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A09287 Rhemes against Rome: or, The remoouing of the gagg of the new Gospell, and rightly placing it in the mouthes of the Romists, by the Rhemists in their English translation of the Scriptures. Which counter-gagg is heere fitted by the industrious hand of Richard Bernard ... Bernard, Richard, 1568-1641. 1626 (1626) STC 1960; ESTC S101681 240,340 338

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we which beleeue in the Name of the Sonne of God haue eternall life 1. Ioh. 5. 13. that so we might reioyce and that our ioy might be full 1. Ioh. 1. 4. He wrote that we might know the things which he had seene the things that were and that which was to be done afterwards euen to the worlds end Reuel 1. 19. Now therefore seeing it is cleare as before is proued that all Scriptures are inspired of God and he the Author thereof as also that vpon what occasion soeuer or to whomsoeuer they were first written that they were not written for their sakes alone but for ours also as their owne Bible iustifieth Rom. 4. 23 24. and 15. 4. 1. Cor. 9. 10. and 10 11. Psal 101. 19. and that they were appointed for all th●se forenamed ends to teach the Churches to argue against errors to correct sinne and vice to instruct in vertue to keepe vs from sinne to worke faith feare hope loue patience comfort and fulnesse of ioy to know the Author of our saluation and what Iesus Christ taught and did to know the words of the Prophets and Apostles also whether we stand in the true grace of God or no how to demeane our selues in Gods Church and to be wise to saluation to beleeue in the Sonne of God and in beleeuing to haue life through his name and to know the Churches state from the beginning to the worlds end These with other before mentioned being the maine ends of holy Scripture what can be further desired to set out the perfection of it especially considering fourthly that the particulars either in expresse words or by a necessarie conclusion which are in euery book do fully shew the sufficiencie of the whole Bible according to these ends so as nothing is to be held necessarie for instruction and direction in Gods Church but is therein contained For would we know what we are to beleeue All the twelue Articles of our Christian faith are there to be found almost in so many words expresly Would we know our dutie to God and man There are the ten Commandements of God wholy set downe with the explanation thereof by exhortations dehortations and examples throughout the Bible Would we know how to pray aright There is the Lords Prayer fully set downe to teach vs to pray and holy mens prayers as a commentarie for our directiō Would we know what Sacraments Christ ordained The two Baptisme and the Supper of the Lord are plainely shewed to be instituted and commanded by Christ Matth. 28. 19. and 26. 26 27 28. Would we haue controuersies decided If men without wrangling will rest in that which is sufficient to quiet the conscience the Scriptures wil end them in any necessarie point of faith and good life I will for example instance in some betweene Papists and vs their own English Bible being iudge 1. Whether publicke seruice ought to be in an vnknowne tongue No say wee Yes say they Heare the Iudge 1. Cor. 14. 9. By a tongue vnlesse thou vtter a manifest speech how shall that bee knowne which is said for thou shalt but speake in the aire Vers 15. I will pray with vnderstanding I will sing with vnderstanding Whether any Images or likenesse of God may be made Yes say they No say we Heare the Iudge Deut. 4. 15 17. Keepe your soules carefully yee saw no similitude in that day that our Lord spake to you in Horeb from the midst of the fire lest perhaps deceiued you might make you a grauen similitude or image of male or female c. 3. Whether the Sacrament of the Lords Supper be to bee administred in one kind Yes say they No say we Heare the Iudge Mat. 26. 26. Iesus tooke bread vers 26. and tooke the Chalice saying Drinke you all of this vers 27. 1. Cor. 11. The Lord Iesus tooke bread vers 23. also the Chalice after he had supped vers 25. This was the Churches practice 1. Cor. 10. 16. 4. Whether the words This is my Body are to be taken properly or figuratiuely Figuratiuely say we No properly say they Heare now the Iudge in the like sacramentall phrase Gen. 17. 10. God speaking of Circumcision saith of it This is my Couenant Also speaking of the eating of the Lambe and manner thereof calleth it the Passeouer it is the Phase that is the passage of the Lord as their Bible hath it and as ours it is the Lords Passeouer Exod. 12 11. Saint Paul in 1. Cor. 10. 4. saith The Rocke was Christ It is vsuall to call the signe by the name of the thing signified Reuel 1. 20. The seuen Candlestickes are the seuen Churches 5. Whether a sacrifice properly so called is now to be offered for the forgiuenesse of sinnes They say yes else their Masse is mar'd but wee say no. Heare the Iudge Heb. 10. 18. Now there is no oblation for sinnes for 1. Ioh. 2. 1 2. We haue an Aduocate with the Father Iesus Christ the Iust and he is the propitiation for our sinnes 6. Whether Saints bee our Mediatours to God and so there be more then one Mediatour betweene God and vs. They say yea we denie it Heare the Iudge 1. Tim. 2. 5. There is one God and one Mediatour betweene God and man which is the Man Christ Iesus 7. Whether we be iustified and saued freely through faith in Christ or by works before God We say yea by faith in Christ freely By merit of workes before God say they Heare the Iudge Rom. 3. 20. By the workes of the Law no flesh shall be iustified before him Chap. 4. 2. If Abraham was iustified by workes he hath to glorie but not with God Chap. 3. 24. For by grace you are saued through faith and not of your selues for it is the gift of God Rom. 9. 16. It is not of the willer nor of the runner but of God that sheweth mercy Rom. 11. 16. If by grace not now of workes otherwise grace now is not grace Rom. 3. 28. For we account a man to be iustified by faith without the workes of the Law Ephes 2. 9. Not of workes that no man glory The place in Iames Chap. 2. 24. is of declaring a man to be iust before men for in the Law no man is iustified with God Gal. 3. 11. because the iust liueth by Faith but such a Faith as worketh by loue and is not a fruitlesse Faith of which Iames speaketh Thus might I runne thorow all the maine controuersies betweene vs and them to shew the sufficiency of the Scriptures which they hold imperfect and insufficient Contraried by Antiquitie Ireneus lib. 2. ca. 47. We know very well that the Scriptures are perfect And li. 3. ca. 1. the foundation and pillar of Faith Iustin in Tryph. Wee must flye to the Scriptures that in all things we may be safe Tertul. contra Hermog I adore the plenitude or fulnesse of the Scriptures And against Praxeas The Scripture is sufficient of it selfe Cyprian or
RHEMES AGAINST ROME Or THE REMOOVING OF THE GAGG OF THE NEW Gospell and rightly placing it in the mouthes of the ROMISTS by the RHEMISTS in their English Translation of the Scriptures Which Counter-Gagg is heere fitted by the industrious hand of RICHARD BERNARD Rector of Batcomb in the County of Sommerset AT LONDON Imprinted by Felix Kingston for Ed. Blackmore and are to be sold at his shop at the great South doore of Pauls 1626. TO THE RIGHT WORSHIPFVLL AND WORTHILY HONOVRED SIR RALPH HOPTON Knight of the BATH encrease of all true happinesse euen to that Glory which neuer fadeth Right worthy Sir I Reade that in ancient times among the Romanes those were adorned with the dignity of Knighthood which had with valorous mindes exercised themselues in the warres men of courage and of life honest These so qualified were much honoured and had many priuiledges granted them by the * Vt fusè docet Claud. Coteraeus de Priuilegijs iure Militum Ciuill Lawe their deserts meriting such an esteeme and their worth reward due for the same Now in a Christian Knight what can be more excellent then by a vertuous life to worship the true God and out of a valorous Spirit to expose himselfe vnto imminent dangers for his Countries honour and safety Your dignity you haue obtained in the seruice of your Soueraigne to the perill of your person and