Selected quad for the lemma: truth_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
truth_n church_n religion_n true_a 7,548 5 5.1593 4 true
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A07444 The iudge of heresies one God, one faith, one church, out of which there is no saluation. Excluding all infidells, Mahumetans, Iewes, obstinate papists, and other heretikes of all sorts, and consequently all newters, who conforme themselues onely externally to any religion, from hope of participation of the kingdome of heauen. If they finally persist therein, and returne not to the knowledge and zealous profession of the true faith. By Iohn Merideth, Sub-Deane of Chichester. Meredith, John, b. 1579 or 80. 1624 (1624) STC 17830; ESTC S112660 68,232 98

There are 11 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

Charitatem in Intentione Loue in thy Intention and Veritatem in Electione Truth in the choyce of thy B●ru Religion For if thou doest loue God and yet doest not serue him according to the Truth of his word thou hast the zeale of God but not according to knowledge therefore thou art not excused by doing that which thou doest beleeue ought to be done for thy beleefe being euill yea being no faith indeed but a light rash Credulity maketh thy purposes like that wicked ones prayer to be turned into sinne and the deuill doth deceaue thee by making thee conceipt it to be faith for as Pirats at Sea are wont in the darke time of the night to set vp lights in places full of sandy shelues and hidden Rockes thereby to allure Passengers vnder hope of attaining to an hauen of Safetie to shipwra●ke and destruction Such is this light of false faith kindled by the Spirits of the Ayre not whereby they may saue the poore Sailers on the Sea of this world and the flouds of this wretched life but by which they may sinke them into the bottomlesse pit of hell and damnation In this respect St. Paul saith that Satan transformeth himselfe into an Angell of light Therefore we that wa●t on the floods of this life must not beleeue euery light vnlesse we fall among Heresies which ruinate the soule while we purpose to reach the true Church which is the pillar and ground of Truth So in matters of Faith and case of Religion a man may intend the true worship of God and yet commit Idolatry as you Papists do● in your 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or worshipping of the Sacramentall Bread which is meere Idolatry therefore Bonauentura saith ●●p 3. Se●t dist 9. that a man may be deceaued in his worship Nisi fiat secundum directionem regulam fidei If it be not done according to the direction and rule of Faith for one may De facto adore the diuell transformed into an Angell of light intending it vnto God Neither may his ignorance excuse him for he hath a treble helpe assigned him to preuent error First the prediction of the Scripture saying Many shall come in my Name Math. 24. Secondly prayer vnto God for inward illumination Thirdly suspention of his Credulity For we must not beleeue 1 Ioh. 4. euery spirit but try the Spirits which are of God otherwise if he be an Idolater he may be iustly taxed for worshipping hee knoweth Ioh. 4. not what In vaine doe we beleeue to attaine to the end of our Hope if so be we are ignorant of the right way which leadeth thereunto how much greater is our danger if running a Contrarie or By-way we will not be reclaimed but goe forward therein presumptuously notwithstanding admonition and direction of cunning guides whom we despise Which is as much as if a man who is drunke should thinke himselfe to be sober and doe all as a drunken man doth and yet thinkes himselfe to be sober and would be so accounted by other Such are they who being ignorant of the Truth haue a seeming shew or shadow of the same and doe euill as if it were good and runne on to destruction as if it were to saluation yea and binde themselues by their supposed knowledge to persist in their ignorance and error reiecting the meanes of Reformation saying with the wicked We will none of the knowledge of thy wayes Iob. ●1 O bloody deuotion sprouting from that Hel-bred Ate which made the Heathen to sacrifice their sonnes and daughters to the deuill and causeth the like in you that are deuoted vassals to the Pope in respect of your soules and your children also who may truly cry out against you Parentes sensimus p●rricidas wee haue 〈◊〉 found our Parents the murtherers of our Soules for preuention whereof St. Iohn as I haue said would haue vs try the spirits whither they be of God if through negligence to examine and finde out the truth thou art deceiued the fault is in thy selfe for as Chrysostome saith They cannot excuse themselues from condemnation Ho●●il S●p Math. who had meanes to finde the truth if they had a desire to seek after it for if the truth be the saluation and life of them that know it M●gis debet quaeri quam quaerere It ought rather to be sought for by other then that it should seeke after vs. And surely Negligence in learning the Grounds of Christian Faith is the chiefe cause that suffereth Man to fall into error when men are carelesse to seeke after Gods helpe therefore they are worthily depriued thereof is not he worthy to haue his house darke that shutteth vp the doores thereof and the windowes against the bright beames of the Sun●e which would enlighten it Such persons must know that faith is not Naturall but proceedeth ●phes from the Election of Gods goodnesse and is Donum Dei the Gift of God for were it Naturall all men would hold the selfe-same Faith nor should there be so great dissention about it as we see at this day therefore it is to be sought of God and therefore as the Sunne is not to be seene but by his owne light So the Sunne of Righteousnesse whereby the day spring from an high hath visited vs is not to be seene but by the light of God● grace But because many are rebellious against this light therefore they are wilfully blinde Another cause is Auersion of the vnderstanding from those things which are to be beleeued and from those which might induce them to beleeue them and conuersion vnto Error for as hee that hath his eyes turned from those obiects which he should behold and turned vnto other in that Auersion cannot see what hee should Such are those who embrace false opinions and damnable Sects with such contumacy that they will not vouchsafe to thinke or heare of the contrary and stand out with so great an hatred against those who hold the truth that they will not so much as giue care to their Arguments but resist the holy Ghost who speaketh by their mouth of which sort of men Salomon spake truly A foole hath no delight in vnderstanding vnlesse thou doest sooth him in the conceipts of his owne heart as the v●lgar translation Prouerb 18. hath it For as Vigilius saith Mans minde being before poysoned with Lib. 1. contra Eutichen fla●●● sub J●it the error of false opinion is growne obstinate against the entertainment of the truth nor will yeeld to any testimony bee it neuer so Authenticall for it had rather maintaine a false conceite wherewith it is once infected then renounce it though it bee reputed with neuer so good authority Therefore St. Paul holdeth such Incorigible and not to be de●lt withall who after the first and second admonition persist obstmate Tit. 3. and censureth them condemned euen by the verdict of their owne conscience He that seeth an imminent danger and runneth vpon
Apology for our Ancestors of the Laity who for the most part dyed true Christians vnder the domination of Antichrist as is plainely proued at large and that the estate of the Papists who liue vnder Protestant Princes is damnable vnlesse they renounce Popery THe Second Motiue whereby men are perswaded to persist in their Natiue Religion though false and impious is the pretence of a good Intention They say Whatsoeuer the religion bee whereof they are vnable to iudge yet their meaning toward God in respect of his Seruice is good and God respecteth and accepteth the minde and the Intention which is sufficient to excuse them rather then to entertaine another wherein they may be deceaued also because they are not iudicious to discerne betweene truth and falsehood in matters of faith and subtilties of religion and it is better to obey ignorantly then to change religion doubtfully so they meane well towards God I doe make this answer vnto such sencelesse soules That it is one thing to haue a Good Intention or meaning another thing to haue a right Intention An Error may easily insert it selfe into a Good Intention and so corrupt it and howsoeuer in respect of the End the intention may bee good yet other Circumstances may marre the matter A right Intention is the working of our will whereby it proceedeth by d●e meanes vnto a good end From whence it followeth That if the End in it selfe Good ●e not rightly