spectant in Pontisice residet i. e. That I may ingenuously confesse I would give more credit to one Pope in t●e things which belong to the misteries of truth then to a thousand such as Augustin Jerom or Gregory For I know certainly that the Pope cannot erre in these things that belong to faith because the authority of determining matters of saith resideth in the Pope yet ignorant people are made to believe that Papists have the consent and practise of the primitive Church along with them and Melchior Canus l●c Theol. lib. 7. cap. 3. num 10. Sequi majores nostros per omnia in illorum vestigiis pedes nostros figere ut pueri faciunt per lusum nihil aliud est quam ingenia nostra d●mnare judicio nos privare nostro facultate inquirendae veritatis i. e. to follow our ancestors in all things and to ●race their footsteps and fixe in them as children use to do in play is no other thing but to condemn our own wit and to deprive our selves of our own judgement and faculty of searching the truth Salmeron in cap. 5. epist ad Rom. disp 5. asserteth quo juniores eo perspicaciores sunt doctores and citeth Exod. 23. follow not the multitude viz. of ancients This is sufficient to prove that as the Papists are jealous of Scripture so are they of the Primitive Church her consent But it is alleadged that ye have the word of God for your warrand Matth. 16. 18. Matth. 18. 18. 1. Tim. 3. 15. To this I answere that the first Text is meaned of the collective body of the Church which fall not away this is clear from the context for it is the Church builded on that confession mentioned by the Apostles and an house so builded cannot fall because it is builded on a rock Matth. 7. 25. Yet it will not follow that there be no drops in it for particular beleevers cannot totally and finally fall away but that they are infallible who can say see Iohn 10. 28. and comyare it with 1. Cor. 13. 9. Iames 3. 2. beside your own writters interpret it so see Melchior Canus lib. 5. de loc Theol. cap. 5. and Panormitan on the place The second Text Mat. 18. is to be understood of a particular Church which you grant is not infallible so Chrysostom interpreteth the place and it is further clear from the Connexion for it is the Church to which appeals should be made in prima instantia this undoubtedly is a particular Church But admitting that it is meaned of the universal church your Pope nor your Church is not it The third Text 1. Tim. 3. 15. holdeth forth no more then what is granted in the answer to the fourth question or if you please to take learned Cameron his exposition who knitteth these words with the 16. verse you may do well But what ever be the priviledges of the true Gospel Church which is the Bride of Jesus Christ Rome hath forefaulted all these and is but a leprous part of the universal Church you grant that the church of Rome is but a particular church Why plead you then for the whole priviledges of the universal Church Is not this absurd arrogance Nor doth Calvin Hospinian Luther or White speak absolutly as ye alleadge but assert that the generality for a time was leavened by Popery which is truth But what then followeth That the mysterie of iniquity did arise by degrees and over-runne all for the most we grant so did the Arrian heresie therefore was not Athauasius and such as adbered to the truth right in their way The whole world in the Apostles time did ly in wickedness 1. Iohn 5. 19. Therefore were they not Sons of truth who endeavoured a Gospel reformation Your last hold is tradition and you say we are commanded to hold them 2. Thes 2. 15. for this you cite Aug. Cyprian St. Dennis Epiphanius To this I answer we are not against Apostolick traditions nor Church history in matters of fact We make use of traditions there mentioned But for your Legends we deny that they are such and disclaim them Have you Sir learned Logick Why do you argument so a genere ad speciem affirmative Is this a good argument Est annual ergo est homo he is a living creature therefore he is a man Can this be better there were traditions delivered to the Church of Thessalonica ergo yours are these Credat Judaeus Appella Secondly If there were unwritten traditions why do you dare to writ these things which the Apostles would not writ Thirdly Will that argue the Scripture of imperfection You may as well argue the Minister writteth a book the summe of which he hath preached to people Ergo his book is imperfect You have then to prove for your end that these traditions mentioned 2. Thess 2. 15. were
