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A13971 The true Catholique formed according to the truth of the Scriptures, and the shape of the ancient fathers, and best sort of the latter Catholiques, which seeme to fauour the Church of Rome : the contents vvhereof are to be seene in the page following. Trigge, Francis, 1547?-1606. 1602 (1602) STC 24282; ESTC S536 568,047 636

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what doe we answere to this We thinke it not meete that that manner of speech which hath obtained the name of a custome among them should be accounted for a rule and canon of true doctrine Let vs both stand to the iudgement of the holy scriptures inspired by God and amongst whome are found opinions agreeing to the diuine Oracles let the sentence of truth bee pronounced on their side What can be plainer then this Custome must not be the canon and rule of truth in doctrine but Gods worde and they which haue that on their side let them haue the victorie The like offer now we make to the Pa●●●ts But that booke of S. Basill is of Erasmus suspected to be forged and that not without iust cause as the most Reuerend Father in God the L. Byshop of Winchester in his booke called The difference betweene Christian subiection and vnchristian rebellion hath verie learnedly prooued Of Christes doctrine Ferus writes thus Fer. de pass part 2. and he quite ouerthrowes the verie ground of Traditions Christ proueth saieth he the truth of his doctrine by two arguments First that he neuer taught secretly but openly For he that doth euill hateth the light but he that doth the truth comes to the light Secondly he giues his hearers leaue to iudge I saith he spake openly in the world in secret I spake nothing that I would haue kept secret or not come to light yea he plainly cōmanded his Apostles That which I tell you in darknes preach you in the light He told his Disciples many things alone but for no other cause then that others were not able to comprehende them For whatsoeuer Christ hath taught he will haue it published and made knowne to all least any should excuse himselfe And hereof Saint Paul saith If our Gospell be hidde it is hidde in those that perish For in truth Christ speakes openly in the world euen now wisedome cries in the streets Therefore no man can iustly excuse himselfe of ignorance And this also is most true that he taught in the Synagogues and Temple of the Iewes where all were wont to assemble themselues yea not onely in the Temple and in their Synagogues but in ships and hilles Luke 6. and plaine fields That is publikely where men most commonly mette together therfore they can haue no excuse Therefore at another time he said vnto them If I had not comed and spoken vnto them they had had no sinne c. This quite ouerthrowes the Popes Religion Christ will haue his doctrine knowne to all and the refore he frequented common places They goe about to kéepe it in secret and thinke it not conuenient that all shoulde know it Againe he deliuered all things openly and nothing by tradition secretly Lib. 5. Eccles Hist ca. 2.4 Eusebius also of Traditions writes thus Not onely saith hee of the day of Easter is the controuersie but also of the manner of fasting for some thinke that the fast ought to be kept but one day some other but two daies other moe daies some fortie daies so that counting the howres of the day and night together they make a day which varietie of obseruations began not in our times but long before vs of them as I suppose who holding not surely that which was by tradition deliuered in the beginning haue eyther by their negligence or vnskilfulnesse afterward falne into another custome Héere we may learne that traditions are no safe and sure kéepers of trueth as the papists would make vs beleeue How soone had they lost the true tradition of fasting which the Apostles practised euen in Eusebius daies And shall wee nowe in the ende of the worlde grounde our faithes vpon traditions Ier. de ord Eccle part 3. c. 9. Saint Ierome also concerning the authoritie of Bishoppes and Elders in the Church writes thus If any of vs could know the custome of the time past I would proue that which I say to haue beene obserued euer and to haue beene obserued when as the Apostles preached in the Church And after by the spite of certaine some things were corrupted and some things were presumed Héere Ierome affirmes that what was done in the Apostles times he could not then certainly learne much lesse we nowe Such an vncertaine rule in matters of faith tradition is And Austen also of Antichrist writes thus But what is the cause of the delaie that he may be reuealed in his time you do know De ciu del lib. 20. ca. 19. that which he said that they knew he would not vtter And therefore we which know not which they knew desire to come to the knowledge of that which the Apostle ment with great labour neither can we attaine vnto it because that those things which he added haue made the sense