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A97309 The whole body of Christian religion, by Hieron. Zanchius. Translated out of Latine by D. Ralph Winterton. Zanchi, Giralamo, 1516-1590.; Winterton, Ralph, 1600-1636. 1659 (1659) Wing Z7; Thomason E1897_1; ESTC R209936 137,419 420

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pay your life for your refusall DOCT. XVII That whoso hath departed from the Romane Church hath not thereby broken the unity of the Church and forsaken the body of Christ FOrasmuch therefore as we are accused of Apostacy from the Catholick Apostolick Church of Christ and censur'd to have broken the unity thereof in regard we refuse to communicate any longer with the assemblies of the Romane Church in their wicked superstitions and Idolatrous worship but choose rather to follow the old doctrine worship and discipline revived through divine mercy by the servants of Christ we protest before God and his Angels and the whole Church to the end of the world that they do a high injury not to us alone but even to the holy Ghost and all the primitive Church since we have neither done not do any thing in this particular whereunto we have not been commanded by the holy Ghost and taught by the Fathers and likewise inform'd of by the Popish Doctors themselves DOCT XVIII The same confirmed FOr our Lord giveth particular advertisement a 1 Cor. 5.11 2 Cor. 6.14 c. Tit. 3.10 Rom. 16.17 that weeschew communion with idolaters and obstinate apostates and hereticks in their idolatries and heresies b C. 24. q. 1. c. 24 and 26. and q. 3. c. 9. Nor have the Fathers taught otherwise as they are produced for witnesses hereof even in the Decree it self then that if not onely any man but any Church do reject the faith and retain not the principles of Apostolicall Religion preached by the Apostles nor persist in the doctrine of Christ it is to be deserted And it is certain C. 24. q. 1. c. 9. the Roman Church which flourished in the dayes of the ancient Fathers was then extolled so much by them and stiled the holy Church and the Mother of the Churches for no other cause then for that it held stedfastly the doctrine received from the Apostles when most part of the rest had departed from it But in these dayes what doctrine and worship they professe and how much they have in many particulars degenerated is sufficiently known Wherefore we again protest that we have separated from the present Roman Church onely upon inducement from the word of God and in obedience to the command of God therein and in that respect deemed it necessary to depart from the idolatries of this most corrupted Roman Church that we might no longer continue in apostacy from the Catholick and Apostolick Church but at length return into her bosome DOCT. XIX That we have not absolutely departed from the Roman Church but onely in some particulars FOr we have not forsaken the Roman Church generally and in all regards but onely in those things wherein she is fallen from the Apostolick Church and from her self the ancient and pure Church Nor have we departed from her with any other mind then of returning to her and renewing communion in her assemblies in case she would reforme and resume her former purity Which that it may at length come to passe we pray unto the Lord Iesus with our whole souls For what can be more desireable by every pious man then that where we were born again by Baptisme there also to live unto the last so it be in the Lord I Hierome Zanchie with my whole family do declare this to the whole Church of Christ to all eternitie DOCT. XX. That the whole Catholick Church is not suffer'd to fall into errour but that all particular Churches may erre BUt we believe and acknowledge that this Catholick Church which we have described above is so governed by the Spirit of Christ that he will never suffer all of it to erre at the same time because he alwayes preserves the light of truth in some pious persons and by their ministry keepes it pure to the end of the world and propagates it to succeeding ages Whereunto we do not doubt to apply that of St. Paul 1 Tim. 3.15 that the Church is the pillar and ground of the truth because there is no truth out of the Church but it is constantly preserved in it seeing there is alwayes some assembly found great or small in which the word of truth is preached But we conceive the matter is farre otherwise in the case of particular Churches which are alwayes mixt of good and bad For first in these assemblies either the pure word of God is preached or errours are taught with it But where there is no ministery of the word at all there we acknowledge no Church If therefore false tenets be preached together with the truth how can it be affirmed that such assemblie cannot erre when it erres manifestly But if the pure word of God be taught yet the hypocriticall reprobates who believe not doe alwaies erre seeing they reject the light of truth and walk in darknesse and of such there is almost ever the greatest number in all places Neverthelesse the godly although they are never suffered by Christ so to erre as to persevere in errour and perish Mat 24.14 since Christ saith the Elect cannot be seduced even by the miracles and wonders of Antichrist namely to the end unto destruction yet they may erre both severally and many together and that not only in point of manners but also in the doctrine of faith as is apparently evidenced by the holy and Ecclesiasticall histories and what hath hapned even to the