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A46991 A collection of the works of that holy man and profound divine, Thomas Iackson ... containing his comments upon the Apostles Creed, &c. : with the life of the author and an index annexed.; Selections. 1653 Jackson, Thomas, 1579-1640.; Oley, Barnabas, 1602-1686.; Vaughan, Edmund. 1653 (1653) Wing J88; Wing J91; ESTC R10327 823,194 586

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you cannot that God can and what if he should expresly grant such authority as the Pope now challengeth would your arguments conclude him to be Antichrist or the Doctrine we teach to be blasphemous On the contrary seeing our Saviour Christ did never either practise or challenge seeing neither Moses nor the Prophets did ever so much as once intimate such absolute power should be acknowledged in that great Prophet of whom they wrote we suppose the imagination of the like in whomsoever cannot be without real blasphemie Yet suppose Christs infallibilitie and the Popes were in respect of the Church Militant the same The Popes authority would be greater or were their authority but equall his priviledges with God would be much more magnificent then Christs That which most condemned the Jews of infidelity in not acknowledging Christ as sent with power full and absolute from God his Father were his mighty signes and wonders his admirable skill in Gods Word already established but chiefly his sacred life and conversation as it were exhibiting unto the World a visible patern or conspicuous modell of that incomprehensible goodnesse which is infallible Now if we compare Christ his power fulnesse in words and w●… with the Popes imperfections in both or his divine vertues with the others 〈◊〉 strous vi●es to equalize their infallibilities were to imagine God to be like man and Christ at the best but as his faithfull servant the Pope his ●in●on his Darling or Son of his age For such is our partiality to our own flesh that oft-times though the Wise man advise to the contrary a lewd and naughty son in that he is a son hath greater grace and priviledges then the most faithfull servant in the Fathers house So would the Jesuites make God dote upon the Pope whose authority be his life never so ungracious if they should deny to be lesse then Christs in respect of us their practises enjoyned ex Cathedra would confute them For much sooner shall any Christian though otherwise of life unspotted be cut off from the Congregation of the faithfull for denying the Popes authority or distrusting his decrees then the Jews that saw Christs miracles for contradicting him in the dayes of his flesh or oppugning his Apostles after his glorification Nor boots it ought to say They make the Popes authority lesse then Christs in respect they derive it from his rather because they evidently make it greater then Christs was it cannot be truly thence derived or if it could this onely proves it to be lesse then the other whilest onely compared with it not whilest we consider Both in respect of us for Christs authority as the Son of Man in respect of us is equall to his Fathers whence it is derived For the Father judgeth no man but hath ommitted all judgement unto the Son 2 But wherein do they make the Popes authority greater then Christs First in not exempting it from trial by Christs and his Apostles doctrine neither of which were to be admitted without all examination of their truth for as you heard before Gods Word was first uttered in their audience established by evident signes and wonders in their sight and presence of whom Belief and Obedience unto particulars was exacted And it is a rule most evident and unquestionable that Gods Word once confirmed and sealed by Experience was the onely rule whereby all other spirits and doctrines were to be examined that not Prophetical visions were to be admitted into the Canon of Faith but upon their apparent consonancie with the Word already written The first Prophets were to be tried by Moses the latter by Moses and their Predecessors Christs and his Apostles by Moses and all the Prophets for unto him did all the Prophets ●… The manifest experiments of his life and doctrine so fully consonant to their predictions did much confirm even his Disciples Belief unto the former Canon of whose truth they never conceived positive doubt 3 Again there had been no Prophet no signes no wonders for a long time in Iudah before our Saviours birth yet he never made that use either of his miracles or more then Prophetical spirit which the Papists make of their imaginary publick spirit he never used this or like argument to make the people relie upon him How know ye the Scriptures are Gods Word How know ye that God spake with Moses in the wildernesse or with your Fathers in Mount Sinai Moses your Fathers and the Prophets are dead and their writings cannot speak Your present Teachers the Scribes and Pharisees do no wonders Must you not then believe him whom daily you may behold doing such mighty works as Moses is said to have done that Moses as your fathers have told you was sent from God that Gods Word is contained in his writings otherwise you cannot infallibly believe that there was such a man indeed as you conceive he was much lesse that he wrote you this Law least of all can you certainly know the true meaning of what he wrote He that is the onely sure foundation of faith knew that faith grounded upon such doubts was but built upon the sand unable to abide the blasts of ordinary temptations that thus to erect their hopes was but to prepare a Rise to a grievous Downfall the ready way to Atheisme presumption or despair For this cause he doth not so much as once question how they knew the Scriptures to be Gods Word but supposing them known and fully acknowledged for such he exhorts his hearers to search them seeking to prepare their hearts by signes and wonders to embrace his admirable expositions of them And because the corruption of particular moral doctrines brought into the Church by humane tradition would not suffer the generality of Moses and the Prophets already believed to fructifie in his hearers hearts and branch out uniformely into lively working faith he laboured most to weed out Pharisaisme from among the heavenly seed as every one may see that compares his Sermon upon the Mount with the Pharisees glosses upon Moses If the particular or principal parts of the Law and Prophets had been as purely taught or as clearly discerned as the generall and common principles His Doctrine that came not to destroy but to fulfill the Law in words and works had shined as brightly in his hearers hearts at the first proposal as the Sun did to their eyes at the first rising For all the moral duties required by them were but as dispersed rayes or scattered beams of that divine light and glory which was incorporate in him as splendor in the body of the Sun Nor was there any possibility the Jews Belief in him should prosper unlesse it grew out of their general assent unto Moses Doctrine thus pruned and purged at the very root Had all believed Moses saith our Saviour 〈◊〉 would have believed me for he wrote of me but if ye believe not his writings how so●●l ye believe my words For
did his words give life unto his greatest works his Divinations were to his Miracles as his humane soul was to his body And no question but the conception of their Faith that heard him preach was as immediately from those words of eternal life which issued from his mouth as ours is from the Word preached by his Messengers To what other use then could miracles serve save onely to breed a praeviall admiration and make entrance for them into his hearers hearts though his bodily presence at all times was not yet were his usuall works in themselves truly glorious more then apt to dispell that veil of prejudice commonly taken against the meannesse of his person birth or parentage had it been meerly naturall not occasioned through wilfull neglect of extraordinary means precedent and stubborn opposition to present grace most plentifully offered His raising others from death to life was more then sufficient to remove that offence the people took at that speech If I were lift up from the earth I should draw all men unto me To which they answered We have heard out of the Law that the Christ bideth forever and how sayest thou that the Son of Man must be lift up Who is that Son of Man 18 To conclude then his distinct and arbitrary foretelling Events of every sort any Prophet had mentioned many of them not producible but by extraordinary miracles withall including divine testifications of farre greater glory ascribed to him then Moses or any Prophet ever challenged was The demonstrative Rule according to Moses prediction whereunto all visible signes and sensible miracles should have been resolved by their spectators as known effects lead contemplators unto the first and immediate causes on which their Truth and Being depends That Encomium This is my Beloved Son in whom I am well pleased Hear him with the like given by John Baptist Behold the Lambe of God that taketh away the sins of the world unto all such as took him for a true Prophet did more distinctly point out the similitude peculiar to Him with Moses expressed in the forecited place of Deuteronomy literally though not so plainly as most Readers would without direction observe it seeing even interpreters most followed either neglect the words themselves in which it is directly contained or wrest their meaning Unto him shall ye hearken according to all that thou desiredst of the Lord thy God in Horeb in the day of the assembly Their request then was Talk th●● with us and we will hear but let not God talk with us lest we die Here the whole multitude bound themselves to hear the word of the Lord not immediately from his mouth but by Moses For whiles the people stood afar off he onely drew neer to the darknesse where God was This their request and resolution else-where more fully expressed the Lord highly commended I have heard the voice of the words of this people which they have spoken unto thee they have well said all that they have spoken Oh that there were such an heart in them to fear me and to keep all my commandements alway that it might go well with them and with their children for ever If we observe that increment the literal sence of the same words may receive by succession of time or as they respect the Body not the Type both which they jointly signifie the best reason can be given of Gods approving the former petition and Israels peculiar disposition at that time above others will be this That as posterity in rejecting Samuel rejected Christ or God the second Person in Trinity so here the Fathers in requesting Moses might be their spokesman unto God requested that Great Prophet ordained to be the Author of a better Covenant even that promised womans seed their brother according to the flesh to be Mediator betwixt God and them to secure them from such dreadfull flames as they had seen so they would hearken as then they promised unto his words as unto the words of God himself esteeming him as the Apostle saith so farre above Moses As he that builds the house is above the house And in the Emphasis of that speech Whosoever will not hearken unto my words which he shall speak in my name I will require it of him purposely resumed by Moses with these threats annexed as if he had not sufficiently expressed his mind in the like precedent Unto ‖ him ye shall hearken The same difference between Moses and the Great Prophet then meant is included which the Apostle in another place expresseth He that despiseth Moses Law dieth without mercy under two or three witnesses Of how much sorer punishment suppose ye he shall be worthy which treadeth under foot the Son of God and counteth the blood of the Testament as an unholy thing Untill the soveraignty of the Law and Prophets did determin that Encomium of Moses did bear date There arose not a Prophet si●●e in Israel like unto Moses whom the Lord kn●w face to face but vanished upon the Criers voice when the Kingdom of heaven began to appear The Israelites to whom both promises were made did far exceed all other nations in that they had a Law most absolute given by Moses yet to be bettered by an Everlasting Covenant the Former being as an earnest penny given in hand to assure them of the Latter In respect of Both the name of a Soothsayer or Sorcerer was not to be heard in Israel as in the nations which knew not God much lesse expected a Mediator in whom the spirit of life should dwell as plentifully as splendor doth in the body of the Sun from whose fulnesse ere he visibly came into the world other Prophets were illuminated as those lights which rule the night are by that great light which God hath appointed to rule the day at whose approach the Prince of darknesse with his followers were to avoid the Hemisphere wherein they had raigned In the mean time the testimonies of the Law and Prophesies served as a light or candle to minish the terrors of the night Even Moses himself and all that followed him were but as messengers sent from God to sollicit his people to reserve their alleageance free from all commerce or compact with Familiar spirits until the Prince of glory came in person 19 Thus without censure of their opinion that otherwise think or teach albeit the continuance of Prophets amongst this people were a mean to prevent all occasions of consulting sorcerers or witches yet the chief ground of Moses disswasion from such practises according to the literall connexion of these words The nations which thou shalt possesse hearken unto those that regard the times and unto sorcerers as for thee the Lord the God hath not suffered thee so with those following hitherto expounded The Lord thy God will raise up unto thee a Prophet was the consideration of their late mighty deliverance by Moses the excellencie of
met them as live-like as they themselves were Was he to them a Prophet mighty in word and deed and yet not able to perform what he had constantly spoken But what was the chief matter of their just reproof That they had not believed his words nor given due credence to his works Dull no doubt they had been in not esteeming better of both unwise in not learning more of Him that taught as never man taught but as in them he teacheth us most dul and most unwise even Fools and slow of heart in not believing all that the Prophets had spoken Ought not Christ to have suffered these things as if he had said Is it possible your ignorance in them should be grosse as not to know that Christ was thus to suffer and so to enter into his glory 2 You wil say perchance they did not wel in giving so little attention and credit to the Prophets whose light should have led them unto Christ but now that they have light on him in person without their help only by his seeking them shall not he who was the end and scope of all prophetical writings teach them all He will but not by relying only upon his infallible authority This Edifice of Faith must be framed upon the Foundation laid by the Prophets For this reason happily our Saviour would not bewray himself to be their infallible teacher until he had made them by evidence of Scripture by true sense and feeling of his spirit believe and know the truth which he taught to be infallible He had opened their hearts by opening the Scriptures unto them before their eyes were open to discern his person for he began at Moses and at all the Prophets and interpreted unto them in all the Scriptures the things which were written of him Stedfast Belief then of any mans authority must spring out of the solid Experience of his skil and truth of his doctrine These two disciples might now resolve their hearts that this was he who John said should baptize with the holy Ghost and with fire when by the working of his spirit their hearts aid burn within them whiles he talked with them and opened the Scriptures unto them Though before they had received John Baptists witnesse of the truth as a Tie or Fest to stay their fleeting Faith yet now they would not receive the record of man there is another that beareth witnesse of him the spirit of truth which hath imprinted his doctrine in their hearts 3 Would the Pope who challengeth Christs place on earth amongst his living members and requires we should believe his words as wel as these Disciples did Christs but expound those Scriptures unto us which Christ did to them with like evidence and efficacy could he make our hearts thus burn within by opening the secret mysteries of our salvation we would take him for Christs Vicar and believe indeed he were infallibly assisted by the Holy Spirit But seeing he and his followers invert our Saviours method by calling the certainty of both Testaments in question telling us we cannot know them to be Gods word unlesse it shal please this Roman God to give his word for them or confirm their truth seeing this his pretended confirmation is not by manifesting the mysteries of our salvation so distinctly and clearly as Christ did unto these Disciples nor by affording us the true sense and feeling of the spirit in such ardent manner as they enjoyed it and yet accurseth us if we believe not his words as wel as they did their Redeemers we may hence take a perfect measure of that mouth of Blasphemies spoken of by S. John according to all the three dimensions contained in the three assertions prefixed to the beginning of this Section Nor can the reader imagin either any other forepassed like unto it or yet to come likely to prove more abominable if it shal but please him to survey the length and breadth of it but especially the profundity 4 The length of it I make That assertion The Pope must be as well believed as either Christ was whilst he lived on earth or his Apostles after his glorification The breadth His absolute authority must be for extent as large and ample as Christs should be were he on earth again or as that commission he gave unto his Disciples Go Preach the Gospel to every creature his directions must go forth throughout all the earth and his words unto the ends of the world The depth is much greater then the space between heaven and hell For if you would draw a line from the Zenith to the Nadir through the Center it would scarce be a gag long enough for this monstrous mouth so wide as hell cannot conceive a greater The depth I gather partly from the excesse of Christs worth either arising from his personal union with the Godhead his sanctity of life and conversation or from his Hyperprophetical Spirit and abundant miracles For look how much he exceeds any but meer man in all these by so much doth the Pope though supposed as not obnoxious to any crime make his authority and favour with God greater then Christs which is the Semidiameter of this Mouth of Blaspemies The other part equal hereunto in quantity but for the quality more tainted with the dregs of Hell ariseth from that opposition the Popes spirit hath unto Christ or from the luxury and beastly manners of the Papacy erected by Satan as it were of purpose to pollute the world with monstrous sins and to derogate as much from mankind as true Christianity doth advance it finally to make the Christian world as much more wicked as Christs Disciples Apostles and faithful followers are better then the heathen Nor doth the Pope exact Belief only without miracles or manifestation of a prophetical spirit but contrary to all notions of good and evil common to Christians and Heathens and as it were in despight of the Prophesies that have deciphered him for Antichrist What heathen Philosopher could with patience have endured to hear that a dissolute luxurious tyrant could not though in matters of this life give wrong sentence out of the seat of Justice The Jesuites teach it as an Article of faith that the Pope albeit a dissolute and ungracious tyrant Mankinds reproach the disgrace of Christianity cannot possibly give an erroneous sentence ex Cathedra no not in mysteries of religion But as if it were a small thing thus impudently to contradict nature and grieve the souls of ingenuous men unlesse they also grieve their God seeking as it were to crosse his spirit by holding opinions not only contradictory but most contrary to his sacred rules they importune the Christian world with tumultuous clamours to take that which the spirit hath given as the demonstrative Character of great Antichrist the old serpents chief confederate for the infallible cognisance of Christs Vicar the very signet of his beloved Spouse Nor wil they I know
of final judgement By this beloved Reader thou mayst perceive my journey is long and may well plead my excuse for setting forth so soon but from that course which I have chosen or rather God hath set me I trust nor hopes of preferment nor any desires of worldly wealth nor affectation of popularity by handling more plausible or Time-serving arguments shall ever draw me away So far I am from aiming at any such sinister end That since I begun to comment upon the nature of Christian faith I never could nor ever shall perswade my self it possibly can find quiet lodging much less safe harbour but in an heart alike affected to Death and Honour alwaies retaining the Desires and fear of both either severally considered or mutually compared in equal ballance Both are good when God in mercy sends them both evil and hard to determin whether worse to unprepared minds or whilest procured by our sollicitous or importunate suit or bestowed upon us in their Donours anger Onely this difference I find death is mankinds inevitable doom but worldly preferment neither so common to all nor so certain to any the less in reason should be our endeavors either for providing it or preparing our selves to salute it decently though comming of it own accord to meet us But what meditations can be too long or what endeavors too laborious for gaining of an happie end or giving a messenger of so importunate and weighty consequence as death one way or other brings correspondent entertainment This Christian modesty I have learned long since of the heathen Socrates to beseech my God he would vouchsafe me such a portion of wealth or whatsoever this world esteems as none but an honest upright religious mind can bear or to use the words of a better teacher That of all my labours under the sun I may reap the fruit in holiness and in the end the End of these my present meditations Everlasting Life Thine in Christ THOMAS JACKSON A Table of the Several Sections and Chapters in the 2. Books following The first Book divided into two general parts The one explicating the nature of Belief in general the other shewing the Method how our Assent unto the divine truth of Scriptures may be established The first general part contained in the first and second Sections SECT I. CAP. 1. THE definition of Belief in general with the explication from parag 1. to the 12. The diverse objects and grounds thereof and by what means it is increased parag 12 c. Page 2 SECT II. CAP. 2. Of Assent unto objects supernatural or unto what a natural Belief of such Objects or a bare acknowledgement of Scriptures for Gods Word binds all men pag. 7 CAP. 3. Of general incitements to search the truth of Scriptures or Christian Belief 9 The second general part containing the Heads or Topicks of such observations as may confirm the divine truth of Scriptures of which some are External some Internal SECT I. Of Observations internal or incident unto Scriptures without reference to any relations or events other then are specified in themselves 13 CAP. 4. Of Historical Characters of sacred Antiquities 13 CAP. 5. Of the Harmony of sacred Writers 17 CAP. 6. Of the Affections or dispositions of sacred Writers 19 SECT II. Of Experiments and Observations external answerable to the rules of Scriptures page 25 CAP. 7. Containing the Topick whence such observations must be drawn 25 CAP. 8. That Heathenish Fables ought not to prejudice divine truths 26 CAP. 9. Observations out of Poets in general and of dreams in particular 27 CAP. 10. Of Oracles 30 CAP. 11. Of the apparitions of the heathen Gods and their Heroicks 34 CAP. 12. The reasons of our mistrusting of Antiquities 37 CAP. 13. Of the diversity of events in different Ages 39 CAP. 14. Of the original and right use of Poetry with the manner of its corruption by later Poets 42 CAP. 15. Of some particular Fables resembling some true stories of the Bible 47 CAP. 16. Of Noahs and Deucalions floud with other Miscellane observations 50 CAP. 17. Of Sacred Writers sobriety and discretion in relating true miracles compared especially with later Heathens vanitie in coyning fruitless wonders 57 The third SECTION of the second general Part. Containing Experiments drawn from the revolution of States or Gods publick judgements but especially of the estate of the Jews from time to time 61 CAP. 18. Of the state of these Jews before our Saviours time gathered from heathen Authors with Tullies objection against them 61 CAP. 19. The ill successe of Pompey the great for his going into the Sanctum sanctorum the manner of his death witnessing his sin the miscariage of Crassus parallel likewise to the manner of his offence against Jerusalem with the like disasters of other Romans that had wronged or molested the Jews 63 CAP. 20. Tacitus objections against the Iews refuted by their palpable grosseness and more competent testimony of other heathen writers 69 CAP. 21. The means of these Iews thriving in captivity In what sence they might peculiarly be termed a mighty people wherein they did exceed or were exceeded by other nations 73 CAP. 22. That all the heathens objections against or doubts concerning the Iews estate 〈◊〉 prevented or resolved by Iewish writers 78 CAP. 23. The fulfilling of Moses and other prophesies touching the desolation of ●ewr● and destruction of Ierusalem and the Signes of the Time witnessing Gods wonderful hand therein 83 CAP. 24. The fulfilling of our Saviours prophecie Matth. 24 with others concerning the time ensuing Ierusalems destruction That those signes in the Sun and the Moon are long since past as may appear from our Saviours words expounded parag 3. compared with the Prophet Joels parag 8. 90 CAP. 25. That the Saracens are the true sons of Ismael Of their conditions and manners answerable to Moses prophecie 103 CAP. 26. The beginning and progresse of Ismaels greatnesse 107 CAP. 27. The persecutions of the Iews by Traian and the desolation of their Country by Adrian their scattering through other Nations foretold by Moses 111 CAP 28. Of the Iews estate after the dissolution of the Roman Empire generally thorowout Europe until their coming into England 114 CAP. 29. Of the fulfilling of other particular prophecies of Moses in the Iews persecutions in England Germany France and Spain 120 CAP. 30. General collections out of the particular histories before mentioned the strange dispositions of the Iews and Gods judgements upon them all testifying the truth of divine Oracles 129 LIB I. SECT IIII. Of Experiments in our selves and the right framing of Belief as well unto the several parts as unto the whole Canon of Scriptures 140 CAP. 31. Shewing the facility and use of the proposed Method by instance in some whose belief unto divine Oracles hath been confirmed by Experiments answerable unto them 140 CAP. 32. Containing a brief resolution of doubts concerning the extent of the general Canon or the number of integral parts
was in respect of the Efficient or impulsive causes rather Superartificial then Natural or Artificial and Rhetorick and Historie only Artificial This opinion will not seem strange if we consider that the wiser sort in those times did commend such matters onely to writing as might inflame posterity with devotion and love of vertue For Poetrie as the same Author tels us was accounted by Antiquitie Prima quaedam Philosophia a kind of sacred moral Philosophie appropriated as it seems at the first to the relation or representation of supernatural Events or divine matters onely of which the most Ancient had best experience and were impelled to communicate them to posteritie elevated as is observed before by the excellency of the Object to this celestial kind of speech which is most apt to ravish younger wits as it self was bred of Admiration This use of Poetrie appears in some Fragments of most Ancient Poets in their kind proportionable to the book of Psalms of Job and the songs of Moses the only patern of true Poesie whose subjects usually are the wonderful works of God manifested unto men Some degenerate footsteps of these Holy men the Heathen about Homers time did observe using their Poets and Musicians for planting modesty and chastity amongst other vertues in their auditors So Agamemnon left the musical Poet as Guardian to Clytemnestra who continued chast and loyal until Aegisthus got the Poet conveyed into an uninhabited Island For this reason was Poetry taught children first throughout the Grecian Cities as Moses had commanded the Israelites to teach their children his divine Poem Deut. 31. 19. and 32. 46. And they much wrong that divine Philosopher that think he was any farther an enemy unto the sacred Faculty then onely to seek the reformation of it by reducing it to its first natural use which was not meer delight as Eratosthenes dreamed rightly taxed by Strabo for this error That might perhaps be true of the Comical Latin poets Poeta quum primum animum adscribendum appulit Id sibi negoti credidit solum dari Populo ut placerent quas fecisset Fabulas When first the Poet bent his wits to write The onely mark he aim'd at was delight Which notwithstanding had neither been the onely nor chief use no end at all but rather an adjunct of Poetry amongst the Ancient by the wiser and better sort of whom nothing was apprehended at least approved as truly delightful which was not also Honest and of profitable use for bettering life and manners The law of nature being then lesse defaced They could read it without spelling and comprehend all the Three Elements of Goodness joyntly under one entire conceit as we do the product of divers Letters or Syllables in one word without examination of their several value apart But when the Union of this Trinity wherein the nature of Perfect Goodnesse consists was once dissolved in mens hearts and Delight had found a peculiar Issue without mixture of Honesty or Utility the desire of becoming popular Poets did breed the bane of true Poesie and those Sacred Numbers which had been as Amulets against vice became incentives unto lust Or if we would but search the native use of Poetry by that end which men not led awry by hopes of applause or gain or other external respects but directed rather by the internal impulsion of this Faculty and secret working of their Souls do aim at It principally serves for Venting Extraordinary Affections No man almost so dul but will be Poetically affected in the subject of his strongest passions As we see by experience that where the occasions either of Joy for the Fortunate Valour or Sorrow for the mishaps of their Countrey-men or Alliance are most rife this disposition is both most pregnant and most common And as Speech or Articulation of voices in general was given to man for communicating his conceits or meaning unto others so Poetry the Excellency of Speech serves for the more lively expressing of his Choicer Conceits for Beautifying His darling-thoughts or Fancies which almost disdain to go abroad in other then this exactly-proportioned attire The souls wooing suits if I may so speak whereby she wins others to Sympathize with her in abundance of Grief or to consent with her in excessive Joy or finally to settle their Admiration or dislike where she doth hers And the more strange or wonderful the matter conceived or to be represented is the more pleasant and admirable will the true and natural representation of it be and the more he that conceives it is ravished with delight of its Beauty or goodnesse the more will he long to communicate his conceit and liking of it to others Whence such as had seen the Wonders of God and had been fed with his Hidden Manna sought by their lively hearty representations to invite others as the Psalmist doth To taste and see the Goodnesse of the Lord as Birds and Beasts when they have found pleasant food call on their fashion unto others of the same kinde to be partakers with them in their Joy until Satan who hunts after the life of Man as Man doth after the life of Birds did invent his counterfeit Cals to allure our souls into his Snare For when men had once taken a delight in the natural representation of events delightful in themselves he stirred up others to invent the like albeit there were no real truth or stability in the things represented and the manner of representation usually so light and affected as could argue no credence given by the Authors to their own report but rather a desire to please such as had never set their mindes to any Inquisition of solid Truth whose unsetled Fancies cannot choose but fall in Love with as many Fair Pictures of others pleasant Imaginations as are presented to them For as to view the connexion of real Causes with their Effects most of all if both be rare or the concurrence of Circumstances unusual doth much affect the judicious understanding so the quaint or curious contrivance of Imaginary Rarities set forth in splendent Artificial colours doth captivate the Fancies of such as are not established in the love of truth But as the Orator said of such as applauded the Tragedie of Pylades and Orestes how would such mens souls be ravished could they upon sure grounds be perswaded that these stories were true albeit devoid of Artificial Colours or Poetical contrivances never used by sacred Antiquitie in whose expression of Wonders the Phrase is usually most Poetical as naturally it will alwaies be where the mind is much affected their invention lesse Artificial or affected then our Historical narrations of Modern affairs the Character of their stile as was intimated before doth argue that they sought onely to set down the true Proportion of matters seen and heard with such resemblances as were most incident to their kind of life And from the Efficacy of such extraordinary effects upon their souls
