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A38590 Catechistical discovrses in vvhich, first, an easy and efficacious way is proposed for instruction of the ignorant, by a breife summe of the Christian doctrine here delivered and declared : secondly, the verity of the Romane Catholike faith is demonstrated by induction from all other religions that are in the world : thirdly, the methode of the Romane catechisme, which the Councell of Trent caused to be made, is commended to practice of instructing in doctrine, confirming in faith, and inciting to good life by catechisticall sermons / by A. E. Errington, Anthony, d. 1719? 1654 (1654) Wing E3246; ESTC R8938 430,353 784

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that the more they drinke the more their disease increaseth and their desire of drinke These ought to consider that riches are the creatures of God ordained for vse and if they be not vsed they are abused and the order is peruerted which God ordained in the creation of them Some sinne by excesse in the contrary that they will not thinke nor prouide how to liue but spend as long as they haue any thing and then they passe on a slothfull and carelesse life choosing rather as the common saying is hungar with ease then plenty with paines taking These must consider that God hath prouided sufficiently for them and if they will needs contemne the prouidence of God and spend all then they must vse their limmes to liue by and that euery man must liue of his owne care and labour in his calling The rich haue a more carefull and lesse painefull life the poorer as they haue lesse care so they haue more paines to take And if they be able they must worke and not thinke any more idly and loosely to depende of others then others thinke to depend of them These sinne by too much neglect of riches as they are good the couetous sin by too much loue of that which is base in riches The remedy of couetousnes is to stirre vp in our selues an ardent loue of God that we loue him in our riches and them not for themselues but for his sake and to doe sometimes some deeds of charity for this end that we may keep our harts allways free from the loue of riches and open to the loue of God and of our neighbour O that rich men would remember those words which King Dauid sang ●s 61. If riches abound set not your hart vpon them They might desire riches haue riches and keepe them if they would but keep their harts of them and vse them as God hath ordained them to be vsed Dauid performed himselfe that which in this he commended to others who although he were guilty of some other sinnes yet he is not noted at any time to haue set his hart on riches when they abounded with him as a king in plenty of all things He was a very charitable man gaue much to the building of a temple to God by which it appeareth that he sett his hart on almesdeeds and doeing works of charity and not vpon riches and if all rich men would doe soe they might be happy and blessed in their riches You haue now the ten Commandements declared the Commandements not of any king or superiour vpon earth but of God the maker of heauen and earth and who gaue these Commandements after such a terrible manner to the Israelits that as you haue heard they were allmost killed with feare at the receiuing of them because they were a hard harted people and as stubborne and peruersed children were to be gouerned with the sight of the rodde But we that liue in the law of Christ which is the law of clemency and grace and in which we haue such an example of the loue of God in the mystery of the incarnation and passion of the sonne of God we ought to be drawne by loue to obey him who intreating and exhorting to keepe his Commandements demandeth If you loue mee keepe my Commandements Io. 14. And a litle after he that hath my Commandements and keepeth them he it is that loueth mee We professe ourselues to be christians that is as the disciples seruants souldiers and spouses of Iesus Christ to loue him and we follow obey sight for and adulterate with the deuill his professed enemy O Christian is this thy loue is this to be a Christian the beloued disciple of Iesus Christ saith He that saith he abideth in Christ ought as he walked himselfe also to walke Io. 1.2 You would thinke it a horrible thinge to see a christian to deny his christendome and to become a Turke or Pagan and yet in deedes we deny it when we breake the Commandements of God which then we promised faithfully to keepe Tit. 1. They Confesse that they know God but in their works they deny saith S. Paul This is to be a christian in name onely and not indeede as the traitour or rebell to the king hath the name of his subiect but is not subiect to him and thus S. Iohn Euangelist was inspired to declare Io. 1.1 He that saith he knoweth him and keepeth not his Commandements is a lyer and the truth is not in him If therefor you will be constant to the faith of Christ and beare truely the name of a christian be good christians keepe the Commandements of God let not the pleasure of any thinge draw you from him giue him the first place in your harts care not for the fauour of any soe as to loose the diuine fauour contemne riches forsake all vnlawfull desires beare afflictions losses iniurys imprisonment or any paine what soeuer rather then to committee any mortall sinne powre forth this life which here you enioy to please God the supreme goodnes better then life How many martyrs haue giuen their liues not onely in defence of faith but of the Commandements of God to fly sinne Dun 13. It is better for mee s●ith chast Susanna without the act to fall into your hands then to sinne in the sight of our Lord. Math. 1.2 Allthough all nations obey king Antiochus I and my sonnes and my brethren will obey the law of our fathers said the holy Priest Matathias when the kings officers vrged him against the lawes of God Death suffered for the loue of God maketh a martyr and soe S. Iohn Baptist was a martyr because he suffered for the good works which he did and soe S. Peter was a martyr in minde when for the loue of Christ he said with thee I am ready to goe both into prison and vnto death Luc. 22. And shall we for a moment of delight that endeth be it be begunne breake the Commandements of God loose his fauour and be banished from him for euer Let vs resist temptations couragiously and with zeale of Gods honour say from our harts all though all should obey the world the flesh or the deuill I will obey the law of God I will liue and dy in his seruice Lord my God for euer will I Confesse to thee Psal 29. THE SEAVENTH DISCOVRSE OF THE PATER NOSTER Quest Say the Pater Noster Answ Our Father which art in Heauen Hallowed be thy Name Thy Kingdome come Thy will be done in earth as it is in heauen Giue vs this day our daily bread And forgiue vs our trespasses as we forgiue them their trespasses against vs. And lead vs not into temptation But deliuer vs from euill Amen THIS is that blessed and most perfect prayer which Christ himselfe made and gaue to his disciples to teach them how to pray It is necessary then that the disciples of Christ vnderstand it and learn to
And in another place Slacke not to be conuerted to our Lord and differre not from day to day Eccl. 5. For his wrath shall come suddainly and in the time of vengeance he will destroy thee Let bold praesumptuous men remember these words and learne to feare God Deere Reader whosoeuer thou art as thou hast a soule which must last for euer apply this booke to the good of thy soule so as shall most concerne it for a happy eternity I excuse noe falts my goodwill shall mende all God can and I hope will honour himselfe euen in my falts Combine thou with mee that we may honour him for euer and euer Amen I submitte all that is conteined in this booke and all whatsoeuer I shall sa●●r thinke as long as I liue to the authority of the Holy Catholike Church A SVMME OF THE CHRISTIAN Doctrine expounded in the follovving Discourses QVAESTION What obligation haue Christians to learn● the Christian Doctrine Answer Euery Christian is bounde vnder a mortal sinne to know the cheife points of the Christian faith 7. Q. What is faith A. Faith is a supernaturall light and gift of God by which we beleeue and firmely adhare to the Doctrine of the Church 11. Q. Make the Signe of the Cros. A. In the Name of the Father and of the Sonne and of the Holy G●ost Amen 49. Q. What is the Signe of the Cros A. The Signe of the Cr●● is a profession of the Christian faith 51. Q. How is the Signe of the Cros a profession of the Christian faith 51 A. Because in the Signe of the Cros we professe the mystery of the blessed Trinity and of the Incarna●i●n which are the two cheife mysterys of the Ch●stian faith 51 Q. What is the B. Trinity A. The B. Trinity is God the Father God the Sonne and God the Holy Ghost One and the same God in three distinct Persons 51 Q. What meane you by the mystery of the Incarnation A. We meane that the Sonne of God was incarnated that is became man to redeeme vs. 52 Q. Say the Creede A. I beleeue in God the Father Allmighty Maker of heauen and earth And in Iesus Christ his onely Sonne our Lord Who was conceiued by the Holy Ghost borne of the Virgin Mary Suffered vnder Pontius Pilate was crucifyed dead and buried He des●en●ed into hell the third day he arose againe from death He ascended into heauen sitteth at the right hand of God the Father allmighty From thence he shall come to iudge vs all both the quicke and the dead I beleeue in the Holy Ghost The holy Catholike Curch the Communion of Saints The forgiuenesse of sinnes The Resurrection of the flesh Life euerlasting Amen 76. Q Who is Christ A. Christ is the Sonne of God incarnated true God and true Man Our Redeemer Iudge and Glorifyer 109. Q. What doe we gett by Christ redeeming vs A. We gett the forgiuenesse of our sinnes and the acceptance of our good works by the merits of Christs passion applyed vnto vs in the Catholike Church 156. Q. What is the Chatholike Church A. The Catholike Church is the Congregation of all faithfull people and Pastors vnited together as a body with its head 176. Q. Giue mee a difference betwixt the true and all false Churches A. The true Church keepeth allwais in vnion and obedience to its Head and Pastors all false Churches beginne in dissentions and disobedience to the Head and Pastors of the Church 214. Q. Say the seauen Sacraments A. Baptisme Confirmation Eucharist Pennance Extreme Vnction Holy Orders Matrimony 281. Q What is a Sacrament A. A Sacrament is an outward signe which causeth grace in vs. 266. Q. What is Grace A Grace is a supernaturall gift which maketh vs gratefull and acceptable to God 268. Q. What is the Blessed Sacrament of Eucharist A. The Blessed Sacrament of Eucharist is the true body and blood of our Lord vnder the signes of bread and wine 298. Q. It shere any bread or wine in the Eucharist A. Noe it seems but soe The bread and wine are conuerted at the words of consecration into the true body and blood of our Lord. 305. Q. What is the Sacrament of Pennance A. The Sacrament of Pennance is that by which we receiue the forgiuenesse of sinnes in Confession 322. Q. Say the tenn Commandements A. Thou shalt not haue strange Gods before mee Thou shalt not take the name of God in vaine Remember thou keepe holy the Sabaoth day Honour thy Father and Mother Thou shalt not kill Thou shalt not commit adultery Thou shalt not beare false witnesse against thy neighbour Thou shalt not desire thy neighbors wife Thou shalt not couet thy neighbors goods 378 Q. Say the Pater Noster A. Our Father which art in heauen Hallowed b● thy name Thy Kingdome come Thy will be done in earth as it is in heauen Giue vs this day our daily bread And forgiue vs our trespasses as we forgiue them their trespasses against vs. And lead vs not into temptation But deliuer vs from euill Amen 449. Q. Say the Haile Mary A. Haile Mary full of grace our Lord is with thee Blessed art thou among woemen Blessed is the fruit of thy wombe Iesus Holy Mary Mother of God pray for vs sinners now and in the hower of of our death Amen 509. Q. What is the Masse A. The Masse is the continuall Sacrifice of the Law of Christ in which his true body and blood is offered vnder the signes of bread and wine 576. Q. Say the fiue cheife Precepts of the church A. To fast fasting dayes To keepe holy dayes To confesse our sinnes to our ordinary Pastour or to another with his leaue at least once a yeare To receiue the Eucharist at Easter time To pay tithes 640. Q. How doe the Precepts of the church oblige A. The Praecepts of the church oblige vnder a Mortal sinne 641. Q. What is sinne A. Sinne is that by which we depart from the diuine Law and are separated from God 673. Q. Ho many kindes of sinne are there A. There are two kindes of sinne Original and Actual sinne 715. Q. What is the difference betwixt Original and Actuall sinne A. Original sinne is that which we are borne in Actuall sinne is that which ●e committe 615. Q. How many kinds of sinne doe we committe A. We committee two kindes of sinnes Mortal sinne and venial sinne 717 Q. What is the difference betwixt Mortal and venial sinne A. Mortal sinne quite depriueth vs of Gods grace venial sinne onely lesseneth and deminisheth the feruour of the loue of God in vs. 717. THE FIRST DISCOVRSE Of the education and instruction of children and of the obligation which all haue to learne the christian doctrine I INTENDE now to speake of two thinges First vnto all those who haue charge ouer children and especially to parents to commende vnto them the care which they ought to haue of their good education and instruction Secondly to declare vnto all the
he comes to yeares of vnderstanding which he professed in baptisme by the months of those that then carried him And in another place he saith that christians should vse it as à looking glasse morning and night to examine themselues in their faith by it L 1 dosymb 1. By all which it doth appeare first that the Creede is of diuine autority as made by the Apostles and deliuered by word of mouth from them to posterity as the written word of the new Testament was from hand to hand to be beleeued with diuine faith Secondly out of S Ambrose and S. Augustine that it being a kea and a looking glasse which the Apostles made for vs we ought with great reuerence to keepe it and to vse it as such often frequenting it to locke vp the infernal darknes from vs and to open the diuine light vnto our soules and to examine ourselues in faith by it as by a looking glasse that soe we may allwais keepe constant to the Catholike Church Quest Say the Creede Answ I beleeue in God the Father almighty maker of heauen and earth And in Iesus Christ his onely Sonne our Lord. Who was conceiued by the Holy Ghost borne of the Virgin Mary Suffered vnder Pontius Pilate was Crucifyed dead and buried He descended into hell the third day he arose againe from death He ascended into heauen sitteth at the right hand of God the Father almighty From thence he shall come to iudge vs all both the quicke and the dead I beleeue in the Holy Ghost The holy Catholike Church the Communion of Saints The forgiuenesse of sinnes The Resurrection of the flesh Life euerlasting Amen THE FIRST ARTICLE I Beleeue in God the Father almighty maker of heauen and earth In this article the Apostles professe their beleefe in the first person of the blessed Trinity in the following articles they professe the second person and the third But we are not here to vnderstande that God the Father without the Sonne and the Holy Ghost made the world for euery external worke which God doth is done by all the Persons of the blessed Trinity the Father Sonne and Holy Ghost hauing all the same vndiuided power all equally concurring to the making of the world and of euery thinge that is conteined in it The Father is named first and the creation of the world is here particularly attributed to him because he is the first Person from whom the Sonne and the Holy Ghost eternally proceede God is rightly termed a father to signify his power loue and care ouer vs. God a father For as fathers beginne the generation that commeth of them and gouerne their children and prouide for them soe is God the beginner of this world he gouerneth it with his power and by his prouidence conserueth it Deut. 32. Is not he thy father that hath possessed thee and made and created thee By heauen and earth are vnderstoode all creatures heauenly and earthly that is both spirituall and corporal creatures And in this the power of God is expressed by his external works soe as is sufficient to destinguish him as the supreme power and to putt vs in minde of our duety to him and dependance of him as giuing vs our being and still conseruing vs in the being which we haue and which all creatures should presently and in an instant loose if he should withdraw his diuine helpe from them and there would be noe creatures at all but as there was once nothing but God God is the most perfect of all thinges and therefor a spirit all ouer by his power and his power is himselfe He is not conteined in any place now noe more then he was before the creation of the world He was all wais the same power the same goodnes and those infinite He euer had a decree to create the world and that eternall decree he performed in time making the Angels onely spirits men both spiritual in their soules and corporall in their bodys and other creatures as we see onely corporall He made heauen a place of glory for the good and hell a place of punishment for the wicked He desireth the saluation of all and giueth sufficient meanes of saluation to all that being the end for which he made vs. In this article we doe not say I beleeue in Gods makers c. but I beleeue in God the maker c. In which we haue two thinges professed Athe●sts First the essence and existence of God against prophane and wicked atheists and secondly against Pagans the being of one onely God This is here but breisly professed for the Apostles made the Creede but onely as an abbreuiated profession and rule of faith to ground and guide vs in the articles which we were to beleeue they prooued them in their preaching as neede required yet that there is a God as in the Creede they suppose it soe also they might doe in their preaching and needed not to prooue it to Iewes or Gentils who were then onely in the world and were neuer likely to deny it But now in these times of soe many heresys I doe not see that any point of faith whatsoeuer is more necessary to be prooued For heresy as it is a corruption of the true faith soe it corrupteth and destroyeth by litle and litle the very hart and roote of all faith and as it annulleth the authority of the Church it taketh away the foundation of all certainty and openeth a gappe to euery mans errors to say what he listeth and for shamelesse atheisme to enter in by it For make it once lawfull to disobey the Church which is the onely authority of God externally vpon earth as all archhaeretiks doe who beginne their new doctrines with obedience to noe Church then extant in all the world and then it followeth that euery man without controle may beleeue and teach what he will himselfe for there is noe authority vpon earth to controle him and soe he may as well teach atheisme as heresy Secondly those that are of God are ordained saith the Apostle that is to say they are with order Rom. 13. and he requireth there that we be subiect to higher powers not onely of necessity but for conscience sake now order importeth subiection and subordination of inferiors to superiour powers if then you take away this subiection and subordination of inferiors to superiours as haeretiks doe by disobeying the Church you take away all order in religion and by consequence you take away God and bring in atheisme and a worse disorder then is in hell How hateful then is heresy to God which is opposite to all religion and how dangerous is atheisme In Collar Patrum and necessary to be preuented in haeretical times Cassianus relateth an example of this in which he sheweth by experience that heresy leadeth into atheisme He sayth that there was a certaine religious man who beginning first of indiscretion to make comparisons betwixt the Saints and
