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A97309 The whole body of Christian religion, by Hieron. Zanchius. Translated out of Latine by D. Ralph Winterton. Zanchi, Giralamo, 1516-1590.; Winterton, Ralph, 1600-1636. 1659 (1659) Wing Z7; Thomason E1897_1; ESTC R209936 137,419 420

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abide in them So neither can we from Christ our head foundation tree and vine unlesse we be truely ingrafted into him by the holy Spirit and be made flesh of his flesh and bone of his bones And they do us great injurie that therefore say we deny the true participation of Christ's flesh and bloud and hold onely the participation of his gifts and benefits because we do not admit that which ought not to be admitted that Christ true body doth really passe through our mouthes into our bodyes As if the communion which is made by the holy Spirit and by faith were not true and essentiall whereas nothing can more nearely joyne divers substances and natures together into one then the holy Spirit As we see it in the incarnation of the Son of God and the creation of man compounded of soul and body Certainly if the communion with the body and bloud of Christ which is made by the Spirit onely and by faith be not true and saving unlesse the body bloud passe through our mouthes into our bodyes Christ hath not provided well for his Church And further he would have the same to be made at the receiving of the Gospell as also in Baptisme As a 1 Iohn 1.3 Iohn witnesseth of the first and the b 1 Cor. 12.13 Apostle of the second This is our confession concerning communion with Christ in generall and concerning the dispensation of salvation and life which is in Christ Iesus DOCT. XIX Errours condemned WE therefore disallow and mislike the errour of those which teach that by the opus operatum or performance of the outward work without faith and true union with Christ remission of sins may be obtained and salvation communicated unto men But we condemne for blasphemie the doctrine of those which teach that remission of sinnes and salvation may be obtained by works not commanded by God but invented by men and those such as are full of superstition and idolatrie We condemne likewise those which making no account of the ministerie of the Word teach that salvation may be had as well without as by the hearing of the Word and the receiving of the Sacraments and likewise those which contend that the children of infidells as well as the faithfull in their mothers wombes are made partakers of Christ's benefits CHAP. XIII Concerning the Gospell and the abrogation of the Law by the Gospell FOrasmuch as the Gospell in the first place and then also the Sacraments to wit Baptisme and the Lords supper are the outward instruments and meanes by the lawfull use and administration whereof our Redeemer and Lord Iesus Christ is wont to offer and dispense unto the would the benefit of redemption and remission of sinnes and communicate himself unto us his chosen by the power of his Spirit and likewise incorporate us into himself and so make us really partakers of salvation and life which he hath in himself Therefore we have studied and endeavoured briefely and plainly to declare unto the Church of God what is our faith and belief concerning them DOCTRINE I. What the Gospell is AS concerning the Gospall then according to the signification received and used in the Church we believe that it is none other but the heavenly Doctrine concerning Christ preached by Christ himself and his Apostles and contained in the books of the New Testament declaring unto the world most wellcome and joyfull tidings to wit that mankind by the death of Iesus Christ the onely begotten Son of God is redeemed so that for as many as repent and believe in Iesus Christ free pardon and forgivenesse of sinnes salvation and eternall life is prepared For which cause it is worthily called by the Apostle the Gospel of our salvation Eph. 1.13 DOCT. II. That the Gospel was indeed promised by the Prophets but published by the Apostles FOr though this mysterie was revealed unto the Fathers even from the beginning of the world and the Prophet also spoke concerning it yet they preached promises Evangelicall that is of the Gospell which the Iews retained amongst themselves rather then the Gospel it self which was to be published to all nations For they prophesied and foretold that which was to come but did not declare any thing present or past As the Apostle teacheth in the Epistle to the a Rom. 1.2 Romanes and Peter in his first b 1 Pet. 1.10 Epistle DOCT. III. That the Fathers by faith in the promises concerning Christ the Redeemer to come were saved as well as we which now believe the Gospell YEt we doubt not but that the Fathers which believed the promised of the Gospel concerning the coming of Christ and his breaking the Serpents head were saved as well as we which now are saved by faith in the Gospel declaring unto us that Christ is come and that he hath redeemed the world As the Apostles abundantly teacheth both in other places and especially in the Epistle to the c Rom. 4.3 Romanes concerning Abraham and in the d Hebr. 11.1 Epistle to the Hebrews concerning all others That it is high blasphemie to say that the Fathers had onely promises of earthly things and that they received them but not heavenly as remission of sins and eternall life For what the Gospel is to us properly taken the same were the promises of the Gospel to them that is a Rom. 1.26 The power of God unto salvation to every one that believeth DOCT. IV. That the Doctrine of the Gospel for the substance thereof is most ancient yea eternall FRom whence we understand that the Doctrine of the Gospel as concerning the substance thereof is not new but most ancient being preached to the Fathers even from the foundation of the world That the Gospel not without good reason is called by Iohn the b Revel 14.6 Everlasting Gospel DOCT. V. What the parts of the Gospel be and how many THe Gospel may be reduced to three heads concerning our duty The first is c Act. 20.21 Repentance towards God The second faith toward our Lord Iesus Christ The third care a Matt. 28.20 to observe all things whatsoever Christ hath commanded us DOCT. VI. The explication of the opinion fore-going FOr the Gospel propounding and setting before us Christ with the full grace and mercie of God with full expiation and remission of sins with perfect salvation and eternall life requireth onely three things of us The first is that grieving heartily and truely for the sins committed in the whole course of our life past we desire of God even from our hearts and souls to change and renew our minds wills and affections to the obedience of his divine will earnestly studying for it and begging it of him by our prayers The second is that by faith laying hold on Christ with all the treasure of his merits we believe certainly without all manner of doubting that all our sins of the grace and mercie of God for Christ's sake onely are
comprehend therefore much in few words our judgement is that The Sacraments are outward signes and such as fall under our senses whith are added unto the word of the Gospel according to Christ's institution by reason of our ignorance weakness and for the better stirring up and confirming of our faith whereby all men are seriously called but the elect onely and believers by the holy Ghost inwardly working in their minds and drawing them are brought unto Christ to have true and reall communion with him and with his flesh and bloud and so are made partakers of all Christs benefits which by the word and outward visible signes are signified and offered that being incorporated into Christ they may at length make up the body of the whole Church according as the Father hath preordained unto the praise and glorie of his grace and their eternall salvation DOCT. XVII In summe what communitie the Sacraments of the Old Testament have with the Sacraments of the New COncerning the Sacraments of the Old Testament we need not say much forasmuch as they are abrogated But this one thing must not be omitted to wit that the Fathers of old forasmuch as they had the same God that we have the same promises the same Mediatour the same Spirit regenerating the same faith and the same hope They had likewise the same Sacraments that we have if we have respect unto the substance thereof which is Christ although for ceremonies different from ours And this we the rather hold because theirs were delivered to them to the same end that ours are delivered unto us to wit that they might be confirmed in the faith of Christ and grow up together in communion with him To prove what we have said these places of Scripture are very pertinent he was a Revel 13.8 the Lamb slain from the foundation of the world b 1 Cor. 10.4 They did all drink the same Spirituall drink for they drank of that Spirituall Rock that followed them and that Rock was Christ And again c Heb. 1● 8 Iesus Christ the same yesterday and to day and for ever DOCT. XVIII That there are onely two Sacraments of the Christian Church WE acknowledge