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A48358 Holy characters containing a miscelany of theolocicall [sic] discovrses that is theology, positiue, scholasticall, polemicall, and morall built upon the foundation of scriptures, traditions, councils, fathers, divided into two books / written by George Leybvrn ... Leyburn, George, 1593-1677. 1662 (1662) Wing L1938; ESTC R18553 388,184 688

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this Iesus in reuerence and reference not to the materiall elements or sound of the name it selfe but to the son of the Virgin Mary God and man which kind of Religious honour was neuer exhibited to the name of Iesus Naue or Iesus the son of Iosedech and the best antiquity counted the said Custom of bowing at the name of Iesus a distinctiue mark to the distinguishing of Christians from Iewes who hearing the name Iesus spoken did no more bow their stiffe neckes and proud heades then they did hearing the names Pharach or Satan * S. Hieron l. 3. Commentar ait suo tempore Christianos hac nota à Iudais cognitos fuisse quod hi nunquam genuflecterēt audito nomine Iesu Besides the ancient Christians were piously accustomed to weare about their necks the name of this Iesus formed in Agnus Deies and Crosses which they counted as Religious table books to preserue the memory (g) According to S. Austin there is no such soueraign medicin against sin as is a reflexion on the grieuous sufferings which Christ God and man endured for our sake and who is writeth S. Bernard so voluptuous as will not abstain so ambitious that will not repent or so full of wrath that will not grieue when he takes into his serious consideration the passion and death of Christ of their God crucifyed dead and buried knowing well that if they would not carry the name of the diuine son in tables of their hearts they should not find their own names put down in the table book of the diuine Father which is the book of life since none can come to the Father but by the son and the merits of his passion Wherby is plain that to a good Christian the name of Iesus the Son of the Virgin Mary * Bonauo●tura in vita● S. Francisci scribit eum solitum fuissa labia sua lambere diâ legerot nomē Iesu S. Bernardus ser 13. in Cant. Iesus inquit mel in ore in aure melos in corde Iubilū is hony in the mouth melody in the care and gladnes in the heart Further more the very name of Iesus (h) Lactantius l. 4 c. 24. affirmes that many men were deliuered from deuils through the name of Iesus and the sign of the crosse that represents his passion and death The same is asserted by S. Justin the Martyr in his dialogue with Tryphon this name Iesus saith he forceth deuils to flie Again the name of Iesus according to Origen heales wounds cures diseases deliuers from death and expells deuils hath produced marueillous effects ouercame temptations expelled deuils and cured all manner of infirmities in reference to him whose proper name it is to witt the son of the Virgin Mary who is also the son of God CHAR. VIJ. OF THE NAME OF CHRIST THE CONTENTS The exposition of the word Christ his Priest hood wherby he was constituted Chief Gouernour of souls vnto bringing them to the knowledge of truth and to healing the wounds also which sin had inflicted in the Cure wherof Christ performed the seuen works of mercy CHrist is a second name properly belonging to the son of the Virgin Mary so named because he was anointed by the holy Ghost in respect of (a) Psal 44. thy God hath anointed thee vvith the oile of gladness aboue thy fellovvs Christ was anointed in regard of his hypostaticall vnion in consequence of which he was both peculiarly and incomparably anointed and endued with abilities and graces aboue all other kings and Priests the hypostaticall union of his diuine and human nature in one diuine person so that at once and in a most eminent degree he was both king and Priest and endued with guifts and abilities effectually necessary for the performance of each charge (b) The Royall Prophet Psal 49. assertes Christs rule and dominion ouer the whole world As king his inheritance was the whole world and the plenitude of all things therin contained though while he liued on the earth he did not exercise Regall power As Priest he was chief Gouernour of soules being maried to the Church in mercy and compassion * Oseae 2. Spensabo te mihi in aeternum for euer and this spirituall gouernment he executed in two kindes of waies As to the first (c) S. Iohn the Euangelist cap. 1. attesteth Christ to be the true light that enlighteneth euery man that cometh into the world from whence S. Austin l. 1. de Gen. Con. Manich. c. 3. inters that euery man may keep the Commandements if he will himselfe because saith he that light Christ lightneth all men that come into the world and indeed as S. Anselm teaches no man wanteth the light of grace because God doth not giue it but because man will not accept it being as S. Austin often inculcates left to the free will of each one to consent vnto or dissent from diuine grace which beginneth euery good work and if not hindred through the resistance of our flexible nature effectually perfects the work it beginneth he was a generall light offering on his part to enlighten euery one in darknes of ignorance and sin insomuch that such as are not enlightened it is because they * Ioa. 3. lux venit in mundum dilexeruns homines magis tenebras qua lucem loue darknes more then light like vnto certaine Ethiopians who haue so great an abhorrence from the clear beames of the sun that at the rising therof they retire into woods or dens to eschew the brightnes of it such are * S. Ansel homo nō habet gratiam non quia hanc nō dat Deus sed quia hanc nō accipit homo sinners which through willfull blindnes of errour doe * Job 24. ipsi erāt lumini rebelles declinauerūt oculos suos ne viderent solem rebell against the light of diuine grace shutting the eyes of their vnderstanding that it may not shine vpon them And as wood wherin is much water doth hardly take fire the form of water mainly resisting the introducing of the form of fire so such loue not the light of grace as are delighted with darknes of sin darknes being an enemy to light When Christ the son of the Virgin Mary was born the generall light of the world he offered his enlightning grace as the rising sun its shining beams to all though the celestiall quiers of Angells did communicate the glad tydings of this light vnto the shepherdes of Bethlem the place of his birth and diuinely sung glory to God in the highest heauens for sending it yet they did not proclaime peace as to the reconciling earth and heauen together but only to men Bonae voluntatis * Luc. 2. in terra pax hominibus bonae voluntatis of good will plainly shewing therby that the reconciliation of man vnto God should depend of the free will of each one prepared by the said light of grace * Aug.
of Christian charity towards our neigbour is that it cannot be idle nor fall away and in Heauen it encreaseth CHarity towards our neigbour is a diuine loue deriued from the loue of God as a copy drawn from the originall * S. Greger ait quod per amorem Dei amor proximi gignitur per amorem proximi amor Dei nutritur Yet as the loue of God causeth loue to our neigbour so this doth nourish that passing from and for God vpon our neigbour in consequence of which both loues are reciprocally necessary to each other their consistency depeuds of their vniting together neither of them is loue to blessednes if diuided As God in the creation of time blessed the first day that was one only and is not said to haue blessed the second which made two that being a number of diuision so he blesseth the loue exhibited to himself and to our neighbour for his sake if vndiuided and one only * Aug. l. 4. confess c. 9. Beatus qui amat te amicum in te inimicum propter te he is blessed that loues God for himself and for and in him his neighbour Wherby it is plainly euident that the loue of such as loue by reflexion on worldly aduantages only or principally do not tend to blessednes which is the centre of charity towards our neighbour nor freindship is a right scoare to loue vpon if it be not with conformity and subordination to the loue of God * Mat. 5. qui facit solem oriri super bonos malos pluit super iustos iniustos who as he maketh the sun to arise on the euill and the good and sendeth raine on the iust and vniust so commandeth loue not only to freinds but euen to enemyes these as well as the others being our neighbours * Aug. in psal 115. tom 8. omnis homo inquit est omni homini proximice for each man is each mans neighbour neither is their any thing that makes a Christian * Secundum S. Chrysost nihil est quod sic Deo similes facit vt malignis laedentibus esse placabi●●m so like to God as to loue them that curse him to do good to them that hate him and to pray for them that hurt and persecute him besides in an enemy is the image of God a possibility of iustification to life and capacity of blessednes which are the chief inducements to charity towards our neighbour Hence is euidenced that because the Image of God the possibility of iustification to life and the capacity of blessednes are proper to all men as well others as our selues pesants as kings foes as friends therefore we are bound to loue and respect all a like our neighbour as well as our selues poore as rich foes as friends for there is no iust difference where the true loues motiues are the same The praise and eminency of charity aboue the vertues of Hope and faith though all three are necessary to saluation consist's in the continuance therof after the enjoyment of blessednes the other two falling away and ceasing A Christian soul that shall depart out of this life in charity shall euer keep it in the kingdom of Heauen for charity neuer falleth away or wanteth the acts which are proper vnto it nay the blessed souls now loue * Aug. in Psal 91. si amamus inquit quem non videmus quomodo amaturi sumus cum viderimus more perfectly God whom they see then when they saw him nor and rejoyce in the glorification of the good through mercy * Psal 57. laetabitur iustus cum viderit vindictam Lucae 18. an inquit Deus nō facit vindictam electorum suorum clamātium ad se die nocte and the punishment of the wicked through iustice Also they loue their neighbours more intensly for charity (a) The Apostle teacheth that charity neuer falleth away the prerogatiue of this diuine vertue is that it cannot be abolished in Heauen or cease from the exercise of its own proper innate actions which it had on earth and these it performes in a far higher degree of perfection according to S. Austin l. de cura pro mortuis c. 14. and S. Hierom. increaseth in Heauen whence by necessary consequence followeth that they intercede for their freinds on earth intercession or praier for freinds being the necessary office or act of charity and idle (b) S. Gregory hom 30. super Euang. teacheth that the loue of God is neuer idle if it abstaine from working it is not loue And l. 4. dial saith that exhibition of worke is the tryall of loue charity acting nothing is not charity neither in reason can it be objected to the blessed want of * S. Gregor l. 4. Dial. cap. 33. quid est quod ibi nesciunt vbi scientem omnia sciūt Loquitur de sanctis in coelo qui clarè intuentur diuinam essentiam knowledg who perfectly know and see him who knowes and sees all things Besides Abraham after his death though then he was not admitted into the kingdom of Heauen had knowledg of Moses and the Prophets books which he neuer saw while he was on Earth and the holy Prophet Ieremie (c) The holy writer of the Machabies 2. cap. 15. affirmes that Ieremy the Prophet dead afore prayed much for the people and Citty of Ierusalem As to this and other books of the Machabies S. Austin l. 18. de ciuit Dei auerres that though they be not comprehended in the Canon or Catalogue of the ancient Iews nenertheless the Catholick Church euer held them as Canonicall also the third Council of Charthage whereof S. Austin was a member counteth the books of the Machabies in the number of diuine Scriptures and for such they are set down in the Decree of Pope Gelasius in a Council of 70. Bishops after his death did pray much for the people and holy city of Ierusalem neither doth such intercession derogat from Christ it being effectuall only through his merits nor can it be displeasing to God * Psal 136. nimis honorati sunt amici tui Deus who will be honoured in his Saints and who promised protection to the Citty of Ierusalem * L. Reg. pretegam inquit Deus hane ciuitatem propter me seruū meum Dauid for his own and his seruant Dauids sake CHAR. XVIIJ OF GODS CHARITY TO MAN THE CONTENTS God is an infinite louer of mankind desireth on his part to bring all men to saluation which is the end of their creation Gods will to saue on his part doth not take away free will on mans part life and death good and euill is put before man he can stretch out his hand to which he will God doth not necessitate him to either of both man of himself works euill vnto damnation and God furnisheth meet helps to doe good vnto saluation neither Pharaoh nor Esau had been rejected
5. asserteth touching children that die immediatly after baptism notwithstanding they will receiue aduantages in order to their bodies in the day of generall resurrection But as to Onesiphorus Mr. White perhaps will answer that the Apostle supposeth him dead because in the same Chapter t is said Our lord giue mercy to the house of Onesiphorus Yet that form of speech doth not make him dead for the Apostle sayeth Rom. 10. salute them which are of Aristobulus his house and Mr. White cannot make it appeare by any orthodox writer that then Aristobulus was dead again the same Apostle 1. Cor. 10. writeth thus now brethren I beseech you ye know the house of Stephanus and Fortunatus be you obedient vnto such and yet it is certaine that Stephanus and Fortunatus were liuing at that time for the Apostle saith in the same Chapter I am glad of the coming or presence of Stephanus and Fortunatus Howeuer the Latine and Greek Martyrologes ought to carrie more weight with wise and iudicious men then Mr. Whites meer asserting the contrary But let his supposall be admitted gratis what doth he infer thence Mary that the soul of Onesiphorus bath not already found that mercy the Apōstle prayed our lord might grant vnto him because the Apostle praid that Onesiphorus might find it in illo die in that day In earnest a manifest weake inference in regard it relies on a false supposall as the former did viz. that of necessity by illo die thay day is meant the day of generall iudgment neither doth Mr. White produce any proofe besids his own bare assertion to shew that to be the Apostles meaning nor indeed can he produce any for both the words that day as likwise euen the words the day of our lord doe commonly signifie in scripture and namly 1. Cor. 5. 2. Cor. 1. Philip. 1. 1. Thes 2. as doe * Doctores Rhemenses in Annot a. super cap. 3. Epis 1. ad Cor. obserue Catholicke writers either the particular or generall iudgment And doubtless the mentioned Text of the Apostle is truly very fied in respect of particular judgment where vnto euery man is liable immediatly after his death because euery one shall be iudged in the generall iudgment according to the account he giues after his death at the particular tribunall of diuine Iustice and not only the fauour that a soul findeth in the generall iudgment but also the fauour that it finds at the particular iudgment is called in the scripture mercy both the one and the other being shown vpon the score of good works which proceed from the mercyfull grace of God through the merits of our lord Iesus-Christ Hereby plainly appeareth the vnquietness of Mr. Whits hawty spirite for as much as through a sacrilegious ambition he endeauours to wrest the Apostles words to ouerthrow the common practice of the whole Church of God Moreouer in persuance of his vnquiet ambition he passeth from this scripture-text vnto Church Lyturgies bearing himselfe confident to euidence thereby that the vnanimous consent of antiquitie witnes plainly on his side Let S. Iames be our first witness saith he in his lyturgy of the Hierosolymitan Church be mindfull lord God of the spirits and their bodyes whom we haue commemorated or not commemorated who were orthodox from the iust Abell to this present day Thou grant them there to rest in the region of the liuing in thy kingdom in the delights of paradise And to assure the reader that the Hierosolymitan Church which by origine is the Cheif in as much as she begun from the iust Abell could not exclude any he produceth S. Cyrills testimony for which he citeth his first catechesis next faith S. Cyril for the holy Fathers and Bishops departed and of all vniuersally who are dead from amongst vs. The second witness S. Basils Mass or lyturgy Bee mindfull also of all who haue slept in hope of resurrection vnto life euerlasting The third witnes S. Chrys Mass or lyturgy For the memory and remission of their sins who were the founders of this habitation worthy of eternall memory and all who haue slept in thy communion in the hope of resurrection and life eternall our orthodox Fathers and brethren The fourth witness S. Marks Mass or lyturgy Giue rest our lord our God to the souls of our Fathers and brethren who haue slept in the faith of Christ mindfull of our Ancestours from the begining of the world Fathers Patriarks Prophets Apostles Martyrs Confessors Bishops Saints and iust men all the souls of Those who departed in the faith of Christ and moreouer of those whose memory this day we celebrate and our holy Father Marke the Euangelist to the souls of all these giue rest our supream lord and God in thy holy Tabernacle c. and he concludes saith Mr. White to their souls grant rest and admit them to the kingdom of Heauen The fift witnes S. Greg. the great his lyturgy Remember also o lord thy seruants who haue gone before vs with the sign of faith and now rest in the sleep of peace To them our lord and all that rest in Christ wee beseech the grant a place of ease and light and peace From the witnesses set down Mr. White argueth thus So many Patriarchall Churches continually in their publick lyturgyes beseech God in generall tearmes to giue saluation to all the faithfull departed assigning them a place of ease light and peace and where none is excepted all are included and in our case eminent Saints particularly named we cannot therefore doubt but that prayer was anciently offered for the blessed that is to say we cannot doubt but that the ancient Churches offered prayers for such as departed in the faith of Christ that they might find mercy saluation place of ease light and peace euen after their souls were beatified these aduantages according to Mr. White being the motiues on which ancient Churches grounded their prayers suffrages and sacrifices which they offered for such as were already blessed that they might find mercy place of ease light and peace which implies manifest weakness for he contradicts himselfe since blessedness is a clear sight of God importing of necessity saluation mercy place of ease light and peace Wherfore it seems a strang thing that vpon such premises he should conclude with soe much confidence as if the point were euidently clear that the anciēt lyturgyes acknowleged prayers for the blessed as to procuring them mercy saluation place of ease light and peace besides it s not as to reason consonant that the said lyturgyes should require the prayers and sacrifices of the faithfull on earth for the aduantages of the blessed in Heauen since these (m) As to the Churches lyturgyes it is obseruable 1. That in Saint Iames lyturgy these words are set down Let vs celebrate the memory of the most holy immaculate most glorious Mother of God and euer Virgin Mary and of all the Saints that through their prayers vve may obtaine
they saw not This sole motiue carrieth evident credibility and weight enough to perswade a rationall prudent man to embrace Christian faith Wherfore Picus Mirandula Epis 5. writeth thus T is an extream madnes not to belieue the gospell the truth vvherof blood of Martyrs proclames Apostolicall voices eccho forth vvonders and miracles proue reason confirmes mute elements speak deuills confess but t is a greater madnes adheth he if a Christian that doubts not of the truth of the gospell neuertheless shall liue as if he did question the truth thereof of infidelity Examples of this captiuity were the learned Pagan Philosophers namely S. Denys of Areopagus Aristides Iustin Magistrat's Princes Kings and Emperours of all nations who illuminated with the admirable splendour of faith through the preaching of poor fishermen forsooke their sacrilegious worship of many Gods to imbrace the religion of one crucifyed Christ that seemed to most Gentiles foolishnes and to most Iews the stumbling stone of offence and rock of scandall hauing respect only to a reward of an enduring happines vnseen Obedience an effect of the afore said captiuity and a necessary requisite to faith is an humble submission of the will to diuine truth which distinguisheth it from all human perswasion for an assent to naturall verities apprehended either by sense demonstration or experience requires nothing of obedience in consequence of which though deuills (c) S. lames cap. 2. saith that deuils belieue and tremble that is they beleiue vnwillingly forc'd there to by clear evidence of the miracles of Christ in consequence of which their faith is not diuine supernaturally infused The deuils were affraid in regard they were conuinc'd that Christ was the son of God who must come to judge both men and Angels wherefore deuils stand in awe of Christ and his office of judge is an vnexpressable terrour vnto them belieue neuertheless they haue not the vertue of diuine faith because they want the vertue of (d) Aug. do verbis Domini c. 9. saith that the faith of wicked men that want the vertue of obedience comes near to the faith of deuils and truly the saith of our witsectaries in these daies is extream like vnto the faith of deuils because they will not belieue the mysteries of Christian Religion in obedience to authority but in clear evidence of naturall reason obedience Examples of this obedience were millions of Christians Primitiue and modern who in obedience to Christ endured mockings scoffings imprisonments wheeles kniues swords and all manner of torments stedfast and valiant in maintaining the faith of Christ and what they * Rom. 10. corde creditur ad iustitiam ore fit confessio ad salutem beleiued with their hearts they confessed with their mouths with their hearts they beleiued to justice and with their tongues made confession to saluation in which consists the cheif praise of Christian faith It is not enough that a Christian Catholick hath faith within himselfe * Mat. 10. qui confitebitur me coram hominibus confitebor ego eū corā Patrè meo qui in coelis est vnless he express it outwardly if he will haue Christ to confess him before his heauenly Father he ought to confess Christ be fore men Nothing is more gratfull to Christ then an open confession of ones faith Saint Peters confession of Christs diuinity * S. Hilar. fides Petri de diuinitate Christi habet claues Regni caelorum got the keys of Heauen and that joyn'd to a full expression of loue to Christ merited the cheif place among the twelue Apostles But faith wanting charity is a lamp without oyle a candle without flame and a body without life faith in the absence of charity is * Jacob. 2. fides sine operibus mortua est dead hauing neither nourishment to burn or flame to enlighten or life to liue and as the body doth act by the influence of life so faith doth work by the support of charity (e) S. Bernard ser 38. teacheth that the want of merits is a pernicious pouerty and biddeth us take care to haue merits and know when we haue them that they are giuen us and indeed the Council of Trent sess 6. can 32. has defined that the good works of a just man be the gifts of God and the merits of the same just man for as much as they proceede from him by diuine grace and the merits of Iesus-Christ and other good works proceeding from diuine grace grounded in the merits of Christ which are not only signs or testimonies of faith's presence but they doe increase * Iacob 2. en operibus fides cōsummata est and perfect it in the work of iustification of which faith is the foundation only Wherby is plainly euidenced that the sole essentiall requisit to sanctifying justice is not faith * 1. Cor. 13. nunc autem manet Fides Spes Charitas tria haec maior autem horum est charitas Igitur cum charitas sit maior fide non debet dici quod sola fides iustificet saluet alone called by the name of speciall faith and counted a certain evident cognition infallibly assuring the beleiuer that his sins are forgiuen him in particular and that he is made an adopted child of God through Christ Neither is such a faith the substance of things hoped for which is the definition or description of Christian faith deliuered by the Apostle for hope that is seen is not hope nor a thing (f) Hieron l. 2. con Iouin writeth thus T vvere great injustice in God if the should punish sins that is vvicked vvorks and haue no regard to or revvard for good vvorks peculiarly assured is a thing hopd for Besides when S. Peter bid Simon Magus who after his baptism had retained wickednes in his heart to repent he did not assure him that his sins should be forgiuen him saying only vnto him Repent of this thy wickednes and pray God if perhaps the thought of thine heart may be forgiuen thee And S. Paul while he preached to others although he did not apprehend in himselfe any guilt of mortall wickednes yet he durst not pronounce himselfe justifyed being afraid of damnation he feared lest while he preached to others himselfe should become a reprobate * Aug. ser 19. de verbis Apostoliait Paulus suo timore nos terruit quid enim faciet agnus vbi aries tremuit But what shall the lamb doe when the Ram is afraid (g) Chrysostome in Comment super 10. Epis 1. ad Cor. writeth thus Let him that thinks he standeth take heed lest he fall for if Paul the Apostle saith he the strongest of all men vvas affraid vve haue greater reason to fear if S. Paul the most sted fast and valiant in the faith of Christ did tremble and fear in the working of his saluation what shall other Christians doe which be far inferior to him CHAR. XIIJ. OF A VVIT-BELIEVER THE CONTENTS
