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A45496 Archaioskopia, or, A view of antiquity presented in a short but sufficient account of some of the fathers, men famous in their generations who lived within, or near the first three hundred years after Christ : serving as a light to the studious, that they may peruse with better judgment and improve to greater advantage the venerable monuments of those eminent worthies / by J.H. Hanmer, Jonathan, 1606-1687.; Howe, John, 1630-1705.; Howell, James, 1594?-1666. 1677 (1677) Wing H652; ESTC R25408 262,013 452

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yet is he not two but one Christ. One not by conversion of the Godhead into flesh but by taking the manhood into God One altogether not by confusion of substance but by unity of Person For as the reasonable soul and flesh is one Man so God and Man is one Christ. Who suffered for our salvation descended into hell rose again the third day from the dead He ascended into heaven he fifteth on the right hand of the Father God Almighty from whence he shall come to judge the quick and the dead At whose coming all men shall rise again with their bodies and shall give account for their own works And they that have done good shall go into life everlasting and they that have done evil into everlasting fire This is the Catholick Faith which except a man believe faithfully he cannot be saved As for the censures annexed hereunto viz. 1. In the beginning except a man keep the Catholick faith 2. In the middle he that will be saved must thus think and 3. In the end this is the Catholick faith which except a man believe faithfully he cannot be saved I thought good to give you Dr. Hammond's apprehensions of them how they ought to be understood His words are these I suppose saith he they must be interpreted by their opposition to those heresies that had invaded the Church and which were acts of carnality in them that broach'd and maintain'd them against the apostolick doctrine and contradictory to that foundation which had been resolved on as necessary to bring the world to the obedience of Christ and were therefore to be anathematiz'd after this manner and with detestation branded and banished out of the Church Not that it was hereby defined to be a damnable sin to fail in the understanding or believing the full matter of any of those explications before they were propounded and when it might more reasonably be deemed not to be any fault of the will to which this were imputable Thus he 2. The canonical books of the old and new Testament owned by him are the same with those which the reformed Churches acknowledge for such of which he thus speaks All scripture of us who are Christians was divinely inspired The books thereof are not infinite but finite and comprehended in a certain Canon which having set down of the Old Testament as they are now with us he adds the Canonical books therefore of the Old Testament are twenty and two equal for number unto the Hebrew Letters or alphabet for so many elements of Letters there are among the Hebrews But saith he besides these there are other books of the Old Testament not Canonical which are read only unto the Catechumens and of these he names the Wisdom of Solomon the Wisdom of Iesus the Son of Syrach the fragment of Esther Iudith and Tobith for the books of the Maccabees he made no account of them yet he afterward mentions four books of the Maccabees with some others He also reckons the Canonical Books of the New Testament which saith he are as it were certain sure anchors and supporters or pillars of our Faith as having been written by the Apostles of Christ themselves who both conversed with him and were instructed by him 3. The sacred and divinely inspired Scriptures saith he are of themselves sufficient for the discovery of the truth In the reading whereof this is faithfully to be observed viz. unto what times they are directed to what person and for what cause they are written lest things be severed from their reasons and so the unskilful reading any thing different from them should deviate from the right understanding of them 4. As touching the way whereby the knowledge of the Scriptures may be attained he thus speaks To the searching and true understanding of the Scriptures there is need of a holy life a pure mind and virtue which is according to Christ that the mind running thorow that path may attain unto those things which it doth desire as far as humane nature may understand things divine 5. The holy Scripture saith he doth not contradict it self for unto a hearer desirous of truth it doth interpret it self 6. Concerning the worshipping of Christ we adore saith he not the Creature God forbid Such madness belongs unto Ethuicks and Arians but we adore the Lord of things created the incarnate Word of God for although the Flesh be in it self a part of things created yet is it made the Body of God Neither yet do we give adoration unto such a body by it self severed from the word neither adoring the Word do we put the Word far from the Flesh but knowing that it is said the Word was made Flesh we acknowledge it even now in the Flesh to be God 7. He gives this interpretation of those words of Christ Mark 13. 32. But of that day and that hour knoweth no man no not the Angels which are in heaven neither the Son but the Father The Son saith he knew it as God but not as man wherefore he said not neither the Son of God lest the divinity should seem to be ignorant but simply neither the Son that this might be the ignorance of the Son as man And for this cause when he speaks of the Angels he added not a higher degree saying neither the Holy Spirit but was silent here by a double reason affirming the truth of the thing for admit that the Spirit knows then much more the Word as the Word from whom even the Spirit receives was not ignorant of it 8. Speaking of the mystery of the two natures in Christ What need is there saith he of dispute and strife about words it's more profitable to believe and reverence and silently to adore I acknowledge him to be true God from heaven imp●ssible I acknowledge the same of the seed of David as touching the Flesh a man of the earth passible I do not curiousty inquire why the same is passible and impassible or why God and man lest being curiously inquisitive why and how I should miss of the good propounded unto us For we ought first to believe and adore and in the second place to seek from above a reason of these things not from beneath to inquire of Flesh and Blood but from divine and heavenly revelation 9. What the faith of the Church was concerning the Trinity he thus delivers Let us see that very tradition from the beginning and that Doctrine and Faith of the Catholick Church which Christ indeed gave but the Apostles preached and kept For in this Church are we founded and whoso falls from thence cannot be said to be a Christian. The holy and perfect Trinity therefore in the Father Son and Holy Ghost receives the reason of the Deity possesseth nothing forraign or superinduced from without nor consisteth of the Creator and Creature but the whole is of the Creator and Maker of all things like it self and
