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A17121 An historicall narration of the iudgement of some most learned and godly English bishops, holy martyrs, and others (whereof III; viz. Archbishop Cranmer, B. Latimer, and Bishop Hooper, suffred martyrdome, in the dayes of Q. Mary, for the truth and Gospell of Christ Iesus) concerning Gods election, and the merit of Christ his death, &c. J. A., of Ailward.; Ailward, John, attributed name. aut; Andrewes, John, fl. 1615, attributed name. aut 1631 (1631) STC 4; ESTC S100399 62,871 120

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Salvation That is to say not GODS Servants They lacke the renovation or Regeneration they be not come yet to CHRIST Now these persons that bee not come yet to Christ or if they were come to Christ be fallen againe from him and so lost theyr Iustification as there bee many of us which when wee fall willingly into Sinne against Conscience wee lose the favour of GOD our Salvation and finally the Holy Ghost all they now that bee out of the favour of GOD and are not sory for it Sinne grieveth them not they purpose to goe forward in it All those that intend not to leave theyr Sinnes are out of the Favour of GOD and so all their workes whatsoever they doe bee deadly sinnes For as long as they bee in purpose to sinne they sinne deadly in all their doings Therefore when wee will speake of the diversity of Sinnes wee must speake of those that bee Faithfull that bee regenerated and made new and cleane from theyr Sinnes through Christ. To these two Holy Martyrs and learned Bishops I adde a third who when hee lived was in place the First and in Grace not inferiour to any It is Archbishop CRANMER Hee speaking of the merit of Christs Death writeth on this wise viz. THE IVDGEMENT OF Archbishop CRANMER Archbishop CRNMER'S Preface to the Reader in his Answere to Doctor GARDINER Bishop of Winchester Touching the Holy Sacrament Printed by Iohn Day 1580. and written by the said Father Anno 1551. OVr Saviour CHRIST IESUS according to the Will of his Eternall Father when the time thereto was fully accomplished taking our Nature upon him came into this World from the high Throne of his Father to declare unto miserable sinners good newes to Heale them that were sieke to make the Blinde to see the Deafe to heare and the Dumbe to speake to set Prisoners at libertie to shew that the time of Grace and Mercy was come to give Light to them that were in darknesse and in the shadow of Death and to preach and give Pardon and full remission of Sinne to all his Elected And to performe the same hee made a Sacrifice and oblation of his owne Body upon the Crosse which was a full Redemption satisfaction and propitiation for the Sinnes of the whole world And in another place CHRIST was such an high Bishop that hee once offering himselfe was sufficient by once effusion of his blood to abolish Sinne unto the worlds end He was so perfect a Priest that by One oblation hee purged an infinite heape of Sinnes leaving an easie and a ready Remedy for all Sinners that his One sacrifice should suffice for many yeares unto all Men that should not shew themselves unworthy And he tooke unto himselfe not onely their sinnes that many yeares before were dead and put their trust in him but also the sinnes of those that untill his comming againe should truely beleeve in his Gospell So that now wee may looke for none other Priest nor Sacrifice to take away our Sinnes but onely him and his Sacrifice And as hee Dying once was offered for All so as much as pertained to him hee tooke all mens sinnes unto himselfe To which we ioyne B. Iewel in his Apologie towards the End thereof Certò Animis nostris persuademus Illum id est Christum esse propitiatorem pro peccatis nostris Eius Sanguine Omnes Labes nostras deletas esse Illum pacificasse Omnia Sanguine Crucis suae Illum unicā illâ Hostiâ quam semel obtulit in Cruce OMNIA perfecisse Eâ causa cum Animam ageret dixisse CONSVMMATVM Est Quasi Significare vellet Persolutum jam esse Pretium pro Peccato Humani Generis That is Wee doe assuredly perswade our Mindes That Hee Christ is the obtainer of forgivenesse for our sinnes And that by his Bloud ALL our