indeede Iesus but also because it was his propper name imposed not by chance but by the will and expresse commandde of his father the Angell forespeaking it to the blessed Virgin when he said Behold thou shalt conceiue in thy wombe and s●alt beare a sonne Luc. 1. and thou shalt call his name Iesus He is called Christ to signify his dignity and speciall functions according to his humanity Christ. for Christ is as much as to say The Messias or Annointed and he was annoinsed in diuerse respects Priests and kings are annointed because they haue authority from God to represent his maiesty Prophets aunciently were annointed because they were the interpreters of God and dispensers of diuine mysterys as Priests and kings are also in their kind Christ had all these offices and according to his humane nature he was Prophet Priest and king after an eminent manner and therefor he was eminently and singularly annointed not by the hands of Prophets or Priests but spiritually by God himselfe Ps 44. Thou hast loued iustice and hast hated iniquity therefor God thy God hath annointed thee with the oile of gladnesse aboue thy fellowes God annointed Christ and Prophets Priests and kings are annointed as lesser Christs that haue power vnder him Christ shewed himselfe a Prophet actually prophecying many thinges and in particular the most remarkeable passages of his owne death and resurrection As priest he offered the most holy Sacrifice of his body at the last supper and afterwards againe he offered the same sacrifice of his body vpon the Cros. He also shewed himselfe to be a king and to haue regall power that could bring kings to adore him and that he could haue brought other kings and all the kings of the world as well as them to his feete if it had pleased him Besides the Catholike Church is his kingdome he is the head and king of it allwais with it vnto the consummation of the world His onely Sonne our Lord. The Apostles in the former article hauing professed the Father who is the first Person of the Blessed Trinity now they professe the second Person in Iesus Christ the Sonne of God S. Iohn testifying that which is here professed saith Io. 1.4 We haue scene and doe testify that the Father hath sent the Sonne the Sauiour of the world And then presently he addeth whosoeuer shall confesse that Iesus Christ is the Sonne of God God abideth in him and he in God This all good christians doe testify and confesse and for that end the Apostles made this article that we might allwais professe it We will see here CHRISTIANITY DEMONSTRATED THat which we beleeue and professe in this article was allwais beleeued by all true beleeuers euer from the beginning of the world All the quires of Angels in their first creation foresaw that the Sonne of God was to be incarnated in lesus Christour Lord and the good Angels willingly submitting to him and beleeuing in him were saued by his pretious blood But Lucifer and the wicked Angels could not endure to see the nature of man exalted to that high dignity aboue Angels that our nature should be assumed of God and not theirs which he could but would not assume noe where doth he take Angels saith S. Heb. 2. Paul but the seede of Abraham he taketh This was the sinne of Lucifer that ennuying and repining at the glory of humane nature in Iesus Christ he drew others into the same sinne with him and for aspiring to be aboue him in glory he was cast downe into the depth of the lake and lost that glory which he might and should haue had and which the good Angels haue by submitting to the diuine ordination in it This was beleeued by our first parents in paradise and euer since as I shall presently shew Christ was promised to them and after them to the following patriarks and after the Patriarks to Prophets they deliuered that faith to posterity vntill his comming he when he came deliuered it to the Apostles they to the Church the Church by a continuall succession of Pastors hath deliuered it vntill our times as it doth now to vs saying I beleeue in God the Father almighty maker of heauen and earth and in Iesus Christ his on●ly Sonne our Lord. In this faith all miracles haue bene wrought that euer were wrought in testimony of faith This was confessed by heauen earth seas by liuing trees and sensible beasts and not onely by holy men but euen by the powers of hell all the creatures of God obeying Christ at his comming This the Apostles saw and were commanded by him to speake it and when they were forbidden by his enemys Act. 4. they answered we can not but speake the thinges which we haue seene and heard and would loose their liues rather then they would cease from publikely professing it S. Paul who saw not the miraculous life of Christ with his Disciples nor heard his preaching but was afterwards called and enlightened by him became notwithstanding soe assured of this verity and by true charity soe vnited vnto him that he thought it was vnpossible for any torments to separate him from him Rom. 8. ●ho then shall separate vs from the charity of Christ tribulation or distresse or famine or nakednesse or danger or persecution or the sword as it is written for we are killed for thy sake all the day we are esteemed as sheepe of slaughter But in all these thinges we onercome because of him that hath loued vs. For I am sure that neither death nor life nor Angels nor principalitys nor powers neither thinges present nor thinges to come neither might nor hight nor depth nor other creature shall be able to separate vs from the charity of God which is in Christ Iesus our Lord. S. Paul was rauished and enamoured with the beauty of Christs diuinity and was transformed as it were by loue into him confessing him to be the image of the visible Go● Colos 1. Heb. 1. The first borne of all creature by whom he made the worlds being the brightnes of his glory and the sigure of his substance Whom the Angels adore soe much more excellent then themselues as he hath inherited a more excellent name aboue them For to which of the Angels saith this holy Apostle did he say at any time Thou art my Sonne to day haue I begotten thee Colos 2. in wh●m dwelleth all the fullnesse of the Godhead corporally All this did S. Paul say and professe of Christ It was then noe meruaile that with Gods grace he would defende him till death Thus did the Apostles professe of him and this profession they made good by many miracles which the enemys of christianity haue written of and confessed This the posterity of the Apostles haue allwais professed in former ages and haue stretched forth their hands and feete vpon racks and with cheerfull mindes haue yeelded their bodys into the hands of torturers
it as by reason a most efficacious motiue and conuincing argument fully to satisfy their vnderstandings and to draw them to beleeue in him First Christ would soe notify the mystery of his resurrection in his life time as that his very enemys might stande in expectation afterwards to see the performance of it and that by it he might not onely encourage his disciples and reinforce them who as faint harted souldiers had forsaken him in his Passion but also that it might serue as a testimony to the world of the verity of his doctrine and that his sufferings were voluntarily vndergone and of his owne good will that soe the scandall of the Cros might be taken away and all seeing his power might beleeue in him And therefor he spoke of it and promised it first whilst he liued and would in his Passion be publikely accused of it vntill he had made it soe knowne that the Priests of the Iewes and Pharisees hearing ofit might labour all they could to hinder it and that all their labour might appeare to be in vaine When therefor they had gotten their malice fullfilled and according to their desire had procured his death they came together to Pilate and said Sir Mat. 27. we haue remembred that the seducer said yet liuing after three dayes I will rize againe Commande therfor the sepulcher to be kept vntill the third day least perhaps his disciples come and steale him away and say to the people he is rizen from the dead c. And Pilate said you haue a guard g●e guard him as you know And they departing made the sepulcher sure sealing vp the stone with watchmen Thus would Christ haue his resurrection to be taken notice of and to be opposed before it came to passe and would permitte his enemys to vse what meanes they could to preuent and hinder it or to conceale it But what is man to compare with God or who can hinder the diuine ordinance by these meanes the resurrection of Christ became better testifyed and was made more apparent afterwards when he made good his word and performed it On the third day early in the morning the deuout women being come to the monument Mat. 28. Behold there was made a great earth quake For an Angell of our Lord descended from heauen and comming rolled backe the stone and sate vpon it and his countenace was as lightening and his garment white as snowand for feare of him the watchmen were affrighted and became as dead And the Angell answering said to the women feare not you For I know that you seeke Iesus that was Crucifyed He is not here for he is rizen as he said Come and see the place where our Lord was laid All these thinges the watchmen were made witnesses of and testifyed them to the cheife Priests who consulting together gaue them a great summe of money to say that his disciples had come by night and had stolne him away when they were a sleepe and promised to them that if the President should come to heare of it they would perswade him and secure them Who notwithstanding would not be perswaded by them but taking the particular examination of it from the watchmen themselues informed Caesar of the truth of it and by his information and other motiues the Emperour was soe moued in affection towards Christ that he proposed in the senate for diuine honour to be giuen to him by the Romanes and being offended that he obtained it not he protected those that were deuoted vnto him and commanded vnder paine of death that none should hinder their deuotion But Christ would not leaue his resurrection with these onely although sufficient testimonys of the good women and euill watchmen but would appeare aliue vnto many more and remained forty dayes after it vpon earth that by many apparitions in which he often shewed himselfe he might giue sufficient proofe of it Mar. 16. We haue how that first he appeared to Mary Magdalene after that to two disciples going to Emaus after that to all the disciples together except Thomas who then was not with them after that to them all againe when Thomas was with them and permitted him to be incredulous of his resurrection and not to beleeue the rest of the Apostles affirming it that he might both see him and feele him to be rizen againe and should confesse him in those circumstances to be his Lord and his God Cor. 1.15 And S. Paul mentioneth to the Corinthians how that he appeared to more then fiue hundred brethren together Thus would our Sauiour take still more and more witnesses of his resurrection before that he would ascende into heauen Act. 1. s●ewing himselfe aliue after his Passion by many arguments For he was seene heard felt and did eate with the liuing And the mystery of his resurrection was soe manifest and certaine that all our Euangelists in their ghospels would record it without feare of either Iew or Gentil disproouing them in it and soe certaine that Iosephus the best historiographer of those times and who flouri●hed immediatly after them could not with his honour although a Iew question the truth of it or omitte to speake of it but hath recorded it for true amongst the publike and remarkeable thinges that then happened commonly knowne and vnquestioned and hath left in his history this worthy saying of Christ There was in these times Iesus a wise man if it be lawfull to call him a man Iosl 18. antiquit c. 6. for he was a worker of miraculous thinges and a teacher of those that desired the truth and adioyned vnto himselfe many both of the Iewes and Gentils This was Christ him did Pilate crucify at t●e accusation of the cheife of our nation But those that lou●d him yet forsooke him not for ●e appeared againe vnto them the third day aliue Because the Prophets by the inspiration of God foretold these and other innumerable miracles of him In which words of this authour is conteined the summe of all that which I haue said of the miracles of Christ to wit that he confirmed his doctrine with miracles and his miraculous life by his resurrection from the dead the Prophets being inspired to foretell these thinges of him And as Christ himselfe first founded the ghospell of our beleefe in the fanctity of his owne life and miracles The Apostles preaching soe also would he haue the same faith to be propagated afterwards by the sanctity and miracles of his Apostles First their holines of life was admitable euen to their enemys They were contented with shame pouerty hungar cold heate imprisonment banishment whipps and all kind of disgraces and crueltys that they might honour Christ and enioy him And soe willingly did they suffer without euer repenting them of that which they had done for Christs sake that after persecution they still beganne againe to preach him carrying his ghospell from place to place and proclaiming it amongst all sorts of
pray by it For this we will implore the intercession of our Bessed Lady Haile Mary c. Christ the best Pastour that euery was and the forme of all good Pastours teaching his disciples all that was necessary for them to know would not leaue them ignorant in a matter of soe much importance as prayer is and therefore he would not only deliuer vnto them some circumstances to be obserued in prayer as to pray with humility confidence and the like but would also giue them an expresse forme of words to be vsed by them that they might haue it as a pattern and perfect modele to frame all their prayers by there being nothing that can be asked of God but it is conteined in some of the petitions of the Pater Noster But before we come to declare the petitions in particular we will say something of prayer in general and first OF THE BENEFITS AND fruits of Prayer THE benefits and fruits of Prayer are so many and generall that we neede not name any but say all For there is nothing that can be good for vs or worthy of asking but it may be obtained by deuout prayer Io. 15. our Blessed Sauiour hauing promised without exception If you abide in mee and my words abide in you you shall aske what thing soeuer you will Mat. 7. and it shall be done to you And the more to incite vs to pray he saith Aske and it shall be giuen you seekö and you shall finde knocke and it shall be opened to you For euery one that asketh receiueth and that seeketh findeth and to him that knocketh it shall be opened And in another place the saith Luc. 18 it behoueth allways to pray and not to be weary What more could bee said to commende prayer to vs and to shew the force and fruit of it it is as necessary as our very breath For as we can not liue without continuall breathing noe more can our soules without continuall prayer we will say then that prayer is the breath of our soules And although this be verifyed by continuing in faith hope and charity and in all good works which as prayers please God and obtaine benefits of him yet he would commende all by the name of prayer and bid vs pray always to increase in vs the esteeme of it The seruants of God haue found by experience the force of prayer Deut. 6. What shall we say of Moyses who remained diuerse times forty dayes and forty nights in prayer for the people as himselfe witnesseth and when they were in batle with Amalech as long as he lifted vp his hands to pray they ouercame and when he was weary as his armes failed soe they failed against their enemys In imitation of which Theodosius the Christian Emperour being to ioyne batle with the tyrant Lugenius went first vp vnto a high place where he might behold both armys and besought God that being that the vndertaking of that warre was for his sake he would giue him victory ouer his enemys His prayer was heard Baron an 394. the two Apostles S. Iohn and S. Philip being seene to sig●t for him and to turne the weapons of their enemys against themselues Dauid being a King could finde leasure to giue praise to God seauen times a day In imitation of which the Catholick Church commandeth the seauen Canonicall Houres to be said euery day by Ecclesiasticall persons Tob. 8. vnder a mortall sinne Toby being married remained the three first nights with his wife in prayer before that he had knowledge of her professing vnto God that he married her not for fleshly lust but for the loue of posterity in which his diuine name might be honored And she who on the very first nights of her former marriages had buried seauen husbands enioyed Toby with life and health the deuill who had killed them hauing no power ouer him S. Bartholomew is recorded to haue prayed a hundred times euery day and as often euery night and diuerse other Saints are read to haue followed his example Hist trip l. 8. c. 1. S. Paul the Ermit is affirmed to haue said euery day three hundred prayers which he remembred by three hundred little stones before he attended to any other busines And Gregory Lopez a holy man who liued lately in the Kingdome of new Spaine is thought for many yeares at euery drawing of his breath to haue said in his hart in vitu cus Thy will be done in earth as it is in Heauen Amen Iesus By all which we may see the great esteeme which the Saints haue had of prayer and the benefit which they expected by it But now we will speake of that which it hath in particular as its proper and peculiar fruit The first is that by prayer we keepe our harts in humility and submission to God acknowledging by our prayers that he is the supreme power and high perfection from whence all benefits proceed and that we depending of him as his creatures Apoc. 8. come for succour and releife to him and therefore S. Iohn saw the prayers of the Saints as incense which was to be offered on the Altare and the Catholike Church prayeth with the holy King saying Ps 440. Let my prayer be directed as incense in thy sight Because it is a kind of inferiour sacrifice and hath the effect of it to doe homage vnto God and to keepe vs in humility towards him The second fruit of prayer is that it pacifyeth the diuine wrath prouoked by sinne For although the prayers of a sinner as long as he is in mortal sinne haue noe proportion to the remission of his sinnes or to the releasing of his punishment yet it is congruous and most agreeable to the infinite goodnesse and liberality of God that he should accept of the endeauours of our nature and should grant vs his grace for such endeauours and soe sinners that are out of the state of grace obtaine grace of congruity by praying for it But the prayer of the iust is soe powerfull that after a certaine manner it forceth God as it were by violence to grant that which he desireth and holdeth his hands from punishing of others Euen as strong dammes well fortifyed with stone and timber resist huge inundations of waters and suport their mighty weight soe the prayer of the iust resist the wrath of God and beare of the weight of his indignation from sinners This is expressed in the words of God to Moyses when Israel had adored the molten calfe and the diuine indignation was comming as a torrent to sweepe them quite away from the face of the earth the prayers of Moyses had such power to withstande it that God said Exod. 23. Suffer me that my fury may be angry against them as though he had held him by force from destroying them Thirdly as I said before of sinners that the forgiuenesse of their sinnes and punishments are obtained as it were by violence