intended neither the End is good nor the Intention right As a worke in it selfe euill is not made good by the good End for which it is intended as if one should steale because h●e would relieue the necessitie of the poore contrary to St. Pauls Rom. 3. rule We may not doe euill that Good may come of it So here if the End be Good yet if the meanes be not good the deed must be euill for Error and Ignorance spoyleth the matter as the Lord speaketh Therefore my people are gone into captiuity because they Esay haue no vnderstanding So we may say of Hereticks They are chained by the Deuill with the strong band of Blasphemy because they are without knowledge and vnderstanding of the law This is it which subuerteth Religion when men are blinded in the choyce and discerning the difference betweene Truth and Falshood erring from the right scope to the infinite damage of their Conscience So the Iewes were perswaded that they had done God a singular peece of Seruice when they executed their woluish ferity against the Christians With the like ●ury was Paul enraged against the Christians persecuting them with menaces and threats with a zeale of piety but such as was erronious and not according to knowledge it was not done with iudgement and preconsideration of the cause not by the impulsion of Gods Spirit which God will haue tryed by his word whither it be his or not And hence ariseth so many Errors in choyce of Religion because men are destitute of Gods Spirit which should secure and certi●ie our spirits of the Truth There is a way saith Salomon that seemeth right to a man but the issues thereof are the waies of Prouerb 14. death Therefore ignorance of Gods law is the ruine of true Religion for Colere amare quem Ignoras non potes Thou August canst not worship and loue him whom thou dost not know zeale without knowledge is a vehement cours● in the wrong way wherein the faster thou dost runne the farther thou goest astray out of the way And as the Father saith Melior vel claudus in via quam cursor praeter viam It is better to halt in the way Serm. 15. de verb. Ap●li then to runne swiftly out of the way Though thou fire Iron neuer so hot in the Fornace yet it will receiue no forme without the Hammer right iudgement must guide the zeale of thy will for the Will is blinde and must be Directed by the vnderstanding Wherefore the Intention is not made good by the E●d which it propoundeth but as the Schooleman saith it must haue Pedem Bonauent Sup. 2. Sent. Dist 41. Affectus oculum Intellectus the foot of Affection and the Eye of vnderstanding the one in respect of the End the other in respect of the Meanes to be vsed to attaine to this End And either of these must haue his Director the vnderstanding must haue Faith the affection Charity Whereupon saith Bernard Two things concurre to the singlenesse of the eye Loue and Truth The one will be Lumen illustrans Lib. de praecept dispens A light to shine and shew him the way the other will be Virtus adiuvans a power to strengthen and further him for there are two things necessarie for him that will attaine to his iourni●s end First a light by which he may See Secondly right footing for want of the first the Blinde looseth his way for want of the Second the Lame doth not attaine to his journies end Briefly as Bernard saith How can the Eye of the Intention be single with Ignorance of the Truth Yea though a man loue God Ibid. and doe euill Ignorantly but he that wanteth neither good hath a true single eye Amorem boni cognitionem veri The loue of that which is good the knowledge of the truth if one faile the whole doth faile for Bonum ex causa Integra causatur malum ex particularibus consurgit defectibus Good is perfected by a compleat Schola●● ex Dio●is de diu nom ca● 4. cause but Euill followeth vpon the defect of a particuler Hereupon Gerson saith that in the description of a Right Intention these two words Debitum Debito modo must be taken Coniunctim Indiuisibly together But in the description of a peruerse or corrupt Intention these two opposite words Indebitum Indebito modo may be taken Diuisum Apart Seeing either of them apart is sufficient to cause a corrupt Intention for more points are Necessary to the constitution of vertue then of vice yea the defect of one of those points which concurre to the constit●●ion of vertue is the change to vice for to make a good Intention is requisite an int●grity in the End propounded and the meanes vsed But thou wilt say my good Meaning proceedeth from my faith and how can I be de●●iued therein Say it proceeded of faith But that faith is false or r●ther it is no faith at all because false faith is not faith for these words of the Apostle Whatsoe●er is not of Faith is sinne be spoken of true not of false faith ●om 13. Therefore it is not of true faith that wee belee●e that to be● Good which is Euill for it is false and therefore a Sinne. Whither therefore thou dost thinke falshood to bee Truth or Truth to be falshood either is a sinne for neither commeth of faith therefore that thou may est not be deceaued in thy well meaning thou must haue
prouing them to be traitors to Christ and no better then Atheists who communicate outwardly with the Papists in their Religious Rites and seeme also to bee Protestants in heart and affection with St. Augustine his Censure of the forenamed for a conclusion THere is a God and the same is the most Omnipotent Lord of hea●en and earth and all things therein contained and therefore he will be worshiped by man though Atheists deny him He is a Spirit and therefore he requireth true and vnfeigned deuotion though Hipocrites dissemble it Hee is holy and requir●th Sanct●ty in his seruants though Epicures neglect it He is Truth and therefore he will be Worshipped in truth though Hereti●ks depraue it Hee only is God and there is No other God beside him though Pagans doe multiply And therefore he claimeth all worship to be done vnto him alone though Idolaters translate it He is the Law-giuer and hath prescribed what worship he requireth of vs From which he will not haue vs to decline either to the right hand or to the left though Libertines Newters or to giue them their proper denomination Nullisidians doe diuersty vary who thinke God is satisfied with any kinde of worship and that man for this cause is safe in what Religion soeuer he liueth or dyeth and might shape himselfe vnto seuerall Religions though neuer so different if they did not directly deny God The which damnable opinion proceedeth from palpable and grosse ignorance in the true faith and is like vnto that error of the Pagans who by Symachus their Ambassadour required of Valeatinian the Emperour that their Idolatry might bee restored and maintained as well as Christ●anity for that worshiping of many Gods saith he is the best meanes to finde out the true God Thus he speaketh in the Christian Poet Secretum sed grande nequit rationis opertae Prudent lib. 2. contra Symachi●n Qu●ri aliter quam si sparsis via multiplicetur Tramitibus centenos terat orbita calles Qu● situra deum variata indage latentem The great secret of the hidden Mistery of the truth cannot be otherwise sought out then by diuiding the way into diuers pathes and without wheeling about seuerall courses thus is God best sought who lyeth hidden in variety of Mazes For as those Pagans not knowing the only true God did therefore addict themselues to worship many Gods that therby they might attaine to the knowledge of the great secret Mystery of the true Religion as they supposed So Newters being ignorant of the true saith betake themselues to sundry Sects and Religions and thinke that to be the safest meanes to become secure of Saluation But as the prudent Poet saith Longe aliud verum est c. The contrary is true for diuersity of wayes hath diuers creckes and causeth to goe astray more dangerously the plaine way only is without error being without turnings and doubtfull vnknowne by-wayes for as there is but one Maker and Gouernour of this world which is God and but one Truth So there can be but one simple Religion because whatsoeuer is true and good cannot be perfect vnlesse it be singular And in vaine doe Newters hope by their various practise to be saued for Dubius in fide Infidelis est Vacillation argueth Extrade Haeret cap. Dubi●s Symbol Infidelity Whosoeuer doth not beleeue the Catholike faith Fir●iter fideliterque saith Athanasius faithfully and constantly he cannot be saued The state of such persons who through doubt being perplexed in case of Religion and therefore embrace all and consequently are voyd of ●ny faith is most elegantly described by Vinc●ntiu● Lyrineusis as followeth Et rev●r● cum quaequ● Nouita● ebullit statim cernitur frumentorum gravitas Leuita● palearum c. Lib. cont h●r● cap. 25. And in very deed when any Nouelty ariseth the solid weighty corne is presently discerned from