to your large expences in maintayning your choice company of Followers in their distresses For this your bounty haue I heard them praise you worthily and pray for you heartily Sure I am you went out with a resolute band and more then so with a Companie by meanes of good instruction well ordering themselues Your glorie standeth not in the issue of the designement being so warrantable and honorable howbeit it lay not in your power to make it prosperous but in your noble resolution wherein you may receiue comfort * Nam Conscientia rectae voluntatis max ima consolatio est rerum incommodarum Cic. Fam. 6. ep 4. and so much the more hauing such impediments as might seeme able to countermand you otherwise to resolue as the gray haires of that wise Lady your aged Grandmother laying it to heart your loue of that worthie Lady your second selfe so tenderly affectionated towards you your so high esteeme and reuerence to your naturall and deare Father so well beloued of his Countrey deseruedly whose very life I may say as Iudah spake to Ioseph of his Father Jacob concerning Beniamins returne was bound vp in your life being his only Sonne the hopefull Heire of so great an estate This threefold cord so strongly tying you besides the infolded louing twists of Vncles and Sisters could not possibly haue bin vnloosed if Generosity of Spirit had not bin predominate and your obliged faithfulnesse to that euerlastingly-renowned name of an afflicted Princesse bin of that commanding power to haue pressed you forward As at your departure for your so praise-worthy resolution I did my best seruice according to my calling and as at your returne I could not neglect my dutie so now hauing so good an occasion againe to expresse my truly honoring of you I desire you to accept this as a Memoriall thereof for the time to come For though I know my selfe by profession to be a Preacher of Peace yet indeed as I euer haue so still I cannot but magnifie a valiant mind and a Martially Spirited Gentleman especially if the same be accompanied with true piety the Crown of Knighthood Of which so qualified the Lord the God of hoasts increase the number in these dayes of warlicke imployments And thus in all dutifull respect I for this present humbly take leaue Your Worships to be commanded in Christ RIC. BERNARD Batcombe May. 22. 1626. AN ADVERTISEMENT TO THE CHRISTIAN READER CONCERNING SOME PASSAGES IN the Gaggers Preface as also shewing this Authors generall intent IT is hard to say whether boldnes or ignorance bee predominant in the Writer of the Pamphlet stiled The Gagg of the new Gospell In his Thrasonicall Preface he braggeth that our owne Bibles are so cleare to all the World for the establishing of the Romane doctrine and condemning our owne that nothing is needful thereto but that a man know to reade and haue his eyes in his head to behold the same at the opening of our Bible And yet among the differences betweene them and vs this not the least concerning the deciding of controuersies is maintained and orged by him that the Scripture is obscure and difficult shut vp with many seales subiect to contrary interpretations not to be cleared by conferring place with place and therefore that the people ought to be restrained from reading of them If so how can his Catholique Reader at the first sight by the same refute our doctrines How needeth he nothing but to haue his eyes in his head when by their owne law he may not vse his owne eyes without the Popes spectacles He deploreth or rather ●●●ffeth at the multitude and varietie of our Translations and Editions of the Bible in English and yet in the while will not remēber the manifold swarmes of their translations corrections editions of their owne vulgar Latine euen since the making it authentical by the Councel of Trent Had we as they aduanced beyond and aboue the Originals any of our authorised Translations attributed infallibilitie to euery tittle of any of them or in diuersitie of varying Copies come neere the Romish for multitude such imputations might be laid against vs but not by Romanists Like a doughty daring Champion or grand Goliah vpon displaying his banner of manifold Scripture-proofes for the Romane cause he proclaimeth of and against our partie that all the packe of them put together is neuer able in their defence to doe the like that is to produce so many places in number so expresse and cleare and for so great a quantitie of controuersies I wish that this Thraso had to the 276. places by him cited out of our Bible added but this one Let not him that girdeth on his harnesse 1 Kings 20. 11. boast himselfe as he that putteth it off Among this packe as he is pleased in his peddling eloquence to stile vs I acknowledge my selfe to be of the meanest and coursest stuffe farre inferiour to most of my learned and iudicious brethren who are able with one finger not only to gagg but also to choake this babbler Yet should I thinke my selfe vnfit to beare the name of a Minister in this Reformed and Renowned Church of England if vpon one cursory view of some parts of the Scriptures I were not able to obserue and ranke out more pertinently and with better conscience and directer consequence many more authorities and arguments for the defence of our Church and beating downe Poperie then he hath pretended to doe on the contrary True it is that my principall calling and daily endeuour is like Dauids in his minoritie to
the same Picus Mirand in Apologia was bold to say that there was no infallible truth without the Bible Our faith saith Aquinas doth stay vpon the Canonicall In sum part 1. q. 1. Art 8. 10. books and the Church doth not decree but of things not necessary to Saluation Ferus on Mat. 13. saith that the holy Scriptures are the sole Rule of verity and whatsoeuer differs or contradicteth the same it is error and Cockle with whatsoeuer shew it commeth forth Franciscus à Victoria de Sacra pa. 120. saith I doe not thinke it sure and certaine although all Writers agree thereto because it is not to be found in the holy Scriptures Villa Vincentius teacheth that the doctrine of the Bookes Li. 2. de form Conci ca. 2. of the Prophets and Apostles is alone the Rule and foundation of Truth Their Canon Law tels vs that the diuine Scriptures containe Dist 37. 6. Relat the whole and firme Rule of faith Andradius lib. 3. Defens Trid. Con. in initio Their opinion dislikes me not who say that therefore the Scriptures are called Canonicall because they containe the most ample Canon that is the Rule and Square of Piety Faith and Religion Bellarmine lets fall this truth that the sacred Scripture is De Verbo Dei lib. 1. ca. 2. the most certaine and most sure Rule of Faith If so in the Superlatiue degree then nothing there is to ouerrule or equall it and therefore we may more safely cleaue to it onely as the most sure and the most certaine Rule For nothing saith the same man a little before in the same place is more knowne nothing more certaine then the holy Scriptures which are contained in the Propheticall and Apostolike writings Besides these testimonies so cleare as no Protestant can speake better in this point I adde their owne practice against themselues For whatsoeuer they conceit to be a Rule whether a Traditionall word or their Popes Definitiue sentence they are constrained to runne vnto the Scriptures for the ground of their assertions and to procure credit to their supposed rule The Gagger hath obiected no Scriptures to disproue the Scriptures to be the onely Rule of Faith II. Proposition That the Scriptures are imperfect and insufficient to instruct vs in all things necessary to saluation Confuted by their owne Bible THeir Bible proueth the vndeniable fulnesse perfection and sufficiency of the Scriptures by setting downe the true ends thereof both for the whole and parts which being so appointed of God cannot bee frustrated nor insufficiency found in any meanes which he ordayneth for they doe perfectly conduce to their ends except any dare imagine impiously and will say that either the Scriptures are not sufficient for the ends whereto they are appointed of God which none but Atheists will affirme or that the ends are not inough to make the Scriptures perfectly sufficient to instrtct vs in all things necessary to Saluation But if the Scriptures be granted to be sufficient for their ends whereto they be appointed as needs must and the ends therein set downe be proued sufficient in all matters necessary to saluation it will necessarily follow that the Scriptures are sufficient The ends why the Scriptures were written proued sufficient to direct vs in all matters necessary to saluation The Scriptures were and are written for our learning Rom. 15 4. to teach to argue to correct and to instruct in iustice 2. Tim. 3. 