Selected quad for the lemma: truth_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
truth_n age_n church_n true_a 1,952 5 4.9061 4 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A37416 A defensive vindication of the publike liturgy, established ceremonies, and setled patrimony of the Church of England against such as (putting themselves to an ill occupation) have unjustly impeached or oppugned them / by a peaceable sonne of the same church, no way addicted to novelty or innovation. Peaceable sonne of the same church. 1641 (1641) Wing D823; ESTC R17218 23,627 39

There are 2 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

great disturbance of the Church there f The copy of the letter is extant in Dr Cowcls brief answer to Mr Burges Reasons p. 69. he wrote back unto him in this milde yet passionate manner Alas that our brother Knox cannot bear with our Book of Common-Prayer in matters against which although I grant a man of wit and learning may finde to make some colourable exceptions yet I suppose he cannot soundly by the Word of God disprove any thing in it Bishop Iewell in his Apology for the Church of England professeth g ●●el Apol. pro cee●●sia Angl. Accessimus quantum maxime potuimus ad ceelesiam Apos●l●rum v●tevum Catholicorum Episcoporum Patrum nec tan●um doctrinam nostram sed etiam Sacramenta precumque publicarum formam ad corum r●us instituta di●eximus That in our Doctrine Discipline and Service we come as neer as we could possibly to the Apostolicall Church and ancient Catholike Bishops M. Dering in a book of his called A spare restraint makes this challenge to Mr. Harding look saith h Derings answer of Hardings Epist t●●uell fol. 5. he if any line be blameable in our Service and take hold of your advantage our Service is good and godly every tittle grounded upon holy Scripture and with what face dare you call it darknesse Lastly Dr. Taylor was so in love with the Service-Book that he i Acts and Mon●fol 1385. I might adde to these that at Franckford when some exiles disliked our Service Book and some of our Church ceremonies other most reverend persons stood strongly for them as Thomas Leaver Iohn Mullins Iohn Parkhurst Lausence Humfrey Iames Pilkington Alexander Nowell Iames Haddon Edwin Sands Ed●●●●d Grindall c. who being exiles at Franckford wrote to the like exiles at Zurick perswading them to stand to the death for defence of our Church service and ceremonies and Master Fox was one of them that subscribed to the letter Discourse of the troubles at Franckford Fol. 16 17 22 23. c. used it to his comfort all the time of his imprisonment and at his Martyrdom commended it as the last token of his love to his dear wife And these men were in that age the Diamonds of the Churches ring and many of them sealed the truth they held not onely with danger and exile but with their blood Yet now he is but a mean silly man in repute that cannot spy much superstition much Popish trash and idolatry in that godly book which the holy Martyrs and best learned men of our Church k And not onely of our Church but s●me also of forregin Churches as Alexander Alesius a worthy Scotsman of great account and note who much commends our Book of Common prayer and the ordering of our Church according thereunto calling it praeclarissimum divinum factum and he complaineth that any contentious mindes should move any to mislike it and saith that the contention of brethren about this Book comes from the divel who failing one way seeks another way to do mischief to the Church Proem before his translation of the Common-prayer Book in Script Anglican Bucer fol. 373 375. then living did highly commend and approve to be in all things agreeable to the Word of God and to the most ancient and best reformed Liturgyes in all ages Polycarps speech shall end this point O Deus in quae tempora reservastinos Oh God for what times hast thou reserved us wherein that Service of thine which hath heretofore had the high approbation applause and commendation of many learned Divines and glorious Martyrs is now in every Parish almost thorowout the Kingdome neglected vilified contemned as popish and superstitious by persons of mean quality meaner knowledge I beseech those who have power in their hand to redresse things amisse both in the Church and State that they would not suffer this sacred Form of Gods Service to be exposed any longer to the carelesse neglect to the proud contempt and scorn of newfangled and misaffected persons whose particular exceptions against it or any passage in it have received full particular abundant satisfaction by the learned pens of l Many things our non-conformists say are ●●●ss● many instances they give of