the light Chaffe then that is cast from the floore without any great labour which had no weighty substance to keepe it within the floore for some flye away wholly out of hand some are shooke off only and feare to perish and are ashamed to returne being wounded halfe dead and halfe aliue like those who haue dranke such a quantity of poyson which doth neither kill nor will be digested nor cause death nor suffer to liue O miserable condition with how great and furious stormes of cares are they touzed Sometimes they are rapt by an headlong error whither the winde will driue them sometime returning vnto themselues they slide backe againe like contrary waues one while through rash presumption they approue things vncertaine another while through foolish feare they are afraid at those things which are certaine They doubting which way to goe whither to returne what to desire what to shun what to hold what to let goe Hitherto Vincentius Such as these are too many who carry the Title of Christians in most Churches they will not approue the Religion of the Reformed Church nor that of the Papists neither will they reiect them but as a learned and religious Diuine of our Church Mr. White Epla dedica● ad lib. said They being ignorant and vnderstanding nothing but liuing voide of the knowledge and conscience of all Relgion are possible of his minde that Turonensis writeth of who said that it was best of all if both the one and the other were followed neither were it any hurt Si inter Gentilium aras Dei Ecclesiam quis transiens vtraque veneretur if going betweene the Alters of the Pagans and the Church of God a man should giue honour vnto both Whereas the saying of an Antient is most true concluding the contrary in these words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Theoder Pr●sbi●er lib. de Incar●●● Do● 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. For it is not possible that a meane betweene Truth and falsehood should be found or conceipted for the truth is alwaies in the middest and neuer declineth from thence and therefore is firme and euen on all sides and straite and doth not suffer any thing that is diuerse which may make it crooked or thrust it out of its owne state or constancy Such wauexers are no Bel●euers for Faith is Certitudo quaedam H●go de Sarcto Vict lib. 1. de Sa●r●●● art 8. ca● 1. an●m c. A kinde of certainty of the minde of things ab●ent about Opinion and b●neath Knowledg● it is called a Certainty Quia vbi est adbuc d●bitatio sides non est Becaus● where doubting remaineth there is no faith for Faith consisteth in two things Knowledge and Affection or Constancy or stability of beliefe The Substance o● Faith is in the Affection the matter is in Knowledge which knowledge may be wholly without Faith But ●aith cannot bee without some Knowledge because he that heareth any thing and doth not vnderstand doth not alwaies beleeue but he that doth vnderstand nothi●g doth beleeue nothing although he may sometime b●l●eue that which he doth not vnderstand
he dwelleth and he hsth promised to raise them vp againe to glory in the last day if we doe glorifie him in them in these dayes of our flesh but such dishonour him with them who with patience can behold him blasphemed in the Masse and bow their knees to their Wafer Idoll And againe I doe say vnto you Pseudo Catholicks who entertaine such Pseudo Proselites and drawe them with temporall earthly rewards to lose eternall Celestiall blessings you are strangely deceaued in them for they are apparantly dissemblers and respect neither your persons nor your Religion but your money and maintenance and consequently deride you and as a Philosopher said of such Non deum sed Themis●i a●ud Socrat. lib. 3. Eccles hist cap. 21. purpuram colunt and that they were like vnto a streame raised by a great raine which sometime runne one way sometime another way Before they went out from vs they were as chaffe among Corne as euill humours in the body which pressed the breast they were not of vs their departure hath cased the Church of a loathsome burden and it is fit that the chaffe and the Tares should haue one society here seeing their end shall be the same hereafter they shall be burned in vnquenchable fire I doe wish that all Christian Princes would practise what Theuderichus the Affrican Prince did before them The Act was la●dable though himselfe an Arrian He had a certaine Deacon who professed the Orthodoxall Theodorus Lect. Collectan lib. 2. faith whom he loued and cherished entirely who to gratifie the Prince as he pretended forsooke the H●mousian faith and embraced Arrianisme which being knowne to Theuderichus he forgate his loue and presently after beheaded him saying Si Deo sidem non seruast● quomodo homini sinceram Conscientiam seruabis If thou hast not beene faithfull to God how canst thou carry a good Conscience toward man If the like course were vsed against all Counterfeite Church-Papists Christian Princes might liue in more security the number of Athiests would decrease and the doubtfull would be more firmely established in the truth And I say vnto both sorts what Augustine did vnto the Manicheas In vobis qui Papistae ficti sunt mali sunt Lib. 6. Contra Faust cap. 11. qui ficti non sunt vani sunt c. Among you those who are counterfeit Papists are euill and they who are not counterfeite are vaine for where the faith it selfe is feigned both he that liueth in it though a Counterfeite doeth deceaue and they who embrace it as true are deceiued To conclude I doe exhort and aduise all those who are intangled with popish heresies and deceaued with erro●s of any other false Religion if they be carefull of their own Saluation if they doe not preferre blindenesse before the light if they will not destroy their owne soules by wandering ouerlong from the light of the truth in the palpable darknesse of vaine opinions if they desire to benefit themselues by being Christians let them lay aside all childish shamefastnesse and forsaking the dangerous imaginations of humane error in which they falsely supposed themselues to haue found the truth and in which vnder the pretext of the name of Christian they were farre distant from the confession of Christ that they hasten with all conuenient speed with all their might and with the strongest endeuours of their faith to finde out the true and straite way of the Holy Catholicke and Apostolike Faith which is now by the mercy of God professed in this Church of England and when they haue found the true way of Saluation let them proclaime with bold liberty of voice 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 wee haue found the truth let vs reioyce together otherwise beleeue most firmely and that without all doubting that not only all Pagans but also Iewes Hereticks and Schismaticks who depart this life out of the Catholike August lib. d● 〈◊〉 cd Pct. Church shall goe into euerlasting fire which is prepared for the Deuill and his Angels FINIS
deepest depth of Impiety I thinke it fit I say in this secure silence but great and crying necessity yea most needfull I deeme it to vse the best meanes I am able to saue their Soules who are vpon the brinke of Hell and run with no small alacrity to destruction as if it were vnto Saluation By propounding vnto them the end of their Deuiall Course which is In●uitable Damnation if they continue vnto the end therein and by reducing them into the right way which conducteth vnto eue●lasting life and endlesse saluation that wee being gatherd together into one fold may be safe vnder the tuition of the great Shepheard of our Soules Christ Iesus our Lord and onely Sauiour THE IVDGE OF HERESIES CAP. 1. Sheweth that God requireth truth in Religion which must be squared to the Rule of his Word and therfore Iewes Turkes and Papists whose Religion is false because contrary to the Scriptures cannot bee saued if they persist in their obstinacie and that Papists are but Pseudo Christians THough the most high and mighty God doth not stand in neede of Mans Seruice yet so hath hee ordained that Man should doe him certaine worship and that ad dandam ●onauext Breuiloq Par. 3. Cap. 11 1. viam perueniendi ad Coronam per obedient●am to make a way for man and to op●n him a doore to obtaine a Crowne of Immortality by Obedience with this bond of Pietie are wee obliged vnto God this is the Su●me of the Religion we profes●e To this end God made Man Exceptorium bonitatis Organon Clarificationis eius saith Irenaeus the Treasure-house Iren●●● lib. 4. ad●ers ●arcs Cap. 24. of his goodnesse and instrument of his glory and againe Exceptorium Justi iudicii ●ius the vessell of his wrath fury and indignation if vngratefully he neglect the exhibition of that allegeance hee doth owe vnto God the which hee hath r●uealed vnto man in his word But as Augustine obserueth Duobus modis hic peccatur antequam sapient fiat