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

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had afore beene baptized h So in Netherland were children rebaptized when the Duke of Alva there tyrannized Trag. hist of Antwerp The like Rebaptization was used by the Papists at Tholouse Towers and other Cities in France especially an 1561. See the Chr. of France The private Baptisme by private persons was also taught long since by the Marcionites and Pepuzians i D. Aug. ad Q●od vult c 27. Epiphan haeres 42. 4. Proposition There is a lawfull ministery in the Church The proofe from Gods Word GOd for the gathering or erecting to himselfe a Church out of mankinde and for the well governing of the same from time to time hath used yea and also doth and to the end of the world will use the ministery of men lawfully called thereunto by men A truth evident in the holy Scripture Iesus said unto his Apostles Goe and teach all Nations baptizing them c. and loe I am with you alway unto the end of the world a Matt. 28.20 Christ gave some to be Apostles and some Prophets and some Evangelists and some Pastors and teachers for the gathering together of the Saints for the worke of the ministery and for the edification of the body of Christ till we all meete together in the unitie of faith and knowledge of the Sonne of God unto a perfect man b Eph. 4.11 12 13. A truth also approoved by the Church c Conf. Helv. 1. ar 15. 2 c. 18. Boh. c. 8.9.14 Gal. ar 25.29 30 31. Bel. ar 30.31 Aug. ar 7. Sax. ar 11. Wittem ar 20. Sue ar 13.15 Adversaries unto this truth Oppugners of this truth are First the Anabaptisticall Swarmers who both tearme all Ecclesiasticall men The Devils ministers and also as very wicked doe utterly condemne the outward ministery of the Word and Sacraments a Althemar conciliat Loc. pugnan lo. 191. And next the Brownists b S.H. on Psal 122. who divulge that in these dayes No Ministers have the calling sending or authoritie pertaining to a Minister and that It will hardly be found in all the world that any Minister is or shall be lawfully called c Bar. diseo p. 104. such also be the Barrowists which say there is no ministery of the Gospel in all Europe 5. Proposition They are lawfull Ministers which be ordained by men lawfully appointed for the calling and sending forth of Ministers The proofe from Gods Word SAint Paul in the beginning of his Epistle unto the Galatians giveth us to observe the divers sending forth of men into the holy ministery whereof Some are sent immediately from God himself So sent was by God the Father both Iesus Christ a Joh. 10.21 and Iohn Baptist b John 1.6 by God the Sonne in his state mortall the twelve Apostles c Matt. 10.15 in his state immortall and glorious Saint Paul d Acts 9.15 This calling is speciall and extraordinary and the men so called were adorned with the gift of miracles commonly as were Iesus Christ and the Apostles but not alwayes for Iohn Baptist wrought none And they were also enjoyned for the most part as the Apostles to preach throughout the world e Matt. 28.20 howbeit our Saviour was limited f Matt. 15.14 Some againe were sent of men as they be who are sent of men not authorized thereunto by the Word of God and that to the disturbance of the peace of the Church sent in the Apostles time were the false apostles in our dayes be the Anabaptists Family Elders and law despising Brownists And some lastly are by men sent so in the Primitive Church by the Apostles were Pastors and Elders ordained g Acts 14.23 1 Tim. 4.14 who by the same authoritie ordained other Pastors and Teachers h 1 Tim. 22.5 Whence it is that the Church as it hath bin so it shall till the end of the world be provided for They who are thus called have power either to worke miracles as the Apostles had or to preach and minister the Sacraments where they will as the Apostles might but they are tyed every man to his charge which they must faithfully attend upon except urgent occasion doe enforce the contrary The calling of these men is tearmed a generall calling and it is the ordinary and in these dayes the lawfull calling allowed by the Word of God So testifie with us the true Churches else-where in the world l Conf. Helv. 1 ar 17. 2. c. 18. Boh. c. 9. Gal. ar 21. Bol. ar 31. Aug. ar 14. Wit ar 21. Suc. ar 13. The adversaries unto this truth This truth hath many waies bin resisted For there be which thinke how in these daies there is no calling but the extraordinary or immediate calling from God and not by men as the Anabaptists Familists and Brownists of whom afore The Papists albeit they allow the assertion yet take they all Ministers to be Wolves Hirelings Lay-men and Intruders who are not sacrificing Priests anointed by some Antichristian Bishop of the Romish synagogue a Concil Trid. sess 7. can 7. Either all or the most part of the Ministers of England saith Howlet b Howl 7. reas be meere Lay-men and no Priests and consequently have no authoritie in these things It is evident c. because they are not ordained by such a Bishop and Priest as the Catholike Church hath put in authoritie 6. Proposition Before Ministers are to be ordained they are to be chosen and called The proofe from Gods Word THough it be in the power of them which have authoritie in the Church to appoint Ministers for Gods people yet may they admit neither whom they will nor as they will themselves But they are both deliberately to chuse and orderly to call such as they have chosen This made the Apostles and Elders in the Primitive Church straightly to charge that suddenly hands should be laid on no man a 1 Tim. 5.22 To make a speciall choice of twaine whereof one was to be elected into the place of Iudas b Acts 1.23 By election to ordain Elders in every Church and by prayer and fasting to commend them to the Lord c Acts 14.23 and by laying on of hands to consecrate them d 1 Tim 4.14 To describe who were to be chosen and called For they are to be Men not Boyes nor Women e 1 Tim. 2.12 Men of good behaviour nor incontinent nor given to wine nor strikers nor covetous f 1 Tim. 3.2 nor proud g 1 Pet. 5.3 nor froward nor irefull h Tit. 17. nor givers of offence i 2 Cor. 6.3 finally men of speciall gifts apt to teach k 1 Tim 3. ● able to exhort l Titus 1.9 wise to divide the Word of God aright m 2 Tim. 2.15 bold to reprove n 1 Tim. 5.20 Titus 1.9 willing to take paines o Matth. 9.38 2 Tim. 4.2 watchfull to oversee p Acts 20.28 patient
Wit c. 30 31 33. Suev ar 1. Errors and adversaries unto this truth Of another iudgement are many For Some do thinke the Scripture may be expounded in what sense and to what purpose men list as the Pharises a D. Iren. l 4. cap. 2 5. the Severians b Euf eccl hist lib. 4. c. 29. and Papists among whom there be which from this opinion doe tearme the most holy Word and Scriptures of God most reprochfully A ship-mans hose a Leaden rule a Nose of waxe c Pighius controuer 3. de Ec. Hierac l. 3. c. 3. Lindan praef Cens Colon. Some do mislike all interpretations written Commentaries vpon the Scriptures as vnnecessary and vaine such were Servetus Valdesius Coranus with others of late yeeres d Beza epi. 59. and are the Libertines Sowenkfeldians e Ibid. and Family of Loue f H.N. 1. exhor cap. 16 sect 4. Some depend wholly vpon visions and reuelations as did the Enthusiasts g Th●●d haeret fab l. 3. Nicholas Storch Thomas Monetarius the Anabaptists h D. Maior in Dom. 8. Post trinit homil fol. 440. and our late English reformer Hacket i Arthing sedu p 17. Some dislike of the literall and referre the Allegoricall sense of the Scriptures and thereby deuise what them list most monstrously from the Word of God as did the Origenists and doe the Libertines k Calv. contra Anabap. and Family of Love hence teaching one the other that the spirituall vnderstanding is the Word of God and that to embrace the literall sense is to commit Idolatary l Allens conf Some of every place of Scripture will have an exposition both Analogicall Allegoricall Historicall and Morall as the curious Thomists and Monks Some are addicted to an interpretation which they cal mysticall and propheticall as Brocardus Morelius and others Some are of mind that the Gospell or Euangelicall Word cannot be committed to letters and writing saith Lindanus m Lib. 2. c. 2. Some doe thinke as afore also hath bin shewed how that is the odde and onely true sense of the Scriptures which is made and given by the Church n Haeretici Scripturarum cognitionē intelligentione extra Ecclesiamponunt nos autem Papistae volumus Ecclesiae Romanae esse annexam nec ab ea separari patimur Stapl. antid Euang. in Ioan 19 21. p. 418 Sicut Christo Iudaei sic nos Ecclesia Romanae simpliciter credere debemus saith Stapleton Antid in Luc. 10.16 When the authoritie of the Church leaveth the holy Scripture then are they of no more account then Aesops fables W●lf Herman and Pope of Rome o Si Papam qui Christi vicarius est ac cius omnimodam potestatem habet in terris consulerent non erra●ent haeretici saith Stella in Lucaeus fol. 499. Some doe maintaine that as the Church in time doth alter so the interpretation of the Scripture also therewithall doth vary whereby that which in the Apostles time was a truth in these dayes shall be a falshood In which error was Cardinall Cusanus p Cusan ad Bohemos epist 2. 6. Proposition The Church is the witnesse and keeper of Gods written Word The proofe from Gods Word THough the Church hath authoritie to heare and determine in controversies of faith yet hath the Church power neither to iudge the Word of God nor to iudge otherwise then Gods Word doth iudge For it is said to the Church and people of God I beseech you brethren marke them diligently which cause diuisions and offences contrary to the Doctrine which you haue learned and auoid them a Rom. 16.7 Heare him b Math. 17.5 To him giue all the Prophets witnesse c Acts 10 43. Search the Scriptures d Iohn 5.39 whosoever transgresseth and abideth not in the doctrine of Christ hath not God e 2 Iohn 5.9 Ye are c. built upon the foundation of the Apostles and Prophets f Eph. 2.19 And of the holy Scriptures Thy word is the truth g Iohn 27.17 They have Moses and the Prophets let them heare them Luke 16.29 saith our Saviour Christ Wee have also a sure word of the Prophets saith Saint Peter i 2 Pet 1.19 And Saint Paul The whole Scripture is profitable to teach c k 2 Tim. 6.16 17. If any man teach otherwise and consenteth not to the wholesome words of our Lord Iesus Christ he is puft vp and knoweth nothing c l 1 Tim. 6 3 4. And so with vs the other Churches conceiue both of the Scriptures and Church m Confe Helv. 2. cap. 1. Bohe. cap. 1. Gal ar 5 Belg. ar 7. Wittemb ar 30 31 32 Sax. ar 11. yet all of vs doe grant that the Church as a faithfull witnesse may yea of necessitie must testifie to the world what hath been the doctrine of Gods people from time to time and as a trusty Recorder is to keepe and make knowne what the Word or God which it hath received is which truly hath beene performed afore the Word was written by the Patriarchs and after the same was committed to writing before Christ his incarnation by the Iews in Christ his life time n Luke 4.17 in the Primitive Church o Acts 13.27 Acts 15.21 2 Cor. 2.15 2 Cor. 8.18 From the Apostles time by the godly Christians thorow out the world Errors and adversaries unto this truth Be it farre therefore from us to thinke which the Papists doe not stick to write and say namely that The Church is to judge the Scripures and not the Scriptures the Church a Jo. Maria Verract●s Pighius in controvers de Ec. The Scripture is not of the essence of the Church Because without it a Church may be though not very well So said Card. Cusan b Card. Cusan ep 2. ad Bohe. The Scripture because in their opinion it is unperfect cannot obscure may not ambiguous ought not to be the Iudge So Lindan c Lind. l. 1. c. 1. Latomus d Contra Bucer Petrus à Soto e De S. Scrip. Pighius f Eccl. Hierar l. 1. c. 4. Coster g Enchir. de S. Scrip. c. 1. c. Hee is an heretike that cleaveth to the Scriptures So said Iacobus Hoestratus Again the carefull keeping of the holy Scriptures by Gods people from age to age and time to time declareth first how the mother Church of Rome is not the onely keeper of the holy writ and next that cursedly they doe offend which either as greatly esteeme the Ethicks of Aristotle as the Commandements of God the Odes of Pindar as the Psalmes of David h Aug. Polit. the works and bookes of men as the writings of God which the Councell of Trent doth i Ses 4. or before and above the Scripture preferre unwritten Traditions Hence Petrus à Soto Tradition saith he is both more ancient and more effectuall then the holy
c. and to call the people to repentance so teacheth Barrow l Ba. disco p. 36. 5. Proposition They must not be silent who by office are bound to preach The proofe from Gods Word As publikely to preach before men are sent is a grievous fault so not to preach being sent is a great sinne Hereunto beare witnesse 1. Our Saviour Christ whose words are these Surely I must also preach the Kingdome of God for therefore am I sent a Luke 4.43 2. Peter and Iohn who being charged to speake no more in the name of Iesus said Wee cannot but speake that which we have heard and seene b Acts 4.17 c. 3. Saint Paul For he saith Necessity is laid upon me and woe is me if I preach not the Gospell c 1 Cor. 9.16 17. 4. The Apostles of Christ For though they were beaten for so doing yet ceased they not to teach and preach Iesus Christ d Acts 5.42 5. All the Churches of God which be purged from superstition and errors e Conf. Helv. 1. ar 25. 2. c. 8 9. Bohem. c. 9. Gal. ar 15. Aug. ar 7. Wit ar 20. Suev ar 13. Errors and adversaries unto this truth Then as in a glasse they may see their faults Who maintaine how there ought to be no publike preaching at all as doe the Anabaptists a Bullin cont Anabap. c. 12. Which deprave the office of preaching as doe the Libertines saying that preaching is none ordinary meanes to come unto the knowledge of the Word b Wilkins against the Fam. of Love ar 14. p. 66. and especially the Family of Love who tearme the publike preachers in derision Scripture-learned c Theoph. against Wilk Licentious scripture-learned d Pat. of the prof Temp. good thinkingwise e H. N pr●ph of the Sp. cap. 2. sect 7. Ceremoniall and letter-Doctors f ●am let to the B. of Roc. Teaching-masters g H. N. Spi● l. c 25 and further say It is a great presumption that any man out of the learnednesse of the letter taketh upon him to be a Teacher or Preacher Againe It becommeth not any man to busie himselfe about preaching of the Word so and more too the Family Which take upon them the office of publike preaching without performance of their duty either through ignorance that they cannot worldly employments that they may not negligence h Idem 1. ●●b c. 10. sect 15. 16. that they will not or feare of troubles that they dare not preach the Word of God Yet thinke wee not which our Sabbatarians let not to publish that Every Minister necessarily and under paine of damnation is to preach at least once every Sunday i D B doct of the Sabbath 2 book p. 174. and Vnlesse a Minister preach every Sunday he doth not hallow the Sabbath day in the least measure of that which the Lord requireth of us k Ibid. p. 277. 3 Proposition The Sacraments may not be administred in the Congregation but by a lawfull Minister The proofe from Gods Word IN the holy Scriptures we reade that the publike Ministers of the Word are to be Administers of the Sacraments For both our Saviour Christ commanded his Disciples as to preach so to baptize a Matth 28.19 and celebrate the Supper of the Lord b Luke 22 1● 1 Cor. 11.24 25. and the Apostles and other Ministers in the purest times whom the godly Ministers and Preachers in these dayes doe succeed not onely did preach but also baptize c Acts 2 3● 41 8 12 13 40.41.16.32 33. John 1.25 1 Cor. 1 1● 16. and minister the Lords Supper d Acts 20.7 1 Cor 10. ●6 And hereunto doe the Churches of God subscribe e Conf. Heb. 2. c. 18 Bohem. c. 9. Gal. ar 2.5 31. Aug. ar 5. Wittem ar 20. Suev ar 13. In saying that none may administer the Sacraments in the Congregation afore he be lawfully called and sent thereunto we thinke not as some doe that the very being of the Sacraments dependeth upon this point viz. whether the Baptizer or giver of the Bread and Wine be a Minister or no. Neither is it the meaning of this article that privately in houses either lawfull Ministers upon just occasion may not or others not of the Ministery upon any occasion in the peace of the Church may administer the Sacraments The aduersaries vnto this truth T. C. 1 rep p. 113. Hereby we declare our selves not to favour the opinion that publikely Some may minister the Sacraments which are not meerely and full Ministers of the Word and Sacraments and so thinke both the Anabaptists among whom their King when it was after Supper tooke bread and reaching it among the Communicants did say Take eate and shew forth the Lords death their Queene also reaching the Cup said Drinke ye and shew forth the Lords death a Sucius com p 237. and the Presbyterians at Geneva where the Elder a Lay-man ministreth the Cup ordinarily at the Communion b Survay of dis c. 15 out of the Geneva lawes Some Ministers and namely the Puritane Doctors may not minister the Sacraments For say the disciplinarians the office of Doctors is onely to teach true doctrine c Lear. disc p. 17. but in our Church of England the Doctor encroacheth upon the office of the Pastor For both indifferently doe teach exhort and minister the Sacraments d Fru● Ser. on Rom. 12. p. 40 None though a lawfull Minister may administer the Sacraments which either is no Preacher e The administration of the Sacraments ought to be committed to none but such as are preachers of the Word Lear. disc p. 60. It is sacriledge to separate the Word viz. Preaching from the Sacraments Ibid. The preaching of the Word is the life of the Sacraments T. C. 1. rep p. 125. or when he ministreth them doth not preach f The unchangeable lawes of God he saith T.C. that none minister the Sacraments which doe not preach T.C. 1. repl p. 104 sect 3. Where there is no Preacher o● the Word there ought to be no minister of the Sacraments Lear disc p. 62. which be the errors of the Disciplinarians or Puritanes Publikely and privately too the Sacraments of Baptisme may be administred by any man yea by women if necessitie doe urge So hold the Papists For saith Iavell g Iavel Psal Ch. par fol. 559. in the time of necessity the minister of Baptisme is every man both male and female A woman be she young or old sacred or wicked Every male that hath his wits and is neither dumbe nor so drunken but that he can utter the words as well Pagan Infidel and heretike the bad as the good the Schismatike as the Catholike may baptize And yet usually in the civill warres both in France and in Netherland the Papists did rebaptize such children as of the Protestant not lay-men but ministers
Church that enquiry be made of evill ministers and that they hee accused by those that have knowledge of their offences and finally being found guilty by just judgement be deposed The Propositions 1. The effect of the Word and Sacraments is not hindred by the badnesse of ministers 2. Evill ministers are to be searched out convicted and deposed but orderly and by the discipline of the Church 1. Proposition The effect of the Word and the Sacraments is not hindred by the badnesse of ministers The proofe from Gods Word OF the ministers ecclesiasticall the Church is to conceive neither too sinisterly as though their unworthinesse could make the Word and Sacraments the lesse effectuall to such as worthily do heare and receive them nor on the other side too highly as if the dignity of their calling were cause good enough that what they doe or say ex opere operato take happy effects These things from the Scriptures are manifest which teach us that wicked ministers even the Scribes and Pharises fitting in Moses chaire a Matth. 23.1 and preaching Christ though through envie strife and contention b Phil. 1.15 are to be heard and many administer the Sacraments as did the ordinary Priests among the Iewes whereof very many both afore and after that our Saviour came into the world were most wicked men and the best are but the Ministers of God c 1 Cor. 4.1 and Gods labourers d 1 Cor. 3.9 Also the purer Churches beare witnesse hereunto e Confes Helv. 1. ar 15. 20 22. Hel. 2. 1. 18 21 Bohe. c. 11. 12. Gal. ar 3. 35. Aug ar 8. Sax ar 1● 13. Wit ar 31. Suc. ar 13 Neither is he whosoever that planteth any thing neither he that watereth but God that giveth the encrease saith Saint Paul f 1 Cor. 3.7 And a signe of a good spirit is it to regard not so much who speaketh a ministreth or what is uttered and offered from God Errors and adversaries unto this truth The due consideration of the premises will both settle us the more firmely in the truth and make us the more carefully to abhorre all adversaries thereof as in old time were the Donatists and the Petilians who taught that the Sacraments are holy when they be administred by holy men but not else a D August in Psa 100. 32. Idem contra P●til l. 1. c 4. also the Apostolikes or Henricians who had a fancie that he was no Bishop which was a wicked man b Magdeburg eccles hist C●nt ●2 cap. 5. fol ●44 Among the Fathers also Cyprian and Origen were not found in this point For Cyprian published that no minister could rightly baptize who was not himselfe endued with the holy Ghost c D. Cyprian epist lib. 1. lib. ad Mag. ep 6. he further delivered that whosoever doe communicate with a wicked minister doe sinne d Ibid. ep 4. Origen held that in vaine did any minister either bind or lose who was himselfe bound with the chaines of sinne and wickednesse e D Orig in Math. ●1 act 1. Such adversaries in our time be the Anabaptists the Family of Love the disciplinarians usually termed Puritans the Sabbatarians the Brownists and Papists For f Wilk against the l a ar 14. p. 66. The Anabaptists will not have the people to use the ministery of evill ministers and thinke the service of wicked Ministers unprofitable and not effectuall affirming that no man who is himselfe faulty can preach the truth to others The Family of Love doe say that no man can minister the upright service or ceremonies of Christ but the regenerate g H. N. evang c. 23. 6. 2. also that wicked men cannot teach the truth h Fam 1. epist to M. Rogers The disciplinarian Puritanes do bring all ministers which cannot preach and their services into detestation For their doctrine is that Where there is no Preacher there ought to be no minister of the Sacraments i Lear. disc p. 62. None must minister the Sacraments which doe not preach k T. C. 1. c. p. 104. The Sacrament is not a Sacrament if it be not joyned to the Word of God preached l Ber. de Loquercas of the Church c. 10. It is a sacriledge to separate the ministration of the word preached from the Sacraments m Lear. disc p. 60. Of these mens opinions be the Sabbatarians among us For their doctrine is to the common people that unlesse they leave their unpreaching ministers every Sabbath day and goe to some place where the Word is preached they do prophane the Sabbath and subject themselves unto the curse of God n D. B. doc of the Sab. 2. booke p. 173. So the Brownists No man is to communicate say they where there is a blind or dumbe ministery o R. H. on Psal 122. The Papists doe crosse this truth but after another sort For Pope Hildebrand decreed and commanded that no man should heare Masse from the mouth of a Priest which hath a wife p B. Iewel on Ag. 1. ser The Rhemists doe publish how The Sermons of heretikes and so tearme they all Protestant ministers must not be heard q Test Rhem. annot tit 3. 10. r Ibid. an Mar. 3.13 though they preach the truth Their prayers and sacraments are not acceptable to God but are the howling of wolves 2. Proposition Evill ministers are to be searched out convicted and deposed but orderly and by the discipline of the Church The wicked and evill ministers must not alwaies be endured in the Church of God For they are the evill and unprofitable servants a Math. 25.26 the eyes which doe offend b Math. 18.9 the unsavoury salt c Math. 5.13 which are carefully to be seene unto and if admonitions will not serve deposed yet orderly and by the discipline of the Church For that God which appointed a government for the civill state hath also given authority unto his Church to punish offenders according to the quality of their transgressions And so may we reade in the Word of God Let the Church say our Saviour d Math. 18.17 Let such a one by the power of our Lord Iesus Christ be delivered unto Satan for the destruction of the flesh that the spirit may be saved in the day of our Lord Iesus saith Saint Paul e So the neighbour Churches f Helv. 2. c. 18. Bohe. 2. c. 18. ar 11. Suev ar 35. Adversaries unto this truth Then deceived and out of the way are the Brownists and Barrowists which are of minde that Private persons in themselves have authority to depose unmeet ministers and to punish malefactors a R.H. in Psal 121. p. 117. Every particular member of a Church in himselfe hath power to examine the manner of administring the Sacraments c. to call men unto repentance c b Bar. disco p. 56. to reproove the faults of the Church and