written by him in Latin yet would not peremptorily conclude it For saith he it is not clear to me whether of the two he wrote in though I rather soppose that he wrote in Latin but was more expert in the Greek and therefore speaking Latin he is bold to make use of Greek figures and forms of speech But most are of another mind judging the Greek to have been the Original Language werein his Books were written And that they were afterward translated by himself saith Feuardentius to cover over the faults of the Translator which are not a few or lest the Testimonies alleadged from the translation should lose of their Authority and Weight or which is most likely by some other All consent in this saith Baronius that he wrote In Greek he wrote many excellent Volumes in the Greek Tongue saith Sixtus Senensis and saith Rhenanus proculdubio without doubt he wrote in Greek for else would not Ierom have ranked him among the Greek Fathers nor have made Tertullian as he doth the third but the fourth as he should among the Latins Pamelius also thinks that both he and those first Roman Bishops unto his time wrote rather in Greek than Latine which things considered it 's a wonder that Erasmus should herein be of the mind he was The Latin Copy of Irenaeus saith Cornatius is an exceeding faulty Translation and may better be restored out of Epiphanius than afford any help in the translating of Epiphanius so that marvailous it is that Erasmus a man otherwise endued with a piercing judgement in things of this Nature should think that Irenaeus did wr●tein Latin To the same purpose speaks the great Scaliger I do admire saith he that from such a feverish Latin Interpreter as he is whom now we have Erasmus should imagine both that 't is the true Irenaeus and that he imitates the Greeks That Latin Interpreter was most foolish and either omitted or depraved many things which he understood not The fragments which are extant in Epiphanius also the History of the things done by Irenaeus in Eusebius do sufficiently prove both that the man was a Grecian and wrote in Greek neither is it to be doubted of c. The Greek Copy therefore written by himself is long since perished only there are some remains of it to be found scattered in several Authors who saw and made use thereof Thus we have seven and twenty Chapters of of his first Book by Epiphanius inserted into his Panarium who took a good part of his second and third Books word for word out of Iuneus and some few fragments in Eusebiu● and Theodoret by comparing of which wit● the Translation we now have it will easily appear how great a loss the Church sustains in the want of it For instead of elegan● Greek we have nothing else in the Ire●e●● now extant but rude and ill-favoured Latin● Nor indeed can a Translation especially 〈◊〉 of Greek into Latin equal the Original seeing that as Ierom speaks the Latin Tongue r●ceives not the propriety of the Greek The Contents of the five Books of this excellent Volume to give you a brief accou●● of them from Grynaeus are these 1. In th● first he at large sets down the dismal and diabolical Errours of the Valentinians together with a narration of the discords and impieties of those wretched Hereticks Wh●●● opinions saith Erasmus are so horrid th●● the very bringing of them to light is confutation sufficient yea the very terms as w●● as the opinions are so monstrous saith the sa●● Author that it would even turn the stomach and tire the patience of any one but to peru●● them over 2. In the second he treats of the one Eternal True Omnipotent and Omniscient God besides whom there is none other And that not any feigned Demiurgus or Angels but this eternal God alone Father Son and holy Ghost did out of nothing produce this whole Fabrick both of Heaven and Earth and gave being to Angels Men and all inferiour Creatures and refuses the Errours of the Gnosticks concerning the same shewing what they stole from the Philosophers to deceive the simple withal and wounding yea overcoming them with Weapons or Arguments fetched out of their own Magazines and Armory 3. In the third which is partly polemical and partly exegetical he discovers and proves the Hereticks to be foully guilty of that heynous crime of corrupting and curtailing the sacred Scriptures and evidently demonstrates the perpetual consent of the Prophets and Apostles concerning our Lord Jesus Christ God and Man 4. In the fourth he clearly and by solid Arguments proves that one and the same God was the Author of both the Testaments the Old and the New and that therein he hath revealed himself and his Will concerning the Restitution and Salvation by Jesus Christ of all men that do repent largely discoursing of the power of the Will and of our imperfection and being gotten out of the craggy and intricate places he enters into a large field explaining many Scriptures depraved by the Hereticks 5. In the fifth and last Book having made a repetition of divers things formerly handled he comes to confute the vain conceits of the Gnosticks concerning the utter perishing of the bodies of men and proves that our bodies shall not only be raised by Christ at the last day but also that the very bodies of the Saints shall injoy eternal life and be saved together with their Souls In the handling whereof he gives a notable experiment as the diligent Reader may observe of a clear head and as of a choice a spirit whence his weighty arguments sharpned with holy Zeal do pierce deeply into the very hearts of the Enemies of the Truth to their shameful prostration and utter overthrow for great is the Truth and will prevail He is one of the Ancients and the only one among those contained in this Decade that had the good hap not to have his name abused by being prefixed to the Books he never wrote nor the bastard-brats of others to be father'd upon him § 4. As for his Stile 't is somewhat obscure and intricate yea he is oftentimes neglectin● of his words and speaks improperly ye such is the subject he discourseth of that ● will hardly admit of clear and plain expressions He himself disclaims Eloquence a● dwelling among the Celtae a people of a barbarous speech Look not saith he for the art of Oratory which we have not learned but what simply truly and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in ● vulgar manner we have written in Love i● Love receive Yet understand him of affected Rhetorick and not that he was altogether ignorant of that art which could not be seeing that in a subject so thorny and perplex his stile is perspicuous digested and coherent So that considering the matter he handleth 't is no wonder he is so obscure and that so little art