godly and religious Bishops and to their Churches in the East and West DOCT. XXI The confirmation of the precedent assertion St. Peter indeed erred at Antioch and sundry persons in the Church of Corinth and very many in those of Galatia being seduced by false Apostles fell into hainous errours although they were not long after reclaimed from their errours by the Apostle Gal. 2.11 c. 1 Cor. 11 c. Gal. 1.6 c. Psal 119.176 David also teacheth that even the sheep of Christ may erre when he saith I have gone astray like a lost sheep And why is the ministry of the word in the Church necessary for all the faithfull if they are not lyable to errour Therefore since all even godly men have often erred severally and do frequently erre in some particular Church and that true and pure too and that hypocrites never have the gift of true faith by which to understand that which is right with what reason can it be said of any particular Church that it is impossible for it to erre And with much lesse can it be affirmed of those which are estranged from the truth and in which lies and the Spirit of iniquitie and grosse darknesse do prevaile Certainly they that are so qualifi'd cannot be the true Churches of Christ if the Church be the pillar and ground of truth Wherefore we conclude 1. Tim. 3.15 that every particular flock and all the severall sheep thereof are so farre incapable of erring as being lead by the holy Spirit they give eare onely to
the voice of Christ their sheepheard but as soon as they cease to attend to him and listen to the voice of strangers from thence forth they can do nothing else but erre Iohn 10.5 27. But forasmuch as even in the greatest dissipation of all Churches the divine goodnesse reserves some to himself whom he retains in the truth and by whose ministry he will again propagate it to the end of the world therefore we confesse That the whole Catholick Church is not permitted erre c. DOCT. XXII That there is no salvation out of the Catholick Church FRom hence also by consequence we understand and believe this Catholick Church so to be the onely holy one and to be saved that out of it there is no holinesse no salvation and since the truth so shines in her alone without which salvation belongs to no man that there is none out of her and lastly since none besides the body of Christ can be saved For no man hath ascended up to heaven Iohn 3.13 but he that came down from heaven even the son of man which is in heaven viz. the whole son of man with his whole body which is the Church so that St. Peter hath not unfitly compared the Church to the Ark of Noah 2 Pet. 2.5 in which alone mankind was saved and as many as were found out of it perished in the waters Gen. 7.23 But what we confesse to be most true of the whole Church we cannot grant the same of every particular Church namely to affirme that onely in this or that Church in the Roman or Constantinopolitan truth and salvation are to be had so as there is none without it and consequently that it cannot be departed from but truth and salvation and Christ must be forsaken too For some Church may be so qualifi'd that unlesse you renounce communion with it you cannot have part or communion with the Catholick and the head thereof DOCT. XXIII That the Catholick Church is not ty'd to certain persons or places FUrthermore we confesse that this Catholick Church in regard it is Catholick is therefore ty'd to no certain places or persons and nations so as if any person would be of this Church it should be necessary for him to betake himself either to Rome or Wittenberg or to depend on the authority of those Churches their Bishop and Ministers seeing Christ is in all places and every where the word may be heard the Sacrament of Baptisme administred the precepts of Christ observed and communion had with all the Saints But wheresoever these are exercised there is the Church in which consideration the Donatists were worthily condemned who circumscrib'd the Church of Christ in Africa alone and that not in all but a part of it namely where themselves dwelt and would not admit it to be any where else Nor with less reason are they to be condemn'd who will not allow any Churches of forreigners to be true Churches but onely those which consist of men of their own nation DOCT. XXIV That the Catholick Church is partly visible and partly invisible LAstly we believe that this Church is indeed partly visible and partly also invisible but in divers respects to wit visible in as much as it consists of men who visibly handle and hear the word of God administer and partake the Sacraments call upon God both privately and publickly exercise the offices of charity towards their neighbour and glorify God in their whole conversation which indeed cannot be performed without falling under the perception of the senses And if it were wholly invisible how could it be discerned from the Synagogues of the wicked Again we say it is invisible first because being it containes a great number of hypocrites acting all the same outward things with the elect we cannot know how are the elect of which alone the Church consists but it is known onely to God according to that The Lord alone knoweth them that are his To which also belongs that of the Apostle Rom. 2.28 29. He is not a Iew which is one outwardly but he is a Iew which is one inwardly Moreover because that to the externall appearance the Church is alwayes oppressed with calamities in the world the number of those that professe the faith of Christ is sometimes so diminish'd and all the Christian Churches driven into those streights that there may seem to be no longer any remaining namely when there appear no more publick assemblies in which the name of God is called upon as both the holy and Ecclesiasticall histories do manifestly and at large testifie to have often hapned notwithstanding it is certain God alwayes preserves a Church to himself upon the earth as the Lord saith Matth. 