against the common order of the Church and woundeth the consciences of the weake brathren 4. Euery particular or nationall Church hath authority to ordaine change and abolish ceremonies or rites of the Church ordained onely by mans authority so that all things be done to edifying The Propositions 1. Traditions or Ceremonies are not neccessary to be like and the same in all places 2. No priuate man of a self-will and purposely may in publike violate the traditions and ceremonies of the Church which by common authority be allowed and are not repugnant to the Word of God 3. Ceremonies and traditions ordained by authority of man if they be repugnant to Gods Word are not be to kept and obserued of any man 4. Every particular or nationall Church may ordaine change and abolish ceremonies or rites ordained onely by mans authority so that all things be done to edifying 1. Proposition Traditions or ceremonies are not necessarily to be like or the same in all places The proofe from Gods Word IF a necessity were laid vpon the Church of God to obserue the same traditions and ceremonies at all times and in all places assuredly neither had the ceremonies of the old law bin as they are now a Act 6.14 10 13. 15 1 c. Gal. 2.3 c. Eph. 2. ●4 Col. 2.16 abolished neither would the Apostles euer have given such presidents of altering them upon speciall reasons as they have done For the said Apostles changed the times and places of their assembling together the people of God meeting and the Apostles preaching sometimes on the weeke b Acts 1.46 5.24 sometime on the Sabbath dayes c Acts 13.14.17 2 18 4. sometimes publikely in the Temple d Acts 24 6 3 15 26. in the Synagogues e Acts 9.20 14 1 17 1● 18 and in the Schooles f Acts 19.9.4 sometime priuately in house after house g Acts 5.42 and in chambers h Acts 1.13 20 8 28 30 3● sometimes in the day time i Act. 2.46 3 1. sometimes in the night k Acts 20.7 Neither kept they the same course in the ministration of the Sacraments For as occasion was offered they both baptized in publike assemblies l Acts 2.46 and in priuate houses m Acts 16 33 10 17 48. before many n Acts 18.12 10 27. 48. and when none of the faithfull but the minister onely and the party to be baptized were present o Acts 8.36 and ministred likewise the Supper of the Lord in the day time p Act 22.46 and at mid-night q Acts 20.11 in the open Churches r 1 Cor. 11.17 and in priuate houses ſ Acts 20.7.2.46 So nothing therefore be done against the Word of God traditions and ceremonies according to the diversitie of countries and mens manners may be changed and divers Of this iudgement with us be all reformed Churches t Conf. Helv. 2. c 7 27 Bohem c 15. Gal. ar 27. Belg. artic 32. Aug. art 15. ar 7. tou●h abuses Sax. ar 20 Wittem ar 35 Suc. c. 14. The errors and adversaries unto this truth They are greatly deceiued therefore which thinke that The Iewish ceremonies prescribed by God himselfe for a time unto the Iewes are to be observed of us Christians Such were the old Heretikes the false apostles a Acts 15. the Cerdonites b Tertul. contra Mar. l 4. the Cerinthians c Philacter and the Nazarites d D. Hieron in epist ad Aug. and are the Familists e H. N euang c. 13. sect 5. The traditions and namely the tradition and ceremony of the seventh day for the Sabbath and the manner of sanctifying thereof must necessarily be one and the same alwayes and in all places Hence the demi-Iewes English Sabbatarians affirme first touching the sanctification of the seventh day how It is not lawfull for us to vse the seventh day to any other end but to the holy and sanctified end for which God in the beginning created it f D.B. Sab. de 1. B. p. 4. So soone as the seventh day was so soone was it sanctified that we might know that as it came in with the first man so must it not goe out with the last g Ibid. p. 6. The Sabbath or seventh day of Rest which hath that commendation of antiquity ought to stand still in force h Ibid. p. 9. All the Iudaicall dayes Feasts being taken away onely the Sabbath remaineth i Ibid. 128. And next concerning the forme and manner of keeping the day they deliver that We are bound unto the same Rest with the Iewes on the Sabbath Day k Ibid. p. 127. As the first seventh day was sanctified so much the last be l Ibid. p. 6. We be restrained upon the Sabbath from worke both hand and foot as the Iewes were m Ibid. p. 127. Euery Ecclesiasticall in Minister in his charge necessarily must Preach and make a Sermon euery Sabbath Day n Ibid. 174. euery man or woman vnder paine of vtter condemnation must heare a Sermon every Sabbath Day o Ibid p. 173. Every Pastor in his charge must execute the discipline and Presbyteriall gouernment in his Parish every Sabbath Day p Ibid 165. Last of all deceiued bee the Romane Catholikes which are of opinion how the Ceremonies of their Church are vniuersally and vnder the paine of the great curse neccessarily to be vsed in all places and countries q Concil Trid ses 7. can 13. 2. Proposition No priuate man of a selfe-will and purposely may in publike violate the traditions and ceremonies of the Church which by common authoritie be allowed and are not repugnant to the Word of God The proofe from Gods Word GReat is the priviledge great also the liberty and freedom of Gods Church and people For they are delivered From the curse of the Law a Gal 3.23 From the Law of sinne and of death b Rom. 8.2 From all Iewish rites and ceremonies c Acts 15.24 And from all humane ordinances and traditions whatsoever when they are imposed upon the consciences of men to be observed under paine of eternall condemnation d Col. 2.8 Notwithstanding the Church and every member therof in his place is bound to the observation of all traditions and ceremonies which are allowed by lawfull authority and are not repugnant to the Word of God For he that violateth them contemneth not man but God e 1 Cor. 4.46.47 who hath given power to his Church to establish whatsoever things shall make vnto comelinesse Order and Edification f Conf. Helv. 1. ar 25. 2. c 24 Bohem. c. 15. 18. Aug. 21. 4. 15. Sax. art 20. Suc. c. 14. This of our godly brethren in their published writings is approved The aduersaries vnto this truth Notwithstanding say the Anabaptists h Bullin contra Anabap. lib. 2. c. 2. The people of God are free
3. and 6. by King Richard the 2. by King Henry the 4. 6. and 8. by Queene Elizabeth and by our most Noble King Iames. His pride and intolerable supremacie over all Christian people is renounced and condemned as well by the mouthes as writings of all the purer Churches i Conf Helv. 1 ar 18 2. c. 17 18. Bohe. c. 8.9 Belg. ar 28.32 Wittem ar 31. August de Abus ar 7. and that deservedly The Errors and adversaries unto this truth But with the Papists the Bishop of Rome hee is forsooth for supremacie Abel for governing the Arke Noah for Patriarch-ship Abraham for order Melchisedech for dignity Aaron for authority Moses for justice Samuel for zeale Elias for humility David for power Peter for his unction Christ a Majoran clyd milit Ec lib. 3 c. 35. the generall Pastor the common Father of all Christians the high Pastor of Gods universall Church the Prince of Gods people b Ans to the execu of lust for title God even the Lord God the Pope c Panorm de transl praef c. Q anto for power God For By him Kings raigne d Cerc l. 1. c. 2. hee may iudge all men but must of none bee iudged e Distin 40. c. 5. Papa hee can doe what him list as well as God except sinne f Extravag de cranst Epis● cap. Quanto His jurisdiction is universall even over the whole world g Test Rhem. annot marg p. 2●0 Him upon paine of eternall damnation all Christians are to obey h Bor if 8 cau de major obed in Extravag And by his Soveraigne authority both all Papists in England were discharged from their obedience and subjection unto Queene Elizabeth and the same Queene disabled to governe her owne people and dominions i Bristow motive 40. 6. Proposition By the lawes of this Realme Christian men for hainous and grievous offences may be put to death The proofe from Gods Word AS the natures of men be divers and some sinnes in some countries more abound then in others so are the punishments to bee imposed upon malefactors according to the quantity and quality of their offences and any Countrey and Kingdome may punish offenders even with death if the Lawes thereof and their offence doe require it For All that take the sword shall perish with the sword a Math. 25.52 Governours bee sent of the King for the punishment of evill doers b 1 Pet. 2.14 A wise King scattereth the wicked and causeth the wheele to turne over them c Prov. 20.26 The Magistrate beareth not the sword for nought and is the Minister of God to take vengeance on them that doe evill d Rom. 13.4 Which punishments testifie to the world that God is just which will have some sinnes more severely punished then others and the Magistrates to cut off dangerous and ungodly members God is mercifull and hath care both of his servants and of humane society God is all wise and holy in that hee will have it knowne who are just who wicked who holy and who prophane by cherishing and preserving of the one and by punishing and rooting out of the other Our godly and Christian brethren in other Countries approve this doctrine e Confes Helv. 1. ar 24 26. 2. c. 30. Basi c. 7. Bohe. c 16. Gal. ar 39. Belg. ar 36. August ar 16. Sax ar 23. The adversaries unto this truth The adversaries of this doctrine be divers For Some are of opinion that no man for any offence should be put to death Such in old time were the Manichies and the Donatists a D. August in Iohan 11. and such in our dayes be the Anabaptists b Confe Helv. 2. c. 30. And some doe thinke that howsoever for their offences against the second Table malefactors may bee put to death yet for hereticall and erroneous opinions in points of Religion none are so to suffer Of this minde are the Familists For They hold that no man should be put to death for his opinions c Display lib. They blame Mr. Granmer and Ridley for burning Ioane of Kent for an heretike d Ibid. It is not Christian-like that one man should persecute another for any cause touching conscience e Fam. 2. letter unto M. Ro. Is not that punishment sufficient say they which God hath ordained but that one Christian must vexe torment belye and persecute another f Ibid. 7. Proposition It is lawfull for Christian men at the commandement of the Magistrates to weare weapons and serve in warres The proofe from Gods Word There is saith K. Salomon a time of warre and a time of peace a Eccles 2.8 and Princes are by warre and weapons to represse the power of enemies whether forraigne or intestine For they are in authority placed for the defence of quiet and harmelesse subiects as also to remove the violence of oppressors and enemies whatsoever they be For these causes have they Horses prepared for the battell b Prov 2.31 Tribute paide them as well for Christians c Rom. 13.6 7. as others and subiects to serve them in their warres of what nature soever Cornelius being a Christian d Acts 10. was not forbidden to play the Centurion or bidden to forsake his profession e Luke 3.14 nor the souldiers that came unto Iohns baptisme willed to leave the warres but to offer no violence unto any man This truth is granted by the Church f Confes Helv. 2. ● 30 Bohe. c. 16. S●x ar 23 The aduersaries vnto this truth Many are against this assertion whereof some doubt of the truth thereof as Ludovicus Vives a Arma Christianum virum tractare n●s●●o ●n ●●s sit Lud. V●ves Instuut su●m Chr. ● 1. Others denie it altogether as untrue So did in ancient time the Manichies whose doctrine was that no man might goe to warre b D. Aug. contra Manich. l. 22. c. 74 Lactartius thought it altogether unlawful for a good man or a Christian either to goe to warre or to bring any man to a violent death though by law he were adiudged to dye c Lactan. de vero cultu●e 20 In these dayes the Anabaptists thinke it to be a thing most execrable for Christians to take weapons to goe to warre d Confes Helv. 2. c 30. The Family of Love also doe so condemne all warres as the time was when they would not beare or weare a weapon e Display H. 5.5 b. and they write first of themselves how all their nature is Love and peace f H.N. spi lan c. 37. sect 2. and that they are people peaceable g Ibid prae sect 3● but all other men in the world besides they doe wage warre kill and destroy for which ends they have divers sorts of Swords Halberds Speares Bowes and Arrowes Guns Pellets and Gunpowder Armour Harnesse and Go●gets h Ibid. cap. 4.
A TREATISE VPON SVNDRY MATTERS CONTAINED IN THE THIRTY NINE Articles of Religion which are professed in the Church of ENGLAND Long since written and published by THOMAS ROGERS Rom. 16. verse 17. I beseech you brethren marke them diligently which cause divisions and offences contrary to the doctrine which ye have received and avoide them LONDON Printed by JOHN LEGATT and are to be sold by RICHARD THRALE at the signe of the Crosse-keyes at Pauls Gate 1639. TO THE MOST REVEREND FATHER in God and his Right Honourable good Lord RICHARD by the Divine providence Archb. of Canterbury and Primate of England and Counceller to the most High and Mighty Prince JAMES King of Great Britaine France and Ireland MOst Reverend Father in God there is no one thing in this world that of men truely zealous and Christian in these latter dayes of the world with greater earnestnesse hath bin desired then that by a joynt and common consent of all the Churches rightly and according to the Canons of the sacred Scriptures reformed there might be a draught made and divulged containing and expressing the sum and substance of that Religion which they doe both concordably teach and uniformely maintaine That holy man of happy remembrance D. Cranmer who sometime enjoyed that roome in our Church Arch. Cranmer which your Grace now worthily possesseth in the dayes of that most godly yong Prince K. Edward the sixt employed a great part of his time and study for the effecting of that work and imparted his thoughts with the most principall persons and of rarest note in those dayes for their wisedome piety and credit among the people of God throughout Christendome Mr. Calvin understanding of his intent addressed his letters unto the said Archbishop and offred his service saying That might his labours stand the Church in stead Ne decem quidem maria it would not grieve him to saile over ten Seas to such a purpose But this proving a worke of much difficulty if not altogether impossible in mens eyes especially in those dayes to be brought about Vnity of doctrine in all Churches reformed the next course and resolution was that every Kingdome and free State or Principality which had abandoned the superstitions and Antichristian Religion of the Church of Rome and embraced the Gospell of Christ should divulge a Briefe of that Religion which among themselves was taught and beleeved and whereby through the mercy of God in Christ they did hope to be saved Which to Gods great glory and the singular benefit and comfort of all Churches both present and to come as the extant Harmony of all their confessions doth most sweetly record with no great labour was notably performed This worke of theirs told the Churches in those dayes and doth us and will informe our posterity that not only in every particular State and Kingdom but also throughout Christendome Ab initio reformationis ardebant amore veritatis omnes Politici Ecclesiastici Plebeii Jezler de diutur belli Euchar pag. 49. Vnity of doctrine in the Church of England in King Edward the sixt his dayes where the Gospel was entertained the Primitive and Apostolicall daies of the Church were again restored For the multitudes of them that did beleeve I speake both joyntly of all and severally of each reformed people not of every particular person fantastique false apostles and perverse teachers or professors in any Church who were not wanting even in the Apostles dayes touching the maine and fundamentall points of true Religion were then of one heart and of one soule and did think and speake one thing and live in peace 3. The said Archbishop for unto whom better after God and the King can we ascribe the glory of this worthy Act wrought this Vnity Vniformity of doctrine in this Kingdome in the Halcyon dayes of our English Iosias K. Edward the sixt of that name and the same doctrine so by his meanes established in the time of peace a notable work of peace like a manly heroicall and heavenly Captaine under our Generall Iesus Christ he resolutely even with his heart bloud and in the fiery torments afterwards confirmed in the dayes of persecution A certain learned man Anno 1552. speaking of the Religion here then professed and writing unto the Lords of our late Queenes Councell doth say he meaning the Papist his adversary who charged our Church with discord and disagreements about matters of Religion K. Edward the 6. Hee ought said he if hee had beene able to have brought out the publike Confession and Articles of faith agreed in K. Edwards time and have shewed any in England that professing the Gospel dissenteth from the same So esteemed he and with him many thousands of learned and judicious men of the doctrine then ratified by authority and professed in this Kingdome But those dayes of our Churches peace continued not long through our unthankfulnesse Q. Mary and sinnes neither on the other side was our persecution permanent through the goodnesse of God though for the time exceeding vehement and violent For nubecula fuit citò transiit It vanished away quickly as doe many raging stormes even upon the sudden yet not through the power of Gunpowder and treasons but through the force of ardent prayers unto the Almighty For arma ecclesiae preces 4. We find that Mr. Latimer that sacred The prayers of the persecuted Saints for the reducing of true Religion into the Realme F. Latimer and reverend Father addicted himselfe very seriously in those dayes unto the exercise of prayer and his principall and most usuall prayers were first for himselfe next for the afflicted Church of England and lastly for Lady Elizabeth that deceased King Edwards and Queene Maries sister For himselfe he prayed that as God had made him 〈◊〉 Minister and Preacher of his truth so hee might constantly beare witnesse unto the same and have the grace power to maintain it in the face of the world even till the houre of his death For the Church of England he prayed that God would be pleased once againe to restore the free preaching of the Gospell to this Realme and this with all possible fervency of Spirit he craved at the hands of God And for Lady Elizabeth that he would preserue and make her a comfort to his then comfortlesse people in England And the Almighty and our heavenly Father both heard and granted all and every of his petitions Mr. Gualter that learned painfull and excellent Divine at Tigure dedicating his holy and Christian Comments upon the lesser Prophets unto D. Parkhurst B. Parkhurst Bishop of Norwich who in the dayes of the forementioned Q. Mary voluntarily had exiled himselfe so farre as Switzerland for his preservation if it might be unto better times saith of the said Parkhurst that when he lived in Tigure Lady Elizabeth was ever in his mouth her Faith her wisedome her magnanimous spirit her virgineous and chaste behaviour he would
have it established and Presbyteries in euery parish to be aduanced 17. The Articles of our religion concluded vpon by the reuerend Clergie of our Church with these learned The Br●renue and continue their base conceits of the publike Art of our religion in comparison of their new Gospell and all-seeing Brethren are but the Bishops decrees the Articles of the Conuocation house and reueale some little truth but these wise Brethren so faithfull haue they bin betweene God and his Church they haue not failed to shew vs the whole counsell of God And yet these faithfull Brethren either through forgetfulnesse or frailty or which I rather think forced thereunto by the power of truth doe plainely confesse that those very decrees of our Bishops and Articles of the Conuocation-house euen that little little part of the Gospell which the said Bishops and Martyrs brought to light and hath enlightned the whole Realme containeth the very fundamentall points of Christianitie Whereof I still gather that had their newly reuealed tearmed learned Discourses Doctrines touching Discipline their Presbyteries howsoeuer with goodly glorious titles to rauish poore hearts with the desire thereof brandished and set out never bin divulged or preached we may be saued but without knowing and beleeuing the Articles or doctrine of our Church which yet is not ours but Gods there is no saluation ordinarily to be looked for of any man so true and of such necessity is this so impertinent vnneedfull the other 18. Octogesimus octavus mirabilis annus it was prophesied to be a wonderfull yeere long afore it came and wil neuer be forgotten now it is past An. 1588. Q. Elizabeth opposeth her authoritie against the Br. their bookes and writings Among the things for which the yeere 88. is famous one and not of least regard is that afore it expired these bookes of the Brethren by a Proclamation from Q. Elizabeth were denounced Schismaticall and seditious and the doctrine in them contained erronious tending to perswade and bring in a monstrous and apparent dangerous Innouation within her dominions and countries and to make a change euen a dangerous change of the forme of doctrine then in vse And therefore the said bookes were commanded to be brought in and deliuered into the hands of authoritie and speciall charge giuen that no moe of that nature should come abroad or be printed Whereby so much as in that blessed Queene whose name with eternall honour shall be recorded these new fancies of the brethren were hissed and exploded out of this Christian kingdom and the articles or publike doctrine of our Church confirmed countenanced and by the royall prerogatiue of that Peerelesse prince more strongly ratified and commended to her awefull and good subiects then afore 19. The zeale of learned and godly men hereupon was inflamed and their courage so increased as whereas afore this time but one or two or a very few the first whereof was your L. immediate Predecessor Most learned and worthy men set themselues against the Br. and the Presbyterian discipline whose memory be alway honourable among the Saints did encounter the Brethren and oppugned their fancies now an army of most valourous and resolute Champions and Challengers rose vp which then and piuers yeeres ensuing among whom as your Grace was the first in time which gaue the onset so are you to be reckoned with the first and best for zeale wisedome and learning did conflict with these Brethren defended the Prelacie stood for the Prince State put the new Doctors to the foile profligated the Elders set vpon the Presbytery and so battered the new Discipline as hitherto they could neuer nor hereafter shall euer fortifie and repaire the decaies thereof 20. Notwithstanding what the brethren wanted in strength and learning they had in wilynesse A Stratagem of the Br. though they lost much one way in the generall maine point of their discipline yet recouered they not a little aduantage another way by an odde and new deuice of theirs in a speciall article of their classicall instructions For while these Worthies of our Church were employing their engins forces partly in defending the present gouernment Ecclesiasticall partly in assaulting the Presbyterie and new Discipline even at that very instant the Brethren knowing themselves too weake either to overthrow our holds and that which we hold Ann. 1595. or to maintaine their owne they abandoned quite the Bulwarkes which they had raised and gave out were impregnable suffering us to beate them downe without any or very small resistance and yet not carelesse of their affaires left not the warres for all that but from an odde corner and after a new fashion which we little thought of such was the cunning set upon us afresh againe by dispersing in printed bookes which for tenne yeares space before they had bin in hammering among themselves to make them compleate their Sabbath speculations and Presbyterian that is more then either Kingly or Popely directions for the observation of the Lords Day This Stratagem of theirs was not observed then neither I feare me is regarded as it should be yet and yet did and since hath and doubtlesse in time to come if it be not timely seene unto with unsound opinions and paradoxes will so poyson many as the whole Church and Common-weale wil find the danger and inconvenience of them so plausibie are they to men either popularly religious or preposterously and injudiciously zealous Certain fruits and effects of the Sabb. doctrine published by consent of the Brethren 21. In this their sally as I said before they set not upon the Bishops their calling their Chancelors c. as Popish and Antichristian they let them alone seeing and knowing they are too well backt for them to subvert but which are of great all and almost of the same antiquitie with Bishops divers of them and I had almost said as necessarie they ruinate and at one blow beate downe all times and daies by just authoritie destined to religious and holy uses besides the Lords Day saying plainly and in peremptorie words that the Church hath none authoritie ordinarily or from yeare to yeare perpetually to sanctifie any other day to those uses but onely the Lords Day They build not Presbyteries expressedly though under hand if it be well marked they doe erect them in their exercises of the Sabbath but they set up a new Idol their Saint Sabbath earst in the dayes of Popish blindnesse S. Sunday in the midst and minds of Gods people By the former they haue opened not a gap but a wide gate vnto all licentiousnesse liberty prophanenesse on the Holy dayes which is readily and greedily apprehended of all sorts of people euery where especially of their fauorites to the high dishonour of God decay of our deuotion hinderance of Christian knowledge and wisdome in all sorts especially in the vulgar multitude and poore seruants aduantage of the common enemies
established which at the Kings first arriuall among vs was so much desired by the Brethren And finally being the same let vs not doubt but perswade our selues that we shal find the Antichristian Church of Rome too the same which for the same doctrine and for none other cause persecuteth al Christian Churches but ours of England especially with sword fire and power in most horrible yea and hellish manner the effect of whose hatred against vs as we have often seene so especially had we felt the same the next yeere after our Kings ratification of these Articles had not our euer mercifull God most miraculously detected both the Treason and Traitors Ann. 1605 For which his fauours his holy Name be glorified of vs and our posterity throughout all generations The Brethren no changelings 36. So our Church is the same But the Brethren the faithfull and godly Brethren too the same now which they haue also beene If they be then will they not deny which An. 72. they writ that we hold the substance of religion with them nor which An. 602. they published and is afore remembred that the true Faith by which we may be saued and the true doctrine of the Sacraments and pure worship of God be truely taught that by publike authority and retained in the booke of Articles And in this Confession I pray God they may constantly perseuere Howbeit euen these men which in a generality doe allow the doctrine of our Church being called by authority to acknowledge their assent vnto every Article thereof in particular they doe not a little debase the estimation of this doctrine of ours and shew themselues but too apparent and professed dissentors from the same And though all of them doe and will approoue some yet not one of them will subscribe vnto all and every of the Articles For vnto the articles of religion and the Kings supremacy they are willing to subscribe And they may subscribe as afore hath beene noted vnto such of them as containe the summe of Christian Faith the doctrine of the Sacraments But vnto the same Articles for number 36. agreed vpon in this Conuocation at London an 62. they neither wil nor dare nor may subscribe For neither the rest of the Articles in that booke nor the Booke of common prayer may be allowed no though a man should be depriued from his ministery for it say the said brethren in a certaine Classicall decree of theirs The late Polititian is not afraid to mooue the high and most honorable Court of Parliament that Impropriation may bee let to Ferme vnto incumbent ministers viz. which faithfully preach in the Churches the true doctrine of the Gospell according to the Articles of Religion concerning faith and Sacraments meaning that such Ministers as preach the same doctrine if they proceed to the rest of the Articles concerning either Conformitie in externall and ceremoniall matters or Vniformitie in other points of doctrine contained in that booke should not be partakers of that benefit or of Benefices Impropriate 31. If it be demanded what the causes may be Why the Br. will subscrib vnto some but not vnto all the Articles why they will vnto some but will not vnto all or why they will vnto those Articles which concerne Faith and the Sacraments but will not vnto the rest subscribe The reasons thereof be two whereof The one is for that in their opinion there is no Law to compell them to subscribe vnto all For say the Brethren resiant I know not where Wee have alwayes beene ready to subscribe to the Articles of Religion concerning the doctrine of Faith and of the Sacraments which is all that is required by Law Also the Brethren in Deuonshire and Cornewall We are ready say they to subscribe to the third which concerneth the Booke of Articles of Religion so farre as wee are bound by Statute concerning the same viz. as they concerne the doctrin of the Sacraments and the confession of the true faith And the 22. London Brethren tell King Iames to his head how the Subscription which he calleth for is more then the Law requireth Their other reason is because as the Lincolnshire doe say sundry as the London Brethren affirme many things in that booke be not agreeable but contrary to Gods Word 32. If these things be true which they doe alleadge surely then are those men to be chronicled for the Faithfull the godly and innocent Brethren indeed whom neither present Benefices can allure nor the angry countenance and displeasure of a King even of the puissant powerful King of great Brittaine can force to doe anything at his becke and pleasure either against Law or for which there is no law and who had rather to forgoe all their earthly commodities liuings yea and to goe from their charges and ministery and to expose themselues their wiues and children to the miseries of this world grieuous for our flesh and blood to endure then to approue any thing fob true sound by their hands which is opposite or not agreeable to the reuealed will and Scriptures of God But if these allegations of theirs be but weake and sinfull surmises or rather apparantly most false scandalous and slanderous imputations to their Prince their mother Church and this State then doubtlesse as they euen Christians now liuing cannot but take them so ages to come will euerlastingly note and censure them both for disloyall Subiects that so traduce a truly and most Christianly religious King ill deseruing children that so abuse their honorable and reuerand Fathers and superiours of State and authority turbulent spirits not peaceable men which raise such broiles troubles and diuisions in the Church and Kingdome the issues whereof no tongue can foretell and are fearefull being thought of without cause and finally neither faithfull nor godly Preachers but vngodly broachers of vntruthes and slanders and the very authors and fautors of horrible confusion and faction in Gods Church whose peace they should seeke and promote euen with their dearest blood 33. Since the Statute for Vniformity in rites and doctrine was first enacted moe then 35. yeeres haue passed in all which space neither the Brethren now being nor the Brethren afore them liuing haue hitherto shewne of the 39. Articles for names and titles Which for number How many the Articles be which Ecclesiasticall Ministers necessarily must how many which they may not or need not vnlesse they list subscribe vnto which I am sure they or some of them at one time or other would have expressed had the Law fauoured there recusancy and they bin able to have justified their Maxime which is That they are not compellable by subscription to approoue them all Againe since the first establishment of that Statute Law the most reuerend Fathers and truly reformed Ministers of this Church sound for iudgement profound for learning zealous for affection sincere for religion faithfull in their Churches painefull in their charges more