is it that the Prophets so often express the same things in divers words as if all they could say could not equalize the sensible Experiments which did move their Hearts and Fancies as the Musitians hands or breath doth his instruments to sound out such Pathetical Ditties Nor had their Ditties any greater disproportion with their subject then our Songs of Famous Victories have with theirs or other passionate Ditties with their composers affections albeit he that hath experience of Love or abundant Grief or Joy will speak in another Dialect then ordinarily he useth without any touch of affectation 5 Hence we may clearly discern whilest wonders decayed and men sought as great delight in Fained as their forefathers had done in True Representations how the disproportion betwixt Representations and the real Events or Experiments of the times wherein the later Poets lived became so Monstrous and Prodigious This fell out just so as if the Armorours of this Age should not observe the stature of men now living but fashion their Armour by old Guy of Warwicks Harnesse or our Painters not look upon the bodies of modern English-men but take their proportions from some Ancient Pictures which had been truly taken about some 1000 years ago in some other Countrey that had yielded men of more ample stature in that Age then this land of ours did in any Such an Errour as this which we have mentioned in Poetry would quickly have been reformed in any other Facultie that had concerned mens temporal profit or commodities or whereof others had been as competent Judges as the Professors for so when they had begun to wander or digress a little from their right end they should presently have bin called to this account Quid ad rem your Work may be Prety but not to our Purpose But when such Admirable Events as were well worth Poetical expression decreased and worldly cares did multiply as men increased the divine art of Poetry which admits not many competent Judges in any age was counted no better then a matter of meer delight or recreation and for this reason the Prodigious Representations of it so Monstrously disproportionable to the truth represented because oft times more pleasant to men wearied with other studies or imployments then the bare narration of the truth were never reformed And so at length that Audacious Licentiousnesse of Fictions for moving delight did in the judgement of posterity disparage the very patterns or Prototypes of Poetical representations whereunto later Poems had been framed As many Tall Fellows in this present age if they should see the true image or picture of some Ancient Giants would swear that the painter had plaied the Poet were it not that the dead bodies or limbs of some Ancient people lately digged out of the ground did by their unusual bignesse teach us to estimate as we say Ex pede Herculem how great others might have been whose big limbs and bones have not come unto this Ages sight 6 But most of these strange Events were such as did continue no longer then while they were a doing wherefore we must seek out the true proportion of these Heavenly Bodies by their shadows represented in the later Profane Poets The Original and manner of whose digression from the paterns of the Ancient Divine Poets or rather from Divine truth the pattern of Ancient Poetrie it self was partly as you have heard partly as followeth 7 Gods wonderful works have been more plenteous in Asia then in other parts of the world more plentiful in Judea and the Regions about it then mother parts of Asia most plentiful in them about the Israelites deliverance out of Egypt In that time and in the ages before or immediately succeeding it Artificial learning was very scant and Characters either not invented or their use very rare in most places The fresh memory of such wonders presupposed the lively image either of inch licentiousnesse in coining fables or confounding true Histories with the mixture of false and unnatural circumstances as these wants every where in all times naturally breed we may clearly behold in the modern Turks who are as abundant in Prodigious Fables as defective in good learning and for want of printing or neglect of writing have no perfect Character of the worlds Fashion in times past nor any distinct order of former Events It is but a petty solecisme among them to affirm that Job the Huss●ite was chief Justice and Alexander the Great Lieutenent general unto King Solomon 8 The like confusion of times and places might be more incident unto the Asiatick Nations before Alexanders time because their Ancestors had been acquainted with more strange events latelier forepast then the modern Turks are Now alwayes the more strange the events be the more ready they be to Mount upon the Wings of Fame and once so mounted the more apt to receive increase in every Circumstance and vary their shape whilest they flie onely from mouth to mouth in the open air not fashioned or limited at their first birth by some visible Character or permanent Stamp set upon them 9 From this vicinity of true wonders in Jury or thereabouts were the Medes Persians and Syrians so much addicted to Fabulous narrations that their delight in such traditions did make their later writers ambitious in the skill of coining wonders as Strabo tels us And Greece as it received Artificial learning first from Asia so did it drink in this humour with it For the traditions of Gods Miracles in Jury and the Regions about it having been far spread when Greece began first to tattle in Artificial learning the Grecians Alwayes Children in true Antiquitie as the Egyptian Priest told one of their Philosophers were apt to counterfeit the form of Ancient Truths and misapply it to unseemly matters or foolish purposes as children will be doing that in homlier stuff which they see their elders do in better Finally the same humour which yet raigns amongst men might possess most of the Heathen There is no famous Event that fals out though it be but a notable Jest but in a short time is ascribed to a great many more then have any affinity with it As many of Diogenes conceits have been fathered upon Tarleton and what the Christians say of S. George the Turks ascribe to Chederley If it be any story concerning way-faring men every Hostler Tapster or Chamberlain will tell you that it fell out in their Town or in the Countrey thereabouts And though you hear it in twenty several places yet shall you have alwayes some new tricks of addition put upon it In like manner did the reports of sundry events which either fell out only in Jury or upon occasion of Gods people flie about the world sometime with cut and mangled but most usually with enlarged Artificial wings as if the same had been acted every where or the like invented upon every occasion CAP. XV. Of some particular Fables resembling some true stories
hath fulfilled his word that he had determined of old time he hath thrown down and not spared he hath caused thine enemies to rejoyce over thee and set up the Horn of thine Adversaries Arise cry in the night in the beginning of the watches pour out thine heart like water before the face of the Lord lift up thine hand towards him for the life of thy young children that famish for hunger in all the corners of the streets These words perhaps were meant in divers measures of both Calamities but the Complaint following of the later only under Titus Behold O Lord and consider to whom thou hast done thus Shall the women eat their fruit children of a span long shall the Priest and the Prophet be slain in the Sanctuary of the Lord the young and the old lie on the ground My Virgins and my Young-men are fallen by the sword thou hast slain them in the Day of Thy Wrath thou hast killed and not spared Thou hast called as in a Solemn Day my Terrors round about so that in the day of the Lords wrath none escaped or remained Those that I have nourished and brought up hath mine Enemy consumed 2 Many particulars here set down by Ieremy are not so much as once intimated by the Sacred Story which describes the Siege by Nebuchadnezzar But no calamity either intimated by any Historical Relations of those times or prefigured in Ieremies complaint but in this later Siege by Titus is most exactly fulfilled as if the Lord had but sown the seeds of destruction desolation by Nebuchadnezzar which now being come to their ful growth ripeness this People must reap according to the ful measure of their Iniquity They are as dry Stubble the Romans as a consuming Fire Nebuchadnezzars Host perhaps slew some but had no occasion to make a General Massacre in the Temple destitute of Defendants ere it was taken the King and his greatest Cōmanders being first fled into the Wilderness nor was it destroyed until the heat of war was past and most of the People lead into Captivity But whilest in this later destruction by Titus it fel by the furious Heat Brunt of War the number of such as were either willing or forced to end their days with it was of all sorts exceeding Great and which was most Miserable many who had taken their Farewel of Life had bid Death Welcome revived again to renew their more then deadly Sorrows to reiterate their bitter Complaints which This Lamentable Accident could only teach them to Act aright and utter with such Tragical and Hideous Accent as was befitting a Calamity so Strange Fearful as never had been known before Even such as Famin had caused to faint having their Vocal Judgements clung together and their Eyes more then half closed up with death upon sight or noise of the Temples crackling in its last and Fatal Fire rowsed up their spirits and resumed their wonted strength to proclaim unto all Neighbour-Regions in shril and lowdest Out-cries That there was Never Any Sorrow like unto this Sorrow wherewith the Lord had afflicted them in the Day of his Fierce Wrath and yet they blow the fire which it had kindled ventilating and inlarging the devouring flame whose extinction the abundance of their Bloud did otherwise seem to threaten by violent Breathing out their last Breath into it The gastly Confusion of this Fearful Spectacle and hideous noise are so lively expressed by Josephus and others that they may well serve the Christian Reader as a map of Hellish misery I onely prosecute the fulfilling of Jeremies Prophecy in particulars related by Josephus as of The Womans Fating Her Child a Thing never heard of in that or any Nation before of the Priests Slaughter both in the Temple and after the destruction of it For Titus otherwise inclined to Mercy seeing it consumed by Fire which he sought by all means to save commanded such of the Priests as had escaped the flame in a By-room adjoyning to be Executed telling them It was fit they should perish with the Temple for whose sake might it have stood he willingly would have saved their lives Again the Massacre of the promiscuous multitude of women and children unfit for War are particularly described with all the circumstances by Josephus Book 7. Chapt. 11. of the Jewish Wars Of six thousand perswaded by a False Prophet to repair unto the Temple there to expect Signs from God of their deliverance not one Man Woman or Child escaped 3 Thus Moses fore-shews the grievous Plagues which hung over this Nations head but then a-far Off Jeremy after points out the Very Place where they shall fall our Saviour Christ onely knew the distinct Period of Time wherein Both the former Prophecies should be accomplished I will not trouble the Reader with Rehersal of particular Calamities fore-told by Him their observation is already made unto his hand by Eusebius and will apply themselves being compared with Josephus so perhaps will not some places of Scripture following though as much concerning the same times For the better understanding of which we must call to mind what was observed before That Hierusalem was the Lords own Seat and the Jews a People set apart by Him and distinguished of purpose from others to Exemplifie his Mercy and Justice in their Prosperity and Distresse Consequent hereunto his pleasure was that in the desolation of Jewry and destruction of the Temple other Nations should be put in mind of their mortality and not think in their hearts that these were Greater Sinners then any other Nation but rather that he who plagued them was Lord of the whole Earth as well as Jewry that the like and more Fearful Judgements did hang over their heads unlesse they would learn by the known Calamities of this People to avoid them So saith the Lord to All the Earth without Exception For Lo I begin to plague the City where my name is called upon and should you go free ye shall not go quit for I will call for a sword upon all the inhabitants of the earth saith the Lord of Hosts Therefore Prophecy thou against them all these words and say unto them The Lord shall roar from above and thrust out his voice from His Holy Habitation he shall roar upon his habitation and crie aloud as they that presse the grapes against all the inhabitants of the earth The sound shall come to the ends of the earth for the Lord hath a controversie with the Nations and will enter into judgement with All Flesh and he will give them that are wicked to the sword And thus saith the Lord God of Hosts Behold a plague shall go forth from Nation to Nation and a great whirl-wind shall be raised from the coasts of the earth and the slain of the Lord shall be at that day from one end of the earth even unto the other end of the earth they shall not be
voice was heard through Portugal surpassing that in Ramah nothing but mourning and weeping and lamentation many a Leah blearing her eyes with weeping for her children and would not be comforted Men and women filling the heavens with more hideous outcries then the Egyptians did at their Fore-fathers departure out of Egypt when the Firstborn of every Family throughout the land was slain at midnight But these were bereft at once of all their loving children in the open Sun Many of them not able either to rescue or dispatch their own bowels become mad with the sight that their eyes had seen and killed themselves Others having better opportunitie account it a part of their happinesse to be able to prevent their childrens washing in the sacred Font by drowning them in draw-wels and ditches In both these calamities at the two fore-mentioned transportations we may see those Prophecies of Moses exactly fulfilled Deut. 28. 30. Thou shalt betroth a wife and another man shall lie with her And again verse 32. Thy sons and thy daughters shall be given unto another people and thine eyes shall fail at the sight every day and there shall be no power in thy hand Many Moors professing Mahumetism were transported from Portugal the same time but had no such violence offered them what was the reason God would have a manifest distinction between this and other people The Barbarous Moors had some power in their hands the Portugals abstain from like usage of them lest the report coming to the African Mahumetans ears might have moved them to avenge their wrongs upon poor Christians living amongst them But these Jews no where had any Nation none to avenge their grievous wrong which the Lord God of their Forefathers had ordained they should suffer at all times in all places wheresoever they have come without redresse 16 Nor do their Fates change with their Name or Profession For what violence was ever offered to any of this race like to that which these late converts Christned Hebrews but still Jews in misfortunes suffered in Lisbon in the year 1506. Two thousand massacred in three dayes space many not suffered to die of deadly wounds were dragged by their mangled limbs into the market place where the bodies of the living and slain with others half alive half dead were burnt together on heaps The Spectacle was so horrible that it quite astonied the rest of this miserable progenie at other times as desperately set to suffer as Monks furiously to inflict any torture Parents durst not mourn for children nor children sigh for their parents though each haled in others sight to the place of torments lest these significations of their grief and sorrow might bewray them to be of the tormented kinred with whom the least suspicion of alliance was sufficient to make them inherit like plagues ere the breath was out of their predecessors bodies Osorius description of these distressed souls perplexitie shewed in their gesture and cariage during this Massacre may serve albeit he meant nothing lesse as a Paraphrase upon the last words of Moses often-mentioned Prophecie There that is in the utmost parts of the earth the Lord shall give thee a trembling heart and a sorrowful mind and thy life shall hang before thee The disposition of the Divine Providence in affording opportunitie to this licentious out-rage was much what like to that described before in Lin. A great part of these Tragical Actors were German and French mariners which had repaired to Lisbon for other traffick but returned home unpunished burdened with the spoil of these Hebrews goods but more heavily laden with guilt of their bloud albeit their souls were not so deeply died therewith as the Lisbon Monks who had instigated them and others to this Butchery inflamed themselves with this furious zeal only by an unseasonable speech of one poor Hebrew apprehended by the other as derogatorie to our Saviour For whilest the others by long gazing upon the picture of his wounded side through a glasse took the reflex of light thence cast upon their dazled eyes for a Miracle the silly Hebrew whether openly to contradict or unawares uttering to some by-standers what he thought bewrayed his incredulitie How a piece of drie wood should work Miracles 17 Whilest I read so many Christned souls thus Butchered like Beasts for ones denial of divine Honour to a livelesse Image I could not but pause with my self and now I must commend it to the Christian Readers consideration whether that part of Moses prophecie and there thou shalt serve other Gods which thou hast not known nor thy Fathers Wood and Stone may not be understood of the convert Jews throughout the Popes Dominions thus oft times urged to commit Idolatrie with stocks and stones upon more Tyrannical terms if they gainsay then their Forefathers were either by the Assyrian Caldaean Egyptian Roman or any whosoever had led them Captive out of their land If the Monkish Apologizer reply There is a great difference between the Heathen Idol and their Image worship I grant the Idolatrie is of a divers kind and so it seems Moses meant when he threatned this people that after their final transplantation by Adrian and their scattering through Spain and these Western Countries They should serve such Gods as their Fathers had not known For this peoples Forefathers before Moses time and after had known the Heathen gods too well If the Romanist yet rejoyn that in worshipping Christs Image they worship Christ I will not deny but he may think so for so the Jews thought they honoured Moses because they honoured the Letter of his Law But to omit other reasons this and other like outragious Facts committed upon as light occasions shall convince their nice School-distinctions of foul errour and turn their lies with such violence into their throat that as Saint Augustin interprets the Psalmist of these Jews It shall even break their teeth in their mouthes For if the zeal these Monks of Lisbon bare unto this Image had been directed unto Christ they had in some good measure been transformed into the similitude of His gentle meek and merciful disposition It was Wbod-worship doubtlesse which had made them so mad and furious It was their continual adoring of stones which had turned their hearts of flesh into hearts more full of fire then the flint and harder then the hardest Adamant But of the effects of Monkish pitie towards Christ or the Crucifix as also of the Jesuites doctrine concerning Image-worship elsewhere if God permit Thus much of these Jews estate from time to time may suffice for our intended purpose to be further collected in the Chapter following CAP. XXX General collections out of the particular Histories before mentioned the strange dispositions of the Jews and Gods Judgements upon them all Testifying the Truth of Divine Oracles 1 I Cannot but approve Crantzius his judgement of these Jews That they are a perfidious and wicked people worthy to be
contrite heart for their disobedience past but rather adding thirst to drunkenness Blesse themselves when they hear the words of that Curse promising peace unto themselves though they walk on according to the stubbornness of their Forefathers hearts Their own desires they will not break But Christian Children they can be well content to Sacrifice kill and mangle throughout all ages wheresoever they come as their often practises in England France and Germany witnesse and the Jews of Lincoln executed at London for this crime did confesse to be a solemn practise as oft as they could conveniently come by their prey Thus out of the mouthes of Infants and Children will God have his praise erected still Their Bloud hath sealed and their Cries proclaimed the truth of our Saviours words that these Jews are of their Father the Devil and the lusts of their Father they will do John 8. 44. He was a murtherer from the beginning and alwayes delighted much in such Sacrifices as were most displeasing unto God 5 If Christian Sobrietie did not teach us to acknowledge Gods judgements alwayes just although the manner of his Justice can not be apprehended much lesse exemplified to ordinary capacities by the wisest of the Sons of men the consideration of these Jews perpetual temper would half perswade us that the souls of such as had either procured consented unto or approved our Saviours and his Apostles death had been Sent from Hell by course into the bodies of these Jews here scattered in these Western parts as so many Messengers from the dead to shew the malignant heat of those Everlasting flames by their unquenchable thirst of innocent bloud But neither doth Scripture warrant nor natural Reason enforce such suppositions either for acquitting Gods Severity upon this people from injustice or His Goodness from suspition of being the Author of their villainous minds though he be the sole Creatour as well of theirs as their godly forefathers souls For these their wicked posterities plagues are just because their souls which he hath made will not receive correction by their own or their fathers plagues continually inflicted upon them since our Saviours death but still as it were Hunt out Gods judgements which lie perpetually in wait for them by treading in their Ungratious predecessours steps In one word Though the God of their Fathers have made their souls yet they make Pride of heart Inveterate custome Examples of their progenitors Their God For us Christians let us admire the wisdom of our gracious God that so disposeth our enemies mischievous minds unto our good rather then enquire how their villanies can stand with his justice This their unsatiable desire of Crucifying them unto whom the Kingdom of heaven belongs doth confirm our Faith in that Main Article of their Fathers crucifying The Lord of Glory And no doubt but God in his All-seeing wisdom hath permitted the like hellish temper to remain in all Generations of these Jews that the former most Horrible and otherwise almost Incredible Act with the Actors Devilish Malice might be more lively and sensibly represented to all posterities which had not seen or known them by Experience And Gods Judgements upon these Modern Jews for their Forefathers sins hereby may appear most just in that they make them their won by Imitation plainly testifying to the world that They would do as their Forefathers had done if the same Tragedie of Christs Passion were to be acted our again yea in as much as they practize the like upon his living members They are guilty as wel as their Forefathers of His Death 6 Generally the outward carriage and inward temper of these modern Jews are such as all that have any Experience of them may perceive the Excellent qualities of their worthy Progenitours and the extraordinary Prerogatives whence they are fallen as sensibly and undoubtedly as we can know by the Lees or corrupt remainder of any Liquor what the vertue and strength thereof was in its Prime The present Depression of this People below all others amongst whom they live rightly taken doth give us the true Excesse of their Exaltation in former times above the Nations as perfectly as the Elevation of the Pole which we see doth give us the degrees of the others Occultation Finally if we compare the Estate of such as lived in Tullies times with these Modern Jews estate lately mentioned the great prosperitie of their Ancestors under Joshuah Judges David and Solomon may be gathered from these differences as exactly and as clearly as the third proportionable number out of two others already known This is that Golden Rule whose practise I would commend to all young Students For from the known differences of their Estate from time to time we may be led unto the perfect knowledge of Gods Power and Providence of his Mercy and Bounty to such as love him of his Judgements upon such as Hate him and transgresse his Laws Finally nothing in Scripture can seem Incredible if men would consider the wonderful exaltation and depression of this People 7 This admirable difference between the true Israelites of old and these Modern perfidious Jews is most lively represented unto us in that Parable of divers Figs which Jeremiah saw Jerem. 24. 1 2. The Lord shewed me and behold two baskets of Figs were set before the Temple of the Lord one basket very good Figs like the Figs that are first ripe and the other very naughty Figs which could not be eaten they were so evil No man I hope will challenge me for extending this Text beyond its literal sense One part of which by the Prophets own exposition is to be understood of such as were led captive by Nebuchadnezzar signified by the good figs the other of Zedechiah with the residue of Hierusalem and them that dwelt in the Land of Egypt represented by the bad figs. My Prophet indeed applies it only unto them of his own time of whom I confesse it was Literally meant but not only of them but more principally more fully and directly of the Jews about or since our Saviours time and his Apostles or their followers The parable with the consequence thereof is true of both in as much as both are particulars contained under that general division which Moses had made of Blessings and Cursings to befall this people in divers measures according to their constancy in good or stubbornnesse in evil Unto this General Prediction the Prophets do still frame their prophecies as Corollaries or Appendices and so must they be applied by us not only to the present times wherein they wrote but to the times of the Messiah in which both Moses his general and the Prophets particular prophecies were more fully accomplished then in any age before That which Jeremy in the third Verse of that same Chapter said of the Figs. was true of this people in all Ages The good amongst them were very good the naughty alwayes very naughty but the difference greater
the knowledge of the truth And as the Philosopher said of his moral Auditors Indocilitie that it skilled not whether he were Young or of Youthful affections so is it not the difference of Sex but resolution that makes a good Scholler or non proficient in the School of our Saviour JESUS CHRIST Many men have weak and Womanish and many women Manly and Heroick resolutions towards God and godlinesse 5 The infirmitie which vexed the religious Hanna was not so grievous as that of Naamans she was in our corrupt language as many honest women at this day are by nature Barren or if we would speak as the Prophet did in the right language of Canaan the Lord had made her barren weary she was of her own and according to the ordinary course of nature she saw no hope of being the author of life to others Yet in this her distresse she prayed unto the Lord her God and he granted her desire From this Experiment of Gods Power though not altogether so remarkable in ordinarie estimation as Naamans cure she fully conceives not only the truth of the former Oracle acknowledged by Naaman but more Emphatically expressed by her There is none Holy as the Lord yea there is none besides thee and there is no God like our God nor that other Attribute only of Wounding or making whole so lively uttered vers 6. The Lord killeth and maketh alive bringeth down to the grave and raiseth up but Gods Word planted in her heart by her fresh Experience grows up like a grain of Mustard-seed and brancheth it self into a faithful acknowledgement of most of his Attributes The Lord is a God of knowledge and by him enterprises are established the Bowe and the mighty men are broken and the weak have girded themselves with strength they that were full are hired forth for bread and the hungry are no more hired so that the barren hath born seven and she that hath born many children is feeble the Lord maketh poor and maketh rich bringethlow and exalteth he raiseth up the poor out of the dust and lifteth up the beggar from the dunghill to set them among Princes and to make them inherit the seat of glory for the Pillars of the earth are the Lords and he hath set the world upon them He will keep the feet of his Saints and the wicked shall be silent in darknesse for in his own Might shall no man be strong Nor doth it contain it self within the bounds of ordinary Belief but works in her heart like new wine filling it not only with Songs of Joy and Triumph over her envious Enemies Mine heart rejoyceth in the Lord my mouth is enlarged over my enemies because I rejoyce in thy salvation but also with the Divine Spirit of Prophecy The Lords adversaries shall be destroyed and out of Heaven shall he thunder upon them the Lord shall judge the ends of the world and shall give power unto his King and exalt the horn of his Anointed verse 10. 6 The like docilitie was in the blessed Virgin of whom perhaps Annah was the Type both of them verified that saying Verbum sapientisat est One Experiment taught them more then five hundred would do most of us The reason was because their hearts were so much better prepared For as heat in some bodies by reason of the indisposition of the matter causeth heat and nothing else in some scarce that in others brings forth life and fashioneth all the Organs and Instruments thereof so Experiments of Gods power in some mens hearts breed onely a perswasion of his Might or operation in that particular as in those foolish Aramites who vanquished in Battel by the Israelites whom he favoured questioned whether he were a God as well of the Vallies as of the Mountains in others the same or lesse Apprehension of his Power or Presence begetteth life and fashioneth this image in their hearts which thence will shew it self unto others in such ample and entire Confession of his Attributes as Hannah and the blessed Virgin uttered Some again are so ill disposed and indocile that the whole Moral Law of God might sooner be engraven in hardest Marble or Flint then any one precept imprinted in their hearts by such wonderful Documents of his Power as would teach the godly in an instant both the Law and Prophets Imagine some men in our dayes had been cured by like means of such a maladie as Naaman was or some women blessed from above with fruit of their wombes after so long sterilitie as Hannah endured Who could expect that one of ten in either Sex should return to give like thanks to God in the presence of his Priests or Prophets Were Elisha now living he must be wary to work his cure by his bare word and so perhaps he should be censured for a Sorcerer in any case he might not use the waters of Jordan or other like second causes otherwise curious wits would find out some hidden or secret vertue caused in them at least for the time being by some unusual but Benign ●●●ect of some Planet or Constellation in whose right they should be entitled either ful Owners or Copartners of that glory which Naaman ascribed wholly unto God And poor Hannah in this Politick Age should not be so much praised for her devotion or good skill in divine Poesie as pitied for a good H●●●st wel-meaning silly Soul that did attribute more to God then was his due upon ignorance of Alterations wrought in her Body by natural causes For it is not the custome of our Times to mark so much the ordering or disposition as the particular or present operation of such Agents If any thing fall out amisse we bid a Plague upon ill Fortune or curse mischance if ought aright we applaud our own or others Wits that have been employed in the businesse or perhaps thank God for Fashion sake that we had Good Luck He is to us in our good successe as a friend that lives far off who we presume wisheth well to such projects as he knows in general we are about being unacquainted with the particular means that must effect them or no principal Agent in their contrivance Hence do not I marvel though many do if such men in our times as reap the fruits of the fields which God hath blest in greatest Abundance make no conscience of returning the Tenth part to him that gave the whole when as not one of a thousand either in heart or deed or out of any distinct or clear apprehension of his power or efficacie or true resolution of all effects into the First Fountain whence they flow doth attribute so much as the Tenth nay as the Hundreth part to Gods doing in any Event wherein the industrie of man or operation of second Causes are apparant We speak like Christians of matters past recorded in Scripture but in our discourses of modern affairs our Paganismes and more then Heathenish Solecismes bewray the