to the Sabbath of the Lord. Secondly Our dayes of humiliation and thanksgiving are not nimious for number nor one rous to the people but yours are such that many of your own complaine on them as Polydore Wirgil in proaemio and o●hers And if Aug. complained so of these in his own time what would he say ●ow if he were living Will ye hear what he saith Epist 119. Omnia talia quae sanctarum Scripturarum autho●itatibus continentur nec in Conciliis Episcoporum statuta inveniuntur nec consuetudine universae Ecclesiae roborata sunt ita ut vix aut omnino nunquam inven●ri possunt causae quas in eis instituendis homines sequuti sunt sine ulla dubitatione resecanda existimo Then he saith all such things which stumble the weake and are detrimental not founded on Scripture are to be cut off And again albeit it cannot be found out Quomodo contra fidem sint Yet ipsam Religionem premunt seruilibus oneribus ita ut tolerabilior sit conditio Judaeorum because non humanis praesumptionibus ita subjiciuntur Is he not clearly then against your way Thirdly In observing the Sabbath we regard at that time the work for the day but in the dayes of fast and thanksgiving we regarde the day occasionally for the worke Fourthly We have in observing these no cognation with Jewish or Pagane times whereof ye may be impeached and cannot plead not guilty Ninthly Ye condemn marriage as carnall § 9. Inst to some contrare to the Apostle Heb. 13. 4. and make it a Sacrament to others So ye confound your self making it both Sacramentall and Sacrilegious to the elect of God whereas Enoch walked with God and begat sons and daughters Gen. 5. 22. You reply to this that we Ministers are addicted Papists Reply to marriage and therefore should not offend that it is called a Sacrament Thou that it is so called Eph. 5. and by the Greek Fathers who understood their own language And that ye condemn it not as sacrilegious in any but such as take on the vowes of chastitie povertie c. And that it is malice in Ministers to call Vertues Vices Here you contradict your self for in answer to the sixt Question you denyed that Prote ∣ stants Duply 1 the word Sacrament was at all in scripture which is true and yet now you alleadge that it is to be found in the 5. Eph. and marriage is so called Beside your contradiction you speak ignorantly by telling th●t the Greek Fathers who understood their own language called marriage a sacrament whereas the word is Latine and not Greek If that place of scripture be read by any it will so●n appear that marriage betwixt man and woman is no● called a myst●rie but that which is between Christ and his Chur●h vers 32. For the marriage of Ministers I se● not why it should be blamed seeing it is holy in all Heb. 13. 4. Nor how any should take on the vow of chastitie who have not the gift from God The Apostle sayeth it is good in time of persecution for the present distress for a man not to be married 1. Cor. 7. It is Bonum utile but it is better to marrie then to burne A chaste life is commendable in any Christian and a Caelchs state may free him of many cares and snares but to tye all Clergie men to it whither they have the gift from GOD or not is a sin And your encroarchment on the divine ordinance and appointment of GOD hath filled your Church with whordoms and adulteries your Cloysters and Nunries with abominable uncleanness and murders of children It is too well known how the vow of chastity is kept by your Church-●en And if any doubt of it let them read the late relation of the Ambassadour of Venice concerning the present state of the Church at Rome and he will tell you that some of the most eminent Cardinals there will frequently be under Lues Venere● Is it not better to marry then to sin thus I appeal to your own conscience Tenthly Ye teach for doctrine the Commandements of men contrar to scripture § 10. Inst for it is reproved Matth. 15. 9. And do dye your worship wholly with there colored antick gestures so that in your worship ye are more like to Monkies then reason●ble men ●nd g●ddi● stage-players then solid Christian● who worship God in spirit and in truth Reply This ci●ation is often answered It Papists Reply is not known of what gestures you speak as if ●uer you did see the gestures of worship of the Catholick Church But one thing is sure that it is a very childish calumny Our gestures being so grave that they move men to dec●●●ion and do accompany GODS w●rship with decency Majestie better then your gaping lik● distracted men your affected sighs and howlings You cite again two words of Scripture that we should worship in spirit 〈◊〉 in truth to condemn reverend and grave gestu●es of the body in time of worship as if men were pure spirits I answer that albeit I have of seen your Prote ∣ stants Duply worship yet I have heard the forme of it from sundry discerning ●en who had seen it and told me how Apishand H●●●●onick it is And it is strange how an● ca● deny it Seeing the reacting of the Earth-quake of the ren●ing of the vale of the Temple of the darkness about the time of the P●d●on your crossings your kissings your kissings your whisperings washings anointings spi●●ings breathings fal●ings c. What are they but many idle observations Yo●● i●cense on your Altars your candles wherewith ye burne day-light do they not savo●● of Judaism and Paganism And are far more like stage work then sincere worship And i● these be not the commandements of men why produce ye not Scripture for your warrand We are not against reasonable service both with the spirit and body but think that bodily exercise alone profiteth little and the marrow of the work is to worship GOD in Spirit Eleventhly Ye think it lawful to equivocat in some cases to dispence with lawful § 11. Inst. Oaths But Scripture sayes It is a snare after vowes to make enquiry Pro. 20. 25. And that the man shal only inhabit the holy mountain who speaketh the truth in his heart Ps 15. Thus ye Popelings are scarce for moral fellowship seeing no words can tye you Doleful experience proveth this in that your Council of Constance murdered John Huss and Hierom of Prague contrar to the solemn warrand for security of their lives And then said by way of poor defence that faith was not to be keeped to Hereticks To this it is replyed thus In your eleventh Section you are not ashamed to set down in Papists Reply writ that we think it lawful to l●e which no Catholick did ever writ or say But ye Protestants brought in your Religion by lies as if the whole Church before them had erred in matters of faith and making poor