onely two Sacraments properly so called which were alwayes common to all the Christian Church by name Baptisme and the Lords Supper whereof the one belongeth to the beginning of our communion with Christ and the other unto the increase thereof Whereupon the one is called the Laver or washing of regeneration and the other the holy Feast or the Lords Supper DOCT. XIX Errours condemned WE cannot therefore but dislike those which will have a Sacrament to be even where no word is heard but onely some visible signe seen And those likewise which make no distinction between the thing of the Sacrament and the Sacrament but will have it to be received into the mouth as well as the Sacramentall signe Whereas the thing of the Sacrament is that which the signe coming under the judgement of our sense bringeth unto our minde but letteth not fall into our hand or mouth Neither yet do we like those which in the Sacraments consider nothing else but what they see with their eyes Nor yet those which will have them to be onely badges cognizances to distinguish us from other people or else but bare signes and no instruments of the holy Ghost by which he worketh in us effectually and confirmes us in the communion of Christ But we condemne those which institute new Sacraments beside those which Christ himself hath instituted And those also which tye the grace of God and the things signified by the Sacraments unto the Sacraments in such manner as if every one that receiveth the signes might truely be said alwayes to partake also of the thing it self CHAP. XV. Concerning Baptisme BEsides what hath been said of the Sacraments in generall we further believe and confesse as followeth concerning the Sacrament of Baptisme in speciall DOCTRINE I. What Baptisme is and what the effects thereof a Matt. 21.19 BAptisme is the first Sacrament of the New Covenant by which both all they which either having made confession of their sins and profession of their faith in Christ and so likewise in God the Father the Son and the holy Ghost or such as at least we believe for the pietie of their b 1 Cor. 7.14 parents do belong unto the Covenant and they more especially which truely belong unto the Covenant are c Eph. 1 1● sealed in Christ being as it were d 1 Cor. 6.15 incorporated into him by the holy Ghost in such manner that they are e 1● no longer their own but his by whom they are said to be received unto the fellowship of the Covenant and so become one body with him and all the Saints and are made partakers of all Spirituall and celestiall benefits being by this Baptisme as the laver of regeneration a Ephes 5.26 cleansed from their sins by the bloud of Christ and b Rom. 6.4 buried with him into death that like as Christ was raised up from the dead by the glorie of the Father even so we also should walk in newnesse of life For which cause it is usually called the Sacrament or c Mark 1.4 The Baptisme of repentance for the remission of sins The seal of faith the seal of the Covenant the laver of regeneration the washing away of sins and the Sacrament or seal of newnesse of life DOCT. II. That the power and vertue of Baptisme hath onely place in the elect and that they alone are Baptised not onely with water but also with the holy Ghost BUt yet notwithstanding such excellent things are said of Baptisme and are truely attributed unto it as an instrument used by the holy Ghost and so Sacramentally all they which are Baptised are truely said to be made and to be such We believe that it is fulfilled really onely in the elect which are endued with the holy Ghost forasmuch as they onely do truely believe and truely belong unto Christ and his mysticall body And therefore that all indeed are Baptised with water but the elect onely with the holy Ghost and that all receive the signe not all the thing signified and offered by Baptisme but that the elect onely are made partakers thereof DOCT. III. What be the integrall parts of the Sacrament of Baptisme WE believe that for the making of the Sacrament of Baptisme to be entire those two things are sufficient which Christ hath instituted to wit the simple element of water with which men are Baptised whether by way of immersion or dipping in the water or aspersion sprinkling on the water and that form of words which Christ taught his Apostles to use when they Baptized Matth. 28.9 to wit In the name of the Father and of the Son and of the holy Ghost And we are fully perswaded that they neither used any other forme of words nor added any thing
else unto the water DOCT. IV. That infants being the children of believing parents are to be Baptized WE believe also with all the ancient Church that to the Sacrament of Baptisme are to be admitted not onely those which are of ripe years which repent and confesse their sins and make profession of their faith in Christ but also infants being the children of such parents forasmuch as we are to judge that they also belong unto the Covenant according to the Apostles saying to this purpose a 1 Cor. 7.14 That the children of believing parents are holy especially considering that Christ in no place hath changed Gods commandment made unto Abraham concerning the sealing of the children also of the faithfull and believers with the seal of the Covenant yea more considering that Christ hath said expresly a Matt. 19.14 Suffer little children and forbid them not to come unto me for of such is the Kingdome of heaven DOCT. V. How far forth Baptisme is necessarie in the Church and how far forth necessarie for every one unto salvation WE believe that Baptisme is altogether necessarie in the Church as a Sacrament instituted by Christ and so farre forth necessarie that where it is not when it may there we cannot acknowledge the Church of Christ to be But in such manner do we think it necessary for every one unto salvation that yet if it so happen that any one for defect of a Minister and not out of contempt do depart out of this life without Baptisme we do not therefore believe that he is damned and swallowed up of eternall destruction For the children of the faithfull and believers are therefore saved because they are within the Covenant of God and so holy But they which are of ripe years are saved by true faith in Christ which certainly cannot stand together with the contempt of Christs commandments DOCT. VI. That Baptisme once rightly administred ought not again to be repeated WE believe farther that as circumcision was made in the flesh but once onely so Baptisme also which succeeded in the place of Circumcision once duely and rightly administred ought not again to be repeated Now we understand that it is duely and rightly administred when as according to Christs institution first the Doctrine of the Gospel is premised concerning the true God Christ and his office and then men are Baptised with water and that by a lawfull Minister a Matt. 28.19 In the name of the Father and of the Son and of the holy Ghost For Christ also died but once and was buried and we are b Rom. 6.3 4. Baptised into his death and c Col. 2.12 buried with him by Baptisme Neither do we reade that the Apostles ever rebaptised any but onely Paul and these were such as before had a Act. 19.5 not rightly been Baptised DOCT. VII That the power and vertue of Baptisme lasteth for ever ALthough we come unto the Sacrament of Baptisme but once Yet we believe that the thing it self of the Sacrament and the power and vertue thereof lasteth for ever that is our ingrafting into Christ and so the participation of his benefits the washing away of sins and regeneration which every day is more and more perfected in us by the holy Ghost For the Apostle saith that b Ephes 5.26 Christ hath cleansed the Church with the washing of water by the word c 27. that he might present it to himself a glorious Church not having spot or wrinkle d 1 Ioh 1.7 And the bloud of Iesus Christ cleanseth us eyery day from all sin And therefore we think that the faithfull and believers being content with the Sacrament of Baptisme once received ought dayly to be put in mind thereof and recall it to their memorie as also into whom they are Baptized and what God hath conferred upon them by Baptisme and again what they likewise have promised unto God That we may be all every day more and more confirmed in our faith and grow up together in our communion with Christ and be made more studious and diligent in the performing of our dutyes Neither is Baptisme ordained for the remission either of Originall sinne onely or the sinnes of our life past but also for all the sinnes of our whole life As our plucking out of the water is a signe of new life not for one day onely but for all the dayes of our life according to the saying of the Apostle a Rom. c. 4. We are buried with him by Baptisme for ever into death that like as Christ was raised up from the dead by the glory of the Father even so we also should walk for ever in newnesse of life We were but once washed outwardly with water but the bloud of Christ is an everliving spring which dayly washeth and cleanseth us from all sinne DOCT. VIII By whom Baptisme ought to be