Authoritie of some Books it rather ought to confirm his Faith that men disagreeing so much in many opinions so opposite in their affections should so well agree about the number of no fewer then two and twentie Canonical Books of the old Testament Had their authority only been Human or left to the choice of men whether they should be allowed or rejected many that now admit them would reject them because opposite Religions did embrace them That all sorts of Protestants Papists and Jews do receive them is an infallible Argument that he who is Lord of all did commend them to all Nor doth our Church so disclaim all which the Romans above these two and twenty admit as if it were a point of faith to hold there were no more it only admits no more into the same Rank and Order with the former because we have no such warrant of faith or sure Experiments so to do Many of them discover themselves to be Apocryphal and albeit some of them can very hardly or not at all be discerned for such by their Stile Character or dissonancie to Canonical Scriptures yet that none of them indeed are or can be admitted for Canonical without manifest tempting of God is evident from what hath been observed before concerning Gods unspeakable providence in making the Blinded and Perfidious Jews Christ's and our bitterest enemies such trusty Feoffees for making over the Assurances of Life unto us For seeing by them he commended unto us only so many Books of the old Testament as our Church acknowledgeth this is an intallible Argument that His will was we should admit no more Had any more been written before the re-edifying of the Temple by Zerubbabel no doubt the Jews would have admitted them into their Canon For all such as should be written after the Prophet Malachie who is the last of their Canon had left this caveat in the last words of his prophecie for not admitting them Remember the law of Moses my servant which I commanded to him in Horeb in all Israel with the statutes and judgments as if he had said You must content your selves with His Writings such as you have already Consonant to his for any others of equal Authoritie you may not expect until the Expectation of the Gentiles come For no Prophet shall arise untill that time as he intimates in the last words Behold I will send you Eliah the Prophet before the coming of the great and fearful day of the Lord and he shall turn the hearts of the fathers unto the children and the hearts of the children to their fathers lest 〈◊〉 come and smite the earth with cursing The Ministery of others for converting souls he supposed should be but ordinarie by the Exposition of the Law and Prophets and the Authoritie of such writ they as much as they listed could not be Authentick or Canonical 3 Some others again of reformed Churches in these our times have from the example of Antiquitie doubted of the authoritie of some Books in the new Testament as of Jude of James the second of Peter and some others Which doubt is now diminished by their continuance in the sacred Canon so long time not without manifest documents of GODS providence in preserving ●hem whose pleasure it may seem was to have these Books of whom the Ancients most doubted fenced and guarded on the one side by S. Pauls Epistles and other Canonical Scriptures never called in question by any but absurd and foolish Hereticks whose humorous opinions herein died with themselves and on the other by the Book of the Apocalypse of whose Authoritie ●hough many of the Ancient for the time being doubted yet He that was before all times did fore-see that it should in later times manifest it self to be ●…is work by Events answerable to the Prophecies contained in it And albeit many Apocryphal Books have been stamped with Divine Titles and ob●…uded upon the Church as Canonical whilest she was in her Infancie and the sacred Canon newly constitute yet the divine Spirit by which it was written hath wrought them out as new wine doth such filth or grossenesse as mingle with it whilest the grapes are troden S. Johns Adjuration in the conclusion of that Book hath not only terrified all for adding unto or diminishing it ●elf but hath been as it were a Seal unto the rest of this Sacred Volume of the new Testament as Malachies prophecie was to the old the whole Canon it self consisting both of the Old and New continues still as the Ark of God and all other Counterfeits as Dagon 4 Were not our Roman adversaries Doctrine concerning the general principles of Faith an Invention devised of purpose by Satan to obliterate all print ●r impression of Gods providence in governing his Church out of mens hearts how were it possible for any man endued with reason to be so far overgrown with Phrensie as not to conceive their own folly madnes in avouch●…g we cannot know what books are Canonical what not but by the Infallible Testimony of the present Romish Church But of those impieties at large hereafter I wil now only infer part of their Conclusion which they still labor but never shall be able to prove from Premises which they never dreamt of For 〈◊〉 profess among others this is not the least reason I have to hold the Apocalypse for Canonical Scripture because the Romish Church doth so esteem it Nor could reformed Churches Belief of its Authority be so strong unless that Church had not denied but openly acknowledged it for Canonical Scripture As the same Beams of the Sun reach from heaven to earth and from one end of the world to another so do the same raies of Gods power extend themselves from generation to generation alwaies alike conspicuous to such as are Illuminate by His Spirit for who thus Illuminate can acknowledg his providence in making the Jews so careful to preserve the old Testament and not as clearly discern the same in constraining the Romish Church to give her supposed infallible Testimony of the Apocalypse Doubtlesse if that Book had been the work of man it had been more violently used by that Church of late then ever the new Testrment hath been by the Jewish Synagogue or any Heretick by the Romanists seeing it hath said far more against ●hem then any whom they account for such ever did But God who ●ade Pharaohs Daughter a second mother unto Moses whom he had ap●…ted to bring destruction afterwards upon her Fathers house and King●●m hath made the Romish Church of old a Dry Nurse to preserve this Book whose meaning she knew not that it might bring desolation upon her self 〈◊〉 her children in time to come For by the breath of the Lord shall she be destroyed her doom is already read by S. John the Lord of late hath intangled her in her own snare whilest she was drawing it to catch others Her childrens Brags of their mothers
annexed to any peculiar Men or Company of Men distinct from others by Prerogative of Place Preheminence of Succession and from him or them to be derived unto all others set apart for this Ministerie or whether the Ministerie of any men of what Place or Societie soever whom God hath called to this Function and enabled for the same be sufficient for the begetting of true Faith without any others Confirmation or Approbation of their Doctrine 9 Secondly it is questioned how this Ministery of Man which is necessarily supposed ordinarily both for knowing the Word of God and the true Meaning of it becomes available for the begetting of true Belief in either point In whomsoever the Authoritie of this Ministerial Function be the Question is whether it perform thus much only by Proposing or Expounding the Word which is Infallible or by their Infallible Proposal or Exposition of it that is whether for the attaining of true Belief in both Points mentioned we must relie infallibly upon the Infallible VVord of God only or partly upon it and partly upon the Infallibility of such as expound it unto us Or in other words thus whether the Authoritie or Infallibilitie of any Mans Doctrine or Asseveration concerning these Scriptures or their true Sense be as infallibly to be Believed as those Scriptures themselves are or that Sense of them which the spirit of God hath wrought in our Hearts by sure and undoubted Experience 10 These are the principal Roots and Fountains of Difference between us concerning our present Controversie whence issue and spring these following First Whether Christ whose Authoritie both acknowledge for Infallible hath left any Publick Judge of these Scriptures which both receive or of their right Sense and Meaning from whose Sentence we may not appeal or whether all to whom this Ministrie of Faith is committed be but Expositors of Divine Scriptures so as their Expositions may by all faithful Christians be examined Hence ariseth that other Question whether the Scriptures be the Infallible Rule of Faith If Scripture admit any Judge then is it no Rule of Faith If all Doctrines are to be examined by Scripture then is it a perfect Rule 11 Our Adversaries especially later Jesuites Positions are these The Infallible Authoritie of the present Church that is of some visible Companie of living Men must be as absolutely Believed of all Christians as any Oracle of God and hence would they bind all such as pro●esse the Catholick Faith in all Causes concerning the Oracles or Word of God to yield the same Obedience unto Decrees and Constitutions of the Church which is due unto these Oracles themselves even to such of them as all Faithful Hearts do undoubtedly know to be Gods written Word 12 The Reasons pretended for this absolute Obedience to be performed unto the Church or visible Company of Men are drawn from the Insufficiency of Scripture either for notifying it self to be the Word of God or the true Sense and Meaning of it self Consequently to these Objections they stifly maintain That the Infallible Authority of the present Church is the mos● sure most safe undoubted Rule in all Doubts or Controversies of Faith or in all Points concerning these Oracles of God by which we may certainly know Both without which we cannot possibly know either which are the Oracles of God which not or what is the true Sense and Meaning of such as are received for his Oracles one of the especial Consequents of these Assertions is That this Churches Decisions or Decrees may not be examined by Scriptures 13 Our Churches Assertions concerning the knowledge of Gods Word in general is thus As Gods Word is in it self Infallible so it may be infallibly apprehended and Believed by every Christian unto whom he vouchsafeth to speak after what manner soever he speak unto him Yea whatsoever is necessary for any man to Believe the same must be infallibly written in his heart and on it once written there he must immediately relie not upon any other Authoritie concerning it 14 Or if we speak of Gods written Word our former general Assertion may be restrained thus 15 We are not bound to Believe the Authority of the Church or visible Compani● of any living men either concerning the Truth or true Sense of Divine Oracles written so stedfastly and absolutely as we are bound to Believe the Divine written Oracles themselves Consequently to this Assertion we affirm 16. The the In●allible Rule whereupon every Christian in matters of written Verities absolutely and finally without all appeal condition or reservation is to relie must be the Divine written Oracles themselves some of which every Christian hath written in his Heart by the finger of Gods Spirit and Believes immediately In and For themselves not for any Authoritie of Men and these to him must be the Rule for examining all other Doctrines and trying any Masters of Faith But because most in our daies in Matters of Faith and Christian Obedience misse the Celestial Mean and fall into one of the two extreams It shall not be amisse while we seek to divert their course from Sylla to admonish lest they make shipwrack in Charybdis CAP. IV. Shewing the Mean betwixt the two Extremities the one in Excesse proper to the Papists the other in Defect proper to the Anti-papist 1 IT is a Rule in Logick that Two contrary Propositions for their form may be both False And hence it is that many Controversers of our times either in love to the Cause they defend or heat of contention not content only to Contradict but desirous to be most Contrarie to their Adversaries fal into Errour with them No Controversie almost of greater moment this day extant but yields Experiments of this Observation though none more plentiful then this in hand concerning the visible Churches Authoritie or Obedience due to Spiritual Pastours 2 The Papists on the one side demand Infallible Assent and illimited Obedience unto whatsoever the Church shall propose without examination of her Doctrine or appeal which is indeed as we shall afterwards prove to takeaway all the Authority of Gods Word and to erect the present Churches Consistorie above Moses and S. Peters Chair On the other side sundrie by profession Protestants in eagernesse of opposition to the Papists affirm that the Church or Spiritual Pastors must then only be Believed then only be Obeyed when they give Sentence according to the Evident and Expresse Law of God made evident to the Hearts and Consciences of such as must Believe and Obey them And this in one word is to take away all Authoritie of Spiritual Pastors and to deprive them of all Obedience unto whom doubtlesse God by his written Word hath given some special Authoritie and Right to exact some peculiar Obedience of their Flock Now if the Pastor be then only to be Obeyed when he brings evident Commission out of Scripture for those particulars unto which he demands Belief or Obedience
by meer Natural precepts For we suppose what afterwards wil manifest it self that all Truths necessary for men to Believe have a distinct relish from all falshood or other unnecessary or superfluous Truths and may be known by their fruit so men wil be careful to preserve the Sincerity of their Spiritual Taste 4 Gods written Word then is the only pure Fountain and Rule of Faith yet not such immediately unto all as it is written but the Learned or Spiritual Instructors only whose Hearts and Consciences must be ruled by it as in all other spiritual duties so especially as they are Instructors in this That they may not commend any Truths or principles of faith unto the illiterate but such as are expresly contained in Gods written Word or at least are in substance the self same with these written Truths If the Unlearned through Gods just Judgement absolutely admit of other principles and equalize them with these such shal lead them into Errour and pervert their faith If they doubt of any mans Doctrine whether it be truly Spiritual or consonant to the foundation of faith they may appeal to Scriptures as they shal be expounded to them by others Finally they are tied to no visible Company of men whom they must under pain of damnation follow but for their Souls Health they may trie every Spiritual Physitian If they wil be Humorous they may but at their own peril both for Temporal Punishment in this life and for Eternal in the life to come 5 For conclusion the Scripture according to our doctrine and the general Consent of Reformed Churches is the only Infallible rule of faith in both respects or conditions of a Perfect Rule First in that it contains all the principles of faith and points of salvation So that no Visible Church on earth may commend any doctrine to others as a doctrine of Faith unlesse it be commended to them for such by the Scriptures by which every ones doctrine that acknowledgeth God for his Lord must be examined as by a Law uncontrollable Secondly in that these principles of faith are plainly perspicuously and distinctly set down to the Capacities of all that faithfully follow their practical rules most plain most perspicuous and easie to all capable of any rule or reason So that this Sacred Canon needs no Associate no Addition of any Authoritie as equally infallible nor more perspicuous then it self to supply what it wants only the Ministery of men skilful and industrious in the search or Exposition of it is to be supposed And all these be they never so excellent and wel conversant in them are unto Scriptures but as the ordinary Expositors of Classick and Authentick Books are unto the chief Authors or Inventors of the science contained in them Supposing that the first Authors were men of extraordinary and infallible skil and their Expositors as they usually are but of ordinary Capacity or Experience in those faculties 6 Finally the Books of Scriptures are to be reputed a more absolute Rule for all Matters of Faith and Divine Mysteries then any Books or Writings of men are for natural sciences or secular professions as in sundrie other Respects so in This that they give as more facile so more infallible directions for finding out their true Sense and Meaning then any other Writings do or Writers could have done who though present could not be so fully Assistant but cannot so much as affoord their presence to their Expositours in the search of Truths rather professed then fully conceived much lesse infallibly taught by them whereas the Spirit of Truth which first did dictate is every where present alwayes Assistant to such as seriously and sincerely seek the Truth contained in these Divine Oracles conducting them from Knowledge to Knowledge both by all such Means as Artists have for increasing their skil and by other Means extraordinary such as none in any other Faculty can have nor any may hope for in the Search of Scriptures but only such as Delight in and Meditate upon them Day and Night SECT II. That the pretended Obscurity of Scriptures is no just Exception why they should not be acknowledged the absolute Rule of Faith which is the Mother-Objection of the Romanist CAP. XII How far it may be granted the Scriptures are Obscure with some Premonitions for the right state of the Question 1 IT is first to be supposed that these Scriptures for whose Soveraignty over our Souls we plead against the pretended Authority of the Romish Church were given by God for the Instruction of all succeeding Ages for all sorts of Men in every Age for all Degrees or divers Measures of his other Gifts in all several sorts or Conditions of Men. This diversitie of Ages and Conditions of Men in several Callings who so wel considers may at the first sight easily discover our Adversaries Willingnesse to wrangle in this point whose usual practise as if they meant to cast a Mist before the weak-sighted Readers eyes is to pick out here and there some places of Scriptures more Hard and difficult then Necessary or requisite to be understood of Every man perhaps of Any man in this Age. The Knowledge of all or any of which notwithstanding those that live after us though otherwise peradventure men of far meaner gifts then many in this present Age shall not therefore need to give for lost or desperate when they shall be called unto this Search For God hath appointed as for every thing else so for the Revelation of his Word certain and peculiar Times and Seasons Daniel though full of the Spirit of Prophecie and one that during the Reign of Nebuchadnezzar and Balthasar his son had as it were continually travelled of Revelations concerning the Estate of Gods Church and the affairs of forrain Kingdoms for many generations to come yet knew not the approaching Time of his peoples deliverance from Captivity until the first year of Darius son of Ahashuerosh And this he learned by Books even in the first year of his Raign I Daniel understood by Books the number of the years whereof the Lord had spoken unto Jeremiah the Prophet that he would accomplish seventy years in the desolation of Jerusalem And of his own Revelation he saith And Daniel was commanded to shut up his words and seal up his book unto the end of the Time or as some read unto the appointed Time and then many shall run to and fro and Knowledge shall be increased For at the Time appointed as he intimates in the words following others though no Prophets were to know more of this Prophecy then the Prophet did himself Then I heard it but I understood it not then said I O my Lord what shall be the end of these things And he said Go thy way Daniel for the words are closed up and sealed till the end of the Time 2 The Prophets of later Ages did see Revelations of matters which had been hid from the Ancient
mocked him 3 That all honest-minded men should be able to understand all Places of Scriptures we never affirmed that without the Ministerie or help of others they should ordinarily understand any aright we never taught This notwithstanding we constantly avouch Without this Condition of doing Gods Will not men otherwise furnished with the best Gifts of Art and Nature can ever be competently qualified for spiritual Instructors By performing it the simple and illiterate shall be made capable of good Instructions and enabled to discern true Doctrine from false By our Saviours Rule in the very next words more infallible than any other pretended Infallibilitie can be we may discern the Pope of all others to be no true much lesse any infallible Teacher unlesse of Lies and Antichristian deceit For he that seeketh his own glory as what Pope is there doth not so many seek the Popedome by their predecessors bloud he speaks of himself not the Word of him whose Viear he boasts himself to be 4 To place the Apostle S. Pauls Authority next in sile unto our Saviours Fashion not your selves saith he unto his beloved Romans like unto this present world but be ye changed by the nenewing of your mind that ye may prove what is the good Will of God and acceptable and perfect Being fashioned like unto the present World they were altogether disproportionable unto the Kingdom of heaven uncapable of heavenly Mysteries but being renewed in their minds they might prove taste and rel●… aright the Meaning of Gods Word revealed Of such as disanul the Scriptures for being the Rule of Faith and transfer this Canonical Dignity upon the Pope I would gladly be resolved whether this his Holinesse Infallibility can take away the Veil which is laid before the Jews hearts or this Desire which raigns in most men of fashioning themselves unto this present World whether he can in all such as professe Christianity root out those Lusts and Concupiscences those corneae fibrae stiff and stubborn heart-strings as are the very the eeds whereof this Veile is made which makes the Scriptures so Difficult and so eclipseth their Light in respect of men If he cannot well may he make them understand or believe his own Decrees but never rightly apprehend or stedfastly embrace the Spiritual Mysteries of their Salvation That Rule of S. Pauls is still most infallible The Natural or Carnal Man is altogether uncapable of the things of Gods Spirit of those things which are in themselves most evident Neither can be know them If you wil not believe his Authority as infallible he gives you a Reason for the truth of the Conclusion for they are spiritually discerned Is it then the Popes Infallibility or the framing of our lives according to Gods holy Word that must purge the Errours of our young and wanton dayes and make us cease to be homines 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Natural or Carnal men and become Spiritual If the Popes infallibility cannot perform this to what use doth it serve The Scriptures wil be difficult stil and their sense insipid to such as have not their hearts thus cleansed If without his Infallibility by the Industry of faithful Pastours attentive Hearing and serious Meditation of his sacred Word our lives may be amended and we of Carnal men become Spiritual we shal discern the things of God what is his Wil and mercy towards us in Christ we shal know of every Doctrine necessary unto our Salvation whether it be of God or no much better then the Pope and his Cardinals can do if they be Carnals For our Apostle adds The Spiritual man judgeth or discerneth all things and is judged of none The sense of which words some of your School-men much mistake when they hence gather that the Pope may judge Princes but the Spirituality so in common talke we cal the Clergie may not be judged by any Temporal or Lay Power Our Apostle means nor wil a learned Interpreter though a Papist deny it that in matters of Faith and in the Truth of Divine Mysteries the truly spiritual that is such as are renewed in the inner man not such as bear the Name or Title of Spiritual men in their corrupt language see and understand those things which the Wisdom of God hath hidden from the wisest and most glorious Teachers of the World from all Carnal men of what Gifts soever they may be in other matters as appears by our Apostles Discourse in that place Which Doctrine of our Apostle how truly it is verified in the wise men of Rome the Jesuites I mean to give them what by our Proverb we are bound to give their Master their due men of famous industry and excellent reach in all subtile and profound Arts but how ignorant and besotted in matters of Faith and Mysteries of mans Salvation their Doctrine in this present Controversie being compared with this Axiom of our Apostle may abundantly witnesse to the Astonishment of all sober-minded Christian Readers 5 They cannot deny That matters of Faith and Christian Life the Mysteries of mans Salvation are matters belonging to the Spirit of God and that a lewd naughty ambitious luxurious man an Heretick is homo 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Carnal Man they will not offer to call in question Again that many of their Popes be such as I have said naughty wicked luxurious men they openly confesse Some of them grant that Honorius was an Heretick Valentian will not dispute this particular de facto whether he were one or no but that the Pope or Popes may hold Heretical Opinions he granteth albeit thus tainted with Heresie they cannot propose their Heresies ex Cathedra to be Believed by others believe Valentian herein who list for God by his Providence would prevent this Mischief But howsoever the Pope and his Cardinals may by their own Confession be Carnal Men with a witnesse Now S. Paul saith plainly Homo animalis non potest cognoscere ea quoe sunt Spiritus Dei No Carnal or Natural man can conceive the things of the Spirit of God 1 Cor. 2. 14. for this indefinite Proposition in materia necessaria may have this Universal Note Homo animalis non potest cognoscere no Carnal Man can perceive The Jesuites affirm the Contradictory unto S. Pauls Doctrine as an undoubted Article of Faith The Pope say they albeit homo animalis though a most wicked man though otherwise an Heretick the worst of Carnal Men cannot but discern the things that belong unto the Spirit all the Mysteries of Mans Redemption all points whatsoever necessary to Mans Salvation For he cannot erre in deciding such Matters if he speak ex Cathedra More unhappy man Honorius more Fools have the whole generation been that ever would shut their mouthes or cease to speak ex Cathedra even to the last gasp 6 That sund●y lewd and wicked men may learnedly discourse of spiritual matters and deduce necessary Consequents out of Truths supposed or
but like Lessons got by rote It must be quite forgotten at least utterly renounced and laid aside before we can be admitted into the School of Christ in which all in this life are but parvuli petties or children for their simplicity and harmlesse minds for Lowlinesse and Nullity of self-conceit Hence saith our Apostle If any man think himself wise let him become a fool that he may may learn wisdom aright And our Saviour Christ saith unto his disciples except ye be converted and become like litle children ye shall not enter into the Kingdom of heaven that is they cannot be capable of this Heavenly Doctrine For true and sanctifying Grace must be ingrafted in this harmlesse simplicity and child-like Disposition 9 It is the Nature and Property of Gods Word to be plain and facile unto such as are of Disposition semblable to it as to the sincere of heart single in life and plain in dealing but obscure and difficult unto the worldly-wise The simplicity of It and the subtilty of the Politician or secular Artist parallel as ill as a straight Rule or Square with a distorted crooked stick The testimony of the Lord saith the Psalmist is sure and giveth wisdom to the Simple The word in the Original silly or credulous such as in worldly affairs are more easie to be deceived then apt to deceive and is rendred by the Septuagint 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 parvuli which word it pleased our Saviour to use when he intimates this Perspicuity of Gods Word unto such little ones I thank thee O father Lord of heaven and earth because thou hast hid these things from the wise and men of understanding and hast opened them unto Babes It is so O father because thy good pleasure was Such Such as in this whole discourse we have supposed and this place doth prove that is Such as had decreed that the Doctrine of Life should be most difficult and hard to proud disobedient or craftily-minded men but most perspicuous because to be revealed by God unto such little ones And again lest any man should presume upon his Wisdom or Dexterity of Wit he tels us expresly no man knoweth the Father but the Son and he to whom the Son will reveal him And his Will is to reveal himself and his Word unto all and only such as we have said to little Ones or such as become little Children casting off the burthen of Age which hath brought such Faintnesse and wearinesse upon their Souls that they cannot hope for any good successe in the Course which tends to everlasting Life until they be disburthened of all former Cares And hence in the next verse his words are general Come unto me all ye that are weary and heavy laden So they will take up his Yoak which is easie and his Burthen which is light he wil free them from all the grievances and discommodities of their former Yoak learning but this one Lesson of Humility and Meeknesse of him it wil teach them all the rest for by it they shal find rest unto their Souls which Christ wil refresh not as the Pope doth with Anathema's binding unto Negatives but with the true taste of this Water of Life 10 Nor wil any of our Adversaries I hope be so perverse as to say our Saviours Doctrine in this place did hold true only for that time wherein the Knowledge of Christ and Doctrine of his Gospel was to be first published For such perversity would bewray so great ignorance in Scriptures and little experience in the course of Christianity as they would be ashamed to be suspected of For who sees not this Opposition between worldly wisdom and heavenly knowledge to continue stil in their several Professours throughout all Ages Nor can any man be sure his Faith is not humorous or Hypocritical unlesse he be transformed into such a little One as Christ here speaks of and have true Humility surely planted in his heart This is the Fundamental or first Principle whereinto Faith must be resolved even all those Graces or Pledges of Gods favour whereon most rely in trial of their Spiritual Estate must be apparantly seated in this Lowlinesse and Simplicity or else eve●y man through the Multiplicity and Subtilty of his own heart shal be over-seen in his perswasions 11 A lively Experiment of our Saviours Doctrine and our Assertion in this point we have in S. Austin as himself witnesseth I purposed to look into the sacred Scriptures that I might see what manner of Writings they were And ●o 〈◊〉 light on a matter altogether hid from the proud and yet not laid open unto children in progresse lowly in processe or issue stately and wrapped in mysteries Finally such as my quality made me uncapable of entrance unto it For the property of it was to grow up with little ones but I disdained to be a little one and swolne with fastuous conceit in mine own eyes I seemed a great one Here Valentian ●ucking poyson out of this reverend Fathers Hony demands importunatly whether it be a matter of no difficulty to procure our freedom from this tumour of viciousnesse To have our hearts purged from that Soot which is as the Jewish veil unto them And finally whether it be so easie a matter as we to his seeming make it to become Humble and meek without which vertues the Scriptures were obscure and difficult unto Austin himself otherwise A man of excellent wit 12 Me thinks this cumbersom Jesuites cholerick strain and Fool-hardy passionate carriage in this whole Controversie doth lively resemble a Strong Sturdy Lubber that had thrust himself unawares into a Quarrel which he is no way able to make good yet so stubborn that he wil not give over but fights and winks and cries and hit he misse he laies about him For can any man think he sees where these fierce Blows would light As much as we have said is most clear out of this very place of Austin which he would throw upon us Most clear it is that unto such as follow our Saviours Method set down before that is unto such as wil become like little Children and begin as it were anew again the Scripture which for the present seems hard to all far entred into the Worlds School is perspicuous clear and easie to be learned ●ut whether it 〈◊〉 hard to become Such a One or whether it be a difficult matter to lay aside all Pride and Self-conceit is no part of the Point now in question nothing at all to this intended Purpose To Man no doubt it is most Hard or rather altogether Impossible But what it is to man once made partaker of the Grace of God and Power of his Spirit let Christ Jesus the Fountain of Grace be Judge He hath told us that his Yoak is easie and his Furthen light Or wil they reply that his Yoak is easie indeed to bear when it is taken up but hard to
intreat the Christian Reader to consider well upon whom their usual Objections of Scriptures Obscurity are most likely to fall Upon us for whose good they were given Or upon God the Father who gave them his Son that partly spake them his Holy Spirit who only taught them his Prophets Apostles Evangelists or other his blessed Ministers which wrote them CAP. XV. The Romanisis Objections against the Scriptures for being Obscure do more directly impeach their first Author and his Messengers their Pen-men then us or the Cause in hand 1 THat these Scriptures which our Church holds Canonical and we now maintain to be the Rule of Faith were given for the good of Christs Church or Multitude of faithful men throughout the World our Adversaries wil not deny or if they would the Scriptures which expresly to deny they dare not bear evident Testimony hereof Infinite places are brought to this purpose by such as handle that Question Whether the written Word contain all Points necessary to Salvation 2 Saint John saith he wrote his Gospel that we might Believe By what Authority did he undertake by whose Assistance did he perform this Work Undertaken it was by Gods appointment effected by the assistance of his Eternal Spirit to the end we might Believe the Truth what Truth That which he wrote concerning the Mysteries of mans Salvation But how far did he intend this our Belief of such Mysteries should be set forward by his pen Unto the first Rudiments only or unto the midway of our Course to Heaven Questionlesse unto the utmost Period of all our Hopes for he wrote these things that we might Believe yea so believe in Christ as by Believing we might have Life through his Name Was he assisted by the Eternal Spirit who then perfectly knew the several tempers and capacities of evey Age And did he by his direction aim at the perfect Belief of succeeding Ages as the end and scope of all his Writings And yet did he write so obscurely that he could not be understood of them for whose good he wrote Out of Controversie his desire was to be understood of all for he envied no man Knowledg nor taught he the Faith of our glorious Lord Jesus Christ with respect of persons He wished that not the great Agrippa's or some few choice ones only but all that should hear or read his Writings to the Worlds end might be not almost but altogether such as he was Faithful Believers From his fervent desire of so happy an end as the Salvation of all he so earnestly sought the only correspondent Means to wit Posterities ful instruction in the Mysteries thereto belonging And for better Symbolizing with the ignorant or men as most of us are of duller capacity in such profound Mysteries his Paraphrase upon our Saviours speeches is oft-times so copious as would be censured for polixity or Tautology in an Artist But seeing the common salvation of others not his own Applause was the thing he sought he disdains not to repeat the same thing sometimes in the same otherwhiles in different words becoming in speech as his fellow Apostle was in Carriage All unto all that he might at leastwise of every sort gain some oft-times solicitous to prevent all occasion of mistaking our Saviours Meaning though in matters wherein Ignorance could not be deadly nor Errour so easie or dangerous as in those other Profundities of greatest moment which he so dilates and works upon as if he would have them transparent to all Christian eyes 2 Do not all the Evangelists aim at the same end do they not in as plain 〈◊〉 as they could devise or we would wish divulge to all the world the true Sense and Meaning of our Saviours Parables which neither the promiscuous Multitude to whom he spake nor his select Disciples or Apostles themselves until they were privately instructed understood aright as they themselves testifie so little ashamed are they to confesse their own so they may hereby expel or prevent like ignorance in others Tell me were not our Saviours Parables expounded by his blessed mouth as plain Rules of Life as may without prejudice to his all sufficiency be expected from any other mans Are not his similitudes wherein notwithstanding are wrapt the greatest Mysteries of the Kingdom drawn from such matters of common Use as cannot change whilest Nature remains the same for the most part so plain and easie as wil apply themselves to the attentive or wel-exercised in Moralities Strange it seemed unto our Saviour that his Disciples should not at the first proposal understand them Perceive ye not this Parable how should you then understand all other Parables Yet happy were they that they were not ashamed to bewray their Ignorance by asking when they doubted though in a point of little Difficulty This good desire of progresse in their course begun brought them within the Hemisphere of that glorious light whereby they were enabled afterward to discern the greatest Mysteries of the Kingdom And unto their Question concerning the meaning of that great Parable of the Sower which is one of the Fundamental Rules of Life Our Saviour immediately replies To you it is given to know the Mysteries of the Kingdom of God but unto them that are without all thing are done in Parables that they hearing may hear and not understand lest at any time they should turn and their sins should be forgiven them 4 Had our Evangelists only set out the Text and concealed the Comment it might have ministred matter of suspicion whether all Christians throughout all generations whilest this Gospel shal endure should be taught of God from the greatest to the least of them or whether Christ had not appointed some great infallible Teacher as his Vicar general to supply the same place successively in the Church that he himself had born amongst his Disciples One on whose living Voice all the Flock besides were in all Doubts or Difficulties to rely as the Apostles did on Christs in the unfolding of this Parable But seeing they have plainly revealed to us in writing what was revealed to them concerning the Meaning of this and other Parables of greatest Use from our blessed Saviours Mouth Their written Relations of these mysteries with their Expositions must be of the same Use and Authority unto us as Christs living Words were unto them And as they were not to repair unto any other but their Master alone for the Word of Eternal Life not to omit any other infallible Teacher for declaration of his Meaning so may not any Christian to this day infallibly rely upon any mans Expositions of his Words already expounded by himself and related by his Apostles these laid up like precious seed in our hearts the diligent labours of Gods ordinary Ministers only supposed would bring forth the true and perfect Knowledge of other Precepts of life in abundance competent to every man in his rank and order 5 For seeing what