A man may offend two wayes before Lib. 3. de lib. Arb. hee hath pe●forn ed it if either hee refuse to apply himselfe to the knowledge of his Word or hauing receiued it will not shape himselfe to those Duties it requireth for p●●u●ntion whereof God made Man by nature to aff●ct these two things Wisedome saith Lactantins and Religion L●b 3 d● sa●s ●a pient cap. 11. Idem 〈◊〉 4 de vera Sap cap. 3. inseperable also in Office because In colendo sap●re debemus wee must bee wise in worshipping that is wee must know what and how we worship and In sapiendo colere in our wisedome wee must worship that is fulfill in Act and deed that which wee know Therefore there is Religion in Wisedome and Wisedome in Religion for which cause they cannot bee separated because to bee wise is nought else Nisi Deum Verum Iustis Ibid. piis cultibus honorare but to honour the true God with due and deuout worship for the selse same God hee is who must be vnderstood and that by Wisedome and be honoured and that by Religion ●ut Wisedome must haue the preced●nce Religion must follow Quia prius est Deum sc●re consequens colere wee must know God before wee can worship Ibid. Cap. 4. him Our Sauiour did vpbraid the Samaritanes for worshipping that which they knew not declaring that God will bee worshipped I●b 4. in Spirit and in truth that is purely against Hypocrites and Newters and in truth against Infidels Iewes Mahumetans and Heretickes The last Condition hee annexeth for those who seeme to worship God in minde Non tamen rectam habent scientiam but want true knowledge for wee must worship him in Minde sanam opinionem de ips● habere and haue a sound Theophilact Ibid. opinion of him for such worshippers God requireth Quoniam spiritus est Spiritus Spirituales quoniam veritas est veros as hee is a Spirit spirituall as hee is truth such as must worship him in truth And thus much the Pagan could discerne by the darke glimmering of Nature saying that it is the chiefe matter to bee regarded in Religion toward God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Epicte● in Enc●yrid cap. 38. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to haue right opinions of God Therefore it sussicet● not to Beleeue Simply but Sicut dicit Scriptura as the Scripture teacheth vs for the true faith Theophil Super cap. 7. Job I●id is drawne out of the Scriptures th●refore our Sauiour saith Hee that beleeueth in me as the Scripture saith that is as the Scripture testifie of me for many think they beleeue in him Sed non vt dicit Scriptura but not as the Scripture directeth and so they follow their owne Sects such are all Heretickes for they beare Witnesse of Christ and whatsoeuer is requisite for vs to know concerning God is cont●ined in them therefore Caietan saith the Scriptures are Deus dicens Seipsum God declaring himselfe and his will vnto man In them God hath set downe what manner of worship he requireth of vs what we ought to beli●ue of him for euery one worshippeth God according to that beliefe he hath of God gathe●ed out of the Scriptures and this beliefe is acc●ptable vn o God and Saluation vnto men In which all those are saued who are predestinated vnto Saluation and without which it is not poss●ble for any man to be saued Whosoeuer therefore shall belieue or maintaine any thing of God and his Christ which is cont●adictory to his holy word doth e●re and that da●nably For as the Philosopher saith An Affirmation and Nega●ion are neuer true of the same Subiect Therfore it is impossible that Turkes Iewes Pagans Hereticks and Orthodoxall Ephes 4. Christians shou●d al● speake and belieue truth of God ● hom they professe s●eing they belieue contrary things of him and that directly contrary to the Scriptures also which are the Rules of Faith This is that Faith in which all Beleeuers since the beginning of the world vntill this present day haue beene saued and wherin our future Posterity vn●ill the dissolution of the same shall bee saued Euen that Seed of the Woman Gen. 3. which bruised the head of the Serpent foreseene by the Patriarches for●told by the Prophets decla●ed by the Euangeli●●s pr●ached by the Apostles and their Su●cessors in fu●ction and Office and belieued by all the fa●tl full vntill this day E● cum pr●dicantium diuersa sunt tempora non tamen Max 〈…〉 in Nat●●● du●ersa narratio and though they liued not all at the same time yet they consented in the same matter One Christ was euer b●lieued so th●t the Faith of the fore-named Ancients and Ours is one and th● selfe same Christ was an● is Heri Hodie ipse in S●cula yesterday Hebr. 13. August this day and the same for eu●r Tempora mutata sunt non fides the ●imes are changed the Faith is one and
the selfe sa●e they beleeued h●e should come in the fulnesse of ti●e wee beleeue and are assured that he is come Therefore hee is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the first and the last the beginning Apocal. and the end So saith the Father Res ipsa quae nunc Christiana Religio August lib. 1. Retract nūcupatur erat apud antiquos c. That euery thing which is now called Christian Religion was in vse among the old Patriarchs Prophets neither did it cease to flourish from the Creation vntill Christ his comming in the flesh at which time immediately the Religion which at that time was began to bee called Christian And Christ said of Abraham that hee saw his day and reioyced And the Apostle said Ioh 8. 1 Corinth 10. that all the Fathers did eate the same spirituall meate and did drinke the same spirituall drinke because they were iustified by the same ●aith and Religion in Christ Wherein that man might walke more confidently and securely vnto the truth the truth himselfe being God euen the Sonne of God assuming our humanity not consuming his Diuinity did constitute and founded the same faith that there might be a way for Man vnto God by Man who was God for this is the Mediator betweene God and Man euen the Man I●sus Christ Christ as hee is a Mediator is Man and the way to attaine vnto God Now if hee bee the middle way between him that walketh and the place vnto which he walketh there is hope of attaining vnto it But if you faile or bee ignorant of the way through which you must passe what auaileth it you if you know whither you must goe for Christ is the only strong most certain way against all errors He him●elfe being both God and Man Quo itur Deus qua itur homo God as the end at which we aime Man as the way by which wee passe This Christ God and Man spake first by the Prophets at length by himselfe afterward by his Apostles as much as hee thought to bee sufficient he made the Scripture also which is called Canonicall of most eminent authority the which wee doe verily firmely beleeue concerning those things whereof wee may not be ignorant neither are wee fit or able to know them of our selues In which is declared that inestimable benefit which Christ performed for vs. In dying as man for our Sinnes and rising vp as God for our Iustification and he that beleeueth so farre forth in Christ cannot bee damned This is the summe of the Gospell the joyfull message of mans Saluation All those who are ignorant heereof must faile in the true Religion by erring either about the Obiect and Substance when they worship not the true God or in the Manner in not beleeuing as they ought and in not giuing such worship as he requireth of mankinde And to this purpose the Apostles as some write collected out of the holy Scriptures an Epitome or briefe Summe of Christian Religion consisting of twelue Articles containing in them by way of Implication all such things as a Christian man is bound to know beleeue to his Soules health wherein is set forth the Essence Omnipotence and Goodnesse of God that man may know how and what worship to giue vnto God and what to belieue of him As that hee beleeue that God is three in Persons and One in Substance and Essence and that hee created all things of Nothing in time that the Sonne being the Second Person in the Trinity tooke our humanity wherein he gaue the Gospell suffered was buried and did rise againe from th● dead to saue man from eternall death And so Christian Religion presupposing such truth out of the Gospell doth adore God three Persons and the same One Creator and Rede●mer and giueth him thanks in the Eucharist in rememberance of his Passion and in Hymnes Psalmes and Prayers publike priuate giueth him thanks for all his Benefits receiued desiring future glory and that felicity which hee promised vnto man This is the Summ● of Christian Faith which except a man beleeue faithfully firm●ly hee cannot be saued From hence I inferre that Iewes Mahumetans and Infidels doe not worship God aright because they haue not the true faith For first they doe not worship nor beleeue the true God for they deny the Trinity in Vnity they deny the Article of Mans Redemption the