Selected quad for the lemma: church_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
church_n apostle_n appoint_v bishop_n 3,573 5 5.9455 4 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A10250 Propositions and principles of diuinitie propounded and disputed in the vniuersitie of Geneua, by certaine students of diuinitie there, vnder M. Theod. Beza, and M. Anthonie Faius ... Wherein is contained a methodicall summarie, or epitome of the common places of diuinitie. Translated out of Latine into English, to the end that the causes, both of the present dangers of that Church, and also of the troubles of those that are hardlie dealt vvith els-vvhere, may appeare in the English tongue.; Theses theologicae. English Bèze, Théodore de, 1519-1605.; La Faye, Antoine de, 1540-1615. aut; Penry, John, 1559-1593. 1591 (1591) STC 2053; ESTC S101754 189,778 296

There are 20 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

is meet as it hath bene the continuall practise of all well ordered churches that first the Pastors Doctors and Elders shuld haue the chief dealing as being those who both haue the ouersight of the flocke and are likelie to bee of sounder judgement in discerning the doctrine Next vnto them the chief and especiall men both in godlinesse and authoritie as the Magistrate if hee be a Christian are to haue place Lastlie the consent of the people is to be had in such sort as no man is to bee admitted vnto anie Ecclesiasticall function but by the knowledge and consent of the whole Church 23 Election being lawfullie finished published and ratified imposition of hands or ordination that is the placing of a man as it were in the possession of the holie ministerie is to be done of Pastors in name of the whole Eldership 24 The Lord hath ordained these callings to continue in his church to the end of the world neither indeed hath the church or euer shall altogether want the ministerie of the word seeing faith is by hearing Yet we see the sinns of men enforcing the Lord thereunto and his just iudgement which beginneth at his owne house requiring the same that it hath often come to passe as it was expreslie foretolde by the Spirit of God that the publick ministery was for the most part not in the handes of carefull Sheepheards but of the most forlorne spoilers and wasters of the Church Antichrist him selfe also sitting in the very Temple of God 25 Nowe when this hath come to passe the Lord in mercie towards his Church hath bene accustomed either extraordinarilie as he did to the Prophets in times past without anie consideration of that election whereof wee haue now spoken or ordinarilie out of their nomber who lurked amongst those robbers to endue with his Spirit wonderfull power whome hee thought good to chuse for the building vp of his decaied house whose vocation appeareth by their fruits that is both by the truth of their doctrine drawn out of the pure word of God and also by the example of their true Christian life 26 So it commeth to passe that the vocation of these men which at the first was extraordinarie is after that the right order is restored by them become lawfull and ordinarie and they are farre vnlike vnto them who neglecting the right order that is in force are drawne either by ambition couetousnesse or some other affection to inuade the functions of the ministerie of whome the Lord saith They ran but I sent them not Defended by ABRAHAM HENRIE a Normane PRINCIPLES TOVCHING THE FALSE MINISTERIE OF THE GOSPELL LXXIIII 1 HAuing set downe the true lawfull Ministery of the Gospell which the Sonne of God ordained and by his Spirit deuided into their seuerall functions It nowe remaineth that wee adjoyne the false ministerie of the same to the ende that contraries beeing laide one against an other may be better manifested 2 In the true Ministerie of the Gospell there are three things which distinguish the same from the false The one that the authority of the callings proceed from the Sonne of God as being ordained either immediatlie by himselfe or mediatlie by his Apostles The other is that the calling be lawfull that is such a calling as is squared according to the prescript lawes of the doctrine and Discipline of the Apostles The third is the prescript administration of the holy callings Now all these things wee aduouch to haue bene by a litle and a little vtterlie ouerthrowen by the Papisticall tyrannie which with the Apostle wee may justly call the mysterie of iniquitie 3 And first wee affirme that the callings of the Popish Cleargy which they expresse by that proud title of Hierarchie are in part altogether false that is such as haue at the first bene inuented by man and afterward became meerly diuelish and in part counterfeit that is such as onelie retained the names of true callings which they abollished in deed 4 These functions following we hold to be altogether false destitute of all true foundation namely the Primacy of the Bishop of Rome ouer al Churches the Cardinalship Patriarkship Archiepiscopalship briefly that whole Episcopall degree of Lord-Bishops ouer their fellowe-Elders 5 As to the vsurped power of the Bishop of Rome ouer others yea ouer al Churches the same by two manifest reasons amongst the rest is conuinced not to be Apostolicall and therefore to haue no warrant in Gods word The one because the Apostles were of equal authority power amongst themselues as it appeareth by the commaundement of Christ who sent them also by the record of the things which were done by them The other because that the Apostolicall function beeing appointed for the laying of the foundation of the christian Catholike church now that the same is laid and the Apostles called into heauen is ceased here vpon earth in respect of their personal ministerie and in respect of the building vppon the foundation which they laid the doctrine deliuered by them preserued from aboue and which is to continue to the worldes end is so sufficient that there is no need of any successor of the Apostolical authority eyther from the planting of new Churches or for the restoring of those that are already planted 6 Cardinals as it appeareth out of the story of FABIAN SILVESTER thogh corrupt stories were at the first no other then the seauē Deacōs of the church of Rome hauing their names from seauen quarters of the citty which also they called cardines wherūto they were allotted therfore called cardinals is as it were quarters and thus doth their borrowed coūtefeit stile yet testifie He furthermore seemeth in the writings of Gregory to be named a Cardinal who is called a Pastor or Curat neither is any mention of those that are now in the subscriptiō of the anciēt Coūcels in so much that they are and ought to bee justly accounted the most ougly brood of Sathan begottē by him in these latter times for the defence of that strumpet 7 As touching the distinctions of Bishoppes into Patriarks Primates Metropolitans and Archbishops al these beeing the same at the first that whole woorke was ●…s institution and not Gods ordinance as euen IEROM himselfe testifieth in expresse words 8 Nowe all these at the first were names of order distinction and not of anie superioritie or power when any Ecclesiastical controuersie did arise or any Pastors were to be chosen both Synods might be orderlie gathered together Synodall decrees put in execution also that elections might be done by the aduise of the neighbour churches and ratified in a comelie manner without confusion 9 This distinction of Churches belonging vnto order and not vnto anie preheminence of degree allowed by custome confirmed by the Fathers in the councel of Nice is not of it selfe to bee reprehended but yet the miserable issue of it manifested at the length that in two respectes
required that heerevnto be adjoyned the consent and authoritie of the Christian Magistrate togeather with the approbation and allowance of the flocke who are not indeed rashly to dissent from the judgement of their Pastors and Elders beeing grounded vpon just reasons which are agreeable vnto Gods word that all things may be orderly done in the house of God 19 Now although these lawes are not imposed vpō the conscience yet being once established no man can with a good conscience violate them both by reason of offence and also of the contumacie that should arise thereof We doe therefore condemne all the open tyranny of the Papists euen in this point also Now touching the third part of Ecclesiastical jurisdiction which we said to consist in the lawful and judicial chastising of offenders we will deale God-willing with that point in the Principles following Defended by IOHANES GEORGIVS VLRICVS of Tigurine PRINCIPLES TOVCHING THE CENSVRES OF THE CHVRCH AND PARTICVLARLY TOVCHING EXcommunication LXXVII WEE HAVE DISPVTED IN THE FORmer Principles touching the power of the Church in making Lawes it remaineth that we now set down the third part thereof which consisteth in Iudiciall censuring 1 THe Church of God in this life is subject vnto sundrie Domesticall offences the which though they cannot be vtterlie taken away before that last day yet are they to bee carefully fore-seene that as neere as may be they doe not arise and when they doe arise that they may be purged by the holy Ministerie 2 Of this purgeing there hath beene alwaies an order and a practise appointed in the Church by the commandement of God whereby not onelie the Church in generall hath bin seuered from those who are manifestly prophane as in times past before the law the sonnes of God were seperated from the sonnes of men but also those who behaued themselues amisse in the bosom of the Church were seperated from the sincere worshippers of the true God in which sense the ancients thought rightlie that CAIN was said to be expelled from the face of the Lord. 3 This order as also all other the parts of Ecclesiastical gouernment was more distinctlie and manifestly ordained by God vnder the lawe where were ordained diuers rites both of inwarde and outwarde pollutions and also of the manner of their cleansing and purifiyng which rites were prescribed vnto the Eldership of the Synagogue 4 This order beeing appointed by the Lord although the rules of the Synagogue did most impudentlie and wickedly abuse the same euen against Christ and his Apostles yet did Christ teach as MATHEVVE witnesseth that this same was to be appointed in the christian church retaining euen the verie name of Elders to this purpose the which thing the Apostles performed and obserued verie diligently as it appeareth by the expresse testimonies and examples of their writings 5 This also is manifest out of the whole Ecclesiasticall storie that the Christian Church euen vnto this day neuer wanted this order although that the Elders properly and peculiarlie so called of whome we haue spoken at large in the former Principles were by a little and a litle abollished by the tyranie of the false Bishops in the place wherof came those most prophane Courts of their Officials as they call them and that abhominable gouernment of the Antichristian kingdome 6 What and how great that Babilonicall confusion is it may appeare no way better then by the comparing of it with the true ordinaunce of God Now this true ordinaunce consisteth of two partes especiallie First that the administration of it should be committed vnto those onelie wherevnto the word of God doth allot the same next that they vnto whome this care is committed doe holilie and sincerelie exercise this power 7 That this spirituall jurisdiction is committed vnto the Pastours and the Elders peculiarlie so called beeing rightlie chosen wee haue fullie shewed in the former principles That whole authoritie then which the Bishops vnder Poperie and the Romaine Antichrist himselfe togeather with the instruments of his tyrannie do vsurpe is altogeather tyrannous Neither ought the power of exercising this Ecclesiasticall censure either of the greater or lesser Excommunication as they cal them to be in the hand of some one particular Pastour or Elder alone They are also deceaued who on the contrarie side do hold that this jurisdiction ought to be exercised by the whole assemblie of the Church the which they gather vpon the wrong exposition of the places MATH 18.17 1. COR. 5.4 8 This censure is rightlie administred when as those are called who ought to be called and both parties being pacientlie heard togeather with conuenient witnesses if the case so require the whole controuersie is decided in the feare of God without prejudice or declining vnto eyther part as the Apostle teacheth 9 We affirme that those who are to be called ought to be discerned partlie by the consideratiō and weight of the matter which is propounded and partlie by the quality of their persons 10 Those that are altogether without such as are at this day the Iewes Turkes c. are not to bee called before the Church as the Apostle doth expreslie teach 11 The same is to be held touching Shismatickes and Haeretickes which by their manifest departure haue made as it were an other bodie of the Church or haue beene borne in those sects hauing neuer joined themselues vnto the true Church of which sort are the Anabaptists newe-Arrians Libertines and the rest of such sectaries which are to bee altogether accounted for those which are without but are yet either by Synods priuate disputations conferences or by anie other meanes if they shew themselues tractable to be called into the right way their haeresies being condemned by just and lawfull proceeding according to Gods word 12 But wee are to thinke otherwise of priuat persons who continue as yet within the bosome of the Church haue made no manifest departure vnto anie such sectaries for they are carefullie to bee called to be admonished reproued and if they bee obstinat and such as are condemned of their owne conscience to be deliuered vnto Sathā as it is manifest out of the writings and by the examples of the Apostles Excommunication therefore of Grashoppers or Locusts of Mise Snakes and Flies and all other such trifles vsed by the Papists are not onelie friuolous foolish and ridiculous but joyned with the manifest and most shamefull abuse of the Ecclesiasticall authoritie 13 As touching those that haue priuatlie sinned and haue not giuen publick offence our Sauiour Christ dooth teach most plainelie MATH 18. how they are to bee dealt with Now publick offenders are either to bee presentlie reprehended if the occasion so require euen to their faces as PAVLE practised towards PETER 1. TIMOTH 5.20 or to bee reproued in the publick assemblie of the Eldership as the very same Apostle teacheth vs. 14 That a difference is to be made betweene outragious crimes and lighter offences it is out of controuersie