also more obscure for what meanes this nowe the mysterie of iniquitie worketh let him onely that now holdeth holde till he be taken out of the waie and then that wicked one shall be reuealed I plainely heere confesse my selfe to be ignorant what he hath said yet I will not keepe close the suspitions and surmises of men which I haue read or heard concerning this matter In Austens daies that tradition which was deliuered by saint Paul to the Thessalonians concerning Antichrist a most great and weightie matter was forgotten and doe we thinke that till our daies the Church hath kept traditions of lighter matters inuiolably Irenaeus to Florinus an heretike writes thus I saw thee Euseb lib. 5. Eccle. hi. ca. 19. when as yet being but a childe I was with Policarpe in Asia who then didst verie well whilest as yet thou remainedst within the Emperours palace and didst studie to please Policarpe For I remember farre better the things which were done then then they which are done now because those things we learne whē we are children grow vp in vs with our minde and doe cleaue fast vnto it Wherefore also I can tell thee the place wherein Policarpe did sit when as he did dispute and also his manner of going his countenance the maner of all his life and also his apparell and also his sermons and discourses he made to the people and also howe he liued with Iohn and how he was wont also to tell of others which had seen the Lord and also how he remembred all the words which the Lord spake which he had heard of them and of his miracles and doctrine and yet notwithstanding he reported all these agreeing to the scriptures the which things I then of the mercie of God which he vouchsafed to bestow vpon me hearing attentiuely and diligently did write not in papers but in my heart and which thinges by the grace of God I yet keepe faithfully and doe as it were chew them ouer againe with my selfe without ceasing I take God to witnesse and in his sight I affirme vnto thee that if that blessed Apostolical man Policarpe had heard any such matter as thou
them plainelie who is this Sunne not the Pope and his Cardinalles and prelates but that great light-bringer Iesus Christ who lighteneth euery man that comes into the world Ioh. 1.9 And dare they abridge the beames of this Sunne Dare they measure his merites dare they pinch his power O blasphemous doctrine Doth not the Pope herein declare plainlie who he is that is that starre that fell from heauen and hath striken the third part of the sun who hath done this but he Ioh. 17.19 Hath not Christ alone himselfe wholie and sufficientlie redéemed vs Iesus Christ did not onely sanctifie himselfe for vs that we might be freed from sinne and cleansed from our faults but he also suffered for vs that we might also be acquited from punishment And therefore Esay saieth verie excellently The chastisement of our peace was vpon him Esay 55.3 And our Sauiour himselfe saith vpon the Crosse Iohn 19.20 It is finished No doubt meaning that great worke of our redemption It was the last word he spake and shall we not beléeue him And Saint Peter saith that wee were not in part but wholie redeemed not with gold or siluer but with the precious bloud of Iesus Christ 1. Pet. 1.18.19 20. And this Granatensis also affirmes speaking of Christ when as he did sweate water and bloud Medit. vitae Christi 22. Is not thine anger appeased O holy Father with this so miserable a spectacle of thy son Behold what he suffers which neuer deserued any euill he hath satisfied thee for our sinnes he hath paid for our redemption a most excellent price For one droppe of this most holy sweat is more precious and of more valew then all the treasures in the world Thus farre Granatensis What shall we thinke then of his heart bloud shed for vs vpon the Crosse And therefore Peter saith 1. Pet. 2.24 By his stripes our woundes were not onely bound vp and now brought to some good perfection that after we our selues might heale them as the Papists teach but they were perfectlie healed And Dauid also prophesying of Christs passion Psal 130.67 faith Let Israell waite on the Lord for with the Lord is mercie Iohn 10.10 and with him is plenteous redemption and he shall redeeme Israell from all his sinnes And the same also our Sauiour testifieth of himselfe That he is comen that they might haue life and that they might haue it more abundantly There is nothing remaining to our saluation it is abundantly accomplished that which remaines is to our conformation Rom. 8.29 We must be like fashioned to the Image of Iesu Christ No doubt they which denie this abundance of Christs redemption which was the end of his comming as he himselfe here witnesseth denie that he is comen And therefore we maie sée here as in a glasse what is that spirite of Antichrist 1. Iohn 4.3 that shall denie Iesus Christ to be comen in the flesh Surely euen they who although they confesse he be comen to giue life yet shall denie that he is comen to giue it abundantlie He