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A10966 A treatise vpon sundry matters contained in the Thiry nine Articles of religion, which are professed in the Church of England long since written and published by Thomas Rogers. Rogers, Thomas, d. 1616.; Rogers, Thomas, d. 1616. Faith, doctrine and religion professed in England. 1639 (1639) STC 21233; ESTC S1674 207,708 274

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persons not a Trinity to be worshipped so did Anastasius the Emperor command and the Apollinarians did hold l Athanas ad Epictet Some doe grant and acknowledge the name of three in the God-head but deny their persons such were the Noetians Praxentans and Hermogenians These did say how the same God was called by diuers names in the holy Scripture and therefore that the Father became flesh and suffered because one and the same God is called the Father the Sonne and the holy Ghost For which cause they were tearmed Patripassians in this number was Serverus Againe some doe grant the names persons of three and yet depriue not onely the Son and holy Ghost of their diuinity but the whole Trinity also of their properties For they say there is three in heauen viz. the Father the Word and holy Ghost howbeit say they the Father onely is very God the Word is the breath of the Father and the holy Ghost is the Spirit created by God of nothing through the Word spoyling so both the Son and holy Ghost of their deity and the whole Trinity of their properties Such were the Arrian and Macedonian heretikes hence by-named Pneumatomachons because they waged battell with the holy Ghost And some doe bring in other names of deity besides of the Father Sonne and holy Ghost as did the Priscilianists m Concil Bra. car cap. 2. 2. Article Of the Word of God which was made very man The Sonne which is 1 the Word of the Father begotten from everlasting of the Father the very eternall God of one substance with the Father 2 tooke mans nature in the wombe of the blessed Virgin of her substance so that 3 two whole and perfect natures that is to say the God-head and man-hood were ioyned in one person neuer to be diuided whereof is one Christ very God and very man who suffered was crucified dead and buried to reconcile his Father to vs and to be a Sacrifice not only for originall guile but also for all actuall sinnes of men The Propositions 1. Christ is very God 2. Christ is very man 3. Christ is God and man and that in one person 4. Christ is the Sauiour of mankinde 1. Proposition Christ is the very God The proofe from Gods Word IN the beginning was the Word and the Word was with God and that Word was God a Iohn 1.1 This is written of Christ Therefore Christ is God Christ was begotten of the Father from everlasting b Psal 2.7 Acts 13.33 Heb. 1.5 Therefore very God This is life eternall that they know thee to be very God and whom thou hast sent Iesus Christ c Iohn 17.3 They shall call his name Emanuel which is by interpretation God with vs d Matth. 1.23 Christ he is the brightnesse of the glory and the engraued Image of the Father his person and beareth up all things by his mighty hand e Heb. 1.3 I beleeue in God the Father c. and in Iesus Christ his onely Sonne our Lord Symb. Apost The Godhead of the Father of the Son and of the holy Ghost is all one the glory equall the Maiesty co-eternall Such as the Father is such is the Sonne The Father vncreate the Sonne vncreate The Father incomprehensible the Sonne incomprehensible The Father eternall the Son eternall The Father is Almighty the Son Almighty The Father is God and the Sonne is God The Father is Lord and the Sonne is Lord Symbol Athanas I beleeue in God the Father Almighty c. and in one Lord Iesus Christ the onely begotten Sonne of God begotten of his Father before all worlds God of God light of light very God of very God begotten not made being of one substance with the Father Therefore very God And this both hath beene of the ancient Christians f Symbo Nicen. and is the Faith of the reformed Churches g Confe Helv. 1. ar 11. ● c 11. Bohem. cap. 4.6 August ar 6. Gal. ar 13 14. Belg. ar 10. Wittemb c. 2. Sueuica ar 1. The errors and aduersaries vnto this truth Miserably therefore do they erre which either deny or impugne the Deity of our Sauiour as did certaine old heretikes viz. The Arrians whereof some were called the Douleians because in scorne they tearmed the onely begotten of God the Fathers seruant a Theod. haer fab lib 4. The Cerinthians b Irenaeus The Ebionites among whom some said that Christ Iesus was a meere man others acknowledged him to be God but not from everlasting c Euseb eccles l. hist l. 3 c. 27. The Eunomians d Basil 5. contra Eunom The Samosatenians who thought that Christ was not the Sonne of God before his incarnation e Concil Bracar cap. 1. The Nestorians whose opinion was that Christ became God by merit but was not God by nature f Liberatus The Macedonians which vtterly denyed the Sonne to be of one substance with the Father g Theodoret. l. 4. haeret fab The Agnoites who held that the diuine nature of Christ was ignorant of some things h Gregor ep 22 l. 8. Againe some late heretikes even to the death never would acknowledge Christ Iesus to be the true and very God as namely Certaine Catabaptists i Zuing. lib. contra Catab Blandrat k Beza ep 19. Matthew Hamant burnt at Norwich An. 1579. one of whose heresies was that Christ was a meere and sinfull man l Iohn chron 12.29 Francis Ker burnt also at Norwich An. 1588 who most obstinately maintained that Christ was not God till after his resurrection Dauid George sometime of Basil who affirmed himselfe to be greater for power then ever Christ was m Hist Dauidis Georg. In oppugning the deity of our Sauiour with these heretiks ioyne the Iewes n Lud Caret I. divinior visci ad Iudaeos and Turkes which say that Christ was a good man such as Moses and Mahomet were o Policy of the Turkish Emp. c. 5 p 16. but not God Hence Amurath the great Turke in his letters vnto the Emp. Rodolph the second An. 1593. tearmed our Sauiour in derision The crucified God vnto whom may be added the Family of Love p Display of the Fam. of Love H. 7. ar 2. Proposition Christ is very man The proofe from Gods Word HOlding the humanity of Christ wee ioyne with the blessed Prophets and Euangelists who either prophecied of his future incarnation a The seed of the woman shal breake thine h●ad Gen. 3.15 The Scepter shall not dep●●t c. vntill Shiloh come Gen. 49 1● and conception in the wombe of a Virgin b Behold a Virgin shall con●●i●● and beare a Son Esay 7.14 or plainely auouched and writ both that the Virgin Mary was his Mother c Matth. 10.18 2● Luk. 27 31.34 and that as very man he grew and increased in strength d Luk. 2.40 endured hunger e When he had ●●sted 40
b Psal 124.8 134.3 by him were all things created which are in heauen and which are in earth things visible and inuisible whether Thrones or Dominions or Principalities or Powers as things were created by him and for him c Col. 1.16 by his Son he made the worlds d Heb. 1.8 and all these acknowledged by the Churches Primitiue e Creede Ap●st Nicen. and reformed at this day f Confess Helv. 2. c. 6 7 Basil ar 1. of France ar ● Fland ar 12 And touching the preseruation of all things by him created My soule praise thou the Lord c. saith the Psalmist which covereth himselfe with light as with a garment spreadeth the heavens like a curtaine which layeth the beames of his chambers in the waters and maketh the clouds his Chariot and walketh vpon the wings of the winde which maketh the spirits his Messengers and flaming fire his Ministers g Psal 164.1 c. c. Are not two Sparrowes sold for a farthing and one of them shall not fall on the ground without your Father yea and al the hairs of your head are numbred saith our Sauiour Christ h Math. 10.29 30. God that made the world and all things that are therein he is Lord of heaven and earth he giveth life and breath and all things hath made of one bloud all mankind to dwell on all the face of the earth and hath assigned the times which were ordained before and the bounds of their habitation saith Saint Paul i Acts 17.24 25 26. The Sonne is the brightnesse of the glory and the ingraued forme of his person and beareth vp all things by his mighty Word k. The Churches of God in Heluetia l Heb. 1.13 Confe 20.7 Basil m Confess Basil ar 1 2. France n Confess Gal. ar 18. and Flanders o Confess Belg. ar 12 13. testifie the very same Errors and adversaries vnto these truths Hereby are condemned all Heretikes errors impugning either the creation of the world by God or his prouidence in the continuing and preservation of the same Of the former sort was First Aristotle and his followers which said the world was eternall and without beginning Next the Marcionites that held how God made not the world as being too base a thing for him to create a Tertul l. 1. co●●t Marc. 3. Simon Magus Saturninus Menander Carpocrates Corinthus who ascribed the worlds creation by Angels b ●ren Epiph. Philaste● 4. The Manichies who gaue the creation of all things vnto two Gods or beginnings the one good whereof came good things the other euill whence proceedeth euill things c Epip Aug. cont Man c. 49 5. The same Manichies d D. August de fide contra Manich c. 40. and Priscillianists e Conc. Brac. cap. 11. which did affirme man to haue bin the workemanship not of God but of the Diuell 6. The Family of Love who deliuer that God by them made heaven and earth f Display of the Fam. of Loue. H. 8 b. 7. The Papists who giue out how sacrificing Priests are the Creators of Christ g Qui creauit me sine me iam creatur mediāte me Stella cleris Of the latter sort were The Stoike Philosophers and the Manichies who are the great patrones of Destiny Fate and Fortune h Socrat. hist Eccles l. 1.22 The Family of Loue which may not say God saue any thing for they affirme that all things be ruled by nature and not ordered by God i Display of the Fam. H. 7. b. The old Philosophers who thought that inferiour things were too base for God to be carefull of k Dii magna curant parua negligunt Cic de nat Deor. l. 2 And lastly the Epicures who thinke God is idle and gouerneth not the same Of which mind was Cyprian who held that God hauing created the world did commit the government thereof vnto certaine celestiall powers l In exposit Symb. 3. Proposition In the Vnity of the God-head there is a Trinity of persons The proofe from Gods Word THe Scripture saith In the beginning God the Father a The Father by the Sonne made the world Heb. 1. the Sonne b In the beginning was the Word and the Word was with God and that Word was God The same was in the beginning with God Ioh. 1.1 2. and the holy Ghost c In the beginning God created the heauen and the earth c. and the Spirit of God mooued upon the waters Gen. 1.1 2. created the heaven and the earth By 1 the Word of the 2 Lord were the heavens made and all the host of them by the d Psal 33.6 Breath of his mouth Loe the heauens were opened unto 1 him and Iohn saw 2 the Spirit of God descending like a Dove and lighting vpon him and loe a voyce from heaven saying This is my 3 beloved Sonne in whom I am well pleased e Mat. 3.16 17 Because ye are sonnes 1 God hath sent forth 2 the Spirit of his 3 Sonne into our hearts which cryeth Abba Father saith the Apostle f Gal. 4.6 and againe The grace of our Lord Iesus Christ and the loue of God and the Communion of the holy Ghost be with you all g 2 Cor. 13.13 And S. Iohn There are three which beare record in heauen 1 The Father 2 the Word and 3 the holy Ghost and these three are one h 1 Ioh. 5 3. This truth hath alwayes beene i Creed Apo. Nic. Athan. and seriously is k Confes Helv 1. ar 6. 2. c. 3 Aug. art 1. Gal. art 6. Bel. art 6. Bohe c. 3 Wittemb c. 1. Sucan art 1. confessed in the Church of Christ Errors and adversaries unto this truth Then cursed are all opinions of men contrary hereunto whereof Some denyed the Trinity affirming there is one God but not three persons in the Godhead so did the Montanists a Socrat. eccle hist l. 1. c. 23. and Marcellians b Theo. haer fab lib. 2. and so doe the Iewes c Lu. Ca●ertus lib. diuiner visor ad Iudae and Turkes d Pol. of the Turk emp. c. 5. Some as the Gnostikes e Clem. Alex. strom l. 5. Marcionites f Clem. Alex. strom l. 5. Epiphan and Valentinians d affirme there be more Gods then one and yet not three persons nor of one and the same nature but of a diuerse and contrary dispositions Some thinke there be three Gods or spirits not distinguished onely but diuided also as did the Eunomeans h Philaster and Tretheites i Zanch de 3. El. par 1. l. 7. c. 1. Some feare not to say that in worshipping the Trinity Christians doe adore three Diuels g Cl. Alex. str lib. 4. worse then all the idols of the Papists and such Blasphemers were Heretikes Blandrat and Alciat k Caluin ep Some will have a Quaternity of
it is not in heauen vnlesse heaven be vpon earth Also from the Montanists Cataphrygians and Carpocratians d Phila. T●od who held how Christ not in body but in soule ascended into heaven From the Papists who say that Christ ascended into heaven carried with him the soules which he loosed from captiuity and bondage of the divell even the soules of the righteous afore that time not in heaven but in Lymbo Catc● ch Trid. in Symb. verba descendit ad inferos ascendit adcoelos Vaux catech c. 1. Test Rhem. an marg p. 633. And lastly from those Germane diuines which thinke that our Sauiour carried with him into heaven the faithfull people in soule and body raised at his resurrection f D. Ma. hom in Euang. in festo Ascen Dom. in ●pi Dom. Ascen Dom. 3. Proposition Christ shall come againe at the last day to iudge all men even the quicke and the dead The proofe from Gods Word God anointed Iesus of Nazareth with the holy Ghost and with power c. Him God raised up the third day c. And he commanded us to preach unto the people and to testifie that it is he that is ordained of God a Iudge of quicke and dead saith S. Peter g Acts 10.38 40 41. God shall iudge the world by Iesus Christ h Rom. 2.16 Iesus Christ shall iudge the quicke and dead at his appearing and in his Kingdome c. Henceforth is laid up for me the crowne of righteousnesse which the Lord the righteous Iudge shall give me at that day and not to me onely but vnto all them also that loue his appearing saith S. Paul i 2 Tim. 1.8 The Iudge standeth before the doore saith S. Iames k Iam. 5.9 And this Gods Church and people do firmely beleeve and faithfully confesse l Symb. Apost Nic●n Athan. conf●ss Hol● 2. c. 11. 1. a. 1. Basi● ar 9. Bohem. cap. 6. Be●ar ●7 Aug 2●3 Su●●i●a ar 2. Errors and adversaries unto this truth On the other side both they abroad and we at home abhorre them for their opinions which said that There shall be no generall Iudgement at all as did the Manichies m Philaster and doe the Athei●●s That the divels and the most vngodly some of them and namely so many as in hell doe call upon God for mercy and forgivenesse say the Turkes b Pol. of the Turks Emp c. 23. yea of all them say the Originists c Aug. cons ar 17. and Catabaptists d Bulling cont Catabap l. 1. tract shall be saved That the wicked shall not be iudged at all but shall dye as the bruite beasts and neither rise againe in body nor come unto Iudgement An error of the Family of Love e Display of the Fam. H. 6. That Christ shall not be the future Iudge so thought both Dauid George Coppinger and Arthington For that George rumord himselfe to be Iudge of the whole world f Hist Dauid is Georg. and Coppinger and Arthington published how William Hacket was come to iudge the world and themselves to be his angels for the separating the sheepe from Goats g Conspir for pretend Reform p 47.55 Arthing sedu That besides Christ the Pope is Iudge of the quicke and dead An error of the Papists h Extrauag de sent Excom C. anobis 24 q. 2. That afore the Iudgement there shall be a golden world the godly and one besides enioying the same peaceably and gloriously as the Iewes imagine i Confess Aug. ar 17. That the Beleefe touching the generall Iudgement of Christ over the liuing and dead is a doctrine mysticall or a mystery no history as k H. N in his Instruct praef sent 5. H.N. teacheth That the righteous are already in godly glory and shall from henceforth live euerlastingly with Christ and raigne upon the earth as the l H. N Ibid. sent 1. ar 8. sect 35. and in his Euang. c 1 sect 1. Alent confes in the Display Family of Love holdeth 5. Article Of the Holy Ghost The holy Ghost 2 proceeding from the Father and the Sonne 3 is of one substance maiesty and glory with the Father and the Sonne very and eternall God The Propositions 1 The holy Ghost is very and eternall God 2. The holy Ghost is of one substance maiesty and glory with the Father and the Sonne 3. The holy Ghost proceedeth from the Father and the Sonne 1. Proposition The holy Ghost is very and eternall God The proofe from Gods Word THe holy Ghost to be the very and eternall God the Scriptures teach us For he is the Creator of all things In the beginning God created the heaven and the earth c. And the Spirit of God mooved upon the waters a Gen. 1.1 2. O Lord how manifold are thy workes c If thou hide thy face they are troubled if thou take away their breath they dye and returne to their dust if thou send forth thy Spirit they are created b Psal 10.24 29 30. Ergo the holy Ghost is God Christians are to be baptized in the name of the Holy Ghost c Matth. 28.19 aswell as of the Father and the Sonne Therefore is he very God Ananias lyed unto God d Act. 5.3 4 9. and Sapphira tempted God when both he lyed vnto the holy Ghost and she tempted the Spirit of the Lord. As God he chooseth assigneth and sendeth forth men for the ministery of the Gospell e Acts 13 2 4. as God hee decreeth orders for his Church and people f Act. 15.28 and as God he is to be inuocate and prayed vnto as well as the Father and the Sonne g 2 Cor. 13.13 Vpon this and the like words I beleeve in the holy Ghost h Sym. Apost Symb Nicen. I beeleeve in the holy Ghost the Lord and giver of life i Symb. Atha the Catholike Faith is this that we worship one God in Trinity and Trinity in Vnity c. The Father is God the Sonne is God and the holy Ghost is God And yet they are not three Gods but one God k c. say the ancient Fathers which also is the Faith and confession of all Gods people at this day l Confess Helv ar 6 c. 2. c 2. Basil ar 1. Bohe c. 3. I●●● ar 8 August ar 1. Wittemb c. 1. Suevica ar 1. Gal. 6. Harm confess praef The Errors and adversaries vnto this truth This maketh to the condemnation of the Pneumatomachereof whereof Some impugne the deity of the holy Ghost as did in old time Samosatenus a Epiph. and Photinus b Vinc. Lyr. l. advers haer of late yeeres Servetus c Beza epist 1. Ochinus d Zanch. de 3. El l. 4 c. 1. abroad and Francis Ket e Burnt at Norwith 14. Ian. 1588. Hamant f Holinsh chro fol. 1297 and certaine Brownists g Who whisper in corners that
to obey or disobey the Gospell of truth preached g Ibid. annot marg p. 408. The Catholike popish religion teacheth free-will 3. Proposition h Hills quart 13. reas Man may performe and doe good workes when he is prevented by the grace of Christ and renued by the holy Ghost The proofe from Gods Word IN a man prevented by the grace of Christ and regenerate by the holy Spirit both the understanding is enlightned so that he knoweth the secrets and will of God and the mind is altogether changed the body enabled to doe good works To this purpose the Scriptures are plentifull I will put my law in their inward parts and write it in their hearts a Jer. 31.33 No man knoweth the Father but the Son and he to whom the Sonne will reveale him b Matth. 11.27 Luke 10.22 Blessed art thou Simon the Sonne of Ionas for flesh and blood hath not revealed it unto thee but my Father which is in heaven c Matth. 16.17 No man can say that Iesus is the Lord but by the holy Ghost To one is given by the Spirit the word of wisedome and to another the word of knowledge by the same spirit and to another faith by the same spirit and to another the gifts of healing by the same spirit and to another the operations of great works and to another prophecie and to another the discerning of spirits and to another diversities of tongues and to another the interpretation of tongues c e 1 Cor. 12.8 God purifieth mans heart f Acts 15.9 worketh in us both the will and the deed g Phil. 2.13 the spirit helpeth our infirmities for we know not what to pray as we ought c h Rom. 8.26 Such were some of you but ye are washed but ye are sanctified but ye are justified in the name of the Lord Iesus and by the Spirit of our God i 1 Cor. 6.11 Vnto you it is given for Christ that not onely yee should beleeve in him but also suffer for his sake k Phil. 1.2 And this doe the Churches of God beleeve and confesse l Confes Hol. 2. c. 9. Aug. ar 18 Bohem. c. 4. Saxon. ar 4. 11. Article Of the Justification of Man We are accounted righteous before God onely for 1 the merit of our Lord and Saviour Iesus Christ 2 by faith and 3 not for our owne works or deservings Wherefore that wee are justified by faith onely is most wholesome doctrine and very full of comfort c. The Propositions 1. Onely for the merit of our Lord and Saviour Christ are we accounted righteous before God 2. Onely by Faith are we accounted righteous before God 3. Not for our owne workes or deservings are we accounted righteous before God 14. Proposition Onely for the merit of our Lord and Saviour Christ we are accounted righteous before God The proofe from Gods Word BY Christ his bloud onely we are cleansed He is the Lambe of God which taketh away the sinne of the world a Joh. 1.29 We are justified freely by his grace through the redemption that is in Christ Iesus b Rom. 3.24 Wee are bought with a price c 1 Cor. 6.19 even with the precious bloud of Christ the Lambe undefiled and without spot d 1 Pet. 1.19 which cleanseth us from all sinne e 1 Joh. 1.7 By his onely righteousnesse we are justified By the obedience of One many be made righteous f Rom. 5.19 Christ is the end of the Law for righteousnesse unto every one that beleeveth g Ibid. 10.4 He of God is made unto us wisedome and righteousnesse and sanctification and redemption h 1 Cor. 1 30. and we are made the righteousnesse of God in him i 2 Cor. 5.21 And therefore from heaven we looke for the Saviour even the Lord Iesus Christ k Phil. 3.21 And this is the faith and confession of all Churches reformed l Confes 2. c. 15 Bohe. c. 6 Gal. ar 12. Belg. ar 22. August ar 4. Wittemb ar 5. Suevica c. 3. Errors and adversaries unto this truth This truth is neither beleeved nor acknowledged Of the Atheists who are neither perswaded of the life to come nor understand the mysteries of mans salvation through the merits of Christ Nor of the Pharises and their followers who think that by civill externall righteousnes we are justified before God m Matth. 5.20 Nor of Matthew Hamant who held that man is justified by Gods meree mercie without respect unto the merits of Christ n Holinsh Chro. f. 1299. Nor of Galeotus Martius which was of opinion that all nations and persons whosoever living according to the rules of nature should be saved and inherit everlasting happinesse p Jovius cleg doci vir p 57. Nor of the Turkes who thinke that so many as either goe on pilgrimage unto Mecha or doe kisse the sepulchre of Mahomet are justified before God and thereby doe obtaine remission of their sinnes d Lonic Tur. ●ist Com. 1. l. 2 par 2 c 14.15.18 Nor of the Family of Love who teach by the shedding of Christ his blood is meant the spreading of the Spirit in our hearts e Display in Allens confes Nor of the Papists whose doctrine is that 1. Though Christ hath suffered for all men in generall yet not onely each man must suffer for his owne part in particular f T●●t Rhem. ●n Rom. 8.17 but also that the works of one man may satisfie for another g Ibid. an Col. 1.24 2. They teach next that sinnes veniall are done away and purged by prayer Almes-deeds by the worthy receiving of the blessed Sacrament of the Altar by taking of holy water knocking upon the brest with holy meditation the Bishops blessing and such like h Vaux catech c. 4. by holy water and such ceremonies i Test Rhem. an Joh. 13.10 sacred ceremonies k Test Rhem. an marg p 258 as Confiteor tundo conspergor conteror oro Signor edo dono per haec venalia pono that is I am confest unto the Priest I knock mine heart and brest with fist With holy water I am besprent And with contrition all yrent I pray to God and heavenly host I crosse my forehead at every post I eate my Saviour in the bread I deale my dole when I am dead And doing so I know I may My veniall sinnes soone put away And sinnes mortall not by the merits of Christ onely but many wayes besides are clensed think the said Papists as by the merits of dead Saints namely of St. Mary the Virgin Threnosa compassio dulcissimae Dei Matris Per ducat nos adgandium summi Dei Patris The pittifull compassion of Gods best pleasing mother Bring us to the joyes of God the soveraigne Father l Horae B. Virg. S. Mar. secundum usum Sarum And of Thomas Becket Tu per Thomae sanguinem