death of a sinner but rejoyceth at his Repentance If we be wanting to our selves in the Practise of these Rules the Popes infallible Authoritie shall never be able to supply our Negligence his Blessing where God hath laid his Curse shall do as little good as Balaams endeavour to Curse the Israclites did them harm whom God had Blessed Observing the former Precepts well the Word of God which these men belike out of their own Experience challenge of Obscurity should be a Lantern unto our feet and a Light unto our paths as it was unto Davids 2 For the Readers further Satisfaction may it please him but unpartially to consider what two of the most-learned Jesuites in matters of moderne Controverses could answer unto this last place of the Psalmist 〈…〉 would have two strings to his deceitfull and broken Bow 〈◊〉 saith he it may be answered that the Psalmist speaks not of all Scriptures but of the Commandements onely If this answer of his could stand for good it would serve as a new Supporter to our former Assertion grounded on our Saviours words in the seventh of John For thus the Commandements 〈◊〉 not be Obscure but a Lantern unto our feet and if we follow them they will be as I have shewed before a perfect Light unto us to discern tro Doctrine from false And in this respect all good Commandements not the Decalogue or these Ten onely are properly a Light whereby we may clearly know as to avoid Evil so to discern that which is Good And by this Light was David conducted unto that true Wisdom which his enemies wanted † By thy Comman dements thou hast made me wiser then mine enemies But what reason had Bellarmine to think that David in the forementioned verse should mean the Commandements onely For there he saith plainly thy Word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is much more generall then 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Corrmandements or Testimonies yet David saith That he had more understanding then all his Teachers not the infallible Teacher that sate if any such there were in Moses Chair excepted So that his Commandements are a Light his Testimonies a Light and his Word a Light And the best 〈◊〉 as well Theirs as Ours take these words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Commandements Words promiseuously thorowout this whole Psalm Any one of these most of all the most generall of all Words s●gnisie at least all Scripture which serves for mans Direction in the way of Life 3 None can be restrained to the Decalogue onely This Bellarmine saw well enough Wherefore his second Answer is It may it must be granted that he speaks of all or rather of the whole Scripture But the Scriptures saith he are called a Lanterne and a Light non quia facile intelligantur not because they are Perspicuous and easie to be understood sed quia intellects cum fuerint illustrant mentem but because when they are understood they Illuminate the Mind or Understanding This much we have said before and still do grant that the Scriptures are not plain and easie unto All live they as they 〈◊〉 nor do they shine unto Such as are Blinded in the Pride Vanitie or Corruption of their Hearts yet a Light in themselves and a Light to all that Love not Dark●… more than Light A Light not after they are understood for a David got true understaning by their Light whose Propertie is as well to thew the way how to avoid that Blindnesse which causeth them to seem obscure as to illuminate the clear-sighted For as by the Sun we see what Bodies are 〈◊〉 transparent or penetrable by its light so by Scriputres we discerne what be the Obstacles that hinder the intromission of their Splendour in it self and for it self most apparent into our Hearts And the Glimpse of their 〈◊〉 Beams appearing thorow the Chinks and ruptures of that Veil of Corruption which Nature hath woven about the eye-sight of our Souls doth enlighten us so far as we begin to desire the Veils removal that we may have a full fruition of their marvellous and comfortable Light as men in the Morning after long and irksom Darknesse unlesse desirous with the sluggard in the Proverbs to have a little more sleep are occasioned to open their Windows when they see the Sun-beams appear in at the Chinks My meaning is those Precepts whereof I spake before to learn Humilitie and Meeknesse Gods Threatnings to sinners his sweet Promises to the Penitent to pray for Wisdom from above and infinite other like are so Perspicuous and clear that they cannot but find entrance into Enveiled if not withall maliciously Wilfull or sluggish Hearts and finding entrance cannot but suggest Considerations what their former Life hath been and whereunto their now professed Hopes do call them that now it is time they should arise from sleep seeing Salvation draweth neerer then when they first Beleeved that the Night is past and the Day at hand therefore time to cast away the works of Darknesse and put on the armour of Light to walk honestly as in the Day not in Gluttory and Drunkennesse neither in Chambering and Wantonnesse nor in Strife and Envie Unto Hearts thus prepared the Scriptures need no other Commendation then their own no infallible Proposers Authority to illustrate or confirm their Truth more then the Sun doth a more glorious Star to manifest his Brightnesse unto men indued with perfect sight For unto such as walk like Children of the Gospels Light nothing necessarie to their Souls health can be hid in Darknesse not the Day of Destruction which shall come as a snare upon other Inhabitants of the earth can steal upon them as a thief in the night 4 But unto Infidels Haughtie and Proud-minded men unto such as delight in Sin and love to sleep in sinfull Pleasures unto such as scorn to be controlled in their Courses the Light of Gods Word if it once shine or send some scattered Raies into their hearts it shines not so again for they draw a Curtain and spread the Veil lest further intromission of such Beams might interrupt their pleasant sleep This did Luther well teach had he been as well understood that the Scripture was onely Obscure or difficult unto Infidels or proud minds But Bellarmine replies At certè David non erat superbus aut infidelis Surely David was neither a proud man nor an Infidell and yet the Scripture was Obscure and difficult to him Let him be accounted both that thinks David was either a proud man or an Infidell But the Question is not whether he were but what was the Cause he was not such was it not the Perfection of Gods Law which did convert his soul was it not the Certainty of Gods Testimonies that gave Wisdom unto his Simplicitie Yes by these Precepts he had gotten understanding to have all the wayes of Falshood And except that Law had been his delight he had perished in his Affliction How then doth
Bellarmine prove that Law was Obscure to him which as he himself confesseth had given Light unto his eyes If it were not why did he pray to God to understand it Then I perceive the Jesuites drift in this present Controversie is to establish a Rule of Faith so easie and infallible as might direct in all the wayes of Truth without Prayer to God or any help from Heaven Such a one it seems they desire as all might understand at the first sight though living as luxuriously as their Popes or minding worldly matters as much as their Cardinals Nili velint nimium esse ●aeci unlesse they would as Valentian speaks desire to be Blinde 5 Surely more blind then Beetles must they be that can suffer themselves to be perswaded that ever God or Christ would have a Rule for mans direction in the Mysteries of Salvation so plain and easie as he should not need to be beholden to his Maker and Redeemer for the true and perfect understanding of it This is a Wisdom and Gift which cometh onely from above and must be daily and earnestly sought for at the hands of God who we may rest assured will be alwayes more ready to grant our Petitions herein with lesse changes then the Pope to give his Decisions in a doubtfull Case ●ad David ask a this Wisdom of him that sate in Moses Chair we might suspect the Pope might be sued unto But Davids God is our God his Lord our Christ our Redeemer and hath spoken more plainly unto us then unto David who yet by his meditations on Gods written Laws added Light to Moses Writings as later Prophets have done to his All which in respect of the Gospels Brightnesse are but as Lights shining in dark places yet even the least conspicuous amongst them Such as will give manifest evidence against us to our eternal Condemnation if we seek this Wisdom from any others then Christs his Prophets and Apostles Doctrine by any other Means or Mediatourship then David did his From Gods Law written by Moses 6 Let us now see what Valentian can say unto the fore-cited Testimonie and to that other like unto it We have also a most sure word of the Prophets to the which ye do well that yee take heed as unto a Light that shineth in a ●…k place untill the day dawn and the day-Star ariseth in your hearts It is true saith the Doctor the word of God is a Light and this Light is clear and illuminates the eyes But it must be considered how it comes to enlighten our eyes Do you su pos that it effects this in as much as every man doth comprehend it within the 〈◊〉 of his private wit or industry as it were in a little bushell Nothing lesse But ●… it as it is placed in the Authority of the Catholick Church as in a Candlestick where it may give Light to all that are in the house For we shall shew saith he ●… place that this Authoritie of the Church is the living Judge and Mistresse of ●…th 〈◊〉 therefore is it necessary that she should carrie this Light which is cont●… Holy W●it and shew it unto all that associate themselves to her and remain ●… bosome although they be unlearned men and such as are not able by themselves to behold this Light as it is contained in the Scriptures as in a Lanthorn 7 He that could find in his heart to spend his groat or go a mile to see a Camel dance a Jigge let him but lay his finger on his mouth that he spoil not the Pageant with immoderate laughing and he may without any further cost or pains be partaker of as prettie a Sport to see a grand demure School-Divine laying aside his wonted habit of Metaphysical Proof turned Doctour Similitude on a suddain and swaggering it in the Metaphorical Cut. For what one joynt or strain is there in this long laborious vast Similitude that doth any way encline unto the least semblance of Truth or can be drawn to illustrate any such Meaning as this man intended or any way to break the force of our Writers Arguments drawn from the forecited places For first what Semblance is there between a private mans Interpretation or Comprehension of Scripture-sence and the putting of a Light or Candle under a Bushel For what though some one some few or more such men will apprehend this or that to be the full Meaning of some controversed place in Scripture I am by our Churches Doctrine no more bound to Believe them then I am to Believe the Pope of Rome whom I never saw nor knew I am bound to Believe neither of them more then if they should tell me that the whole Light of that candle which shines alike to all were onely comprehended in their eyes For by our Doctrine I may behold the same Light of Scriptures which they do as freely as they Judge of it by mine own eyes and Sense as well as they not onely submit my Sense and judgement unto theirs But if we should as this ●esuite would have us permit the judgement of all Scripture-sence wholly and irrevocably unto the Pope and his Cardinals as if their Consistorie were the compleat Hemisphere or rather the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sphere the whole sphere wherein this heavenly Lamp doth shine then indeed we should see no more of its Light then we could of a Candle put under a Bushell or locked up in some close Room In which Case we might Believe others that it did shine there still but whether it did so or no we could not Judge by our own eyes And in like manner would this Doctor perswade us that we should judge of this Light of Scriptures onely by the Testimonie or Authoritie of such as see it shine in the Consistorie at Rome not with our own eyes Had the Lord permitted but one grain of good wit to have remained in this Bushel of Bran not Impudencie in grain could without Plushing have offered to accuse our Church for hiding the Light of Scriptures under a Bushell when as we contend the free Use of it should be permitted to the whole Congregation But he disputeth of the Light as Blind men may of Colours He lived at Ingolstade and the Light of Gods Word was at Rome lockt up within the compasse of the Consistorie so that he could not see to make his comparison of it Secondly what Proportion is there between the Churches Authority such Authority as he claims for his Church and a Candlestick Let the Consistory be supposed the Candlestick wherein the word of God doth shine as a Light or Candle Doth it indeed shine there unto whom To all that will associate themselves to that Church Come then let every man exhort his Neighbour to repair to the Mountain of the Lord. Shall we there immediately see the Truth of Scriptures clearly and distinctly with our own eyes because the Pope or Trent-Councel holds out unto us the Books
heard or learned from his godly Ancestors doth but trace out the Print of Moses footsteps almost obliterate and overgrown by the sloth and negligence of former Times wherein every man had trod what way he liked best And though the same Prophet descend to later Ages as low as Davids Yet he proceeds still by the same Rule relating nothing but such Historical Events or Experiments as confirm the Truth of Moses divine Predictions such as are yet extant in Canonical Scriptures So perfect and absolute in his judgement was that Part of the Old Testament which then was written to instruct not only the Men such as he was but every Child of God that he presumes not to know or teach more them in It was written And thus much this people should have done by Moses Precept without a Prophet for their Remembrancer And these Words which I command thee this day shall be in thine heart And thou shalt rehearse them continually unto thy children and shalt talk of them when thou tarriest in thine house and as thou walkest by the way and when th●… liesi down and when thou risest up And thou shalt bind them for a Sign upon thine hand and they shall be as Frontlets between thine eyes Also thou shalt write them upon the posts of thine house and upon thy gates And again S●t your hearts unto all the Words which I command you this day that you may command them unto your children that they may observe and do all the Words of this Law For it is no vain Word concerning you but it is your Life and by this Word you shall prolong your dayes 2 Questionlesse they that were bound to observe and do this Law were bound to know it and yet Moses refers them not to his Successor as if it were so obscure that it could not possibly be known without his Infallibility but on the contrary he supposeth it so plain and easie that every Father might instruct his Son in it and every Mother her Daughter It was their own daily Experience of the fruits and benefits in Obeying of their harms and plagues in Disobeying his Precepts which was to seal their Truth unto their Consciences For without such Observation without squaring their Lives and comparing their Thoughts and Actions unto this streight and plain Rule all other Testimonies of men or Authorities of their most infallible Teachers were in vain The Miracles which they had seen to day were quite forgotten ere nine dayes after Nor could their Perswasions or conceit of Moses Infallibility serve them for any Rule when they had shaken off these inward Cogitations and measured not the Truth of his Predictions by Experiments In their Temptations they were as ready to disclaim Moses as alwayes they were to distrust God whose mighty Wonders they had seen To what use then did the sight of all Gods Wonders or of Miracles wrought by Moses serve Motives they were necessary and excellent to incline their stubborn hearts to use this Law of God for their Rule in all their Actions and proceedings and to cause them set their hearts unto it as Moses in his last Words commands them For this Law as he had told them before was in their Hearts 3 Would any man that doth fear the Lord or reverence his Word but set his heart to read over this Book of Deuteronomy or the one hundred and nineteenth with sundry other Psalms but with ordinary Observation or attention that so the Character of Gods Spirit so lively imprinted in them might be as an Amulet to prevent the Jesuites Inchantments It would be impossible for all the wit of Men or Angels ever to fasten the least suspicion on his thoughts whether the Ancient Faithful Israelites did take this Law of Moses for their Infallible Rule in all their proceedings For nothing can be made more evident then this Truth is in it self That the Israelites Swarving from this Rule was the Cause of their departure from their God and the Occasion or Cause of their Swarving from it was this devilish Perswasion which Satan suggested to them then as the Jesuites do unto the Christian People now That this Law was too Obscure too Hard too Difficult to be understood no compleat Rule for their actions without Traditions or relying upon their Priests or Men in chief Authority This Hypocrisie Moses did wel foresee would be the beginning of all their Miseries the very Watch-word to Apostasie For which Cause he labours so seriously to prevent it Deut 30. 14. For this Commandment which I set before thee this day is not hid from thee neither far off but the Word is very near unto thee even in thy mouth and in thy heart to do it How was it in their Mouthes and in their Hearts when it was so obscure and difficult unto them after Moses Death It was in their Hearts and in their Posterity too had they set their hearts to it But as it is true Pars sanitatis est velle sanari It is a part of Health to be willing to be healed so was it here Pars morbi nolle sanari more then a part of this their grievous Disease their Blindnesse of heart was their pronenesse to be perswaded that this Word or Doctrine which Moses here taught was too Obscure and Difficult for them to follow They first began as the Jesuites do to pick Quarrels with God for which their Stubbornnesse he gave them over to their hearts desire And this his Sacred Word which should have been a Lantern unto their feet and a Light unto their paths as it was to Davids became a stumbling Block and a Stone of offence 1 Cor. 1. 23. What was the reason By their swarving from this plain and straight Rule their wayes became crooked and their actions unjust And it is the Observation of the wise Son of Sirach As Gods wayes are right and plain unto the just so are they stumbling Blocks unto the wicked Not Moses himself had he been then alive could have made this or any other true Rule of Faith plain unto these Jews whilest they remained perverse and stubborn And had they without Moses or any infallible Teachers help cast off this Crookednesse of heart Moses his infallible Doctrine had stil remained easie streight and plain unto them For it was in their Hearts though hid and smothered in the Wrinkles of their crooked Hearts In our Saviours time they wil not assent unto the Word written nor unto the Eternal Word unto which all the Writings of the Prophets gave Testimony unlesse they may see a Signe What was the Cause They had not laid Moses Commandments to their hearts For had they from their hearts Believed Moses they had Believed Christ For all whose Miracles wrought for their good in their sight and presence they cannot or wil not see that his Words were The Words of Eternal Life as Peter confesseth John 6. 68. Nor would any Jesuite
have acknowledged as much had be been in their place For why should he Any other might say he had the Spirit of God and that he was the Messias and what if Peter one of his Fellows late a Fisher-man did confesse him The Scribes and Pharisees principal Members of the visible Church deny him to be their Messias And how should they know his Words to be the Word of God unlesse the Church had confirmed them If Christ himself should have said in their hearing as he did to the Jews John 5. 46. Moses wrote of me consider his Doctrine and lay it to your hearts A Jesuite would have replied You say Moses wrote of you But how shal we know that he meant you Moses is dead and saies nothing and they that sit in his Chair say otherwise And verily the Scribes and Pharisees had far greater Probabilities to plead for the Infallibility of that Chair then the Jesuites can have for their Popes who had they been in the others place could have coyned more matter out of that one saying of our Saviour Mat. 23. 2. Sedent in Cathedra Mosis for the Scribes and Pharisees infallible Authority then all the Papists in the world have been able to extract out of all the Scriptures that are or can be urged for the Pope or Church of Romes Infallibilitie 4 The Scribes and Pharisees though no way comparable to the ●esuites for cunning in painting rotten or subtilty in oppugning Causes true and ●…nd could urge for themselves against such as confessed Christ that none of the Rulers nor of the Pharisees did Believe in him but only a Cursed Crew of such as knew not the Law John 7. 48. They could Object the Law was obscure and the interpretation of it did belong to them But could these pretences excuse the people for not obeying Christs Doctrine You will say perhaps they could not be excused because Christs Miracles were so many and manifest These were somewhat indeed if Christ had been their Accuser But our Saviour saith plainly that he would not accuse them to his Father And for this cause he would not work many Miracles amongst such as were not moved with the like already wrought lest he should increase their Sins If Christ did not who then had reason to accuse them Moses as it is in the same place did Moses in whom they trusted and on whom they fastened their Implicite Faith Moses of whom they thought and said We will Believe as he Believed Moses whose Doctrine they to their seeming stood as stifly for against Christs new Doctrine as they supposed as the Jesuites do for the Catholick Church as they think against Hereticks and Sectaries as they term us Why then is Moses whom thus they honoured become their chief Accuser because while they did Believe on him only for Tradition or from pretence of Succession or for the dignity of their Temple Church or Nation they did not indeed Believe Him nor his Doctrine For had they Believed his Doctrine they had Believed Christ For he wrote of Christ So he might thinks the Jesuite and yet write so obscurely of him as his Writings could be no Rule of Faith to the Jews without the Visible Churches Authority Yea rather they should and might have been a Rule unto them for their good against the Visible Churches Authority and now remain a Rule or Law against both to their just condemnation because the Doctrine of Christ was so plainly and clearly set down in these writings had they set their hearts unto them Even the Knowledg of Christ the Word of life it self was in their mouthes and in their hearts For that Commandment which Moses there gave them was That Word of Faith which S. Paul the infallible Teacher of the Gentiles did preach as he himself testifies Rom. 10. 8. If any man ask how this Place was so easie to be understood of Christ or how by the doctrine of Moses Law the doctrine of the Gospel might have been manifested to their Consciences my Answer is already set down in our Saviours Words Had they done Gods Will revealed unto them in that Law they should have known Christs Doctrine to have been of God 5 Had they according to the prescript of Moses Law repented them of their Sins from the bottom of their Hearts the Lord had blotted all their Wickedness out of His remembrance And their hearts once purged of Wickednesse would have exulted in his presence that had made them whole Faith would have fastened upon his Person though never seen before Not the Moon more apt to receive the Sun-beams cast upon it then these Jews hearts to have shined with the Glory of Christ had they cast away all Pride and Self-conceit or the Glory of their Nation but unto them as now they are and long time have been swollen with Pride and full of Hypocrisie Christs Glory is but as clear Light to sore or dim-sighted eyes They wink with their eyes lest they should be offended with the Splendor of it This Doctrine of Christ and Knowledge of Scriptures in points of Faith shall be most obscure to us if we follow them in their foolish pretences of their Visible Church most clear perspicuous and easie if we lay Moses Commandments to our hearts For Truth Inherent must be as the eye-sight to discern all other things of like nature CAP. XVIII Concluding this Controversie according to the state proposed with the testimony of Saint Paul 1 WE may conclude this Point with our Apostle Si Evangelium nostrum tectum est iis qui pereunt tectum est in quibus Deus hujus saeculi excaecavit mentes id est infidelibus ne irradiat eos lumen Evangelii gloriae Christi qui est imago Dei If the Gospel be Obscure or rather hid For it is a Light obscure it cannot be God forgive me if I used that speech save only in our Adversaries persons It is hid only to such as have the eyes of their mind Blinded by Satan the God of this World Of which Number may we not without breach of Charity think he was one who seeing the light and evidence of this place would not see it but thought it a sufficient Answer to say Aposiolus non loquitur de intelligentia Scripturarum sed de cognitione side in Christum The Apostle speaks not of understanding Scriptures but of Knowing and Believing in Christ It is well the Jesuite had so much Modestie in him as to grant this later that he spake at the least of Knowing Christ For if the knowledg of Christ be so clear to the godly and elect then are the Scriptures clear too so far as concerns their Faith For S. Paul wrote this and all his Epistles only to this end that men might truly come to the Knowledge of Christ But he meant of a perfect and true Knowledge not such as Bellarmine when he gave this Answer dreamed of ut neque sit puer neque
These Hereticks some of you I imagin would say albeit they might pretend Scriptures for the Rule of Faith yet would not be ruled by Scriptures when they were evidently brought against them For your evidence of Scripture to prove these Points there mentioned we know them well enough for some of them you professe Tradition only CAP. XXII That our Adversaries Objections do not so much infringe as their Practise confirms the Sufficiency of Scriptures for composing the greatest Controversies in Religion 1 BUt suppose many Hereticks your selves for example will not submit their minds unto the Evidence of Scripture what Remedy who can help it Their Condemnation is just and Vengeance is Gods he will repay Man it behooveth to see evidently that they contemn or abuse Scripture before he adventure to iinflict Punishment upon them for it lest otherwise he become an intruder into the Almighties Tribunal But if the Evidence of Scripture will not what else shall recall such from Errour 2 Besides the former general Allegations let us see what more can be said why the Scriptures may not be the most effectual and infallible Rule that can be imagined to guide men in the way of Truth The Authority saith Valentian ordained by God for determining all Questions of Faith is without all question most apt to discern and prevent all Errours contrary to Faith Why may not the Authority of Scripture be accounted such The Scripture saith be is so framed yet was it God that framed it as Experience may also teach us that of it self alone it is so far from being a fit Rule for avoiding all Errours that by the secret judgement of God it is a stumbling Block and as a Snare to the feet of the unwise so that such as will rely upon it alone may soon trip or tr●●● awry 3 The Reader must lay the Blame where it is due if these indefatigable mouthes of blasphemies reiterating the like absurd Impieties so oft enforce me often to oppose the same or like Answers to them Such an Occasion as Gods Creatures were of Idolatry the Scriptures we grant may be of Heresie For of Gods good Creatures wherewith the idolatrous Heathen polluted themselves the wise man speaks in that place whereto Valentian alludes And such an Occasion should this infallible Way of the Romish Church pretended for avoiding be of breeding Heresies were it any of Gods Wayes of which the wise son of Syrach saith indefinitely They are stumbling Blocks to the wicked so was the Way of Life the Gospel it self even whilest proposed and avouched by S. Peter and S. Paul The Question then must be For what Cause the Scriptures are a Snare to some mens feet because they admit and embrace them for their Rule of Life If thus either Valentians Ghost or any Jesuite now alive dare avouch I say no more then the Archangel said to Satan The Lord rebuke thee Only unto the unwise and wilfully wicked because Such the Mediator and Saviour of the world Salus ipsa Salvation it Self was a Stone of offence and unto all such not Scripture nor any of Gods Wayes serves as a Rule to save but to condemn them 4 This is the Article then upon which the Jesuite must once again be examined whether unto such as are by Gods just Judgements decreed to Destruction and given over by his Holy Spirit to believe Lies and follow lying Traditions or Fables of mans invention the Popes infallible Authority can be a Rule of Life or saving Faith If it can then we will grant it to be a more infallible Rule then Scripture because able to controul Gods immutable Decree if it cannot as none without open and presumptuous Blasphemy will say it can then is it no more effectual for to reclaim men from Errours then the Scriptures are nor doth it any wayes supply their want If they will not believe Moses and the Prophets saith our Saviour neither will they be perswaded though one were raised from the dead why So Because God hath decreed this Word as the onely Means of Salvation to such as have been partakers of it and such as refuse this are given over by his Spirit to the Stubbornnesse of their own hearts shall then the Popes Infallibility make such believe By what Means Are his words more effectual then the Words of Life Are his Buls able to withstand the Decrees of the Almighty Or are his Curses to the disobedient more terrible then the everlasting Woes pronounced by our Saviour Christ and his Prophets more piercing then the Relation of Hell-pains by a messenger from the dead By your Churches continual Practise I should guesse this would be your reply for there is no other left that the Pope can constrain men to subscribe to his Decrees by Fire and Sword This might command their Hands or Tongues but not their Minds For the Jesuites would teach such as feared the smart of their fleshly members to cosen their Conscience for saving their Bodies with this distinction Juravi linguâ mentem injuratam gero And if fire and sword be the best Weapons of spiritual Warfare or unrelenting Persecutions the ensigns of infallible Authority then the greater Tyrants may be alwayes the more infallible Teachers But these Weapons by your best writers consent ye may not use against any but such as are already admitted into Christs Fold Quae foris sunt judicabit Deus Such as are without God will judge The Pope may such as are within in what manner for what Cause he please not liable to any account whether in so doing he do right or wrong Let the fruits of our Practise then witnesse whether what is by you objected to us for using our Saviours language may not by fit Analogie be verified of your selves in this point whether We or Ye be the men of whom our Saviour gave the world warning when he told Of false Prophets outwardly appearing in sheeps clothing being inwardly ravening Wolves Unto such as are by us won to the Gospel we grant that Christian Liberty after which before their Conversion we promised Your Factors abroad as in the Indies or Japan appear to men in sheeps cloathing making fair promises of the glorious Gospel of Christ and the Liberty of the Son of God but inwardly as in Italy Spain or generally within your own Folds are ravening Wolves Or to sit you with an Emblem essentially parallel to your nature and custome ye are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 inversi Men abroad and Wolves at your own home For whiles you seek to convert an Alien you magnifie the Doctrine of the Gospel your speech is fair your whistle pleasant and your feeding sweet and good if ye mention the Popes Authority it is moderately and urged in that stile 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Peter feed my lambs but when ye have once drawn these lambs within your hurdles ye change your note and turn into your proper shape then you cry with