is comen as himselfe witnesseth that we might haue life and that abundantly Let vs marke this well and let vs take heede least by pinching his merites that we denie not that hee is comen Saint Paul himselfe taketh awaie all parts of iustification from man I knowe nothing by my selfe saith he 1. Cor. 4.4 yet am I not hereby iustified but he that iudgeth me is the Lord. As though he should saie with Dauid Although as concerning this my ministerie I know nothing to accuse my selfe of Act. 20.26.27 I haue declared all the counsels of God c. yet there are secret sinnes which man cannot espie from which Dauid praieth to be cleansed Psal 19.12 and therfore no man can iustifie himselfe no not the holiest man in the world It is God that iudgeth And after he accompts his stricte kinde of life wherein he liued euen a Pharisée and his integritie of life among all men but euen as doung Philip. 3.5.8 that he might bee found in Christ Iesus not hauing his owne righteousnesse which is of the law but that which is through the faith of Christ euen the righteousnesse which is of God through faith He repeates twise wherein true righteousnesse consisteth euen through faith in Christ If Saint Paul accompted his owne righteousnesse but as doung in Gods sight and all the good workes he had done and durst not trust in them what shall we accompt of the merits of Friers and such others Can they profit to the saluation of others Shall we accompt them as treasures of the Church Paul accompted not so of his workes as here we maie learne of him Matth. 25.4 and shall we accompt better of our owne workes or of the workes of any others The wise virgins also teach all Gods Saints this lesson They plainly confesse that they were afraid least they had not oyle enough for themselues and therefore they would impart none thereof to others and shall wee accompt our selues more rich then they Surely then we shall shew our selues to be foolish and not wise virgins And no doubt such wise virgins are all Gods Saints and yet Poligranes will make them to haue merites enow not onely to serue their owne turnes but also to be laide vp in the treasure of the Church to profit others and that for others also they wrought their workes All Christs seruants must say Luke 17.10 that they are vnprofitable seruants when as they shall haue done all things that are commanded them which who is able to doe if they were able to doe all Gods commandements yet euen then they must saie and confesse and that not with mouth onely but with their hearts also that they are vnprofitable seruants much more then now they must confesse and acknowledge this when as they are not able to doe the least part of those things which are commanded them and when as those things also which they doe they do verie vnperfectly Where are then those workes which they haue done for others where is that wages of desert which other Papists teach An vnprofitable seruant can challenge no wages at all much lesse of due desert Nay our Sauiour in that place teacheth all his what accompt to make of their workes Say saith hee wee haue done but that which was our duety to haue done This our Sauiour teacheth all Christians to saie and beléeue and shall we not obey him All Christians workes they are but dueties they are no merites or deserts they are rewarded of mercie and not of merit Luk. 12.33 of promise and not of performance They are laide vp for themselues as treasures in heauen and not as the Papistes teach in the Popes treasurie here on earth to profit others But let vs consider what other sounder Catholiques then Poligranes hath written of Christs redemption Gagneius expounds that place of Saint
For the word of God is the sword of God whereof saint Paul speakes to the Ephesians Take vnto you the Sword of the Spirite which is the word of God c. Thus farre Pintus The scriptures are most pure gold and shall wée not earnestly labour for them They are our fathers will and testament and shall wée not reade them They are the onelie sword to haue in our hands against the world the flesh and the diuell our most deadlie enemies and shall wée goe vnarmed amongst so manie and so cruell enemies Or shall Priests onelie haue this sword as the Papists teach and not Laie men As though these enemies onelie assaulted them Granatensis also takes awaie Maister Staphilus his obiection Lib. 1. de ora● med cap. 1. Thou wilt say peraduenture sayeth hee that this exercise of praying and meditating of the holy Scriptures belongs onely to religious men and to Priests and not to men that are occupied about worldly businesses It is true sayeth hee that that belongs chiefly vnto them by reason of their estate and office yet the men of the world cannot be excused if they haue not also a certaine manner of prayer although they be not in that degree of perfection which the other be in if so be that they desire euer to liue in the feate of God and not to sinne mortally For it is necessary that worldly men haue faith hope