Scripture k Conf. Cath. de Eccles and Lindau The Scriptures would be of no validitie neither had continued till this day but for traditions l L●nd l. 1. c. 4 5. 7. Proposition The Church may not enforce any thing to be beleeved as necessary unto salvation that is either contrary or besides the Word of God The proofe from Gods Word YEe shall put nothing unto the Word which I command you neither shall yee take ought there-from a Deut 4.2 Put nothing unto his words lest he reprove thee and thou be found a lyer b Prov. 30.6 Though it be but a mans covenant when it is confirmed yet no man doth abrogate it or addeth any thing thereto c Gal. 3.15 If any man shall adde unto these things God shall adde unto him the plagues that are written in this book And if any man shall diminish of the words of the booke of this prophecie God shall take away his part out of the booke of life and out of the holy Citie and from those things which are written in this booke d Rev. 22.18 19. And so witnesse with us the Churches reformed e Conf. Helv. 1. ar 4. 2. c. 2. Basil ar 10. Bohem. cap 1. Gal. ar 5 Belg. ar 7. Saxon. ar 1. Wittemb c. 30.33 Sucvica ar 1. Whatsoever also is grounded upon Gods written Word though not by our common and vulgar tearmes to be read therein we doe reverently embrace which maketh us for doctrine to embrace the Consubstantialitie of our Saviour with the Father and the holy Ghost which the Arrians would not a Trinitie of persons in the Godhead which the Sabellians would never doe the justification by faith onely which the Papists will not the Baptisme of Infants and young children which the Anabaptists dare not and for discipline not to refuse of Church officers the names Archbishops Patriarches Primates Metropolitanes Suffragans Parsons Vicars c. of Ecclesiasticall censures the tearmes Suspension Excommunication of Ceremonies none at all which tend either unto order comelinesse or edification But from the heart we abhorre in matters both of doctrine and discipline whatsoever either agreeth not with the Canon of the Scripture or is not grounded thereupon Errors and adversaries of this truth Hence detest we both all the old heretikes and their fancies with the new prophets of Basilides the manifestation of Marcion the mysteries of the Manichies the Iobelaea of the Scythians the Symbonia of the Achontikes the Cabasa of the Iewes the Alcaron of the Turkes and also all new heretikes and Schismatikes with all their cursed opinions as first the Anabaptists and namely the Libertines and Davigeorgians and Family of Love and all the codeified Elders thereof as Henry Nicholas Eliad Fidelitas Christopher Vitell Theophilus the Exile and the rest Next the Papists whereof Some have commanded that all the Popes Decrees should be taken as confirmed by the mouth of God himselfe so did Pope Agatho the first a Gra. d. ● 16. Sic. Some write as Busgradus that if the Pope beleeve there is no life to come as some Popes have done we must beleeve it as an Article of our faith Some say if the Pope carry innumerable soules with him unto Hell yet he may not be judged so did the Pope Boniface the eighth b Decr. lib 3. cit 2. Crantz lib. 8. c. 36. Some as Bellarmine conclude that it is a point of faith to hold that the Bishop of Rome hath succeeded Peter in the universall regiment of the Church c Bellarm. de Pontif Rom. l. 2. c. 12. Others as the Iesuites perswade their Catholikes that the King of Spain their Catholike faith are so linked together as it is become a point of necessitie in the Catholike faith to put all Europe into the hands of the said King otherwise the Catholike religion will be utterly extinguished and perish d Spa● dis of the Eng. Ies d. 7. Others of them have published a new Gospel called Evangelium aeternum Spiritus Sancti which they say doth so far excell the Gospel of Christ as the kernell surpasseth the shell the Sunne the Moone and light darknesse The author whereof was one Cyrillus a Carmelite And lastly the Puritanes and all the speculations of Brown Barrow Greene Penry Marprelate T.C.E.G.R.H.A.C.I.B. with the new Sabbatarians and their fancies 21. Article Of the authority of generall Councels Generall Councels 1 may not be gathered together without the commandement and will of Princes And 2 when they be gathered together forasmuch as they be an assembly of men whereof all be not governed with the Spirit and Word of God they may erre and 3 sometimes have erred even in things pertaining unto God whorefore 4 things ordained by them as necessary unto salvation have neither strength nor authority unlesse it may be declared that they be taken out of holy Scriptures The Propositions 1. Generall Councels may not be gathered together but by the commandement and will of Princes 2. Generall Councels may erre 3. Generall Councels have erred even in things pertaining unto God 4. The things ordained by generall Councels are so farre to be embraced and beleeved as they are consonant to Gods holy Word 1. Proposition Generall Councels may not be gathered together but by the commandement of Princes The proofe from Gods Word GReat is the power and authoritie of Kings and Princes by the Word of God For as the defence of Religion is committed unto them so must they see that all men doe their duties That these things the better may be performed they are as just occasion is offered not as men under the power of others to summon but as supreme governours within their own territories and dominions to command all sorts of men to meete together and that either to the implanting of the truth where it is not or to the suppression of sin errors idolatry and superstition where or in whomsoever it doth arise or is rooted Such Councels were holden both in the time of the Mosaicall government by the commandement of the most godly Kings David a 1 Cor. 3.1 2. Salomon b 1 King 8.1 Asa c 2 Chr. 15.9 Ezechiah d 2 Chr. 29.4 and Iosiah e 1 Chr. 34.29 and since the Gospel hath bin received into Kingdomes and Common-weales by Christian Princes Kings and Emperors who gathered Councels both Generall as the Nicene was by Constantine the Great f Ruffi l. 10.1 1. Eus de vita Const l. 3. c 9. The Councell of Constantinople by Theodosius the elder g Theo. l 5 c. 6. the Councell of Ephesus by Theodosius the younger h Euang. l 1. c. 2 the Councell of Calcedon by Marcian i Leo ep 43.53 and Nationall and Provinciall so the Councell at Franckford Rhemes Turon Arelot and Moguntia by the will and commandement of Charles the Great k Aventin Carr●●z● summa Conc. Carion lib. 3. at Marison by Gunthranus
l Turon l. 8. c. 10 at Paris and Orleance by the direction and appointment of Childeb●rt m Magdeburg eccl hist Con. 6. cap. 9. were kept and holden And never yet had there bin a Councell either Generall or nationall or whatsoever I onely except the councels held by the Apostles and Apostolicall men in a troublesome state and time of the Church there being then no Christian Princes and Emperors to countenance the truth neither begun or ended to the glory of God but it hath bin I say not called onely but confirmed also by some godly Emperour King or Queene This in effect is granted by all reformed Churches n Conf. Helv. l. ar 26. 2. c. 30 Bohe c. 16. Belg. ar 36. Saxon. ar 23. Wittemb c. 35. Suevica in perorat The errors and adversaries unto this truth This assertion hath beene oppugned and that diversly both by the Papists and Puritanes For the Papists they say Emperours and Kings be the Pope his Summoners but of themselves are no absolute and powerfull commanders and callers of Councels a Hard. confut par 5. cap. 6. sect 3. There ought no Councell to be kept without the determinate consent of the Bishop of Rome b Harding No Councell ever yet had firme and lawfull authority which was not confirmed by the Bishop of Rome c Duraeus con Whitak lib. 2. Cardil in def Concil Triden disp 1. The Popes of Rome and not Christian Princes have the authority and power of making lawes ecclesiasticall and of calling Councels d Test Rhem. an Matth. 16. And the Puritanes doe think that private persons without the leave or privity of Princes may summon assemblies about Church causes at their pleasures and consult about the publike affaires of the Church Of this mind was Beza e Per placet autem mihi quod de conventu absque ulla principum aut civitatum authoritate privatim instituendo scribis Beza epi. 68. p. 292. and be the disciplinaries both of South f Witnesse their Classicall assemblies at Commencements Faires c. See Discipline grounds and North Britaine g The approbation or disallowance of a generall assembly hath beene and should be a matter and cause spirituall and alwayes cognosced and judged by the Church as Iudges competent within this Realme say certaine Scottish Ministers in their letter unto the Lords of the Kings privie Councel in Scotland which letter is printed in the said Lords declaration c. published an 1606. and printed by Robert Barker Others adversaries to both Puritanes and Papists are of mind that were the Pope a good man as hee is nothing lesse hee might and hee being wicked other good Bishops though subject unto Kings and Emperours may summon Councels at their discretion An error of Scelneccerus h Analyct pag. 35. The Muscovites have a fancie that since the seventh generall Councell that was neither Prince nor Pope nor any other men else have power to call a generall Councell i Surius comment an 150 1. pag. 30. 2. Proposition Generall Councels may erre The proofe from Gods Word GEnerall Councels consisting first of men who may erre nothing more easily for all the imaginations of mans heart are onely evill continually a Gen. 6.5 even from his youth b Gen. 9.21 but God onely is true and all men are c Psal 116.11 yea and every man is a lyer d Rom. 3.4 Next of men differing in yeares riches learning judgement calling and authority whereby distractions of opinions often doe arise Thirdly of many men whereof the wicked be for number commonly the major part and the better in outward countenance of the world Lastly of men not all nor alwaies either grounded with Gods holy Spirit and Word or gathered together in the Name of Christ none of found judgement in Religion doe doubt but they may erre If Paphnutius had beene absent at Nice that Councell had erred e Sozom. lib. 1. c. 33. If Hierome had been away at Calcedon that Councell had erred f B. Iewel dec fol. 58. At any time if some be beleeved be the Pope of Rome not present at such meetings either per se or per Legatum by himselfe or his Legate no Councell but must erre g Rosien contra Luther Therefore Councels may erre That which one Councell doth establish another will disanull They will not wee must think revoke that which is well decreed Therefore Councels may erre h Test Rhem. an Ioh. 16.13 The adversaries unto this truth Therefore erre doe the Papists which say that the holy Spirit is director to all Councels and That Councels cannot erre 3. Proposition Generall Councels have erred even in things pertaining unto GOD. The proofe from Gods Word COuncels both generall and particular have erred and that in matters of Faith a Conf. Wittemb cap. 33. For in the holy Scriptures we finde that it was ordained if any man did confesse that Iesus was the Christ hee should be excommunicate b Iohn 9.22 12.42 which could not be but by a Councell A councell was gathered to suppresse Christ and his doctrine c John 12.47 A councell consulted how they might take Iesus by subtilty and kill him d Math. 26 3 4 e Marke 14.53 55. A councell sought for false witnesse to put him to death By a councell Iesus was bound led away and delivered unto Pilate f Mark 15 1. A councell judged our Saviour Christ to be both a deceiver g Math. 27.63 and a blasphemer h Luke 21 71. A councell corrupted the Souldiers and willed them to tell a lye i Mat. 28.12 13 A councell withstood Peter and Iohn and commanded them that in no wise they should speake or teach in the name of Iesus k Acts 4 5 6.18 A councell both caused thr Apostles to be beaten and commanded them also that they should not preach in the name of Iesus l Acts 5.40 In ancient writers of credit we may reade how contrary to Gods Word by councels Arrianisme hath beene confirmed as by the councell of Ariminum m D. Hieron in vita Damasi Papae By councels the traditions and bookes of foolish men have beene made of equall authority with the Word of God as by the Councell of Trent n Ses 4. decr 1. By councels hath beene established both the adoration of images as by the second councell of Nice and the Invocation of creatures as by the Tridentine councell o Brev. Rom. ex decr S. ● Concil Trid. ●●●icu● edit 5. By councels the authority of Princes hath bin impaired and the Pope and Clergie advanced above all earthly Princes as by the Councell of Lateran p Concil Later c. 5. apud Innocent The consideration of the premises and the like mooved S. Hilarie to call the Synode of Mediolane The Synagogue of the malignant q Hilar. epist ad Const
have it established and Presbyteries in euery parish to be aduanced 17. The Articles of our religion concluded vpon by the reuerend Clergie of our Church with these learned The Br●renue and continue their base conceits of the publike Art of our religion in comparison of their new Gospell and all-seeing Brethren are but the Bishops decrees the Articles of the Conuocation house and reueale some little truth but these wise Brethren so faithfull haue they bin betweene God and his Church they haue not failed to shew vs the whole counsell of God And yet these faithfull Brethren either through forgetfulnesse or frailty or which I rather think forced thereunto by the power of truth doe plainely confesse that those very decrees of our Bishops and Articles of the Conuocation-house euen that little little part of the Gospell which the said Bishops and Martyrs brought to light and hath enlightned the whole Realme containeth the very fundamentall points of Christianitie Whereof I still gather that had their newly reuealed tearmed learned Discourses Doctrines touching Discipline their Presbyteries howsoeuer with goodly glorious titles to rauish poore hearts with the desire thereof brandished and set out never bin divulged or preached we may be saued but without knowing and beleeuing the Articles or doctrine of our Church which yet is not ours but Gods there is no saluation ordinarily to be looked for of any man so true and of such necessity is this so impertinent vnneedfull the other 18. Octogesimus octavus mirabilis annus it was prophesied to be a wonderfull yeere long afore it came and wil neuer be forgotten now it is past An. 1588. Q. Elizabeth opposeth her authoritie against the Br. their bookes and writings Among the things for which the yeere 88. is famous one and not of least regard is that afore it expired these bookes of the Brethren by a Proclamation from Q. Elizabeth were denounced Schismaticall and seditious and the doctrine in them contained erronious tending to perswade and bring in a monstrous and apparent dangerous Innouation within her dominions and countries and to make a change euen a dangerous change of the forme of doctrine then in vse And therefore the said bookes were commanded to be brought in and deliuered into the hands of authoritie and speciall charge giuen that no moe of that nature should come abroad or be printed Whereby so much as in that blessed Queene whose name with eternall honour shall be recorded these new fancies of the brethren were hissed and exploded out of this Christian kingdom and the articles or publike doctrine of our Church confirmed countenanced and by the royall prerogatiue of that Peerelesse prince more strongly ratified and commended to her awefull and good subiects then afore 19. The zeale of learned and godly men hereupon was inflamed and their courage so increased as whereas afore this time but one or two or a very few the first whereof was your L. immediate Predecessor Most learned and worthy men set themselues against the Br. and the Presbyterian discipline whose memory be alway honourable among the Saints did encounter the Brethren and oppugned their fancies now an army of most valourous and resolute Champions and Challengers rose vp which then and piuers yeeres ensuing among whom as your Grace was the first in time which gaue the onset so are you to be reckoned with the first and best for zeale wisedome and learning did conflict with these Brethren defended the Prelacie stood for the Prince State put the new Doctors to the foile profligated the Elders set vpon the Presbytery and so battered the new Discipline as hitherto they could neuer nor hereafter shall euer fortifie and repaire the decaies thereof 20. Notwithstanding what the brethren wanted in strength and learning they had in wilynesse A Stratagem of the Br. though they lost much one way in the generall maine point of their discipline yet recouered they not a little aduantage another way by an odde and new deuice of theirs in a speciall article of their classicall instructions For while these Worthies of our Church were employing their engins forces partly in defending the present gouernment Ecclesiasticall partly in assaulting the Presbyterie and new Discipline even at that very instant the Brethren knowing themselves too weake either to overthrow our holds and that which we hold Ann. 1595. or to maintaine their owne they abandoned quite the Bulwarkes which they had raised and gave out were impregnable suffering us to beate them downe without any or very small resistance and yet not carelesse of their affaires left not the warres for all that but from an odde corner and after a new fashion which we little thought of such was the cunning set upon us afresh againe by dispersing in printed bookes which for tenne yeares space before they had bin in hammering among themselves to make them compleate their Sabbath speculations and Presbyterian that is more then either Kingly or Popely directions for the observation of the Lords Day This Stratagem of theirs was not observed then neither I feare me is regarded as it should be yet and yet did and since hath and doubtlesse in time to come if it be not timely seene unto with unsound opinions and paradoxes will so poyson many as the whole Church and Common-weale wil find the danger and inconvenience of them so plausibie are they to men either popularly religious or preposterously and injudiciously zealous Certain fruits and effects of the Sabb. doctrine published by consent of the Brethren 21. In this their sally as I said before they set not upon the Bishops their calling their Chancelors c. as Popish and Antichristian they let them alone seeing and knowing they are too well backt for them to subvert but which are of great all and almost of the same antiquitie with Bishops divers of them and I had almost said as necessarie they ruinate and at one blow beate downe all times and daies by just authoritie destined to religious and holy uses besides the Lords Day saying plainly and in peremptorie words that the Church hath none authoritie ordinarily or from yeare to yeare perpetually to sanctifie any other day to those uses but onely the Lords Day They build not Presbyteries expressedly though under hand if it be well marked they doe erect them in their exercises of the Sabbath but they set up a new Idol their Saint Sabbath earst in the dayes of Popish blindnesse S. Sunday in the midst and minds of Gods people By the former they haue opened not a gap but a wide gate vnto all licentiousnesse liberty prophanenesse on the Holy dayes which is readily and greedily apprehended of all sorts of people euery where especially of their fauorites to the high dishonour of God decay of our deuotion hinderance of Christian knowledge and wisdome in all sorts especially in the vulgar multitude and poore seruants aduantage of the common enemies
