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A15857 H. Zanchius his confession of Christian religion Which novve at length being 70. yeares of age, he caused to bee published in the name of himselfe & his family. Englished in sense agreeable, and in words as answerable to his ovvne latine copie, as in so graue a mans worke is requisite: for the profite of all the vnlearneder sort, of English christians, that desire to know his iudgement in matters of faith.; De religione Christiana, fides. English Zanchi, Girolamo, 1516-1590. 1599 (1599) STC 26120; ESTC S120607 223,465 477

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truely ioyned to him by the holie spirit and so to haue beleeued in god the father in his sonne Iesus Christ and in the holie ghost and to haue bin liuelie members of the holie church and to haue had communion withal the Saints and obtained forgiuenesse of their sinnes which the Lord also teacheth saying He will say to them which shal be on his right hand come yee blessed of my father possesse the kingdome prepared for you before the foundation of the vvorld for I vvas hungrie and yee gaue me to eate c. II. A confirmation of the former opinion and that eternall life is not giuen for our owne works but for Christ in whom we are freely chosen blessed and made the children of god For by these wordes the Lord seemeth to haue declared vnto vs that our good workes are testimonies of our election blessing and adoption in Christ and so of our lawfull inheritance and that the cause whereby we shall obtaine eternall life and possession of the heauenly kingdome is partly because that ere the beginning of the world that is ere we had done any good thing that kingdome was freely prepared for vs in Christ partly because we were blessed of the father namely Eph. 1.3 with all spirituall blessing in Christ and therefore called by grace iustified forgiuen our offences and sanctified lastly because we were in the same Christ adopted the sonnes of God and ●●nued or borne againe by his spirit therefore made coheirs with him of the kingdom which he plainly ment by the worde 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is by the right of inheritance possesse as sonnes VVhereas the Lord therefore shall recken vp the works of pietie he shall do it wee doubt not to this purpose that by them it may appeare to the whole world that wee were the truely blessed chosen iust children of God to whome the inheritance was due Rom. 8.17 the Apostle saying If sonnes then heires also but that wee are the sonnes of God is declared by our regeneration and regeneration by the effectes of regeneration which are called works of faith and pietie III. As the godlie shall haue eternall life so the paines and fire of the wicked shal bee eternall And as wee beleeue that the children of God shal obtaine eternall life so also we confesse that the hypocrites and all the wicked shall bee cast into the fire that neuer shal bee quenched and there bee tormented for euer Christ saying plainely Goe yee into euerlasting fire Mat. 25.42 IV. How happie that eternall life shal be it can neither be said nor thought But what and what manner of life it is and how great felicitie which is ment by the name of the heauenly kingdome wee doe with the Apostle freely confesse 1. Cor. 2.9 that neither eare hath heard nor hath it come into mans heart to conceiue for it is a matter greater and more excellent then can be comprehended in mans vnderstanding of such passing happines that nothing cā be wished more happie We therfore simply beleeue that we which are christs which are guided by his spirite which depend on his word which lastlie doe place but whole hope of saluation in him shall all bee most blessed Mat. 13.43 shall all shine as the sunne in the fight of god we shall all see God euen as he is 1. Cor. 13.12 we shall all liue a heauenlie and diuine life with Christ his Angells and be deliuered from all sinne from all misterie from all ill without any longer griefe without feare without lack or desire of any thing 1. Cor. 15.28 Apo. 22.3.4 because God shal bee all in all and wee shall behold his face And in that citie shal be no more night neither shall there neede any candell or sunne-light because the Lord shall giue vs light and wee shall raigne for euer and euer with Christ Iesus our head spouse Sauiour and our Lord to whome bee praise honor and glorie worlde without ende Amen Obseruations of the same Zanchius vppon his owne confession NOT few nor smale were the the occasions whereby I was induced rather to adioyne these mine obsernations to my confession it selfe then to alter anie thing therein contained Many there bee to whome it is not vnknowne vpon what occasion at what time at whose commaundement in whose names and for what purposes I euen against my will and constrained thereunto wrote this summe of christian doctrine For although there is no man but seeth that this cōfession as was neuer looked for is published in their name for whose sakes it was written yet how this came to passe for what causes it was done all men do not know manie wondring at the deede yet ignorant of the true causes Hereuppon how diuerse suspitions many men might gather how diuerse iudgements might bee giuen of me and of the confession it selfe I say not of priuate men but euen of the whole congregations yea howe diuerse and sinister speaches might be throwne out among the vulgar sort who is it that perceiueth not I was therefore enforced before I dye to stoppe such sinister and false suspitions iudgementes and speaches concerning my doctrine That I thought could bee done by no better meanes then to publish a parte by it selfe both the confession euen as I write it and a part likewise my obseruations vppon the same wherein what so is darke is expounded and what so is doubtfull is confirmed so to leaue the iudgement of the whole matter together to all the true catholicke church I thought moreouer it would bee no little help to take away al suspicions of men if there be any conceiued if such iudgements as learned men haue giuen of my confessions I make knowne to all the godlie readers out of their owne letters especially sith by them it may well appeare vnto euerie man what were the causes why the confession came not forth in the same manner as was appointed One great learned man write vnto me concerning that matter in these words Whereas you write vnto me concerning your confession it hath beene read ouer both by me by N. and others with great pleasure which is written verie learnedly and with an exquisite methode and if you take out that same which you haue added in the ende concerning Arch-bishops and the hierarchie it pleaseth me passing well But whenas together with the brethren N.N. which are with vs we conferred about the way and meanes of an agreement among the churches of our confession to be begonne they all with one consent thought onely this to be the safest and speediest waye that the confessions of faith receiued and set forth by euerie of the churches in each prouince should bee composed and framed into one harmonie that they might bee alike touching the substance of faith all of them and each church embrace thē as their owne This their aduise sith they cōmended to vs by many reasons we haue writtē vnto you
in the same manner that he was to the Apostles namely visibly seeing he saide not I will be but I am neither is there any necessity to alter the sense of those wordes 46 Adde this that if he speake of the same reall presence of his body and that this promise pertained not to the Apostles onely but also to all the faithfull which were then in the world Christ had not spoken a trueth For he was not before his death or after his Resurrection present in a visible presence with all the faithfull which were then in the world and which were gathered together in his name 47 VVherefore the doctrine of the reall and substantiall yet invisible presence of the body of Christ Iesus on the earth and euerie where is not agreeable with the holy scriptures but seemeth to come neere to the Maniches who as Augustine sheweth against Faustus saie that Christs bodie doth invisiblie hang on euerie tree 48 If Christ also satte not at Gods right hand in his bodie before his resurrection and ascension into heauen as the wholle Church confesseth then their doctrine is impious and hereticall which teacheth that Christ Iesus euen from his mothers wombe according to the flesh he tooke hath sitteth at the right hand of Gods power 49 If this also be true which the Apostle teacheth and the whole scripture confirmeth and the Catholike Church confesseth that Christ Iesus not only then sate at his Fathers right hand after he ascended into heauen but also is so placed in the same at Gods right hand as he is neuer read to sitte at such a right hand in any other place then in heauen therefore then it cannot onely not be saide according to the holy scriptures that Christ Iesus sitteth any other where at God the Father his right hand then in heauen but also it is false that he also so sitteth in the earth that he is no lesse present really in substance of his body in the bread of the Lords supper and in euerie place then he is in heauen 50 For the Apostle also in other places and specially in the epistle of S. Paule to the Hebrues denieth that he is vpon the earth namely in a corporall presence for as much as hee sitting at the right hand of the throne of maiestie in heauen executeth his office of priesthood 51 Moreouet wee hold beyond all controuersie that Christ sitting at Gods right hand is a figuratiue speach seing God to speake properly hath neither right hand nor left hand neither is it lawfull to imagine any carnall thing concerning the seates and thrones in heauen wherein they are saide to sitt and often-times in the scriptures this word sitting is vsed besides other significations for dwelling ruling exercising iudgment and for resting 52 But that the Apostle Paule ment not by this phrase that Christ Iesus in his owne bodie is truely and substantially present in all places besides that which hath bin already saide it is also euident by that which for declaration sake he adioyneth 53 For to this sitting of Christ at Gods right hand the Apostle addeth for declaration sake three thinges First that Christ is so placed at Gods right hand that he is aboue all principallitie that is that he hath no creature aboue him or equall to him no not in heauen but is made higher then the heauens and al heauenly things then he addeth that all thinges are made subiect to him that is that there is nothing beneath him ouer which he hath not power and authoritie thirdly that he was giuen to be a head of the church 54 Now as we said that whatsoeuer wee haue