administred WE believe that by whom the Gospel is preached by the same also ought holy Baptisme to be administred For to whom Christ said a Mark 16.15 Go ye into all the world and preach the Gospel to the same also he said b Matt. 28.19 Go and teach all nations Baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the holy Ghost c 20. Teaching them to observe all things whatsoever I have commanded you DOCT. IX Errours condemned WE therefore condemne all heresies as well old as new which are or have been spread abroad concerning Baptisme contrarie to sound Doctrine either by Seleucus and Hermias which Baptized with fire or the Cerdonians and Marcionites which used another form of words then that which was prescribed by Christ and that in the name of another God then in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the holy Ghost Those which Baptised in the name of Iohn or any other The Cataphryges which Baptised even the dead together with the Donatists and Anabaptists which rebaptised all that come unto them Those likewise which deny that infants are to be Baptised and those also which deny that Baptisme to be true whereunto there is not added Exorcismes Spittle Salt and other ceremonies which are the meer inventions of men CHAP. XVI Concerning the Lords Supper BY what hath been delivered by us concerning our communion with Christ the word of the Gospel the Sacraments in generall and Baptisme in speciall it may be easily known what our faith and belief is concerning the Lords Supper DOCTRINE I. That the Sacrament of the Lord's Supper is an instrument used by the holy Ghost for the furthering of our communion with Christ and his Church WE believe that the Sacrament of the Supper is not onely a testimonie of our communion with Christ and so with his flesh and bloud and also with the whole Church but also an instrument used by the holy Ghost to confirme and further the same The Apostle saith as much a 1 Co● 10.16 The bread which
we break is it not the communion of the body of Christ The breaking and the receiving the blessed bread he calls the communion of the Lord's body because they which eat thereof with actuall faith in the Lord himself grow up together in communion with the Lord himself and with his flesh and bloud Even as they also which with faith embrace the word preached by the Apostles b 1 Iohn 1.3 have also fellowship with the Apostles and that fellowship is with the Father and his Son Iesus Christ DOCT. II. A confirmation of the former FOr as Baptisme is an instrument to inchoate and begin this communion because thereby we are born again in Christ So the Supper was instituted to perfect the same because therein we are fed with the flesh and bloud of Christ that we may grow up in him a 1 Cor. 12.13 For as the Apostle saith by one Spirit are we all Baptized into one body and have been all made to drink into one Spirit DOCT. III. That the furthering and increasing of our communion with Christ is the chief end of the Lords Supper THe Lords Supper was indeed instituted for many other ends to wit that being admonished both by words and signes representing the Lords death and the effusion of his most precious bloud we might call to mind and thankfully acknowledge the great benefit of our Redemption For what saith the Apostle b 1 Cor. 11.26 As often as ye eat this bread and drink this cup ye do shew the Lords death till he come To these ends therefore serveth it that we may be confirmed in our faith about the remission of our sins that we may be nourished unto the hope of a blessed resurrection that we may be stirred up to give thanks unto God for so great a benefit and to repent us of our sins and last of all to renew our covenant made with God openly and in the presence of the whole Church But because all these tend to no other end but this that we may be more and more united unto Christ and become one with him and that a Gal. 2.20 he may live more effectually in us and we in him b Eph. 5. ●0 being made flesh of his flesh and bone of his bones Therefore we doubt not but the Supper was chiefly and principally instituted for the increasing and furthering this our union and communion with Christ in which is perfected and consummated our salvation Whereunto also serveth the bread and wine being bodily nourishments That we may know it for certain that what the bread and wine is for the nourishing of our bodyes and the preserving of this naturall life such also is the flesh and bloud of Christ for the feeding of our souls and the maintenance of our Spirituall life DOCT. IV. Why the bread is called the body of Christ FRom whence also we may learn why Christ calleth this bread his body Not so as if it were either properly his true body or as if his body were included in it or so as if it were but a bare and naked signe of his body which was broken and crucified for us But because it is a Sacrament thereof and Sacraments as St. Augustine saith are often called by the names of those things whereof they are Sacraments and so is made an instrument of the holy Ghost for the communicating unto us the true body of Christ and for the confirming us in the communion thereof As also the Apostle for the same reason speaking of Baptisme called it not a signe of regeneration but the very laver of regeneration without doubt because a Eph. 5.26 with the washing of water by the word as by a fit and convenient instrument Christ by the effectuall working of his Spirit doth inwardly wash cleanse and regenerate us DOCT. V. That the bread is but improperly and figuratively called the true and substantiall body of Christ WHerefore we doubt not but in the words of the Supper the true and naturall body of Christ is predicated of the bread especially seeing that for explication sake there is added b Luk. 22.19 Which is given for you So that this is a most true saying the bread is Christs body to wit that true boby which was given for us but this is improperly and figuratively seeing that in very deed the bread was given for us but the true body of Christ whereof the bread is a Sacrament DOCT. VI. That the body of Christ is not in the bread really and properly FRom hence also we are confirmed in our opinion that as the bread is not properly the very body of Christ but a Sacrament thereof so likewise the body of Christ is not really and properly in the bread For in Sacraments the things themselves whereof they are Sacraments are not really included although they sometimes receive the names thereof As it appeareth plainly in Baptisme without all controversie in which no man saith that either the bloud of Christ by which we are washed from our sins or regeneration it self is included For neither in the word of the Gospel are included really those things which thereby are declared Now the Sacraments are the visible word But neither did Christ say My body is in this that is in the bread but he used another farre different manner of speaking to wit This that is This bread is my body Now if any one list to be contentious and say that the sense is all one It will follow that if the body of Christ be really in the bread the bread likewise is really properly and substantially the body of Christ which if it be impious once to affirme then cannot the other be affirmed without great impietie And yet we deny not but that Sacramentally it may be so according to the sense in which we say that in the word of the Gospel is remission of sins life and salvation which thereby are declared and offered unto us But forasmuch as by such manner of speaking the vulgar sort are commonly drawn to superstition we judge it fitting to abstain altogether from them and we hold it most mete to use such formes of words as we find recorded in the sacred Scripture DOCT. VII That in the Supper not onely the signes but also the things themselves signified are distributed NOw without all manner of controversie this we hold for a sure position and a certain truth that although the very body and bloud of the Lord are not that is exist not in their own substance and really and properly in the bread wine but in heaven Yet together with the distribution of the bread and wine the very flesh and bloud also are truely offered unto all to be eaten and to be drunk But how Not simply but as the one was delivered unto death for us and the other poured forth for the remission of our sins For the words of Christ in a Iohn 6.51 Iohn are manifest concerning the eating of his flesh