gaine-said which afore I deliuered The Propositions are and yet not many moe the method altered quotations added both for the satisfaction of some learned and iudicious friends of mine requesting it at mine hands and for the benefit both of the common and vnlearned and of the studious and learned Reader The whole worke expresseth aswell my detestation and renunciation of all aduersaries errors opposite crossing or contradicting the doctrine professed by vs and protected by our King or any Article or particle of truth of our Religion as my approbation of that truth which in our Church by wholesome Statutes and Ordinances is confirmed There is not an heretike or Schismatike to speake of of any speciall marke that from the Apostles time hitherto hath discouered himselfe his opinions vulgarly in writing or in print against our doctrine but this heresie fancy or phrensie may be here seene against one proposition or other The Sects and Sect-masters aduersaries vnto vs either in the matter or maine points of our doctrine or Discipline to one of our Articles or other wholly or in part which here be discouered to be taken heed of and auoided are many hundreds 38. This and whatsoeuer else here done either to the confirmation of the truth or detestation of heresies and errors I doe very meekely present unto your Grace as after God and our King best meriting the patronage thereof My selfe am much the whole Church of England much more bound vnto your Lordship yea not wee onely now liuing but our successors also and posteritie shall have cause in all ages while the world shal continue to magnifie Almightie God for the inestimable benefits which we have shall receiue from your selfe your late Predecessors D. Whitegift Grindall Parker Cranmer of famous honourable remembrance Bishops of our Church Archbishops of the See of Canterbury for this uniforme doctrine by some of your Lordships drawne and penned by all of you allowed defended and as agreeable to the Faith of the very Apostles of Christ and of the ancient Fathers correspondent to the Confessions of all reformed Churches in Christendome and contrariant in no point unto Gods holy and written Word commended unto us both by your Authoritie and Subscriptions Now the all-mercifull God and heavenly Father which so inspired them and your Lordship with wisedome from above and inabled you all to discerne truth from falshood and found religion from Atheisme idolatry and errors vouchsafe of his infinite goodnesse to encrease his grace more and more upon your Grace to his owne glory the Churches benefit and your owne everlasting comfort And the same God which both mercifully hath brought and miraculously against all hellish and divellish practices of his and our enemies continued the light of his truth among us give us all grace with one heart and consent not onely to embrace the same but also to walke and carry our selves as it beseemeth the Children of light in all peaceablenesse and holinesse of life for his Sonne our Lord and Saviour Christ his sake At Horninger neere S. Edm. Bury in Suff. the 11. of March Ann. 1607. Your Graces poore Chaplaine alwayes at Command THOMAS ROGERS Constitutions and Canons Ecclesiasticall Anno 1604. VVHosoever shall hereafter affirme that the Church of England by Law established under the Kings Majesty is not a true and an Apostolicall Church teaching and maintaining the Doctrine of the Apostles let him be excommunicated ipso facto and not restored but onely by the Archbishop after his repentance and publike revocation of this his wicked error Can. 3. VVhosoever shall hereafter affirme that any of the 39 Articles agreed upon by the Archbishops and Bishops of both Provinces and the whole Clergy in the Convocation holden at London in the yeare of our Lord God 1562. for the avoiding of diversities of opinions and for the establishing of consent touching true Religion are in any part superstitious or erroneous or such as he may not with a good conscience subscribe unto let him be excommunicated ipso facto and not restored but onely by the Archbishop after his repentance and publike revocation of such his wicked errors Can. 5. Whosoever shall hereafter separate themselves from the Communion of Saints as it is approved by the Apostles rules in the Church of England and combine themselves in a new Brother-hood accounting the Christians who are conformable to the Doctrine Government Rites and Ceremonies of the Church of England to be prophane and unmeete for them to joyne with in Christian profession let them be excommunicated ipso facto and not restored but by the Archbishop after their repentance and publike revocation of such their wicked errors Can. 9 The Titles of the thirty nine Articles with the Pages where to finde every of them in this Booke Articles 1 OF faith in the holy Trinity Page 1 Articles 2 Of the Word of God which was made very man Page 7 Articles 3 Of the going downe of Christ into Hell Page 15 Articles 4 Of the Resurrection of Christ Page 17 Articles 5 Of the Holy Ghost Page 21 Articles 6 Of the sufficiency of the Scriptures for salvation Page 26 Articles 7 Of the Old Testament Page 33 Articles 8 Of the three Creeds Page 39 Articles 9 Of Originall or birth sinne Page 41 Articles 10 Of Free-will Page 47 Articles 11 Of the Iustification of man Page 50 Articles 12 Of good workes Page 56 Articles 13 Of workes before Iustification Page 56 Articles 14 Of workes of Supererogation Page 59 Articles 15 Of Christ alone without sinne Page 62 Articles 16 Of sinne without Baptisme Page 65 Articles 17 Of Predestination and Election Page 69 Articles 18 Of obtaining salvation onely by the Name of Christ Page 82 Articles 19 Of the Church Page 86 Articles 20 of the Authoritie of the Church Page 98 Articles 21 Of the Authoritie of generall Councels Page 112 Articles 22 Of Purgatorie Page 118 Articles 23 Of Ministring in the Congregation 131 Articles 24 Of speaking in the Congregation in such a tongue as the people understand not Page 141 Articles 25 Of the Sacraments Page 142 Articles 26 Of the unworthinesse of the Ministers which hinder not the effects of the Sacraments Page 160 Articles 27 Of Baptisme Page 165 Articles 28 Of the Lords Supper Page 170 Articles 29 Of the wicked which doe not eate the Body and bloud of Christ in the use of the Lords Supper Page 178 Articles 30 Of both kindes Page 179 Articles 31 Of the oblation of Christ finished upon the Crosse Page 181 Articles 32 Of mrariage of Priests Page 185 Articles 33 Of Excommunicate persons how they are to be avoided Page 189 Articles 34 Of the traditions of the Church Page 193 Articles 35 Of Homilies Page 194 Articles 36 Of Consecration of Bishops and Ministers Page 196 Articles 37 Of the civill Magistrate Page 201 Articles 38 Of Christian mens goods which are not common Page 215 Articles 39 Of a Christian mans Oath Page 217 FINIS
dayes and 40 nights he was afterward hungry Matth. 4.2 thirst f Iohn 4.7 He said I thirst Iohn 19.28 wept g Luke 19.41 and slept h Marke 4.38 and suffered death i Matth. 27.50 Marke 15 ●7 Luke 23.46 Ioh. ●9 30 33. Hence the ancient Fathers and Christians I beleeue in God the Father Almighty c and in Iesus Christ c. which was conceiued by the holy Ghost borne of the Virgin Mary suffred vnder Pontius Pilate was crucified dead and buried k Symb. Ap●st The right faith is that we beleeve and confesse that our Lord Iesus Christ the Sonne of God is God and man God of the substance of the Father begotten before the world and man of the substance of his Mother borne in the world Perfect God and perfect man of a reasonable soule and humane flesh subsisting Equall to the Father as touching his Godhead and inferiour to the Father touching his manhood l Sym. Athan. I beleeue in one God the Father Almighty c. and in one Lord Iesus Christ c. who for vs men and for our saluation came downe from heaven and was incarnate by the holy Ghost of the Virgin Mary and was made man c m Sym. Nicen. The very same testifie Gods people in Heluetia n Confess Helv. 1. ar 11. 2. c. 11. Basil o Confess Basil ar 4. Bohemia p Confess Bohem. c. 6. the Low countries q Confess Belg. ar 18. France r Confess Gal. ar 14. Ausburgh ſ Confess Aug. ar 3 Wittemberg t Confess W●ttemb c. 2. Suevia v Confess Suevica ar 2. with many more besides x Harmen Confess praef The Errors and adversaries vnto this truth Therefore most wicked were the opinions of those men which held viz that 1. Christ really and indeed had neither body nor soule but was man in appearance onely as the Manichies a Aug. l. 14. contra Faust the Eutichians b Niceph. l 18 c. 52. the Marcionites c philast Beza ePist 81. and the Saturnians d Iren. l. 1. ● 22 2. Christ had a bodie without a soule as thought the Eunomians e Basil contra Eunom the Arrians f Theodoret. haeret fab l. 4. the Apollinarians g Ruffin lib. 2 c. 20. with the Theopaschites h Niceph. l. 18. c. 53. 3. Christ tooke the flesh of the Virgin Mary so did the Valentinians thinke i Iren. l. 1. c. 1. and so thinke the Anabaptists k Confess Belg ar 18. and the Family of Loue who make an allegory of the Incarnation of Christ l H.N. prophecie of the Spi c. 19 sent 9. 4. Christ tooke flesh onely of the Virgin but no soule as the Arrians m Epiphan 5. Christ tooke flesh not of the Virgin onely but by the seed of man too so said Ebion n Euseb eccles hist l. 3. c. 27. and Carpocrates o Iren. l. 1. c. 24 6. The flesh of Christ was spirituall and his soule carnall so dreamed the Valentinians p Tertul. lib. de car Christ 7. The carnall body of Christ was consubstantiall with the Father as published the Apollinarians q Athan. li. de incar Christ 8. The humane nature of Christ before his passion was deuoid of humane affections so thought the Seuerites r Niceph. lib. 17. c. 29. 3. Proposition Christ is God and man and that in one person The proofe from Gods Word THat the Diuine and humane natures of Christ are vnited in one person it accordeth with the holy Scripture For The Word was made flesh and dwelt among vs and we saw the glory thereof as the glory of the onely begotten of the Father full of grace and truth saith the Euangelist Iohn a Ioh● 2.14 And Matthew Iesus when he was baptized c. Loe a voice came from heaven saying This is my beloued Sonne in whom I am well pleased b Math. 3.17 He that descended is even the same that ascended farre aboue the heavens that he might fill all things saith S. Paul c Eph. 4.10 Againe Christ Iesus being in the forme of God thought it no robbery to be equall with God hee made himselfe of no reputation and tooke on him the forme of a seruant and was made like vnto man and was found in shape as a man c. wherefore God hath also highly exalted him c. that euery tongue should confesse that Iesus Christ is the Lord unto the glory of God the Father d Phil. 2.6 7 9 11. And the same Apostle There is one God and one Mediatour betweene God and man even the man Christ Iesus who gave himselfe a ransome for all men e 1 Tim. 2.5 6. Vpon these and the like grounds I beleeue in God the Father Almightie c. and in Iesus Christ his onely Son our Lord which was conceived by the holy Ghost borne of the Virgin Mary f Symb. Apost The right faith is That we beleeve and confesse that our Lord Iesus Christ the Sonne of God is God and man c. who although he be God and man yet he is not two but one Christ One not by the conuersion of the Godhead into flesh but by taking of the manhood unto God One altogether not by confusion of substance but by vnity of person g Symb. Nicen I beleeve in one Lord Iesus Christ the onely begotten Sonne of God begotten of the Father before all worlds God of God light of light very God of very God begotten not made being of one substance with the Father by whom all things were made who for vs men c. came downe from heauen and was incarnate c. He suffered and was buried c. and he shall come againe c h Confes Hel. 1. c. 11. 2. ar 11. Basil ar 4. Bohem ar 6. Gal. ar 15. Belg. ar 19. August ar 3. Wittem c. 2. Suenica ar 2. Harmon confess praef say the ancient and first Christians The very same is the beleefe and confession of all the reformed Churches at this present and alwayes hath beenei. Errors and adversaries unto this truth Detestable therefore is the error Of the Acephalians who denyed the properties of the two natures in Christ a Hartman Schedel Of the Seuerites b Niceph. l. 16. cap. 33. of Eutiches and Dioscorus who affirmed the diuinitie and humanity of Christ to be of one and the same nature Of the Monothelites who denyed that two wils viz. a diuine an humane were in Christ c Volater l. 1. Of Theodorus Mesechius who said that the Word was one thing and Christ another d Magdeburg eccles hist Cen. 6. c 5. fol. 319. Of Nestorius who denied that two natures of Christ to be any otherwise vnited than one friend is ioyned to another e Niceph. l. 18. c. 48. which onely is in good will and affection Of Seruetus who
we must not beleeue in the holy Ghost saith Bredwell writing against Glouer p. 102. among us at home Some affirme the holy Ghost to be but a meere creature as did Arius h Theod. l 5. c. 10. the Semiarians i Philast the Macedonian heretikes k Soz. l. 4. c 27. the Tropickes l Athan. Ochinus m Zanch. de El par l. 2. c. 5. Some haue assumed the style and title of the holy Ghost unto themselues as did Simon Magus n D. ●ren Montanus o Eus I. 5. c. 18. and Manes p Chry des S. Some have given the title of the holy Ghost vnto men and women so Hierax said that Melchisedech was the holy Ghost q Epiphan Simon Magus tearmed his Helene the holy Ghost r Epiphan The Helche said the holy Ghost was a woman and the naturall sister of Christ ſ Epiphan Many Papists and namely the Franciscanes t Alcar Fr l ● blush not to say that S Francis is the holy Ghost 2. Proposition The holy Ghost is of one substance maiesty and glory with the Father and the Sonne The proofe from Gods Word THE holy Ghost eff●cted the incarnation of Christ a Mat 1.18 10. Luke 1.35 teacheth all things b Ioh. 14.26 leadeth into all truth c Ioh. 26.13 giueth vtterance to his seruants d Acts 2.4 and gifts unto his people e 1 Cor. 12.8 placeth Rulers in the Church and Ouerseers to feede the flocke of God f Acts 20.28 sealeth the Elect vnto the day of redemption g Eph. 4.30 aswell as the Father and the Son and these three viz. the Father the Word and the holy Ghost are one h 1 Iohn 5.7 Therefore is the holy Ghost of one substance maiesty and glory with the Father and the Sonne And this was the beliefe of the ancient Fathers I beleeue say they in the holy Ghost the Lord and giuer of life c. who with the Father and the Sonne together is worshipped and glorified who spake by the Prophets i Symb. Nicen. The Godhead of the Father of the Sonne and of the holy Ghost is all one the glory equall the maiesty coeternall Such as the Father is such is the Sonne and such is the holy Ghost c. And in this Trinitie none is afore or after other none is greater or lesse then another But the whole three persons be coeternall together and coequall k Symb. Ath. The very same doe all reformed Churches beleeue and confesse l Confes Helv 1. ar 6 2. c. 3. Basil ar 1. Bohem. c. 3 Gal ar 1. Belg. ar 1. Aug. ar 1 Wittemb c. 1 2. Sucrica ar 1. The Errors and adversaries unto this truth The premisses doe make Against the Tretheites which affirme the holy Ghost to be inferiour unto the Father a Zanch de 3. E● par 2 l. 5. c. 1 Against the Arrians who said the holy Ghost was inferior to the Sonne b Aug. contr Mar. A●rian Against the Macedonian heretikes who held the holy Ghost to be but a minister and servant of the Father and the Sonne c Ruffin l. 1. c. 25. yet of more excellent maiesty and dignity then the Angels d Niceph. l. 9. c. 17. Against many erroneous spirits which deliver the holy Ghost to be nothing else but The motion of God in his creatures as did the Samosatenians e Confess Aug. 5. ar 3. A bare power and efficacy of God working by a secret inspiration as the Turkes f Pol. of the Tur. Emp. 3. c. and certaine English Sadduces doe imagine * Hut●● inson in his Image of God c. 24. p 112 ● The Inheritance allotted to the faithfull g H. N. in his In●●ruct praef se●● 7. and the being or vertuous estate of Christ h Idem in his Spir. and praef sect 14. as dreameth H.N. The affection of charity or Love within vs an error of Petrus Lombardus i Sen l. 1. dist sect 5. 2. Gods love fauour and vertue whereby he worketh in his children so thought Ochinus k Zanch. de 3. E. par 1 l 4. c 1. and Servetus l Zanch ib. l. 1. c. 2. 2. Proposition The holy Ghost proceedeth from the Father and the Sonne The proofe from Gods Word THe proceeding of the holy Ghost from the Father and the Sonne we gather from the holy Scripture which teacheth how The Father sendeth the Comforter which is the holy Ghost in the name of the Sonne a John 14.16 and the Sonne sendeth the Comforter the Spirit of truth from the Father b John 15.26 he proceedeth of the Father c Ibid. and is sent of the Sonne d John 16.7 So with us say the ancient Fathers and Christians He proceedeth from the Father and the Sonne e Symb. Nic●n The holy Ghost is of the Father and of the Sonne neither made nor created but proceeding So there is one Father not three Fathers one Sonne not three Sonnes one holy Ghost not three holy Ghosts f Symb. Athan. which is the faith of the moderne Christians g Confes H●● 1. c. 3. Gal. c. 3 Belg. ar 8. 11. Wittemb c. 3. Sucrica ar 1. The adversaries unto this truth This discovereth all them to be impious and to erre from the way of truth which hold and affirme That the holy Ghost proceedeth neither from the Father nor the Sonne but is one and the same person that Christ is as the Arrians doe a Basi serm de sp S. That the holy Ghost proceedeth from the Father but not from the Sonne as at this day the Grecians b Russe Commonweale ● 23 the Russians c Guagnin de relig Moscov the Moscovites d Father de relig Moscov maintaine That there is a double proceeding of the holy Ghost one temporall the other eternall an errour of Peter Lombard e T. Sent l. 1. distinct 14. uncontrolled hitherto and therefore well liked of the Papists 6. Article Of the sufficiency of the holy Scripture for salvation Holy Scripture 1 containeth all things necessary for salvation so that whatsoever is not read therein nor may be proved thereby is not to be required of any man that it should be beleeved as an Article of the faith or be thought requisite and necessary to salvation 2 In the name of the holy Scripture we doe understand those Canonicall bookes of the Old and New Testament of whose authoritie was never any doubt in the Church Of the names and number of the Canonicall bookes Genesis Exodus Leviticus Numbers Deuteronomium Ioshua Iudges Ruth The 1. Booke of Samuel The 2. Booke of Samuel The 1. Booke of Kings The 2. Booke of Kings The 1. Booke of Chronicles The 2. Booke of Chronicles The 1. Booke of Esdras The 2. Booke of Esdras The Booke of Esther The Booke of Iob. The Psalmes The Proverbs Ecclesiastes or the
Preacher Canticles or Song of Solomon 4. Prophets the greater 12. Prophets the lesse And the other bookes Hierome saith the Church doth reade for example of life and instruction of manners but yet doth it not apply to stablish any doctrine such are these following The 3. Booke of Esdras The 4. Booke of Esdras The Booke of Tobias The Booke of Iudith The rest of the Book of Hester The Booke of Wisdome Iesus the Sonne of Sirach Baruch the Prophet Song of the 3. Children The Story of Susanna Of Bel and the Dragon The Prayer of Manasses The 1. Booke of Maccabees The 2. Booke of Maccabees 4 All the Bookes of the new Testament as they are commonly received we doe receive and accompt them for Canonicall The Proposition 1. The sacred Scripture containeth all things necessary to be knowne and beleeved for the salvation of man 2. All the bookes in the volume of the Bible are not Canonicall but some and namely those here specified are 3 The third and fourth Bookes of Esdras the Booke of Tobias c. are Apocryphal 4. Of the New Testament all the Bookes are Canonicall 1. Proposition The sacred Scripture containeth all things necessary to be knowne and beleeved for the salvation of man The proofe from Gods Word THe holy Scriptures to be sufficient to instruct us in all things necessary to be knowne and beleeved for mans salvation the Word of God teacheth Ye shall put nothing unto the Word which I command you saith the Lord neither shall ye take ought there from Whatsoever I command you take heed you doe it thou shalt put nothing thereto nor take ought therefrom Thou shalt not turne away from it to the right hand not to the left that thou maiest prosper whithersoever thou goest c Jos 1.7 Every Word of God is pure c. Put nothing unto his words lest he reproove thee and thou be found a lyer d Prov. 30.5 6. These things are written that ye might beleeve c. and that in beleeving ye might have life through his Name e Joh. 20.31 The whole Scripture is given by inspiration of God and is profitable to teach to improove to correct and to instruct in righteousnesse that the man of God may be absolute being made perfect unto all good workes f 2 Tim. 3.16 17. If any man shall adde unto these things God shall adde unto him the plagues that are written in this booke and if any man shall diminish of the words of this booke God shall take away his part out of the booke of life and out of the holy Citie and from those things which are written in this booke g Rev. 22.18 Hereunto Gods people both alwayes have and at this present doe subscribe h Confes Helv. 1 ar l 4. 20. 1. Basil ar 10. Boke c. 1 Gal. ar 2. 4 5. Bel. ar 7. Saxon. ar ● Wittemb c. 30. Suev ar 1. The Errors and adversaries ●●●o this truth Therefore adversaries be we to all adversaries to this truth especially To such as scorne and contemptuously reject the booke of God as both did the Circumcellians which defaced and burnt the holy Scriptures a Aug. contra P●●●ll 1. c. 27. and Pope Leo the tenth who tearmed the holy Gospel a fable of Christ b Apol. Steph. fol 3. 58. and doe the prophane Atheists c N●sh in Christ his teares p. 39. a. Also to such as debase the credit and estimation of the holy Scriptures as David George did d Hist Davidis Georg. and both doe the Papists who have an opinion that the Scriptures of God are not sufficient to instruct mankinde unto salvation e L●●●a l. 1. c. 1. and the Anabaptists which deeme not the holy Bible to be the Word of God f Bu●●in cont Catabap l. 1. with the Family of Love in whose bookes nothing is more frequent then the tearming of Gods reverend ministers and preachers Scripture-learned Also to them which with Gods Word do equall their own doctrine Injunctions Precepts and Traditions as doe the Papists For of their doctrin say the Rhemists Whatsoever the lawfull Apostles Pastors or Priests of Gods Church preach in the unitie of the same Church meaning the new Church of Rome is to be taken for Gods own word g Test Rhem. an● 1 Thes 2 12. To the same purpose but more blasphemously Stapleton As the Iews were to beleeve Christ so are we simply and in every thing to beleeve the Church of Rome whether it teacheth truth or errors h Stapl. antid Evang in Luc. 10.16 p. 528. Whatsoever by the authoritie of the Church is commanded ought of all men to be esteemed as the very Gospel saith Abbat Trithemius i Tract de propriet Monach. c. 4. of Popish precepts and our English Rhemists k Test Rhem. an 1. Thes 4.8 He that despiseth the Churches or her lawfull Pastors precepts And of their Traditions He that refuseth Ecclesiasticall traditions deserveth to be throwne out of the Church among the heathen as well as he which refuseth the Gospel saith Didacus Stella l Stella in Luc. 10 fol. 20. and the Councell of Trent with like affection of godlinesse and reverence embrace we and worship the bookes of the Old and New Testament and Ecclesiasticall Traditions saith the Councell m Concil Trid. sess 4. The like opinion have the Moscovites of Traditions n Ruff. Com. c. 23. To them finally are we adversaries which above the Scriptures doe preferre their owne 1 inventions as did the Philosophers whereof one said of Moses That good man maketh a trim discourse but prooveth nothing and the Grecians to whom the Gospel is foolishnesse o 1 Cor. 1.23 2 and imaginations as did the Manichies p Epiphan David George q Hist Da. Geo. and doe the Turkes r Pol. of the Tur. em c. 3.23 and Family of Love ſ Display A. 6. 3 or Traditions as doe the Papists who more cruelly doe punish the violaters of their own Traditions and ordinances then they doe the breakers of Gods Commandements 4 or Statutes Edicts Iudgements Proclamations c. proceeding from the braine of man as Machiavell doth and his Schollers 2. Proposition All the Bookes in the volume of the Bible are not Canonicall but some are That some bookes and namely those above mentioned are Canonicall it hath bin granted by the best learned and most godly of long time And as all reformed Churches in the world are of the same judgement with us so in their publike Confessions some have so accounted and judged of them as we do a Confess Gal. ar 9. Belg. ar 4 Adversaries to this truth Therefore to speake first of the Canonicall bookes of the old Testament much have they offended which either rejected all or allowed but some of the bookes of the old Testament of the former sort were the Severians a Trit ●ur de eccles scrip Basilides b