before spoken of the resurrection from the dead and so of the ascension ought to bee vnderstood according to the humane nature of Christ so wee thinke with the sound fathers that these thinges also must bee vnderstood especially according to the same humane nature 55 The exaltation of Christs humane nature aboue al things may be vnderstood two waies either in re-pect of the locall placing as this he ascended aboue all the heauens that the meaning may be the humane nature was placed locally aboue all created things or in respect of the excellēt preheminence of the dignitie and power thereof then the meaning may be Christ euen touching his humane nature was set ouer all created thinges and to him was giuen power and authoritie ouer all things For in these two manners any thing of the same kinde is said to bee ouer another eiin place or in dignitie 56 If then this saying be vnderstood the latter waye thereupon the vbiquitie cannot be proued seing Christ in that in his humane nature he may vse his authoritie ouer all creatures although he be not in substance of body euerie where If the former way then he is not euery where seing that which is euerie where is aswell beneath and at and within as aboue all creatures 57 But Paule doeth plainely teach that Christ touching his humane nature did so rise from the dead that hee was no longer among the dead and so ascended into heauen that hee was no longer on earth and so being exalted aboue all creatures sitteth at the fathers right hand that he is nether beneath nor within created things seing all thinges are put vnder his feete 58 Neither can the head bee saide to bee in it owne substance where the feete are although it be in them in vertue and operation and indeed aswell the head to the feete as the feet to the head are ioyned together in their substāce by the sinues and by the soule 59 But the Apostle saieth Christ Iesus is giuen for a head of the church namely according to his humanitie nowe the head is aboue all the bodie 60 The Apostle therefore ment nothing lesse by his wordes of Christs sitting at Gods right hand then to conclude that Christs bodie in it owne substance is present in all places Wherefore they doe great wrong to the Apostle which by their cauills labour to conclude this out of his words 61 Neither can any such Vbiquitie be proued by any necessary consequence out of that article of faith 62 For although it were graunted which cannot bee graunted that by the sitting at Gods right hand the humane nature is made truely by it selfe omnipotent yet vnlesse it bee prooued to bee so made omnipotent that it is also made infinite and immeasurable it can by no meanes bee conuinced that Christs bodie in it owne substance is euerie where present 63 For so is this the onely cause why God also in his owne essence is euerie where that if ye take immeasurablenesse from him he cannot be saide to be euery where in his owne essence 64 And if also yee faine an infinite body and therefore euerie where yet that it is whollie in all places at once you shall neuer prooue while the world stands vnlesse yee can shewe that the same body is also a most simple essence seing God is
theruppon and to the reuerend brethren N. N. and other cōgregations round about vs who haue al of them liked very wel thereof Thus farre out of the letters of that learned man almost to the same purpose could wee bring many things besids out of letters written from other about the same matter but for that it greatly needeth not wee will for breuitie sake omitt the same Therefore to our matter An obseruation vpon the whole confession When we vse the word of condemning we meane nothing els thē that the heresies which haue bin condemned by the catholick church the same also wee condemne and which it allowed not the same also we allow not and this we desire to leaue witnessed to all posteritie Vpon the first chapter aphorisme 4. Whereas we haue giuen the first place next after the canonicall books to the Apocryphi in the volume of the Bible we did it induced by the authoritie of the greek and latine churches who did alwaies giue that honour vnto them that they should be ioyned with the canonicall books See the places in Hierome Cyprian and the councell of Laodicea cyted in the confession the first chapter fift aphorisme Moreouer we spake of books not of any manner of writinges For otherwise wee preferre the generall creeds before the Apocryphi Vpon the second chapter Of God The first aphorisme Though the propertie of existences bee to exist in the essence yet speaking of God we would rather vse another manner of speach that more vsuall for certaine causes as namely to teach against the reproches and skoffes of the Arrians of our time that the diuine essence is not found but onely in the persons and therefore that we do not make an essence aparte by it selfe subsisting from the persons wherein yet three persons should subsist as though the catholicke church should forge foure existences in God The third aphorisme Of this reall communication of the essentiall proprieties of God we haue also written a seuerall treatise in the booke which shal be intituled Of the incarnation of the sonne of God vppon the words to Phil. 2. Who when he was in the forme of God c. Vnto which we referre the reader who so he bee that desireth a further explanation of this doctrine Surely the Lord Iesus when he said No man knoweth the sonne but the father and no man knovveth the father but the sonne and he to whome the sonne will reueale him he plainely excepted his created minde from that essentiall knowledge wherewith the father knoweth that is as the schoolemen speak comprehendeth the sonne and the sonne the father teaching that what knowledge soeuer creatures haue in themselues cōcerning God the same is some waye reuealed vnto them and therefore such knowledge is not the essential infinite knowledge which is in God but a created and a finite or determinate knowledge Vpon the 5. chapter of the worlds creation c. The 2. aphorisme That the heauen of the blessed wherein the Lord Iesus is now in his bodie doth differ frō the earth and from the other heauens and is aboue all those visible heauens besides that which hath bin already said these few proofs do also confirme Eph. 4. Christ is said to haue ascended aboue all heauens in another place he is read to haue ascended into heauen and to bee in heauen and to sitt at the right hande of the father Therefore this heauen is aboue the other heauens and differeth from them So in the third to the Colloss the Apostle distinguisheth the place where Christ is at the right hand of the father from the earth and calleth it vpward saying Seeke yee the things aboue sett your affections on things aboue where Christ is and in the 4. of the first to the Thess he saieth the Lord shall descend from heauen namely into these lower partes and all the godlie shal be caught vp into the ayre to meete Christ in the cloudes That heauen therefore is aloft not on the earth not in the ayre much lesse in euerie place For he shall come downe in the visible shape of his body frō the high heauen into these parts to iudge the quick and the dead Of this heauen wee haue spoken particularly in our bookes Do operibus dei of the workes which he created in the sixe daies Wee therefore disallow of that doctrine which is contrarie which distinguisheth not the heauen from the earth nor this heauen from other heauens but would proue it to be euerie where Vppon the 7. chapter The 11. aphorisme Among other thinges which Iulianus the Pelagian obiected to Augustine proouing defending originall sinne these were some that either he made God an author of sinne or the deuill a creator of man and that because the Pelagians thought that Aughstine made originall sinne the very substance of man Al which obiections he confuted in his 7. Tome against Pelag. the 5. booke and first chapter in these words Neither do we ascribe iniustice to God but rather equitie in that euen infants are punished not vniustly with such and so many euills as we see neither doe we attribute the making of man but the corrupting and depra●ing of mans originall to the deuill neither doe we graunt a substance in the sinne but an act● of it in the first man and a contagion thereof in all his posterity neither do we graunt vnto infants a conscience without knowledge in vvhome is neither conscience nor knowledge but he knewe what he did in vvhome all haue sinned and from whome all haue drawn● corruption c. Vpon the 9. chapter The 5. aphorisme How they can winde themselues out of this errour which denie that the fathers did eate the true flesh of Christ we see not as though because he was not as yet indeede existing in nature therefore he was not existing in the assured promise of Christ consequently could no● be apprehended and eaten by faith For this proposition is generall and to all men at all times belongeth Vnlesse ye eate the flesh of the sonne of man yee haue no life in you For life is not imparted but onely to those which by faith as members to the head are ioyned to the flesh of Christ by the flesh to the spirit or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 To the word which is life Vpon the 10. chapter The 3. aphorisme For God would shew c. That which I said of the first second third and fourth estate had bin more cleare if I had told what man was before he sinned what after hee had sinned what vnder grace and what he shal be in his glorie Vpon the 11. chapter of Christ the redeemer aphorisme 6. That the person of Christ speaking properly is compounded of the diuine nature which is immeasurable and most pure and of the humaine which in respect of the diuine is lesse then a pricke to an infinite masse as of two partes truely and properly so called wee together with the schoolemen do