wherby he is armed against his own lusts and wanton desires (b) Seneca compareth a wise man vnto the strongest army because a wise man indeed stands firm against pouerty slanders reproches ignominies and all manner of tribulations and made vndantedly valiant in all encounters with aduersity wherfore wisdome is an infinit treasure vnto such as lay hold on her for her counsell preserueth and her vnderstanding keepeth them as a pillar of a cloud led the Israëlits in their way by day and the pillar of fire gaue them light by night that they might goe both by day and night Exodus 13. soe wisdome is a guid vnto men which walk in prosperity as by day and a light vnto men that walke in aduersity as by night Wisdome is the schoolmistris of the knowledge of God the chooser out of his works the teacher of sobernes the giuer of holines and the doer of all things most profitable and acceptable in the sight of Heauen * Jacob 30. Sapientia desursum est whence she is descended Wherby is plainly evident that wisdome is not the same thing with science which taken precisely hath no bounds being common a like to each human knowledge besides many times * 1. Cor. 8. Scientia inflat science puffeth vp him that findeth it and deceiueth his judgment rendering him curious in superfluous things (c) Those which know profitable and not such as know many things are wise men indeed which haue nothing of profit Of this curiosity in order to science the Athenians were guilty who saith S. Luke Act. 17. gaue themselues to nothing else but to speak or to heare something of nouelty which is the mother of schism and heresy but in all times some wanton wits haue either begot or reuiued dangerous vnauthorised doctrins blown vp with their own science to the end they might be counted learned aboue the ordinary ranck of knowing men so that it is no strang thing that the present age should bring forth new Teachers and new hearers of prophane nouelties in consequence of the premisses noe man how knowing soeuer he seems is truly wise when (d) S. Austin in an Epistle to Dioscorus condemnes those schollars which rejoyce in knowing of Anoxagoras Anoxemenes Pithagoras Demosthenes to the end they may seem learned because there is nothing of solide doctrine and true erudition in them he seeketh out curiously things that haue nothing of profit or searcheth into hidden misteries which exceed his capacity for a wise man indeed thinketh with reuerence vppon what God hath commanded Eccles 32. in superfluous things search not and be not curious in many of his works for many things are shewed vnto thee aboue the capacity of men Furthermore true wisdom which is from aboue is pure Iacob 30. That is without vncleanes A wise man indeed (e) Ecclesiasticus cap. 3. saith that an heart which is wise and vnderstanding will abstaine from sin and shall prosper in the works of Iustice wherfore S. Bernard teacheth that those sind wisdome which are sorry for their sins purgeth out of his heart the leuen of sin casteth a way wickednes presseth down the lustes of curiosity of ambition of vain glory committeth not fornication with schism and heresy despiseth wordly pleasures (f) According to S. Austin l. de ciuit the intent and aime of true wisdome is to be where God is all in all things with an assured eternity and perfect peace and setteth his affection on things that are aboue and not on things which are on the earth true wisdome is peaceable Iacob 30. A wise man indeed hath nothing of strise in his heart is a louer of vnion established in the vnity of Christian schooles is gentle humble modest without leuity pride wantounes is full of obedience to the Churches lawes and ordinances and full of mercy and good fruits without hypocrisy Again a wise man indeed is wise in order to himselfe Prouerbs 90. if thou be wise thou shalt be wise for thy selfe The primitiue Christians were wise indeed to themselues which euery where bore in their bodies the mortifications of Christ IESUS for they suffered with great patience all manner of tribulations together with the spoiling of their goods for his sake that they might be glorified with him counting that the afflictions of this present time were not worthy of the glory to come through his merits and truly what shall it prosit a man though he did win the whole world and lose his own soul or What exchange shall a man giue for his soul Mat. 8. Wherfore such Christians as desert the Catholick Church to get worldly honours to heap vp earthly treasures preferring the world to the faith of Christ earth to Heauen flesh to the soul transitory pleasures to eternall blessednes * S. Bernard de consideratione Sic alloquitur Eugenium Papam quid prodest si vniuersum mundum lucreris te vnum perdens etsi sapiens alijs sis deest tibi sapientia si tibi non fueri● how wise soeuer they be to others are not wise to themselues for the wisdome of such men doth not descend from aboue but is earthly sensuall and deuilish Iacob 30. CHAR. XXV OF IVSTICE THE CONTENTS The things that are made equall are said to be adjusted from whence Iustice deriues its name the property of Justice is to render to euery one what is euery on 's own Iustice requireth of euery man worship and obediencein order to God exacteth loue kindnes respect honour and duty in order to man man in Iustice is bound to doe to his neighbour what he would his neighbour should doe vnto him Iustice exhorteth the faithfull aliue to shew pity vnto the faithfull departed apparitions of souls after their remouall out of their bodies asserted IVstice is a * Iustitia definitur virtus reddens vnicuique quod su●● est Seu constās perpetua voluntas in s suum vnicuique tri● buens constant perpetuall inclination of the will to render vnto euery one what is euery on 's own That is to giue vnto God the things that are Gods and to giue vnto man the things which are mans as the immobility (a) According to Aristotle l. 2. de coelo the earth is equally poisd in the mids of the world in consequence whereof t is immoueable and indeed according to the holy Scripture terra in aeternum stat Eccles 1. that is the earth for euer stands firme without mouing at all of the earth is perceiued through an equall weighing of its parts in the center of the world so the firmnes and constancy of Iustice is establisht and perpetuated by an equall adjusting of debts vnto God and man which is the center thereof (b) Iustice is a morall vertue so named because of necessity it requires equallity and things are said to be adjusted which are of equall parts wherefore the great lawer Constantine defines us to be ars boni aqui and
not been depriued of wisdom nor Sampson of his mighty strength if he had taken diligent ligent heed * Mat. 10. Iuda vna cū alijs Apostolis dixit Iesus euntes praedicare dicentes quia appropinquauit Regnum calorum infirmos curate mortuos suscitate leproses mundate demones eijcite and what auaileth Iudas his election to the high dignity of an Apostle his familiarity with Christ his society with other Apostles and the power giuen him against vnclean spirits to cast them out to heal euery sicknes and to raise vp the dead Mat. 10. seeing his good begining ended in wicked treachery to the deliuering vp of his diuine lord vnto death many begin well that end ill many depart from Egypt and come to the wildernes which do not enter into the land of promise that is many are brought to the marueilous light of Christian faith euen vnto iustification of life that come not vnto glorification he that endureth to the end shall be saued Without (e) S. Bernard Epis 29. ad Ianuenses assureth that without perseuerance neither those which fight can gain the victory nor those which ouercome obtaine the prize perseuerance neither he that striueth to get the victory nor he that ouercometh obtaines the prize And although perseuerance be a diuine gift freely giuen * Aug. I de prad SS aliqua inquit danda praeparari à Deo non orantibus vt initium fidei alia vero non nisi orantibus vt donū persenerantiae neuertheless the feruent (f) According to S. Austin I. de dono perseu c. 6. an humble prayer can merit the gift of perseuerance merito de congruo duntaxat and he means finall perseuerance And indeed t is but meet that a friend grant assurance of his friendship to his friend that humbly intercedes for it prayer of a just man conduceth some thing to the hauing of it Hereby is plainly euident that true fortitude does not consist in the arme of flesh or in the outward gallantry of euery man but in the spirit of a just Christian that ouercometh the lusts of the flesh vnto sanctifying and glorifying the soul in consequence of which the fortitude of Mutius Sceuola of Cocles of Attilius Regulus so much renowned and extoiled by the Roman writers was but a shadow of true fortitude in regard their braue enterprises and gallant sufferings tended meerly to get a name vnto perpetuating a memoriall of their own praise that therby the remembrance of their gallantry might be as hony sweet in all mouthes for the future No man how glorious soeuer his actions or passions appeare in the sight of the world can lay claim to true fortitude when they doe not tend to the glory of the soul Many heathen Captains which haue been renowned to the ends of the earth for valiantnes are not now crowned in heauen for fortitude for though with their courage they mastred fortresses of earth vnto winning of Cities yet they did not ouercome the works of the flesh vnto the obtaining of blessednes wherin is the consistency of true fortitude CHAR. XXVIIJ OF SIN THE CONTENTS God that made all things of nothing made not sin which is nothing The deuil is the sole author of sin wherby he maketh those his seruants which he ouercom's through a voluntary condescension thereto to whomsoeuer a man giueth himselfe to obey his seruant he is exceeding great miseries accompany the seruitude of sin to be deliuered from the bondage of sin is a worke of diuine grace whereby a finner turneth to God his maker whith a penitent heart confessing his wickednes against himselfe SIn taken in the formall sense (a) God made all things and vvithout him vvas made nothing 10. 10. where according to S. Austin by the particle nothing is meant sin which God made not and indeed sin taken in the formall sense hath nothing of a reall entity being a meer pri●●tion of that conformity to the law of God which ought to be in all in ward and outward human actions that is to say in all our outward deeds and inward thoughts Wherefore S. Austin l. 22. con Faustum Manichae defineth sin to be That vvich is done or said or coueted contrary to the eternall lavv so that outward deeds or sayings or inward thoughts are the acts only whereby sinnes are committed is nothing yet not that nothing of which God created all things that were very good but that nothing of which the deuil hath made all things which are very euill For example the deuil through sin ouercame man and thereby brought him into seruitude for of whomsoeuer one * 2. Pet. 2. à quouis superatus est huius seruus is ouercome euen vnto the same is he in bondage which is an euil thing because a slaue is tyed to the will of his master wherefore a sinner * S. Chris homo obligatus peccato per propriam voluntatem iā non agit quod vult sed quod diabolus vult of necessity as it were walketh after the flesh in the lusts of vncleanes being it is the deuils will whose slaue he is that he doe so A stag that is once mastred by an other stag afterwardes resisteth him no more * Sic referūt naturales de ceruo victo but boweth down his head whensoeuer he passeth in presence of his conquerour in token of his subiection a maid that once suffereth her selfe to be deflowred will go whether it pleaseth the deflourer euen so he that is once ouercome of the deuil through voluntary condescention vnto sin afterwards is vnwilling to resist him some times it is in the power of man to make king whomsoeuer he pleases but once made he cannot vnking him at his pleasure for To whomsoeuer we giue our selues as seruants to obey his seruants we are to whom we obey whether it be of sin vnto death or of obedience vnto iustice Rom. 6. Wherfore as a seruant cannot cast of the yoke of seruitude when or as he pleaseth so neither can a sinner according to the form of morall speech (b) The Apostle in his Epistle to the Rom. cap. 7. saith Not the good things vvhich I vvould but the euill vvhich I vvould not that doe I novv if I doe that I vvould not it is no more I that do it but the sin that dvvelleth in me whereby is meant that the iustest man carryed by the violence of carnall concupiscence which he calleth sin taken in a larg sense may do or suffer many things in his outward parts or faculties without the consent of his will in consequence whereof a man put in that condition is so far from sinning sin taken in the proper sense for a voluutary act of the will that according to S. Austin he neuer need say to God forgiue us our sins for sin vnless it be voluntary contractes nothing of guilt that is ther 's no sin taken in the proper sense without a free consent of the
will free himselfe of his bondage at his pleasure As a ship that hath lost her helme cannot sail whether and as her self would but is caryed whether and as the wind will euen so a sinner that is depriued of the helme of grace cannot doe the good things which he should but the euill which he should not and as ship of it self can descend but not ascend so a man by the power of his own free will can fali into But cannot rise from sin The works of nature (c) God said by the mouth of his Prophet Ose cap. 13. Perdition is thine O Israel onely in me is thine help whereby is clearly euidenced that the euils which happen come of our own procurement in regard of the sinnes we commit which do not proceed from God who cannot be the author of euil as it is an euil worke though according to the Prophet Amos cap. 3. he is cause of punishment due to sin which is called malum poena But God punisheth in order to amendement in this life and Iustice after death so that those which amend their life need not feare the diuine iustice after death can cast him down but the works of grace only can raise him vp again that he is a seruant of sin and freed of iustice is his own free act but that he is freed of sin and a seruant vnto iustice is the work of grace through IESUS-CHRIST and indeed if the works of nature were sufficient enough to raise vp a sinner vnto iustification of life Christ had dyed * Ga. 2. so per legem iustitia ergo Christus gratis mortuus vnde Aug. infert contra Pelagi Si per naturā tustitia ergo Christus graits moriuus ergo scandalum crucis euacuatum est without cause Furthermore besides this bondage there be sundry other euil things which the deuil hath made of sin for he that sinneth speakes * Jsa 5. va vobis qui dicitis malū bonum bonum malum ponentes tenebras lumē lumen tenebras ponētes amarum in dulce dulce in amarū good of euill and euil of good puts darknes for light and light for darknes puts bitter for sweet and sweet for bitter goes far from the springs of liue waters and dyes in the waters of vnclean delights that is to say a sinner preferreth wickednes to godlines ignorance to knowledg vice to vertue and death to life for as much as he forsaketh God his creator without whom nothing can be lightened sweetened sanctified quickened know therefore says the holy Prophet Ieremy cap. 2. and Behold ô sinner that it is an euil thing and bitter that thou hast for saken God thy lord which is an infinit treasure of good things The deuil makes a couenant with euery man that sinneth which is like the league * 1. Reg. 11 Naas interpretatur serpens significat diabolum of Naas the Amonite 1. Reg. 11. on condition that he may thrust out his right eye that is his obedience to God and his loue to spirituall things which is a very ill agreement in regard it spoileth him of knowledg grace and glory a chess player by one negligent remouall or touch of his men a miss often times loseth the whole game and the whol gaine too euen so one sin destroyeth much good Eccles 9. for euen When a iust man turneth away from his iustice and committeth iniquity all his iustice that be bath done shall not be remembered but in his transgression that he hath committed and in his sin that be bath sinned in them shall be dye Ezech. 8. That is when a sinner does not cast away from him his wickednes wherby he hath taken the couenant of the deuil and turne to God with a new heart and a new spirit but die in the bitternes of his soul he shall lose all the fruit of his good works together with the glory of Heauen Neither are these all the euill things that the deuill hath made of sin for the burdens which he layes on the shoulders of him that sinneth mortally are most beauy and grieuous and albeit that for the present they seem sweet and light yet afterwards they press him down as he that in water drawes a log of wood feels not the full waight therof till he come to land so the burden of a sinner is not felt in the waters of fleshly delights and the pleasures of this life but when he shall goe out of them that is when he shall depart out of the world he will find the (d) S Iohn Apoca. 8. faith that the waters destroy many that is worldly delights which after death are made bitter water in which he delighted as bitter as wormwood and the load that sin laid on his neck so heauy that it will suppress him suddenly for as lightening descends from Heauen in the turne of an eye so a sinner will fall down into hell in * Job 21. in puncto descendune ad inferos Ex Luc. 10. videbam Satanam sicut fulgur de calo cadentem a trice which is the place of diuine execution in punishment of transgressions As earthly kings haue faire lodgings for the entertaining of the good people and dark prisons for the punishing of malefactours so the king of glory that is exalted aboue all Princes of the earth hath goodly pallaces for delighting such as do well which is Heauen and dungeons of vtter darknes for tormenting of those that doe euill which is hell where the wicked experience in bitter suffering the power of him whose mercy in bountifull gifts they haue despiced as he that walketh in iustice and shutteth his eyes from seeing euill shall dwell on high with God in full enjoyment of all good things so he that deuiateth from the waies of godlines and delighteth in the pathe of iniquity when the number of his life is cut of (e) The Prophet Isaias cap. 33. expressing the punishments which the wicked endure after their death speaketh to sinners thus Who among yee can endure to dvvell vvith the deuouring fire vvho among yee vvith euerlasting burnings Wherfore S. Gregory saith that the death of the wicked is an euerlasting death shall dwell below with the deuil in deuouring fire and euerlasting burnings which is a death without dying and sorrow without ending for death there is alwayes * S. Gregor●●it miseris ●●ors sine ●●●rte begining and sorrow neuer ending in reguard the deuouring fire is for euer burning and no deliuerance from hell which is a laborynth in the mids of the earth though easely entred into yet affordes no guid or thread to direct out againe and the windings and turnings therof minister nothing of pleasure for brimstone is scattered in euery walke * Job 14. vndique terrebunt eum formidines and trouble anguish feares together with dispaire and horrible confusion be on euery side hope of blessednes being rooted out of this dwelling yet