indivisible and the operation thereof one For the Father by the Word in the holy Spirit doth all things and so the unity of the Trinity is kept or preserved and so one God in the Church is preached who is above all and through all and in all viz. above all as the Father as the beginning and fountain but through all by the Word moreover in all in or by the holy Spirit But the Trinity is not in name only or an empty form of speech but in truth and reason of subsisting the Trinity For as the Father is that very thing that he is so also the Word God over all is that very thing that he is so also the Holy Ghost is not any inessential thing but truly existeth and subsisteth 10. According to the Ecclesiastical Canons saith he as the Apostle commanded the people being gathered together with the Holy Ghost who constitute a Bishop publickly and in the presence of the Clergy craving a Bishop inquisition ought to be made and so all things canonically performed 11. Concerning the lawfulness of flight in time of persecution he thus speaks I betook me to flight not for fear of death lest any should accuse me of timidity but that I might obey the precept of our Saviour whose command it is that we should make use of flight against persecutors of hiding places against those that search for us lest if we should offer our selves unto open danger we should more sharply provoke the fury of our persecutors Verily it is all one both for a man to kill himself and to proffer himself unto the enemies to be slain but he that flees as the Lord commands knows the Articles of the time and truly provides for his persecutors lest being carried out even to the shedding of blood they should become guilty of that precept that forbids murther Again concerning the same thing 12. That law saith he is propounded unto all in general to flee when they are pursued in time of persecution and to hide themselves when they are sought for neither should they be precipitate and rash in tempting the Lord but must wait until the time appointed of dying do come or that the Judge do determine something concerning them as shall seem good unto him But yet would he have us always ready when either the time calls for it or we are apprehended to contend for the Church even unto death These things did the blessed Martyrs observe who while they lay hid did harden themselves but being found out they did undergo Martyrdom Now if some of them did render themselves unto their persecutors they were not thorough rashness moved so to do but every where professed unto all men that this promptness and offering of themselves did proceed from the Holy Ghost 13. He giveth this character of an heretick Heresie sa●th he or an heretick may thus be known and evinced that whosoever is dear unto them and a companion with them in the same impiety although he be guilty of sundry crimes infinite vices they have arguments against him of his hainous acts yet is he approved and had in great esteem among them yea and is forthwith made the Emperour's friend c. But those that reprove their wickedness and sincerely teach the things which are of Christ though pure in all things upon any feigned Crime laid to their charge they are prefently hurried into Banishment § 6. The defects and blemishes of this eminent Father and Champion of Jesus Christ were neither so many nor so gross as are to be found in most of the Ancients that were before him yet was he not altogether free but liable to error as well as others as appears from somewhat of this kind that dropt from his pen which were especially such passages as these in his genuine works for as for the apparently supposititious I shall forbear to meddle with them having in them so much hay and stubble as we cannot imagine should pass thorow the hands of so skilful a Master-builder 1. He affirms the local descent of Christ into Hell He accomplished saith he the condemnation of sin in the earth the abolition of the curse upon the Cross the redemption from corruption in the Grave the condemnation of death in Hell Going through all places that he might every where perfect the salvation of the whole man shewing himself in the form of our image which he took upon him Again The body descended not beyond the grave the Soul pierced into Hell places severed by a vast distance the Grave receiving that which was corporeal because the body was there but Hell that which was incorporeal Hence it came to pass that though the Lord were present there incorporeally yet was he by death acknowledged to be a man that his Soul not liable unto the bands of death but yet made as it were liable might break asunder the bands of those Souls which Hell detained c. 2. Concerning the state of the Fathers before Christ that they were in Hell he thus speaks The Soul of Adam detained in or under the condemnation of death did perpetually cry unto the Lord and the rest who by the law of nature pleased God were detain'd together with Adam and were and did cry with him in grief In which passage we have also a third error of his viz. 3. That men by the law of nature may please God contrary unto what we find in Heb. 11. 6. 4. He maketh circumcision a note or sign of Baptism Abraham saith he when he had believed God received circumcision for a note or sign of that regeneration which is obtained by Baptism wherefore when the thing was come which was signified by the figure the sign and figure it self perished and ceased For circumcision was a sign but the laver of regeneration the very thing that was signified Besides these there are in him some other passages not so aptly nor warily delivered as they ought to have been viz. 1. Concerning the freedom of mans will he thus speaks The mind saith he is free and at it's own dispose for it can as incline it self unto that which is good so also turn from it which beholding its free right and power over it self it perceives that it can use the members of the Body either way both unto the things that are i.e. good things and also unto the things that are not i.e. evil 2. He is too excessive and hyperbolical in the praise of Virginity The Son of God saith he our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ among other his gifts bestowed upon us in virginity an example of angelical holiness Certainly Virgins endowed with that virtue the Catholick Church is wont to call the Spouses of Christ whom being beheld by them the very heathen do prosecute with admiration as the Temple of Christ. There is a large encomium hereof in the end of the treatise of Virginity which being but a vain
