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A91516 The right religion, reviewed and inlarged / by L.P. Gent. L. P., Gent. 1658 (1658) Wing P74C; ESTC R181384 42,130 187

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3. By the first conformity Man comes to the knowledge of God as he is the Author and end of Grace by the second relies upon his mercy and goodnesse that in due time he will grant and give those good things which Christ hath taught us to ask in his prayer in the last he is taken with the beauty of his divine perfections and so in joyes him in a higher and more eminent manner Both Happinesses in this life are imperfect by reason of the glimmering light Man onely hath of God during the same they will be compleated and perfected in the next When Man after a willing complyance with Gods grace in this shall see him not as in a looking glasse 1 Cor. 13. but face to face as he is in himself CHAP. 4. Of the diversities of faiths hopes and charities 1 IT is demonstrable that there are divers sortes of Faiths Hopes and Charities as habituall and Actuall Divine Habituall and Actuall Humane for some believe hope for and love supernaturall things with the same if not more eagernesse and fervency than naturall which Actions suppose as effects their proper and proportioned causes supernatutall qualities naturall not being able in respect of their meaner extract on and dignity to give such noble births Those are called divine because infused by Gods extraordinary power these humane for that they are acquired by the strength of nature 2. The Habituall divine are the supernaturall qualities themselves The Actuall divine are acts of the will of understanding as raised and enabled to a higher pitch by those supernaturall qualities The Habituall humane are the acquired qualities themselves the Actuall humane are acts of the will and understanding as inclined and fitted for act on by those acquired qualities The Habituall and Actuall divine differ further from the Habituall and Actuall humane in their materiall and formall objects as also in the Means whereby those severall objects come to knowledge the materiall of Habituall and actuall divine being revealed Truths the formal Revelation the materiall of habituall and actuall humane unrevealed Truths the formall the light of Reason private reading or information The meanes of habituall and actuall Divine the Tradition of the Church of Habituall and actuall humane the light of Reason private reading or information 3. Now forasmuch as Christianity is a supernaturall building contrived and framed by the wisdome of God to last for ever of which Faith is the foundation Hope the walls and Charity the Roofe and perfection The conformities expressed in the precedent Chapter are to be understood of divine Faith Hope Charity and not of humane because all nature joyn'd gather'd in one is not able to make a Being above Nature And these are the vertues call'd Theological as having God immediatly for object the harmonious Sisters three in number but one in affection none desiring that which displeaseth other Greatness is their essentiall attribute yet Charity excells St. Paul 1 Cor. 13. compares them together extolls them all but in the close gives unto Charity the preheminence And not undeservedly for she is the enlivening soule of Faith and Hope and all the moral vertues both they and these being out of her company as dead bodies without life or motion as to heaven and Eternity CHAP. 5. Of the Churches power and infallibilitie in matters of Faith 1 SUpposing it for granted ' that Christs knowledge of Gods reaveled truth and his power to convey the same to beliefe raised his preaching teaching to the full height and perfection of a Rule of beliefe to the first Christians it cannot in reason be denied he having communicated his said knowledg and power to the Apostles in them to the succeeding Churches as appears by his own words All I have learnt of my father I have made known unto you Joh. 15. As my father sent me so I send you Joh. 20. but she may challeng a like interest and right in respect of after-Christians whence it followeth that all matters of Beliefe as well other points as scripture are to be taken upon her accompt and ciedit and that whatsoever comes upon any other score is to be reputed Apocryphall and no way appertaining to the Obligation of Beleife 2. St Paul declares this truth unto the Ephesians assuring them that they are builded upon no other foundation than the Apostles and Prophets Eph. 2. likewise to the Thessalonians 2. Thes 2. and Timothy 1 Tim 6. bidding them hold the traditions and keep the depositum and again if an Angell from heaven shall Evangelize any other than what I have Evangelized to you let him be accursed Gal. 7. The reason is cleare because the Rule of Beliefe is the Measure of beliefe beyond which there is not any conformity or obedience due from Beliefe 3. The usuall colour for believing more or lesse than the Church alloweth of grounded upon her pretended subjection to Errour is vain inasmuch as that very Christ that stored her with knowledge of Gods revealed truth and with power to convey the same hath also indowed her with inerrability whereby to convey it safely and without danger of miscarrying by arming her proof aginst all the enemies of truth against ignorance Mat. 13. To you it is given to know the mysteries of the Kingdom of heaven against darknesse Mat. 6. you are the light of the world against Errour and falshood Joh. 14. I will send unto you the spirit of truth to remaine with you for ever Jsaah 62. thou shalt no more be called forsaken against Weaknesse 1. Tim. 3. she is the Pillar and ground of truth Mat. 16. Hell gates shall not prevaile against her To make which good and the worke sure Christ called his eternall father to his aid prayed him and was heard for his reverence Heb. 5. And to prevent and cut off all occasions of imagining that these favours bestowed on the Church were not to survive the Apostles for a continuance in the succeeding Church Christ adds Behold I am with you all dayes to the end of the world Mat. 28. soe as it must be said that either Christ was not of power to keep his Church from straying or that he wanted fidelity to make good his word 4. The certanity divine faith requires to build on is a further Evidence of the Churches infallibility for how is it possible Faith can be certain if the Church that is to ascertain it be uncertain and fallible look on the Churches composure and nature and her strength will appear yet more by reason she is framed and made up of men dispersed and spread over the world who by this meanes being of severall Nations different tempers and interests neither could nor can meet or conspire to Cheat themselves and posterity with a lie That men of themselves are apt to mistake and deceive is from the purpose So the evangelists might have fallen short of performing their taske But as God holding their hands and guiding their pennes his holy word