this signe of the new couenant consecrated vnto Christ in the sight of the congregation sealed for to hold fast the faith in him and to performe obedience to his commaundements and to bee ingrafted into the bodie of his church and receiued into the communion of Saintes and to a perpetuall amendment of life and to a continuance of faith in Iesus Christ to their liues end For the whole church and euery of the faithful are baptized into the death of Christ and buried with him whereof the signe is the very dipping into the water that thereby we may learne that throughout our whole life we must die vnto sinne and liue vnto righteousnesse which is to be truely baptized into the name of Christ who died and was buried for vs. The fourth aphorisme The substance also of the law yea the canonicall law is perpetual and for euer to be holden For Christ came not to destroy the law or the Prophets touching the substance of doctrine And it belongeth to the substance of the law of circumcision that they which are the couenant should be sealed vnto god with the signe of the couenant But now the signe of the couenant is baptisme which succeeded circumcision Coll. 2. Add the place of Peter out of the Acts. 2. ver 38. Repent ye and be baptized euerie one of you in the name of Iesus Christ for remission of sinnes and yee shall receiue the gift of the holte ghost For the promise is made vnto you and to your children to all that are a farre of euen as many as the Lord our God shall call To whomsoeuer therefore the promise of saluation by Christ belongeth to them also belongeth baptisme But Peter teacheth that the promise belongeth to the yong children of the faithfull therefore yong children are to be baptized Aphorisme 6. Whereas wee saide that Paule baptized againe those of whome it is spoken in the 19. of the acts as being not rightly baptized we said it without preiudice to any learned interpretor for we condemne none Onely we desire the reader to conster fauourably of that word rebaptize For we meant not that they which were rightly baptized were afterwards baptized againe but they which were not baptized with true baptisme where the true doctrine of God the father the sonne and the holie ghost went before it they after Paule had taught them the true and sound doctrine of Christ then they tooke true baptisme and after baptisme by the laying on of handes receiued the holy ghost and the gifts thereof this to speake properly was indeed not to be rebaptized but to be truely baptized Now why I thought so and do yet thinke I was induced by the authoritie both of the fathers and especially Ambrose and Hierome so expounding that place and also by a reason drawne from the text it selfe Touching the authoritie first neuer any of the fathers did teach that these words and when they heard it they vvere baptized were the words of Paule spoken of them which heard Iohn Baptist but expoūded them as the words of Luke spoken of them which heard Paule So Chrysostome Tom. 3. in act hom 40. So Occum in act ca. 19. So Augustine Tom. 7. cont Petil. ca. 7. So Gregory Tom. 1. in euang hom 20. So Bede in act ca. 19. So all the rest Moreouer most of them do in plaine tearms write that these twelue disciples were baptized by Paule or at least by Paules commandement as hauing not bin rightly baptized before because they heard not the doctrine of the holie ghost nor were baptized into his name Ambrosius Tom. 2. de spi san ad Theo. imp ca. 3. Lastly they themselues also which said wee haue not so much as heard whether there be an holy ghost were afterwards baptized in the name of the Lord Iesus Christ And this abounded vnto grace because they then by Paules preaching knew the holy ghost neither must it be thought a contrarietie because although afterwardes no mention is made of the holy ghost yet it is beleeued and that which is omitted in wordes is expressed in faith For when it is saide in the name of our Lord Iesus Christ by the vnity of the name is fullfilled the whole misterie neither is the holy ghost separated from the baptisme of Christ because Iohn baptized to repentance Christ in the holy ghost Thus farre Ambrose Hierome Tom. 6. in Ioel. ca. 2. pa. 66. Therefore saith he the sauing health of God cānot bee seene except the holy ghost bee powred downe and who so saith that he beleeueth in Christ and beleeueth not in the holy ghost he hath not the eyes of perfect faith Whereon also in the Actes of the Apostles they which were baptized by Iohns baptisme into him that was to come that is in the name of the Lord Iesus because when Paule asked them they aunswered wee know not whether there be an holy ghost they were baptized againe yea they receiued true baptisme because without the holie ghost and the misterie of the trinitie whatsoeuer is receiued in the name of the one or the other person is vnperfect c. Augustine cont Petil. cap. 7. coll 498. saieth Paule baptized those twelue either because they had not receiued Iohns baptisme but lyed or else if they had receiued it yet they had not receiued Christs baptisme For he thought with Cyprian and Tertullian and other fathers that Iohns baptisme and Christs did differ of which matter more hereafter Of our owne writers also that learned man Wolff Musculus about the place of the Act. 19. thinketh as Ambrose doth in his cōmon place the place of baptisme whose words because he hādleth that place very largely we wil not repeat and before Musculus Bucer both on the third of Matth. and on the fourth of the epist to the Ephes vpon Math. he hath these words To those Ephesians which had beene baptized with Iohns baptisme not knowing what it was because as then they knewe not the holy gnost wherewith Paule had preached that Christ should baptize them wee reade that he said Act. 19. Iohn baptized indeed with the baptisme of repentance saying vnto the people that they should beleeue in him which should come after him that is in Christ Iesus Nowe what do we else or ought we to do in baptizing For ours is also the baptisme of repentance so long as those whome we baptize we also burie into the death of Christ that is we ascribe them into that nūber which throughout all there life must die vnto sinne and liue vnto righteousnesse and yet shall not receiue that neither but by the gift of Christ Therefore of such as be of years of discretion whom we baptize we require their faith in Christ the infants we commit vnto the church to be brought vp to the same faith Therefore Paule would neuer haue rebaptized those Ephesiās if they had beene baptized with Iohns baptisme that is with that baptisme wherewith he vsed to baptize into
Iohn himselfe but by some one of Iohns disciples who expounded not vnto thē the true doctrine concerning God and therefore baptized them not rightlie But all the fathers doe hold beyond all controuersie that they which are not rightly baptized into Iesus Christ as the naturall Sonne of God mediatour and so also into his father and the spirite of them both the same must bee rightlie baptized And therefore those twelue were not as being not baptized rebaptized but as being not rightlie baptized Paule did baptize them with true baptisme first teaching them the true doctrine of the trinitie which also Iohn had preached vnto them And thus much of the authoritie of the fathers from whome either in their assertions or in their expositions of Scriptures especiallie where they all for the most part doe agree I dare not decline for my cōscience sake vnlesse I be cōstrained by most apparant reasons Thus I freelie cōfesse to the whole church of Christ The reason also besids the authoritie of the fathers brought as we saw before euen by the fathers out of the verie text confirmeth me in the same opinion This reason is partly gathered out of those words which these Ephesians being asked by Paule whether they had receiued the holie ghost that is the gifts of the holie ghost aunswered saying that they had not so much as heard whether there bee that is whether that holie ghost bee existent whome Paule would haue to bee the author of those gifts so farre from thē it was that they should haue receiued him and his gifts and partlie it is gathered out of the wordes which Paule vsed concerning the doctrine and baptisme of Iohn saying Iohn verily baptized with the baptisme of repentance saying vnto the people that they should beleeue in him which should come after him that is in Christ Iesus as if he had said you haue not rightlie beleeued in Christ such as he is the sonne of God God seing yee know not his spirite The conclusion followed that therefore they although they were baptised by I knowe not whome into Iohns baptisme yet were not rightlie baptized seing they were not instructed in the doctrin of the person of Christ in whome they ought to beleeue namelie that he was not onelie man and the Messias but also the sonne of God God from whome also from the father proceedeth the holie ghost and consequentlie not in the doctrine of god the father the sonne and the holie ghost in the name of all which baptisme is to be giuen And therefore that they ought to learne the true doctrine concerning the father sonne and holie ghost and resting therein to receiue lawfull baptisme that afterwardes by laying on of hands they might receiue the gifts of this holy spirite which Luke teacheth to bee afterwardes done saying but vvhen they heard it namely those twelue Ephesians what whē they heard euen when they perceiued Paules doctrine concerning true faith in Christ the sonne of God and so in his father and the holie ghost which faith Iohn had also preached and wherein they resting were baptized c. This is the interpretation of the fathers namelie that those twelue were not rightlie instructed in the doctrin of god the father the sonne holie ghost and so neither rightlie baptized and it may be confirmed both by the kindred and cuntrie of those twelue and also by the cause for which Paule letting alone al the rest peculiarly asked them whether they haue receiued the holie ghost since they beleeued By kinde they were Iewes as appeareth by Iohns baptisme vnto which they saide they were baptized and they were baptized by a Iewe. But the Iewes for the most part neuer rightlie held the doctrine of the three persons subsisting in one essence And therefore these 12 Iewes also though they graunted Iesus to bee the true Messias yet they seemed to acknowledge but onely two persons the person of God the father and the person of the Messias euen as the most thought a bare mā but yet such a one as in whome God the father dwelt but that they were altogether ignorāt that the holie ghost was an existing thing the giuer of those graces they are conuinced by their owne words But surely there was some cause why Paule comming into Ephesus where were manie of Christs disciples asked this question of the 12 Iewes onely Surelie it is to bee thought by their aunswer that the Apostle either by their owne talke or by telling of some other of the brethren perceiued that these twelue did not thinke aright concerning the holie ghost Finallie this was the Apostles argument whereby he would prooue by their owne aūswere that they were not baptized with the true baptisme of Iohn Whosoeuer hath bin baptized with the true baptisme of Iohn he hath also heard his doctrine concerning god the father the sonne the holy ghost and hath professed the same and consequently hath knowne also the holy ghost This proposition is not expressed but the proofe of it the Apostle bringeth in the 4. verse saying Iohn baptized c. that is Iohn preached not onely repentance but also faith in Christ namely that he is not onely man the Messias but also the sonne of God God from whome as also from the father