himself gives of his end in compiling these Books his words are as rendred in the Parisian Edition Non est hoc opus Scriptura artificiosè comparata ad ostentationem sed mihi ad senectutem reconduntur monimenta oblivionis medicamentum verè image adumbratio evidentium anim●tarum illarum orationum quas dignus hahitus sum qui audirem virorum beatorum quique reverà erant maximi precii aestimationis 2. The eighth Book of Stromes is different from the rest 1. In the bulk of it being shorter then the fore-going whence it appears not to be an entire book 2. In the Inscription thereof fo● in some copies it hath this Title saith Photius Quis dives salveter of which before and begins with these words Qui laudatorias or ationes in other Copies it is thus inscribed Stromat●n Octavus as the other seven and begins with the same words which the now extant eighth book doth Sed neque antiquissimi Philosophi 3. In the subject thereof or matter contained and handled in it for the seven preceding books are altogether Theological but this wholly Logical nihil continet inquit Scultetus Theologicum sed de syllogismis argumentisque logicis quasdam praeceptiunculas wherein there are some things unsound though not so many as in his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or institutions so far Photius Heinsius supposeth that this may be a fragment taken out of his Institutions to which some things contained in them that were not sound did stick so that he conceives this book was long lost and that now a part of the institutions hath invaded the place thereof Which haply may be the reason wherefore Freculphus reckons the books of Stromes to be but seven This I thought good to intimate and so to leave it unto the discreet Reader to judge and make what use of it he can That small Commentary set forth by Bigne which he calls adumbrationes or shadowings Baronius gives them the name of breves notae short notes upon some of the Catholical Epistles viz. The Epistle of Peter the Epistle of Iude and the first and second of Iohn and the truth is they give but little light into those Scriptures though they bear the Title of this ancient Father yet in all likelyhood are they none of his for neither Eusebius nor Ierom make any mention of them only Cassiodorus affirms it and that it is done in an Attick or Elegant stile wherein many things are spoken subtily indeed but not so warily as they should have been Probable it is that these notes also were by some one taken out of his Institutions For these are said to contain in them an explanation of a great part of the sacred Scriptures and particularly of the Catholical Epistles § 4. For the stile that he useth 't is elegant and full of gravity both Ierom and Cyril commend in him his eloquence and Trithemius stiles him Eloquentissimus a most eloquent Man It 's conceived that he was born in Athens and consequently it is likely that there also he had his first Education and the Language of the place which was of all other the best and finest Athenis inquit Tertullianus sapiendi dicendique acutissimos nasci relatum est In Athens are born the most acute men for Wisdom and Speech Athens being famous for Eloquence as was Sparta for Arms. His Books of the School-master saith Photius are nothing like unto his Institutions or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for besides that they have not in them any of those sottish and blasphemous opinions which were to be found in the other the very phrase is more florid and rhetorical rising to a certain well temper'd gravity mixed with sweetness Such was the Attick Dialect Atticorum aures teretes ad quas qui se accommodat is existimandus est Atticè dicere inquit Rhodiginus ut nil sentiatur insolens nil ineptum omnia ornata gravia copiosa Whence grew that adage 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 pr●venustâ lepidâque oratione § 5. Those excellent Monuments of his own extant may not unfitly be compared unto a pleasant Garden richly furnished with great variety of the choicest herbs and flowers wherein the judicious Reader may with much contentment recreate himself and be thence abundantly stored both for his profit and delight I shall gather and present you with a view for an invitation 1. Concerning the Holy Scriptures he speaks very venerably plainly asserting the Divine authority perspicuity and perfection of them thus We make use saith he of the Scriptures for the finding out and judging of the truth of things Now whatsoever is judged is not believed before it be judged wherefore neither is that a principle that needs to be judged If it be not enough to affirm what seems to be a truth but that a proof of what is spoken be requisite we expect not the Testimony of men but we prove what is inquired after by the Voice of the Lord which is more worthy to be believed than any demonstration or rather is the only demonstration Again as in war that order is not to be foresaken which the Commander hath given to the Soldier So neither is that order to be forsaken that the word hath prescribed to us which we have received as the Prince or Moderator both of knowledge and practice 2. To believe in Christ is to be made one with him and inseparably united to him Not to believe is to doubt and to be divided and at distance from him Faith is a voluntary anticipation or aforehand taking hold of what is promised a pious assent the substance of things hoped for and argument of things not seen Others an uniting assent unto things not apparent a demonstration or manifest assent unto a thing not known 3. The whole life of a godly man is as it were a certain holy and solemn festival day his Sacrifices are Prayers and Praises and the reading of the Scriptures before his repast as also Psalms and Hymns while he is at meat likewise before he goeth to rest yea and in the night to Prayers again By these he unites and joyns himself unto the Quire of Heaven But doth he know no other Sacrifices Yes namely the largess of instruction and relief of the poor 4. The Sacred Scriptures are they which make men holy like unto God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 5. This is to drink the Blood of Jesus viz. to be made partaker of the incorruption of the Lord. 6. It 's the greatest argument of Divine Providence that the Lord permits not sin and vice which had its rise from mans voluntary defection to remain unprofitable nor yet altogether hurtful for it is the office of the divine wisdom vertue and power not only to do good for this is to say it once for all the nature of God as it is of fire to burn