profitable many wayes of as tender consciences euery way as any of these Brethren combined according both to their bounden duties and as they are perswaded to the very purport and true intent of the said Statute have alwayes both with their mouthes acknowledged and with their pennes approued the 39. Articles of our religion for truthes not to be doubted of and godly Yea and the Brethren too themselues which now so scrupulously when they are orderly called thereunto doe hold backe their hands and will subscribe but choisely vnto some of them euen they with their mouthes which is equiualent and all one have that according to the Statute or else their liuings be void vpon the first entrance into all and singular their ecclesiasticall benefices openly both read and testified their consent vnto the said Articles for number euen nine and thirty acknowledging them I say all of them to be agreeable to Gods word whereof the people in their seuerall charges be ready witnesses to testifie so much before God and the world 34. Againe of these Brethren that will subscribe but vnto which they please of these Articles there be some who faine would beate into mens heads if they could tell how to make it credible that the Doctrine of our Church is altred from that it was in the raigne of Q. Eli. But this assertion being too grosse egregiously vntrue A late deuice of the Br. to shunne subscription no waies iustifiable they secondly give out and report so industrious be they to inuent new shifts to cloak their inueterate and rooted pertinacy how the purpose if not doctrine of our Church is of late altered from that it was And therefore though they can be well content to allow of the old doctrine and ancient intention yet vnto the old doctrine and new Intention of our Church they cannot subscribe might they either gaine much or lose whatsoeuer they have thereby Besides this new Intendement contrary to the old purpose if not doctrin of our Church is become now the maine and principall obstacle why they cannot subscribe vnto the booke of Common prayer and booke of Ordination as earst they some of them foure times have done when aswell Intention as Doctrine of our Church was pure holy Lastly they seeme not obscurely to intimate vnto the State that were they sure or might be assured that the purpose of our Church were the same which it was neither varied from the doctrine they would be prest and as ready euen foure if not forty times moe to subscribe vnto the forementioned bookes of Common prayer and of ordination as aforetimes they did when they were out of doubt the Intention of our Church was correspondent to her Doctrine that it was found and good I haue foure times subscribed saith a Brother to the booke of Common prayer with limitation and reference of all things therein contained not vnto the purpose onely or doctrine onely but unto the purpose and doctrine of the Church of England Yet cannot the same man with a good conscience so much as once more subscribe which formerly and that with a good conscience had subscribed foure times His reason is Because the purpose if not doctrine of our Church to which he referred his subscription appeareth to him by the late Canons booke of conference and some speeches of men in great place and others to be varied somewhat from that which he before not without reason took it to be The purpose and Doctrine of our Church continue the same 35. The purpose of our Church is best knowne by the doctrine which she doth professe the Doctrine by the 39. Articles established by Act of Parliament the Articles by the words whereby they are expressed and other purpose then the publike Doctrine doth minister and other Doctrine then in the said Articles is contained our Church neither hath nor holdeth and other sense they cannot yeeld then their words doe impart The words be the same and none other then earst and first they were And therefore the sense the same the Articles the same the Doctrine the same and the purpose and Intention of our Church still one and the same If then the purpose be knowne by her Doctrine and Articles and the true sense by their very words needs must the purppose of our Church be the same because her Doctrine and Articles for number words syllables and letters and every way be the very same And so our Churches intention in her publike Doctrine and Articles reuealed being good at the first it is so still For her purpose continuing one and the same cannot be ill at the last which was good and so beleeued and acknowledged even by the Brothers subscription at the first or good in good Queene Elizabeth and ill in illustrious King Iames his dayes 36. If the premisses sufficiently explane not the constancy of our Churches purpose in professing religion sincerely Neither the Doctrine nor purpose of our Church altered then cast we our eyes vpon the Propositions which she publikely maintaineth and if we find them the same which euer they have beene then need we not doubt the Brethren themselves being Iudges but the Articles againe their sence the Doctrine purpose and Intention nf the Church of England the Proposition interpreting as it were the said Articles is the very same it ever was Now that Propositions pregnantly and rightly gathered and arising from the articles be the same for substance vnaltered though vpon good considerations some few bee added to the former and all of them approued for true and Christian by the lawful publike allowance of our Church the Booke here ensuing plainely will declare and so demonstrate withall not the Doctrine onely but intention also of our Church to be the same and not changed and being vnchanged the books then of common prayer and of ordination too considered in the purpose and intention of the Church of England and reduced to the Propositions as the Brethren would haue them be well allowed and authentically approued and the said brethren with as good conscience now againe and afresh may subscribe vnto all the Articles euen concerning the Booke of common prayer and of ordination aswell as of the kings supremacy and of Religion as afore often and alwayes they did 37. For my selfe most reuerend Father in God what my thoughts be of the religion in this Realme at this instant professed and of all these Articles if the premisses doe not that which here followeth will sufficiently demonstrate Twenty yea 22 yeeres agoe voluntarily of mine owne accord altogether vnconstrained I published my subscription vnto them my Faith is not either shaken or altred but what it then was it still is yeeres have made those haires of mine gray which were not and time much reading and experience in Theologicall conflicts and combates have bettred a great deale but not altered one whit my judgement I thanke God Nothing have I denied nothing
THE CATHOLIKE DOctrine beleeued and professed in the Church of England 1. Article Of Faith in the holy Trinitie There is but 1 one liuing and true God euerlasting without body parts or passions of infinite power wisedome and goodnesse 2 the Maker and preseruer of all things both visible and inuisible 3 And in vnitie of this God-head there be three persons of one substance power and eternitie the Father the Sonne and the holy Ghost The Propositions 1. There is but one God who is liuing true everlasting c 2. God is the Maker and preseruer of all things 3. In the vnitie of the God-head there is a Trinitie of persons 1. Proposition There is but one God who is liuing true euerlasting without bodie parts passions of infinite power wisedome and goodnesse The proofe from Gods Word THat there is but one God who is c. is a truth which may be gathered from the all-holy and sacred Scripture and is agreeable to the doctrine of the reformed Churches For both Gods Word giueth vs to know that God is one and no more a Thou shalt have none other Gods before me Exod. ●0 3. the Lord our God is Lord onely Deut. 6.4 Who is God beside the Lord Psal 18 31. Hath not one God made us Mal. 2.10 There is none other God but one 1 Cor. 8.4 liuing b Mine heart and my flesh rejoyce in the living God Psal 84 2 Yee are the Temple of the living God 2 Cor 6.16 For a long season Israel hath been without the true God 2 Chr. 15 3. The Lord is the Lord of truth he is the living God and an everlasting King Ier. 10.10 This is life eternall that they know thee to be the onely very God c. Ioh. 17 3. Ye turned to God from idols to serve the living true God 1 Thess 1.9 and true God c everlasting d O my God c. thy yeere endur from generation to generation c. thy yeeres shall not faile Psal 102.24 26 27. He is the living God and remaineth for ever Dan 6.16 without body parts or passions e O Lord my God thou art exceeding great thou art clothed with glory and honour which covereth himself with light as with a garment c Psal 104 1 c God is a Spirit Ioh. 4.24 The Lord is the Spirit 2 Cor. 3.17 He is not a man that he should repent 1 Sam. 15.29 I will not execute the fiercenesse of my wrath I will not return to destroy Israel for I am God and not man Hosh 11.9 of infinite power f The sound of the Cherubins wings was heard into the utter court as the voyce of the Almightie God when he speaketh Ezek. 10.5 I will be a Father unto you c. saith the Lord Almightie 2 Cor. 6.18 We give thee thanks Lord God Almightie Rev. 16.17 wisedome g Great is our Lord and great is his power his wisedome is infinite Psal 147.5 To God onely wise be honour and glory for ever and ever 1 Tim. 1.17 To God I say onely wise be praise through Iesus Christ for ever Amen Rom. 16.27 and goodnesse h Praise ye the Lord because he is good for his mercy endureth for ever Psal 106.1.107.1 108. 1 c. and Gods people in their publike confessions from Ausburgh i Art 1. Heluetia k Confes 2. ar 2. Bohemia l c 3. France m art 1 Flanders n art 2. and Wittembergh o c. 1. testifie the same Errors and adversaries vnto this truth Then impious and execrable are the opinions of Diagoras and Theodorus who flatly denyed there was any God a Deos 〈◊〉 dubita●a● Protagoras nullos esse ●ma●ue D●agoras Theodotus Cyreniacus pu●●v●runt M. ● Ci● de Nat Deo l. 1. Of Protagoras b Protagoras Deos in dubium v●cauit Diager a● exclusit Lactan. de fal Rel. cap. 2 and the Machiuillian Atheists which are doubtfull whether there be a God Of such as fained unto themselves divers and sundry gods as did the Manichies c Aug. contra Manich. l. 2. c. 1 2. the Basilidians d Clemen Alex. 〈◊〉 l 5. the Valentinians e Valentinus triginta Deorum praed●cator saith Cyril Catech. 6. the Messalian heretikes f Epiph Exod. 32. the Gentiles and heathen people whereof some in place of God worshipped Beasts vnreasonable as the AEgyptians did a Calfe g an Oxe Cats Vulturs and Crocodils h Gand. M. ●rula de mirabi l 3. c. 56. The Syrians a Fish i Piscem Syrae venerantur Cic. de Senect Merula de mirabl l. 3. c. 48. and Pigeons k the Persians a Dragon l Histor of Bel. some as Gods have adored men vnder the names of Iupiter Mars Mercury and such like m Gods are come downe to vs in the likenesse of men and they called Barnabas Iupiter and Paul Mercurius c. Then Iupiters priest c. Acts 14.11 c Who knowes not that the City of the Ephesians is a worshipper of the great goddesse Diana Act. 19.35 and some even at this day for God doe worship Kine the Sunne and what they thinke good so the inhabitants of Baly in the East Indies n Voiage of the Holland ships Of the Anthropomorphites which ascribed the forme and lineaments of man vnto God o Theodoret l. 4. c. 10. thinking God to be like vnto man Of such as put their trust and confidence to be reposed in God alone either in men liuing as doe both the Persians in their Soldan p Tu es nostra fides inte credimus will the Persians say unto the Soldan P. B●zarus rerum Persic l. 1 ● and the Papists in their Pope who with them is God q Panormit C. quanto Abbas their Lord and God r Extravag Ioan. 22. of infinite power ſ Extravag de transl epist Quanto or in Saints departed this life as doe the same Papists both in their S. Francis whom they tearme The glory of God prefigured by Esay when he said Holy Holy Holy t Alcar Francisc lib. 1. c. and in their Thomas Becket whom they say God hath set ouer the workes of his hands u Horae B. virginis Ma. secundum usum Sarum pa. 15. or in Beasts vnreasonable as doth the Mordwite Tartar x Russe Common-weale c. 19. or finally in riches and other senselesse creatures as doe the Atheists and irreligious worldlings 2. Proposition God is the Maker and preserver of all things The proofe from Gods Word THat the world and all things both visible and inuisible therein both where made and are preserued by the Almighty and only power of God are truthes grounded vpon the holy Scripture and agreeable to the confessions of Gods people For touching the creation of the world we reade that in the beginning God created the heauen and the earth a Gen. 11 c. c. He made heaven and earth
b Psal 124.8 134.3 by him were all things created which are in heauen and which are in earth things visible and inuisible whether Thrones or Dominions or Principalities or Powers as things were created by him and for him c Col. 1.16 by his Son he made the worlds d Heb. 1.8 and all these acknowledged by the Churches Primitiue e Creede Ap●st Nicen. and reformed at this day f Confess Helv. 2. c. 6 7 Basil ar 1. of France ar ● Fland ar 12 And touching the preseruation of all things by him created My soule praise thou the Lord c. saith the Psalmist which covereth himselfe with light as with a garment spreadeth the heavens like a curtaine which layeth the beames of his chambers in the waters and maketh the clouds his Chariot and walketh vpon the wings of the winde which maketh the spirits his Messengers and flaming fire his Ministers g Psal 164.1 c. c. Are not two Sparrowes sold for a farthing and one of them shall not fall on the ground without your Father yea and al the hairs of your head are numbred saith our Sauiour Christ h Math. 10.29 30. God that made the world and all things that are therein he is Lord of heaven and earth he giveth life and breath and all things hath made of one bloud all mankind to dwell on all the face of the earth and hath assigned the times which were ordained before and the bounds of their habitation saith Saint Paul i Acts 17.24 25 26. The Sonne is the brightnesse of the glory and the ingraued forme of his person and beareth vp all things by his mighty Word k. The Churches of God in Heluetia l Heb. 1.13 Confe 20.7 Basil m Confess Basil ar 1 2. France n Confess Gal. ar 18. and Flanders o Confess Belg. ar 12 13. testifie the very same Errors and adversaries vnto these truths Hereby are condemned all Heretikes errors impugning either the creation of the world by God or his prouidence in the continuing and preservation of the same Of the former sort was First Aristotle and his followers which said the world was eternall and without beginning Next the Marcionites that held how God made not the world as being too base a thing for him to create a Tertul l. 1. co●●t Marc. 3. Simon Magus Saturninus Menander Carpocrates Corinthus who ascribed the worlds creation by Angels b ●ren Epiph. Philaste● 4. The Manichies who gaue the creation of all things vnto two Gods or beginnings the one good whereof came good things the other euill whence proceedeth euill things c Epip Aug. cont Man c. 49 5. The same Manichies d D. August de fide contra Manich c. 40. and Priscillianists e Conc. Brac. cap. 11. which did affirme man to haue bin the workemanship not of God but of the Diuell 6. The Family of Love who deliuer that God by them made heaven and earth f Display of the Fam. of Loue. H. 8 b. 7. The Papists who giue out how sacrificing Priests are the Creators of Christ g Qui creauit me sine me iam creatur mediāte me Stella cleris Of the latter sort were The Stoike Philosophers and the Manichies who are the great patrones of Destiny Fate and Fortune h Socrat. hist Eccles l. 1.22 The Family of Loue which may not say God saue any thing for they affirme that all things be ruled by nature and not ordered by God i Display of the Fam. H. 7. b. The old Philosophers who thought that inferiour things were too base for God to be carefull of k Dii magna curant parua negligunt Cic de nat Deor. l. 2 And lastly the Epicures who thinke God is idle and gouerneth not the same Of which mind was Cyprian who held that God hauing created the world did commit the government thereof vnto certaine celestiall powers l In exposit Symb. 3. Proposition In the Vnity of the God-head there is a Trinity of persons The proofe from Gods Word THe Scripture saith In the beginning God the Father a The Father by the Sonne made the world Heb. 1. the Sonne b In the beginning was the Word and the Word was with God and that Word was God The same was in the beginning with God Ioh. 1.1 2. and the holy Ghost c In the beginning God created the heauen and the earth c. and the Spirit of God mooued upon the waters Gen. 1.1 2. created the heaven and the earth By 1 the Word of the 2 Lord were the heavens made and all the host of them by the d Psal 33.6 Breath of his mouth Loe the heauens were opened unto 1 him and Iohn saw 2 the Spirit of God descending like a Dove and lighting vpon him and loe a voyce from heaven saying This is my 3 beloved Sonne in whom I am well pleased e Mat. 3.16 17 Because ye are sonnes 1 God hath sent forth 2 the Spirit of his 3 Sonne into our hearts which cryeth Abba Father saith the Apostle f Gal. 4.6 and againe The grace of our Lord Iesus Christ and the loue of God and the Communion of the holy Ghost be with you all g 2 Cor. 13.13 And S. Iohn There are three which beare record in heauen 1 The Father 2 the Word and 3 the holy Ghost and these three are one h 1 Ioh. 5 3. This truth hath alwayes beene i Creed Apo. Nic. Athan. and seriously is k Confes Helv 1. ar 6. 2. c. 3 Aug. art 1. Gal. art 6. Bel. art 6. Bohe c. 3 Wittemb c. 1. Sucan art 1. confessed in the Church of Christ Errors and adversaries unto this truth Then cursed are all opinions of men contrary hereunto whereof Some denyed the Trinity affirming there is one God but not three persons in the Godhead so did the Montanists a Socrat. eccle hist l. 1. c. 23. and Marcellians b Theo. haer fab lib. 2. and so doe the Iewes c Lu. Ca●ertus lib. diuiner visor ad Iudae and Turkes d Pol. of the Turk emp. c. 5. Some as the Gnostikes e Clem. Alex. strom l. 5. Marcionites f Clem. Alex. strom l. 5. Epiphan and Valentinians d affirme there be more Gods then one and yet not three persons nor of one and the same nature but of a diuerse and contrary dispositions Some thinke there be three Gods or spirits not distinguished onely but diuided also as did the Eunomeans h Philaster and Tretheites i Zanch de 3. El. par 1. l. 7. c. 1. Some feare not to say that in worshipping the Trinity Christians doe adore three Diuels g Cl. Alex. str lib. 4. worse then all the idols of the Papists and such Blasphemers were Heretikes Blandrat and Alciat k Caluin ep Some will have a Quaternity of
it is not in heauen vnlesse heaven be vpon earth Also from the Montanists Cataphrygians and Carpocratians d Phila. T●od who held how Christ not in body but in soule ascended into heaven From the Papists who say that Christ ascended into heaven carried with him the soules which he loosed from captiuity and bondage of the divell even the soules of the righteous afore that time not in heaven but in Lymbo Catc● ch Trid. in Symb. verba descendit ad inferos ascendit adcoelos Vaux catech c. 1. Test Rhem. an marg p. 633. And lastly from those Germane diuines which thinke that our Sauiour carried with him into heaven the faithfull people in soule and body raised at his resurrection f D. Ma. hom in Euang. in festo Ascen Dom. in ●pi Dom. Ascen Dom. 3. Proposition Christ shall come againe at the last day to iudge all men even the quicke and the dead The proofe from Gods Word God anointed Iesus of Nazareth with the holy Ghost and with power c. Him God raised up the third day c. And he commanded us to preach unto the people and to testifie that it is he that is ordained of God a Iudge of quicke and dead saith S. Peter g Acts 10.38 40 41. God shall iudge the world by Iesus Christ h Rom. 2.16 Iesus Christ shall iudge the quicke and dead at his appearing and in his Kingdome c. Henceforth is laid up for me the crowne of righteousnesse which the Lord the righteous Iudge shall give me at that day and not to me onely but vnto all them also that loue his appearing saith S. Paul i 2 Tim. 1.8 The Iudge standeth before the doore saith S. Iames k Iam. 5.9 And this Gods Church and people do firmely beleeve and faithfully confesse l Symb. Apost Nic●n Athan. conf●ss Hol● 2. c. 11. 1. a. 1. Basi● ar 9. Bohem. cap. 6. Be●ar ●7 Aug 2●3 Su●●i●a ar 2. Errors and adversaries unto this truth On the other side both they abroad and we at home abhorre them for their opinions which said that There shall be no generall Iudgement at all as did the Manichies m Philaster and doe the Athei●●s That the divels and the most vngodly some of them and namely so many as in hell doe call upon God for mercy and forgivenesse say the Turkes b Pol. of the Turks Emp c. 23. yea of all them say the Originists c Aug. cons ar 17. and Catabaptists d Bulling cont Catabap l. 1. tract shall be saved That the wicked shall not be iudged at all but shall dye as the bruite beasts and neither rise againe in body nor come unto Iudgement An error of the Family of Love e Display of the Fam. H. 6. That Christ shall not be the future Iudge so thought both Dauid George Coppinger and Arthington For that George rumord himselfe to be Iudge of the whole world f Hist Dauid is Georg. and Coppinger and Arthington published how William Hacket was come to iudge the world and themselves to be his angels for the separating the sheepe from Goats g Conspir for pretend Reform p 47.55 Arthing sedu That besides Christ the Pope is Iudge of the quicke and dead An error of the Papists h Extrauag de sent Excom C. anobis 24 q. 2. That afore the Iudgement there shall be a golden world the godly and one besides enioying the same peaceably and gloriously as the Iewes imagine i Confess Aug. ar 17. That the Beleefe touching the generall Iudgement of Christ over the liuing and dead is a doctrine mysticall or a mystery no history as k H. N in his Instruct praef sent 5. H.N. teacheth That the righteous are already in godly glory and shall from henceforth live euerlastingly with Christ and raigne upon the earth as the l H. N Ibid. sent 1. ar 8. sect 35. and in his Euang. c 1 sect 1. Alent confes in the Display Family of Love holdeth 5. Article Of the Holy Ghost The holy Ghost 2 proceeding from the Father and the Sonne 3 is of one substance maiesty and glory with the Father and the Sonne very and eternall God The Propositions 1 The holy Ghost is very and eternall God 2. The holy Ghost is of one substance maiesty and glory with the Father and the Sonne 3. The holy Ghost proceedeth from the Father and the Sonne 1. Proposition The holy Ghost is very and eternall God The proofe from Gods Word THe holy Ghost to be the very and eternall God the Scriptures teach us For he is the Creator of all things In the beginning God created the heaven and the earth c. And the Spirit of God mooved upon the waters a Gen. 1.1 2. O Lord how manifold are thy workes c If thou hide thy face they are troubled if thou take away their breath they dye and returne to their dust if thou send forth thy Spirit they are created b Psal 10.24 29 30. Ergo the holy Ghost is God Christians are to be baptized in the name of the Holy Ghost c Matth. 28.19 aswell as of the Father and the Sonne Therefore is he very God Ananias lyed unto God d Act. 5.3 4 9. and Sapphira tempted God when both he lyed vnto the holy Ghost and she tempted the Spirit of the Lord. As God he chooseth assigneth and sendeth forth men for the ministery of the Gospell e Acts 13 2 4. as God hee decreeth orders for his Church and people f Act. 15.28 and as God he is to be inuocate and prayed vnto as well as the Father and the Sonne g 2 Cor. 13.13 Vpon this and the like words I beleeve in the holy Ghost h Sym. Apost Symb Nicen. I beeleeve in the holy Ghost the Lord and giver of life i Symb. Atha the Catholike Faith is this that we worship one God in Trinity and Trinity in Vnity c. The Father is God the Sonne is God and the holy Ghost is God And yet they are not three Gods but one God k c. say the ancient Fathers which also is the Faith and confession of all Gods people at this day l Confess Helv ar 6 c. 2. c 2. Basil ar 1. Bohe c. 3. I●●● ar 8 August ar 1. Wittemb c. 1. Suevica ar 1. Gal. 6. Harm confess praef The Errors and adversaries vnto this truth This maketh to the condemnation of the Pneumatomachereof whereof Some impugne the deity of the holy Ghost as did in old time Samosatenus a Epiph. and Photinus b Vinc. Lyr. l. advers haer of late yeeres Servetus c Beza epist 1. Ochinus d Zanch. de 3. El l. 4 c. 1. abroad and Francis Ket e Burnt at Norwith 14. Ian. 1588. Hamant f Holinsh chro fol. 1297 and certaine Brownists g Who whisper in corners that