Delusions and Appearances as well as the true their divine Illuminations whence the Contention amongst the professed Prophets themselves was as great as any now amongst the learned Interpreters of Prophecies or other Scriptures And from this Contention amongst the Prophets the unlearned or rather all in that people not Prophets were by the Romanist Objections against us were they pertinent to waver and halt between the contrariety of Illuminations and Visions professed as well by the false Prophets as the true Nor will any Jesuite I think be so bold as to deny lest every man might perceive him to deny more then possibly he could know that those lying Spirits in the mouthes of Ahabs Prophets were then as cunning in imitating true Revelations as now in counterfeiting Orthodoxal Interpretations of Truth revealed Or if this they cal in question let them resolve us why Idolatry in those Ages wherein true Prophets flourished most should be as frequent and various as Heresies in later times wherein the preaching of the Gospel is most plentiful The true Reason whereof as we suppose is this These lying Spirits were alike apt to imitate Gods several manner of speaking whether by means ordinary or extraordinary in divers Ages At all times if we compare either their native Capacity or acquired skil with our own though in matters wherein we have been most conversant if to their sag●…y we adde their malicious Temper and eager Desires of doing ill which alwayes adde an Edge unto Wit in mischievous Invention In all these they so far exceed the sons of seduced Adam that unlesse the Almighty did either 〈◊〉 us by his Holy Spirit or restrain them in the exercise of their skil especially in Spiritual matters wherewith the natural man hath no acquaintance who could in any Age be able to discern their Jugling much less to avoid their snares alwayes suited to the present season Notwithstanding most evident it is that in Ahabs as in all other times tainted with the like or a quivalent Sins the Almighty gives them leave to do their worst to practise with such cunning in every kind as leaves men so disposed as these false Prophets were until they amend no more possibility of distinguishing Devilish Suggestions from Divine Oracles then Ahab had without repentance to escape his doom read by Elias and Michaiah For he had not fallen unlesse his Prophets had been first seduced Their Errour therefore was by Gods just judgement as Fatal as his Fall both absolutely inevitable upon supposition of their obstinate Disobedience to the undoubted Mandates of Gods written Law Thus no one tittle of our Adversaries Objections how the learned should be sure of their interpretations when others as learned as they are as strongly perswaded to the contrary but is as directly opposite unto the Certainty of true Prophets Revelations seeing many yea most of that Profession and in the judgement of man men of better gifts and places then such as proved true Prophets were otherwise perswaded usually such as the people esteemed best strangeliest deluded 3 That from this Variety of Opinions amongst the Prophets about their Illuminations others not endued with the gift of Prophesie were in the self same case the unlearned people throughout the Christian world are in wheresoever or whensoever Dissentions arise amongst the learned admits no question but amongst wranglers For albeit the excellent Brightness of Divine Truth did necessarily imprint an infallible Evidence in their apprehension to whom it was immediately by Means extraordinary revealed yet could they not communicate this Evidence or Certainty unto the people but by preaching the Word revealed after the self same manner we do Yea sometime it was only communicated unto them by the Ministery of others no Prophets Here let any Jesuite or other Patron of the Romish Churches Cause answer me to these Demands First whether the People were not bound to believe the true Prophesies either delivered by the Prophets own mouthes or read by others or directed to them in writing to be the Word of GOD and to reject the contrary Doctrine of false Prophets as Delusions Secondly whether if the ordinary People of those times could by any Christians though private men in later may not by the same Means distinguish the Word of God being in like sort read or expounded or preached unto them from the Word of Man The Word remains stil the same the Truth of it better confirmed unto the World by the continuance of it in power and strength throughout all Ages intermediate wherein Gods Spirit by which it was first manifested to the Prophets and written in the Peoples hearts hath been more plentiful then before especially since the Revelation of the Gospel most plentiful in this present if I may so speak the second time of Grace Our Argument then stands good A fortiori If every private man amongst GODS People of Old might and ought Believe and believing Obey his Word revealed to others only read or expounded unto him rejecting all contrary or erroneous Doctrines the People of this Age must do the like and all Objections possible against the judgement of modern private Spirits conclude as much against all private persons of Ancient times For their Means of knowing the Prophets Illuminations or Visions were ordinary such as we have now liable to all exceptions that can be made against our knowledge or perswasion of the true Sense of Scripture But neither theirs nor our Imbecillity in knowing or Facility of erring was or is any just Exception why the Scripture should not be a Rule to both Albeit all the Papists Arguments might be urged with far greater probability against them who were to Believe Prophetical Writings first For more easie it is to Assent unto Particulars contained in a general Canon already established by the approbation of former Ages and confirmed by joynt consent of Parties most adverse and contrary in the interpretation of several parcels then to admit the general Canon it self for the undoubted Word of GOD or yield obedience to the Particulars therein contained Yet were the Ancient people bound to admit the Prophesie of Isaias Jeremiah as the undoubted Word of God albeit unknown to their Ancestors but only in the generality of Moses doctrine much more as we conclude may Christians now living assent unto the true expositions or particular contents of these Prophesies or other Scriptures of whose absolute Truth in general they do not doubt and of whose 〈◊〉 articulars they may now behold the sundry Opinions and Expositions of divers Ages 4 To presse the former Arguments more fully parallel'd to our present Controversie a little farther I would demand of any Jesuite whether the Word of God taught by the Prophets who were to win credit by their skil not presumed skilful for their Authority in the Church or credit in Common-weal or the definitive sentence of the High-Priests or others in eminent place were to be the Rule of Israels Faith Whether the
Peoples distraction in following some one false Prophet some another fewest of all the true Prophets most their High-Priests and men in Authority might exempt any from acknowledgement of such Prophesies as in the issue proved Divine for the Rule of their Belief If that People either upon the Variety of Opinions or the Authority of the Priests or others might reject the Word of God either preached unto them by the Prophets or read by others or appeal from It to any visible company of men on whose decrees they might safely rely then may the Romanists with some probability teach men to rely upon the decrees of their Church for their infallible Rule not upon Scriptures only But if the People of those times were bound to rely upon MOSES Law and the Prophets Writings against all the World besides albeit joyntly conspiring to teach them otherwise though with Glozes and pretences of Moses Authority then much more must these Writings be of like Authority unto us And all the Mimical Objections which the Jesuites can frame to this or like purpose If the Scripture be the Rule of Faith and must be discerned by private Spirits how comes it to passe that Calvin expounds it one way Luther another Zwinglius a third and yet all think they have the Spirit are the very same in effect with the false Prophet Zedekiah's Exception against Michaiah When went the Spirit of the Lord from me to speak unto thee 5 Zeclekiah had four hundred more of his opinion and this People had been very dull if conscious of their own factious greatnesse they could not have pleaded all the Papists Arguments against Michaiah all that can be drawn from the Universality or Authority of the Church All which have meer ignorance or incogitancy of a Divine Providence for their Root but branch themselves in their after-grouth into positive Atheism and contradictious Infidelity First their Authors the Priests and Jesuites erre not knowing the Scriptures nor the Power of God able to lead men unto Life by this written Way though narrow and private yet straight and plain Afterwards as if they were Satans sworn Takers or authorized Purveyo●●s to furnish Hell with guests observing some who rather idly wish or loosly profer then seriously purpose or earnestly strive to enter in at the streight Gate either sail in their first Adventures or finally miscarry they watch hence all opportunities of haling Passengers to their broad beaten Catholick Way which almost all heretofore have gone as they brag wherein a blind man so he will follow his Guide cannot easily trip so I think until both come at the very Pit-brink of Destruction whereunto it tends directly and infallibly But is this your Catholick Way more plain or better beaten then rebellious Israels or Judahs was Could not these also whilest backed by their blinded Guides have mockt at private Spirits and bestowed Titles upon Gods true Servants because in number fewest and most opposite to their Prelates as foul and odious as Sectaries Schismaticks or Hereticks Or did these willingly and wittingly go astray as knowing their wayes to be the wayes of death Therefore my people is gone into captivity saith the Lord because they had no knowledg Ignorance the Nurse of your Devotion was the true Mother of their Superstition and Idolatry yet was this want of Knowledge which thus proved the fertile Seed of all their insuing Misery the native Fruit of their former Negligence in not practising the known Precepts of Moses Law And because increase of Ignorance in Gods Word did breed in them a greater delight of hearing Lies and pleasant things then the Truth he gave them their Lust as he had done their Forefathers Quails in his displeasure Son of man saith the Lord unto his Prophet these men have set up their Idols in their heart and put the stumbling Block of their Iniquity before their face should I being required answer them Therefore say unto them Thus saith the Lord God Every man of the House of Israel that setteth up his 〈◊〉 in his heart and putteth the stumbling Block of his Iniquity before his face and cometh to the Prophet I the Lord will answer him that cometh according to the multitude of his Idols That I may take the House of Israel in their own heart because they are all departed from me through their Idols 6 This evidently proves that unlesse the Moral Law be duly practised and those stumbling Blocks which the wicked set before their faces removed to seek after such a facile inerrable Rule as the Papists have framed for direction in points of Faith is to solicit a snare for their own Souls as no doubt God gave the Romans for their distast of his Word and that longing after Genulism before mentioned this broken Reed whereon to this day they rely as he had done the Israelites a King in his wrath And though in every Age since the Goths and Vandals over-ran the Empire God hath raised up some poor Michaiah to withstand their state-Prelates Yet those lying Spirits which possessed Ahabs Prophets have ever born greatest sway in that Church seducing Princes and People as they had done Ahab by multitude of Voices to their own Destruction That the Romanists can produce men of great fame and note through many Generations for their defence in some one point or other it skils not much For as God in times past suffered Prophets or Dreamers to take opportunity from their strange Predictions of inticing his people to Idolatry forbidden by his written Law so in every Age his Providence permits men of excellent Gifts and great skill in Scriptures to have yea to seek to establish their plansible Errours under pretences of Revelations secret Assistance or abundant measure of his Spirit that by this means he may try our Fidelity in searching Scriptures and Diligence in trying Spirits as he did the Israelites by such presumptions of Divine Prophesies or Visions And if amongst this great Variety of Opinions I might deliver mine as freely as I willingly submit it to each sober Prophets Censure much more to the Correction of my lawful Superiours I should for ought I yet see to the contrary avouch first that no Christian in any Age but is oft put upon his Trial Whether he love God or the great Ones of this world more Whether he will Confesse or Deny Christ before men Secondly That during these dayes of Peace and Security which we now enjoy our Acquital or Condemnation in both the Two former main Interrogatories stands especially upon our abandoning or abetting their Errours in some points of Danger whose Worth in others we justly admire So much addicted are we for the most part to such mens persons as have been Gods Instruments for our good that upon often experience of those wholesome Medicines wherewith their shops are plentifully furnished we swallow down whatsoever there we find when as perhaps the disease they had to deal with or some other
circumstances of the time were such as required an extraordinary Medicine which whilst we administer without mixture of like Ingredients or not upon the same Occasions we may chance to poyson both our selves and our Patients Others of us again are so much accustomed to politick Observation that we commonly make no other trial of Divine Truths then by some such forinsecal form of proceeding as is used in secular Inquisitions wherein determinations go by calculation of most Voices But unlesse the Lord did suffer us to have plausible shews and goodly inducements in the worlds sight for Believing that which is contrary unto Truth our Faith should not be sincere nor as an Armour of proof to resist all temptations seeing there is no man almost but is apt by Nature to follow a multitude to do that which publick Laws have judged evil much more to think or Believe as most men or men most esteemed do On the contrary if we look into our Calling Not many wise men after the flesh not many noble are chosen of God Such as are His ought to be like Him in this that they see not as men not as Natural men be they never so many see nor judge not as they judge 7 The stay whereupon they as in all other Difficulties so especially in this Trial of Spirits must rely is his Providence which in time wil bring the Truth to light and daily diffuseth the odour of life able were not our Senses dull or prepossessed with the fragrant Smel of earthly Pleasures to lead us to that invisible Truth which in this life we must follow not by View but by Faith Yet not by Faith if we take the Jesuites for our Guides who in this present Controversie play false Huntsmen alwayes seeking to bring us from the Prints of Gods Providence unto the Pathes and foot-steps of Men that have corrupted their wayes casting the form of secular Proceeding before our eyes so to withdraw us from following him who hath sweetned the 21 wherein we breath with the words of Eternal Life If men would be so mad as to frame their lives according to their Doctrine Hell it self could not wish a more Devilish Means to make men Christians in conceit and At heists or Infideis in heart And yet besides the Impiety of all other kinds of Heresies or Infidelities that are or have been this of theirs is the most palpably absurd and most contradictory to the Rules of Reason and Principles of Arts received by all For if the Arguments they bring against us conclude any thing at all they conclude as much against all Certainty of secular or natural Sciences 8 And because whether purposely or as meer Instruments managed by Satan to what use they know not they still labour to make civil Modesty but a mask for Infidelity rightly judging though to a wrong end ingenuous Humility and mens lowly conceipts of their own worth the fittest disposition whence utter distrust of Gods Favour towards such poor Creatures as men so minded deem themselves can be wrought and if once wrought and deeply planted in soft minds or humble hearts the only sure Foundation whence they can hope to raise their Blind Implicit Faith It shall not be amiss whilst we prosecute the second Branch of their immoderate Folly last mentioned to discover withall and partly dissolve The Snares which they have set for the Simple and Ingenuous CAP. XXV How far upon what terms or grounds we may with Modesty dissent from the Ancient or others of more excellent Gifts then our selves That our Adversaries Arguments impeach as much the Certainty of Human Sciences as of private Spirits 1 LEt it be granted that many Places of great Moment are diversely expounded by learned men what will hence follow That not the greatest Schollars in reformed Churches can be as sure of their true Sense and Meaning as the Pope Not unlesse you first can make it evident that Learning or Subtility of wit is the only Means whereby the true sense of Scriptures can be found out And this being proved you must assure us that the Pope is alwayes better learned then others otherwise he may fail as wel as they Or if you admit not Learning for the only Means of distinguishing Doctrines as indeed it is not yet must you secure the world that the Pope hath all those other good Qualifications whose want caused the learned to erre Or if you require neither one nor other of these you must prove that the best Gifts of God the peculiar Attribute of whose Glory is to be no Respecter of persons are infallibly entailed to a certain succession of men without all respect of Learning Wit or Honesty Lastly you must prove that the Holy Ghost was a Private Spirit and might erre when he said The Lord giveth Grace to the Humble Or the Law of the Lord Wisdom unto the Simple And that our Saviours words Ventus spirat ubi vult did not import as he meant that his Spirit might enlighten whom he pleased For if all these and that Deus cujus vult miseretur be true who can hinder Him or His Spirit to open the eyes of some less learned to behold clearly the true Sense and Meaning of that Scripture wherein many excellent Writers have either erred or been overseen or who can hinder God if these places be true to reveal his Will to little ones and keep it secret from the wise and mighty because it is his pleasure so to do and that for this end that men should learn to rely upon his Mercy and Providence not upon the Authority or Skill of Men. Or who can hinder his Omnipotency even in this Age to make his Power seen in our Weaknesse If this his Power be not limited now then may he stil both reveal the true Sense and Meaning of his Word in some points unto men of lesse Capacity in others and furnish them with ability too for demonstrating by Evidence of Argument and surest Grounds of Reason unto others that this sense must needs be the true sense and that all other Interpretations given of the same places by men otherwise excellent for their Learning and Skill in Scripture cannot stand with those Principles of Christian Faith which all sorts of Believers stedfastly Believe Must such a man or those to whom God reveals the Truth by his Ministry doubt of the Evidence of the Truth revealed and mistrust Gods Word because others as learned or more learned then either he that hath the Truth revealed unto him first or they that take it from him are of another mind He must verily by this Objection For a Jesuite would say Why should he not think others as likely to have the Spirit as himself Let him esteem of them as far better Scholars and men indued with as great or greater Measure of Gods Spirit then himself for so the Scripture teacheth us not to be wise in our own conceipt but to think better of others then
all though different in their particular Natures and peculiar Properties uniform for the transmission of Light But after the dissolution of the Christian Empire and the constitution of several States and Soveraignties throughout Europe all compleat within themselves and different one from another in Laws and Customes the transfusion of such an absolute Ecclesiastick Authoritie through all would be unequal and make Christendom like a Monster compact of many several entire Bodies made up in one or like some uglie living creature that had many Heads and but one Heart or Soul CAP. XXX That the final Trial of this Controversie must be by Scriptures That the Jesuites and modern Papists fierce oppugning all certainty of private Spirits in discerning the Divine Truth of Scriptures or their true Sense hath made the Church their Mother utterly uncapable of any plea by Scriptures for establishing her pretended Infallibility 1 BUt what Christian heart could have suspected that any man acknowledging the infinite Majestie of an Omnipotent God filling every place with his Presence ruling all things by his Power and having every least Creature of the World a world of Witnesses of his inconceivable Wisdome and unspeakable Providence over the Works of his own Hand durst once have presumed to think much lesse have opened his mouth to utter least of all have imployed his pen to proclaim such foul Impietie to the world as that a Power so infinite could not sufficiently provide for his Church in deciding matters of Faith surpassing all reach of Reason unlesse he had ordained some one Supream Tribunal Seat on earth the Judges whereof should be but mortal men whose Bodies can be but in one place at once whose Voices cannot reach without the precincts of their Consistories whereas the Law of this our God unto whose sentence in matters of Faith we appeal is or might be but for these our Antiscripturian Adversares importunitie every where throughout the Christian World dispersed and besides the external helps of an ordinary Ministerie or Magistracie alike common to all Nations the Holy Spirit is every where assistant to all such as seek him in the written Word by him revealed whose live-characters are as the prints or footsteps of his wonted Motions in Gods Prophets or Apostles hearts by which the faithful may discern his approach or Presence in their own Nor wil the Jesuites be so wilful I hope as to denie that this Holy Spirit who did dictate the Word to such as wrote it in these material Tables having first written it in the fleshly Tables of their Hear●ts is able now also to write the same immediately in the Hearts of all such as with fear and reverence prepare themselves for his fit and decent entertainment That this was possible to be performed by the Almighty Wisdom of God they would not I know deny were this 〈◊〉 direct and plain termes made the main Controversie betwixt us Albeit as much as we have charged them withall will most necessarily follow from their absurd and lavishly blasphemous Speeches which in the heat of contention have distilled from their pens in this present Controversie But of the Possibilitie of Gods immediate teaching every Christian Heart or rather of the Probabilities which may induce all to relie immediately hereupon we shall have occasion to discourse hereafter Let us now in sobrietie of Spirit rather dispute of Gods Will then his Power As whether there be any sure Argument to perswade us that it was his intent or purpose either to instruct men in the true Sense of Scriptures or to take up all Controversies in matters of Faith by this supposed Infallibilitie of some visible Church All this and somewhat more our Adversaries in this Point seriously avouch and earnestly contend for Let us therefore briefly see whether or no Gods Spirit hath taught thus much That the Sense of Scriptures cannot be had without the Assistance or working of Gods Spirit both jointly acknowledge They must be understood and interpreted saith Bellarmin by the same Spirit which wrote them as he very well gathers out of Saint Peter Whence likewise he well collects that the whole difficultie in this Question about taking up Controversies and finding out the true Sense of Scriptures consists in this where this Spirit is and where the distressed Soul and doubtfull Conscience ought to seek it In the Visible and Catholike Church saith Bellarmin and all the Modern Roman Catholicks that is as they interpret it in the Consistorie of the Pope and Cardinals or in the Assemblie of Bishops or as the Modern Jesuites will have it in the Pope alone speaking ex Cathedra 3 Every man say we ought to seek the Spirit of God in his own Soul and Conscience being directed and ruled by the Sacred Word which was revealed and uttered by the same Spirit This Word directs them in this search and the Spirit once found out or rather finding them thus seeking him establisheth their Assent unto the Word already revealed and written by imprinting the same invisible Word or the true Sense and Meaning of it in their Hearts 4 Why this Spirit should be infallibly present to the Visible Church all our Adversaries uncessantly urge Scripture I will not abuse the Readers patience with allegation of the Places which have been very fully answered by many of our Church That which I intend at this time is First to debar them by their own Grounds of this Plea of Scriptures by shewing their Absurditie and folly in urging any Scripture at all for the proof of their A●lertion And secondly to overthrow the Assertion it self by manifest proofs that either their Churches transcendent Authoritie as it is now taught must fall or Christianitie cannot stand To make way for our dearer passage in the former 5 They generally hold That this Infallibilitie of the Visible Church consists directly in this That the Holy Ghost is infalliblie present to it and gives it the true Sense and Meaning of Scriptures which he doth not give to private persons whom in their judgements he will not vouchsafe immediately to instruct so that his Dictates already revealed cannot be a Rule unto them because they want his infallible Assistance for their Exposition and for the same reason Certain they cannot be without the Churches Authority that they understand the Scripture aright 6 This their Assertion being two-fold for their Churches infallible Expositions and against all private Interpretations is grounded upon these two Principles They are to be Believed in exposition of Scriptures fide divina whom the Holy Ghost infallibly assists They are not so to be Believed whom the Holy Ghost doth not so assist Whence what he said before will follow that no man besides the Pope may believe his own interpretations of Scriptures His or the Churches all must nay all men must believe fide divina that the Church or Pope is in all Determinations infalliblie assisted by the Holy Ghost For if we were not bound to
severe unpartial execution of known Lawes might easily restrain usually eclipse or hide it from us Such as are not so Eagle-sighted as to behold the brightnesse of every Divine Truth in it proper Sphere might yet safely behold the reflexion of it in one part or other of the sacred Fountain were it not troubled with the muddy conceipts of unsetled and unquiet Frains or were not such men oftentimes in great places as minding nothing but earthly things alwayes mingle filth and clay with the Chrystal-streams of the Water of Life Happie is that man of God that in this turbulent Age can in points of greatest moment see the Divine Truth himself small hope have any of causing others to see it whilest carnal mindes may every where without fear of Punishment but not without terrour of such Ecclesiastick Power as shall controul them foam out their own shame and overcast the face of Heaven whence Light should come unto their Souls with blasphemous unhallowed Breath whilest dunghill-Sinks may be suffered to evaporate the abundance of that inward Filth which is lodged in their hearts as it were of purpose to choak the good Spirit of God whilest it seeks to breath in others Mouthes whose Breasts it hath inspired with Grace 14 In brief lest my Adversary should challenge me of Partialitie As the Means which our Church from Gods Word prescribes for establishing mens hearts in the Unity of true Faith were the execution of known Lawes any way correspondent might as is said infallibly effect what the Papists falsely pretend so in truth it cannot without Hypocrisie be dissembled that whiles our Practise is so dissonant to our Doctrine and our Publick Discipline so loose though in detestation of their Errours we have turned our backs upon them with Protestation to follow a contrary Rule yet for the most part we jump with them at the journeys end To omit more finall agreements of our Contrarieties elsewhere shewed They wholly permit the Keyes of the Well of Life to ones mans hands who for his own advantage we may be sure will lock it up so close as none shall look upon it but with Spectacles of his making For as the Head is such we must expect the Eyes will be if the one the other must be universall too such as will leave nothing to be seen by private or particular eyes but what they have seen before or in one word if we admit one absolute visible Head his must be the onely Eyes of the Church We not through default of publick Constitutions nor so much by connivence of Ecclesiastick Magistrates as by presumptuous disobedience of Inferiours are so far from committing the custodie of this Sacred Fountain into one or few mens hands that the Flock for the most part never expect the Pastors marshalling but rushing into it without order trample in it with unclean feet If any Beam of Truth have found entrance into one of their Souls though quickly eclipsed or smothered by earthly cogitations he straight-way presumes Gods Word more plentifully dwels in him then in all his Teachers whence if his Purse be strong it is with him as with an Horse when Provender pricks him he kicks against all Ecclesiastick Authority and spurns at his poor Overseer that should feed him like the wanton Asse in the Fable that seeing the Moon lately shining where she was drinking suddenly covered with a cloud upon imagination she had drunk it up ran winsing out ere her thirst was quenched and threw her Rider 15 Thrice happie is that Land and State where Civil Policie and Spiritual Wisdom grave Experience and profound Learning in whose right Commixture consists the perfect Temperature of every Christian State do rightly symbolize These where they mutually clasp in their Extreams without intermedling in the Essence of each others Profession are like the Side-postes or Arches in the Lords House and the awfull respect of Christ Jesus the Judge of both and that dreadfull Day continually sounding in their ears by the voice of Gods faithfull and sincere Ministers would be as the Binding-stone or Coupling to fasten them surely in the joyning But whilest these each jealous of other start asunder that Breach is made whereat the Enemies of the Church and State hope for speedy entrance to the utter ruine of both CAP. XXXII Brieflie Collecting the Summe of this second Book 1 TO draw a brief Map of these large Disputes As the Occasions that breed so the right Means to avoid all Contentions and Schismes are most perspicuously set down in Scriptures Amongst others most necessary for this purpose for the plantation increase and strength of true and lively Faith sincere Obedience to Spiritual Authoritie is the chief For more willing and chearful performance hereof Choice should be made of Pastors or Overseers qualified as Scripture requires men of so high a Calling should be men not given to Quarrels or strife men of mild and lowlie Spirits fearing God and hating Covetousnesse men esteeming the hidden treasure of a good Conscience at so high a rate as neither Fear of man nor Hopes of any Worldly favour can move them to hazard or adventure it Were these Rules by such as have the oversight of Gods Flock as faithfully practised as they are by Scripture plainly taught the knowledg of Gods Word should daily encrease Piety Devotion and Christian Charitie continually flourish all Strife and Dissention quickly fade 2 But if through the default of Princes or Potentates no fit choice be made of spiritual Governours if by their negligence worse be made of inferiour Ministers the cause comes not by devolution to be reformed by the Congregation What then must they be altogether silent at such abuse No the Scripture hath given as plain a Rule for their imployment as for the others The more or more often Higher Powers offend the more fervently frequent should the lower Sort be in pouring out supplications prayers and intercessions for Kings and for all that are in Authority that they may Rule according to Gods Word In the mean time albeit they Rule otherwise Inferiours should consider that GOD gives them such Superiours for their pronenesse to disobedience scurrilitie scoffing at lawfull Authoritie or other like sins expresly forbidden by his Word To every People as well as Israel he gives such Rulers in his wrath as shall not seek them but theirs not his Glory in their salvation but their own Glory by their harm 3 But as the Tongues of Inferiours must be tied from scoffing or jesting at men in Authorities bad proceedings so must not the Word of God be bound If their Consciences rightly and unpartially examined direct them otherwise then their Governours command they must notwithstanding their Superiours checks speak as they think until Death command them silence if for the freedom of their Speech upon good warrant of Conscience they be punished Vengeance is Gods he will repay Superiours for it unto whose lawfull Authority whilest Obedience is denied upon
