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A71096 The verity of Christian faith written by Hierome Savanorola [sic] of Ferrara.; Triumphus crucis Liber 2. English Savonarola, Girolamo, 1452-1498. 1651 (1651) Wing S781; ESTC R6206 184,563 686

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not what is superfluous she forceth not her own she maintaineth what is not her own shee usurpeth not but with all industrie laboureth only about this one thing that is by faithfull prudent handling of our forefathers doings what by them in times past was well entered begun she polisheth what then was well polished and declared she confirmeth what then was confirmed and defined she retaineth To conclude what hath she else endeavoured by the decrees of Councells but that that doctrine which before was simplie credited the same afterward should be more diligently beleeved that religion which before was taught more slowly the same afterward should be preached more instantly That faith which before was more securely reverenced the same afterward should more carefully be practised This I say alwayes and nothing els hath the Church provoked with the novelties of Hereticks set down by the decrees of her Councels to wit onely to confirme that to posteritie by writing comprehending a great summe of things in few words often times for more easie understanding to an old article of faith giving a new name which before by tradition she had received of her forefathers CHAP. XIV BUt to return to the Apostle O Timothie quoth he keep the depositum avoyd prophane novelties of voices Avoid quoth he as a viper as a scorpion as a ba●ilisk least they infect thee not only by touching but also with their very eyes and breath What is meant by Avoid 1 Cor. 5. that is not so much as to eate with any such what importeth this Avoid if any man quoth he come unto you and bring not this doctrine what doctrine but the Catholick and universall that which with sound tradition of the truth hath continued one the self same through all successions of times and that which shall continue to the worlds end What then Receive him not quoth he into the house nor say God save you for he that sayeth unto him God save you communicateth with his wicked works Prophane novelties of voices quoth he What is Prophane Those which have no holines in them no jote of religion wholly unknown to the Church which is the temple of God Prophane novelties of voices quoth he of voices that is novelties of opinions novelties of things novelties of senses contrarie to our forefathers faith contrarie to antiquitie which if we admit and receive of necessitie the faith of our blessed ancestours either all or a great part of it must be overthrown the faithfull people of all ages and times all holy Saints all chast all continent all virgins all widowes all Clerks all Deacons all Priests so manie thousands of Confessours so many bands of Martyrs so many famous and great cities and commonwealths so manie Islands Provinces Kings countries kingdomes nations to conclude almost the whol world incorporated by the Catholick faith to Christ their head must needs be saied so many hundreds of years to have been ignorant to have erred to have blasphemed to have beleeved they know not what Avoid quoth he Prophane novelties of voices to receive which to follow which never was the custome of Catholicks but alwayes the propertie of hereticks And to say truth what heresie hath ever peeped forth but under the name of some certain man in some certaine place and at some certaine time Who ever set abroach any heresie who first devided not himself from the consent of the universality and antiquity of the Catholick Church Which to be true examples do plainly prove For who ever before that prophane Pelagius presumed so much of mans free will that he thought not the grace of God necessary to every particular good act Who ever before his monstrous disciple Celestiut denyed all mankind to be tyed and bound with the sin of Adams prevarication Who ever before facrilegious Arius durst tear in peeces the Unity of Trinity Who ever before wicked Sabellius attempted to confound the Trinity of Unity Who ever before cruell Novatian affirmed God to be so mercilesse that he had rather the death of a sinner then he should returne and live Who ever before Simon Magus punished by Apostolicall censure from whom that old sink of filthinesse came by continuall and secret succession unto Priscilian that was the last durst ever affirme that God our Creatour was the Authour of evill that is the Authour of our wickednes impieties and horrible crimes because God as he said so made mans nature that by a certain peoper motion and impulse of an inforced will it can do nothing else but sinne desire nothing else but to offend because being provoked and inflamed with the surious rage of all vices it is with an insatiable desire carryed away headlong into the pit and sink of all filthinesse Such examples are infinite which for brevity sake I omit by all which notwitstanding it appeareth plainly and clearly that it is an usuall and common thing in all Heresies to take great pleasure in prophane novelties to loath the decrees of our forefathers and so fall from the faith by pretending the false and counterfeit name of knowledge and learning contrariwise that this is proper to all Catholicks to keep that faith which the holy fathers have left and committed to their charge to condemne prophane novelties and as the Apostle hath already said again doth say If any man shall preach otherwise then that which is received to accurse him CHAP. XV. HEre happily some man may demand whether hereticks also do use the testimony of holy scripture To which I say that they do and that very earnestly for a man may behold them ranging coursing in every part of the Bible in Moses in the Kings in the Psalms in the Apostles in the Gospels in the Prophets for whether they be amongst their own brethren or with strangers whether in private or in publick whether in talking or writing whether in the house reasting or abroad walking they almost never alleadge any thing of their owne which they do not pretend to shadow with the words of sacred scripture Read the pamphlets of Paulus Samosatenus of Priscilian Eunomius Jovinian and the rest of such like pestilent Hereticks and you shall find through all their works an huge heap of examples almost no page omitted which is not coloured and painted with the sayings of the new and old testament But the more closely they lurk under the shadow of Gods law the more carefully are they to be feared the more narrowly to be watched for they know full well that their stinking and unsavory drugs be not likely almost to please any if simply nakedly they be set forth and therefore they do temper them as it were with the sweet powder of Gods word that he which would have contemned mans erroneous invention dares not so readily reject Gods divine scripture wherein they are like to those which minding to minister bitter potions to young children do first annoint the brim●●● of the cup with hony that thereby
Glory and Dominion through all ages for ever Amen FINIS THE PROFIT OF BELIEVING Very usefull Both for all those that are not yet resolved what Religion they ought to embrace And for them that desire to know whither their Religion be true or no. Written by S. Augustine LONDON Printed by ROGER DANIEL In Lovels Court near Pauls Church-yard 1651. The Preface To the well-disposed READER Learned Reader I Know thou art not ignorant that of all the affairs and businesses in this world there is none of that consequence and importance unto thee as the saving of thy soul and that our Blessed Saviour who knew best of all the mestimable value thereof and vouchsafed to redeem it at so dear a rate as with his own pretious bloud plainly declared the importance thereof when he said in the Gospel Mat. 16.16 What is a man profited if he shall gain the world nnd loose his own soul Or what shall he give in exchange thereof Wherefore let me advise thee to seek out and embrace the true Faith and Religion for that without such a Faith according to the Apostle Heb. 11.6 it is impossible to please God and without pleasing of him it is impossible to be saved If thou thinkest that thou hast found out the truth already and that thou dost embrace it then give me leave to tell thee that the world at this present abounds with an hundred heresies at least the embracers whereof shall not according to S. Pauls doctrine Gal. 5.20 inherit the kingdome of God and yet as the same Apostle doth affirm Ephes 4.5 there is but one Lord one Faith one Baptisme so that it is an hundred to one but that thy Faith and thy Religion are false and thy salvation is in danger thereby Is there not then great reason that thou shouldest well consider whither the Faith and Religion which thou embracest be true or no when upon this resolution depends thy fruition of unspeakable blisse or intolerable suffering of endlesse pains for all eternity How to find out the true Faith Religion it is a matter of very great difficulty not onely by reason that there are many faiths and religions in the world and of all these there is but one true and all the rest be false but also for that the controversies debated now adayes