beleeue this 3 We also distinguish this Faith from the assent wherby some haue peculiarlie applied some peculiar promises made vnto themselues that were diuerse from the promises of aeternall life who notwithstanding were neuer made pertakers thereof 4 The Faith therefore whereof we now speake we doe define to bee that assurance whereby beyond the former assent the godlie are caried vnto Christ and so particularlie apply vnto themselues the promise of saluation offered in him We do condemne therefore all such sophistrie as doth confound these two sorts of faith and especially those who taking Faith for the obedience that is yeelded vnto Gods commandements doe by that meanes mingle the one of them with the other 5 We affirme this Faith to be the meere guift of God peculiar only to the elect and such a guift as in no wise cā be repented off or called back or beeing the most sure immoueable remedie vnto the saluation of all the elect Wee detest therefore all those who imagine that Christ and his sauing grace may be receaued by any merite either praeparatorie or fore-seene And especiallie all these who dreame that Christ may be conuaied vnto vs with the hand or mouth of the bodie 6 We denie also that this Faith can euer vtterly be lost although at some times euen in the most holie men it bee a sleepe as the minde is in those that are ouercome with drinke and notwithstanding that some haue as it were a shadow thereof begun in them 7 This faith doth God creat at what time and in what measure it pleaseth him strengthening and increasing the same by little and little though neuer perfecting it while wee are heere yet graunting so much of it in this life as is needfull for the elect to obtaine the victorie Nowe in the life to come he doth fulfill in deede that which we beleeued and hoped for while wee were heere on earth We doe execrate and detest therefore the CELESTINIANS and the ANABAPTISTS who dreame of a perfection of faith and righteousnes in this life and doe abollish the dailye growth of repentaunce and our continuall praiers which euen vnto our last gaspe we are to make for remission of sinnes Defended by BENIAMIN C●ESSONIVS of Burgundy PRINCIPLES CONCERNING THE CAVSES AND EFFECTS OF FAITH XXIII 1 THe efficient cause of faith indeede and to speake properlie is one to wit the mercie of God that is if the Father in the Sonne by the holie Ghost that the same Coessentiall power of the Father and the Sonne by the which man at the first was created in the image of God should restore in vs the same being left 2 The ordinary meanes whereby the same is wrought that is wherby both the vnderstanding of man is framed vnto a sauing knowledge of God in Christ and a particular receauing thereof and also the will powerfullie disposed vnto a right order of the affections is the preaching of Gods worde deliuered vnto vs be the Prophets and Apostles and for that cause so farre as it concerneth the elect appointed to be in the Church 3 But here two extremities are to be taken heed vnto the on of the ENTHYSIASTES who do not only distinguish but also separate the internall word as they call it that is the worke of the Spirite of God in our soules from the preaching of the written word whence followeth not any faith but rather a meere dotage The other is of those who after the manner of Sorcerers do transfer the efficacacie which is the proper and incommunicable worke of God onlie either vnto the ministers which speake or to the Sacramentall elements wheras notwithstanding they haue no other effect then to represent these things to our vnderstanding which according vnto Gods ordinaunce they are appointed to signifie Wheras then the ministers are said to worke together with God it is so to bee taken as they are vsed but for the outward planting watering when as in the mean time the whole force which worketh in the vnderstanding and the will doth flow from God only 4 Now that which we haue spoken of the Ecclesiastical ministerie is so to be taken as in the meane time wee are to know that God as often as it pleaseth him is able in a moment by the inward operation of his Spirit extraordinarily to regenerate his elect 5 But this extraordinarie worke of God is neither to be expected for of vs nor yet rashlie to be admitted 6 Now the most sure way to try it whether it be trulie from God or no is this namelie that whether it be by the ordinarie hearing of the word or which hath beene alwaies most seeldom whether God worketh by extraordinarie inspiration it must needes euermore teach the verie same doctrine which the written word of the Prophets and the Apostles do teach 7 There is not at all times the like majesty of the good order of this sacred Ministerie because the Lord doeth as often and as farre as hee thinketh good reuenge the negligencie and wickednes of the Sheep-heards and the contempt of the sheepe in such sort that sometimes it is darkened by spots of filthinesse and otherwhiles for a time it goeth as it were cleane out of sight as it came to passe in the former ages 8 Yet the Militant Church either priuate or publicke from others or by means of priuate reading hath euer enjoyed and euer shall enjoy the hearing of the worde and the vnderstanding of the trueth that ariseth therefrom 9 Nowe that true and liuely faith whereof wee speake is no lesse made knowen by the perpetuall and necessarie effects thereof then is the life of the bodie by motion and sense 10 But these effects doe not giue beeing vnto faith or informe the same as the Sophisters doe most absurdlie dreame but they are the vndoubted and sure signes of it 11 These effects are partly caried out of vs vnto Christ with whome we are vnited by faith and partly they do beget some things within vs. 12 The outward effects in asmuch as they doe peculiarly apply Christ and his benefits vnto those that beleeue are therefore the most excellent and of greatest account And they are both the full remission of all sinnes as well originall as actuall by the blood of Christ and also the bestowing vpon vs of all righteousnes fulfilled by him together with the most full restoring and repairing of our nature in the flesh of Christ All which are freelie by faith in Christ imputed vnto vs who take holde both of him and his gifts 13 Another effect of our spirituall joyning togeather with him by faith is that he gouerneth by his holy Spirit both our vnderstanding wil being sanctified and broght out of darknes vnto that marueilous light so as we begin to thinke to will and to doe the thinges that are of God This selfe same Spirite encreasing faith in vs being now not vnder the authoritie of the law and the flesh but vnder the grace
seemed indeed to haue beene done vpon some colour of reason but it had a most ill issue and wee affirme that this is it that IOHN in the Reuelation doth meane by the image of the Beast 4 For hence it came to passe the aequality of the Churches beeing taken away and the order of Priorship beeing vnder the colour of auoiding schisme transformed into superioritie that in steede of the Apostolicall and the truly diuine gouernment of the church by the Eldership the humaine order of Bishoppes was by little and little brought in and from thence presentlie sprang that horrible Antichristian tyrannie the chief head whereof nowe for these manie yeares hath beene that counterfait Romaine Bishop 5 Yet of this order as long as the Lord raised vp those who did so vse this office of Bishop invēted by man as they did maintaine and set forward Gods Church there was some vse as whereby in some sort the puritye of Christian doctrine hath bene maintained 6 It was apointed to the ouerthrow of the endeuours of Sathan and his ministers not by man but by God both before the comming of Christ and in the time of the Apostles that there should bee held certaine Assemblies of the godlie both for the preseruation and reformation of Religion and also for the appeasing of controuersies risen in the Church the which meetings are called in the storie of the Christian Church by the name of Synods and Councels 7 But when as these euils did not alwaies infect the whole bodie of the Churche but did rather spring from particuler members It was not without great cause obserued in the ancient Church that certain Prouinciall assemblies should be helde at appointed times wherin the controuersies if any had risen in the prouince wer determined according to the worde of God and the outward order of the Church so appointed as was thought expedient 8 As often as the harme grew farther there is no dout but the godly the religious Pastors of churches though dwelling in diuers Prouinces did yet conferre togeather without any ambition concerning the remedies thereof as it apeareth out of the stories of the Councels and the writings of the ancient Fathers that were before the councell of Nice the aeternal God verie mightily blessing their zeal before euer the ambition of Bishoppes seas was knowen in the Church 9 But as Christian Religion after that the Romaine Empire submitted it self vnto Christ vnder CONSTANTINE the great began greatly to florishe all outward persecution being ended So Sathan on the other side began after a marueilous sort openly to set vp the Mystery of iniquity which before hand secretly had taken some growth 10 Hervpon that authority of the Seas ouer their brethren and fellowe-Ministers was established in that first councell of Nice which otherwise was a Christian assemblie and one of the most famous since that time the which authoritie could bee afterward restrained by the force of no Canons and decrees but that it brake vnto that horrible tyrannie which wasted and at this day dooth deuour the whole Church 11 There were notwithstanding the Lorde rightlie vsing this euill vnto the preseruation of his Church in these times Councels gathered and ended vnto many good purposes by the authority of godlie Romaine Emperours against those haeresies which inuaded the vniuersall body of the Church and they are therfore called general councels because the Emperours of Rome did then gouerne the most part of the world 12 Now it is manifest that these councels were graunted by the Emperours vpon the entreatie and requeste of godlie Bishops whereas otherwise the haeretickes and factious heades would not haue yealded vnto the Ecclesiasticall censures and judgements of the godly Pastors and Elders had it not beene for the authoritie of the Emperours especiallie seeing manie Churches woulde receaue those that were cast out by their Pastors as the whole auncient storie doth testifie 13 It is also manifest that the Bishops themselues or such as was sent by them to supplie their roomes satte as the Iudges in these councels and meetings for the Episcopall degree of superioritie which was euen then a great staine vnto the Church of God was euen at that time crept thereinto 14 Yet in these meetings either the Romaine Emperour himself or some noble men sent with commission by him in his stead were present but not as beeing to judge or to giue the definitiue sentence but as beeing to moderate the behauiours of the Bishops themselues which yet sometimes they could by no meanes bring to passe as yet appeareth in that sacrilegious synod of EPHESVS otherwhiles though with great labour they did in some sort effect 15 In these Synods were heard and admitted euen lay-men as they call them that no man should be condemned before his cause were heard Now the whole controuersie concerning Christian Religion was first of al properly defined out of the written word of God Next and in the second place were brought the auncient Christian Fathers yet so as of them selues they were not beleeued but receiued so far as they agreed to the word of God To conclude the determination of the Synods being sent vnto the Christian Emperours were established by their vnviolable constitutions 16 In these Synodes were determined both the waightier controuersies risen among the Bishoppes themselues togeather with their elections and depositions and also the rules concerning the generall gouernement of the Church which the Greekes call Canons were enacted 17 Hence it appeareth what place those Councels are to haue which are called by the authoritie of the counterfeit Romaine Bishop and concluded by the suffrages and voyce of his own vassals both to the establishing of his tyranie and also to the ouerthrow of all godlines and whatsoeuer good order hath bene confirmed by the approoued ancient Canons 18 Now that the Romain Empire is seuered into parts and the gouernment of Christendome deuided into diuers kingdomes and estates If any man should demand what way we think meet for the gathering of Synods we answer after this sort 19 First in those Churches who haue Christian Magistrats care is to be had after the truth of Religion and the right gouernement of the Church be established that they haue setled ordinary meetinges according to the conuenient distribution that they haue made of their Churches to the ende that the controuersies either alreadie risen or beeing likelie to arise maye bee appeased and preuented and the progresse of the Churches of euery Prouince may be looked vnto vnto which worke the authoritye of the Christian Magistrates is also to be vsed 20 But where the Magistrates doe not professe true religion we see not to what end the appointing of Synodes either ordinarie or extraordinarie should depend vppon their authoritie In such a case then the Pastors are wisely to fore-see that the Church of God be gouerned notwithstanding all the impediments of the aduersaries 21 Now what hope there can be of a generall Counsel
the word committed vnto them and sometimes they do declare dictinct and peculiar functions in which sense we take them in the treatise following 7 Of these fiue the three first were temporarie hauing also euery one of them a distinct Ministerie and they were peculiarlie called Apostles Euangelistes and Prophets as being appointed for the planting of the Church throughout the worlde by the publishing of the newe couenant The other two callinges were perpetuallie to remaine vnto the last comming of Christ 8 The chiefe and most excellent of all these were the twelue Apostles vnto whose number PAVLE was afterward called as it were the embassadors of God who were elected and admitted neither of men neither by men but of Christ immediatlie that all of them being of equall authoritie amongst themselues should become the Maister-workman of the building whereabout they were to be imployed beeing strictlie tied vnto no certaine congregation 9 They therefore as they were lead by the inspiration of the holie Ghost or by some peculiar commaundement of God traueling thorow many countries preached the grace of Christ euerie where vnto all men the which they both confirmed with miracles and sealed by the administration of the Sacraments They also committed the churches which they had planted to be gouerned by their Pastors and Doctors as time and place would permit this office being faithfullie performed by them and they being called out of this life the Apostolicall calling also ceased 10 Hence it appeareth how vaine and detestable in all godlie eares is that voice of the Romishe Prelate who is not affraid to professe himselfe an Apostle by vertue of his tyrannicall succession and is not ashamed vnder the fayned pretence of PETERS Primacie to call himselfe chief or Prince of the Apostles amongst whome there was none either greater or lesser then other and euen the heade of the whole Church 11 It is out of controuersie that all those were called Prophetes who by the inspiration of Gods Spirit forsawe and fore-told things to come whose calling before the comming of Christ was when the Priests grew negligent to direct the faith of the Saints vnto the promised saluation and also both to raise vp the godlie to beat down the disobedient by their diuine reuelations So also at the beginning of the preaching of the Gospell they were called Prophets who were indued with a peculiar gift of reuelation or diuine wisdome wherwith God would at that time adorne his Church of this sort was AGABVS the foure daughters of PHILIP the Euangelist mentioned in the Acts of the Apostles and others vndoubtedlie not a few 12 Sometimes notwithstanding the woorde PROPHET and Prophesying in the Scriptures are taken in a manifold sense and signifie all those in generall who execute the function of the Pastor For in this sense the Apostle saith He that prophesieth aedifieth the Church exhorteth comforteth reproueth the contrarie doctrine 13 Vnder the name EVANGELISTS are vnderstood those whome the Apostles vsed as their companions and fellow labourers because they themselues were not sufficientlie able to performe euerie work in all the Churches of this sort was TIMOTHIE and TITVS SILVANVS and others 14 Now their office was to performe the worke begun or otherwise committed vnto them by the Apostles as it is manifest especiallie out of the Epistles of PAVLE to TIMOTHY and TITVS whose calling was also temporarie Those foure in like sort are called Euangelists in a more strict signification whose seruice the Lord vsed for the writing of the storie of the Gospell and describing the beginning of the Christian Church 15 There remaine two callings belonging to the Ministerie of the word to wit Pastors and Doctors who are distinguished from the former in a three-fold respect first in that they are not immediatlie but haue bene euer since the time of the Apostles ordained by the ministery of men according vnto that forme whereof wee shall speake Secondlie in that they are tied vnto a certain congregation lastlie because the Lord hath ordained both these functions to be perpetuall in the Church 16 The proper the peculiar function of the Doctor is to teach the doctrine of true Religion by the faithfull interpreting of the Scriptures to defend the same against the gainsayers and to gouerne the Ecclesiasticall schooles 17 Nowe the Ministerie of Pastors as of the Priest in times past consisteth in three points First not onlie in the simple laying open of the propheticall and appostolicall doctrine which wee sayd to bee the office of the Doctors but also both in the priuate and publick aplication therof by sinceare and diligent teaching reproouing correcting and instructing Next in the administration of the Sacraments which are come in place of the legall rites brieflie in conceauing publick prayers which is not the lest part of the Ecclesiasticall ministerie 18 The administration of the worde also is committed vnto the Elders peculiarlie soe called whome Paul doeth especially expresse by the name of gouerners but not simply to that end for the which it is committed vnto the Pastors and doctors For they doe not administer the worde either publicklie vnto the whole congregation or priuatlie vnto some but haue authoritie to administer the ecclesiasticall censures together with the Pastors by reprouing rebuking and binding if necessitie so require those who by due tryal are found to walk inordinatly in the Church being such as cannot be otherwise amended which is don not that sinners should perish but contrariwise that being humbled at least by shame they may returne into the right way 19 These together with the Pastors though distinguished by their function as wee said are some times called by a generall and common name of Bishoppes overseers rulers and that in respect of the flocke which they are to rule and gouerne 20 DEACONS peculiarlie so called are those who haue the charge both of the receauing and also of the orderlie distribution of the almes and the administration of the rest of the Church-goods and the applying of them to the necessitie of the poore other holie vses amongst which number in times past were reckoned the companie of widdowes beeing appointed especiallie for the manifold necessities of the poore 21 Nowe it is vnlawfull for anie man to intermeddle with these holie functions except he be rightlie called a lawfull calling is that whereby according to the order instituted by Christ anie man of whose life and doctrine there hath bene a diligent and a precise examination had is by the Church whereunto he is appointed the name of God beeing in all singlenesse and sinceritie called vpon chosen as it were by the voice of the holie Ghost speaking in the mouth of the Church 22 In these kindes of elections whether they be done at once in the same tenour time and place which vse being at the first in a holie sort practised in the Church was afterwarde made dangerous by couetousnesse and ambition or in diuers actions times and places it