it is that most Mens stiles do differ as well as their faces suus cuique stilus est inquit Erasmus quisque suum quendam habet gustum peculiarem every one hath somewhat peculiar to him in this partic●lar Accordingly our Author being a Man ●cris vehementis Ingenii of a rough sharp and vehement spirit makes use of a stile answerable viz. quick and crabbed and consequently harsh and obscure which he did of purpose affecting it as most agreeable to his Genius so that his expressions are such even in things that are plain and easie This Rhenanus renders as the reason why his writings had so many faults or Errataes in them viz. ●eglectus aut●ris quo multis annis non est lectotum manibus tritus ips●m dicendi g●nus affectatum Africanum affectati stili durities molestiam addit quod etiam magis effecit ut minùs leg●retur quàm quidvis aliud Which betided the Poet Persius qui consul●ò est obscurus suisque scriptis caliginem tenebras exindustriâ objecit for being by one taken in hand and perceived to be so dark and cloudy he was fairly laid aside with such like words as these Si nol●t intelligi non legetur 4. His converse in the Greek Authors whom he diligently read being very skilful in that Tongue idenim temporis nihil extaba● inquit Rhenanus apud Latinos in sacris praeter testamentum utrumque tantum Victor Apollonius scripserant opuscula hence it is that transcribing much from them he retains their phrases though he quote not his Authors which was the manner of the first ages viz. to cite none by name but the sacred Scriptures only especially if they had drawn the Water out of the Wells of the Greeks and imitates their manner of speaking By his assiduous perusal of their Books saith Pamelius adeò Graecas loquendi formulas imbiberit ut etiam Latinè seribens illarum oblivisci nequiret he so drank in their forms of speech that when he comes to write in Latin he cannot forget them and both himself and Rhenanus have taken notice of many phrases in him which he borrows from the Greeks and wherein he conforms unto them Most of these I find observed by that Learned French-man Mr. Iohn Daille in his choice Treatise concerning the right use of the Fathers What shall I say saith he of Tertullian who besides his natural harshness and roughness which you meet with in him throughout and that Carthagmian spirit and genius which is common to him with the rest of the African writers hath yet shadowed and over-cast his conceptions with so much learning and with so many new terms and passages out of the Law and with such variety of all visions subtilties and nice points as that the greatest stock both of learning and attention that you can bring with you will be all little enough to fit you for a perfect understanding of him § 5. This father is full fraught with and abounds in grave and excellent sentences some few whereof I shall here insert which may serve a little to acquaint us with the state of those times in reference unto both the Doctrine and Discipline then professed and practised in the Chuches of Christ. 1. Take a view of his Symbol or Creed containing a summary of the faith which was generally received and maintained in his time Altogether one the only immoveable and irreformable rule as he stiles it which is this To believe that there is but one God nor he any other beside the Creator of the world who made all things of nought by his word first of all sent forth Colos. 1. 16 17. That word to be call'd his Son in the name of God variously seen by the Patriarchs always heard by the Prophets last of all brought down by the Spirit of God the Father and Power into the Virgin Mary made flesh in her womb and of her born a man and that he is Jesus Christ moreover that he preached a new law and a new promise of the Kingdom of Heaven that he wrought or did wonders was fastned to the Cross arose the third day that being taken up into heaven he sate down on the right of the Father sent the power of the Ghost in his stead that he might guide or act believers that he shall come in glory to take the Saints into the fruition of eternal life and heavenly promises and to adjudge the wicked unto perpetual fire a resurrection of each part being made with the restitution of the flesh This rule instituted by Christ as shall be proved hath no question made of it among us but which Heresies bring in and which makes Hereticks A compend or brief hereof is to be seen in the beginning of his book of the veiling of Virgins as also in that against Praxeas the Heretick unto which he subjoyns these words This Law of Faith remaining other things that concern discipline and conversation do admit of a newness of Correction the grace of God working and making a proficiency unto the end So that where there is a consent in the fundamental and substantial truths of the Gospel differences in things of less moment may be born with nor should they cause divisions among Christians That rule holding here that Opinionum varietas opinantium unitas non sunt 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 He adds that this rule hath ran down from the beginning of the Gospel even before any heresie sprung up insomuch as from hence this appears to be a firm Truth id esse verum quodcunque primum id esse adulterum quodcunque posterius Again The Church acknowledgeth one God Creatour of the universe and Jesus Christ of the Virgine Mary the Son of God the Creator and the resurrection of the flesh it mingleth the Law and the Prophets with the Evangelical and Apostolical writings and from thence drinks in that faith It signs with water clotheth with the holy Ghost which Pamelius understands of confirmation feeds with the Eucharist exhorteth with Martyrdom and so receives none against this institution 2. He prescribes and lays down this for a sure rule by which the truth may be known viz. If the Lord Jesus Christ did send out the Apostles to Preach other Preachers are not to be received then those whom Christ did institute because neither doth any other know the Father but the Son and he to whom the Son hath revealed him neither doth the Son seem to have revealed him unto any others save to the Apostles whom he sent to Preach Now what they have preached i.e. what Christ revealed to them ought no other way to be proved then by the same Churches which the Apostles themselves founded preaching unto them as well by a lively voice as they say as afterward by Epistles If these things be so it is then evident that