16. that we might haue faith and life in the Sonne of God Ioh. 20. 31. and hope also by the patience and consolation of the Scriptures Rom. 15 4. which can instruct to saluation 2. Tim. 3. 15. that the man of God may be perfect instructed to euery good worke If it can instruct and make perfect to euery good worke then euery good worke may be learned out of the Scriptures and that which can make a man to euery good worke perfect is in it selfe a perfect instruction thereto And what instruction is farther required then to good workes and to euery good worke where instruction is for euery such thing there is no defect This were proofe enough for the sufficiencie of the Scriptures but yet more Moses as their owne Bible sheweth wrote that the people might learne that they might feare the Lord their God all their dayes and keepe and fulfill all the words of the Law Deut. 31. 9 12 13. and his words and ceremonies that were commanded in the Law Deut. 17. 19. Dauid and others wrote the Psalmes to teach the feare of God Psal 33. 11. for instruction for the iust for comfort in aduersitie for praising and thanksgiuing in prosperitie with many other ends which their owne Bible plentifully sets out in their contents before euery Psalme according to their Doway translation Salomon wrote his Prouerbs to know wisedome and discipline to vnderstand the words of prudence and to receiue instruction of doctrine iustice and equitie that subtilty that is as they expound it profound and solid wit may be giuen to little ones knowledge and vnderstanding to yong men Prou. 1. 2 3 4. The Prophets wrote to discouer mens sinnes to threaten iudgements to call them to repentance to comfort the humbled to foretell things to come either of some particulars or of the state of the whole Church either then or afterwards as the Prophesies do witnesse The Euangelist S. Luke wrote that we might know the veritie Luk. 1. 3 4. of all those things which Iesus began to do and teach vntill the day that he was assumpted Act. 1. 1 2. S. Paul wrote to the Romanes to put them in remembrance what he had taught Rom. 15. 15. to the Corinthians to admonish them 1. Cor. 4. 14. not to keepe company with such as professed Christ and liued lewdly 1. Cor. 5. 9 11. to instruct them how to carrie themselues to an excommunicate penitent 2. Cor. 2. 3 9. To the Ephesians he wrote that by reading they might vnderstand his wisedome in the mysterie of Christ Ephe. 3. 3 4. to Timothy how he ought to conuerse in the house of God 1. Tim. 3. 15. To these may be added the end and scope of all the rest of his Epistles S. Peter wrote to admonish alwayes the Saints 2. Pet. 1. 12. to stirre them vp by admonition ver 13. and after his decease to keepe a memoriall of the things taught ver 15. that they might be mindfull of those words which he before had told them from the holy Prophets and the Apostles of the precepts of our Lord and Sauiour 2. Pet. 3. 2. and to testifie that this was the true grace of God wherein they stood 1. Pet. 5. 12. S. Iohn he wrote that we might not sinne but if any did to let vs know that we haue Iesus Christ our Aduocate and propitiation for our sinnes 1. Ioh. 2. 1 2. that we also might beleeue that Iesus is the Christ the Sonne of God Ioh. 20. 31. and that we might know that
they come in Christs stead 2. Cor. 5. 20. and doe alledge these faithfull promises of God made in generall and apply them to their hearers assuring them that if they beleeue these promises shall be certainly performed Thus Peter applyed the promises Act. 2. 38 39. 3. 25 26. So did S. Paul Act. 13. 26. 16. 31. which assurance made by faithfull Ministers vpon these vndeceiueable promises of God is to bee receiued and beleeued as from Christs owne mouth because they speake not vpon any warrant of their owne but vpon the vndoubted warrant of Christ himselfe Thirdly the Hearers as many as be ordained to eternall life Act. 13. 48. beleeuing doe apprehend and by faith doe apply to themselues these promises so deliuered for that they know that they doe beleeue and truely repent of which their conscience beareth witnesse whose heart is so seasoned with grace and conformed to Gods voice as the same like an Eccho answereth thereto So that when God saith Seeke ye my face the faithfull soule answereth to God Thy face Lord will I seeke Psal 27. 8. When God saith Thou art my people it soundeth backe Thou art the Lord my God Zach. 13. 9. When Christ saith If thou beleeuest al things are possible to him that beleeueth he answereth Lord I beleeue helpe my vnbeliefe Mar. 9. 23. When God requireth his will to be done and his commandements diligently to be kept the gracious soule is moued with desire therto Oh that my wayes were directed to the keeping of thy Statutes Psal 119. 4 5. and shewes it selfe ready Loe I come O God I am content to doe it yea thy Law is within my heart Psal 40. 7 8. Therefore their faith claimeth these promises and concludeth the assurance of the things promised in particular so to themselues as if they in the same promises were personally named Fourthly to this spirit of true Beleeuers the holy Ghost beareth witnesse Rom. 8. 16. and it is true 1. Ioh. 5. 6. that wee are the sonnes of God Rom. 8. 16. and that God hath giuen to vs eternall life 1. Ioh. 5. 11. which true Beleeuers doe know for the Word was written also that this they should know 1. Ioh. 5. 13. Thus we see how a true Beleeuer hath his particular perswasion not from an idle fantasie or vaine conceit but from the vndoubted Word of God and from the faithfull witnesses of Gods Spirit and his owne conscience If our Aduersaries will be yet obstinate and say that these generall promises cannot bee thus particularly applyed I demand foure things First why is it said Rom. 15. 4. Whatsoeuer things were written aforetime were written for our learning that wee through patience and comfort of the Scriptures might haue hope and in Rom. 4. 23 24. That the things written were not written for their sakes onely of whom they were spoken but for vs also if we cannot apply them as spoken to euery one Secondly why haue the Apostles applyed the generall promises to particular persons so as they haue done as before is shewed Act. 3. 26. 16. 31. 13. 26. and why haue they comforted the faithfull in generall with a promise made to one before in particular Ios 1. 9. Heb. 13. 5 And why did Zachary include himselfe in those promises made long before to Abraham as spoken to himselfe and those then liuing Luk. 1. 73 74. if faith might not apply them to a beleeuers owne speciall comfort Thirdly how can the Popish Priests from a generall Scripture Ioh. 20. 23. with such authoritie absolue their particular Penitentiaries And are either those Priests or any of their Penitentiaries named in the Text If vpon so generall words they can be bold to assure their Confitents of pardon of sinnes may not a true Beleeuer vpon the forenamed grounds hee assured particularly of his owne saluation Lastly if there can be no assured application without particular nomination how shall men become obedient to the precepts and commandements of God how shall any bee stirred vp by exhortation how shall any bee terrified by threatnings For in none of these is any man personally named more then in the promises Therefore as in hearing the other we apply them and verily take them without any doubt as spoken to vs in particular to worke obedience and feare so in hearing these promises are we to apply them as spoken to vs by name if we truely beleeue to our heauenly comfort and assurance of life Obiection Secondly they say that Gods Decree whence we fetch the ground of assurance is conditionall If we beleeue If we liue as we ought to liue and perseuer to the end Which perseuerance when God foreseeth in vs doth thereupon elect vs to saluation Answ The Decree is absolute according to the good pleasure of Gods owne will For therefore we beleeue because hee so hath ordained it Act. 13. 