things in our Common-prayer not agreeable as they pretend with the Word of God It hath in their eye too great affinitie with the forme of the Church of Rome it differeth too much from that which Churches elsewhere reformed allow and observe it is not or derly read nor gestured as beseemeth attire disgraceth it it requireth nothing to be done which a childe may not lawfully do it hath a number of short cuts or shreddings which may be better called wishes then prayers it intermingleth prayings and readings c. it is too long and by that means abridgeth preaching it appointeth the people to say after the Minister it spendeth time in singing and in reading the Psalms by course from side to side it useth the Lords-prayer too oft the Song of Magnif Beaedictus and N●nc dimittis it might very well spare it hath the Letany Creed of Athanasius and Gloria Patri which are supersluous it craveth earthly things too much some things it asketh unseasonably as deliverance from thunder and tempest when no danger is high Some in too diffident manner as that God would give us that which we for our unworthynesse dare not aske Some which ought not to be desired as deliverance from sudden death riddance from all adversity and the extent of ●aving mercy towards all men all which exceptions Hooker answereth punctually and fully and so as may give any intelligent and indicious Reader abundant satis●action Lib 5. p 241 242 c. Hooker Cowell Hutton Fisher c. II Now secondly for the Ceremonies as they are used in our Church howsoever some do take offence at them yet they can give no just offence for we put no merit no matter of salvation no worship of God in them we use them not for exercises of piety but onely for m These ceremonies are retained for a discipline and order which upon iust causes may be altered and changed and therefore are not to be esteemed equall with Gods Law in the Preface before the Book of Common-prayer Vain then and ignorant is there doubt that think our ceremonies are imposed as parts of Gods proper worship order and decency according to that generall Church Canon of the Apostles wherein he prescribes that all things in the Church be done decently and in order 1 Cor. 14.40 which Apostolicall Canon being a Canon of Canons by which all Ecclesiasticall Canons are to be n R●gnla est ad quam omnia quae ad ex●ernam politiam spectant exigere conveait Calv. in Loc. regulated and squared cals for comelinesse and order in the Church and requires that all outward duties of Gods publike worship and service be performed in the face of the Church after a decent comely and
orderly manner Comelinesse becomes all actions but more especially religious actions and is duely to be observed in all places but chiefly in the Church which is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the School of comelynesse as Clemens Romanus calls it lib. 8. cap. 31. For the Church is Gods House the place of his speciall presence and if men be carefull in the presence chamber of an earthly King to do nothing uncomely or unbeseeming the respect which they owe to so great a Majesty much more ought we to be carefull in the House of God which is the presence Chamber of the King of Kings to do nothing uncomely or unbeseeming so great and sacred a Majesty And as all things in the Church are to be done decently or in a comely fashion so are they to be done orderly for where disorder is there is tumult and confusion but where order is there is discipline and peace t is S. Ambrose glosse upon the forecited Canon of the Apostle by vertue of which Canon the Apostle gives power and authority to all Christian Churches to make orders to ordain rites and ceremonies for the more decent and orderly performance of Gods publike service and wills all who live under the Government of such particular Churches obediently to conform themselves to the orders of the Church wherein they live First the former Rule or Canon prescribed by the Apostle is saith Pareus of very great importance Et universaliter ad ecclesiam pertinens and doth universally concern all Christian Churches thoroughout the world decorum enim ordinem eorum arbitrio relinquit for it leaves all matters of outward order and decency in the Church to the free disposall of Church Governours When the Apostle saith 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Let all things be done ritus externos in libertate nostra ideo reliquit ne putaremus culeum dei illis inclusum he leaves the ordering of all externall or ceremonious rites in every particular Church to their free power and determination least we should deeme them essentiall parts of Gods worship and of absolute necessity to salvation saith Calvin in