and the drinking of his bloud if any man will have life in him and consonant and agreeable unto the words of Christ are the words of the Apostle also saying b 1 Cor. 11.27 Whosoever shall eat this bread and drink this cup of the Lord unworthily shall be guilty of the true body and bloud of the Lord. Neither do we doubt but as Christ openly commanded the bread to be eaten so also not long after where he said this is my body he secretly commanded that also to be eaten no lesse then the bread but yet each after it's own manner DOCT. VIII That none but the faithfull do truely eat the true flesh of Christ BUt yet notwithstanding the flesh of Christ is in the Supper offered unto all to eat we believe that they are the true faithfull onely which do truely eat thereof And that for these reasons First because they onely have communion with Christ and so also with his flesh and bloud but others have not neither are they made partakers thereof when they receive the bread Secondly because they onely have the Spirit of Christ by the power of whom alone the flesh of Christ is truely communicated Thirdly because they onely bring faith with them without which there can be no true receiving and eating thereof For neither doth Christ himself truely and really exhibit his true body but to them who as truely believe that his body was delivered unto death for them and his bloud poured forth for their sins as they believe that those words are true THIS IS MY BODY DOCT. IX That Hypocrites eat the body of Christ Sacramentally MEan while we deny not but that even Hypocrites themselves void of true and justifying faith when they receive and eat the bread as the Sacrament of the Lords body may be said in some sort to eat the true body of Christ to wit Sacramentally but not truely and really As the Apostle in like manner saith that all the Corinthians which were Baptized with water were also sanctified and justified to wit Sacramentally as we declared before although they were not all truely made such DOCT. X. That of those that eat there are three sorts and so divers manners of eating FRom whence we are taught that there are three sorts of men of whom there may a question be made whether they eat the flesh of Christ or no. The first is of thē which receive the bread as common bread and not as a Sacrament And these eat not the body of Christ in any sort but are true Capernaites and their eating is merely carnall The second is of them which contrarily eat not the bread at all but yet not out of contempt but believe the Gospel onely and their eating is merely Spirituall The third and last sort is of them which not content onely with believing the Gospel receive the bread also not simply as the first as if it were bare and common bread but as the Sacrament of the Lords body whereupon they may be said also to receive and eat Sacramentally But forasmuch as this may be done by the true Godly as well as by those which are hypocrites and ungodly but yet after a different manner the one sort eating also by faith and the other without true faith Therefore also we say that the ungodly and hypocrites eat onely Sacramentally but the true Godly both Sacramentally and truely and Spiritually and so unto salvation DOCT. XI That by faith onely the true body of Christ is eaten BUt whereas we say that the faithfull onely receive the true body of Christ not Sacramentally onely but also truely we understand it of eating not with the mouth of the body but the mind and Spirit endued with faith and that by the operation of the holy Spirit effectually working in us and applying Christ wholly unto us For it is the food of the mind as a Cyprian Serm. de Coena Cyprian speaketh and not of the belly And as Christ speaketh and St. Augustine expounds it b Ioh. 6.36 It is the Spirit that quickeneth the flesh profiteth nothing And the Apostle teacheth That c 1 Cor. 12.13 by one Spirit we are all Baptised into one body and have been all made to drink into one Spirit And if all our true union with Christ is by the holy Spirit although he with his body be in heaven and we on earth It is necessarie also that the eating be after the same manner For what is it to eat but to receive and unite the food unto thee for the nourishment of that part for which it is appointed Now the flesh of Christ as we said before is the food of the mind and not of the belly Neither truely do we eat the body of Christ any otherwise but as it was delivered to death for us made without bloud as the words do sound and the breaking of the bread doth represent unto us and also as the passeover and other sacrifices were wont to be eaten But now the body liveth and cannot be without bloud As at the first Supper it was neither dead nor without bloud To say then that properly that body doth passe into our bodyes and that by the mouth it is no lesse then sacriledge To what end also is this that as the bread is distributed without the wine and the wine without the bread so also the body without the bloud and the bloud apart without the body is given in the Sacrament of the Lords Supper But that we may understand that the body and bloud in their very substance and as they are in heaven do not passe through our mouthes but are received onely by a faithfull remembrance stirred up in us effectually by the holy Spirit For this is the thing which the Lord required saying a Luk. 22.20 This do in remembrance of me And again b 19. This is my body which is given for you For in so speaking he required faith of them by which they should believe this and by believing eat that is apply it to themselves for the food and life of their souls Wherefore we are verily perswaded that they do truely and not imaginarily eat the flesh of Christ whosoever believe that it was delivered unto death for an expiatorie sacrifice to cleanse them from their sins and so believing embrace with a faithfull mind and apply it unto themselves And whosoever thus eat the body of Christ as dead we doubt not but they are more and more joyned and knit unto it now being living and quickning according to the promise of Christ who having first said c Ioh. 6.56 He that eateth my flesh afterwards added dwelleth in me and I in him DOCT. XII That the opinion concerning the eating of Christs body corporally is not to be admitted as being vain and improfitable Furthermore forasmuch as this manner of eating the flesh of Christ to wit by faith is certain and saving and that other feigned manner of eating by the
the Romanes and others not converted unto the faith were in them the singular gifts of God DOCT. VI. The Confirmation of the fore-going opinion FOr all infidels or unbelievers are not indued with the same or alike equall virtues sciences That even from thence it may manifestly appear that they are not the gifts of nature but the gifts of God added unto nature DOCT. VII That in things belonging unto God and true pietie the unregenerate man can do nothing BUt as concerning things belonging unto God true pietie and religion and a Christian life we believe that the mind of an unregenerate man is so blinded and his heart so depraved and all his powers and faculties so weak or none at all that he can neither truely know God nor the things of God neither love him nor desire things pleasing unto him much lesse obey his will as he ought For according to the Apostle a 1 Cor. 2.14 The naturall man perceiveth not the things of God neither can he perceive or understand them How can he then of himself either will or do any thing b Iohn 15.5 Without me saith our Saviour ye can do nothing DOCT. VIII The confirmation of the fore-going opinion FOr even as a man dead to men and nature can perform no action belonging unto men and nature So neither can he which is a P●● 2. ● dead to God in trespasses and sinnes truely know those things which belong unto God and true pietie much lesse can he do them but he lies rotting and stinking in his sinnes unless he be delivered from them by the grace of God through Christ and so be restored again unto life But all men that are without Christ and not regenerated by the Spirit of Christ are truely dead and therefore they are truely said to be b Iohn ● 21 quickned to be raised from the dead and to be regenerated or born again whosoever are by faith in Christ delivered from their sinnes and ingrafted into Christ DOCT. IX Errours condemned THerefore we condemne all Pelagians which teach the contrarie lifting up the power and strength of free-will against the grace of Christ And we detest and abhorre the opinion of the Manichees and all others which will have a man to be like a stock as if he had no judgement or libertie of will at all in civil matters CHAP. IX Concerning the Promise of Redemption and Salvation through Christ DOCTRINE I. That Christ the heavenly man was of grace promised to save us WHen a 1 Cor. 15.47 the first man which was of the earth earthy was b Gen. 3.17 fallen into such a miserable estate and condition by his own fault through disobedience and not he onely but together with him all his posteritie which sinned in him and were to be c Psalm 5● 5 conceived in sin to be born d Eph. 2.3 the children of wrath We believe that God of his mere grace and mercie to Adam and Eve and in them to all mankind e Gen 3.15 Matt. 1.21 promised another man f 1 Cor. 15.47 from heaven of the true substance of man indeed but to be a Luk. 1.34 conceived without the seed of man and therefore to be b Isa 7.14 Matt. 1.23 Luk. 1.34 born of a Virgin c Heb. 4.15 without sinne in whom as in another head of mankind consisting of a divine and humane nature being the true d Heb. 1.3 expresse image of God the Father and filled with the holy Ghost that might be fulfilled which in the first head succeeded not through his own fault that is That he the second