29. which sheweth vvhereunto onely the Primitive Church necessarily was tyed By the Apostles doctrine b Rom. 13.1 1 Pet. 2.13 14 which enjoyneth the Christians to yeeld obedience unto the ordinances of their lawfull Governers and Commanders whatsoever By the Apostles example and namely of the blessed Saint Paul c Acts. 16.37 Act. 22.25 c. Act. 25.11.12 who tooke benefit and made good use of the Romane and Emperiall Lawes Errors and adversaries unto this truth This truth neither is nor ever was oppugned by any Church Onely among our selves some thinke us necessarily eyed unto all the Iudicials of Moses as the Brownists For they say The Iawes Iudiciall of Moses belong as well unto Christians as they did unto the Iewes a Barrowes disco p. 127. Others that we are bound though not unto all yet unto some of the Iudicials as holdeth T. C. b 1. Reply sect 1 3. and Philip Stubs c Anatom of abuses 2. part D●b 5. Proposition No Christian man whatsover is freed from the obedience of the law Morall The proofes from Gods Word THink not that I am come to destroy the Law or the Prophets I am not come to destroy them but to fulfil them For truly I say unto you saith our Saviour Christ til heaven and earth perish one jot or one tittle of the law shall not scape till all things be fulfilled whosoever therefore shall break one of these least Commandements and teach men so shall be called the least in the Kingdome of Heaven c a Matth. 5.17 18 19. If thou wilt enter into life keep the Commandements c. Thou shalt not kill Thou shalt not commit adultery Thou shalt not steale Thou shalt not beare false witnesse Honour thy father and thy mother b Mat. 19.17 18 19. Doe we make the Law of none effect through faith God forbid yea we establish the Law c Rom. 3.31 Circumcision is nothing and uncircumcision is nothing but the keeping of the Commandements of God d 1 Cor. 7.19 The publike confessions of the Churches of God in France e Art 23. and Belgia f Art 25. agree with this Doctrine Errors and adversaries unto this truth Whereby are condemned as most wicked and unsound the Opinions Of the Manichies who found fault with the whole Law of God as wicked and proceding not from the true God but from the prince of darkenesse a Aug. con● Faust epist 11. and 74. Of Brownist Glover whose opinion was that Love now is come in the place of the ten Commandements b Bredweb detect p. 119. Of Iohannes Istebius and his followers the Antinomies who will not have Gods Law to be preached nor the conscience of sinners to be terrified and troubled with the Iudgements of God c Sim. Paulimeth par 2. de lege De● p. 54. Of Banister among our selves who held how it is utterly evill for the elect so much as to thinke much lesse to speake or heare of the feare of God which the Law preacheth d Bani error 8. Article Of the three Creedes 1 The three Creeds Nicene Creede Athanasius Creede and that which is commonly called the Apostles Creede ought throughly to be received and beleeved For 2 they may be prooved by most certaine warrants of holy Scripture The Propositions 1. The Nicene Athanasian and Apostolicall Creeds ought to be received and beleeved 2. The three Creeds viz. The Nicene Athanasian and of the Apostles may be prooved by the holy Scripture 1. Proposition The Nicene Athanasian and Apostolicall Creeds ought to be received and beleeved THis proposition the Churches of God both anciently and in these last dayes a Confess Helv. 2 c. 11. Gal. ar 5. Belg ar 9. Saxo ar 1. doe acknowledge for true The errors and adversaries unto this truth Therefore much out of the way of godlinesse are they which tearme the Apostles Creede A forged patchery as Barrowe doth a Bar. dis p. 76. and Athanasius Sathanasius Creede so did Gregorius Paulus in Polonia b Genebr l. 4. p. 1158. and the new Arrians and Nestorians in Lituania c Surius chro p. 320. My selfe some 28. yeares agoe heard a great learned man whose name upon another occasion afore is expressed to whose acquaintance I was artificially brought which in private conference betweene him and my selfe tearmed worthy Zanchius a Foole and an Asse for his booke de tribus Elohim which refuteth the new Arrians against whose founders the Creeds of Athanasius and Nicene were devised Him attentively I heard but could never since abide for those words and indeed I never saw him since 2. Proposition The three Creeds viz. the Nicene Athanasian and of the Apostles may be prooved by the holy Scripture The proofe from Gods Word THan this assertion nothing is more true For the Creedes I meane these three Creedes speake first Of one and the same God whom we are to beleeve is for essence but one a Deut. 6.4 Mal. 2.10 1 Cor. 8.4 Eph 4.5 6. in persons three b Matth. 3.17 Gal. 4.6 1 John 5.7 viz. The Father the Creator c Psal 134.3 the Son the Redeemer d Esa 53.4 Rom. 5.18 Gal 3.13 Eph. 2.16 1 Iohn 2.2 the holy Ghost the Sanctifier e 1 Cor. 1.21 22. 1 Pet. 1.2 Next of the people of God which we must thinke and beleeve is The holy f Eph. 1.3 4. and 2.21 Col 2.22 and Catholike Church g Esa 54. 2. Psal 87.4 Acts 1.8 c. Eph. 2 14. Reu. 5.9 The Communion of Saints h Eph. 4.15 1 Cor. 10.16 Heb. ●0 25 1 Iohn 1.7 Pardoned of all their sinnes i Esa 44.22 Math. 18.23 c. Col. 2.13 And appointed to arise from death k Ioh. 5.28 1 Cor. 15. Phil 3.21 1 Iohn 6.39 and to enioy eternall life both in body and soule l Pet. 1.4 Reuel 21.4 The aduersaries vnto this truth Therfore we are enemies to all aduersaries of this doctrine or any whit of the same in them comprised whether they be Atheists Iewes Sadduces Ebionites Tretheites Antitrinitarians Apollinarians Arrians Manichies Nestorians Origenians Turkes Papists Familists Anabaptists or whosoeuer 9. Article Of Originall or Birth sinne 1 Originall sin standeth not in the following of Adam as the Pelagians doe mainely talk but 2 it is the fault and corruption of the nature of euery man that naturally is engendred of the off-spring of Adam whereby man is very farre gone from originall righteousnesse is inclined to euill so that the flesh lusteth against the Spirit and therefore in euery person borne into the world it deserueth Gods wrath and damnation 3 And this infection of nature doth remaine yea in them that are regenerated whereby the lust of the Flesh called in Greeke 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Which some doe expound the wisedome some the Sensuality some the affection some the desire of the flesh is not subiect to the Law of God
ar 8. 2. c. in the iudgement of Gods people f Basil ar 2. Gal. ar 11. Saxon ar 11. Errors and aduersaries vnto this truth We stand therefore in this point Against the Papists who say that Originall sinne was not at all much lesse remained in the Virgin Mary a Concil Basil sest 6. Test Rhem. annot Rom. 5.14 Against Giselbertus whose doctrine is that Baptisme once receiued there is in the baptized no sinne at all either originall or actuall b Giselb lib. alte cat Synag eccles c. 8. Against the Family of Loue who affirme that the elect and regenerate sinne not c H.N. Document sent c. 2. sect ● c 13. sect 5 Against the Carpocratians whereof some boasted themselues to be euery way as innocent as our Sauiour Christ d Iren. l. c. 24. Against the Adamites both old e Epiphan and new f Aeneas Sylv. hist Bohe. c. 42. who said they were in so good a state as Adam was before his fall therefore without originall sinne Against the Begadores in Almaigne affirming they were impeceable and had attained vnto the very top and pitch of perfection in vertue and godlinesse g Carranza summa Concil 4. Proposition Concupiscence euen in the regenerate is sinne Concupiscence in whomsoeuer lusteth against the Spirit a Gal. 5.1 7. fighteth against both the soule b 1 Pet. 2.11 and the law of the mind c Rom. 7.23 and the●efore but that there is no condemnation to them which are in Christ Iesus d Rom. 8.1 it bringeth death damnation e Gal 5.17 21. Iam. 1.14.15 Mortifie therefore your members which are vpon earth saith S. Paul Coloss 3.5 vnto the Colossians fornication vncleannesse the inordinate affection euill concupiscence c. for the which things sake the wrath of God commeth on the children of disobedience And vnto all Christians S. Peter I beseech you as strangers abstaine from fleshly lust g 1 Pet. 3.11 To the same purpose is both the doctrine and Confessions of Gods people h Confess Helv 2. c. Saxon. ar 2 10. Errors and aduersaries vnto this truth Therefore we mislike their opinions as unsound which say that concupiscence either is no sinne at all or but a veniall fin the former was an assertion of the Pelagians Confess Aug ar 2. and is of the Papists that latter was one of Glouers errors Francis the Monke of Colen counted concupiscence no sin but said it was as naturall and so no more offensiue before God for man to lust then for the Sunne to keepe his course Petrus Lombardus saith that concupiscence afore Baptisme is both a punishment and a sinne but after Baptisme is no sin but onely a punishment Lomb l. 2. dift. 32. ● Catech Trid. praecep 9. The Church of Rome both teacheth that the power of lusting is not but the vse of wicked concupiscence is euill and numbred amongst most grieuous sinnes and decreeth how Concupiscence is no● sinne but proceedeth from sinne and inclineth vnto sinne d Concil Trid ses S. decreto de pec Or●g Glouer the Brownist said that the intemperate affections of the minde issuing from concupiscence are but veniall sins e Bred. detect ●9 1 9. 10. Article Of Free-will 1 The condition of man after the Fall of Adam is such that he cannot turne prepare himself by his owne naturall strength good workes 2 to faith calling vpon God wherefore we haue no power to doe good workes pleasant and acceptable to God 3 without the grace of God preuenting vs that we may haue a good will and working with vs when we haue that good will The Propositions 1. Man of his owne strength may doe outward and euill workes before he is regenerate 2. Man cannot doe any worke that good is and godly being not yet regenerate 3. Man may performe and doe good workes when he is preuented by the grace of Christ and renewed by the holy Ghost 1. Proposition Man of his owne strength may doe outward and euill workes before he is regenerate The proofe from Gods Word VVEE deny not that man not yet regenerate hath free will to doe the workes of nature for the preseruation of the body and bodily estate which thing had and have the bruit beasts and prophane Gentiles as it is also well obserued in our neighbour Church a Confes Helv. 2. cap. 9. Aug. ar 28. Saxon. 3.4 7. Besides man hath free will to performe the workes of Satan both in thinking willing and doing that which evill is For the imaginations of the thoughts of mans heart are onely evill continually b Gen. 6.5 evill even from his youth c Confes Helv. 2. c. 9. and 1. ar 9 Bohem. c. 4. A truth confessed by our brethren Aduersaries to this truth A false perswasion is it therefore that man hath no power to mooue either his body so much as vnto ourward things as Laur. Valla dreamed a Simon Pauli meth par 2. de lib. Ar. or his minde vnto sinne as the Manichies maintained affirming how man is not voluntarily brought but necessarily driuen to sinne b Aug. epist 28 2. Proposition Man cannot doe any worke that good is and godly being not as yet regenerate The proofe from Gods Word THE wisedome of the flesh is enmity against God for it is not subiect to the Law of God neither indeed can be They that are in the flesh cannot please God a Rom. 8.7 8. ● The naturall man perceiueth not the things of the Spirit of God for they are foolishnesse vnto him neither can he know them because they are spiritually discerned b 1 Cor. 2.14 No man can say that Iesus is the Lord but by the holy Ghost c 1 Cor. 12.3 We are not sufficient of our selves to thinke any thing as of our selues but our sufficiency is from God d 2 Cor. 3.5 Without me ye can doe nothing saith our Sauiour Christ e Iohn 15.5 Which is the confession of the godly reformed f Confes Helv 1. ar 9. 2. c. 9 Basil ar 2. Behem c. 4. Aug. ● ar 18. Belg. ar 14. The adversaries unto this truth Adversaries unto this truth are all such as hold that naturally there is free will in us and that unto the best things So thought the Pharises the Sadduces the Pelagians a August de pec mer. l. 3. and the Donatists b Idem contra Petil. cap 19. and the same affirme the Anabaptists c Zuing. contra Catabap and Papists For say the Papists Man by the forme and power of nature may love God above all things d Gab. B●el 3. sent dist 37. Man hath free will to performe even spirituall and heavenly things e Concil Trid. sess 6. c. 1. Men beleeve not but of their own free will f Test Rhem an Mat 20.16 It is in a mans free will to beleeve or not to beleeve
actuall n Prooued p. 50. Besides there is no man iust in the earth that doth good and sinneth not saith the Preacher o Eccles 7.21 Yee cannot doe the same things that ye would Gal. 4.17 Christ Iesus came into the world to saue sinners of whom I am chiefe saith S. Paul b 1 Tim. 1.15 In many things we sinne all is S. Iames saying Iam. 3.2 and S. Iohn If we say we haue no sinne we deceiue our selues and the Truth is not in vs Ioh. 1.8 Pray therefore Forgiue vs our debts Matth. 6.12 A truth beleeued and confessed by all Churches expressedly by some Confess Aug. ar 20. Sa● ar 2. The Errors and adversaries unto this truth Many aduersaries hath this truth had and hath as the Papists the Manichies the Catharans the Donatists the Pelagians Family of Love Marcionites Adamites and Carpocratians For The Papists say that the blessed Virgin was pure from all sinne both Originall Conc. Trid. ●ss decr de pec O●g and actuall For these are their owne words Our Lady neuer sinned Test Rhem. an Col. 1.24 an Mark 3 35. Our Lady sinned not so much as veniall in all her life she exactly fulfilled the whole Law that is was without sinne Also of S. Francis they write that for vertue and godlinesse he was like vnto Christ and hath fulfilled euery jot of the Law Stap● an●●d ●●ang in Mat. 12.50 p 11.8 The Manichies l S●cut Adae D●● non pa●ē●● omnis creatura ●eb●llis ex●itit●●sic B. Francisco omnia praecep●● Dei implenti creatura omnis famulata cit omnia Deus fu●●ecit sub pe●ibus cius Alca● Fran. lib. 1. and Catharans m Hiel in pro. Dial. contra Pelag● thought they could not sinne so much as in thought The Donatists dreamed how they were so perfect as they could iustifie other men n Cyp. l. 4 op 2. Some were of opinion as the Pelagians o August lib. ● cont Pet c. 14 and Family of Loue p Concil Meli cap. 8. Dis H. 6. b. how they were so free from sinne as they needed not to say Forgiue vs our trespasses Which Family also teacheth how there be men liuing as good and as holy as euer Christ was An error of Christopher Vitels Ans to the Fam. lib. L. 3. ● Disp H. 6. b. a chiefe Elder in the said Family and ●pat He which is a Familist is either as perfect as Christ or else a very Diuell Some deemed themselues as pure as Paul Peter or any men as the Marcionites Iren. 1. c. ● yo● as Adam and Euah before their fall as the Adamites v Epiphan yea as Iesus Christ himselfe as the Carpocratians x Iren. lib. 1. cap. 24 16. Article Of sinne after Baptisme 1 Not euery deadly sinne willingly committed after Baptisme is sinne against the holy Ghost and vnpardonable Wherfore the grant of repentance is not to be denyed to such as fall into sinne after Baptisme After we haue receiued the holy Ghost we may depart from grace giuen fall into sinne and by the grace of God we may rise againe and amend our liues and therefore they are to be condemned which say they can no more sinne as long as they liue here or any place of forgiuenesse to such as truly repent The Propositions 1. Euery sinne committed after Baptisme is not the sinne against the holy Ghost 2. The very regenerate may depart from grace giuen and fall into sinne and yet rise againe vnto newnesse of life 3. No men vtterly are to be cast off as reprobates which vnfainedly repent 1. Proposition Euery sinne committed after Baptisme is not the sinne against the holy Ghost The proofe from Gods Word THough euery sinne in it selfe considered deserueth damnation yet is there a sinne which shall be punished with many and a sinne which shall be punished with few strip●● a Luke 12 40. a sin vnto death a sin to● vnto the death b 1 Iohn 5.6 a sin against the Father and the Sonne which shall be forgiuen and a sinne against the holy Ghost which neuer shall be forgiuen c Matt. 13.31 Marke 3.39 Luke 12.10 So in their extant confessions witnesse the Churches in Bohem d Confess Bohe c. 4. Saxony e Confes 21.10 Heluetia Confess Sax. Helv. 3 c. 8. Errors and aduersaries vnto this truth Diuersly hath this doctrine bin oppugned For Some haue thought all sinnes to be like and equall as the Storkes Pelagians Cor. c. Mileuit and Io●inians i D. Hieron aduers Io●in Some haue taught as Manes the heretike Epiphan how none of the godly Fathers and others from the beginning of the world till the 15. yeere of Liberius the Emperour though earnestly they did repent were saued but were all punished alike with vtter confusion Some giue out that such persons be vtterly out of Gods fauour and condemned which depart out of this world either afore they are baptized as the Papists do l Spec. poreg●m quest de● 1. c. 3. q. 5. Posstion Ingol stad de ●urgat or afore they come vnto yeeres of discretion as Hieracites did m Epiphan 2. Proposition The very regenerate may depart from grace giuen and fall into sinne and yet rise againe to newnes of life The proofe from Gods Word THat the regenerate may fall into sinne yet rise againe it is a doctrine grounded vpon the Scriptures For in them we evidētly may se that fall they may partly by the admonitions of our Sauiour vnto the man healed of the Palsie a Iohn 5.14 and vnto the adulteressle b Iohn 8 11. of S. Paul vnto the Ephesians c Eph. 21.22 Colossians d Coloss 3.8 Hebrewes e Heb. 3 12. and Timothy f 1 Tim. 4.3 2 Tim. 1.19 of S. Peter vnto all the godly g 1 Pet. 2.10 and ● 8 2 Pet. 3.27 and partly by the examples of Dauid h 2 S●m 11.4 1 Kings ●1 4 Peter k Matth● 25.70 72 74. who egregiously and very offensiuely did fall and that they doe fall it is most euident by the fift petition of the Lords Prayer were nothing else to prooue the same but soe afore 9. art Prop. 3. art 1 2. Prop. 2. art 15. Prop 2. Next that being falne they may rise againe and be saued it is apparent both by the exhortations of the Angell vnto the Churches of Ephesus Pergamus and Thyatira l Reuel 2. and by the examples of Peter who denyed m Luke 22.55 and yet afterward confessed his Master Christ n Acts 2● 22. c. and. 3 13 and 40 ● and of all the Disciples who fled o Matth 2● ●● and yet returned This both granted is and published for truth by the Churches p Confes He● 2. c. 7 Bohem c. 58. Saxon. ar 10 11 Witt ar 23. Suev ar 15. The aduersaries vnto this truth Vnto