THE RIGHT RELIGION Reviewed and inlarged By L. P. Gent. John 24. No man cometh to the Father but by Me. Ezekiel 13. Woe be to foolish prophets that follow their own spirit they see nothing but vain things and divine lies saying The Lord whereas the Lord hath not sent them Printed at PARIS M.DC.LVIII TO THE CATHOLIKES OF ENGLAND THe old saying Truth purchaseth hatred is verified at this time wherein Truth is grown so loathsome and hatefull that whosoever goes about to tell it indangers displeasure It is strange that any can take distast at that all desire which is to know the truth Truth being the natural pleasing object of the understanding Neverthelesse such is the perverseness and vanity of some that they despise and maligne what ought most of all to be cherisht and loved of whom it is said They preferred darkness before light Joh. 3. Having then undertaken in this small Treatise to declare Gods revealed Truth I should be wanting to my self in so dangerous an enterprize if I did make choice of any other Patronage than yours Renowned Catholikes whose many and glorious sufferings for the said Truth have rankt you in the number of the best and greatest Conquerors Others hold dependence of Fortun you of Grace they surmount force and strength common to beasts you Reason and Will proper to men They overcome vanquish'd men you conquerors themselves their conquest is of others onely yours of others and your selves too In a word all the addition that is to be made to your greatness is a continuance of patience and constancy And this God hath in store and will give conditionally that you ask it heartily He that hath begun a good work in you desires no better than to perfect the same What need you fear your enemies may hurt themselves but want power to wrong you unlesse you will Nay their worst is your best taking away your estates your good names bereaving you of your Liberties your lives those bruta fulmina which render them so formidable begets you a richer and surer possession Heaven and Eternity All the pudder they keep in vexing you is but sowing your seed for you which undoubtedly will grow up to an hundred fold increase Let them hammer cut hew you till they are weary they do no more than carve and fit you for the walls of Heaven And who can justly say he is a loser that changes for better gets much with the losse of little Take a serious view of the B. Saints that passed as you do through a sea of calamites and troubles and are now at rest with God and amongst them all you will not discover one complaining The richnesse and magnificence of their reward hath so fully recompensed their forrows and losses that they wonder at the unwillingnesse and repining of some to part with and at the greedinesse and injustice of others to wrest from that which neither can long keep For the covenant betwixt birth and death stands firm and inviolable as that gives all things this must return all bare and naked This I know is meer folly to hardened Libertines that look not beyond the fading pleasures of this life but not to melting Christians who believe and are assured that Heaven is a Reward a Gole a Crown which are not to be atchieved by sitting still by leading a licentious and inordinate life but by flying evill overcoming temptations doing good and vertuous acts Take heart therefore brave Champions and be not daunted for your greater comfort and incouragement rest assured that God is with you yea marshalls the very field you fight in and when he sees it for your spirituall advantage he will either cause a retreat to sound that you may have a time of breathing in this world or crown you with victory that he may have just cause to reward you in the next Then your persecutors will be at a stand have no more to say to you and your troubles will be at an end your mourning out your cries and sighs cease your grievances heard and redressed your teares dried up the sweat of your browes wiped away and finding your excessive gain unspeakeable joy will seize your hearts and make you glad that you had the grace and courage to suffer for so good and gracious a God For my part I shall ever acknowledge your greatness admire your glory and from your goodness raise to my self a hope that you will dart a ray to quicken and cherish these my indeavours whereby you will add an obligation to my being Your devoted Friend and Servant L. P. To the Reader Good Reader OF many Religions professed in this land severall Writers men of approved integrity and profound learning have so clearly demonstrated that there is onely one true and that the Roman is it that I cannot but impute the ungenerall acknowledging of the same to prejudice or impatience of labor To prejudice in them that have read their works and yet do not believe accordingly To impatience of labor in others that will not bestow the paines to turn over great volumes The best remedy for that sort of men is to implore the Divine Goodness for cleane and unbiass'd hearts without which it is not possible to behold the radiancy of Truth For this J have endeavoured to draw Catholike Belief into a narrow room as a vast world into a small Map to the end that with a little travails much may be discovered Jn pursuance whereof J shew in the first place the end of man in the next the will of God and the means which he hath appointed to attain to this end Then I evince the weakness and vanity of such pretences as divers make to this and other means Lastly the true Church appears in her right colours And for as much as Truth shines brighter by opposition after the manne● of contraries the mainest Objections of Adversaries are propose● and solved By all which if Go● prove to be glorifyed and you rea● benefit I shall have the return 〈◊〉 desire and wish my aime being 〈◊〉 other than Gods Glory and you● good THE Right Religion reveiw'd c. CHAP. 1. Of happinesse 1 THE severall knowledges of things within and above the reach of Reason are sufficient Evidences that there is a naturall and a supernaturall state in both which God is the beginning and end of all 2. In the naturall for who is so short-sighted that doth not see that what hath been is at this present existent and visible was not alwayes so That then it could not produce it selfe out of the void state of nothing and by consequence that it needed an active Beginning that never was nothing and ever something whereby to bring nothing to existence and being And who so stupid that doth not feele want or satiety in the possession of whatsoever is created or made Honours expose as Cedars on Hills to the boysterous storms of Envy and malice lift up high to make the fall greater