the obtaining of benefits of them but the mother of God the Angels and Saints are the freinds and fauorits of God therefor their intercession may with prudence be desired for the obtaining of benefits of him If they obiect that to pray to the Saints is iniurious to God for that he is the giuer of all benefies of himselfe infinitly liberal and that it deregareth from his power and goodnes to aske of any but of him and that it is to make the Saints Gods to pray to them to interceede for vs and that the liberality of God is such that he needeth noe intercessors all this is to noe purpose It is not iniurious to God to honour his seruants for his sake and to desire his fauorits to stande our freinds with him but it is rather iniurious to God to thinke that he will not allow of his fauorits intercession We pray not vnto Saints as to the supreme power and authour of gifts and therefor we make them no● Gods but we pray to them to obtaine gifts of God for vs and by this we vertually acknowledge and confesse the supreme power and liberality to be in God and that all power is subordinate to him and all gifts proceede from him And allthough the liberality of God be such that he needs noe intercessors noe more then he needeth any honour or praise from vs yet our vnworthinesse is such that our prayers stande neede of intercessors and the diuine liberality is such as to heare the prayers of his best freinds and not to hinder them for praying to him Neither is there any thinge of this obiection but it hath the same force against the aduocatship of Christ and of the faithfull that are liuing which not withstanding our enemys allow of as nothing iniurious to God or derogating from his liberality They obiect the words of the Apostle there is one God Tim. 1.2 one also mediatour of God and men man Christ Iesus And S. Iohn sayth if any man shall sinne we haue an aduocate with the father Iesus Christ the iust Io. 1.2 and he is the propitiation of our sinnes Christ therefor being our mediatour and our aduocate we are not say they to vse the mediation and aduocatship of any other First this argument is turned backe vpon themselues If Christ be our mediatour and aduocate it is not then iniurious to God nor derogating from his liberality to make vse of a mediatour and aduocate as they said before that it was The words therefor alleadged make nothing against the Catholike doctrine nor are here applyed to good purpose nor in their true sense for the Apostles speake there of the mediation of Christ by way of redemption and soe Christ is our onely mediatour and aduocate because he onely in the propitiation of his passion redeemed vs and the Angels and Saints redeemed vs not By him the Angels are good Angels and by him the Saints are Saints and by his powerfull redemption he obtained that the Angels and Saints might pray and be heard praying for vs. This is the honour which Catholiks giue to the mediation of Christ and which Protestants deny to him Againe not onely by way of redemption but also by way of intercession Christ is our prime mediatour and intercessour by whom Angels and Saints interceede for vs. He interceedeth in his owne name and vertue they interceede in his name and vertue he the cheife they inferiour intercessors vnder him And this is well expressed by S. Bernard of our blessed Lady ser qui incipit signum magnum apparuit post ser 5. de assump Opus est mediatore ad mediatorem Christum nec alter nobis vtilior quam Maria. We stande neede of a mediatour to Christ our mediatour and none more profitable then Mary to vs. And the same is also orderly expressed by the Catholike Church in the end of our prayers asking through the merits of Christ out Lord. S. Tract 1. in Io. Augustine hath these words in declaration of the place of S. Iohn aboue mentioned answering this very obiection of theirs But some will say doe not the Saints then pray for vs doe not bishops prelates and pastors pray for the people Yes marke the scriptures and you shall finde that the Apostles prayed for the people and againe desired the people to pray for them and s●e the head prayeth for all and the members for one another This is the doctrine of the Catholike Church Christ is our onely aduocate by way of intercession our B. Lady the Angels and Saints are inferiour aduocates vnder him the faithfull that are liuing are inferiour aduocates vnder them praying for one another and desiring the prayers of one another and soe the Church is a body well vnited the head helping the inferiour members and they all concurring to helpe one another by their prayers Hence the Catholike doctrine is further confirmed It can not be denyed but that we may lawfully begge the prayers of one another therefor with more reason we may begge the intercession of the Saints For the first S. Paul often desired the prayers of the faithfull to the Romans that you helpe mee in your prayers Rom. 15. And in the same place he prayeth for them and he desireth the Thessalonians brethren pray for vs. Thes 1.5 2.3 And againe in the second brethren pray for vs. and to the Hebrews pray for vs. And S. Iames pray for one another that you may be saued Ia. 5. The second followeth planely for there is nothing which they haue obiected or can obiect against the inuocation of Saints but it hath the same force against desiring the prayers of the liuing for if it be iniurious to God or to the mediation of Christ to desite the mediation of the Saints in heauen much more must it be to desire the intercession of sinners vpon earth But they say that the Saints in heauen heare vs not nor know when we desire their prayers but this is not truely said of them Christ saith that the Angels reioyce at the conue Luc 15. sion of a sinner but how can they reioyce at it if they know it not Saints whilst they liued on earth vnderstoode the secrets of mens harts and haue knowne things that haue passed at farre distance from them and haue foreseene many thinges euen before they came to passe and shall they be lesse knowing when they are in glory Samuel told Saul what was in his hart Reg. 1. ● and promised to tell him all things that were in his hart and it was noe meruaile for God had reuealed them vnto him Elizeus saw in absence that which passed betwixt his seruant and the Prince of Syria and at his returne he rebuked him for the gifts which he had receiued and thought to haue concealed from him If liuing in this world they knew these things by the reuelation of God when it was necessary that they should know them shall we thinke that
God because God sheweth himselfe there in glory as a King reigning in the mindes and hearts of his Saints who are in perfect loue and subiection to him And supposing here that which we prayed for before to wit that it be for the honour of God we may be vnderstoode to pray that our soules may be freed out of the prison of our bodys Phil. 1. and come soone to that happy state as the Apostle desired to be dissolued and to be with Christ The Kingdome of Heauen is the first thing Mat. 6. which we ought to aske for our selues Seeke first the Kingdome of God and the iustice of him and all these things shall be giuen you besides Christ said this to his disciples after that he had delinered the Pater noster to them in which he taught them first to aske the honour of God and then those things which were good for themselues and amongst all those things in the first place the kingdom of heaven Tract 102. This is saith saint Augustin that full and perfect ioy which we ought to pray for and which oll our prayers ought to aime at as the only true ioy Here the Romane Catechisme admonisheth Pastors to excite their people to the loue of that Kingdome by the sentences of holy Scriptures which are indeede frequent enough for it But in order to this it ought to be sufficient that Christ hath said in few words Aske and you shall receiue that your ioy may be full For what ioy should we desire but that which is full ioy and fullnesse of ioy is not to be had but in heauen Euery thing aspireth to that in which its cheife and full ioy consisteth Sensible things to that which pleaseth the senses liuing things to the conseruation of life and those things which haue onely being and noe life delight in that which is according to their nature and seeke to it because there is the fulnes of their ioy And shall the soule of man which is reasonable aboue all these things forsake that which is its cheife and full ioy All corporall things tende with violence thither where their cheife ioyes are and rest not contented vntill they enioy them The Sunne Moone and Planets reioyce in their courses the Starres in their stations and keepe themselues in them because there is the fullnes of their ioy The creatures of the earth are some aboue the earth some within it and some part within and part without it as trees and herbes and will not liue otherwise because there is the summe of their delight The fishes of the Seas and fresh waters seeke allways to be there and striue by violence to that place Light thinigs tende vpwards and heauy things to the centre of the earth because there they haue the fulnesses of their ioy The fulnesses of our ioy is noe where but in Heauen and why doe not we then seeke to it and abhorre all that hindereth vs of it We liue in this world as it is were out of our element in a place most lothsome to our soules a deadly prison condemned to dy continually and in danger of eternall death Rom. 7. What ioy can we take in this condition Vnhappy that I am saith the Apostle who shall deliuer mee from the body of this death The Kingdome of God is diuersely vnderstoode First it is general ouer all the world as he gouerneth and prouideth for his subiects which are the multitude of all creatures Secondly it is more particularly ouer the Catholike Church as the people of a Kingdome gathered together to worship him as their true King Thirdly more particularly yet his Kingdome is with the iust in whose harts he reigneth by grace of whom Christ the Kingdome of God is with you Luc. 17. Lastly his Kingdome is most especially ouer the blessed to whom at the day of iudgement he shall say Mat. 25. Come the blessed of my Father possesse you the Kingdome prepared for you Here we aske that we and all people may soe liue in the Communion of the Catholike Church by Faith and good works that in the end we may obtaine the glory of Heauen For this Kingdome is not otherwise obtained but by such faith as S. Gal. 5. Paul requireth which worketh by charity as by those who haue giuen meate drinke and cloths for Gods sake and they shall be excluded that come with the profession onely of Catholiks saying Mat. 7. Lord Lord open vnto vs but bring not with them the light of good workes Not euery one that sayeth Lord Lord shall enter into the Kingdome of Heauen but he that doth the will of my Father of which point Saint Augustine wrote a booke de fide operibus in which he sheweth that the Epistles of S. Paul were misconstrued by some of those times as though he required not good works after baptisme cap. 14. but that faith alone did iustify And therefore saith he the other Epistles of Peter Iames and Iude were written to auouch vehemently that fait without good works profiteth nothing THE THIRD PETITION THY will be done in Earth as it is in Heauen Man hath not a greater enemy then his owne will when it is not gouerned by the will of God All good things which we haue come by the goodnesse of the diuine will and all euills that befall vs come through the malice of our owne wills The ignorance of our vnderstandings neuer hurteth our soules but when it is voluntary and all our sinnes proceede from thence that either we will not doe what we know is to be done or will not know what we are to doe Esa 5. Hence is that curse of the Prophet Woe vnty you that call euill good and good euill putting darknesses light and light darknesse putting bitter for sweet and sweet for bitter This curse commeth by the euill of our wills because we will follow our owne blindnes and not the will of God which ought to be our rule and guide in all things The malice of men beganne presently to be much vpon earth and the cogitations of their hart were soe bent vpon vpon euill that a deluge of waters was sent to destroy them This euill was in their harts that is to say in their wills because they followed not the will of God which is sweet and lightsome but their owne wills which are darke and bitter in effect and so haue all the euils of the world come Therefore we are topray and to labour with ourselues for conformity with the will of God Besides we not knowing what is best for vs aske that some times which is hurtfull as sicke folkes in a feauer desire that which hurteth them and as children who would take poison for treacle if they had there owne wills and therefore sicke folkes and children haue keepers whose wills they must follow and be directed by We are as children in our wills and vnderstandings both deficient by sinne God is our
called priests Angels saying The lipps of the priest shall keepe knowledge and from his mouth thou shalt require the law Mal. 2. because he is the angell of our Lord of hosts The angels are the treasurers of the diuine mysterys who open them in their messages to mankind as God will haue them to be imparted vnto vs soe priests haue the keeping of the diuine mysterys and must deliuer them to the people as they neede them and therefor the people must aske of them and adhaere to the doctrine of the Church when it is deliuered by them Yet the mystery of the blessed Trinity is a mystery which is kept euen from the knowledge of priests although angels witnes S. Augustine who was a priest and one of the cheife of the Angelical Hierarchy of Priests B. Trin. for he was a bishop yet he relateth of himselfe how that being on a time walking on the sea shore studying vpon the mystery of the blessed Trinity he saw a child who hauing made a litle pitte in the sand was lauing with a spoone the water of the sea into Aug. ad volus that litle pitte S. Augustine earnestly obseruing him asked him what he meant did he thinke to empty the maine ocean into that litle pitte yes replyed the child as soone will I bring the ocean into this compasse as thou with thy vnderstanding shalt comprehende the mystery of the blessed Trinity By which he vnderstoode that it was a messenger of God sent vnto him to humble him and to let him know that the mystery of the blessed Trinity is aboue humane vnderstanding We see by reason that God the Creatour of all thinges must needs be aboue all thinges incomprehensible infinite in power wisdome and goodnes and therefor for men to thinke to comprehende God is to contradict the first principle of reason and aboue Lucifers pride to thinke to be equall with him It is enough for vs to thinke that God is God that is to say the supreme and infinite perfection which putts bounds and limits to the perfections of all other thinges who as he hath sette a terme of time to our liues soe hath he also limited our vnderstandings and we can noe more by our owne power exceede those limits then we can by our owne power escape death Great is our Lord great is his strength Psa 146. and of his Wisdome there is noe number If we will build vpon a sure ground let vs cleaue to that rocke which Christ hath left and say as our Creede teacheth vs I beleeue the holy Catholik Church In the law of Moyses the mystery of the blessed Trinity was beleeued as authors commonly shew by diuerse places in the old Testament although the Prophets haue deliuered it for the most part in obscure termes to the Israëlits least they who liued amongst idolatrous nations and were of themselues prone to idola●ry should take occasion by the Trinity of Persons to beleeue in many Gods But idolatry being to be soe much subuerted by the faith of Christ and bu● litle or noe danger of it amongst christians the mystery of the blessed Trinity is deliuered to v● planely and more expresly in the new Testament our Lord and Sauiour at his last departure from his Disciples commanding the expresse profession of it to be made in baptisme when we are made christians Mat. 28. Going therefor teach ye all nation● baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Sonne and of the Holy Ghost Io. 1.5 and againe There be three that giue testimony in heauen the Father the Word and the Holy Ghost And these three be one Genebrard sheweth by diuerse places out of the auncient ●hilosophers that the Gentils by their familiarity and commerce with the Iewes came to heare and to write of the B Trinity But the moderne Iewes which now are earnestly oppose it being fallen in this point as they are also in the mystery of the Incarnation from the true faith which their forefathers professed That which we beleeue of this mystery is to acknowledge an vnity of Godhead essence and nature in the Trinity of Perfons God the Father is the same God as God the Sonne God the Sonne is the same God as God the Holy Ghost and they are not three Gods but one onely God The Person of the Father is not the person of the Sonne nor is the Person of the Sonne the Person of the Holy Ghost but they are three really destinct and different Persons This we intende to professe when we say in the Name of the Father and of the Sonne and of the Holy Ghost We also paofesse in the signe of the Cros the mystery of the Incarnation in that we make a Cros to remember and acknowledge the loue of God with which he soe loued the world that he gaue his onely begotten Sonne to become man Ioan. 3. and to redeeme vs on the Cros. God had created man in a happy state in Paradise as it were in the way to heauen enuironed on all sides with vnspeakeable pleasures and in that pleasant way was conducting him to the heauenly glory But man sinning lost the fauour of God was debarred of that blessed state which he should haue obtained and being then out of the state of grace he could sinne still more and more bu● he could doe noe good worke sufficient to satisfy for his sinnes and to be restored againe to the diuine grace by it God of his iustice requireth satisfaction but noe man not creature being able and of sufficient worth to make it and the diuine nature not being subiect to make sarisfaction in in it selfe it was the goodnes of God to vnite our weakenes to his power and our nature to his diuine nature in the incarnation of his sonne that the nature of man being vnited to his diuine person might by that person be soe dignifyed that it could make worthy satisfaction for the sinnes of all men that should apply vnto themselues the merits of his passion This is the mystery which was reuealed vnto Abraham and the holy Patriarks which many kings and Prophets desired to see and which filled the hart of Abraham soe full of comfort that he laughed for ioy to heare and thinke of it By this the seed of the Patriarks was multiplyed like the starres of heauen and like the dust of the earth which is not to be numbred and all kindreds were blessed in it to wit as Christ came of their seede by the merits of whose passion heauen is replenished with saints more glorious than the starres and the Catholike Church of all faithfull christians haue sprung from him dil●●ed to the west and to the East and to the North and to the south not to be numbred all whosoeuer are saued being saued by Christ our Sauiour We can neuer sufficiently acknowledge the loue of God in this mystery by it man was soe exalted as to become the diuine Spouse by