there was not that wise regarde by this meanes had of the Churches which had beene needfull 10 First in that this Prioritie and Primacie was tied vnto certaine rites whereas the regarde should chieflie haue bene had in this point vnto the fitnes of the persons and not vnto the power and populousnes of Cities for experience it selfe doth teach vs that vices invading the very Pastors themselues doe grow no where more rife then in great Cities and in this point this one thing is verie wonderfull that the Fathers in that distribution followed the type of the Romaine Empire notwithstanding that the holie Ghost by IOHN speaketh of the image of the beast 11 The other in that they made one man ouer-seer ouer more elderships or churches then had bin needfull that for tearme of life vnles some great matter had fallen out although at that time he easilie suffered himselfe to be displaced whence the waye was opened first for those Bishops to opresse their fellow-laborers Next vnto mutual contention amongest themselues then to the tyrannicall gouernement of a few and last vnto that Antichristian tyrannie it selfe 12 Whence it appeareth of what great moment it was that the gouernement of the Church ordained by the Apostles and vnder the which the Churches flourished euen in persecution being a gouernment consisting of an Aristocratie most diuinelie mixed with the holy Democratie of the Church vnder that onely Monarch ruling by his owne lawes should haue beene retained rather then new degrees and formes of gouernement should haue bene invented and especiallie according vnto the paterne of the Romaine Empire wherein they did no other thing then the Israelites in times past who not contenting themselues with the Aristocratie ordained by the Lord would bee gouerned by kings after the manner of the nations round about them 13 Yet the Fathers fore-seeing this inconuenience labored to preuent the same by many decrees both of particular and generall Synods least that this order by anie pretence should be turned into honour and lordlie dominion But what compelled them to ordaine that wherevnto they were necessarilie enforced to prouide a remedy 14 And alasse this remedie was vsed in vaine as most woefull experience did presentlie testifie From whence I pray you did it proceed but from this authoritie attributed vnto certaine Cities and places that first scismes next the defence of heresies did arise and presently the chaunge of the Ecclesiastical Aristocraty the head whereof is Christ alone into the horrible tyrannicall gouernment of a few when as at the first the foure Patriarks exercised jurisdiction ouer their fellow-brethren the Metropolitans or Archbishops wherevnto the Patriarch of Constantinople being added to make vp the fift and vsurping the Patriarkes of Ierusalem Antioch and Alexandria beeing thereby thrust downe lower the next place vnto the Romaine Patriarke by reason of the dignitie of new Rome he in the East and the Romish Patriarke in the West invaded the very throan of Christ Iesus 15 Nowe as touching the other functions the onelie names whereof haue remained amongst the false Romish cleargy to blind the worlde withall it shall appeare in the 3. head of this contrariety or Antithesis how they are depraued 16 The Lord in his word hath opened one onely way whereby men are to enter into the sacred functions of the Ministery that is free election made by those who haue interest therin together with the trial of doctrine and life as also it is decreed by infinit numbers of the purer canons of Councels and Synods 17 The right of this election in regard of the choice of their vniuersall tyrant or rather in the execution of their open most manifest Symony haue the Colledge of Cardinals at Rome vsurped vnto themselues And this tyrant also doth claim vnto himselfe most impudently the authoritie to make most shamefull marchandize vnto anie that will giue most of Ecclesiastical benefices as they cal them or to bestow them any waies at his pleasure raising exacting very often the price of them as hee thinketh good without regard of any canon old or new and besides that Bishoppes and a few others within their Prouinces are beholding vnto him for the right of collation as they call it or bestowing of benefices hee hath very often couenanted concerning the naming of those that should possesse thē vpon what condition hee thought good euen with Kings and Princes 18 Now the treatise concerning the third head that is concerning the administration of Ecclesiasticall functions in that false Apostaticall Church of Rome we will referre vnto the next disputation Defended by SAMVEL CEVALLER of Geneua PRINCIPLES TOVCHING THE HOLY FVNCTIONS OF THE CHVRCH THAT ARE DEPRAVED AND RETAINED ONELIE IN name in the Romish counterfayt Church LXXV 1 FIrst of all this shamefull errour hath taken roote in that Romish false-Church namelie that they count the holie functions of the Church amongst Sacraments vpon the number of which functions also they thē selues cannot agree 2 This which falslie they call the Sacrament of Order some do deuide into the highest and the lowest orders others more arrogantlie vnto the ruling and gouerning or into the ministring seruing degree not altogether without reason because some of them are vnder the authority subjection of others yet by a vain friuolous distinctiō seeing they haue taken away as shall be shewed the things thēselues and do onely retain the names that therby they may cloak thēselues vnder the coūterfeit shew of antiquity 3 This ruling order they attribute vnto their Bishops whereof also they make diuers degrees and their Elders vnto whome also they do assigne their rulers called their Arch-elders the rest they containe vnder the name of the seruing order 4 Others do make the Ecclesiasticall Lordships and jurisdictions to be aboue the orders themselues and so they make the highest orders to be Priests Deacons and Subdeacons the rest which are of the inferiour order they name Ostiaries or doore-keepers Readers Exorcists and Acolythes or such as in times past attended vpon the Ministers of these we will speake seuerallie laying down this foundation that none of these functions are found in the Romish fals-fals-Church but onlie in name Concerning Bishops 5 Nowe as touching Bishops seeing that by the ordinaunce of God a Bishop Pastor and Elder we speak now of those Elders that labour in the woorde are the one and the same in respect of their function whereas in the Romish counterfeit Church to be a Bishop and to bee an Elder are altogeather diuers things so that there are manie Bishops there which neither are nor neuer were Elders whome they call Priests and on the other side there are manie and almost infinite Elders which neither are nor euer shall be Bishops it followeth that amōgst them there are no Bishops of Gods ordinaunce 6 Seeing that none by Gods word is called a Bishop in respect of his fellow brethren which are al aequall among themselues but in regard of
his own flock which he ouerseeth as the rest of them doe theirs amongst whome hee which seemeth to bee most meete to moderate the whole number of the brethren is chosen to be ouer them not in regarde of anie degree or preheminence but onelie for orders sake Mans wisdome as wee haue spoken in the Principles last going before brought this order which was onlie an order of place amongst them which were aequall into superiority and preheminence which preheminence notwithstāding was tied within the boūds of certain lawes least it should grow into plaine tyrannie 7 But this humain Bishoprick in the Romish coūterfeit Church not onlie vntying but breaking a sunder casting cleane away all these bonds grew into manifold tyrannie 8 Now howe far this false and counterfeit Bishopricke differeth both from that which was ordained by God and also frō the other of mans inuentiō which by steps was cōuaied into the Church these things following do shewe I In that some are promoted vnto this dignitie by a fained kinde of election with the chapters of Cannons as they call them haue wholie wrested vnto themselues Others treading and despising all Cannons and order doe come by the same through most shamefull and abhominable briberie II In that as the soldiers in times past deuided the garments of Christ beeing crucified so doe these false Bishops with their chapters openly without all shame deuide the goods of the poore amongst themselues III In that contrary vnto the manifest so often repeated prohibition of Christ hauing cast from them the dispensation of Gods mysteries they haue so farre intangled themselues with Ciuill gouernment affairs that some of them haue vsurped all kind of temporal gouernment fraudulentlie obtaining the same either by deceiuing Common-wealthes and Cities or by seducing as the Pharises did vnder colour of Religion the vnwarie and vncircumspect heirs to bequeath vnto them their possessions which neither the one could giue nor the other lawfully receiue Other of them doe beare rule ouer Princes and euen ouer Kings themselues IIII And what should hinder them to do this who stick not to beare rule ouer the verie soules and consciences of men and to abrogate the very expresse law of God as often as they thinke good V To bee short in that if it pleaseth them for fashions sake to performe any thing that seemeth to haue any affinitie with the office of a Bishoppe that must consist not in the dispensation of Gods word but partly in their disguised and masking Bishoplie apparell and crossing with the signe of the Crosse partlie in the defending of their superstitious and cursed Idolatrie as in anointing in vsing that ridiculous ceremonie of confirmation as they call it in the consecration of Temples and Altars in the wicked ordination of their sacrifices Brieflie it consisteth in the godlesse rites of their Idolatrous worship VI. And this forsooth is that true and vndoubted Apostolicall succession whereby the true Catholick Church may be discerned in deede from the false Touching Elders 9 By the ordinaunce of God which was carefullie obserued in the Church as long as the same was rightlie gouerned there were chosen others also called according to the custome of the Hebrues by the common name of ELDERS whome PAVLE doth also call Gouernours who being men of approued godlines were joined vnto the nomber of Bishops Pastors or Elders for these three are all one by whose common direction and authoritie sinners were admonished or brought vnder the Ecclesiasticall censures and by whome the meere Ecclesiasticall causes which had risen were decided and the ciuill contentions also as it is likelie before there were anie Christian Magistrate were according to the Apostolicall doctrine brotherlie friendlie taken vp without anie debating of the matter as it is vsuall in ciuill courts 10 This then was the Christian Presbyterie or Eldershippe But in the Romish false-Church they came in the place of the Elders that ought to haue attended vpon the worde whose especiall and principall calling is not to declare that Sacrifice of Christ nor as PAVLE commaundeth to teach to rebuke improue and exhort the people out of the Scriptures of God but whollie to ouerthrow the verie foundation of Christianitie by that horrible and blasphemous Sacrifice wherby they beare the world in hand that they in verie deede do offer Christ himself vnto his Father for the quicke and the deade to mocke God and men by their singings which are either ridiculous or patched together out of Gods word miserablie torne in peeces or els full of horrible impietie being also sung in mockery of the Church in a strange and for the most part a barbarous tongue to burne incense vnto Idols to administer Baptism which they pollute a thousand waies in a strāge tongue also that for money to change the holy Supper of the Lord into most detestable Idolatrie Brieflie not to feede the poore people but to flea them and pill them most vnnaturallie by exacting a continuall tribute both of the liuing and of the dead This I say is the charge this is the calling both of their Curates and of the rest whome they call beneficed men and also of their maisterlesse hounds who liuing by their dailie wages doe as hungrie Dogs smell out the kitchin of these fat mastiffes and hire out themselues to supply their roomes 11 Now as to the other Elders whome we said to bee especiallie called Gouerners they haue vtterlie abolished euen their names and haue placed in their steed the Officiall as they call him being the Bishops Vice-gerent the Promoter as they call him and brieflie the Procurators of that which they name their Ecclesiasticall Court wherein Ciuill causes for the most part are handled that with greater brablement and sturre than in any ciuill court beside and wherein the cause of matrimonie is decided not by Gods law but according vnto their rottē Canons briefly where all the lawes of God men are most impudentlie put to sale And therfore there is no holie Eldership or Presbyterie and no Elder in the false Romish Church saue only in name Concerning Deacons 12 It is cleare and out of controuersie vnto all those that are conuersant in the reading of the word and in the storie of the purer Church that the Deacons by the ordinaunce of the Apostles had the charge of the Church-goods wherein they were also subject vnto the ouersight of the Pastors But in the false Romish Church wherein they haue adjoined subdeacons vnto their Deacons what is it I pray you to be a Deacon Forsooth to be discerned from the Priest saying Masse by a coat without sleeues to stand answering the Priest at his right or at his left hande if the Masse be to be chanted or sung otherwise Deacons haue nothing to doe there when hee secretlie muttereth some things to himself to chaunt the Epistle as they call it and to reade a peece of the Gospell to reach the Cup or Chalice vnto
same leaning vpon the power of GOD doth preuaile against the gates of Hell and it is also bestowed although not in the same measure but as it pleaseth the holie Ghost to giue it vppon euerie particular member of the Church whereby it commeth to passe that the holy Ghost in them dooth tread Sathan vnder feete resist the fleshe beare rule ouer sinne yea at the length vtterlie destroy and ouercome death 4 Neere vnto this is that other extraordinary particular force whereby the Lord indued his when and whom hee thought good with the power of casting out Diuels in the name of the Lord and with other gifts of woorking miracles 5 The other Ecclesiasticall power which concerneth the order appointed for the Gouernement of the Church is defined to bee that power which is giuen vnto them that are in the function of the Ministerie ouer those whose saluation they are in respect of their calling to promote of this sort are Pastors and Elders called also Gouernors of whome wee haue spoken in the former sort of Principles 6 This whole power consisteth in three points namelie in teaching in appointing of lawes and in censuring 7 The right and authoritie of teaching not what they thincke good but that onelie which the Lorde hath written by the Prophets and Apostles and in the publicke administration of those Sacraments which and in those rites wherein hee commaunded them to be administred dooth belong onelye vnto those Pastours that are rightlie called as long as the ordinarie vocation dooth remaine 8 Now this authoritie euerie faithfull Pastor is bound to practise not onelie vniuersallie amongest his flocke but euen towardes euerie particular sheepe thereof by instructing comforting and correcting them according as their necessitie requireth as the Lord in EZECHIELL and the Apostle himselfe by his owne example dooth teach vs. Act. 20. 