this truth subscribe will not Either the Catharans a Mag. eccles hist cen 12. ●5 Nouatians b Eus l. 5. c. 43. Iouinians c Magd. eccles hist cent ● c 5. which thinke Gods people be regenerate into a pure and Angelicall state for that neither they be nor can be defiled with any contagion of sinne Either the Libertines whose opinions were that Whosoeuer hath Gods Spirit in him cannot sinne David sinned not after he had receiued the holy Ghost d Wiliams against the family of Loue. ar 14. Regeneration is the restoring of the estate wherein Adam was placed afore his fall e Calv contra Liber fol. ● ●7 Or the Papists who are of minde that The workes of men iustified are perfect in this life f Tapp p 18 9. No man which is falne into sinne can rise againe and be saued without their Sacrament of Penance g Concil Trid. s●ss 6. can 26. S. Francis attained vnto the perfection of holinesse and could not sinne at all h Vis ad apicem venire perfectionis Vitam cum mo ribus actende B. Franciesci 3. Proposition No men vtterly are to be cast off as reprobates which vnfainedly repent Such as doe fall from grace and yet returne againe vnto the Lord by true repentance are to be receiued as members of Gods Church and this by the Scripture is verified For there we reade that God would haue all men saved a Matth. 11.28 1 Tim. 2.4 God is alwayes ready to receiue the penitent into fauour For there is ioy in heauen for the sinner that conuerteth b Luke 5 7. Christ is grieued when sinners will not repent c Luke 19 41 42 c. He shall saue a soule from death and hide a multitude sinnes which conuerteth a sinner from going astray out of his way d Iam. 5.20 The Lord would haue no man to perish but all men to come to repentance e 2 Pet. 3.9 If we acknowledge our sins he is faithfull and iust to for giue vs our sins and to clense vs from all vnrighteousnesse f 1 Ioh. 1.9 He evhorteth his erring people to repent and doe their first workes Reu. 2.5 16. neither refuseth he the sinner that repenteth as appeareth in the example of the Prodigall sonne h Luke 25.20 and of the debter i Matth. 18.26 c. God then being so gracious and mercifull man after his ensample is both by all good meanes to prouoke sinners vnto repentance and they testifying the same to receiue them into fauour So did Saint Paul will the Galatians Brethren saith he if a man be falne by occasion into any fault yee which are spirituall restore such one with the spirit of meekenesse considering thy selfe lest thou also be tempted k Gal. 6.1 So did he enioyne the Corinthians when he said If any hath caused sorrow the same hath not made me sorry but partly lest I should more charge him you all It is sufficient vnto the same man that he was rebuked of many So that now contrariwise yee ought rather to forgiue and comfort him lest the same should be swallowed vp with ouermuch heauinesse i 2 Cor 5 6 7 When also 〈◊〉 said Receiue him meaning Onesimus m Phile. v. 12. And so teach the Churches n Confe Helv. 2. c. 14. Bohem c. 5. August ar 11 Saxon ar 3 Wittem ar 12 Errors and adversaries unto this truth Adversaries unto this truth are they First which leave nothing but the unappeaseable wrath of God to such as doe sinne after Baptisme as did both in old time the Montanists a D. Hieron adv Marc. and Novatians b Cypr. epist 4. ad Antoniam and of late yeares Melchior Hoffman the Arch-heretike of his dayes c Ballm contr Anab. l. 2 c. 13. and the Anabaptists in Germany d Calv. Inst 1. and the Barrowists among our selves in England e Giffords r●pel Next who say that being once regenerate sin is out away as with a Razor so that the godly cannot sinne and therefore neede no repentance so did the Messalians f Magd. eccles hist cen 4 c. 5. and doe the Family of Love g H. N spirit land c 33 sect 3. c. 34. sect 11. c. 37. sect 8 Proverbs c. 5. sect 15. and Crying voice sect 6. Lastly the desperate whose sinnes being either infinite or abominable they think how God neither can nor will forgive them such in times past were Cain h Gen. 4. and Iudas i Acts 1. in our fathers Franciscus Spirae k Hist Fr. Spi●● and one Doctor Kraus l Luther on Gal. 3.1 and in our dayes Bolton even he that first hatched that fact in England which afterward was termed Brownisme m Giffords rep to Barr. and Green p. 17. 17. Article Of Predestination and Election Predestination to life is the everlasting 1 purpose of God whereby 2 before the foundations of the world were laid he hath 3 constantly decreed by his counsell secret to us to deliver from curse and damnation 4 those whom he hath chosen 5 in Christ out of mankinde and to bring them by Christ to everlasting salvation as vessels made to honour wherefore they which be indued with so excellent a benefit of God 6 be called according to Gods purpose by his Spirit working in due season 7 they through grace obey the calling they be justified freely they be made sonnes of God by adoption they be made like the image of his onely begotten Sonne Iesus Christ they walk religiously in good works and at length by Gods mercy they attaine to everlasting felicity 8 As the Godly consideration of Predestination and our election in Christ is full of sweet pleasant and unspeakable comfort to Godly persons and such as feele in themselves the working of the Spirit of Christ mortifying the works of the flesh and their earthly members and drawing up their minde to high and heavenly things as well because it doth greatly establish and confirme their faith of eternall salvation to be enjoyed through Christ as because it doth fervently kindle their love towards God so for curious and carnall persons lacking the Spirit of Christ to have continually before their eyes the sentence of Gods predestination is a most dangerous downe-fall whereby the Devill doth thrust them into desperation or into retchlesnesse of most uncleane living no lesse perilous then desperation Furthermore 9 we must receive Gods promises in such wise as they be generally set forth unto us in holy Scripture and in our doings that 10 Will of God is to be followed which we have expresly declared unto us in the Word of God The Propositions 1. There is a Predestination of men unto everlasting life 2. Predestination hath beene from everlasting 3. They which are predestinate unto salvation cannot perish 4. Not all men but certaine are predestinate to be saved 5. In Christ Iesus of the
me●re will and purpose of God some are elected and not others unto salvation 6. They who are elected unto salvation if they come unto yeares of discretion are called both outwardly by the Word and inwardly by the Spirit of God 7. The Predestinate are both justified by faith sanctified by the holy Ghost and shall be glorified in the life to come 8. The consideration of Predestination is to the godly wise most comfortable but to curious and carnall persons very dangerous 9. The generall promises of God set forth in the holy Scriptures are to be embraced of us 10. In our actions the Word of God which is his revealed will must be our direction 1. Proposition There is a predestination of men unto everlasting life The proofe from Gods Word THat of men some be predestinate unto life it is a truth most apparent in the holy Scripture by the testimony both of Christ himselfe who saith To sit at my right hand and at my left hand is not mine to give but it shall be given to them for whom it is prepared of my Father a Matth. 20 23. Many are called but few chosen b Ibid. 22.14 For the elects sake those dayes shall be shortned c Ibid. 24.2 Feare not little flock for it is your Fathers pleasure to give you a Kingdome d Luke 12.32 I tell you in that night there shall be two in one bed the one shall be received and the other left e Ibid. 17.34 All that the Father giveth me shall come unto me f John 6.37 Witnessed also is this by the Evangelist Luke and Paul the one saith how of the Gentiles at Antioch so many as were ordained unto eternall life beleeved g Acts 13.48 and the other those whom he knew before he did also predestinate h Rom. 8.20 We are unto God the sweet savour of Christ in them that are saved and in them which perish to the one wee are the savour of death unto death and to the other the savour of life unto life a 2 Cor. 2.15 16. Blessed be God even the Father of our Lord Iesus Christ which c. hath chosen us in him before the foundation of the world c. who hath predestinate us to bee adopted through Iesus Christ unto himselfe c Eph 1.3 4 5. The example also of the elected creatures man and Angels c Matth. 25.34 41. Jude 6. of the two brethren Abel and Cain Gen 4.4 Isaac and Ismael e Rom. 9.17 c Iacob and Esau Ma● 1 2. ● Rom. ● 13 of the two Eunuches of King Pharaoh g Gen. 40 10. of the two Kingdomes Iuda and Israel the two peoples Iewes and Gentiles the two Apostles Peter and Iudas the two Theeves upon the Crosse h Luke 23.39 40 43. the two men in the fields and the two women at the Mill i Matth. 24.40 41. make to the illustration of this truth All Churches consent with this doctrine The errors and adversaries unto this truth Erre therefore doe they which stand in opinion that Some are appointed to be saved but none to be damned In soule some persons but in soule and body together none shall be saved of this mind were the old heretikes viz. the false apostles k 1 Cor. 15.12 the Carpocratians l Clem. strom lib. 4 the Valentinians m Iren. the Cerdonites n Iren. the Manichies o Aug contra Faust l. 4. c. 16. and the Hieracites p Epiphan and of their opinion be the Family of Love q H N. Instr ar 5. sect 24. Prophecy of the sp r. c. 16. sect 7. 2. Proposition Predestination hath beene from everlasting The proofe from Gods Word PRedestination begun before all times It will be said saith our Saviour Christ Come ye blessed of my Father inherit ye the Kingdome prepared for you from the foundations of the world a Matth 25 3● God hath chosen us in Iesus Christ before the Foundation of the world b Eph 1.4 God hath saved us c. according to his owne purpose and grace which was given to us through Christ Iesus before the world was c 2 Tim. 1.9 The publike confession of the Churches namely in Helvetia d Confess 2. c. 10 11. Basil e ar 1. and France f ar 10. beare witnesse hereunto The adversaries unto this truth Those wrangling Sophisters then are deceived who because God is not included within the compasse of any time but hath all things to come as present continually before his eyes do say that God did not in the time long agoe past only but still in the time present likewise doth predestinate 3. Proposition They which are predestinate unto salvation cannot perish The proofe from Gods Word ALL that the Father giveth me shall come to me and him that commeth to me I cast not away saith Christ a John 6.57 I give unto them eternall life and they shall never perish neither shall any pluck them out of my hand c. none is able to take them out of my Fathers hand b John 10.28 29. The gates of hell shall not overcome the Church c Matth. 16.18 Moreover whom he predestinated them he also glorified d Rom. 8.30 For the gifts and calling of God are without repentance e Rom 11.29 They went out from us but they were not of us for if they had beene of us they would have continued with us 1 John 2.19 So the Church of God as afore in this article The errors and adversaries unto this truth Wander then doe they from the truth which think That the very elect totally and finally may fall from grace and be damned That the regenerate may fall from the grace of God may destroy the Temple of God and be broken off from the vine Christ Iesus which was one of Glovers errors a Bredwels de●ect p. 89. That the number of those which be predestinate may both encrease and be diminished so thought the Pelagians 4. Proposition Not all men but certaine be predestiante to be saved The proofe from Gods Word VVE denie all and affirme that a certaine chosen and company of men be predestinate and so doth Gods Word Rejoyce that your names are written in heaven a Luke 10.20 I know mine and am knowne of mine is the saying of Christ Iesus b John 10.14 I suffer all things for the elects sake saith St. Paul c 2 Tim. 2.10 The very same with us doe the Churches affirme d Confes Helv. 2 cap. 10 Basil ar 1. Gal ar 12 Belg. ar 16. The adversaries unto this truth We are therefore against them which teach how not certaine but all even the most ungodly and damnable yea the very devils shall be saved of which opinion were the Origenists a Wolf Musculus in epist ad Philip praef and are the Catabaptists b Bullin
cont Catabap lib. 1. All men be elected unto life everlasting There is no hell nor future and eternall misery at all but onely either in mans opinion as hold the Atheists c Nash●n Chr. his teares p. 58 or in the heart and conscience of man in this life as the Familists maintaine d Ramose is and Allens confess No certaine company be foredestined unto eternall condemnation None more then others be predestinate unto salvation which was an error of Henry Bolseck e Calvin epist munistr Basil f l. 105. In like sort wee condemne such as either curiously enquire who and how many shall be saved or damned or give the sentence of reprobation upon any man whosoever as doe the Papists upon Calvine Beza and Verone when they call them reprobates f Test Rhem. ar Rom. 11.23 5. Proposition Of the meere will and purpose of God some men in Christ Iesus are elected and not others unto salvation The proofe from Gods Word IN the Scripture we reade of mans predestination the cause efficient to be the everlasting purpose of God a That the pupose of God might remaine according to election Rom 9.11 Who doth predestinate us c. according to the good pleasure of his will Eph. 1.5 Not according to our works but according to his own purpose and grace 2 Tim. 1.9 the cause formall God his infinite mercy and goodnesse b I will shew mercy to whom I will shew mercy Exod. 33.19 Rom. 9.15 He hath chosen us in Christ c and hath predestinate us through Christ unto himselfe Eph. 1.4 5. Ye were not redeemed with corruptible things c. but with the pretious bloud of Christ as of a lambe undefiled and without spot which was ordained before the foundation of the world but was declared in the last times for your sakes 1 Tim. 1.18 19 20. the cause materiall the blood of Christ c the cause finall or end why both God the Father hath loved and Christ for his elect hath suffered is the glory of God d Who doth predestinate us c. to the praise of the glory of his grace Eph. 16. The Lord hath made all things for his own sake yea even the wicked for the day of evill Prov. 16.4 and the salvation of man e Rom. 8.29 Those whom he knew before he did also predestinate to be made like to the image of his Son that he might be the first borne among many brethren Hath not the potter power of the clay to make of the same lumpe one vessell to honour and another to dishonour Rom. 9.21 And this doe all the Churches militant and reformed with a sweet consen● testifie and acknowledge Adversaries unto this truth Hereby is discovered the impiety of those men which think that 1. Man doth make himselfe eligible for the kingdome of heaven by his owne good workes and merits so teach the Papists The kingdome of heaven say they is prepared for them that are worthy of it and deserve it by their well doing a Test Rhem. an Matth. 20.23 Licet electis gloria ex aeterna Dei praedestinatione dimanet non tamen provenit nisi ex corum operibus c. Sine nebis non glorificamur 1. Although from Gods eternall predestination glory floweth to the elect yet for all that it springeth not but from their owne workes c. Without our selves we are not glorified b Stella in Luc. c. 10. fol. 35. 2. God beheld in every man whether hee would use his grace well and beleeve the Gospell or no and as hee saw a man affected so did he predestinate chuse or refuse him 3. Besides his will there was some other cause in God why he chose one and cast off another man but this cause is hidden from us 4. Men by nature be elected and saved an error of the Basilidians and Valentinians c Clem. strom lib 2.4 5. It is in mans power to be elected the error of Theophylact d Theoph in Matth. 22. and of Bolseck e Calvin epis m●● i st Helv. fol. 104. 6. God is partiall and unjust for chusing some and refusing others calling many and electing but few 6. Proposition They who are elected unto salvation if they come unto yeeres of discretion are called both outwardly by the Word and inwardly by the Spirit of God The proofe from Gods Word THough true it be the Lord knoweth all and every of his elect yet hath he revealed unto us certaine notes and tokens whereby we may see and certainly know whether we be of that number or not For such as be ordained unto everlasting life if they live long in this world they one time or other bee called unto the knowledge of salvation by the preaching of Gods Word they obey that calling through the operation of the holy Ghost working within them they feele in their soule the same spirit bearing witnesse vnto their spirits how they are the children of God and finally they walke religiously in all good workes These things are most euident and cleare in the holy Scripture where is set downe both the calling of the predestinate a Whom he predestinate them also hee called Rom. 8.30 God separated me from my mothers wombe and called me by his grace Gal. 1.15 He hath called you to his Kingdome glory 1 Thess 2.12 He hath saved vs called vs with an holy calling 2 Tim. 1.9 They that are on his side called chosen and faithfull Reu. 17.14 and their obedience to the Word being called b Your obedience is come abroad amōg all Rom. 16.19 in Christ also ye trusted after ye heard the Word of truth Ephe. 1.13 Iesus Christ is in you except ye be reprobates 2 Cor. 13.5 Ye receiued the Spirit of adoption whereby we cry Abba Father the same Spirit bearing witnesse with our spirit that we are the children of God Rom. 8.15 16. After this manner pray ye Our Father c. Matt. 6.9 And because ye are sonnes God hath sent forth the spirit of his Son into your hearts which cryeth Abba Father Gal 4.6 He hath chosen vs in him and their adoption by the Spirit to be the children of God c c. that we should be holy without blame befo●e him in loue Eph. 1.4 we are his workemanship created in Christ Iesus vnto good workes which God hath ordained that we should walke in them Eph. 2.10 and last of all their holinesse of life and vertuous conuersation d For the grace of God c. hath appeared teacheth vs that we should deny all vngodlinesse and worldly lusts and that we should liue soberly and righteously and godly in this present world Tit. 2.11 16. All Churches reformed consent hereunto Errors and aduersaries unto this truth Sundry aduersaries hath this truth and First the Papists who teach that none are to thinke or perswade themselues that they are of the number of the Predestinate vnto
saluation but to be euer doubtfull thereof e Con. Trid. sess 6. cap. 1 2. con 15. Test Rhem. an Rom. 8.38 an 1 Cor. 2.12 an Phil. 2.12 The said Papists deliuer that so many persons as are not marked with the signe of the crosse vpon their forehead are damned and reprobate f Test Rhem. an Apoc. 6.4 also that they which will be saued must be Franciscans g Conform F l. 4. fol. 10● at leastwise become members of the Church of Rome h Ans to the exec of Iust c. 8. p. 192. Secondly the Anti-nomi which thinke the outward calling by the word though they haue not the inward calling by the Spirit and be destitute of good workes a sufficient argument of their election vnto life i Simon Pauli meth par 2. de ege Dei Thirdly the Puritanes who among other affiances giuen them from the Lord of their saluacions made their aduancin●●te Presbyteriall Kingome by the putting downe of Bishops Chancellours c. a testimony that they shall haue part in that glory which shall be reuealed hereafter f Demon. of D●s epist ded Fourthly the Schwenfeldians and all such as depending vpon immediate diuine reuelations condemne and contemne the ordinary calling of God by the ministery of his Word Lastly the Russians g Sartan de Relig Ruthen c. 2 Catabaptists h Zuingl contra Catabap fol. 107. and Family of Loue i Display H. 9. b D. 5. who beleeue that themselues onely and none besides shall be saued 7. Proposition The Predestinate are both iustified by faith sanctified by the Spirit and shall be glorified in the life to come The proofe from Gods Word Diuers be the effects of mans predestination but chiefly it bringeth to the elect a Know that a man is not iustified by the workes of the Law but by the faith of Iesus Christ Gal 2.16 They which be of faith are blessed with faithfull Abraham Eph. 2.8 iustification by faith in this life and in the life to come glorification b Moreone whom he predestinate them also he called and whom he called them also he iustified and whom he iustified them also he glorified Rom. 8.30 Come ye blessed of my Fathers inherit ye the Kingdome prepared for you Matth 25 34. alwaies a conformity to the image of the onely begotten Son of God both in suffering troubles here and in enioying immortall glory hereafter c If we be children we are also heire● euen the heires of God heires annexed with Christ if so be that we suffer with him that we may also be glorified with him Rom. 8.17 as we haue borne the image of the earthly so shall we bear● the image of the heauenly ●c or 15.49 as testifie all the Churches in their confessions The errors and adversaries unto this truth This is flatly against Papias a Tritcuhem de eccle scrip Iustinus b Wolf Musculus in epist ●d Phil. praef and all Millenaries Eus eccles hist l. 7. c 13. who deny the eternity of mans happinesse and dreame of I know not what blisse in this life to endure a thousand yeeres but no longer Also against the Manichies who said the soule onely shall be saued d Philastrius Also against those heretikes which deny the resurrection of the flesh as did the Carpocratians e Clem. strom lib. 4. Manichies f Aug. contra Faust l. 4 c. 16. and others g See afore ar 4. prop. 1. Likewise against the Hieracites who haue a phantasie that no children departing this life before they come vnto yeeres of discretion and knowledge shall be saued h Epiphan So the Papists doe teach i Positiones Ingolstad de Purgat that no infants dying vnbaptized doe goe to heauen but vnto another place adioyning vnto Hell called Limbus puerorum i Positiones Ingolstad de Purgat 8. Proposition The consideration of Predestination is to the godly wise most comfortable but to curious and carnall persons very dangerous The proofe from Gods Word This doctrine of Predestination is to the godly full sweet pleasant and comfortable because it greatly confirmeth their faith in Christ and encreaseth their loue toward God I account the afflictions of this present time are not worthy of the glory which shall be shewed vnto vs k Rom. 8.18 If God be on our side who can be against vs who spared not his owne Sonne but gaue him for vs all to death how shall he not with him giue vs all things also who shall lay any thing to the charge of Gods chosen It is God that iustifieth who shall condemne c l Ibid. 31.34 Yee were sealed with the holy Spirit of promise which is the earnest of our inheritance vntill the redemption of the possession purchased vnto the praise of his glory m Eph. 1.13 14 Grieue not the holy Spirit of God by whom ye are sealed vnto the day of redemption n Eph. 4.30 But to the wicked and reprobate the consideration hereof is very sowre vnsauory and most vncomfortable as that which they thinke though very vntruly and sinfully causeth them either to despaire of his mercy being without faith of not to feare his iustice beeing extremely wicked where as neither from the Word of God nor any confession of the Church can any man gather that he is a vessell of wrath prepared to damnation but contrariwise by many and great arguments may perswade himselfe that God would not his destruction as in the next proposition immediately ensuing plainely may appeare Errors and aduersaries vnto this truth Therefore they are to be taken as much out of the way which say that this doctrine leadeth either vnto desperation which is without all comfort or vnto loosenesse of life so vnto Atheisme and therefore to bee published neither by mouth nor booke and so thought both the Pelagians k Prosper in Epist ad Aug. der el●qui●s Pela haeresis and the Predestinates a sort of heretikes so called in old time l Magd. eccle hist Cent. 5 c. 5. p. 620. and the Family of Loue in our daies who terme the doctrine of Predestination a licencious doctrine and say it filleth all the prisons almost in England m Display in an epist of the Families l. 7. b. 9. Proposition The generall promises of God set forth in the holy Scripture are to be embraced of vs. The proofe from Gods Word That men the better may auoide both desperation and carnall securitie they are to haue alwayes in minde that 1. The promise of grace and fauour to mankind● are vniuersall as Come vnto mee all yee that are weary and laden and I will ease you n Mark 11.38 God sent not his Sonne into the world that he should condemne the world but that the world through him might bee saued o Ion. 3.17 God will that all men shall be saued and come vnto the knowledge of