48. We walke in good workes because he hath so fore-ordained vs thereto Ephes 2. 10. We are in time called iustified made conformable to Christ adopted for children to bring forth fruit that also the same should remaine and so be at length glorified because he hath predestinated and ordained vs thereto Rom. 8. 30. Ephes 1. 5. Ioh. 15. 16. So as his Decree is the cause of all good to vs and not our obedience and perseuerance the cause of his Decree Obiection Thirdly this Doctrine of the certainty of saluation and that faith cannot faile maketh men secure careless of good works Answ This is a very old obiection but altogether slanderous There is indeed to be granted a kind of security or assurednesse being vnderstood spiritually for it maketh vs secure in God in the infinitenesse of his mercy towards vs through Christ in the vndoubted truth of his promises in the full perfect satisfaction made by Christ and in the vnchangeablenesse of Gods eternall Decree to saue all those which truely beleeue in Christ But this Doctrine maketh them not carnally secure which are vpon solid ground assured of their saluation which is thus manifest First this sauing faith as you haue heard is euer accompanied with other graces which maketh the true Beleeuers neither barren nor vnfruitfull 2. Pet. 1. 5 8. Secondly this precious faith doth not onely claime the promises but humbly attendeth vpon Gods will in vsing such meanes as God hath appointed in the way to Heauen Thirdly it is euident from examples in Scripture of such as were certaine of saluation as Abraham Moses Dauid S. Paul and others that they did not therefore neglect their duties And such with vs as conscionably hold this doctrine doe walke nothing lesse carefully in the wayes of Gods Commandements but doe endeuour to keepe a good conscience towards God and men And what if vaine presumptuous spirits abase this doctrine as they doe other holy and wholesome truths to their condemnation is the Doctrine therefore faulty Shall the abuse of truth make it to be iudged falshood God forbid To conclude this Doctrine of assurance is most comfortable to humbled and afflicted soules as the other is full of slauish feare and very comfortlesse For what can bee more terrour to mans heart in the time of temptation when hee hath fallen by infirmitie suddenly into some grieuous offence as Peter did and being assaulted by Satan to despaire as Iudas did then to be perswaded that Gods Decree dependeth vpon mans perseuerance that the couenāt of Grace made with his soule may be annihilated his promises fallible his power frustrated Christs strength too feeble to vphold him Christs prayers not of force to preuaile for him with Gods the holy Spirit to haue forsaken him the Seale of Gods Couenant broken off the writing cancelled Faith it selfe and the hope of heauen lost for euer This wounded spirit this soule thus perplexed this heart thus affrighted cast into such a deepe gulph of despaire who can but pittie and withall beware of that desperate Doctrine which casteth poore soules into such vnexpressible misery and sorrows of heart On the other side by the Doctrine of assurance of saluation when a poore weake Christian hath beene ouertaken by some violent storme of temptation and commeth to the sight of sin with Dauid cryeth calleth with bitter teares of repentance and faine would finde peace with God againe how comfortable will it be in such a distresse when Satan with his fiery darts assaulteth him to thinke that though he hath failed on his part and so vndone himselfe for euer as much as lyeth in him yet that God is one and the same his Decree vnalterable his Couenant not broken on his part Christ still his Sauiour his prayers prevalent for him the Spirit of God exciting him to prayer with groanes not to be expressed and his faith though shaken yet not lost O how will the meditation hereof comfort such an afflicted spirit turne his heart to seeke after God grieuing with himself that he should displease so gracious a God and after he hath once againe found some comfort to put on a resolution neuer to offend so any more in a holy zeale therefore to auenge himselfe on himselfe bringing downe his flesh in subiection to the Spirit and all this with an earnest loue to God and care to please him euen for that he hath not lost through his fall the assurance of his saluation as iustly he had deserued Thus is this Doctrine a comfort in distresse and an incouragement after a fall to rise againe and in the time of greatest peace neuer any cause of carelesse securitie but rather of spirituall ioy and an incitement to well-doing to expresse all thankefulnesse to God through Christ for the same Euen so Amen FINIS
the Author de dupl mart ca. 42. There is no sicknesse of the soule for which the Scripture doth not afford a present remedy Athanas li. contr Gentes The Scriptures inspired of God are sufficient for all discussing and manifesting of the Truth August Tract 49. in Iohan. They are choise things which haue been written and thought sufficient for the saluation of beleeuers Chrysost hom 41. in Mat. or whosoeuer was that ancient Author Whatsoeuer is required to saluation is all accomplished in the Scripture neither is there any thing wanting there that is needfull for mans saluation Cyril lib. 12. in Iohan. in ca. 20. 31. Such things as the Apostle saw sufficient for our Faith and manners are written Hilar. li. 2. de Trinit speaking of Gods Booke What is there concerning mans saluation that is not contained therein What doth it want or what is there obscure in it All things are there full and perfect as being of him that is full and perfect Vincentius Lyrin yeeldeth the Canon of the Scriptures to be perfect and in it selfe aboundantly sufficient for all matters Thus we see how the Ancients ran vpon the perfection of the Scriptures and doe not vilifie them putting vpon them imperfectnesse and insufficiency as our Aduersaries very wickedly doe to get way hereby to their owne inuentions Gainesaid by the learned on their owne side Antoninus Archbishop of Florence God hath spoken but In sum part 3. tit 18. cap. 3. once and that in the holy Scriptures so fully to all doubts and cases and to all good workes that he needeth speake no more Scotus in 1. Sent. q. 2. The holy Scripture is all true necessarie and sufficient for him that walketh here below to bring him to saluation in all that concerneth beleeuing hoping and doing Gerson in serm in die Circum Dom. consul 1. The sacred Scripture is sufficient Caictan in Deut. 4. 2. willeth vs to gather from it that the Law of God is perfect Yea on 2. Tim. 3. saith he It s proper to the holy Scripture to teach the ignorant that he may bee perfect in all things Lyra on Ioh 20. 3. acknowledgeth the sufficiency of the Scriptures in respect of Christs excellencie in worke and doctrine Trithemius the Abbat li. 8. quaest ad Maximil Caesar q. 4. It is necessary that we hold the Scriptures perfect in all things and we must beleeue that they be true right entire sound diuinely-inspired and aboundantly sufficient to confirme the Christian Faith Villa-Vincentius de rat stud Theol. li. 1. ca. 3. The Scriptures and they alone are able to teach vs to saluation And he groundeth his assertion on 2. Tim. 3. 16 17. In which words saith hee the Apostle comprehendeth all things that are necessary to saluation Canus loc theol li. 7. ca. 3. The Canon of the Scripture is perfect and most sufficient of it selfe to euery end Espencaeus on 2. Tim. 3. 