9 The strength and efficacie of this power is shewed in that it is Metaphorically expressed by the names of Keyes of shutting and opening and properlie vttered by remission and retaining of sinnes and it is also of that great moment that that is saied to bee loosed and remitted and on the other-side to bee shutte and retained in Heauen which is opened and remitted and in like sort shut and retained in earth 10 Yet is not that by this meanes transferred to men which is onely proper vnto God and to our sauiour Christ Iesus vnto whome alone all judgement is committed but heereby is ment that that is ratified with GOD which is rightly done in his name by his Pastor that is chosen thervnto or rather that God is the authour of that which hee doth by his Ministers declaring remission of sinnes vnto those that beleeue the Gospell and condemnation vnto the vnbeleeuers according vnto that saying Hee that heareth you heareth me hee that despiseth you despiseth me he that beleeueth shal be saued hee that beleeueth not is alreadie condemned The Romish Prelate therefore and his false Cleargie who doe falslie beare the world in hand that the keies and power of opening and shutting of heauen is committed vnto them do abuse their Ministerie and according vnto the saying of Christ let them alone they are blind leaders of the blind 11 The other part of this Ecclesiasticall gouernment being committed to Pastors and Elders which wee said to consist in appointing of lawes is so to be vnderstood not as though it were lawfull in Christian Religion to impose lawes vpon the consciences as it is in the Ciuill pollicie to ordaine and to abrogate ciuill lawes and constitutions the which point the Apostle expreslie testifieth not to be permitted vnto the very Angels For we haue but one law-giuer namely the onely Sonne being the alone interpretour of his Fathers will and the head of the Church who hath most fully opened the whole counsell of our saluation togeather with the whole worshippe due vnto him and hath both by his own mouth and also by the Apostles both by preaching and by writing most perfectly set down the gouernement of his owne house euen vnto the ende of the world wherevnto nothing is to bee added or detracted and wherein it is vnlawfull to change one tittle 12 That matter therefore remaining whole and sound in those points which God hath commanded concerning his worshippe and the duties of a Christian life it followeth that the Church hath power to enact lawes onlie touching those thinges which belong vnto comelines and order and appertaine vnto the mutuall agreement of the faithfull in the outwarde worship of God in consideration of which matters seeing by reason of the diuers and sometimes repugnant circumstances the Church beeing now gathered out of all nations they cannot bee the one and the same at all times and places It followeth that it is free and lawfull either to ordaine or to abrogate them as it shall appeare that the necessitie or commodity of the Church doth require the same 13 But heere some thinges are especially to bee verie carefullie taken heede vnto First that the conscience bee not ensnared hereby as though these lawes were anie part of Gods worship For the Lorde doth condemne all will-worship as being himselfe the onlie Law-giuer of the conscience 14 Secondly that vnprofitable curious and ridiculous rites be not appointed in stead of graue comely and profitable order 15 Thirdly that the true and pure worship of God bee not hindred much lesse oppressed by the multitude of such lawes 16 Fourthly that especial care be had that these things by a false pretence of Religion grow not into superstition much more that they degenerate not into impietie and if this come to passe that they be either presently amended or rather vtterly abollished 17 Now that men haue long since greatly offended in these matters experience alasse and the lamentable deformity of the church doth make it true and manifest whereas the true vse both of the word also of the Sacraments hath bene not onely depraued but euen turned into open Idolatrie All the will-worship then that hath beene brought either into the West by that Romish Prelat and his false Bishops or into the East Churches by the Patriarkes of Greece we doe at once condemne And we affirme that those Christian Magistrats haue doone well who by the procurement and aduise of the true seruants of God haue cut off out of their Dominions many vnprofitable ceremonies and altogether abollished the vngodly and superstitious rites how ancient so euer they were We doe on the contrary side auouch that they haue smally regarded the good of the Churches within their dominions who either haue retained the relicks of such ceremonies or haue chosen in a kinde of preposterous judgement rather to correct them then at once to abolish them 18 Briefly the ordinary and lawful power to ordain and abrogate these lawes doth neither depend onelie vppon the will and good liking of the Pastour alone nor yet vpon the judgement of some Presbitery onely but there is also
VERITAS CASTITAS PROPOSITIONS AND PRINCIPLES of Diuinitie propounded and disputed in the vniuersitie of Geneua by certaine students of Diuinitie there vnder M. THEOD BEZA and M. ANTHONIE FAIVS professors of Diuinitie WHEREIN IS CONtained a Methodicall summarie or Epitome of the common places of Diuinitie TRANSLATED OVT OF Latine into English to th●… end that the causes both of the present dangers of that Church and also of the troubles of those that are hardlie dealt vvith els-vvhere may appeare in the English tongue AT EDINBVRGH Printed by Robert Walde-graue printer to the Kings Maiestie Anno Dom. 1591. Cum Priuilegio Regali TO THE RENOVMED AND NOBLE LORD THE LORD NICHOLAS EARLE of Ostrorog c. IT hath bene long since the complaint of verie many that those whome they call the Schoolmen and Disputers haue giuen the studies of the holie Scriptures not onely a great stroake but euen a deathes wounde And therfore it will seme wonderfull it may bee vnto some that the custome of disputing touching diuine matters is retained in these Churches and Schooles which are reformed acording to the pure word of God For to dispute of euery matter will some say is blame-worthie neither can it be lawfull to call euery thing into question but only such matters as being doubtfull and vncertaine in their own nature may be argued one boath sides according as the opinions and iudgements of men do vary and disagree of which sorte there are many thinges in Philosophie which do so moue the mindes of men with a kinde of probability that it may be iustly doubted whether the things be as they seeme or no. But Diuinitie is grounded vpon such a sure and certain foundation that there is no place left therein vnto doubting and questioning For he himselfe spake that is not PYTHAGORAS but IEHOVA by his Prophets and Apostles in his word written by them teaching therein the onely truth of those matters which neither eie hath seene eare hath heard nor euer enterd into the harte of man and which they whome God loueth and who loue him againe do obtaine of the mercifull Lord not by reasoning but by beleeuing and leading an holy life This reason hath so preuailed that many godly graue men haue either from their hartes as beeing of this iudgement or for some other cause abstained from this course of disputing touching diuine matters For godlines say they is to bee taught and learned according vnto the plaine and simple maner of Fishermen and not by the subtilties of ARISTOTLE and that doubting of the ACADEMICKES who as AVGVSTINE saith hold that men are to bee without all hope of finding the truth beeing an opinion that maketh men wauering and changeable ready to holde any thing and to beare any face and countenance is to be vtterly remoued from the Church wherunto you may adde as the Apostle admonisheth vs that we take heed lest any man spoil vs by philosophy neither indeed can it be denied but that in the very first beginning of the Church there was a very sore blowe giuen vnto religion by those who being swollen vppe by the pride of humaine reasonings would rather submit Christ vnto their iudgements then themselues vnto his maiestie So that TERTVLLIAN long since iustlie named the Philosophers to be the Patriarches of haeresies Now in the ages following that wound was not onely not healed but made greater and grieuouser by those who mingling the Schoole Philosophy with Diuinitie did make the Ladie and Mistres to bee at the commandement of the seruant and handmaide For the craft of Sathan was such that whilest those who being otherwise good men did endeuour by the light of disputation to cleare the truth against errors they themselues falling into far greater darknes drewe others after them For why should wee not so account of those questionarie maisters as they call them Whereunto if vnto any other that which AVGVSTINE allegoricallie spake out of the eight Psalme concerning curious men may be most fitlie applied The most earnest and obstinat studie saith he of all curious men who seeke vaine and transitorie thinges is like vnto the fishe that walke through the pathes of the Sea the which pathes doe as soone vanish away and decay as the water cōmeth againe together after it hath giuen place to any that passe or swimme thorough it Thus far AVGVSTINE For what is more curious and more intricate or brier like then so many not so sound as subtil questions diuisions distinctions and solutions of these men whoe stand gnawing vpon the bones of argumentes as TERTVLLIAN saith Verely that which is set downe in the Fables touching IXION rauishing the cloude in stead of IVNO whence the CENTAVRES were begotten who killed one another may be verie aptlie applied vnto these men For the bare shadow in steed of the solide truth being taken holde vpon and apprehended by them hath altogether drunke vp and consumed the iuyce and moisture of godlines so that there remaineth nothing for them but the dry and wythered barke and it hath brought forth so many controuersies and diuersities of opinions which teach and learne nothing els but brawles and partes taking that to recall so many mindes and contrarie iudgements that deadlie gore one another vnto concord and the right rule of reason concord and reason it selfe cannot suffice and bee able For as NAZIANZEN sayeth when as hauing once left faith we pretend the force and the abilitie of disputation wee do nothing els thereby but blot out the authoritie of the Spirit by questionings By the which vnsuccessiue and lamentable issue wee are earnestly admonished to betake our selues from their traine who vse over narrowlie and curiouslie to sift matters vnto the assemblie of those that are godlie and profitable hearers But yet this was the falt of these men who in diuinitie obserued not that rule That nothing shoulde bee too much which is exceeding profitable in ciuil affaires For it followeth not because they were over curious which is not to bee commended that therefore carefull diligence shoulde bee disliked or sluggishnes and securitie thought praise worthie But holie things as they are to be dealt in with great iudgment so they are to be handled with greater pietie for this latter is as it wer the soule the former being as the eie of diuinitie The orations of the Prophets the sermons of Christe the writings of the Apostles and especiallie the Epistles of PAVL do containe most sharp and graue disputations which can in no wise bee aptlie discussed but by the vse of reasoning Our Sauiour Christ him selfe disputed with the Doctors Pharisies Sadduces c. The same did PAVL with the Iewes with the Philosophers with the brethren The Fathers also disputed IRINEVS against the GNOSTICKES TERTVLLIAN against the MARCIONITES ATHANASIVS against the ARRIANES NAZIANZEN CYRIL THEODORET HILLARIE AVGVSTINE and many others almost against innumerable haeresies but so as their disputations wer not a bare exercise or a setting forth for a
are a sleepe vntill the last day of judgement Defended by BENIAMIN CRESSONIVS of Burgundie PRINCIPLES CONCERNING CHRIST HIS ASCENSION INTO HEAVEN XLVI SEING THE ARTICLE OF CRISTS REsurrection hath bene alreadie opened it now followeth that we deale with his ascension into heauen 1 AS the Scripture dooth teach that the death resurrection and buriall of Christ were true and not fained so the same doth testifie that his Ascension into heauen was not onely visible but also locall 2 For although the word ASCENDING is sometimes Figuratiuely spoken concerning God yet in this Article of the Faith it is taken in his proper and naturall signification in such sort that by it is expressed a passage from a lower place vnto a higher which is pointed out by the name of Heauen 3 Whereas in the Scripture there is mention made of a three-folde Heauen wee affirme that the highest of all is heere to bee vnderstood wherein is the seat and aeternall habitation of the soules of the faithfull and where also Christ is exalted aboue all Creatures 4 And although he be trulie ascended into Heauen yet doth it not follow thence that he is no more present here with his Church for the gouernment thereof seeing that the said Ascention dooth onely appertaine vnto that nature which is finite and contained in a place that is vnto his humanitie and not to his Diuinitie which is euery where alwais present and can be contained in no certaine place seeing it containeth all things For as AVGVSTINE hath spoken very notablie the body wherein Christ rose must bee in one place where as his trueth is euery where spread abroad 5 Hence we gather that hee is not now vpon earth in respect of his Manhood seeing he hath once ascended into that place whence the Scripture dooth testifie that hee will not depart vntill the restitution of all thinges and in no other manner neither then he did ascend 6 Yet wee say that God and man did ascend because that his humaine bodie was taken vp by the power of the Deity which was vnseparably joyned with the humain nature and nowe remaineth there after a manner vnknowen vnto vs. They are deceiued therefore who holde that Christ according vnto his humaine nature can be at the same time both in heauen and in earth And those also who auouch that his fleshe is euery where and all those in a word who bereaue his body of the essential and as DAMASCEN speaketh of the Caracteristical properties therof that is such as are markes of a true bodie 7 Now where as Christ after his Ascention was seen of PAVL and STEPHEN that vision was extraordinary and a peculier reuelation So that from thence it cannot bee gathered that Christ was not in that place wherevnto hee ascended 8 This Ascention furthermore was as it were a certain triumph after the victory gottē ouer the enemies of mankind which he ouercame 9 The end of this triumph is diuers and manifold First of all it testifieth that the woorke of our Redemption was finished vpon earth the which he would seale by this magnificall and royall triumph which for this cause is called by AVGVSTINE a confirmation of the Catholicall faith For by this meanes Christ hath gotten vnto the immortal and incorruptible life not an earthly but an incorruptible and aeternall mansion 10 Secondly that there should be extant a most cleare testimonie of the Diuinitie of Christ by the which his humanitie was taken vppon high whence also it appeareth that he consisteth of two natures 11 Thirdlie that hauing ouercome death hee should enjoy that glorye which was prepared and ordained for him before the foundation of the world was laid not according to his Deitie but according to his humanitie the glory wherof appeared then when a new ghuest as it were entered into heauen to wit the man GOD the which thing the Angels had neuer seene before 12 And although the man Christ was glorified by his Resurrection in such sort as there was nothing wanting vnto him yet this Ascention was a more certaine ample possession of that glory 13 Fourthly and lastly that he might prepare a dwelling for vs in Heauen and not onely prepare it but also allure vs thither that wee might follow him by an ardent desire and affection while we are in this life and here vpon earth seeke those things that are aboue 14 Nowe euen as Christ was borne for our cause dead for our cause c. So hee ascended into Heauen for our cause 15 The fruit and profite therefore which ariseth to the faithfull out of this Ascention is manifolde For first wee are thereby vndoubtedly assured that we shall once namelie at the last day ascend also into Heauen For where the head is there the members also ought to be the Ascention of the members shall bee such as the Ascention of the head was saue that he ascended by his own power where as we shall ascend not by our owne but by his vertue For our bodies ought to bee fashioned like vnto his glorious body as the members vnto the head 16 Secondly after this Ascention was the holy Ghost giuen vnto the Apostles Next were other gifts from heauen bestowed vppon men and the Church furnished with things needfull for the same 17 Thirdlye heereby a way is opened for vs vnto our heauenly countrey from whence we fell by the meanes of ADAM 18 Fourthly and lastlie his Resurrection confirmeth our faith For hereby we are assured that our soules separated from our bodies euen before the Resurrection shall passe to no other place then where Christ is that they may liue for euer in blessednes with him Defended by WILLIAM QVERCINVS Tarbiensis PRINCIPLES CONCERNING THE SITTING AT THE RIGHT HAND OF THE FATHER ALMIGHTIE XLVII 1 SEeing whole Christ that is Christ personally considered or in respect that he is one subsisting person is said to sit and that the action of sitting can not in the proper signification thereof agree vnto the Deitie in it self we must needs conclude that sitting properlie taken can in no wise agree vnto the Deitie 2 And although it may be properlie applied vnto that other nature of Christ which is corporall in that sense that sitting is opposed vnto the standing or the moouing of the bodie yet wee must not thinke that that glorious bodie of his though it be truly circumscribed and contained in a place doth either continually stand sit or moue For all these things are grosse and curious matters neither are they so particulerly to bee applied to the estate of that life 3 That which is added concerning the right hand of God is much more to bee taken Figuratiuelie as whereby those thinges are attributed vnto God which are proper vnto man seeing that God who is without a bodie hath neither right side nor left as beeing altogeather immeasurable and infinite 4 By this kinde of speach therefore being taken from the custome of Kings and Princes who are wont to make a