ignorants believe that Catholicks do adore stocks or stones give GODS worship to Saints or Angels think to be saved by their own works without the merits of Christ that there be nothing required for remission of sins but tel them to a Priest that the Pope giveth pardon for by gone sins and sins to come all which are open sies So they continue it by lies and gross calumniesꝭ which maketh the people though wearied of many alterations and innovations in their Religion yet profess it outwardly as if there were none better As for equivocating I grant it is a probable sentence although no article of our Creed that men may equivocat in some cases but not in answer to any just interrogative before a lawful judge And as for that you say in some cases we dispence with lawful oaths it is true for there be many oaths with which we not only dispeace but put a tie on men not to keep them c. But when oaths are lawfullie made and continue lawful in all circumstances both for GODS glorie and the greater spiritual good of the people we dispence with none As Vowes of chastity obedience to the superiour and Pastours of the Church But I hope you will hardly persuade any that Popelings as you call them not regarding Kings and Queens of that profession more then if they were bonnet-makers in Dundee are searce for moral fellowship as if no word nor oaths could tie them There being many old men yet living who remember some to have seen and some to have heard that in the time the Catholick Religion did flourish in this Kingdom mens words were better then their bands now And that since the reformation which is but a hundred and three years ago There hath been more rebellion falshood and perjurie then in 300. years before Neither had John Huss nor Hierom of Prague been in any danger in the Council of Constance if they had keepe the conditions upon which securitie was promised to them And so faith is onlie not to be keeped to Hereticks when they keep not the conditions upon which it is promised which is common to them with all others and the Council of Trent hath declared Sess 15 that to vi●lat the least part of publick faith given to Hereticks is a thing punishable both by the law of GOD and man There be here many words and little Prote ∣ stants Duply more You grant that in some cases equivocation is taught as a probable durie but deny that it is lawful to lie Is not equivocation lying Are they not both contrar to speaking the t●uth in the heart A liar should have a good memorie Otherwise I see he will soon contradict himself as you do here Well then ye will pass with equivocations unless it be before a Bench. This is your Topick Will it not clearly follow that ye are not for moral fellowship which is extra judicial So if I be to bargain with a Popish person a Court must be conveened and there he will possibly speak truth to a Judge but otherwise he is taught to dissemble with me That this is your doctrine and lies also taught by you see it fully proved by learned Mr. William Dowglas in his late Treatise de Aequivocatione which you cannot refute nor refuse Your dispensing with oath● you say is when the oath is unlawful But I intreat you tell me if you judge the oath of alledgeance to a lawful King an unlawful oath For it is clear ye dispence with such as shall appea● afterwards Or is the marriage betwixt single persons who are not within degrees of affinitie or consanguinity forbidden by GOD lawful It is a● true that ye loose such And was it not a lawful oath that the Emperour gave to John Huss and Hierom of Praguo Yet the Council of Constance dipensed with him and broke to them as their death did demonstrat You say they failed in conditions but do not set down particulars This is an invention of your own what condition did they fail in can you tell it Tutus accessus recessus was promised to them not keeped few of your writters adhere to this childish evasion but tell us plainly that the Emperour had no power to do so and therefore the Council wo●ld not stand to it You may justifie if you wil also by so●●e device of this forge the murther of Count-Edgmount and Horn contrar to the tennour of their safe conduct under trust by Duke de Alva The Council of Trent seeing the odium this tenet brought on Popery speak after their manner in general termes for vindication in time to come But this n●t I hope will catch few fowles unless there be a particular renunciation of that damnable error which I desire heartily all of you to do Was there not an act of the Council of Constance Sess 19. saying that the safe conduct was salva justitia The German Protestants refused to come to the Council of Trent upon their assurance because of the tenet at Constāce not clearly renounced You say that our Doctrine is carried on with lies we desi●e not to lie for GOD nor mis-state any question betwixt you and us Truth can stand upon one foot when a lie will need many proppes like an old house If we should fraudulently deceive people how could we expect a blessing or assistance from the GOD of truth It is my wish to the Lord that this may be our Motto which was the Apostles 2. Cor. 13. 