man in our name and for us which were to be e Rom. 6.5.11.7 grafted into him by his Spirit and by spirituall generation to be f Eph. 5.29 flesh of his flesh and bone of his bones might most perfectly g Rom. 5.19 obey God the Father and by his h Phil. 2.8 obedience and death take away sinne appease the wrath of God redeem us justifie us sanctifie us rule us by his Spirit set us at libertie give us grace and strength to that which is good and finally save us unto everlasting life and glorifie us DOCT. II. That the Promise Concerning the Redemption by Christ was necessarie FOr Adam not as a private person but as the parent and root of all mankind as he was indued at the first with righteousness that he might propagate it unto all his posteritie as in an inheritance for which cause it is commonly called Originall righteousness So by his disobedience he hath transmitted unto all men great unrighteousnesse in stead of righteousnesse and eternall death in stead of life eternall Necessarie therefore was it that there should be another head that is Christ from whom by reason of his obedience there might be derived on all his members true and heavenly righteousnesse holinesse and life DOCT. III. To what end the Promise was made presently after that the sinne was committed WE believe That therefore the promise was presently after the sinne committed made from the begining of the world and afterwards by the holy fathers was often repeated expounded and confirmed by divers wayes signes and seales That not only we which have been since the coming of the Messias but also all others from the foundations of the world as many as should believe this promise and by true faith embrace Christ to come might also be made partakers of redemption justification and salvation DOCT. IV. That from the beginning of the world as many as believed on Christ to come were saved WE believe That from the beginning of the world as many as believed on Christ promised and to come they were grafted into him by faith they were made partakers of his future obedience passion death and redemption they did eate his body which was afterwards to be delivered and drink his bloud which was afterwards to be powred out and last of all they were all Christians indued with the Spirit of Christ and saved unto everlasting life no lesse then we are DOCT. V. Errours condemned ANd further we condemne and detest their opinon which hold that no man was saved before the coming of Christ and that the Fathers which were before received no promise of eternall salvation but onely of things temporall CHAP. X. Concerning the Law DOCTRINE I. That the Law of Moses came between the promise of salvation by Christ and the fulfilling thereof and to what end BUt between the Promise of Redemption by Christ which was first made unto Adam and afterwards more manifestly declared unto others but especially unto Abraham sealed by the Sacrament of Circumcision and as it were confirmed by the death of Isaac the first born offered for a sacrifice and established by an everlasting covenant Between this promise I say and the fulfilling thereof the Law which was delivered by Moses came between the people which descended from the seed of Abraham of
the divine nature DOCT. VII As the first union so likewise the second is made by the power of the holy Ghost NEither doubt we but that the Son of God our Lord Iesus Christ as in the first union by the power of his Spirit he assumed and took upon him our flesh and bloud for he was conceived man by the holy Ghost and that without sinne for which cause also he is called the a 1 Cor. 15 4● Heavenly Man so also in the second he gives us his flesh and his bloud and communicates himself wholly unto us and by this communion so knits conjoynes and incorporates us unto himself by the efficacie of his Spirit that still the bond that knits Christ unto us and us unto him is the same Spirit which Spirit as it effected in the wombe of the Virgin that the Son of God became flesh of our flesh and bone of our bones So also by working in our hearts and incorporating us into Christ it effecteth likewise that we by the participation of the body and bloud of Christ become flesh of his flesh and bone of his bones especially when it stirreth up faith in us whereby we embrace and lay hold on Christ and acknowledge him to be true God and Man and so a perfect Redeemer and Saviour DOCT. VIII That our union with Christ is in such sort Spirituall that it is notwithstanding true and reall SO believe we this other union also no lesse almost then the former if I may so speak to be Spirituall that yet it is true and reall For by the Spirit of Christ we though here on earth are really and truly joyned with the body bloud and soul of Christ now raigning in heaven and with his divine nature abiding in us insomuch that this mysticall body which consisteth of a 1 Cor. 12.12 Christ as the head and the faithfull as the members thereof is sometimes simply called Christ So great is the conjunction of Christ with the faithfull and the faithfull with Christ that it is not amisse in some sort to say that as the first union was of two natures in one Person so also this of many Persons as it were into one nature according to these texts of Scripture b 2 Pet. 1.4 That you might be partakers of the divine nature and We are members of his body of his flesh and of his bones DOCT. IX The Confirmation of the opinion fore-going How close and near this union is FOr as in man the soul which is one and the same and all in every part as well in the head and every particular member as in the whole body together causeth all the members to be united and grow together into one body under one head So also by the power of Christ's Spirit which is one and the same in Christ and in all the faithfull it cometh to passe that all of us being both in body and minde knit together into one Spiritually become one and the same body with Christ our head one body I say mysticall and Spirituall because it is connected and compacted together by the most secret bond of the same Spirit CHAP. X. That this union forasmuch as it is made by the holy Ghost cannot be hindred by any distance of place FRom whence it followes that this true and reall union though Spirituall of our bodyes and souls with the body and soul of Christ cannot be hindred by any no not the greatest distance of place because it is made by the efficacie of that Spirit which reacheth from earth even up to heaven and higher then so and knitteth together the members of Christ here on earth with the head in heaven sitting at the right hand of the Father conjoyning them together in one so closely and nearely as the soul of man doth the armes legs hands and feet and the other members with the head into one body though the man should be so great and tall for stature that having his feet set in the Centre of the earth his head should reach to heaven even to the ninth spheere So great is the virtue and power of the soul How great then is the virtue and power of the holy Ghost who is true God and omnipotent DOCT. XI That the holy Ghost by whom this union is made is given by Christ at the preaching of the Gospell and the administration of the Sacraments WE believe further that this Spirit by which Christ knitteth himself unto us and us unto himself his flesh with ours and ours with his is communicated by Christ at his own pleasure and according to his grace when and where and after what manner it pleaseth him but ordinarily at the preaching of the Gospell and the administration of the Sacraments A visible testimonie whereof there was in the infancie of the Church when as we read those which received the Gospell and were baptised or on whom hands were laid beside the invisible grace of regeneration received also sundrie and sensible gifts of the Spirit DOCT. XII That this union is the principall end of the Gospell and Sacraments FRom whence we easily gather what is the principall end of the preaching of the Gospell and the administration of the Sacraments to wit this Our communion with Christ the Son of God who for us was made flesh who suffered died for us but now raigneth in heaven and communicateth salvation and life to his elect and chosen Our Communion with Christ I say here inchoate and begunne but hereafter to be perfected and finish'd in heaven that further by this our true and reall connexion conjunction with his flesh and bloud and his whole Person we may at length be made partakers of eternall life which was purchased by him and resideth or abideth in him DOCT. XIII That this union is not imaginarie nor made by participation of gifts onely but also by communication of substance BUt for this cause do we call this our present incorporation with Christ true reall and substantiall to meet with the errour of those which think that the union which we hold is but onely imaginarie and therefore false or if true that then it is onely by the participation of Spirituall gifts and the grace of Christ without the communication of the substance of his flesh bloud DOCT. XIV That this union is made by no other means but onely by the holy Ghost and by faith BUt again lest any should falsely imagine that we hold this union to be made with the flesh of Christ either as if it were here really present upon earth by any Physicall or naturall contact whether grosse or subtill as all siensible things are united with the sense some after a more grosse and others after a more subtill manner Or else with the same flesh as it is abiding in heaven by Species in the minde which the Philosophers call Intelligible as all things Intelligible are united with the Intellect which receiveth them by certain images and mentall