spots of Sinnes be washed Cleane That he hath Pacified and set at One All things by the Bloud of his Crosse That he by the same One Onely sacrifice which hee Once offered upon the Crosse hath brought to effect and fulfilled ALL thinges And that for that Cause Hee said It is Finished as though hee would Signifie That the Price or Ransome was Now Fully-paid for the sinne of Mankind To this GOD the Sonne together with GOD the Father and GOD the Holy Ghost bee ascribed all Honour Worship Praise and Glory for ever FINIS a For Ieyden was made an Vniversity not past 56. yeares agone by Wil 〈◊〉 Prince of Orange Anno 1574. Merit Merit Epist 100. Tom. 2. The Errours which ●el●g●●● held and 〈◊〉 ●a●ted in ●he ●ounc●il of Pal●s 〈…〉 PELAGIVS his first Errour Rom. 5. Wisdom 1. 13. 14. 15 16. I he Second Errour Rom. 5. 18. 〈◊〉 Esdras 6. The Third Psal 51. The Fourth C. N. P. Rom. 5. N. B. 1. Iohn 2. The 〈◊〉 1 Timotl 6. The Siat 2. Cor. 3 5. The Seventh Rom. 11. 6. The Eight Errour 1. Iohn 1. Iames 3. The Ninth Aug. de verb. Apost Se● 192. Or Free-will Philip. 4. 4. Esd●a● 9. N. B. The tenth and element i● Errour The Conclusion of the first part of this Trea●ise N. 〈◊〉 The Second Part of this Treatise 1. God is not the Author of Sinne. 1. Ioh. 2. Ecclus 15. Note August 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 N. B. August retra●● l. 1. c. 9. 16. Eccl. 4. d. Prospor ad Object Vinc. N. B. Aug. de Civ Dei lib. 5. Cap. 1. vix K. Henry the sea●enth Math 〈…〉 is often taken as S. Augustine useth it heere for Ge●●thliacus whose profession was to declare mens Fortune or Destiny by the Time of Nativitie Which in Esa 2. The translation of Zurich calleth Mathematicos and our Translator calleth it Talkers of mens 〈◊〉 Prosp Respons ad Object Gall. cap. 6. Deut. 30. Iosuah 24. Iud. 10. Luke 10. Psalm 119. Esay 65. Esay 66. N. 〈◊〉 Gen. 4. a. 〈◊〉 King 24. b. 1. Para. 21. b. Prov. 3. d. Ecel●s 25. 〈◊〉 4. ●s●r 7. b d g 〈◊〉 9. 2. Luk 10. d f. Iohn 1. b. Acts 5. a. 1 Cor. 7. g. 9. a. 10. c. 14. f. 2 Cor. 13. 〈◊〉 Phil. 4. c. Heb. 14. Aug. Quast●e Nov. ●est●n Quaest 115. Lib. de Pradest Cap. 2. II. Sin the Cause of Reprobation N. B. Rom. 9. c. 11 12 13. Sap. 12. c. D●●t 9. Rom. 7. 13. Rom. 6. Ose 13. c. N. B. III. GODS Free Mercy in CHRIST the Chiefe cause of Election N. B. Genera Bible Rom. 9. 〈…〉 s 3. b. Eccl. 2. d. Iam 2. b. Psal 149. b. Psal 84. a. Math. 1. a. Ephes 1. a. 2 b. Rom. 5. a b. Colos 1. c. 2 Cor. 5. d. 1 Iohn 2. a. Heb. 5. b c. 〈◊〉 a b c d c. 2 Tim. 1. c. Why the Law was given Deut. 4. 13. Math. 7. 12. What the ten Commandements containe Gen. 17 7. 22 16. Ierem. 〈◊〉 7 23. The condition on Gods behalfe E●od 19 56. Deut. 4 20. Math. 11 28. The condition on mans
AN HISTORICALL NARRATION OF THE IVDGEMENT OF some most Learned and Godly English Bishops Holy Martyrs and Others Whereof III viz. Archbishop CRANMER B. LATIMER and Bishop HOOPER Suffred Martyrdome in the Dayes of Q. MARY for the Truth and Gospell of CHRIST IESVS Concerning GODS Election and the Merit of CHRIST his Death c. LONDON Printed by B. A. and T. F for Samuel Nealand and are to be sold at his shop at the Signe of the Crowne in Duck. Lane 1631. Archbishop CRANMER his Booke of the Sacrament of CHRIST his Body and Blood against STEPHEN GARDINER B. of Winchester was written by that most Reverend Father Anno 1551. in the Raigne of K. EDVVARD the 6. And Reprinted by Iohn Day Anno 1580. Cum Privilegio B. HOOPER his Booke upon the Commandements together with the Preface which is heere presented was Written by him An. 1549. Novemb. 5. and Printed first in the said Kings raigne Anno 1550. And afterwards reprinted by Robert Walgrave in Queene Elizabeths Time but the yeare is not specified B. LATIMER is Printed by Divers and at divers Times and is in every mans hands But the Copie here-alledged is that which was Printed by Iohn Day Anno 1571. TO THE IMPARTIALL Christian Reader Whether He bee Laick or Ecclesiastick Grace Mercy Truth and Peace bee Multiplyed Deare CHRISTIAN ALbeit I am no Professed Scholler nor am able to brangle Sophistically about the niceties of Schoole-Quod-libets yet by the Blessing of GOD and Tender care of my Parents I have beene trayned up to such a little