though there is no regress out of this labyrinth full of all miseries howeuer not euen the wickedest man is necessitated to enter into it for God desireth not the death of the wicked but that the wicked turne from his way and liue Ezech. 33. and when the wicked casteth from him all his transgressions that he hath committed he shall furely liue and shall not dye Ezech. 18. (f) According to S. Prosper 1. sent ex S. Aug. there is no diuine vengeance if human vengeance goe afore that is God will not aueng himselfe of us if we will do vengeance on our seluē● by fasting praying c. God ceaseth from his iust vengeance when man turneth to humble repentance if we would judge our selues we should not be judged Cor. 11. that is we should not be tormented in hell if on earth we would examine our selues acknowledg to God our infirmities punish our transgressions in the Sacrament of Pennance master fleshly lusts and abstain from the pleasures of this life vnto the exercise wherof conduceth much an often reflexion on the greiuous torments and euerlasting afflictions which the damned endure a serious thought of hell encourageth vs to fight valiantly against the deu●l considering that if we be ouercome of him he will lead vs captiue thither and no ransom shall be accepted for our deliuerance out of his tyranny Often serious thougts of hell unable vs to subdue the Iusts of the flesh and despise the pleasures of this world seeing that if these raign and bear rule we must of necessity giue our members as weapons of iniquity vnto sin that brings death for they be the deuils in truments whereby wickednes is committed vnto the killing of our souls in consequence of which it is manifest madnes to take a sword and fall vpon it as Saul and his armour-bearer did that is to run wilfully after vn clean delights which are the deuils swords that destroy as many souls as fall vpon them if a child of one year will refraine from the milke which it delighteth in when at weaning time vnsauoured bitternes is applied to the breasts of the nurce much rather a man come to the age of discretion ought to abstaine from wanton pleasures considering they shall make him dye in the bitternes of his soul vnto euerlasting damnation And who in reason can tast a thing * 6 Nūquid potest aliquis gustare quod gustatum affert mortem which tasted bringes eternall death Moreouer often serious thoughts of Heauen strenghen vs mainly against sin for as much as nothing of vncleanes be it coueted in the heart vttered with the mouth or exercised by outward works can haue admittance there But as sin is the deuils sword that sendes souls into hell so is it Gods sword that gards the way to the tree of life Gen. 30. And suffers no sinner to enter into Heauen Wherfore if the wickedest man that breatheth vpon the earth will take Heauen into his serious consideration he must of necessity abhorre and cast away his wickednes which obstructs the passage thither that is depriues him of the Summum bonum * Aug. quid per multa vagaris ô homuncis quaerend● anima tuae corpori hic ama summū bonum which is the fountain of all good things for Heauen is a glorious Citty a secure dwelling and a country that * Iudic. 18. tradit nobis locum coelā in quo nullius rei est penuria aboundeth in all delights in Heauen the iust shall be deliuered from the bondage of corruption into the glorious liberty of the son of God Rom. 8. in Heauen the iust shall shine as the sun Mat. 13 in Heauen the iust shall be in the hand of God and no torment shall touch them Sap. 3. in Heauen the iust shall haue fullnes of joy Psal 16. and lack nothing they shall be cloathed with robes of immortallity they shall hunger no more Liue bread that descended from Heauen shall be their meat neither shall they thirst any more the water that springeth vp vnto life euerlasting shall be their drinke they shall endure no tormenting heates the wings of the almighty shall couer them They shall suffer no cold the sun of iustice shall warme them they shall desire no sleepe the bright rayes of the diuine majesty shall expell darknes from their rest the things which eye hath not seen neither eare heard neither come into mans heart God hath prepared for them that loue him 1. Cor. 20. The sins which driue away thoughts of Heauen are seauen especially named capitall vices in regard they be the heads of all others for example Pride Auarice Luxury Enuy Gluttony Anger slothfullnes or wearines in the exercise of good works CHAR. XXIX OF PRIDE THE CONTENTS Pride the first sin that came into the world Lucifer and the confederat Angels pust vp with the brightnes and excellency of their own nature became proud whereby they fell from sanctifying grace which they had receiu'd in their creation the Angelicall pride was an inordinate desire of dominion ouer all other creatures and of independence in gouernement euen of their Creator God resisteth the proud and exalteth the humble PRide is an inordinat loue * Definitur superbia inordinatus amor propriae excellentiae of selfe excellency which is the * Eccles 10. dnitium omnis pecence est superbiae vnde Chrysost tolle inquit hoc vitium vt nom velint homines hominibus praestare sine labore catera vitia resecantur Origen of all euill affections For the proud man turneth his heart from God and disdaineth to be * Luc. 18. dixit superbus Pharisaeus nō sum sicut cateri homines ergo inquit S. Bernardus sicut cateri damones counted as other men wherefore he is indeed as other Angells which puft vp with pride because of their eminency and inordinately carryed away with the greatnes * Ezech. 28. eleuatum est cortuum in decore tuo of their brightnes coueted equallity with their maker as to similitude (a) S. Cyprian 1. de ieiunio tenta Christi Ascribes the cause of the deuils ruine vnto an ambitious desire of dominion and S. Austin l. 14. de ciuit c. 11. speaketh thus in order to the faln Angels That proud Angel and therefore enuious for enuy is not properly the cause of pride but pride is the cause of enuy by the same pride turning from God to himselfe and ambitiously seeking rather to haue subjects then to be subject fell dovvn from Heauen he inordinatly coueted rule ouer all other creatures and doubtles the Angels that sell neuer went about to equall God as to diuine perfection knowing by the light of nature the impossibility of such an enterprize in order to dominion affecting as it were with tyrannicall arrogancy rule and authority ouer all things created by him and independence in gouernment euen of him their lord and therefore God gaue them vp
bringes poor man into the pit of the deuil for they that will be rich saith the Apostle 1. Timot. 6. fall into temptation and snares and into many foolish and noisome lustes which drown them in perdition and destruction A ship that is fastened to the earth cannot sail to the hauen she tends to euen so a man whose affections are fixed on earthly riches cannot pass to Heauen which is his hauen in regard the ship of his soul stickes fast to the ground of worldly treasures howeuer riches in themselues are not euil as the poor labourer that spreads fatt dung abroad ouer all his feild renders it fruitfull vnto (d) According to the holy Scriptures Almes deeds deliuer from sin The holy Prophet Daniel counselled Nabuchodonosor to redeem his sinnes by giuing almes and to releiue the poore is a counsell Christ himselfe gaue saying Giue vnto the poore and thou ●halt haue a treasure in Heauen bringing forth much corne so the rich man that distribut's his riches to such as be in necessity prosits his soul vnto iustification of life but who is he that vses well his riches which he might abuse who is he that might doe euil with his gold and hath not don it might offend and hath not offended who is this blessed rich which is found without blemish and hath not gon after riches nor hoped in mony or treasures wherby so many are destroyed who is he for he is an example of glory and his goods be established in our lord and all the Church of Saints shall declare his almes Eccles 31. the blessed rich is he that maketh himselfe poore hauing great riches or he that of his little substance is not afraid to giue a little almes In the law of Moses the old Tobias was blessedly rich he gaue the first tenth part of all his goods to the Priests the sonns of Aron another tenth part he sold and euery yeare bestowed it in good vses at Ierusalem the third tenth part of his goods he destributed among them to whom it was meet he powred out great almes to his brethren and gaue his own bread to such as were hungry and his own clothes to those which were naked Tob. 10. likwise Zaccheus was blessed in riches that gaue halfe of his goods * Qui miseretur pauperi beatus erit beatus qui intelligi● super egenū pauperem id est qni prouidet egenis pauperibus to the poor because saluation came therby to his house Luk. 19. and that almes laid vp a good store for him selfe in regard it deliuered him from death and suffered him not to come into darknes In the law of grace the primitiue Christians were the blessed rich for many which were possessors of lands or houses sold them and brought the price and laid it down at the Apostles feet and it was distaibuted according to the necessity of each one respectiuely Act. 4. and down from the Apostles to the present times the Church hath produced numberless numbers of blessed rich in euery age respectiuely and our country of England makes a larg claim to the blessed rich as euidence the many beautifull Churches sumptious Monasteries goodly Colleges and famous hospitalls which the almes of its primitiue Catholick Christians haue erected in the honour of God his glorious Virgin mother and other blessed Saints But truly the modern haue much surpassed euen the primitiue Catholick Christians of this Iland for as much as they haue gladly born the yoke of persecution patiently endured the spoiling of their goods and willingly suffered banishment taking vp their Cross of tribulation after the example of their heauenly Master the son of God that desceuded from Heauen to exalt and render pouerty estimable beyond worldly treasures for coming into the world he made choice * Elegi te in camino paupertatis ait Propheta of a poor Virgin in the furnace of pouerty of whom he was made man and in lieu of a glorious pallace sutable to the king of glory at his first entrance into the world was lodged in a stable in room of rich mantles was wrapped in poor swadling cloathes In stead of a bed of state he was laid in a crath or manger and while he was conuersant on earth he had not wheron to rest his head besides at his departure out of this world he was stripped of all cloathes Wherfore t is a great abuse saith S. Bernard and manifest madnes if we shall * S. Bernardus magna abusio vt quis diues esse velit pro quo Deus pauper fier● voluit couet to be rich for whose sake the son of God made himselfe poor CHAR. XXXI OF VSVRY THE CONTENTS To lend vnto vsury is forbidden by the law of nature the written law of Moyses and the Euangelicall law of Christ The ancient Iewes by diuine dispensation lent vpon vsury to the Cananites to lend for a spirituall gain precisely implies nothing of vsury nor to exacte or receiue temporall gain either in regard of gain that ceaseth by or dammage that comes of loan precisely Those which lend money or other commodities that consume in vsing transfer the dominion thereof vnto the borrowers in consequence of which Mutuum loan differs from letting or setting to hite The condition of vsurers is miserable USury whichcomes of couetousnes taken in the proper sense implies lucre that is gain gotten exacted or coueted of the loan of money principally and precisely aboue the Capitall sum or of some other thing which through vsing consumes away namely oyle corne c. aboue the capitall stock Here the particle lucre denotates reall money or a vantage that carries the price or valeu of true money for he who lend's to an other man with intent onely to make him his friend or to keepe him from being his Enimy or lends meerly to preuent an vniust vexation does not commit vsury since he reaps thereby nothing of lucre that bears the price or valeu of money because the motiues of such loane be spirituall in consequence of which the lucre that comes of them must of necessity be * S. Math. c. 15. centuplum accipietis c. hic saccrtextus intelligitur de lucre spirituali spirituall also The particle principally makes the primary or principall intent and aime of receiuing encrease aboue the Capitall to be a requisit necessary to the guilt of vsury and indeed a secundary or less principall intention of gain has nothing of wickednes for exāple t' is lawfull to serue the Church or the chief Prelate of a Church with a secundary and less principall intent in order to the obtaining of a benefice for his seruice likewise t' is lawfull to celebrate or heare diuine seruice vnto receiuing daily distributions or to serue God in hope and in reguard secondarily of worldly rewards and enioyements * Psal 118. inclinaui cor meum ad faciendas iustificationes tuas propter vetributionē which is the doctrine of
the Idolatry of the Synagogue and the people her children After the like manner the Digbean Theology which is the product of Mr. Whites 40. yeares study to proue that outward sin doth not necessarily exclude charity from the souls nor that the soul is excluded from the kingdom of Heauen by outward sin make scripture giue an example therof Gen. 19. that is of the sweet agreement between the loue of God and outward sin in Lot and his daughters yet indeed no one place of holy scripture attestes that Lot and his daughters retained charity with their outward sin As touching Lot the holy writer seemes rather to excuse then accuse him in order to outward sin taken in the proper sense For t is expresly set down that his daughters made him drinke wine and lay with him but he perceiued not neither when they lay down neither when they rose so that lot might want knowledg of and thereby voluntary condescention to the fact and in consequence of which might not sin because sin properly taken importes of necessity (d) Sin of necessity includes a voluntary assent of the will which supposeth an act of the vnderstanding for as S Austin often inculcateth no man sinneth by doing a thing which he cannot auoid a voluntary act of the will for S. Austin teacheth that no man sinneth in a thing that he cannot * Hac propositio homo peccat damnabiliter in ●o quod necessario facit est damnata à Pio 5. Gregor 13. secundum Aug. eam asserere summae est iniquitatis ac demētiae ait S. Hiero. vbi est necessitas ibi neque meritum neque demeritum neque laus neque vituperium neque vita aeterna neque damnatio auoid or eschew in regard wherof some of the ancient Fathers endeauour to absolue lot from all guilt albeit that the maior part and current of Catholick Doctors of these dayes doe ascribe vnto him the sin of drunkennes at least in the second bout and to his daughters the guilt of both for as much as they voluntarily procured the one and committed the other sin But as to Mr. whites assertion Author of the Digbean Theologie to witt If one should commit an outward deadly sin retaining a loue to God notwithstanding he might goe to Heauen which importes communion fellowship and a Iouing agreement between charity and outward sin a doctrine truly which hath been hid in darknes since the first age of christianity for 1660. yeares till the supream prouidence sent Mr. white to teach Christian schools that charity and deadly sin are not inconsistent together which he proues from the text set down thus God did bless the progeny that proceeded from Lot and his daughters therfore Lot and his daughters retained charity that is continued in holy society and freindshipp with God notwithstanding their externall sin of * Jn filiabus Lot propriè fuit peccatum incestus vt fusè probat Aug. l. 22. contrae faustum cū ab illis fuerit causatum voluntariè incest but good God what a poore demonstratiue argument is this where the antecedent proposition is euidently false and the consequence suppose the antecedent were true very inconsequently deduced Falsity as to the antecedent plainly appeares for as that issue was born in horrible incest so was it and the posterity therof namely the Amonites and the Moabites vile and wicked * Aug. l. quaes in Deutro qu. 35. notat ab Abrahamo cuius frater erat Lot vsque ad Ruth quae prima ex Moabitis intrauit in Ecclesiam decem generationes inueniri in so much that euen to their tenth generation they did not enter into the Church of our Lord according to scripture testimony and the deduction is very inconsequent if the antecedent proposition were granted because the supream prouidence many times blesseth the children of wicked parents so that the diuine blessing bestowed vppon children is no infallible argument to demonstrate that their parents did adhere to God in charity and holy society at the time they got them For example God blessed the issue of Iudas and Thamar in a great measure Christ as man descending from it albeit that both were grieuous sinners in order to the bringing forth of the said issue for Iudas the Father voluntarily committed simple fornication and Thamar the mother the sin of incest But perhaps the student of 40. yeares standing will alledge that the antecedent afore mentioned That God did bless the progeny c. is meant of temporall blessings only and indeed it cannot be denyed but that the said progeny for example Moab the son of Lots elder daughter and Ammon son of the younger were heads of great nations the Moabites descending from the one and the Ammonites from the other yet this answer will auail him nothing at all as to the point of the present difficulty being it implieth manifest weaknes to infer from the worldly aduantages of Moab and Ammon that Lot and his daughters retained charity that is holy society with God in the outward sin of incest For God prospered the kings of Egypt many hundred yeares though they did not adhere vnto him in communion and holy society And S. Austin attesteth that God did extend the territories of the Roman Empire for the morall vertues practiced by the ancient Romans which notwithstanding were not endued with diuine charity Hereby plainly appeares that the holy scripture will not receiue into their sanctuary Mr. Whites Theology truly noe wonder for t is a doctrine destructiue of all morality and christian Religion in regard the excellent agreement that it setles between charity and externall sin must as it were of necessity induce fraile nature to commit outward sins of the flesh presuming that notwithstanding all outward vncleanes namely of drunkennes simple fornication adultery the loue retained to God shall bring a man so sinning outwardly to Heauen Besides it doth preiudice the Apostles Theology Neither drunkards nor fornicatours nor adulterers shall inherit the kingdom of Heauen Heb. 13 But perhaps it will be replyed that the Apostle excludes only such drunkards fornicatours and adulterers c. from the kingdom of Heauen as haue nothing of charity together with the sinns of drunkennes fornication and adultery so that though drunkards c. without charity cannot inherit the kingdom of God neuertheless charitable drunkards charitable fornicatours charitable adulterers charitable murderers shall not be excluded is this the Theology that 40. Yeares study hath brought forth But to returne vnto the matter in debate t is an article of Christian faith Trident. sess 6. can 15. can 27. that charity and deadly sin are incompatible and S. Iames the Apostle giueth euidence therof in the 2. Chapter of his canonicall Epistle saying Whosoeuer shall keep the whole law and yet offendeth in one he is guilty of all Because whosoeuer transgresseth one sole precept of the law is liable to eternall malediction enioyn'd by God to the
an other place or receptacle besids the Heauen of the blessed and the Hell of the damned Caluin that he might the rather deny Purgatory he deny'd Limbus and that he might the better deny Limbus he denyed that Christ descended into hell otherwise then by suffering on his Cross the torments of a damned soul which saith Caluin in cap. 26. mat vvere so grieuous that euen vvords of dispaire came from him So impudently this great reformer of religion blasphem'd against Christ but the Catholick Church teacheth that Christ truly and properly descended into hell that is the soul of Christ remoued out of his body with its proper presence penetrated the lower receptacles of the earth where good souls were detained as pr●sonners and brough with him from thence such as were ripe and fit for the kingdom of Heauen Lege S. Jgnat Epis ad Trallia Clem. Alex. l. 2. 6. stromatum Basil in Psal 48. visited the lower parts of the earth comforting such as were departed in perfect grace afore his coming thither From his sepulcher he leapt again into the world from whence after that he had setled a Priestly ministery that should be of perpetuall vse in his vineyard that is the Church like a hunter that gladly rejoyces in his obtained prey went with joy home leading captiuity captiue that is rendering happy the captiuity of just souls detained as it were in a prison vnder ground and carrying them with him in glorious triumph for he opened the gates of his Fathers Pallace which were euer afore shut against them As clamorous hunting so couetous playing * Aleae lusus Clericis interdictus à Concilijs Patribus Canonibus Aristoteles Aleatores latronum praedonumque societati inserit at cardes or dice for mony is an exercise vnworthy Priests which ought to seek no other lucre then the gaining of souls vnto Iesus-Christ who is their proper treasure and * Sacerdos dicit Christo tu es qui restituis haereditatem meam mihi heritage and mony betrayed him sould Ioseph and damned Iudas * Augustinus vocat Theatra cau●as turpitudinis publica● professiones flagitiorum laudantur Massilienses quod sic abhorrebant à spectaculis vt mimis locum in scaena non conceder●nt Again stage-playes as they be commonly exhibited in our country are incōsistent with Priestly function for as much as the outward words and counterfeited Gestures of the players representing reciprocall passages of wicked louers tend to carnall wantonnes and vncleanes and such a a Theater Saith S. Chrysostom is the chair of pestilence schole of incontinency and shop of luxury that sets out to sale the lusts of the flesh howeuer stage-playes are laudable recreations in order to lay-people while they represent but heroicall actions of gallant persons vnto imitation and vn godly enterprises of wicked men vnto detestation therof or while they exhibite delightfull fictions without obscenes Furthermore Missionary Priests must not affect to be counted * 2. Timoth. 2. homo militans Deo non se implicet negotijs saecularibus statesmen they being priuat persons professing a spirituall vocation which hath not any relation to the temporall affaires of state The supream prouidence hath set bounds to euery vocation * Tractent fabrilia fabri nec sutor vltra crepidam vt fert vetus pronerbium nor ought any man to put his sickle on strang ground Let Priests mannage what is theirs and Christs business and the affaires which pertaine to Caesar let them leaue to Caesar and the ministers of his Council yet there are some wanton witts which like the raging sea transcend their prefixed limits lifted vp aboue the hight of the clouds with an opinion of their own science fancying to themselues knowledg of all things though indeed the greatest part of what they know * Sapiens ille Mercurius Trismigistus maxima ●orum inquit quae scimus est minima pars eorum quae nescimus is the least part of what they know not and thus wantonly carried away entangle themselues with publick affaires of ciuill Magistrats before they be called thereto Howeuer Priests ought to know nothing * Apostolus Paulus profitetur se nihil scire praeter Iesum Christum hunc Crucifixum but Iesus-Christ and him crucified and if the supream prouidence hath bestowed on one alone a better memory and witt then on others contemporary with him he is to vse his aboundant abilities according to charity temperance and sobriety for otherwise he shall by his high attempts vnhappily verifie the old Prouerb much witt little iudgment Besids great wanton wits are not without a mixture of madnes And truly experience shewes that common wealths are vnfortunat when the things named witts manage the affaires therof t is iudgment not flashes of witt that makes gouernements happie FINIS I. BOOK The faultes escaped in printing a curteous Reader will easily correct and pardon THE SECOND BOOK OF HOLY CHARACTERS containing a Miscelany of Theologicall discourses THAT IS THEOLOGY Positiue Scholasticall Polemicall and Morall Built vpon the foundation of Scriptures Traditions Councils Fathers CHAR. I. OF SACRIFICE THE CONTENTS Proper sacrifice defined no Preists Priesthood taken in the proper sense if proper sacrifice be laid aside asserting of improper metaphoricall sacrifice onely bringeth confusion and rendereth priestly function common to all alike SAcrifice taken in a spirituall generall sense is euery * Aug l 10. de ciuit Dei c. 6. ait sacrificium generaliter sumptum esse omne opus quod agitur vt sancta soci●tate inbaereamus Deo● work that a belieuer imployeth to the end that he may continue in holy society and freindship with God There are (a) According to S. Thomas two kinds of sacrifice taken in the generall sense are offered vpon the altar of Christ whereof one is called deuotion in order to God the other pity or compassion in order to our neighbour two kinds thereof the one is deuotion towards God comprehending all such actiōs inward and outward of the minde and body as tend to the honouring and praysing of God the (b) The Apostle Hebrae 13. exhorteth vs to do works of Almes and charity saying that such sacrifices promerite God that is procure his grace and fauour and according to Ecclesiastes cap. 5. Those offer sacrifice which shew mercy other is pity or compassion towards our neighbour including the works of mercy and iustice to both kinds of spirituall sacrifice the Royall Prophet Dauid exhorteth all God's people of whatsoeuer condition or sex saying * Psal 15. tibi sacrificabo hostiam laudis Et psal 4. sacrificate sacrificium iustiti● Offer to God hosts of prayses and sacrifice sacrifices of Iustice and according to the Apostle spiri uall sacrificers of these kinds are * 1. Pet. 4. vos autem genus electum vegale Sacerdotiū Idem habetur Apoc. 5. kings and Preists investedwith the honour of royall Preisthood and indeed deuout