they become their chief accusers That opinion which at first brought in neglect of the Chalice and as the Trent Councel presumed would have warranted them in making this decree doth most condemn them for the measure of their iniquity could not have been so fully accomplished unlesse they had held a transubstantiation of the wine into Christs bloud 19 What part of Scripture can we presume they wil spare that dare thus countermand the most principal of all Gods Commandments what reckoning may we think they make of our Saviour Christ that adventure thus shamefully to disanul and cancel his last wil and testament defrauding almost the whole Christian World of half their Lord and Masters royal allowance partly without any shew of Scriptures either to restrain or otherwise interpret these Soveraign precepts partly upon such idle and frivolous allegations as may further witnesse their sleight estimate of Gods Word save only so far as it may be wrested to serve their turns 20 But grant the places there alledged by the Councel did so mitigate either the form of the institution or the peremptory manner of our Saviours speeches in the sixth of John as to make it disputable in unpartial judgments whether they did plainly injoyn any necessity of communicating under both kinds the former decree notwithstanding would manifestly infer an usurpation of Soveraignty over Gods word quite contrary to the general Analogie of faith reason and conscience by all which in cases doubtful and for the speculative form of truth disputable with equal probability affirmatively or negatively we are taught to frame our choice when we come to practise according to the difference of the matter or of consequences which may ensue more dreadful one way then the other alwayes to prefer either a greater good before a lesse or a lesse evil before a greater though both equally probable Suppose then these two contradictory propositions The denial of the Cup is a mutilation of Christs last will and testament the denial of the Cup is no mutilation of Christs last will and Testament were for their speculative probabilities in just examination equipendent yet the doctrine of faith delivered in Scripture reason and conscience without contradiction instructs us that to alter abrogate or mutilate the son of Gods last Will and Testament is a most grievous most horrible most dreadful sin but to permit the use of the Chalice hath no suspition of any the least evil in it Had the Trent Fathers thus done they had done no worse then our Saviour then his Apostles then the Primitive Church by their own confession did This excesse of evil without all hope of any the least compensative good to follow upon the denial should have swaied them to that practise which was infinitely more safe as not accompanied with any possibility or shew of danger although the speculative probability of any divine precept necessarily injoyning the use of the cup had been none Thus peremptorily to adventure upon consequences so fearful whereto no contrary fear could in reason impel nor hopes any way comparable allure them thus imperiously to deprive the whole Christian World of a good in their valuation testified by their humble supplications and frequent embassages to that Councel so inestimable without any other good possible to redound unto the deniers save only usurpation of Lordly Dominion over Christs heritage plainly evinceth that the Church is of far greater authority with them then GODS Word either written in the Sacred Canon or their hearts then all his Laws either ingrafted by nature or positive and Supernatural For 21 Admit this Church representative had been fully perswaded in conscience rightly examined and immediately ruled by Scripture that the former decree did not prejudice the institution use or end of this Sacrament yet most Christians earnest desire of the Cup so publickly testified could not suffer them to sleep in ignorance of that great scandal the denial of it needs must give to most inferiour particular Churches Wherefore the rule of charity that moved the Father of the Gentiles to that serious protestation If meat offend my brother I will eat no flesh while the world standeth that I may not offend my brother should in all equity divine or humane have wrought these Prelates hearts to like profession If want of their spiritual drink offend so many Congregations and such a multitude of our brethren we will rather not use our lawful authority acknowledged by all then usurp any that may be offensive or suspicious unto others though apparantly just unto our selves for they could not be more fully perswaded this decree was just then Saint Paul was that all meats were lawful to him 22 But may we think these Prelates had no scruple of conscience whether the very form of this decree were not against our Saviours expresse command Bibite ex hoc omnes drink ye all of this For mine own part whiles I call to mind what else-where I have observed that the Jews were never so peremptory in their despightful censures of our Saviours doctrine nor so outragiously bent against his person as when their hearts were touched in part with his miracles or in some degree illuminated with the truth he taught The Councels extraordinary forwardnesse to terrifie all Contravenaries of this decree makes me suspect they were too conscious of their own shallow pretended proofs to elude Gods word whose light and perspicuity in this point had exasperated their hardned hearts and weak-sighted faith to be so outragious in the very beginning of that session as if they had meant to stifle their consciences and choak the truth lest these happily might crosse their proceedings or controul their purposes if this cause should once have come to sober and deliberate debatement For as theeves oftentimes seek to avoid apprehension by crying loudest Turn the Thief so these wolves hoped wel to smother their guilt and prevent al notice taking of their impiety by their grievo us exclamations against others monstrous impious opinions in this point interdicting all upon penalty of the causes following ere they had determined ought to teach preach or believe otherwise then they meant to determin 23 Yet though the Councel accurse all that hold communication under both kinds as a necessary doctrine it doth not absolutely inhibit all use of the Chalice but leaves it free unto their Lord the Pope to grant it upon what Conditions he please either unto private men or whole Nations Upon what conditions then may we presume wil it please his Holinesse for to grant it upon any better then Satan tendred all the Kingdomes of the Earth unto our Saviour For this fained servant of Christ a true Gehazi repining at his Lord and Masters simplicity that could refuse so fair a profer made after Satan in all haste saying in his heart I wil surely take somewhat of him though my Master spared him and pretending a message in his name to whom all power was
yet do that not Peter but His and Their Master onely was to be the Chief Corner Stone in that Temple they had often heard he should and now he tels them he was to build The present Dialogue would abundantly instruct them that not the Son of man himself howsoever considered but in such sort as his heavenly Father had revealed him to Saint Peter truely apprehended as God and Man was a Foundation competent for so incomparable a Structure Such as before his time had gone the farthest such as thought he had been Moses who had no Peer among the Prophets greater then whom it was scarce expected any son of mortal man should be had not come unto ground firm enough to build their own and all mens Faith upon To them the gate of the Lord by which the righteous were to enter was not fully opened They came not to a distinct direct and perfect view of this Chief Corner Stone for this reason they could not be accounted 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 stones actually wrought and so well fitting this precious Foundation as that others might be framed by their Patern and then joyntly fastned to it This was Peters Prerogative unto whom the Keyes are first given as unto the first of all the faithfull that had passed this gate and power by them to admit as many as were to exclude all that were not fashionable to this Rock and Corner-stone 4 Seeing then neither the Apostles then thought nor can any man yet conceive that Peter could be an extraordinary stone or second Foundation in the aedisice there spoken of but must withall admit Christ to be The Chief Corner Stone or Surest Fundamental Rock I would appeal to my Adversary in his sober mood to any not actually drunken with the Babylonish Cup unto whether foundation unto what stone the principall or lesse principall these words and upon this Rock will I build my Church must be referred We must judge of the foundation by the aedifice and of the aedifice by the attribute Now as there is no one Title wherein the spirit doth more delight to expresse the Strength and Praises of the living God then this of Rock so was there never any more puissant effect attributed to any Rock then the eternal stabilitie of this aedifice What Saint Paul saith of the foundation I may truely say of the Edifice and the Attribute Another Edifice more strong then this Church can no man build no Attribute can be imagined more glorious then This That the gate of hell shall never prevail or as Maldonate more fully expresseth the majestie of the Hebraisme shall not be able to stand against it or confront it To ascribe the supportance of such a structure to the strength of Peters Faith not as it was in him onely but as it is perpetually propagated to his successours is to impeach him of disloyalty and rob Christ of his greatest glory For even such as plead for this prerogative in Peters successours confesse that this they give to Peter is our Saviours most usuall stile we may with the Prophet demand Who is the Rock besides our God The Lord is the Rock of our salvation of such salvation as the gates of Hell cannot oppugne the same He is the Lord our Rock and our Redeemer Psal 19. 14. 5 The former interpretation will yet further approve it self to be most consonant to the general Analogie of faith most native to the place before alledged and in respect of Romish glosses such as is the Church of Christ unto the gates of Hell or the Ark of old unto Dagon if we observe what is most frequently and perspicuously taught in other Scriptures pertinent to the main point in Controversie First that the immediat subject of Peters Confession God incarnate or dwelling as S. Paul speaks bodily in Christ is presupposed by all sacred Writers as the great Mysterie of mans Redemption the Fundamental Rock of Salvation Secondly that all and onely they which in sincerity of heart conceive and with stedfast perseverance retain this confession which Peter made are true and lively parts of that Edisice which the Son of the living God here promised to erect 6 The Reader I know in this fruitfull age of learned Expositors may finde varietie of Comments but none that can more fully satisfie him then Saint Peters own Paraphrase upon our Saviours Promise to him if we compare it with other Scriptures in sence and meaning equivalent That Christ was the onely Rock whereupon this Saint himself as a living member of the Church was built is apparant because intending to make his flock lively parts of the same aedifice he tels them they come not to himself as to a second Rock but unto the Lord as unto a living stone disallowed of men yet chosen of God and pretious As if he had said Not flesh and bloud not the wisest of men but onely our heavenly Father did first reveal him unto me for such and in the words following as if he had purposely intended to certifie us that the name of Peter did descend to him from this affinitie with this elect and pretious stone not because he was a Rock or fundamental stone himself he addes and ye as lively stones be made a spiritual house a lively Priest-hood Priests as living and altars as stones to offer up spiritual sacrifices acceptable to God by Jesus Christ Though they were not all to have the title or name of Peters for so there could be no distinction yet so they would believe and confesse as he did that Christ was the living stone they were to have the realitie or substance to be stones of that spiritual house against which the gates of hell should not be able to prevail 7 And seeing he now endeavoured to fasten them unto Christ as unto the onely sure Rock of their redemption it could not be so available to tell them in our Saviours own words that becoming such a spirituall house and continuing in offering up sacrifices acceptable unto God the gates of hell should not prevail against them Until this Day-star had more fully shined in their hearts he knew it for the better method to kindle the same hope in them by the Prophets light which in time would break forth clearer of it self for that glorious promise of our Saviour differed from the prophetical prediction which S Peter gives them for their assurance but as the light which goes before doth from the brightnesse following the Suns rising What Christ had told him was in effect contained before in that Scripture Behold I lay in Ston a chief corner stone elect and pretious and he that believeth therein shall not be ashamed Why not ashamed because his hope should be most sure and Hope as the Apostle saith maketh not ashamed he meant It supporteth against all shame or terrour the world flesh or Devil can oppose against us They may threaten but not so deject us as to
adversary or accuser he himself bearing the name of adversary likewise in his ●itle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a second foundation in shew subordinate in deed and consequence quite contrary to that which the Prophets and Apostles have laid eternally priviledged if we may believe his followers from those spurnings of men from which the pretious stone of Sion was not exempted 22 To collect the sum of late Romanists comments upon their Churches supposed fundamental Charter Their confession of Christ come in the flesh and made head stone in the corner though conceived in form of words Orthodoxal enough proves only this but this abundantly to all the world that the Pope their supream head sits in the Temple of God whose circumference in respect of men who cannot search other mens hearts is defined by this Confession Their attributing the title of Rock or Fundamental supportance of that spiritual house unto this head proclaims unto all the world that he sits as God in the Temple of God shewing himself that he is God For the Hebrew 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 equivalent to the Sy●iac 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in that sence they take it as assording such impregnable supportance or fortification against the powers of hell world or flesh is oftner by their own vulgar latin rendred Deus then Petra or Rupes which it directly signifies because considered with these circumstances or effects it is rather a glorious Title of the Godhead or Derty it self then a particular attribute taken from some divine propriety communicable to Gods servants in the Abstract 23 Lastly unto me their common exposition of Christs speeches unto S. Peter suggest this argument more then demonstrative that the Papacy is lead by the spirit of great Antichrist in that no doctrine of Devils can more directly contradict or more shamefully deny the vertue and power of Christ come in the flesh nor more peremptorily disanul or cancel his promise there made unto his Church then Jesuitical comments upon it do Christs promise was a promise of life and saving health a full assurance of eternal happinesse to all that should be truly built upon that Rock which Peter confessed or which they say Peter was They make the tenure of this glorious covenant to be no more but this that Peters successours and such as will build their faith upon them speaking ex Cathedra as upon Rocks invincible shall be indefectible in points of Christian faith and manners howsoever even these Rocks themselves may be for life and conversation as wicked as Annas or Caiphas or other blinded guides of the Jewish Synagogue that crucified our Saviour 24 Thus by a pretended successive perpetuity of Peters Faith they utterly abolish that lively Faith whereby he confessed Christ which is alway included as a necessary condition without which none can be capable of that glorious promise but with it all are made immediate heirs of salvation Or to speak more plainly none may expect the least portion of Peters blessing without Peters Faith nor can that be in any but such as are born of God Everyone saith S. John that is born of God over cometh the world and this is the victory that overcometh the world even our faith And again who is he that overcometh the world but he which Believeth what Peter had confessed that Jesus is the Son of God And our Saviour himself to whom his father had given power over all flesh that he should give eternal life to all given him by his father tels us that this Life Eternal must grow from that root of Faith which first did branch in Peters mouth but must be so planted as it grew in him in every heart endued with sure hope much more in all such as ●ay challenge to such preheminency or Prerogative of Faith or Hope as Peter had This is life eternal that they may know Thee saith Christ speaking of his Father to be the Only Very God and whom thou hast sent Jesus Christ so then God manifested in the flesh was the Rock of salvation whereupon the Church is built he that rightly knows and so believes this truth hath life eternal dwelling in him 25 But shall such a Faith as may be severed from Charity shall such a knowledge of Christ as may be in them to whom Christ shall say Depart from me I never knew you I say not make any so impregnable a Rock but so fasten any to that Rock so impregnable as the gates of hell shall not be able to dispossesse him of eternal life Whiles we produce the late cited or other testimonies alike pregnant to condemn the Pontificians for denying Justification only by Faith they think themselves fully acquitted with this solution that our assurance of salvation relies not upon Faith as alone but as it is the Foundation of Charity and accompanied with other Christian vertues We never taught us shall be shewed in that controversie that Faith unlesse thus attended could with true confidence plead our cause before God which yet though thus attended It only pleads But here our adversaries must be contented to take their payment in their own coin For if no man can be justified or made heir of salvation it is unpossible any should be a lively stone or living member much lesse a supream head or sure foundation of that spiritual house alwayes victorious over death and hell without a Faith so appointed as in the former case they require without a Faith as clearly testifying Christ dwelling in men by works flowing from it as their edification upon him by an Orthodoxal form of words Whosoever is destitute of a faith thus bearing fruit unto salvation is so far from being a Rock or sure foundation for others to build upon that he himself if we may believe our Saviour Mat. 7. 26. builds all his hopes upon the Sand Whosoever heareth these my words and doth them not shall be likened unto a foolish man which hath builded his house upon the sand and the rain fell and the flouds came and the winds blew and beat upon that house and it fell and the fall thereof was great Not every one therefore that saith unto our Saviour as Peter did thou art Christ the son of the living God but he that expresseth his faith and hope by works answerable to Christs conversation in the flesh and his Fathers will shall enter into the kingdom of heaven because he only is built upon that Rock which the floud-gates of hell cannot undermine or overthrow For whosoever saith our Saviour heareth of me these words and doth the same I will liken him to a wise man which builded his house on a rock And the rain fell and the flouds came and the winds blew and beat upon that house and it fell not for it was grounded upon a Rock 26 Let the Jesuite either produce any Heresie broached since our Saviours Incarnation or frame a conceit of any but Logically possible before his coming unto
hath been the Original I am perswaded as well of the Papists error in demanding absolute obedience without all condition or limitation as of many Protestants granting lesse then is due to Pastors that is obedience onely upon this condition If they shew expresse warrant of Scriptures for the particulars enjoyned Nor is the condition between the Pastor and his flock like unto that between man and man in legal contracts or in controversies of debt wherein all are equal and nothing due unto the plantiffe before the performance of the condition be proved but such as is between a private man and a Magistrate both subordinate in their several places to one Soveraigne unto whom onely absolute and complete obedience is due though unto his Officers some obedience is absolutely due at the least to be dicto audiens to hear him with patience reverence and attention not to contradict or neglect his commands but upon such evident reasons as the inferiour party dare adventure to trie the cause instantly with him before the supreme Judge The acts of obedience which are absolutely due from the flock to spiritual Magistrates or Christs Messengers and precedent to the condition interposed or inserted are the unpartial examinations of their own hearts and consciences the full renouncing of all worldly desires earthly pleasure carnal lusts or concupiscences because these unrenounced have a command over our souls and detain them from performing service best acceptable unto God or yeelding that sincere obedience which is absolutely due unto his sacred Word For this end and purpose the flock stand absolutely bound to enter into their own hearts and souls to make diligent search and strict enquiry what rebellious affection or unruly desire is harboured there as often as their overseers shall in Christs Name charge them so to do otherwise their neglect or contempt will be in that dreadfull day a witnesse of their rebellion in this life a bar to keep sin in and shut grace out 13 But if any man out of the sincerity of a good conscience and stedfast resolution of a faithfull heart which hath habitually renounced the world flesh and Devil that it may be alwayes ready to serve Christ shall refuse his Pastors commandment though threatning hell pains to his disobedience in some particulars he doth yet better observe the former precept by this his deniall then others do by performance of absolute blind obedience without strict unpartial examination of their consciences for he doth herein obey God whom to obey with heart and mind thus freed from the dominion of Sathan and the World is the very end and scope the finall service whereunto all performance of obedience unto spiritual Governours is but as a trayning of Christs faithfull Souldiers And in these acts of obedience is that saying of our Saviour most generally and absolutely true He that heareth you heareth me he that despiseth you despiseth me That precept of denying our selves and renouncing all is the foundation of all the rest concerning obedience without performance of this neither can our undertaking any other acts be sincere nor our refusall lawfully admonished safe our best obedience not hereon grounded is Non-christian our disobedien e Unchristian and rebellious For which cause we are absolutely bound unto habitual performance of this ere we can be admitted as lawfull auditors of Christs other precepts All other our resolutions or deliberate intendments whether for performance of any action commended for good and honest or for maintaining any Doctrine proposed by lawfull Pastors for true and Orthodoxal must be limited by their proportion or disproportion to the end of obedience enjoyned unto spiritual Commanders which as we said before was to obey God in all Those acts then must be undertaken which upon examination appear not prejudicial to that oath of absolute obedience which we have taken unto our supreme Lord these omitted which out of this generall resolution of renouncing all and denying our selves and this unpartial examination of our souls in particular doubts may seem to derogate from that absolute Loyaltie which we owe to Christ No Minister may expect obedience but upon these conditions and he that sincerely obeyeth in the forementioned fundamental act of renouncing all and denying himself and yet disobeys in other particulars upon such grounds and motives as we have said doth perfectly fulfill that precept if any such there were obey your spiritual Overseers in all things 14 Be our bond of duty to such Governours whether by ordinary subjection to their calling or voluntary submission of our judgements to their personal worth never so great yet seeing they command onely in Christs Name and for the advancement of his kingdom to imagine spiritual obedience should be due to such injunctions as upon sober and deliberate examination seem to crosse the end they propose would argue such spirituall madnesse as if a man should adventure to kill by all probability of present occurrence his father or mother because he had formerly vowed without consideration of any homicide much lesse parricide thence likely to follow to kill the first live creature he met In such a case as Philo acutely observes a man should not forswear himself or break his vow yet overthrow the very end and use of all vowes which were instituted as bridles to make us refram all occasions or provocations to evil not as halters to lead or draw us to such unnatural villanies 15 These rules hitherto mentioned rightly observed there is no greater diffculty in restraining universal precepts of obedience to the Church then in limitting general commandements of Kings to their Deputies or Vice-gerents Now if a King should charge his Subjects to obey his Lieutenant in all that he should command any reasonable man would take the meaning to be this That he should be obeyed in all things that belong unto the Kings service because this is the end of his appointment and the proper subject of this precept No man in this case would be so mad as to take the Princes word for his warrant if by his Lieutenant he should be put upon some service which were more then suspitious to be traiterous or apparently tending to the Kings destruction If a Jesuite should see the Popes Agent or Nuncio whom he were bound to obey by the Popes injunction delivered in most ample termes tampering with the Popes open enemies either consorting with us in our Liturgie or communicating with us in our Sacraments receiving pension from forrainers or secretly conferring with such of their Counsellors as had more wit then himself could he dispence with his oath of absolute allegeance to the Pope upon these or like evasions This is suspitious indeed but how shall I know whether the Popes Agent in doing this do disobey his Holinesse If he say no must I not believe him must I not obey him and do as he doth whom the Pope commands me to obey in all things The Jesuites are not so simple in the
Popes cause as they would make all other in Gods they could tell how to limit such commands though delivered in most universal and ample termes This is the matter then which so vexeth their devout hearts and sets them besides themselves with furious zeal in this argument that any Christian should be as wary and circumspect lest he should prove disloyall unto the Creator and Redeemer of mankind as they are lest they should disobey the advancer and supporter of their Order 16 But to come nearer the point and instance in some Precepts of obedience delivered in most general forme Might the literal or Logick note of Universalitie carry away such absolute soveraignty as they contend for far greater reason there is why every father or master should be an absolute Pope over his own familie then why the Pope of Rome should be a father of all Christian Congregations an absolute Judge of Scripture or master over mens faith Saint Paul Col. 2. 20. Commands children to obey their fathers in All things for that is well-pleasing unto the Lord which is as much as if he had said in obeying them you obey the Lord. Again he commands servants to be obedient unto them that are their masters according to the flesh in All things not with eye-service as men pleasers but with singlenesse of heart fearing God Both these precepts are conceived in termes as general as any precept for obedience to spiritual Governours In the Precept concerning wives obedience to their husbands the note of universalitie is omitted for he saith Wives sabmit your selves unto your husbands as it is comely in the Lord not in all things Had the Apostle made any mention of obedience unto spirituall Governours or were there any hope to comprehend Pastors under the name of fathers or masters it would quickly be inferred the note of universality was purposely added by our Apostle in these later precepts that men might know absolute obedience without limitation or examination was due unto the Pope 17 But the Holy men of God whose mouthes alwayes spake out of the abundance of their hearts as the spirit gave them utterance and were not curious to cast their words in such exact scholastick moulds as men addicted to artificial meditations having their brains more exercised then their hearts in Gods word usually do even where they seem to speak most Universally for the Form are to be Universally understood only in that subject or matter which for the present they mind most As when our Apostle commands servants and children to obey the one their masters the other their parents in all things the meaning is as if he had said ye that are christian servants be ye most willing to yield all obedience that is due unto masters ye that are christian children to yield all obedience unto your parents which is convenient for any children to yield to theirs So that the universal note doth rather injoyn a totality of heartinesse and cheerfulnesse a perfection of sincerity in performing that obedience which other children ought to their fathers or servants to their masters then any way extend the object of christian childrens or servants obedience to more particulars then others were bound unto at the least he doth not extend the object of their obedience to any particulars which might prejudice the sincerity of their obedience due unto other commanders whilest he enjoyneth servants to obey their masters in all things he reserves their allegiance intire unto Princes and higher powers Such must be obeyed both by masters and servants by fathers and sons Much more doth God when he injoyns obedience in most ample form unto Kings or spiritual governours reserve obedience due to himself most intire and absolute 18 Yet intire and absolute it cannot be unless it depend immediately and absolutely upon his laws unless it be exempt from the uncontrollable disposal or infallible direction of other authorities Nor can Christ be said our supream Lord unless our obedience to him and those laws which he hath left us do limit and restrain all other obedience due unto any authority derived from him and his laws more then a Prince could be said to be that servants supream Lord or Soveraign which were bound absolutely to obey his Master in all points without examination whether his designments were hot contrary to the publick laws and statutes of his Prince and Country Wherefore as the oath of Allegeance unto Princes doth restrain the former precepts Servants obey your Masters in All things that is in all things that are not repugnant to publick laws nor prejudicial to the Crown and dignity of your Soveraign so must that solemn vow of fidelity made unto Christ in Baptism and our dayly acknowledgement of him for our Soveraign Lord restrain all precepts injoyning performance of obedience to any power on earth and set these immoveable bounds and limits to them Obey thy King and Governour in All things that is in All things that are not repugnant to the laws and ordinances of the Great King thy supream Lord and Governour Whilest thou obeyest him thou doest wel in disobeying them as wel as that servant that takes Arms against his Master in the Kings desence whilest thou disobeyest him all other obedience is rebellion Ye are bought with a price saith our Apostle be not ye the servants of men Service according to the flesh he else-where approves he strictly injoyns for that is freedom in respect of this servitude of mind and conscience in being wholly at any other mans disposition 19 Nor is it more difficult for Christs servants to discern when governours solicit them to disloyalty against him then for servants according to the flesh to know when their masters seduce them unto rebellion so Christian men would fear God as much as natural men do earthly Princes Such as fear God are sure of a better expositor of his laws for fundamental points then servants can have for their Princes The transgression of both are easie to discern in the beginning of revolts or Apostasies but the later more difficult when traitors or usurpers are grown strong and can pretend fair titles unto soveraignties or coin false pedegrees yet it is not impossible for sober and observant spirits in such a case to foresee what party to follow unto such the Signs of the time and carriage of the several causes will bewray who have the true title But this difficulty is in none in our spiritual obedience challenged by the Church of Rome for that Church in words confesseth Christ to be the true King and supream Lord no usurper which is as much as to say the Pope is an usurper and a rebel that dares in deeds and substance challenge the soveraignty from him as you heard in the former dispute by making claim to this unlimited unreserved obedience Upon what grounds especially we are now to examin by these rules hitherto discussed CAP. XII The authority of the Sanhedrim not so