thinke will the deuill doe to see the sword with which Christ disarmed him and cut of his head be not thou then ashamed of soe great a good least Christ be ashamed of thee when he commeth in his maiesty Thou shalt see then this signe borne before Christ as bright as the sunne The Cros shall goe before him and shall speake with a lowde voice for him to shew that there was nothing wanting on his part This signe both now and of old doth open the doores that are shutt is hath extinguished poyson it hath tamed wild beasts it hath cured the mortall stings of serpents The Cros hath conuerted the world it hath put away feare and brought the truth it hath turned earth into heauen men into Angells death into sleepe it hath brought all our enemys downe to the ground If a gentill shall say to thee adore not him that was Crucifyed be not affraid with a cleere voyce and countenance to say I adore him and will adore him for euer And if he shall lauhg at thee weepe thou with many teares to see his madnes Giue thankes vnto our Lord by whom we haue these things which none without the diuine grace can say We wi●h a lowde and cleere voyce and with speciall confidence will cry out The Cros is our glory our freedome our crowne the head and fountaine of our happines I would I could say with S. Paul the world is Crucifyed to mee and I to the world But my Passions hinder mee that I can not say soe Wh●efore I admonish you and much more my selfe that we be Crucifyed to the world that we haue nothing to doe with he earth but that our wh le mindes be insla●●● with the desire of heauenly glory Thus S Iohn Chrysostome and there remaineth nothing for mee to adde to his words words worthy of his holy zeale and eloquence I would I had an Angells voice to sing them as they deserue I would repeato that saying ouer and ouer againe Th Cros is our glory our freedome our cr●wne the head and fountaine of our happinesse Make it not onely with the fingars on the body but with confidence on the soule and make it as a profession of this faith as an incitement vnto all vertues as an armour against all temptations as a defence against all dangers as a comfort in all afflictions It is the beginning of our awaking of our sleeping of our prayers of our studies of our preaching of our Catechizing of our eating of our drinking of our walking of our riding of our working and of our leauing of from worke all our actions shall beginne and end with this blessed signe and words In the name of the Father and of the Sonne and of the Holy Ghost Amen THE FOVRTH DISCOVRSE OF THE CREEDE OF THE AVTHORITY AND VSE of the Creede I INTENDE now to declare the Creede vnto you in which not onely the cheife mysterys of the christian faith but all whatsoeuer the christian doctrine teacheth in some sort is conteined But first we will haue recourse vnto God and craue his assistance by our blessed Ladys intercession Haile Mary c. Before we declare the articles of the Creede in particular we will say somethinge of the authority and vse of the whole Creede to shew how authentical and pious it is Although the Creede be not deliuered in any part of the scriptures yet it is of equall authority with them to vs neither they nor it being receiued by vs but for the testimony of the Church which both of them haue and which in all thinges we are bounde to beleeue the same autority of the Catholike Church which hath deliuered the scriptures to vs deliuering also the Creede to be beleeued in the same manner by diuine faith the one by writing the other by word of mouth from time to time both of which traditions being in themselues by humane meanes onely a like fallible and by the power of God a like infallible S Pauls writings are receiued by vs as the word of God and he himselfe hath said of his preaching although not written that it was to be receiued not as the word of man but as the word of God Thes 1.2 And againe he planely commandeth them to receiue the like traditions which are deliuered by word of mouth as well as those that are written saying Breth en stande and hold the traditions which you haue learned whether it be by word or by our Epistle Thes 2.2 These are as plane words as S. Paul could speake or write to let vs vnderstande that the words of the Church are to be receiued as the writings which it deliuereth and the holy fathers by these words vnderstande the same autority to be for all the mysterys of faith and for the lawfullnes of all the ceremonys generally practised and allowed of by the Church although not mentioned expresly in the scriptures as is for the scriptures themselues L. 3. c. 3. S. Irenaeus biddeth vs in all questions of controuersy to haue recourse vnto the Apostolicall traditions and to try them by the Apostolicall succession of bishops and in particular by the chayre of Rome and saith that there are many nations of barbarous people simple for their learning but most wise in the constancy of their faith who neuer had the scriptures S. Clement the disciple of S. Peter and the adiutor of S. Paul speaking of the Creede saith that the Apostles before that they separated themselues into seueral countreys to preach the ghospell conferred together and by the inspiration of the Holy Ghost made the Creede as a rule to direct them and others in the faith which they were to preach and therfor saith he it is called the Symbole which is a Greeke word signifying a collection or a conference for that it was made by the general assembly and conference of the Apostles S. Ambrose hath these words Ep. 81. The Apostles like a company of skillfull workmen conserring together made the Symbole as a kea to locke vp the Diabolical darknes and to let in the light of Christ and we must deliuer this kea to ourbrethren that the Disciples of Peter may vse it to locke the gates of hell and open the gates of heauen to themselues S. Augustine speaketh thus of it Serm 80. de temp The Apostles haue deliuered a sure rule of faith comprehended according to the Apostolicall number in twelue sentences They called it a Symbole by which Catholike vnion might be conserued and haeretical pranity conuinced It is a Symbole breife in words but large in mysterys for whatsoeuer is praefigured in the Patriarks whatsoeuer is declared in the scriptures an● whatsoeuer is foretold by the Prophets either of God the Father of God the Sonne or of the Holy Ghost or of the receiuing of the Sacraments or of the death and resurrection of our Lord is conteined and breifly confessed in it Let therefor euery one learne that Apostolical faith when
propper office with such parts and abilitys as are necessary for the dew performance of it some of them incorruptible others corrupting and those after a strange manner concealed from our vnderstandings when they are dead to reuiue againe to life by the corruption of their seede Soe from bodys we come to spirits that gouerne them and amongst spirits to some supreme cause and gouernour of them All which if we will attende vnto we cannot but reflect vpon the workman that made it and admire at his power and greatnesse That meruelous mother worthy of good mens memory seeing all her sonnes but one to haue passed through cruell torments to the crowne of martyrdome and the yongest of seauen to be brought to execution with a manly courageexhorted him Mach. 2.7 saying I beseech thee my sonne that thou looke vp to heauen and earth and to all thinges that are in them and vnderstande that God of nothing made them and mankind And Cicero sayth that there is nothing soe manifest when we looke vp to the heauens Gi● l. 2. de ●at deer as that there is a diuine power that made and gouerneth them Behold then amongst visible creatures first the heauens see their huge greatnes and capacity conteining not onely a thousand and twenty two starres which astronomers haue mentioned but an innumerable number which they cānot discerne to reckon and some of them may be thought to be a thousand times bigger then the whole globe of the earth how exceeding great then must the capacity of the heauens be to conteine them all Behold them of a nature incorruptible soe solid and strong that with that mighty violent motion which some of them haue they neuer breake nor corrupt nor weare away the least haire bredth See their great brightnes calmenes and quietnes without any noyse at all in that violence of motion Looke vpon the elements the fire next vnto the starry heauens vnder that the ayre and then the waters and the earth all of them of contrary natures yet agreeing together in those admirable effects which we see to result of their concord that all sublunary productions depende not onely of some one of them but of them all Looke now downe vnto the earth and behold there the many kindes of liuing and sensible creatures and amongst them all one onely endowed with reason as the Prince of the rest to order them and he inuested with such power and commande that by nature they feare and tremble at his voyce Behold them more in particular and first thy owne soule a spirituall creature which can moue in an instant to the furthest part of the earth or of the heauens and yet for the present is bounde to an earthly body whether it will or noe Consider then the disposition of thy body prepared as a seate sitte to receiue it and with parts conuenient for its operations and this not by its owne reason for that it hath none Behold the many diuerse natures of sensible creatures that moue themselues some flying some walking some creeping some swimming all liuing by the ayre some on the earth some within the earth some in the fire some in the waters all of them directed by some reason to loue that which is good for them and congruous to their nature Behold those creatures that liue without sense trees plants flowers and herbes producing fruits with admirable variety of tasts smells pleasant colours and profitable effects to delight the senses of higher creatures which are sensible and to serue them And lastly behold the earth with being onely yet susteining all liuing thinges in the life which they haue All these haue their limits set their perfections and operations and are bounde within them whether they will or noe and did not choose for themselues but haue onely that which another would giue them These are the testimonys which God hath left of himselfe and by these testimonys we must confesse the supreme power that caused all this and sett it in that order which we see it to haue And therefor it is natural to man when he looketh vp to the heauens with gladnes of hart to blesse God and if we haue a litle bird fly flower or any creature though neuer soe imperfect in our hands and consider attentiuely the parts and composition of it reason presently telleth vs that it could not make it selfe and by nature we blesse God that made it Say now according to reason and tell vs who it was that made the heauens and gaue them that huge vastnesse and capacity more then we can thinke that brightnes calmenes solidity and incorruptibility who gaue to the elements their mighty power by concorde to produce those great effects who gaue to man the principality ouer other creatures and made them by nature to feare and obey him and who was that superiour of mankind that commanded his spirituall and incorruptible soule to his corporall and corruptible body what reason was it that directed vnreasonable thinges to that which is good for them and made those which are vnsensible to yeeld such pleasure and profit to the senses and who gaue to the earth that hath not life power to conserue the liues of other thinges He that had power to doe all this we will confesse him to be God and we will praise and blesse him For of themselues they could not be at all nor would haue bene with the imperfections which they haue Here now reason is sufficiently satisfyed and the malice of man conuinced that shall deny God For the reason of euery man of it selfe presently consents if by malice and liberty it be not forced to the contrary vnto some superiour power that caused these thinges And that power all though we cannot comprehende it because it is aboue vs and must needes be infinite in perfection but of what nature soeuer that supreme power be meaning the supreme we say God and blesse him All this is breifly formed out of S. Thomas and Aristotle after this manner Wheresoeuer we see motion and alteration in any thinge there we must grant a cause of that motion and alteration but we see motion and alteration in the productions of creatures which beginne to be and before were not therefor we must grant some cause of that motion and alteration by which they are produced and come to be This doth S. Thomas call a demonstration and Aristotle with the rest of Philosophers call it a Metaphysicall Euidence that is to say an euidence which is not onely deduced by Physical principles of nature but that the contrary conteineth repugnance in it selfe and that it is the first euident certainty from which all natural euidences are deduced And to contradict it is either to say that all the world came by chance or els to runne from cause to cause without end into insinites which in substance commeth to be the same noe cause at all being assigned First the alterations which we see can not come by chance for
soe obscured and thy sacred and life giuing face to become pale and void of life as a roote from a thirsty ground that there is noe beauty nor comlinesse in it It was by vs that thou camest into this plight thou didst beare our sinnes and they put thee to paine and disfigured thee Thinke now O Christians of that which you beleeve and confider who he was and what he suffered for you Iesus Christ the onely sonne of God suffereth for man the master for the seruant the Creatour for his creature he that made Angels and men heauen and earth he of whom and by whom and in whom are all thinges he bore our infirmitys our sorrowes he carryed Rom. 11. and became as a lepar strucken of God and humbled Esa 53. He was wounded for our iniquitys and with the waile of his stripe we are healed our sinnes drew blood of his sacred body and crucifyed and killed him Heauen stoode astonished the sunne was ecclypsed a terrible darknesse was spred ouer the earth the earth was shaken graues opened and the bodys of the dead roze vp to life againe at this mystery and shall it make noe impression in vs Behold ô Christians Christ expired on the Cros and say often with your selues who is this that is Crucifyed and dead who is this that is crucifyed and dead It is the onely sonne of God whom the Angles adore the latchet of whose shoe S. Iohn Baptist was not worthy to loose Thinke then againe what he was crucifyed for It was to take away our sinnes and to blesse vs with euerlasting glory O blessed Lord O God our Sauiour how great was thy loue to vs and thy hatred to sinne that could cause the miracle of thy incarnation and death for our redemption I reioyce in thy merits by which I am redeemed and being now at liberty I dedicate my selfe for euer to thy seruice Keepe thou my soule and let it neuer forsake thee The benefit which we haue by the death of Christ was praefigured vnto vs in the law of Moyses where guilty persons that had sled to the cittys of sanctuary were set at liberty and went home pardoned at the death of the high Priest Our high Priest was Iesus Christ heauen is our blessed home sinne banished vs from thence but thither we returne againe by the death of Christ Heb. 10. hauing considence saith the Apostle in the entring of the holys in the blood of Christ Let vs serue him as we ought and then indeede we may haue confidence in him THE FIFTH ARTICLE HE descended into hell the third day he arose againe from death The Apostles hauing in the former article professed the Passion and death of Christ declare now his victory and triumph ouer it That which by this article is proposed to be beleeued is that the soule of Christ departing in death from his body descended truely into hell For as long as his body remained in the sepulcher his soule was separated from it and all that while was descended into hell Some haeretiks haue wickedly denyed this article of Christ his descension into hell ignorantly vnderstanding by hell his sepulcher Not considering that his descending into the sepulcher was professed before in the former article and therefor there needed not another article to repeate it ouer againe and to say that he descended into the sepulcher Neither is it a propper manner of speech in that sense for the body of our Lord was then dead and descended not but was laid by others in the sepulcher This therefor can not be vnderstoode of his body descending into the sepulcher but of his soule descending into hell Aunciently by hell some place in general was vnderstoode where the soules of men resided after death and it was not onely taken for the place of the damned but also for the residence of the iust As when the holy Patria●ke Iacob mourning for the death of his sonne Ioseph said Gen. 37. I will descende vnto my sonne into hell and when the Apostle saith Phil. 2. In the name of Iesus euery knee bow of the caelestials terrestrials and insernals For hell in Latine is as much as to say a place inferiour vnto vs or below vs which is therefor in the earth For the vnderstanding of which we may destinguish fower places in the earth the receptacles of soules departed Fower kinds of hell First there is the lowest hell of euerlasting damnation which is the furthest place from heauen as most suetable to those whose liues and actions were furthest of and most opposite to God and therefor in respect of punishment it is the deepest hell Secondly the next aboue that in paine is Purgatory Thirdly aboue purgatory is the place where the soules of those are detained who dy onely in original sinne Fourthly aboue that there was a place for the soules of the iust that dyed before Christ not hauing the guilt of any sinne or satisfaction to make for it For it was not conuenient that any should enter into heauen before Christ who purchased it for all and therefor those soules remained in an inferiour place vntill the death of Christ and then he descending to them freed them from that place This was some times called the bosome of Abraham because Abraham was the father of the elect and comprized as it were in him all the iust as Christ came of his seede who was the head of all the iust Thither therefor did our blessed Sauiour descende to blesse and to free those holy soules And perhaps he would also shew himselfe to the soules of purgatory for their comfort as also to the damned soules for their terrour and rebuke Christ was buryed on the fryday on which he suffered For the death of the Cros was held in that ignominy that the law commanded those that were Crucifyed to be taken from the Cros on the same day After his buriall he remained in the sepulcher all that day and all Saturday and part of Sunday vntill about breake of day all which time his soule was descended into hell Then he released the iust out of that place in which they were detained and brought them with him to the sepulcher where vniting his soule and body together againe the third day he arose from the dead not as those who haue bene reuiued by the power of others to a second life and to dy a second death but by his owne power he aroze againe to dy noe more For the diuine nature being allwais present with his body and soule as vnited with them in the vnity of person he had power to raise himselfe and by his owne power he tooke life againe and aroze glorious and therefor he said of himselfe Io. 10. I yeeld my life c. I yeeld it of my selfe and I haue power to yeeld it and I haue power to take it againe We reade of diuerse who haue bene raised from death to life both before and since the