A man must be made a christian through baptism before he can make a progress in christianity through confirmation A man must be made a member of Christ through baptism before he can be a soldier of Christ through confirmation A man must be endued with faith through baptism before he can be deputed to a speciall office in the exercise thereof which is to defend it against the assaults of Tyrants through confirmation A man must be invested with * Hieron diolog con Lucifer cap. 4. quemodo inquit ab Ecclesia recipiet confirmationē qui nec dum remissionem peccatorum cōsecutus est Docet Arianos qui errabant contra formam baptismi non accepisse spiritum sanctū per Sacramentum Cōfirmationis grace vnto remission of sins through baptism before he can receiue the holy Ghost vnto perfection through confirmation which does not confer sanctity after the manner of other Sacraments only but also doth * Omnes S. Patres qui agunt de Sacramento confirmationis docēt baptismi gratiam perfici consummari per gratiam cōfirmationis increase and perfect the sanctity receiued afore by baptism it being the complement or consummation thereof Whereby it is plainly euident that albeit this Sacrament is not as baptism a requisite absolutely necessary vnto obtaining eternall blessedness neuertheless it is conditionally necessary to wit as to the armour of grace and (h) According to Pope Vrban dist 5. de consecratione there is no perfect christian that hath not receiu'd the holy Ghost through the imposition of Episcopall hands and Hugo de S. Vict. l. 2. de Sacram. par 7. cap. 3. countes it dangerous to dye without being confirm'd afore which is conform to the doctrine of ancient Fathers S. Dionys L●de Eccles Hierar c. 4. S. Cypr. Epis 72. ad Iubaian which assert that then a man has fulnes of sanctity and is made an adopted son of God when he receiues both the Sacraments baptism and confirmation perfection therof as also to a more ample measure of blessedness then baptisme alone doth effect so that christian catholicks especially such as liue vnder persecution ought to vse extraordinary endeauours for their admittance to this Sacrament the proper office there of being to strenghten them by grace that they may not fall from the Church of Christ * In Epis ad Fabium vti refert Eusebius l. 1. cap. 35. S. Cornelius affirmeth that Nouatus fell into Heresie for the want therof If they haue no conueniency in their own country to repaire vnto a catholick Bishop the spirituall aduantages which they may reape from the Sacrament of confirmation will compence the charges of a journey into forrain parts where catholick Bishops are to be found but this is to be vnderstood in reference to such catholicks as haue ability of body and a competency of temporall fortunes As touching the sensible rites or ceremonies employed in or about the Sacrament of confirmation the most remarkable are two only For example a Bishop in making of chrism breatheth three times in form of a cross on the mouth of the pot or flagon that containeth the said Chrism signifying thereby that euen at that time through episcopall consecration Chrism receiueth virtue from God wherby it is impowered as his instrument to confer strengthning grace to such as doe receaue the Sacrament aright and ceremonies signifying the thing that is done for the time they are employed are profitable by the confession of such * Caluinus in sua harmonia ad cap. 7. S. Marci fatetur caeremonias illas quae habent significationem eius quod tunc fit dū exercentur esse vtiles as impugne catholick ceremonies The other ceremonie is the reuerence a Bishop exhibiteth to the consecrated Chrism bowing down his head he saluteth saying Haile holy Chrism This ceremony hath nothing of Idolatry for an vnliu'd thing may challenge religious adoration in reference to an other distinct wherin excellency is contained to which religious adoration is due The ancient Iewes adored the Ark of the Testament because of the relation it had to God that is an increated excellency and all Christians doe religiously worship and adore the sacred books of the new Testament in reguard of the word of God therin comprehended And subjects of a temporall Prince do render ciuil reuerence to his chaire of state in relation to his sacred Person if a king or Emperour to which is due ciuill adoration by the law of God and nature in like manner religious worship is exhibited to holy Chrism in as much as it is the effectuall instrument of God to giue armour of grace to such as are baptised and is by speciall benediction deputed to the effecting therof CHAR. VIIJ. OF THE EVCHARISTE THE CONTENTS Christ the night before his passion made his last Testament gaue vnto his Church a legasy of his body and blood in the Sacrament of the Euchariste vnder the form's of bread and wine for to continue the spirituall food of souls till he come to Iudgment The express words of the Testament This is my body This Chalice is the nevv Testament in my blood exclude each figure that is inconsistent with the litterall sense intended by the Testatour that vseth not to say one thing literally and mean an other mystically because Christ Said this is my body this Chalice is the nevv Testament in my blood no man in reason ought to doubt of it Authorities of Councils testimonies of ancient Fathers and the warrantable practice of both primitiue and modern Churches euince the reall presence of Christ in the Sacrament of the Euchariste in vertue of the same word that was made flesh and made all things of nothing bread is transubstantiated in to the body and wine in to the bloud of Christ who is in Heauen and in the Sacrament at once One body can agree with many places by diuine dispensation Requisit's necessary to a worthy receiuing of Christs body and bloud in the Sacrament THe Euchariste is the (a) The blood of Christ shed vnto remission of sinnes is the proper legacy of the new Testament according to Christs owne words set down 1. Cor. 11. This Chalice is the nevv Testament in my blood legacy of the new Testament vnto eternall life that Christ bequeathed to his Church in a Sacrament of his body and blood the night before he suffered his passion in the presence of witnesses without exception which were his Apostles The same body and blood that Christ offered in a sacrifice on the cross visibly to the redeeming of man kind vnto liberty he left in a Sacrament vnder the elements of bread and wine invisibly to the feeding of man vnto eternall life In the bestowing of this legacy Christ who is faithfull in all he promiseth fulfilled the promise he had made long afore and which is set down Io. 6. (b) Christ Ioan. 6. promising and recommending the Sacrament of his body and blood said
he carryed himselfe in his own hands while giuing his body he said This is my body But truly he had not done what no other could doe if he had carried in his hands a meer figure or sign of his body onely Again S. Cyril Hieros Catech. mysti affirmes that the wine is as truly chang'd into the blood of Christ as water was conuerted into wine in Cana-Galilaea Moreouer S. Cyprian ser de Domi. coena asserts that the bread Christ gaue vnto his Disciples is chang'd saith he not as to the form or figure that is as to the accidents thereof but as to the nature that is as to substance through the Omnipotent power of the worde that was made flesh plainly and euidently otherwise the mystery established vnto saluation might leade into errour and damnation since a thing deliuered in Tropes and figures is subiect vnto vncertainty and intricacies Again the words afore mentioned set down by three Euangelists and one Apostle importe the new Testament made by Christ himselfe the night before his passion and it is vncredible that a Testatour expecting death suddenly should say in express tearmes what he meaned not In regard whereof the ancient Fathers doe vnanimously declare that the cited words of institution vꝪt videlicet This is my body This is the blood of the new Testament ought to be taken in their proper sense that no man according to reason might doubt of the ●●all and substantiall presence of Christs reall and substantiall body and blood in the Sacrament of the Eucharist Christ the diuine Testatour expressing himselfe therein plainly and clearly Wherfore it is an infallible Article of christian faith that vnder the elements of bread and wine is contained Christs true reall and substantiall body and blood through a maruelous transubstantiation that is to say substantiall (h) Transsubstantiation signifies conuersion of one substance into an other conuersion of the bread into his body and the wine into his blood in vertue of the word that was made flesh which the word made that made all thinges of nothing Gen. 1. In vertue of the word that changed Lots wife into a piller of salt Gen. 19. that turned Moyses rod into a serpent Exod. 4. that conuerted the riuers and fountaines of Egypt into blood Exod. 7. that made wine of water Io. 2. that created man of the dust of the ground and breathed in his face breath of life Gen. 1. In vertue of the word that was God Io. 10. Wherfore since the omnipotency of the word can work such marueilous effects it is euidently plain that Christ who is this omnipotent word to wit the son of God can conuert bread into his flesh and wine into his blood and the diuine omnipotency as to transmutation of one created substance into an other in like manner created the Deuil did acknowledg when he said vnto Christ If thou be the son of God command that these stones may be made bread Mat. 4. Wherfore such as deny transubstantiation in the Sacrament of Christs body and blood as an action impossible are worse then Deuills and doe not consider the infinite power of God according to the innate vertue therof Besides if the nutritiue faculty of nature can turne bread into the substance of him that eateth it and change wine into the blood of him that drinketh it if art can make Iron of earth and glass of ashes why cannot God that is aboue nature and art conuert bread into Christs body and wine into his blood Christs body and blood being created substances Furthermore it is extream weakness in a Christian that ought in the mysteries of christian doctrine to be ruled by faith which is a conuiction of thinges not seen to think that he cannot receiue in the Sacrament with his corporall mouth the true reall and substantiall body and blood of Christ because he doth not see them for indeed he might as to reason think as well that there are not three persons in God and one substance two natures in Christ and one person or that there was neuer such a man as Salomon or any such as are called his great Grand-Fathers and Grand-mothers because he hath not seen them or to thinke he is not endued with an immortall soul which quickneth each part of his body because he cannot see it and t' is as great weakness to think that if all the belieuers had eaten of Christs reall body from the first age for 1662. it would haue been wasted and spent long agoe though it had been as big as a great mountaine for Christ's (i) T is no strange thing for the substance of Christs body to exist after an indiuisibie manner since according to true Philosophy the substance or essence of euery real thing hath an indiuisible existency body by diuine dispēsation is spiritually cloathed in the Sacrament being inuisible indiuisible and incorruptible and consequently deuested of outward extension in order to place and therfore not subiect to naturall alterations which doe accompany common bodies As Heate brightness of fire sweet odour of a rose doe not suffer prejudice for as much as they be communicated to many and as the pot of meale and vessel of oile did not faile or diminish though the widow of Sareptha and her family did eat thereof continually while the Heauens were shut frō rayning through the prayers of Elias 30. Regum so the body of Christ in the Sacrament is not wasted spent or prejudiced albeit that the whole Church doth dayly feed thereof Likewise t is extream weaknesse to think that Christ cannot be in * Chrys l. de Sacerd. ait qui Christus cum patro sursum sedet in illo ipso temporis momēto omnium manibus pertractatur Heauen and in the Sacrament at once in as much as one body is not capable according to Philosophy to possess two places together for God is not confined to Aristotles principles The diuine omnipotency transcend's Philosophy her Rules and all the works of nature God made all thinges of nothing contrarie to the maxime of Aristotle Nothing is made of nothing Furthermore in Christ are two natures and one sole person Christ was conceiued of the Virgin Mary without prejudice to her virginity and in the day of his Ascension penetrated the Heauens which are solid bodies without boring into them and other effects which vnto Philosophy are impossible to God are possible Howeuer one body and many places are not inconsistent together as to naturall Philosophy especially when a body is in many places after the manner of a spirituall substance deuested of outward extension in order to the places that containe it and so Christs body is in many consecrated Hosts at once or when one body is in one place with it's quantity extended outwardly thereunto and in another depriued therof at the same time and so Christs body is in Heauen and in the Sacrament together all which according to naturall Philosophy ought not to seem thinges
new law namely outward Rite or sign promise of sanctifying grace and the institution of Christ The outward Rite or ligh as to the Sacrament of Penance is the sensible absolution of a Priest The promise of grace appears by the words of Christ Ioan. 20. Whose sinnes you shall forgiue they are forgiuen them and the institution of Christ is expres'd in the precedent words of the same Chapter As my Father sent me so send I you Wherfore the ancient Fathers treating of sacramentall Penance in order to such as are baptized teach that Christ giues power vnto a Priest to remit thereby euen occult sinnes in consequence of which they appropriate to Penance the name of a Sacrament as much as to baptism Tertull. l. de praescript adversus Haeret Ambros l. de poenit c. 7. and S. Austin l. 5. hom c. 5. compareth this Sacrament ministred by a Priest to the raising yp of Lazarus by Christ and to the vntying of his cords by the Apostles Sacrament of the new law taken in the proper sense vnto remission of sius committed after baptism and therefore named * Hieron ad Demetr vocat Sacramentum poenitentia secundam tabulam post naufragium the second spirituall boord or plank of a souls spirituall wrack Grace giuen by baptism restoreth sanctity that Originall sin tooke away grace receiued through Penance recouereth that sanctity being lost again through actuall sin A christians life on earth is a warfare against flesh and blood against principalities against powers against worldly Gouernours the Princes of the darknesse of this world and against all spirituall wickednesses which are the assaults of the deuill And for as much as humane nature is infirm and the power of this aduersary great it is impossible for any whomsoeuer to escape vnwounded without armour of extraordinary protection In regard whereof Christ hath prouided a soueraigne remedy as an effectuall cure for all the personall wound a christian might receiue in this warfare exercised after baptism and this is the Sacrament of Penance instituted by Christ himselfe (b) Christ Mat. 18. saying to his Apostles Whatsoeuer ye shall binde on earth shall be bound in Heauen and vvhatsoeuer ye shall loose on earth shall be loosed in Heauen only promised them and their successors in Priestly function authoritie and power to forgiue sinnes and inuested them in it Ioan. 20. saying vnto them Receiue the holy Ghos● vvhose sinnes you shall forgiue are forgiuen them Neither hath Christ left less power vnto Priest's to loose then to binde as S. Ambrose asserted against Nouatianus who taught that Priests had power to bind but not to loose 10.20 when he said to his Apostles Receiue the holy Ghost whosoeuers sius ye shall remit they are remitted and whosoeuers sins ye shall retain they are retained Although Christ alone had the * Apoc. 3. qui habet clauem Dauid c. key of Dauid which openeth and no man shutteth and shutteth and no man openeth Apocal. 30. as to supream excellency and power of remitting and retaining sins being enabled in vertue of his diuinity to open to and shut against sinners the kingdome of Heauen without help of a Sacrament neuertheless the same power as to participation and outward Ministery therof he communicated to his said Apostles and their successors in priestly function committing to them the Word of reconciliation 1. Cor. 5. That is to say the * Aug. accedit verbū ad elementum fit Sacramentum Elemētum seu materia proxima Sacramenti poenitentiae est confessio contritio word of sacramentall power implyed in the form of sacramentall absolution vꝪt videlicet I absolue thee which ioyned to the elements contrition confession and actuall satisfaction makes the Sacrament of Penance these acts being the materiall parts therof And although Christ did not appoint this form in express tearmes neuertheless for as much as he instituted this Sacrament (c) Great is the dignity of a Priest saith S. Chrysostome hom 85. in Joan. For vvhose sinnes they shall remit are remitted to them and hom 5. de verbis Isa Vidi Dominum Speaking of the Sacrament of Penance writeth thus Heaven takes from the earth chief povver for the Iudge sitteth in earth our lord follovv's the seruant and vvhatsoeuer he shall judge here belovv God approu's aboue By the judge that sitteth in earth is meant a Priest whose judgment or sentence goes before and the sentence of God comes after In consequence of which seeing that a sentence meer declaratory cannot goe before but of necessity must follow it is euident that a Priest sacramentally absoluing a penitent is a judge taken in the proper sense wherefore S. Cyprian Epis 73. ad Iubaian S. Ambrose lapsis de poenit c. 1. 2. S. Austin l. 2. con Epis parmeni c. 11. and S. Chrysostome l. 3. de Sacerdot expound the particles vvhose sinnes ye shall forgiue of power and authority giuen vnto the Apostles as judges in order to remitting of sinnes after the similitude of an outward iudicatory Court or Tribunall wherin the penitent acts the accused and the witnesses too and the Priest supplies the part of the (d) The Council of Trent declares that no man can be restored by the Sacrament of Penance to that sanctity and integrity which he receiu'd by baptism without bitter tears and painfull labours judge in the room of Christ it is euidence enough to proue it As in an outward Court of iustice the judg giueth sentence and therby absolueth or condemneth the accused So Christ did thinke fit that a Priest as lawfull judg should pronounce sentence of absolution vnto remission of sins committed after baptisme for Christ in saying Whosoeuers sins ye shall remit are remitted substituted the Apostles * 1. Cor. 5. vbi dixisset Apostol is dedit nobis ministerium reconciliationis subiungit pro Christo ergo legatione fūgivnur id est Sacardotes succedunt in munus seu ministerium reconciliationis eo modo quo Christus reconciliauit homines Deo ramittēdo paccata corum vt constat av citato Textu Et Chryso hom 11. in●llam 2. Epis Pauli sic scribit quod igitur pro Christo legatioue fungimur idem est ac si dixisset Christi vice nos enim ipsius muneri successimus his speciall Legats to reconcile sinners to God neither is it of necessity required to the forme of a Sacrament that it be expresly set down in holy scripture the vniuersall tradition of the Church being testimony enough to proue it and euen Caluinists and sundry other sectaries doe vse in baptism the words I baptise thee for which they cannot alleadge any scripture-euidence Besides Caluin in his fourth book of institutions chapter 3. 5. 6. treating of imposition of hands exercised in the ordination of Church-minister's deriueth that ceremony from Church tradition and practice only and confesseth withall that it ought to be counted in lieu of a precept By the premises plainly