and charity humility and the feare of God contrition also and deuotion and the hatred of sinne And therefore as all these vertues for the most part as we haue said proceede of the affection of the mind which must necessarily flow from some consideration of the vnderstanding if the worldly man haue not these considerations how can he preserue these vertues How can a man continue faithfull vnlesse hee often meditate on those things which faith commandeth How can hee bee inflamed with charity strengthened in hope brideled through the feare of God bee moued to deuotion and contrition and the contempt of himselfe wherein consists the vertue of humility which belongs to all these vertues if he doe not frame himselfe to meditate vpon those things by which those affections as we haue proued before are woont to be kindled And a little after Hitherto may be added the dangers of the world and that great difficulty which man feeles herein that he can hardly keepe himselfe free from sinne in such a fraile body in such a dangerous world and amongst so many enemies which we haue Therefore although thou be not a religious man and thy condition doe not bind thee yet looke that the greatnes of the perill thou art in do bind thee I confesse truly that the state of a religious man is very hard and great but thy danger is greater then his The religious man is looked vnto of his superior he is kept in of his cloister he is fenced as it were and walled about with his attendance with his obedience with prayer with fasting with saying his seruice with the strictnes of his order with good company and with all other exercises and businesses which belong to the monastery But the man that liueth in the world besides that he is naked and destitute of all these helpes he is compassed about on euery side with Dragons and Scorpions he walks euer vpon serpents and Cocatrices both at home and abroad both in himselfe and without himselfe in his doores and windowes night and day a thousand kind of snares are set in his way amongst all which hee is bound to keepe a pure heart chast eyes and a cleane body euer in the midst of the flame of his youth and of the euill companies and examples of this life wherein he sees or heares nothing that tasteth of God Wherefore if the religious man who is a Souldiour by profession ought euer to go armed how much more behooueth it that a man of this world should euer goe armed who is not so safe as the other not so much for the strict bond of the state of his perfection then as for the greatnesse of the dangers wherein he is Those which haue some enemies whom they doe feare doe goe no lesse armed then Souldiours those for their othe wherewith they are bound these for necessity Amongst these weapons we put not onely prayer but fasting also and silence and reading and hearing of the word of God the receiuing of the Sacraments the eschewing of the occasions of sinne and other corporall exercises which all are as it were a * Salsitudo quaedam brine as we call it which preserue this our carnall nature prone to vices least it putrifie and wormes be ingendered in it Thus farre Granatensis wherein he plainelie prooues that Laie men as well as cleargie or religious men are bound to studie and reade and meditate vpon the Scriptures For how else can they haue faith sayeth hee or hope or charitie without which none can bee saued how else can they withstand their enimies amongst the midst of whome we dailie walke They haue béene traitours to their brethren that haue spoiled them of this spirituall Armour Againe the same Granatensis De Deuot. li. 1. ca. 9. of the reading of the Scriptures verie excellentlie writes thus The deuout reading of heauenly Bookes profits to this guard and puritie of the heart for as Saint Bernard sayth our heart is like to a Milne which neuer rests but euer grinds that which is put into it if Wheat it grinds Wheat if Barlie it grinds Barlie Therefore it is very profitable to be occupied in the reading of holy Bookes that when the mind would thinke or meditate of any matter it might meditate on those things wherewith it was occupied For this cause Saint Ierome doeth so greatly commend the reading of the holy Scripture in all his Epistles but especially in that which hee wrote to Demetriades the Virgine in the beginning wherof he sayeth thus O thou daughter of God I wil commend this one thing vnto thee and one aboue all other things and repeating it I will giue thee counsell thereunto againe and againe that is that thou occupy thy mind with the loue of the reading of the holy Scripture neither that thou receiue into the good ground of thy heart the seedes of Darnell or Oates And in the end of his Epistle he repeates the same counsell againe saying I ioine the end and the beginning together neither I thinke it sufficient to haue admonished thee once loue the holy Scriptures and wisedome shall loue thee loue hir and she shall preserue thee honour hir and she shall embrace thee Here wee maie plainelie see how that Granatensis Bernard and Ierome are not of Staphilus and Stapletons mind that the reading of the holie Scriptures doe not hurt the soules of the faithfull which thing if it had doone as some of our latter Papists thinke then these men would neuer haue so earnestlie perswaded all men vnto it In 2. Act. Ferus