the truth c 1 Tim. 2.4 2. The doctrine of the Gospell for the free remission of sinnes is to be preached not vnto a few but vniuersally and generally vnto all men Goe therefore and teach all nations baptizing them c. d Mate 28.19 Goe into all the world and preach the Gospell to euery creature He that shall beleeue and be baptized shall be saued but he that will not beleeue shall be damned e Math. 16.15 16. 3. The seales of the couenant be appointed to be giuen to all men which are members of the visible Church or desirous to be incorporated thereinto For All are to be baptized f Math. 28.19 and all are to participate of the bread and cup at the Lords Supper g Mat. 26.26 27. 1 Cor. 11.34.35 4. As the disobedience of Adam brought condemnation vpon all men so the blood and obedience of Christ is able and all-sufficient to wash away all sinnes that of all men 5. No man euer truly repented but he was receiued againe into fauour so was Dauid after his adultery h 2 Sam. 12.13 Manasses after his Idolatry i 2 Chro. 33.12 13. Peter after his Apostacie k Ioh. 21.15 c. the Thiefe vpon the Crosse l Luke 23.42 43. the Nineuites m Ionas 3.10 The adversaries unto this truth They are not to be heard then which say that The number of the Elect is but small and seeing we are vncertaine whether we be of that company or no we will proceede in our course as we haue begun God is an accepter of persons and so vniust in chusing some and refusing others God hath predestinate all those persons to eternall death which are not in the state of true repentance which was one of Glovers errors a Bredwels dete ct p. 06. It is the part therefore of all and euery man Not to refuse the mercies of God both generally and graciously offered vnto all men by his Word and Sacraments Not to despaire in respect either of the greatnes or multitude of his sinnes Nor yet to prouoke the Lord to execute his vengeance vpon them through prophanenesse of life or securitie 10. Proposition In our actions the Word of God which is his reuealed will must be our direction The proofe from Gods Word In our doings but chiefly in the matter of Predestination we are to follow not our owne iudgement and what seemeth good in our owne opinions but the will of God and that will too not which is concealed from vs viz. of God his omnipotency whereby he gouerneth at his pleasur the things by himselfe created whereof mention is made both in the Psalmes a Psal 115.3 in the Prophet Isay b Esa 46.10 and other places of his Word c Rom. 9.15 but of his fauour and good pleasure towards man reuealed in the holy Scriptures by Iesus Christ whom we are to heare d Math. 3.17 Subscribed hereunto haue and doe Gods Church euery where The aduersaries vnto this truth This truth is gaine-said by the Phrygians Montanists and Messalians a Theodoret. l. 3. de haeret fab also by the Enthusiasts b Beza ep 81. Anabaptists c Sle●dan com lib. 6. and Family of Loue d H.N. euang c. 13. sect 6. which leave the written Word of God and relye vpon their owne dreames visions and lying reuelations Hence proceedeth the contempt of Gods written Word and of the Preachers and all religious exercises thereof For saith the Family of Loue e In a letter of theirs vnto the B. of Roch. in Wilk confut No differunce is there betweene a ceremoniall either Letter-Doctor Christian and an vncircumcised Heathen 18. Article Of obtained eternall saluation onely by the name of Christ They also are to had accursed that presume to say that euery man shall be saued by the Law or sect which he professeth so that he be diligent to frame his life according to that Law and the light of nature For holy Scripture doth set out vnto vs 2 onely in the name of Iesus Christ whereby men must be saued The Propositions 1. The profession of euery religion cannot saue a man liue he neuer so vertuously 2. No man euer was or shall be saued but onely by the Name or faith of Iesus Christ 1. Proposition The profession of euery religion cannot saue a man liue he neuer so vertuously The proofe from Gods Word THis we cannot but acknowledge to be a truth if we beleeue the Scriptures for they testifie that Iewes and Gentiles are vnder sin culpable before God and depriued of the glory of God a Rom. 3.6 19 23. All men that would be saued must be borne againe of the holy Ghost b Ioh. 3.3 No man is iustified by the words of the Law c Gal. 3.16 either ceremoniall d Act. 15.24 2. Col. 1 16 20. Gal. 5.18 or morall e Rom. 3 10 20 28. Eph. 2.8 9. God hateth the doctrine of the Nicolaitanes f Reu 2.15 and of Balaam g Ibid. 14. The Reprobate whose names are not written in the booke of the Lambe they doe worship the Beast h Reu. 13.8 Punishments eternall and intolerable are threatned both to the Beast and the false prophet i Reu. 2.10 and likewise to all such as will not goe out of Babylon k Reu. 18.4 and to all Idolaters l Reu. 21.8 The confessions of Gods-people are to this end and purpose m Confes Hel. 1. ar 12. 2. c 1. ● Bohe. c d. Gal ar 22.23 Belg. ar 2● 13 Aug. ar 45.21 Wittem ar 5 6 Suev c. 3. Errors and adversaries unto this truth Then to be held accursed are they which affirme that The obseruation of the iudiciall ceremonies is necessary vnto saluation as did the false apostles a Act. 15.11 the Ebionites b Ire l. 1. c 27. and the Corinthians c Philastrius Such throughout the world as lead an vpright life and be morally righteous whatsoeuer their religion is shall be saued as many of the Philosophers were in the opinion of the Valentinian and Basilidian heretikes d Clem. Alex. q 2.4 of Galeatus Martius e Paul Iovius log doct vir p. 67. Erasmus Roterodam f Praef. sua Tuscu quest That men externally may professe any religion and notwithstanding be saued if their affections and heart be with the Family of loue g H. N. praef 19 his 3. Reform sect 2.6 That all those that liue vprightly and doe good deeds shall be of equall happinesse in the Kingdom of heauen be they Turkes Christians Iewes or Moores A Turkish error h Pol. of the Turk emp c. 23. Lon. cer Turk hist tom 1. 2. par 2 cap. 12. That men may embrace and follow the sect and religion which they haue most minde vnto and so doing please God and be saued the Lampatians doctrine i Damascene That
Wit c. 30 31 33. Suev ar 1. Errors and adversaries unto this truth Of another iudgement are many For Some do thinke the Scripture may be expounded in what sense and to what purpose men list as the Pharises a D. Iren. l 4. cap. 2 5. the Severians b Euf eccl hist lib. 4. c. 29. and Papists among whom there be which from this opinion doe tearme the most holy Word and Scriptures of God most reprochfully A ship-mans hose a Leaden rule a Nose of waxe c Pighius controuer 3. de Ec. Hierac l. 3. c. 3. Lindan praef Cens Colon. Some do mislike all interpretations written Commentaries vpon the Scriptures as vnnecessary and vaine such were Servetus Valdesius Coranus with others of late yeeres d Beza epi. 59. and are the Libertines Sowenkfeldians e Ibid. and Family of Loue f H.N. 1. exhor cap. 16 sect 4. Some depend wholly vpon visions and reuelations as did the Enthusiasts g Th●●d haeret fab l. 3. Nicholas Storch Thomas Monetarius the Anabaptists h D. Maior in Dom. 8. Post trinit homil fol. 440. and our late English reformer Hacket i Arthing sedu p 17. Some dislike of the literall and referre the Allegoricall sense of the Scriptures and thereby deuise what them list most monstrously from the Word of God as did the Origenists and doe the Libertines k Calv. contra Anabap. and Family of Love hence teaching one the other that the spirituall vnderstanding is the Word of God and that to embrace the literall sense is to commit Idolatary l Allens conf Some of every place of Scripture will have an exposition both Analogicall Allegoricall Historicall and Morall as the curious Thomists and Monks Some are addicted to an interpretation which they cal mysticall and propheticall as Brocardus Morelius and others Some are of mind that the Gospell or Euangelicall Word cannot be committed to letters and writing saith Lindanus m Lib. 2. c. 2. Some doe thinke as afore also hath bin shewed how that is the odde and onely true sense of the Scriptures which is made and given by the Church n Haeretici Scripturarum cognitionē intelligentione extra Ecclesiamponunt nos autem Papistae volumus Ecclesiae Romanae esse annexam nec ab ea separari patimur Stapl. antid Euang. in Ioan 19 21. p. 418 Sicut Christo Iudaei sic nos Ecclesia Romanae simpliciter credere debemus saith Stapleton Antid in Luc. 10.16 When the authoritie of the Church leaveth the holy Scripture then are they of no more account then Aesops fables W●lf Herman and Pope of Rome o Si Papam qui Christi vicarius est ac cius omnimodam potestatem habet in terris consulerent non erra●ent haeretici saith Stella in Lucaeus fol. 499. Some doe maintaine that as the Church in time doth alter so the interpretation of the Scripture also therewithall doth vary whereby that which in the Apostles time was a truth in these dayes shall be a falshood In which error was Cardinall Cusanus p Cusan ad Bohemos epist 2. 6. Proposition The Church is the witnesse and keeper of Gods written Word The proofe from Gods Word THough the Church hath authoritie to heare and determine in controversies of faith yet hath the Church power neither to iudge the Word of God nor to iudge otherwise then Gods Word doth iudge For it is said to the Church and people of God I beseech you brethren marke them diligently which cause diuisions and offences contrary to the Doctrine which you haue learned and auoid them a Rom. 16.7 Heare him b Math. 17.5 To him giue all the Prophets witnesse c Acts 10 43. Search the Scriptures d Iohn 5.39 whosoever transgresseth and abideth not in the doctrine of Christ hath not God e 2 Iohn 5.9 Ye are c. built upon the foundation of the Apostles and Prophets f Eph. 2.19 And of the holy Scriptures Thy word is the truth g Iohn 27.17 They have Moses and the Prophets let them heare them Luke 16.29 saith our Saviour Christ Wee have also a sure word of the Prophets saith Saint Peter i 2 Pet 1.19 And Saint Paul The whole Scripture is profitable to teach c k 2 Tim. 6.16 17. If any man teach otherwise and consenteth not to the wholesome words of our Lord Iesus Christ he is puft vp and knoweth nothing c l 1 Tim. 6 3 4. And so with vs the other Churches conceiue both of the Scriptures and Church m Confe Helv. 2. cap. 1. Bohe. cap. 1. Gal ar 5 Belg. ar 7. Wittemb ar 30 31 32 Sax. ar 11. yet all of vs doe grant that the Church as a faithfull witnesse may yea of necessitie must testifie to the world what hath been the doctrine of Gods people from time to time and as a trusty Recorder is to keepe and make knowne what the Word or God which it hath received is which truly hath beene performed afore the Word was written by the Patriarchs and after the same was committed to writing before Christ his incarnation by the Iews in Christ his life time n Luke 4.17 in the Primitive Church o Acts 13.27 Acts 15.21 2 Cor. 2.15 2 Cor. 8.18 From the Apostles time by the godly Christians thorow out the world Errors and adversaries unto this truth Be it farre therefore from us to thinke which the Papists doe not stick to write and say namely that The Church is to judge the Scripures and not the Scriptures the Church a Jo. Maria Verract●s Pighius in controvers de Ec. The Scripture is not of the essence of the Church Because without it a Church may be though not very well So said Card. Cusan b Card. Cusan ep 2. ad Bohe. The Scripture because in their opinion it is unperfect cannot obscure may not ambiguous ought not to be the Iudge So Lindan c Lind. l. 1. c. 1. Latomus d Contra Bucer Petrus à Soto e De S. Scrip. Pighius f Eccl. Hierar l. 1. c. 4. Coster g Enchir. de S. Scrip. c. 1. c. Hee is an heretike that cleaveth to the Scriptures So said Iacobus Hoestratus Again the carefull keeping of the holy Scriptures by Gods people from age to age and time to time declareth first how the mother Church of Rome is not the onely keeper of the holy writ and next that cursedly they doe offend which either as greatly esteeme the Ethicks of Aristotle as the Commandements of God the Odes of Pindar as the Psalmes of David h Aug. Polit. the works and bookes of men as the writings of God which the Councell of Trent doth i Ses 4. or before and above the Scripture preferre unwritten Traditions Hence Petrus à Soto Tradition saith he is both more ancient and more effectuall then the holy
Imper and S. Augustine to write unto Maximinus Neither ought I to object against thee the Synode of Nice nor thou against me the Synode of Ariminum r D. Aug. contra Max. lib 3. and Nazianzene openly to pronounce that He never saw any good end of a Councell ſ Naz. ad Pro. cop epist 42. and The French Kings Embassadour to say unto the Chapter of Trent that scarcely any good at all or very little came by Councels unto the State of Christendome t Orat. Synod Legat. regis Fran. an 1562. and Cornelius Bishop of Bitonto to breake out into these words in the face of the Councell at Trent I would that with one consent we had not altogether declined from Religion unto superstition from faith unto infidelitie from Christ unto Antichrist from God unto Epicurus u B. Jewels dvf. par 1. fol. 39. The adversaries unto this truth This notwithstanding the Papists doe continue in an opinion that Councels cannot erre x Test Rhem. an Joh. 16.13 4. Proposition The things ordained by Generall Councels are so farre to be embraced and beleeved as they are consonant to Gods holy Word The proofe from Gods Word GEnerall Councels we simply condemne not yet doe we not ground our faith upon any Councell but onely upon the written Word of God Therefore in generall Councels whatsoever is agreeable unto the written Word of God we doe reverently embrace but whatsoever is contrary unto or besides the will of God revealed in the holy Scriptures we doe carefully avoid And so are wee commanded to doe even by God himselfe Whatsoever I command you take heed you doe it thou shalt put nothing thereto nor take ought there-from a Deut 12.33 Walk ye not in the ordinances of your fathers neither observe their manners c. I am the Lord your God walke in my Statutes and keepe my Iudgements and doe them b Ezek. 20 18 19. Though that we or an Angel from heaven preach unto you otherwise then that which wee have preached unto you let him be accursed As we said before so say I now againe If any man preach unto you otherwise then that yee have received let him be accursed c Gal. 1. ● 9. And so think the Churches reformed with us d Conf Helv. 2 c. 18. Bohe. c. 1 Gal. ar 5. B●lg ar ● Wit●●m● c. 33. The aduersaries vnto this truth Contrary hereunto are the opinions of the Papists For of them Some doe think that the decrees of Councels doe binde all nations as Pope Hormisda decreed they should Some as Pope Gregory the great supposed that some Councels and namely the Councell of Nice of Constantinople Ephesus and Chalcedon a Greg. 1. l 1. epi. 24. l. 2. epist 49. some as Campian b Campian 12● 4 thought that all Councels were of equall authority with the Word of God Others as the Guisian faction in France be resolved in matters of religion to follow the footesteps of their ancestors though Gods Word and a thousand Councels decree to the contrary c Calvin epist Bulling 1231. 22. Article Of Purgatorie The Romish doctrine concerning 1 Purgatory 2 Pardons worsh●pping and adoration as well 3 of images as 4 of reliques and 5 also of Invocation of Saints is a fond thing vainely invented and grounded upon no warranty of Scripture but rather repugnant to the Word of God The Propositions The Romish doctrine concerning 1. Purgatory 2. Pardons 3. Worshipping and adoration of Images 4. Reliques 5. Invocation of Saints is a fond thing and not warranted by the holy Scripture nor consonant but contrary unto the same 1. Proposition The Romish doctrine concerning Purgatory is fond and not warranted by the holy Scripture nor consonant but contrary unto the same The proofe from Gods Word IT is granted as well by the Romish or false as by the true Church that none uncleane thing can enter into the Kingdome of God And because all men either have been or be still uncleane therefore they must be purged from sinne But in the manner of purging them who are unpure they do greatly differ For the true Church looking into the Word of God doth finde that we are sanctified or made cleane in divers respects diversly as by Baptisme a Christ loved the Church gave himselfe for it that he might sanctifie it and cleanse it by the washing of water through the Word Eph. 5.25.26 by the Word preached b Now yee are cleane thorow the word that I have spoken unto you John 15.3 by the blood of Christ c The blood of Jesus Christ his Son cleanseth us from all sin 1 John 1.7 and by the Spirit of God d Ye are washed ye are sanctified ye are justified in the name of the Lord Jesus and by the Spirit of our God 1 Cor. 6. ●1 and that in this life and not in the other world For in the sacred Scripture there is mention but onely of two wayes one leading unto destruction the other bringing unto life e Mat. 7.13 14. of two sorts of men whereof some beleeve they are saved some beleeve not and they are damned f Matt. 16.16 Joh. 3.18 and of two States one blessed where Lazarus is the other cursed where Dives doth abide g Luke 16. A third way or sort or state cannot be found in the Word of God And therfore the Purgatory in another world both denied hath alwayes beene by the Greeke Churches h Alphons de haeres l. 8. de Indulgentiis Polydor. de Inventor l. 8. c. 1. Cons Helv. 2. c. 26. Gal. ar 24. Sax. ar 11. Aug. ar 11. Wittemb cap. 25. and neither is nor will be acknowledged by any of Gods reformed Churches in this world as their Confessions doe testifie The adversaries unto this truth Erronious therefore and not warrantable by Gods Word concerning Purgatory is the doctrine both of the old Heretikes the Montanists who thought there was a purging of soules after this life a Tertul. de cot militis De Anima in si●● and of the new and renued Heretikes the Papists For They think it to be unsound doctrine and not sufferable in any booke for Christians to deliver that it is unpossible for godly and faithfull men or women to be punished after they be dead Therefore deleatur say they Blot out such doctrine b Pu●ari pios post mort●m impossibile deleatur l●dex expurg p. 26. They teach by their Catechismes that to doubt whether there is a Purgatory or no is a breach of the first Commandement c Vaux catech chap 3. Thus doe they pray for the soules of the faithfull as they fancie boyling in the torments of Purgatory Avete omnes animae fideles quarum corpora hic abique conquiescunt in pulvere Dominus Iesus Christus qui vos nos redemit suo preciocissimo sanguine dignetur vos à poenis liberare c. that is
All haile all faithfull soules whose bodies doe here and every where rest in the dust The Lord Iesus Christ who hath redeemed both you and us with his most precious blood vouchsafe to deliver you from paines c d Horae B. Virg. Mariae secundum usum S●r. They have ratified the doctrine of purged soules after this life in the Councell of Trent e Conc. Trid. d●●r de Purg. Ses 25. ses 6 can 30. It it further to be noted how the same Papists sliding backe from the truth of God have fallen into many noisome and divers opinions in the matter of Purgatory agreeing among themselves Neither about the place where Purgatory should be some placing the same in the bottome of the Sea f Eckius in Enchirid some neere unto the mount Hecla in Ireland some upon the mount Aetna in Sicil g Bernard de Bustis Rosar par 3. c. 2. others in the Center of the earth h Spec. pereg quaest doc 1. c. 3. q. 5. others in Hell whereof they make foure roomes the first of the damned the second of infants dying unbaptized the third Purgatory the fourth Limbus patrum whereinto Christ descended i Position Ing. de purgat and others in a minde tossed and troubled betwixt hope and feare k Lorich insti Cathol de 12. Fidei art Neither about the Tormentors there who are thought of some to be holy Angels l Albertus Roffensis of others to be very devils m S. Th. Morc Neither about the torments For some dreame how they are tormented there with fire onely as Sir Thomas Moore some with water and fire as Roffensis and some neither with fire nor water but with troublesome affections of Hope and Feare as Lorichius n Insti Catho ut supra Neither about the causes of Purgatory torments because that some doe thinke that onely veniall sinnes o Greg. dial l. 4. c. 39. Spec. pereg quaest dec 1. c. 3. q. 4 others that veniall and mortall sinnes too p Eckius posit 6. for which in this life men have done no penance are there purged Nor about the time which they that be tormented shall abide in Purgatory For some have given out how the poore soules there be continually in torments till the day of Iudgement as Dionys Carthusianus q De 4. Hom. noviss others as Durandus r De officio mort l. 7. doe thinke they have rest sometimes as upon Sundaies and Holidaies others are of mind that in time they shall be set free and at libertie because their punishment is but temporary ſ Spec. pereg quaest ut supra quaest 5. and others that at any time they may be delivered if either their friends will buy out their paines or the Priests will pray or say any Masse for them or the Pope will but say the word Nor finally about the state of soules in Purgatory For Our English Papists at Rhemes doe thinke the soules in Purgatory to be in a more happy and blessed condition then any men that live in this world t Test Rhem. an Apoc. 14.13 and yet say the same Rhemists that Purgatory fire passeth all the paines of this life v Ibid. an marg p. 431. Thomas Aquinas holdeth how the paines of hell fire and of Purgatory are all one nothing differ but that the one is but temporall and the other not so And others put in choyce either to tarry in Purgatory one day or to endure the miseries of this world an 100 yeares have chosen to suffer the troubles of this life an hundred yeares together rather then to abide the paines of Purgatory but one short Winters day x Cap. Quid in aliud dist 25. Therefore in this contrarietie of opinions some of them the Papists themselves cannot deny must be we say all of them are fond and contrary to the Word of God Besides they nourish most cursed and damnable errors as That all the soules of the faithfull separated from their bodies are not at rest That all sins in their owne nature be not mortall or deadly and that some deserve not everlasting torments They are purged in Purgatory That one sinfull man may save and satisfie the wrath of God for another and that easily by prayer saying or doing something for them That if friends in this world will doe nothing for the poore soules in Purgatory paines yet may the said soules come at length unto happinesse by abiding their deserved torments untill the last houre or day of judgement in Purgatory Finally that the Pope is God in that he can at his pleasure discharge guiltie souls both from the guilt of sinne and from the punishments due for the same 2. Proposition The Romish doctrine concerning pardons is fond and not warranted by the holy Scriptures nor consonant but contrary unto the same The proofe from Gods Word SVch hath been the exceeding mercy and love of God towards mankinde that as he hath purged us from all guiltinesse of sinne by the blood so hath he pardoned us from the everlasting punishment due for sinne by the paines of Iesus Christ For There is salvation in none other For among men there is given none other name under heaven whereby they must be saved a Acts 4.12 Through his name all that beleeve shall receive remission of sinnes b Act. 10.43 He hath purchased the Church by his owne blood c Act. 20.28 With his stripes we are healed d Isa 53.5 He that beleeveth in him shall neither be condemned e Joh. 3.18 nor ashamed f Rom. 10.11 Therefore Come unto mee all yee that are weary and laden and I will ea●● you c. and yee shall finde rest for your soules saith our Saviour Christ g Matth. 11.28 29. If thou shalt confesse with thy mouth the Lord Iesus and shalt beleeve with thine heart that God raised him from the dead thou shalt be saved saith Saint Paul h Rom. 10.9 Errors and aduersaries unto this truth This being the Doctrine even of God himselfe * Whereof see more Art 2. pr. 4. ar 11. pr. 1. ar 22. pr. 1. we may evidently perceive how not onely vaine but beside not onely besides but against the Word of God the Romish doctrine concerning pardons is For that doth teach us 1. To seeke salvation not at God alone but at the hands of sinfull men For would we have a pardon for the sinnes of fortie dayes A Bishop may give it For the sinnes of 100 dayes A Cardinall may grant it For all our sinnes committed or to be committed From the Pope we may have it Hence be his pardons if you respect time for 40. 50. 100. 1000. 10000. 50000. c. yeares of offences Homicide Patricide Perjury Sodomitry Treason and what not c. a Vide Taxam poenit 2. That we may be our owne Saviour So did that of Purgatory 3. How the precious