are so many and so intricate that few have leasure to study them and fewer ability to conceive and understand them yet the zeal of learned Writers hath not been wanting to satisfie men herein But what age since the Apostles dayes hath brought forth any man so able to perform so great a task as was that incomparable Doctor S. Augustine lib. 3. de Eccles fol. 170. who as Doctour Field asserteth was the greatest and chiefest of the antient Fathers and the most famous of all the Divines which the Church hath had since the Apostles time and as Doctour Covell affirmeth in his answer to Master Burges pag. 3. hath farre excelled all others that have been or are like to be hereafter those onely excepted that were inspired by the Holy Ghost both in Divine and Humane knowledge What man since the Apostles dayes could ever so well discern true doctrine from false truth from errour and true faith from heresie as could that great S. Augustine who did not onely like another David fight against the Goliah of one heresie but like another Joshua fought the battels of the Lord against all the force and power of heresie in his dayes for fourty years together Wherefore if this great Doctour should have left any advises or instructions behinde him unto any of his dear friends that were then hereticks whereby he taught them how to find out the true faith and religion amongst so many heresies ought not such instructions to be greatly desired and if any such could be found to be highly esteemed and diligently perused Surely thou wilt say that coming from so great a Doctour and being so proper and necessary fot these times without doubt they ought Why then Learned Reader give me leave to present unto thee a learned Treatise of his which he sent unto his dear and learned friend Honoratus to draw him from the Manichean heresie to the true Religion I durst not presume to tender it unto thee in this poor English habit were I not confident that thou seekest more after the true Religion and the saving of thy soul then after vain eloquence the entising words of humane wisdome 1 Cor. 2.4 but I will assure thee under this poore attire thou wilt find a rich and a learned discourse of great S. Augustine not onely very profitable for those that are not yet resolved in point of Religion but also for them that dere to be satisfied whither the faith and Religion which they embrace be true or no. If the stile be displeasing and ungratefull unto thee know that very many of the African Fathers have harsh stiles besides consider how hard a matter it is to teach a native African to speak true English In this work first he shews how the old Testament is to be expounded and defends the Authority of it against the Manichees that rejected it Secondly he overthrowes that Manichean principle That nothing is to be believed in point of Faith which is not first by reason made manifest and evident unto the Believer In the third place he adviseth fervent and frequent prayer peace and tranquility of mind and a sequestration of affections from terrene things as aids necessary for the finding out the truth then declaring that Christ hath raised a very great and a famous Church consisting of all Nations which is to continue very visible and conspicuous even to the worlds end he exhorts Honoratus to addresse himself unto the Pastours and Teachers thereof and to learn of them the true faith and Religion This way of proceeding to find out the truth is far more short and easie then by the examination of all the points of controverted doctrine by their conformity to the holy Scriptures for it consists in two points onely first in seeking out which of all the Churches is the Church of Christ and secondly whither this Church can erre or no. For the finding out of the Church S. Augustine proposed four marks unto Honoratus Unity Universality Sanctity and Apostolicall Succession the which are set down very plainly in Scripture The Unity of the Church is twofold in body and in faith in regard of the first our Saviour saith his Church is one fold and hath one shep-heard Joh. 10.16 and the Apostle calls it one body 1 Cor. 12.13 In respect of the second S. Paul earnestly exhorted the Corinthians 1 Cor. 1.10 to speak the same thing and that there be no division amongst them but that they be perfectly joyned together in the same mind and in the same judgement and he beseeched the Ephesians to endeavour to keep the unity of the spirit in the bond of peace Ephes 4.3 4 5. affirming
from new errour to old sobernes from new madnesse to antient light from new darknesse But in this divine vertue which they shewed in the confession of their faith this thing is especially of us to be noted that in that antiquitie of the Church they took upon them not the defence of any one part but of the whole For it was not lawfull that such excellent and famous men should maintaine and defend with so great might and maine the erroneous suspicions and those contrary each to other of one or two men or should stand in contention for the temerarious conspiracie of some small Province but they did chuse by following the Canons and decrees of the Catholick and Apostolike veritie of all the Priests of holy Church rather to betray them selves then the universall ancient faith For which fact of theirs they merited so great glorie that they are accounted not only Confessours but also justly and worthily the Princes of all Confessours Great therefore surely divine was the example of these blessed Confessours and of every true Catholick continually to be remembred who like the seven branched Candlestick shining with the sevenfold gifts of the holy Ghost delivered unto all posterity a most notable example how afterward in each foolish and vain errour the boldnesse of profane noveltie was to be repressed with authority of sacred Antiquity CHAP. III. NEither is this any new thing but alwaies usual in the Church of God that the more religious a man hath been the more ready hath he alwayes resisted novell inventions examples whereof many might be brought but for brevity sake I will onely make choice of some one which shall be taken from the Apostolick sea by which all men may see most plainly with what force alwayes what zeal what indeavour the blessed succession of the blessed Apostles have desended the integrity of that religion which they once received Therefore in times past Agrippinus of venerable memory Bishop of Cart hage the first of all mortall men maintained this assertion against the divine Scripture against the rule of the universall Church against the mind of all the Priests of his time against the custom and tradition of his forefathers that rebaptization was to be admitted and put in practise Which presumption of his procured so great dammage and hurt to the Church that not onely it gave all hereticks a pattern of sacrilege but also ministred occasion of errour to some Catholicks When therefore every where all men exclaimed against the novelty of the doctrine and all priests in all places each one according to his zeale did oppose then Pope Steven of blessed memory bishop of the Apostolique sea resisted in deed with the rest of his fellow bishops but yet more then the rest thinking it as I suppose reason so much to excell all other in devotion towards the faith as he was superiour to them in authoritie of place To conclude in his Epistle which then was sent to Africk he decreed the same in these words That nothing was to be innovated but that which came by tradition ought to be observed For that holy and prudent man knew well that the nature of pietie could admit nothing else but only to deliver and teach our children that religion and that faith which we received and learned of our forefathers and that we ought to follow religion whither it doth lead us and not to lead religion whither it please us and that nothing is more proper to Christian modestie and gravitie then not to leave unto posteritie our own inventions but to preserve and keep that which our Predecessours left us What therefore was then the end of that whole busines What else but that which is common and usuall to wit antiquitie was retained noveltie exploded But perhaps that new invention lacked patrons and defenders To which I say on the contrary that it had such pregnant witts such eloquent tongues such number of defendants such shew of truth such testimonies of scripture but 〈◊〉 after a new and naughtie fashion that all that conspiracie and schisme should have seemed unto me invincible had not the very profession of noveltie it self so taken in hand under that name defended with that title recommended overthrowen the very ground of so great a schisme To conolude what force had the Councell or decree of Africke By Gods providence none but all things there agreed upon were abolished disanulled abrogated as dreames as fables as superfluous And O strange change of the world the authours of that opinion are judged and thought Catholicks the followers accounted and reputed Hereticks the masters discharged the schollers condemned the writers of those books shall be children of the kingdome of Heaven the maintainers of those books shall burne in Hell For who doubteth but holy S. Cyprian that light of all Saints that lanterne of Bishops and spectacle of Martirs with