night in the word of God For by this exercise the soule is fed with the knowledge of the trueth and the will with the loue and sweetnes of it And when as the vnderstanding and the will are as it were two principall wheeles of a clocke that is of a life that is rightly gouerned if they moue in order and as they ought all the whole worke and whatsoeuer dependes thereon shall be perfectly ordered In this holy reading a man seeth his wants he resolueth his doubts he findes remedies to keepe in store against tribulations there are good counsels also afforded him there he learns many mysteries he is strengthened by the examples of vertues and he learnes the profit that comes by them And therefore Salomon so highly commendes it in his Prouerbes Keepe saith hee my sonne the precepts of thy father and forsake not the law of thy mother Binde them in thy heart continually and knit them about thy necke When as thou walkest any whither let them go with thee and when thou sleepest let them preserue thee and when thou awakest talke with them because the commaundement is a lanterne the law a light and the nurture of discipline the way of life Thus farre Granatensis Where he plainely condemnes that position of other Papistes that the reading of the scripture is daungerous Nay hée condemnes that which in their blind kingdome when as Gods word was banished they allowed that is the reading of vaine Histories as of Beuis and such like That saith he is most dangerous The author also of that booke called the Resolution agrees with Granatensis herein Who is there now adaies saith he which maketh the lawe or commaundement or iustifications of God as the scripture termeth them his daily meditation Part. 1. ca. 2. as king Dauid did Neither onely in the day time did he this but also by night in his heart as in another place he testifieth of himselfe How many of vs doe passe ouer whole daies and monethes without euer entering into these meditations Nay God grant that there be not many Christians in the world which know not what these meditatiōs meane We beleeue in grosse the mysteries of our Christ ā faith as that there is a Hell a Heauen a reward for vertue a punishment for vice a iudgement to come and an account to be made and the like but for that we chew them not well by deepe consideration and doe not digest them well in our hearts by the heat of meditation they helpe vs little to good life no more then a preseruatiue put in a mans pocket can helpe his health c. This author besides that he commends the continuall studie and meditation of the scriptures séemes to mislike with that generall faith knowledge which the Church of Rome teacheth we must not beléeue in grosse saith hée but we must particularly muse vpon and applie the things to our selues Ferus also of the princely authoritie of the scriptures writes thus And here thou feest the great boldnes of trueth Only trueth can say Fer. part 2. pass I feare no man No other doctrine is so perfect that it can say so besides that which God hath reuealed in his word And after he writes thus That Christ suffered all other iniuries with silence besides this blow on the face which the high Priests seruant gaue him He replies to that saith Ferus least that he should thinke that it were not lawfull to reprooue princes with the word of God whereas the word of God spareth no bodie It is the iudge of all men c. If the word of God be the iudge of all men then of the Pope hee must submit himselfe vnto it he cannot dispense with it The same Granatensis also De deuor Lib. 1. cap. 44. of the authoritie of the scriptures writes thus The controuersies that arise about trust or credite of bargaines betweene man and man and of ecclesiasticall decrees commaundements the Maisters and Doctors of that facultie know best And those same spiritual matters also are diligently to be examined that we may see if they agree with the rule of the diuine scripture He makes the holy scripture the rule of spirituall matters Granatensis also in another place yéeldes this excellent testimonie to the scriptures Med. 7. vitae Christi Mat. 2. And as these men speaking of the wise men made no account of this wisedome and of the argumentes of the flesh after that they saw a contrarie witnesse and testimonie giuen them in heauen so neither must thou thinke that the iudgements and opinions of the world to be of any force when as thou seest the word of God and the most holy gospell to teach the contrarie Let the world reproue and let it gainesay as much as it listeth the words of God let all the wise men of this worlde storme against it let them alledge olde customes let them oppose the