fall of mankinde by the mercifull voice of God haue and will vnto the end of the worlde consent together in the profession of his true worship 4 Nowe in asmuch as all those who haue giuen their names to bee of this meeting haue not either doone the same vnfainedlie or shewed that constancie that had bene meet by reason that Sathan neuer ceaseth to sowe tares in the field of the Lord Hence it came to passe that men haue beene alwaies enforced to take the Church sometimes in a more generall sometimes in a more speciall signification 5 The Church therefore is generallie called the congregation of all those who professe true Religion whether they do it vnfainedlie and perseuere therein or hypocriticallie and fall away from the same In speciall it is taken for all those onelie whome God of his infinite mercie hauing elected before all worldes doth effectuallie call when he thinketh good in such sort as they being endued with true faith and perseuering vnto the end may be justlie accounted to be of Gods flock 6 Hence sprung that distinction of the visible and inuisible Church of the visible which is so accounted by the notes of the outward profession without any differēce betweene the faithfull and the close hypocrites of the inuisible which is restrained vnto those onelie who trulie and constantlie beleeue to the end therfore called inuisible because true faith can assuredly be discerned by none saue by the Lord and them in whome it is 7 This inuisible Church is only one as there is but one God the Father one Christ the Mediatour and head of his mysticall bodie one faith one hope by the holy Ghost and one aeternall life and it is therefore called Catholicke that is vniuersall both because it hath bene is and shall be alwaies the one and the same and also because GOD hath alwaies gathered them into one bodye out of all sorts of men and people as it seemeth good vnto his mercie whereas before the comming of Christ the Church was particularly called out of the nation of the Iewes onelie 8 And although God for many ages had seperated the Gentiles whome the Apostles therefore affirmeth to bee without God strangers from the couenant of grace frō the seed of ABRAHAM yet was there almost no age wherein he called not some of the Gentiles vntill that the particion-wall being broken by the preaching of the Apostles that promise made vnto ABRAHAM was accomplished namely that all the nations should be blessed in his seede because they were to become ABRAHAMS seed by Christ 9 The particuler assemblies of this bodie dispearsed throughout the world considered either generallie or speciallie as it is visible or inuisible are as it were the members that make vp one mysticall body 10 And this is that Catholicke Church whereof mention is made in the beliefe therfore called holie because it is by the holy Ghost seperated from the rest of the worlde and consecrated vnto God 11 This same Church is rightly deuided into the Militant and Triumphant By the Militant is vnderstood the company of the true beleeuing yet remaining vppon the earth and striuing with Sathan and the remnants of their fleshe By the Triumphant are meant those whose blessed Spirits are already gathered vnto the Lord euen vntil both the one and the other at that glorious comming of Christ hauing receiued their glorious bodies shall triumph with Christ their head for euermore 12 That holines wherby this Catholick Church which is also inuisible in that sense that we haue spoken is seuered from the world if it be considered in respect of the puritie of the doctrine of the truth is altogeather without spot or wrinckle Or if it be considered not as it is in it selfe but according vnto the beliefe that is yeelded vnto this true and wholsome doctrine we holde againe that the force of that truth is so great that it is alwaies declared and obeied in the Church vniuersally considered Wherefore the Apostle calleth the Church taken in this sense the piller and ground of truth 13 But if the Church be respected not vniuersally but particularlie that is according as it hath diuers assemblies here and there gathered togeather then indeed it may often come to passe that some particular Churches may err yea in some fundamētal points either in part or in whole yet so as the elect do alwaies returne vnto the way neither can those particular spottes that cleaue vnto it for a time make the vniuersal church to leese her naturall beautie 14 We confesse to speake nothing here of the corruption of manners that this may come to passe much more if wee seuerally consider the members of particuler Churches for such is the weaknes of mans judgement euen in the deare Saints of God that you cannot find any so indued with the perfect knowledge of the trueth but hee doth stagger in some things especially when the Lord being prouoked by the sinnes of men doth giue efficacie and force vnto the spirit of error 15 Although that the Catholicke Church can neuer fall away from the truth yet both the Prophets and Apostles together with the holy storie in generall both before and after the comming of Christ haue foretolde and these very times wherein wee liue doe testifie that it hath often come to passe that the greatest part of particuler churches and men falling away yea and striuing against the truth the light of the Church seemed for a time though not vtterlie yet in a manner to be cleane extinguished 16 The true markes therefore of the visible Church can not bee the multitude or personall succession but the doctrine truly taught out of the written word of God and the lawfull administration that is such as is agreeable vnto Gods ordinance of the Sacraments to wit of Baptisme and of the Lords Supper 17 These two notes doe depend vpon the lawful forme that is such as is prescribed in Gods worde of the holie Ministerie constituted as it ought to be But in asmuch as the Church sometimes is brought to that passe that not onely Wolues doe supplie the place of lawfull Pastors but also the whole forme of the ordinarie Ministerie is turned into a plaine confusion that somtimes the externall Ministerie being for a time altogeather broken of the church is extraordinarilie fed as it were in the wildernes therefore is not this marke simplie and absolutelie necessary to point out the Church here vpon earth 18 Now wheresoeuer the Doctrine of the Apostles is taught ther is no question to be made but that the church is there though there bee fewe that giue eare vnto the same with fruit 19 That therefore is a true Church be it vniuersall or particuler which heareth the worde of God contained in the writinges of the Prophetes and the Apostles in suche sort as it canne adde nothing therevnto detract nothing from the same nor chaunge anie thing therein either in respect of the Doctrine it selfe or
in regard of those things that appertain vnto the foundation of the gouernment of the Church as for the hard places that are in the word it interpreteth them both by conference of the scriptures and also according to analogie of faith 20 Nowe as touching those thinges which appertaine vnto outward order the Church in the feare of the Lord may therein consider what is most meete vnto time and place Wee doe condemne therefore those who dreame that euerie man whatsoeuer hee professe shall bee saued by his own Religion seeing out of the Catholicke Church there is no saluation And those who tie the Catholicke Church vnto one certaine place Those who bring vnto the Church the Academicall ●ncertainty Those who require a forme of perfection in the Militant Church Those who holde the personall succession absolutelie for an vndoubted note of the Church Those who haue by little and little transformed the Christian Presbyteries or Eldership that is the gouernment ordained by Christ the onely King and Monarch of his church into the image of the beast which was the olde Romaine Empire and that first by bringing in the dignity of Bishops next by apointing degrees amongst them and last of all by placing Antichrist at Rome vnder the title of the Ministeriall head Those who doe not measure the Church according to the word of God but the word according to the bare name of the Church Defended by DAVID PIOTAEVS of Geneua PRINCIPLES VPON THE ARTICLE I BELEEVE THAT THERE IS A COMMVNION OF SAINCTS LI. 1 CHrist can be fruitfull vnto none but by participation 2 This participation is partly of Christ and partlie of of his benefites which doe flow from the participation of him 3 That therefore whereof wee are made partakers is partly substantiall and partly a quality 4 The Substantial things are both Christ himselfe God and man and also all those corporall things which are bestowed vpon vs together with Christ beeing participated vnto vs. The qualities are all those gifts both of the bodie and the mind which in him we receaue in this life and obtaine in the life to come 5 Now wee are made partakers of the Deitie of Christ onely in force and operation but of his humanity in verie deed as far as he is our brother 6 Nowe this participation by reason of the most strait bād and the vnspeakable efficacie therof not that the one substance doth touch the other is expressed by the names of vnion engraffing incorporation and such like 7 The same is for three causes called spirituall first of all because the true and the soueraigne cause thereof is that power and vnspeakable force of the holy Ghost the which notwithstanding the distaunce of place doth most trulie and most effectually joyne the Saints though here as yet vpon earth in a spiritual marriage with Christ that they may be flesh of his flesh bone of his bones althogh according vnto this flesh they are not vpon earth but in heauen 8 Secondly because again this conjunction with Christ himself according to the flesh is in regard of vs a worke not of the bodie but of the minde which receiueth Christ by faith 9 Thirdly because the end and the scope of this mutuall Communion is not to the end that a kind of monstruous bodie should arise from the vniting of his substaunce with ours but that in this life we shuld be gouerned by his Spirit and that in the life to come we should liue an aeternall and a heauenly life with him 10 Yet may this vniting bee called a corporall vnion in a sound meaning so that all ambiguitie and newnes of wordes be auoyded namely if that especiall thing which in this mysterie as before hath bin said we spiritually receiue by faith and that is the verie humanitie of Christ be considered Next if respect be had to the external means which the holy Ghost vseth to beget and nourish faith in vs namely both the outward word sounding in our ears and also the Sacramentall elements and rites that affect the rest of our senses 11 Out of this spirituall vnion ariseth that mysticall bodie wherof Christ is the head both in respect of his preheminence ouer the same and also because he doth wholie giue sense and motion therevnto Nowe all those that beleeue and are sanctified are called members vnder this head in which sense is the Church called by PETER the Citie the spirituall temple of God built of liuely stones whose foundation and cheife corner stone is Christ who sustaineth and beareth vp the whole building It is no lesse absurd therefore to suppose that there is a kind of fastning and a cleauing of Christs bodie within ours or of ours within his then it were to say that the bodies of the Saints do subsist one within another Seeing that the band of the Communion of Saints is the very same that the vnion is which they haue both with themselues and with Christ 12 Some of those things wherof we are made partakers in this mysterie are altogeather proper to the elect namelie Christ himselfe of whome none can be a member except he be indued with true faith true faith which is inseparablie joyned with true hope charitie and last of all that aeternall kingdome prepared from all aeternity according to the free purpose of God vnto the elect onelie Some also are after a sort as the Lord thinketh good common to the hypocrites and prophane by reason that they seeme to bee ingraffed into Christ as are the gifts of Prophesie of tongues and of healing togeather with manie other notable gifts of the mind and excellent benefites of this life the which as by the elect they are consecrated to God who is the giuer of them so are they prophaned by the wicked 13 Againe these gifts though not alwaies in the same measure are partly common to all the Saints as beeing necessarie to the saluation of all of which sort are the participation of Christ himselfe liuelie faith steadfast hope loue vnfained remission of sinnes and sanctification by the holie Ghost with suche like and partlye proper to euerie seuerall beleeuer the which the same holie Spirite doth distribute according to the diuers consideration of the callings of men vnto whome and in what measure hee thinketh good 14 Euerie one of the Saints seuerallie considered haue their peculier giftes both in regarde of the possession of Christ himselfe and also of his benefits as it is expressed in the similitude of the talents But in asmuch as there is one GOD and Father of all one Christ the Lord one Spirite whereof all the Saints are endued one faith one hope of the same calling one baptisme one kingdome of heauen and also because whatsoeuer graces bestowed vpon anie is therefore giuen that the vse of them may bee common vnto them all and so that they should be the one and the selfe same bodie of Christ therefore all the gifts bestowed vppon any of the
elect in particuler are common vnto all the Saints in respect of the vse which is the communion of Saints in this life 15 Yea and the vse of these graces if it may be ought to reach euen vnto them that are without as farre as the glorie of God and the edification of the Church doth permit both because often times many of the elect lie hid amongst them and also because wee must bee like our heauenly Father who maketh his Sunn to rise vpon the good and bad 16 This Communion begun here vpon earth shal then after that those thinges which belong vnto the vse of this life are abollished be perfected in that aeternall kingdom when as faith being chaunged into a full knowledge hope into the injoying of the thinges hoped for and charitie being made perfect God shall be all in all his Saints Now the Communion of Merites either amongst the Saints liuing heere togeather or betweene the Militant and the Triumphant church is both most false and also blasphemous as also the very opinion of merrites is a meere forged vntruth Defended by IOHN WTENBOGAERT a Low-country man of Vtrick PRINCIPLES CONCERNING THE WORD OF GOD. LII 1 VVE haue dealt in the former principles with the Church and it hath bene said that the notes of the true Church were the Word of God and the Sacraments now wee will deale with these notes and first of all with the former of them 2 The word of God which is the first note wee cal in this place not whatsoeuer GOD hath spoken but those things onlie which the Prophetes and Apostles inspired by Gods Spirite haue in times past as taught by worde so committed to writing those things which being comprehended in the bookes of the ould and new Testament are as yet vnto this day after so manie warres slaughters ouerthrowes extant in Gods Church in which bookes God hath declared both what he will haue vs to know cōcerning him and what is to be done of vs. 3 God onelie is to bee acknowledged the authour of these bookes whence the whole Scripture is said by PAVL to bee giuen by the inspiration of God and is also called the word of God And therefore it is vnlawfull to call into question or to refuse anie thing that is contained therein as also to bring in anie thing that is not written in the same Detestable therefore was that peruersnes of the Marcionites Manichaees the Valentinians and of all such as refused either all or some of the bookes of the newe Testament 4 These writings by the singular prouidence of God haue long since beene brought by the Church into a certaine order and Cannon that they might bee discerned from counterfaite yea and all other bookes and that they should bee a rule of faith and obedience that should haue credite of it self and hence they are called Cannonicall Other bookes whosoeuer haue beene the authours of them though they contain manie wholsome profitable things are yet but accounted the writings of priuate men neither haue they their credite of themselues but as far as they agree with the former bookes and no otherwise They therefore both haue and at this day doe most greuouslie offend who take away this difference and