of Mercury over against Sicily distant from Carthage about fifty miles In this place of a pleasant situation was he fitted with a convenient lodging and visited by many of the brethren Continuing here the most part of a year he was not idle as his Letters not a few written from hence do testifie wherein he ceased not to exhort those unto whom he wrote to constancy in suffering even unto the laying down of their lives for Christ in which imployment let us a while leave him till we shall come to speak of his Matyrdom § 2. He was a man of excellent natural parts the elaborate piece of Nature saith Nazianzen the Flower of Youth and these to the utmost improved by Education and industry so that he attained unto a great height of secular Learning in all kinds before his conversion For besides his exactness in the art of Rhetorick whereof he was publick Professor in the famous City of Carthage and he so far excelled that he went beyond other men in Eloquence as much as we exceed the brute Creatures he was accurately skill'd in all other Arts One saith Nazianzen that had gotten unto the top of Learning not only of Philosophy but other Sciences in every kind take him where you will so that in variety of knowledge and in absolute insight into the Arts yea in every regard he excelled all others To which was added his through knowledge in the Tongues viz. the Greek and Latin the two learned Languages wherein he was most skilful The most Eloquent Preacher Danie● Tossanus did perswade both my self saith Keckerman and other candidates of the Ministery that among all the Fathers we would in the next place after the holy Scriptures and most diligently read Cyprian and certainly I know not what spirit of Eloquence breaths upon us when we have read this Author These things did afterward prove of great advantage unto him as did unto the Jews the Gold and Silver whereof they spoiled the Egyptians 'T is Augustine's allusion whose words for their weight and worth do deserve perusal which I shall here insert As the Egyptians saith he had Gold and Silver and Rayment which the people of Israel departing out of Egypt did clancularly challenge for a better use not by their own Authority but by the command of God the Egyptians ignorantly lending them those things which they used not well So the Doctrines of the Gentiles do contain the Liberal Arts very useful to the Truth and some most profitable moral precepts as also some Truths concerning the worship of that one God Which Gold and Silver as it were of theirs that they themselves instituted not but did dig out certain Mines of the Divine Providence extending it self every where and which they perversly and injuriously abused to the worshipping of Devils 〈◊〉 Christian when he departs from them and in heart separates himself from their miserable society ought to take or bring away for the just use of preaching the Gospel and what else did many of our good and faithful men Do we not see with how great a burden of Gold Silver and Rayment the Most sweet Doctor and blessed Matyr Cyprian departed out of Egypt So also did Victorinus Optatus Hilarius and innumerable of the Greeks c. thus he And not much unlike is that passage of Ierom 〈◊〉 alluding unto those words of Moses Deut 21. 10 c who being demanded by Magnus a Roman Orator Cur in opusculis suis saecularium literarum interdum poneret exempla caudorem Ecclesiae ethnicorum sordibus pollueret responsum inquit breviter habeto Quis nesciat in Moyse in Prophetarum voluminibus quaedam assumpta de gentilium libris Sed Paulus Apostolus P●etarum Epimenidis Menandri Arati versiculis abusus est Quid ergò mirum si ego sapientiam saecularem propter eloquii venustatem membrorum pulchritudinem de aneillâ captivâ Israelitidem facere cupio si quicquid in eâ mortuum est idololatriae voluptatis erroris libidinum vel praecido vel rado mixtos purissimo corpori vernaculo ex eâ genero Domino Sabaoth labor meus in familiam Christi profecit But the most splendid Jewels that were his principal Ornaments Christianity only furnished him withal which made him exceeding amiable in the eyes both of God and Men so that nothing was more illustrious or famous in the whole world saith Billi●s quoting the words of Ierom accounted by the Church as a Star of the greatest Manitude Non solùm malos Catholicos inquit Augustinus nullo modo comparamus sed nec bonos facilè coaequamus beato Cypriano quem inter r●ros paucos excellentissimae gratiae viros numer●● pia mater Ecclesia He was saith Nazianzen sometime viz. before his conversion the singular honour of Carthage but now viz. since his becoming a Christian of the whole world His natural disposition was very sweet and lovely but being polished by Religion it became much more so in whom was to be found such an equal composition of gravity and chearfulness severity and mildness that it might be doubtful whether he deserved to be more feared or loved but that indeed he equally deserved both His knowledge in the Mysteries of the Gospel was such that for it he was renowned every where his writings that were dispersed f●r and near did spread his fame and made him of great note not only in the African and Western but also in the Churches of the East In comparison of whom the great Augustin doth so far undervalue himself that saith he I am very much yea incomparably inferiour unto the desert of Cyprian And he was not only a shining but also a burning light so exemplary in his conversation that the Rays of Grace and Holiness streaming forth therein did even confound the minds of the beholders Talis ubique Sermonis habitus et inquit Erasmus ut loqui sentias verè Christianum Episcopum ac Martyrio destinatum Pectus ardet Evangelicâ pietate pectori respondet oratio loquitur diserta sed magis fortia quàm diserta neque tam loquitur fortia quàm vivit Insomuch that in the sentence pronounced upon him he is stiled the Standard-bearer of his Sect and enemy of the gods qui futurus esset ipse documento cujus sa●guine inciperet Disciplina sanciri Among the rest those graces whose lustre and brightness the place he held the employments he managed and the condition of the times that he lived in did more especially discover were such as these 1. His humility that sweet grace peculiar to Christianity this added a beauty unto all the rest tanto erat excelientior quanto humilior inquit Augustinus who was so much the higher in the account of others by how much the lower he was in his own Being to deliberate