15 16. If any thing be needfull to bee knowne or done the Scriptures teach they can instruct a man to saluation and make him sufficiently learned Roffensis Art 37. aduers Luthera pa. 411. The holy Scripture is a store-house of all truths which are needful to be knowne of Christians Bellarm. de Verbo Dei li. 4. ca. 11. All things are written of the Apostles which are necessarie for all and which they openly did preach commonly to all Wee here then see that the Scriptures containe and that sufficiently all the things which be necessary for mans saluation by the many witnesses among the Papists themselues See Doctor * Reply to Fishers answer White pa. 42. producing Anselmus Scotus Gerson Bonauentura Occham Waldensis Gabriel Aquinas Lyra and Durand Here may be brought in against the sufficiency and perfection An Obiection answered of them their common obiection which is that many bookes are lost Let it be so what then This proueth not the insufficiency of these Scriptures for first I haue prooued that they are sufficient to wit these which we haue for of these now wee dispute Secondly the ancient Fathers speeches before are of these and their sufficiency not regarding the Books lost Thirdly of these also doe their owne men speake in their before-cited testimonies though they know well enough this triuiall obiection III. Proposition That the Scriptures be obscure and hard to be vnderstood euen in things necessary THis question is to be vnderstood of all things necessarily to be beleeued and done in the way of saluation For wee doe not say that all and euery thing and all and euery word sentence speech and prophecie in Scripture is plaine and easie to be vnderstood but all the places speaking of matters of faith and good life necessary to saluation are plaine and easie to bee vnderstood and yet not of all men neither but of all such as in humilitie with prayer diligently and constantly reade and heare them hauing a godly purpose and a true indeuour to liue after them for such shall vnderstand these things Prou. 2. 1 5. vers 24 9. Ioh. 7. 17. The question being thus conceiued to say that the Scriptures are to such darke and hard to be vnderstood in such necessarie points of saluation is vntrue Confuted by their owne Bible Psal 18. 18. The testimony of our Lord is faithfull giuing After our Bible Psal 19. wisedome to little ones Vers 9. The precept of our Lord is lightsome illuminating the eyes Psal 118. 105. Thy Word is a lampe to my feete and a light to Psal 119. my paths Vers 130. The declaration of thy words doth illuminate and giues vnderstanding to little ones Prou. 6. 23. The commandement is a lampe and the Law a light 2. Pet. 1. 19. We haue a Propheticall Word most sure which you doe well attending vnto as to a candle shining in a darke place By all these places it is euident that the Scriptures being a light a lampe candle shining lightsome illuminating the eyes and giuing vnderstanding to little ones must be plaine easie and not obscure and dark For if it were how can it be called light how can it be said to enlighten our eyes and be a lampe to our feete And what need haue we to attend to it for direction and guideance in a darke place if it were not a shining light vnto such as attend vnto it Contraried by ancient Fathers Clem. Alex. protrept pa. 25. It is a common light shining to all men there is no obscuritie in it Epiphanius Haeres 69. All things in the Scripture be manifest to them which repaire to them with a religious heart Saint August in Psal 8. God hath bowed downe the Scriptures euen to the capacitie of babes and sucklings And in Epist ad Volus The Scripture like a familiar friend speaketh those plaine things which it conteineth without glosing to the heart of the learned and vnlearned de doct Chr. li. 2. ca. 9. In these things which are set downe plainely in the Scriptures are to bee found
a man endued with Gods Spirit and spirituall vnderstanding come to the holy Scriptures he will discerne them to be of God and of his Spirits inditing though none beare witnesse to them and tell him so much For the spirituall man iudgeth all things 1. Cor. 2. 15. and if he can iudge he also can discerne of thē Weigh also that those which bee good Bankers know money at the first sight whose image and superscription it beareth The worke of an Apelles is easily discerned from that which is an ordinarie Painters And wee know that men well read are so quick-sighted as that they can discerne learned mens writings from the counterfeites of them How much more then may the writings of God so infinitely surmounting all others in all manner of grace dexteritie and maiestie of themselues be seuered and sundred from all other writings and be knowne to be of the Lords owne inditing Lastly as in generall the Scriptures shew themselues to bee Gods Word and also more particularly that the seuerall books thereof are his Word So these very bookes which wee at this day acknowledge and haue in account for Gods Word and so beleeue them to be doe witnesse for themselues that they are indeed the very Word of God though the Church should bee silent in her dutie so to professe and teach them to be And this is cleare 1. From the Penmen who according to the wisdome giuen to them as Peter speaketh 2. Pet. 3. 15. haue written the truth of God Ioh. 19 35. and the commandements of God 1. Cor. 14. 37. Now who were the Penmen of these bookes we know 1. By the titles of them 2. By the inscriptions as that to the Rom. chap. 1. 1. to the Corinth chap. 1. 1. 2. Cor. 1. 1. to the Gal. chap. 1. 1. and so of the rest of the Epistles of Saint Paul Likewise that of Saint Iames Peter and Iude and the Reuel 1. 1 4. are knowne by their inscriptions 3. By the subscription in some as 1. Cor. chap. 16. 21. The salutation of me Paul with mine owne hand 4. By apparant testimonie within them telling vs who wrote them Iohn saith he wrote the Gospell ascribed to him Ioh. 21. 24. So Saint Paul his Epistles 2. Cor. 10. 1. 1. Corinth 15 9. 1. Tim. 1. 13. That to the Hebrewes in many places discouers it selfe to be Saint Pauls So the Gospell to be Saint Lukes and the Acts too for hee that wrote the one wrote the other also Acts 7. 7. 2. From the puritie the veritie the integritie the godly plainenesse and simplicitie and yet powerfull maiestie thereof euincing all gaine-sayers and manifesting these very bookes to be the Word of God What true and euident properties soeuer can be shewed to be the properties of Gods Word to know it by the very same these bookes challenge to themselues to approue themselues to bee Gods Word to the conscience of euery true Christian See Scotus his ten arguments 1. Sent. prol Art 1. Also Gregor de Valent. tom 3. p. 329. Let our aduersaries speake herein 3. From the witnesse of Gods Spirit making the reading studying meditation preaching and hearing of the things contained in these bookes very powerfull vpon mens consciences working conuersion to God and so perswading to beleeue them to bee of God as hereupon they doe yeeld obedience thereto feare to offend against the commandements therein beleeue with comfort the promises yea and so fully to giue themselues to the guiding thereof as they thinke in them to find eternall life and are so perswaded as that they can forsake all yea if need were also to suffer death vpon the faith of these sauing truths therein contained as holy Martyrs haue done very chearefully and constantly through the Spirits assistance bearing witnesse to them and by which they and wee know them to be the things giuen vs of God 1. Cor. 2. 12. This worketh faith and maketh vs beleeue them and therefore is called the Spirit of Faith 2. Cor. 4 13. This teacheth vs Ioh. 6. 45. and is truth 1. Ioh. 5. 6. and euer accompanieth the Word Esay 59. 