we must not beleeue in the holy Ghost saith Bredwell writing against Glouer p. 102. among us at home Some affirme the holy Ghost to be but a meere creature as did Arius h Theod. l 5. c. 10. the Semiarians i Philast the Macedonian heretikes k Soz. l. 4. c 27. the Tropickes l Athan. Ochinus m Zanch. de El par l. 2. c. 5. Some haue assumed the style and title of the holy Ghost unto themselues as did Simon Magus n D. ●ren Montanus o Eus I. 5. c. 18. and Manes p Chry des S. Some have given the title of the holy Ghost vnto men and women so Hierax said that Melchisedech was the holy Ghost q Epiphan Simon Magus tearmed his Helene the holy Ghost r Epiphan The Helche said the holy Ghost was a woman and the naturall sister of Christ ſ Epiphan Many Papists and namely the Franciscanes t Alcar Fr l ● blush not to say that S Francis is the holy Ghost 2. Proposition The holy Ghost is of one substance maiesty and glory with the Father and the Sonne The proofe from Gods Word THE holy Ghost eff●cted the incarnation of Christ a Mat 1.18 10. Luke 1.35 teacheth all things b Ioh. 14.26 leadeth into all truth c Ioh. 26.13 giueth vtterance to his seruants d Acts 2.4 and gifts unto his people e 1 Cor. 12.8 placeth Rulers in the Church and Ouerseers to feede the flocke of God f Acts 20.28 sealeth the Elect vnto the day of redemption g Eph. 4.30 aswell as the Father and the Son and these three viz. the Father the Word and the holy Ghost are one h 1 Iohn 5.7 Therefore is the holy Ghost of one substance maiesty and glory with the Father and the Sonne And this was the beliefe of the ancient Fathers I beleeue say they in the holy Ghost the Lord and giuer of life c. who with the Father and the Sonne together is worshipped and glorified who spake by the Prophets i Symb. Nicen. The Godhead of the Father of the Sonne and of the holy Ghost is all one the glory equall the maiesty coeternall Such as the Father is such is the Sonne and such is the holy Ghost c. And in this Trinitie none is afore or after other none is greater or lesse then another But the whole three persons be coeternall together and coequall k Symb. Ath. The very same doe all reformed Churches beleeue and confesse l Confes Helv 1. ar 6 2. c. 3. Basil ar 1. Bohem. c. 3 Gal ar 1. Belg. ar 1. Aug. ar 1 Wittemb c. 1 2. Sucrica ar 1. The Errors and adversaries unto this truth The premisses doe make Against the Tretheites which affirme the holy Ghost to be inferiour unto the Father a Zanch de 3. E● par 2 l. 5. c. 1 Against the Arrians who said the holy Ghost was inferior to the Sonne b Aug. contr Mar. A●rian Against the Macedonian heretikes who held the holy Ghost to be but a minister and servant of the Father and the Sonne c Ruffin l. 1. c. 25. yet of more excellent maiesty and dignity then the Angels d Niceph. l. 9. c. 17. Against many erroneous spirits which deliver the holy Ghost to be nothing else but The motion of God in his creatures as did the Samosatenians e Confess Aug. 5. ar 3. A bare power and efficacy of God working by a secret inspiration as the Turkes f Pol. of the Tur. Emp. 3. c. and certaine English Sadduces doe imagine * Hut●● inson in his Image of God c. 24. p 112 ● The Inheritance allotted to the faithfull g H. N. in his In●●ruct praef se●● 7. and the being or vertuous estate of Christ h Idem in his Spir. and praef sect 14. as dreameth H.N. The affection of charity or Love within vs an error of Petrus Lombardus i Sen l. 1. dist sect 5. 2. Gods love fauour and vertue whereby he worketh in his children so thought Ochinus k Zanch. de 3. E. par 1 l 4. c 1. and Servetus l Zanch ib. l. 1. c. 2. 2. Proposition The holy Ghost proceedeth from the Father and the Sonne The proofe from Gods Word THe proceeding of the holy Ghost from the Father and the Sonne we gather from the holy Scripture which teacheth how The Father sendeth the Comforter which is the holy Ghost in the name of the Sonne a John 14.16 and the Sonne sendeth the Comforter the Spirit of truth from the Father b John 15.26 he proceedeth of the Father c Ibid. and is sent of the Sonne d John 16.7 So with us say the ancient Fathers and Christians He proceedeth from the Father and the Sonne e Symb. Nic●n The holy Ghost is of the Father and of the Sonne neither made nor created but proceeding So there is one Father not three Fathers one Sonne not three Sonnes one holy Ghost not three holy Ghosts f Symb. Athan. which is the faith of the moderne Christians g Confes H●● 1. c. 3. Gal. c. 3 Belg. ar 8. 11. Wittemb c. 3. Sucrica ar 1. The adversaries unto this truth This discovereth all them to be impious and to erre from the way of truth which hold and affirme That the holy Ghost proceedeth neither from the Father nor the Sonne but is one and the same person that Christ is as the Arrians doe a Basi serm de sp S. That the holy Ghost proceedeth from the Father but not from the Sonne as at this day the Grecians b Russe Commonweale ● 23 the Russians c Guagnin de relig Moscov the Moscovites d Father de relig Moscov maintaine That there is a double proceeding of the holy Ghost one temporall the other eternall an errour of Peter Lombard e T. Sent l. 1. distinct 14. uncontrolled hitherto and therefore well liked of the Papists 6. Article Of the sufficiency of the holy Scripture for salvation Holy Scripture 1 containeth all things necessary for salvation so that whatsoever is not read therein nor may be proved thereby is not to be required of any man that it should be beleeved as an Article of the faith or be thought requisite and necessary to salvation 2 In the name of the holy Scripture we doe understand those Canonicall bookes of the Old and New Testament of whose authoritie was never any doubt in the Church Of the names and number of the Canonicall bookes Genesis Exodus Leviticus Numbers Deuteronomium Ioshua Iudges Ruth The 1. Booke of Samuel The 2. Booke of Samuel The 1. Booke of Kings The 2. Booke of Kings The 1. Booke of Chronicles The 2. Booke of Chronicles The 1. Booke of Esdras The 2. Booke of Esdras The Booke of Esther The Booke of Iob. The Psalmes The Proverbs Ecclesiastes or the
man as above art 2. hath bin declared is offered unto mankinde for his eternall salvation by them both For We learne that there is one and no Christs moe in the New a Act. 3.25 Gal. 3.8 10. and we learne the same in the Old Gen. 22.18 A Math. 16.16 That Christ is the Sonne of God in the New ●t 13.33 we learne the same in the Old Psal 27. That Christ is very man in the New 1 Heb. 2.14 5 16 we learne that he should be so from the Old Es● 11.1 ●nd 53.3 That Christ was borne at Bethelem in the New Matth. ● 1 we learn that he should be so from the Old M●●h 5.2 That Christ was borne of a Virgin in the New Matth. 2.23 we learne that he should be so from the Old Esa 7.14 That Christ was honoured of Wise-men in the New Matth. 2.11 Esa 60.6 we learne that he should be so from the Old Matth. 21.1 That he rode upon an Asse unto Ierusalem from the New Zach. 9.9 we learne that he should so doe from the Old Luke 22.7 That he was betrayed in the New Zach. 11.12 we learne that he should be so from the Old Acts 8.33 1 Cor. 5.4 1 Pet. 2.24 That he suffered not for his owne but for our transgressions in the New Esa 53.5 we learne that he should so doe from the Old Act. 2.29 31. 1 Cor. 5.4 In the New that he rose againe from the grave Matth 12.40 from the Old that he should so doe Psal 16.10 And in the New that he ascended into heaven Ionas 1.17 and 2.10 and in the Old that he should so doe Eph 4.8 Psal 51.18 The Errors and adversaries unto this truth We are then adversaries to them all which reject as of no reckoning the Old Testament as did both old heretikes as Basilides Carpocrates and the Manichies a See 〈◊〉 6. Prop. 2. and the new Libertines who say the Old Testament is abrogated b Builin c●● Anab. l. 2. c. ● 2. Proposition The old Fathers looked for eternall happinesse through Christ as well as for temporall blessings The proofe from Gods Word THe Old Fathers to have looked not onely for transitory promises but also for eternall happinesse through Christ the holy Scripture doth manifest Saint Paul saith 1 Cor. 〈◊〉 ● Brethren I would not have you ignorant that all our Fathers were under the cloud 2. and all passed thorow the red Sea and did all eate the same spirituall meat and did all drink the same spirituall drinke 3. for they dranke of the spirituall Rocke that followed them and the Rocke was Christ By faith Noe was made heire of the righteousnesse which is by faith Heb. 11.7 By faith Moses when he was come to age refused to be called the sonne of Pharaohs daughter and chose rather to suffer adversitie with the people of God then to enjoy the pleasures of sinne for a season esteeming the rebukes of Christ greater riches then the treasures of Egypt for he had respect unto the recompence of the reward Ibid. 24.25 26. c. All these through faith obtained good report and received not the promise God providing a better thing for us that they without us should not be made perfect d Ibid. 39 40. Abraham rejoyced to see my day e Rom 8.5 6. Abraham above hope beleeved under hope that he should be the father of many nations f Rom. 4.18 Of which salvation the Prophets have inquired and searched g 1 Pet. 1.10 This truth was never doubted of in the Church of God and is publikely acknowledged by some confessions h Helv. 2. c. 13. Saxon ar 13. The adversaries unto this truth They are not then to be heard which thinke the Fathers and faithfull people before Christ his time hoped onely for temporall and not for spirituall and if for spirituall yet not for eternall happinesse as did many of the Iewish Atheists a Psal 53.1 and Sadduces b Acts 23 2● and doe the Family of Love which make the promises of happinesse by temporall blessings to be accomplished in transitorie life Hence H.N. very strangely allegorizeth of the land of promise when he calleth it The good land of the upright and concordable life and saith that The lovely being or nature of the Love is the life peace and joy mentioned Rom. 14.6 and the land of promise wherein honey and milke floweth spoken Exo 43. a 13. a. Deut. 8. b. This and more a great deale to this effect hath H. N c In his booke entit The sp●land of peace c. 18.9 10. c. 2.4 5. 3. Proposition Christians are not bound at all to the observation of the Iudaicall ceremonies The proofe from Gods-Word THat neither the whole Law ceremoniall of the Iews nor any part thereof is necessarily to be observed of us Christians the holy Scripture teacheth us by Peters vision a Acts 10.13 the Apostles decree b Act. 15.24 29. and by the doctrine of S. Paul c Gal 1.3 4. and 4.10 11. Eph. 2.14 15. Col. 2.16 17. As all beleeve so some Churches publikely acknowledge the same d Confess Gal. ar 13. Belg ar 25. Errors and adversaries unto this truth In a wrong opinion therefore be they who are of minde either that the law Ceremoniall wholly is to continue and be in use or that part thereof is yet in force and must be The former of these was the opinion of the false prophets a Acts 15.1 2 the Cerinthians b Euseb the Ebionites c Iron l. 1. c. 26. and is of the Iews Armenians and Family of love d H. N. evang c. 12. sect 4. 9. the latter is an error of our home Sabbatarians For say they The Sabbath was none of the Ceremonies which were justly abrogated at the coming of Christ e D. B. Sab. doctrine 1. booke p. 11. When all Iewish things have bin abrogated only by their very words the Sabbath hath continued still in the Church in his proper force that it might appeare that it was of a nature farre differing from them f Ibid. p. 10. Whereas all other things were so changed that they were cleane taken away as the Priesthood the Sacrifices and Sacraments this day meaning the Sabbath day was so changed that it yet remaineth which sheweth that though all the other were ceremoniall and therefore had an end This Sabbath was morall and therefore abideth still g Ibid p. 4 1. The Commandement of Sanctifying every Seventh Day as in the Mosaicall decalogue is naturall morall and perpetuall is their doctrine h Ibid. p. 7. 4. Proposition The Iudiciall lawes of the Iewes are not necessarily to be received or established in any Common-wealth The proofe from Gods Word THe truth hereof apeareth by the Apostles decree a Acts 15.20 28
ar 8. 2. c. in the iudgement of Gods people f Basil ar 2. Gal. ar 11. Saxon ar 11. Errors and aduersaries vnto this truth We stand therefore in this point Against the Papists who say that Originall sinne was not at all much lesse remained in the Virgin Mary a Concil Basil sest 6. Test Rhem. annot Rom. 5.14 Against Giselbertus whose doctrine is that Baptisme once receiued there is in the baptized no sinne at all either originall or actuall b Giselb lib. alte cat Synag eccles c. 8. Against the Family of Loue who affirme that the elect and regenerate sinne not c H.N. Document sent c. 2. sect ● c 13. sect 5 Against the Carpocratians whereof some boasted themselues to be euery way as innocent as our Sauiour Christ d Iren. l. c. 24. Against the Adamites both old e Epiphan and new f Aeneas Sylv. hist Bohe. c. 42. who said they were in so good a state as Adam was before his fall therefore without originall sinne Against the Begadores in Almaigne affirming they were impeceable and had attained vnto the very top and pitch of perfection in vertue and godlinesse g Carranza summa Concil 4. Proposition Concupiscence euen in the regenerate is sinne Concupiscence in whomsoeuer lusteth against the Spirit a Gal. 5.1 7. fighteth against both the soule b 1 Pet. 2.11 and the law of the mind c Rom. 7.23 and the●efore but that there is no condemnation to them which are in Christ Iesus d Rom. 8.1 it bringeth death damnation e Gal 5.17 21. Iam. 1.14.15 Mortifie therefore your members which are vpon earth saith S. Paul Coloss 3.5 vnto the Colossians fornication vncleannesse the inordinate affection euill concupiscence c. for the which things sake the wrath of God commeth on the children of disobedience And vnto all Christians S. Peter I beseech you as strangers abstaine from fleshly lust g 1 Pet. 3.11 To the same purpose is both the doctrine and Confessions of Gods people h Confess Helv 2. c. Saxon. ar 2 10. Errors and aduersaries vnto this truth Therefore we mislike their opinions as unsound which say that concupiscence either is no sinne at all or but a veniall fin the former was an assertion of the Pelagians Confess Aug ar 2. and is of the Papists that latter was one of Glouers errors Francis the Monke of Colen counted concupiscence no sin but said it was as naturall and so no more offensiue before God for man to lust then for the Sunne to keepe his course Petrus Lombardus saith that concupiscence afore Baptisme is both a punishment and a sinne but after Baptisme is no sin but onely a punishment Lomb l. 2. dift. 32. ● Catech Trid. praecep 9. The Church of Rome both teacheth that the power of lusting is not but the vse of wicked concupiscence is euill and numbred amongst most grieuous sinnes and decreeth how Concupiscence is no● sinne but proceedeth from sinne and inclineth vnto sinne d Concil Trid ses S. decreto de pec Or●g Glouer the Brownist said that the intemperate affections of the minde issuing from concupiscence are but veniall sins e Bred. detect ●9 1 9. 10. Article Of Free-will 1 The condition of man after the Fall of Adam is such that he cannot turne prepare himself by his owne naturall strength good workes 2 to faith calling vpon God wherefore we haue no power to doe good workes pleasant and acceptable to God 3 without the grace of God preuenting vs that we may haue a good will and working with vs when we haue that good will The Propositions 1. Man of his owne strength may doe outward and euill workes before he is regenerate 2. Man cannot doe any worke that good is and godly being not yet regenerate 3. Man may performe and doe good workes when he is preuented by the grace of Christ and renewed by the holy Ghost 1. Proposition Man of his owne strength may doe outward and euill workes before he is regenerate The proofe from Gods Word VVEE deny not that man not yet regenerate hath free will to doe the workes of nature for the preseruation of the body and bodily estate which thing had and have the bruit beasts and prophane Gentiles as it is also well obserued in our neighbour Church a Confes Helv. 2. cap. 9. Aug. ar 28. Saxon. 3.4 7. Besides man hath free will to performe the workes of Satan both in thinking willing and doing that which evill is For the imaginations of the thoughts of mans heart are onely evill continually b Gen. 6.5 evill even from his youth c Confes Helv. 2. c. 9. and 1. ar 9 Bohem. c. 4. A truth confessed by our brethren Aduersaries to this truth A false perswasion is it therefore that man hath no power to mooue either his body so much as vnto ourward things as Laur. Valla dreamed a Simon Pauli meth par 2. de lib. Ar. or his minde vnto sinne as the Manichies maintained affirming how man is not voluntarily brought but necessarily driuen to sinne b Aug. epist 28 2. Proposition Man cannot doe any worke that good is and godly being not as yet regenerate The proofe from Gods Word THE wisedome of the flesh is enmity against God for it is not subiect to the Law of God neither indeed can be They that are in the flesh cannot please God a Rom. 8.7 8. ● The naturall man perceiueth not the things of the Spirit of God for they are foolishnesse vnto him neither can he know them because they are spiritually discerned b 1 Cor. 2.14 No man can say that Iesus is the Lord but by the holy Ghost c 1 Cor. 12.3 We are not sufficient of our selves to thinke any thing as of our selues but our sufficiency is from God d 2 Cor. 3.5 Without me ye can doe nothing saith our Sauiour Christ e Iohn 15.5 Which is the confession of the godly reformed f Confes Helv 1. ar 9. 2. c. 9 Basil ar 2. Behem c. 4. Aug. ● ar 18. Belg. ar 14. The adversaries unto this truth Adversaries unto this truth are all such as hold that naturally there is free will in us and that unto the best things So thought the Pharises the Sadduces the Pelagians a August de pec mer. l. 3. and the Donatists b Idem contra Petil. cap 19. and the same affirme the Anabaptists c Zuing. contra Catabap and Papists For say the Papists Man by the forme and power of nature may love God above all things d Gab. B●el 3. sent dist 37. Man hath free will to performe even spirituall and heavenly things e Concil Trid. sess 6. c. 1. Men beleeve not but of their own free will f Test Rhem an Mat 20.16 It is in a mans free will to beleeve or not to beleeve
quem pro te impedit Fac nos Christe scanders quo Thomas ascendit By the blood of Thomas which he for thee expended Make us Christ to climbe up where Thomas ascended By Agnus Deis whereof they say Peccatum frangit ut Christi fanguis angit It breaketh sinne and doth good As well as Christ his pretious blood m Cerem lib. 1. tit 7. By reading certaine parcels of Scripture according to their vulgars Per Evangelica dicta Deleantur nostra delicta n Breviar secundum Sarum Through the sayings and words evangelicall Our sinnes blot out and vices all 2. Proposition Onely by Faith are we accounted righteous before God The proofe from Gods Word ONely beleeve o Mar. 6.36 all that beleeve in Christ shall receive remission of sinnes p Acts 10 4● from all things from which ye could not be justified by the Law of Moses by Christ every one that beleeveth is justified q Acts 13.19 The Gospell is the power of God unto salvation to every one that beleeveth r Rom. 1.16 To him that worketh not but beleeveth in him that justifieth the ungodly his faith is counted for righteousnesse ſ Bom. 4.5 Christ is the end of the law for righteousnesse to every one that beleeveth t Rom. 10.4 Know that a man is not justified by the workes of the law but by the faith of Iesus Christ c. g Gal. 2.16 God would justifie the Gentiles through faith c. They which be of faith are blessed with faithfull Abraham h Gal. 3.8 9. By grace are ye saved through faith and that not of your selves i Eph. 2.8 Yea doubtlesse I think all things but losse for the excellent knowledge sake of Christ Iesus my Lord for whom I have counted all things losse and doe judge them to be doung that I might winne Christ and might be found in him not having mine owne righteousnesse which is of the Law but that which is through the faith of Christ even the righteousnesse which is of God through faith k Phil 3.8.9 The Churches of Christ by their publike confessions give testimony unto this truth l Confess Helv. 2. ca 6. Basil ar 8. Bohe. c. 6 7. Ga. ar 10. Belg ar 22. Aug. ar 4 Saxon. ar 3.8 Witt. ar 4. S●●● cap. 3. The errors and adversaries unto this truth Partakers of ths profit and sweetnesse of this doctrine are not they which be altogether ignorant of this mysterie Nor they who know the same but apply it not to their owne soules and consciences but altogether despise the same as did Pilate in condemning Christ m Nat. 27.24 Heroa in killing Iames n Acts 12.1 Agrippa in not defending Paul o Acts 26.26 the Iewes in persecuting the Apostles and doe the Divels p Jam. 2.19 and many ungodly persons Tyrants false Christians and Apostataes Nor they which teach not a sure confidence in Iesus Christ but an historicall knowledge of him as the Papists q Canis catec cap. 1. Vaux cat● c. 1. Test Rhe. an Rom. 4.14 1 Tim. 3.15 Nor they which hold that all and every man is to remaine doubtfull whether he shall be saved or no as doe the same Papists r Concil Trid. ses 6. c. 9. Test Rhe. an Rom. 5.1 Nor they which teach that man is justified Either by works without faith as did the false apostles in Asia 2 Tim. 1. and doe the Turks and Anabaptists t Bale myst of iniquit p. 53. Or by faith and works as both the Pseudapostles at Ierusalem v Acts 1.5.1 the Ebionites x Eus l. 3. c. 24. and the Papists y Test Rhem. an Luk. 7. mar Luk. 10.20 28. Joh. 3.18 James 2.25 with the Russians z Russi● Common-weal● ● 23. Or neither by faith nor workes as they which continue both faith in Christ Iesus and good works too hoping yet to be saved as the carnally secure worldlings Neither shall they be partakers of the sweetnesse of this truth which say that for Christians to trust onely by Christ his passion or by Faith onely to be saved is a breath of the first commandement as Vaux n Catech c. 3. is the Doctrine of Divels as Friar Lawrence a Villavicentia o De forman S. concion l. 1. c. 11. and the doctrine of Simon Magus as doe the Rhemists p Test Rhem. an Acts 8.18 Nor they finally which maintaine how the truly righteous apprehend not Christ by Faith but have him his righteousnes essentially and inherent within them which is an error of the Catharists q Isidor etim l. 8. c de haeres Papists r Conc. Trid. sess 6. c. 16.7 Osiandrians ſ Calvin contra Osiand epist fol. 303. Theod. Beza epist 1. and Family of Love t Display in Allens confess 3. Proposition We are accounted righteous before God not for our owne works or deservings The proofe from Gods Word Besides what hath been said that works have no place nor portion in the matter of our justification it is evident in the holy Scripture where we finde that All men be sinners and destitute of the glory of God And therefore that no man can be justified by his owne works v Psal 14.2 3. Psalme 53.2 and 41.4 Rom. 3.12 Eternall life commeth unto us not by desert but partly of promise x Acts 2.30 Acts 3.25 Acts 13.32 2 Tim. 1.1 partly of gift y John 17.2 Rom. 6.23 1 John 5.11 Revel 2.10 The just shall live by faith and the Law is not of faith z Gal. 3.11 12. Moreover as the godly in old time were so Christians in these daies are and shall be justified But the godly were justified not for any good works or worthinesse of their owne so justified was Abraham a Rom. 5.1 2. Gal. 3.6 Heb. 11.17 the Iewes b Act. 2.44 c the Samaritans c Acts 8.15 Paul d 1 Tim. 1.14 16. Acts 22.16 Phil. 3.6 9. the Eunuch e Acts 8.36 the Iailor f Acts 16.31 c. and the Ephesians g Eph. 4 5. c. All Churches reformed with a sweet consent applaud and confesse this doctrine h Confess Helv. 1.4.16 Basil ar 8. Boh. c. 7. Gal. ar 22. Belg. ar 24 Aug. ar 6.26 The Errors and adversaries unto this truth Adversaries hereunto are The Pharises who thought men were justified by externall righteousnesse morall a Mat. 5.21 c. and ceremoniall b Matth. 15.2 The false apostles in Asia c 2 Tim. 1. and at Ierusalem d Gab. Biel. l. 2. dist 27. q. 1. The Pharisaicall Papists who against the Iustification by faith alone doe hold a justification by merits and that of Congruity dignity and condignity The said Papists teach besides that life eternall is due unto us of debt because we deserve it by our good works f Concil Trid. sess 6. Cant. 32
actuall n Prooued p. 50. Besides there is no man iust in the earth that doth good and sinneth not saith the Preacher o Eccles 7.21 Yee cannot doe the same things that ye would Gal. 4.17 Christ Iesus came into the world to saue sinners of whom I am chiefe saith S. Paul b 1 Tim. 1.15 In many things we sinne all is S. Iames saying Iam. 3.2 and S. Iohn If we say we haue no sinne we deceiue our selues and the Truth is not in vs Ioh. 1.8 Pray therefore Forgiue vs our debts Matth. 6.12 A truth beleeued and confessed by all Churches expressedly by some Confess Aug. ar 20. Sa● ar 2. The Errors and adversaries unto this truth Many aduersaries hath this truth had and hath as the Papists the Manichies the Catharans the Donatists the Pelagians Family of Love Marcionites Adamites and Carpocratians For The Papists say that the blessed Virgin was pure from all sinne both Originall Conc. Trid. ●ss decr de pec O●g and actuall For these are their owne words Our Lady neuer sinned Test Rhem. an Col. 1.24 an Mark 3 35. Our Lady sinned not so much as veniall in all her life she exactly fulfilled the whole Law that is was without sinne Also of S. Francis they write that for vertue and godlinesse he was like vnto Christ and hath fulfilled euery jot of the Law Stap● an●●d ●●ang in Mat. 12.50 p 11.8 The Manichies l S●cut Adae D●● non pa●ē●● omnis creatura ●eb●llis ex●itit●●sic B. Francisco omnia praecep●● Dei implenti creatura omnis famulata cit omnia Deus fu●●ecit sub pe●ibus cius Alca● Fran. lib. 1. and Catharans m Hiel in pro. Dial. contra Pelag● thought they could not sinne so much as in thought The Donatists dreamed how they were so perfect as they could iustifie other men n Cyp. l. 4 op 2. Some were of opinion as the Pelagians o August lib. ● cont Pet c. 14 and Family of Loue p Concil Meli cap. 8. Dis H. 6. b. how they were so free from sinne as they needed not to say Forgiue vs our trespasses Which Family also teacheth how there be men liuing as good and as holy as euer Christ was An error of Christopher Vitels Ans to the Fam. lib. L. 3. ● Disp H. 6. b. a chiefe Elder in the said Family and ●pat He which is a Familist is either as perfect as Christ or else a very Diuell Some deemed themselues as pure as Paul Peter or any men as the Marcionites Iren. 1. c. ● yo● as Adam and Euah before their fall as the Adamites v Epiphan yea as Iesus Christ himselfe as the Carpocratians x Iren. lib. 1. cap. 24 16. Article Of sinne after Baptisme 1 Not euery deadly sinne willingly committed after Baptisme is sinne against the holy Ghost and vnpardonable Wherfore the grant of repentance is not to be denyed to such as fall into sinne after Baptisme After we haue receiued the holy Ghost we may depart from grace giuen fall into sinne and by the grace of God we may rise againe and amend our liues and therefore they are to be condemned which say they can no more sinne as long as they liue here or any place of forgiuenesse to such as truly repent The Propositions 1. Euery sinne committed after Baptisme is not the sinne against the holy Ghost 2. The very regenerate may depart from grace giuen and fall into sinne and yet rise againe vnto newnesse of life 3. No men vtterly are to be cast off as reprobates which vnfainedly repent 1. Proposition Euery sinne committed after Baptisme is not the sinne against the holy Ghost The proofe from Gods Word THough euery sinne in it selfe considered deserueth damnation yet is there a sinne which shall be punished with many and a sinne which shall be punished with few strip●● a Luke 12 40. a sin vnto death a sin to● vnto the death b 1 Iohn 5.6 a sin against the Father and the Sonne which shall be forgiuen and a sinne against the holy Ghost which neuer shall be forgiuen c Matt. 13.31 Marke 3.39 Luke 12.10 So in their extant confessions witnesse the Churches in Bohem d Confess Bohe c. 4. Saxony e Confes 21.10 Heluetia Confess Sax. Helv. 3 c. 8. Errors and aduersaries vnto this truth Diuersly hath this doctrine bin oppugned For Some haue thought all sinnes to be like and equall as the Storkes Pelagians Cor. c. Mileuit and Io●inians i D. Hieron aduers Io●in Some haue taught as Manes the heretike Epiphan how none of the godly Fathers and others from the beginning of the world till the 15. yeere of Liberius the Emperour though earnestly they did repent were saued but were all punished alike with vtter confusion Some giue out that such persons be vtterly out of Gods fauour and condemned which depart out of this world either afore they are baptized as the Papists do l Spec. poreg●m quest de● 1. c. 3. q. 5. Posstion Ingol stad de ●urgat or afore they come vnto yeeres of discretion as Hieracites did m Epiphan 2. Proposition The very regenerate may depart from grace giuen and fall into sinne and yet rise againe to newnes of life The proofe from Gods Word THat the regenerate may fall into sinne yet rise againe it is a doctrine grounded vpon the Scriptures For in them we evidētly may se that fall they may partly by the admonitions of our Sauiour vnto the man healed of the Palsie a Iohn 5.14 and vnto the adulteressle b Iohn 8 11. of S. Paul vnto the Ephesians c Eph. 21.22 Colossians d Coloss 3.8 Hebrewes e Heb. 3 12. and Timothy f 1 Tim. 4.3 2 Tim. 1.19 of S. Peter vnto all the godly g 1 Pet. 2.10 and ● 8 2 Pet. 3.27 and partly by the examples of Dauid h 2 S●m 11.4 1 Kings ●1 4 Peter k Matth● 25.70 72 74. who egregiously and very offensiuely did fall and that they doe fall it is most euident by the fift petition of the Lords Prayer were nothing else to prooue the same but soe afore 9. art Prop. 3. art 1 2. Prop. 2. art 15. Prop 2. Next that being falne they may rise againe and be saued it is apparent both by the exhortations of the Angell vnto the Churches of Ephesus Pergamus and Thyatira l Reuel 2. and by the examples of Peter who denyed m Luke 22.55 and yet afterward confessed his Master Christ n Acts 2● 22. c. and. 3 13 and 40 ● and of all the Disciples who fled o Matth 2● ●● and yet returned This both granted is and published for truth by the Churches p Confes He● 2. c. 7 Bohem c. 58. Saxon. ar 10 11 Witt ar 23. Suev ar 15. The aduersaries vnto this truth Vnto