proceedeth the holie ghost and that hee shall baptize in the holie ghost and therefore all which desire to bee saued must also beleeue in him as the true Sauiour But you haue not heard this doctrine nor professed it therfore haue not truely beleeued in Christ such as he is For yee your selues say yee haue not so much as heard whether there bee an holie ghost namelie when yee were baptized Therefore c. So consequentlie it remaineth that professing this doctrine and faith yee nowe receiue lawfull baptisme and afterward by the laying on of handes those giftes of the holie ghost This is the declaratiō of the argument according to the exposition of the fathers but Luke as the Prophets and Euāgelists vse to doe cōprehended the whole summe in few words And I praye what absurditie can followe hereō or what iniurie is done to the Apostles narration is the heresie of the Donatiftes Anabaptists maintained nothing lesse For they rebaptize such as are rightlie baptized the Apostle baptizeth them which had not beene rightly baptized as hauing not heard nor professed the true doctrine concerning God he tooke care they should be rightlie baptized And such when they come into the catholicke church we speake of them that bee of yeares of discretion all the fathers teach they must be baptized with true baptisme instructing them first in the doctrine concerning God Christ their Sauiour Touching the text it selfe it is no whitt wrested That their aunswer But wee haue not so much as heard whether there be an holie ghost cā not bee vnderstood of the giftes of the holie ghost it appeareth by Paules demaund following being asked with an admiration Vnto what were yee then
they could not quickly or easily be driuen out againe what should the inhabitāts of that cuntrey do to prouide for the safety of thēselues their childrē First they must flie into the strong defensed citties tarry there vntil by gods help the cuntrey might bee deliuered out of their enemies hāds Next least being besieged they should perish by famine or be cōstrained to yeld thēselues to the enemie they must looke for as plentifull prouisiō of vittailes as may be And because vnlesse the Lord do keep the cittie the watchmā watcheth but in vaine therefore all the people must with earnest prayers call vpō god daily to bee with them keep defend thē Hereunto it is ne●d●ul that al within the citty do obserue cōstantly a brotherly faith loue peace concord among thēselues sith euery kingdome deuided in it selfe as the Lord vsed to say cannot stand euen the heathē do witnes that by cōcord smale matters grovve to encrease by discordgreat things fal to decay Neither is the health of body to be neglected wherin the cittizens must be kept soūd strong as much as may be for the profite defence of the cōmō wealth For the sick deseased especially at such a time cā profite the common state very little nay they are a great burden combrance to it so far ar they frō being able to fight against the enimy Therfore it is very needfull that euery one looke to his health then there is need of a careful diligent watch least the foes by any suddain assault or by some deceite or vndermininges should pearce into the citty set vpon vs vnawares vnprouided hereupō are night watches prouided But how can there be any watching without sobriety For by surfeting dronkenesse heauy sleepe is prouoked so that there can no watch bee kept Therefore least being ouer drowned in wine sleepe we should bee catched by our enimies we had need of sobriety what is more needefull then alwaies to haue weapons in our hands whereby we our selues may both be kept defēded frō the blowes of our enemies and may also be able to repell and put back the enemie therefore ouer and besides our strong walles wel defensed rāpiers the cittizēs thēselues must also be ready in their armour But nothing can happē more pestilent pernicious to the cōmō wealth thē if within their citty especially in time of warre they haue fauourers of the enemie who may indeed giue them a wipe priuily howsoeuer they may pretend friendship with the citizens and professe in words that they cōsent vnto them in al matters such are perfidious traiterous fellowes Therefore there must great care be taken that diligent inquirie bee made who be in the citie what they doe what life they lead wheron they liue and if there be any founde to goe out of course from the common profession life manners of the cittie they may be knowne examined corrected punished or driuen out of the cittie But as there is nothing that can either set a deeper marke of infamie vppon the citizens or make thē deserue to be more seuerelie punished then if being entised by large promises or bribes of the enemies they betraye their cuntrey or being terrified by their threatnings they slipp from their ruler shamefully yeeld themselues so contrarywise there is nothing more honorable more profitable or worthie of greater praise and reward then if keeping sound thy faith to thy prince and cuntrey with the publike profession of the faith thereof thou constantly standest to it euen vnto death and fightest it out to the last man Therefore there is need of constancie in thy faith giuen to thy prince and cuntrey and a publike professio● of that faith euen vnto the death By these defensed cities I meane those churches which were once builded vppon the foundation of the Apostles and Prophets and afterwardes were repaired againe out of the gospel and truely reformed and so do hold the same foundatiōs of the Apostles doctrine firme and fast with the holy scriptures vnderstāding expoūding the same according to the sound interpretations of the auncient fathers These foundations the church was wont to comprehēd in that short forme of doctrin which they cal the catechisme wherein is contained the Apostles creed the Lords praier and the ten cōmandements The creede brieflie sheweth both what we must beleeue and in whome we must place the whole hope of our saluation The Lords praier manifestly directeth vs both who is to be prayed vnto and what is to bee prayed for as also for what causes God is onely to bee called vppon and that we aske all that we aske of him onely namely because his onely is the kingdome the power and the glory by which addition our assured hope is kindled vnto praier The decalogue or ten commandemēts very briefly and plainely prescribeth how wee must behaue our selues to god-ward with what ●●●uice we must worship him in what sort also we must liue with our neighbours how we must die vnto our selues that is to our cōcupiscence in withdrawing frō it euermore all such things as it coueteth against the law of god Vnto these three those chiefe partes of the catechisme is ioyned a fourth part the doctrine of the sacramēts which by a Synecàoche is whollie comprehended in the great creed as they cal it vnder the name of baptisme All these thinges summarily gathered out of the holy scriptures reduced into a briefe compēdiary we doubt not with the whole auncient church to cal the foūdations of al christian religion And because heretikes when they durst not simplie denie these foundations were euer wont to wrest yet do wrest and wring the same for the most part by false interpretations to their owne heresies therefore that the true churches may bee discerned from the conuenticles of heretikes we must vnderstand and expound those principles and chiefe pointes of doctrine in no other sense then as the auncient church agreeably to the scriptures by common consent specially in the best approued counsailes expounded them For what to say something for exāple fake can be more firme certen manifestly spoken for the article in the creede of the person of Christ then those things which we●e determined out of the scriptures in the cou●cel at Nice at Ephesus Constant Chalced. add also the 5. 6. by the godly fathers against Arrius Samosatenus Apollinaris Nestorius Eutiches the Monothelites whosoeuer therefore teacheth concerning Christs person against the determinations of those counsells certainely they doe not rightly hold this principall foundation of christian religion Further concerning the grace benefite of Christ the beginning whereof is his eternall loue towards vs his free election of vs to the participation of redemption euerlastin life but the proceeding of it is the free dispensation of the same redēption once performed vpō the crosse the effectual vocatiō iustification sanctification
diuine prouidence yet we beleeue that the Church of god is gouerned by an especiall care and meanes and all the elect people Rom. 8.13 Phil. 2.13 2. Cor. 6.16 yea and all the willes and actions of the elect sith he calleth peculiarlie iustifieth and sanctifieth but not all sith hee vvorketh in them to vvill and performe Act. 4.16 and saith that he dwelleth in them and not in all sith lastlie he leadeth them vnto eternall life but suffereth others in his iust iudgements to walke in their owne pathes and fall into eternall destruction 1. Pet. 5.7 so that worthilie we be commaunded peculiarlie to cast all our care vppon god because he peculiarlie careth for vs. III. That god ordinarilie gouerneth the vvorld by second causes This also we learne by the holie scriptures though God performeth manie purposes of his diuine prouidence by himselfe without any external helper yea and sometimes quite against ordinarie meanes yet he executeth manie more thinges ordinarilye by second causes Hos 2.21.22 as well in the gouernmēt of the whole world as of the church sith he himselfe saieth he vvill heare the heauens the heauens vvill heare the earth the earth vvill heare the corne the corne vvill heare Israell IV. The meanes vnto the ende are not to bee contemned sith god ordereth as vvell the one as the other by his prouidence Whereuppon we also knowe that although we are assured that god hath a care ouer vs yet the meanes which hee hath ordained for the saluation both of our soules and bodies are not to be contemned nor god to be tempted but herein we must followe the Apostle vvho although he vvere assured of the safetie of all them which were in the shipp yet as the mariners went about to escape awaie he saide to the soldiors and to the captaine vnlesse these abide in the shippe you cannot be saued For God who setteth an ende vnto each thing he also hath ordained both the beginning meanes by which that ende is attained vnto V. All thinges come to passe in respect of god necessarilie in respect of vs manie thinges happen casuallie But sith god by his prouidence doeth preserue second causes which he vseth in gouerning the worlde euerie one in her proper nature yea and is the moouer of them and of them some are ordained of their owne nature to certaine and sure effects other some are indefinite Wee knowe and confesse