knowledg of his own infirmity left of his great pride detested the wickedness that he had committed in the holy Temple of Ierusalem and prayed also vnto God neuerthelesse found no mercy vnto iustification of life because his repentance proceeded from naturall * S. Thomas ●it actum poenitentiae quem exercuit Antiochus fuisse ex motiue purè natutali motiues precisely For he did not cast away from him the thoughts of sins in regard they were offences to God but in respect they were punishments to himselfe In like manner Esau found no place to penance though he sought with teares Heb. 12. because he did not weepe for his sins wherby he had offended God but for the loss of his father Isaacks blessing that by a diuine ordinance was annexed to his Birth right which he had sold afore for one portion of meate Besid's his heart was full of enuy and malice againsT his brother Iacob whose death he had threatned Gen. 27. A sinner that will finde place to penance and blessing to inheritance ought to behold his wayes * Vide vias tuas in con●alle scito quid feceri● Jerem. 2. in the valley of humility and know what he hath done call to his rememberance the dayes of his life that are passed thinke * Heb. 10. borrendum est incidere in manus Domini viuentis how terrible it is to fall into the hands of the liuing God consider how * Jerem. 2. scito vide quia malum est ●marum reliquisse Do●●inū Deum ●num euill a thing and bitter it is to forsake his Creatour and thereby in vertue of an humble and contrite heart to cast away from him the serpent in his bosome the poyson in his stomack the thiefe in his house that is deadly sin which keeps away from him wrongfully the place to penance and the blessing to the inheritance of Heauen CHAR. XIJ. OF CONFESSION THE CONTENTS T' is not enough that a sinner confess his sinnes to God with his heart vnless he tell them to a Priest with his mouth also that is the Minister of Christ to whom the word of reconciliation is committed Joa 20. As secret auricular so intire perfect confession and likewise the seale or obligation to keepe secret what in secret is sacramentally confessed lie claim to a diuine precept according to the practice of some primitiue Churches publick confession of publick sinnes were enioyn'd as satisfactory penances vnto humbling publick sinners the church of God haith laid aside publick confessions for iust reasons those hazard their foul's which defer sacramentall confession of their sinnes till grieuous sicknes seize on them Confession is an outward act of penance wherby a penitent sinner humbly accuseth himself of himself telling his own sins in the eare of a Priest in uested with power of iurisdiction to the end be may obtain full remission thereof in vertue of his absolution Christ when he instituted the Sacrament of penance Ioan. 20. wherein he conferred on his Apostles and their successors in priestly function authority to absolute from sins committed after baptism enioyned also sacramentall confession for by the words set down Io. 20. plainly appear's that Christ euen then instituted an inward tribunall in order to remission of sinnes and constituted Priest's the spirituall Iudges therin wherfore as in an outward Court of Iustice a person arraigned cannot be absolued or punished by a temporall Iudge legally vnless * Prouerb 12. qui iudic●t quod no●●t iudex est iustitiae he hath the hearing of his cause so a Priest to whom the keys of authority are giuen as to the opening or shutting the gates of Heauen cannot open to or shut against a sinner iuridically whose sins he hath no knowledg of (a) The Council of Trent fess 14. c. 6. 7. as likewise others more ancient namely Lateran sub Innocent 3. Constant c. haue defined the necessity of sacramentall confession as to mortall sinnes committed after baptism And indeed veniall sinnes importe no such necessity because the Sacrament of penance hath nothing of power to retaine them and consequently confession is of diuine right and an essentiall part of the Sacrament of penance neither matters it that Christ pardoned the sinnes of S. Mary Magdalen and others of whome he exacted no confession for he that searcheth the heart knoweth exactly the state and condition of the spirit albeit nothing be outwardy expressed Howeuer now the Sacrament of penance being instituted after the similitude of an outward Court of Iustice wherein the penitent supplieth the part of the person accused and the Priest of the Iudg in the room of Christ sacramentall confession is of absolute necessity for the remission of mortall sinnes committed after baptism (b) According to S. Austin l. 65. hom 49. c. 3. if to confess our sinnes to God priuately were sufficient vnto the remission of them without cause it is said whatsoeuer yee shall loose in Earth shall be loosed in Heauen c. and in vain the keyes are giuen to the Church of God and thereby as this great Doctour obserues we should frustrate the holy Euangell we should frustrate Christ's own words promising to our selues what he denyeth And according to S. Basil in regulis breuioribus interrog 288. there is a necessity of confession our sinnes to those which are dispensers of the misteries of God it is not enough that a sinner confesse his sins to God with his heart vnless he shall tell them also with his mouth vnto a Priest who is the Minister of Christ to whom is committed * S. Basil in Regulis breuioribus interrog 228. necessario inquit ijs peccata aperire debent quibus credita est dispensatio mysteriorum Dei qua habetur 1. Cor. 4. dispensation of the mysteries of God together with the word of reconciliation A penitent that out of the tribunall of Priests seek absolution from his sins deceiues himself for it is not said in vaine Whatsoeuer yee shall loose vpon earth shall be loosed in Heauen nor the keys of authority in order to the forgiuing of sin's are giuen in vaine to the Church of God which would proue a necessary consequence if the antecedent were granted For the Sacrament of penance which Christ instituted for the pardoning of sins would not be vsefull a●ot if sin's might be pardoned without it In the primitiue times two kind's of confession were in practice the one publick the other secret in reference to two kind's of offences the one openly the other in secret committed and the primitiue Bishops in their seuerall Dioceses respectiuely deputed certain speciall Priests for hearing the confessions of such (c) According to Orig. in hom 2. in psal 37. S. Cyprian l. de lapsis and Tertull l. de poenit c. 9. Confession of publick sinnes was publick in the primitiue Church and publick penitent's had a place in the Church a part from the rest of the faithfull whose sinnes
were not publick as attest Tertull. and S. Cyprian as had openly sinned to the disedifying of other belieuers whence they named them Penitentiaries and those so sinning Penitents and for distinction sake alotted them places in their Churches apart from the rest of their flocke yet now by vsage of speech the name of penitents is appropriated to all sinners joynt and seperat that confesse their sins to any Priest lawfully ordaind and approu'd Howeuer euen those publick offenders did confess their publick together with their secret offences vnto the penitentiary Priests secretly (d) Secret confession made to a Priest is no humane inuention but a diuine institution Concil Trid. fess 14. c. 6. and S. Chrysostom hom in Gen. de Lazaro names secret confession made to a Priest confession made to God himselfe because a Priest is Christ's Vicar or substitute and Iudge appointed by Christ vnto loosing and binding who is chief principall cause that work 's in euery Sacrament for example a Priest that ministereth Baptism though he truly baptizes neuertheless Christ specially is said to baptise according to the holy Euangelist Hic Christus est qui baptizat This is he Christ that baptiseth secret confession importing a diuine precept in order to both kinds of sins entire confession being an essentiall part of the Sacrament of penance and publick confession that was made in an open assembly was a meer iniunction as to satisfaction in flicted by the said Penitentiaries to whom power was giuen by their Bishops to impose publick confession of sundry publick sin's as in prudence they should thinke it expedient for the humbling of publick sinners and thereby vnto terrefying and edifying of others Yet in this and many ages before publick confession together with Penitentiary Priest's in order to the practice mentioned are laid aside * Socrater qui narrat factum nectarij ait eum tantum sustulisse quod Episcopi Ecclejiarū adiunxerant Canoni id est praecepto diuino confitendi propter haeresim Nouatianorum Nectarius Patriarch of Constantinople in respect of great inconueniences occasioned thereby annulled both they being Church additions only ioyned to the diuine precept of sacramentall confession and S. Chrysostome that succeeded Nectarius approued his proceeding therin iudging it vnreasonable and too heauy a burthen for sinners to confess vnto men t at might reproach them for their sins as be such as are no Priests and consequently such as are not concerned in the seal of sacramentall confession * Obligatio sigilli nascitur ex omni sola confessione Sacramentali id est quae suscipitur animo subȳciendi peccataclauibus Ecclesiae which is an obligation not to reueale what is confessed sacramentally the precept therof being of diuine right and whereas it includes a negation after the manner of meer negatiue precepts for example Thou shalt not commit adultery thou shalt not tell a lie which be binding without exception the seale of sacramentall confession ought not to be broke in any case whatsoeuer again as confession in secret in order to the Sacrament of penance hath it's institution and command from Christ and as the seale of sacramentall confession hath institution and command from Christ also (e) The necessity of whole and entire confession euidently appeares by sundry generall Councils Namely Latera cap. omnis v. riusque sexus Flor. in Decreto Eugenij Trident. fess 14. cap. 5. so integrity as to confessing of sins committed after baptism hath it's institution and command from Christ in order to a Christian that will confess vnto full remission therof in so much that sacramentall confession of necessity must be perfect entire and vndiuided in order to all mortall sins which occurre to a Penitent's memory after sufficient examination of his conscience for that thing is a necessary requisite to sacramentall confession which if it were omitted the Priests absolution would be in vaine and of no effect or purpose and a Priest's absolution is of no value without integrity of confession in order to all mortall sins which occur to a Penitents memory after a serious examination of his conscience not confessed afore because one mortall sin confessed apart from another mortall alike cannot be pardoned Wherefore it is not enough as to the integrity of sacramentall confession to confess wittingly one mortall sin vnconfessed afore sacramentally to one Priest and another mortall alike to another Priest but all mortall sins ioynt and seperate ought to be confessed to one and the same Priest together with the * Trident. sess 14. docet eas circumstantias in confessione explicandas esse quae speciem peccati mutant quibus verbis damnat nōnullos haereticos asserentes circumstantias peccatorum fuisse ab otiosis hominibus excogitatas circumstances that bring with them a new mortall malice to the making of a distinct sin for example it is not enough for a man that hath robbed a Church to confess that he hath committed theft because that circumstance import's a new and distinct sin integrity of sacramentall confession being inconsistent with voluntary omission of any one mortall sinne And for as much as a penitent cannot procure integrity of confession without * Eccles 18. ante indiciū interroga to ipsum in conspectu Domini inuenies propitiationem a due inspection ouer his conscience (f) S. Athanas in illud Euangelij profecti in-Pagum writeth thus 1. letus examine our selues whether our fetters be loos'd whereby he requires inspection into our consciences before we come to confession 2. in case saith he the cord's of sin that tye vs fast be not loos'd already we must deliuer our selues vp to the Disciples of JESUS that is we must confess our sinnes to a Priest for they are those that can loose our cords by the power which they haue receiu'd from our sauiour IESUS who said Whatsoeuer yee shall binde on Earth shall be bound in Heaven and vvhatsoeuer yee shall loose on Earth shall be loos'd in Heauen in consequence of which Priests haue power to absolue iuridically as true Iudges in the Sacrament of penance it is expedient for him to call to his remembrance the howers of his life that are passed especially since his last confession what businesses he hath managed what persons he hath haunted and what sins he is inclined to most As a prudent Physician that vndertak's the cure of a diseased body giues preparatiues to the loosening or stirring vp of ill humours that are cause of the disease before he applies soueraign physick to the purging of them away wherby the cure is done so a discreet penitent in the cure of a sick soul prepares his conscience by examination vnto the remouall of malignant humours of sins which are the cause of it's sickness before he applies the remedy * Aug. de poenitent confessio est salus animarum dissipatrix vitiorum expugnatrix daemonum quid plura obstruit os inferni paradiso portas aperi●
portransibit gladius she endured grieuous afflictions and painefull sorrows S. Iohn Baptist who exceeded in sanctity all others of his sex by Christ's owne testimony did practice extream penance and the calamities that holy Iob suffered were greater then his sin 's required as himself witnesseth in the sixt Chapter of his book saying Oh that my sins were weighed wherby I haue desernad wrath and my miseries together in the ballance as the sand of the sea this would appeare heauier in like manner it may be turly said of the passions endured by other blessed Saint's wherfore since the supream prouidence doth reward euery good work beyond what it deserueth vndoubtedly he hath assigned reward 's suitable thereto that is both in order to merit and satisfaction according to that of S. Luke cap. 21. There shall not an hair of your heads perish Wherby Christ promiseth a recompence to each good work how litle soeuer it be But if the works of blessed Saint's as meritorious only and not as satisfactory should receiue reward many baires of their head 's would perish that is many of their good works as they are satisfactory should not be recompenced which is contrary to Christ's promise Sithence the cōdition of satisfaction is such that it is applyable by him that satisfyes for others distinct from himselfe as appears by S. Paul that wished to be Anathema for his bretheren and by Moses that beseeched God to blot him out of the book of life for the conseruation of the Israëlites it is conformable to reason and diuine iustice which hath a reward for euery good work that the aboundant and exceeding satisfactions of blessed Saints that remaine vprecompenced be laid vp in the Treasury of the Church vnto the remission of temporall paine due to sin which is the reward that good works as satisfaction specially challenge and vndoubtedly * 2. Cor. 12. Ego autem libentissimè impendam super impendam ego ipse pro ani●●bus vestris Et S. Timoth. 2. omnia sustineo propter electos the saints themselues now departed in as much as they were inuested with the grace of charity when they did exercise their voluntary satisfactions and endured their violent passions had at least a virtuall intention to assist and profit therby the rest of the faithfull the law of charity requiring that * Vnum inquit Paulus corpus in Christo sumus Et Gal. 6. alter alterius onera portate all members of the holy catholick Church concurre mutually to the perfecting of the whole body one bearing anothers burthen and one satisfying for an other applying a meer price for temporall paine due to sinne * In Bulla Pij 5. damnatur propositio Michaelis Baij dicētis per passiones sanctorum cōmunicatas Jndulgentijs non propriè redimi debita which is the consistency of Communio Sanctorum that christians profess in the Nicene Creed and the Apostle practiced saying Now reioyce I in my suffering's for you and fulfill the rest of the afflictions of Christs in my flesh for his bodies sake which is the Church Neither hence ought any man to infer the saint's to be our Redeemers because their satisfactions for others in order to remission of temporall punishment's if Christ's satisfactions were to be laid aside would signifie nothing being founded therin (g) Though the blood of Christ be sufficient enough to olenst a soul from both the guilt and the pain of sin neuertheless it does not procure that deliuerance vnless it be applyed by the Churches Sacraments or by acts of faith and contrition and indeed euen sectaries assert a necessity of saith and contrition vnto remission of sinnes In consequence wherof wheras Christ is said Hebra 10. with one oblation to haue consummated foreuer them that are sanctifyed it is meant as to sufficiency being that one oblation without the application thereof doth not sanctify indeed and effectually and he alone is properly our Redeemer in and by whose proper merit 's through the effusion of his blood was purchased our redemption vnto forgiueness of sinnes Collos 1. And that was Christ only One mediator of God and man and as no man ought to be said his own Redeemer according to the form of proper speech for as much as through good works of painfull satisfaction he payeth a ransome for temporall punishment's corresponding to his sins or for as much as he exerciseth an act of perfect contrition whereby his sin 's are remitted so the blessed saint's ought not to be called the Redeemers of such as receiue remission of temporall paines due to sinn's through the application of their satisfactions Neither hereby are Christ's satisfaction 's preiudiced For as the prayer that one belieuer on earth maketh for another doth nothing at all diminish the dignity of Christ's dayly praying for vs at the right hand of his diuine Father * Rom. 8. quotidie interpellat pro nobis Rom. S. since the efficacy of it is founded in the merit 's of his death and passion so the satisfactions of the blessed saint's applyed for the remission of paine due to sin doe dot lessen the infinite valour of Christ's satisfactions being they receiue from them all their worthiness and efficacy And doubtless Christ's own will was to haue it so to the end that his faithfull on earth might exercise reciprocall works of charity towards one an other and exhibit honour to such as he had translated to his kingdom of eternall blessedness being the honour done to a seruant doth redound to his lord and Master Power to dispence this spirituall Treasure of Indulgences or pardons is committed to the Catholick Church as appeareth euidently by Christ's own word's Mat. 16. saying And I will giue vnto thee the key 's of the kingdome of Heauen and whatsoeuer thou shalt binde vpon earth shall be bound also in Heauen and whatsoeuer thou shalt * Quoad verba Christi quodcūque solueris nomine solutionis non intelligitur sola absolutio iudiciaria sed etiam omnis dispēsatio imo omnis fauor gratia ex vi illius potestatis facta proinde Indulgentia concessa pro extensa ad defunctum à summo Pontifice eius enim solius est dare Indulgentias per defunctis infallibiliter prodest defuncto per modum suffragij id est pro modum auxilij adiutorij Ecclesiastici eidem defuncto applicata si caetera sint paria puta si Jndulgentia fiat ex rationabili causa sique defunctus existat in gratia c. his suppositis Indulgentia applicata defuncto alicui semper est valida rata apud Deum luxta tamen Ca●etanum Henricum Indulgentia non babes infallibilem effectu● respectu animae defuncti sed liberum est Deo eam acceptare vel non acceptare loose an earth shall be loosed also in Heauen wherby Christ promiseth to S. Peter and his successors in Church-gouernment authority and power for the remouing of all
impediment's inconsistent with the enioyment of heauenly blessedness wherfore since not sinn's alone but pain 's due thereunto obstruct the passage to the kingdome of Heauen according to Christ's own preaching Mat. 5. Verily 1 say vnto thee thou shalt not come out thence till thou hast paid the vtmost farthing it is euident that the power of the Church doth not only extend vnto the remitting of sinn's but likewise to the releasing of temporell punishment's due thereunto this catholick Truth is clearly euidenced by S. Paules proceeding with the incestuous Corinthian whom he had commanded afore to be deliuered vp to Satan as to destruction of the flesh that his spirit might be saued 1. Cor. 5. For when the Apostle heard that the incestuous adulterer had exercised great penance for his sin least he should be swallowed vp with ouer much sorow at the earnest request of the Corinthians he for gaue the rest or surplus of the pain he had inflicted on him writing to them thus Whom ye forgiue any thing I forgiue also for if I forgiue any thing to whom I forgiue it for your sakes forgiue I it in the person of Christ 2. Cor. 2. by these words plainly appeares that the Apostle forgaue something and since what he forgaue could not be sin in order to the guilt therof for by the Epistle it is clear that the adulterer had exercised great contrition in consequence of which he had receiued remission of his grieuous offence as to it's malice or guilt It followeth of necessity that the thing forgiuen was part of the temporall punishment which the greatness of the sin had deserued and indeed in order to that alone the Corinthians presented their request Hereby further appeares the authority wherwith Church-gouernours are inuested for the remission of temporall pain 's remaining after sin's are forgiuen which is the power of granting Indulgences proper to the Vicars of Christ in whose room they exercise it And the word 's sett down beare euidently this sense viꝪt videlicet In the person of Christ As the Apostle did deliuer vnto Satan the adulterer in the name and by the power of our lord IESVS CHRIST 1. Cor. 5. so 2. Cor. 2. * In 1. Cor. 5. Patianus Epis contra Nouatianū Vide inquit Apostoli Jndulgentiam proprias etiam sententias temperantis he did moderate his sentence by remitting part of his temporall affliction * S. Ambros l. 1. de poeniten c. 6. agens con Nouatianos ait ex eo quod Apostolus dicit se condonare in persona Christi ipsū vendicasse ius à Domino acceptum non indebitum vsurpasse challenging to that effect authority receiued of Christ whose person he represented in the dispensation of that pardon or Indulgence Neither is this doctrine infirmed at all because of the Apostles request directed to the rest of the Corinthians wherby he hearing of the said adulterers exceeding griefe for his sin exhorteth them to pardon and comfort him saying It is sufficient vnto the same man that he was rebuked of many so that now contrary wise ye ought rather to forgiue and comfort him lest exceeding heauiness should swallow him vp Cor. 2. For though it was not said to all the faithfull of the Church ioynt and seperate Whatsoeuer ye shall loose on earth shall be loosed in Heauen But to the Apostles and their successours in Priestly function such only being Christ's ministers and Vicegerents to whom the power of loosing is cōmitted properly as to the iuridicall exercise of it (b) A belieuiug Christian that hath nothing of iurisdiction can by way of request or prayer obtaine for an other remission of the pain due to his sin for example a man that is bound to suffer pain or punishment may notwithstanding transfer and apply the prize of that satisfaction to the aduantage of his freind for as the Apostle saith Charitas patiens est Charity is patient wherfore a charitable man is inclinable to suffer affliction vnto profiting his Neighbour whereof the Apostle Collos 1. giues euidence euough saying Novv rejoyce I in my sufferings for you and to fulfill those things that vvant of the passions of Christ in my flesh for his bodies sake vvhich is the Church though Christs Passions were wanting in nothing as to sufficiency for he was made vnto vs iustice sanctification and redemption 1. Cor. 1. that is according to the same Apostle 1. Cor. 6. he was made the Author giuer and meritorious cause of our iustice sanctity and redemption neuertheless as to efficacy there was something wanting viz. the application of Christs merits which is made by the Sacraments of the Church vnto remitting both the guilt and pain of sin and by our own afflictions charitable offered in order to our Neighbour vnto remitting of temporall punishment due to sin remitted afore But no man can satisfye for the sin of an other as to the guilt therof for he diuine Iustice will remit no man his sin that shall not be sorry for and dereste it himselfe according to the holy scripture Luc. 13. Except yee do penance that is except ye haue in ward sorrow and detestation of your sinnes yee shall all perish Besides neither the guilt of a mortall sin nor eternall pain due thereto is forgiuen and taken away without the infusion of sanctifying grace according to the Council of Trent sess 6. c. 7. nay veniall sin according to the common opinion of Catholick Doctours is not purged out of a soul vnless grace be infused into it howeuer neither of both is remitted to those which are come to full yeares of discretion without an act of detestation and sorrow Wherfore when the Popes Bull 's whereby Indulgences are granted mention remission of sinnes they mean remission of the temporall pains due vnto them And indeed the Popes declare in their Bull 's that they grant their Indulgences to such as are contrite and truly penitent Again accordiug to holy scriptures sin is taken sometymes for the paine due thereto namely Machabae 2. neuertheless all the faithfull together with their Pastours forgiue and loose by consent desire (i) The Apostle 2. Cor. 8. in saying Let your aboundance supply their vvant that also their aboundance may supply your vvant gaue hopes to the Corinthians whom he exhorted to furnish Titus and Luke with corporall necessary's that the spirituall aboundance of the same Titus and Luke might supply and enrich their spirituall want through their good work 's prayers and corporall satisfactions And truly this sacred Text shew's euidently that not only worldly goods as Almes may be rewarded through spirtuall riches namely prayers and other holy works but that the Saincts or godly persons may as well applye their aboundant satisfactions vnto supplying the spirtuall want's of others as those which abound with worldly riches may supply with their superfluities the corporall necessities of their Neighbours commiseration outward ward good works and holy prayers offered to God