no sect euer erred or were out of the way to heauen a fancy of the Rhetorians k D. Aug ep ad Quod vult 1. Proposition No man euer was is or shall be saued but onely by the name or Faith of Iesus Christ The proofes from Gods Word This we cannot but acknowledge to be true if also we beleeue the Scriptures which say that Among men there is giuen none other name vnder heauen whereby we must be saued a Acts. 4.12 Through Iesus Christ his name all that beleeue in him shall receiue remission of sinnes b Acts 10.43 In thee viz. Christ Iesus shall all the Gentiles be blessed c Gal. 3.8 And this is the Faith and confession of the reformed Churches d Con● s Helv. 2. ar 10 11. 2 cap. 11.13 Basil ar 4 Bohem c. 4.10 Gal. ar 13.16 17 Belg. ar 17.20 21.22 August an ar 3. Saxon. ●r 3. Wittemb c. 8. Suc vica ●r 9. sect 2. they revolted The errors and adversaries unto this truth Many wayes this truth very heretically is oppugned For Some teach that we are saved not by Christ but as the Valentinians said by the labour of their hands and by their own good works a Iren lib. 1. as Simon Magus boasted by his faire Helene b Iren. as Matthew H man● he●d by other meanes and that all persons which worshipped Christ are abominable Idolaters c Holinsh chro fol. 299. as N●userus and Silvanus beleeved by Mahomet d ● za resp ad repetit Io. And. Cal. p. ● and therefore he revolted from Christianity unto Turcisme Others confesse that wee are saved by the name of Christ but either not by the right and true Christ for they said themselves and every of themselves were Christ and in old time did Saturnius e Epiphan● Manes f Euseb l. 7. c. 31. Desider Burd●gal and Eudo de Stella g Genebr chr l. 3. p 358. 709. and of late yeares as Basil David George h Hist David Georgii and in England first one Iohn Moore i S●ow and afterward William Hacket k Conspit for pretend refor● the former was whipt for the same at Bethlehem in the second of Queene Elizabeth the other hanged and quartered in Cheap side Ann. 1591. Or by the true Christ but either distinguish betweene Iesus and Christ saying Iesus was one man and Christ another as did the Marcionites l Philaster Or say there be two Christs one revealed already in the dayes of Tiberius the Emperour who came for the salvation of the Gentiles another yet to come for the redemption of the Iewes so tho ght the same Marcionites m Tertul. l. 4. contr Marc. Nestorius held also there were two Christs whereof one was very God the other very man borne of a woman n Vincen. Li● adv haereses Or publish how 〈◊〉 ●e were saved by the true Christ till the 15. yeare of the foresaid Tiberius an heresie of Manes and his company o Epiphan Others besides as the Family of Love understand all things written of Christ allegorically and not according to the letter of Gods Word For they teach that whatsoever is written of Christ must in us and with us be fulfilled p H.N. proph of the Spi. c. 7. sect 3. Others have thought yea have spoken blasphemously of the constant and holy Martyrs who for the Name of Christ gave their lives in England in the raigne of Queene Mary some saying They were starke fooles as did Christopher Vitel a chiefe Elder in the Family of Love q Ans to the Fam. let l 3. a. others as West phalus and Morbachius that they were the Divels martyrs r Sturmius an●● ap 4. par 3. p. 189. 19. Article Of the Church 1 The visible 2 Church of Christ 3 is a congregation 4 of faithfull men in the which 5 the pure Word of God is preached and the Sacraments be duly ministred according to Christs ordinance in all those things that of necessitie are requisite to the same As 6 the Church of Ierusalem Alexandria and Antioch hath erred so also 7 the Church of Rome hath erred not onely in their living and manner of ceremonies but also in matters of Faith The Propositions 1. There is a Church of Christ not onely invisible but also visible 2. There is but one Church 3. The visible Church is a Catholike Church 4. The Word of God was and for time is before the Church 5. The markes and tokens of the visible Church are the due and true administration of the Word and Sacraments 6. The visible Church may and from time to time hath erred both in doctrine and conversation 7. The Church of Rome most shamefully hath erred in life ceremonies and matters of faith 1. Proposition There is a Church of Christ both invisible and visible The proofe from Gods Word A True saying it is The Lord onely knoweth who are his For to man the Church of Christ is partly invisible and visible partly The visible are all the Elect who be or shall be either in heaven triumphing or on earth fighting against the flesh the world and the Divell These as members of the Church are said to be invisible not because the men be not seene but for that their faith and conscience to Godward is not perfectly knowne unto us The members of the visible Church are some of them for God and some against God all of them notwithstanding deemed parts of the Church and accounted faithfull so long as they make no manifest and open rebellion against the Gospel of Christ All this we gather from the holy Scripture where mention is made of the Church invisible and triumphing Rev. 2.26 28. and 3.5 12. and 7.14 15. invisible and militant in the Epistles of St. Paul a Gal. 4.29 Eph. 6.10 c. 2 Tim. 3.12 Peter b 1 Pet. 5.9.10 and book of St. Iohns Revelations c Rev. 1● 7 11 17 17.14 also of the Church visible and mixed with good and bad by the Parable of the Sower d Matth. 13. of the Marriage e Matth. 22. and of the Vrgins f Matth 25. as also by the saying of our Saviour Christ g Have not I chosen you twelve and one of you is a divell John 10. and of S. Paul h For he knew who should betray him therefore said Ye are not cleane John 13.11 In a great house are not only vessels of gold and of silver but also of wood and of earth and some for honour and some unto dishonor 2 Tim. 2.20 Confess l. Helv. 1. ar 14. 2. c. 17. Bohem. c. 8. Gal. ar 27. Belg. ar 27. August ar 7. Saxon. ar 11. Wit ar 32. Su●vica ar 15. The Churches beare witnesse hereuntoi. Errors and adversaries unto this truth This truth hath many adversaries whereof S me ●en un●● our Christ the Savi●ur of mankinde and so thinke his
the day of Iudgement Pope Iohn the 23. denies the soules immortality k B. Jewel def fol 6 5. i Gerson ser 1. Pasch And some worldly prophane and devilish Atheists For Sixtus 4. builded a Male stewes l Acts Mon. Paul 3. received a monethly pension for 45000. whores at Rome m D. Sparke against Id. Albine p. 399. Leo the 10. made a Fable of the Gospel of Christ n Smeton contra Hamilt p. 104. Hence it proceeded that Rome hath bin called Babylon both by S. Augustine o De civit Dei lib. 18. and Hierome p Praes lib. de Sp. S. and by Pope Pius 5. was said Magis Gentilizare quàm Christianizare rather to Gentilize or to be a City of Heathens rather then of Christians q Chr. Franck. praef ad Paradox St. Bernard said how the Romans in his time were hatefull unto heaven and earth yea and hurtfull unto both wicked against God rash against holy things and seditious among themselves r De consid ad Eugen. Genebrard himselfe an Antichristian Romanist writeth that 50 Popes successively and within the space of 150 yeeres departed from the vertue of their Elders and shewed themselves Abjurers of Christianity and Apostataes rather then Catholike Bishops a Chron. lib. 4. p. 817. The Pope was proclaimed Antichrist at Rhemes by the Councell there under Hugh Capet b Arnolph in Con● Rhem. inter opera Bernardi Errors and adversaries unto this truth What the Papists are then it appeareth whose doctrine as hath beene shewne is that the Church of Rome neither hath nor can erre Erraverunt aliae ecclesiae saith Di. Stella other Churches as Antioch Alexandria Constantinople c. have erred sed nunquam ecclesia Romana but the Church of Rome never yet erred c Stella in Lu●a 9. fol. 430. Id constanter negamus saith Costerus the Iesuite wee constantly denie that Christ his Vicars and Peters successors the Bishops of Rome have either taught heresies or can propound errors d E●chirid controvers c. 3. de summo Pontif. p. 136. God preserveth the truth of Christian Religion in the Apostolike Sea of Rome e Test Rhem. an Matth. 23 2 and it is not possible that the Church meaning the Church of Rome can erre or hath erred at any time in any point say the Rhemists f Ibid. an mar p. 164. 20. Article Of the authority of the Church 1 The Church hath power to decree Rites or Ceremonies 2 and authority in controversies of faith And yet it is not lawfull for the Church 3 to ordain any thing that is contrary to Gods Word 4 neither may it so expound one place of Scripture 5 that it be repugnant to another Wherefore although 6 the Church be a witnes and a keeper of holy Writ yet as it ought not to decree any thing against the same so 7 besides the same ought it not to enforce any thing to be beleeved for necessity of salvation The Propositions 1. The Church hath power to decree rites or ceremonies 2. The Church may not ordaine what rites or ceremonies she will 3. The Church hath authority to judge and determine in controversies of faith 4. The Church hath power to interpret and expound the Word of God 5. The Analogie of faith must be respected in the exposition of the Scripture 6. The Church is the witnesse and keeper of Gods written Word 7. The Church may not enforce any thing to be beleeved as necessary unto salvation that is either contrary or besides the Word of God 1. Proposition The Church hath power to decree rites or ceremonies The proofe from Gods Word THE Churches authority to decree rites or ceremonies is warranted in the Word of God first by the example of the Apostles who did ordaine rites and ceremonies among other things that In the Church men should not be covered a 1 Cor. 11.4 7 14 c. Women should keepe silence b 1 Cor. 14.34 and be covered c 1 Cor. 11.5 A knowne tongue understood of the common auditorie should be used d 1 Cor. 1.24 with other things e 1 Cor. 22.2 3 4. Next by the generall and binding commandement of God himselfe who at all times will have every thing in the Church to bee done unto edifying f 1 Cor. 14.26 honesty and by order g Ibid. v. 40. as being not the author of confusion but of peace h Ibid. v. 33. All Protestant Churches confesse the same i Confes Helv. 1. ar 13. 2. c. 22 23 24. Basil ar 10. Bohem. c. 15.17 Gal. ar 32. Belg. ar 32. Aug. ar 4.57.15 Saxon. ar 20. Suev c. 8.14 Wittemb c. 27.31 Errors and adversaries unto this truth This power being given by the supreme Authority unto the Church they doe greatly offend which doe condemne either generally all d R H. on Psal 122. or particularly some rites and ceremonies orderly and lawfully established of the former sort are e Such a one was that Scottish Minister which said unto the head of K. Iames how he would hold conformitie with his Majesties ordinances for matters of doctrine but for matters of ceremony they were to be left in Christian liberty unto every man This D. Barlow reporteth in the summe of the Confer p. 21. 1. The Family of Love who say of themselves how they are a free people a H N. Sp. land c. 31. ss 6. in bondage unto no creature nor to any created thing b Ibid. cap. 40. sect 7. they have no severall dissenting or variable religions or ceremoniesc. 2. The Brownists who teach that every Christian is to joyne himselfe unto that people among whom the Lords worship is free and not bound or withholden with any jurisdiction of this world 3. The Puritants whereof some would have all matters of ceremonies to be left in Christian liberty unto every man Others would have both temples to bee left without Service Sermons and Sacraments and Princes to ●e scarred with the feare of uproares and sedition and all because they would be freed from the obedience unto ceremonies not impious of themselves imposed by the Church the Father of these men was Illyricus of whom Melancton writeth f Ep. ad Pium. Lect. p. 455. Of the latter kinde be 1. The Family of Love againe who utterly dislike our Churches or Temples also our Liturgies and formes of serving our God and finally our designed times of meeting together for the worship of God Our Churches they blasphemously terme common houses and so we terme Brothel-houses or the stewes g H. N. Speland c. 5. l 5. Our Lyturgies and manner of serving of God they call foolishnesse of taken on services h Ibid. false seducing Gods services i H N exhor c. 15. sect 2 3. of no man to be ordained k Ib. cap. 16. sect 14. nor to be obeyed or used when they are established l
Ibid sect ●● with these joyne the Brownists who doe write that to haue Liturgies and formes of common prayer is to haue another Gospell and another Testament m Barrowes ref●t p. 244. Our Sabbaths they contemne yea they condemne for they say There ought to be no Sabbath day n Zispl H. 8. ● Our Sabbatarians goe not so farre yet come they neere unto these Familists when they divulge that The Church hath no authoritie ordinarily and perpetually to sanctifie any day but the seventh day which the Lord himselfe hath sanctified o D. B doct of the Sab. 1. bo●ke p. 31. The Church cannot take away this liberty of working sixe daies in the weeke p T.C. 1. replic p. 120. These assertions are against all holy daies lawfully established Barrow yet goeth further then doe these men for he saith how the obseruing of times as it is in our Church is an errour fundamentall q Bar. ref p. 36. They also be alike culpable who approuing some rites and ceremonies doe yet tie the Church or people of God to the observation of the ceremonies either Mosaicall as many have done and doe r See art 7. prop. 3. or of the Romish Church as doe the Papists ſ Conc. Trid. sess 7. can 13. and the halfe Papists the Family of Love t H.N. euang c. 3 ● sect 1. Finally they are out of the way which thinke that either one man as the Pope or any certaine calling of men as the Clergie hath power to decree and appoint rites or ceremonies though of themselues good unto the whole Church of God dispersed over the vniuersall world 2. Proposition The Church may not ordaine what rites and ceremonies she will The proofe from Gods Word AS it is a cleere truth that the Church may ordaine ceremonies so true it is also that the Church hath no power to appoint what rites or ceremonies she will For shee must decree none which be Either for their owne nature impious like the ordinances manners and idols of our fore fathers a Walke ye not in the ordinances of your fathers neither obserue their manners not defile your selues with their idols Ezek. 30.18 teachers of vanitie b Ier 10.8 and of lies c Heb. 3.10 Or for vse superstitious like the brazen Serpent which King Ezechiah brake in pieces d 2 King 18.4 Or for their weight ouer-heauy and grieuous to be borne like the Iewish constitutions e Ye lade men with burdens grieuous to be borne Luke 11.46 Why tempt yee God to lay a yoake on the Disciples ne●kes which neither our fathers nor we were able to beare Acts 15.10 Why as though ye liued in the world are ye burdened with traditions Col. 2.20 Or for their worthinesse in the eyes of the ordainers either of equall price or of more account then the very ordinances of God so as for the performance of them the lawes of God must be left vndone such were many of the Pharisaicall rites and traditions f Ye lay the Commandement of God apart and obserue the traditions of men as the washing of pots and of cups and many other such like things ye doe Marke 7.8 Yee reiect the Commandements of God that yee may obserue your owne traditions c. making the Word of God of none authoritie by your traditions which you have ordained Ibid. 9.13 Or against the libertie of Christians and to the entangling of them againe with the yoke of seruile bondage g Stand in the libertie wherewith Christ hath made vs free and be not intangled againe with the yoke of bondage Gal. 5.1 Or last of all any way contrary to the Commandements Word and Will of God h Every plant which my Father hath not planted shall be rooted vp Matth. 15.13.11 Cor. 14.14 But the rites ceremonies and constitutions of the Church they must make altogether and tend both to the nourishing and encrease of loue friendship and quietnesse among Christians and also to the retaining of Gods people in the holy seruice worship and feare of God according to the rule of the Apostle afore mentioned Let all things be done honestly and by orderi. All Churches reformed consent hereunto k Confes Helv. 2 cap. 1. Gal. ar 33. Belg. ar 33. August ar 7. 15. Sax. ar 20. Wittemb ar 35. Suevica c. 14. The Errors and adversaries vnto this truth The premises being as they are most true most false then is it which the Papsts doe publish viz. that The Church hath power to change the Sacraments ordained euen by Christ himselfe Conc. Trid. ●st 5 cap. 2. Whatsoever the Apostles and Rulers of the Church command is to be kept a Test Rhem. an marg p. 336. and obeyedb. The authority of the Church is greater then of the Sacred Scripture c Confess Patrocemen 15. 3. Proposition The Church hath authority to iudge and to determine in controuersies of faith The proofe from Gods Word AVthority is given to the Church and to every member of sound iudgement in the same to iudge in controuersies of faith and so in their places to embrace the truth and to auoid and improue Antichristianity and errors and this is not the priuate opinion of our Church but both the straight commandement of God himselfe particularly vnto all Teachers a and hearers b Cast away prophane and old wives fables 1 Tim 4.7 O Timothy keepe that which is committed unto thee 1 Tim. 6.20 A Bishop must c. hold fast the faithfull word according to doctrine that he also may be able to exhort with wholesome doctrine and improue them that say against it c. Tit. 1.9 c. Heare not the words of the prophets that prophesie vnto you and teach you vanities they speake the vision of their owne heart and not of the mouth of the Lord Ier. 23.19 Beware of false prophets Matth. 7.15 Beware of dogges beware of euill workers Phil. 3.2 The sheepe know the shepherds voyce and they will not follow a stranger but they flye from him for they know not the voyce of strangers Iohn 10.4 5. Be not carried about with divers and strange doctrines Heb. 13.9 Beware lest you be also plucked away with the errour of the wicked and fall from your own stedfastnesse 2 Pet. 3.17 If there come any vnto you and bring not this doctrine receive him not to house neither bid him God speed 2 Iohn 10. If any shall say vnto you Loe here is Christ or there beleeve him not For there shall arise false Christs and false prophets Matth. 2.4.23.24 I speake vnto them which have understanding iudge ye what I say 1 Cor. 10 15. Try all things and keepe that which is good 1 Thess 5.21 of Gods Word and generally vnto the whole Church c and also the iudgement of our godly brethren in foraigne countries d Confess Wittemb ar 32. Sucviar 15. The errors and adversaries vnto this truth Vnsound therefore
in iudgement are the Papists For first they maintaine That the Pope of Rome hath the power to iudge all men and matter but may be iudged of no man a Dist 40. c. Si Papa to decree without controulement against the Epistles of S. Paul b C●● Ruinus to dispence even against the new Testament c Panorm fixtra de diuortris and to giue the sense and meaning of the holy Scripture to which sense or interpretation of his all and every man without contradiction must yeeld and obey d H●rvae● de potestate Papae Next they publish and hold that the power to iudge of religion and points of doctrine is either in Bishops onely as some of them do thinke e The mysteries of religion are committed to the trust of Bishops p ●bi tantum solendum est q●nd ad m●●● f●●ma● vitam per●●net the common people are onely to know that which pertaineth vnto ●anne is and good behauiour saith Fryer La●●nc a Villavincence de forman conci●● lib. 1. cap. 10. Nec gratia nec 〈◊〉 ●or a i●●a v●rtus ●o qu●enda●st in memoe i● vel minist●● Ecclesie gr●●ter publican professionem sid i● It is sufficient for the members and Ministers of the Church to make open profession of the faith more is not required of them neither grace to iudge of doctrine nor any other inward vertue saith Petru● à So●● 4 Ter● ca ●●de Ec. The common and faithfull people may in a generality refuse and forsake all new doctrine dissenting from that which they haue learned and embraced Non autem vt doctrinam in particulari ex causis fundam m●●●● s●●s examini ●t sic proprio iudicio discu●●nt quid ●rum quid sassum sit But they haue none authority to examine any doctrine in particular from the very causes and grounds and thereby search out what is true what false quod proprium est Ecclesinum ●●ag ●●●is this they must leaue to the masters of the Churches to whom properly it b●longeth saith Stapl or in their Clergy only as others deeme An●d●ae van Matth 7. and in the Church of Rome onely as all of them suppose g Sacrae scripturae ●●●sus na●vus indubitatus a● eccl●si● 〈◊〉 a est p●●n●dus saith the forementioned Pe●rus à So●● The natiue and true sense of the sacred Scripture is to be fetcht from the Catholike Church of Rome Ass●r ●●●th de E●c The whole Church throughout the world knoweth that the holy Church of Rome hath power to iudge of all matters n●que cuiquam ●ebit de eius judicio iudicare ●●●the● is at lawfull for any man to give any sentence of her iudgement ●●la 9. q C●n●●ia 4. Proposition The Church hath power to interpret and expound the Word of God The proofe from Gods Word TO interpret the Word of God is a peculiar blessing giuen by God onely to the Church and company of the faithfull though not to all and every of them For No man knoweth the Son but the Father neither knoweth any man the Father but the Sonne and he to whom the Sonne will reveale him a Matth. 11.27 It is given to you to know the secrets of heaven saith our Sauiour vnto his disciples but to them it is not given b Mark 13.11 The manifestation of the Spirit is given to every man to profit withall For to one is given by the Spirit the Word of wisedome c. and to another prophesie c 1 Cor. 12.7 If any thing be revealed to another that sitteth by let the first hold his peace saith S. Paul vnto the Church at Corinth d 1 Cor. 14 30 Ye haue an oyntment from him that is holy and yee have knowne all things c ye need not that any man teach you saith the Apostle Iohn e 1 Iohn 2.20 21 27. Hereunto subscribe the Churches in Helnetia f Confe Helv. 2 cap. 2. Wittemberg Confess Wit tomb c●p 30. Boheme h Confes Bohe cap. 1. The Errors and adversaries unto this truth Many sundry are the adversaries vnto this truth whereof Some thinke that to expound the Word of God is so easie a matter as any Student endued with a good naturall wit by diligence and industry of his owne may doe the same Some teach how to interpret the Scriptures is too hard a thing for any mortall man to attaine vnto so did Iohannes de Wassalia a Aeneas Syl. and doe many Anabaptists Some though they acknowledge that diuers haue the gift to open the sense of Gods Word yet that some say they are not the knowne Preachers and writers in the reformed and Christian assemblies whom the Family of Loue in scorne doe tearme the Scripture-learned For saith the said Family It is meere lyes vntruth c. whatsoever the Scripture-learned through their knowledge out of the Scriptures institute preach and teach b H.N. euang c. 33. sect 11. 12. 13. They preach the letter c. but not the Word of the liuing God c Idem i. ex hor. cap 16. sect 18. but themselves onely have that gift neither every one of the Family but the illuminate Elders For to them it is giuen to know the truth d Idem in his Prov. c. 21. sect 2. and they are the Elders of the Godly-vnderstanding and of the manly-wisedome the e Sp. land cap. 7. sect 10. Primates or principals in the light f 1 Exhor cap. 14. sect 1. Some doe suppose that to interpret the holy Scriptures is not so much a speciall gift of God vpon some chosen persons as an ordinary power annexed to the state and calling of Popes Bishops and Clergy men g See the proposit next immediate aforegoing Others be so farre from giuing the people of God not being of the Clergy power to expound as they will not suffer them to reade nor so much as to haue the Scriptures by them in a vulgar tongue except it be their owne most corrupt and barbarous translation which but of late yeeres neither and that in part too is granted by the Papists but in place thereof they thrust vpon the Laity their most idolatrous and blasphemous Festiuals Legends Rosaries Horaries and Psalteries of our Lady as falsly they called her 5. Proposition The analogy of faith must be respected in the exposition of the Scripture The proofe from Gods Word FOrasmuch as no prophesie is of any priuate motion a 1 Pet. 1.20 and whatsoever interpretation man giueth if it agree not to the analogy of faith which St. Paul gave in commandement to be obserued b Rom. 12.6 is priuate interpretation speciall heed is to be had that one place of Scripture be so expounded as it agree with another and all to the proportion of Faith The Churches reformed approoue this assertion by their subscriptions c Confes Helv. 1. ar 2. 2. c. 2 Gal. 1. ar 7. Sax. ar 1.