the judgement then both of Calvin and Pareus every Christian Church hath warrant from the forecited Apostolicall Canon to ordain o These things the Lord left to the liberty of every Church pattly because they are not of the substance of his worsh●p but adiuncts onely partly because one form therof cannot fit every Country but must be varyed and applyed to severall nations and times as shall be found most convenient thus teacheth S H●erome E●ist 28. concluding with this saying unaquaeque p●ovincia abundet in sensu suo thus S. August Epist 86.118.119 and thus Zanchius the great reformed Schooleman Tom. 8. loc 16. de tradit ecclesiast pag 821 c. externall rites and ceremonies and to make ecclesiasticall Lawes and Canons for the more decent and orderly performance of all religious duties in their publike assemblyes That their is such a power left to each Church and to Church Governours it is evident for if every man might do what he list and serve God at what time in what place after what manner he pleased or according to his own humour and fancy what other can be the issue and sequell of such licentious and unrestrained liberty but infinite distraction and disorderly confusion in the Church For the preventing of which we must of necessity grant if we will be reasonable that each Christian Church hath power to make lawes and to ordain rites for decency and orders sake and to command and force her children obediently to observe them And their is not any reformed Church but is of this minde they all with one consent hold this opinion that it is not necessary ecclesiasticall rites and ceremonies should be in all places alike but that they may be divers in divers Countries and Churches so that nothing be ordained against Gods Word that this is the judgement of our Church is plain from the 34. Article that all reformed Churches are of the same judgement with ours M. Rogers in his explication of that Article makes it manifest by particular instances And reflect your eyes back to the primitive times and you shall finde that even in those dayes every particular Church was allowed to have those orders and ceremonies which she in her wisedome thought most fitting and convenient So we read that some Churches used to receive the Sacrament thrice others twice a week others onely upon the Lords day some Churches gave the Eucharist in the morning some at even Aug. Epist 118. ad Ian. some Churches did dip the infant baptized thrice in the water others but once onely as Tertullian witnesseth de Coron milit cap. 3. all which Churches notwithstanding the diversity of these or the like ceremonies were the true Churches of God and held Union and Communion one with another Dissonantia in his non sustulit consonantiam fidei they knew that although the Kings daughter were all glorious within yet her cloathing was wrought about with needle work of divers colours by which needle work of divers colours q Sit una si les universae quae ●●iqu dilatatul ecclesiae tanquam intus in memmis etiam si ipsa sidei unitas quibusd●m div●rsis obs●rvatio 〈◊〉 celebratur qui●us ●udo modo quod in side vorum est impeditur Omnis enim pu●●●●●udo filiae Regis intrinsecus illae autem observatio●es quae variae celebrantur in eius veste intelliguntur unde dicitur in fimb●iis au●eis circuma●●icta v●ricta●● s●dea quoque vestis ita diversis celebratiombus varietur ut non adversis contention●bus d●ssipetur Aug. Epist 86. ad casul S. Augustine understands the diverfity of ceremonies in particular Churches and if the judgement of one or two Churches must be hearkened unto and may not be despised or contradicted rashly much more ought the judgement of all reformed Churches to be regarded Certainly for a few persons to call in question that which hath been held for a truth at all times in the true Churches of God argues such singular persons to be singularly proud and possessed with a spirit of contradiction I will conclude this point with the q This is not the doctrine of Calvin onely but it is the constant doctrine of all O●thodoxe Divines and Churches both ancient and modern that God hath sufficiently and perspicuously del●vered the whole substance of his own proper worship and all things necessary to mans salvati●n in the holy Scr●ptures and that these things must evermore be unalterably the same in all Churches but the cir●●mstances and ceremonies of his publike worship as of place time ornaments gestu●e c he hath left to the wisedome of every nationall Church to determine and make choice of so that all things be done according to the Canon of Canons delivered by S. Paul 1 Cor. 14.40 judgement and resolution of judicious Calvin who in the fourth of his institutions Cap.