that although in respect of God Mat. 10.29.30 Ex. 21.13 without whose foreknowledge and wil nothing can happen in the world all things are done necessarilie yet in respect of vs and of the second causes manie things happen come to passe chaūceablie For what can bee more chaunceable and casuall to a carpenter and trauailer then if the axe fall out of his hand kill the other yet the Lord saieth that it is he which killed the trauailer And our Lord Iesus died willinglie yet he said Christ must suffer Luc. 24.46 Herode Pilate of their free-will condemned Iesus yet the Apostles saie Act. 4.28 they did nothing but what the hand and counsaile of God had decreed to be done VI. That god is not the author of sinnes vvhich are committed in the world And hereupon we also know and confesse Act. 17.28 that although manie offences are committed in the world by men god in the meane time guiding all thinges 1. Ioh. 2.16 yet the same cannot bee imputed to god nor to his prouidence for he indeede mooueth all thinges and ministreth strength by his prouidence vnto euerie one to worke but yet he instilleth not that corruption to anie whereby they worke amisse As therefore the earth yeelding her sappe aswell to il trees as to good yet is not to be blamed because an ill tree makes ill fruite so much lesse may god rightlie be said to bee either the cause or the author of our sinnes although by the hand of his prouidence he beareth vpholdeth ordereth and guideth euen the wicked Jn him saieth the Apostle we liue vve are mooued Heb. 1.3 Act. 17.28 and haue our beeing namelie wee are mooued of him such as wee are except he by his grace doe make vs otherwise VII The secret counsailes of God in gouerning the world are to be reuerenced not inquired after Meane while the secrete and vvonderfull counsells of god whereby wee see innumerable things to be done and whereof we cannot giue or know any reason the same we behold adore with that reuerēce which we ought contenting our selues with this assured knowledge Mat. 10.29.30 Rom. 9.14 namely that nothing comes to passe in the worlde without the will of God and that will of god to be so just that it is the most certain rule of all iustice therefore that which the Apostle saith must euer bee holden Rom. 11.33 O the deepenes of the riches both of the wisedome knowledge of god how vnsearcheable are his iudgements and his vvayes past finding out Rom. 9.14 Rom. 11.36 Also that Is there anie iniquitie vvith God And yet Of him and through him and for him are all thinges To him be glorie for ouer Amen VIII Errors Wee condemne therefore all scorners and all those philosophers which either do wholie take awaye the prouidence of god out of the worlde or denie that humaine matters and smale things are regarded of god Those likewise which abusing the prouidence of God doe contemne the meanes ordained of God for the saluation of vs both soule and bodie as also those which woulde haue all thinges to come to passe so meerely necessarily that they take awaye all casualtie and depriue men of all libertie lastlie those which will haue God so to worke all thinges in all men that they also doe blasphemouslie prooue him to bee 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a iointe-worker an author of sinne CHAP. VII Of mans fall and of originall sinne and the fruites thereof I. Adam sinned of his owne accord by disobedience WE beleeue Gen. 1. 2 Eccl. 7.30 Sirac 15.18 that the first man when he was created after the image of God iust and righteous and meerlie free so as he might if he woulde not haue sinned nor haue died any kinde of death The diuell then alluring him and god not letting him but leauing him in the hāds of his owne counsells he transgressed by disobedience Rom. 5.19 Libera voluntate of his owne accord and of his meere free choise so that he nether can nor ought to ascribe the blame of his transgression to his owne nature giuen to him of god nor to god himself nor to any other thing created but to his own selfe alone because it was his owne vvill II. What and what manner of sinne Adams was For vve knovv that Adams sinne was a voluntarie transgression of gods commandemēt that he should not eate of the forbidden fruit as Moses describeth it and so as the Apostle speaketh it
all into euerlasting glorie with Christ Neither doe wee doubt but Christ purposed to foreshew vnto vs the second by the first and the third by the second that by that which was alreadie made we might bee confirmed in the hope of that which was to be made VI. As the first vnion was made that satisfaction might bee made for our sinnes so the second is made that vve might bee partakers of that satisfaction Wee beleeue therefore that letting passe those things which pertaine not to this matter in hand wee may come neerer that the Sonne of God by the euerlasting will of the Father and therefore of himselfe also and of the holy ghost like as he tooke vpon himselfe into vnity of his person our flesh that is mans nature conceiued by vertue of the holy ghost in the wombe of the virgine that he might in himselfe purge vs of our sinnes and in that flesh he most perfectlie fulfilled the lawe of God for vs beeing made obedient vnto his Father euen vnto death and at the length the same flesh being offred vp in sacrifice for our sinnes he obtained in himselfe eternall saluation for vs so also that he might make vs partakers of this saluation by sacrifice of his flesh assumed for vs he was willing accustomed to take vnto him and to knitt and ioyne all his elect vnto him in another kinde of vnion namelie in such a coupling as in it wee may bee vnited with him though not into one person yet into one misticall bodie whereof he is the head and euerie one of vs members and may be made partakers of his diuine nature VII As the first is made by vertue of the holie ghost so is the second As we certainelie knowe that as the Sonne of God our Lord Iesus Christ in the first vnion coupled vnto himselfe our flesh and blood by vertue of his spirite for he was conceiued man of the holie ghost and therefore without sinne for which cause also he is called the man from heauen so also in the secōd vnion he doth communicate his flesh and his blood and his whole selfe vnto vs and in the same communion doth knitt ioyne and incorporate vs into him by the power of the same his spirite that alwaies the bonde where with Christ is coupled with vs and we with Christ might bee the same spirite of Christ which as it did bringe to passe in the wombe of the virgine that the sonne of god should be made flesh of our flesh and bone of our bones so also by working in our hearts and incorporating vs into Christ it bringes to passe that wee likewise by participation of the bodie blood of Christ should be bone of his bone and flesh of his flesh especiallie seeing hee stirreth vp that faith in vs whereby wee acknowledge and embrace him for true God and man and therefore a perfect Sauiour VIII The vnion of vs with Christ is spirituall yet so as it is true and reall So we beleeue that this other vnion also is almost no lesse then the former so spirituall if we may so speake that yet it is true reall Because that by the spirite of Christ wee allthough remaining on the earth yet are truely and reallie coupled with the bodie blood and soule of Christ raigning in heauen so as this misticall bodie consisting of Christ as the head and of the faithfull members sometime is simplie named Christ So great is the coniunction of Christ with the faithfull and of them with Christ that surelie it may seeme not to be said amisse that as the first vnion was made of two natures in one person so this is made of many persons as it were into one nature 2. Pet. 1.4 Eph. 5.30 according to those sayings That ye should be made partakers of the diuine nature And Wee are members of his bodie of his bones and of his flesh IX A confirmation of the former opinion hovve straight this vnion is For like as the soule in a man because it is one and the same and no lesse whole in the head and in each member then it is in all the bodie together it causeth that all the members do vnite and ioyne themselues into one bodye vnder one head euen so by vertue of Christs spirit because it is one and the same in Christ and in euery of the faithfull it causeth that all of vs knitte spiritually together both in soules and bodies into one we are all one and the selfe same body with Christ our head a body I say misticall and spirituall because it is ioyned and compact by a secret band of the same spirite X. This vnion because it is made by vertue of the holie spirit cannot be hindred by anie distance of place Whereupon it followeth that this true and reall vnion though spirituall of our bodies soules with the bodie and soule of christ can be letted by no distance of place though neuer so great because that spirite is so mightie in operatiō as it reacheth from earth to heauen and beyond and ioyneth in one no lesse strictly the members of christ being on earth with their head in heauen sitting at the right hand of the Father then the soule of a man ioyneth together the hands and leggs and other members into one bodie with the head yea though that man were so great that his head did reach vnto the ninth spheare and his feete stand fast in the center of the earth So great is the vertue of the soule thē how great is that of the holie spirit the true and almightie God XI The spirit by whome this vnion is made is giuen of Christ to the preaching of the gospell and administration of the Sacraments Furthermore wee beleeue that his spirite whereby christ both coupleth himselfe vnto vs and vs vnto him ioyneth his flesh with ours and ours with his is communicated of the same christ vnto vs by his meere grace when and where and how he please yet ordinarily at the preaching of the gospell and administration of the Sacramēts Of which thing was a visible testimonie which we read how that they in the primitiue church which imbraced the gospell by faith and were baptised in the name of christ or vpon whomsoeuer the hands were laid besids the inuisible grace receiued also diuerse sensible giftes of the spirite XII This vnion is the especiall ende of the gospell and Sacraments Whereuppon we do easily gather which is the principall end both of preaching the gospell and administring the Sacraments namelye this communion with christ the Sonne of God incarnate who suffered and died for vs but now raigneth in heauē and imparteth saluation and life to his chosen which communion was begonne here but was to be perfected in heauen so that we by this true reall copulatiō of our selues with his flesh blood and his whole person may also be made partakers of eternall saluation which was purchased by him and stil remaineth and