the rest of his companions shall raigne with Christ for ever And contrariwise who is so wicked to deny that the Donatists and such other pestilent Hereticks which by the authority of that Councell vaunt that they do practise rebaptization shall burn for ever with the Devill and his Angels Which judgement in mine opinion seemeth to have come from God for their fraudulent dealing especially which endeavouring under the cloak of an other mans name cunningly to frame an heresie commonly lay hold of some dark sayings of one antient Father or other which by reason of the obscurity may seem to make for their opinion to the end they may be thought that whatsoever I know not what they bring forth to the world neither to have been the first that so taught neither alone of that opinion whose wicked device in mine opinion is worthy of double hatred both for that they fear not to sowe their poysoned feed of herefie amongst others and also because they blemish the memory of some holy man and as it were with profane hands cast his dead ashes into the wind bringing with shame that to light which rather with silence were to be buried following therein the steps of their father Cham who not onely neglected to cover the nakednesse of venerable Noe but also shewed it to others to laugh at by which fact of his he incurred so great a crime of impiety that his posterity was subject to the malediction of his sinne Gen. 9. his blessed brethren doing far otherwise who neither with their own eyes would violate the nakednesse of their reverend father nor yet permit it to remain uncovered for others to behold but going backward as the holy text saith they covered him which is as much as to say that they neither approved with heart nor blazed with tongue the holy mans fault and therefore they and their posterity were rewarded with their fathers blessing But to returne to our purpose CHAP. IIII. WE have therefore much to fear the sacriledge of a changed faith of a violated religion from which fault not only the discipline of the
by being the cause of a virtuous life Page 32 CHAP. VIII That Christian Doctrine containing the Grounds of Faith is from God Page 44 CHAP. IX Christian Faith proved true out of their use of Prayer and Contemplation Page 58 CHAP. X. The same Verity proved out of the exteriour Worship of Christians Page 67 CHAP. XI The same Verity proved out of the intrinsecall effects of Christian life Page 77 CHAP. XII The same truth proved out of the extrinsecall effects of Christian life Page 90 CHAP. XIII The same confirmed by the wonderfull works of Christ and first by his Power Page 101 CHAP. XIIII The same concluded out of the Wisdome of Christ Page 125 CHAP. XV. The same Verity confirmed out of the Goodnesse of Christ Page 144 CHAP. XVI The same proved out of the Power Wisdome and Goodnesse of Christ all together Page 161 THE TRIUMPH OF THE CROSSE OR Of the Verity OF FAITH By Hierome Savanocola of Ferrara LONDON Printed by R. Daniel 1651. The Preface HAving as farre forth as I judged sufficient for my present purpose treated in the precedent Book those things which are of themselves obvious to naturall reason it remains now that I discusse those also which are above the sphere of our Nature that I may thereby plainly shew the Christian Faith to be most true not onely by natural motives but out of the very actions of our blessed Saviour Christ Jesus and because things before our eyes do more enforce our under standing to assent then things which are past for it is harder to deny what we plainly see before our eyes then that which we receive at trust by Traditions I shall lay the first grounds of my proofs in those things which are unquestionable unto all as being daily seen practised in the Church of Christ and are most apparant to sense it self I do not speak of the vices of evill Christians who as such are sequestred rather and cut off from the communication and mysticall Vnion of the Church but of those good members of it which not onely bear and professe the name of Christians but also prove themselves to be such by their virtuous lives and actions This done I shall produce reasons grounded in those actions of Christ which are most generally received and allowed of by all so that the latter shall manifestly confirm the former the things present those which are past But because the chief effect at which the institution of the Church aims is Justice and an irreprehensible and unspotted life our Saviour saying speaking of the members of his Church Ego veni ut vitam habeant abundantiùs habeant To this end I came that they may live and that they live more abundantly First therefore I shall in due order prove the truth of the Christian Faith by reasons truly grounded in the virtuous lives of good Christians Secondly in the causes of such a life and lastly in the effects of the same life wherein I shall comprise all those things which are daily exercised in the Church Militant of Christ The triumph of the Crosse or of the verity of Faith CHAP. I. That there is a true Religion IT is altogether necessary that every one acknowledge that in the world there is a true Religion By Religion we understand a due Worship exhibited unto Almighty God as he is the universall fountain source and moderatour of all things For every effect doth exhibite a certain worship to its cause whilst converting its self unto it and as it were invocating it with a kind of subjection it strives to imitate and make it self like unto it which expresses nothing else but a certain return of honour from the effect to its cause that it may be more and more perfected by it Wherefore Almighty God being the universall Cause of all things of whom heaven and earth and all that hath goodnesse in it have their whole being and dependance most clear it is that in man there ought to be an ingrafted and naturall instinct to convert it self to God and to invoke and subject himself unto him to do his uttermost to become like unto him and to be perfected by him which is nothing else then to exhibite worship unto him Now if there be such a naturall inclination in the rationall nature of man to worship his Creatour and that this inclination cannot be superfluous or in vain we must of force conclude that there is a true Religion to be found amongst men Moreover seeing that man is naturally inclined to the divine Worship as every effect is to its cause and that he is rationall as not being necessitated to any thing as other brute and irrationall things are which are naturally carried away by their appetites but having a true dominion over his actions he freely disposes of them as he list Now if all men as naturall reason is oftentimes very defective should fall into so generall and gross an errour that there should be no true and divine Worship found amongst them it would follow that they would be so deprived of the divine Providence that there would appear no Divine care exercised towards them in the thing which is of all others most necessary and naturall unto them seeing that this true divine Worship is that by which man is to arrive to the fruition of his last end But this I have elsewhere plainly refuted I adde that every countrey and nation in every age both past and present having been though in divers wayes addicted unto the divine Worship it must necessarily follow that this truth is wholly ingrafted and naturall unto man for that is naturall as I have elsewhere showen which agrees unto all and at all times wherefore if there should be no true divine Worship found this natural inclination would be wholly frustrate seeing it were not able to arrive unto the end which it was ordained for whence it would follow that Almighty God executed his Providence more towards unreasonable creatures then towards man Lastly seeing that every cause infuses its perfection and goodnesse as much as possible it may into its effect intending by all means to attract it and make it as farre as it hath capacity like unto it self Almighty God being superlatively good and the first origin of all things hath questionlesse a speciall care of the perfection of man for whose sake and use he made all other inferiour creatures wherefore the true perfection of man principally consisting in the subjecting himself unto God and in the Divine veneration in the which Religion doth chiefly consist it follows that there is a true Religion to be found in the world CHAP. II. There are two sorts of Divine Worship MAn having a capacity to exhibite veneration unto Almighty God two wayes corporally and spiritually we ought to distinguish two sorts of Divine Worship in him to wit interiour and exteriour interiour is that which we perform by the acts of our understanding and will exteriour is that which we