blood of Christ was shed in vain For corruptible gold and silver with our owne deeds and works may and will save us if we will 4. That repentance is not of necessitie unto the salvation of man For without the same a popish pardon may save But without either a pardon from the Pope or such like or absolution of a Priest there is no salvation by the doctrine of the Church of Rome b See ar 25. p. 6. A further manifestation of the vanitie and impieties of the Romish pardons from a booke of the Papists intituled Horae beatissimae Virginis Mariae secundum usum Sarum Quicunque in statu gratiae existens dixerit devotè septem orationes sequentes cum septem Pater noster totidem Ave Maria ante imaginem pietatis merebitur 56. millia annorum Indulgentiarum Iohannes Papa 12. concessit omnibus dicentibus orationem sequentem transcundo per cemiterium tot annos indulgentiarum quot faerunt ibi corpora inhumata à constitutione ipsius cemiterii Oratio pro defunctis Avete omnes animae fideles quarum corpora hic ubique requiescunt in pulvere Dominus Iesus Christus qui vos nos redemit suo pretiofissimo sanguine dignetur vos à poenis liberare inter choros suorum sanctorum angelorum collocare ibiq●e nostri memores suppliciter exorare ut vobis associemur vobiscum in coelis coronemur Innocentius Papa 2. concessit cuilibet qui banc orationem sequentem de votè dixerit 4000. millia annorum indulgentiarum Ave vulnus lateris nostri Salvatoris c. Quicunque devotè dixerit istam orationem habebit 3000. dicrum indulgentiarum criminalium peccatorum 2000. millia dicrum venialium à Domino Iohanne Papa 22. concessarum ut in A●tidatorio animae habetur Quicunque orationem sequentem devotè dixerit promerebitur 11000 annorum indulgentiarū c Ave Domina sancta Maria mater dei regina coeli porta paradisi domina mundi lux sempiterna imperatrix inferni c. Ora pro me Iesum Christum dilectū filium tuum libera me ab omnil us malis ora pro peccatis meis Amen Whosoever being in the state of grace shall devoutly say the seven prayers ensuing with seven Our Fathers and as many Haile Maries afore the image of Piety shall thereby merit 56. thousand yeares of Pardons Pope Iohn the 12. hath granted to all persons which going thorow the Church-yard doe say the prayer following so many yeares of pardons as there have beene bodies buried since it was a Church-yard The prayer for the dead Haile all faithfull soules whose bodies here and every where doe rest in the dust The Lord Iesus who hath reedemed you and with his most precious blood vouchsafe to deliver you from paines and to place you in the company of his holy Angels and there being mindfull of us meekely to pray that we may both be joyned unto you and crowned with you in the heavens Pope Innocent the 2. hath granted to every one which devoutly shall say this prayer following 4000. yeares of pardons Haile wound of our Saviours side c. Whosoever devoutly shall say this prayer shall have 3000. dayes pardons of criminall sinnes and 20000. dayes of veniall offences granted by the Lord Pope Iohn the 22. as it is to be read in the Antidatory of the soule Whosoever devoutly will say the prayer following shall merit thereby 11000. yeares of pardons Haile Lady Saint Mary mother of God Queene of heaven the Gate of Paradise the Lady of the world the Light eternall the Emperesse of hell c. Pray unto thy beloved Sonne Iesus Christ for me and deliver me from all evils pray for my sinnes Amen 3. Proposition The Romish doctrine concerning Images is fond and not warranted by the holy Scriptures nor consonant but contrary unto the same The proofe from Gods Word Images are such an abomination to the Lord as to make them among all men odious he describeth the vanitie of them by his Prophets as that they are the doctrine of vanitie the worke of errors a Jer. 10.15 the teachers of lies b H●b 2.18 silver and gold the worke of mens hands c Psal 135.25 vanitie d Esa 41.10 c. they have a mouth and speake not eyes and see not eares and heare not e Psal 135.16 hands and touch not feet and walke not f Psal 115.7 2. He giveth a strait commandement Not to bow downe to them nor worship them g Exod. 20.5 1 Cor. 10.7 14. nor to make them h Exod. 20.5 Deut. 4.15 c. to flie from them i 1 Iohn 5.21 1 Cor. 10.14 yea to destroy both the images themselves k Deut. 7.5 12 2● ● the Idolaters l Deut. 17.2 3. and the Enticers unto Idolatry m Deut. 13.5 3. He commendeth greatly and praiseth such men as have destroyed images n 2 King 18.3 4. 2 Chr. 14.2 3. and not bowed unto Idols o Deut. 7.25 26. Ier. 5 1. 4. He finally curseth the Images p 1 King 19.18 Dan. 2. the Image-makers q Deut. 27.15 Esa 44. and the Image-servers or worshippers r Deut. 27.26 Psal 97.7 Esa 42.17 Hereunto with us the Protestant Churches every where doe subscribe ſ Conf. Helv. 2. cap 3 4. Basil ar 10.6.3 Bohem. c. 3.16 Gal. ar 1. August ar 12. Wittem c. 1.23 Suev ar 22. The adversaries unto this truth The Romish Church most fondly contrary to the word of God doth allow and not onely allow but publikely erect and not onely erect but adore a Dele statuas verserari potius quam statuarios stolid●m ●●t Index expurg p. 31. and not onely adore Images but doth accu●se and more then so condemne to the fire yea to hell fire as heretikes such persons as will not worship images and the Images too which is most abominable Of God himselfe even of God the Father and that in the likenesse of an old man with a long white Beard of the Son in the similitude of a man hanging on the Crosse of the holy Ghost in the shape of a Dove of the wholy holy and incomprehensible Trinitie with three Faces in one head b In hoe plerisque Christianis ●●hnicus philosophus religiosior qui etiā Trinitatis quae mente vix cōprehenditur figuras oculis ●ot poris aspectabilis Petri Rami verba in scholis physicis delcantur Index expurg pag. 149. Atque haec absurditas Patrem Filum Sp effigiantium Iacobitis à Nicephoro tributur G. Cassand consul p. 164. Also of God his creatures as of Angels alwaies with wings sometimes with a paire of ballance as S. Michael of men as of Moses as it were with hornes the Apostles with round orbes on their heads like Trenchers the blessed Virgin with frisled haire and costly garments And of other base things as Agnus deis of wax wafer cakes of flower Crosses of gold
silver stone wood paper copper c c Non inficiam●● haec nos latriae admatione C●r sti praeclaressimam crucem ●●re vene●a●i A●drad orthodox expl lib. 9 p. 284. 4. Proposition The Romish doctrine concerning Reliques is fond and not warranted by the holy Scriptures nor consonant but contrary unto the same The proofe from Gods Word OF all the erroneour opinions among the Papists which are infinite none is more to the illusion of well meaning Christians then their doctrine concerning worshipping b Confes Helv. 1. ar 11. c. 5. Bas● ar 10. Bohem c. 17. Gal. ar 24. and adoration of the reliques of Saints A doctrine which is so farre from being found as it is forbidden in the holy Scripture a Thou shalt worship the Lord thy God and him onely shalt thou serve Matth 4.20 and a doctrine in the purer times and writers of the Church no where to be found and in all the best Churches at this day utterly condemned Adversaries unto this truth Such notwithstanding is the Satanicall boldnesse of the Antichristian Synagogue of Rome that as they will delude men with the reliques of Saints which are not such so likewise they teach the people which is most offensive and execrable to give divine adoration and honour unto them a Praed●catio autem eccl●siastica hoc sc●●p●●en●●it Sanctorum re●iquias ess ex fide venerandas Stap ● antidot evang in Mat 8.21 p. 30 The Catholike affirmeth worshipping of Saints prayer unto them feasts of them adoration of their reliques and images the Protestant denieth all Hils quartron 14. reas p 71. Hence it is that some doe pray unto St. Benet whose Reliques they had stolne O Benedict after God our onely hope leave us not orphanes who art come hither not through our merits but for the salvation of many soules b Vi●● Lir. l. 23 cap. 155. Others have published that the bodies of Saints and specially the Reliques of the blessed Martyrs are with all sinc rity to be honoured as the members of Christ c. If any denie this conclusion he is to be thought not a Christian but an Eunomian and Vigilantian c Ra●●l 6. c. 10. de S●●●rop●● The Councell of Trent also hath decreed that they are to be taken for damned which affirme how worship and honour is not to be given unto the Reliques of Saints d Conc. Trid. sess 25. decr de Invoc c. Of this preposterous devotion they have appointed a certaine and common service for the holy Crosse whereon Christ was hanged e Massa de S. Cruce Offi ium de S. Cruce they have made a feast for the speare and Nailes wherewith Christ was fastned to the Crosse f Be●-h●ve lib. ● cap. 3. they have canonized for a Saint the chaines which bound S. Peter g ●●racian dist 3● Nul ●olat To say nothing of the adoration they gave unto the Haire Milke Smocke of the blessed Virgin unto the Head Haire Thombe Coate of Iohn Baptist unto the breeches of Ioseph the sword and Handkerchiefe of Saint Paul the Keyes of Saint Peter and unto many other things which of modesty I will not mention but doe over-passe 5. Proposition Invocation of Saints is a fond thing not warranted by the holy Scriptures nor consonant but contrary unto the same The proofe from Gods Word THe Christian exercise of Prayer is a duty which may not be either s●curely omitted or vainely abused And though many things in prayer be necessarily to be observed yet a speciall point it is that in our Supplications and Prayers we doe call onely upon God For so to doe we are both commanded even by God himselfe a Call upon me in the time of trouble Psal 50.15 After this manner ●●ay Our Father which are in heaven c. Matth. 6.6 When ye pray 〈◊〉 Our Father 〈◊〉 are in hea●●n Luk. 11 2. and thereunto also allured by manifold as well promises of large blessings b Psal 50.15 Math. 7.11 Luk 11.12 18 7 8. Io●● 16.23 24. as by the examples of godly men in all ages Patriarks Abraham c Gen. 13.4 Isaac d Gen. 26.25 c. Iacob e Gen. 32.9 Prophets as Daniel f Dan 9.16 c Elias g 1 King 18.36.37 c. Ieremy h Ier. 14.7 c. Centurions i Act. 10.2 Publicans k Luke 18.13 Apostles as Paul l Act. 16 25. and through his Epi tles Peter m Acts 1 24. c. yea of all the Elect of God in this world n Luke 1.87 On the other side to pray unto any creature that is out of this world besides Iesus Christ there is in the Scripture neither Law to command nor promise of blessing nor any example of godly men or women to provoke Finally as all Gods people in the purer and former times have so in these dayes the Protestant Churches utterly condemne the invocating of or praying unto creatures whatsoever o Confe Helv. 1. ar 1. 2. c. 5. 23. Basil ar 10 Bohe c. 2. 17. Gal. ar 14. 24. Belg. ar 20. Au. ar 21. Wit c. 23. Suc. ar 11. 21. The adversaries unto this truth Therfore the Romish doctrine that Saints are to be prayed unto a Test Rhem. pag. 187. Orationem Dominicam fundimus Sanctis Censur a Colon. f. 208. and their daily praying as occasion serveth unto S. Agatha that have sore brests unto S. Benedict that either be or feare to be poisoned unto S. Clare for them that have sore eies S. Damian that be sick for health S. Erasmus for help in the intrals S. Feriol for Geese S. Giles for women that would have children S. Hubberts for dogges S. Iob for them which have the pox S. Katherine for knowledge S. Loys for horses S. Margaret for women in travaile S. Nicholas for little children S. Otilia for the head-ach S. Petronil for the Ague S. Quintin for the cough S. Ruffin for lunacy or madnes S. Sebastian for the plague S. Thomas Becket for sinners S. Valentine for the falling sicknesse S. Winefrid for virginity S.X. or Crosse for all things it is vaine not warrantable by Gods Word but altogether repugnant to the holy Scriptures The vanity and Idolatry of the Popish Invocation further demonstrated from that booke of theirs entituled Horae beatissima virginis c. Oremus Majestatem tuam Domine suppliciter exoramus ut sicut Ecclesiae tuae beatus Andreas Apostolus tuus extitit praedicator rector ita apud te sit pro nobis perpetuus intercessor per Dominum nostrum Iesum Christum Oremus Deus pro cujus Ecclesia gloriosus martyr Pontifex Thomas gladijs impiorum occubuit praesta quaesumus ut omnes qui ejus implorant auxilium piae petitionis ejus salutarem consequantur effectum per Dominum nostrum Versus Ora pro nobis beata Katherina Resp Vt digni efficiamur promissionibus Christi Versus Ora a
c. and to call the people to repentance so teacheth Barrow l Ba. disco p. 36. 5. Proposition They must not be silent who by office are bound to preach The proofe from Gods Word As publikely to preach before men are sent is a grievous fault so not to preach being sent is a great sinne Hereunto beare witnesse 1. Our Saviour Christ whose words are these Surely I must also preach the Kingdome of God for therefore am I sent a Luke 4.43 2. Peter and Iohn who being charged to speake no more in the name of Iesus said Wee cannot but speake that which we have heard and seene b Acts 4.17 c. 3. Saint Paul For he saith Necessity is laid upon me and woe is me if I preach not the Gospell c 1 Cor. 9.16 17. 4. The Apostles of Christ For though they were beaten for so doing yet ceased they not to teach and preach Iesus Christ d Acts 5.42 5. All the Churches of God which be purged from superstition and errors e Conf. Helv. 1. ar 25. 2. c. 8 9. Bohem. c. 9. Gal. ar 15. Aug. ar 7. Wit ar 20. Suev ar 13. Errors and adversaries unto this truth Then as in a glasse they may see their faults Who maintaine how there ought to be no publike preaching at all as doe the Anabaptists a Bullin cont Anabap. c. 12. Which deprave the office of preaching as doe the Libertines saying that preaching is none ordinary meanes to come unto the knowledge of the Word b Wilkins against the Fam. of Love ar 14. p. 66. and especially the Family of Love who tearme the publike preachers in derision Scripture-learned c Theoph. against Wilk Licentious scripture-learned d Pat. of the prof Temp. good thinkingwise e H. N pr●ph of the Sp. cap. 2. sect 7. Ceremoniall and letter-Doctors f ●am let to the B. of Roc. Teaching-masters g H. N. Spi● l. c 25 and further say It is a great presumption that any man out of the learnednesse of the letter taketh upon him to be a Teacher or Preacher Againe It becommeth not any man to busie himselfe about preaching of the Word so and more too the Family Which take upon them the office of publike preaching without performance of their duty either through ignorance that they cannot worldly employments that they may not negligence h Idem 1. ●●b c. 10. sect 15. 16. that they will not or feare of troubles that they dare not preach the Word of God Yet thinke wee not which our Sabbatarians let not to publish that Every Minister necessarily and under paine of damnation is to preach at least once every Sunday i D B doct of the Sabbath 2 book p. 174. and Vnlesse a Minister preach every Sunday he doth not hallow the Sabbath day in the least measure of that which the Lord requireth of us k Ibid. p. 277. 3 Proposition The Sacraments may not be administred in the Congregation but by a lawfull Minister The proofe from Gods Word IN the holy Scriptures we reade that the publike Ministers of the Word are to be Administers of the Sacraments For both our Saviour Christ commanded his Disciples as to preach so to baptize a Matth 28.19 and celebrate the Supper of the Lord b Luke 22 1● 1 Cor. 11.24 25. and the Apostles and other Ministers in the purest times whom the godly Ministers and Preachers in these dayes doe succeed not onely did preach but also baptize c Acts 2 3● 41 8 12 13 40.41.16.32 33. John 1.25 1 Cor. 1 1● 16. and minister the Lords Supper d Acts 20.7 1 Cor 10. ●6 And hereunto doe the Churches of God subscribe e Conf. Heb. 2. c. 18 Bohem. c. 9. Gal. ar 2.5 31. Aug. ar 5. Wittem ar 20. Suev ar 13. In saying that none may administer the Sacraments in the Congregation afore he be lawfully called and sent thereunto we thinke not as some doe that the very being of the Sacraments dependeth upon this point viz. whether the Baptizer or giver of the Bread and Wine be a Minister or no. Neither is it the meaning of this article that privately in houses either lawfull Ministers upon just occasion may not or others not of the Ministery upon any occasion in the peace of the Church may administer the Sacraments The aduersaries vnto this truth T. C. 1 rep p. 113. Hereby we declare our selves not to favour the opinion that publikely Some may minister the Sacraments which are not meerely and full Ministers of the Word and Sacraments and so thinke both the Anabaptists among whom their King when it was after Supper tooke bread and reaching it among the Communicants did say Take eate and shew forth the Lords death their Queene also reaching the Cup said Drinke ye and shew forth the Lords death a Sucius com p 237. and the Presbyterians at Geneva where the Elder a Lay-man ministreth the Cup ordinarily at the Communion b Survay of dis c. 15 out of the Geneva lawes Some Ministers and namely the Puritane Doctors may not minister the Sacraments For say the disciplinarians the office of Doctors is onely to teach true doctrine c Lear. disc p. 17. but in our Church of England the Doctor encroacheth upon the office of the Pastor For both indifferently doe teach exhort and minister the Sacraments d Fru● Ser. on Rom. 12. p. 40 None though a lawfull Minister may administer the Sacraments which either is no Preacher e The administration of the Sacraments ought to be committed to none but such as are preachers of the Word Lear. disc p. 60. It is sacriledge to separate the Word viz. Preaching from the Sacraments Ibid. The preaching of the Word is the life of the Sacraments T. C. 1. rep p. 125. or when he ministreth them doth not preach f The unchangeable lawes of God he saith T.C. that none minister the Sacraments which doe not preach T.C. 1. repl p. 104 sect 3. Where there is no Preacher o● the Word there ought to be no minister of the Sacraments Lear disc p. 62. which be the errors of the Disciplinarians or Puritanes Publikely and privately too the Sacraments of Baptisme may be administred by any man yea by women if necessitie doe urge So hold the Papists For saith Iavell g Iavel Psal Ch. par fol. 559. in the time of necessity the minister of Baptisme is every man both male and female A woman be she young or old sacred or wicked Every male that hath his wits and is neither dumbe nor so drunken but that he can utter the words as well Pagan Infidel and heretike the bad as the good the Schismatike as the Catholike may baptize And yet usually in the civill warres both in France and in Netherland the Papists did rebaptize such children as of the Protestant not lay-men but ministers