Measure of Learning as hath enabled mee though not to conceive the STRONG LINES of these Times yet to understand Plaine English And some Easie-latine Authors Wherefore when I can steale any Vacancie from mine Ordinary Imployments I doe betake my selfe to converse with such Bookes as speake to my Simple capacity in a Stile Intelligible And happening by Chance upon a Booke written some Fourescore yeares agone by an excellently-learned Byshop and a most holy Martyr Iohn Hooper upon the Ten Commandements I perused it with Diligence and received no small comfort to my Soule and instruction to my understanding by It Especially by the Perface In which to my simple Iudgement The Author discourseth very learnedly and conscionably about the Points of Gods Election and the Merit of our Blessed Saviour Iesus Christ-his Death and Passion I had also read in the Booke of English Martyrs That the great learned and Holy Arch-Byshop Doctor Cranmer and Byshop Latimer and Byshop Hooper did All of them suffer Martyrdome and shed their dearest Hearts bloud in the blacke dayes of Persecution under Queene Marie for the Truth and Gospell of Christ Iesus And that None of Them could iustly bee Charged or Branded with any Hereticall or damnably-Erroneous Doctrine More-over I was informed That All of Them were worthy Instruments of God in the First Reformation of Religion from Popish Errours and Superstition in the Raigne of King Edward the sixt of ever-Blessed Memory And that Some of them were imployed in the Making and Ordering of our Booke of Common-Prayer as it was THEN set out and in Composing the Confession of the Church of England in the Booke of Articles of Religion That These were Persons as cleare and Free from all Taint of Poperie Pelagianisme Superstition or Heresie as Any that lived in Those Times or Since I thinke the Booke of Acts and Monuments will fully perswade any honest man that shall There reade their Stories without preiudice Besides Though I will not take upon Me to give you the Sence and Meaning of the Confession of our owne Church yet This wee may say without offence to Any That such learned Men and Holy Bishops as were Principall Agents inframing the Confession and Doctrine thereof in the Booke of Articles and in the Booke of Common Prayer did well and throughly understand and know the True-sense and meaning of their owne Conclusions and neither did nor would eyther write or preach any thing against or Contrarie to the Same Neither is it possible or any wayes probable that These Holy Martyrs and learned Bishops who sacrific'd their lives for the Gospell of Iesus Christ Almost fourescore yeares agone should derive and borrow Their Tenents touching these matters from Iames Harmin or the Remonstrants in Leyden Considering These did first begin publikely to write of such Things not much above Twenty yeares since Wherefore It seemes to me that it is against Reason that very Many Conscientious learned Divines amongst us which doe now teach the selfe-same Doctrine that was long agone delivered by These Holy Mirtyrs and Fathers of our Church should be uncharitably Falsely and Ignominiously Branded with Odious and Abhorred Nick-names fetcht from Leyden Whereas in Truth I know They disdaine to become Sectatours ' to Any Sectaries of any Countrey But Contrariwise doe strive to preserve the Purity of the same Doctrine which They received from the First Fathers of the Reformation in England and neede not to straggle beyond the Seas into Belgia to learne Instructions from thence For which Cause I thought I should doe God and my Holy Mother the Church of England no Evill seruice in giving Notice to the world of what These Holy Fathers and Martyrs did hold and Teach touching these Matters of Gods Election and the Merit of our Blessed Saviours Death in a meere Narrative and historicall way which onely will stand with my profession not in any Argument or so much as in a Bare-word Interposing or Engaging my selfe For my End and scope is not at all to Debate or Determine such points to Meddle with the sacred Doctrine of the Church to wrest the sense or Meaning of the Articles or indeed any way to State the Trueth on eyther side For this would