Incarnation of the Sonne of God his Passion and Resurrection and consequently they intend to worship one God who is not three in persons nor Incarnate But there is no such God therefore they worship no God To this purpose Augustine spake properly Quis quis Qu●stio super 〈…〉 6. Cap. 26. talem cogitat Deum qua●ts non est Deus alienum Deu● vtique falsum in cogitatione portat whosoeuer thinketh God to be such a one as he is not carrieth in his thought a strange and a false God The like Censure may be iustly passed against Hereticks for no man dying in such Heresie which is detractory from the glory of our Head Christ Iesus such as are most of the learned Papists if their Faith be agreeable to their Writings can be saued This may seeme rough doctrine to Men pleasers They confesse the Iewes because of their obstinate Incredulity the Turkes because of their prophane Impiety the Pagans because of their absurd Idolatry are out of all hope of Saluation if so they persist But the Papists who confesse professe and worship God● and his Christ are in a farre different state from the former because they retaine some worship of Christ though it bee not so exact and perfect in truth as Gods word requireth I answere All the Impiety that euer was among the Gentiles was but a Deprauation of the true worship of God Saint Paul saith of them that They withheld the truth in vnrighteousnes He said not as one noteth that they had not the Rom 〈◊〉 Sedulis Ibid. truth but that they withheld the truth which they knew in vnrighteousnesse for they detained the truth of the Name of God in the vnrighteousnesse of the vnworthy matter of Idols And another doth most plainly illustrate this poynt vpon Theop●ylact the same words saying that the truth it selfe or the knowledge of God were from the beginning infused into men The heathen withheld the truth knowledge in vnrighteousnesse that is they depraued it as much as they could when they translated the glory of God to their Idols neither did they otherwise then they who hauing receiued money to be spent on the honour of the Emperour consume it vpon theeues and Harlots whom all men will confesse to deale iniuriously with the Maiesty of the Emperour Thus dealt the Pagans with God as Origen doth exemplifie Lib. contra celsum in the Egyptians who saith hee erected magnificent Temples pleasant groues stately Porches and Galleries admirable Chappels curiously vaulted vbi
that most glorious Martyr as the Diuell saith he is not Christ though Cyptian tract de Simplie proll●t he doth deceiue in the name of Christ Ita nec Christianus videri potest qui non permanet in Euangelij ●ius et fidei ●eritate So hee cannot seeme to be a Christian that doth not abide in the truth of his Gospell and Faith for to Prophesie to cast out Diuels and to doe great wonders on the Earth is surely an high and admirable matter But he that doth all these things doth not attaine the Kingdome of Heauen vnlesse hee walke in the right path of true faith And wee say with our Church that They are to bee Artic. 18. had accursed that presume to say that euery man shall be saued by the Law or S●ct which hee professeth so that hee bee diligent to frame his life according to that Law and the light of Nature CHAP. 2. Proueth that Infidels and Heretiques by an Innocent life and vertuous actions if they could performe any cannot be saued vnlesse they bee Orthodoxall Christians also and the Error of Lodouicus Viues is confuted NOw I will propound foure Obiections which men make against the former Doctrine vnto themselues to maintaine their perseuerance in any Religion though it be false and impions to be safe annexing seuerall Answeres therevnto The First is an Innocent life and adorned with good workes The Second is a good Intention or meaning The Third is the Obligation of Conscience though Erroneous The Fourth is the Phylanthrophy or loue of God to Mankind Let vs therefore examine whither the First will suffice or the Second excuse or the Third Secure or the Last assure them of Saluation The First Obiection may thus be made What if I should not beleeue that Christ is come in the flesh with all other Articles of the Christian faith but should notwithstanding spend my life in good workes Cannot I by these workes bee numbred among the Godly and Religious and receiue a reward for them This Obiection is most Elegantly and luculently answered by Lactancius as followeth Sed putemus fieri posse Vt aliquis naturali ingenito Bono Lib. ● de vero cult● cap. 9. veras Virtutes Capiat c. But grant that some one man by naturall an● innated benefit should be able to practise true vertues as we reade of Cimon of Athens who gaue a Stipe●d to the needy Inuited the poore and cloathed the naked yet seeing that one thing which is the greatest of all other that is the knowledge of God was wanting Surely all those other good Vertues Super vacua sunt ina●ia are Superfluous and serue to no purpose that it were a needlesse labour spent in attaining vnto them for all his Righteousnesse is like to the body of a Man that hath no head thereon In which though all the Members stand in their due places in their apt forme and proportion yet because that which is the principall of all is away it want●th life and all Sence Therefore those Members haue the forme only of Members but not the vse So is it likewise where there is an Head without a Body vnto which hee is like who knoweth God yet liueth vnrighteously for hee hath that only which is the Chiefe but in vayne because he wanteth v●rtues in stead of Members Therefore that the Body may bee liuing and sensible both the knowledge of God is necessary as it were the head and all Vertues as it were the Body So there shal bee a perfect and liuing man yet the chiefe shal be in the head which though it cannot consist without all yet it can with some members Yet it shal be a ce●taine vitious and weake creature but so that it shall liue euen as he that knoweth God and si●neth in some matters Da● enim veniam peccatis Deus for God doth forgiue sinnes so that a man may liue without some of his members but not possibly without his head Hence is it that the Philosophers though they be good by nature yet they know nought they vnderstand nought all their learning and vertue is without an head because they know not God who is the head of vertue and learning whom whosoeuer doth not know though he doe see yet is hee blind though he doe heare yet is he dea●e though hee doe speake yet is hee dumbe but when hee knoweth the Creator and Parent of all things then hee shall heare and see and speake for hee beginneth to haue an head in which all the senses are placed that is Eyes Eares and Tongue For verily hee seeth who seeth the truth in which God is or God in whom the truth is with the eyes of his heart ●e heareth who fasteneth the Word of God and his liuely Precepts to his breast hee speaketh who discoursing of heauenly things declareth the power and Maiesty of the most excellent God Wherefore there is no doubt but that hee is vngodly who hath not the right knowledge of God and all those vertues which they thinke they haue are found in that deadly way which is altogether darknesse Therefore in vaine doth any one slatter himselfe with the possession of those Idle Vertues And he concludeth that Chapter a little after in these word●s Ergo in dei agnitione culturerum summa versatur c. Therefore the whole matter consisteth in the knowledge and worship of God In him is the whole hope and saluation of man This is the first degree of wisedome that wee may know who is our true Father and that wee worship him onely as wee ought let vs obey him let vs serue him most deuoutly let all our p●actise care and actions be but to purchase his loue and fauour Hitherto Lactantius whose Iudicious Discourse I thought good to p●opound vnto you rather then to ●aile or faulter in mine owne poore and barren Inuention And this is confirmed by holy Writ where it is said that Whatsoeuer is not of faith is sinne vpon which words Rom. 13. saith Augustine Where the knowledge of the eternall truth is a wanting falsa virtus est etiam in optimis moribus the best vertues are but deceitfull shadowes yea saith another The whole life of In●idels is sinne and wholly v●acceptable vnto God Etiamsi ea quae agunt sunt bona de se though their Bonauent Super 2. Sent. Dis● 41. Actions bee good in themselues But say that there were all Morall Vertues in a Pagan yet there is not one free from vices but as one of them Crates T●●● apud B●uso● lib. 5. cap. 12. said It is impossible that that man should bee found who neuer ●ell but that one graine in him as in a Pomegranade should be● rotten whence I argue thus if they expect a reward for Vertue they must likewise bee pleased to receiue punishment for their vices Shall wee receiue good at the hand of ●ob 2 the Lord and not receiue euill Iustice requireth no lesse The