16.18 Matth. 28.20 And the gates of Hell shall not prevail against it also Behold I am with you even to the end of the world which is the same with what we confesse with the whole Church in the Creed saying I believe the holy Catholick Church to wit to have been from the beginning to exist now and to endure to the end of the world upon the earth For properly we alwayes believe those things which we do not alwayes see Heb. 11.1 This is our confession concerning the Church Militant 1. What it is 2. How it differs from the Triumphant 3. How it is often divers from it self 4. How one Catholick consists of many particular 5. By what marks the true may be distinguished from the false 6. What succession of Bishops and what kind of consent is sufficient to demonstrate a true Church 7. That the unity of the Church is not to be violated upon every difference although it be in doctrine it self 8. What is to be understood by the unitie of the Church and wherein it consists also how great account is to be made of it 9. How farre it may erre and how farre it may not and how out of the Church there is no salvation 10. And lastly how farre it is visible and how farre invisible It remaines that we speake of the government of it CHAP. XXV Of the Government of the Church Militant and of the Ecclesiasticall Ministry DOCTRINE I. That the Church is governed by Christ WE believe that as all things were made by Christ are preserved govern'd by him Colos 1.17 so likewise the Church which is his kingdome body is governed by him as the authour Eph. 1.13 king and head of the same after a more peculiar manner then all other things are which is confirmed by that saying of the Angel concerning Christ Luk. 1.31 And he shall raign over the house of Iacob for ever and that of the Apostle ●eb 3.6 He as a son is over his own house which house are we that is the Church and in another place Eph. 5.13 He is the head of the Church and giveth life unto the body DOCT. II. That Christ doth govern the Church partly by himself
good whatsoever is due unto them For e Luke ●● 10 though we should perfectly keep all Gods commandments yet even then should we be but unprofitable servants But there is no man no though he be ingrafted into Christ and justified that doth keep the commandments of God as he ought And yet we find no fault with the Fathers for using the name of Merit so farre forth as they use the word in this sense as signifying a good work done in faith which is recompensed with a reward and that of grace and for the merits of Christ But again we like not those who dispute of good works as if they were things indifferent and further say that they are so farre from being necessarie that they make nothing at all unto our salvation For a ●eb 11.6 how can a man be saved without faith and b Iam. 2.20 How can faith be lively without the studie and practise of good works and c 1 Tim. 1.19 How can a man hold faith unlesse also he keep a good conscience and How can a man keep a good conscience unlesse he hold a constant resolution to eschew sin to practise good works and to compose and frame his whole life to the will of God But we absolutely condemne all libertines to whom it is all one without difference either to keep God's commandments or not to keep them to do well or to do ill We condemne likewise those who teach that our good works are profitable for the souls of the dead in I know not what fire which they call Purgatorie forasmuch as the Scripture saith that every man shall be judged according to the works which he hath done in his body and that as concerning the dead their own works and not other mens do follow them CHAP. XXII Concerning Invocation and Swearing BEcause amongst good works commanded by God Invocation is none of the last but is often taken in holy Scripture for the whole worship of God whereunto also is added an Oath as being a part of divine worship Therefore we thought good here in brief to explicate and declare what is our belief concerning both and that the rather because even amongst those that professe the name of Christ there is some controversie concerning them both DOCTRINE I. That Invocation is due to God onely and therefore also to Iesus Christ AS concerning religious Invocation we believe that it is a Deut. 6.13.10.12 20. due onely to the true God that is the Father the Son and the holy Ghost and therefore to Iesus Christ our Advocate and to none besides Matt. 4.10 That Invocation is due to God onely it is made manifest by many places of Scripture Because God alone is to be worshipped and adored And that it is due unto Christ as our Mediatour and Advocate we have sufficient testimonies in the Acts of the Apostles in the Epistles and in the Revelation And as we are expressely b Coloss 2.18 forbidden to worship and adore any creature whatsoever it be whether in heaven or on earth So likewise are we forbidden to invocate and call upon them And if whatsoever is not of faith is sin much more that which is committed against the expresse word of God For the very gentiles themselves did not judge it fit to call upon any with a religious worship whom they did not acknowledge for a God And as the Apostle saith a Rom. 10.14 How shall they call on him in whom they have not believed But we must believe onely in God and in Iesus Christ as we are taught in holy Scripture and all the true Catholike Church confesseth in the Apostles Creed which is dayly recited DOCT. II. That a Christian man may swear lawfully WE believe likewise that a Christian man may swear lawfully to wit in truth b Ier. 4. 