All haile all faithfull soules whose bodies doe here and every where rest in the dust The Lord Iesus Christ who hath redeemed both you and us with his most precious blood vouchsafe to deliver you from paines c d Horae B. Virg. Mariae secundum usum S●r. They have ratified the doctrine of purged soules after this life in the Councell of Trent e Conc. Trid. d●●r de Purg. Ses 25. ses 6 can 30. It it further to be noted how the same Papists sliding backe from the truth of God have fallen into many noisome and divers opinions in the matter of Purgatory agreeing among themselves Neither about the place where Purgatory should be some placing the same in the bottome of the Sea f Eckius in Enchirid some neere unto the mount Hecla in Ireland some upon the mount Aetna in Sicil g Bernard de Bustis Rosar par 3. c. 2. others in the Center of the earth h Spec. pereg quaest doc 1. c. 3. q. 5. others in Hell whereof they make foure roomes the first of the damned the second of infants dying unbaptized the third Purgatory the fourth Limbus patrum whereinto Christ descended i Position Ing. de purgat and others in a minde tossed and troubled betwixt hope and feare k Lorich insti Cathol de 12. Fidei art Neither about the Tormentors there who are thought of some to be holy Angels l Albertus Roffensis of others to be very devils m S. Th. Morc Neither about the torments For some dreame how they are tormented there with fire onely as Sir Thomas Moore some with water and fire as Roffensis and some neither with fire nor water but with troublesome affections of Hope and Feare as Lorichius n Insti Catho ut supra Neither about the causes of Purgatory torments because that some doe thinke that onely veniall sinnes o Greg. dial l. 4. c. 39. Spec. pereg quaest dec 1. c. 3. q. 4 others that veniall and mortall sinnes too p Eckius posit 6. for which in this life men have done no penance are there purged Nor about the time which they that be tormented shall abide in Purgatory For some have given out how the poore soules there be continually in torments till the day of Iudgement as Dionys Carthusianus q De 4. Hom. noviss others as Durandus r De officio mort l. 7. doe thinke they have rest sometimes as upon Sundaies and Holidaies others are of mind that in time they shall be set free and at libertie because their punishment is but temporary ſ Spec. pereg quaest ut supra quaest 5. and others that at any time they may be delivered if either their friends will buy out their paines or the Priests will pray or say any Masse for them or the Pope will but say the word Nor finally about the state of soules in Purgatory For Our English Papists at Rhemes doe thinke the soules in Purgatory to be in a more happy and blessed condition then any men that live in this world t Test Rhem. an Apoc. 14.13 and yet say the same Rhemists that Purgatory fire passeth all the paines of this life v Ibid. an marg p. 431. Thomas Aquinas holdeth how the paines of hell fire and of Purgatory are all one nothing differ but that the one is but temporall and the other not so And others put in choyce either to tarry in Purgatory one day or to endure the miseries of this world an 100 yeares have chosen to suffer the troubles of this life an hundred yeares together rather then to abide the paines of Purgatory but one short Winters day x Cap. Quid in aliud dist 25. Therefore in this contrarietie of opinions some of them the Papists themselves cannot deny must be we say all of them are fond and contrary to the Word of God Besides they nourish most cursed and damnable errors as That all the soules of the faithfull separated from their bodies are not at rest That all sins in their owne nature be not mortall or deadly and that some deserve not everlasting torments They are purged in Purgatory That one sinfull man may save and satisfie the wrath of God for another and that easily by prayer saying or doing something for them That if friends in this world will doe nothing for the poore soules in Purgatory paines yet may the said soules come at length unto happinesse by abiding their deserved torments untill the last houre or day of judgement in Purgatory Finally that the Pope is God in that he can at his pleasure discharge guiltie souls both from the guilt of sinne and from the punishments due for the same 2. Proposition The Romish doctrine concerning pardons is fond and not warranted by the holy Scriptures nor consonant but contrary unto the same The proofe from Gods Word SVch hath been the exceeding mercy and love of God towards mankinde that as he hath purged us from all guiltinesse of sinne by the blood so hath he pardoned us from the everlasting punishment due for sinne by the paines of Iesus Christ For There is salvation in none other For among men there is given none other name under heaven whereby they must be saved a Acts 4.12 Through his name all that beleeve shall receive remission of sinnes b Act. 10.43 He hath purchased the Church by his owne blood c Act. 20.28 With his stripes we are healed d Isa 53.5 He that beleeveth in him shall neither be condemned e Joh. 3.18 nor ashamed f Rom. 10.11 Therefore Come unto mee all yee that are weary and laden and I will ea●● you c. and yee shall finde rest for your soules saith our Saviour Christ g Matth. 11.28 29. If thou shalt confesse with thy mouth the Lord Iesus and shalt beleeve with thine heart that God raised him from the dead thou shalt be saved saith Saint Paul h Rom. 10.9 Errors and aduersaries unto this truth This being the Doctrine even of God himselfe * Whereof see more Art 2. pr. 4. ar 11. pr. 1. ar 22. pr. 1. we may evidently perceive how not onely vaine but beside not onely besides but against the Word of God the Romish doctrine concerning pardons is For that doth teach us 1. To seeke salvation not at God alone but at the hands of sinfull men For would we have a pardon for the sinnes of fortie dayes A Bishop may give it For the sinnes of 100 dayes A Cardinall may grant it For all our sinnes committed or to be committed From the Pope we may have it Hence be his pardons if you respect time for 40. 50. 100. 1000. 10000. 50000. c. yeares of offences Homicide Patricide Perjury Sodomitry Treason and what not c. a Vide Taxam poenit 2. That we may be our owne Saviour So did that of Purgatory 3. How the precious
pro nobis beate Martyr Sebastiane Resp Vt moreamur pestem epidemiae illae si tranfire promissionē Christi obtinere Virgo Christi egregia pro nobis Apollonia Funde preces ad Dominum ut tollat omne noxium Ne pro reatu criminum morbo vexemur dentium Let us pray O Lord we humbly beseech thy Majesty that as thy blessed Apostle Andreas was a Preacher and Ruler of thy Church so he may be a perpetuall intercessor for us through Iesus Christ our Lord. Let us pray O God for whose Churches sake the glorious Martyr and Bishop Thomas was slaine by the sword of the ungodly grant we beseech thee that such as call unto him for helpe may obtaine a good effect of his Godly prayer through our Lord. The vers O blessed Katharine pray for us The Ans That we may be made worthy of the promises of Christ The vers O blessed Martyr Sebastian pray for us The Ans That we may deserve to escape the plague without hurt and obtaine the promises of Christ Christ his noble virgin Apollonia pray unto the Lord to remoove whatsoever is hurtfull lest for the guiltinesse of our sinnes we be vexed with the tooth-ach Whosoever saith this prayer following in the worship of God and S. Roche the very words in the said booke shall not dye of the pestilence by the grace of God c. Oremus Omnipotens sempiterne Deus qui precibus meritis beatissimi Rochi confessoris tui quondam pestem generalem revocasti praesta supplicibus tuis qui pro simili peste revocanda sub tua confidunt fiducia ipsius gloriosi Confessoris tui precamine ab ipsa peste epidemiae ab omni perturbatione per Christum Dominum nostrum Oratio ad tres reges Rex Iasper rex Melchior rex Balthasar rogo vos per singula nomina rogo vos per sanctum Trinitatem rogo vos per Regem regum quem vagientem in cunis videre meruistis compatiamini tribulationum mearum hodie intercedatis pro me ad Dominum cujus desiderio exules facti estis Crux Christi protege me Crux Christi salva me Crux Christi defende me ab omni malo Let us pray O Almighty and everlasting God who by the prayers and merits of the most blessed Confessour Roche didst revoke a certaine generall plague grant unto thy suppliants who for the revocation of the like plague doe trust in thy faithfulnesse by the prayer of that thy glorious Confessour wee may be delivered from the plague and from all adversity through Christ our Lord. A prayer unto the three Kings O King Iasper King Melchior King Balthasar I beseech you by every of your names I beseech you by the holy Trinity I beseech you by the King of Kings whom yee deserved to see even in his swadling clothes that you would take pitie on my troubles this day and make intercession for me unto the Lord for whose desire yee made your selves exiles O Christs crosse protect mee O Christs crosse save mee O Christs crosse defend me from all evill 23. Article Of ministring in the Congregation It is not lawfull for any man to take upon him the office of publike preaching 2 or ministring the Sacraments in the congregation 3 before hee be lawfully called and sent to execute the same 4 And those we ought to judge lawfully called and sent which be 5 chosen and called to this worke 6 by men who have publike authority given unto them in the congregation to call and send ministers into the Lords vineyard The Propositions 1. None publikely may preach but such as thereunto are authorized 2. They must not bee silent who by office are bound to preach 3. The Sacraments may not be administred in the Congregation but by a lawfull Minister 4. There is a lawfull Ministery in the Church 5. They are lawfull Ministers which be ordained by men lawfully appointed to the calling and sending forth of Ministers 6. Before Ministers are to be ordained they are to be chosen and called 1. Proposition None publikely may preach but such as thereunto are authorized The proofe from Gods Word THis truth in the holy Scripture is evident For there we finde how Godly men were both called by God and commanded to preach before they would or durft so doe So was Samuel a 1 Sam. 3.3 4. c 20. Ieremy b Ierem. 1.4 5. Iohn Baptist c Joh. 1.6 Christ Iesus himselfe d Ioh 20.21 who also to preach did send the twelve Apostles e Math. 10.5 and the seventy Disciples f Luke 10.1 2. The wicked and false prophets for preaching afore their time are blamed g Ier. 14.14 23 21 27 14 15 29.8 9. 3. A commandement is given us to pray the Lord of the harvest that hee would send forth labourers into his harvest h Matth. 9.38 4. Lastly wee doe reade that God hath ordained in the Church some to be Apostles some Prophets some teachers some to be workers of miracles i 1 Cor. 1● 28 and Christ being ascended into heaven gave some to be Apostles some Prophets some Evangelists and some Pastors and Teachers k Eph. 4 1● And all this is acknowledged by the reformed Churches l Cont. Helv. 2. c. 18. Bohe cap ● Gal. ●1 31. Belg. ar 14. Wittem ar 2● Su●● ar 13. The errors and adversaries unto this truth And so are we against them Which to their power doe seeke the abolishment of publike preaching in the reformed Churches as doe first the Papists who phrase the Preachers to be uncircumcised Philistims a Ans to the execut of lust cap. 3. p. 44. sacrilegious ministers b Ib. c. 9. p. 211. Ieroboams priests inordinate c Ib. c. 5. p. 91. and unordered Apostataes d Ib. c. 3. p 41. and next the Barrowists who say how the said Preachers are sent of God in his anger to deceive the people with lies e R. A. confut of Brow p. 113. Who publish how the word is not taught by the Sermons of Ministers but onely by the Revelation of the Spirit so did Muncer the Anabaptist f Sleiden com lib. ● and so doth H.N. g H. N Evang. c. 13. sect 6. and Spir. land c. 48 sect 5. and his Family of Love h Letter to the Br. of Roch. Who runne afore they be sent as doe many both Anabaptists and Puritanes as Penry Greenwood Barrow c. or which hold how they which are able to teach and instruct the people may and must so doe and that not privately onely but publikely too though they be not ordinarily sent and authorized thereunto which was the doctrine of R. H i R H. in Psal 122. Who teach that Lay-men may teach to get faith k R. A. conf of Brownism p. 113. and that every particular member of the Church hath power yea and ought to examine the manner of administring the Sacraments
to suffer q Acts 5.41 2 Tim. 4.7 8. and constant to endure all manner of afflictions r 2 Cor. 11.23 And this doe the Churches Protestant by their Confessions approve ſ Conf. Helv. 1. ar 25. 2. c. 18. Bohe. c. 9. Gal. artic 13. Belg. ar 31. Aug. ar 14. Wittem ar 20 Sue ar 13. The errors and adversaries unto this truth In error they remaine who are of opinion that The due election and calling of Ministers according to the Word of God is of no such necessity to the making of Ministers an erroneous fancie of the Anabaptists and Family of Love That women may be Deacons a Sigebert Elders and Bishops the former the Acephalians the latter the Pepuzians did maintaine A speciall care is not to be had both of the life and the learning of men or that wicked men of evill life ignorant men without learning Asses of no gifts loyterers which doe no good or favourers of superstition and idolatrie which doe great hurt are to be admitted into the ministerie They are causes which indeed are none to debarre men from the ecclesiasticall function as if men have beene twice married an error of the Russians b Liberus retum Mosco p. 20. b. be married c Coster Enc. controv c. 15. de coel sacerd have had certaine wives d Test Rhem. an 1 Tim. 5.2 have not received the Sacrament of Confirmation e Conc. Trid. sess 23. c. 4. have beene baptized of Heretikes f 1 quaest 1. vencum these may not bee Priests say the Papists or if either they have not been trained up in the family or be not Elders in the said Family of Love g Such ought not to busie themselves boot the Word H. N. document sent c. 3. sect 1. and 1. Exhort c. 16. sect 16. 24. Article Of speaking in the Congregation in such a tongue as the people understand not It is a thing plainly repugnant to the Word of God and the custome of the Primitive Church to have publike prayer in the Church or to minister the Sacraments in a tongue not understood of the people The Proposition Publike prayer and the Sacraments must bee ministred in a tongue understood of the common people The proofe from Gods Word THis assertion needeth small proofe For who so is perswaded as all true Christians of understanding are that what is done publikely in the Church by a strange language not understood of the people profiteth not the Congregation a 1 Cor. 14.6 9 14. edifieth not the weake b Ib. 17.26 instructeth not the ignorant c Ib. v. 9. inflameth not the zeale d Ib. 7.11 offendeth the hearers abuseth the people f displeaseth God g Mark 15 8. Ib. 11.16 bringeth religion into contempt h 1 Cor. 14.23 easily will thinke that where prayers be said i Conf. Helv. 2 c. 22. Wittem c. 27. Aug. de Missa artic 3. Suev c. 2● or the Sacraments administred in a tongue not understood of the vulgar sort neither is the Word of God regarded nor the custome of the purer and primitive Church observed This article no Church doth doubt of and very many by their extant Confessions doe allow Adversaries unto this truth But there is nothing either so true or apparant which hath by all men at any time bin acknowledged so contrary to this truth In old time the Ossens made their prayers unto God alwaies in a strange language which they learned of Elexus their founder a Epip haer 19. and the Marcosians at the ministration of Baptisme used certaine Hebrew words not to edifie but to terrifie and astonish the minds of the weak and ignorant people b D. Iren. l. 1 c 8. In these daies the Turks performe all their superstitions in the Arabian language thinking it not onely unmeet but also an unlawfull thing for the common sort of persons to understand their Mahometane mysteries c An. Genfraeus a●lae Tu● l 2. The Iacobite Priests doe use a tongue at their Church ministrations and meetings which the vulgar people cannot comprehend d Magd. eccl hist Gen. ● 2 c. 5. The divine Liturgie among the Russians is compounded partly of the Greeke and partly of the Selavonian language e Alex Guag de relig Mose pag. 2 ●0 The Papists will have all divine Service Prayers Sacraments and that thorow out the world ministred onely in the Latine tongue but which few men of the common people doe understand some of them holding that it is not necessary that we understand our prayers f Test Rhem. annot p 463. and that prayers not understood of the people are acceptable to God g Test Rhem. an Mark 21.6 and all of them maintaining that he is accursed whosoever doth affirme how the Masse ought to be celebrate onely in a vulgar tongue h Si quis dixerit lingu● tantū vulgari Missam cele●●an debere anathema ●it Conc. Trid. s●ss 21 cap. 9. 25. Article Of the Sacraments Sacraments 1 ordained of Christ be not only badges or tokens of Christian mens profession but rather they bee certaine 2 sure witnesses effectuall signes of grace and Gods good will towards us by which he doth work invisibly in us 3 and not onely quicken but also strengthen and confirme our faith in him 4 There bee two Sacraments ordained of Christ our Lord in the Gospell that is to say Baptisme and the Supper of the Lord. Those five commonly called Sacraments that is to say 5 Confirmation 6 Penance 7 Orders 8 Matrimony and 9 extreme Vnction are not to be counted for Sacraments of the Gospel being such as have growne partly of the corrupt following of the Apostles partly are states of life allowed in the Scriptures but yet have not like nature of Sacraments with Baptisme and the Lords Supper for that they have not any visible signe or ceremony ordained of God 10 The Sacraments were not ordained of Christ to bee gazed upon or to be carried about but that we should duly use them 11 And in such onely as worthily receive the same they have a wholesome effect or operation but they that receive them unworthily purchase to themselves damnation as Saint Paul saith The Propositions 1. The Sacraments ordained of Christ be badges or tokens of our profession which be Christians 2. The Sacraments be certain sure witnesses and effectuall signes of grace and God his good will toward us 3. By the Sacraments God doth quicken strengthen and confirme our faith in him 4. Christ hath ordained but two Sacraments in his holy Gospell 5. Confirmation is no Sacrament 6. Penance is no Sacrament 7. Orders is no Sacrament 8. Matrimony is no Sacrament 9. Extreme unction is no Sacrament 10. The Sacraments are not to be abused but rightly to be used of us all 11. All which receive the Sacraments receive not therewithall the things signified by the Sacraments 1. Proposition The
Sacraments ordained of Christ he badges or tokens of our profession which be Christians The proofe from Gods Word THe Sacraments are badges or tokens both of Christians and of Christianity Of Christians For by them are visibly discerned the faithfull from Pagans and Christians from the Iewes Turks and all prophane Atheists Of Christianity For as Circumcision in the old Law was a token how the corrupt and carnall affections of the minde should be subdued and that the Lord required not so much an outward of the body as an inward circumcision of the heart a Deut. 18.16 39 6. Jer. 4.4 Acts 7.51 ●●●m 12.28 Phil. 3.3 Col. ● 11 so Baptisme telleth us that being once dead unto sinne wee are to live unto righteousnesse that all we that have been baptized unto Iesus Christ have been baptized unto his death c. and must walke in newnesse of life c b Rom 5.3 c. for wee have put on Christ c Gal. 3.26 by Baptisme And as the Paschall Lambe was to the Iewes a token that the flight of sinne should alwayes bee fresh in memory and that it should be celebrated not with the old Leaven neither in the Leaven of maliciousnesse but with the unleavened bread of sincerity and truth d 1 Cor 5.8 so the participation of one Loafe and of one Cup in the Lord his Supper doth commend unto our consideration a sweet concord a brotherly unanimity and a constant continuance in the true worship of God without favouring of Idolatry in any respect e 1 Cor 107. This doe the godly in any their Churches and throughout the world both teach and testifie f Confes Hel. 1 c. 29. 2. ar 20. Aug. ar 13. S●x ar 12. The adversaries unto this truth Vngodly therefore and in a cursed state are they which equall other things with the Sacraments to discerne Christians from Pagans So the Iacobites imprint the signe of the Crosse on their armes foreheads c. to be knowne for Christians a Magdeburg ec hist Con. 12 c. 3. which contemne the Sacraments as of none account So doe the Anabaptists b Dulling con Anab l 2. c. 4. Althamar concil Lo. pag. lo. 191. There be saith D. Saravia which hold how the Sacraments were to bee administred onely at the first planting of the Church by the Apostles and Evangelists but doe not appertaine unto us in these dayes c D. Saravia def tra de divers min grad cap. 14. It was also one of Matthew Hamants heresies that the Sacraments are not necessary in the Church of God d Holinsh chr fol. 1299. Which think the Sacraments are but onely civill and ceremoniall badges of an outward Church such generally be all Atheists and hypocrites particularly the Messalians e Theodor. lib. c. 9. c. 11. and Family of Love who thinke that for obedience sake to Magistrates the Sacraments are to be received f Patterne of the pref Tem. but are to none effect to the perfect ones in the Family g R●msels confess 2. Proposition The Sacraments be certaine sure witnesses and effectuall signes of Grace and God his good will towards us The proofe from Gods Word INfinitely doth God declare his unspeakeable and incomprehensible good will to man-ward yet in these dayes by none outward things more notably and effectually than by the Sacraments For Of Baptisme saith Christ He that beleeveth and is baptized shall be saved a Mark 16.16 and Peter Amend your lives and be baptized every one c. for the remission of sins b Acts 2.38 and Paul Husbands love your wives even as Christ loved the Church and gave himselfe for it that he might sanctifie it and cleanse it by the washing of water through the Word c c Eph. 5.25 And of the Lords Supper saith our Saviour Christ touching the Bread This is my body which is given d Luke 22.19 and broken for you e 1 Cor. 11.24 and of the Cup This is my blood of the New Testament that is shed for many for the remission of sinnes f Mark 26.28 Luke 22.20 This truth doe the purer Churches of these dayes every where acknowledge g Confes Helv. 1. ar 20. 22. 2 c. 19 20 21. Bohe. c 11. 12 13. Gal ar 34 38. Belgr ● 33. 35. August ar 9. 13. Witt. ar 10 19. Suev ar 16. 18. The adversaries unto this truth Contrary hereunto the Papists erroneously doe hold that The Sacraments of the new Law do conferre grace ex opere operato a Concil Trid sess 7 can 8. The Sacraments of the Old and New Testament in this do differ for that the Sacraments of the Old Testament did onely shadow forth salvation but the Sacraments of the new did conferre and work salvation b Concil Flo● and doe justifie not onely signifie God his good will toward us by reason of the worke done which is the outward Sacraments c Bonavent lib. 4. 〈◊〉 1 〈◊〉 5. Gab. Biel. l. 4. di●t 1 p. 3. 3. Proposition By the Sacraments God doth quicken strengthen and confirme our faith in him The proofe from Gods Word BE baptized every one of you in the Name of Iesus Christ for the remission of your sinnes and yee shall receive the gift of the holy Ghost saith S. Peter a Acts 2.38 Christ gave himselfe for the Church that hee might sanctifie it and cleanse it by the washing of water through the Word b Eph. 5.25 26. The cup of blessing which we blesse is it not the communion of the bloud of Christ The bread which we breake is it not the communion of the body of Christ saith Saint Paul c 1 Cor. 10.19 The same is affirmed by the reformed Churches d Conf. Helv 1. ar 21. 2. c. 10. 20 21. ar 6. Bohem. c. 17. 12. Gal. ar 34. Belg. ar 33 34. Aug. ar 13. Saxon. ar 13. Suc. c. 17. Howbeit this faith is not necessarily tyed unto the visible signes and Sacraments For Without the Sacraments many have lived and dyed who pleased God and are no doubt saved either in respect of their owne faith as we are to thinke of all the godly both men who were borne and dyed afore the institution of Circumcision in the wildernesse and in the time of grace c. yet by some extremitie could not receive the Seale of the covenant and women who afore and under the Law for many yeares were partakers for no Sacrament and never of one Sacrament or that they be heires of the promise Some have faith for they receive any of the Sacraments So had Abraham e Rom. 49. ●0 the Iewes unto whom Peter preached f Acts 2 41. the Samaritanes g Acts 8.12 the Church h Acts 8.37 Cornelius the Centurion and have the godly of discretion wheresoever not yet baptized i Acts 10.42 Some neither afore nor at the instant nor yet
afterward though daily they receive the Sacraments will have faith such are like unto Iudas k Ioh 12.26 Ananias and Sapphira l Acts 5. Simon Magus m Acts 1 13. the old Israelites n 1 Cor 10 5. and the wicked Corinthians o 1 Cor. 11 37. In some the Sacraments doe effectually work in processe of time by the helpe of Gods Word read or preached which engendreth faith p Rom. 10 1● such is the estate principally of Infants elected unto life and salvation and increasing in yeares The adversaries unto this truth Therefore doe they erre which teach or hold that They never goe to heaven which die without the Seales of the covenant so thinke the Papists of infants which dye unbaptized a Iavel Phil. Contract 4. de relicit Chr c. 3 Tigner institu● Theol. c. 16. sect 4 c. Spec peregr quae●t doc 1. c. 3 q. 5. They are damned though they receive the Sacraments that will not receive them after the received and appointed manner of the Church of Rome b Concil Trid. sess 7. c. 13. There is no way of salvation but by faith c Lear disc hereby excluding infinite soules from the kingdome of heaven which depart from this world before they doe beleeve None beleeve but such as are baptized say the Papists d Test Rhem. an Gal. 5.27 as heare the Word of God preached say the Puritanes e Lear. ds c. p. 3. The Sacraments give grace ex opere operato f Test Rhem. an mar p. 357. and bring faith ex opere operato g Ibid. an mar p. 391. The Sacrament of Baptisme is the cause of the salvation of Infants h Ibid an 1. Pet. ● 21 4 Proposition Christ hath ordained but two Sacraments in his Gospel The proofe from Gods Word A Sacrament according to the etymologie of the word as the Schoolemen doe write is a signe of an holy thing which being true then have there bin and still are by so many above either two or seven Sacraments as there be and have beene above two or seven things which are signes of sacred and holy things But according to the nature thereof a Sacrament is a covenant of God his favour to man-ward confirmed by some outward signe or Seale instituted by himselfe which also hath been sometimes speciall either to some men and that extraordinarily by things naturall sometimes as the tree of Life was to Adam a G●n 2.3 and the Rainbow to Noah b Gen. 9.9 13. and sometimes by things supernaturall as the smoaking furnace was to Abraham c Gen. 15.17 18. the Fleece of wooll to Gedeon d Iudg 6.37 and the Diall to Ezeckiah e 2 King 20 7.11 Isa 38.8 or to some Nation as the Sacrifices Circumcision and the Paschall Lambe was to the Iewes And sometimes generall to the whole Church Militant and ordinary as in the time of the Gospel And then a Sacrament is defined to be a ceremony ordained immediately by Christ himselfe who by some earthly and outward element doth promise everlasting favour and felicitie to such as with true faith and repentance doe receive the same And such Sacraments in the New Testament we finde only to be Baptisme f Matth. 18.19 Mark 16.16 ● Ioh. 3.5 Acts 2.38 and the Lords Supper g Luke 22.19 Joh. 6.53 1 Cor. 11.24 This is the judgement also of the Churches Protestant h Conf. Helv. 1. ar 20. 2. c. 19 Basil ar 5. sect 2. Gal. ar 35. Belg ar 33. Saxon ar 12. Suev ar 16. Errors and adversaries unto this truth In a contrary opinion are divers and namely The Iewes and Turks for they deny all the Sacraments of the Church as we doe hold them The Eutychites who say that prayer onely and not the Sacraments are to be used a Theodoret. The Schwenkfeldians who contemne not onely the word preached but the Sacraments also as superfluous depending wholly upon revelations The Banisterians who thinke there will be a time and that in this world when we shall need no Sacraments b Vnfold of untruths The Papists who publish That wee leave out no lesse then sixe of the seven Sacraments c How let reas 7. How there be seven Sacraments of the New Testament d Catech. Canis Vaux That he is accursed that shall say there be either more or fewer then seven Sacraments or that any of them is not verily and properly a sacrament or that they be not all seven instituted of Christ himselfe e Test Rhem. an Jam 4.24 Concil Trid. sess cap. 1. That there are seven Sacraments whereof two are voluntary and at the discretion of men to be taken or not as Matrimony and holy Orders and five are necessary and must be taken and of these five three to wit Baptisme Confirmation and Orders are but once to be taken because they imprint an indelible Character in the soule of the receivers and foure be reiterable and may often be received as the Sacrament Eucharisticall Matrimony Penance and extreme Vnction because at their first ministration they leave in the soule no indelible Character f Stella Cleticorum 5. Proposition Confirmation is no Sacrament Touching Confirmation the sentence and judgement of the true Church is that rightly used as it was in the Primitive Chured it is no Sacrament but a part of Christian discipline profitable for the whole Church of God For the ancient Confirmation was nothing else then an examination of such as in their infancie had received the Sacrament of Baptisme and were then being of good discretion able to yeeld an account of their beliefe and to testifie with their own mouthes what their Sureties in their names had promised at their Baptisme which confession being made and a promise of perseverance in the Faith by them given the Bishop by sound doctrine gave advice and godly exhortations confirmed them in that good profession and laying his hands upon them prayed for the encrease of Gods gifts and graces in their minds The Popish confirmation all Churches of God with us utterly doe dislike as no Sacrament at all instituted by Christ a Conf. Saxon. ar 16. Wittem c. 11. See the Prop. immediately precedent Errors and adversaries of this truth Contrariwise the Synagogue of Rome teacheth that Confirmation is a Sacrament whereby the grace that was given in Baptisme is confirmed and made strong by the seven gifts of of the holy Ghost Of which their Confirmation they give us foure things principally to observe viz. 1. The substance or matter which is holy Chrisme confect as they say and made of Oyle olive and Balme consecrated by a Bishop See Canis catech chap. 4 2. The forme and manner of ministring the same consisting of the words of the Bishop which are I signe thee with the signe of the Crosse and confirme thee with the Chrisme of salvation in the name of