it is the cause of his owne destruction or if a man would goe vnto a place and knoweth not the way which leadeth thereunto but hauing a conuenient guide to direct him at hand enquireth not the way is not the cause of his going astray to bee imputed vnto himselfe If thou seest a Stranger or blinde man to goe out of the way thou art bound to recall him and direct him aright and to deliuer him from danger much more thy selfe Wherefore that Negligence in not seeking the way of truth and saluation is culpable and damnable neither may you pretend Ignorance For God gaue his diuine precepts to this end Vt homo de Ignorantia excusationem non habeat that Man might not Aug. lib. d● G●a lib. arb pretend Ignorance for an excuse But say that a man should fall among two Doctors of contrary profession the one an Orthodoxall Christian the other a Popish Hereticke and bee not able of himselfe to iudge whom he should beleeue would God require at his hands that he should diuine which is the true Faith I answer that in this case he must implore Gods helpe as Augustine saith and earnestly intreat him that he would enlighten his heart and vnderstanding to that part of the contradiction which is true and acceptable vnto him and we may presume that God in his mercy will open vnto him that so knocketh and that if his negligence in seeking after the truth or some other soule Sinne hinder not God will so worke in his heart that hee shall not giue way vnto error for God preserueth them that loue him Extra de spons cap. Iuvents Otherwise if he feare to bee perplexed hee must follow the counsell of the Law Semper in re dubia securior tutior pars est eligenda in euery distresse by scruple or doubt we must cleaue vnto that part which is most secure and safe But the Religion of the Protestants is the most safe for the Soule especially in the fundamentall point of Iustification as their best Diuine after long cauillation confesseth in these words Propter incertitudinem Iustitiae propriae periculum in an is gloriae tutissimum Bellarum lib. 5 de Iustisicat Cap. 7. est fiduciam totam in sola Dei miscricordia benignitate reponere Because of the vncertainty of our owne righteousnesse and the danger of vaine-glory it is the safest way to repose our whole trust in thealone mercy and loue of God The which when he proued to be true by many testimonies of the Fathers he concludeth his Chapter with these words following His accedit ratio manifesta c. And reason confirmeth the former position for saith hee Either a man hath true merits or else he hath not if he hath not he is dangerously deceaued and seduceth himselfe by trusting in false Merits for they are false Riches which hinder the true Riches But if he hath he loseth nothing thereby in not trusting in them but in God only for God knoweth them well and considereth them and will not suffer them to be vnrewarded To this purpose and almost in the same words speaketh Rosfensis in his Booke De fide miserecord●a Dei. Ad Axie●●● 12. But aboue all that we might be vnexcusable God hath assigned vnto vs a certaine remedy to preuent error and heresie whereinto we might be seduced by false teachers and that is Confeience with the holy Scriptures Thus the Berrhaeans daily searched and examined the Scriptures Act. 17. to know whither that which Paul and Sylas preached were true or not Chrysostome expounding these words When yee shall see the abomination of desolation standing in the holy place saith That Christians that would be secured of the true faith are commanded to flyeto no other thing then vnto the Scriptures Our Lord said that the Sadduces error sprang from their Ignorance of the Scriptures for which cause St. Ierome would haue vs In lib. 3. in Epla ad I phes cap. 4. reade them diligently that like cunning exchangers we may bee able to discerne good coyne from counterfeit for as another saith They who are conuersant in the Scriptures cannot be deceiued by T●co●● Sup. cap. 15. Luc. any meanes for they are the Lanthorne whereby the thiefe is discryed The abridging hereof from the people hath beene in all ages the cause of ruine of Religion Our Sauiour chargeth the Lawyers that they tooke away the Luk. 17. key of knowledge they would not enter themselues and hindred other who would enter into the kingdome of heauen On which words saith Lyra Similes sunt Doctores Ecclesiae speaking of his owne time Such are the Doctors of the Church who hinder the vnderstanding of the truth which is necessary vnto S●luation with strange and curious words and opinions The Doctors and Teachers in the Romish Sinagogue where Satan dwelleth imitating the aduice of Varro the Heathen Philosopher preach vnto the simple credulous people meere falshoods and shut vp the truth Inter par●etes scholarum within the precincts of their Schooles to be disputed of though by their disputations they neuer attaine vnto it Neither will they suffer the people to search any farther or to seeke for the truth least they should forsake their damnable falsehood● And this was an old pollicy of the Pagans whereof saith Lactantius Hinc sida silentia Sacris instituta sunt vt nesciat Lib. 5. de Iustitia cap. 20. populus quid colat Cunning fellowes silenced Men from acquaintance with sacred matters that the multitude should not knowe what they worshiped In what a miserable case are such people who belieue they knowe not what not beeing able to giue a reason why they should be perswaded but flye onely to the Iudgement of their Auncestors that they were wise and hang on the opinions of their seducing teachers that they approue they knowe what is best and consequently bere aue themselues of their sences rob themselues of reason while they giue credit to their errors and thus being wrapped vp in ignorance they know neither themselues nor their Religion But like the poore seduced people in the time of Arr●anisme Credunt quod non credunt Hillar ad Constant Intelligunt quod non intelligunt They beleeue without faith they vnderstand without knowledge This is no faith but Folly not effectuall to Saluation but bringing certaine damnation Constat fidem st●ltam non prodesse Aug. in qu●st ●et test qu●st 43. sed pot●us obesse It is certaine that foolish faith doth not proffit but rather hurt yet this is the thraldome of the poore people who beleeue this deceiptfull opinion that Minores saluantur in fide Maiorum The ignorant Lay-people are saued B●ll●rm lib. 1 de Justific cap. 7. by the f●ith of their learned Priests bee their faith meere falshood whereof saith the great Cardinall T● per obedientiam c. Thou canst not be deceiued by thy obedience toward thy Prelate whom
the Church doth beare Cusa lib. 6 Exc●t●t yea though he command other things then he ought to doe vnreasonable obedience is the most sound and perfect obedience that is when you obey without asking a reason thereof as a beast obeyeth his master From whence you may gather that they repute you of the Lai●ie to be no better then brute beasts and therefore say they Pearles are not to be c●st vnto them because they be sw●ne nor holy things because they be dogges But you will obiect and say our Teachers are as learned and as iudicious as yours who are Protestants and therefore it is Ob●ect likely that they should know the truth and consequently they would not teach vs falshood contrary to their owne knowledge and if so they should doe and we through simple credulity and obedience toward them as our Pastors should entertaine and beleeue it we are excused I answer that I confesse and know that many of the most learned of your Clergie who haue more curiously examined the Mysteries of Religion then your ordinary Scrible●s haue had the right knowledge and true vnderstanding in many points of faith and those fundamentall which is manifest in that they haue held many contradictions against the common Tenent of their Sinagogue their conscience vrging them to no lesse yet through feare they haue reuersed all with submission to their Sinagogues censure and partly for couetousnesse par●ly fearing they should lose the vaine glory of the world they haue hidden the truth and laboured by fraudulence to peruert the ge●unie sense of the Scriptures Thus dealt the Scribes and Phariseas who did shut vp the kingdome of heauen before men vpon which words saith Chrysostome Math. 23. Chrysost a●ud Al●xand in des●r vitiorum lib. 6. cap. 79. Ex. homil 41. ●●cris 〈◊〉 Christ would shew that the Priests of the Iewes did all for couetousnesse sake Who did certainely know the comming of Christ by the Scriptures But they considered that if Christ had bèene beleeued the custome of offering Sacrifices had beene extinct and the Sacrifice of righteousnesse had pr●uailed and therefore by peruer●e interpretation they shut vp the Gate of the law and the Prophets against the people who spake manifestly of Christ his comming that they might seperate men from the faith of Christ fearing least happily if Christ were beleeued they should be defrauded of their Sacr●fices for they rather desired that the law continuing their Sacrifices should be in vse by which they were inriched And not God for when the law ceased the sacrifices of Righteousnesse should come in vse with which God is delighted and faithfull men are magnified The holy Scriptures are called the kingdome of heauen because the kingdome of heauen is laid vp in them The Gate is the faithfull vnderstanding of them the Preachers are the Porters vnto whose fidelity the word is committed to teach expound the Scriptures it followeth How did the Priests shut vp the Scriptures Aliud pro alio Interpretantes by expounding one Sense for another as where Esay saith Behold your God commeth with vengeance euen God with a recompence he● will come and saue you then shall the eyes of the blinde be lightened and the eares of the deafe be opened c. These should be the signes of the comming of Christ When as therefore afterward Christ did heale the dumbe and the deafe the Iewes out of a peruerse excogitation said This man casteth out deuils no otherwise but through Belzebub Math. 12 the Prince of Deuils That they might turne away the people from beleeuing in him or else they did shut vp the Gate of the truth when they made this Decree That if any called h●m the Sonne of God he should be cast out of their Synag●gue Vpon which words of St. Chrysostome a right learned and zealous Diuine who liued aboue 200. yeares since here in Alex. ●bisupra● England maketh this Inference of the like abuse practised by the Clergie of his time saying Sic modo Sacerdotes claudunt Ianuamveritatis sciunt enim quoniam si manifesta fuisset veritas corum Ecclesia non esset Thus doe the Priests in these dayes saith he shut vp the gate of the truth for they know that if the Truth were made manifest their Church should haue an end and they should fall from Priestly dignity to popular vility And this is the reason why they keepe the Laitie in grosse ignorance least they discerning the Truth should relinquish their damnable politicke heresies whereupon the ruine of Baal and his Epicurish Priests must ineuitably ensue For most of the substantiall and accidentall parts of their Religion is nought else but a fardell of blasphemous absurdities inuented by cousening mates to deceiue the simple people of their money as is manifest in those of Purgatory and Pardons of which saith one of your owne Writers Videnou● enim in dies quod ex spelunca indulgentiarum procedunt latr●res Ioh. Rawlins S●● quadrages●imal● 94. A. We see that theeues come out of the denne of pardons daily who preach false things vnto the people to drawe thei● money from them wh● with their cunning w●t make a net to take ●lyes that is money The like complaint is made by thei● owne Writers concerning the Masse pecuniary satisfaction Reliques c. as vpon iustoccasion shall be de●lared But in this houre of thei●s and this power of darknesse what shall the people doe If the blinde sh●ll follow these blinde guides they must fall with them into the dit●h Therefore our Lord hath forwarned what is to be done to preuent thi● danger where he speaketh of that Abominatic● of desolation spoken of by Daniel the Prophet that should sit in Math ●2 the holy place by which he meaneth Antichrist and his H●resies as the Current of the Fathers expound it hee annexeth an admonition in the words following Then let them that are in Indaea ●lye vnto the mountaines saith our Sau●our which words are thus expounded by the golden mo●thed Chrysostome Idest q●●i in Christianitate sunt sugiant ad Scripturas Ho●●il 49. in Math c. That is let those who liue in Christs Church ●lye vnto the Scriptures The Mountaines signifie the writings of the Prophets and Apostles Our Lord knowing the confusion that was to en●ue in th● last dayes therefore commandeth that Christian men that beleeue in him and desire to be established in the true faith should be take themselues to nothing else but vnto the Scriptures otherwise if they haue regard vnto ought else they shall be offended and perish not vnderstanding what is the true Chur●h Therefore if any one be deceiued in his Religion it commeth to passe through his owne negligence in the faith because he is carelesse to vnderstand the faith which is made manifest in the Scriptures and consequently is vnexcusable especially those who liue in such places where Gods word is pres●nted vnto them but they shut vp their eyes against
make your intention sufficient to saluation you must extend it for Hoc est ad Deum tendere semper cum per desideri●m quaerere et per cognitionem Hug de Sa●ct● vict lib. 1. de Archa Noe. inuenire If your intention be directed vnto God you must not cease to seeke him by desire and you must not leaue off vntill you haue ●ound him by knowledge Our Sauio●r tolde the Iewes that the complement of true liberty consisted in abiding in his word which would make them know the truth and that truth should set them free For the Ioh. 8 knowledge of the truth is the knowledge of that by which a thing is truly that which it is And this is the Art and wisdome of God propounded in the word of God it is the beginning of all truth vnto which whatsoeuer is squared is certainly true whatsoeuer declineth from this line is falshood and enthralleth vnto Satan Therefore we must apply our beliefe to this line if we would not be deceaued if we seeke not the truth so earnestly as we ought we are vnex cusable because we did not vse such diligence as God requireth Therefore that Man should not erre God hath giuen him as well the Vnderstanding as the Will so that the Vnderstanding is as much bound vnto God in his opperations as the A●fection but it is neuer lawfull for the Affection to loue the contrary vnto God or to those things which concerne God Therefore in like manner it shall not be lawfull for the Vnderstanding not to beleeue in God or beleeue in any other manner then he requireth Nemo de Christo credat nisi quod de se credi voluit Christus Aug. Serm. de tempore 145. saith Augustine No man may beleeue other matters of Christ then such as he would haue men beleeue of him Thus much knew the Pagan That euery God would be worshipped after his Socr●t apud Aug. lib. ● de c●nsens Eua●gelist Deut. 12. owne will and not after the will of the worshipper and God requireth it ye shall not doe euery one what seemeth good in his owne eyes but that which seemeth good in the eyes of the Lord. Whence it appeareth that the Vnderstanding hath a law giuen vnto it and limits in his operations and that it is limited what to beleeue or what to know or to be ignorant of and that Ignorance in some matters is damuable as Credulity in other and that neither doth excuse from damnation and consequently That a good Intention is not sufficient vnto saluation Dist 37. Cap. Non omnis ex ●●gust vnleast it be rectified by knowledge and therefore is no protection for such who professe a false Religion And take this for a Corallary Non omnis immunis est à pae●● qui Ignorat c. Euery one that is ignorant is not free from punishment for happily that ignorant man may be excused from punishment who could not finde what to learne But they cannot be pardoned who hauing meanes to learne did neglect to employ their diligence to attaine vnto it CHAP. 4. Proueth that an erronious Conscience is no sufficient bond to oblige a man to persist in a false Religion as the Papists teach but such a conscience ought to be deposed reformed or abandoned and altered according to the rule of Gods law and therefore the case of those Papists who are trained vp in blindenesse is miserable and lamentable TThe Third Motiue obligatory to persist in a false Religion vnknowne is the Conscience which may not be contradicted Let vs therefore consider how farre we are bound to follow the informations thereof and Whither an erronious Conscience bindeth vs as the Papists Aquin. Bel●arm lib. ● de gra lib. arb cap. 10. teach The Conscience therefore vrgeth to those things which are either Secundum legem Dei agreeable to Gods law or praeter legem different from the Law or Contralegem contrary to the law of God In the First sort which are agreeable to the law of God Questionlesse the Conscience bindeth Simply and Vniuersally because that with it a man is bound by the law of God and the Conscience which agreeth with this law sheweth it is bound In the Second sort the Conscience doth binde as long as it vrgeth a thing of that kinde to be done so that a man is bound either to depose his Conscience or else to fulfill what it commandeth to be done As for example my Conscience telleth me that I must vse the Ceremonies of the Church in the execution of my Ministeriall function not only because they are inioyned by the Church