not sute with my poore Abilities But mine Earnest Endeavour and desire is for Peace and quietnesse sake among Those of our owne whose Consecrated Mouthes especially in consecrated places cannot without Sacriledge bee imployed by the Houre in ray lings and evill speakings to give such as are willing to reade it onely a sight and view what Propositions concerning These matters Opinions or Doctrines call them what you will were agitated and Maintained by Many ancient Fathers of our Church and Principall Authors in our Reformation who were all Dead before Leyden was so much as an Vniversity and concerning whom no member of any Reformed Church in Christendome can make any scruple but that they might bee saved To the Intent that if such Positions as we Here shall find were by them tollerated and Approved in those Times by One or other without Breach of Charity or Bandying of Nick-names We also in these Times notwithstanding the like private Differences in unnecessary Controversies may as They herctofore did beare with one Another and unanimously orderly and silently submit our Pennes and Tongues unto Gods sacred and our Dread Soveraignes Royall and Christian Ordinance in this Church which onely bids us to
asfirme and confesse That Man So hath Freedome or Choice that Neverthelesse he hath continually need of the Helpe and Grace of God Who they are I say which in This point also ought worthily to be called Pelagians let All men Iudge The Case is so cleare that No lacke of knowledge but onely wilfull Blindnesse may helpe to Cloake the Matter There followeth the Tenth and Eleuenth Errours which are these That our Victory commeth not of Gods-Helpe but of Free-Choice And that Remission of sinnes is not given to them that repent according to the grace and Mercy of God but according to the Deserving and labour of them which by Repentance are worthy of Gods Mercy O Blasphemie Intolerable O Filthy Puddle and Sincke most Execrable full of stinking Errours full of Damnable Presumption like to the Pride of Lucifer most Abominable The detestable vilenesse whereofis such that rather by Exclamation I thought it Good to Re●●unce it Than with Scripture or Reason to Confute it Seeing All Reason and All Scripture giveth All glory vnto GOD and this Blasphemous Errour raketh away all the glory of all Goodnesse from the Father of all Mercy and GOD of all Consolation and giveth it unto vile and wretched Man which hath of Himselfe Nothing that is Good but doth altogether receive it from the mercy and goodnesse of GOD. Heere concludeth St Augustin with the Errours of Pelagius and saith That All these Errours He Revoked and Renounced in the generall Councell of Palestine Thus have I set forth in English these Errours of Pelagius together That thou which art willing to know the Trueth and understand the Matter even as it is mayest bee Able to Iudge who they are that hold Any of these Errours and not credit the Malice of certaine which to cloake their owne False Opinions accuse Other to bee Pelagiaus who indeed from their very Heart and Soule abhorre All these wicked Opinions and have beene many yeares willing to bestow their lives against all these Abominable Errours Yet there is One thing whereunto Pelagius was Compelled to Subscribe which I haue not rehearsed among the Errours aforesaid because the Deniall thereof is of all our Gospellers as I suppose received for no Errour The Article is This Quòd Infantes non baptisati non solùm Regnum Calorum verùm etiam vitam aeternam habere non possint Hereunto did Pelagius subscribe That Infants which are not Baptized cannot have the Kingdome of GOD nor Eternall life Which cruell Opinion That All un-baptized Children are damned St. Austin in many places of his workes doth boldly and vehemently maintaine But Calvin saith Explodendam esse Illorum Glossam palàm est qui Omnes non-Baptizatos aeternae morti adiudicant It is cleare saith hee that their Glosse is worthy with hissing and clapping of Hands to bee driven out of Doores which Condemne unto everlasting Death all those which are not Baptized And because Calvin is with so Many of us which are Gospellers in Authority fully-sufficient to encounter with Augustine