21. to make it the power of God to saluation Rom. 1. and the sauour of life vnto life to them that are saued 2. Cor. 2. The Church is to testifie of them to interpret them out of themselues to keepe them and to defend them but she cannot either make them to be Gods word if they were not so already for she cannot make a word to be mans if man neuer spoke it neither can she make Gods word to be his word vnto vs vpon her owne credit if it selfe bare not witnesse of it selfe and the Spirit did not confirme the same and not worke this faith in vs. If her authoritie could worke this beliefe then were she to blame for not bringing all to the faith of them To worke diuine faith in our hearts is of God and not of men Contraried by Antiquitie Saluianus lib. 3. de prouidentia saith All that men say need reasons and witnesses but Gods Word is witnesse to it selfe for whatsoeuer the incorrupt Truth speaketh must needs be an incorrupt witnesse to it selfe Ambrose lib. 5. Epist 31. Whom may I beleeue in the things of God better then God himselfe Hilarie lib. 1. de Triniate God is a witnesse for himselfe and he is not to be knowne but by himself Now God and his Word is one and therefore saith Nilus it is all one to accuse God as Decausis dissent Eccl. pag. 2. to challenge the Scriptures Origen lib. 4. cap. 2. de Princip Whosoeuer with all diligence and reuerence as is meete shall consider the words of the Prophets it is certaine that in the reading and diligent view thereof hauing his mind and vnderstanding knocked at by a diuine inspiration he shall know that the words which he readeth were not vttered by man but are the words of God and of himselfe shall perceiue that these bookes were written not by humane Art not by the word of mortall man but by a Maiestie Diuine Gainesaid by some of their owne Gregorie de Valentia Comment in Thom. cap. 3. pag. 31. The Reuelation of the Scripture is beleeued not vpon the credit of another Reuelation but for it selfe Canisius citeth cap. de praecept Eccl. Num. 16. We beleeue adhere and giue the greatest authoritie to the Scripture for the testimonies sake of the holy Ghost speaking in them Bellarmine de Verbo Dei lib. ca. 2. Nothing is more knowne nothing more certaine then the Scripture that it were the greatest madnesse in the world not to beleeue them If he saith truth as he doth then is it madnesse not to beleeue the Scripture bearing witnesse of it selfe that it is all of it selfe inspired of God What farther Testimonie neede wee A Papist now of late in His guide of Faith saith thus We beleeue the Scriptures S. N. Guide of faith chap. 7. num 3. for the diuine Authoritie which is the
erre in this way hee doth not say The Church or the learned Church men or men in holy Orders for are these fooles but wayfaring men though fooles shall not erre Here is a promise that the simple Laytie shall not mistake their way which Popish Teachers cannot abide to heare of Neither shall any vncleane passe ouer this way but they teach that their Church Catholike consists of elect and reprobate both good and bad cleane and vncleane Therefore in a spirituall sense the words are to be vnderstood of the onely sanctified by Gods Spirit here trauelling in this World as wayfaring men and though esteemed as fooles yet are so guided in their holy profession as they shall not bee suffered to wander out of the way of life neither totally nor finally But he will say If these shall not erre then much lesse shall the Church True who denies it we doe not say that all the whole Church and all the holy that euer haue been such as this place speaketh of haue all erred this thousand yeeres as the Gagger beares his Reader in hand making him beleeue that we so teach Here the Prophet speakes of the Lords redeemed separated from the vncleane in a spirituall estate in and by Christ but in our dispute we speake of the visible Church of cleane and vncleane good and bad and of a mixt company III. This verse and the whole chapter speakes in the first place of the returne from Captiuitie which the Prophet doth expresse in figuratiue speeches to set out the comfort thereof most liuely and so it is nothing to the purpose for which the Gagger brings it In a high sense it sets out the spirituall happinesse of the redeemed by Christ partly here begun and fully to be perfected in the day of the Churches perfect redemption IV. It speakes not here of the Churches teaching but rather of the Saints trauailing towards Heauen But the word not erre made the Gagger thinke he had obtained his purpose and an expresse text for not erring in Doctrine when the words speake of a way a high-way of trauailing men and others not passing ouer it and of the redeemeds walking vers 9. Then being vnderstood of not erring in life it cannot be taken absolutely for error of life is in the best but they erre not to finall destruction Ephes 5. 27. That hee might present it to himselfe a glorious Church not hauing spot or wrinkle or any such thing but that it should be holy and without blemish Answ 1. Our dispute is of the visible Church and mixt company this is to be vnderstood only of the body whereof Christ in the most proper sense is the Head and Sauiour vers 9. which hee nourisheth and cherisheth vers 29. betweene whom and Christ thereis such an vnion as it is called a great Mystery vers 32. which cannot properly be meant of visible Churches consisting not onely of Elect but also of Reprobates who are not clensed nor nourished or cherished as members of his body nor made euer glorious II. The Apostle speakes heere of the Church either as triumphant or if as militant then as it is in preparing and as it shall bee hereafter in Heauen for in this life it is not altogether spotlesse without wrinkle or blemish Cant. 1. 5 6. III. This place doth serue rather to prooue her puritie in life then infallibilitie of iudgement in teaching this latter is hence farre fetched the former may seeme more apparant But will any beleeue that Gods Church for life and conuersation is in this life without spot wrinkle or blemish 1. Tim. 3. 15. The Church of the liuing God the ground and pillar of truth Because this place is much vrged by others and the last of this Gaggers I will more fully make answer vnto it Hence hee would conclude that the Church cannot erre he meaneth the Church of Rome the Pope at least the virtuall Church for they defend not now any Church from errour but their owne But this they can neuer proue out of the place I. Saint Paul wrote to Timothy how he should behaue himselfe in the Church 1. Tim. 3. 14. So his Epistle that is the Apostolicall written Word was made to be Timothies rule to guide him from erring and not the Churches determination S. Paul for all this his praise of the Church sent him not to Her but prescribed him a written Word to direct him in gouerning of her which hee would not haue done if by calling the Church the pillar and ground of truth he had meant she could not haue erred II. Saint Paul speaketh thus of the then present Church of Ephesus where Timothy was chap. 1. 3. built vpon the foundation Ephes 2. 20. and yet she soone left her first Loue Reuel 2. 4. and after fell away III. The word Church comprehendeth all the faithfull together at Ephesus so the Church of Ephesus is taken Reuel 2. 1. But our Aduersaries will not haue the people as the Apostles allowed Act. 15. 22. with their Bishops and Pastors to be the Church and with them to approue of matters of Faith For the Romish Clergie thinke of the people as did the hypocriticall Pharises that they know not the Law and are cursed Ioh. 7. 49. Except they allow the people also with the Teachers to be the pillar and ground of truth this place doth not serue their turne IV. If the word Church bee taken for any other particular Church to which Timothie as an Euangelist might goe after the Apostles planting of them then from hence the Papists cannot conclude that which they would for first they acknowledge that particular Churches may erre Secondly its euident by Scripture in the Churches of Galatia Gal. 1. and 3. 1. and 4. 10 11. by historie and by experience Now the Church of Rome was neuer other then a particular Church in the best spirituall estate thereof Saint Paul writes to it no otherwise then to a particular Church V. If it be taken for the Vniuersall Church this helpes not them For first theirs is not the vniuersall but a particular Church as is proued after in the sixteenth question Secondly it is absurd to reason from that which is not questioned nor can euer assemble together to come to the triall if it were questionable VI. The intituling of the Church to bee the pillar and ground of truth wil not afford the conclusion of not erring and that for these Reasons First because the words are metaphoricall and a similitude must be extended no farther then is in ended Now the Church is called the pillar and ground not because shee cannot erre but first for that she hath the Apostles writings committed to her as were the Oracles of God to the Iewes Rom 3. 2. which Apostles writings are saith Irenous the pillars and supporters of our faith the proofes foundations Li. 3. ca. 1. and the grounds of our cause as Saint * De vnit Eccl. ca. 16. On this 1. Tim. 3.