indeed such a magistrate is not in that behalfe the minister of God Wherefore if we must be subiect and obey the magistrate for conscience sake not for feare onely Rom. 13.5 then we conclude that where we cannot for conscience obeye him neither ought wee there for feare to obeye him In other matters Rom. 13.2 whoso resisteth the power we knovve that he resisteth God and shall receiue to himselfe damnation III. We must praye for all magistrats that vvhat there dueties are they may indeede performe and what the duetie of euerie magistrate is But seing the duty of euery free magistrate is to haue a diligēt care both in making lawes in giuing iudgement and also in punishing offences that their subiectes maye liue vertuouslie and after Gods lawes the summe wherof is that we should liue in this world Tit. 2.12 soberly therfore chastly and honestly and rightly therefore peaceably with our neighbours and godlilie towardes God and that no princes can performe this of themselues vnlesse God indue them with a knowledge of their duetie stirre them vp both to will and to performe therefore that which we do according to the Apostles precept Phil. 2.13 1. Tim. 2.2 the same wee teach others that they should also do namely that they must pray for all magistrats of what sorte soeuer that they maye both bee willing and able to performe that which is their duetie so may bring to passe that we may lead a quiet peaceable life in all honestie and godlinesse that is that wee may liue all friendly and in peace on with another that a publike honestie may be obserued and true pietie and religion preserued and encreased IV. It belongeth principally to a christian prince to take vppon him the care of christian religion And if he bee a christian and godlie magistrate wee beleeue that it chieflie belonges vnto him that besides the regard of the publike and politick good and profite of the publike and politick peace and honestie he should also take the peculiar care of christian religion sith the Lord hath made him the keeper of both the tables Ios 1.8 Deu. 13.2 c. and commaundeth him that as a prince he alwaies keep the law of God in his hands that he may punish aswell idolaters and blasphemors false Prophets and seducers as murtherers and adulterers and the same is aboundantly confirmed by examples of godlie kings in Israell and christian princes Constantine Valentinian Theodosius Iustinian others who not onely as priuate men but also as kings serued the Lord according to his commaundement euen as concerning their duetie and office Tō 2. ep 50. Saint Augustine most learnedly noted out of the second Psalme and declared it to Boniface V. The office of a godly prince concerning religion is two fold and wherein it chieflie consisteth Now sith the duetie of a godly prince that is a magistrate which hath a free power ouer any people and authoritie within his iurisdiction to institute and reforme religion is twofold which hee oweth to Christ and to the church in the cause of religion one about such things as belong vnto religion the other respecteth men which are in his iurisdiction and subiect vnto him for the first our beleefe is that he should diligently take heede that by the pure word of God rightly vnderstood and expounded by the verie word it selfe and according to the principles of faith that which they call the analogie or rule of faith religion may be instituted in his dominion or kingdome or where it is instituted may bee kept found and pure or where it is corrupted may be restored and reformed to the glory of God and saluation of his subiects For this we read hath beene commaunded of God and of Moyses and euer obserued of all godlie princes VI. A declaration of the former opinion by the parts We beleeue therefore the duetie of a godlie magistrate is first to knowe out of Gods word generally and according to the summe of the pointes of faith which is the true and christian religion and which is the apostolicall doctrine whereunto the church is to bee reformed that he may do or dare to do nothing onely by the iudgement of others but also vpon his owne sure knowledge Then this being thus knowne to haue a care that ministers which are meet men for the office not by his owne choise but according to the rule of Gods word may be chosen called and ordained Thirdlie to bring to passe that by them both the doctrine of saluation deliuered in the holie scriptures may be set forth expoūded and often beat vppon and also the sacraments according to Christs institution administred yea and the discipline ordained of Christ exercised Fourthly to haue a regard to this that schooles may be erected wherein aswell good artes and tongues may bee diligently taught as also the holie scriptures faithfully expounded and the studious may learne the summe of christiā wisedome Fiftly wherby ministers and teachers may be held in their duety and so true religion by them preserued in the church to do their best that priuate cōsultations yea and also prouinciall Synodes as is saide before may at least twise in the yeare be called Sixtly to carrie a speciall care to the goods of the church that they maye bee bestowed on the right that is on the true godly vses and that all necessarie things bee supplied to the church and to the ministers thereof VII A godly prince ought not to deale with all men of a diuerse religion after one manner But seing to say something brieflie of the other duetie of a prince concerning religion there be diuerse kinds of men which a prince may haue vnder his gouernement namely either meere infidells or such as indeede professe Christ but yet are also open idolaters or in manie things apostataes from the apostolicall church or in some article of the faith manifest heritikes or else erre vppon simplicitie or such as are rightly persuaded in all matters we doe certainly hold that a prince ought not to vse one kinde of measure towards all these sortes for some of them are to be loued cherished and honored some to bee winked at some not to be suffred other some to be quite cut off and none must bee permitted to blaspheme Christ or to worshipp idolls or retaine vngodlie ceremonies VIII All men must be subiect to the higher powers and all the higher powers must be subiect to Christ himselfe and to his word Lastlie we beleeue that euery soule that is Rom. 13.1 euerie man none except and therefore also euerie inferior power must bee subiect to the higher and greater power yea and that superior power also no lesse then the inferior and all other men must bee subiect to Christ the king of kings and Lord of all Lords Apo 17.14 1. Tim. 6.15 For it is Gods will that they should al kisse the Sonne and bowe their neckes vnder the yoake
to be omnipotent namely in as much as it is so vnited to the vvorde that both those things which are proper to the vvord may also be said of it yet in the concrete and the vvorde did vse and might vse his soule and his body as proper instruments yet the proprieties and actions of each of them remaining distinct to performe many of the workes of his omnipotencie Of gods prouidence yeare 1576. 1 WE beleeue and teach out of Gods worde that the prouidence which the grecians call a Rom. 13.14 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and also b Luc. 22 Act. 4.28 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is in God by which prouidence al thinges are c Ps 139.4 foreknowne d Ps 119.91 preordained and e Don. 4.3 gouerned 2 This prouidence of God is that a Iob. 9 4 12 13 Ier. 51.15 most wise b Deut. 32 Psal 145 1● Sap. 12 15 most iust vnchaūgeable counsaile d Dan. 4.32 wherein hee e Pro. 8 22 Eph. 1 9 decreed in himselfe from all beginnings of all thinges aswell in heauen as earth both that they should be f Thess 2 39 made and that they should be made in such order and fashion as they are made and to the g Rs 1.19 92 patterne whereof he also h Lev. 26 4 Psal 104.4 Hos 2 21 Eph. 4 11 ordereth and gouerneth continually all things i Gen. 1 in time k Deut. 8 3 Psal 72 18 Ier. 32 20. 1. Reg. 17 4 sometime by certaine and ordinarie meanes l Psal 115 3 Rom. 9.10 sometime without them but euermore m Psal 138 8 Dan. 4 32 Ioh. 5.17 mightilie and that both for the n Gen. 50 20 Rom. 8 28 Cor. 3 21 o Psal 19.1 1. Chron. 29 11 12 Rom. 9 17. saluation of his chosen and especially for the aduauncement of his owne glorie 3 For besides that it is manifest that God is a Ier. 32 17 Luc. 1 37 omnipotent wise and exceeding b 1. Cro. 16 34 Mat. 19.17 good whereby it cannot be that he should suffer this huge large world c Gen. 1.1 Heb. 11 3 created by himselfe and wherein Christs d Ioh. 16.33 church remaineth to rowle after the rash hazard of fortune and chaunce e Psal 33 147 Iob. 5. ibi 9 ibi 37.38 c. Sap 14 3 Col. 1 16 Heb. 3 Ios 42.5 Also the holie Scriptures themselues in apparent words do teach that this world is gouerned by Gods prouidence 4 Neither doe we make onely a a Neh. 9 35. Act. 17 28 Heb. 1. general prouidence in God whereby he ruleth the whole frame of the world but also we acknowledge and hold that peculiar prouidence wherein hee worketh and guideth b Iob. 37 ●8 euerie thing seuerally and especially c ●sa 104 ●47 men and of men chieflie d ●at 6 26 ● 29 his elect withall their actions 5 For we know that nothing is done or mooued in the world without the will of the a ●●h 4 6 7 Psal 8 5 ●●r 10 23 Ies 43 1 Psal 139 Psal 91 Zach. 2 8 Mat. 6 10 father so that nothing can be more absurd then to say there may something bee done in the world which God had not before ordained and which hee gouerneth not with his owne hand 6 Neither yet doe wee thereby simplie denie but that many thinges fall out a Mat. 10 29 Luc. 12 6 casually by chaunce b Pro. 16 4 Dan. 4 32 a Exo. 21.13 Pro. 16 33 seing this being rightly vnderstood doth not impugne the eternall and infallible prouidence of God 7 For God by his vnchaungeable prouidence decreed not onely that such things should be done as are done but he also ordained from the beginning that all thinges should come to passe in that verie manner as they doe come to passe 8 But in that wee saye nothing is done in the world without the will of the father wee doe not thereby enwrapp God himselfe the most wise and iust director of all actions into sinne or make him author of sinne 9 For sinne is a ●●h 3.4 a transgression of the law and a declining from the straight line of the diuine law But God can neither b Nu. 23.19 Tit. 1.2 Heb. 6.18 1. Ioh. 1 5 decline from the straightnesse of his will neither c Ia. 1 13 Ose 13.9 doth hee instill into others the fault of declining d Psal 5 6 nay God is a hater and a e Deu. 32 41 Ios 59 17 Nah. 1 2 most iust reuenger of sinne 10 Wherefore seing it belongeth to the prouidence of God that sinnes should be punished of God the iust iudge by the doctrine of prouidence it is rather prooued that God is to be feared and sinnes to be auoyded then that thereby any blame can be transferred vpon God or our wickednesses excused 11 But whereas besides this which wee nowe spake of there bee many other profitable vses of this doctrine of Gods prouidence yet these two are principally to bee noted namely that this doctrine is a meanes that the godlie in all their afflictions do flie vnto God a 2. Cro. 14 11.20.6.12 Psal 46.1 Mat. 10.28 27 23 35. 