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A67555 The proselyte of Rome called back to the communion of the Church of England in a private letter thought very fit and seasonable to be made publick. L. W. 1679 (1679) Wing W81; ESTC R24582 21,305 34

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he was baptized as also because it is not certain that he was lawfully or validly Ordained by a true Bishop having an intention requisite to that effect c. Secondly It is not certain that he did pronounce the words of Consecration If he did duly pronounce them yet Thirdly perhaps he had not a due intention If all these things were observed as they should be It is not certain in the Fourth place that a due matter was made use of for the Bread might not be made of Wheat Fifthly Although all these things proceeded well and rightly yet it is not indubitable that the Officer to whom the custody of the venerable Sacrament belongs did not expose an Host that was not consecrated instead of one that was truly consecrated to be adored All these are generals to which we may add the malice of mans heart which is too vigorous in some persons Upon these heads saith he we have known many Cheats too frequently practised in this matter and they know it much better who are employed as Judges upon the Tribunal of the Sacred Inquisition Thus far Father Terill Now if they of the Church of Rome have no certainty in their Sacraments no certainty in their Sacrifice of the Altar no certainty in their Priesthood no certainty but they may commit Idolatry every day if they cannot be certain but the malice of their Priests may frustrate all the sacred Ordinances of God to them and make them absolutely null though they be never so worthily disposed to receive the benefit of them And this is the Doctrine and Belief commonly maintained in the Church of Rome They should rather blush at such an Infallibility than boast of any great advantage to be reaped from it For grant further that that Infallibility were such as they would have it yet they can have no security in it for salvation 'T is such as a man may carry into Hell with him if it proves not a means to lead him thither where for ought I know the Devils have it as much as he And Gregory the Seventh was of the same mind Nam ut Jacobus frater Domini testatur fides sine operibus mortua est qualem Daemones habere fatetur Non Ergo minùs est resistendum pertinacibus authenticarum institutionum impugnatoribus quam Sacrae fidei violatoribus cùm Daemonibus assimilentur quicunque institutionem SS Patrum in fide tantum non etiam in conversatione pro viribus assectatur For as James the Brother of our Lord doth testisie Faith without Works is dead which kind of Faith he doth acknowledge to be in the Devils We ought therefore no less to resist such as are obstinate impugners of Authentick Institutions viz. of Piety than such as do violate the Sacred Faith seeing they that do earnestly follow the instruction of the Holy Fathers in matter of Faith only and not in a holy conversation are like unto the Devils For this Infallibility is restrained to matters of Faith and that Faith is but historical as they call it and not sufficient to salvation To the Essence of a Church right Doctrines in Practicals are as necessary as in Speculatives if mortal Sin excludes from salvation as well as an erroneous Faith † R. H. Disc of the Necessity of Church Guides p. 82. as the Author of the Guide in Controversies does acknowledge And this is the Doctrine of the Council of Trent Sess 6. de Justificatione Si quis dixerit solâ fide justificari ita ut intelligat nihil aliud requiri quod ad Justificationis gratiam consequendam cooperetur nulla ex parte necesse esse cum suae voluntatis motu praeparari atque disponi Anathema sit Can. 9. If any man shall say that Faith alone does Justifie so that nothing else is required to cooperate towards the attainment of the Grace of Justification and that it is in no wise necessary that he should be prepared and disposed to it by any motion of his own will let him be accursed Et Can. 19. Siquis dixerit nihil praeceptum esse in Evangelio praeter fidem caetera esse indifferentia neque praecepta neque prohibita sed libera aut Decem Praecepta nihil pertinere ad Christianos Anathema sit If any man shall say there is nothing commanded in the Gospel but Faith that all other matters are indifferent neither commanded nor forbidden but left free or that the Ten Commandements do not concern Christians let him be accursed Et Can. 21. Si quis di●erit Christum Jesum à Deo hominibus datum fuisse ut Redemptorem cui fidant non etiam ut Legislatorem cui obediant Anathema sit that is If any man shall say that Christ Jesus was given unto man of God as a Redeemer in whom they should trust and not also as a Lawgiver whom they should obey let him be accursed Which Canons we can readily subscribe to From which it appears beyond exception that the Infallibility pretended by the Church of Rome is not to be relied on as sufficient for salvation The Creeds chiefly comprehending Speculatives there must be a great body of Articles also of necessary Faith relating to Practicals as R. H. C. 1. §. 3. p 4. maintains in his Discourse of the Necessity of Church Guides But doth this Infallibility extend to all matters of Practical belief as well as Speculative Yes saith R. H. Christ hath left an Infallible Guide for Manners as well as Faith † Id. p. 176 and a little after God hath provided by the same Church Authority to preserve his Church in truth and to restrain it from sin giving an equal Commission to teach the ignorant and to correct the vicious And that since their Doctrine directs our Manners as well as Faith their Infallibility is as necessary for things of Practice as of Speculation But if there be such an Infallibility in the Guides of the Church not o●ly in reference to points of Faith but to Doctrines of Practice also 1 Sam. 15.14 What meaneth then this bleating of the Sheep in mine ears and this lowing of the Oxen which I hear Of the degeneracy of the Church in his time V. Bede writes thus Apud Meisner de Ecclesia p. 681 682 684. Videt quisque non sine lachrymis c. Every one sees not without tears into what a weak and infirm condition the state of the Church does daily dwindle And St. Bernard in his time Hodie serpit putida tabes c. Now-a-days an infectious and spreading Consumption hath seized the body of the Church which the further it is dilated the more desperate it grows and it is so much the more dangerous by how much the more inward And after him the Cardinal Petrus de Aliaco in a publick Sermon at the Council of Constans Manifestum esse saith he c. 'T is apparent that the Church hath of a long time been in several respects deformed and not only