examples of Kings and Emperours all these are but vapors and smoke neither are they of any force against the worde of God and his holy gospell and his heauenly wisedome And after Where art thou which art borne King of the Iewes the lawe of all deuout men the captaine of all miserable men the sight of all blind men the life of the dead and the euerlasting saluation of them that shall liue for euer And a fit answere followes In Bethlehem Iudah Bethlehem is expounded to be the house of bread and Iudah confessing For there Christ is found where after the confession of our faultes the bread of the heauenly life that is the doctrine of the gospell is heard mused vpon and kept in a deuout mind that it may be practised in deed and also may be declared to others There the child Iesus with his mother Mary is found whereafter sorrowfull contrition and fruitfull confession the sweetnes of heauenly comfort is tasted sometimes amongst streames of teares where praier him whom she founde almost in despaire now leaues reioysing and presuming of pardon c. And in another place he writes As concerning the first we must consider that it ought to be the chiefe and most principall exercise of a christian that he should meditate in the lawe of God and in the doctrine of the commandements And therefore among the commendations of a iust man this is one of the chiefest that he should meditate in the law of God day and night Med. 11. vitae Christi And the kingly Prophet in his Psalmes doth almost euery where make his boast of the loue which he had to the law of God and that he daily meditated in it And that the wordes of God were more sweete to him then hony and the hony combe If it were so delectable and pleasant to that most holy King to reade meditate and studie the words and precepts of that olde law how farre more pleasant should the reading and meditation of the words of the Gospell be to vs All the commandements
chanced to his Apostles Let vs not therefore be troubled if there be now great dissension and quarels about religion Neither for this cause must we neglect to go to godly sermons but rather let vs diligently do this First call vpon God with the kingly Prophet saying Shew me thy wayes O Lord and teach me thy paths Then compare the doctrines diligently together and that which thou shalt perceiue more forcible to drawe thee from the world to God from the flesh to the Spirit from euill to goodnesse and from idolatrie to the true worshipping of God embrace that without anie feare with tooth and naile as they say nothing respecting the gainesayings of others The diuell hath euer gone about this That good deeds and words might bee made none account of least men beleeuing should bee saued Therefore by his ministers he sowes errours and sometimes also hee doth worke miracles that by errours he might make Gods word and by false signes Gods works to be lightly set by that by this means he may rather draw men quite frō the word or at least wise he may make them distrust and doubt of it God suffers this first that the godly may be tried according to that If a Prophet rise among you c. beleeue him not Deut. 13.1 for God tries you And hereof also Christ saith that in the end of the world so great shall be the beguilings of false Prophets that if it vvere possible the very elect should be seduced And hereof Saint Iohn saith Beleeue not euerie spirit but proue the spirits whether they be of God or no. The doctrin of the Gospell which we haue receiued is the word of God which hath been confirmed by many signes and with the bloud of many thousands Wherefore let no man doubt of that although an Angell from heauen should perswade the contrarie Againe therefore God suffers the diuell to shew lying signes that the wicked may be more blinded For it is done by the iust iudgement of God that they which will not beleeue the truth should be seduced and should cleaue to lies Thus far Ferus Where he plainly teacheth that it is no maruell that after the preaching of the Gospell contention and heresies haue sprung in the Church he saith it hath béene alwaies so and shall be euer And that for this cause no man ought to refuse to go and heare sermons And he loues the doctrine of the Gospell not anie lying miracles as the ground-worke of true Christian religion And after concerning the same matter he writes thus vpon these words The citie was deuided Ferus in 14. cap. Act. Here thou seest fulfilled that which Christ foretold I came not to send peace into the world but a sword The Gospell teacheth not seditions nor soweth discords but because it reprooueth their sinnes it cannot choose but the worldlings should repine against it I came to send fire vpon the earth maruell not therefore if there spring vp and be sects in the world for it hath beene euer so yea there must be heresies that the elect may be proued As much more as we see sects to arise so let vs striue earnestly to find and search out the truth and to stand firmely and vnmoueably