champion is it brought to light because our understanding having Verity for its object is naturally inclined unto it as to its proper perfection and where the more it shines with greater delight it is embraced but then Verity appears most when it is most sharply impugned because in the very discussion and conflict of disputation it manifests it self Seeing therefore that Christian Doctrine having been so vehemently impugned by so many Philosophers and Tyrants hath alwayes remained invincible and victorious which the infinite volumns of Christians testifie it is consequent that its truth proceeded from Almighty God otherwise in so many conflicts it had not so long remain'd unconquer'd CHAP. IX Christian Faith proved true out of their use of Prayer and Contemplation AS Faith and the reading holy Scriptures Auscultation and Meditation is the principall cause of a Christian life so Prayer is its principall nourishment where it hath its growth and perfection for by long experience we have found in our Religion that all those who profit in our Religion and have arrived to the highest degrees of sanctity have attained it by frequent and continuall Prayer and we have observed that they have taken such gust and complacence in it that they have despised all other humane delights as vile abject and unworthy of them Nor doth this happen onely to the most eminent and learned sort of those which flourish in sanctity but it is commonly found in the simple and ignorant as well men as women and even in all those who have learned to leade a Christian life By this effect therefore we may prove the Verity of out Faith Almighty God being a pure Act the first Verity and an infinite Light the nearer a man makes his approach unto him the more abundartly doth he partake this Purity Verity and Light But man doth not make his approach unto Almighty God by corporall paces but by the purity of life elevation of mind and contemplation of Verity Seeing therefore that there can be no life more candid and more sincere then that of Christians and that then the mind of man is most pure when it is wrapt up in a soaring and extaticall contemplation of the Divine perfections it follows that man is most possessed of this Verity and Light as he is in the very act of prayer and contemplation and seeing that we find by experience that Christians as they encrease in the fervour of Devotion and frequency of Prayer are more and more confirmed in their Faith and inflamed with the love of Christ and profit in virtue we must confesse that the Faith Verity and Light of Christian Religion is Divine Our understanding affecting Verity as its proper perfection and abhorring Falsity as its greatest enemy man is in nothing so disposed for the entertaining of Verity and rejecting of contraries as in the very act of Prayer and Contemplation by which he doth most stedfastly and ardently embrace the documents of Faith which therefore cannot be erroneous Moreover all Christians in their Prayers to Almighty God do beseech him to grant that for the which they pray by the merits of Christ for in the end of every prayer they most commonly adde some such form Through Jesus Christ our Lord or Through Christ our Lord and yet they obtain admirable and incredible graces from him which if any should not believe yet certainly they must grant that which by daily experience is manifest that they obtain that which they principally seek after the righteousnesse of a virtuous life the quiet and joyfulnesse of mind so as they preferre the pious tears of Devotion farre before any delights and pleasures of the world Now certainly if Christ were not he whom our Faith proclaims him to be they could not in so great a serenity of mind and at so near a distance of so great a light be environed and buried in so great a darknesse nor would Almighty God permit them to be so grosly deceived or at least if they were obstinate in an errour he would not grant their petitions Again every cause disposing its matter for the producing its effect after it hath introduced its last disposition immediately produces it nor would it dispose the matter unlesse it meant to Introduce the form nor any cause of motion would produce it if it intended not some end of the motion produced but a just man unlesse he were invited and drawn on by Almighty God who is the first cause of all things could not elevate his mind unto him by prayer Blisse therefore being the end of prayer and a virtuous life Almighty God would not induce man unto those means of prayer and virtue unlesse he intended to make him finally blessed If therefore Christians makig progresse in virtue and prayers become more grounded and settled in their Faith and Contemplation of Christ their Faith cannot be but from Almighty God by which he leades men unto blisse Every cause grants as I may say unto its effect what it asks the effect asks of its cause it s due and proper perfections which then it is said to exact when it is rightly disposed for then the cause if not otherwise hindred delaies not the execution of the effect infusing that quantity of perfection into it which the degree of disposition doth exact which immediate execution proceeds out of its facility and goodnesse which of its nature is desirous to communicate it self Almighty God therefore being the most sovereign good questionlesse will more then other causes which have not so great goodnesse grant the petitions to this effect especially unto those which are best disposed for the receiving his favours as are Christians chiefly when they are in the act of Prayer and Contemplation but Christians ask nothing more then the light of truth according to that of the Psalmist Ill umina oculos meos nè unquam obdormiam in morte Enlighten my eyes that I never sleep in death And therefore Almighty God never denies them their request but Christians the more they pray the more they are confirmed in their Faith therefore this our discourse is of greater force Further if Christ were not God to professe himself so would be the most supreme degree of blasphemy and detestation that could be Now if Christians do pray to God the Father through Christ whom they believe to be of the same nature with the Father and the holy Ghost how doth Almighty God permit them in so great an errour arising out of ignorance and simplicity and doth not draw them out of it knowing that they serve him with their whole affection and humbly beg of him the knowledge of truth or if their obstinacy be in fault why doth he leave so great a wickednesse and treason against his Divine Majesty unrevenged or why doth he as we see him favour this errour and impiety whilst bestowing so many and great gifts on them he questionlesse grants them that which they ask at his hands Our soul as I have said doth
happy But yet because this knowledge or contemplation of the Divine Majesty is inseparably accompanied with a certain infinite and ineffable joy or pleasure conceived upon that sight and by which the sight or contemplation it self seems to be perfected therfore we say that in regard of operation or the exercise of Beatitude that it is compleated in the will which with an infinite delight doth embrace that good sight and consent to be absorpt and drowned in the glorious Abyss thereof to all Eternity As in like manner we say of man that he consists essentially in the union of a rationall Soul with the body but yet that he is perfected in regard of operations by such accidents as do either necessarily or contingently follow that union to which sense the Philosopher also saith Delight hath the same relation to Felicity which Beauty hath to youth The XI Conclusion That perfect Blessednesse cannot be attained in this life First because in this life we have no immediate knowledge of God we see him not but by and through the creatures and as it were in such a glasse as the Phantasie or some inferiour faculty of our soul is able to present unto us which manner of knowledge being so imperfect the soul of man finds no satisfaction therein that is to say no Beatitude no full content Secondly because as Boetius saith Blessednesse is a state consummate or perfected with a concurrence of all good but in this mortall life there never was seen nor ever shall be such a generall confluence of All Good Things upon any one man as that nothing should be wanting either to his body or to his soul especially seing that Immortality the Crown of the Bodies perfections cannot possibly be attained here no more then the certain hour of a mans death can be foreseen and that knowledge which is the prerogative royall of the soul is found but by very few and that never absolutely clear in this life never but darkened and eclipsed with a multitude of errours Not to speak of those inferiour and lesse valuable goods of fortune and the body health wealth c. the least of which yet being wanting doth infinitely disturb our union with God and dayly yea hourly deject us from that state wherein True Felicity consists The XII Conclusion Yet notwithstanding a certain Inchoate Felicity or as 't were the First Fruits of happinesse may be had in this life In the heart of man we may conceive a double rest viz. either of the appetite it self or of the motions and stirrings of the appetite The former which is indeed a beginning of happinesse a man may perhaps perfectly obtain in this life for it is nothing else but the determining or settling of our desire upon that object which is in Truth our last end 'T is true in a generall notion all men do naturally desire to be happy because 't is naturall for every thing to desire at least that perfection which is proper to his kind yet in particular or in regard to their indeavours or motions to attain happinesse they do as generally mistake few of them knowing where to find it or in what Thing it consists