1. Pet. 5 6 7. Iam. 4.11 who gouerneth all things and doe rest themselues in his bosome and they referre all glorie to him alone in prosperitie and are euermore humbled vnder his mighty hand by which he worketh all things Of eternall election and predestination and of redemption made by Christ Out of the first chapter of Paule to the Ephesians yeare 1579. 1 NO blessing since the worlds creation hath befallen or can befall vs ver 3. 4 to which we were not elected and predestinated before the foundation of the world neither is the same bestowed on vs by any other nor by any means else then by whome and after what sorte God in his euerlasting decree had appointed as the Apostle saieth Wee are blessed in Christ Jesus vvith all spirituall blessing euen as he hath chosen vs from the foundation of the vvorld 2 As in Iesus Christ alone wee obtaine all spirituall blessing so also in him alone wee were chosen and predestinated to obtaine it sith the Apostle teacheth both namely that vve are blessed in Christs and vvere all chosen in him ver 3. 4 3 VVhosoeuer wee bee that haue beene elected ver 4 we were elected not onely to the ende that is eternall life but also to the meanes ordained for the ende For S. Paule saieth God hath chosen vs that vvee should bee holy and vnblamable 4 In that God hath chosen vs ver 3 4 5 hee it did of his loue towards vs and according to the good pleasure of his will and therefore our whole election is of free gift 5 The ende of our free election is two-fold ver 5. 6 our saluation and the glorie of
can be found more excellent then Christs body both for the vnion with the word and for the wonderfull gifts created in the same and so also for the most perfect glorie and happines wherein he nowe liveth It must needes be that this bodie must exist in some certaine most happie place 31 Neither can it proceede but onely from trupiety and from our true reverence towardes Christ that we should beleeue that his body doth dwell not vnder the earth not in the earth not in the waters not in a peece of bread not in every leafe of a tree not in the ayre or in the celestiall speres but in a place as the most happie faire perfect so the highest of al others which we with Ambrose think the Apostle spake of when he said that he was caught vp 2. Cor. 12.2 4. into the third heaven and into paradise 32 To this the same scripture also teacheth the Catholike faith beleeueth and confesseth that the same Iesus Christ shall come out of that heauen in the cloudes Phil. 3.20 1. Thes 4.16 1. Thes 4.17 to iudge the quicke and the dead and that we beeing raised from the dead shall be caught vp into the aire to meete him in the cloudes and so shall be with him in that heauen for euer 33 And this heauen Ioh. 14.2 which is called the Fathers house and the heauenly citty and by many other names The scripture prooueth to be placed aboue all the visible and mooveable heauēs saying that Christ is ascended aboue all heauens Eph. 4.16 and that he is in heauen 34 For this heauen wherein he is in his body and wherein we shall be in our bodies and soules cannot be some vast and I knowe not what vncreated roome partly because nothing is vncreated but God partly because it is plainely to the Hebr. Heb. 11.10 said to be Gods workmāship 35 Moreover the chiefe and principall efficient cause of that moouing wherein his bodie was carried vp into heauen was the divine nature remaining in him according to that to the Phil. 2. God hath exalted him And he was taken vp of God into glory But a secondary efficient cause was the gift of agility which followed his glorious resurrection bestowed on the humane nature by the diety by which agility that flesh ascended vp not held and sustained by angels or by the cloudes as once Elias was in the fierie chariot but of it owne accord and without trouble or difficultie and therefore that motion was not a violent motion 36 Now this ascention of Christ our head was the cause and the example of our ascension which shal be into heaven For sith the head is ascended it must needes be that the members shall ascend and as his ascension was so ours shall bee For he shall chaunge our vile bodies to be like to his glorious body and we shall be caught vp into the cloudes to meete Christ in the ayre and so we shall be with the Lord for euer 37 If then ours shall be a true ascention and that we shall truely be lifted from the earth into heauen Therefore Christs body also did truely ascend from earth into heauen not imaginarily or putatively 38 And this doctrine of Christs true ascention into that highest heauen and his perpetuall abiding there is most profitable and full of cōsolation 39 For first it serueth to strengthen our faith about the certaine place where with the eyes and hands of our faith we may behold touch and take hold of the body of Christ Then to establish our hope namely that it shall be that before the resurrection of our bodies our soules beeing separated from our bodies they shall neither discend beneath the earth nor shall flote in the waters or the aire nor roule about with the spheres but shall be carried aboue all these heauens to that blessed and heauenly house of the Father into which Christ in his body is already entred that they may be euer with Christ Lastly to kindle in our hearts the loue and desire of a heauenly life and conversation as the Apostle saith If ye be risen vvith Christ seeke those things which are aboue set your affections on thinges vvhich are aboue vvhere Christ sitteth at the right hand of God 40 Of Christs sitting at the right hand of the father thus speaketh the Apostle And hath set him Christ raised from the dead and carried vp into heauen in the heauenly places farre aboue all principallities and power and might domination and euerie name that is named not onely in this vvorld but also in that which is to come and hath made all thinges subiect vnder his feete c. YVhatsoeuer is read otherwise in the holy scripture or confessed by the church in the Creedes concerning this sitting is agreeable vnto this 41 But we cā no where read that for this sitting at Gods right hand either Christ Iesus tooke any other body call it howesoeuer or that in his naturall body there was any chaūge made of the substance of it or of any of those naturall qualities and essentiall proprieties which it retained after his resurrection It is therefore manifest that in what body Christ rose and ascended into heauen namely a visible palpable and circumscribed body in the same he also sitteth at the Fathers right hand in the highest heauens and wheresoeuer he is or pleaseth to be he keepeth still to himselfe such a body 42 The Apostle also witnesseth and the church confesseth in the Creedes that Christ first died was buried raised from the dead and taken vp into heauen before he fare at the Fathers right hand Therefore either it is false that Christs humaine nature thē first receiued a gift for substance of his body to be really euery where or if it be true then it receiued it not by the hypostaticall vnion which was made in his very incarnation 43 Neither is this exception any thing that by the hypostaticall vnion this was giuen him in the first act as that if he would he might be present every where but by the sitting at Gods right hand it was giuen him in the second act that is that he was indeed present every where 44 For besides that the tearmes of this distinction are tearmes not taken from the fountaines of Israel but out of the puddles of sophisters Christ himselfe also refelleth this exception when speaking not of the first act but of the second that is of his actuall presence he said both a little before his death Where two or three shall be gathered together in my name there am I in the middest of them and after his resurrection bofore his ascension he said Beholde I am vvith you even to the ende of the world 45 By those sayings it evidently appeareth that either Christ spake not of the reall presēce of his body but onely of the presence of his diety and power of his spirit or that he is present to vs
therefore wholly euery where nor according to his partes but because he is the most simple essence 65 VVherefore whatsoeuer the Vbiquitaries do prate and bable arguing either from the Hypostaticall vnion or the right hand of God or the words of the supper or the diuers kinds of being or from the saying all power is giuen vnto me and such like speaches they euermore in this disputation inferr one fallation to speake of none els at this time which is called non causa pro causa except by those argumēts they could prooue the substance of Christs body to bee made immealurable and infinite also most simple such as is the essence of God 66 Yet do we not for al this denie but the body of Iesus Christ though it remaine in heauen yet it is truely present vnto vs not onely in his operation but in substance also 67 But how or in what manner of presence surely a true presence but so as he is really present in vs by his spirite in vs and by our faith and if we may vse similituds as the head is truly and really present to all the members yea to the feete 68 But howe are these present one to another not in neerenesse of place for so the head of a Pigmey were more present to his feete then the head of a giant but by vertue of one soule and the ioincttures of sinues and ligaments 69 Seing then according to the scriptures our bodies and Christs body are truely knitt together by the same spirit so that we are one and the same body vnder one and the same head which God hath giuen to the church namelie Christ no mā can denie this true presence without great blasphemie 70 But for the sitting at the right hand we beleeue that the Apostle ment to signifie by this phrase how Christ according to his humanity after many and most greeuous labours rubbed through vpon earth and many troubles indured for our redemption sake now gloriouslie resteth in heauen so being dearly beloued of his father liueth in exceeding happines and appeareth in Gods sight in our behalfe that his intercession and propitiatiō is most acceptable to his father and that he raigneth with his father and by him is appointed to bee the iudge which shall at length come to iudge the quicke and the dead and is placed in the celestiall