in the confessed truth and to professe it boldly vnto our liues end And after he writes thus of the ground of euerie true Christians faith Ferus in cap. Act. 15. Euerie Christian ought to bee so sure of his faith that if all the world were of a contrarie opinion yet he could say I am sure this is Gods word let other men think what they will God cannot deceiue or beguile Yea if an Angell frō heauen should preach the contrarie let him be accursed Vnles thou be thus grounded thou canst not stand stedfastly when the false Apostles shall teach the contrarie And hereof Christ saith My sheepe heare my voyce and they will not heare stangers but run from them Gods word by Ferus iudgement is the onely Rocke of Christians faith and religion in these doubtful daies And againe in another place he makes these steps of Christianitie Marke in the foresaid words this order in Christianitie Ferus in cap. 22. Act. First is the predestination of God For it is not of him that willeth but of God that sheweth mercie Reade the ninth chapter to the Romans And we are predestinate not to idlenesse or wantonnesse but that wee may know the will of God what kind of one he is towards vs what he requires and willes at our hands Then wee are sent to Christ in whom alone we see how God is affected to vs. By him also we receiue the holy Ghost that we may be able to doe the will of God After we haue knowne Christ it remaines that in our life maners and words we testifie his goodnesse towards vs and that we are his disciples And this testimonie cōsists in foure things First that we rise vp from our old conuersation Secondly that we be baptized and bee partakers of the Sacraments Thirdly that we wash away the sinnes whereinto wee haue fallen by Christs bloud Fourthly that we call vpon his name that is his righteousnes and merits Here Ferus doth as it were make a perfect anatomie of a Christian man I would to God euery true Christian would marke well euerie part thereof and sée whether himselfe were sound in that faith or no. And in another place of Christian conuersation he writes thus Ferus in cap. Act 20. Marke here the manners of Christians First of all hee prayes the Saints alwayes giue themselues diligently to prayers both in the beginning and end of their work yea all their work thorough For we euer stand neede of the helpe of God for without him we can do nothing We are not sufficient of ourselues to thinke any thing that is good And againe He workes in vs both the will and to finish And in Osee O Israel thy destruction comes of thy selfe but thy helpe comes of me Let no man therefore trust in his owne strength Cursed is he that puts flesh his arme Therefore Paul neuer tooke any thing in hand nor finished anie thing without the helpe of prayer Secondly he kneeles downe against those which make a iest at all ceremonies in prayers He that goes about to make his prayers vnto God must haue well profited first in the schoole of humility otherwise he shall not be heard The prayers of him that humbleth himselfe pierceth the clouds And hereof it is said by the Prophet Vpon whom shall my Spirit rest but vpon the humble and peaceble And thirdly he prayes not alone but with all the companie The prayers of the holy Church is of great force So when the Apostles continued praying with one accord and consent the holy Ghost came vpon them and filled them all In like maner after the Iewes had threatned them when they had prayed altogether the place moued and they were all filled
must all his Christians So did Saint Paul who writes thus of himselfe God forbid that I should reioyce but in the crosse of our Lord Iesus Christ whereby the world is crucified to me Gal. 6.14 I vnto the world What worldly pompe or delight was there in the crosse of Iesus Christ but hunger cold nakednesse vineger raylings and such like In these S. Paul reioyced Let the worldlings with that rich man delight in their braue apparell in their daintie fare in their state and pompe S. Paul with his Sauiour Iesus Christ will despise all these and reioice rather in nakednes in hunger in reproches as he himselfe witnesseth in another place Euen vnto this houre we both hunger and thirst are naked 1. Cor. 4.11 are buffetted haue no certaine dwelling place no place to put our heads in This is the crosse of Christ which Saint Paul reioyced in Here is a contempt of all the pleasures of the world And in another place We approue our selues the ministers of God in much patience 2. Cor. 6.4 in afflictions in necessities in distresse Here is the proofe that S. Paul was an Apostle of Iesus Christ and by the same arguments must all Christians proue themselues to be Christians For thus our Sauiour pronounceth of his Apostles and in them of all Christians Blessed are ye poore Luke 6.20 for yours is the kingdome of God Blessed are yee that hunger for ye shall be satisfied Blessed are ye that weepe now for ye shall laugh Blessed are ye when men hate you and when they separate you and reuile