for a sinfull Brother and truly this kinde of forgiuing and loosing is common alike to all such as deuoutly and charitably recite that petition of our Lord's prayer Forgiue us our trespasses as we forgiue the trespasses against vs as witnesseth S. Augus trac 58. vpon S. Iohn and doubtless by the mentioned word 's of the Apostle viꝪt videlicet Ye ought rather to forgiue and comfort him and whome yee forgiue any thing c. is meant of this generall manner of forgiuing and loosing which is common alike to all the faithfull of the Church but to demonstrate that he himself laid claime to a higher and better kinde of forgiuing and loosing he professeth that he exercised his forgiueness and power of loosing in the person or room of Christ Wherby again appear's that the Apostle did not forgiue this adulterer the rest of the paine enioyned him in order to the rigour of Church-discipline only that is to the intent only that it should aduantage him in the ecclesiasticall Court but also in order to the diuine Court of Iustice that it might benefit him before God and this is so manifest a truth that no sectary can say the contrary without contradicting the Apostles own words viꝪt videlicet I forgaue it in the person of Christ that is in the room of Christ and as his Minister to whom Christ had committed his power of loosing and binding vpon earth and indeed S. Paul should haue extreamly preiudiced the said miserable adulterer which were great impiety to think if his forgiuenesse should haue had no weight * S. Cypria Epis 14. agens de relaxatione poenarum impositarum peccatoribus ait illam fieri per intercessionem martyrum vel aliorum fidelium quorum satisfactionibus suffragijs adiuuantur in delictis apud Dominum id est in foro Dei with the diuine Court and been of no value before God for according to that supposall he should haue pardoned a pain of this life in respect wherof the adulterer should haue suffered a far greater in the next because the punishment a man endureth vpon earth is a thousand times lesser then the torment 's of Purgatory and therby S. Paul would haue brought his penitent Corinthian out of the frying pan into the fyer That is out of the prison of the ecclesiasticall Court into the prison of the diuine Court Conformably vnto this catholick doctrine Bishops in the primitiue Church enjoyned sinners penances to satisfye God and to compence the iniury done to him through their sin 's (k) According to Tertullian l. ad martyres and S. Cyprian Epis 10.11.12.13.14 sundry Christians that through frailty fell from the Church in tyme of grieuous persecution were wont to recur vnto the Martyrs and Confessours that their penances might be remitted vnto them and these ancient Fathers did not mean penances or pains enioynd and due only in the Churches Court but due also in the Court of God wherfore S. Cyprian Epis 14. faith expresly that they receiued help and deliuerance from their pains apud Dominum that is in the diuine Court in consequence whereof Indulgences remit penances or pains at the Tribunall of God as due there and not as due onely in order to the Churches Canons as wanton schollars of these dayes vnaduisedly teach for otherwise according to S. Thomas q. 25. a. 1. Indulgences would be more vnprofitable then profitable reseruing the penitent to more grieuous pains in Purgatory Besides according to the holy scriptures whatsoeuer priest 's shall binde on earth shall be bound in Heauen and whatsoeuer they shall loose on earth shall be loosed in heauen in consequence of which God has a Court in Heauen that remits the guilt and paine of sinne accordingly as they be remitted in the Churches Court and indeed if there were no remitting of pains in the Court of Heauen there would be no need at all of the Churches spirituall Treasure consisting of the aboundant satisfactions of Christ and the blessed Saincts and yet that there is this spirituall Treasure is an article of Christian faith for as such a Treasure could not be necessary vnto remission of pains in a ciuil Court so it could not be necessary vnto remission in an ecclesiasticall Court The ground on which the Digbean diuines build their opinion is a damned heresy namely that God does not forgiue us our sinnes as to the guilt thereof except her pardon the pain also as is plainely clear according to the definition of the Council of Trent sess 6. can 30. and this practice was both in order to such as had publickly sinned in reference to which canonicall pain 's were instituted only as also in order to such as had sinned in secret as doe demonstrate Burchard in the 13th book of decretalls and sundry others which haue made a full collection of the canonicall pains Furthermore no man can say without running into manifest errour that the Apostles forgiuenesse or indulgence in order to the penitent Corinthian was but an absolution of excommunication or of his sinne giuen in the Sacrament of penance for first a deliuerance from an ecclesiasticall censure of excommunication is neuer named by scriptures or Fathers a condonation forgiueness or indulgence Again by the Apostles words appeareth that he forgaue part only of the punishment enioyned which cannot be meant of an absolution either from excommunication or sin 's in the Sacrament of penance where there is no sharing out by partes Yet notwithstanding all this the vsage of indulgences was not neer so frequent in the primitiue times as in the subsequent ages because primary Christians carrying the fresh memory of their crucifyed Redeemer and thereby much enflamed with loue towards his sufferings allwayes bore about his dying mortification that his life also might be made manifest in their mortall flesh 2. Cor. 4. so that then there was strict discipline and great penances enioyned sinners For example rigorous fasting much praying and other painfull afflictions * In 1. Concil Nicae cui intersuerunt 318. Patres indicitur poena vndecim annorum Item in Concil Ancyrano iniungitur poena septenij ijs qui bis vel ter Idolis sacrificauerant Porro vulgatum est vnicuique peccato mort ali poenitentiam septem annorum iniungendam esse iuxta Canones pro quo tam en nullus Textus reperiri potest Et contrarium tenet S. Tho. in 4. l. sent dis 20. sanè Gratianus qui allegatur pro contraria sententia non dicit Ecclesiam septemnem poenitentiam in singula peccata statuisse sed tantum pro grauissimis iniungi solitam fuisse deinde dicit illam poenit entiam non taxatam fuisse pro foro interiori sed exteriori constat illos Canones ad forum exteriùs pertinere as by the ancientest Councils appeareth Neuerthelesse such was their feruour of spirit and extream zeale in complyance to Christ's sufferings that they fullfilled them willingly and chearfully few sought after pardons vnto
(c) S. Austin l. de bono coningij cap. 6. names mortall sin deadly crime and Epis 89. and in sundry other places he calleth offences which are not deadly and therfore commonly nam'd veniall sinnes litle fault 's of which the Apostle S. Iames cap. 2. in many things vve sinne all And S. Mathew cap. 6. foregiue us our treipasses c. and of veniall sinnes the Mileuitan synode interpretes these scriptures so that the iustest man that liues is liable to veniall sinnes and veniall defects and therefore counted imperfect they continue depriued of blessedness till all imperfection be purged away As a Iudg doth not punish all offences with death and as one man after that he is reconciled to another that hath iniured him demandeth some satisfaction for the iniury done for Dauid though he pardoned Absolon his offence Yet he did not suffer him * Reg. 14. Dauid condonauit filio suo Absoloni peccatum sic tamen ci placatus addit reuertatur in domum suam faciem meam non videat to abide in his sight or in his house so God though he doth not punish all sinnes with eternall death some hauing nothin g of mortall malice and though he receiueth a grieuous sinner into grace that casteth away all his mortall transgressions and turneth vnto him with a new heart neuertheless he doth not admit him to his glorious presence till he hath made full satisfaction as to the reparation of he injury done him wherby it is clear that God neither in this life nor in the next * Prouerb 23. Tu virga percuties eum animam eius de inferno liberabis Item Tob. 13. Tu flagellas saluas deducis ad inferos reducis chasteneth sinners that haue turned away from their iniquity as his enemies to destroy them but as his children to make them fit and proper for the enjoyment of their heauenly inheritance This catholick truth all antiquity acknowledgeth Councils define the approued vniuersall practice of christian Churches teacheth and authority of scriptures warranteth The second booke of the Machabees prayseth the noble Iudas (d) Judas Machabae us piously conceiu'd all or at least many of his souldiers to haue dyed godly that is in the state of grace and though they might haue coueted and detain'd some part of the siluer and gold that was on the Idols contrary to the commandement of God Deut. 7. Neuertheless we ought not to infer from thence that the same souldiers did not repent of that sin before their death or that by doing so they committed a deadly sin being they might want sufficient instruction and recogni zance in order to that law Howeuer t' is certain that Iudas Machabaeus appointed a sacrifice to be offer'd for those only which dyed godly As to the books of the Machabies S. Austin l. 18. de ciuit cap. 3. attests that though they be not contained in the Iew 's Canon or Catalogue neuertheless the catholick Church counteth them for canonicall Besides the third Council of Carthage whereof S. Austin was a member placeth he Machabies in the number of diuine scriptures who iudged that it was a holy and good thought to pray for the dead that they might be deliuered from sin and therfore sent three thousand drachmes to Iesusalem for the offering of a sin-sacrifice in regard of his souldiers that were ssaine in the holy warr belieuing that there was great fauour laid vp for those that died godly that is in the state of grace and since this action of religious piety cannot be meant in order to blessed soul's these hauing ful enioyment of blessedness nor in order to damned souls these being sentenced to eternall fire it is plainly euident that the meaning thereof is in reference to good souls which are neither in Heauen nor in Hell but in a third place suffering vnto heauenly blessedness this doctrine the Apostle teacheth * Ex scriptura 1. Cor. 3. Patres Latini in Conlio Florent Purgatariū dari definiunt Et quod ibi Apostolus intelligat ignē Purgatoriū testantur Orig hom 25. in Exod. Jtem Aug. in Enchyrd c. 68. l. 21. de ciuit c. 2. 26. 1. Cor. 3. where he affirmeth that after this life some souls are saued by fire saying If any man's work 's burne be shall suffer preiudice but he shall be saued himselfe yet so as it were by fire In which scripture he distinguisheth two kind's of work 's that a catholick christian constituted in the state of grace exerciseth whereof some are meritorious and in as much as they containe nothing of vncleaness or imperfection the Apostle compareth them vnto gold siluer and precious stones which can receiue no detriment through fire therby signifying that such souls as build on the foundation that is Christ and his grace works of gold siluer and pretious stones which is to say pure and holy actions without mixture of vncleaness (e) According to holy scripture fire shall trye all works yet not so as that all works and all the workers shall haue their tryall in burning flam's but because fire that is ordain'd to purge out of our works the dregs of corruption is said to trye works which haue nothing of vncleanes because the fire does not touch them in regard of their purenes Which is s. Ambroses explication in Psal 118. and after the same manner wild beasts are said to haue tryed many martyrs though they touch'd not their sacred bodyes will suffer no preiudice by fire in the day of particular or vniuersall Iudgment but there be other workes built vpon Christ as the foundation which include small defects and imperfections to wit veniall sinnes only which the Apostle nameth Wood bay or stubble that do consume in the fire wherfore such soul 's as be charged with this kinde of vncleane works doe suffer detriment in the day of particular Iudgment remaining afflicted by fire till all vncleaness be purged away and this to be the true meaning of the Apostle his own words explicated aright do clearly euidence For first that by gold siluer and pretious stones be vnderstood good work 's pure without thout staine orthodox writers vnanimously grant Secondly that by wood hay or stuble are meant veniall sinnes it is manifest enough because the Apostle expresly doth assert that the works signified by those word 's are to be burnt by the fire and neuertheless such as haue exercised them are to be saued which cannot be vnderstood of mortall offences the guilt wherof vndoubtedly damneth euery one that dyeth charged with it neither can the said word 's carry the sense of works that haue nothing of vncleaness because fire cannot preiudice those they being as gold siluer and pretious stones vnc●mbustible wherefore of necessity wood hay or stuble doe signifie small faults which being once purged out by fire the soul that committed them is saued that is to say translated to eternall life and indeed since the Apostle
speaketh of sauing after death it is clear that he meaneth eternall saluation therby Thirdly that by the words The day of the lord shall declare it is vnderstood the day of each souls particular judgment is manifest likewise according to that saying Math. 24. Watch therfore for ye know not what howre the son of man will come that is to say what hower ye shall die and be iudged Again the same Apostle 2. Timoth 4. sayth that there was laid vp for him a crown of Iustice which At that day our lord would giue him a iust Iudg. Yet doubtless he obtained that reward instantly after his death as to essentiall blessedness Lastly that by the word (f) According to S Austin l. de fide operibus the fire of hell is euerlasting against the errour of Origin and the Latin Father 's in the Council's of Florence assert true fire in Purgatory and speake after the same manner of it as of Hell fire and the Current of catholick Doctours teach that the fire of Hell is true corporall fire fire true and reall fire is meant appear's by the Apostles saying That if any mans work burneth for to burne is proper to true fire and as concerning the particles * Jo. 1. vidimus gloriam eius quast gloriam vnigeniti à Patre vbi quasi non est particula diminuens aut faciens comparationem inter veram metaphoricam gloriam sed potius explicat veritatem vt notant S. Patres sic loquendo de Rege dicimus incedit quasi Rex id est vt Regem decet de v●ro iusto venit vt vir iustus id est vt decet virum iustum as it were they doe rather affirme then infirme the reality of fire for when S. Iohn sayeth of Christ cap. 1. we saw the glory of him as it were of the only begotten of the Father the particles as it were doe not deny Christ to be the true and naturall son of God the Father but rather affirme that vndoubted truth as all catholick writers doe obserue in their Commentaries vpon that scripture Hereby it is cleare (g) S. Cyprian Epis 52. ad Antonia writes thus T' is not the same thing to be sent to prison and there to remain till the last farthing be pay'd t' is not the same thing to receiue suddenly the reward of faith and vertue and to be clens'd and purg'd by fire after long suffering of grieuous sorrovves for sinnes committed afore that the Apostle held purgation of some soules after they were deuested of their bodies and before their translation vnto eternall life and this the catholick Church calleth Purgatory which name though it be no vsed in holy scripture no more then the words Trinity person and sundry others which are receiued and allowed of by all writers in order to a clearer explicating some misteries of christian Religion howeuer the name Purgatory taken in the sense afore mentioned layeth claime to a large series of Antiquity But seeing that scriptures and * S. Cyprian Epis tota 52. ad Anton Orig. hom 6. in Exod. cum inquit venitur si quis multa opera bona parum aliquid iniquitatis attulerit illud parum tanquā plūbum resoluitur purgatur totum remanet aurum purum .... Hilar. in illud Psal 118. concupiuit anima mea purgatorium vocat indefessum ignem in quo grania sustinentur supplicia per quae animae à peccatis expiantur Aug. l. 2. 1. de ciuit c. 24. ait constare quod spiritus aliquorum fidelium poenas aliquas temporales post mortem patiantur primitiue Fathers doe assert the thing signifyed by the name of Purgatory vꝪt videlicet purgation of some souls by suffering of temporall paines in the next life * Aug. quando de re constat de nomine non est contēndendum no man can contend about that name without incurring a censure of manifest weakness yet in regard of two states only to which God promiseth eternall life or eternall death that is beatitude or damnation for Purgatory shall cease after the day of generall Iudgment is past both the scripture and the Fathers sometimes doe mention only after death the Paradise of the blessed and the Hell of the damned * De locis seu statibus perpetuis intelliguntur hae scripturae Eccles 11. si ceciderit lignum ad Austrum aut Aquilonem in quocunque loco inciderit sbi erit Item Mat. 25 Jte maledicti in ignem aternū venite benedicti possidere Regnū which be the two euerlasting states of soules but hence no man can argue an absolute negation of a third place or state in reference to temporall afflictions after death without preiudicing both scriptur's and Fathers as is sufficiently enough proued and though S. Austin Ser. 14. de verbis Domini lib. 10. de peccatorum meritis remissione cap. 20. doth expresly affirme that the catholick faith acknowledgeth two places only vat an eternall kingdome of Heauen or Hell eternall neuertheless by his other writings appeareth plainly that he held the Purgatory of some faithfull soul 's after death and in the cited writing's he denyeth only that the Catholick Church does acknowledge such a third place as Pelagius contended for who taught that children dying without baptism should be saued though they were not admitted into the kingdome of Heauen which errour S. Austin confuteth By the premises is euident that such souls only goe to Purgatory as are liable either to veniall sins or temporall satisfactions corresponding to their sins pardoned in this life as to the guilt thereof both of them importing defects that are inconsistent with the perfection of heauenly blessdeness yet these suffering souls while they endure their painfull afflictions haue something of comfort and refreshment (b) Pope Leo the tenth in his condemnation of Luther's 26. article hath defined that soul 's in Purgatory are assured of their saluation for they know that there is fauour laid vp for them they are certaine of their saluation they loue God with all their power conforming themselues in the bitterness of their afflictions to his diuine will of Iustice they haue confidence in the suffrages and sacrifices of the faithfull vpon earth in order to their deliuerance and are visited by their good Angells that cheare them vp Neither doth it hence follow that their paines are less grieuous for the intensest sorrow is not incompatible with the said refreshments as appeareth by Christ whose grief abounded and exceeded others in intensness notwithstanding the assurance of glory the comfort flowing from his God-head the conformity to the will of his diuine Father and the extream willingness to suffer his death and passion for the Redemption of the world and indeed it is a certaine truth that the anguish and tribulation which a soul endureth in Purgatory * Docent S. Aug. l de euva pro mortuis agenda c. 16. S.