affirme that the bookes of the APOCRYPHA are to haue no lesse credite in the establishing of Religion then the Cannonical Scripture of which number are the Tridentine conspiratours 5 This Scripture we acknowledge to be cannonicall and authentick not so much by the common consent of the Church as by the testimonie of the Spirite of God who teacheth vs that they are to be embraced as beeing most vndoubtedlie true and such as haue proceeded from Gods own mouth 6 Now these holie books do whollie containe al those thinges that are needfull for our saluation in somuch that it is altogether vnlawfull to exspect for anie supplie of this doctrine for the Scripture as PAVLE doth expreslie teach is able to make the man of God absolute Most greeuous therefore is their errour who thinke that the liuelie and the sauing knowledge of God is to be else where sought then in the written word and doe therefore thrust vnto vs their vnwritten falshoods out of the which they will haue necessarie arguments to bee drawne in the cause of faith and religion 7 The naturall and proper interpretation of this holy Scripture is to be drawne from the analogie of faith and the conference of places For that which is darcklie in one place is in an other clearelie taught that which heere is shortlie is elsewhere largelie set down and so the Woord is the rule and the interpretour of it selfe They are deceauers therefore who say that the right and authoritie of expounding the worde of God is in their power as though it were lawfull for them to interpret anie place as they think good 8 Neither are the expositions of auncient Doctors to bee receaued as vndoubted anie farther then they agree with the truth for PAVLE doth command vs that we giue eare or consent vnto none whosoeuer he be that teacheth anie other doctrine Wee cannot allow therefore of their opinion who wil haue the interpretation of the fathers as they call thē to haue credite of themselues 9 It is true indeed that some places of the Scripture remaine euen vnto this day so obscure and hard to bee interpreted as the verie best and most faithfull interpretours haue not agreed among themselues vpō their proper meaning but in these things euery man is to acknowledge his owne ignorance sluggishnes or some other fault and the Scripture is so plentifull that the one and the selfe same place can admit diuers interpretations and yet all agreable with the doctrine of faith 10 This notwithstanding is most certaine that the grounds and necessarie heades of Christian Religion are so clearely set downe by the Prophets and Apostles as the Spirite of God woorking in the Saincts they are manifestlie perceaued in the Church And therefore wee doe not agree vnto them who thinke the Scripture so obscure as it needeth to be made cleare by some other light Nowe this light they will haue without exception to bee drawne from that pretended Catholick Church that is either from the fathers from the Synods or from some long custome of time as though the Scripture had not beene vnderstood before either the Fathers or the Synodes were 11 This Word of God is to be dailie meditated vppon and all men of what estate soeuer they bee ought most diligentlie to read the same for no man is to be bereaued of that meanes whereby hee is to be instructed in the knowledge and the sure way of his saluation Wee cannot therefore but condemne the Papistes in this point also who holde it vnlawfull for laie-men as they call them to employ themselues in the reading of the Word 11 Now that the vnlearned and vnskilfull may with fruit bee conuersant in the reading heereof it is needfull that
the Bible be translated into the mother tongue of all Christian people Therefore wee doe also condemne the said Papists who will not allow of such translations 13 This same word of God ought to be faithfully and sincearlie expounded vnto the people by euerie Pastour and out of the same are exhortations consolations and reprehensions to be drawne whence also the gainsayer is to be conuinced and put to silence 14 This worde of GOD is said to haue life in it not that this life is placed in the letters syllables or wordes for they are to be counted witches and enchanters who attribute anie deuine power vnto the letters and woordes themselues but because it is an instrument whereby God doth make knowne vnto vs that which he will haue vs to vnderstand for our saluation 15 To conclude this is an absolute perpetuall and necessarie note of the Church namely that the purity of doctrine be maintained therin and that the pillar ground of the truth be in the same Defended by IOHN GIGORDVS Baeterrenensis PRINCIPLES CONCERNING TRADITIONS LIII 1 HAuing last of al disputed concerning the written Worde of God this present Treatise is to bee touching Traditions which some call by the name of vnwritten word and doctrine 2 Those which the Greek cal 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 are commonly called Traditions amongst the Latines which they affirme not to bee contained in writing but to haue beene conueied by word of mouth as it were from hand to hand deliuered from one to an other 3 Now there are two sorts of Traditions mentioned in the Scriptures whereof some are commendable as proceding from the Spirit of God of which sort are those which are mentioned to haue beene receaued from Christ his Apostles others were inuented by the wit of man as those which Christ calleth the Traditions of the Fathers and the commandements and doctrines of men 4 The former of these were not at the first as being in the infancy of the church committed to writing but now since that time that they haue beene put into the writings of the Apostles they are not to be taken as vnwritten but to haue credit amongst all as being the verie written word of God 5 Of these there are two sorts for some do appertaine vnto the record of the hystorie and the things that were done as that which LVKE speaketh cap. 1. 2. of the things that were done by Christ some do appertaine vnto doctrine and that in a twofold difference 6 For some were concerning the Doctrine it selfe as those things touching the Lords Supper which PAVL affirmeth to haue deliuered as he receiued them of the Lord Some are concerning the rites and the good order of the Church as that touching the blood of thinges that were strangled the couering of womens heads that men should not bee couered in the time of praier and such like 7 Those thinges which are concerning the substaunce of doctrine are to be perpetually obserued in the Church but as for the things which apertain to outward rites they in consideration of diuers circumstāces as of time place person may bee chaunged yet so as regard be alwaies had which must be generally obserued in al indifferent things vnto that which maketh most for the glorie of God the aedification of the Church 8 As touching other traditions which haue risen from the bare will of man though they haue neuer so glorious a shewe of antiquitie holines and wisedome yet if they agree not with Gods word they are to be accounted for no better then will-worship and so they are to be vtterlie cast out with all other superstitions that are either directlie or indirectlie against Gods word Of this sort are the obseruations of the difference of meat garments daies praier for the dead invocation of Saints departed Mouckery single life and a thousand such like either foolish or impious toyes wherewith Christians are now much more burthened then the Iewes were in times past with their Ceremonies 9 For in the worshippe of God this hath bene is and shall be the onely rule Whatsoeuer is without faith is sin and that faith dependeth not vpon the inuentions of men but vpon the hearing of Gods worde and that there can be no obedience where there is no commandement 10 And seeing the minde of the Lord is onely knowen vnto himselfe it belongeth not vnto man to set downe what is acceptable or what is odious in his sight but vnto God onely who hath therefore taught vs how hee will be worshipped and would not leaue that point to our choise 11 The word of God furthermore is euery way perfect and thervnto nothing is to be added or detracted for it is able to make the man of God absolute Wherefore we do constantly affirme that we are bound onely to cleaue vnto it rightly vnderstoode and that wee must not depart one jote from the same The vnderstanding of it is to be drawen from the analogie of faith and the conferences of other places of Scripture 12 We hould that it is lawfull neither for counsellors nor Bishops nor for anie man to impose lawes vppon the consciences of men which onelie belongeth to the alone Bishop of our soules and our Law-giuer Christ or vnto the Apostles hauing his commaundement For although true Pastors and Doctors of the Church haue beene and are in the place of the Apostles yet haue not they the same commission that the Apostles had For the Apostles being immediatlie inspired by the spirite of God could not erre and we are bound in euerie point to beleeue them But as for Pastors and Teachers they may such is mans weakenesse oftentimes slipp and therefore they are onelie to be followed so farre as they followe Christ and his Apostles Wee condemne therefore the olde Pharisies and those which haue followed them as the Iewes who haue coined vnto vs their CABALA and manie other dotages of their TALMVD the Papists and all other false Christians who haue polluted the seruice of God with their own dreames and inuentions and as it is written ISAY 29. MAT. 15. doe worship God in vaine in teaching mens traditions Defended by IOHN RVE of CADOMA in Normandie PRINCIPLES CONCERNING COVNCELS AND FATHERS LIIII 1 VVE haue shewed in the former treatise what the authoritie of Traditions can be it followeth that wee entreat of those thinges which appertaine vnto the confirmation of them wherefore wee will first of all deale with counsels next with Fathers 2 Seeing all things in the Church of God ought to be done orderlie and that the Church is gathered out of all people and nations the parts as it were of the Catholicke or vniuersal church were not without cause deuided which parts we call particular churches 3 Whereas this diuision was by little and little framed according to the example of the Prouinces and Diocesses or seuerall jurisdictions of the Romaine Empire as both the thing it selfe and also the very names doe shew it
amongst so many distinct kingdoms and estates we see not seeing that they who do purposely withstand the reformation of the Church will neuer agree that there shall bee a lawefull and free meeting And seeing also too many of those whom the Lord hath in these times inlightned with the brightnes of his Gospell are so drawen into diuers factions that there is left but small hope of reconciliation except that Princes beeing kindled indeede with the true zeale of Christs glory would by their authoritie restraine the madnes of some of the Bellowses and firebrandes that Sathan hath raised in these our daies so that the discourse concerning such a general Councel may at this time seeme superfluous 22 But if the question be in generall what the authoritie of the determination of Councels ought to be wee answere brieflie and plainlie seeing we know fully that those ancient general Synods as both those foure most famous gathered against the blasphemies of ARRIVS MACEDONIVS NESTORIVS and other suche monsters and also manie others helde against the Monothelites and Monophysites were lawefull and altogeather agreeable vnto Gods woorde in respect of the truth of Doctrine that hee which dissenteth from these Synods in respect of Doctrine may justlie be said to swarue from the very worde of God which is the rule of all lawfull Synods 23 Wee dare not affirme this without exception of all prouincial synods bicause they are found marueilous contrarie and repugnant one to another Therefore wee doe affirme that the determinations of those Synods concerning Doctrine is to be very carefully and religiously measured according vnto the rule of Gods worde or the Doctrine of the Apostles the analogie of faith briefly comprehended in the Apostolicall beliefe 24 Now as touching those general councels that were manifestlie tyrannicall as that first of EPHESVS and the second of NICE wherein the worshipping of Images was established and all others gathered against Gods truth by the counterfeit Bishops of Rome together with al prouinciall assemblies like vnto them we do not onely not allowe but holde them accursed according to the commandement of PAVLE seeing the true much lesse the counterfeit Bishops are not in authoritie aboue the Angels whom he commaundeth to be held accursed if they teach any other Gospell 25 Now in those thinges which belong vnto the good order of the Church be they established by ancient or latter Canons This is first of all to be obserued that the conscience is not simplie tied by any such rules 26 And this meane is also preciselie to be kept in all of them vz. that those things which are either in their own nature supersticious or so farre abused vnto superstition as it is more expedient they should bee abollished then amended bee at once cleane taken awaye that the Church bee burdened with no Ceremonies that wicked Rites bee rooted out of the same and consideration bee had what is agreeable vnto euery place and time 1 They erre therefore most dangerouslie who holde that Councels both generall and particular cannot err and will haue the consciences of Christians to depend vppon them both in doctrine and also in traditions or Canons 2 They also doe erre who resting onely in their own priuate studies doe attribute nothing vnto the decrees of Councels 3 As those also do erre who in Ecclesiasticall controuersies will affoord no place vnto Councels Concerning Fathers 1 IT is certaine that as the Lorde in times past raised vp godly Priests leuits and prophets which might interpret his law against false teachers and apply the same vnto their time So in the Christian Churche after the labours of the Apostles and the Euangelistes hee indued with a certaine greater measure of his Spirit those whome he thought good by whose writings posterities might be instructed not that they should adde or detract any thing from the worde of GOD or change any syllable therein But that they should bee the true interpretours of the same and that there should bee an vse both of their sound disputations against heretickes and also of their holie and learned both exhortations and consolations to ouer-passe heere that the storie of the ancient Church is to be knowen out of their writings 2 But heere men do diuerslie offend for both they are greatlie to be reprooued who doe neglect so great gifts of God and they on the other side do greeuously offend who receaue the writings of the Fathers without exception for the rule of faith and those also who will haue the gouernment of the church without respect of time place and person to be framed according to the prescription of the ancients Neither are they to be heard who holde that the Fathers are to be accounted because they are ancient 3 Therefore there is this meane to bee kept in the reading of them namely in respect of Doctrine be they old or be they new for the olde themselues were sometimes new al their sayings are without preiudice to be diligentlie examined according to the rule of Gods written word the which thing they themselues euery where in their writinges wish to be done and as touching the gouernment and ceremonies of the Church receiued in their times all preposterous zeale is therein to bee auoyded in such sort as those thinges which the writings of the Apostles commaund to bee perpetually obserued in the Church are to bee descerned from the matters that are indifferent and were added since their time There is also great consideration to be had of circumstances which are alwaies necessarilie subject vnto change Defended by IOHN HALSBERGIVS a Flemming PRINCIPLES CONCERNING THE SACRAMENTS LV. WE HAVE IN THE FORMER PRINCIPLES dealt both with the word beeing one of the markes of the Church and also with those things that depend thervpon now we are to handle the other marke thereof vz. the Sacraments and first in generall 1 VVHen as God of his infinit goodnes would not haue his Church after the fall of man to remaine in that miserable estate hee did not onelie in word and promises declare his goodnes thereunto concerning the sauing thereof by Christ but also added certaine rites and ceremonies whereby hee might confirme the same in the assurance of his diuine goodnes towardes it 2 These rites did the Grecians call Mysteries because they signified secrete and hidden matters which can bee known vnto none saue vnto those only that are instructed that is vnto the members of Gods Church Now the Latines called them Sacraments either because the woorde 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 was so interpreted by the olde translatour of the new Testament or because these rites are the markes of the couenaunt betweene God and vs that hee should bee our God and we his people and that by a Metaphore borrowed from the Sacraments that is the solemne oathes whereby souldiers bound themselues vnto their Captains and the Captaines againe vnto them 3 Now although neither the word MYSTERIE nor SACRAMEMT be found in the Scripture in that