and therefore we see their desires thereof are commonly unequall irregular and restlesse But when once a man hath found that his happinesse consisteth in the Contemplation or knowledge of God and is resolved to make it his chief business study and care to advance himself therein his appetite becomes in that respect satisfied and quiet But yet again because this knowledge of God is not perfect in this life but rather in continuall advancement towards perfection therefore we say in that second sense that the appetite is not satisfied that is to say not the motions and stirrings thereof which indeed never cease but are continually labouring and endeavouring after greater perfection in that Contemplation and this so much the more incessantly and strongly by how much a man comes nearer to perfect Beatitude and receives as it were beforehand some glimpses and Irradiations thereof And this is that we call Felicity Inchoate or in its First-fruits The XIII Conclusion That Christians have this Felicity Inchoate in a greater measure then the best of Philosophers The reason is because the Contemplation and Fruition of God which good Christians have are in themselves greater and more perfect then those which the most excellent Philosophers could ever arrive unto By what I have elsewhere said it is manifest that a Christians life is not founded upon any naturall principle either within or without man but in something supernaturall that is to say in the Grace of God by which also he is elevated unto a participation of the Divine nature Seeing therefore that the operation of every thing followeth its Essence for every thing worketh so far as it can agreeably to its own nature by how much the nature or essence of any thing is more perfect by so much perfecter also is it in its operation or working But Grace is a thing of a much nobler and more perfect essence then nature and therefore the operations or effects which proceed from thence must needs excell those of nature And seeing again that by how much the operation or Action of any Thing is more perfect by so much a greater and more perfect delight is conceived thereupon it must needs follow that those spirituall Contentments and Gusts which good Christians have with God and in God do infinitely excel those of philosophers which at best are but naturall and such as the principle is from whence they proceed Besides seeing that happinesse consisterh in the Contemplation of God the greater knowledge a man hath of God the greater that is the more perfect is his Contemplation and Fruition of him But this is certain that Christians have greater knowledge of God then philosophers as well in regard of the light of Grace which perfects that of nature and reveals unto Christians many excellent mysteries altogether unknown to philosophers as also in regard of that Purity of heart which as we have shewed elswhere true Christians do injoy in a more excellent measure then others The delights therefore which Christians injoy in their Contemplation of God are much greater in themselves and more perfect then those which the best of philosophers could have And seeing that this happinesse Inchoate which we speak of doth consist in that Contemplation and Fruition of God which is attainable in this life it follows that it is more perfectly attained by Christians then philosophers Lastly this happinesse Inchoate is so much greater and more perfect by how much it cometh nearer to Felicity consummate or that of the next life But the Felicity of Christians which is here begun cometh much nearer to Felicity Consummate then that of philosophers for as much as no man shall ever actually attain heaven but by Grace which the philosophers neither had nor knew it is manifest therefore that true Christians are more
of satisfaction in things of such consequence but diligently to search out which amongst all the societies of men in this world is that blessed company of holy ones that houshold of faith that Spouse of Christ and Church of the living God which is the pillar and ground of truth that so they may embrace her commuuion follow her directions and rest in her judgement Now that thou maist be the better able to follow this wholesome counsell let me advise thee with care and diligence to peruse this ensuing treatise and that thou maist receive much benefit thereby for thy souls health thou hast already the prayers of S. Augustine and thou shalt have the hearty wishes and desires of Thy charitable Welwisher A. P. The TABLE Chap. I. HOw S. Augustine came to be deceived by the Manichees Page 1 Chap. II. That the Manichees do condemn the old Testament Page 11 Chap. III. Of the four wayes of expounding the old Testament Page 15 Chap. IV. 3. ways whereby men fall into errour Page 31 Chap. V Of the truth of the holy Scripture Page 37 Chap. VI. That the holy Scripture is first to be loved before it can be learned Page 42 Chap. VII That we ought not to judge rashly of the holy Scriptures and how and with what care and diligence the trve religion is to be sought for Page 49 Chap. VIII Of the way to the instruction of piety and of the wonderfull pains S. Augustine took to find it out Page 63 Chap. IX Of Credulity Page 68 Chap. X. Why Credulity is the way to Religion Page 75 Chap. XI Of understanding belief and opinion Page 83 Chap. XII That it is the safest way to believe wise men Page 93 Chap. XIII That Religion takes her beginning from believing Page 98 Chap. XIV That Christ chiefly exacted belief Page 104 Chap. XV. Of the most commodious way to Religion Page 114 Chap. XVI That miracles do procure belief Page 117 Chap. XVII The consent of nations believingin Christ Page 124 Chap. XVIII The conclusion by way of exhortation Page 129 The Profit of Believing CHAP. I. How Saint Augustine came to be deceived by the Manichees O Honoratus IF any Heretick and a man believing Hereticks did seem unto me to be one and the same thing I should think fit to be silent at this present and to abstain both from speaking and writing in this cause But now whereas they do verymuch differ For he is an Heretick according to my opinion who for some temporall benefit and chiefly for glory and his own preferment either broacheth or followeth false and new Opinions but a man believing Hereticks is one that is deluded with a certain imagination of Piety and Truth I held it to be my duty to deliver thee my opinion touching the finding out and embracing the Truth with the love whereof we have both as thou knowest been greatly enflamed even from our youths Truth is a thing farre differing from that which vain men do conceive who having too deeply settled their affections upon these bodily and corporall things do hold and imagine it to be nothing else but what they do perceive and discern by those five most known Messengers of the Body and they to sse to and fro and rerevolve in their minds the impressions and images which they have received from these things even when they endeavour to disbelieve their senses and by a deadly and a most deceitfull rule taken from thence they think that they do frame a right and perfect judgement of the inefffable Secrets and Mysteries of Faith There is nothing more easie my most dear friend then for a man not onely to say but also to think that he hath found out the Truth but how extream hard it is to find it out indeed thou wilt as I hope acknowledge and confesse upon the perusall of these my writings which that they may prove beneficiall unto thee or at least not hurtfull and unto all those into whose hands they may chance to light I have beseeched the divine Majesty and I do beseech him and I hope it will come to passe if mine own conscience can but bear me witnesse that I came to write them not with a desire of vain renown or frivolous ostentation but with a pious and a serviceable mind My intent therefore is to prove unto thee if I can that it is sacrilegiously and rashly done of the Manichees to speak bitter words and inveigh against those who following the authority of the Catholick faith are fortified and strengthened before-hand by believing and are prepared to receive the light of the Divine grace before they can behold that Verity and Truth which is seen and beheld with a pure and clean mind For thou knowest O Honoratus that we put our selves into the company of such men for no other cause but for that they said that the terrour of authority being set aside they would with plain and admirable reasons bring their hearers and followers unto God and free them from all errour For what else was it that enforced me to follow them and to hearken to them attentively almost for the space of nine years having despised and contemned the religion which by my parents was ingraffed in me being a little child but for that they affirmed that we are terrified with superstition and commanded to believe before any reason is given us of belief and that they importune and urge none to believe untill the truth be first discussed and made manifest unto them who would not be allured with these promises especially the mind of a young man desirous of truth a babler and one that was puffed up with pride upon disputations had with some skilfull and learned Schoolmen and such an one they found me then to be namely who despised my former religion like old wives tales and desired to embrace and with greedinesse to receive the manifest and sincere Truth which they promised to teach and deliver But again what reason withdrew me and called me back that I did not wholly adhere unto them but kept my self in the degree of Hearers as they use to call them and did not forgo the hopes and affairs which I had in this world but for that I also noted and observed that they were more eloquent and copious in confuting others then firm and certain in proving and maintaining their own grounds But what shall I say of my self who was now become a Catholick Christian who being almost exhausted and greedy after a very long thirst was now with an ardent affection returned again to the breasts of the Church which I shaked and wrung much weeping and lamenting to the end I might not onely draw from thence sufficient comfort for my misery and affliction but might also recover my former hope of life and salvation What then shall I say of my self And as for thee thou didest so vehemently hate and detest them that I could hardly draw thee by entreaties and exhortations to