great injurie to the Gospel of Christ Concerning the Gospel of Christ this is our faith DOCT. VIII Errours WE therefore hold that the Antinomi or the professed enemies of the Law are to be condemned and whosoever do dislike the Morall Law and banish it out of their Churches as if it were either contrarie to the Gospel or nothing pertaining unto Christians and further those which mislike and finde fault with Magistrates forgoing about to bring in Politicall Laws of Moses into their commonwealths CHAP. XIV Concerning the Sacraments of the New Testament BEcause God for the perfecting of our communion with Christ wherein the participation of salvation wholly consisteth hath been pleased to use not onely the word of the Gospel alone by it self but also enternall signes fit for that purpose and joyned together with the word which two are required to the constituting of a Sacrament Therefore in the next place after our confession concerning the Gospel we think good to adde a brief and perspicuous Sacraments and that agreeable unto the holy Scripture and the first principles of our Christian faith DOCTRINE I. What we understand by the name of Sacrament WE know that a Sacrament is properly an holy oath or promise on both parts that is made between God and his people not simply but also established by certain holy rites and ceremonies As it appeared manifestly in the Sacrament of circumcision between God and Abraham and in Baptisme which succeeded in the place of circumcision between Christ and us So a Sacrament is by the Fathers taken often for the whole Sacramentall action whether of Baptisme or of the Lords Supper in which there goes before a promise on both parts confirmed after an holy manner by externall rites signes and seals and also by the bloud of Christ But in after time by the name of Sacrament they understood by a figure called Synecdoche the rites onely or the visible signes added unto the word And this is another signification which prevailed and had place in the Church Now we according to the signification and use of the word in the Church call a Sacrament not the word onely nor the outward element onely but the element or the visible signes joyned with the word of the Gospel according to Christ's institution Whereunto agreeth that of St. Augustine a Augustine The word is added unto the element and so it becomes a Sacrament DOCT. II. Whereof the Sacraments are Sacraments NOw because every Sacrament is the Sacrament of some thing we say that this thing is that which the word of the Gospel doth signifie to wit the grace of God in Christ or rather Christ himself together with grace and salvation placed in him For Christ is the summe of the Gospel and that we may have communion with him as was the word so likewise were the Sacraments instituted and ordained to put us in mind of him and to raise up our thoughts unto him And so what is outwardly exhibited unto us we say it is a signe of that which is inwardly proposed and set before us to be received and that which is done without is a signe of that which the holy Ghost inwardly worketh in our hearts DOCT. III. What the parts are whereof a Sacrament consisteth FRom hence also we come to understand what the parts are whereof a Sacrament is properly said to consist to wit the word and the signe or outward visible element but yet with a relation unto the thing by them signified and represented and whereof they are a Sacrament For the thing whereof any thing is a Sacrament is not it self neither can it be a Sacrament or any part of a Sacrament Forasmuch as every Sacrament is a Sacrament of another thing which is different and diverse from it But yet we do not simply and absolutely separate the thing it self from the Sacrament neither do we deny but that the Fathers and many other learned and godly men do in the name of Sacrament comprehend the thing it self whereof any thing is a Sacrament As by the name of Baptisme is not onely the outward ablution or washing of water understood but also therein is contained the inward purging of the conscience from sin and likewise regeneration Therefore we embrace that saying of Ireneus concerning the Eucharist or the Sacrament of the Lords Supper that it doth consist both of an earthly and heavenly matter neither do we when we speak of the Sacraments abstain from such manner of speaking yet in this sense not that the thing signified is properly a part of the Sacrament for it is rather that unto the participation whereof the Sacraments do lead us But because the Sacrament hath a mysticall relation unto it so that by the tye of this relation the earthly matter is knit together with the heavenly And thus we reconcile the sayings of divers Fathers and many other learned men which may seem to jarre one with another whereas they were all of one and the same mind every where some calling the Sacraments simply by these and the like names Signes Figures Resemblances or Representations Types Antitypes Signets Seals Ceremonies and the Visible Word others saying that they consist of an earthly and heavenly matter which how it is to be understood we have declared already all of them oftentimes after the manner of holy writ calling them by the names of those things whereof they are Sacraments whereas yet notwithstanding they understood professed that there were three things to be considered in the Sacraments that is to say the Word the signes added unto the Word and the things whereof they are signes DOCT. IV. The reasons why the Lord would have signes also added to the Word of the Gospel and why they are called the Visible Word WE believe also and confesse ingenuously that the visible signes by Gods institution were added unto the word and that they were to be added for the better and surer confirmation of the word in our mindes it being the manner and custome almost in every nation to affix and set to their seals to their last wills and Testaments as also to divers other writings Which also is the reason why the outward signes which fall under our sense are called by St. Augustine the Visible Word to wit because they were instituted and ordained and likewise added unto the word to this end that they should do the same thing which the Word doeth that is to say that what the Word signifieth unto our eares the same also should they represent unto confirme unto us the Word and promises of God And that as by the Word faith is stirred up in our minds so also by them as outward signes and seals it might be confirmed sealed and every day more and more increased And last of all that as the Word so also the holy signes might become as instruments for the holy Ghost to use for the bringing us to have communion with Christ or for the making us to
grow together in it And we make no doubt or question at all but all this was instituted and appointed by God for our weaknesse and ignorance and for the imbecillitie of our faith that it might be supported not onely by the Word but also by the outward signes Forasmuch as faith it is by which properly it comes to passe that we embrace and lay hold on Christ and grow up together in him DOCT. V. That where the Words of institution are not recited there is no Sacrament And that without the use thereof the outward signes are no more then what they are of their own nature ANd as we believe that the signes are added unto the Word not for superstition but for the greater confirmation of our faith so also we confesse that the Word is necessarie in the administration of the Sacraments not for incantation but for to stirre up faith in our hearts And thereupon when the Words of Institution are not so recited or rehearsed as that they may be heard and understood for the stirring up of faith There we deny any true Sacrament to be and conclude that without the due lawfull use thereof the outward signes are no Sacraments but merely that which they are of their own nature and no more For by the Word onely are the outward elements or signes set a part for an holy use which setting apart is by many called the Consecrating or Sanctifying thereof And so they become Sacraments according to that of St Augustine August The Word is added unto the element and so it becomes a Sacrament But yet so must it be added that it may be understood and believed DOCT. VI. That the Sacraments are not bare and naked signes THerefore we believe that the Sacramentall signes are not onely bare notes or marks to distinguish us from all other people which are aliens and strangers from the true Church nor yet onely badges