〈◊〉 in judgement and in righteousnesse as the Prophet teacheth so that his oath be neither false nor rash nor unjust For the taking of the name of the Lord in our mouthes is not simply condemned but the taking of it in vain and falsly And it is a received custome amongst all nations from the foundation of the world to take an oath when it makes for the glorie of God and the benefit of a neighbour And to say nothing of the perpetuall consent of the Church in all ages it is likewise confirmed by Gods own example as also by the example of Christ and his Apostles Wherefore the Doctrine of Christ in a Matt. 5.24 St. Matthews Gospell b Iam. 5.12 St. Iames in his Epistle is not repugnant to ours For their purpose was to shew the true meaning of the commandment concerning swearing and they spake onely against the abuse thereof DOCT. III. That when we swear we are to swear by God onely and by no other WE believe that when we are to swear no other is by us to be called upon as the witnesse of our consciences but God alone and therefore that we are to swear by none but God For God alone is the beholder and searcher of our hearts and he alone hath power over our souls And therefore to him onely is this honour and worship due to be appealed unto by us as unto a witnesse and avenger on our souls if we observe not what by oath we have promised DOCT. IV. That such oaths as are just and lawfully * Or taken made are to be kept and observed by us HE reupon we confesse that such oaths as are lawfully * Or taken made are by us to be kept and observed also and that for the glory of God whose name we do as it were lay to pledge as often as we swear by it As it is also commanded in the law for we are not to take the name of God in vain or falsly DOCT. V. That oaths concerning * Vnjust Or unlawfull wicked and ungodly matters that is such as are repugnant to the Law of God are not to be taken or if taken yet not to be kept AGain forasmuch as we are to promise nothing which is * Unjust or unlawfull wicked and ungodly that is to say repugnant to the Law of God Therefore much lesse ought we to confirme any such thing by an oath interposing the name of God But if any such oath of it self unlawfull be taken we affirme that it ought not to be kept for in keeping it the sin is doubled as we read in the a Matt. 14.7 8 9 c. Gospel concerning Herod DOCT. VI. That such oaths as cannot be kept without trangressing Gods Law are not to be kept although some of them of themselves be not unjust or unlawfull ANd this also we adde that such oaths as cannot be kept without transgressing Gods Law are not to be kept although the things themselves be not of themselves unjust or unlawfull And therefore to instance in a particular If any man hath bound himself by an oath never to
of the Church to the Ecclesiasticall function and next that he be in a lawfull manner chosen and ordained by the Church it self according to the saying of the Apostle a Heb. 5 4. No man taketh this honour unto himself but he that is called of God as was Aaron c. DOCT. XIV Who are called to the ministry by Christ BUt we believe them to be called by Christ to the ministry whom he hath enabled and made fit to undertake it and those fit to whom besides the desire of propagating the Kingdome of God and glorifying God by a holy life he hath given the knowledge of sound doctrine and abilitie to propound it to the people for their salvation as the Apostle teacheth both otherwhere and b 1 Tim. 3.2 Tit. 2.6 in the Epistles to Timothy and Titus For whom God chooseth and calleth to any function he endues them with gifts necessary to the performance of the same since he calleth us rather in deed then by words And therefore they who hold not the sound doctrine of the Gospel nor teach the same to the people but rather that which is contrary unto it whether they runne of their own accord or are sent by men entrusted with the ordinary authority of sending yet we acknowledge them not for ministers called by Christ and consequently do not account them fitting to be heard as St. Iohn saith a 2 Iohn 10. If there come any unto you and bring not this doctrine receive him not into your house neither bid him God speed and God also by the Prophet Ieremie describeth those Prophets which were sent by him and those which were not in these words b Ier. 23.21 I have not sent these Prophets yet they ran I have not spoken to them yet they prophesied where explaining the former clauses by the latter he teacheth that those are not sent by him who speake not out of the mouth of God and on the contrarie that they who bring the word of God are sent by him And we are not to seek for the reason hereof For seeing c Eph. 4.12 ministers are sent of God for the edification of the Church which is rather destroyed by the doctrines of men but built up by the word of God certainly they are not sent by God who bring not his word with them DOCT. XV. That Christ calleth men to the ministry two wayes FUrthermore seeing