I thinke it good for shortnesse in this Article to say no further There remaineth then as before I promised briefly to Note those things which I thinke worthy to be reprooved about the Doctrine of Predestination as it is Now-a-dayes taught of many VVHerein lest I should seeme to speake without assured Ground and because wordes in Preaching in Talke or Disputation wherof I have heard great abundance in this Matter may rashly passe with small advisement and eyther easily bee Denyed or soone forgotten I am determined to touch Nothing but their very words which are set forth in Print And because the taking and answering of their whole Bookes were a matter long and tedious Being commonly stuffed on the oneside with an heape of Opprobrious and outragious wordes against such Private persons as they tooke in hand to write And on the other side filled rather with obscure Subtilties than with plaine Affirmations I have thought it best therefore to take certaine Sentences which contayne manifest Affirmations out of Divers late Printed English Bookes wherin the Summe effect of this Doctrine which Many doe for iust cause mislike is Fully plainely and simply declared I reade in an English Booke set forth by Robert Crowly and entituted THE CONFVTATION OF 13. ARTICLES c. These words viz. Adam therefore being so perfect a Creature that there was in Him no lust to Sinne and yet so weake that of himselfe hee was not Able to withstand the assault of the subtile Serpent No Remedy the onely Cause of his Fall must needs bee the Predestination of GOD. Thou seest Dearely beloved in the Conclusion of this Sentence one Point declared wherein the Contreversie doth consist For where Hee plainely affirmeth That GODS Predestination is the onely Cause of Adams Fall which is the Fountaine of All sinne Others having much more Reverend opinion of GOD and of his Holy Predestination doe set their Foot or rather their Heart and Soule against their said Conclusion Esteeming it farre better to bee Tor●e in many thousand pieces than to thinke or say that Gods fore-Ordinance or Predestination is the Cause of any Sinne or Evill I beseech Thee Let not thine Eyes bee blinded nor thy Mind muffled with malice eyther against the One party or the Other but in the Ballan●e of an upright Iudgement weigh the Difference The One saith as in this Conclusion manifestly appeareth And as afterward yet more plainely hee affirmeth That the Predestination of GOD is the onely Cause of Adams sinne and so Consequently of All evill The other affirmeth directly Contrary that GOD or his predestination is the Cause of No Sinne or Evill but the onely Cause of all Goodnesse and Vertue And Herewith agreeth the Holy and Divine Apostle S. Iohn in his Epistle saying All that is in the world as the Concupiscence of the Flesh the lust of the Eyes and the Pride of life is Not of the Father All Good things that are in the world are no doubt of GOD our Heavenly Father But what soever in the world is Concupiscence Lust Sinne Evill or Wickednesse That same it not of GOD our Heavenly Father as S. Iohn doth plainly and precisely affirme The like plainnesse useth also the holy Man Iesus the Sonne of Syrack in these words Say not Thou It is the Lords Fault that I am gone by For thou shouldest not doe the thing that GOD hateth Say not Thou Hee hath caused me to goe wrong For He hath no Need of the Vngodly The very same thing is plainly declared in these Scriptures following and in other places almost innumerable Psal 5. a. Prov. 19. a. Ierem. 7. c. 19. B. Ose 13. c. Iob. 34. b. 36. B. Rom. 7. b. c. 1. Cor. 4. F. Iam. 1. c. Exod. 34. A. Deut. 5. D. 2. King 14. b. Psal 81. c. 144. b. Prov. 1. c. Wisd 1. c. 2. D. 11. D. 12. B. C D. 15. A. Eccl. 2. D.