universal or absolute amongst the Jews as the Papists make it but was to be limited by the former Rules 1 ONe especial place on which they stand is from that Law in Deuteronomy If there arise a matter too hard for thee in judgement between bloud and bloud between plea and plea between plague and plague in the matters of controversie within thy gates then shalt thou arise and go up unto the place which the Lord thy God shall chuse And thou shalt come unto the Priests of the Levites and to the Judge that shall be in those dayes and ask and they shall shew thee the sentence of judgement and thou shalt do according to that thing which they of that place which the Lord hath chosen shew thee and thou shalt observe to do according to all that they inform thee According to the Law which they shall teach thee and according to the judgement which they shall tell thee sealt thou do thou shalt not decline from the thing which they shall shew thee neither to the right hand nor to the left And that man that will do presumptuously not hear kning unto the Priest that standeth before the Lord thy God to minister there or unto the Judge that man shall die and thou shalt take away evil from Israel so all the people shall hear and fear and do no more presumptuously 2 This precept admits of many restrictions any one of which doth take away all the force of our adversaries objections First it may without prejudice to our cause be granted although it cannot out of these words be necessarily inferred that God here prescribes obedience in the abstract such as was to be performed unto those Priests and Judges that lived according to that pattern which he had set them Thus may this precept of obedience for the extent be universal and concern all causes whatsoever spiritual or temporal doubts of conscience or matters of this life in all which such governours were to be obeyed but conditionally if they were such as God in his law required they should be unto such as you heard before he gave illuminations extraordinary such as the parties that were to obey might have perfect notice of But how great soever the extent of this precept be not one syllable in it makes more for absolute obedience unto spiritual then unto civil governours for it is said indefinitely vers 10. thou ●… do according to that thing which they either spiritual or temporal of that plac●… which the Lord hath chosen shall shew thee And again the words are di●…ctive That man that will do presumptuously not hearkening unto the Pr●… unto the Judge that man shall die whether the Priest were to be supream Judge or no it is not said at the least the High Priest was not the chief man alwayes in the Councel for he was not alwayes admitted into the supream Consistory or Sanhedrim which is established in this place yet Bellarmin will have the definitive sentence belong unto the Priest and the execution of it to the civil magistrate so indeed the present Romish Church in spiritual cases would be judge and m●ke Christian Princes her hang-men but their practise must not be taken for an infallible exposition of that Law whence they seek to justifie their practise quite contrary to the practise of the Jewish Church and Synagogue Nor doth Bellarmin or any other beside the base parasitical Canonists or the Popes trencher chaplains deny but that in many civil causes the Prince or temporal Magistrate hath a definitive sentence can he then gather out of any circumstance of this place that only spiritual causes are here meant nay he confesseth that the law is general concerning all doubts that might arise out of the law yet it is most probable that it only concerns civil controversies and Bellarmins reason to prove that it includeth spiritual causes or matters of Religion is most idle The occasion of this Law saith he was for them that did serve other Gods as appears out of the beginnning of the Chapter now the service of other Gods is a point of Religion But what though Moses in the former part of this Chapter speak of Idolaters must this law therefore concern Idolaters In the former part he speaketh only of Idolaters but this law is not only for them by Bellarmins confession Yet the circumstances of the place and the expresse law against Idolaters mentioned before evince that in this Chapter as in the former he first sets down laws concerning the true service of God and in the later part gives precepts for the observation of the second Table the maintaining of love by the final composition of all controversies that might arise betwixt neighbours In the former law Idolaters are sentenced to death and Idolatry saith Bellarmin is a point of Religion Was the Priest alone then to give sentence and the civil Magistrate only to execute it There is not the least pretence for it out of this Text. Any ordinary Magistrate might execute him that was lawfully convicted of this crime nor was it so hard a matter to judge who was an Idolater amongst the Jews as it is to determin what is an Heresie amongst the Romanists This was to be proved by witnesses not by Logical proof or force of speculative reason Had the cunningest Jesuite in the world been taken amongst them kneeling down before an Image and praying to it all the distinctions in the Master of sentences or Aquinas or both their Commentators could not have redeemed him against two honest men that had sworn he had done thus much there had been no appeal from any City in Judah unto any higher Court his doom had been read in the gates and without them he should as Homer speaks have put on a stony coat 3 That the Kings of Judah were only to execute the Priests definitive sentence in all hard controversies is a position well deserving execution without appeal at Princes hands And no doubt but it did so amongst the Jews The former Court as is most probable was to cease when they had a King amongst them And Moses in the former Chapter after he had given the other law for ending controversies gives the law for the election of their King if so be they would have one as if the former Court had then ceased to be the supream Tribunal seeing all Subjects might appeal unto the King from it in which this Soveraignty did before reside as being the supream Tribunal whence there could be no appeal 4 The King in the Law concerning his qualification is commanded to have the Law of his God written out And it shall be with him and he shall read therein all the dayes of his life that he may learn to fear the Lord his God and to keep all the words of his Law and these Ordinances for to do them that his heart be not lifted up above his brethren and that he turn not from the commandment
to the right hand or to the left Was he to take all this pains only that he might learn to execute the Priests indefinite sentence This any heathen might have done But the Kings of Israel albeit they were not to meddle in the execution of the Priests office were not withstanding to be so well skilled in Scriptures as to be able to judge whether the Priest did according to that Law which God had set him to follow and to controle his definitive sentence if it were evidently contrary to Gods word which both were absolutely bound to obey 5 It may perhaps here be objected that the King had no such assurance of infallibility in judgement as the Priest had and therefore it was requisite he should rely upon the Priests definitive sentence What construction then can any Jesuite make of these words A divine sentence shall be in the lips of the King his mouth shall not transgress he saith not in execution of judgement given by the Priests but in judgement given by himself seeing it is an abomination to Kings to commit wickednesse for the throne is established by justice And again ‖ Righteous lips such as the Priests should and might have been but usually were not are the delight of Kings and the King loveth him that speaketh right things This place if we respect either the abstract form of precept or plenitude of Gods promise for abiliment to perform it is more plain and peremptory for the Kings then any can be brought for the High Priests infallibility in giving definitive sentence yet doth it not necessarily infer Kings shall not but rather shews that they should not or that they might not at any time erre in judgment so they would stedfastly follow those rules which God hath prescribed them For when God saith A divine sentence shall be in the lips of Kings this speech doth no more argue a perpetual certainty in giving righteous sentence then if he had said A corrupt or erroneous sentence shall not be in the lips of the King or his mouth shall not transgresse in judgement For as that which God saith shall not be done oft-times is done so may that which God saith shall be done be oft-times left undone Who is he then would make this collection God saith Thou shalt not steal that is no man shall steal ergo there can be no thieves no theft committed yet is our adversaries collection as foolish The Priests lips shall preserve knowledge Ergo they cannot erre in giving definitive sentence as again The spirit shall lead you into all truth they shall be all taught of God therefore the Church shall be infallibly taught by the spirit and shall as infallibly teach others live they as they list 6 These places shew what should be done and what God for his part will infallibly perform so men would be obedient to his word but neither do these or any of like nature include any infallibility of not erring without performance of due obedience in practise of life nor do they necessarily conclude that men alwayes shall perform such obedience The most which they infer is this that Governours by duty are bound to perform that performing such obedience in practise of life they might be freer from errour in their doctrine or difinitive sentence And it was abstinence and integrity of life that was to preserve sincerity of judgement in Princes as well as Priests lips for which reason Princes had their precepts of temperance answerable to those rules prescribed for the Priests So Solomon teacheth kings Give not thy strength unto a woman nor thy wayes this is to destroy Kings it is not for Kings O Lemuel it is not for Kings to drink wine nor for ●rinces strong drink lest he drink and forget the decree and change the judgement of all the children of affliction This place evidently shews that if their Princes were of riotous or intemperate lives they had no promise that they should not pervert the judgement of the children of affliction The conclusion hence arising is all the places that can be brought either for the King or Priests authority rather shew what manner of men they should be both in life and judgement then ●…ure them of any infallibility of judgement if they be dissolute in life This was a point never dreamt of by any before the Popes notoriously infamous lives did discredit the Titles of sanctity and infallibility which from a concert of their predecessors integrity they have usurped and inforced their parasites to frame a distinction of sanctity in doctrine separated from sanctity in life 7 It is questionable where both Priests and Princes of Judah had not an extraordinary priviledge above all other nations both for being infallible in their definitive sentences whilest they lived according to the laws which God had given them and also for their more then ordinary possibility of living according to such laws Gods blessings as is most probable in both th●se respects were extraordinary unto their Princes and Priests yet not so m●nitely extraordinary that either of them might without presumptuous blasphemy hope for ordinary integrity such as the more civil sort of heathens had much lesse for any absolute infallibility if they were extraordinarily wicked in their lives or unfaithful in their other dealings Even the peoples wickednesse did impair the force and vertue of these extraordinary blesings promised to their Kings and Priests God gave them Priests as well as Princes in his anger such as should be pliable to their humor not such as should infallibly direct them against the suggestions of the world and flesh for their spiritual good So that these gracious promises both for their spiritual and temporal governours sincerity in judgement did depend in part upon the condition of this peoples life 8 The usual Proverb was most true though the words thus inverted Like people Like Priests Thus did the wise Son of Sirach interpret Gods promises both to Priest and Princes † Because Phineas of●leazar ●leazar had zeal in the fear of the Lord and stood up with good courage of heart when the people were turned back and made reconciliation for Israel therefore was there ●…venant of peace made with him that he should be the chief of the Sanctuary and of his people and that he and his posterity should have the dignity of the Priesthood for ever And according unto the covenant made with David that the inheritance of the kingdom should remain to his son of the Tribe of Judah so the heritage of Aaron should be to the only son of his son and to his seed God give us wisdom in our heart to judge his people in righteousness that the good things that they have be not abolished and that their glory may endure for their posterity 9 From what we have said it is most evident that the precepts injoyning obedience unto civil Magistrates are as large and ample as any can be found for obedience unto spiritual
Faith there should be no question but God hath ordained such an authentical manner of deciding all Controversies If he have not it must needs be either because he could not establish such an infallible Authority and uncontrolable power or else because he would not To say he could not were to deny his omnipotencie open blasphemie to say he would not were little better for this were to denie his goodnesse and love to his Church both which the Scriptures testifie to be great nay infinite 3 But how great soever his love to his Church and chosen be as we acknowledge it to be infinite and everlasting if these or the like arguments make any thing for the infallibilitie of the present Romish they prove as much and as directly for the ancient Jewish Church For that was a Visible company of men not of oxen and asses and of them God had a care also Nay they were his own peculiar people and without all controversie the onely visible Church which he had on earth Wherefore all the former arguments if they conclude any infallible Authority in the present Romish Church they conclude much more for the like infallibility of the Jew●sh And by necessary consequence if I prove That Church had no such Authority my assertion stands sure That this infallible authority which the Factors of the Romish Church do challenge is greater then any visible Company of men had before our Saviours time And by the same proof shall the Romish Church be debarred for ever of both the two former pleas either drawn from the authority of the Priests or from the best form of government CAP. XV. That justly it may be presumed the Jewish Church never had any absolute infallibility in proposing or determining Articles of faith because in our Saviours time it and so grievously erre in the fundamental point of salvation FOr proof of the Conclusion proposed that Jerusalem had no such absolute infallibilitie as Rome pleads for I took it for a long time as granted by all that if any such authority had been established in the Law it should not have varied untill the alteration of the Priesthood For Gods covenant with Levi was in this sence everlasting that it was to endure without interruption untill His sacrifice was accomplished that was a Priest after a more excellent order His oblation of himself was the common bond to the Law and Gospel the end of the one and the beginning of the other Nor did the Legal rites or ceremonies themselves though these most obnoxious to corruption vanish by little and little as this sacrifice did approach neerer and neerer as darknesse doth before the rising of the Sun rather that consummation wrought upon the Crosse did swallow them up at once as virility doth youth youth childhood childhood infancie Seeing then our Adversaries suppose this infallibilitie was annexed as a prerogative royall unto the Priesthood they cannot imagine any tolerable reason why the one should expire before the other was quite abolished Hence it is that most of them hold the Scribes and Pharisees in our Saviours time were absolutely infallible in their Cathedrall consultations And I had just reasons to presume B●llarmin had been of the same mind For besides his urging that place without all sense or reason unlesse grounded on this opinion They sit in Moses chair All therefore whatsoever they bid you that observe and do these other words of his seemed to imply thus much It cannot be shewed that the Synagogue of the Jews did fail in faith untill Christs coming at what time it did not fail but rather became better by change By his speeches elsewhere I perceived by the Synagogue thus changed he meant the Church planted by Christ not the Consistory of the High-Priests and Elders not the Catholick Representative Jewish Church For saith he as it is not necessary the Popes Vicar should be inerrable when the Pope himself doth guide the Church and defend it from errour so neither was it necessary that the Jewish High Priest should not erre when Christ the High-Priest of the whole Church was present and did govern his Church in person 2 This example were it true might illustrate though ill-favouredly his assertion once supposed as possible but no way argues it to be probable Herein his similitude fails that the High Priests in our Saviours time were Aarons lawfull successors their Priesthood as entire then as ever it was and they Deputies to none in this rank or order That their Predeces●ors had such infallibility he fain would prove Can he or any for him ●hew us when or by what means it should determin whiles the Priesthood lasted To take away the Popes infallibility even in this last age of the word were in their construction to deny Christs promise made unto S. Peters chair And was not the former like prerogative as inseparably annexed to Moses seat did our Saviour before his Passeover either by doctrine or practise derogate ought from any lawful authority established on earth much lesse from that which God had expresly instituted The greatest prerogative the Scribes and Pharisees Priests or Rulers ever had was that they were Aarons successors and possessed Moses place and this authority was never disanulled but rather ratified by our Saviour after he had undertaken his ministerial function They sit in Moses seat all therefore whatsoever they bid you that observe and do And elsewhere Go and shew thy self unto the Priest c. 3 Yet this Sophister would perswade us that Isaiah and Daniel had foretold the expiration of this prerogative in later times They both indeed foretel this peoples extraordinary general blindnesse about the time of our Saviours conversation on earth But this directly proves what we object not what Bellarmin should have answered at least to us who contend the Priests and Rulers of this people were not infallible in our Saviours time nor doth Isaiah or Daniel or any Prophet of God say they were at any time such Let any Jesuite prove what easily he may out of Isaiahs words cited by Bellarmin that the Jewish Church representative was not infallible in our Saviours time and from the same we shal as clearly evince it palpably erroneous in Isaiahs own dayes or immediately after For the self same words which the Evangelist saith were fulfilled in the unbelieving Jews that heard our Saviours doctrine were literally and exactly verified of their fore-fathers before the captivity of Babylon as the Cardinal himself would he take the pains to read the whole Chapter and review the place cited by him I know would not deny His words are these And he said go and say unto this people Ye shall hear indeed but ye shall not understand ye shall plainly see and not perceive Make the heart of this people fat make their ears heavy and ●●●ut their eyes lest they see with their eyes and hear with their ears and understand with their hearts and convert and
and feeling of his goodnesse and truth of his word 7 Though no Law-giver or Governour whether temporal or spiritual especially whose calling was but ordinary could possibly before or since so well deserve of the people committed to his guidance as this great General already had done of all the host of Israel were they upon this consideration forthwith to believe what soever he should avouch without further examination sign or token of his favour with God without assured experience or at the least more then probable presumptions of his continual faithfulnesse in that service whereunto they knew him appointed Albeit after all the mighty works before mentioned wrought in their presence they had been bound thereunto the meanest handmaid in that multitude had infallible pledges plenty of his extraordinary calling lockt up in her own unerring senses But from the strange yet frequent manifestation of Moses power and favour with God so great as none besides the great Prophet whom he prefigured might challenge the like the Lord in his al-seeing wisdom took fit occasion to allure his people unto strict observance of what he afterwards solemnly enacted as also in them to forwarn all future generations without express warrant of his word not absolutely to believe any governour whomsoever in al though of tried skil and fidelity in many principal points of his service That passage of Scripture wherein the manner of this peoples stipulation is registred wel deserves an exact survey of all especially of these circumstances How the Lord by rehearsal of his mighty works so epassed extorts their promise to do whatsoever should by Moses be commanded them and yet will not accept it offered until he have made them ear-witnesses of his familiarity and communication with him First out of the Mount he called Moses unto him to deliver this solemn message unto the house of Jacob Ye have seen what I did to the Egyptians and how I carried you upon ●agles wings and have brought you unto me Now therefore if you will hear my voice indeed and keep my covenant then ye shall be my chief treasure above all people though all the earth be mine After Moses had reported unto God this answer freely uttered with joynt consent of all the people solemnly assembled before their Elders All that the Lord commanded we will do was the whole businesse betwixt God and them fully transacted by this Agent in their obsence No he is sent back to sanctifie the people that they might expect Gods glorious appearance in Mount Sinai to ratifie what he had said upon the return of their answer Lo I come unto thee in a thick cloud that the people may hear whilest I talk with thee and that they may also believe thee for ever They did not believe that God had revealed his word to Moses for the wonders he had wrought but rather that his wonders were from G●d because they heard God speak to him yea to themselves For their principal and fundamental lawes were uttered by God himself in their hearing 〈◊〉 Moses expresseth These words to wit the Decalogue the Lord spake unto ●… 〈◊〉 ●ul●●tude in the ●ou●t out of the midst of the fire the cloud and the 〈◊〉 with a great voice and add●d no more And lest the words which they had heard might soon be smothered in fleshly hearts or quickly slide o●● of their brittle memories the Lord wrote them in two Tables of stone and at their transcription not ●oses onely but Aaron Nada● and A●th● with the seventy Elders of Israel are made spectators of the Divine glory ravished with the sweetnesse of his presence † They saw saith the Text th●… of Isr●●l and un●er his feet as it were a work of a Saphire stone and as the 〈◊〉 h●a●●n when it is clear And upon the Nobles of the children of Israel ●e 〈◊〉 his 〈◊〉 also they saw God and did eat and drink After these Tables through A●●s●s anger at the peoples folly and impiety were broken God writes the 〈◊〉 same words again and renews his Covenant before all the people promising undoubted experience of his Divine assistance 8 Doth Moses after all this call fire from heaven upon all such as distr●●t his words ●aron and M●riam openly derogate from his authority which the Lord consirmes again viva voce descending in the † pillar of the 〈◊〉 co●…ng these d●tractors in the doore of the Yabe●●acce Wherefore were you 〈◊〉 a●raid to sp●ak against my servant even against Moses Th●●s the Lord was 〈◊〉 a●g●●e and depa●t●d leaving his mark upon Miriam cured of her leprosie by Moses instant prayers No marvell if Korah Dathan and ●●irams judgements were so grievous when their sin against Moses after so many documents of his high calling could not but be wilfull as their perseverance in it after so many admonitions to desist most malitious and obstinate Yet was M●s●s further countenanced by the appearance of Gods glory unto all the Congregation and his authority further ratified by the strange and fearfull end of these chief malefactors † foretold by him and by fire i●luing from the Lord to consume their confederates in offering incense ungratefull to their God Tantae molis erat Judaeam condere gentem So long and great a work it was to ●…ie Israel in true faith But without any like miracle or prediction such as never saw him never heard good of him must believe the Pope as well as Israel did their Law-giver that could make the Sea to grant him passage the clouds send bread the windes bring flesh and the hard rock yeeld drink sufficient for him and all his mighty host that could thus call the heavens as witnesses to condemn and appoint the earth as executioner of his judgements upon the obstinate and rebellious yet after all this he inflicts no such punishments upon the doubtfull in faith as the Romish Church doth but rather as is evident out of the places before alledged confirms them by commemoration of these late cited and like Experiments making † God 's favours past the surest pledges of his assistance in greatest difficulties that could beset them To conclude this people believed Moses for God● testimony of him we may not believe Gods Word without the Popes testimony of it He must be to God as Aaron was to Moses his mouth whereby he onely speaks distinctly or intelligibly to his people CAP. XVII That the Churches authority was no part of the rule of faith unto the people after Moses death That by Experiments answerable to his precepts and predictions the faithfull without relying upon the Priests infallible proposals were as certain both of the divine truth and true meaning of the Law as their fore-fathers had been that lived with Moses and saw his miracles 1 TO proceed unto the ages following Moses How did they know Moses law either indeed to be Gods Word or the true sence and meaning of it being indefinitely known
for such By tradition Yes By tradition onely No But how at all by tradition As by a joint part of that rule on which they were finally to relie Rather it was a mean to bring them unto the due consideration or right application of the written rule which Moses had left them So hard were their hearts with whom this great Law-giver had first to deal that faith could not take root in them unlesse first wrought and subacted by extraordinary signes and wonders but once thus created in them the incorruptible seed thereof might by means ordinary easily be propagated unto posterity with whom it was to grow up and ripen not by bare credence to their Ancestors traditions nor by such miraculous sights as they had seen but by assiduous and serious observation of Gods providence in their own times For all his wayes to such as mark them are ever parallel to some one or other rule contained in this book of life The Israelites in every age might have discerned the truth of his threats or promises alwayes fulfilled according to the diversity of their wayes though thus much the best amongst them would seldome have observed perhaps not so much as once have compared their course of life with either part of Gods covenant of life and death unlesse thus forewarned by their Ancestors The tradition then of former was of like use for begetting true belief in latter generations as the exhortations of tutors who have already tasted the sweet of Helicon are unto their pupils for attaining true knowledge in good Arts of whose pleasantnesse they never conceive aright untill they tast it themselves though tast it but upon the others commendation they would not without their direction ordinarily they could not 2 This Method Moses himself prescribes Consider this day for I speak not unto your children which neither have known nor seen the chastisement of the Lord your God his greatnesse his mighty hand and his stretched-out arm and his signes and his acts which he did in the midst of Egypt unto Pharaoh the King of Egypt and all his land For your eyes have seen all the great acts of the Lord which be did Therefore shall yee keep all the Commandments which I command you this day that ye may be strong and go in and poss●sse the land whither ye go to possesse it Gods wonders past they were to consider to what end That they might lay up their Law-givers words in their hearts and in their souls ●ind them 〈◊〉 remembrances upon their hands that they might be as frontlets between their eyes or sights whereby to level their steps lest they trode awry Gods Word so rooted in the fathers as thus to fructifie in their carriage gesture speech and action the seed of it was to be sown in the tender and supple hearts of children as Moses in the next words addes And ye shall teach them your ●●●l●ren speaking of them when thou sittest in thine house and when thou walkest by the war and when thou lyest down and when thou risest up And thou shalt write them upon the posis of thine house and upon thy gates Thus was Gods Covenant with his people first briefly drawn in signes and wonders and uttered by a mighty voice in mount Horeb as it had been a Demise Paro● afterwards conceived in more ample sort and written in more special termes by M●ses but was to be sealed to every generation by their sure experience of Gods mere●e and justice the one infalliblie accomplishing their prosperitie for obeying the other their calamities for transgressing it as in the same place followeth For if ye keep diligently all these commandements which I co●… 〈◊〉 to ●…o that is to l●ve the Lord your God to walk in all his wayes and to ●●ea●e unto 〈◊〉 then 〈◊〉 the Lord ●ast out all these nations before you and ye shall ●… great nations ●●ghtier then you All the places whereon the soles of your feet 〈◊〉 ●●ea● shall ●e ●●●rs y●ur coast shall be from the wildernesse and from Lebanon 〈◊〉 from the river even the river Perah unto the uttermost Sea No man shall 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 you for the Lord your God shall cast the fear of you upon all the land that ye shall 〈◊〉 upon as he hath said unto you 3 Every light or formal observation of this covenant sufficed not to avert Gods threats or make them capable of those bounteous promises which he never failed to fulfill as long as in heart and deed they used Moses writings for their rule not weighing the foolish traditions of the Elders ●… he ●●ew them saith the Psalmist they sought him and they returned an sought God 〈◊〉 And they remembred that God was their strength and the me● high God th●●r redeemer Proportionally to their repentance but far above or rather without all proportion of deserts did the Lord deal with them For as their h●a●ts though in some sort turned unto him were not upright 〈◊〉 him neither were they faithfull in his covenant so he b●i●g mercifull thus far for gave their iniquitie that he destroyed them not but o●t-times called back his anger and suffered not his whole displeasure to arise 4 The whole historical part of the old Testament untill Davids time epitomized by this Psalmist witnesseth what way soever this people went either the blessing or the curse which Moses there sets before them did alwayes surely meet them Behold I s●t before you this day a blessing and a curse the blessing if ye obey the commandements of the Lord your God which I command you this day and the curse if ye will not obey the commandements of the Lord your God but turn out of the way which I command you this day to go after other Gods which ye have not known In these terms of blessings and cursings he en●tiles the former disjunctive covenant If ye shall hearken therefore to my commandements which I shall command you this day that you love the Lord your God and serve him with all your heart and with all your soul I also will give 〈◊〉 unto your land in due time the first rain and the latter that thou mayest gather in thy whe●t and thy wine and thine oyl Also I will send grasse in thy field for thy catt●ll that thou mayest eat and have enough But beware lest your he●●t dece●ve you and lest ye turn aside and serve other Gods and worship them and so the anger of the Lord be kindled against you and he shut up the heaven that there be no rain and that your land yeeld not her fruit and ye perish quickly from the good land which the Lord giveth you To stir them up to more st●●t observance of the former covenant the blessings and cursings here mentioned were to be pronounced with great solemnitie at their first entrance into the land of Ca●●an When the Lord thy God therefore hath brought thee into the land weaher tho● goest
to possesse it then shalt thou put the blessing upon Mount Ger●…m and the curse upon Mount 〈◊〉 And elsewhere Moses chargeth the People saying These all sons of the free-woman shall stand upon Mount Geri●… to 〈◊〉 the pe●●●● 〈◊〉 ●e passe over Jordan Simeon and Levi and Judah and I●●a●har and●oseph ●oseph and Benjamin and these sons of the bond-woman shall stand 〈◊〉 Mount E●al to ●urse Reuben Gad and Asher and Zebulon Dan and Nephtali 〈◊〉 the Levites shall answer and say unto all the men of Israel with a loud voyce Cursed c Nor was this rehersall more strictly enjoyned by Moses then faithfully performed by Iosuah And all Israel and their Elders and Officers and their ●…ges stood on this side of the Ark and on that side before the Priests of the Levites which bear the Ark of the Covenant of the Lord as well the stranger as he that is born in the Countrey half of them were over against Mount Gerizim and half of them over against Mount Ebal as Moses the servant of the Lord had commanded before that they should blesse the children of Israel Then afterward he read all the words of the Law the blessings and cursings according to all that is written in the book of the Law There was not a word of all that Moses had commanded that Josuah read not before all the Congregation of Israel aswell before the women and children as the stranger that was conversant among them The like solemnity was to be continued every seventh yeer as Moses commanded them saying Every seventh yeer when the yeer of freedom shall be in the feast of Tabernacles when all Israel shall come to appear before the Lord thy God in the place which he shall 〈◊〉 thou shalt read this Law before all Israel that they may hear it Gather the people together men and women and children and thy stranger that is within thy gates that they may hear and that they may learn and fear the Lord your God and keep and observe all the word● of this Law and that their children which have not known it may hear it and learn to fear the Lord your God as long as ye live in the land whither ye go over Jordan to possesse it 5 Children were to be instructed first privately then publikely that the solemnity of the spectacle might work in them a modest fear and reverence without whose precedent impression true faith hardly findes entrance into the heart of man And without miracles it seldom takes but where the seed of it have been sowen in tender yeers nor doth it usually sink into younger breasts unlesse sucked in with admiration All that Moses all that Josuah all that Priests and Levites all that Parents or other Instructers private or publick could do to such all they aimed at was to propose the infallible word in such sort as might stir up their hearts to receive it with attention and admiration and afterwards to make sure triall of it alwayes sufficient to prove it self by their practise No instructer in that people ever taught his hearers either finally or jointly to rely upon the infallibility of his proposals 6 But the Jesuites heart though his mouth will not utter it thus indictes Did all this stir these Scripturians would seem to make or tatling parents daily invitation of their children to strict observance of this rule take such effect as Moses dreamed of in posterity No. But the reason why it did not was because they sought not in time to supplie the defect or raritie of miracles in latter with more frequent and solemne memorial of such as had happened in former ages or with more abundant meditation upon their written law and diligent observation of their ordinary successe alwayes correspondent thereunto Take heed to thy self saith Moses and keep thy soul diligently that thou forget not the things thine eyes have seen and that they depart not out of thine heart all the dayes of thy life but teach them thy sons and thy sons sons forget not the day that thou stoodest before the Lord thy God in Horeb when the Lord said unto me Gather me the people together and I will cause them to hear my words that they may learn to fear me all the dayes that they shall live upon the earth and that they may teach their children The necessity of this and like premonitions was too well manifested by the event The people saith another Pen-man of the sacred Canon had served the Lord all the 〈◊〉 of Josuah and all the dayes of the Elders that out-lived Josuah which had seen all the great works of the Lord that he aid for Israel Not the avouchment or presence of infallible teachers but their sure experience of Gods power and mercy did more surely fasten this peoples assent unto the truth of that which Moses had left written then Moses live-personal proposal could do their Fathers to his words uttered in their audience But after that generation with whom Josuah had conversed was gathered unto their fathers and another generation arose after them which neither knew the Lord nor yet the works he had done for Israel then the children of Israel did weekenly in 〈◊〉 sight of the Lord and served Baal Whence it came to passe that whithersoever they went out the hand of the Lord was sore against them as the Lord has said and as the Lord had sworn unto them so he punished them sore Notwithstanding the Lord raised up Judges which delivered them out of the hands of their oppressors yet when the Iudge was dead they returned and did worse then their fathers in following others gods to serve them and worship them they ceased not from their own inventions nor from their rebellious way What rule then was left to reclaim them the infallible proposals of their Priests Though these or an Angel from heaven should have proposed any other Doctrine then what was consonant to their written law whose true meaning in this respect every one of them should have known Moses curse before mentioned had overtaken them following it So much were they addicted unto Baals Priests proposals that Angels could scarsly be heard though suggesting nothing but what their Law-giver had taught though assuring them by their presence of such assistance from their mighty God as he had promised Thus when the general of these heavenly souldiers sought to encourage Gideon The Lord is with thee thou valiant man He replies ah my Lord if the Lord be with us why then is all this come upon us and where be all his miracles which our Fathers told us of and said Did not the Lord bring us out of Egypt but now the Lord hath forsaken us and delivered us into the hand of the Midianites As if he had said I will not deny but the Lord hath done of old as our fathers have declared unto us Moses story I distrust not but am sure he hath