no lesse grievous but the same words will serve to confute it If in the third it is no fault at all Go to then and hereafter consider the Scriptures themselves for what do they object against the books which are called the Old Testament do they say that they are good but that we do not well and rightly understand them but they themselves receive them not Do they say that they are neither good nor rightly understood by us but this is sufficiently convinced by the former defense or will they say that we rightly understand them but that the books be naught what is this but to acquit and absolve their living adversaries with whom they are in debate and to accuse those that are formerly dead with whom they have no contention nor strife Verily I do believe that all the works which those men left to posterity were profitably written and that they were great and very holy men and that that Law was made and published by Gods will and command and although my skill and knowledge be but very little in books of that kind yet this I can easily prove to be true unto one that bears an equall and an impartiall and not an obstinate and a refractory mind and I will do it when thou wilt afford me an attentive and a courteous hearing and mine own occasions will permit But now is it not sufficient for me howsoever that businesse goes not to have been beguiled nor deceived CHAP. VI. That the holy Scripture is first to be loved before it can be learned O Honoratus I call mine own conscience and God who inhabits pure fouls to witnesse that I judge and esteem nothing to be more wise nothing more chaste nothing more religious then all those Scriptures be which under the name of the Old Testament are held and embraced by the Catholick Church I know thou admirest to hear me talk thus for I cannot disguise nor dissemble the matter we have been exhorted and perswaded to believe far otherwise but truly a rasher act cannot be committed rashnesse being a fault unto which we were addicted being yet but children then to forsake the judgement of the Expositours of any kind of books who professe that they can receive them and can teach and deliver them to their disciples and to require their judgement and opinion of them who being constrained I know not for what cause have denounced a most sharp and bitter warre against their authours and compilers and that I may speak of those sciences wherein perhaps a Reader may erre without any heinous crime or offence who ever thought that the exposition of the profound and obscure books of Aristotle ought to be received from his enemy or who being desirous to learn the Geometry of Archimedes would take Epicurus to be his master against which he disputed very stiffely and eagerly and yet as I conceive he understood nothing thereof Are those Scriptures of the law most plain and easie against which they proceed with violence in vain and to no purpose as though they were exposed and lay open to the capacity of the common people I think these men are like to that woman which they themselves do laugh at and deride who being angry to hear the praises of the sunne and to have it recommended unto her by a certain Manichean woman to be worshipped as she was religiously simple starts up upon a sudden and stamping often upon the place which the sunne with his beams had enlightned thorough a window began to cry out Behold I contemn and tread under foot the sunne and thy God That this was done altogether foolishly and like unto a woman no man can deny but do not those men seem to resemble her who casting forth violent speeches and curses against the things they understand not neither why they were written nor what manner of things they be which seem as though they were low and contemptible but to them that understand them they are subtile and divine think to receive some benefit thereby because unskilfull men do countenance and applaud them believe me whatsoever is contained in those Scriptures is high and divine there is truth altogether in them and most fit instruction both for the amending and reforming mens minds and it is certainly so well digested and ordered that every one may receive from thence that which is sufficient for himself if he comes prepared to take it with such piety and devotion as true Religion doth require Should I go about to prove this unto thee I must alledge many reasons and entertain thee with a longer discourse for first I must perfwade thee not to hate the Authours themselves and then to love them and this I must effect by any other means rather then by expounding their opinions and their writings and therefore if we did hate Virgil yea if we did not love him upon the commendation of our Predecessours before we understood him we should never be satisfied in those innumerable questions touching him wherewith Grammarians are wont to be much perplexed and troubled nor should we give eare to any man that could resolve those questions to his honour and praise but we should give countenance and shew favour unto him who by those questions would endeavour to shew that he erred and doted but now when as many men do labour to expound them and that after divers manners and every one according to his skill and ability they receive the chiefest commendation and applause by whose expositions he is found to be a better Poet and he is conceived and believed even by those that understand him not not onely to have committed no fault nor errour but to have said nothing which doth not deserve much glory and praise and therefore if a Master fails but in a small question and knows not what to answer we are rather angry and offended with him then we will conceive that by any fault committed by Maro he is silent and dumb but if a Master should in his own defence affirm that so great an Authour hath committed a fault he would loose so much credit and reputation thereby that his scholars would hardly continue with him even though he should hyre them with wages and rewards How great a matter were it for us to give so much credit to those Writers by whose mouthes the Holy Ghost hath spoken as Antiquity confirmed by a long continuance doth testifie and declare but we forsooth being very wise young men and wonderfull searchers of reasons not having so much as perused those books nor sought out Masters to expound them unto us nor somewhat accused our own slownesse herein nor held them to have any judgement or understanding who affirmed that those works had for a long time been read kept and expounded thorough the whole world though that no credit was to be given unto them being moved by their words who were their enemies and offended with them by whom we were enforced with a false promise of
reason to believe and embrace unheard of millions of fables and tales CHAP. VII That we ought not to judge rashly of the holy Scriptures and how and with what care and diligence the true Religion is to be sought for BUt now if I can I will accomplish that which I have begun and I will treat with thee after such a sort that in the mean time I will not expound the Catholick Faith but I will shew unto them that have a care of their souls some hope of divine fruit and of finding out the Truth to the end they may search out the great mysteries and secrets of Faith He that seeks after the true Religion doth without doubt either believe already that the Soul is immortall unto whom that Religion may be commodious and profitable or he desires to find her to be so in the same Religion and therefore all Religion is for the souls sake for the nature of the body howsoever it doth put him to no care and solicitude especially after death whose soul hath taken a course by which it may become blessed Wherefore true Religion if there be any was either onely one chiefly instituted for the souls sake and this soul erres and is foolish as we see untill she gets and possesses wisdome and that perhaps is the true Religion if I seek out and enquire the cause of her erring I find it to be a thing which is extremely hidden and obscure But do I send thee to fables or do I enforce thee to believe any thing rashly I say our soul being entangled and drowned in errour and folly seeks after