resurrection of Christ but his resurrection excelleth theirs in many respects First for that he raised himselfe as I haue said by his owne power and all others were raised by his power Secondly he was the first that euer aroze glorious Thirdly others aroze to death as well as to life Fourthly his resurrection was the cause and meanes of all our glorious resurrections In these respects S. Paul calleth him the first fruits of those that rize to life Cor. 15. Christ saith he is rizen from the dead the first fruits of them that sleepe In Christ all shall be made aliue But euery one in his owne order the first fruits Christ then those that are of Christ The resurrection of Christ ought to be a great comfort and encouragement to the good For his rizing to glory hath giuen vs hopes of a glorious resurrection Blessed be God saith S. Pet. 1.1 Peter and the father of our Lord Iesus Christ who hath regenerated vs vnto a liuely hope by the resurrection of Iesus Christ from the dead vnto an inheritance incorruptible We are encouraged to beare with patience all afflictions and all kind of persecutions in this world in hopes to rize glorious with him Christ is our head and we are the members of his body and he hauing made way through persecutions for vs we ought couragiously to follow him THE SIXT ARTICLE HE ascended into heauen sitteth at the right hand of God Christ hauing consummated the worke of our redemption by his death on the Cros and after his death performed his resurrection and hauing after his resurrection remained forty dayes on earth to teach his disciples speaking of the kingdome of God that is to say instructing them concerning the gouernment of the Catholike Church which is the kingdome of God vpon earth he had done now all for which his father sent him and was to ascende into heauen and to carry mankind vnto that blessed place of glory which he had purchased for them He tooke therefor his disciples vnto mount Oliuet to be the witnesses of his ascension and lifting vp his eyes and blessing them he was gloriously el●uated in their sight and they being ●auished with ioy and spirituall consolation at it behold two Angels whom the Euangelist calleth men stoode beside them in white garments and said to them Act. 1. Ye men of Galily why stande you looking into heauen This Iesus which is assumpted from you into heauen shall soo come as you haue seene him going into heauen Thus would our Sauiour ascende that he might giue vnto the world a tast and scantling of the future glory and a memorial of his second comming This was the most glorious day that euer was to mankind For this is the day of our first entring into heauen The holy Prophet king Danid inuiteth all the world to the ioy of this day saying All ye nations clappe hands Ps 46. make iubilation to God in the voyce of exultation God is ascended in iubilation To day mans nature triumphed in the heauens and that soe glorious that it was exalted aboue all the coelestiall powers of Angels to the very right hand of God Ser. 3. de Ascen See ô man sayth S. Iohn Chrysostome how high thy nature is exalted Consider the distance of heauen and earth and of the lower to the higher heauens and from those higher heauens to the Angels and from them to the higher powers and from those to the seate where our Lord sitteth Humane nature is exalted thus high aboue all that nature which was of it selfe soe low that it could be noe lower became now soe high that it could be raised noe higher And the Holy Ghost to shew how high that glory was which mankind then receiued would inspire the Apostles to make such a remarkeable expression of it as to say that it was set at the right hand of God That as great Princes and eminent personages when they will shew a more then ordinary respect to some other Prince their freind they set him on their right hand soe the nature of man in Iesus Christ who was the Prince of mankind ascending into heauen the king of heauen and of the whole world would be said to set him on his right hand A greater expression of his loue could not be made then this yet thus would he haue his Apostles to expresse it Christ ascended both in body and soule for they being once vnited together in his resurrection were neuer more to be separated againe He ascended by his owne power and not as Elias Abacuc S. Phillip or others who were eleuated into the ayre carried by Angels for their soules and bodys being then vnglorifyed could not by their owne power ascende But Christ besides that he ascended by the power of his diuinity being in the state of glory his body was perfectly subiected to his soule and was therefor eleuated by it and stoode noe neede of the externall helpe of Angels In that he is said to sitt at the right hand of God we are to vnderstande a siguratiue manner of speech which God would haue to be vsed to accommodate himselfe to our weake vnderstandings which can haue nothing represented to them but by the species of corporal thinges and soe Christ is said to sitt at the right hand of God to shew how highly our nature was exalted in him although God haue noe hands nor corporal parts as being a spiritual substance that needeth not them Neither ought we to thinke by this that there is any precedency of place or degrees of dignity in the Persons of the B. Trinity but that the Father the Sonne and the Holy Ghost are all of equall and infinite dignity Christ according to his humanity is said to sitte at the right hand of God in respect of creatures in that he is superiour to them in dignity and glory And according to his diuine nature he may be said to sitt at the right hand of God in this sense and to this end that we might not vnderstande as Arius did that the Sonne of God was inferiour to the Father For which reason the holy Psalmist also placeth the Sonne at the right hand of the Father Ps 109. and then presently in the same psalme the Father on the right hand of the Sonne to signify equallity betwixt them Let vs now apply this mystery to the profit of our soules that they may haue the benefit of it and receiue the giftes which were then giuen Ps 67. for it is written ascending on high he ledd captiuity captiue he gaue gifts to men Iph. 4. These gifts are too great to be spoken for vnto some he gaue then the gift of heauenly blesse Towit to the soules of those in limbus whom he freed out of captiuity and carried with him And to those whom he left behinde him on earth he gaue the promise of the Holy Ghost and performed that promise within a while sending him to comfort and
secute from errour that at all times in all controuersys follow the sentence of the Church and adhaere to it And therfor the Apostles by the inspiration of the Holy Ghost made this important article that we might neuer forgett our obedience to the Church but that in all doubts and difficultys we might haue recourse to it and say I beleeue the Catholike Church And that those who will stande against it may be knowne to be infringers of the law and Creede of the Apostles From hence is the beginning of all heresys that some priuate men will contradict the authority of the whole Church and obiecting against some particular point or points of faith they make themselues the iudges and determine as they will themselues They contende allwais about some particular point or points of faith and wrangle about them but if you aske them vpon what authority they contradict the Catholike Church and all the Churches in the world separating from them they are then out of their witts and know not what to say knowing that if they pretende the word of God the same question confoundeth them againe demanding vpon what authority they dare interprete the word of God against the Catholike Church and against all the Churches in the world besides that the word of God is against them commanding both in the Creede and scriptures to beleeue the Church If we will giue them satisfaction in those particular points and difficultys it is but of curtesy for we confesse that there are many points of faith which by our owne reason we cannot comprehende the most reasonable and best satisfaction is because the Catholike Church soe teacheth otherwise as I haue shewed we should neither haue Creede nor scriptures nor God Contende not then with haeretiks about particular points but aske them vpon what authority they dare question them what Church will they follow If they will fall from the Catholike Church to some company of haeretiks that beganne at some time against all Churches or if themselues will beginne such a company they are here condemned in this article The authority of the Church is the rule the guide the sure anker to which we must all wais hold It is a rocke which dasheth in peeces all temptations of faith and obiections of haeretiks and keepeth vs free from doubts and feares as in a quiet and safe harbour Let vs now speake OF THE GOVERNMENT of the Church THe Church in holy scriptures is compared to a well ordered citty such an one as Hierusalem was when the seruice of God slourished in it But the gouernment of the Church of Christ doth farre excell that For it is a gouernment which God hath taken a neerer charge of as hauing in his owne person instituted it first and engaged himselfe by promise allwais to protect and defende it and therfor he must at all times prouide such gouernors for it as shall carefully mainteine his diuine seruice in it Esa 62. Vpon thy walls Hierusalem I haue appointed watchmen all the night for euer they shall not hold their peace It is compared to the army of a campe set in array Cant. 6. glorious in it selfe and terrible to its enemys for the order which it hath The order and good gouernment of the Church consisteth in the dew subordination of subiects to their superiors As in our bodys seueral offices are giuen to seueral parts and all of them constituted vnder one head And as in a common wealth some beare offices and others without offices obey them and all are finally reduced vnto some head and supreme power and that supreme power subordinate lastly to God that impowred it soe in the gouernment of the Church some haue authority ouer others and one head is placed ouer all These are the pastors whom God hath appointed and disposed into that order Rom. 13. Those thinges that are of God are ordained Saith the Apostle that is to say they are with order and to be with order is to be not all alike but with subordination of inferiors to superiour powers and soe the order of the Church consisteth in people subordinate to their pastors and of pastors subordinate vnto one supreme head vpon earth And the head and pastors of the Church exercizing their power most fully in a General Councell it will be sufficient for the gouernment of the Church to speake of the head and of General Councels Christ chose out of all the world some to be his disciples Of the head of the Church out of his disciples he tooke some to be Apostles and out of his Apostles he chose one to be the head and to haue authority ouer his whole Church These vnderstanding by the disciples all those that were vnder the Apostles were then the whole Church of Christ S. Peter was chosen by him as the head and supreme pastour ouer all both pastors and people Him and his successors we call the vicars of Christ that is to say he that beareth vpon earth the person and place of Christ who is in heauen the cheife head of the Church Neither can it in reason offende any that we call S. Peter and his successors in that office the Vicars of Christ For if S. Paul might authorize what he did in punishing and pardoning of the Corinthian with the authority of Christ and could lawfully say that he did it in the name vertue Cor. 1.5 Cor. 2.2 and person of Christ he being but a subiect of the head pastour of the Church with much more reason the cheife pastour and head of the Church may be called the Vicat of Christ he performing and executing that office after a more eminent manner in the name vertue and person of Christ Christ first promised this authority when asking his disciples whom they thought him to be Peter answered Thou art Christ the Sonne of the liuing God Then ●esus answering said to him Mat. 16. Blessed art thou Simon 〈…〉 I say to thee thou art Peter that is to say a rocke and vpon this rocke I will build my Church and the ga●es of hell shall not preuaile against it And I will giue to thee the keyes of the kingdome of heauen And whatsoeuer thou shalt binde vpon earth shall be bounde also in the heauens and what soeuer thou shalt loose in earth it shall be loosed also in the heauens By which it is most euident that some greater dignity and preeminonce was intended to Peter then to the rest of the Apostles First it was a most singular high mystery that which Christ asked and Peter then professed and which before then perhaps was neuer reuealed to any of the Apostles and which flesh and blood could not reueale that is by humane meanes could not be vnderstoode Moreouer Christ then blessed him and spoke vnto him after a most particular and energious manner of speech calling him a rocke which was not his name nor had ary relation to him more then to the rest of his
sentence which they giue soe priests are made of God the iudges ouer soules they beare his person they forgiue sinnes and whose sinnes they forgiue vpon earth those are forgiuen by him in heauen By sinne we become debtours to God he is the creditour who onely of himselfe can forgiue but he substituting others to forgiue in his name his substitutes can validly forgiue and the substitutes of God are his priests To say that men can not haue power to forgiue sinnes is that which the Iewes obiected against Christ and which he answered and disprooued by a miracle shewing by it that himselfe not onely as he was God but also according to his humanity could forgiue sinnes A lame and impotent man being brought vnto him he said Mat. 9. Thy sinnes are forgiuen thee And when the Iewes heard those words presently they said that he blasphemed as though the power of forgiuing sinnes had bene soe propper to God that he could not haue imparted it to man But they shall see the contrary and that there was noe blasphemy in his words Wherfor thinke you euill in you harts saith Christ whether is easier to say thy sinnes are forgiuen thee or to say arize and walke but that you may know that the Sonne of man hath power on earth to forgiue sinnes Arize take vp thy bedd and goe into thy house And he aroze and went into his house And the multitudes seeing it glorifyed God that had giuen such power to men Now let none euer say that men cannot haue power to forgiue sinnes It is soe farre from being a blasphemy or iniury to God to say that he giueth power to men to forgiue sinnes that to say the contrary is a blasphemy and iniury to him to wit that he can not or doth not giue that power to men For as the honour and power of the king is not diminished but rather his loue and care ouer his subiects is demonstrated in making iudges to conserue iustice and order amongst them and especially in giuing power to his iudges to pardon offences done against him soe is it a special demonstration of the loue of God vnto men to giue power to priests to forgiue sinnes which are committed against him And this is that which the Apostles would haue vs here to professe to wit the forgiuenesse of sinnes by power giuen to the Catholike Church He that considereth the euill of mortall sinne how that it woundeth and quite killeth our soules leauing them depriued of the grace of God and guilty of the paines of hell will esteeme greatly of this power and will thinke that there is nothing in the world which soe much behoueth a sinner as the right application of that power to himselfe Esa 27. This is the end and fruit of all that sinne be taken away Saith the Prophet By this our soules when they are as a dead and filthy carrion in the sight of God are restored to the life of grace made cleane and beautifull and all the happines of future life also becommeth then due to them This we shall learne how it is to be applyed in the Sacrament of Pennance where the benefit of it is obtained THE ELEAVENTH ARTICLE THe Resurrection of the flesh How necessary this article was to the establishing of the christian doctrine it appeareth in this that the holy scriptures doe not onely professe it but also prooue it S. Paul prooueth the resurrection of our bodys by the resurrection of Christ If saith he there be noe resurrection of the dead neither is Christ rizen againe Cor. 1 15. And if Christ be not rizen againe then vaine is our preaching vaine also is your faith And he declareth and confirmeth it by the similitude of corne which corrupting in the seede rizeth vp fresh and faire corne againe With these and the like arguments he disputeth against certaine men that denyed the resurrection Tim. 2.2 as Hymenaeus and Philetus who interpreted the scriptures to be vnderstoode of the resurreation of the soule to the state of grace Christ also himselfe disputed with the Saducaeans about this point and confirmed in fact the truth of it when he raized Lazarus to life who although he had bene fower dayes dead and laid then stinking in the monument yet when Christ called he heard Io. 11. and obeyed comming forth fresh and liuely Holy Iob in the midst of all his assictions comforted himselfe with these words Iob 19. I know that my redeemer liueth and in the last day I shall rize out of the earth And I shall be compassed againe with my skinne and in my flesh I shall see God Thus did this holy man solace himselfe with the thought of the resurrection which he saith he had laid vp in his bosome vsing it as a cordiall and antidore against his great miserys Our soules and bodys desiring by nature to be vnited together for the complete and intire constituting of man it stands with reason that they should once come together againe that the soules of the blessed may enioy their desire and be satiated in the naturall appetite which they haue vnto their bodys And for this reason the immortality of the soule and the resurrection of the body is mentioned in the scriptures and was taken by the auncient Philosophers as it were for the same because such is the connexion betwixt them that by the immortality of the soule the resurrection of the body is inserred for if the soule be immortal and haue a natural appetite to the body as being ereated to constitute man consisting of both soule and body then that appetite must once be satiated by the resurrection of the body after death and revnion of the soule to it againe and soe take away the resurrection of the body and you take away the immortality of the soule and then all grounds of faith and the hopes of future life are taken away with it our soules being mortal with our bodys and therefor S. Paul If I fought with beasts at Ephesus what doth it profit mee Cor. 1.15 if the dead rize not againe let vs eate and drinke for to morrow we shall dy And therefor S. Chrysostome calleth the Saducaeans who denyed the resurrection the most pernicious haeretiks that euer were S. Ambrose hauing prooued it by scriptures and by the examples of those who haue rizen from the dead and by reasons which he calleth euident concludeth all in this plane and certaine truth that the corruptions of seedes and productions which we see of new thinges are vnto God the resurrection of the old That which we beleeue by this article is that the very same bodys which liued before although neuer soe much corrupted shall be vnited to their soules againe and remaine for euer with them for if it were not the same body which was before it were not a resurrection but a production of a new thinge and that this resurrection is general to all Cor. 1.15 according to the
the rewarde which we shall haue after victory ought to be a great encouragement vnto vs. We shall haue the grace of God which is the kings eldest daughter and by it euerlasting glory in the kingdome of heauen Remember then that thou art the souldier of God and in all temptations thinke that he then calleth thee forth to fight for him in his owne presence and before the host of his Angells and Saints and that in the sight of them all and in their hearing he had made the promise of thy reward and besides that he will soe helpe thee that thou art sure of victory if thou wilt Who in this case would not runne vnto the batle This is the case of euery one of vs. Apos 2. God hath promised to him that ouercommeth I will giue to eate of the tree of life to wit euerlasting and he giueth vnto euery one sufficient meanes to ouercome Is he not a coward in the sight of God and before the whole court of heauen that shall refuse to fight vpon these termes Thinke what this reward is an eternity of happines And when thou hast thought for a good space say to thy selfe I can not comprehende that eternall happinesse Ep. 205. ad Cyr Hicros Ps 83. In the Epistles which are commonly said to be S. Augustins he describeth a vision which himselfe had to his purpose and I will giue it you as neere as I can in the same words and stile I was saith he in my cell at Hippo resting and greedily thinking of the glory of the blessed and of the greatnes of their ioy and being compelled by the intreaty of my deere Seuerus once the disciple of venerable Martin bishop of Turon I desired to setforth a short treatise of this matter but hauing pen in my hand to write to most holy Hierome for his opinion in it when I had begunne the exordium of my salutation behold a suddaine light such as our times hath not seene nor can be spoken with our tongues entred into my cell and filled it with an vnspeakeable sweetnes of all odours Which when I saw I was soe astonished that the powers of my minde and body were quite taken from mee For J knew not then that the right hand of God had exalted his seruant Because at that very hower did S. Hierome depart this world And therefor because mine eyes had neuer seene the like brightnes nor euer had I felt such sweetnes I wondered and was quite rauished with it And being in this sort I heard a voyce comming forth of that light saying to mee Augustine what dost thou meane dost thou thinke to put the sea into a litle dish to hold all the earth in the compasse of thy hand to detaine the heauens from their naturall course shall thy eye see that which none could see shall thy eares heare more then the eares of any and those things which haue not entred into any hart dost thou thinke to conceiue them where is the end of that which is endles how wilt thou measure that which is immense The sea shall be put into a litle dish the earth shall become a handfull and the heauens shall sooner stay their course then thou shalt vnderstande the least part of that ioy and glory which the blessed enioy But that thou shouldst vnderstande that which I know now by experience not to vndertake impossible things Seeke not to vnderstande but labour to gett that glory which thou wouldest conceiue Thus S. Hierome would preuent his letter and satisfy him by experience in that which he desired to vnderstande to wit that the glory of the Saints is aboue humane vnderstanding It is enough for vs to thinke that it is a life in which God is enioyed for euer but here we can not comprehende what God is what euer is or what that life is in which God is enioyed and which they lead in heauen O the infinite goodnes of God! O eternity O sweet life in which that infinite good is eternally enioyed That which is good and the best in euery thinge that is conteined in God the summe and hight of perfection I say all in this word Perfection And this perfection thou shalt allwais desire Ps 23. and haue it allwais there as thou defirest in God How beloued are thy tabernacles O Lord of hosts my soule coueteth and fainteth vnto the courts of our Lord. My hart and my flesh haue reioyced towards the liuing God This is the end of the Creede and of true faith that we gaine euerlasting life This is the finall but infinite reward which Catholiks onely and none but good Catholiks come to receiue that our soules shall be placed in perfect spirituall pleasures and our bodys in corporall and shall still aime at that which is most perfect and enioy that perfection which they aime at to wit God in his glory THE FIFT DISCOVRSE OF THE SACRAMENTS I INTENDE to declare the Sacraments vnto you which as they are the most estimable iewels and pretious ornaments by which the merits of Christs Passion are applyed for the sanctification of our soules soe it is very necessary for all to be well instructed in them that those holy mysterys being receiued with due reuerence may blesse and effectually sanctify the receiuers of them Mat. 7. Giue not that which is holy to doggs neither cast you your pearles before swine Saith our blessed Sauiour That is that holy things are not to be giuen to the vnworthy and as S. Augustine hath noted especially the Sacraments which are vnderstoode by pearles as the most pretious of holy thinges That I may speake worthily of them and you receiue benefit by my speech we will say the Haile Mary for our Blessed Ladys intercession Haile Mary c. Quest What is a Sacrament Answ A Sacrament is an outward signe which causeth grace in vs. To be a Sacrament is to be an outward signe and to be an outward signe is to be somethinge that may be perceiued outwardly by the senses By the sense of seeing we perceiue in the Sacraments the thinge which is done as the ablution in baptisme and by the sense of hearing the words that are said and in that which is done and said consisteth the nature and essence of euery Sacrament as it is an outward signe to our senses S. Augustine The word is ioyned to the element and there is a Sacrament The Sacraments cause grace in vs Tract 80. in Io. because they are the meanes which Christ hath instituted to sanctify vs by and we can not be sanctifyed but by the diuine grace being caused in vs. OF THE EFFECTS OF THE Sacraments THE prime and propper effect of euery Sacrament is to cause grace for they are not onely signes to signify that God then giueth grace but they haue power giuen them of God to cause grace in the soules of those that worthily receiue them that as a Cherry tree produceth a cherry and a
in the Church and the auncient and true doctrine was better vnderstoode that it was not of obligation for all to receiue vnder both kindes For as the Councell of Trent hath obserued when Christ said vnles you eate the flesh of the sonne of man and drinke his blood you shall not haue life in you Io. 6. He added also he that eateth this bread shall liue for euer By which he declared that the benefit of the Eucharist is receiued as much in the host onely as in both the host and the chalice euerlasting life being promised to those that eate that sacred bread OF THE EFFECTS OF THE Eucharist THE effect of the Eucharist is to giue grace by which we become the adopted children of God nourished and fedd as it were at his owne table our soules hauing satiety in him and obtaining by it the fullnes of his glory That where as according to S. Tract 26. in Io. Augustine by other meate and drinke we seeke to be satiated there is noe true satiety but in this by which we gaine heauen And it is especially gained by this Sacrament both by reason of the more special vnion which we baue with Christ in it and also for that the gift of perseuerance is especially here obtained as by a strong and nourishing bread It remitteth sinne and preserueth from future sinne according to the disposition of the receiuer according to which also it blotteth out the punishment due to it It hath for its propper effect to feede and to strengthen the soule to keepe it in spiritual health and vigour And because for the most part it is receiued with more feruour and sweetnes of deuotion and outwardly in the similitude of bread therfor it is compared to the Manna of the Israëlits which is thought by some to haue had the sweetnes of all tasts S. L. 8. ep 62. Ambrose We haue the Manna euery day rayning downe vpon vs that body which came from the virgin and S. Iohn Chrysostome therefor calleth it the fountaine of paradise from whence sensible riuers flow Ho. 45 to 1. The Saints of God haue bene soe transported with spiritual consolations in the receiuing of the Eucharist that good and authentical writers haue recorded of some who haue liued for diuerse months and of others who for some yeares together haue bene susteined without any other foode S. Katherine of Siena was singularly deuoted to the blessed Sacrament She receiued it euery day except her Confessour commanded the contrary whom she obeyed in all things and noe doubt but that for a long time she was susteined onely by it In her life it is said that as children earne vnto their mothers brests soe did she to the blessed Sacrament and that it often happening that she being in an extasy all the time of masse vntill Communion and then comming to her selfe would say O my Lord although I were dead I should reuiue againe to enioy thee THE SACRAMENT OF Pennance Quest What is the Sacrament of Pennance Answ Pennance is a Sacrament by which we haue the forgiunesse of sinnes in Confession FIRST we will shew that this is a Sacrament in the forgiuenesse of sinnes and then we will declare the parts of it and benefits which are receiued by it Although Luther for the most part denyeth this to be a Sacrament and laboureth with other Protestants to robb the world of the benefit of it yet l. de capt bab he saith that it is a Sacrament There he saith truely for it is soe indeede and hath all that is included euen in the Protestants definition of a Sacrament Apol. Confess art 13. which is to be an outward signe instituted of Christ by which grace is promised And this it shall appeare to be Amongst the many apparitions which Christ made betwixt his Resurrection and Ascension to his disciples S. Iohn hath recorded that once he came and stood in the midst of them and said Peace be to you Io. 20. And when he had said this he shewed them his hands and side and said againe Peace be to you As my father hath sent mee I also doe send you And he breathed vpon them and said Receiue ye the Holy Ghost whose sinnes you shall forgiue they are forgiuen them and whose you shall retaine they are retained This is all which the Euangelist mentioneth to haue passed in that solemne apparition which must therfor include some great mystery Hence it appeareth that this is a Sacrament for where forgiunes of sinnes is promised there grace is promised And this forgiuing and retaining of sinnes being giuen to the Apostles and their successors to be practised by them who vnderstande not the inward of mens minds and consciences the poenitent must declare his sinnes to them that they may know what and how to forgiue or to retaine them And soe there is all that is included in the nature of a Sacrament to wit an outward signe both in the poenitent confessing and in the Priest absoluing and that outward signe instituted of Christ to giue grace vnto sanctification By which the Catholike doctrine is made manifest that power is giuen to the Church to forgiue sinnes For is it likely that Christ would appeare in all those circumstances and mysterious caeremonys giuing them the Holy Ghost for nothing but onely to let them know that God can and doth forgiue sinnes The Apostles esteemed soe highly of this grace that they made the forgiuenesse of sinnes an article of the Creede to wit by the power of the Catholike Church which they had professed in the article before Is it likely that they meant to make it an article of the Creede that God can and doth forgiue sinnes After that they vnderstoode that themselues had power to forgiue sinnes they being sent as Christ was sent and the Holy Ghost being giuen soe particularly then to them and therfor they feared not to practise the forgiuing of sinnes Priests of themselues haue not power to forgiue sinnes for noe man of himselfe hath that power They haue it of God as the vicars and substitutes of him who gaue it them God giu's power to priests as kings doe to iudges Iudges represent the person of the king and Priests represent the diuine maiesty Iudges must be informed and soe must priests iudges giue sentence and their sentences are ratifyed by the king God giueth authority to priests and their sentēces are ratifyed by him he that contemneth the authority of the iudge contemneth the authority of the king and he that contemneth the priests authority contemneth the diuine maiesty Christ hauing made them his iudges and set them in his owne place with power to binde and to loose promising that what they did vpon earth should be ratifyed in heauen That Christ did truely giue this power to the Church his words are as plane as words vse to be and that plane words might not be misconstrued he deliuered them in such circumstances as might binde them as
alleadge against them the authority of the Church of Christ and will tell them Not the Iewes but the Church holdeth the books of Machabees to be canonical And his owne reason will tell him that to deny the authority of the Church is to deny all Scriptures and to confounde the order of the whole world Tertul. Tert. l. de coron militi● c. 3. Amb. orat pro Theod. Aug. l. 8. de Genes con Manichaeos Oblationes pro defunctis facimus We make offerings for the dead S. Ambrose in his speech of the Emperour Theodosius prayeth for him Thou o Lord giue rest vnto thy seruant Theodosius S. August speaking of him that dyeth in sinne saith after this life he shall haue either the fire of Purgatory or eternal fire And in Psal 87. In this life purge mee and make mee soe that I may not neede the purging fire The doctrine of Purgatory is soe planely deliuered by the auncient fathers of the Church that Caluin could not deny or conceale it but l. 3. Instit c. 5. § 10. calleth it a most auncient obseruation of the Church and saith that the fathers as humane were deceiued But who can endure this saying in him were the auncient fathers of the Church and both the Church which was aunciently and which was when Caluin came into the world deceided and Caluin not deceiued shall Caluin take vpon him to correct the auncient fathers and present obseruations of the Church And shall any hazard his soule with Caluin against them He asketh what authority of Scriptures they had Must the whole Church be examined by him in the Scriptures And shall not he be thought an haeretike for this and to abuse the Scriptures in condemning of the Church S. Augustine shall answere him Aug. l. de cura pro mortuis Jn the books of the Machabees we read that sacrifice was offered for the dead but although in the auncient Scriptures it were not at all to be read the authority of the vniuersal Church is noe small matter which is cleere for this custome where in the prayers of the priest which to our Lord God are powered forth at his altare the commendation of the dead hath its place S. Augustins argument was good in which he prooued Purgatory both hy the Scriptures and the Church But if this be not enough for Caluin to whom nothing will serue but his owne will and word We will also produce his owne words against him l. 4. Instit c. 2. num 3. he saith that without controuersy nothing from the beginning untill that age was changed in doctrine To wit vntill the times of Tertullian Origen and Augustine of whom he was speaking If therfor this were the doctrine of the Church in those times it was the doctrine of Christ and of the Apostles euer from the beginning And soe Caluin is condemned by Scriptures fathers Church and by his owne words and Purgatory is prooued to be the true Catholike Apostolike doctrine There for pennances are rightly enioyned prayers may be said almes deeds giuen indulgences granted and many voluntary afflictions haue bene vndergone by the Saints and faithfull of the Catholike Church to escape the paines of Purgatory which although they be but temporal yet they are most greeuous and vehement more then can be spoken And because the Catholike doctrine of Indulgences by many is not vnderstoode I wil say somethinge of them in this which is also their propper place An Indulgence is as much as to say a fauourable remission or pardoning of some due punishment Such are the indulgences of the Church either absolute remissions without exchange or imposing of any other taske or exchanges of a greater into a lesser penalty The power of granting indulgences or absoluing from punishment which is all one was granted by Christ vnto his Apostles and especially to S. Peter to whom he promised the keyes of the kingdome of heauen Mat. 16. and told him whatsoeuer thou shalt loose vpon earth shall be loosed in heauen What can be vnderstoode by the keyes of heauen and the words following but power soe to open heauen gates as to take away all that hindereth for entring in at them to wit sinne and punishment He gave also the like authority to the rest of the Apostles saying whatsoeuer you shall loose vpon earth shal be loosed in heauen Mat. 18. If whatsoeuer they loose be loosed then punishment loosed by them on earth is loosed also in the sight of God in heauen Neither is there any good connexion in those words if they be not vnderstoode of absoluing as well from punishment as from sinne Now if any aske how it can be that sinnes of which the diuine iustice requireth soe much satisfaction should be satisfyed for with soe litle as some indulgences require and some indulgences require nothing at all to be done for the gaining of them he may vnderstande that indulgence or pardon of punishment is neuer granted but full satisfaction is made to God for the sinne For there is in the Church a treasury of Satisfactions soe great that it can neuer be exhausted by satisfying for sinnes There are in this treasury the satisfactions of Christ infinitly more then all the sinnes in the world can require There are also the good works of our B. Lady that had nothing of her owne to satisfy for There are the good works of S. Iohn Baptist of the Apostles and of many others whose works were much more satisfactory then their owne sinnes needed and may be applyed by the pastors of the Church to those that stande neede of them For the Church is a body and all the members of it haue a Communication and participation of good works with one another as we professe in the Creede saying I beleeue the Communion of Saints And the psalmist sayeth Ps 118. Col. 1. I am partaker of all that feare thee And S. Paul I now reioyce in suffering for you and doe accomplish those thinges that want of the passions of Christ in my flesh for his body which is the Church He did not fullfill the passions of Christ for any defect or want which was in them but that by his sufferings the passion of Christ was applyed actually to the Colossians as it is by the suffrages and good works which are done in the Church for others and by them their punishments are fully satisfyed for If any aske why the Pope onely and bishops giue indulgences I answere that the words of Christ before alleadged were spoken onely to S. Peter who was to be the Pope and to the Apostles who were at first the onely bishops of the Church And the practise of the vniuersal Church which ought to be our rule in all things hath bene allwais for the Pope and bishops and not for priests to grant Indulgences S. Augustine speaking of the obseruations of the Church saith If the Church through out the World frequent any of these things to dispute of