vnto vs into ours seeing the Apostle saith that they did eate the same spirituall meat 12 It appeareth that their outward matter and forme was diuers from the Sacraments of the new Testament by the verie signes rites and manner of administration 13 That they differed in nomber it is out of controuersie for we according vnto the institution of Christ doe acknowledge onelie two Baptisme and the holie Supper they had more as Circumcision the Paschall lamb the Sacrifices and oblations Wee doe therefore condemne the Manichaees who taught that the things signified vnder the olde law were changed together with the signes Defended by DANIEL DOOLEGIANVS a low country-man PRINCIPLES TOVCHING THE NOMBER OF THE SACRAMENTS OF THE NEVV TESTAMENT LVII WE HAVE DEALT TOVCHING SACRAments in generall and the difference of the Sacraments of the olde and new Testament wee will nowe omitting the olde which were abolished by the comming of Christ deale with the new 1 THe Sacraments of the new Testament are those which Christ hath instituted in his Church to continue vntill his second comming 2 Of this sort there are onelie two Baptisme and the Supper of the Lord by the former we are receaued into by the latter nourished and sustained in the Church Confirmation Repentance extreame vnction order and mariage which the Papists account among the Sacraments are none in deed 3 For the true definition of a Sacrament cannot agree vnto them Now that definition which they bring that a Sacrament is a visible signe of an inuisible thing reacheth a great deale toe farre and is not proper vnto this discourse 4 Therfore although the Fathers in the verie puritie of the auncient Church did vse the worde Sacrament in a verie large signification yet did they not acknowledge any more Sacraments of grace then these two so far were they from admitting the other fiue into the nomber of Sacraments 5 For these doe want in deede that forme whereby the Sacraments are that which they are that is the worde of God or the institution of Christ whose office alone it is to ordaine Sacramentes comprehended in his word 6 And none of them doe testifie the vnion that the Saints haue betweene themselues vnder Iesus Christ their head 7 We do not denie but there were some vse of them in the auncient and purer Church but we affirme it to bee a far other than that which is now in Poperie 8 The Papists make Confirmation to be the next Sacrament vnto Baptisme and they say that it is that wherby the children of Christians that are come to age after they are annointed in the fore-head with oile and haue receaued a blow or a pat of the Bishop doe forsooth receaue the holie Ghost though they make no confession at all of their Faith 9 But the Fathers made that to be Confirmation wherby those that were baptised when they were infants beeing after instructed in the Christian Religion were by laiyng on of hands and solemne prayers after they had made publick confession of their faith commended vnto God and the church 10 But it was not a Sacrament for it wanted a proper visible signe which is one necessarie part of the matter of a Sacrament 11 True Repentaunce wee admitte in the Church as beeing altogether necessarie vnto the saluation of all beleeuers that are come to age although it hath not alwaies satisfaction before the Church joyned with it 12 Now the Papists call that Repentaunce when as a man being touched with a perfect contrition for his sinns doth confesse them by making a full reckoning of them in the eares of the sacrificing masse-priest by whome after he hath receaued absolution he is enjoined to make suche a satisfaction as receauing force from the merits of Christ doth satisfie Gods justice 13 And seeing furthermore it hath no visible signe it can not be a Sacrament 14 They make extreame vnction to be a fift Sacrament whereby some person beeing at the point of death is by the sacrificing Masse-priest annointed with oile that the paines of Purgatory may be remitted vnto him 15 In the time of the Apostles when as the guiftes of miracles remained as yet those who were sick were wont to call the Elders of the Church by whome they were annointed and so did oftentimes recouer their health 16 But miracles beeing ceased vnction also hath ceased and therefore is no Sacrament for the Sacraments of the new Testament are to continue vnto the comming of Christ 17 Orders amongst the Papists are rites and Ceremonies partlye inuented by them and partlie fetched from the Fathers whereby they consecrate their Ecclesiasticall Ministers 18 It is out of controuersie that in the Church of God who is the authour of order all thinges ought to bee done in order yet cannot this order bee anie wise a Sacrament of the Church seeing it neither hath anie promise of grace annexed vnto it nor doth belong vnto all the faithfull 19 Mariage being the seauenth Sacrament of the Papists is out of question the holie ordinaunce of God appointed for the propagation and conseruation of mankinde yet do we not acknowledge it to be a Sacrament 20 First it hath no promise of saluation nor any corporall matter which might bee a signe of the grace of saluation ordained by God 21 Secondlie it is not common vnto all the elect for it is not needfull that all those who will bee accounted of the visible Church should be maried yea the Papisticall cleargie doe reject the same as a filthie and prophane thing 22 Thridlie it is not proper vnto the Church of Christ vnder the new Testament for it was preciselie instituted at the verie beginning of the world and it is common vnto all men euen the verie heathen which could not bee if it were a Sacrament Defended by DANIEL CRAMERIVS Occitanus PRINCIPLES TOVCHING BAPTISME BEING THE FIRST SACRAMENT OF THE NEVV TESTAMENT LVIII HAVING IN THE FORMER PRINCIPLES set down the nomber of the true Sacraments of the new Testament we now come to handle the first of them namelie Baptisme where we will deale with the causes and effectes thereof referring other things that belong vnto this argument vnto the next disputation 1 BAPTISME beeing a Sacrament of the newe couenant testifying that Christ is come came in the place of Circumcision which vnder the old Testament did prefigure Christ to be manifested 2 Both of them are the same in deede yet differing in signes 3 The same is to bee saide of all types both singulare and extraordinarie of which sort was the passage through the sea vnder the cloud and also legall and ordinarie of which sort were sprincklings and diuerse washings ordayned vnder the olde Testament 4 By Baptisme beeing one of the two Sacramentes of the new Testament we vnderstand in this treatise that holie and mysticall action which is proper vnto the Christian Church and ordained for those ends wherof we will speak anone 5 The matter of Baptisme are the signes the things
5 The principall and chief end therefore of the holie Ministerie in respect of saluation was alwaies one namelie the laying open of Gods goodnes touching the saluatiō of men by meanes of the free couenant made in Christ onelie who both before and vnder the rudiments of the Law was shadowed and manifested in deed in the fulnesse of time 6 Yet of this holie ministerie both before and vnder the law there were three generall parts namely to teach to sacrifice to blesse as might be shewed by many testimonies of the scripture vnder the name of sacrifice we vnderstand all sorts of rites as vnder the name of blessing wee containe publike prayers 7 Of the holy doctrine there haue beene two kindes namely the law denouncing judgement and death the Gospell offering life freelie giuen vnto the repentant 8 Yet is it not properlie the lawe but the transgression thereof that doth kill 9 The Legall ceremonies were certaine appurtenances both of the law and the Gospell wherin as in a glasse were to be seene though in a contrary regard both the cursse of the law and also the blessing of the Gospell 11 The ministery of Moses notwithstanding compared with the ministery of the Gospell is for three causes called the ministery of death The one because that the lawe written was giuē by Moses whereby death was more manifestly layde before the eyes of sinners then euer before 12 The other because Moses did labor much more in setting downe the Lawe then in opening the promises of the Gospell that men might learne by the terrors thereof to frame thē-selues vnto the receiuing of perfecter things that were to be manifested at the time appointed and not place the hope of saluation in these rites Thirdly because the Lawe indeed dooth point out the disease that bringeth death but doth not heale it yea rather encrease the same through our falt in that it requireth of vs the execution of the Commandements and giueth vs not abilitie to performe them 12 But in the Gospell the picture whereof in a sorte was that externall worshippe of the Lawe God giueth by his holy spirite the abilitie to performe the promise of the same that is the power to repent and belieue And therefore the preaching of the Gospell is called the spirite ingraffed in our heartes but the Lawe is tearmed the dead letter that is a dead writing engrauen in Tables of Stone 13 Wherefore the Ministery not onely of the olde but also of the newe Testament was ordained not by men but by the Lord who both instructed and also called both the Patriarches and also Moses Aaron to exercise the same and afterwarde declared to Moses the rule and the forme thereof as hee would haue it executed among his people wherevnto it was not lawefull to adde or to detract any thing 14 And because the Lord fore-sawe the negligence and the wickednes of the Priests hee did therefore ordaine in the auncient Church both before and vnder the lawe not onely an ordinary which vnder the lawe was especiallie assigned vnto the Tribe of Leuy but also an extraordinary that is a Propheticall ministerie vnto whome the Priests and Kings themselues were to yeld obedience and whose office was to teach the whole people partly by a more exquisite exposition of the lawe and partly by terrifiyng the disobedient by fearfull Reuelationes of Gods judgments and comforting the godlie by most louing promises 15 Their ministerie was extraordinarie for although there were certaine colledges of Prophets when and as often as it pleased God yet were they not apointed by man neither did they leane vpon any ordinarie calling Briefly God did enspire with his Spirite whome it pleased him respecting therein neither sex nor calling 16 Both these Ministeries did the Lorde promise vnto his people by MOSES and withall shewed how false Prophets whome the people were to take heede of might bee discerned from the true whome they were to heare 17 The Lord ordained this Ministerie of men not that he was compelled thereto by any necessitie but that therby he regarded mans infirmitie 18 Yet he neuer vsed it in such sort as hee would giue his owne glorie therevnto that is the authoritie to performe those thinges which the diuine power alone bringeth to passe but he effecteth externall things onely by his Ministerie performing those thinges by his owne inward power alone which were declared vnto the senses of the hearers by the outward ministerie of men 19 Therefore hee performeth what he thinkeh good inwardlie in the vnderstanding and will of man when and as often as it pleaseth him even without the externall ministerie but he who ever neglecteth the ordinarie ministerie or by vnbeleefe doth seuere the inwarde force from the outwarde administration that man tempteth God sheweth himself vnworthie of his grace But as for those that any wise ascribe the proper worke of God vnto the ministerie of men they are to bee accounted meere superstitious and even plaine Idolators Defended by ARON CAPEL an English-man of London PRINCIPLES TOVCHING THE MINISTERS OF THE WORDE VNDER THE GOSPEL LXXIII 1 BEcause God by means of his Ministers from the beginning of the world vnto this day hath with the word of life sustained man being fallen the order both of time and doctrine requireth that seeing we haue in the former Principles spoken of the Ministerie which God ordained in his Church both before and after the law We now deale with that Ministery which Christ after the abolishing of the law appointed in these last times to be in the Christian Church 2 And to the end that the summe and the truth of the whole matter may be more clearely set downe we affirme first of all that there are three sortes of Ecclesiasticall functions to be gathered out of the holie Scriptures For some doe attend vpon the preaching of the word of which sort were Apostles prophets Euangelists and at this day Pastors and Teachers Others haue the ouersight of the gathering and right distribution of the Church goods The third sort doe watch ouer the manners of men in preuenting offences and preseruing the right gouernement of the Church 3 Christ therefore as the Son and the soueraigne Lord and gouernor of his Fathers house did not only perfectlie set downe the doctrine of the couenant but also declared by what callings hee would haue his Fathers house that is the Church to be gouerned 4 And therefore he himselfe as PAVLE saith gaue for the worke of the Ministerie and the knitting togeather of the Saints some Apostles some Prophets some Euangelists some Pastors and Teachers 5 Neither is it to bee inferred either that all these callings were ordained to bee perpetually in the Church or yet on the other side that all of them were to continue but onely for a time 6 Now all these names as also the name of Elders and Deacons are sometimes in a general signification attributed vnto al those who haue the ministery of
the Priest being to make merrie therwith alone brieflie to carie about the basen wherein they doe receaue the money that is offered by the poore miserable sheep to bee deuided onelie amongst the wolues themselues And who I pray you do exercise this Ministerie euen they who though they bee sacrificing Masse-priestes themselues doe yet for the names sake play the part of a Deacon and Sub-deacon in this Comedie But what is become in the meane time of the goods of the Church belonging vnto the poore Surelie this whole praie excepting Hospitals which Cities and Townes are bound to maintaine vpon their owne charges beeing shared and torne in peeces amongst the wolues themselues is publicklie without all shame bestowed vpon the maintenāce of dogs and horses of whoores and baudes vpon dycing and carding and all kinde of luxuriousnesse vnlesse it bee that couetousnes dooth deuoure vp some portion of it or that it be spent vpon the maintenance of Ciuil dissentions amongst themselues or vpon the persecuting of the godlie There is therefore no office of the Deacon according to Gods ordinaunce in the false counterfait Church of of Rome no Deacon but onelie in name vnlesse wee had rather call al these forlorne wretches by the name of Deacons than of sacrilegious persons as they are in deede 13 As to the inferiour orders as they cal them they are not so much to bee counted Ecclesiasticall functions whereof we haue alreadie spoken as certaine exercises wherby the young mē excepting onlie the Exorcists that were consecrated vnto the church were in times past made meet a proof being had of their godlines and religion to the execution of the ministerial functions wherof we haue spoken 14 The office of the Ostiaries or doore-keepers was to attēd vpō the Church-dore least that any Catechist or any who making their repentance stood in the Church-porch should rashly intrude themselues vnto the holy assembly or Supper Now the Readers office was standing at the desk to read some part of the word vnto the people while they staied for the Sermon The Acolythes did attend vppon the Pastors and vpon the Bishop not onelie for honours sake but also for the performance of diuers other seruices if it were needfull and euen to the end that the Pastours should doe nothing as neere as could bee without witnesses brieflie that by this their dailie attendance and hearing the young men might be made meet for the holy functions As touching Exorcists the Christian Church vsed them as long as the guift of miracles continued to the healing of those that were possessed and distracted or at least wise for the commending of them to God by certaine peculiar prayers But seeing the guift of miracles is now ceased to what purpose should wee haue Exorcists 15 Now because it was ordained by the ancient Cannons that no man should be rashlie admitted vnto the ecclesiasticall functions who had not first approued his godlines and diligence vnto the Church in these small offices therefore do our good Romanists of that false and apostaticall Romish Church before they admit anie vnto the highest orders as they call them which are most disordered ordaine with most foolish and ridiculous ceremonies their Clarks hauing paid their fees euen in the one the selfe same week to be Dore-keepers Readers Acolythes and Exorcists and within a short while after they presentlie if they pay for it will admit them vnto their higher orders Now in their churches they haue neither ostiary nor reader and as for Acolythes they do not so much as know them by name