the way of venty and truth if there be any such to be found if thou findest not thy self thus inclined and disposed pardon me and make me I pray thee partaker of thy wisdome but if thou doest let us I beseech thee both together seek out the truth Imagine with thy self that no not ce had as yet been given unto us nor no insinuation made unto us of any Religion what soever Behold we undertake a new work and a new businesse Professours of Religion are I believe to be sought for if there be no such thing Suppose then that we have found men of divers opinions and in that diversity seeking to draw every one unto them but that in the mean time some amongst these do surpasse the rest in renown of fame and in the possession of almost all people Whether they embrace the truth or no it is a great question but are they not first to be examined and tried that so long as we erre for as men we are subject to errour we may seem to erre with mankind it self but thou wilt say Truth is to be found but amongst a few certain men if thou knowest amongst whom it is why then thou knowest already what it is Did not I say a little before that we would seek after the truth as though we were yet ignorant thereof but if by the force of truth thou doest conjecture that there be but few that embrace it and yet thou knowest not who they be what if those few do lead and rule the multitude by their authority and can dive into the secrets and mysteries of faith and can make them in a manner plain and manifest do we not see how few attain to the height of eloquence and yet the schools of Rhetoricians do make a great noise throughout the whole world with companies of young men Do all those that desire to become good oratours being terrified with the multitude of unskilfull men think that they ought to addict themselves rather to the studie of the orations of Coccilius and Erucius then to those of Tullius Cicero all men affect the things that are strengthened and confirmed by the authority of their ancestours The simple sort of people endeavours to learn those things which a few learned men have delivered unto them to be learned but very few there be that attain unto great eloquence fewer there be that practise it but fewest of all that grow eminent and are famous What if true Religion be some such thing what if a multitude of ignorant people frequents the Churches it is no proof nor argument that therefore none are made perfect by those mysteries and yet if so few should studie eloquence as there are few that become eloquent our parents would never think it fit to have us recommended unto such masters When as therefore the multitude which abounds with a number of unskilfull people invites us to these studies and makes us earnestly to affect that which few do obtain why will we not admit that we have the like cause in Religion the which peradventure we contemne and despise to the great perill and hazard of our souls for if the most true and most sincere worship of God though it be but amongst a few yet it is amongst those with whom the multitude though wholly addicted to their appetites and desires and farre from the purity of knowledge and understanding doth consent and agree which without all doubt may come to passe I ask what answer are we able to give if any one should reprove our rashnes folly for that having a great care to find out the true Religion we do not diligently search it out amongst the masters and teachers thereof if I should say the multitude hath discouraged me Why then hath it not disheartened men from the study of the liberall sciences which hardly yields any profit to this present life why not from seeking after money and getting wealth why not from obtaining dignities and honours moreover why not from recovering and preserving health finally why not from the desire of a blessed an happy life in all which affairs though many men be imployed yet few there be that are eminent and excell You will say that the books of the Old Testament seemed to contain absurd things Who are they that affirm it namely enemies for what cause or reason they did it is not now the question but yet they were enemies you will say when you read them you understood so much by your own reading Is it so indeed if thou hadst no skill in Poetrie at all thou durst not take in hand Terentianus Maurus without a master Asper Cornutus Donatus and a multitude of other Authours are thought requisite for the understanding of any Poet whose verses deserve no greater esteem then the approbation and applause of a stage and thou without a guide doest undertake to reade those books and without a master darest passe thy judgement upon them which howsoever they be are notwithstanding by the confession of almost all mankind published to be holy and replenished with divine matters nor if thou findest some things therein which seem unto thee absurd dost thou rather accuse the dulnesse of thy wit and thy mind corrupted with the infection of this world as the minds of all fools are then those books which peradventure by such kind of men cannot
be well conceived and understood Thou shouldst do well to seek out a man both pious and learned or one that is esteemed and reputed so to be by the approbation and consent of many by whose instructions thou mightest become better and more expert and skilfull by his learning Such an one saist thou was not easie to be found it would be some labour and trouble to seek him There was none such in the land wherein thou didst dwell If so what cause could more profitably enforce thee to travell if he lay hid in the continent or firm land or were not there at all thou shouldst sail beyond sea if he were not there to be found by the shore thou shouldest make a voyage even unto those lands wherein the things which are contained in those books are said and reported to have been done O Honoratus have we done any such thing and yet when we were but most wretched and silly boyes we did at our own pleasure and in our own judgement condemn a Religion and that perhaps a most holy one for I speak as yet as though some doubt were to be made thereof whose fame and renown hath already possessed the whole world What if the things which seem in those Scriptures offensive to some that are ignorant and unskilfull be for this cause so written and set down that when such things are read as agree not with the sense of all sorts of men but much lesse with theirs that are holy and wise we may with more care and diligence seek out a secret and hidden meaning thereof doest thou not see how men labour to interpret the pastorall Catamite upon whom the rough shepherd poured out his affections and how they affirm that the boy Alexis upon whom Plato is also said to have made some love-verses signifies I know not what great and mysterious matter but that it surpasseth the judgement and understanding of unskilfull men when as indeed that Poet abounding in his inventions may without any detestable crime or offence be conceived to have published lascivious songs but were we indeed hindred and withdrawn from seeking out the true Religion either by the publishing of some law against it or by the power of them that oppose it or by the contemptible shew and appearance of men dedicated to the service of God or by any base or dishonest report or by the newnesse of the institution or by some hidden profession thereof No no none of these things did withdraw and hinder us all laws both divine and humane do permit men to seek out the Catholick faith and certainly it is lawfull according to humane law to hold embrace it if so long as we erre we be uncertain of the divine law We have no enemie that puts any fright or terrour into our weaknes although truth and the salvation of our souls if it be sought after where it is lawful to seek it with most safety and it cannot be found ought to be enquired for with any danger and hazard whatsoever the degrees of all powers dignities do most devoutly impart their service unto this sacred and divine worship and the very name of Religion is most honourable and hath a very great esteem and renown What hindereth us then at last to seek out carefully and to examine with a pious and diligent search whether here be that truth which though few do know and retain after the sincerest manner yet the favour and good will of all nations doth conspire therein All this being so imagine as I said that we now make our first enquiry what Religion we ought to embrace both for the cleansing and reforming of our souls Without doubt we must take our beginning from the Catholick Church for there are now more Christians then if the Jews were joyned with the worshippers of idols And whereas of the same Christians there be divers heresies and all would have themselves thought to be Catholicks and do call others besides themselves hereticks the Church is one as all do grant greater in multitude if thou considerest the whole world and as those that know do affirm more sincere in truth then all the rest but as for truth it is another question But that which is sufficient for those that seek it is that the Catholick Church is one upon which other heresies do impose divers names when as every one of them is called by its proper name which it dares not deny whereby we may understand by the judgement