but because my Conscience enformeth me that they ●ught to be vsed in as much as they are not contrary to Gods word but also edisicatory to the simple knowing also that so the case standeth with man through the prouidence of God that no humane Actions can be rightly and orderly performed without a kinde of Ceremony that is that they be done in their due place time and forme for otherwise they doe binde my Conscience vnto them vnder penalty not only of Schisme but of Heresie also for the Churches authority maketh them Necessary in respect of my obedience in which sense the Schoolemans rule is true Consciencia ●abet virtutem ligand● Bon●vent sup 2. sent ●●st 39. in his quae possunt aliquo modo bene ●ieri The Conscience hath power to binde in those things which may any way bee done well In the Third which are Contrary to Gods law Conscience doth not binde to doe or leaue vndone but it is bound to depose it selfe for in as much as it erreth against Gods lawe it putteth a man out of the estate of Saluation and therefore it must be deposed or abandoned For whither a man doeth what it commandeth or not he sinneth First if hee follow his Conscience in that which is against Gods law he Sinneth But if he doe against his Conscience he sinneth likewise not in respect of the Act but of the manner of it for his Conscience telleth him that he doth against Gods law though indeed it be pleasing vnto God for All that is not of Faith is sinne for though it be good which is done yet let the Actor constantly perswade himselfe that it is euill he sinneth because God respecteth the minde of the Doer more then the deed Neither can you say that such a one is simply perplexed because he had a way to auoyd it By deposing his erronious Conscience which if he doth not he is perplexed by his owne fault and if he be not able to iudge of such things by himselfe because of his ignorance he must consult with the learned and godly So that An erronious Conscience bindeth but not as a right Conscience for it bindeth not to doe that which it informeth contrary to Gods law though it beleeue it doth all according to the law for then it should binde against the law and consequently a man
yet were not without sinne no more are the Papists In the person of whom Paul speaketh saying I knowe nothing 1 Cor. ● by my selfe and yet am I not thereby iustified Neither is it to any purpose that they say My Conscience doth not iudge mee to bee culpable but contrarily doth iudge me to be in the right way for I say this iudgement is erroneous and therefore is condemned by the highest Iudge and if their conscience be their chiefe booke wherein they learne that which they will retaine without instability they must know that they are bound to correct the Booke of their Conscience if it be corrupted by comparing it and correcting it by the true Booke of the Generation of Iesus Christ which is the word of God The neglect whereof is the chiefe cause of the retardation from conuersion of our Pseudo-Catholiques who hauing studied their whole time in the false and vncorrected booke of their owne conscience wherein they finde nothing but falsehoods yet refuse to trie and examine their Religion by the word of God but make ignorance their deuotion like those Hereticks called Gnosimachi Damascen lib. d● 100. h●r●s 88. Who prohibiting all knowledge in Christianity taught That they who sought after knowledge in the holy Scriptures Suparfluum quid faciunt tooke in hand a needlesse labour for they said that God required nothing but good deedes of Christians and that therefore it is best for Christians to walke plainely and not to search after the knowledge of any articles of Religion But if you doe obiect that it is dangerous for you being an ignorant Layman to looke into the Mysteries of Faith whereof you are not able to iudge but that it is more safe for you to beleeue in generall as the Church doth though you doe not know any of the particulars I say vnto you with the Father you are deceaued in your opinion for Tutior est Affectus vera quaerendi quam Incognita procognitis praesumend● The desire to seeke the Truth is more safe then that a man should presume o● things vnknowne insteed of things which hee is bound to know And farther I say with the golden Father If thou wouldest Ho●il 44. ●ap 23. Nath. go vnto any place vnto which thou diddest not know the right way to gaine some great necessary commodity thou wouldest not neglect thy iourney because of thy ignorance of thy way but thou wouldest enquire after cunning guides and learne the direct path of them So if thou wilt learne the way to heauen thou must pray vnto God thou must reade the Scriptures thou must enquire of those Priests who are the Porters vnto the Scriptures But if thou wilfully refuse this meanes thy case is desperate because thou louest darkenesse more then light for as he that plucketh out his owne eyes can neuer recouer his sight so he that hateth the knowne truth Ex malitia cannot possibly repent for the Spirit of truth is the light of our soule but if our eye be euill the whole body must needes be darke If thou sayest thou doest not hate the truth but art not able to discerne it I answer this argueth naturall blindenesse of thy soule for the light discouereth the differenc●s of obiects vnto him that can see which is wholy vnprofitable vnto the blinde pray therefore vnto God that hee would bring thee out of that darkenesse of Aegypt and that he would open thine eyes that thou mayest behold the wonderfull things of his Lawes and that hee would giue thee a wise and vnderstanding heart Then shouldest thou behold the slauery of Aegypt and tyrannie of Pharaoh which in that time of palpable darkenesse thou couldest not Exod. 10. Prou. 2. see But when wisedome entereth into thine heart and knowledge delighteth thy soule then shall counsell preserue thee and vnderstanding shall keepe thee and deliuer thee from the euill way and from the man that speaketh froward things that is Antichrist and from them that leau● the wayes of righteousnesse to walke in the wayes of darkenesse CHAP. 5. Answereth Obiections made from the diuine Philanthropy or loue of God vnto mankinde who say they will not condemne vnto euerlasting death such infinite multitudes of people who die in infidelity and Heresie and saue but only a fewe true beleeuing Christians where is plainely proued also that very few in respect of those who are to be● damned shall be saued ANother Reason which is the last and of greatest moment is a certaine blinde kinde of pitty whereby such persons become impious against God and while they thinke otherwise of God then the truth is they offend against the Truth and this is drawne from the Diuine Philanthropy or loue of God vnto man they demand how Gods mercy should elect so few vnto Saluation and forsake so many vnto damnation especially seeing he is more prone to saue then to condemne or that his Mercy is not lesse to take pitty and to pardon then his Iustice to reuenge and punish They say it standeth not with the goodnesse of God to be cruell against his creatures and that hee should suffer any of those whom he hath made to perish And thus while they thinke They honour his goodnesse they offend his Truth From whence they conclude that the immensity of Gods mercy and goodnesse is such that he will saue euery man in his owne faith law sect or religion if so be he beleeue the same to be good and pleasing vnto God They argue farther That it is a great presumption to suppose that a fewe Christians should thinke themselues only to be saued the whole remaining multitude of euill Christians which farre exceede the good in number beside Iewes Saracens and Pagans being cast off to destruction Doth it stand with Gods Maiestie who is Lord of heauen and earth to haue moe slaues then freemen more adiudged to torments then faithfull Subiects Why should the mercifull God create so great a multitude of those to be damned and not rather saue them I would haue these men to know that Qui puis fuit vt non existentia crearet Iustus est vt errantia et Hugo de Sancto Vict. lib. 1. de Sacram. part 8. cap. 5. delinquentia Indice● As God is mercifull in creating those who before had no being So hee is iust to punish them that e●re and offend against him It is certaine that hee created them out of the riches of his goodnesse and bestowed many great guifts on them freely But hee neuer punished any without their most iust desert Whence it appeareth that the Iustice of God is the efficient cause of their damnation but their owne euill deserts are as it were the materiall and meritorious cause of their perdition But that there are so many damned and so few which are and shall be saued is caused partly by the Iustice of God partly through want of disposition in Man to receiue and entertaine Gods mercy Therefore whereas some doe reason