8. But I remarke in your large discourse one notable lie you say there be old men in SCOTLAND who did live when Popery flourished and can yet witness what moral honesty was amongst men then such old men must now be six score years old ●t least for you must allow them to be fourteen years before they could discern the carriage of neighbours and Ancestors in commerce and barganing and it is 106. years and above since the Reformation If I knew where such old men lived I should have some account from them but you did not wisely tell us that they were here seeing one of that age is not to be found with us far less many Although this be an untruth yet I find you speaking some truth here for you call without any ●●●●nution that work a Reformation and so indeed it wa● although ye hate to be Reformed Twelfthly Ye teach a practice that lawful § 12. Inst Magistrats may be deposed by the Pope Ye will canonize the kille● of such contrar to the Apostle Rom. 13. 1. 1. Pet. 2. 13 Let every soul be subject to the higher powers and submit to every ordinance of man for the Lords sake If your Pope had his will there would be no Kings at lest none reformed And Kings have not reason to be content that there be a Pope nor yet indulge tr●●fiqueing Papists seeing it is certain that none holding their tenets can be a loyal subject to a Protestant King scarcely to
Air that whore ●itteth on many waters if ye stand on the brink and ●ook long to these your head may take a round and ye fall into the deep Wherefore is it that there be such pompous schenick actings charming musick 〈◊〉 Casuists amongst Romanists if not for ●●trapping those who go by An old noble man in this land who lived and died a good Protestant told me that when he was young he travelled to Rome and out of curiosity desired he might be admitted to see the Popish ceremonies monuments and rites which the Conclave at first refused but the next day Bellarmin being present who was absent in the former dyet it was granted by his mediation He in this was more wirry then the rest and did take the nearest way for ensnaring the Nobleman albeit it pleased the Lord to preserve him Abstaine then from all appearance of evil and knit not a snare to your self with your own hands The fume of that cup of fornication hath made some drunk make as quick dispatch as ye may home-ward some temptations are best overcome by resisting and standing it out Eph. 6. 14. 1. Pet. 5. 9. others are foiled better by flying nor medling as Idolatry Adultery Fornication 1. Cor. 6. 18. 1. Cor. 10. 14. Flee fornication flee from idolatry saith the Apostle Therefore carry in this as men in infected places come away quickly longe cit● tarde and linge● nor there lest ye be taken up in the snare Counsel fourth Be bussie in secret when the occasion of publick worship is denyed to you They who have nor the opportunity of a publick market saith one should be the more diligent to have nurseries or store at home In cases of this kind closing of the door and secret work is necessar then ye are called to spend the Lords-day in spiritual meditation prayer praises So was that divine man of GOD employed in the Isle Pathmos and received rich alowance from on high Rev. 1. 10. VVhen David was driven from the Temple he had Temple work alone in the wilderness of Maon the Lord was no wilderness to him When Jacob was retired ●e wrestled and prevailed he found the Lord at Bethel and there he spoke with us H●s 12. 4. That is the fruit of that work and the exampla●y carriage of this tender Believer belongeth to the whole Israel of GOD much of the work of a Christian is transacted in secret and we under the Gospel have this priviledge which was not under the Law that the Christian sacrifice reasonable service may be offered every where lo. 4. 23. 1. Tim. 2. 8. it's men when a Christian hath fewest diversions may enjoy much of GOD and himself use greatest freedom have most accesse and word his particular cases best One saith that Jesus Christ is sweet company but frequently sweetest to the sense alone And what is more edifying for a particular Believer amongst Augustines works nor his Soliloquies T●erefore in this exigence me●itat much on the Lords Word his Workes your own weak●ess w●nts receits experiments the excellency of Jesus Christ the bitterness of sin of death judgement eternity and how precious your souls are beyond the gold of Ophir Consider ser●ously that no merchandise can avail you if ye purchase not the pearle of price who ●●oweth the worth of that jewel None but he to whom the arm of the Lord is revealed In your secret retirements the Lord may acquaint your hearts with himself and give you songs in the night Baldwin in his cases propoundeth some directions page 206. how men shal be exercised when they are necessitated to desert the publick worship First If the administration of the Word and Sacraments be not embezeld nor corrupted contrar to the written word then none conscionably betake themselves to privat exercise in the time of publick worship because it is contrar to that Heb. 10. 