They lacke the wedding garment h Math. 22.11 12. which is faith and the righteousnesse of Christ They are no members of the true Church the head whereof is Iesus Christ i Ephes 4.15 c. They have no promise of heavenly refreshing because they are without a lively faith k Iohn 6.25 Therefore they procure unto themselves most heavie punishments l 1 Cor. 11.27 as diseases death guiltinesse of the body and bloud of Christ and therewith damnation Of this judgement be other Churches Christian and reformed besides m Conf. Helv. in the declar of the Lords Supper Helv. 2 c. 21. Basil ar 6. Bohem c 13. Gal. ar 37. Belg. ar 37. Errors and adversaries unto this truth The adversaries of this doctrine are The Vbiquitaries both Lutheran and Popish they seeing the very body of Christ at the Lords Supper is eaten aswell of the wicked as of the godly a Stur An. ip 4. par 1. p. 58. these affirming that all Communicants bad and good doe eate the very and naturall body of Christ Iesus b Test Rhem. annot 1. Cor. 11.27 they saying that the true and reall body of Christ In With Vnder the Bread and Wine may be eaten chewed and digested even of Turks which never were of the Church c So reporteth Sturmius in his Antipap p. 4. par 2. p. 106. and these maintaining that under the form of bread the same true and reall body of Christ may be devoured of Dogs Hogs Cats and Rats d Alex. Hales par 4. q. 44. D. Thom. par 5. q. 8. ar 3. 30. Article Of both kinds The Cup of the Lord is not to be denied to the lay people For both the parts of the Lords Sacrament by Christs ordinance and commandement ought to be ministred to all Christian men The Proposition The people must be partakers not onely of the bread but also of the wine when they approach unto the Lords Table The proofe from Gods Word OVR Lord and Saviour Christ hath so instituted his Supper as he will have not onely the Bread but also the Cup to be delivered unto all Communicants So finde wee in the Word of God namely That the Bread must be given to All and eaten of All a Math. 26.26 Marke 14.22 Luke 22.19 1 Cor. 10.16.11.25 The Cup is to bee given to All and to bee drunken of All b Math. 26.17 Marke 22.27 1 Cor. 10.16.11.25 Hereunto subscribe the Church c Conf Helv 1. ar 22. 2. c. 21 Bohem. c. 13. Gal. ar 36.38 Belg. ar 35. Aug. de Massa art 1 2. Saxon. 15 Wittemb c. 19. Suc. c. 18. The adversaries unto this truth Though it be a mans covenant yet when it is confirmed no man doth abrogate or addeth any thing thereunto a Gal. 3.15 What impudencie then yea what impiety doe they shew which alter this Ordinance of God Some by adding thereto So added was unto the Bread Cheese by the Artotarites b Epiphan bloud by the Cataphrygians c Philastrius the seed of man by the Manichies d August de haeres unto the Wine warme water by the Muscovites e I. Faber de relig Mosco Some by taking there from so the Encratites f Epiphan the Tatians g Theodoret. the Severians h Epiphan use no wine at all the Manichies do minister onely the bread i Leo. ser 4. quadrages the Papists though they use both kinds yet they alwaies denie the Cup unto the people and unto Priests also when they say not Masse k Concil Trid. ses 5. c. 1. ses 21. cap. 1 2 3. affirming that The people participating of the Cup thereby perceive no fruit of spirituall comfort but receive to themselves damnation l Censura Colon pag. 289. It is not by Gods but mans law that Lay persons communicate either in both kinds or in one m Ibid. p. 283. Notwithstanding that Christ instituted the Sacrament to be received under both kinds and the Primitive Church accordingly did so administer the same Hoc tamen non obstante yet this notwithstanding it is to be taken of the Laitie but under one kinde n Con● Constan sess 13. Some by confounding the elements So the Moscovites doe mingle Bread and Wine together o Surius Comment an 1501. pag. 31. and the Papists make a mixture of Wine and Water maintaining that Water must be mixt with Wine at the Consecration of the Blood p Catec Trid. and then that mixture of Water with Wine without sinne cannot be omitted q Ibid. Some by changing the Elements So the Aquarians and the Hydroparastites for Wine administred and gave Water unto the people r Theodoret. 31. Article Of the one Oblation of Christ finished upon the Crosse The offering of Christ once made 1 is that perfect redemption propitiation and satisfaction for all the sins of the whole world both originall and actuall and there is none other satisfaction for sinne but that alone Wherefore 2 the sacrifices of Masses in the which it was commonly said that the Priests did offer Christ for the quick and the dead to have remission of paine and guilt were blasphemous fables and dangerous deceits The Propositions 1. The blood of Iesus Christ once shed for mankinde upon the Crosse is a perfect redemption propitiation and satisfaction for all the sinnes of the whole world 2. Sacrifices of the Masse are most blasphemous Fables and dangerous deceits 1. Proposition The blood of Iesus Christ once shed for mankinde upon the Crosse is a perfect redemption propitiation and satisfaction for all the sinnes of the whole world The proofe from Gods Word OF the benefits redounding unto mankinde by Christ his offering up of himselfe upon the Crosse we have in sundry places afore a See art 1. pr. 4. 22. pr. 1 2. 20. pr. 2. spoken and by the Word of God prooved him to be the perfect Redemption b Acts 20.28 Rom. 5.6 c. Gal. 3.13 1 Cor. 6.28 1 Pet. 1.18 19 Propitiation c Acts 10 43. Rom. 3.25 Heb 9.12 c. 1 John 2.2 1 John 4.10 and satisfaction for all the sinnes of the whole world both originall and actuall d John 1.29 1 Pet. 3.18 1 John 1.7 Hereunto the Churches of God beare witnesse e Conf. Helv. 1 ar 11. 2. cap. 11. 15. Basil ar 4. Bohem. c. 6. Gal. art 13. 16 17. Belg ar 20. 22. Aug. ar 34. Saxon. artic 3. Wittemb c. 2. 5. Suc. c. 2 3. The errors and adversaries unto this truth Hereby it is evident to the eyes of all godly persons that accursed be the errors of them which doe affirme that From the beginning of the world untill the 15. yeare of the Emperour Tiberius none at all were saved The error of Manes the heretike a Epiphan Mans body is not capable of happinesse but the foule only and yet
from all lawes owe obedience to no man are not to be bound with the bands of any jurisdiction of this world say the Brownists i R. H. on Psal 122. are freed from the observation of all rites and Ecclesiasticall ceremonies say certaine Ministers of the precise faction both in Scotland and England k D. Bar. confe ar Hamp p. 70. 71. Againe there be of the Clergie who rather then they will use or observe any rites ceremonies or others though lawfully ratified which please them not will disquiet the whole Church forsake their charges leave their vocations raise stirs and cause divisions in the Church as did many when it was in Germany about the Rhene Frankeland and Sueaveland whereby most lamentable effects did ensue l Phil. M●l ep ad pastores in com●●am Mansfield and doe the refractory Ministers in the Church of England at this day m Burges in his letter unto K. Iames an 1604 saith the number of those Ministers so refusing conformity were 6. or 700. viz. as it is in the Lincolnshire Ministers Apologie in Oxfordshire 9. Staffordshire 14 Dorcetsh 17. Hartfordsh 17. Northamptonshire 20. Surry 21. Norfolke 28 Wiltshire 31. Buckinghamshire 33. Sussex 47. Leicestershire 57. Essex 57. Cheshire 12. Bedfordshire 16. Somersetshire 17. Darbyshire 20. Lancashire 21. Kent 23. London 30. Lincolnshire 33. Warwickshire 44. Devonshire and Cornewall 51. Northamptonshire 57. Suffolke 71. the more is the pitty The principall author of these tragicall furies about ceremoniall matters was Flacius Illyricus whose preachings were that rather then Ministers should yeeld unto the servitude of ceremonies they should abandon their calling and give over the ministery to the end that Princes Magistrates even for feare of uproares and popular tumults might be forced at the length to set their Ministers free from the observation of all ceremonies more then any were willing to use themselves n Fateor me suasisse Francis aliis ne deferrerent Ecclesias propter servitatem quae sine impietate sustineri posset Nam quod Illyricus vociferatur potius vastitatem suisse faciendam in templis metu seditionem terrendos Principes ego ne nunc quidem tam tristis sententiae autor esse vel●m inquit Phil. Melancton epist ad pium Lectorem inter epist Theolog suas Pag. 455. 3. Proposition Ceremonies and traditions ordained by the authority of man if they be repugnant to Gods Word are not to be kept and observed of any man The proofe from Gods Word OF ceremonies and traditions repugnant to the Word of God there bee two sorts whereof some are things meerely impious and wicked such was the Israelites Calfe a Exod. 30.4 c. and Nebuchadnezzars Idoll b Dan. 3.1 c. and be the Papisticall Images Reliques Agnus-deis and Crosses to which they doe give Divine adoration c See afore Art 22. prop. 3 4 5. These and such like bee all flatly forbidden d Thou shalt make thee no g●aven Image neither any similitude of things c. Thou shalt not bow down to them neither serve them c. Exod. 20 4 5. Others are of things by God in his Word neither commanded nor forbidden as of eating or not eating Flesh of wearing or not wearing some Apparell of keeping or not keeping some dayes Holy by abstinence from bodily labour c. the which are not to be observed of any Christian when for sound doctrine it is delivered that such works either doe merit remission of sinnes or be the acceptable Service of God or doe more please then the observation of the lawes prescribed by God himselfe or necessarily to be done insomuch as they are damned who doe them not Wee must therefore have alwaies in minde that wee are bought with a price and therefore may not be the servants of men e 1 Cor 7.23 and that none humane constitution in the Church doth binde any man to breake the least commandement of God f Acts 5 19. The consideration hereof hath caused other Churches also with a sweet consent to condemne such wicked ceremonies and traditions of men g Conf Helv. 1. ar 4. 2. c. 144 27. Ba. ar sect 3 ar 10. Bohe. c. 15 Gal. ar 24 33. Belg. ar 7. 29. 32. Aug. ar 15. Wittem ar 28. 29. 32. 33. Suc. c. 8. 14. 1● The Errors and adversaries unto this truth Such ungodly traditions and ceremonies are all the ceremonies and traditions in a manner of the Antichristian Synagogue of Rome Such also be the Sabbatarian traditions and ceremonies lately broached because they be imposed upon the Church necessarily and perpetually to be observed of all and every Christian under paine of damnation both of soule and body For they say speaking yet of their private and Classicall Injunctions about the Sabbath day The Lord hath commanded so precise a Rest unto all sorts of men that it may not by any fraud deceit or circumvention whatsoever be broken but that hee will most severely require it at our hands under the paine of his everlasting displeasure a D. B. Sab. doct 1. booke p. 98. This viz. the manner of keeping the Sabbath prescribed by themselves the Lord requireth of all and every one continually from the beginning to the end of our lives without any interruption Vnder the paine of everlasting condemnation b Ibid. p 146. Another sort of people there is among us which will observe and use all Ceremonies whatsoever as the temporizing Familists who at Rome and such like places of Superstition will goe unto idolatrous services and doe adoration unto Idols c Patterne of the praes Tem. and no where will they strive or vary with any one about Religion but keepe all externall orders d Ibid. albeit in their hearts they scorne all professions and services but their owne tearming all Temples and Churches in derision Common houses e H. N. spi lan cap. 5. sect 1. and all Gods services or religions besides their owne foolishnesse f Ibid. To the Christian Reader Christian and beloved Reader l●t me request thee to observe well the first section of the proofe of this present propositio● and therein how I speake of ceremonies and traditions apparently impious among which I doe reckon papisticall Crosses whereunto the Romanists doe attribute divine adoration as else-where in this booke and subscription of mine I have ddeclared and could more copiously but the reliques of a Libell of theirs left in the Parish Church of E●born in Bark-shire an 1604 sufficiently shal expresse the thoughts of Papists touching their Crosse and crossing whose words be these Now Mr. Parson for your welcome home Reade these few lines you know not from whom You hold Crosse for an outward token and signe And remembrance onely in religion thine And of the profession the people doe make For more then this comes to thou doest it not take Yet holy Church tels us of holy Crosse much more g V●de
given to every King or Queene in their owne Dominion by the Word of God For They are for titles gracious Lords a Luke 22.25 Princes b Rom. 13.3 the Ministers of God c Ibid. 4. the Nurses of the Church d Isa 49.23 Gods e Psal 32.1 For authority the chiefe f 1 Pet. 2.13 Which moveth St. Paul to exhort that supplications be made for all men but first for Kings as the chiefe g 1 Tim 3.1 Againe Every soule is commanded to be subject to the higher power c h Rom. 13.1 Finally the examples are manifold and pregnant shewing the principality of Kings over all persons and causes For Aaron the high Priest called Moses the chiefe Prince his Lord i Exod. 32.21 so did Abimelech tearme Saul his Lord k 1 Sam. 22.12 K. Iehosaphat as chiefe in Iudah appointed Iudges Levites and Priests l 2 Chr. 19.5 c. 8. K. Ezechias also as chiefe sent unto all Israel and Iudah that they should come to the house of the Lord at Ierusalem to keepe the Passeover m 2 Chr. 30.1 also hee appointed the course of Priests and Levites by their turnes n 2 Chr. 31.2 and commanded all the Priests to offer sacrifice c. and they obeyed him o Ibid. c. 29.21.22 and enjoyned all the congregation to bring offerings and they brought them p 31. Confess Helv. 1. ar 16. c. 2 30. Basil ar 7. Bohem. c. 16. Bel. ar 36. Aug. ar 16. 17. Sax. ar 23. Suc. pecorer Which we doe unto ours the very same doe the Churches of God ascribe unto Christian Magistrates in their principalities Errors and adversaries unto this truth Which being true then false is it which the Papists deliver viz. that The Kings excellency of power is in respect of the Nobility and Lay-magistrates under him and not of Popes Bishops or Priests as they have cure of soules a Test Rhem. Annot. 1 Pet. 2.13 Kings and Princes be they never so great must be subject unto some Bishop Priest or Prelate b Ibid. an Heb. 13.7 The whole Clergie ought to bee free from paying Tribute c Ibid. an Mat. 17.26 Sacerdotes etiam Principibus jure divino subditi deleatur say the expurgators Priests are not by Gods Law subject unto Princes d Index expurg p. 26. No man is to be subject unto his temporall Prince and superiour in matters of Religion or regiment of his soule but in such things onely as concerne the publike peace and policie e Test Rhem. an Rom. 13.1 False also is it which the Puritanes doe hold namely that Princes must be servants unto the Church be subject unto the Church submit their scepters unto the Church and throw downe their Crownes before the Church f T. C. r●p p. 144. Magistrates as well as other men must submit themselves and bee obedient to the just and lawfull authority of the Church g ●● dis p. 185. that is of the Presbitery h That which our Saviour calleth Presbyt●rian and to doth Luke ●●a disc p. 89. Quis tandem reges principes who can exempt even Kings and Princes from this Non humana sed divina Dominatione not humane but divine Domination meaning of the Presbytery saith Beza i B za de pres p. 124. which Presbytery they would have to be in every Parish k There ought to be in every Church a Consistory of seigniory of elders or governours ●●ar disc p. 84 Every Congregation ought to have Elders and an Eldership-Demon of dis c. 12. p. 55. cap. 14. pag. 69. In stead of Chancellors A●chdeacons Officials Commissaries Proctors Summoners Churchwardens and such like you Parliament men have to plant in every Congregation a lawfull and godly Seigniory 1. Admor to the Parliam I would that every little Parish should have seven such Elders at the least and every meane Church 13. and every great Church 13. Hunt of the Foxe c. Ec. 2.2 Quotquot ecclesiae Christi as many as be members of Christ and of the Church they must subject themselves to the Consistorian discipline Non hic excipitur Episcopus aut Imperator Neither Bishop or Emperour is excepted here Nulla hic acceptio aut exceptio est personarum Here is no acception or exception of persons l S●eca● de dis p. eccles p. 456. 3. Proposition His highnesse may not execute the Ecclesiasticall duties of preaching and ministring the Sacraments and yet is to prescribe lawes and directions unto all estates both Ecclesiasticall and Temporall The proofe from Gods Word KIng Ezechiah said unto the Priests and Levites of his time My sonnes be not deceived For the Lord hath chosen you to stand before him and to serve him and to be his Ministers and to burne incense a 2 Chr. 29.11 So doe we say The Lord hath appointed a company and calling of men to teach the people to expound the Scriptures to celebrate the Sacraments to handle the Keyes of the celestiall Kingdome insomuch as hee whosoever that shall presume to doe these things not called thereunto and that lawfully b See afore ar though he be a King or Prince he may feare that punishment which fell upon Vzzah c 2 Chr. 26.19 Notwithstanding all Kings Queenes and Princes in their places may yea and must as occasion serveth with K. Salomon build an house for the Lord d 2 Chr. 2.1 and set the courses of Priests to their office e 2 Chr. 8.14 with K. Ezechiah breake the Images cut downe the Groves take away the high places f 2 Chr. 31.1 appoint the courses of the Priests and Levites and enjoyne all the people to minister sustenance unto the Priests g Thus did Ezechiah throughout all Iudah and did well and uprightly and truely before the Lord his God 2 Chr. 31.20 with K. Iosiah put downe and burne the horses of the Sunne h 2 Kin 23.11 breake downe the houses of the Sodomites i Ibid. 7. purge Iudah and Ierusalem from the high places Groves carved and molten Images k 2 Chr. 3.34 appoint the Priests to their charges l Ibid. 3.5.2 and compell all that are found in Israel to serve the Lord their God m Ib. c. 33.34 and with the King of Niniveh proclaime a fast and command every man to turn from his evill way c n Jonas 3.7 Of the same judgement be other Churches o Confe Helv. 1. ar 26. 2. c. 30. Basil ar 7. Boh. c 16. Gal. ar 39. Belg. ar 35. Sax. ar 23. Wittem c. 35. The errors and adversaries unto this truth Much therefore out of the way are and offend greatly doe first the Papists who publish that The care of Religion pertaineth not unto Kings Religionis curam semper pertinnisse adreges dole say the expurgators blot it out a Index expur p. 145. Queenes may not have
or give voyce either deliberative or definitive in Councels and publike assemblies concerning matters of Religion nor make ecclesiasticall lawes concerning Religion nor give any man right to rule preach or execute any spirituall function as under them and by their authority b Test Rhem. an In matters of Religion and of their spirituall charge neither Heathen nor Christian Kings ought to direct Clergie-men but rather to take direction from them c 1 Cor. 14.33 The Emperour of the whole world if he take upon him to prescribe lawes of Religion to the Bishops and Priests c. he shall be damned assuredly except he repent d Ans to the execut of Iust d. 3. p. 56. Next the Anabaptists who being private men and no Princes will take upon them the ordering and reformation of the Church as did the Monetarians e Test Rhem. an Heb 13.17 and Muncer f Carranz sum Conc●d 365. Bullin in con Anabap. in Germany And thirdly the Disciplinarian-Puritans whose doctrine is that 1. The making of Ecclesiasticall Constitutions and Ceremonies belongeth unto the Ministers of the Church and Ecclesiasticall Governors g T C. 1 rep p. 163. unto the Elders who are to consult and admonish correct and order all things pertaining to the congregation h 1. Admon to the Parliam 2. Civill Magistrates have no power to ordaine Ceremonies pertaining to the Church i T.C. 1. rep p. 153. but to ordaine civill Discipline onely k Idem 2. rep 2 par p 4. as being no Church officers at all 3. The Ecclesiasticall officers be Doctors Pastors Elders and Deacons the onely officers instituted of God l Lear. dis p. 10. or at the most Pastors Doctors Elders Deacons and widowes These are all no moe nor fewer and are onely sufficient and wee are to content our selves with these and rest in them saith the Preacher m Fruc s●r on Rom. 12 p. 33.71 In which number unlesse the King be included hee cannot possibly have any thing to doe in Church affaires in these mens opinions Without the Prince the people may reforme the Church and must not tarry for the Magistrate so thought Barrow Gr●enewood n B●r●●fut p. 169. and Wigginton o Conspir for pretend p. 34. Hence Hackets Coppingers and Arthingtons insurrection at London 1691. Without the Prince also the Lords and Burgesses of the Parliament have power of themselves to reforme the abuses and take away the corruptions of the Church Hence their manifold petitions supplications politike assertions exhibited unto the Parliament from time to time In one of which their supplications saith one speaking unto the Parliament You must enjoyne every one according to his place to have a hand in this work You must encourage and countenance the Gentlemen and people that shall be found forward c. And you of the Parliament must not suffer an uncircumcised mouth to bring a slander upon that Land c. sciz upon their discipline This hath Penry p Penry supp p. 60. 2. Proposition The King by his authority is to restraine with the materiall sword and to punish malefactors whosoever they be The proofe from Gods Word THE office of the Civill Magistrate is to restraine and if need be to punish according to the quality of their offences the disturbers of the quiet and peace of the Common-weale and that as occasion shall require sometime by force of armes if the enemies of his State be either forraigne or domesticall and they gathered together be many and mighty To this end Kings and Princes have both men munition Subsidies and Tributes So against the enemies of God and good men went of Israel and Iudah the valiant Iudges and the noble and puissant Princes And sometimes they execute their wholesome and Penall Statutes upon the goods cattell lands and bodies of their disorderly and rebellious subjects For the King is a Minister of God to take vengeance on him that doth evill Therefore Princes are to be feared not of them which doe well but of such as doe wickedly a Rom. 13.3 4. And this doe the people of God acknowledge to bee true b Conf. Helv. 1 ar 24.26 2. c. 30. Basi ar 7. Bohe. cap. 19. Gal. artic 33. Belg. artic 36. August ar 16. Saxon. ar 23. Adversaries unto this truth Contrarily hereunto The Cresconians were of opinion that Magistrates were to punish no malefactors a D. Aug. contra Crescon Gra. l. 3. c. 51. One Rabanus maintained that Magistrates were not of Gods Ordinance for the good but an humane institution for the hurt of men b Mag. eccles hist Cen. 6. c. 4. fol. 2 16. Many have a fancie that before the generall Resurrection there shall be no Magistrates at all because they dreame all the wicked shall be rooted out Of this minde are the Anabaptists c Confes Aug. ar 17. and the family of Love d H. N. 1. exh c. 12. sect 39.40 Ramseis confes 5. Proposition The Bishop of Rome hath not jurisdiction in this Realme of England nor other of the Kings Dominions The proofe from Gods Word THE Bishop of Rome did hee according to the Will of God Preach the Gospell labour in the Lords harvest divide the Word of God aright minister the Sacraments instituted by Christ and that sincerely and shew by his life and conversation the good fruits of a godly Bishop doubtlesse he were worthy of double a 1 Tim. 5.17 yea of triple honour Yet will not the Word of God were he never so holy and religious warrant him any jurisdiction out of his Diocesse especially not within this Realme much lesse when he doth performe no part of a Christian but every part of an Antichristian Bishop in corrupting the doctrine of the truth with errors and cursed opinions in polluting the Sacraments of Christ by superstitious ceremonies in persecuting the Church and Saints with fire and sword in making marchandise of the soules of men through covetousnesse b 2 Pet. 2.3 in playing the lord over Gods heritage c 1 Pet. 5.3 in sitting in the Temple of God as God shewing himselfe that he is god d 2 Th. s 2.4 and in exalting himselfe against all that is called God or that is worshipped e Ibid. In respect of which fruits of impieties the said Bishop of Rome in the holy Scripture is described to be very Antichrist that wicked man the man of sinne the sonne of perdition and the adversary of God f Ibid. Hee was openly proclaimed Antichrist by a Councell in France in the Raigne of Hugh Capet Hee is termed by the truly and godly learned The Basiliske of the Church g Luther praef epi. L. Huss neither the Head nor the tayle of the Church h Heming in 5. c. Iac. epist His jurisdiction hath beene and is justly renounced and banished out of England by many Kings and Parliaments as by King Edward the 1.