throne 71 For to sitt as Tertullian teacheth is proper to one that resteth and as Augustine teacheth to one that dvvelleth raigneth and doth the office of a iudge neither are any saide to sitt at the right hand but such as are dearly beloued and neere friends 72 Augustine indeede thus interpreteth this place of the creede to the Catechumeni He ascended into heauen beleeue it Lib. 1. ca. 4 hee sitteth at Gods right hand beleeue it To sitt vnderstand to dwell as wee saye of any man Ibid. in such a cuntrey he hath sitt three yeares so therfore beleeue yee that Christ dwelleth on the right hand of God there he is Let not your heart aske ye this question what doth he doe not seeke for that which it is not lawfull to finde there he is it sufficeth vs he is blessed and of this blessednes which is called the fathers right hand the name of this blessednes it selfe is called his fathers right hand For if we take it carnally then because he is at the right hand the father should be at the left hand and is there any reason thou shouldest so set them the sonne at the right hand and the father at the left There all is the right hand seing there is nothing but blessednes Also this sitting of his beloued Lib. 2. ca. 4 ye must not take it to be ment of the humane partes as if the father satt on the left hand and the sonne satt at the right hand but by the right hand vnderstand that power which that man being entertained of God receiued namely that he might afterwardes come to iudge which before came to be iudged Also Lib. 3. ca. 7 who is he that sitteth at Gods right hand the man Christ For in that he is God he was euer with the father and of the father when he came forth vnto vs he departed not from the father for to be God is to be wholly euery where Therefore the sonne is wholly with the father whole in heauen whole on earth whole in the virgins wombe whole on the crosse whole in hell whole in paradise whether he brought the theefe Not at diuers times or diuers places do we say he is whole euery where as nowe whole in one place and another time whole in another place but he is whole alwayes and in all places Also Ibidem But by this that the sonne is said to sitt at the fathers right hand it is shewed that the man whome Christ tooke vpon him hath receiued the power of a iudge Also Lib. 4. ca. 7 The man which Christ tooke on him now raigneth sitting at the fathers right hand Also Ibidem But in that he is God and equall to the father and alwaies iudgeth he is euer present but he shall come a redeemer in that forme wherein he ascended 73 So farre from it therefore is it that by the fltting at Gods right hand the Apostle ment to signifie that Christ in the substance of his body is on earth and euery where that he rather seemeth to teach them quite contrary seing that in heauen onely and not on this earth mēs blessednes consisteth and God is said to dwel in heauen not on earth and rather that he raigneth in heauen then on earth and it is said and beleeued that Christ shal come not from earth but from heauen to iudge both the quick and the dead 74 Add this that as gods feet by a certen humane affectiō or property at not said to be in heauē but on earth according to that saying Act. 7.49 heauē is my seat and earth my footestoole so also wee may with good reason say that his right hand hath place in heauen rather then on earth 75 We therefore conclude that as by the Apostles doctrine of the resurrection frō the dead and the ascension into heauen the Vbiquitie of Christ cannot be proued but is rather confuted so neither by the doctrine which is of his sitting at gods right hand can the same be necessarily inferred 76 Nay if such an Vbiquitie bee admitted we doe not onely shake but euen quite ouerthrowe all these articles of faith of his incarnation in the wombe onely of the virgine of his true death that is the true separation of his soule and bodie of his true resurrection of his flesh of his true and visible ascension from the earth into heauen of his true sitting at Gods right hand in the heauenlie places lastlie of his visible returne from that place to iudge both the quicke and the dead 77 For a bodie that is euerie where
chaunge nor confusion among themselues or among there proprieties so also the actiōs are so the actions of one and the same person that yet they are truely distinguished betwixt themselues and so distinguished that those which proceed from the one nature and are proper thereunto they although they be done with the communion of the other yet it is not lawfull to say that they be done by the other or that Christ doth them according to the other nature 13 Where fore like as wee allowe the fathers when they saye that Christs actions in redeeming sauing vs were are done by god man so also we greatly commend that famous saying of Leo the bishop of Rome in his epistle to Flauianus we teach that it is with a stedfast faith to be holden namely Each forme vvorketh with communion of the other that which is proper to it selfe as the word working that vvhich is proper to the word and the flesh performing that which is proper to the flesh 14 For he suffred for vs died and was buried according to the flesh but he gaue the grace of deseruing and redeeming to his suffring by which he redeemed vs according to his deitie but all these he willed according to both the natures 15 Also he rose from the dead ver 20.21 and ascended in a visible and locall ascension into heauen exalted aboue all Angels according to his humanity yet he wrought the same resurrection ascension and exaltation according to his diuinity but he willed it according to the will of both the natures 16 Like as then we beleeue that Christ redeemed vs according to both the natures according to that God purchased his Church by his owne blood so also we doubt not but the same Christ sitteth at his Fathers right hand and resteth in the heauenly places gouerning all thinges with his Father and dispenseth and communicateth the grace of redemption and euerlasting salvatiō to the wholle church which is his bodie and to euerie member according to both his natures the word working that which is proper to the word the flesh that which belongeth to the flesh 17 For although he vseth the ministerie of the word and sacraments by men to the imparting of salvation vnto vs yet the same Christ both as he is God and as he is man is properly the very same which calleth vs giueth vnto vs faith and repentance and he iustifieth regenerateth quickeneth and bringeth into eternall life all that beleeue by the working of the power of his might 18 For this cause also our faith whereby we take holde of saluation in Christ and eternall life must not respect and rely vpon either the one or the other nature of Christ severally but on whole Christ himselfe as the Ephesians were said to haue faith in the Lord Iesus 19 Whereon it followeth that who so do deny either the one or the other nature in Christ or deuide the one from the other or confoūd thē both together so that they acknowledge him not for true God and true man in all things sinne excepted like vnto vs and imbrace him not for such and therefore for a true and perfect redeemer they can neuer be made partakers of redemption and eternal saluation 20 For as he that beleeueth in Christ such as he is hath life eternall so he that beleeueth not cannot haue it Of those thinges which are spoken of our Lord Iesus Christ after the vnion and in what sort they are spoken Out of the 1. to the Ephesians Positions Anno 1582. 1 THe Apostle writeth that Christ was raised from the dead and therefore he truely di●●●●●d in another place The Lord of glory was 〈◊〉 yea we often read howe the sonne of man was deliuered vnto death But in all these enunciations the speach is ever of the same person namely the sonne of God incarnate Therfore the person of Christ which is in these propositions the subiect or that whereof another thing is spoken is vsed to be signified by 3. kindes of names namely by those which betoken the divine nature onely and that sometime in respect of the essence sometime in respect of the hypostasie or persons as The lord of glory the onely begotten sonne of God or which betoken in like sort the humaine nature onely as Man the sonne of Mary or which betokē both natures togither as Christ Immanuell god incarnate 2 We adde herevnto that Christs verie persō is signified by those names also which are taken from the offices of a mediatour as these Amediatour a Redeemer a Saviour a high priest an Advocate and such like But these may be referred to the third kind because by them are shewed and made known both the natures in one person 3 The concrete names which haue denomination of the natures as Man of the humanity and God of the diety when in speaking of Christ they be the subiects or the first part of the enunciation or sentence they haue two significations one formall as the schooles say and the other materiall of which by the former is meant the verie nature by the other the person which hath such a nature whereof it taketh denomination 4 For as names in the abstract do signifie only the nature and propriety which is in a thing so all names in the concreat doe betokē both the nature and qualitie which is in the thing and the hypostasis wherein it is as for examples sake the name of Iust betokeneth both Iustice wher with one is made iust him which is Iust both together 5 Therefore by these Subiect names which hauing their denominations from the natures do shewe the person of Christ sometimes is declared the propriety of the natures sometime the vnity of the person and therefore the Subiects must be vnderstood and expounded according to the diversities of the Praedicates that is of those things which are spoken thereof 6 In this proposition the sonne of God is eternall the subiect namely the sonne of God must be expounded according to the proprietie of the nature But in this the onely begotten sonne of God suffered the subiect the onely begotten sonne of God must be vnderstood according to the vnity of the person For he suffered which was not onely man but also God yet the dietie remaining vnpassible 7 We denie not but manie times are found wordes in the abstract which are the Subiects as the light came into the world as also some which are Predicats as Christ is the light of the world our righteousnesse our peace but these st●̄d in steade of concretiues as the light came into the world that is he which lighteneth vs. Wherefore for the manner of such like words they are to be referred to some of the foresaid three kindes 8 Furthermore there are three kindes of attributes which vse to be spoken of the same person of Christ God and man by what name soeuer it be signified For some are propper to the divine nature and