25. forsake not the assembling of your selves as the manner of some is The publick hath more of the promise Matth. 18. 20. This by the context must be understood of such publick meetings as have power of binding and loosing Micah fell into a sin not only of Schism but of Idolatry when in that place where the Lord had called a Ministry he without a call set up privat worship in his house to the prejudice of the publick Iudg. 17. This is his first position which he layeth down as a foundation Secondly If the worship be corrupted as in Popery then Christians should call an orthodoxe Minister who is called of GOD to the work and hath the promise Rom. 10. 14. and go about their worship at home for this he citeth Luther Tom. 6. fol. 275. Thirdly If no Minister can be had in the place where the Lord casteth the lot of a Christian for the time then he should be diligent in reading and searching the Scriptures If his ●ands b●come weak here he should take help from conference ei●h●r with the dead who yet speak by their books or with the living If he be a Master of a family then he may pray read the word of GOD which is an ordinance Deut. 11. 19. and instruct his family according to his ability Now from these posi●ions this may be proportionably gathe●ed that when Merchants travelling in Popish Countreys stay there on the Sabbath they should be well employed on that day by doing the work of the Lord diligently with both their hands This is the way to be free of the power of tēptation throughout the week to make you prosper the better in your affairs Our successe in temporalls hath ordinarily a connexion with our through bearing in spirituals as appeareth from the case of Abrahams servant Gen. 24. 14. 15. C●ursel●ifth When ye are deprived thus of the publick worship regrate your mispent Sabbaths mis-heard sermons and that ye made so frequently that feast-day of the Lord a fast-day and starved your self without necessity it is the Winter-season and a providenced retirement to you which in deno●nced as a calamity Matth. 24. 24. Beside the sinnes and snares of your calling which are not few the evil use of ordinances at home may bring to your minde this much that it is just with the Lord morally to shut you up that ye cannot come forth Many Prophers and righteous men desired to see the dayes of the Son of man which ye did see and depretiated As in temporals fulness of bread procureth famine so in spirituals when men who have the occasion will not serve the Lord Deut. 28. 47. Spiritual famine is threatned to such Amos 8. Therefor● song much for a communion in publick Ordinances with your mother Church And when ye remember her towers bulwarks and how a high throne in the Sanctuary is for the Lord there then let your soul be poured forth in you Psalm 42. 4 and with these who did hang up their harps Psalm 137. by the rivers of Babylon lay bonds on your selves neve● to forget your Jerusalem the valley of vision and if the Lord return you home in peace spit not in her face who is the joy of the whole earth but glorifie the Lord in the house of his glorie upon his own day according to the prophecie Isai 60. 7. which now to us is a precept in the beauty of ordinances as in former dayes where the man amongst the myrtle trees cloathed with a garment down to the foot girt about with a golden girdle whose voice is as the sound of many waters shal be seen walking amongst the golden candle-sticks That is festus dies Domini saith Ambrose lib. 2. de Ca●n Abel cap. 2. ubi perfecta virtutum gratia est ubi victor animus liber est a seculo Then ye dedicat a day to the Lord when ye worship him in spirit and truth thus Fill your heart in secret with fixed purposes to enter on this work at your home-coming seeing ye may better know the worth of Ordinances by the want of them Counsel sixth Pray much in secret for a discovery to Papists of their sinful worship the sight whereof is sufficient to confirm discerning men in the truth professed by us It is lamentable that so many knowing men should upon a secular interest for upholding the pompous Papacie detain the truth in unrighteousness When Ezekiel chap. 8. did see the image of jealousie he mourned and received with the rest of the mourners for the abomination of the place a mark of preservation chap. 9. so should ye do for these abominations Peccatum tuum est quod tibi non disp●●cet said Augustin How shal your displacency be better attested unless ye were called to a publick confession Overcome their evil with good and pray for them who are ready to presecute you that the Lord would turne them from darkness to light and the power of errour to truth As also that he would enlarge the Gospell by the power of his own Arme that yet Rivers may run in that Dese●t and the Myrtle may grow where the Bramble is The zeal of the Lord of Hosts can performe this The times are like the latter dayes being so pe●●illous See Brightman in Apoc. Mr. Medes Synchronismus and concerning the Apostacie of the latter time Master Durrham on the Revelation then it is that knowledge shall encrease and Babylon fall if many mistake not his minde who governeth all Roma diu titubans variis erroribus acta Corruet mundi desinet esse caput Rome to●tering long possest with errours strong Shal tumble down and prime no ●ore ere long FINIS