shalt not couet thy neighbors wife Thou shalt not couet thy neighbors goods THE Romane Catechisme hauing expounded the Creede and the Sacraments giueth in the next place the exposition of the Commandements In the Creede we haue the summe of what we are to beleeue in the Sacraments we are sanctifyed with diuine grace and in the Commandements we are taught how to be haue ourselues towards God and our neihhbour soe as to keepe that grace which we receiued in the Sacraments The commandements are the law of God and to say the law or the Commandements is the same thinge For the Commandements saith S. Augustine are the summe and abbreuiation of that which God hath commanded all being deduced from them as from the first principles of that law which by nature he had imposed vpon men We obserue them not because they were of the law of Moyses for that law was to vanish away as a shaddow when the light of Christ came into the world we obserue them because they are natural praecepts obliging all by an obligation of nature which we see by reason and feele by experience in ourselues Neither were the commandements deliuered to the Israelites soe much to let them know their obligation to them as to make them remember it And therefor they were deliuered with such dreadfull signes as I shall presently declare that they might reuerence them the more and feare to breake them It is the office of priests to instruct in the Commandements and to see that they be kept Gal. 6. If a man be praeoccupated in any falt you that are spiritual instruct such an one These are priests who haue the spirituall charge of soules and who must answere for the sinnes of the people committed to them They haue then good reason to instruct and to reprehende and if people wil haue priests to answere for them they must be contented to be reprehended by them and must heare and obey them in the Commandements of God otherwise they shall be condemned as disobedient to God himselfe Luc. 10. He that heareth you heareth mee and he that despiseth you Heh 10. despiseth mee Saith our sauiour and S. Paul saith Obey your Prelates and be subiect to them For they watch as being to render account for your soules The imperfections of priests are readily noted and euery word which they speake is put into the weighskales to be examined but their instructions and admonitions are not soe hearkened vnto they are more obserued in the breaking then in the keeping of the Commandements L. 2. de cons It is true S. Hierome saith that a trifeling word in the mouth of a priest is a sacrilege And S. Bernard calleth such a word a blasphemy in them Mal. 2. But God saith that they are his Angels when they deliuer the law The lipps of the priest shall keepe knowledge and the law they shall require from his mouth because he is the Angell of the Lord of hosts Their falts indeede become greater by the greatnes of their dignity yet for all their falts the law must be receiued of them and good Catholiks wil reuerence priests as Angels and will be glad of their admonishments as from heauen It is my part to instruct in the keeping of the Commandements and yours to harken and to learne to keepe them That we may both doe our parts we will pray to our B. Lady for her intercession Haile Mary c. OF THE AVTHOVR OF THE Commandements IT ought to be a great motiue to vs for the keeping of the Commandements to thinke who it is that commandeth them It was not any potentate of the earth though neuer soe great and powerfull neither was it any Angell from heauen that imposed them vpon vs. God is the authour of the Commandements God that made both men and Angels heauen and hell for the reward or punishment of those that keepe or breake them This consideration he would inculcate in the very first words in which the Commandements were deliuered Exod. 20. saying I am the Lord thy God It is our Lord our master our eternal and omnipotent God that commandeth vs these things Let vs feare him and keepe his Commandements Mal. 1. If I be the Lord where is my feare saith the Lord of hosts The Commandements were written by Angels in the two tables of stone and deliuered by the Angels to Moyses but they were not commanded by Angels God commanded them and with his owne fingar hath printed them in the harts of all men striking reuerence vnto them and a natural feare to breake them And the more to augment that feare and reuerence in vs he deliuered them after a most maiestical and dreadfull manner to the Israelits They were to prepare themselues for three dayes before to wash their garments and to absteine from their wiues that by that external and corporal purity their deuotions might increase and their reuerence to them The third day being come and the morning appearing behold saith the holy Scripture thunders beganne to be heard and lightenings to flash Exod. 19. and a very thicke clowde to couer the mount and the noyse of the trumpet sounded exceedingly Moyses brings the people towards the mountaine and such was the reuerence which God then required of them that they were to keepe of and vnder paine of death not soe much as to touch the mountaine on which they were deliuered He and Aaron onely were called vp and all the people when they saw the voyces and the flames the sounde of the trumpets and the mount smoking were soe terrifyed that languishing and euen like to dy they gott a great way of and were glad to cry out vnto Moyses Speake thou to vs let not our Lord speake least perhaps we dy All this maiesty would God shew to the Israelits that they might acknowledge his power in the Commandments and feare to breake them And it was not onely for that people that he would shew this terrour and maiesty but for all others after them that all might acknowledge his diuine power and that they keeping the Commandements might moue others by their example to keepe them Eu●d 20. This is your wisdome and vnderstanding before peoples that hearing that is obeying all these praecepts may say behold a people full of wisdome and vnderstanding a great nation He that considereth rightly the maiesty of God commanding him and seeth himselfe besett on al sides that he can by noe meanes escape his power will thinke it indeede his onely wisdome to submitte vnto him and to obey him But some haue said that the Commandements of God are vnpossible to be kept and yet professe themselues to be christians This is a saying vnworthy of that name and we will shew on the contrary THAT THE COMMANDEMEN●● of God 〈…〉 CHRISTIANS in their christendome haue receiued grace for the keeping of the Commandements and that Christian that sayeth the Commandements are vnpossible to be kept
when the iust pray for them soe also we may say of all others benefits for that the goodnes and liberality of God is such that he is forced as it were to grant all and can deny nothing which is worthily asked of him This he would shew euen in the granting of a temporall benefit at the prayers of Iosue when the Israelits wanting day to pursue the victory Iosue praying commanded the Sunne and Moone to stande still and they stoode still till the people reuenged themselues of their enemys And to shew how powerfull the prayer of the iust is the Holy Ghost would make so remarkeable an expression as to say that God obeyed the voice of a man as though Iosue by his prayers had had God at obedience And although heauen be gained as well by all good workes as by praying Ser. de temp 226. yet S. Augustine calleth prayer the kea of Heauen Let vs learn then how to pray OF THE PREPARATION TO PRAYER THAT we may pray with profit Eccl. 18. and reape the fruite of prayer we must prepare ourselues duely to it Before prayer prepare thy soule saith the Holy Ghost The first and most necessary preparation is to bee cleere from mortall sinne For prayer which is made in mortall sinne hath but litle force and noe condignity at all to the obtaining of supernatural gifts which must proceed from the diuine grace And therefor he that will pray effectually must first make cleere his conscience by a good confession that being restored to the grace of God his prayer may be acceptable to him But if he haue not the opportunity of a Confessour let him in the meane time make an act of contrition which may supply confession vntill it can be had and let him pray for contrition and for a fitt disposition for prayer as the man of the Ghospell Marc 9. who when Christ required of him to beleeue he said I doe beleeue Lord help my incredulity Soe may the sinner endeauour before prayer to make an act of contrition and pray for that which is wanting in him The Publican was a sinner when he began to pray but praying with humility and sorrow he obtained the remission of his sinnes when standing a farre of Luc. 18. and knocking of his breast he prayed God be mercifull to mee a sinner By his standing a farre of his humility by the knocking of his breast and the words which he spoke his great sorrow is denored and by so praying although he were at first a sinner yet by prayer he obtained contrition and by contrition his sinnes were forgiuen Act. 10. and he went away iustifyed So Cornelius the Centurion prayed and gaue almes and although then as a Gentil he were out of the state of grace yet by continual prayer for the Euangelist commendeth him as allways praying to God he obtained the vision of an Angell and S. Peter was sent to enlighten him with the Faith of Christ Those therefore that are out of the state of grace and haue not the opportunity of confession let them pray for contrition and endeauour to stirre vp in themselues a true and feruerous loue of God Wicked Antiochus was grieued at his sinnes or rather at his punishments and although he acknowledged the truth that they came from God yet it is said Mach 2.9 He prayed to our Lord of whom he was not to obtaine mercy because he was not truely penitent nor sought the honour of God but his owne ease only by prayer The next preparation to prayer is to come with much humility and reuerence considering who it is to whom we are going to speake and who we are that are admitted to speake It is God to whom we speake God the Lord of Heauen and Earth that made vs of noe better thing then the slime of the earth a peece of dead clay breathing life and giuing reason to it and that peece of earth being thus framed of God hath rebelled against him and abused his maker and euen then not being quite free from sinne is permitted neuertheles to appeare in his sight and to petition him Eccli 35. The prayer of him that humbleth himselfe shall penetrate the clowdes Thus did holy Abraham pray with humility saying Gen 18. I will speake to my Lord where as I am dust and ashes Thirdly we must pray with much loue and confidence in the goodnes and bounty of God We may consider then that he is as he is indeede our father allwais desiring our good and that he is infinitly liberall of all those things which he knoweth to be good for vs and that we will kneele downe to him as a louing and gracious child would doe to his father to aske blessings of him and that we will aske with confidence that which is necessary for vs and will obey him Thus the holy King prepared himselfe with humility loue and confidence and then powred forth his prayer in the sight of God Let vs then remember to prepare ourselues to prayer with these three things First with a cleere conscience by confession or contrition Secondly with humility and reuerence to God Thirdly with loue and confidence in him Let vs see now FOR WHAT THINGS AND FOR whom we are to pray THE cheife thing which we are to pray for is that which is the cheife good and that is that God be honored his blessed name being hallowed byvs and that we may soe serue him here that we may enioy him in heauen All temporall things as health wealth strength beauty and the like are to be prayed for conditionally if they be conducing to our future happines but it is dangerous to pray to excell much in them and therefore the wise man durst not pray for riches but for necessarys Prou. 30. Beggery and riches giue mee not giue mee onely things necessary for my sustenance Charity humility patience and all vertues may absolutly without any condition be prayed for because they of themselues aduance the honour of God in vs and helpe vs to euerlasting glory We pray for all men because we are bounde to desire the good of all as our neighbors But of all men we pray especially for the Catholike Church and of the Catholike Church we pray especially for the Popes holines as the head of the Church Then we pray for our particular prelates and pastors and generally for all the pastors of the Church that they may excell with such vertues as may illustrate it and render it a more amiable spouse to God in the sanctity of her subiects which dependeth most vpon the goodnes of Church men And therefor as the Euangelist sayth prayer was made without intermission for Peter Act. 12. he being then Pope and in the hands of his enemys And S. Paul desired the prayers of the faithfull that his seruice might be acceptable We pray also for our temporal superiors the king and his officers that they may gouerne according to
our prayers are hidden from them now in heauen and that God will let vs want their intercession for want of reuealing our prayers to them Noe we shall loose nothing by any ignotance of theirs They see God in glory and in that glorious sight they see all that is good for them to see therefor if they might pray and be desired by others to pray for them whilst they liued in this world there is nothing to hinder them for being prayed vnto in the next Hence it appeareth how absurde that question of Caluin was ●olu l. 4. insti nu ●4 when he asked how it came to passe that the Angels and Saints could heare soe farre as betwixt heauen and earth I giue you not his words because they are blasphemous and to irreuerent to be repeated but if Caluin will know how it com's to passe I tell him that it is by the light of glory which the Saints haue and if he say that they haue noe such glory he shall neuer haue it himselfe nor can in reason expect to haue it If they obiect the words of Ecclesiastes to shew that Saints might be prayed vnto in this life and not in the next B●●l 9. where it is said better is a dogg liuing then a Lyon dead It is true in respect of the operations of life which then the Lyon hath not and soe the Saints according to their bodys were better aliue then dead because their bodys liuing had the operations of life which dead they haue not but according to their soules which are spirits they are not onely as perfect but much perfecter and without comparison more actiue lightsome and vnderstanding being then not onely lightened of the burden of their bodys but also enlightened with the light of glory Saint Hierome answered this very obiection to Vigilantius the haeretike about twelue hundred yeares since in these words Lib. cont ●●g If Apostles and marryrs liuing in their bodys could pray for others when they might be sollicitous for themselues how much more after their crownes victorys and triumphs Moyses but one man getteth pardon of God for six hundred thousand armed men Steuan the first martyr after the example of our Lord prayed for his persecutors and now when they are with Christ shall they haue lesse power Paul saith of himselfe that two hundred and seauenty soules were granted him in the shipp at his prayers and now that he is resolued and with Christ shall he haue his mouth shutte vp and shall he not open it for those who all ouer the world haue beleeued at his ghospell and shall Vigilantius a liuing dogge be better then Paula dead Lyon This of the Ecclesiastes were indeede to some purpose if J did beleeue that Paul were dead in spirit Thus did S. Hierome discourse as a Catholike on this point shewing that the Saints with much more reason shall be prayed vnto in heauen then on earth and that there is noe comparison in those words of Ecclesiastes betwixt the soule of man whilst he is liuing and whilst he is dead but onely betwixt a liuing and a dead body and he calleth Vigilantius a dogge for barking against the Saints in denying their intercession We pray therefor to God as to the supreme power to grant vs that which we want We pray to our blessed Lady the Angels and Saints not to grant vs our wants but to grant vs their intercession to obtaine them of God for vs. And in this the Catholike Church vseth an orderly destinction euen in words when we pray destinguishing betwixt the diuine maiesty as supreme and the Saints as his seruants We say not to God Lord pray for vs but Kyrie eleyson Lord haue mercy vpon vs. Nor to Christ as he is the sonne of God doe we say Christ pray for vs but Christe eleyson Christ haue mercy vpon vs. We doe not say to our B. Lady or to the Angels or Saints haue mercy vpon vs but holy Mary pray for vs all ye holy Saints of God make intërcession for vs. Soe giuing vnto God that which is his due to wit the supreme and all honour both in himselfe and in his seruants and we giue vnto the Saints inferiour honour as the beloued seruants of God and follow the Councell of the holy psalmist who beginning his last psalme was inspired to say prayse God in his Saints Ps 150. This I haue said in honour of God and of his blessed Saints and euery word that I haue said I giue it freely to their honour desiring their prayers We pray particularly to some Saints for some particular benefits because we see those benefits more frequently granted by hauing recourse vnto those Saints ●nd if any aske why God granteth those benefits rather at the intercession of those then of other Saints I answere with the Apostle who hath knowne the name of our Lord Rom. 11. or who hath bene his Counsellour And this is a sufficient answere to such questions of curiosity for so it might be asked why God would determine particular offices to such and such Angels Yet the reason may be giuen to honour the merits of those Saints in some circumstances of their liues or deaths which those benefits haue relation vnto Soe women that haue sore breasts obtaine helpe by the intercession of S. Agatha whose breasts were cut of for the faith of Christ S. Apollonia is called vpon for the tooth ake because her teeth were strucken out for the same cause S. Roch is inuoked against the pestilence because himselfe was infected with it S. Blase against paines of the throte because he cured a child that was like to dy of a bone in the throte And our blessed Lady with good reason is called vpon by women in trauaile because she is the ioy glory and comfort of all women who in her child bearing was exempted from those paines and it pleaseth God that those miracles he remembred by vs. If any aske why in some places more then others we pray for such and such benefits I answere that there may be many reasons why God would oblige especially the inhabitans of that place and honour it with miracles and if this be not sufficient satisfaction I aske of him why at the Probatica pond in Hierusalem miraculous cures were obtained rather then in others places and why onely one was cured at a time and no more and why the leprous Prince of Syria was sent to be washed in lordan rather then in other waters and to be washed seauen times rather then any other number If he giue mee a good reason for these the same will I giue him to his question if he referre mee to the diuine will and pleasure so will I referre him Hauing declared whom wee are to pray to we will speake OF SOME IMPEDIMENTS that hinder vs in the obtaining of our prayers THE first and greatest impediment that hindereth the obtaining of our prayers is the greatest of all euils