we doe and all that we can doe both for the beginning for the increase and for the continuance By which we may see how that it is Gods preuenting grace that brings vs to him and his grace also that confirmeth increaseth and preserueth vs vnto the end This also their Bible teacheth and sheweth how mercifully God preuenteth vs in all things that no man might glory in himselfe but hee that glorieth should glory in the Lord Ier. 9. 23 24. First God before such men haue any being as haue free-will in spirituall things chooses and predestinates them in Christ to be holy and blamelesse Ephes 1. 4. and preordinates them to beleeue and to haue eternall life Act. 13. 48. So as the ground of their saluation is farre before their will Secondly hauing thus chosen them he findeth them when they neither seeke nor aske after him Rom. 10. 20. they are his worke Ephes 2. 10. made anew they haue a new birth Iam. 1. 18. being borne of God Ioh. 1. 13. and of the Spirit Ioh. 3. 5 8. by the immortall seed of the Word 1. Pet. 1. 23. Hee takes away vnwillingnesse and the stony heart and giues them a will Phil. 2. 23. euen a heart of flesh to doe his will Ezek. 11. 19 20. and puts also into them a new heart and a new Spirit Ezek. 36. 26. so is the new man created in iustice and in the holinesse of the truth Ephes 4. 24. Thus God in mercie preuents mans will Thirdly Man being thus begotten thus borne and made anew the Lord quickneth him Rom. 8. 11. Ephes 2. 5. and giueth him spirituall life Ioh. 5. 21. 1. Cor. 15. 45. For now hee liueth yet not he but Christ liueth in him as the Apostle speaketh Gal. 2. 20. still preuenting mans will Fourthly when God of a dead man hath made him aliue and raised him vp againe Col. 2. 12. then he openeth his vnderstanding to vnderstand the Scriptures Luk. 24. 45. openeth his eyes Psal 118. 18. Esai 35. 5. and 42. 7. his eares Esa 50. 5. Iob Psal 119. 18. Psal 51. 17. 33. 16. his lips Psal 50. 17. his heart to attend to the Word Act. 16. 14. In whose heart God now so shineth as when hee commanded light to shine out of darknesse 2. Cor. 4. 6. and setteth them free Ioh. 3. 37. still in mercy preuenting mans will Fifthly thus God maketh way for himselfe opening mans vnderstanding eyes eares lips and heart he draweth vs vnto him Ioh. 6. 44. and giueth his lawes into our hearts and subscribeth them in our minds Heb. 10. 16. Hee giueth vs diuine graces spirituall wisedome Ephes 1. 17. the knowledge of the mysteries of the Kingdome of heauen Matth. 13. 11. Faith Ephes 2. 8. Phil. 1. 29. Loue 1. Ioh. 4. 20. Feare Ier. 32. 40. Repentance 2. Tim. 2. 25. Act. 5. 31. and 11. 18. and the Spirit to know the things that are giuen vs of God reuealing vnto vs that which no eye can see no eare can heare no heart conceiue of 1. Cor. 2. 9 10 12. Doth not God then by his grace preuent our will Sixtly after his thus furnishing vs with heauenly indowments Ezek. 16. 9 13. hauing wrought in vs the will that we may be imployed in his seruice he worketh also in vs the deed Phil. 2. 13. hee teacheth vs to pray Rom. 8. 26. powring out the Spirit of grace and prayer Zach. 12. 10. Hee maketh vs to walke in his precepts and to keepe his iudgements Ezek. Deut. 8. 18. 2. Cor. 9. 9 11. 11. 20. and it is of him that men haue great substance a Chron. 32. 29. 1. Chro. 29. 16. and of him it is that they bestow of it liberally verse 14. yea if any doe suffer for his name this is also the gift of God Phil. 2. 29. Seuenthly that all our sufficiencie may be knowne to bee of God their Bible telleth vs in general that of him are all things Rom. 11. 36. that euery best gift and euery perfect gift is from aboue Iam. 1. 17. that he beginneth the worke Phil. 1. 6. that it is he also that increaseth 1. Cor. 3. 7. Ephes 2. 21. Col. 2. 19. perfecteth Phil. 1. 6. Psal 138. 8. strengtheneth and confirmeth Rom. 16. 25. 1. Cor. 1. 8. and keepeth vs 1. Pet. 1. 5. so that none shall plucke vs out of his hand Ioh. 10. 28. and putteth his feare into our hearts that we shall not depart from him Ier. 32. 40. concluding that all our sufficiencie is of God 2. Cor. 3. 5. and that it is hee that hath wrought all our workes in vs Esai 26. 12. Lastly to all these reasons I may adde these fiue following First Gods promising of his heauenly gifts and graces as shewing men to be without them till they receiue them from him such are those in Ezek. 11. 19. Ier. 32. 39 40. 31. 33 34. 24. 7. Secondly the prayers made vnto God to conuert men Ier. Psal 119. 36. 31. 18. to fit them in all goodnesse to doe his will Heb. 13. 21. to sanctifie and preserue them without blame 1. Thes 5. 23. doe shew that the power is from God and not in man Thirdly the godly acknowledging their preseruation from falling to be of God Psal 115. 8. and 36. 24. and that it is hee Psal 116. 8. Psal 37. 24. Psal 145. 14. that lifteth them vp being fallen Psal 144. 14. they attribute nothing to their owne power Fourthly the Apostles giuing God thankes for mens obedience Rom. 6. 17. for their faith hope loue Col. 1. 3 4 5. for their deliuerence frō the power of darknes for translating them into the kingdome of his Sonne Col. 1. 13. for the increase of faith and charitie 1. Thes 1. 3. for blessing them with spirituall blessings Ephes 1. 3. By all which God is made the Author and Giuer and we onely the Receiuers thereof when hee hath made vs willing thereto For a man can receiue nothing vnlesse it be giuen him from heauen Ioh. 3. 27. The last is that the Scripture telleth vs how the Lord preuenteth the pride of mans heart that hee might not ascribe power to himselfe Deut. 8. 7. Hee had mercy on thee lest thou shouldst say in thy heart Mine owne force and the strength of mine owne hand hath atchieued all these things for me Ephes 2. 8 9. Wee are saued by grace not of workes lest any man should boast himselfe We are not wee see to boast of our owne strength nor to ascribe any thing to our selues but remember Gods mercy that hee which doth glory may glory in the Lord 1. Cor. 1. 31. 2. Cor. 10. 17. For of him and by him and in him are all things to him be therefore glory for euer Amen Rom. 11. 36. Contraried by Antiquitie Austin in Enchir. ad Laurent cap. 30. No man can beleeue hope and loue vnlesse hee will but euen the selfe-same will to beleeue hope and loue commeth not but from God De gra