Touching exorcism it is partly ridiculously performed in Baptisme by all Curates or Priestes that are their substitutes as though that al the children of the christians were borne possessed with Deuils and partly vsed in a wonderous jugling and deceitfull sort by some who are indued forsooth with a peculiar kind of power ouer euil Spirits as in times past when as the gifts of miracles was in force and that sometimes as it hath bene seene when they haue suborned those who faigned them selues possessed with Deuils though also they haue sometimes performed it in deed by reason that the Deuill did not refuse to depart out of the bodies of men as ouer-come by signing of the Crosse or sprinckling of holie water and invocation of the dead that thereby deceiuing many a miserable soule hee might confirme them in their superstitious worship Wherefore in Poperie there is neither Ostiarie Reader Acolyth or Exorcist saue in mockerie and in name onely 16 Wherefore also there is in that Babilon no holie order or Ministerie in deed no lawfull calling and therefore no true Apostolicall succession but a meere vsurpation of the holie Ministerie Whence it is necessarilie gathered that seeing the sacred Ministerie is a true and an essentiall marke of the true and Catholicke Churche that there hath bene and that as yet in some sort there dooth remaine a true Church held captiue in Babilon which the Lord some few yeares since began to bring out of the said captiuitie and it necessarilie followeth that the said Babilon neither was at any time nor euer shal be the Church of God Defended by DANIEL CHAMPHORANVS of Piedmont PRINCIPLES TOVCHING THE POWER AND AVTHORITY OF THE CHVRCH LXXVI HAVING DONE WITH THE ECCLESIAsticall functions it remaineth that wee nowe shewe what and how great the power and authoritie thereof is to be accounted 1 BVt before we come vnto the particuler handling hereof there are two things especially to be considered the one that this whole power is spirituall that is directlie belonging vnto the conscience and therefore that is seuered from the power and authoritie of the Magistrate by the substauntiall forme and proper ende thereof The other that it is not a soueraigne authoritie neither consisting in their will vnto whome it is committed but onelie an Administratorie poweer contained within certaine boundes and lawes prescribed by GOD the onelie Lorde and Lawe-giuer of his Churche vppon whome alone also and not vppon men the force and efficacie therereof dooth depend That whole Lordlie power therefore which both the Bishoppe of Rome and the rest of the false Bishops haue attributed vnto them selues togeather with the temporall Gouernement also which they haue wreasted and which is more intollerable the rule which they haue vsurped ouer the consciences of men is not a power ordained by God but a tyrannie inuented by Sathan and his instruments for the disturbing of mans societie and the ouerthrowe of the true power of the Church 2 This true power of the Church is partlie ordayned against Sathan and the rest of the enemies of our saluation namelie sinne the world and death which are subject vnto him and it dooth partlie belong vnto that order and degree which the Lord hath appointed for the gouernment of his owne house that is his Church here vppon earth 3 The former of these two is common to the whole Churche whereby it commeth to passe that the
abolish the authority of the Eldership doe pretend that men arrogate vnto themselues the authoritie of God and Christ in retaining or remitting sinnes Hence also it followeth that those Ecclesiastical censures are of no force which are exercised by those who were not appointed by God to be judges in that cause and wherein either the lawfull triall of the cause hath not gone before or the sentence hath exceeded those bounds within the which God will haue the authority of the Eldership to be contained much more are their censures of no effect who vnder the false pretence of Gods name do judge contrarie vnto his word 27 This manner of confession either before the Eldership or Presbyterie is so far from procuring any discredite with men vnto the offender that contrariwise it restoreth the sinner who dooth repent vnto that dignity and excellencie amongst Christians whereunto they are promoted who are made the sonnes of God Defended by BARNARD MORLANVS of Bearne PRINCIPLES CONCERNING THE MAGISTRACIE LXXVIII WEE HAVE HITHERTO SPOKEN CONcerning that gouernment which is properlie spirituall and meerelie Ecclesiastick it followeth that wee now deale with that which is directlie Ciuill 1 SEing Ecclesiasticall discipline doth according to the word of God alone take order with offences and that there are manie stubborne and obstinat persons to be found who cannot be drawne vnto the way by anie admonitions or censures of the Church either in regarde of pietie or yet of common quietnes an other remedy was to be prouided whereby this vntamed brutish vnrulines of men might be healed 2 This remedie is in their hands vnto whome a kinde of supreame power hath euer since the beginning of the world bene ascribed and in whose power the soueraigne gouernment hath bene alwaies in making of those lawes wherby the ciuill societie of men should be maintained 3 It is manifest by the common consent of men who haue rightlie judged that good lawes and their maintainers and defenders haue bene the worke of Gods Prouidence that this Ciuill power was not iustituted by men for the hurt of man but ordained by God for the preseruation of mankind in such sort as the Lord doth vouchsafe Magistrats to be called ELOHIM that is Gods 4 Of these formes of gouernments there are reckoned vp three sorts especiallie a Monarchie which is the gouernement of one aboue the rest an Aristocracie where many of the nobilitie best sort haue the gouernment in their hands and a Democratie where the same consisteth in the power of the whole people The Anabaptists therefore are to be detested who despise al gouernmēt speake euil of the superior powers vnder the pretence of a kinde of imaginarie perfection which stādeth not in need of the gouernmēt of any mā Their cauill is also friuolous wherby they goe about to proue that we can haue no vse of the Magistracy becaus we acknowledge Iesus Christ for our Lord and King by whose spirit we are led wheras the inward power which the Lorde exerciseth by the vertue of his Spirite in the consciences of his children doth not onlie exclude that outward dominiō which belongeth vnto the Magistrate as vnto Gods Liuetenaunt but doth establish the same 5 We affirme that the dutie of the Magistrate dooth extend it self vnto both the Tables of Gods law or as the Apostle saieth that it is their dutie to prouide that their subjects may not onlie liue peaceablie but also religiously But in a diuers respect and manner 6 For in respect of the first Table it is vnlawfull for the Magistrates to inuent anie lawes touching Religion but their dutie is to see that the worship of God be vnderstood and practised by their subjects as it is fullie set down in the sacred bookes of both the Testaments which haue bene written by the Apostles Prophetes and Euangelists 7 The Magistrates also are bound if necessitie so require to compel such as are in the Ecclesiastical function vnto the godlie and carefull performance of their dutie they are much more bound to punish blasphemers and such as either broach haeresies make a departure from the Church by schismes or brieflie doe anie wise endeuour to ouerthrow the truth of the Gospell together with those who will not suffer themselues to be called into the right way by the Censures of the Church 8 And if anie controuersie doe arise concerning the truth of doctrine vnto the appeasing wherof an extraordinarie meeting of the Pastors the Doctors of the Church seemeth needfull It is the dutie of the Magistrate to call a Synode to gather the Ministers together thereunto and to see that the whole controuersie bee decided according to the holie Scriptures and being decided that it bee extinguished and vtterlie put out The Pope therefore dooth thrust his sickle vnto other mens corne who doth licentiouslie arrogate vnto himself this power of summoning Councels at his owne pleasure which was in times past justlie exercised by the godlie Emperours and Kings 9 Now touching the second Table the Magistrates are to see that by their just lawes they be the protectours and defenders of publick innocencie modesty and tranquillitie that they maintaine the good from the injuries of the euill men and vphold by their help and power such as are oppressed brieflie that they haue a regard of the cōmon goods of all their subjects 10 This cānot be performed by them except they be endued with power might wherfore they are to be armed with the sword to the end that they suffer not those sins to remaine vnpunished which God and the behoofe of the Common-wealth require to be punished 11 Hence also wee vnderstand that when necessitie so compelleth them and when they cannot otherwise defend the Dominions committed vnto their gouernement they may lawfullie proclaime warre both that they may thereby keepe vnder the seditious practises of the vnbrideled Domesticall disturbers of the common peace and quietnes and deliuer their Dominions from the inuasions or anie other the attempts of their forraine enemies 12 For the vpholding of this burthen they may lawefullie require tributes and subsidies of the people whome they gouerne The annuall reuenues furthermore whereby the Magistrates doe maintaine the honour and magnificence of their daily port and traine beeing thinges in some sort joyned with the dignitie of the Gouernement which they beare are to be paied vnto them 13 It is their dutie also to publish the lawes and edicts which seeme necessarie for the right gouernment of the ciuill pollicie according to the circumstances of time place and persons 14 No vnchāgeable rule of these laws by reason of the varietie of circumstances can be set downe saue onely this one namely that they be leaueled and directed vnto Gods glorie and to the good of the subjects Wee doe therefore condemne those customes lawes and constitutions which decline from this aeternall rule of the honour of God and loue towards our neighbor and do permit either theft stewes or any such
15 Vnbrideled contumacie is almost the most hainous sinne against the Church whether it bee that hee who is called refuseth to appeare or that beeing lawfullie admonished and conuicted he denie to confesse his fault as it deserueth 16 After the lawfull triall of the cause both the whole fact togeather with the circumstances are carefullie to bee considered and also great regarde is to bee had of the sinner himselfe brieflie all things are to bee referred vnto this end namelie that regard be had both to the cōscience of the sinner and also to the aedification of the Church in preuenting offences 17 For the end of these Censures is of two sorts the one that a timelie and a conuenient remedie may bee applied to the sinner who is neither to bee left in his sinne nor swallowed vp with heauinesse The other ende is both that the Church may bee purged from offences and infected by no contagion and also that euerie man may bee instructed and taught by the example of others 18 There is also a difference to bee made betweene those who doe confesse their faultes and those who doe professe their repentaunce least that a fained confession bee rashlie beleeued or that whilst some one is borne with by vntimelie le●itie a sufficient care should not bee had for the publick aedification of the Church as the example shewed by the Lorde himselfe vpon MARIE MOSES sister dooth declare Touching which point a perpetuall rule neither can nor ought to bee set downe by reason of the varietie and diuersitie of the circumstances Wherefore with reuerence of the Fathers bee it spoken wee doe not allowe of the too great seueritie of manie of the auncient Cannons in appointing the space of repentance from the which necessitie compelled them to depart by bringing in their indulgences 19 The sortes of these Ecclesiasticall Censures are Admonition Suspension from the Supper of the Lord which they call the lesser Excommunication publick Excommunication vnto the time that repentance bee testified as it is manifest that the Hebrewes also had a three-folde Excommunication Yet as touching perpetuall ANATHEMA or Excommunication to death the Fathers of the soundest judgement justlie disliked the same 20 We are to abstain from the companie of those that are publicklie excommunicated to the end as the Apostle witnesseth that they may be ashamed yet so as we are to performe towards them all those things which appertain to admonish them of their dutie and to call them to the right way 21 This Excommunication is altogeather a spirituall chastisment and dooth directlie belong vnto the amendement of the conscience Wherefore they are ouerthrowne both by the word of God by the testimonies of the whole Ecclesiastical storie who do attribute the authoritie of the Eldership in binding and loosing vnto the Magistrate though Christian much more they who leaue no place vnto those Ecclesiasticall judgements where there is a Christian Magistrate seeing on the contrarie side they can be no where more practised than vnder his wings whē as his authoritie who is the maintainer and defender of this whole diuine ordinaunce is vsed against the disobedient neither was there anie other course taken in the auncient Church euen vnder the most religious Emperours They doe also greeuouslie erre who as it is vsuall amongst the Papists drawe meere Ciuill causes vnto this Ecclesiasticall Court. For Christ did not onelie distinguish but also most manifestlie seuer the office of the Magistrat from the ecclesiastical functions although he hath commanded all those who execute the Ecclesiasticall functions aswel as al the rest of the subjects to submit them selues vnto the power of the Magistrates in those thinges which are properlie belonging to his office And againe hee will haue Kings and Emperours themselues to be subject vnto the authoritie of the Ecclesiasticall Ministerie and to the commandement of his word Nowe of this diuine order wee do acknowledge that the Magistrats are ordained the maintainers and defenders 22 The contract of Mariage seeing in part it is manifest and properlie diuine namelie in the consideration of the verie bond and couenaunt of the mariage and in part meerelie Ciuill as far as it belongeth vnto the common soeietie of men in that diuers ciuil conditions belonging to the things of this life are adjoyned thervnto wherefore Matrimonial controuersies are in some sort to be referred vnto the determination of the Eldership as shall bee spoken more fullie God willing in the proper place thereof 23 They who haue authoritie to binde the sinner the cause beeing lawfullie tried haue also authoritie to loose and to restore him to the Church when hee hath approoued his repentance 24 This confession that is this profession of repentāce whether it be done before the Eldership or publickly in the congregation of the Church is to go before his absolution and reconciliation with the church in such sort as the neglecting hereof is to be takē for vndoubted contumacie They are therefore deceaued who thinke that those who are bound in the Consistorie of the Eldership are to be left vnto their owne judgement and triall And they offend no lesse who as they haue abolished the Eldership so also haue they cōmanded this confession which is onelie proper vnto those that are tied by the judgement of the Eldership as a law common to al Christians and haue turned it vnto auricular confession which is to bee done eyther vnto the Masse-priest or vnto the Confessor as they commonlie call him 25 Seeing this confession though most acceptable vnto God is not therefore ordained that it should bee a satisfaction for sinne in the presence of God but onelie that the Church may be assured of the repentance and restoring of the sinner it is onelie thus farre necessarie as he who hath not performed the same before his death the fault not beeing his is yet justlie accounted as absolued if he hath repented in his hart Detestable therefore is their opinion who will haue the punishment which they call Satisfactorie the Canons tearmed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to be meritorious satisfactory in the presence of God and vnder that pretence haue for the most part made that purgatorie fire of theirs and brought into the Church their Indulgences which they sell for money being so manie blasphemies against that one oblation of the Sonne of God 26 The Eldership dooth properlie neither binde nor loose for this is the proper right of Christ alone but it doth onelie apply the word of God after the lawfull triall of the cause vnto the sinner either for his retaining or releasing vpon earth and it pronounceth vpon earth in the name of God and of Iesus Christ that either contumacie had bound or repentāce had loosed the conscience of the sinner before the Lord in heauē neither is it to be doubted but that which is thus done vpō earth is ratified in heauen Friuolous therefore is that objection of some who to the end they might