all truly ministers are called by Christ we believe that he calleth men to the ministry after a double manner namely either a Gal. 1.1 immediately by himself alone or mediately by men that is by the Church and therefore they are both equally to be heard and accounted the true ministers of God DOCT. XVI How Christ declares to the Church those that are sent by him to be sent by himself alone WHereas those whom Christ himself calleth he declareth to be sent by himself by rendring them all fit for that charge he doth it more especially in them whom he calls and sends immediately by himself and by his Spirit extraordinarilie For he is wont to endue them largely with peculiar and excellent gifts and chiefly with the holy Ghost in abundant measure with ardent zeal of the glory of God singular knowledge of the word of God which they bring a profitable and perspicuous manner of teaching and consequently with happy successe of their labours whereby they are inabled with more speed and efficacie to reduce the Churches to the ancient that is the Apostolike frame and their lawfull and divine calling is more easily and certainly made known to the Churches a Eph. 4.12 Because all that Christ gives to the Churches as ministers he gives them to the edification thereof from whence the conclusion is easily consequent that by whose meanes we observe the Churches to be edified they are such as are called by Christ and their ministry is divine and lawfull DOCT. XVII That the calling of those ministers whom Christ sends extraordinarily and by himself is not alwayes confirmed by miracles nor is it needfull it should be so FOr we do not believe that miracles are alwayes necessary to the confirmation of the ministry of this kind of ministers since we do not read that the mission of all the Prophets was confirm'd by miracles but onely by the Spirit of God and the zeal of his glory wherewith they were enflamed and especially by the truth of the divine word which they preached not without advantage to the Saints that is the elect in the Church whereas on the other side some even false Prophets did performe signes and wonders a 2 Thes 2.9 which also the Apostle hath foretold should be done by Antichrist b Matt. 24.24 Christ before him Which notwithstanding because they brought not the word of God but lies and exhorted the people to go after strange Gods the Lord forbad them to be heard yea a Deut 3.2 10. he commanded they should be stoned to death DOCT. XVIII That the Churches which Christ restoreth by ministers extraordinarily sent are true Churches and consequently there is a lawfull ministry in them and they have lawfull authority of calling and ordaining ministers COnsidering the truth of what we have already deliver'd concerning ministers extraordinarily called by Christ we believe likewise that the Churches which Christ by their meanes and ministry restores and happily reformes in setting up the preaching of true doctrine with the lawfull administration of the Sacraments and purging the worship of God from idolatries and superstitions and recalling the true forms of discipline as much as is possible to be done and consequently communion with the Apostles that they are true Churches And from thence it followes that they have authority of calling and ordaining ministers in a lawfull manner and by that meanes to continue the succession of ministers amongst themselves So that there remaines no doubt but that ministers do there lawfully succeed and are the true ordinary ministers of the Church namely so long as together with the personall succession as it is called they likewise succeed and persist in the preaching of sound doctrine DOCT. XIX That as where true doctrine is there is a true Church so where it is not there is neither a true Church nor a lawfull ministry FOr we are well assured that as where the true doctrine onely even without a continued succession of Bishops from the beginning can be shown there is a true Church and likewise a true and lawfull ministry so on the contrary where onely a personall succession is boasted of but the purity of doctrine truely Christian is defaced there is no lawfull ministry since as the Church so the Ecclesiasticall ministry is not ty'd to persons but tot he word of God DOCT. XX. That the authority of ministers extends onely to those things whereunto themselves are called by Christ WE believe also that great authority is given by Christ to lawfull ministers namely as to the
performance of those things whereunto they are called a Matt. 28.19 to preach the Gospel b 1 Cor. 12.10 to expound the holy writ according to the analogy of faith c Heb. 6.1 to catechise d Gal. 6.6 to teach the people what is the will of God e 2 Tim. 4.1 to reprove and admonish both great and small f Iohn 20.21 to remit and retain sins ministerially g Matt. 18.18 to bind the impenitent and to loose those that repent also to administer the Sacraments which Christ ordained and according to the manner h Matt. 28.19 1 Cor. 11.23 c. deliver'd by him and exercise discipline as it is commanded by Christ and likewise k 1 Cor. 5.4 explained by the Apostle lastly to all those things which though not expressed in the holy word do notwithstanding appertain to order and decency and tend to edification not to destruction according to the generall rule deliver'd by the Apostle That a 1 Cor. 14.40 all things should be done in the Church in order decently and to edification For we do not believe that any authority is given to