was truly and infallibly coucht on the sacred leaves of the Bible so assisting and strengthening his Church she becomes in all matters concerning faith powerfull and infallible God is not tyed to this or tother he is free to worke his wonders where when and to whom he pleaseth Neither is there any disproportion betwixt men thus assisted and infallibility it being not necessary for the production of a supernaturall effect that every part of the total cause be supernatural for it is visible to the eye that God frequently makes use of secondary causes in the production of supernaturall effects in that of faith Rom. 10. of hearing and preaching in that of Grace Mat. 18 19 of Elements and words in that of the blind man Jo. 6. of spittle and earth CHAP. 6. Of the possibilitie of keeping the Commandements 1 NOt onely that it is possible to keep the Commandements but also that divers have kept them is a truth so cleerly delivered both in the old and new Testament that there is cause to wonder any can make question thereof In the old Moses speaking of the Commandments sayes Deut. 30. They are not above but very near us in our Mouths in our hearts to doe them Noe Ezekias Josias Josaphat Asa Gen. 6. 4 Kings 18. 2 Paral. 30. 4 Kings 22. 1 Paral. 15 2 Paral. 20. Tob. 2. Iob 1.17 2 Kings 7. 3 Kings 9. Luke 2. Mat. 11.21 Luke 1. Joacham Tobias Job kept them In the New Christ is no lesse plain My yoke is sweet my burden light Simeon St John the Baptist Zacharias Elizabeth the B. Virgin kept them Gods conditional promises to David and his Posterity could be termed no better than Jeers unlesse the commandements were possible To what purpose so much perswasion in Books and Pulpits to live well if the Commandements be impossible is living well any other than keeping of the Commandements It is assuredly as rid culous as impious to tearm him a good liver that steales murthers and commits adultery c. The justness of lawes that inflict severe punishments vpon the breakers of the Commandements are not at all consistent with the impossibility of keeping them Necessity is a good and forcible excuse against the strongest charge The very light of Reason giveth testimonie to the Commandements possibility they being all grounded upon Reason and suited to her bent and inclination The wickedest man alive cannot say with truth that he breaketh any Commandment without some secret check of conscience 2. To alledge that God onely requires mans indeavour is repugnant to Christs express words which are not Mat. 19. If thou wilt come to heaven endeavour to keep but keep the Commandements Many a good endeavour as many a good purpose burns in Hell Heaven being the reward of doing not of endeavouring Besides it is equally unnaturall to endeavour impossibilityes and to desire things unknown Who could Choose but smile to see one leap and skip as ayming to soar fly in the Ayr knowing it to be possible onely for Birds that are fitted with wings and feathers for the purpose Indeed to point at any particular that doth keep the Commandements is hard no man knowing Eccles 9. whether he be worthy of love or hatred But that all in generall may keep them Christ himselfe assures it 2. Tim 2. Willing all to be saved God wills nothing impossible and he that wills the end wills the meanes 3. True it is neither Men nor Angells can love God as he is loveable that 's a perfection God onely is capable of nevertheless it is in the power both of Angells and Men to love God so far forth as the capacity of their condition reacheth which though it be a perfection of a lower degree ye● it is sufficient to denominate and render the subject it is in perfect And even this I confess is a● effect which Gods grace hath● chief hand in but that is no Ba● for Man having his share to Grace and Nature are not inconsistent yea Grace supporteth nay bettereth Nature they may then joyn and endeavour together as two of unequall strength drawing a boat one draweth more but yet both draw The part Grace acts in the working of salvation is to enlighten the understanding move and enable the Will The part Man acts is to comply with Grace Cor. 6.1 to yield and consent to her good Motions Apocj 3.20 Wherefore salvation is the work not of Grace alone nor of man alone but of Grace and Man joyning hand and heart together St Austin Tom. 10. Serm. 15. de verb. Apost post med speakes truth He that made you without you will not justifie you without you CHAP. 7. Of Religion 1 SUch is the dread of Gods awfull Majesty imprinted in Man that the most bararous people deem it a duty to set apart some time to worship him in the light of reason teaching that a certain return of honour and veneration is due from the effect to its cause whereby to express subjection gratitude and thankfullness and albeit impiety wants not Proselites that rejecting the Deity refuse to do him homage their folly is to be imputed to lack of grace and not o● the said light as appeares by readiness observeable in them to suffer for their opinion If th● other world yield no Punisher n● Rewarder no Hell nor Heaven it is madness to fear and vain prodigality to give away life the chief good and best flower of natures garden 2. This naturall propension to praise and magnify God begets religious acts and Religious acts that great moral vertue called Religion but Religion in a more common acception consists in Beliefe not humane grounded upon Reason but divine relying on the Churches Authoritie and the assistance of the holy Ghost It is the doctrine of Christ delivered by himself in plain and express terms Mar. 16. All power is given to me in heaven and in earth goe ye therefore and preach the Gospell unto all nations hee that believeth shall be saved he that believeth not shall be condemned Jo. 14. I will send unto you the holy Ghost who shall teach you all Truth Christ here speakes to the Apostles the Church giveth power to preach the Gospell to the Apostles the Church promiseth salvation to Believers of the Apostles the Church threatens damnation to unbelievers of the Apostles the Church lastly that there may be no pretence for disobedience he assureth to the Apostles the Church a peculiar assistance of the holy Ghost whose proper effect is to keep power from excess and failing 3. Not a word of or to Reason what colour then for attributing so much to Reason and so little to the Church as to deny Christ to have intrusted her with his Truth as if the Gospell were not Christs truth or Christs impowering the Church to preach the Gospell meant any other thing than to intrust her with his truth Had Reason the preheminence of Belief St Paul would not have subjected Reason unto Belief bidding all