Adam and his Posterity were made in Christ and for Christ onely and appertained to our Fathers and vs as wee appertained to Christ. Hee is the doore the way and the Life Hee onely is the Mediator betweene GOD and Man without whom no man can come to the Father celestiall Ioh. 1. 3. 6. Because the Promises of GOD appertained to our Fathers forasmuch as they likewise to Christ Hitherto and for ever they were preserved from Hell and the paines due to Adams sinne in him for whose sake the Promise was made The meanes of our Peace and reconciliation with GOD is onely in Christ as by whose Passion we are made holy Therefore CHRIST is called by Iohn the Baptist The Lambe that taketh away the Sinnes of the world And as the Divell found nothing in Christ that he could condemne likewise so now hee hath nothing in us worthy damnation because wee be comprehended and fully inclosed in him for we bee his by Faith All these that be comprehended under the Promise belong unto CHRIST And as farre extendeth the vertue and strength of GODS Promise to save Man as the rigour and Iustice of the Law for sinne to damne man For as by the offence and sinne of one man Death was extended and made common unto all men unto condemnation as Paul sayth So by the Iustice of one is derived life into all men to Iustification The wordes of the promise made unto Adam and Abraham confirmeth the same They are these I will put enmity and hatred betweene thee and the Woman betweene thy seed and the womans seed and her seed shall breake thy h●●d For as wee were in Adam before his Fall and should if hee had not sinned beene of the same Innocencie and perfection that hee was created in So were we in his loynes when he sinned and participated of his sinne And as we were in him and partakers of the ill So were we in him when GOD made him a promise of Grace and partakers of the same grace Not as the children of Adam but as the children of the Promise And the sinnes of Adam without priviledge or exception extended and appertained unto all Adams and every of Adams posteritie So did this promise of Grace generally appertaine as well to every and singular of Adams posterity as to Adam as it is more plainly expressed Where GOD promiseth to blesse in the seed of Abraham all the people of the world And Paul maketh no diversity in Christ of Iew nor Gentile Further it was never forbid but that all sorts of people and of every progeny in the world to bee made partakers of the Iewes Religion and Ceremonies Further St. Paul doth by collation of Adam and Christ Sinne and Grace thus interpret GODs promise and I●aketh not Christ inferior to Adam nor grace unto sinne If all then shall be saved what is to bee sayd of those that St. Peter speaketh of That shall perish for their false Doctrine And likewise Christ sayth That the gate is straight that teadeth to Life and few enter Thus the Scripture answereth 〈◊〉 the promise of Grace appermineth to every sort of men in the world and comprehendeth them all howbeit within certaine limits and bound 〈…〉 the which if men neglect or passe over they exclude themselves from the Promise in CHRIST as Caine was no more excluded till hee excluded himselfe than Abell Saul than David Iudas than Peter Esau than Iacob By the Scripture it seemeth that the sentence of GOD was given to save the one and to damne the other before the one loved GOD or the other hared GOD. Howbeit these threatnings of GOD against Esau if hee had not of his wilfull malice excluded himselfe from the promise of Grace should no more have hindered his Salvation than GODS threatnings against Ninivie which notwithstanding that GOD sayd should be destroyed within 40. dayes stood a great time after and did Penance Esau was Circumcised and presented unto the Church of GOD by his Father Isaac in all externall ceremonies as well as Iacob And that his life and conversati●n was not as agreeable unto justice and equitie as Iacobs the sentence of GOD unto Rebeced was not in the fault but his owne malice Forthere is mentioned nothing at all in that place that Esau was disinherited of eternall life but that hee should be inferiour to his brother Iacob in this world Which Prophecy was fulfilled in their Posterities and not the persons themselves Of this acceptation of the one and reprobation of the other concerning the promise of the earth speaketh Malachy the Prophet as the beginning of his booke declareth speaking in this wise I have loved you saith the Lord yee say Wherein hast thou loved us God answereth Was not Esau Iacobs brother saith the Lord Not withstanding I loved Iacob and hated Esau Wherein hated GOD Esau The Prophet sheweth I have made his