of Arbitratours not hindred by any favour unto whom the name Catholick which all seek after ought to be attributed But lest that any one should think that this thing ought to be debated with much babling or superfluous discourse there is one Church indeed wherein even the humane Laws are after a sort Christian Yet I will have no preocupation of judgement to be drawn from hence but I judge it to be a most fit beginning for the seeking out of the truth For there is no fear least the true worship of God relying upon no proper force of its own should seem to stand in need to be upheld and supported by them whom it ought to sustain and support but certainly it were a perfect happinesse if the Truth could there be found where with most fecurity it may be sought and retained but if it cannot it ought to be sought for in another place what danger and perill soever be incurred CHAP. VIII Of the way to the instruction of piety and of the wonderfull paint Saint Augustine took to find it out HAving thus resolved and determined these things which in my opinion are so right and just that I ought to prevail in that cause with thee whosoever were against it I will recount unto thee as well as I can what course I took to find out the true Religion when as I sought it with such a mind and resolution as I have now declared that it ought to be sought for When I was departed from thee beyond the Sea now staggering and doubting what I ought to embrace and what to reject which doubting daily encreased in me from the time that I gave ear unto that man whose coming unto us was as thou knowest promised as from heaven for the resolving of all the difficulties wherewith we were troubled and I knew him to be a man like other men but onely that he was eloquent I held a great debate and deliberation with my self being now in Italy not whether I should continue in that sect into which I was sorry and grieved that I had faln but by what means I might find out the truth for the love whereof thou canst bear me witnesse how I sighed and groaned I was often of an opinion that it could not be found out and the great waves of my thoughts and cogitations moved me to assent to the Academicks Oftentimes again when I considered as well as I could that the mind of man is endued with such vivacity and
almost all sufficient to have disputed of matters of faith Which great assemblie and meeting together although it might in some mans opinion have imboldened them to presume and determine somewhat of themselves yet they delivered nothing presumed nothing arrogated nothing to themselves but above all things they were very carefull not to leave any thing to posterity which before they had not received of their fore-fathers not thinking it sufficient to dispose well of the businesse then present but also to leave an example to their posterity how they in like manner should reverence the Religion of sacred Antiquity and utterly condemn the inventions of profane Noveltie We inveighed also against the wicked presumption of Nestorius who boasted that he was the first and the onely man which understood the Scriptures and that all others which before his daies preached and taught all that interpreted and expounded the word of God were ignorant and unskilfull that is all Priests all Confessours and Martyrs of whom some had expounded Gods law others allowed and believed them to conclude he maintained that the Church both now did erre and alwayes had erred because as he thought it had and did follow unlearned and erroneous Doctours All which albeit they were abundantly sufficient for the overthrow and extinguishing of all profane novelties Yet least that ought should in such plenty of proofs be wanting we added for a conclusion a double authority of the Sea Apostolick the one of holy Pope Xistus which venerable father now honoureth the Church of Rome the other of Pope Celestinus of blessed memory his predecessour which I have thought good also here to set down Pope Xistus then in his Epistle which he wrote to the Bishop of Antioch touching the cause of Nestorius saith thus Therefore quoth he because as the Apostle saith the faith is one that which evidently hath obtained to be so called let us beleeve and such things as are to be holden let us beleeve Afterward he prosecuteth and explicateth what those things be which are to be beleeved what they be which are to be kept saying thus Nothing quoth he is further lawfull for Novelly because it is convenient that nothing be added to Antiquity The faith and belief of our forefathers is clear and perspiouous let it not be troubled nor defiled with any permixtion of dirt or mire A postolically spoken in commendation of our forefathers faith to compare it to light and perspicuity and in likening novell prophaness to the admixtion of frith and mire Pope Colestinus likewise is of the same opinion for in his Epistle which he sent to the Priests of France wherein he reprehendeth their dissimulation in that by their silence they left the old saith destitute and suffered profane Novelties to spring up thus he writeth Worthily quoth he the cause doth touch us if with silonce we foster er● rour therfore let such men be corrected let them have no liberty to speake at their pleasure Some happily may doubt who they be whom he forbideth to have their liberty in speaking whether the preachers of antiquity or the inventours of novelties Let him speak and discharge the Reader of this doubt for it followeth Let Novelty cease quoth he if the matter be sa that is if that be true which divers accuse unto me your Cities and Provinces that through your pernicious dissimulation you cause them to yield unto certain new doctrine Therfore quoth he if the matter be so let Novelty cease to molest Antiquity This then was the blessed opinion of holy Celestinus not that Antiquity should cease to overthrow Novelty but rather that Novelty should give over to trouble Antiquity Which Apostolick and Catholick decrees whosoever resists first of necessity he must proudly contemn the memory of S. Celestinus who defined that novelty should give over to provoke antiquity Again he must jest and scoff at the decree of holy Xistus whose judgement is that nothing is lawfull for novelty because it is not covenient that ought be added to antiquity Again he must contemn the determination of blessed Cyrill who highly commended the zeal of venerable Capreolus in that he desired that the old Articles of Faith should be confirmed and new inventions utterly condemned Likewise he must reject the Councell of Ephesus that is the judgement almost of all the holy Bishops of the East who inspired by God would not decree that posterity should beleeve ought but that which the sacred Antiquity of our Forefathers agreeing together in Christ had holden and belceved who with their uniform allowing and acclamation testified that they all decreed all wished all gave judgement that as all Hereticks almost before Nestorius contemning antiquity and defending Novelty were condemned so likewise Nestorius himself the Authour of Novelty and impugner of Antiquity should be condemned Whose sacred consent and agreement proceeding from Gods goodnesse if a-any dislike what remaineth but that he maintain that Nestorius his profane opinion was unjustly condemned Finally he must also reject and contemn the universall Church of Christ and her masters the Apostles and Prophets and especially the doctrine of S. PAUL as dregs and drosse The universall Church because she hath alwayes religiously kept and maintained that faith which was once delivered S. PAUL because he hath thus written O Timothy keep the depositum avoiding profane Novelties of voyces And again if any preach unto you otherwise then you have received be he accursed So that if neither the Apostle his definition nor the Ecclesia sticall Canons ought to be violated by which according to the sacred consent of universality and antiquity alwayes all hereticks and lastly Pelagius Celestinus and Nestorius were justly deservedly condemned surely necessary it is that hereafter all Catholicks which desire to shew themselves true children of their mother the Church adhere joyn and stick close unto the holy faith of their holy Fathers detesting and abhorring pursuing and opposing the profane novelties of all profane miscreants whatsoever This almost is the summe of that which in these two Commonitory Books we have more amply discoursed of and now after the manner of recapitulation in fewer words gathered together that my memory for helping whereof I have wrote this Treatise may both with daily admonition be repaired and yet not overlaid with any tedious prolixity FINIS THE VERITY OF Christian Faith Written by Hierome Savanorola of Ferrara LONDON Printed by R. Daniel 1651. The Contents CHAP. I. THat there is a true Religion Page 1 CHAP. II. There are two sorts of Divine Worship Page 5 CHAP. III. That there is no better life then that of Christians Page 9 CHAP. IIII. There cannot be imagined the last end of any life better then that of Christians Page 13 CHAP. V. There can be no better means to attain unto eternall blisse then a Christian life Page 22 CHAP. VI. By Christian Religion man most assuredly obtains eternal blisse Page 28 CHAP. VII The truth of Christian Faith is proved