re shall hind vppon earth shall be bound in Heauen which is meant of ecclesiasticall Censures the greatest of which is excommunication Again Act. 15. when the new christians referred their controuersie concerning circumcision and other ceremonies of the law of Moyses to the Apostles at Ierusalem sentence of iudgment was declared by one accord thus It seemed good to the holy Ghost and to vs to lay no more burthen vpon you then these necessary things c. Wherby it is cleare that the Apostles then the representatiue Church were inuested with authority to make ordinances (c) It appeares plainly by the sacred text Act. Jt seems good to the holy Ghost and to vs to lay no more burden vpon you then these that the Apostles had authority to commande and exact obedience to their ordinances For the particles it seems good to vs to lay no more burden Shew euidently that they were superiours inuested with authority to commande and exact obedience from the people who were bound to obey them But here is obseruable that as to the matter in debate mentioned in the Chapter set down viz. whether the conuerted Gentils were obliged to obserue the law of Moyses S. Peter in that Council cald to determine it was supream Iudge for t' is written that after much dispute Peter rose vp and as head of all spoke first and decided the controuersy in fauour of the said conuerted Gentils deliuering them from the bondage of the old law and all the multitude saith S. Hierom Tom. 2. Epis 89. Augus cap. 2. kept silence and into Peters sentence or definition the Apostles S. Iames and all the Priests past with one accorde and euer since the Popes of Rome as S. Peters lawfull successors haue had precedence and the deciding suffrage in all Councils which are of credit and authoritie in the Church of God and to oblige the faithfull in the obseruation of them for the words It seemed good to vs to lay no more burden vpon you doe signify the authority of superiours to commande inferiours and the obligation of inferiours to obey their superiours Thirdly that the Church is liuing visible and speaking which is the third propriety of this Iudg is clearly expressed Act. 20. take heed to your selues and the flock wherof the holy Ghost hath made you Bishops to rule the Church of god which he hath purchased with his own blood and Again Math. 5. (d) According to S. Aug. trac in 1. epis Ioan. those are blind which cannot fee so great a mountaine and shut their eyes against the clear light put on a candlestick which is the Church of God the Church is stiled a Citty that is set on a mountaine which cannot be bid but no man can conceiue how Bishops can gouerne a Church which they see not or how a Citty set on a high mountaine can lie hid Besids all the Church offices ioynt and seperate do declare it visible liuing ad speaking neither matters it that the Church is known by faith which is of things not seen for the Apostles when they conuersed with Christ vpon earth they both saw and belieued him to be Christ As the Apostles saw Christ to be aman and belieued him to be God soe wee doe see the Church to be a congregation of men outwardly professing the faith of Christ and doe belieue that it is directed by the infallible assistance of the holy Ghost and as it cannot be euinced that a man is inuisible because an inuisible soul gouerneth him soe neither can it be euinced that the Church is inuisible because the supernaturall gifts of the holy Ghost namly faith hope and charitie wherby the Church is gouerned and men made children therof be inuisible From the premises is euidently deducible (e) S. Austin li. 10. de doct christ disputing against such as pretended to the knowledge of holy scriptures by speciall reuelations dissuades euery man from so proud and dangerous a tentation as to presume that he is taught of God and not of men and this caueat he vrgeth by many examples that the priuate spirit which is to say the particular reuealing spirit wherby as many sectaries conceiue euery priuate belieuer is enabled to interpret scriptures and iudge all matters concerning faith and religion hath no good claime to the office of this suprem Iudge beeing neither seen nor heard to speak clearly nor known certainly to be infallible in what it reuealeth to each particular belieuer in priuat for it may prudently be doubted whether it be a good spirit or not since false ministers can transforme themselues into Apostles of Christ and Satan himselfe into an Angel of light 2. Cor. 11. in consequence of which no wise and iudicious man can rely his eternity on such a priuat reuealing spirit Again God according to his ordinary way doth not immediatly himselfe reueale verities of faith to euery one in particular or iudge himselfe between party and party from the begining of the creation down to these times his prouidence hath ordained men to declare his ordinances vnto men appointed men to teach men and constituted men suprem Iudges of men for the determining of all hard matters in debate concerning faith and religion In the law of nature Abraham was made Teacher of men I know speaking of Abraham that he will command his son and family after him that they keepe the way of our lord Gen. 18. In the written law Moyses was constituted to teach the people of God the diuine ordinances and to shew vnto them the way wherein they were to walke and the worke they were to doe Exod. 18. and Deut. 17. the Priests of the Leuits were deputed supreme Iudges of controuersies which might rise about religion also Malac. 2. it is written the Priests lips shall preserue knowledg and they shall seek the law from his mouth In our new law of grace the Apostles were sent into diuers parts of the world to preach christian religion Mar. vltime Act. 8. God appointed Saint Philip to teach the Eunuch of Ethiopia Act. 9. Christ sent Saul to be instructed of Ananias and Act. 10. Cornelius the Centurion was admonished by an Angel to repaire vnto Saint Peter that he might learn of him matters of c●ristian faith wherfore Saint Paul says Rom. 10. Faith is by heating and hearing by the word of God and how shall they heare without a preacher because ordinarily God teacheth men by men the verities of faith and Gal. 1. the same Apostle doubted not to prefer the doctrine he preached before the doctrine of an Angel from Heauen that should preach otherwise and truly if it were lawfull for euery man to follow and adhere to his own priuate spirit there would rise almost as many contrary religions as there are men liuing vpon the earth and consequently in room of that peace that Christ hath promised to the Church nothing but disorder and confusion would happen wherfore both in the old and new law this
controuersies in debate for as much as they relate to faith Furthermore God who is not an accepter of persons Rom. 15. who is not God of men only but of women also and who desireth to saue all of each sex doubtless instituted a remedy against originall sin in fauour of men and women for as much as the expiation thereof is absolutely necessary vnto saluation wherfore in regard circumcision was the remedy proper to men and could not be applied to women some other expedient was ordained for their cure and although no express mention thereof be made in any part of the old Testament neuertheless that God instituted a remedy for the deliuerance of women * Quod qualeue fuerit illud remedium à Deo institutum ad subueniēdum faeminis quae nascebantur in peccato originali nullibi explicatur in sacris litteris nec porest deduci ex illis from the guilt of originall sin the Iews belieued as an article of faith necessary to saluation and indeed so it was as appeareth from the necessity of it and from the prouidence God hath ouer both men and women and truly to auerre that God was defectiue then in necessary requisits to the saluation of women is a manifest blasphemy wherby it is clear that euen the Iews in the old law held vnwritten besides written tradition as necessary vnto saluation neither is the said unwritten tradition preiudiced by the reply of some sectaries saying that the oblation of women in the Temple according to the law of Moyses did free them of originall sin For that legall offring was common alike to women and men and Christ was both circumcised and offered in the Temple nor by recurring for this deliuerance vnto the circumcision of Parents there being not any passage in the whole Testament of the old law that carrieth the least sound that way or that hath relation to the deliuerance of women from originall sin in vertu of their parents circumcision besides S. Austin and other ancient Fathers expresly teach that baptism is to Christians as circumcision was to the Iewes but no Christian sectary will say that women are sanctified and consecrated to God through their parents baptism for if it were enough for the purging out of originall sin to baptise the male there would be no need at all to baptise the female sex hereby it is clear again that the Iews of the old law allowed and professed vnwritten besides written traditions as necessary to saluation From the premises appeareth that the word of God taken precisely comprehendeth both vnwritten and written traditions in consequence of which vnwritten traditions are not additions to the word of God they being a part therof Wherfore neither Moyses Deut. 4. saying to the people of Israel Ye shall adde nothing to the word which I speake to you neither shall ye take ought from it Nor S. Paul Gal. 1. saying to the Galatians though that we or an Angel from Heauen preach vnto you (h) According to S. Austin tom 7. con liter petiliani l. 3. cap. 6. and tom 9. trac 98. in Io. the particle praeterquam besids in the cited Text imports the particle contra against or contrary so that the meaning is that nothing must be preached against or contrary to the holy scripture And truly this explication appears euidently by the Apostles arguing against those that asserted Iudaism to be consistent with christianism which assertion because it was contrary to the law of Christ the Apostle added the curse set down in the same sentence of the Text. Moreouer the Greek 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which the Latin Interpreter translateth praeterquam is vsed by the Apostle for contra not only in the Epistle alledged ad Gal. but also Rom. 4. besids what we haue preached vnto you let him be accursed condemne vnwritten traditions as sectaries do calumniate the Catholick Church besides sectaries very vnhandsomly and weakly do infer from these two scripture testimonies that no doctrines of faith ought to be receiued saue such as be contained expresly in or by euident consequence deduced from the written word of God for neither of both doe mention the written word of God The word says Moyses which I speake vnto you and that we haue preached vnto you says the Apostle but if it were granted vnto them what they cannot proue viz that Moyses then spoke what he had written afore notwithstanding they could not ouerthrow therby vnwritten traditions vnless they could proue which they can neuer doe that they be additions destructiue of or contrary to the written word of God for such additions only he meant and excluded by the cited scriptures and indeed if S. Paul had meant otherwise he should haue cursed S. Iohn the Euangelist that many yeares after his martyrdome writ reuelations which S. Paul had not preached to the Galatians likwise the Anathema had touched S. Paul himselfe that deliuered sundry passages in the acts of the Apostles which happened after his preaching to the Galatians Howeuer catholicks doe not deny but that traditions which are the vnwritten word be contained implicitly in the written word of God that is to say as in a generall principle from whence they are deducible and the whole word of God is contained in scriptutes yea in this sole Article of the Apostles Creed I belieue in the holy Catholick Church in as much as all the matters pertaining to faith and generall manners and not clearly expressed in holy scriptures are contained expresly in the doctrine of the Church which the scriptures commend vnto vs as infallible and indeed the whole word of God is expounded vnto vs in Christs command Math. 18. If he refuse to heare the Church let him be vnto thee as an heathen man and publican in regard wherof ancient Fathers do auerre all doctrines of faith to be contained in scriptures that is as in a generall principle from whence they can be deduced CHAR. XXJ. OF THE CHVRCH TRIVMPHANT THE CONTENTS Souls that remoue out of their earthly habitations cleansd from all vncleanes are instantly translated into Heauen the clear sight of God wherein consisteth heauenly beatitude is not deferd till the generall Resurrection though the office of mediation aduocation and intercession is proper to Christ alone as to the noblest manner therof neuertheless according to the Catholick Church all the Saints mediate and intercede in the sight of God for the faithfull on earth in subordination to Christ the Church of god does not nor neuer did teach that the faithfull on earth ought to mediate and intercede for the blessed in Heauen S. Paul did not mediate or intercede for Onesiphorus that he might obtaine mercy after his soule was beatifyed the ancient Liturgies of the Church approue not of prayers vnto helping of the blessed THe Church triumphant is a holy Congregation of blessed Saints reigning with Iesus-Christ innocēt souls not liable to any guilt of sin as soon (a) 2. Cor. 5. we know
faith The Apostle that if our earthly house of this habitation be destroyed vve haue a building giuen of God ... eternall in heauen From this sacred Text S. Anselme infers that good souls as soon as they are deuested of their bodyes haue full enjoyment of heauenly blessednes and according to Saint Austin l. 2. de ciuit cap. 15. martyrs as soon as they be deliuered from their earthly tabernacles reigne in Heauen with Christ And Christ himselfe according to the Apostle Ephes 4. led captiuity captiue in the day of his glorious ascention that is then the iust souls that were detained as captiues in the lower parts of the earth namely lymbus called Abrahams bosom were translated into Heauen And S. Hierom Epis de obitu letae Novv she for a smal labour hath the enioyment of eternall blessedness as the earthly house of their habitation is destroyed are translated into an other building giuen of God their Creator that is an house not made with hands but eternall in Heauen and as now euery creature is a dark glass whereby God is seen in part so in the next life * Verbum diuinum propter repraesentandi perfectionē vocatur speculum fine macula God himselfe is a clear glass wherin creatures see him fully as he is that is perfectly if nothing of sin interuene to obstruct their passage to Heauen Now saith the Apostle * 2. Cor. 5. mūc videmus per speculum in anigmate sed tūc videbimus facie ad faciem Aug. in illud Aposto Philip. 1. sic scribit inde incipit requies quae non interrumpitur resurrectione sed clarificatur quae nunt fide retinetur wee see through a glass darkely but then shall wee see face to face (b) 2. Cor. 5. the Apostle teacheth that while we are in the body we are absent from our lord for we walk by faith and not by sight Wherefore he coueteth to remoue out of the body and dwell with Christ in consequence of which good souls enioy the clear vision of God before the generall resurrection for otherwise the Apostles earnest desire to remoue out of his body and dwell with Christ had been vain and impertinent since he might not enioy thereby blessednes which consists in the clear vision of God before the generall resurrection besids according to S. Aus l. 14. de Trinit cap. 2. to be present and dwell with Christ includs sight and excludes faith 2. Cor. 5. which words plainly shew that then * begineth the eternall when the transitory life endeth in consequence of which pure souls without offence after they be deliuered from their earthly tabernacles do not expect the generall resurrection to put them in possession of the clear vision of God and truly the desire of S. Paul expressed Philip. 1. and Ephes 5. to be remoued out of the body and to be present with Christ had been very vnprofitable and impertinent if the clear sight of God wherein consisteth the souls blessedness were to be differred for soe long a series of yeares and it matters not that to be present with Christ doth not include of necessity a clear sight of his diuinity for it appeareth by the words of the Text that the Apostle desired a full clear sight of Christ vnto blessedness in regard he speaketh of that presence with him which excludeth faith saying We know while wee are at home in the body that we are absent from Christ for we walke by faith and not by sight signifying thereby that when we are remoued out of the body we walke by sight and not by faith but it is the clear sight of God that abolisheth faith according to the doctrine of all ancient Fathers besids 't is in reason conuincing that Christ hath not appointed prisons to keepe the Saints of the new Testament out of Heauen hauing in his ascention trāslated thither the Saints of the old Testament which were detained afore as prisoners in the lowest parts of the earth Again God is far more inclined to reward the iust then to punish the wicked for his mercyes * Psal 144. miserationes eius super omnia opera eius exceed all his other works but his diuine Iustice (c) According to the Councill of Florence God punisheth wicked souls with eternall sensible paines as soon as they remoue out of their bodys inflicteth eternall sensible paine vpon wicked men sudainly after their remouall out of their bodyes wherefore doubtless iust men doe quickly after their death receiue their blessed rewards nothing of offence interuening to obstruct their passage to Heauen moreouer God is more iust in giuing labourers their hire then any man whosoeuer but a iust man doth not suffer the workemans hire to abide with him till morning Leuit. 19. Wherefore Since eternall blessedness that consisteth in the clear vision of God is the hire of good labourers in the diuine vineyard (d) According to the Councill of Florence in the decree of Eugenius and of Treat sess 25. in decret de inuocatione sanct the souls of the faithfull that remoue out of their bodyes cleansed from all sin and vncleanes see immediately the essence of God And S. Gregorie Nyss ora funebri in pulcheriam writeth thus The plant pulcheria is pluckt from vs but transplanted in paradice she is translated out of one kingdom into an other She hath put of her purple robe and put on the clothing of Heauens kingdom And all the ancient Fathers assert this Catholick truth namly S. Austin trac 128. in Ioan. S. Cyp. li. de exhort ad martyres cap. vltimo payment of it is made quickly after the finishing of their worke that is suddenly after their death wherewith endeth all meritorious working but there be two kinds of blessedness the one complete and full in order to both body and soul the other which is the principall and essentiall blessedness is not perfect as to the whole man but in respect of the soul only Now when the holy scriptures declare that blessedness or reward for good works is to be giuen after the generall resurrection they mean only of the consummation thereof which is full blessedness named the double stole of felicity in order to both body and soul and indeed Christ in the generall iudgment as appeareth by the 25. Chapter of S. Mathew will say after the same manner to the blessed Come ye blessed of my Father take the inheritance of the kingdome prepared for you from the foundation of the world as he will say to the damned depart from me ye cursed into euerlasting fire which is prepared for the deuill and his Angels but Christ by this latter saying meaneth that after sentence of vniuersall iudgment is pronounced the damned whose souls were punished afore shall suffer euerlasting torments of fire in order both to the body and soul for the cōsummating of their misery wherefore by the other saying addressed to the blessed is meant that in the generall resurrection those