or cognizances of Christian societie by which we may make profession of our faith and give thanks unto God for the great benefit of our redemption But also that they are instruments by which whilst the actions and benefits of Christ are represented unto us and recalled unto our memorie the promises of God are sealed unto us and faith also stirred vp in our hearts the holy Ghost also ingrafting us into Christ and preserving us being once ingrafted and making us every day more and more to grow up into one with him that so being indued with greater faith towards God more ardent charitie towards our neighbour and the gift of true mortification of our selves we may leade a life as near as it is possible according to the most perfect pattern of Christ's life in all Spirituall joy and gladnesse till at length we received up to live with him in heaven a most holy happy and blessed life for ever and ever DOCT. VII What the Sacraments of the New Testament are WE confesse also with St. Augustine August De Doctrin Christ lib. 3. cap. 9. that the Sacraments by Christ delivered unto us are for number few for performance most easie for understanding most full of majesty First For number few because they are but two onely Baptisme and The Lords Supper Secondly For performance most easie because there is nothing in Baptisme or in the Lords Supper which may not easily be performed and received nothing troublesome nothing unpleasant nothing strange or abhorring from the manners of men Last of all For understanding most full of majestie because although the things which are seen with our eyes are vile yet the things signified and represented unto our minds to be understood thereby and to be considered are most full of majestie divine and heavenly pertaining unto everlasting salvation DOCT. VIII That for the worthy receiving of the Sacraments there is need of faith and understanding FRom whence also we come to understand that for the worthy receiving of the Sacraments the action of the mind also is required attention and faith whereby we may understand and apprehend what is thereby signified and exhibited unto us as also Christ himself teacheth where concerning his Supper he saith a Luke 22.19 This do in remembrance of mee And the b 1 Cor 1.42 Apostle duely waighing and considering with himself the Words of Christ expounds them at large Whereunto belongeth that also Lift up your hearts For there are set before us things majesticall heavenly and divine to be understood by the mind and to be received by faith DOCT. IX That the thing it self of the Sacrament is seriously and truely set before all although all do not truely partake thereof but the elect and faithfull onely BUt although all men come not to the receiving of the Sacraments with true faith and understanding Yet as the visible signes are exhibited unto all that do professe the name of Christ so also we believe that the things themselves which by the Sacraments are signified are also seriously and truely by Christ offered unto all and therefore that by reason of the infidelitie and unbelief of those which receive onely the visible signes nothing at all is detracted from the integritie perfection of the Sacraments Forasmuch as that dependeth onely on Christ's Institution and the truth of his Words DOCT. X. That whilst the Sacraments are administred the holy Ghost worketh effectually in the faithfull and therefore that they do not onely receive the bare visible signes but also partake of the thing thereby signified BUt again although whilst the Sacraments are administred the Spirit of Christ worketh not effectually in all men as neither doth he whilst the Word is preached but all through their own fault because they bring not with them faith and understanding Yet we believe neverthelesse that he worketh effectually in all the elect and believers forasmuch as he conferreth and bestoweth faith upon them by the preaching of the Word and every day more and more confirmeth them in it by the receiving of the Sacraments and bringeth them to have communion with Christ and causeth them to grow up together in it And therefore we confesse that they are in Baptisme truely washed from their sins and purged by the virtue of Christ's bloud and that in the Supper they are nourished and fed with the body and bloud of Christ DOCT. XI That Christ is the Authour and true dispenser of the Sacraments ANd as we acknowledge onely one Authour of the Sacraments So also we acknowledge one onely true dispenser of the same to wit our Lord Iesus Christ who dispenseth indeed the outward elements and visible signes by the ministerie of man Instrumentally but himself doth truely and properly communicate the matter it self of the Sacraments or the thing signified by himself and his holy Spirit efficiently According to what Iohn the Baptist said that he indeed did Baptize a Matt. 3.11 with water but Christ with the holy Ghost And therefore as it is lawfull for no man to institute and
ordaine new Sacraments so neither can any man boast that he doth truely and properly either purge the Consciences of men from sin or feed them with the true body and bloud of Christ but onely as they use to say Ministerially DOCT. XII That the Sacraments received by the faithfull are not vitiated and polluted by the ill lives and conditions of the Ministers thereof BUt if Christ alone be not onely the true Authour but dispenser also of the Sacraments From hence it is easily gathered that the Sacraments received by the faithfull are not vitiated and polluted by the corruptions and ill lives of those whose Ministerie God useth but that they receive them worthily and are made partakers of the thing signified and offered by the Sacraments For a T●it 1.15 Vnto the pure all things are pure and b Eph. 3.17 By faith Christ with all his treasures dwelleth in the hearts of the believers DOCT XIII That grace is not tyed and bound to the Sacraments UPon the same grounds and foundations we are confirmed in the opinion which is received and maintained by all the godly That grace is not tyed and bound unto the Sacraments to wit so that he which receiveth them doth necessarily yea though he want faith receive also the thing it self thereby signified and offered as if ex opere operato as they speak upon the outward act of receiving the Sacraments barely considered a man might attain unto the signified For Christ doth not absolutely say a Mark 16.16 He that is Baptised shall be saved but he saith in the first place He that believeth and is c. And b Act. ● 13 Simon Magus also was Baptised but yet he attained not unto the thing it self signified by Baptisme For as Peter witnesseth he was still c 23. in the gall of bitternesse and in the bond of iniquitie being held entangled in diabolicall malice and so having no part in the Kingdome of Christ And d August Many there are which eate the bread of the Lord but not the bread the Lord. For as they which hear the Gospell preached unto them are not made partakers of remission of sins unlesse they repent them of their sins past and believe in Christ so neither are they which receive the Sacrament made partakers of those things which are thereby represented and offered unto them unlesse unto to outward receiving there be also added repentance and faith DOCT. XIV That by the unworthinesse of the receivers the power and virtue of the Sacraments is neither taken away nor diminished NEither yet do we therefore take away or diminish the power and efficacie of the Sacraments given thereunto by God Forasmuch as we confesse that it depends upon faith and the power of Christ who instituted and ordained the Sacraments and that it is neither taken away nor diminished by the unworthinesse of the administers thereof or the receivers For as the Gospel by it self retaineth alwayes it's own power efficacie and signification although all men do not understand it and again as it hath power to exhibite what it offereth to be received although all men be not made partakers thereof So also is it with the Sacraments which are the visible Word For as the Word by it self alwaies is the power of God unto salvation but not so to every one that heareth unlesse he also doth believe So also the Sacraments are instruments which the holy Ghost useth alwayes efficacious unto salvation although none partake of the efficacie thereof but onely those which do truely believe For which cause the Apostle is not afraid to say that all those which were Baptised were a 1 Cor. 6.11 washed sanctified justified although he knew that there were many hypocrites amongst them For by such manner of speaking is signified the efficacie by God given unto the Sacraments and what we are to believe concerning the efficacie thereof unlesse perhaps our own hypocrisie be an hindrance and impediment thereunto In which sense if any one shall say that whosoever eate the bread of the Lord they are made also partakers of the Lords body that is as concerning the power and efficacie of the Sacraments and the Authour and distributour thereof there is no impediment or hindrance but that the receivers of the Sacraments