you and put out your name as euill for the Sonne of mans sake Reioyce you in that day and be glad For behold your reward is great in heauen for after this maner did their fathers to the Prophets But woe vnto you that are rich for you haue receiued your consolation Wo be vnto you that are full for ye shall hunger Wo be to you that now laugh for ye shall waile and weepe Wo be to you when all men speake well of you for so did their fathers to the false prophets c. Here is plainly put downe Diues and Lazarus Diues was rich was full reioyced euerie daie was highly no doubt commended of all men and Lazarus was poore hungry despised contemned of all men But mark what followes befals to both these Abraham told there Diues Sonne Luke 16.25 remember that thou in thy life time receiuedst thy pleasures or good things and contrariwise Lazarus paines or euill things Now therefore hee is comforted and thou art tormented The same here our Sauiour pronounceth to all those which embrace the pleasures of this present world Woe to them that now laugh for that they haue receiued their consolation And againe Blessed are they which now weepe and that despise the pleasures of this world for that their consolation is to come And here is plainelie portrayed out vnto vs the crosse of Christ wherein Saint Paule gloried hunger wéeping reuilings and such like to which a blessing is pronounced But a wo and curse to the contrarie Let all Christians therfore hearing this lesson at their Sauiours mouth and séeing it plainly put in practise of Saint Paul and of all the rest of the Apostles nay perceiuing the terrible execution of the transgression thereof verified in that rich man learne to despise this world and all the pleasures and delights thereof and only to reioyce in the crosse of Christ with Saint Paul and to remember that solemne vow they made in their Baptismes Let them not buy repentance so deare The money they bestow vpon these vaine delightes and pleasures maie be far better bestowed with Cornelius vpon almesdeeds and works of mercie Act. 10.1 Such a despiser of the world was Abraham Gen. 14.22 Who told the king of Sodom that he would not take of all that was his so much as a thréed or a shoo latchet whē as he offred him all the spoiles We would haue said who but a foole would haue refused gold whē as it was offred him But such a foole was Abraham We would haue bin sure to haue taken the riches with this flattering perswasion beguiling our owne selues as manie doe now adaies Iam. 1.22 that when we had possessed them we wold haue bestowed them well But Abrahā chose the safer way not to meddle with them at all His like contempt of the world appeares in his dealing with his brother Lot whē their heardsmen fell out Who though he was the elder had the promises of God made vnto him Gen. 13.1 9 yet he said Let there be no strife I pray thee between thee and me neither betweene thine heardsmen and mine heardsmen for we are brethren Is not the whole land before thee Depart I pray thee from me If thou wilt take the left hand then I wil go to the right if thou go to the right hand then I will take the left If Abraham had made account of the world he would not haue yéelded from his right hee would not haue giuen Lot leaue to haue chosen The like we reade of Moses who when as he was come to age refused to be called the sonne of Pharaohs daughter Heb. 11.24 chose rather to suffer aduersitie with the people of God He reioiced rather in the crosse of Christ with Saint Paule then in worldlie pleasures with Diues Some here would haue said though I be in Pharaohs Court I will serue God in my heart I maie do both But Moses thought that Pharaohs delightes and pleasures and Gods loue and fauour could not stand together The prophet Zacharie writes thus of Christs Church Zach. 14.16 that euery one that is left of all the nations which came against Ierusalem shall go vp from yeare to yeare to worship the king the lord of hosts to keepe the feast of Tabernacles And they which will not come vp c. vpon them shall be no raine A strange law and no lesse strange punishment God séemes to renewe againe the ceremonies of the olde law which by the comming of our Sauior are abrogated Againe it is very strange that omitting all the other feasts hee will haue one onlie to remaine that is the feast of Tabernacles Here no doubt the Prophet teacheth vs to forsake the letter For the letter killeth The feast of Taberbernacles was ordained as appeareth in Exod. 23. that the children of Israel might remember their abode in the wildernesse 40. yeares without anie dwelling houses And this feast though it be abolished literally yet God will haue the faithfull still to obserue it spiritually that as they trauailed in the wildernesse those fortie yeares so we also in this world should be as pilgrims and strangers all the course of our life and that we should know that we are borne here in the world no● that we should fixe our hearts here but that we should as it