captivate the understanding to the obedience of Faith 2. Cor. 10. Indeed to give Reason the guidance of Belief were to make the blind lead the blind Mat. 15 For asmuch as Reason is at a losse in the object of Belief and in Belief it self the hottest zealots of Reason having come short of the one and the other witness the Manichees and other Heretiques The Reason is because both are above Reason as being high mysteries and revealed so long since But Christianity is not against Reason and he is to be reputed silly and light that hasteneth upon a truth Eccl. 19. however proposed without examination of its credibility and consistence with Nature which must be the work of Reason very true nay more Belief is beholding to Reason even for discerning and finding out her guide the true Church But this onely amounts to an evidence that Reason helps and contributes to belief so doth preaching reading hearing c. 4 To be the guide of Belief requires further ability and skill to lay open immediately to Belief Gods revealed Truth a Prerogative belongs to the Church and no other as to whom alone revelation was made Whence it followeth that the Religion of Sectaryes is deficient vain their belief being grounded upon some humane respect and not upon the authority of the Church and assistance of the Holy Ghost And consequently that for them to deserve the name of true Chrstians and to be styled of the right Religion their onely way is to level at a perfection that takes its rise from an absolute resignation of their wills to the will of God in order to the Church which according to Christ is to become spiritually little ones Mat. 18. in resemblance to naturall Children who are at best when they most follow and obey their Parents directions and commands Hilar. in Mat. CHAP. 8 Of the Unity of Religion 1 IT is an undoubted Maxime amongst all that have any insight in nature that Being and Unity are inseparably together insomuch that where Being is there Unity cannot be wanting If then there be any such thing as Religion appointed by God for the salvation of soules without all peradventure it is one Christ himself cleares the difficulty saying One sheepfold and one Pastor Jo. 10. St Paul declares no lesse to the Ephesians willing them to affect unity to the end that they may bee as one Body one Spirit one Faith one Baptisme as God is one Ephe. 4. And again He gave some c. Untill we all meet in the unity of Belief 2. Now experience shews that this unity of Religion is an effect of acknowledging the Church for the Rule of Belief it being visible to the eye that all that square their Belief to the Church are one in Religion whereas they that take to themselves other rules dissent and jarre of which no other reason can be given but that the Church is all wayes constant and certain in her proceedings and clear in her expressions other Rules subject to uncertainty change and obscurity The fixedness of the severall Centers of fire and water inclines that to a constant ascension and this to a like descension That Pilot were guilty of much ingratitude and injurious to the Polars that should not yeild the guidance of the Ocean to the regularness of their motion Contrariwise it is a plain demonstration that the inequality of dayes and nights relates wholly to the wavering progress of the Sun for every cause giveing that it hath and no more as certain effects of one and the same kind hold dependance of constant and certain causes so uncertain effects of many and divers kindes must needs belong to unconstant and various causes 3. True it is that Scripture in it self that is as it is the word of God dictated by the holy Ghost is certain and infallible but to us to wit as it is lyable to this and t'other private interpretation it is as uncertain and fallible as man Witness the many contrary interpretations we se dayly made of Scripture which cannot possibly be all true wherefore the conclusion issueth abundantly that the Church is the onely fit Principle to unite Christians together and consequently that those may despair of ever wearing the Badg and Ornament of true Chrstianity viz. unity who dare with Core and the rest of that rebellious Crew bid defyance to the Church Num. 16. Jude 11. CHAP. 9. Of the goodnesse of the Roman Cotholique Religion 1 IF Excellency of nature and sweetness of disposition be ground enough to term a thing good the Roman Catholique Religion may not unjustly claym that appellation For first in her nature she is made up of Excellencies acknowledging a God Eternall Almighty Provident Wise Good Just Maker Govern our of heaven Earth One in nature three in persons Father Sonne and Holy Ghost the Sonne to have taken humane flesh whereby to converse with man to instruct and free him from the Bondage of Hell and sinne to have instituted seven Sacraments to supply the necessityes of his spirituall life Baptisme that he might be regenerate Confirmation that he might grow strong and able to profess his Faith before his enemies the Eucharist that he might be fed with divine grace Penance that his Maladies and sores of sinne might be cured and healed Extream unction that he might be comforted in his last Agony against the usuall assaults of the Divell Holy Order that he might be provided of spirituall teachers and Guides Matrimony that he might be multiplyed in a holy and sacramentall way that he hath an endless store of bliss and happiness to reward the good and a like of pain and misery to punish the bad that he hath chosen and establisht some to propose and apply all those good things to others Now for her disposition it is also good teaching to love God above all our Neighbours as our selves to make an hearty and ready expression of both of the former by laying down wealth honour liberty yea life it self rather than offend him by building Churches and Oratories to praise and serve him in by adorning and enriching them for the better stirring up of devotion and reverence by retaining and holding dear things appertaning to him or his by setting a part dayes to remember his favours and benefits by worshipping him for his own sake with supream his servants and beloved for his sake with inferiour honour by abhorring all manner of Idolatry of the latter by bearing in juries leaving revenge to God by forbearing even the least wrong and if any be done by making full reparation and amends by perswading not forcing Religion by relieving the poor needie with foundations of Hospitalls Almshouses Colledges c. by keeping faith with all especially Magistrates be they Catholiques or Sectaries Christians or Infidells good or bad and that for very Conscience sake These are the Roman Catholiques tenets and howbeit they admit of more yet none being what ever ignorance or malice hath noised