Sacraments ordained of Christ he badges or tokens of our profession which be Christians The proofe from Gods Word THe Sacraments are badges or tokens both of Christians and of Christianity Of Christians For by them are visibly discerned the faithfull from Pagans and Christians from the Iewes Turks and all prophane Atheists Of Christianity For as Circumcision in the old Law was a token how the corrupt and carnall affections of the minde should be subdued and that the Lord required not so much an outward of the body as an inward circumcision of the heart a Deut. 18.16 39 6. Jer. 4.4 Acts 7.51 ●●●m 12.28 Phil. 3.3 Col. ● 11 so Baptisme telleth us that being once dead unto sinne wee are to live unto righteousnesse that all we that have been baptized unto Iesus Christ have been baptized unto his death c. and must walke in newnesse of life c b Rom 5.3 c. for wee have put on Christ c Gal. 3.26 by Baptisme And as the Paschall Lambe was to the Iewes a token that the flight of sinne should alwayes bee fresh in memory and that it should be celebrated not with the old Leaven neither in the Leaven of maliciousnesse but with the unleavened bread of sincerity and truth d 1 Cor 5.8 so the participation of one Loafe and of one Cup in the Lord his Supper doth commend unto our consideration a sweet concord a brotherly unanimity and a constant continuance in the true worship of God without favouring of Idolatry in any respect e 1 Cor 107. This doe the godly in any their Churches and throughout the world both teach and testifie f Confes Hel. 1 c. 29. 2. ar 20. Aug. ar 13. S●x ar 12. The adversaries unto this truth Vngodly therefore and in a cursed state are they which equall other things with the Sacraments to discerne Christians from Pagans So the Iacobites imprint the signe of the Crosse on their armes foreheads c. to be knowne for Christians a Magdeburg ec hist Con. 12 c. 3. which contemne the Sacraments as of none account So doe the Anabaptists b Dulling con Anab l 2. c. 4. Althamar concil Lo. pag. lo. 191. There be saith D. Saravia which hold how the Sacraments were to bee administred onely at the first planting of the Church by the Apostles and Evangelists but doe not appertaine unto us in these dayes c D. Saravia def tra de divers min grad cap. 14. It was also one of Matthew Hamants heresies that the Sacraments are not necessary in the Church of God d Holinsh chr fol. 1299. Which think the Sacraments are but onely civill and ceremoniall badges of an outward Church such generally be all Atheists and hypocrites particularly the Messalians e Theodor. lib. c. 9. c. 11. and Family of Love who thinke that for obedience sake to Magistrates the Sacraments are to be received f Patterne of the pref Tem. but are to none effect to the perfect ones in the Family g R●msels confess 2. Proposition The Sacraments be certaine sure witnesses and effectuall signes of Grace and God his good will towards us The proofe from Gods Word INfinitely doth God declare his unspeakeable and incomprehensible good will to man-ward yet in these dayes by none outward things more notably and effectually than by the Sacraments For Of Baptisme saith Christ He that beleeveth and is baptized shall be saved a Mark 16.16 and Peter Amend your lives and be baptized every one c. for the remission of sins b Acts 2.38 and Paul Husbands love your wives even as Christ loved the Church and gave himselfe for it that he might sanctifie it and cleanse it by the washing of water through the Word c c Eph. 5.25 And of the Lords Supper saith our Saviour Christ touching the Bread This is my body which is given d Luke 22.19 and broken for you e 1 Cor. 11.24 and of the Cup This is my blood of the New Testament that is shed for many for the remission of sinnes f Mark 26.28 Luke 22.20 This truth doe the purer Churches of these dayes every where acknowledge g Confes Helv. 1. ar 20. 22. 2 c. 19 20 21. Bohe. c 11. 12 13. Gal ar 34 38. Belgr ● 33. 35. August ar 9. 13. Witt. ar 10 19. Suev ar 16. 18. The adversaries unto this truth Contrary hereunto the Papists erroneously doe hold that The Sacraments of the new Law do conferre grace ex opere operato a Concil Trid sess 7 can 8. The Sacraments of the Old and New Testament in this do differ for that the Sacraments of the Old Testament did onely shadow forth salvation but the Sacraments of the new did conferre and work salvation b Concil Flo● and doe justifie not onely signifie God his good will toward us by reason of the worke done which is the outward Sacraments c Bonavent lib. 4. 〈◊〉 1 〈◊〉 5. Gab. Biel. l. 4. di●t 1 p. 3. 3. Proposition By the Sacraments God doth quicken strengthen and confirme our faith in him The proofe from Gods Word BE baptized every one of you in the Name of Iesus Christ for the remission of your sinnes and yee shall receive the gift of the holy Ghost saith S. Peter a Acts 2.38 Christ gave himselfe for the Church that hee might sanctifie it and cleanse it by the washing of water through the Word b Eph. 5.25 26. The cup of blessing which we blesse is it not the communion of the bloud of Christ The bread which we breake is it not the communion of the body of Christ saith Saint Paul c 1 Cor. 10.19 The same is affirmed by the reformed Churches d Conf. Helv 1. ar 21. 2. c. 10. 20 21. ar 6. Bohem. c. 17. 12. Gal. ar 34. Belg. ar 33 34. Aug. ar 13. Saxon. ar 13. Suc. c. 17. Howbeit this faith is not necessarily tyed unto the visible signes and Sacraments For Without the Sacraments many have lived and dyed who pleased God and are no doubt saved either in respect of their owne faith as we are to thinke of all the godly both men who were borne and dyed afore the institution of Circumcision in the wildernesse and in the time of grace c. yet by some extremitie could not receive the Seale of the covenant and women who afore and under the Law for many yeares were partakers for no Sacrament and never of one Sacrament or that they be heires of the promise Some have faith for they receive any of the Sacraments So had Abraham e Rom. 49. ●0 the Iewes unto whom Peter preached f Acts 2 41. the Samaritanes g Acts 8.12 the Church h Acts 8.37 Cornelius the Centurion and have the godly of discretion wheresoever not yet baptized i Acts 10.42 Some neither afore nor at the instant nor yet
afterward though daily they receive the Sacraments will have faith such are like unto Iudas k Ioh 12.26 Ananias and Sapphira l Acts 5. Simon Magus m Acts 1 13. the old Israelites n 1 Cor 10 5. and the wicked Corinthians o 1 Cor. 11 37. In some the Sacraments doe effectually work in processe of time by the helpe of Gods Word read or preached which engendreth faith p Rom. 10 1● such is the estate principally of Infants elected unto life and salvation and increasing in yeares The adversaries unto this truth Therefore doe they erre which teach or hold that They never goe to heaven which die without the Seales of the covenant so thinke the Papists of infants which dye unbaptized a Iavel Phil. Contract 4. de relicit Chr c. 3 Tigner institu● Theol. c. 16. sect 4 c. Spec peregr quae●t doc 1. c. 3 q. 5. They are damned though they receive the Sacraments that will not receive them after the received and appointed manner of the Church of Rome b Concil Trid. sess 7. c. 13. There is no way of salvation but by faith c Lear disc hereby excluding infinite soules from the kingdome of heaven which depart from this world before they doe beleeve None beleeve but such as are baptized say the Papists d Test Rhem. an Gal. 5.27 as heare the Word of God preached say the Puritanes e Lear. ds c. p. 3. The Sacraments give grace ex opere operato f Test Rhem. an mar p. 357. and bring faith ex opere operato g Ibid. an mar p. 391. The Sacrament of Baptisme is the cause of the salvation of Infants h Ibid an 1. Pet. ● 21 4 Proposition Christ hath ordained but two Sacraments in his Gospel The proofe from Gods Word A Sacrament according to the etymologie of the word as the Schoolemen doe write is a signe of an holy thing which being true then have there bin and still are by so many above either two or seven Sacraments as there be and have beene above two or seven things which are signes of sacred and holy things But according to the nature thereof a Sacrament is a covenant of God his favour to man-ward confirmed by some outward signe or Seale instituted by himselfe which also hath been sometimes speciall either to some men and that extraordinarily by things naturall sometimes as the tree of Life was to Adam a G●n 2.3 and the Rainbow to Noah b Gen. 9.9 13. and sometimes by things supernaturall as the smoaking furnace was to Abraham c Gen. 15.17 18. the Fleece of wooll to Gedeon d Iudg 6.37 and the Diall to Ezeckiah e 2 King 20 7.11 Isa 38.8 or to some Nation as the Sacrifices Circumcision and the Paschall Lambe was to the Iewes And sometimes generall to the whole Church Militant and ordinary as in the time of the Gospel And then a Sacrament is defined to be a ceremony ordained immediately by Christ himselfe who by some earthly and outward element doth promise everlasting favour and felicitie to such as with true faith and repentance doe receive the same And such Sacraments in the New Testament we finde only to be Baptisme f Matth. 18.19 Mark 16.16 ● Ioh. 3.5 Acts 2.38 and the Lords Supper g Luke 22.19 Joh. 6.53 1 Cor. 11.24 This is the judgement also of the Churches Protestant h Conf. Helv. 1. ar 20. 2. c. 19 Basil ar 5. sect 2. Gal. ar 35. Belg ar 33. Saxon ar 12. Suev ar 16. Errors and adversaries unto this truth In a contrary opinion are divers and namely The Iewes and Turks for they deny all the Sacraments of the Church as we doe hold them The Eutychites who say that prayer onely and not the Sacraments are to be used a Theodoret. The Schwenkfeldians who contemne not onely the word preached but the Sacraments also as superfluous depending wholly upon revelations The Banisterians who thinke there will be a time and that in this world when we shall need no Sacraments b Vnfold of untruths The Papists who publish That wee leave out no lesse then sixe of the seven Sacraments c How let reas 7. How there be seven Sacraments of the New Testament d Catech. Canis Vaux That he is accursed that shall say there be either more or fewer then seven Sacraments or that any of them is not verily and properly a sacrament or that they be not all seven instituted of Christ himselfe e Test Rhem. an Jam 4.24 Concil Trid. sess cap. 1. That there are seven Sacraments whereof two are voluntary and at the discretion of men to be taken or not as Matrimony and holy Orders and five are necessary and must be taken and of these five three to wit Baptisme Confirmation and Orders are but once to be taken because they imprint an indelible Character in the soule of the receivers and foure be reiterable and may often be received as the Sacrament Eucharisticall Matrimony Penance and extreme Vnction because at their first ministration they leave in the soule no indelible Character f Stella Cleticorum 5. Proposition Confirmation is no Sacrament Touching Confirmation the sentence and judgement of the true Church is that rightly used as it was in the Primitive Chured it is no Sacrament but a part of Christian discipline profitable for the whole Church of God For the ancient Confirmation was nothing else then an examination of such as in their infancie had received the Sacrament of Baptisme and were then being of good discretion able to yeeld an account of their beliefe and to testifie with their own mouthes what their Sureties in their names had promised at their Baptisme which confession being made and a promise of perseverance in the Faith by them given the Bishop by sound doctrine gave advice and godly exhortations confirmed them in that good profession and laying his hands upon them prayed for the encrease of Gods gifts and graces in their minds The Popish confirmation all Churches of God with us utterly doe dislike as no Sacrament at all instituted by Christ a Conf. Saxon. ar 16. Wittem c. 11. See the Prop. immediately precedent Errors and adversaries of this truth Contrariwise the Synagogue of Rome teacheth that Confirmation is a Sacrament whereby the grace that was given in Baptisme is confirmed and made strong by the seven gifts of of the holy Ghost Of which their Confirmation they give us foure things principally to observe viz. 1. The substance or matter which is holy Chrisme confect as they say and made of Oyle olive and Balme consecrated by a Bishop See Canis catech chap. 4 2. The forme and manner of ministring the same consisting of the words of the Bishop which are I signe thee with the signe of the Crosse and confirme thee with the Chrisme of salvation in the name of
the Father c. and of the actions both of a Godfather or Godmother already confirmed holding up the childe to the Bishop and of the Bishop crossing him which is to be confirmed on the forehead with oyle and next striking the party confirmed on the eare 3. The minister who must be a Bishop and none inferiour Minister a Nunquam erit Christianus nisi in Confirmatione Episcopali fuerit confirmatus De consecra dist 5. cap. Jejuru 4. The effect or effects rather For by Confirmation they say that Sinnes are pardoned and remitted The grace of Baptisme is made perfect Such become men in Christ who afore were children Grace is given boldly to confesse the name of Christ and all things belonging to a Christian man The holy Ghost is given to the full And perfect strength of the minde is attained But in so teaching dangerous and very damnable doctrine doe they deliver For It is an error that confirmation is a Sacrament because it hath no institution from God which is necessary to all every sacrament inasmuch as a sacrament cannot be ordained but by God onely even as the Papists themselves doe confesse b Catech. Trid. tit de Confit To say that Popish confirmation is grounded upon Gods word is to speake foule untruths For in the Scripture there is mention neither of the matter that it must be Chrisme and that made of oyle olive and Balme and the same consecrated of a Bishop nor of the forme that either a Bishop must signe the party to be baptized with the signe of the Crosse or that a Godfather c. must be thereat nor of the Minister that of necessity he must be a Bishop that is to confirme nor of the effects that thereby sins are pardoned and released and Baptisme consummated and made perfect It is an error to say there is any other oyntment given to the strengthening of the Church Militant besides the Holy Ghost Ier. 2.27 It is an error to maintaine that any Bishop can give heavenly graces to any creature It is an error to ascribe salvation unto Chrisme and not only unto Christ It savoureth of Donatisme to measure the dignity of the Sacraments by the worthinesse of the Ministers It is an error to say that men cannot be perfect Christians without Popish Confirmation It is an error that by confirmation the holy Ghost is given to the full 6. Proposition Penance is no Sacrament Touching penance the Papists doe publish foure things to be noted whereof none of them is truely grounded upon the Word of God Canis Catec cap. 4. Catec Trid. de poen First the matter which they doe say is partly the actions of the person penitent which are sufficient contrition of his heart perfect confession of all his sinnes and that in particular with all the circumstances as of time place c. and satisfaction by deeds which maketh an amends for all his offences and partly the absolution of the Priest Secondly the Forme which in the Priest is the words of Absolution which he uttereth over the sinner in the person penitent it is his kneeling downe at the Priests feet his making the signe of the Crosse upon his brest and his saying Benedicite to his ghostly father The Priest say they beareth the person of God and is the lawfull iudge over the penitent and may both absolve from the guilt of sinne and inflict a punishment according to the offence Thirdly the minister who ordinarily is the Curate of every parish but extraordinarily and in the time of great necssitie or by licence is any Priest And yet some sinnes are so grievous as none may absolve but either the Bishop or his Penitentiary as the crime of Incest breaking of vowes Church-robbing Heresie adultery and some againe none remit or pardon but the Pope onely or his Legate as burning of Churches violent striking a Priest counterfeiting of the Popes Bulles c. Fourthly and last of all the effect Hereby they say the penitent sinner is purged absolved made as cleane from all sinne as when he was newly baptized and besides enriched with spirituall gift and graces The consideration hereof hath mooved besides the Church of England all other Churches reformed to shew their detestation of this new Sacrament as having no warrant from Gods Word a Conf. Helv. 1. c. 14. 19. Bohe. c. 4. August ar 3. 11 12. Saxon. ar 16. 17. Witte ar 13. 15. Suc. 28. The blasphemies are outragious and the errors many and monstrous comprised in this doctrine of Popish penance For neither can the matter of this their Sacrament nor the forme nor the minister nor the effect be drawne from the Word of God They say penance is a sacrament and yet can they shew no element it hath to make it a sacrament Their Contrition is against the truth For no man is or can be sufficiently contrite for his sinnes To confesse all sinnes and that one after another with all circumstances unto a Priest as it is impossible so it is never enjoyned by God nor hath ever beene practised by any of Gods Saints That any man in any measure can satisfie for his sinnes it is blasphemy to say and against the merits of Christ Test Rhem. in Colos 1.26 And yet doe the Papists teach it as also that one man may satisfie for another An untruth is it that any Priest Bishop or Pope hath power at his will to forgive sinnes or can enjoyne any punishment that can make an amends unto God for the least offence If penance purge men and make them cleane from all sin then is there a time and that very often in this life when men in this life be perfect which tendeth greatly to the error of the Catharans Donatists and Pelagians The doctrine of the Papists that such persons as willingly depart out of this world without their Shrift are damned is damnable doctrine and to be eschewed and yet it is dispersed every where in their bookes * Vaux catec c. 4. Catech. Trid. de poenit Test Rhem. annot Matth. 12.31 Hils quartron 13. reas p. 65. Pel. de Seto meth confess par 4. p. 156. a. 7. Proposition Orders is no Sacrament The Churches of England and of other places reformed doe acknowledge an order of making ministers in the Church of God where all things are to be done by order But that Order is a Sacrament none but disordered Papists will say and yet they observe none order in speaking of the same For among them Canis Catec Some doe make seven orders whereof some they call inferior and some superior the inferior be the orders first of Porters whose office is to keepe the doore to expell the wicked and to let in the faithfull next Exorcists or Conjurers which have power to expell the devils thirdly Lectors or Readers who are to reade Lessons and bookes in the Church and fourthly Acolytes or Candlebearers whose office is to
grace is universall and belongeth unto all so well young as old 2. Baptisme is unto us as Circumcision was unto the Iews But the Infants of the Iewes were circumcised Therefore the children of Christians are to be baptized 3. Children belong unto the Kingdome of Heaven a Matth. 13.14 and are in the covenant therefore the signe of the covenant is not to be denyed them 4. Christ gave in commandement that all should be baptized b Matth. 28.19 therefore young children are not to be exempted 5. Christ hath shed his blood aswell for the washing away the sinnes of children as of the elder sort Therefore it is very necessary that they should be partakers of the Sacrament thereof All Christian Churches allow of the Baptisme of Infants c Conf. Helv. 1 ar 21. 2. c. 20. ar 35. Belg. ar 34. Aug. ar 13. Sax. ar 13. Wit c. 10. Suc. cap. 17. The adversaries unto this truth The premises declare that They slander us which say that all Protestants deny the Baptisme of children to be necessary and this is Runagate Hils report a Hils quart reas 14. They erre which oppugne this truth as doe many persons but not after one and the same sort For Some utterly deny that Infants or young children are to be baptized so did the Pelagians b D. August de Ver. Apo. se de Bap par the Heracleans and the Henricians c Mag. eccles hist con 12. c. 5. and so doe the Anabaptists whereof said some how baptisme is the invention of Pope Nicholas and therefore naught d Bullin contra Anbap l. 1. others that baptisme is of the devill So thought Melchior Hoffeman e Ibid. l. 2 c. 13. so also doe the Swermerians a sect among the said Anabaptists f Althemar lo. pug co 131. the Servetians g Epi. minist Bern. in Cal epist fol. 118. and the Family of Love which doth hold that none should be baptized untill he be thirtie yeares old h Display H. 7. a. Others refuse to baptize not all but some Infants So denied is baptisme by the Barrowists unto the seed of whoores and witches i Bar. disc p. 9. by the Brownists unto the children of open sinners k Giffords reply by the Disciplinarians unto their children which subject not themselves as Dud. Fenner saith unto the discipline of the Church or obey not the Presbyteriall decre●● l Sacramentorum autem primum pro natura sua administrari debet vel infantibus vel adultis Infantibus autem i●s qui sunt liberi corum qui sunt intra Intra autem qui ecclesiae 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sc subii civat D. Fenner 5. Theol. cap. ult Others allow the Baptisme of Infants yet thinke those Infants not lawfully baptized which are baptized either by the now ministers of the Church of England as the Brownists doe thinke m R.A. confut of Brow p. 113. or by Protestant ministers as the Papists are of minde witnesse their rebaptizing of infants in France and in Netherland n See afore ar 25. p. 8. or by unpreaching ministers as the disciplinarian Puritanes doe hold o See ar 26. pr. 1. Declarent ubinam legerint tam necessario esse copulandam coelestis verbi praedicationem cum administratione Sacramenti ut nisi concio habeatur renascentium lavacro infans aspergi non possit And others are of opinion that none are to be baptized which beleeve not first Hence the Anabaptists Infants beleeve not therefore be not to be baptized Hence the Lutherans Infants doe beleeve p Querim ec p. 80. Hessius de 600. ar Pontif. lo. 16. Therefore to be baptized 28. Article Of the Supper of the Lord. 1 The Supper of the Lord is not onely a signe of the love that Christians ought to have among themselves one to another 2 but rather it is a Sacrament of our redemption by Christs death Insomuch that to such as worthily and with faith receive the same the bread which we breake is partaking of the Body of Christ and likewise the Cup of blessing is a partaking of the bloud of Christ 3 transubstantiation or the change of the substance of bread and wine in the Supper of the Lord cannot be proved by holy writ but is repugnant to the plaine words of Scripture overthroweth the nature of a Sacrament and hath given occasion to many superstitions 4 The Body of Christ in given and taken and eaten in the Supper onely after an heavenly and spirituall manner and the mean whereby the Body of Christ is received and eaten in the Supper is faith The Sacraments of the Lords Supper were not by Christs ordinance reserved carried about carried about lifted up or worshipped The Propositions 1. The Supper of the Lord is a signe of the love that Christians ought to have among themselves 2. The Lords Supper is a Sacrament of our Redemption by Christs death and to them which receive the same worthily by faith a partaking of the body and blood of Christ 3. The Bread and Wine in the Lords Supper be not changed into another substance 4. The Body of Christ is given taken and eaten after an heavenly and spirituall not after a carnall sort 5. To reserve carry about lift up or worship the Sacrament of the Lords Supper is contrary to the Ordinance of Christ 1. Proposition The Supper of the Lord is a signe of the love that Christians ought to have among themselves The proofe from Gods Word THE Supper of the Lord is a token of the love that Christians ought to have among themselves For which cause it is called the Lords Table a 1 Cor. 10.11 the Lords Supper b 1 Cor. 11.10 a Communion of the Body of Christ and they that partake thereof though they be many yet are but one bread and one body c 1 Cor. 10.16 17. This is the doctrine of all Christian Churches The errors and adversaries unto this truth d Conf. Helv. 2. cap. 21. Basil ar 6. Bohem. c. 13. Belg. ar 35 Saxon. ar 14. Suc. c. 18. So thinke not those men who either with heretike Hamant deny the use of the Lords Supper to be necessary a Hol. chron fol 1299. or with the Rhemists raile on it and the Protestants that use the same calling it a prophane and detestable table the Cup of divels b Test Rhem. an 1 Cor. 10.21 2. Proposition The Sacraments of the Lords Supper is a Sacrament of our redemption by Christs death and to them which receive the same worthily by Faith a partaking of the body and blood of Christ The proofe from Gods Word THE Sacrament of the Lords Supper is to all Christians a Sacrament of our redemption by Iesus Christ For This is my blood of the New Testament which is shed for many for the remission of sinnes a Matt. 26 28. this is my body which is given for you c.