no definition was past and that vpon notice of any he should be most ready to embrace the sense and defend the sentence of the Church which testimony giueth euidence enough to belieue that Pope Iohn neuer defined the said controuersy As the Catholick Church guided by the holy Ghost asserteth the Saints reigning with Christ to haue actuall enioyment of blessedness so likwise declareth them to be our Aduocats mediatours and intercessours in the sight of God Although the office of aduocation mediation and intercession (g) Although Rom. S. Christ is said to make intercession for vs neuertheless the Churches custom is not to say Christ pray for vs but Christ haue mercy of vs. Thereby preferring his diuine before his human nature that is we pray vnto him as God and not as man and this Church practice taketh away the occasion of erring with the Arians which denyed the diuinity of our Sauiour Christ is proper to Christ alone as to the most excellent manner thereof for as much as he only without the helpe of man or of any Angel through the proper merits of his own passion and death on the crosle payed the full ransom or price of all sins whereby he reconciled vs to God in respect of which the Apostle calleth him the * Est vnicus mediator Christus ratione scilicet ac medio redemptionis qui proprio sanguine in cruce effuso nos ab inferno à diabolo ira Dei Patris redemit eidem nos reconciliauit●●● est aut● 〈◊〉 solus mediator ratioue medio intercessionis precum onely mediatour between God and man 1. Cor. 2. that is the sole singular mediatour taken in the singular sence of redemption after which sort also he is our sole Aduocate and Patron that by himselfe alone procured for vs mercy in the sight of his diuine Father and truly noe Christian asketh or obtaineth grace in this life or glory in the next but in vertue of his merits neuertheless the Apostles and Saints in Heauen and the faithfull on earth that deale with God by intercession and mediate with Christ by prayer also vnto procuring for vs saluation lay clame rightly to the office of an Aduocate and mediatour taken in a more large sense according to the common vsage of speech and the scriptures euidence as much which attribute the name of mediatour to Moyses Ieremy the Apostles and others as clearly proueth S. Cytill l. 12. Thom. cap. 10. also they giue the name of Sauiour and redemer to meer creatures Iud. 3.92 (h) S. Bernard ser that begins Signum magnum apparuit Teacheth that there is need of a mediatour to the mediatour Christ neither is there any better or more profitable then the Virgin Mary The obedient Virgin Mary saith he is made the aduocate of the inobedient Virgin Eue wherefore the holy Church calleth the Virgin Mary our Aduocate besids S. Greg. Nazian ora ad Grego Nysse asserts that Martyrs are mediatours between vs and God and so teacheth also S. Chrysostome in psal 50. and S. Hierom Epis ad Vigilant cap. 3. if the Apostles saith this great Doctour of the Church and Martyrs inuested with their bodyes did pray for others when they ought to haue been solicitous for themselues they pray rather for vs now being deliuered from their bodyes after their victories crownes and triumphs Again S. Austin Epis ad Paulinum calleth Bishops the peoples Aduocates in as much as they giue them their benediction Esdras 9.27 Act. 7.35 Wherefore Christ is our Aduocate after a far nobler manner then the Saints are Christ maketh intercession for vs in as much as he representeth to his diuine Father his own merits in our fauour The Saints in as much as they offer for vs their prayers through the merits of Christ Christ exhibiteth for vs what is his own Saints offer for vs what is Christs and therfore are but inferiour and secundary intercessours which neuer ask or obtaine any grace for vs but through Christ our lord which is the close of all Church prayers addressed to the blessed Saints in consequence of which the greatness of Christs glory suffereth nothing of preiudice but rather is illustrated thereby since through the immensity of his merits he did not procure only that his own prayers should be graciously heard and accepted in the sight of his diuine Father but likwise the prayers of euery one offered in his name aright in regard wherof the Apostles Martyrs and other Saints that reigne in Heauen hauing here on earth * S. Cypria magnus charorū numerus nos in coelo exspectant .... de sua salute securi pro nostra soliciti espoused the generall interests of their neighbours and after the imitation of Christ their head promote by intercession the spirituall aduantages of all notwithstanding that their own concernments might haue exacted of them their whole employment in the behalfe of themselues being not then certain of heauenly blessedness doubtles whereas now they enioy a full assurance of the crownes of iustice which their victories haue merited their desires to aduance the spirituall interests of their friends on earth abound more and their charity soliciteth more for our admittance into Heauen to be partakers of their inheritance in the light of glory Coloss 1. * Tom. 1. Conciliorum Epis 1. S. Clemens in initio S. Clement in his Epistle to S. Iames called the brother of our lord auerreth that S. Peter encouraging him to accept after his death the gouerment of the Church promised that after his departure he would not cease to make intercession for him and his flock therby to ease him of his pastorall charge Likwise * Ser. 3. in anniuersario die assumptionis S. Leo the great that succeeded in the Church-gouerment ascribeth the good administration therof to the prayers of S. Peter to whom Christ said before his passion and thou being conuerted confirme thy brethren and after his resurrection feed my sheepe my lambs And indeed S. Peter himselfe saith in the first Chap. of his second Epistle that he would endeauour after his decease that the Christians of those dayes might haue frequent remembrance of the things which he had taught them wherby it is euident enough that the Saints departed haue * S. Grego l. 4. dial ca. 33. quid est quod ibi nesciunt vbi scientem omnia sciunt Loquitur de sanctis in caelo Deum clarè intuentibus vnderstanding and memory and in earnest otherwise the comparison Christ made Math. 22. to wit the Saints are as the angels in Heauen had been very impertinent for * Euseb l. 6. cap. 4. refert Potamiena cum iret ad maatyrium promisisse se post mortem suam impetraturam à Deo misericordiam pro Basilide qui fuit vnus ex militibus qui ducebant illā ad locū supplicij the heauenly Angels (i) It appears euidently by Christs owne words Luc. 15. how
God in the conuersion of sinners of all diuine things is the diuinest the diuinest as also amongst all facrifices the gratfullest to the diuine Majesty consisting in a dayly exercise of good works spirituall and corporall charitablely employed for the saluation of sinners The Panther by a naturall quality breathes forth a pleasant perfume the swetnes wherof allures beasts of the wood to his sanctuary and then he kills them the Priest is the Panther sinners the wild beasts the delicious odour of charity the sweet perfume that enticeth sinners to the Priests tribunall the sinkiller and the property of a Priest is with S. Peter * Act. 10. surge Petre occide to kill vncleane beasts As charity in a missionary is the loadstone that drawes sinners to saluation so the want therof is the Remora that keepes them from it nor can a golden tongue draw when the heart is made of yron Christ the cheif missionary Priest sent by his diuine Father to be Teacher and gouernour of souls first begun to doe well himselfe as to the law of charity and afterward to teach well as to the way of saluation Nothing better teaches others to liue well then the well ordered life of the Teacher who is the guid of others laudable deeds are more effectuall then fair speeches * Aug. super Ioan doctrina per malos est palmes in sepe Botrus inter spinas cautè aliquis colligit vuas inter spinas ne dum quaerit fructum laceret manum dū audit bona dicētem imitetur mala facientem good sayings coming from a Teacher that does ill are like a goodly bunch of grapes in a hedg of thornes whoeuer will attempt gathering them shall hazard the pricking of his fingers and tearing his hands so the hearer of a Teacher that speakes well and does ill runs a hazard of imitating euill doings while he heares good sayings A Priest does ill when he seekes praise and glory in order to himselfe or lookes more to * 1. Pet. 5. pascite qui in vobis est gregem Dei .... neque turpis lucri gratia sed voluntariè indignum est Sacerdote sacram functionē suam quaestui habere worldly aduantages then his spirituall function preferring his own gain before the gaining of souls and while by holy sayings and good doings he might render himself capable (c) According to the Apostle 1. Timoth. 5. Priests which rule well ought to be had in double honour Which is meant of such specially as instruct the vnlearned in the mystcries of Christian Religion of double honour and judg of all others he contracts an incapacity of enjoying either and makes himself * S. Chrys ad id Mat. 13. super cathedram Moysis Si bene vixeris omnium Judex eris si malè vixeris bene docueris Iudex eris tui solius quia malè viuendo docès Deum quomodo te debet condemnare Porrò vt ait S. Bernardus misera Sacerdotum cōuersatio fit misera dominicae plebis subuersio hinc illae in Ieremia lachrymae quia stultè egerunt pastores Dominum non qüaesiuerunt omnis grex meus dispersus est judg of himself only teaching God how to condemn him of vnfaithfullnes in the pursuance of his charge Hereby plainly appeares that the charitable zeal to worke in the vineyard of our lord that is to deliuer souls out of errour and sin is the compass by which a missionary Priest ought to steer the whole course of his life in consequence wherof he ought not to run after vaine sportes and worldly pleasures which haue nothing of relation to the end of his mission and which indeed prejudice the sacred dignity of his function neither euery thing though indifferent in it selfe and wherof the exercise is laudable as to a secularperson (d) According to the Apostle 1. Cor. 6. euen things which in themselues are lawfull be not at all times and to all persons expedient or profitable and indeed clamarous hunting in order to Priests was alwaise prohibited though it be an exercise in it selfe lawfull is lawfull to him For example the Churches ordinances * Semper fuit prohibita clericis venatio quae fit in saltibus syluis cum strepitu clamore forbid Priests to practice clamarous hunting after hares does bucks stags which is an honest recreation in order to lay-people but in Priests t is a great scandall to cry and hollow among the trees of forests and woods after dogs * Ioel. 2. pl●rabunt Sacerdotes ministri Dei inter vestibulum altare dicent parce Domine parce populo tuo whose office is to weep between the porch and the altar and say Spare o lord spare thy people and giue not their inheritage into reproach that the lusts of the flesh should rule ouer them yet in as much as Priests exercise charitable works powre forth prayers and teares for the conuersion of sinners they be hunters too not of clean but of vnclean beasts namely sins they be spirituall hunters of souls vnto iustification of life in the vineyard of our lord the king of hunters and neuer any huntsman made such marueilous leaps in hunting beasts vnto destruction as the son of God made in hunting souls vnto saluation our lord the son of God to saue souls leapt from Heauen into the wombe of a Virgin from the Virginall wombe like a yong Hart came skipping into the world and leaped by the mountaines and by the little hills of Iudaea working miracles by word and example teaching all men euery where the way of God truly Afterwards he leapt into Mount-caluary where lift vp from the earth and put on the tree of the Cross gaue himselfe a full propitiation for the sinns of all men from his Cross he leapt into the sepulcher wherin his body remained for three dayes whilst his soul (e) Catholick faith teacheth that before the Incarnation of the son of God there were receptacles of good souls in the lower parts of the earth which the Prophet Zachary c. 6. names a lake vvithout vvater that is without water springing vp vnto euerlasting life according to the interpretation of Theodoret. S. Cyprian and other ancient Fathers yet S. Peter 1. Epis c. 3. calleth the same receptacles a prison where the good souls vnto which Christ at his descending into hell as to his soul preach'd were detained as prisoners And Christ preach'd according to S. Damascene l. 3. de fide ortho c. 9. as Angels speak one to an other by mutuall communication of thoughts Again Christ Luc. 16. stileth the said receptacles the bosom of Abram and all antiquity nameth them Limbus or Purgatory and truly the ancient Fathers Irenae l. 4. c. 19. Nazan Ora. ad pasch S. Ambros de mysterio paschatis attest that Christs descending into the lower parts of the earth releas'd many souls which he found in the bosom of Abram wherby appears that there was
impossible outward extension in order to place being an accidentall propriety only of a body cloathed with quantity as naturall Philosophy teacheth and consequently the want thereof destroieth not the nature or essence of a body as naturall Philosophy teacheth also Besides though the light of the sun be a corporeall quality neuertheless it is well nigh in infinite places at once likewise the words of a preacher are corporall things which in the same moment of time possesse the eares of all such as are attentiue to his sermon and one man walking in a Chamber where be placed sundry looking-glasses his Image appeareth in each of them at the same time in consequence of which doubtless God in the virtue of his word can put supernaturally one singular Man in many places since his figure which is some thing doth naturally occupate many looking-glasses at once Out of the premises plainly followeth that the Sacrament of the Eucharist hath a singular prerogatiue beyond all the other Sacraments of the new law in as much as it is not an effectuall instrument only to confer diuine grace which is a soueraign Antidote against the poyson of sin but it containes and giues also the Author of grace wherfore it comprehends within it self both the sweetness of inherent sanctity and the giuer therof which is all sweet being the fountaine of sweetness and sweetnes it self whereunto the faire spowse in the Canticles inuiteth saying Tast yee and see how sweet our lord is Howeuer as Manna which was a figure of this Sacrament as to Christs body did seem bitter and loathsome to the ill minded and pleasant only to the good Israelites In like manner Christs body to Christians that receiue it vnworthily is the bitterness of death vnto death and to others that eat it aright the sweetness of life vnto life so fier that purgeth gold consumes wood soe the suns light that recreat's the sound offend's the vnsound eyes so the sweet sauour of an oynt●●ent that refreshes doues kill 's beetles Christians by eating Christs naturall body worthily are not vnited to him only * Eph. 5. quia membra sumus de corpore eius de car ne ●●us de ossibus cius through faith and charity mystically but really and are flesh of his flesh and bones of his bones Eph. 5. To eate worthily vnto a naturall vnion with Christ a christian ought * 1. Cor. probet autem seipsum homo sic de pane illo edat vnde dc Sacramento corporis sanguinis Christi canit Ecclesia mors est malis vita bonis to examine himselfe afore and purge out the leauen of vice Christ hath * Nulla conventio Christi ad diabolum nulla conventio charitatis ad peccatum mortale no concord with sin nor consequently vnion with a soul that sin hath dominion ouer Christs body will not be * Luc. 23. in sindone mūda in sepulchro in quo nondum quisquā positus sit wrapped but in a pure linnen cloath that is to say in a clean heart nor will be laid in a Tombe that is not hewen out of a rock wherin neuer any laid afore As there is no agreement betwixt Christ and Belial no communion betwixt sanctity and iniquity no society betwixt light and darkness so there is noe vnion betwixt Christs body and a Christian that serue's Belial delight 's in iniquity and walkes in darkness wherfore let no Christian thinke to tye a knot of vnion with Christ if he shall put his body where allready is * L. 6. super cap. 9. Lucae ait nemo accipit cibum Christi nis● fuerit ante sanatus Et Aug. trac 26. in Joan. sic praecipit Innocentiam ad altare portate established Belial that is to say the deuill through mortall sin and truly Christians that * 1. Cor. 11. qui manducat bibit indignè reu● erit sanguinis corporis Domini vnworthily receaue the body of Christ as much as lyeth in them doe betray him to the deuill putting him in a place the deuill command's in and consequently become guilty of Christ's body and blood in as high a measure (k) According to S. Chrysostom hom de non contemnenda Ecclesia hom 8 ad popul Antioch those which receiue the Sacrament of the body and blood of Christ vnworthily doe an iniury to Christs proper person like the Iewes and Gentils that crucified him as Iudas that betrayed him to the Iewes As the children of Israel were for●idden Exod. 12. to cate the paschall lambe which was a figure of Christs Sacramentall body too * Exod. 12. non comedetis ex eo crudum quid nec coctum sed tantum assum igne raw or boiled butrosted only so Christians be prohibited to eat Christs body raw that is before the fire of charity hath prepared them for it or boiled namely in luxury and voluptuousness but rosted only viz. at the fire of a contrite heart inflamed with the memory of Christ * Ecce agnus Dei inquit Apostolus qui tollit peccata mūdi the lambe of God that was rosted in the hot furnace of affliction for the taking away the sins of the world CHAR. IX OF COMMVNION IN BOTH KIND'S THE CONTENTS Christ instituted the holy Euchariste vnder the elements of both bread and wine Christ by his institution did not oblige the Church to dispense the Euchariste vnder both kinds Christ left it in the Churches power to giue the Euchariste to lay-people vnder one or both kinds accordingly as she should think fit in order to tymes places and persons those which receiue the Euchariste vnder one sole kind haue nothing less nor such as receiue vnder both kinds haue nothing more of Christ nor of the Sacramentall grace if there be parity in the receiuers as to worthiness obiections answered Communion in both kinds is the receiuing of Christs reall body and blood vnder the two Sacramentall shapes or element's of bread and wine afrer Christ's own institution Mat. 26. Mar. 14. Luc. 22. Howeuer from thence it followeth not that communion vnder both kindes is necessary to the whole Church ioynt and separate vnto saluation for matrimony and the orders of Bishops and Priests doe challenge diuine institution neuertheless none of them be necessary to each member of Gods Church A Priest celebrating as he ought to consecrate the body and blood of Christ vnder distinct elements through distinct form's of words for as much as he then representes Christ's person supplyeth his room and offereth an vnbloody sacrifice on the Altar that is an express remembrance of Christ's bloody sacrifice offered on the cross wherein his blood was seperated from his body in consummation of the generall redemption so he ought likewise to communicate in the distinct consecrated elements but communion in order to lay-people which are no Priest's Christ hath left free (a) According to S. Austin Epis 108. Christ left power vnto