to the contrary inconsistent with these and consequently agreeable to all sorts of Governments that State or Common-wealth that refuses to protect and defend them from violence and oppression appeares clearely wanting to its interest in not complying with Prudence and Iuffice which bid to love and cherish all safe and fast subjects O but Catholiques have a dependance on the Pope who is a forraign Prince they haue so but not as he is a temporall Prince for so he is confined within certain territories of Italy and France their relation to him is onely as hee is their common spirituall Father whose office being to keep off Rebellion and to teach obedience cannot endanger the least St Peter and the rest of the Apostles were forreigners to severall Provinces the interest of Christ brought them to yet in regard their power was spirituall the Civill Magistrate had no cause to fear but rather to rejoyce as at a Good drawing towards them God having given the spirituall power as the soul to the body for comfort and support not for hurt or anoyance what say you then to the practise of severall Popes I say that Popes may prevaricate and exceed their Commission and in case they doe that they are to stand by themselves I strange cases are maintained by some which seem to induce to murder theft lying cases appertain not to religion but to action whose rule is reason and not revelation for God hath not revealed all belonging to charitie as he hath in relation to Faith Now reason being in most men weak and by ast by passion or interest what cause is there so much to wonder at the strangeness of conclusions resulting thereof the worst can be inferred hence is that sectaries seem void of reason that make reason the rule of their belief which is so defective and uncertain in the reach even of naturall and morall truths Then the stewes are allowed in severall places A clear mistake they are onely permitted that is not hindred or punisht for no Catholicke approves of Whoredome as an act well done which is the proper signification of allowing now not to hinder or not to punish some kind of sinne at least wise in certain causes is not ill or if it be how can God bee good who permitts all manner of sinne Nay the forbearance to is but from violence there being all the sweet and charitable meanes used to take off of that lew'd way as pious exhortations godly sermons offers of entertainment in Religious houses founded of purpose for such as repent lastly an assurance of an unchristian like buriall to those that Dye impenitent Further the Inquisition admits of no perswasion but her own The Inquisition hath lesse relation to religion than cases being a meer peice of State Policy as is apparant in France and Germany where Catholicke Religion bearing the sway the Inquisition is not at all owned Protestants enjoying in both places as much freedome of Conscience as Catholickes themselves At least wise it is not to be denied that the Romish Religion allowes of Breaking of faith with sectaries upon which accompt outrages have been committed Most false she abhominates all such doctrine as destructive to fidelity which she magnifies as the ground of Iustice Whence then this Monster Marry from ill composure weak understanding depraved will crooked nature prompts to ill weak understanding conceives amisse depraved will receiving erronious judgment for good and currant musters her forces stirs up Anger and hatred which heightned trample under foot all regard of Religion vertue and transports to disorder and mischief so that ill composure weak understanding depraved will wild passions and not Religion were the guilty let them suffer and not those who in order to their Religion hate all barbarousness in opinion keep under and curb unruly naughty passions It were a strang peice of Iustice to punish equally flyers and followers of Theft and Murther Scripture is express for every one to abide the shame of his own sinne wherefore the concurrence seemes generall to free and keep inocency from molestation and trouble CHAP. 10 Of the truth of the Roman Catholique Religion 1 I Strange at the Partiality inconsequence of those who Justify the Enemies of the Roman Catholique Religion whiles they are in a readiness to condemne of folly perversness such as should goe about to call in question the conquest of England by William the Conquerour I say I strange at it in as much as the evidence of the conquest comes farre short of the evidence of the Roman Catholique Religion that amounting onely to an attestation from the oral tradition and history of England whereas this besides the oral tradition and history of England hath the like testimony of France Spain Italy Germany Greece Asia and Affrica all unanimously witnessing that the Roman Catholick Religion was first taught and delivered by Christ as may appear to any that will lay aside prejudice make a through enquiry of the truth Whence resulteth that if it be ridiculous and absurd to question the conquest much more is it repugnant to reason to doubt of the Roman Catholique Religion Notwithstanding the Conquest is preferred by some as more evident in regard it was never questioned the Roman Catholique Religion often What then questioning is no mark of falshood The Trinity the Incarnation the Scriptures have been all questioned and yet are confessedly true questioning argue rather ignorance and malice in the Questioner than want of truth in the thing questioned whereto adde that the Roman Catholique Religion was sometime unquestioned yea acknowledged for true even by them that afterwards questioned its truth Others will oppose that the Pope bearing great sway in the world might and did first bring in the Roman Catholique Religion Christ bore greater why not he now that Christ and not the Pope did first teach deliver the Roman Catholique Religion Tradition both oral and historicall give testimonie here is the proper proof of a thing done so many Ages past their onely surmise and saying can there be any Comparison in the desert of credit but to shew further even an impossibility in these opposers assertion I must observe unto them that the Rule of the Catholique Church is not the Popes pleasure as they fondly imagine but as St Paul calls it the depositum which importing to hold what was delivered and to recieve no other for divine truth could not but defeat this pretended Pope of all possibility of bringing in a Religion of his own coyning for either he kept to the Rule of the Catholique Church or he did not if he kept to the Rule of the Catholique Church what he taught was delivered to him and consequently not invented by him if he did not the generalitie of Christians could not follow his example because the universality of contingent causes is unchangeable because Christ's iterated promises of the holy Ghosts assistance would not suffer it Now the Roman Catholique