〈◊〉 9. none of which the Familists doe use or allow of 38. Article Of Christian mens goods which are not common The riches and goods of Christians 1 are not common as touching the right title and possession of the same as certaine Anabaptists do falsely boast Notwithstanding 2 every man ought of such things as he possesseth liberally to give almes to the poore according to his ability The Propositions 1. The riches and goods of Christians as touching the right title and possession of the same are not common 2. Every man is to give liberall almes to the poore of that which he possesseth according to his ability 1. Proposition The riches and goods of Christians as touching the title and possession of the same are not common The proofe from Gods Word AGainst community of goods and riches be all those places which are infinite of the holy Scripture that either condemne the unlawful getting keeping or desiring of riches which by Covetousnesse a If any one that is called a brother be a fornicator or covetous c. with such one eate not Covetousnesse let it not be once named among you as it becommeth Saints Eph. 5.3 Theevery b Let none of you suffer as a Theefe c. 1 Pet. 4.15 Extortion With a brother that is an extortioner eate not 1 Cor. 5.11 Neither theeves nor covetous persons nor Extortioners shall inherite the Kingdome of God 1 Cor. 6.10 and the like wicked meanes many doe attaine or doe commend liberality d It is a blessed thing to give rather then to receive Acts 10.35 yea and that thing ye do unto all the Brethren throughout all Macedonia 1 Thes 4.10 If a brother or a sister be naked and destitute of daily food c. notwithstanding ye give them not these things which are needfull to the body what helpeth it Iames 2.15 16. Frugality e If there be any that provideth not for his owne namely for them of his houshold he denieth the faith and is worse then an Infidell 1 Tim. 5.8 free and friendly lending f From him that would borrow of thee turne not away Matth. 5.42 And lend looking for nothing again Luke 6.35 honest labour g Let him that stole steale no more but rather let him labour c. that hee may have to give unto him that needeth Eph. 4.28 Wee warned you that if there were any which would not work that he should not eate 2 Thes 3.8 and lawfull vocations to live and thrive by h Ye know that these hands have ministred unto my necessities and to them that were with me Acts 20.34 We laboured day and night because we should not be chargeable unto any of you 1 Thes 2.9 wee tooke not bread of any man for nought 1 Thes 3.8 All which doe shew that Christians are to have goods of their owne and that riches ought not to be common Of this iudgement be the reformed Churches i Confess Helv. 3. c. 29. Gal. ar 40. Belg. ar 36. Aug. ar 16. Wittemb c. 21. The adversaries unto this truth Of another mind were the Esseis a Heyden des urbis Hierosolym l. 3. c. 3. the Manichies b D. Aug. de mor. eccles Cat. lib. 1. the Pelagians c Magdeb. eccles hist Gen. ● fol. 586. the Apostolikes d D. Humfr. de Romanae curiae praxi p 39. exl Epiphan and Fratricellians e W. Tho. desc of Italy p. 59. and are the Anabaptists f Sleidan com lib. 6. and Family of Love g Display H. 3 b. Among the Familists saith H.N. none claimeth any thing proper to himselfe for to possesse the same to any owednesse or privatenesse For no man c. can desire to appropriate or challenge any thing to himselfe either yet to make any private use to himselfe from the restward but what is there is free and is also left free in his upright forme h H. N. Spir. laud. c. 35. sect 34. 1. Proposition Every man is to give liberall Almes to the poore of that which he possesseth according to his ability The proofe from Gods Word VNto liberality towards the poore according to our ability we are in the holy Scriptures provoked 1. By the commandements from God by his servants the Prophets a Deut. 15.11 Prov. 5.15 16. Eccles 11.1 2. by his Sonne our Saviour b Matth. 5.42 c. 6.2 3 c. Luk. 9.30 c. and by his Apostles c Rom. 12.13 1 Cor. 1.62 2. By sweet promises of ample blessings d Eccles 11.1 The liberall person shall have plenty and he that watereth shall also have raine Prov. 11.24 Hee that stoppeth his eare at the crying of the poore he shall cry and not be heard Prov. 1.13 3. By threatnings of punishments to the covetous and stony-hearted He that giveth unto the poore shall not lack but he that hideth his eyes shall have many curses Prov. 28.27 4. By the examples of the best men viz. the Apostles and Primitive Church f Acts 11.19 20. Rom. 15.15 1 Cor. 8.1 2 3 c. 2. Cor. 6.2 c. So the Churches g Conf. Helv. 2 c. 2. 3. 28 29. Sax. ar 21. Wittemb c. 18. The adversaries unto this truth Of strange minds therefore and impious are First the Anabaptists which would have no man either to give or receive For all things in their opinion should be common as afore also hath bin said and none among them be either poore to receive or wealthy to minister any almes a Bale myst of Iniq. p 53. Secondly the hypocriticall sectaries who are bountifull only to those which side with them Such were first the Publicans in our Saviour his dayes b Mar. ● 46.47 and after them the Manichies who would minister neither bread nor water unto any hungry and pyning begger unlesse he weare a Manichean c Homini mendico esurienti nisi Manichaeus sit panem aut aquam nō porrigunt Manic D Aug. de Mor. Manc l. 2. And such are the Family of Love who say they are not bound to give almes but to their owne sect and if they doe they give the same to the devill d Dispi H. 7. b. 39. Article Of a Christian mans oath As we confesse that 1 vaine and rash swearing is forbidden Christian men by our Lord Iesus Christ and Iames his Apostle So we judge that 2 Christian Religion doth not prohibit but that a man may sweare when the Magistrate requireth in a cause of faith and charity so it be done according to the Prophets teaching in justice judgement and truth The Propositions 1. We may not sweare vainely and rashly 2. A lawfull oath may be given and taken according to the Word of God in justice judgement and truth 1. Proposition Wee may not sweare vainely and rashly The proofe from Gods Word THE better to avoid vaine and rash oathes and swearing it is good to have in remembrance
ever celebrate with high words and commendations and that God would gard Q. Elizabeth and safegard her person for the good of his people was his daily prayer yea saith the same Gualter orabant idem tecùm pii omnes it was not your prayer onely but all Gods people so prayed besides And their prayers were not made in vaine For both Queene Mary lived not long and Lady Elizabeth was placed in the Royall throne superstition was expulsed and true Religion againe to the singular comfort and multiplication of Gods people in this Kingdome very solemnely restored Notwithstanding an Vniformitie of doctrin to be taught embraced True doctrine restored anno 1558. and an uniformitie of the same established and published an 1562. and professed by authoritie of the Prince and State was not published till certain yeers after the Queenes attaining the kingly Diademe but then Articles of Religion to the number of thirtie nine drawne yet three yeeres afore were commended to the consideration and perusall of the whole Clergy of both Provinces in an orderly and lawfull assembly or Convocation of theirs at London and by a sweet and unanimous readinesse thereupon by them allowed This was effected in the yeer of our Lord 1562. Ann. 1562. the same yeer that the mercilesse massacre at Vassey in France was committed by the Duke of Guize and the same very time also that all the Protestants in that countrey of France for holding and professing the same doctrine were sentenced unto death and destruction by the Parliament at Paris after which their condemnation ensued those horrible and more then savage murders and slaughters of the Religious and onely for their Religion at Carrascone at Tholouse Amiens Towres Sens Agen Aurane and many other Cities Townes and Villages throughout France A principall contriver of this Vniformitie in Religion Arch. Parker and thereby Vnitie among us was another Predecessour of your Graces even D. Parker the first Archbishop of Canterbury in the said Queenes dayes Hereupon Beza from Geneva Doctrinae puritas viget in Anglia purè syncerè Religion flourisheth in England Zanchius from Stra●borough Per hanc Reginam factam by her meaning Q Elizabeths comming to the Crowne God againe hath restored his doctrine and true worship and Daneus The whole compasse of the world hath never seen any thing more blessed nor more to be wished then is her government So now again flourished those Apostolicall times as I may say of unitie and Vniformitie of doctrine in our Church For then were there no contentions nor dissentions nor thorny and pricking disputations among us about questions of Religion tantum res nobis cum satellitibus quibusdam Pontificiis as Bishop Iewell said we then skirmished onely with the Papists As it was at the building of Salomons Temple so was it with us then We set upon the building of Gods House which is his Church without din without noyse and stirres The adversaries without heard us and heard of our doings abroad by the pens of the learned Iewell Nowell Calfehill and such other Architects of ours to our selves we were comely at Ierusalem to our enemies terrible as an Army of Banners 6. Also what afore viz. an 62. they had agreed upon Subscription required unto the Booke of Art an 1●●2 the same at another Assembly at London an 71. and the 13. of Q. Elizabeth according to an Act of Parliament then made the said Clergie of England the Archbishops and Bishops first beginning and giving the example by their several subscriptions with their owne hands most readily did approve An. 1572. Howbeit in the yeere next ensuing sciz an 72. a yeere many wayes memorable especially for the great and general Massacre of above an hundred thousand Protestants in France chiefely in Paris and the countrey thereabout adioyning begun on St. Bartholmewes Eve * Bartholomaeus flet quia Gallicus occubat Atlas for Pope Gregories excommunicating of Q Elizabeth for defending this doctrine and religion which here we speak of and thirdly for the erecting of private Presbyteries now first in England divers of the inferiour Ministers in and about London and else-where in this Kingdome not a little disturbed the quiet of our state and peace some of them by untimely and inconsiderate admonitions pamphlets and Libels others by obstinate refusing to subscribe as both Law did enjoyne and their Fathers in Christ and superiours afore them had done But these men speedily both by learning were answered and by authority censured suspended or deprived Vnitie of doctrine stil continued 7. And yet not one of these Recusants and so not one of Englands Clergie either now or afore did ever oppugne the received publike and Catholike doctrine of our Church but most willingly approved and applauded the same as the truth of God For even the admonitioners themselves which said that they did strive for true Religion and wished the Parliament even with perfect hatred to detest the Church of England whereof notwithstanding they were members even they do say how they meaning the Bishops and their partakers hold the substance of Religion with us and wee with them And againe We all of us confesse one Christ And their Champion doth acknowledge that her Maiestie hath delivered us from the spirituall Egypt of Popery So that for doctrine I means still for the maine points of doctrine there was now a sweet and blessed concord among us which Vnity continued all that holy and Reverend Fathers I meane Archbishop Parkers time which was till the 17. yeere of Queene Elizabeth 8. Archbish Grindall After him succeeded in the said Archiepiscopall chaire B. Grindall a right famous and worthy Prelate and for religion so sound as in K. Edwards dayes had the Prince liued a while longer he had beene promoted vnto the Bishopricke of London vpon the translation of B Ridly vnto Durham for these things had the State then in purpose But God otherwise had decreed for their aduancements as that the one of them should passe through the fire vnto the kingdome of heauen and the other escape the dangers of many stormes and waters before he came unto any preferment at all And so accordingly Ridly was burned and Grindall banished and both of them depriued either of life or liuing or both and that for one and the same cause and doctrine which they had preached and we professe But the tempest being ouerblowne and Q. Elizabeth her selfe hauing likewise escaped the bloody hands of her cruell enemies yea and Gunpowder traines and Treasons too in most barbarous manner laid to haue blown vp her Saint like and sanctified Body and Soule into the heauens and all for her constant fauouring and embracing this very doctrine her Maiestie not forgetfull what he had endured for the cause of Christ and his Church aduanced this zealous Confessour and tryed Souldier vnto the See first of London afore designed him next of Yorke and lastly of Canterbury The care of
this Archbishop was great to further the glory of God but through the enuy and malice of his ill-willers his power was but small his place high but himselfe made low through some disgraces by his potent aduersaries which he meekely and patiently endured till his dying day 6. During the time of this mans troubles among other The factious encrease and grow confident two things especially deserue obseruation One is the flocking of Iesuits into the Kingdom who afore then neuer came among vs the other is the insolency boldnes of our home faction The Iesuits indicted Councils summoned Synodes enacted and reuersed orders and exercised Papall iurisdiction among vs wee not witting nor so much as dreaming of any such matter The Brethren for so did they now stile themselues in their Churches and charges would neither pray nor say seruice nor Baptize nor celebrate the L. Supper nor Marry nor Bury nor doe any other Ecclesiasticall duty according to the Law but after their owne deuisings And abroad as if they had bin acquainted with the Iesuitical proceedings or the Iesuites with their practices they had their meetings both classicall and Synodicall they set downe decrees reuersed orders elected Ministers exacted Subscription and executed the censures of suspe●●ision and excommunication where they thought good The I●su●es had for their prouinciall first Robert Parsons alias Cowbuck then Weston and lastly Garnet which Garnet continued in that office till the yeere 1605. when he was apprehended and for most horrible and hellish treasons as an arrant Traitor put to death in Pauls Churchyard the fame yeer And the Brethren had their I know not what chiefe men All of these residing in and about London and in speciall fauour both with the Gentiles and vulgar people of their seuerall factions and so continued multiplying their number and growing strong euen head-strong in boldnesse and schisme till the dying day of this most graue and reuerend Archbishop which was in the moneth of Iuly 1583. 10. Some foure moneths afore whose death the said Brethren at a certaine Assembly of their own appointing among other things as I find decreed Vnitie of doctrine still holdeth among vs. An. 1583. that if Subscription unto the booke of Articles of Religion afore mentioned and still meant should againe be vrged the said Brethren might subscribe thereunto according to the Statute Which declareth that what diuersity and disagreement soeuer was about other matters yet abode there still a blessed Vnitie among vs touching the foundation of Christian Religion And this was in 25. yeere of Q. Elizabeth Archbish Whitegift 11. Next vnto him D. Whitegift then Bishop of Worcester a man deseruedly vnto that dignitie promoted and for his manifold paines in writing teaching defending the truth his wisedome in gouerning and his well demeaning of himselfe euery way worthy the double honour which hee did enioy or the State could aduance him vnto from thence was translated vnto the See of Canterbury No sooner was he confirmed in his office but obseruing both the open intolerable contempt in many places of all Church orders by authority prescribed and hearing both of many secret conuenticles and vnlawful assemblies in his Prouince and of the tumults and garboiles abroad and euen at his very admission vnto his charge raised in Scotland and that for the selfe-same cause which by the Brethren here in England was maintained and foreseeing the dangers and troubles likely to ensue for which he should giue an account if in time he sought not meanes to preuent them he thought it his bounden duty for the preseruation of vnity and purity in Religion the preuenting of further schisme and the discouery of mens inclinations either vnto peace or faction that all and euery Minister Ecclesiasticall hauing cure of soules within the Prouince of Canterbury vnder his owne hand and by subscription Subscription the secōd time called for should testifie his consent both vnto the points of Religion in the Conuocation Ann. 62. approoued and likewise vnto other Articles necessary for concord sake of all euery man Minister especially to be acknowledged and accordingly by due course of Law called then thereunto Which was done the very first yeere of his remoueall and of her Maiesty the 26. Anno 1584. This of the brethren was tearmed the wofull yeere of subscription but that they should so doe there was no cause vnlesse they are grieued that factious spirits and malecontented Ministers and Preachers were discouered and their erroneous and schismaticall opinions brought into light And surely neuer was their subscription hitherto by authority vrged in this land but diuers new fancies held yet for truthes not to bee doubted of among the brethren were thereby detected for Gods people to auoid as monsters neither hath our Church lost by imposing nor the aduersaries gained at the long runne by refusing Subscription 12. In the yeeres 71. and 72. when subscriptiom first was required the whole land will witnesse that many and sundry bookes aswell in Latine How basely the Brethren cōceiue of the doctrine by the Bishops agreed vpon and established by the Prince as English then and afterward flew abroad In which we read how then and in those dayes the truth of God did in a manner but peepe out as it were at the Screene that Cranmer Parker Grindall and all the other Martyrs Preachers and learned men which first in our age brought the light of the Gospell into this Realme did see a little and had a glimpse of the truth but ouersaw many things which in these dayes of the Sunshine of the Gospell men of meaner gifts doe see and yet may not vtter them without great danger of the Lawes through the iniquity of the times though the said things now seene be comprised in the Booke of God and also be a part of the Gospell yea the very Gospell it selfe so true are they and of such importance as if euery haire of our heads were a life say the Brethren we ought to afford them in defence of these matters the Articles of Religion penned and agreed vpon by the Bishops and Clergy and ratified by the Prince and Parliament in comparison of these things now reuealed and newly come to light are but Childish and toyes Thus write they as your grace best knoweth and I would haue quoted the places where they may be read had I either not written vnto your selfe or did write vnto a man vnacquainted with their bookes And had they here stayed their words had bin able without the more grace of God to haue moued the Parliament and all the people of this land as they have preuail'd but too much already with their too credulous Fauorites to thinke our Church for all the reformation wrought and Vniformity in doctrine established to be much awry and farre from the truth it should professe But setting downe as they haue done and publishing both what the truth is which now breaketh out and
29. which sheweth vvhereunto onely the Primitive Church necessarily was tyed By the Apostles doctrine b Rom. 13.1 1 Pet. 2.13 14 which enjoyneth the Christians to yeeld obedience unto the ordinances of their lawfull Governers and Commanders whatsoever By the Apostles example and namely of the blessed Saint Paul c Acts. 16.37 Act. 22.25 c. Act. 25.11.12 who tooke benefit and made good use of the Romane and Emperiall Lawes Errors and adversaries unto this truth This truth neither is nor ever was oppugned by any Church Onely among our selves some thinke us necessarily eyed unto all the Iudicials of Moses as the Brownists For they say The Iawes Iudiciall of Moses belong as well unto Christians as they did unto the Iewes a Barrowes disco p. 127. Others that we are bound though not unto all yet unto some of the Iudicials as holdeth T. C. b 1. Reply sect 1 3. and Philip Stubs c Anatom of abuses 2. part D●b 5. Proposition No Christian man whatsover is freed from the obedience of the law Morall The proofes from Gods Word THink not that I am come to destroy the Law or the Prophets I am not come to destroy them but to fulfil them For truly I say unto you saith our Saviour Christ til heaven and earth perish one jot or one tittle of the law shall not scape till all things be fulfilled whosoever therefore shall break one of these least Commandements and teach men so shall be called the least in the Kingdome of Heaven c a Matth. 5.17 18 19. If thou wilt enter into life keep the Commandements c. Thou shalt not kill Thou shalt not commit adultery Thou shalt not steale Thou shalt not beare false witnesse Honour thy father and thy mother b Mat. 19.17 18 19. Doe we make the Law of none effect through faith God forbid yea we establish the Law c Rom. 3.31 Circumcision is nothing and uncircumcision is nothing but the keeping of the Commandements of God d 1 Cor. 7.19 The publike confessions of the Churches of God in France e Art 23. and Belgia f Art 25. agree with this Doctrine Errors and adversaries unto this truth Whereby are condemned as most wicked and unsound the Opinions Of the Manichies who found fault with the whole Law of God as wicked and proceding not from the true God but from the prince of darkenesse a Aug. con● Faust epist 11. and 74. Of Brownist Glover whose opinion was that Love now is come in the place of the ten Commandements b Bredweb detect p. 119. Of Iohannes Istebius and his followers the Antinomies who will not have Gods Law to be preached nor the conscience of sinners to be terrified and troubled with the Iudgements of God c Sim. Paulimeth par 2. de lege De● p. 54. Of Banister among our selves who held how it is utterly evill for the elect so much as to thinke much lesse to speake or heare of the feare of God which the Law preacheth d Bani error 8. Article Of the three Creedes 1 The three Creeds Nicene Creede Athanasius Creede and that which is commonly called the Apostles Creede ought throughly to be received and beleeved For 2 they may be prooved by most certaine warrants of holy Scripture The Propositions 1. The Nicene Athanasian and Apostolicall Creeds ought to be received and beleeved 2. The three Creeds viz. The Nicene Athanasian and of the Apostles may be prooved by the holy Scripture 1. Proposition The Nicene Athanasian and Apostolicall Creeds ought to be received and beleeved THis proposition the Churches of God both anciently and in these last dayes a Confess Helv. 2 c. 11. Gal. ar 5. Belg ar 9. Saxo ar 1. doe acknowledge for true The errors and adversaries unto this truth Therefore much out of the way of godlinesse are they which tearme the Apostles Creede A forged patchery as Barrowe doth a Bar. dis p. 76. and Athanasius Sathanasius Creede so did Gregorius Paulus in Polonia b Genebr l. 4. p. 1158. and the new Arrians and Nestorians in Lituania c Surius chro p. 320. My selfe some 28. yeares agoe heard a great learned man whose name upon another occasion afore is expressed to whose acquaintance I was artificially brought which in private conference betweene him and my selfe tearmed worthy Zanchius a Foole and an Asse for his booke de tribus Elohim which refuteth the new Arrians against whose founders the Creeds of Athanasius and Nicene were devised Him attentively I heard but could never since abide for those words and indeed I never saw him since 2. Proposition The three Creeds viz. the Nicene Athanasian and of the Apostles may be prooved by the holy Scripture The proofe from Gods Word THan this assertion nothing is more true For the Creedes I meane these three Creedes speake first Of one and the same God whom we are to beleeve is for essence but one a Deut. 6.4 Mal. 2.10 1 Cor. 8.4 Eph 4.5 6. in persons three b Matth. 3.17 Gal. 4.6 1 John 5.7 viz. The Father the Creator c Psal 134.3 the Son the Redeemer d Esa 53.4 Rom. 5.18 Gal 3.13 Eph. 2.16 1 Iohn 2.2 the holy Ghost the Sanctifier e 1 Cor. 1.21 22. 1 Pet. 1.2 Next of the people of God which we must thinke and beleeve is The holy f Eph. 1.3 4. and 2.21 Col 2.22 and Catholike Church g Esa 54. 2. Psal 87.4 Acts 1.8 c. Eph. 2 14. Reu. 5.9 The Communion of Saints h Eph. 4.15 1 Cor. 10.16 Heb. ●0 25 1 Iohn 1.7 Pardoned of all their sinnes i Esa 44.22 Math. 18.23 c. Col. 2.13 And appointed to arise from death k Ioh. 5.28 1 Cor. 15. Phil 3.21 1 Iohn 6.39 and to enioy eternall life both in body and soule l Pet. 1.4 Reuel 21.4 The aduersaries vnto this truth Therfore we are enemies to all aduersaries of this doctrine or any whit of the same in them comprised whether they be Atheists Iewes Sadduces Ebionites Tretheites Antitrinitarians Apollinarians Arrians Manichies Nestorians Origenians Turkes Papists Familists Anabaptists or whosoeuer 9. Article Of Originall or Birth sinne 1 Originall sin standeth not in the following of Adam as the Pelagians doe mainely talk but 2 it is the fault and corruption of the nature of euery man that naturally is engendred of the off-spring of Adam whereby man is very farre gone from originall righteousnesse is inclined to euill so that the flesh lusteth against the Spirit and therefore in euery person borne into the world it deserueth Gods wrath and damnation 3 And this infection of nature doth remaine yea in them that are regenerated whereby the lust of the Flesh called in Greeke 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Which some doe expound the wisedome some the Sensuality some the affection some the desire of the flesh is not subiect to the Law of God
Coster I●s● enchirid controvers c. 11. d. S. Ciuc p●g 3●8 c. Of power and vertue to heale sick and sore Of holinesse to blesse us and keepe us from evill From foule fiend to fend us and save us from devill And of many miracles which holy Crosse hath wrought All which by tradition to light Church hath brought Wherefore holy worship holy Church doth give And surely so will we so long as we live Though thou saist Idolatry and vilde superstition Yet we know it is holy Churches tradition Holy Crosse then disgrace not but bring it in renowne For up shall the Crosse goe and you shall downe Of this Crosse I sp●ake and meant and of none other when I number it among things meerely impi us and unlawfull And therefore have I not a little wondred at those my Brethren which draw these words of mine in this section unto the Crosse used in our Church at Baptisme h A brid of the Lancolne mi●ist Apol. unto King Iames a● 1605. p. 30. which I never thought not take to be either papisticall or impious because none adoration not so much as civill much lesse divine is given thereunto either by our Church in generall or of any minister or member thereof in particular If they have no other Patrons for their not using or refusing the ceremonie of the Crosse then my selfe they are in an ill case For both in my judgement and practice I doe allow thereof This their perverting of my words contrary to their sense and my meaning telleth mee that other mens words and names are but too much abused by them in that book to the backing of schisme and faction in the Church and State which from our soules we doe abhorre 4. Proposition Every particular or nationall Church may ordaine change and abolish ceremonies or rites ordained onely by mans authority so that all things be done to edifying It hath pleased our most mercifull Lord Saviour Christ for the maintenance of his Church militant that two sorts of rites or ceremonies should be used whereof Some God his most excellent Majestie hath himselfe ordained as the ceremonie of Baptisme and the Lords Supper which are till the end of the world without all addition diminution and alteration withall zeale and religion to bee observed Others be ordained by the authority of each provinciall or nationall Church and that partly for comelinesse that is to say that by these helps the people of God the better may be inflamed with a godly zeale and that sobernesse and gravity may appeare in the well handling of Ecclesiasticall matters and partly for order sake even that Governours may have rules and directions how to governe by Auditors and inferiours may know how to prepare and behave themselves in sacred assemblies and a joyfull peace may be continued by the well ordering of Church affaires We have already proved a In this art Prop. 1. that these latter sort of ceremonies may be made and changed augmented or diminished as fit oportunity and occasions shall be ministred and that by particular or nationall Churches which thing is also affirmed by our neighbours b Confes Helv. 2. c. 27. Bohe. c. 15. Gal. ar 12. Bel ar 32. Au. de abu ar 7. Wit ar 35. Suc. c. 14. Adversaries unto this truth This manifesteth to the world the intolerable arrogancie of the Romish Church which dare take upon her to alter and apply to wrong uses the very Sacraments instituted even by Christ himselfe a See ar 25. pr. 20. and to prescribe ceremonies and rites not to some particular but to all Churches in all times and places b Trid. Conc. ses 7. c. 13. It sheweth also the boldnesse of our home-adversaries the Puritane-dominicans which say that the Church nor no man can take away the liberty of working six daies in the week from men and drive them to a necessary rest of the body upon any saving the seventh c T. C. 1. rep p. 120. Againe say these men the Church have none authority ordinarily and perpetually to sanctifie any day but the seventh day which the Lord hath sanctified d D. B. doct of Seb. 1. B.p. 31. nor to set up any day like to the Sabbath day e Ibid. p. 47. The latter sort what in them is quench the peoples devotion and hinder them from frequenting of Churches upon all holy-dayes falling on the weeke-dayes and ordained by the lawfull authority of the Church 35. Article Of Homilies The second book of Homilies the severall titles wherof wee have joyned under this Article doth containe a godly and wholesome doctrine and necessary for these times as doth the former booke of Homilies which were set forth in the time of Edward the sixt and therefore wee judge them to be read in Churches by the Ministers diligently and distinctly that they may be understood of the people Of the names of the Homilies 1. Of the right use of the Church 2. Against perill of Idolatry 3. Of the repairing and keeping cleane of Churches 4. Of good works first of Fasting 5. Against Gluttony and Drunkennesse 6. Against excesse of apparell 7. Of Prayer 8. Of the place and time of Prayer 9. The Common Prayers and Sacraments ought to bee ministred in a known tongue 10. Of the reverend estimation of Gods Word 11. Of Almes-doing 12. Of the Nativitie of Christ 13. Of the Passion of Christ 14. Of the Resurrection of Christ 15. Of the worthy receiving of the Sacrament of the Body and Blood of Christ 16. Of the gifts of the holy Ghost 17. For the Rogation dayes 18. Of the state of Matrimony 19. Of Repentance 20. Against Idlenesse 21. Against Rebellion Touching this Article the greatest matter is not whether these Homilies meant and mentioned doe containe doctrine both godly wholesome and necessary but whether Homilies or any Apocrypha writings at all may bee read in the open Church and before the congregation which I thinke they may and prove it thus Great is the excellency great also the utility of Gods Word preached Therefore saith Saint Paul None can beleeve without a Preacher a Rom. 10. and Woe is mee if I Preach not the Gospell b 1 Tim. 4.16 Howbeit the manner of preaching is not alwaies one and the same For the Apostles were to teach as well by the pen as by the voice c D. Whitak cont Belg. con 1 q. 6. p. 335. Paul did preach the Gospell by writing d D. Fulke against the Rhem. an Rom. 1.15 wee owe in a manner evermore to the bonds of Paul for his books than to his liberty for preaching e Pauli vinculis plura pene qu●m libertati de●emus B●z epi. ded Ol●vi●n com in ●pi ad Galar Calvins writings will edifie all men continually in the time to come f The Ministers of Genevas epist before Calv. on Deuteron Protestants books are witnesses of sound doctrine and sincere Christianity