ministers to any other end then for the edification of the Church or that is of greater extent then the word of God And therefore we deny that any Bishop or even altogether have authority to constitute any thing against the Scriptures to adde to them or detract from them or make any alteration in them to dispense with the commands of God to make new articles of faith to institute new Sacraments to induce new kinds of worship into the Church to make laws which may binde the conscience or be of equall authority with the divine Law to domineer in the Church and over the consciences of the faithfull to forbid what God hath licensed and left free or lastly to command any thing as necessary to salvation not contained in the word of God seeing not even the whole Church can with truth be said to have this authority DOCT. XXI That we do not deny the civill authority of such Bishops as are also Princes NEverthelesse we do not gain-say but that Bishops who are also Princes beside their Ecclesiasticall authority have their politicall rights and secular powers aswell as other Princes have authority in ruling over temporalls the power of the sword some a right of electing and confirming Kings and Emperours and of constituting and administring other civil affaires to compell the people that are their subjects to performe their obedience to them And therefore we confesse that their politicall commands which can be observed without transgressing the divine law are to be obeyed by their subjects not onely out of fear but for conscience sake For we know a Rom. 15.1 2. that all power is from God and whosoever resisteth the power resisteth the ordinance of God also that a 1 Pet. 2 17 18. Kings are to be honoured and that we ought to be subject to Princes and Lords with all fear not onely to the good and gentle but also to the froward and perverse DOCT. XXII That matrimony ought to be as free for ministers of the Church for for as for others BUt we believe that this is necessary to the good deportment and salvation of ministers and to the honour of the ministry and so to the right governing of the Church to wit that marriage be as freely permitted to them as it is to all Lay-persons seeing Christ hath not forbidden it to any sort of men yea speaking of single life he saith b Mat. 19.11 All men cannot receive this saying namely that commends singlenesse of life intimating that which the Apostle hath in plaine termes expounded namely c 1 Cor. 7.9 If a man cannot contain he ought to marry d Heb. 13.4 For we confesse with the Apostle that marriage is honourable in all and the bed undefiled DOCT. XXIII That it is good and commendable for any one that is indued with the gift of continencie to abstain from Marriage NOtwithstanding we deny not but such as have received the gift of continencie from God have greater advantage to exercise the holy function and to serve the Church then such as are joyn'd in matrimony by reason of the many weighty cares and troubles which marriage is attended with whereby they are oftentimes even unwillingly drawn away from their divine contemplations to domestick affaires and the incombrances of the present life according to the saying of the Apostle a 1 Cor. 7.32 33. He that is unmarried careth for the things that belong to the Lord how he may please the Lord But he that is married careth for the things that are of the World how he may please his Wife and is divided Wherefore as they are not unworthy of praise who therefore take a Wife that they may live unto God with a clean and pure conscience so they are highly to be commended who the better to imploy their endeavours in the Church choose a chast single life and continue therein so long as is possible for them DOCT. XXIV That marriages are to be contracted in the Lord and religiously observed MOreover we know and confesse that all marriages are to be contracted a 1 Cor. 7.39 in the Lord according to the divine law and that of nature and that they are also holily to be observed according to the honest and good customes of places and that it is unlawfull for any man to put away his Wife b Matth. 19.9 saving for the cause of fornication but if an unbelieving woman refuse to cohabit with her believing Husband out of hatred to religion she is not to be retained by force c 1 Cor. 7.15 for the faithfull Husband is not under bondage in such cases but God hath called him to peace DOCT. XXV That it is no lesse lawfull for him that hath divorced an adultresse or is forsaken by an unbelieving Wife to contract new matrimonie then for him whose Wife is deceased WE believe also that it is not lesse lawfull for him who hath either lawfully repudiated an adulteresse or is deserted by an unbelieving Wife to enter into marriage anew then for a person whose former Wife is dead For that saying of the Apostle concerning all unmarried persons and Widowes is perpetually true and wholesome a 1 Cor. 7.8 9. It is good for them if they abide even as I. But if they cannot contain let them marry for it is better to marry then c. DOCT. XXVI That some ought to be appointed in the Church to judge of controversies touching Marriage BUt we do not approve that any of these things be done in the Church without the lawfull cognisance judgement opinion of the Church and the Christian Magistrate where there is any and therefore we conceive that there ought to be constituted some pious knowing and prudent persons for the cognisance and judgement of masters touching matrimony so that nothing