to observe the unjustness of sectaries who impute easiness to Catholiques avouching that according to their Religion a bare confession of sinns to a Preist pacifies and appeases God whereas besides confession not to speak of its horridness a verseness to nature they hold as necessary all the other above mentioned Acts that if any one bee wanting their confessions become invalid and sacrilegious Above all their strangeness breakes out in their complaint of uneveness in their way as though it were such a matter to believe Christes merits who is the source and fountain of all worth or to have a confidence in God whose goodness trascends all that can be sinne and yet this is the very quintessence of their requisites to reconciliation with God albeit their sinnes should swell to drown in loudness the cryes of Sodome and Gomorrha CHAP. 13. Of the Spirit of Spiritists 1. THe spirit of God in God is as God every where I fill heaven and earth Jer. 23. So as in this sense none can be absent from his essence presence nor vertue But the question runs of the effects thereof which depending upon his will are confined within narrower limits This truth appears bright in St Iohn where he forbiddeth to give credit to every spirit Jo. 1.4 To deny that the spirit of God is active fruitfull in some were to fall into another extream and in effect to call Gods goodness mercy in question to know and discern who they be the onely way is to see their warrant and examine their works If their warrant prove that of Miracles and their workes good doubtless they have the favour of Gods spirit if otherwise they are at the best but pretence makers and ushers of innovation 2. This way must needes be true and sure because Christ and Saint Paul taught it and it stands with right reason for bare sayings without proof are sounds of want and emptiness and the capacity of every Agent being to produce effects like it self it is as impossible for the spirit of God that is all goodness to be the author of ill as for a reasonable creature to beget an unreasonable or heat to cause cold Whence it is plain that the spirit of Spiritists is a false imposture a meer figment and delusion in as much as it is destitute of Miracles and induceth to ill it perswading a disloyall defection from our Lords Prayer the Commandements and Church Bucer in Mat. 6. Calvin in Mat. 6. Luther de Moyse Zuinglius in explan art 16. Tindal in Fox his acts pa. 140. edit An. 1610. in the consonancy and dissonancy to which consist the goodness and badness of all Actions All actions being good or bad according as they are conform or difforme to Gods known will which is apparently manifested in the aforesaid Hereto adde that the spirit of Spiritists prompteth things contrary and imconsistent each with other Lutherans assert the reallity of Christs ' body Zuinglians maintain a bare figure Calvinists differ from both which cannot befall the spirit of God for so the spirit of truth might become the spirit of Errour and falshood 3. To say that God is no excepter of persons that his spirit being free may breath on whom he pleaseth is out of the matter in hand here being no dispute of Gods power what he may doe but of his will what he doth Their other ground for inspiration upon the assurance of Conscience St Paul and St Austin convinced long since of weakness and cozenage St Paul when for yielding to Conscience in persecuting the primitive Christians he acknowledged himself unworthy of the name of an Apostle 1 Cor. 15. St Austin when he sharpned his pen against Manichisme which before in obedience to Conscience he upheld and defended Conscience can have no greater certainty than the understanding that gave it being and the understanding experience teacheth to be so bad an aymer that in the search of truth it oftner misses than hits CHAP. 14. Of the Spiritists Rule of faith 1 THe Rule of faith may be considered in it self or in respect of us in it self it is Gods revealed truth in respect of us it is the same truth expressed to us Thus far Catholiques and Spiritists agree their difference is about the expression These holding that it is that of their private spirit joyned to that of Scripture onely Those that it is that of the Church Scripture bearing witness of her truth This latter is clear by what hath been already said in the third Chapter and will appear yet more by disproving the former Which for the first part that it is false and spurious Saint Peter gives evidence point-blank 2. Pet. 1. No interpretation of Scripture by private spirit Saint Paul speakes to the same effect where he wisheth 2. Cor. 10. to captivate the understanding to the obedience of faith And our Saviour confirms both testimonies obliging all under pain of damnation Mat. 18.17 to believe the Church If the Church be to sway every private spirit must stoop and obey for none can serve two Masters Luke 16. 2. For the second that it is deficient Scripture attesteth referring to the Church and reason makes it good For as much as the expression Faith requires ought to be as full and ample as the duty of Faith that is it must be able to informe the understanding in all it stands bound to give assent unto wherein the expression of Scripture alone is defective it not declaring sundry pointes Christians acknowledge themselves bound to believe To wit that those bookes of Scripture which are received for Canonicall are so indeed That some are Canonicall other some Apocryphall That they are determinately these or others That the Jewes Sabaoth is to be neglected and laid aside and the Sunday solemnized That the Creed is authenticke and truely the Apostles That it is lawfull to eate stra●gled meates and blood But these men please themselves with onely talke of Scripture for were Scripture as they pretend the Rule of their beliefe though it containes divers truths yet those truths meeting and becoming one in Revelation they would all perfectly agree not onely Lutherans among themselves Calvinists among themselves but likewise Lutherans with Zuinglians and Calvinists with both it being the propertie of unity to unite and make one all that conforme to the same Whereas happening quite contrary it is a manifest signe that fancy under specious pretences of Scripture the Spirit is the great Idol they do homage to Lutherans to Luthers Zuinglians to Zuinglius and Calvinists to Calvin CHAP. 15. Of the Protestant Church Protestants cast a fairer shine than the Spiritists and certes were their Church as true as it is seeming they could not be justly taxed But all is not gold that glisters Satan is apt to transforme himselfe into an Angell of light 2. Cor. 11. Falshood it self is not seldome seen in the habiliments of truth and therefore this Chapter pretends to lay open the many