much as is intimated in the words following was their inordinate desire of having an earthly King that might rule the nation with an iron rod. ‖ When Jesus therefore perceived by their forwardnesse to professe the former truth that they would come and take him to make him a King he departed again into a mountain himself alone for the same cause no doubt which the Evan●elist speci●… the former place But Jesus did not commit himself unto them because he knew them all and had no need that any should testifie of man He knew such as upon these glimpses of his glory were presently so stifly set to believe in him upon hopes of being fed with dainties or mighty protection against the Heathen would be as violently ●e●t against him even to crucifie him for a seducer ●tter they had discovered his constant endeavours to bring them both by life and doctrine unto conformity with his cross mortification humility contempt of the world patience in affliction with other like qualities despiseable in the worlds eyes yet main principles in his school and elementary grounds of salvation so his country-men of Nazareth sodainly admiring the grat●ous words which proceeded out of his mouth after he begun to upbraid them with unthankfulness as speedily attempt to throw him headlong from the top of the hill whereon their City was built By this it may appear that of the ●ewish people in ancient times some did sin in being backward others in an immature forwardnesse to believe prophetical doctrines But the fountains or first heads whence these swift motions of life were depraved in the one was inordinate assection or intrinsick habitual corruption the root whence such deadnesse was derived into the actions of the other was hardnesse of heart precedent neglect of Gods word and ignorance of his wayes thence ensuing Which presupposed the parties so affected did not amis●e in not believing the true Prophets without examination but in not abandoning such dispositions as disenabled them for believing all parts of truth proposed with constancy and vniformity making them fit instruments to be wrought upon by seducers Hence saith our Saviour I come in my fathers name and ye receive me not if another shall come in his own name him will ye receive How can ye believe which receive honour one of another and seek not the hon●●r that cometh of God alone Nor Prophetical nor Apos●olical nor Messiacal much lesse could Papal authority make them believe the doctrine of life intirely and sincerely whilest their hearts were hardned whose hardnesse though might easily have been mollisied by laying Moses law unto them while they were young and tender 4 It is a rule as profitable for our own information in many points as for ●●●ut●tion of the adversary that The commendation of necessary me●ns is alwayes included in the commendation of the end which how good or excellent soever it be our desires of it are preposterous all earnest endeavours to attain it turbulent unlesse first addressed with proportionable alacrity to follow the means that must produce it Sober spirits alwayes bound their hopes of accomplishing the one by perfect survey of their interest in the other as minds truly liberal determine future expences by exact calculation of their present revenews Even in businesses of greatest importance though requiring speediest expedition a wise man will moderate his pace according to the quality of the ground whereon he goes otherwise the more haste may cause worse speed The Jews were as we are bound to believe truths proposed without delay but both for this reason most strictly bound to a continual uniformity of practising divine precepts already known without dispensing with this or that particular though offensive to our present disposition without indulgence to this or that special time without all priviledge sought from the pleasure or displeasure of men Both bound so to frame our lives and conversations as to be instantly able to discern the truth proposed not by relying upon their authority that propose it but for it self or from a full and lively though a quick and speedy apprehension of immediate homogeneal consonancy between the external and the internal word For if any part of Gods word truly dwel in us though secret it may be and silent of it self yet wil it Eccho in our hearts whilst the like reverberates in our ears from the live-voice of the Ministery Thus had the Jews hearts been truly set to Moses law had their souls delighted in the practise of it as in their food they had resounded to the Prophets call as a string though untouched and unable to begin motion of it self wil yet raise it self to an unison voice or as the fowls of heaven answer with like language to others of their own kind that have better occasion to begin the cry In this sense are Christs sheep said to hear his voice and follow him not every one that can counterfeit his or his Prophets Call 5 The issue of all that hath been said is that none within the pr●cincts of these times whereof we now treat from the Law given unto the Gospel were bound to believe Gods messengers without examination of their doctrine by the precedent written word Only this difference there was such as had rightly framed their hearts to it did make this trial of Prophetical doctrines as it were by a present taste which others could not without interposition of time to work an alteration in their distempered affections For this reason do the Prophets alwayes annex Mosaical precepts of repentance to their predictions of future events as knowing that if their hearts to whom they spake were turned to God their sight should forthwith be restored clearly to discern the truth For further manifestation of the same conclusion it appears sufficiently from sundry discourses in the former book that Israels incredulity unto their Prophets was finally to be resolved into their neglect their imperfect or partial observance of Moses precepts Wherefore not the live-voice of them whose words in themselves were most infallible and are by the approbation of time with other conspicuous documents of Gods peculiar providence preserving them in divine estimation so long become an undoubted rule of life unto us but the written word before confirmed by signs and wonders sealed by the events of times present and precedent was the infallible rule whereby the prophetical admonitions of every age were to be tried and examined 6 The words of the best while they spake them were not of like authority as now written they are unto us nor were they admitted into the Ca●on but upon just proof of their divine authority That one speech which Fsay uttered was an Axiom so well known as might bring all the rest to be examined before admission To the Law and to the Tescimony if they spea● not according to this word it is because there is no light in them For Gods Wil already known and
immediately sent from Heaven not made by multiplication of such bread as they might have bought of ordinary Bakers Nor doth our Saviour seek to win them by out-vying Moses in multitude or magnificence of his miracles but by alluring them to taste and prove his heavenly doctrine For The Experiments that give us the seal and assurance of lively faith must of necessety he within us even in our hearts and in our souls and these are they Had this people without miracles been dicto audiens as they were enjoyned by Moses in that they took him for a Prophet they might in short time have known what Peter confessed Verba vitae aeternae habes Thou hast the words of eternal life whose sweetness once inwardly tasted was much more then all the miracles that could be wrought without his hearers or upon them But of such works these proud Jews never dreamed as not knowing the Scriptures nor the vertue of their Messias who as the Prophets had soretold was to preach the Gospel unto the poor to comfort such as mourned in Sion to whom no miracles could be more welcome then such as he did for what could be more acceptable to the blind then restitution of sight to the lame then right use of his limbs what more grateful message could be uttered to the deaf then Ephata to have his ears opened what to the dumb then un●ying of the tongue what to the possessed then to be freed from the tyrannie of Satan or his Ministers Finally as the Evangelist notes he did all things well and unto the best contentment possible of every afflicted soul far above the exigence or significations of their peculiar necessities but further beyond their expectation In every work he shewed his willingnesse in all his power to ease and refresh all that were weary and heavy laden but unto such as thought themselves so whole and sound as no way to need his Physick rather desirous to feed their curious fancies with superfluous or unnecessary wonders he was not willing to give satisfaction by turning Gods graces into wantonnesse or vain ostentation of his power or skil Another especial occasion of this peoples stumbling at this stone elect and pretious was their not considering that many of Moses greatest wonders were types partly of those glorious miracles which Messiah was to work secretly by his spirit manifested only to the ●earts and consciences in whom they were wrought partly of that his glory and power which was outwardly revealed to his Disciples and might so have been to more had they not stumbled as the Proverb is in the very Entry and so departed from him in despair bred from a foolish prejudice that no great good could be expected from a Nazarite of parentage birth and education so mean CAP. XXI Confirming the truth delivered in the former Chapter from the very law given by Moses for discerning the great Prophet further exemplifying the use and force of miracles for begetting faith The manner of trying Prophesies of the similitude betwixt Christ and Moses 1 AS well for farther discovery of Romish blasphemy as ratification of our former assertion let us view with diligence that place of Moses wherein such strict obedience and attention to the Messias doctrine is enjoyned as no where else such as no other may exact without incurring the curse there threatned to the disobedient The Lord thy God will raise thee up a Prophet like unto me from among you even of thy brethren unto him ye shall hearken According to all that thou desiredst the Lord thy God in Horeb in the day of the assembly when thou saidst Let me hear the voice of my Lord God no more nor see this great fire any more that I die not And the Lord said unto me they have well spoken I will raise them up a Prophet from among their Brethren like unto thee and will put my words in his mouth and he shall speak unto them all that I shall command him And whosoever will not hearken unto my words which he shall speak in my Name I will require it of him This prophesie by joynt consent of best interpreters as well modern as ancient Pontificians as Protestants may be truly and literally applied to other Prophets whether of the old or new Testament according to that measure of the spirit they had from him of whose fulnesse all as well such as in time went before him as those that came after him had received grace for grace True it is if we rightly value the strict propriety of every word or clause in the whole context what all historical circumstances put together import or the ful extent of S. Peters paraphrase on the last sentence it cannot be exactly fitted unto any but Christ unto whom only the whole discourse is as fully commensurable as a well made garment to the body that wears it yet is this no impediment why the same rule taken according to some literal circumstances might not usually serve for certain discretion of true Prophets from false as we use to notifie lesser but indefinite quantities of things by the known parts of some greater measure commensurable if we take the whole to substances of a larger size 2 Evident it is out of the literal meaning of this law acknowledged by all that Israel was strictly bound to hearken unto such Prophets as God at any time should raise them up though with most attention and greatest reverence to hear The Prince of Prophets But the question is upon what tearms or how far they were bound to hear all Absolutely and at first proposal of their doctrines without examination of them by the written law So might he that could have set the best leg foremost and stept up soonest into Moses chair have kept the rest of his profession in aw by thundering out Anathema's thence as the Pope doth from S. Peters to all gain-sayers priest or people By what rule then were true Prophets to be distinguished from false By miracles These were means of times effectual but as was intimated more usual for enforcing men to an acknowledgement of the truth in general then for trying particular controversies by amongst true professors in respect of whom they were subordinate to that rule given by Moses in the words immediately following But the Prophet that shall presume to speak a word in any Name which I have not commanded him to speak or that speaketh in the name of other Gods even the same Prophet shall die And if thou think in thine heart How shall we know the word which the Lord hath not spoken When a Prophet speaketh in the name of the Lord if the thing follow not nor come to passe that is the thing which the Lord hath not spoken but the Prophet hath spoken it presumptuously thou shalt not therefore be afraid of him 3 Before this or any other part of the law was written somewhat in proportion answerable to
Come and see a man that hath told me all things that ever I did is not he The Christ Upon their like experience fully consonant to the same common notion on conceit of the Messias did a many of that City conceive Faith from the womans report but moe because of his own words And they said unto the woman Now we believe not because of thy saying for we have heard him our selves and know that This is indeed The Christ the Saviour of the World From the like but more lively experience of his discovering secrets did his Disciples make that confession Now know we that thou knowest all things and needest not that any man should ask thee By this we believe that thou art come out from God 16 The manifestation of this Prophetical Spirit did give life unto his greatest miracles in working Faith for his Disciples believed in him after his resurrection because he had foretold his reedifying the Temple in three dayes space Which speech of his the foolish Jews not knowing His Body to be the true Temple wherein their God did dwell after a more excellent manner then between the Cherubins take as meant of the materiall Temple which had been fourty six yeers in building But saith Saint Iohn Assoon as he was risen from the dead his Disciples remembred that he thus said unto them and they believed the Scripture and the word which Iesus had said Nor did they compare these two together by chance for our Saviour often inculcated this Method as of purpose to imprint the former Oracle of Isaiab in their hearts To assure them of his going to his Father he expresly tels them Now I have spoken unto you before it come that when it is come to passe ye might believe Foretelling the persecution of his Disciples he addes These things have I told you that when the hour shall come ye might remember that I told you them That glory likewise which God had professed he would not give to any other he foretels should be given Him and so demands it as if He that did glorifie and He that was glorified were both One Father Glorifie thy Name Then came there a voice from heaven saying I have both glorified is and will glorifie it again How had he glorified it before By glorifying this great Prophet who did fully expresse but for exceed Moses in all things wherein Former Prophets did resemble him but came far short of him When was he so glorified At his transfiguration upon Mount Tabot which none without Sacrilegious impiety could have foretold as likely to befall him self save he alone that had not as Moses onely seen the Similitude of the Lord but being in the Forme of God thought it no robbery to be Equal with him Yet this Prophet of whom we speak though like to his Brethren in shape and substance to assure them he should come in the Glory of his Father foretells his Disciples that some of them should not die untill they had seen the Kingdom of God come with Power which was accomplished in that Transfiguration where as Saint Peter witnesseth He received of God the Father honour and glory when there came such a voyce unto him from the excedent glory This is my beloved Son in whom I am well pleased Yea so well pleased as for his sake the world might henceforth know how ready he was to hear all that through faith in his Name should call upon him even such as had displeased him most For this cause the Codicil annexed to the divine Will and Testament here signified immediately after to be sealed with the bloud of this Best Beloved Son was that reciprocal duty before intimated in the Law Hear Him as is specified by three Evangelists For more publick manifestation of his Majesty as then revealed but to a few was that glorious commemoration of it lately mentioned celebrated again in the audience of the multitude This voice saith our Saviour came not because of me but for your sakes And in that place again after his wonted predictions of things should after come to passe as of his victory over death he testifies aloud to all the people that he was the great Prophet foretold by Moses sweetly paraphrasing upon his words And Jesus tried and said He that believeth in me believeth not in me but in him that sent me And if any man hear my words and believe not I judge him not for I came not to judge the world but to save the world He did not accurse such as would not acknowledge his authority or derogated from his person or miracles nor needed he so to do for he that refuseth him and receiveth not his words hath one that judgeth him the word which he had spoken it shall judge him in the last day This was that which Moses had said And whosoever will not hearken unto my words which he the great Prophet shall speak in my Name I will require it of him to wit in the last day of accompts For I have not spoken of my self but the Father which sent me he gave me a commandement what I should do and what I should speak And I know that his commandement is life everlasting the things therefore that I speak I speak them so as the Father said unto me What is this but that speech of Moses improved to it Full Value according to the circumstances and signes of those times and as it concerned the Lord and Prince of Prophets I will raise them up a Prophet from among their brethren like unto thee and will put my words in his mouth and he shall speak unto them all that I shall command him 17 This being the last conference our Saviour was willing to entertain with the Jews this his last farewell given in Moses words warrants me to construe that speech of Saint Iohns though he had done so many miracles before them yet believed they not on him as I have done the like before to wit That not his miracles considered alone but with Mosaical and Prophetical writings or common notions of the Messias thence conceived or especially as they concurred with his own predictions did immediately condemn the Jews Under the name of works his words are comprehended such at the least as foretell his admirable works or in generall all those solemn invocations of his Fathers name in such predictions as had he not been the Son of God would rather have brought speedy vengeance from heaven upon his head then such glorious testimonies of his Divinity And to me our Saviour seems to call his very words works in that speech to philip Believest thou not that I am in the Father and the Father in me the words that I speak unto you I speak not of my self but the Father that dwelleth in me he doth the works Howsoever as all the works of God were created by this Eternall Word so
labouring in vain to see the Truth of Divine revelations without it as much in vain as if a man should strive to see colours without light For this is Sacroboscus instance Besides the habit of faith seated in the understanding and the supernatural concourse of the Holy Spirit due to all endued with the babit of faith but necessary in respect of the subject or party two things more are requisite on the behalf of the object of which if either be wanting the facultie can never perform it proper function Of these two the one is that the proposition to be believed be revealed by God the other that there be a sufficient proposal made to us that God hath revealed it For an unsufficient proposal of any object is as none as may appear by the example of light which proposeth colours to be seen For when the light is weak or scant we cannot discern Colours not that we want a visible object but because we want light sufficient to illuminate the object or the space betwixt us and it He adds withall such as disclaim the Churches Authority and are content with this That Truths of faith are revealed by God in his Word and hence promise themselves the supernatural concourse of the Holy Ghost for producing acts of faith are destitute of a sufficient proposer and their presumption such as if a man should perswade himself because he hath Colours before his eyes and God ready to afford his ordinary concourse as oft as he is disposed to exercise his visive faculty he should be able to see them without light For saith this Jesuite the Prophets are dead Apostles dead Christ gone to heaven and instead of all Prophets Apostles or himself hath left us his Church Nor is it to be expected that God will every where upon all occasions supply the want of the external proposals by the abundance of internal illuminations as he did to our first parent or Saint Paul who had his Gospel neither from man nor by man but by the revelation of Jesus Christ For those are priviledges 6 The calumnie intended in this last instance hath often heretofore been prevented We never denied either the necessity or suff●iciencie of the Churches proposal as an external mean we account no other of that rank and nature is or could be either more necessary or more sufficient Saint Paul we grant had an extraordinary priviledge and yet for his private information had the truth proposed unto him by Ananias though the gifts of his publick Ministery were immediately from God Both the measure of his faith and manner of attaining it were unusual but his faith it self once attained no otherwise independent of any external proposal then ours is and all Christians must be We should have been more beholden to this professor had he distinctly told us what it is in their language to have a sufficient proposer albeit this we may gather from his words late cited and these following The Sectaries take upon them to correct the Churches sentence as oft as they list and then they oppose Christ to the Church as if the Church did propose one thing and Christ teach another If they admitted any Church as a sufficient proposer they were bound to conforme their opinions to it in all things As you heard before out of Bellarmine That the Popes Decrees may not be examined whether consonant or contrary to Gods Word or the foundations of faith already laid in our hearts and out of Canus That we must believe the Church absolutely without its or ands Thus believing we have Gods Word sufficiently proposed without this belief or acknowledgement of such authority in the Church we have no sufficient proposal of it but strive as foolishly to hear God speak as if we sought to see Colours without the light 7 It appears I hope as clearly to the Reader as to me that the Churches testimony or authority by our Adversaries Doctrine benefits none but such as stedfastly and absolutely believe it in all things But he that so believes it may by it easily believe all other points as he that can perfectly see the light may see Colours by it Want of this radical belief in us makes our faith in their opinion so unstable or rather blind and dead Yet can I hardly perswad● my self all of them will grant the Church addes any inherent or participated splendor to divine revelations whereby they become perspicuous in themselves as Colours are made visible by irradiation of the Sun Thus much notwithstanding all of them I know willingly would subscribe unto A Protestant can neither of himself be infallibly perswaded of the Truth of Scriptures or other conclusions of faith nor doth he absolutely believe any others that are infallible in their determinations but a Roman Catholick albeit by his private spirit he cannot infallibly believe them yet he infalliby believes the Church which cannot erre in belief All then that a Papist hath more then a Protestant is this his Belief of the Church if once he doubt of this he is where he was Which in plain termes is as much as to say ‖ He believes the Church concerning Scriptures not Scriptures That this is the true interpretation of their Tenent may easily be gathered from their own writings For Bellarmine expressely contends and all of them suppose that saying of Saint Austin Non crederem Evangelio nisime commoveret Ecclesiae authoritas I would not believe the Gospel unlesse the Churches authority did thereto move me to be true as well after faith is produced whilest it continues as whiles it is in planting Now if a man should say Non crederem Francisco nisi me commoveret Petri fi●elitas I would not trust Frances but for Peters word this speech resolved into it natural or proper sence is aequivalent unto this I do not trust Frances but Peter that gives his word for him And in case Peter should prove false or be distrusted by him that took his word for Frances as yet not believed but for Peters sake the creditor could have no hold of either Thus if Bellarmine and his fellows be as they would seem to make S. Austin minded not to believe the Gospel but for the Churches authority or proposal of it let them speak plainly and properly not in parables or metaphors and so we shall know their meaning to be That they indeed believe not the Scriptures but the Church or the Church truly and really the Scriptures onely by extrinsecal denomination 8 Nor can they reply either consequently to Sacrobos us instance or their general Tenents that as he which sees colours by the light truly sees colours not the light onely so he that believes Scriptures by the Churches infallible proposal believes not the Churches proposal onely but Scriptures as truely and properly The diversity of reason in these two consequences ariseth from the diverse manner of seeing colours by the Suns light and believing
quam à Deo homines avocare ad 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sui ab intellectu verae religionis avertere cum sint ipsi poenales quaerere quas ad 〈◊〉 comi●es qu●●●… en soul fecerint errore participes Hi tamen adjurati per Deum verum à nobis statim cedunt fatentur de 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 extre coguntur These were the effects of Christs triumph over Satan sure pledges that the strong man was 〈◊〉 cast cut And the like power had not been so manifest before among the Sons of men * * 1 Kings 22. 24. † 〈◊〉 5. 15. ‖ 〈◊〉 1● 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a ●… * This Law of Deuteronomie holds true in proportion throughout al Ages If there arise among you a Prophet or a Dreamer of dreams and give thee a sign or wonder And the sign and the wonder which he hath told thee come to Passe saying Let us 〈◊〉 after other Gods which th●u hast not known and let us serve them Th●u shalt not ●ea●ken to the words of that Prophet or unto that Dreamer of dreams for the Lord your God proveth you to know whether ye love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul Deut. 13. 1. † 1. Cor. 1. 26. * Phil. 2. 3. † 1 Cor. 14. 32. That this 〈◊〉 ●… the 〈◊〉 should rather move all 〈◊〉 Christians to 〈◊〉 all in ●… 〈◊〉 of men then to rely upon any ●… 14. ●… Psal 119. 99. Heb. 3. 5. Psal 119. 100 * That our means for ●iscerning the ●●●ginal Causes o● O● 〈◊〉 of Con●…ns are fully ●●ui ●a●●nt to the Romish Churches † ●●lla●mi● lib. 3. de justif cap 3 4. c. disputes so eagerly against this Bishop as might have 〈◊〉 a Censur●●f Irregul●…ty had ●e li●●● in his Di●●esse ‖ Apostolica authoritate inhibemus omnibus tam Ecclesiasticis personis cujuscunque sint ordinis 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 q●●m ●ai● is quocunque honore ac potestate praeditis Praelatis quidem sub interdicti ingressus Ecc●… que ●u●rint sub e●communicationis latae sententiae poenis ne quis sine authoritate nostra audeat ullos 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 glos●●s annotationes scholia ullumve omnino interpretationis genus super ipsius concili● decretis quo●… a●● quidquam quocunque nomine etiam sub praetextu majoris decretorum corroborationis aut executi●… ●… colore statuere Bullae Pij quarti super confirmatione oecum gener Concil Trident. * Maldo●atus censu●e of th●se men for dissenting as he thinks from their Church is so sharp and pe●●●p●o●y as might well have caused Contention should his writings have come into their hands Impediunt nos quo ●inus acriter veheme●ter invehamur in haereticos Catholici quidam qui nescio qua imprudentia hereticis se junxerunt Neminem nomino n●minem vi●latae accuso religionis scio Catholicos scio doctos scio religiosos ac probos viros esse sed minimè profecto util●m atque fidelem in hac re operam Ecclesiae navaverunt Quod contra Scripturae sensum contra Patrum omnium inter pretationem contra tacitum i●o minime tacitum sed satis superque explicatum consensum Ecclesiae dixerint atque contende●int hoc loco de Sacramento non agi quod ut Benignissimè dicam est Temerarium gravioribus condemnarem verbis nisi crederem viros bene Catholicos Errore magis animi quam vitio in Haereticorum sententiam impegisse Maldonat Comment in sext Johan In this sense Christ is said to have come not to send Peace but a Sword unto the World That this very challenge of this insallible Authority of the R●mish Church for ending all Controversies ●●th necessarily 〈◊〉 the greatest Di●…tion from it that can be in all rel●gi●us minds * ●… whether from the known or possible fruits of the Romish Churches Means so excellent as is pretended ●… Argument can be drawn to work a prejudicial conceipt in mens minds That it were ●… Authority to their Church before they come to direct examination of the main point what ●… Scriptures * See 〈◊〉 14 ●… 5 c. * Non ignora●at dens multas in Ecclesia exorituras dis●icul●ates circa fidem debuit igitur ju dicem aliquē 〈◊〉 a provid●● 〈◊〉 iste 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 non potest elle Scriptura neque Spir●aus revelans privatus neque princeps saecularis ig●tur princeps Ecclesiasticus aut solus aut cer●e cum cōsilio cōsensu Coepiscoporum Neque enim singitur neque singi potest aliquid aliud ad quod hoc judicium pertinere posse videatur Bellarm. lib. 3. de verbo Dei cap. 9. * Christs Church having by our Doctrine a most infallable written Law and living though but fallible Ecclesiastick Judges is much better provided 〈◊〉 in all matters Spiritual then Politick ●…ties whose Laws as wel as Judges are faluble in matters C●vil † The utmost Bounds of all Christian Obedience unto any Authority on earth is only to abide a peaceable ●ial before the lawful Judges patiently to imbrace the Penalty inslicted but not to think about Penalties soever they shall 〈…〉 cause for which 〈…〉 be just or such as shal sta●● for good in the day of final Judgement for so earthly Powers 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 abs●lute Authority over our Souls which is Gods 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Our Adversaries go in t that a Pr●vi●cial Councel conjirmed by the Pope is as authentick as a General wherein be were pres●●t th●ugh a s●nt in the other 〈◊〉 ac●quainted with particular Circumstances or car●●ag of the Connoversie Much more availeable should a Popes Confirmation of such Councels be who were present and uel acquainted with all Occasions or other Circumstances of the Con●orersie or the Division Wherefore if Reason without Scripture might divide this Comrover sie it were more 〈◊〉 to have a many Popes as s●●eraly●ce Stat●●o or Monarchies * Convenit etiam inter nos adversaries S●… intellig● debere to Spiritu quo factae sunt id est Spiritu sancto Quod Apostolus Pe●… Epist 2. cap. 1. doe et cum ait Ho● 〈◊〉 intelligentes quod omnis Prophetia Scripturae propria interpretatione non sit Non enim humana voluntate allata est aliquando Peophe●a sed Spirtu Sancto inspirati loquuti sunt Sancti Dei homines Ubi B. Petrus probat non debere exponi Scriptur as ex proptio ingenio sed secundum dictamen Spiritus Sancti quia non sunt scriptae humano ingenio sed ex inspiratione Spiritus Sancti Bel. lib. 3. de verb. Dei cap. 3. † 2 Pet. cap. 1. vers 20. 21. ‖ Tota igitur quaestio in ●o posita est ubi sit iste Spiritus Nos enim existimamus hunc Spiritum etsi multis privatis hominibus saepe conceditur tamen cetto inveniri in Ecclesia id est in Concilio Episcoporum confirmato à summo Ecclesiae totius Pastore sive in sun mo Pastere cum Concilio aliotum Pastorum Bellarmin ibid. In this place as he professeth he will not dispute