and learning among whom Tertul●ian and Augustin were chief but scarcely unto any one happened the genuine purity of the Roman Language but only unto Cyprian Thus Erasmus Like a pure fountain he flows sweetly and smoothly and withal he is so plain and open which is the chief virtue of speech that you cannot discern saith Lactantius whether any one were more comly in speaking or more facil in explicating or more powerful in perswading Prudentius also in this regard thus extols him O nive candidius linguae genus O novum saporem Vt liquor Ambrosius cor mitigat imbuit palatum Sedem animae penetrat mentem fovet pererrat artus His phrase is most elegant saith Sixtus Senensis and next unto Ciceronian Candour And in the judgment of Alsted as Lactantius may be truly accounted the Christian's Cicero so may Cyprian their Caesar for these two among the Latines added ornament unto Christian Doctrine Now Caesar saith Vives is egregiously useful for dayly speech unto whom Tully gives the praise of a pure and uncorrupted dialect Quintilian of elegancy whom he peculiarly studyed and Mr. Ascham in that learned and grave discourse which he calls his Schoolmaster judgeth that in Caesar's Commentaries which are to be read with all curiosity without all exception to be made either by friend or foe is seen the unspotted propriety of the Latine Tongue even when it was in 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 at the highest pitch of all perfectness yet is his phrase various sometimes he soars aloft and is very copious with abundance of words as in his Epistle unto Donatus another time he falls as low as in his Epistle unto Caecilius of the Sacrament of the Lord's Cup but most commonly he is temperate and keeps the middle way between these extremes as in his Treatise of the Habit of Virgins In a word he was saith Hyperius plain vehement serious and not unhappily fluent his words breathing a venerable elegancy as the things which he wrote did piety and martyrdom whereof I now proceed to give a taste § 5. In his Treatise of the vanity of Idols we have a sum of his Faith which Froben in his Index affixed unto the edition of Erasmus stiles the most elegant Creed or Symbol of Cyprian containing the Doctrines of Christ his Deity Incarnation Miracles Death Resurrection Ascension and second coming His words are these Indulgentiae Dei gratiae disciplinaeque arbiter magister sermo filius Dei mittitur qui per Prophetas omnes retrò illuminator doctor humani generis praedicabatur Hic est virtus Dei hic ratio hic sapientia ejus gloria hic in Virginem illabitur carnem Spiritu Sancto cooperante induitur Deus cum homine miscetur hic Deus noster hic Christus est qui mediator duorum hominem induit quem perducat ad Patrem quòd homo est Christus esse voluit ut homo possit esse quòd Christus est Cum Christus Iesus secundùm a Prophetis ante praedicta verbo vocis imperio daemonia de hominibus excuteret leprosos purgaret illuminaret caecos claudis gressum daret mortuos rursus animaret cogeret sibi element a famulari servire ventos maria obedire inferos cedere Iud●ei qui illum crediderant hominem tontùm de humilitate carnis corporis existimabant magum de licentiâ potestatis Hunc Magistri eorum atque primores hoc est quos doctrina illâ ille sapientiâ revincebat accensi irâ indignatione provocati postremò detentum Pontio Pilato qui tunc ex parte Romanâ Syriam procura●at tradiderunt crucem ejus mortem suffragiis violentis ac pertinacibus flagitantes Crucifix●s prevento carnis officio spiritum sponte dimisit die tertio rursus a mortuis sponte surrexit Apparuit discipulis talis ut fuerat agnoscendum se videntibus praebuit simul junctus substantiae corporalis firmitate conspicuus ad dies quadraginta remoratus est ut d● vel ab eo ad praecepta vitalia instrui possent discerent que docerent Tunc in Coelum circumfusâ nube sublatus est ut hominem quem dilexit quem induit quem a morte protexit ad patrem victor imponeret jam venturos è Coelo ad poenam Diaboli ad censuram generis humani ultoris vigore judicis potestate 2. Concerning the Article of Christ's descent into Hell the Author of the Exposition of the Apostles Creed thus speaks We are saith he verily to know that it is not to be found in the Creed of the Roman Church neither in the Oriental Churches yet the force of the words seemeth to be the same with those wherein he is said to be buryed 3. Of the Canonical Books of the Old and New Testament the same Author of the Exposition of the Apostles Creed having enumerated the same Books that we do These saith he are they which the Fathers concluded within the Canon out of which they would have the assertions of our Faith to consist But we are to know further that there are other Books which our Predecessors called not Canonical but Ecclesiastical as the Books of Wisdom Ecclesiasticus Toby Iudith and Maccabees all which they would indeed have to be read in the Churches but yet not to be produced for the confirmation of the Faith 4. Of how little esteem custom ought to be if not founded upon truth he pithily shews in that short sentence Consuetudo sine veritate vetustas erroris est Custom without truth is but mouldy errour In vain therefore saith he do some that are overcome by reason oppose or object custom unto us as if custom were greater than truth or that in Spirituals were not to be followed which for the better hath been revealed by the Holy Ghost Again if Christ alone must be heard as Matth. 17. 5. we ought not to heed what another before us thought fit to be done but what Christ who is before all first did Neither ought we to follow the custom of man but the truth of God 5. He understands by Tradition nothing but that which is delivered in the Scripture Let nothing be innovated saith Stephen unto him but what is delivered He replyeth whence is this Tradition whether doth it descend from the authority of the Lord and the Gospel or doth it come from the Apostles Commands and Epistles for those things are to be done that are Written If therefore this speaking of the Rebaptization of Hereticks or receiving them into the Church only by imposition of hands which later was Stephens opinion against Cyprian be either commanded in the Evangelists or contained in the Epistles or Acts of the Apostles let it be observed as a Divine and Holy Tradition 6. That the Baptism of children was then received and practised in the Church and that performed by aspersion as valid as that