poor illiterate men to perswade a Religion so contrary to flesh and blood as mortification of Wills Fasting Chastity c. Luther was a man of learning and parts who had onely to instil a doctrine acceptable and pleasing to the depravedness of nature to perform which needed not abilities other than naturall 3 A third shape is Protestants received their Mission from Catholick Bishops in Queen Elizabeths dayes and since ANSWER 1. If some did which is to be proved Nay the contrary seemes demonstrated by Doctor Champney it is evident the greater part did not and what a Church must that company make of which most are judged fit to preach the word of God and administer the Sacraments without authority But admit the calling of Protestant Bishops and Pastours were right in all of them it would not follow that the Protestant Church is true so long as she advanceth Protestanisme contrary to the meaning of the Catholique Bishops who never impowr'd any but in relation to the setting up and upholding of Catholique Religion 2. Furthermore Communion with the true Church being as necessary a requisite to the making up of a true Church as union of parts to the compleating of a naturall body what colour for truth in the Protestant Church that is at variance with the Catholique of whom she gloryeth to have her power and which she confesseth to be a true Church whereto adde that Protestants derivation from Catholiques is not proof for a personall succession of Bishops and Pastours agreeing in all points with Protestants which ought to be the scope and ayme of that derivation it being not required of Protestants to deduce a succession from Christ and his Apostles of men meerly sent but withall professing the doctrine maintained in the Church of England For although doctrine be no mark of the true Church as shall be shewn hereafter nevertheless it is her inseparable Mate insomuch that where true Doctrine is wanting there the true Church cannot be Christ having intrusted her with his truth and ordained her keeper and preserver thereof 3. It will be said such a succession may be shewn but mingled pale-male with Catholiques as corn with chaffe good fish with bad conformably to Scripture comparing the Church to a barn-floor where there is corn and chaffe together Math. 3. to a Net replenished with all sortes of fish Math. 13. Repl. This mixture must have been either of Protestant and Catholique doctrine in the same company of men making profession of both or in severall companies one professing one another the other It could not be the former because that would be a clear argument that the Church hath erred contrary to what was proved in the fift Chapter Besides the name of Protestant to this company would be very improper holding a Doctrine inconsistent with the Protestant Surely whosoever over and above the Protestant Doctine should profess the Arian or Nestorian would deem himself jeered and laughed at to hear himself styled by the name of Protestant Doctrine being in nature much like unto number the least addition or diminution altering its kind and grounding a new denomination Nor the latter in as much as there is no agreement betwixt the Temple of God and Idols no concord with Christ and Belial 2. Cor. 6. The Arke of God and Dagon may not stand together 1. Kings 5. It were a strange example if the Church unparaleld for love to her spouse that professeth so much to truth and strictly forbiddeth ill company as dangerous to her Children should receive into her company Lyers and Innovatours This would leave a stain upon her reputation make her sincerity be suspected her Doctrine contemned and despised But she who is all fair Cant. 6. Without spot or wrinkle Epes 5. is free from any such guilt Sectaries being as hideous and hatefull in her sight as their suggestions are full of poyson and destructive to soules 4. It will be said Protestant Bishops and Pastours were not so near mingled with Catholiques as either to believe or profess their Doctrine they onely concealed and covered their own for fear of the formidable rigour of Catholiques Repl. such Bishops and Pastours could neither be true nor make a saving Church Not true because the Mission of true Bishops and Pastours being founded upon persecution and suffering Loe I send you as sheep among Wolves Math. 10. Luke 11. it is proper for them to fear no colours Cruelty in her gastliest hue is not able to fright or daunt them from preaching the word of God and administring the Sacraments The Apostles gave testimony to this truth when commanded by higher powers to forbear mentioning Christ or his actions they bravely and with stoutness reported that they could not choose but declare What they had seen and heard yea even outraged and ill entreated for this behalf they went away glad and rejoycing to be thought worthy to suffer for the name of Jesus Acts. 5. All the glorious Martyrs and Confessours confirm the same by their profession of faith amidst the loathsome stenches of close Prisons and horrible torments of bloody persecutours 5. Nor make up a saving Church by reason profession of Faith is necessary to salvation Rom. 10. In heart it is believed to justice by mouth profession is made unto Salvation Mat. 10. He that denies me to men I will denie him before my father c. The Comparisons are meant of private men for matter of manners not of any mixture of true and false Doctrine Orthodoxall Heretical Bishops Pastours together 6. A fourth shape is in all ages since Christ and his Apostles there have been Protestant Bishops and Pastours but through the negligence of men and hard fate of times their names have miscarried and perish'd And as it is no argument many famous Romans and Graecians are not named therefore never were any such men so it is no less fals a sequell Protestant Bishops and Pastours are not mentioned all the way from Christ and the Apostles therefore they were sometimes wanting ANSWER 1. It is not the same of private men and of Bishops and Pastours These have Christs Warrant and assurance for a Continuance of visibility so have not those Math. 28. Bishops and Pastours are as Aqueduces and Limbecks through which the vivifying waters of Christs holy Doctrine are derived into our eares and distilled into our soules so are not private men should they be at any time clouded and in obscurity Christ would be worse than his word his Doctrine fall short and not come home to us 2. It will be said visibility is a badge private men wear as well as Bishops and Doctours therefore it cannot be inferred more of the one than of the other Repl. Visibility is not peculiar to Bishop and Pastours but necessity of visibility is private men in this way of visibility being onely contingently visible So that though this inference be not right they are visible men therefore they are Bishops and Rastours no more