possession that was the mount Seir desolate as a desert or wilder nesse of Dragons the which happened in the time of Nabucho donozor Wherein hee loved Iacob the Text declareth God transferred the right and tytle that appertained unto Esau the elder Brother to Iacob the younger Likewise the Laad that was promised unto Abraham and Isaac was by legacy and testament given unto Iacob and his Posterities St. Paul useth this example of Iacob and Esau for none other purpose but to take away from the Iewes the thing that they most put their trust in to say The vayne hope they had in the carnall Linage and naturall descent from the family and houshold of Abraham and likewise their false considence they had in the keeping of the Law of Mose● Pauls whole purpose is in the Epistle to bring Man unto a knowledge of his Sinne and to shew him how it may bee remitted and with many testimonies and examples of the Scripture hee proveth Man to be saved onely by Mercy for the merites of Christ which is apprehended and received by Faith as he at large sheweth in the 3 4 and 5 Chapters of the same Epistle In the understanding of the which three Chapter aright is required a singular and exact ailigence For it seemeth by those places that Paul concludeth and in a manner includeth the divine Grace and promise of GOD within ●ertaine tearmes and limits that onely CHRIST should bee efficatious and profitable in those that apprehend and receive this abundant grace by Faith and to such as have not the use of Faith neyther CHRIST nor Gods grace to appertaine Now seeing no man by reason of this natur all I●●redulity borne and begotten with us can beleeve and put such confidence in God as he requireth by his Law as experience of our owne weakenesse declareth though Man have yeares and time to beleeve the promise of GOD in CHRIST appertaineth to no man This sentence is plaine in the last Chapter of Marke Hee that beleeveth not
it cleane away but rather the strength and force of the same So he saved vs from other Calamities not taking the same cleane away but rather the power of the same So that no Calamity nor misery should be able to hurt us that are in Christ Iesu And likewise he saved us from Death not that we should not dye but that Death should have no victory over vs nor condemne us but rather to be a way and entrance unto Salvation and everlasting Life for death is a gate to enter into everlasting life No man can come to everlasting life but he must first dye bodily But this death cannot hurt the faithfull for they are exempted from all danger through the death and passion of Iesus Christ our Saviour who with his death hath overcome our death And in another place the same Father writeth as followeth viz. THe Holy Scripture maketh mention of a Sinne against the Holy Ghost which Sinne cannot bee forgiven neyther in this world nor in the world to come And this maketh many men unquiet in their hearts and consciences For some there be which ever bee afraid least they have committed that same sinne against the Holy Ghost which is irremissible Therefore some say I cannot tell whether I have sinned against the Holy Ghost or not If I have committed that sinne I know I shall be damned But I tell you what yee shall doe Despaire not of the Mercy of GOD for it is immeasurable I cannot deny but there is a Sinne against the Holy Ghost which is irremissible But wee cannot iudge of it afore-hand we cannot tell which man hath committed that sinne or not as long as he is alive But when he is once gone then I can Iudge whether hee sinned against the Holy Ghost or not As now I can judge that Nero Saul and Iudas and such like that dyed in sinnes and wickednesse did commit this sinne against the Holy Ghost for they were wicked and continued in their wickednesse still to the very end They made no end in their wickednesse But we cannot judge whether one of us sinne this sinne against the Holy Ghost or not For though a man bee wicked at this time yet he may repent and leave his wickednsse to morrow and so not commit that sinne against the Holy Ghost Our Saviour Christ pronounced against the Scribes and Pharises that they had committed that sinne against the Holy Ghost because