are made parkers of the thing thereby signified and offered unto them We cannot dislike such manner of speaking if so be that there be added thereunto such explications and expositions as these for the instructing of the ruder sort of people and for the rooting up out of their mindes the false opinion which hath been along time conceived concerning the Opus operatum or the outward work performed at the receiving of the Sacraments DOCT. XV. That between the signes and the things signified there is a Sacramentall union And what that is ANd although we say that the thing it self of the Sacraments is not tyed and bound unto the Sacraments nor included in them either Naturally or Locally or Corporally or by tye of obligation as if God simply and absolutely had promised to give even the things themselves to all the receivers of the Sacraments though wanting faith and further as if he were bound to give them even unto the impenitent and unbelievers Yet we do not hereby take away all manner of conjunction and tye between the things signified and the signes For we acknowledge and confesse a Sacramentall that is such a union as may stand with the Sacraments and the things of the Sacraments Now this Sacramentall union consisteth in a kind of mysticall and holy relation inasmuch as the signes do both signifie the things and also offer them to be received and again the things are signified by the signes and exhibited also to be received As likewise there is a union between the word signifying and exhibiting and the things by the word signifyed and exhibited But this conjunction or union as well of the Sacraments as of the word with the things themselves dependeth on the will and counsell of God who did institute them For when he instituted the preaching of the Gospel and the administration of the Sacraments he did it to this end and purpose which we have declared and that we hearing the word and beholding and receiving the signes should presently lift up the eyes of our minds unto the things thereby signified and that by the hand of faith we should receive them being offered and that we might truely and really be united unto Christ who by the word is preached unto us and by the signification of the Sacraments is as it were pointed at with the finger As therefore our conjunction or joyning together with Christ is altogether mysticall as the a Eph. 5.32 Apostle teacheth So also we hold that the union as well of the word as of the Sacraments with the things whereof they are signes and Sacraments is mysticall and Spirituall DOCT. XVI The Definition of the Sacraments TO
connexion together with the Head b 6. One onely God to worship whom and to glorifie him for ever we are all elected and called c 5. one faith of all believers one salvation and one celestiall inheritance in regard whereof Christ alwayes called his Church one and his flock one We do not therefore make the Church which was from the beginning of the world and before the coming of Christ to be another from that which now is and ever shall be even to the end of the world but we hold it to be one at all times and in all places and of all persons truely joyned unto Christ And therefore we say that the communion of all Saints is one and we are perswaded out of holy Scripture that whosoever do make a finall revolt or departure therefrom they do not belong unto this one body DOCT. VIII That there is but one Head of the Church to wit Iesus Christ FRom hence are we confirmed in the faith that seeing the Church of Christ which is his body is but one therefore the Head thereof is and alwayes was but one Now by the name of Head we understand him who from the beginning of the world was by God given unto the Church to this end that he should be at length made partaker of the same nature with it and redeem it and closely unite it unto himself and quicken it and illuminate it with the splendour of his wisdome and inflame it with the ardent heat of divine love and effectually move it unto all good desires and good works and perpetually guide governe and preserve it For besides dayly experience in nature we are caught it out of the holy Scripture that these are the proper operations of the Head in respect of the body But we acknowledge none that doth or can perform these for the Church besides Iesus Christ not denying in the mean time but there may be one head of all the hypocrites which are in the Church and consequently of a hypocriticall Church it self forasmuch as the Prophets did foretell thus much and the Apostles also have confirmed it But we believe and confesse with the holy Apostles that the a Eph. 1.22.4.15.5.23 Col 1.18 Head of the true Church is but one onely to wit Iesus Christ DOCT. IX That this Church is truely holy FRom whence also it followes that this Church is truely holy and that for these reasons 1. Because it hath a most holy and sanctifying Head 2. Because no sins are imputed to it 3. Because from the Head it drawes the Spirit of Sanctification 4. Because whatsoever sanctitie is in the Head all the same is imputed to every particular member DOCT. X. That the Church is also truely Catholike WE confesse also that it is truely Catholike that is Universall Because the Head thereof is Catholike and eternall at all times from the foundations of the world even unto the end thereof out of all sorts of men and nations and places gathering and knitting unto himself the members of the body and governing ' guiding and preserving them unto himself unto eternall happinesse DOCT. XI That this one onely Church is partly Triumphant in the heavens and partly Militant on the earth BUt yet we acknowledge that this Church although it be and for ever hath been but one onely yet it is so distinguished that one part thereof is Triumphant in heaven together with Christ who was raised from the dead and now sitteth at the right hand of the Father and the other part on earth fighting still with flesh and bloud with the world and with the devil From whence is received amongst all the godly that distinction of the Church into Triumphant and Militant CHAP. XXIIII Concerning the Church Militant ALthough from what we have confessed concerning the Church in generall there is none but may easily gather and perceive what our belief is concerning the Church Militant in particular Yet that it may the easier and better be understood we purpose to declare and explane our opinion apart concerning it partly by a brief repetition referring hither what hath been said concerning the whole and partly adding what is proper hereunto DOCTRINE I. A Description of the Church Militant WE believe then that the Militant Church is a companie of men a Eph. 1.4 chosen unto eternall life in Christ before the foundation of the world out of every nation and kindred who in time by the b Matt. 28.19 Mark 16.15 Rom. 10.14 preaching of the Gospel and the holy Spirit being called out of the world unto Christ and out of the kingdome of the Devil unto the kingdome of God gathered into one body under one c Eph. 1 22. Head which is Christ and so truely justified and sanctified wheresoever they be and how many or how few soever they be do heartily and with one consent professe the same faith in God and in Christ the same hope of a celestiall inheritance and that for the onely merits of Christ the observing and keeping the same commandments given by Christ and therefore brotherly love one towards another and charitie towards all who preach and hear the word of the Gospel administer and receive the holy Sacraments according to Christ's institution and use all care and diligence that all men may live soberly justly and godly in this present world as long as they are in the flesh ever a Eph. 6 12 c. fighting for the kingdome of Christ against sin dwelling in the flesh against the world whether alluring them unto sin or persecuting them for Christ's sake and against the devil waiting through patience for the coming of Christ and for eternall happinesse Amongst whom there are also many reprobates and ungodly b Matt. 13.5 c. and 21. 1 Ioh 2.19 hypocrites professing the same Christ But as they are themselves nothing lesse then of the Church so neither doth their hypocrisie and ungodlinesse take away the Church or extinguish blot out the name of the Church For we deny not but under the name of the Church hypocrites also which are in it are comprehended because the Lord himself saith that it is like unto a flour in which there is wheat and chaffe unto c Matt. 13.24 a field wherein is wheat tares into a net in which are fishes good and bad unto ten a Matt. 25.1 2. virgins whereof five of them were wise and five foolish But yet we deny them to be of the Church For the Lord again taught as much in that place where he said that he would b Matt. 16.18 build his Church in such a manner that the gates of hell should not prevail against it and St. Iohn confirmed it in his Epistle where he said thus c 1 Ioh. 2.19 They went out from us but they were not of us This we believe to be a true description of the Church Militant for it hath manifest testimonies out of the holy Scripture DOCT. II.