dearest Friends unto whom herein he consented and as himself saith not without just cause for that it is meet a Bishop should in that City wherein he is set over the Lord's Church there confess the Lord and so make the whole people famous by the confession of their present Overseer for whatsoever in that moment of Confession the Confessour Bishop speaketh God inspiring him he speaks with the mouth of all If it should be otherwise the honour of our so glorious a Church shall be maimed c. Here therefore lying hid we expect the coming of the Proconsul saith he returning unto Carthage that we may hear what the Emperour shall command and speak what the Lord shall give in that hour Accordingly there came suddenly upon the Ides of September two Apparitours to bring him before the new Pròconsul Galerius but being put off till the next day the Lord so willing that he might dispose of the affairs of the Church he was brought then into the Court of Judgment where he received this sentence that having been the Standard bearer of his Sect and an Enemy of the gods and one that would still be an example unto his own refusing to offer sacrifice It is my pleasure saith Galerius that he be beheaded Which Sentence being passed he was led away unto a certain place called Sexti about four miles six saith Baronius from the City a great multitude following him and crying Let us die together with the Holy Bishop Being come unto the place he submitted himself unto the stroke of the Sword by which his Head being severed from his Body he changed this frail for an eternal life being the first of the Bishops of Carthage that sealed the truth with his blood He suffered under the Emperours Valerian and Galerius anno Christi 259. The Carthaginians did so highly honour and had him in such veneration that they erected unto him a most magnificent Temple and kept a yearly Festival in memory of him which from his name they call Cypriana as Mariners do also a certain storm that usually falls out about the same time Lactantius § 1. LVcius Caelius was his name unto which his eloquence gained him the addition of Lactantius from his milky and smooth kind of speaking as his Country that of Firmianus being an Italian by Birth not an African as Baronius and Posseviue imagine because he was the Scholar of Arnobius that was so of the Province called Picenum of old but afterward by the Lombards Marchia Anconitana from the chief Town therein Ancona as also Marchia Firmiana from the strong Town Firmium heretofore the Head City of the Piceni which Country is a part of the Land of the Church under the Government of the Popes of Rome Some do contend that he was of the German Race and that at this day there is a Family not obscure among the Germans which bearing the name of the Firmiani do boast themselves to be the posterity of Lactantius but the general consent of Authors shews this to be but a vain conceit He was at first the Scholar of Arnobius Professour of Rhetorick at Sicca in Africa as also some time at Rome where Lactantius heard him and profited much in the study of eloquence who also instructed him in the Christian Religion which it seems he had embraced before he came into Bythinia whither under Di●olesian the Emperor he was called unto the City of Nicomedia wherein for some while he professed the Art of Rhetorick whereof he had been a learner before But being a Latine in a Greek City his auditory grew thin so that he was destitute of hearers hereupon laying aside the work of teaching he betook him unto his pen and fell to writing being provoked unto and put upon it by a couple of impure and foul-mouthed Philosophers who either of them had belched out their books against both the Religion and name of Christians He was at length in France made Tutor unto Crispus the son of Constantine the great and his great friend who committed him for his breeding unto the c●re of Lactantius an evident argument both of his fame and faithfulness § 2. He was a man of great Learning 〈◊〉 eruditione clarus abundanter 〈◊〉 inqui● Trithemius a very grave Author saith Hospinian one notably skilled 〈◊〉 the Art of Rhetorick and in all Philosophy having diligently perused the writings of all sorts of Humane Authors as his books do sufficiently testifie in which he omitted almost ●one of any science or Profession whose testimony he made not use of and so excelled in ●loquence of speech that therein he was judged to be superior even unto his Master Arnolius who yet was of chief note among Orators He is for this cause often stiled Orat●● disertissimus the most eloquent and elegant Lactantius who among the Latines especially added Ornament unto Christian Doctrine the very top and most eminent of the Latine Rhetoricians in Divinis Scripturis nobiliter institutus His great abilities he notably improved for the publick good for though he were somewhat defective in the inward knowledg of Divine Mysteries and far inferiour unto many others for his skill in delivering and confirming the Doctrine of Christianity yet was he a stout Champion for the truth and gave good testimony of his zeal thereunto in opposing with all his might the adversaries thereof for which work he was excellently furnished having such a dexterity herein that he easily refuted and overcame them Vtinam inquit Hieronymus tam nostra confirmare potuisset quàm facilè aliena destruxit For observing the Christian Religion to be destitute of those that should eloquently defend it the opposers of it being such I saith he undertook this task being grieved with the sacrilegious writings which they published and stirred up hereunto with their proud impiety and conscience of the truth it self that so with all the strength of my wit I might reprove the accusers of righteousness not that I might write against them who might have been confounded in few words but that I might at once by one assault put to flight all those who every where do or have undertaken the same work A most laudable enterprise wherein as he manifested no small love unto the truth in attempting it so did he manage it with no less dexterity for which he hath been deservedly famous in the Church of Christ unto this day His challenge that he makes of all the Heathen is remarkable Si qua inquit 〈◊〉 fiducia est vel in philosophiâ vel in eloquentiâ arment se ac refellant haec nostra si possunt congrediantur comminus singul● quaeque discutiant Decet cos suscipere defen●●onem Deorum suorum ne si nostra invaluerint ut quotidie invalescunt cum delubris 〈◊〉 ac ludibriis deserantur Procedant in medium Pontifices seu minores seu maximi