Hee knew their hearts he knew that they would still abide in their wickednesse to the very end of their lives Further the promises of Christ our Saviour are generall they pertaine to all Mankinde hee made a generall Proclamation saying Qui credit in me habet vitam aeternam Whosoever beleeveth in mee hath everlasting life Likewise St. Paul saith Gratia exuperat super peccatum The Grace and Mercies of God exceedeth farre our sinnes Therefore let us ever thinke and beleeve that the grace of God his mercy and goodnesse excedeth our sinnes Item consider what Christ saith with his owne mouth Venite ad me omnes qui laboratis c. Come unto me All yee that labour and are laden and I will ease you Marke here hee saith Come all yee Wherefore then should any body despaire or shut out himselfe from these promises of Christ which be generall and appertaine to the whole world For he saith Come all unto me and then againe he saith Refocillabo vos I will refresh you you shall be eased from the burdens of your sinnes Therefore as I said before he that is blasphemous and obstinately wicked and abideth in his wickednesse still to the very end he sinneth against the Holy Ghost as St. Augustine and all other godly writers doe affirme But he that leaveth his wickednesse and sinnes and is content to amend his life and then beleeving in Christ seeketh Salvation and everlasting life by him No doubt that man or woman Whosoever they be shall bee saved For they feed upon Christ upon that meate that God the Father this Feastmaker hath prepared for all his guests Such another passage to This same purpose you may Reade in his sixt Sermon upon the Lords Prayer Some two passages before the End of the Sermon Speaking against Novatus the Hereticke CHrist onely and no man else merited Remission Iustification and eternall felicity for as many as will beleeve the same They that will not beleeve it shall not have it For it is no more but beleeve and have For Christ shed as much bloud for Iudas as for Peter Peter beleeved it and therefore he was saved Iudas would not beleeve and therefore he was condemned The Fault being in him onely and in no body else Againe The same blessed Father writeth Thus as followeth SIc Deus dilexit mundum So entirely hath GOD loved the world that hee sent his onely begotten Sonne to that end that all that beleeve in him should not perish but have life Everlasting this is now a Comfortable thing and a great promise which GOD maketh unto the whole world and no doubt he is as able to fulfill that promise of Grace as hee was able to fulfill His wrathfull word against the Iewes So likewise hee saith Vivo ego dicit Dominus nolo mortem Peccatoris sed ut convertatur vivat As truely as I live sayth the Lord God I will not the death of a Sinner but rather that hee shall turne and live It is not his pleasure when wee be damned therefore hee sweareth on Oath wee ought to beleeve him without an Oath yet to satisfie our mindes and to the intent that wee should beleeve him and be the better assured of his goodwill towards Vs hee sweareth this Oath Now therefore if wee will follow him and leave our wicked living convert and turne our selves unto him be sory for that which is past and intend to amend our life now forward If wee doe so no doubt we shall live with him everlastingly without end Therefore let every one of us goe into his owne heart and when he findeth that hee hath beene a Wicked man an Irefull man a Covetous or a sloathfull man Let him Repent and be sory for it and take a good purpose to leave that same sinne wherein he hath lyen before Let us not doe as the Iewes did which were stiffe-necked they would not leave their Sinnes they had a pleasure in the same they would follow their old Traditions refusing the Word of GOD Therefore their Destruction came worthily upon them And therefore I say let us not follow them least we receive such a Reward as they had least everlasting destruction come upon us and so we be cast out of the favour of GOD and finally lost world without end Furthermore in another Sermon hee saith as heere followeth I Say there be two manner of Men Some there be that are not Iustified not Regenerate nor yet in State of