form of sound words 2 Tim. 1.13 And it is undoubtedly St. Judes Faith we contend for which as Beza very well notes upon the place was once and at once so delivered to the Saints that it ought never to be changed That Faith which the Fathers of the Council of Nice professed we do very heartily embrace we keep this Faith whole and undefiled But from receiving any other we are deterred by the Sentence of the Synod of Ephesus forementioned Qui aliam fidem audent componere c. Whosoever shall dare to compose alledge or introduce any other Faith if he be a Bishop or Clergy-man he shall be degraded if a Lay-man excommucated If the Faith thus delivered were sufficient for their salvation in genere fidei why not for ours And herein without all doubt we are no less Infallible than the Church of Rome And to the Ancient Fathers in the most Sacred Councils this was their † Lud. Bail Sum. Concil Tom. 1. in decreto de Symbolo Sess 3. m. pa. 522. Shield against all Heresies Quo solo c. Through whose attractive power alone they have in times past drawn unbelievers to the Faith resisted and rooted out Hereticks and confirm'd the Faithful as the Fathers of the Council of Trent do acknowledge If there be any other points of Faith needful to salvation our ignorance thereof after a long and diligent search is both involuntary and invincible and that will totally excuse us For that superfatation of Articles by Pope Pius the Fourth we were never Baptized into them nor can we answer for them The truth is the Faith of the Church of England the Romanists can never justly reprehend being more pure more Primitive and more Catholick than their own and was professed intirely by all Christian Churches before some Articles of the present Church of Rome were ever known to have had a being And for part of this we have a pregnant acknowledgment in the Council of Trent where they set down this Symbolum fidei totidem verbis quibus in omnibus Ecclesiis legitur Lud. Bail ubi supra In the same words in which it is read in all Churches And this they set down as that principle wherein all that do profess the Faith of Christ do necessarily agree and as that firm and only foundation against which the gates of Hell shall never be able to prevail This Faith I say we do keep whole and undefiled but it seems it was a foundation too narrow to bear up the Popish superstructures of Hay and Stubble but yet being the only foundation as they confess and so firm that the gates of Hell shall never prevail against it we do stedfastly rest upon it building our selves thereon as St. Epist Jude v. 20 21. Jude directs us in expectation of the mercy of our Lord Jesus Christ to Eternal life Towards the accomplishment whereof our Charity is so much more Catholick than theirs that with some craft and sophistry though with little reason they take an Argument from thence to delude the weak and make them Proselytes to their party For our Agenda or matters of Practice we have a Liturgy that is full solemn and intelligible we have all Sacraments and Sacramentals that are generally necessary or of any efficacy to salvation And besides all publick Offices for private devotion and use we have Institutions and forms of Christian piety no part of the Christian Church better Our Priesthood and Government you cannot with any truth or reason deny to be Apostolical and if our Discipline be in some instances collapsed from the severity which it obtained in the practice of the Ancients that of the Church of Rome is so likewise And if we reflect upon the many disadvantages and perils which are in Their Communion they will warrant the security in ours to be far the greater Amongst the disadvantages on that side I reckon their half Sacraments against the express letter of our Saviours Institution * Mat. 26.26 1 Cor. 11.23 c. and their Service in an unknown Tongue contrary to the express discourse of the Apostle † 1. Cor. 14. Amongst the perils I must account 1 That of Idolatry in the adoration of the Host 2 The veneration of Images 3 And the invocation of Saints Secondly Such as arise from the abuses in the matter of Confession and Penances of Indulgence and Dispensation with many delusions under pretence of Revelations Thirdly Such as arise from several of their Doctrines viz. That the Sacrament does conferr Grace ex opere operato from the Act performed without any worthy or moral disposition in the Receiver That Attrition for fear of Hell is sufficient without Charity to obtain Grace and pardon in the Sacrament of Penance That in a case of Conscience I may follow a probable opinion which is more benign and gentle and reject that which is more safe if it be more severe and rigid That a man is not obliged to decline and avoid Proximam occasionem peccandi the immediate danger of sinning though he has had sad experience of his own frailty and recidivation That the precept of Repentance does not bind presently but only in the time of sickness or at the point of death These Doctrines are taught and practised without any the least check of his Infallible Holiness Nor is the danger small which ariseth from the perswasion of their Infallibility For from thence proceeds a belief that whatsoever they take upon them to define is as true as Gospel And what sad work this hath made in the Church of God we may observe from that single instance about the Sacrament In a Council at Rome under Nicholas the Second An. Dom. 1059. Berengarius was enjoyned a form of Recautation wherein he professed and swore that the Bread and Wine which are set upon the Altar after Consecration are not only a Sacrament but also the true Body and Blood of our Lord Jesus Christ And that the said Body is not in Sacrament only but in truth N. B Sensualiter manibus Sacerdotum tractari frangi fidelium dentibus atteri i. e. sensually handled by the Priest broken and torn by the teeth of the Faithful Expressions so gross to unfold an inexplicable mystery that the Author of the Gloss upon Gratian gives his Reader this sober warning of them De confect dist 2. c. 42. ego Bereng Haec verba nisi sane intelligas in majorem incides Haeresin quam ipse Berengarius habuit i. e. Unless you understand these words in a sound sense you will fall into a greater Heresie than Berengarius was guilty of And upon the account of this pretended Infallibility I might add some Reflections upon those horrid Murthers Treasons and Rebellions which have been encouraged and carried on out of a belief of the Popes Supremacy and Power over Princes at least in ordine ad Spiritualia in order to Church-matters which must needs make a great flaw in