than that there are white fowle therefore they are swans whiteness belonging as well to Geese Ducks Pigeons c. Yet there are Bishops and Pastours therefore they are visible holds good as there are swans therefore they are white fowl in asmuch as visibility agreeth necessarily to Bishops and Pastours as whiteness doth to swans 3. It will be said Divers Bishops and Pastours have been whose names are not extant therefore Bishops and Pastours have no stricter relation to visibility than private men Repl. Bishops and Pastours are necessarily visible either indeterminately or determinately indeterminately all for some are necessary to make a visible Church determinately so many without which there could not be a sufficient number to make a true visible Church Even as Ships in respect of passing the Sea all are necessary either indeterminately or determinately indeterminately all some being necessary to pass with determinately so many without which the Sea is not to be passed Wherefore as the Antecedent is true the Sequell is false Bishops and Pastours having either indeterminately or determinately a necessary Reference to this sort of visibility private men onely an accidentall 4 It will be said Bishops and Pastours are necessarily visible whil'st they live dead that necessity ceaseth Repl. Such a visibility would be to no purpose it not providing the Church of means to defend and make good her right in case of opposition for the question of lawfulness in Bishops and Pastours and of their truth in point of Doctrine soaring as high as Christ commonly be satisfied by a shewing of equall rise which supposeth a visibility reaching from Christ to the end of the World as power to the Act. The question of the Churches Right is to be decided not unlike that of two great men laying claim to a Principality by vertue of some pretended descent from a certain Prince or to that of 〈◊〉 River whether it hath its of●●ring from such a Hill or Mountain For as to Evidence this the surest way will be to derive their Pedigree and to trace the River up to the Head so to clear that no means more effectuall than to take a view of the ages gliding betwixt Christ and us If Bishops and Pastours be found succeeding each other without intermission it is Evident they are true and Catholick if otherwise they may not escape the brand of usurpation and intrusion 5. The Truth of Doctrine is discernable much after the same manner If it be found to have no way varied but to have kept its own from Christ and the Apostles doubtless it is Orthodox if not most certainly it is new and false In short by the good help of this visibility the Bishops and Pastours of Gods Church together with his Doctrine shine so bright throughout all ages since Christ that who will open their eyes to see and their mouthes to ask may with ease finde whom to obey and what to believe for want of this visibility Sectaries boast they never so much of Antiquity prove but of late creation and their Doctrines fond devises of unsetled and wavering mindes 5. The last shape is That Church is true and Catholick which professeth the Apostles Doctrine clearly delivered in Scripture but the Protestants Church doth this therefore c. ANSWER 1. TRue Doctrine is no mark of a true Church it being to be seen among Schismaticks who for want of Communion are not able to make a true Church Besides Doctrine is as divers as there are divers seeming Churches and so not affording any determinate motion drawes in opposition of a mark of truth to which adde that Doctrine supposeth Bishops and Pastours as the means whereby it is conveyed unto us For Doctrine comes not in the ayre or by infusion but by preaching and teaching of men not only sent inwardly by inspiration but likewise outwardly by ordination or imposition of hands of such as have power as the Priests in the old Law the Apostles and their successors in the new were Exod. 3. Levit. 8. Math. 28. therefore it importeth as much to name Bishops and Pastours before way be given to the mentioning of Doctrine as it is necessary passing from one extreame to another to touch first the middle It is no less untrue that Protestants maintain the Apostles Doctrine delivered in Scripture inasmuch as they cleave to a sense which the words neither do nor can beare without wresting forcing as Dr. Smith late Bishop of Chalcedon hath clearly shewn in his Collation to which I must remit you for avoyding of tedious quotations as opposite to my professed brevity To be of the Apostle belief requires a full and entire admission of what they believed For if belief of some points only were enough to make two of one belief Catholicks and Protestants Turks and Jews might crack of unity in Religion because though they differ in some points yet in other some they consent and agree Now Heaven being a reward only intended and promised where there is a full performance of Duty belief of part of the Apostle Belief is as ineffectuall to Salvation as perseverance for a time which moved St Athan to say that he that did not hold the Catholick Faith intirely should for ever perish And it is agreeable to reason in regard punishment is the reward of contempt offered to Gods Majestie which may be done as by transgressing any one Commandment so by disbelieving any one point Gods Majesty shining no less resplendently in his veracity than in is Will. It will be said Protestants agree with the Apostles in sundamentalls which is sufficient to be of the Apostles belief and to Salvation Repl. There are two sortes of Fundamentalls answerable to the twofold precept of belief affirmative He that believes shall be saved and negative He that doth not believe shall be condemned Mar. 16. The first sort is points to be believed explicitly or in particular as the Trinity the Incarnation c. The second sort is points to be believed at leastwise implicitly or in generall as all points whatsoever relating to belief both are Fundamentalls because both are necessary to Salvation and both are necessary to Salvation because both are equally grounded upon Revelation whence ariseth the necessitie and obligation of belief Now admit it should be granted that Protestants agree with the Apostles in the first sort of Fundamentalls that is in points necessarie to be believed explicitly according to the affirmative precept of belief which may well be a question they not believing them upon account of the Church but for fancie or some other humane respect yet disagreeing in the second sort that is in points necessarie to be believed at leastwise implicitly according to the negative precept of belief How is it true that they do not disagree from the Apostles in fundamentalls It will be said those points Protestants disagree in were not revealed to the Apostles Repl. It is manifest they were there being the same light for the revelation of them