keeper we must be ruled by him and pray for obedience to his holy will that we may follow it and then all will be well with vs. In earth as it is in Heauen We pray not here that we may doe the will of God vpon earth with that perfection with which it is done in Heauen for that is vnpossible but that as the Saints of God performe his will according to the perfection of their state so that we may performe it according to the perfection of our present state and that as the Saints in Heauen haue a most perfect conformity with the will of God so that wee may imitate them euery one in the vocation in which he is called following the diuine pleasure in all things and saying willingly with holy Iob As it hath pleased our Lord so is it done Iob. 1. The name of God be blessed THE FOVRTH PETITION GIVE vs this day our daily bread This and the petitions that follow are to be referred to those that goe before to wit that the name of God be hallowed that we may gaine his blessed kingdome For all whatsoeuer we prayfor is to be ordained to the honour of God and to the gaining of that kingdome L. 2. deserm Dem. We pray saith S. Augustine not for temporall things as our true goods but as our necessarys because they are in themselues imperfect and therefor not absolutly good nor to be prayed for but as they are referred to the honour of God and haue a partial and participated goodnes from him Whether you eate or drinke Cor. 1.10 or doe any other thinge doe all thinges to the glory of God Saith the Apostle to the Corinthians And the same Apostle desired the Romans to pray for him that he might escape the hands of his enemys and that his seruice might be acceptable Where he referreth the escaping of his enemys to the glory and seruice of God Yet we may see by this petition that it is lawfull to pray for temporal things for although God of his owne goodnes doth prouide sufficiently for vs yet soe as that he will haue vs to aske and pray for that which we stande neede of Soe the Patriarke Iacob prayed and made a vow of some particular deuotions to be done for the obtaining then of a prosperous ●ourney Saying if God shall be with mee C●n. 28. and shall keepe mee in the way by the which I walke and shall giue mee bread to eate and rayment to put on and I shall be returned prosperously to my fathers house the Lord shall be my God and this stone which I haue erected for a title shall be called the house of God and of all thinges that thou shalt giue to mee I will offer tithes to thee All this did this holy man doe that God might blesse him and supply his wants in that voyage By bread all corporal necessarys are here vnderstood For foode being the most necessary of all corporal thinges and bread-being the most necessary of all foodes it may properly signify all temporall necessarys and therefor in the holy scriptures bread is taken generally for any kind of meate as in the place aboue cited where lacob prayed for bread and rayment and Luc. 14. where it is said that Christ entred into the house of a certaine Prince of the Pharisys to eate bread Luc. 14. That is to say to eate meate in general for it was a feast which the Pharisee then made for his freinds Here we may conceiue somethinge of the great losse which we haue incurred by sinne Man whilst he was in paradise and in state of grace was well prouided for of all corporal thinges the tree of life supplying him soe that he could feare noe want But falling into sinne he fell into feare and shame and beganne to want meate and cloths and many other things and was glad to take paines and to worke hard to get that which he stoode neede of and for all his paines taking is still in feare of want and therefor we are taught here to humble ourselues to God and to pray to him to blesse our labors and to giue fruit to them which otherwise are vaine and fruitlesse and to shew this he sendeth sometimes excesse of heates colds thunders droughts inundations and the like by which he deminisheth our allowance and taketh as much as he will from vs. What a folly then is it in rich and worldly men for the loue of riches or for any worldly respect to forsake God and to sinne against him If God should blast their corne burne their grasse send diseases to their goods fire to their houses or some greeuous lamenesse or deformity to their persons what would they doe then Iob was rich enough and had honour enough as a prince Yet he came to loose all and to be in great want and such misery as to ly vpon a dunghill and to scrape away the putrefaction from his body with shells and such things as he founde beside him This would God permitte in him to shew that all our felicitys are in his hands and that their is none rich and prosperous but by him And because he tooke all patiently and remained still the seruant of God he was blessed againe with temporal prosperity double to that which before he enioyed Antiochus was a king farre greater then Iob yet lesse then God who for his pride and cruelty destroyed his armys and brought him to that misery that as holy Scripture saith he that seemed to himselfe to rule euen ouer the wanes of the sea and to wey the heights of mountaines in a ballance Mach. 2.9 now being humbled to the ground was carried in a portatiue seate testifying the manifest power of God in himselfe soe that out of the body of the impious man wormes crawled abundantly and his liue flesh fell of for paines with his smell also and stinke the army was annoyed Now what better was this man for all his worldly greatnes when God would thus punish him he was made an example to others of the power of God and because he made not good vse of his afflictions as Iob did but remained still in his wickednes he was neuer restored to prosperity againe but died miserably It is therefor a vaine thinge to forsake God for temporall prosperity seeing that all blessings proceede from him and cannot be had but by him And yet that which is most absurde of all these very men that goe to the deuill for riches and for a pleasant life come to God to aske bread of him in their prayers They serue the world and the deuill and aske their liuelyhood of God Is not this absurde Seruants aske their wages of the masters whom they serue as souldiers doe of their captaines and generals Was their euer any souldier that went to the general of the enemys campe to aske pay or prouision If then worldlings you will serue the world why doe you aske your
to 8. That saith he the sacred body of which Christ tooke flesh and vnited together the diuine and humane nature should be giuen to the wormes to eate I dare not say it nor can I thinke it Thus much out of saint Iames saint Denis and saint Ignatius for the first age In the second age liued S. Irenaeus and Tertullian both of them haue set forth her ample prayses comparing her by contrarys to Eue Iren. l. 5. Tertl l. de Incarnat Christi who was our mother that caused our fall hurt and losse of Heauen but the B. Virgin is our Mother by whom wee are raised cured and restored to heauen againe And in respect of the power which her prayers haue with God S. Irenaeus calleth her the Virgin Aduocate of Eue the Virgin In the third age liued Origen a man of such parts to 3. ho. 1. and so well deseruing in his former yeares that he had a chaire of publike lecture of diuinity in the Schooles of Alexandria when he was but eighteene yeares of age he speaking of Christ and his Mother hath these words His Mother mother immaculate mother incorrupted mother vntouched His mother whose mother the mother of the onely begotten Sonne of God O great Sacrament the same a virgin and the mother of our Lord and a little after of this onely begotten Sonne of God this is the mother the Virgin Mary The worthy of the worthy one the vndesiled of the holy one the freind of the only one Tertullian liued in this age although he seemeth to haue flourished most in the former Saint Athanasius also liued in this age but flourished most in the next where I goe to cite him In the fourth age S. Athanasius flourished who opposing himselfe against the Arian haeretiks for forty six yeares in which he was Bishop was the prime pillar of the Catholik Church in the easterne parts of the world In these words he soundeth the blessed Virgins prayses and prayeth to her It becometh vs to call thee the regenerating mother Mistres and Lady for that our King Lord and God sprang forth of thee Athan in euang deip The Archangell gathered the first fruits of thy prayses when he spoke that glorious hymne Haile full of grace c. So doth the first front of Thrones Cherubims and Seraphims salute thee and so doth the second Hierarchy of Dominations Vertues and Powers and so doth the third of Angels and we the terrestriall hierarchy admonished by them extoll thee with a lowd and cleere voyce saying Haile full of grace our Lord is with thee Pray for vs ô Lady ô Mistres ô Queene ô Mother of God In the same age liued S. Ephrem who calleth her Holier then the Seraphims with out comparison more glorious then the supernall hosts The hope of the Fathers the glory of the Prophets the prayse of the Apostles Virgin before her child bearing and after it In this age also liue Saint Hierome S Chrysostome Saint Ambrose and Saint Augustine whom God raised as glorious lights to illustrate his Church in those blind and obstinate times of the Arian herely being at the hight And they haue said so much in deuotion to our blessed Lady that I know not where to beginne their Sentences You may read in S. Hier. ep de Nat. Mar. ad Crom. Heliod to 9. Hierome the miraculous manner of her Conception of S. Anne an aged and barren woman and how the name of MARY which in Hebrew is to say MISTRES or LADY was brought for her by an Angell from Heauen Who also foretold to Ioakim her father that she should bee blessedamong women and how she was consecrated to the seruice of God at three yeares old in the Temple and attended their being gouerned by priests Esa 11. and how that the Prophecy of Esay was litterally denoted in S. Ioseps rod which miraculously flouri●hed to assigne him as a worthy husband for her And in another place hee calleth her the life Epist ad Paul Enstoc rule and discipline of all and saith that as there is none Holy to compare with God so there is none perfect in comparison of her Saint Chrysostome Truely this Virgin is the miracle of the world Chry. in hypa dom She alone surpasseth in greatnes both Heauen and Earth For what is there holier then her not the Prophets not the Apostles not Martyrs not Patriarks not the Angels not the Thrones not the Dominations not the Cherubims not the Seraphims nor any other thing is there to bee founde greater or more excellent then her either amongst visible or inuisible creatures You may see in the second book which S. Ambrose wrote of Virgins and in S. Augustins sermons of her Natiuity and Assumption the deuotion which they bore to her In the next age beganne Nestorius his heresy the professed enemy of Christ and of our blessed Lady so farre as to deny vnto him one onely person of God and by consequence to robbe her of her prime title and honour of the Mother of God Many holy men beganne then to bestirre themselues for the honour of Christ Cyr. cont Nestor and his Mother but Saint Cyrill of Alexandria was his prime Antagonist and next vnder God the prime defendour of the Catholike cause who thus expresseth his deuotion to her Praise be to thee ô Holy Trinity to thee also be praise Holy Mother of God Thou art the pretious pearle of the world Thou art the candlestike of vnquenchable light Orat. de dorm deip the Crowne of virginity the Scepter of the Catholike Faith In the sixt age liued Andreas Hierosolymitanus Bishop of Crete who calleth our blessed Lady a saint holier then the Saints the most holy treasure of all sanctity Eusebius Emissenus liued in the same age who speaking of our B Lady was strucken with astonishmēt that he knew not what to thinke of the greatnes of her graces For saith he if she were full of grace before she conceiued what shall we thinke her to haue bene after it But what what then shall we thinke her to haue bene after so many yeares of continuall and such intimate conuersation with Christ she being his mother and he her master Thus you haue the deuotion of the auncient Fathers to our blessed Lady for the fist six hundred years of the Faith of Christ declaring a farre different spirit in them from those who wickedly blaspheme her or derogate from her praises or but any way sleight them as the moderne enemys of the Catholike Church commonly doe I might produce the Sentences of holy men in following ages vnto our dayes to shew the contiruance of that first and auncient denotion to her to haue bene at all times in the Catholik Church I might alleadge the words of S. Anselme Auth. Protest relig l. 1. c. 6. § 3. Saint Bernard Saint Bonauenture Saint Thomas of Aquine the denotion of S. Dominike S. Francis and of many other Saints some of whom
vse them Thirdly they obiect that our B. Lady is farre distant from vs and it is absurde to salute one at such a distance But this is noe absurdity because distance of place hindereth not the intelligence of glorious soules It were indeede absurde formen here vpon earth to salute one another in absence because in absence they vnderstande not but if they vnderstoode it were ●ather absurde to hinder their communication when it were for a good end The blessed Virgin vnderstandeth in heauen our deuotions vpon earth for although in body she be absēt from vs yet in spirit sheis presēt with vs as Elizeus was absent in body from his seruant but was present in spirit with him and saw all that passed betwixt him and Naaman and told him afterwards Reg. 4.5 Was not my hart present when the man returned out of his chaire to meete thee S. Paul also wrote to the Corinthians that he was absent in body Cor. 1.5 but present in spirit with them But the blessed Virgin seeeth by the light of glory the deuotion of those that pray to her and is much more present with them then Elizeus or S. Paul were whilst they liued vpon earth absent from them Fourthly they obiect against the often repeating of the Haile Mary that God heareth as well at once as at many times but to repeate it a hundred and fifty times to what purpose Yes for many good purposes First to pray with more feruour secondly to obtaine by perseuering in prayer that which at first is not allwais obtained thirdly to imploy ourselues in the consideration of holy mysterys such as I haue declared to be conteined in the Rosary Christ hauing deliuered to his disciples the Pater Noster as a patterne of prayer shewed them also how it was to be vsed to wit with much earnestnes and importunity not presently desisting from prayer when we obtaine not our desire but perseuering still to aske For this he immediatly annexed the parabole of a man who asking to borrow bread at first it was denyed him but perseuering to aske by his importunity he obtained as many loaues as he needed And he did not onely teach this by word but also by example praying with much feruour and repeating in the garden the same prayer ouer Mat. 26. and ouer and ouer againe as S. Mathew hath noted He was heard as well at the first as at the last but he would teach vs to perseuer in prayer and that God granteth for our importunity and therefor he had at last the comfort of an Angell appearing to him which at first it is not likely that he had The blinde man sitting by the way when he heard the noyse of the multitude and vnderstoode that Iesus of Nazareth was passing by cryed out Iesus sonne of Dauid haue mercy vpon mee Luc. 18. And when they rebuked him he cryed much more Sonne of Dauid haue Mercy on mee Christ heard him as well at the first as at the second time yet at first he granted not his desire because he would haue him to perseuer asking that he might commende his faith grant for his perseuerance and propose him as an example to teach vs how to pray The holy Kingin the 137. psalme repeateth in euery verse the very same words ouer againe soe that there being 27. verses the same thinge is repeated 27. times and take vp about halfe of the psalme An haeretike might aske what neede there was of soe much repeating the same thinge To whom I answere that Dauid was a holy man according to the hart of God and would sing the diuine praises with much feruour of spirit repeating the same words ouer and ouer againe many times and soe we repeate the praises of the B Virgin and double and redouble our prayers to her Christ sayeth it behoueth allwais to pray Luc. 8. Thes 1.5 and not to be weary And S. Paul biddeth Pray without intermission but we can not allwais pray new prayers If the prayer be a good prayer the more we repeate it the more loue we shew and more desire of obtaining and that which is to the honour of God cannot be asked too often vntill we obtaine it If it be good to say a good prayer once euery month it is better to say it once a weeke and if it be good to say it euery weeke it is better to say it euery day and better yet to say it euery hower so that we hinder not more necessary imployments l. 4. c. 28. Lactantius who liued about a thousand and three hundred yeares since and was master to Constantine the Great hath a discourse of purpose to commende the often repeating of the Aue Mary Fiftly they obiect that it tasteth of superstition to obserue such a number of prayers I answere that it tasteth of superstition to none but such as are out of tast with pious things and with the deuotions of the Catholike Church what superstition was it in saint Bartholomew and in saint Paul the Ermite to obserue a certaine number of prayers euery day An haeretike may call it superstition in Christ to choose twelue Apostles corresponding to the twelue Tribes of Israel or to pray thrice the same prayer in the Garden for that the number of three is often vsed in the Scriptures to signifie the firmnesse and stability of any thing or in a Catholike to say three Pater nosters in honour of the three persons of the blessed Trinity or siue in honour of the fiue wounds of our Lord. All which are as much superstitious as to obserue a certaine number of the Aue Marys in the Rosary And much more superstitious doth it outwardly appeare for Iosue to commande twelue men to take vp twelue stones out of lordan and to lay downe other twelue in their places to signify the twelue Tribes then to say a hundred and fifty Aue Marys in imitation of Dauids hundred and fifty Psalmes Yet who dare say that any of these things are superstitious We must not goe by the outtward appearance but by the intrinsecal to iudge of the malice of things Christ must not be iudged a sinner because he had the outward habite of a sinner The reasō why none of these things are superstitious is because there is nothing done in them but which hath conexion and proportion to a good end for which it is intended and therefore to obserue a certaine number of prayers in relation to some holy mistery not any of the actions aboue mentioned are in the species of superstitiō nor haue the malice of it because they haue proportion to a good end which is to stirre vs vp to deuotion by the representation of pious things Thus you see that the deuotion of the Rosary is well grounded vpon good and holy misterys and that all obiections against it are vaine and groundles as all must needes be that are obiected against the blessed Virgins honour Blessings are giuen to Beades