Spirit First by the Spirit For the Spirit himselfe giueth testimonie to our spirit that wee are the sonnes of God Rom. 8. 16. This Spirit of God wee receiue that wee may know the things that of God are giuen to vs 1. Cor. 2. 12. Hence it is that Iohn saith In this we know that we abide in him and he in vs because hee of his Spirit hath giuen to vs 1. Ioh. 4. 13. and 3. 24. What can be more certaine then knowledge and that knowledge which is of Gods Spirit whose testimony is most infallible for it is the testimonie of God himselfe and the Spirit of truth Ioh. 14. 17. 1. Ioh. 5 6. It is also Gods pledge to vs 2. Cor. 5. 5. and 1. 22. Ephes 1. 14. and his Signet with which we are signed vnto the Day of Redemption Ephes 1. 13. and 4. 30. Now Gods Spirit being truth being Gods owne witnesse being his owne pledge in euery true beleeuers heart and his owne signet and seale is hee not certaine and sure of his saluation Will any man question the truth of an earthly Kings word his hand and seale so affirming any thing to be as hee saith How much lesse the Word hand and Seale of the King of Heauen bearing witnesse to euery true beleeuer that hee is the child of God yea and making him to speake to God as to a Father so to call him by the name of Father Rom. 8. 15. Gal. 4. 6. then which what greater assurance of saluation can there be Secondly by faith which maketh the party which hath it to know that he hath it 1. Cor. 13. 5. and that which it beleeueth to be certaine to the beleeuer so as he can say We know that hee will raise vs vp 2. Cor. 4. 14. We know that wee haue eternall life 1. Ioh. 5. 13. and we know that we haue a building of God eternall in Heauen 2. Cor. 5. 1. Therefore the Apostle saith We are bold alwayes verse 6. So as the Apostle Iames exhorteth not to wauer or to doubt Iam. 1. 6. So S. Paul 1. Tim. 2. 8. For saith is the substance of things to be hoped for and the argument of things not appearing Heb. 11. 1. Which could not be vnlesse there were certainty in it yea so certaine faith maketh things to be to beleeuers that the Apostle saith Wee walke by saith and not by sight hauing before spoken of constant boldnesse and also by and by after touching their assurance of future happinesse 2. Cor. 5. 6 7 8. Moreouer this grace of faith giueth a particular assurance to him that hath it and applyeth that to himselfe which hee beleeueth Therefore beleeuing in Christ and receiuing him are made both one Ioh. 1. 12. Now he that receiueth a thing from another for himselfe is to lay hold on it and so to take it to himselfe So beleeuing is a laying hold and applying Christ and his benefits and all promises of saluation made in Christ to a mans selfe in particular Whereupon it is that the Apostle speaking of faith exhorteth to apprehend eternall life 1. Tim. 6. 12. Also the more fully to expresse this particular assurance and application in Ioh. 6. to eate and to drinke Christ is made the same with beleeuing in him To beleeue in Christ saith Saint Austen is to In Ioan. tract 25. 26. eate the bread of Life He that beleeueth eateth Beleeue and thou eatest Now can any thing be more assured and more neerely applyed to a man that it is his infallibly then that which he hath eaten And if to beleeue in Christ be the eating of him and the eating assureth him that eateth him to liue for euer Ioh. 6. 51 58. then faith doth assure him that beleeueth in Christ that he hath Christ and all the benefits of his death and Passion for his eternall saluation as he that hath eaten bread hath the benefit of it to the sustentation of corporall life Of this liuely and certaine application of faith the Fathers speake Austin saith that saith sent vp layeth hold on Christ Chrysostome Tract 50. on Iohn On Marke hom 10. On Luk l. 6. c. 8. Li. de resur Cor. saith Let vs beleeue and we see Iesus present before vs. Ambrose saith That by faith Christ is touched and is seene Tertullian saith That by faith Christ is digested Now if Christ by faith be laid hold on seene present touched and as food digested it doth according to the measure thereof effectually apply him and giueth particular assurance of Saluation which is obtained by Christ though we haue neither miracle nor extraordinarie reuelation to tell vs that we are saued Furthermore faith is that which receiueth the promise Gal. 3. 14. It goeth out of a mans selfe to fetch all that it beleeueth concerning saluation from God most fully knowing that whatsoeuer God promiseth he is able to performe it Rom. 4. 21. Hence is it that by faith which applyeth the promise and beleeueth that God is true of his word and able also to make it good aboue all that we desire or vnderstand Ephes 3. 20. we are ascertained of that which we beleeue neither doth our faith stagger but maketh vs most assured while it is fixed on God on his Word on his will made knowne by his Word and promise on the truth of that also which he once hath spoken on his almightie power to make it good accordingly But God hath promised to euery true beleeuer forgiuenesse of sinnes Act. 10. 43. and euerlasting life Ioh. 3. 15. Thus hauing spoken his will and good pleasure is hereby knowne this word will hee keepe and his power will make it good All which true faith applyeth to him that hath it as spoken to him for in this faith excelleth all other graces and so maketh him certaine of forgiuenesse of sinnes and of euerlasting life which we in our Creed professe to beleeue not onely that there is remission of sinnes the resurrection of the body and the life euerlasting but euery true beleeuer by faith saith that his sinnes are remitted his body shall rise againe as Iob was perswaded and that hee shall haue life euerlasting For to beleeue them to be and not to apply them is not a iustifying faith but such a faith as is in reprobates euen the faith of deuils Lastly this sauing faith bringeth forth such fruits as wil proclaime to all that faith is a grace of certainty It maketh a beleeuer that he shall not be confounded Rom. 10. 11 to haue affiance and accesse with confidence Ephes 3. 12. Now where there is assiance and confidence there is much certainty in that grace which worketh these It worketh also hope now hope maketh vs glory and confoundeth not Rom. 5. 2 5. and is the anchor of the soule sure and firme Heb. 6. 19. yea hope is said to haue glory and confidence Heb. 3. 6. If hope then bee so certaine sure and firme as that we are thereby confident
it withereth and such a Beleeuer falleth away Luk. 8. 13. and is offended Mar. 4. 17. This is called temporarie faith Of these faiths the question is not for historicall is also in Deuils as well as men Iam. 2. Faith of miracles lasted but for a time and was the faith of some few Faith temporarie may be lost the Scriptures are plaine for it But the faith which we say cannot be lost is that precious faith 1. Pet. 1. 1. that vnfained faith which is accompanied with a pure heart a good conscience 1. Tim. 1. 5. working by loue Gal. 5. 6. that faith which iustifieth Rom. 5. 1. which saueth Eph. 2. 8. by which Christ dwelleth in vs Eph. 3. 17. and by which the world is ouercome 1. Ioh. 5. 4. through which by the power of God we are kept vnto saluation 1. Pet. 1. 5. This is called the most holy faith Iude vers 20. and is properly the faith of Gods Elect Tit. 1. 1. This faith may be shaken and the power of it sometime very greatly weakened and sometime be so made to languish as the true beleeuer may cry with the afflicted Father in the Gospell Lord I beleeue helpe thou my vnbeliefe Mar. 9. 24. the sense thereof being very little and the power thereof hardly felt for a time the partie being as it were in a swoune or traunce through the force of the temptation But yet neuerthelesse it is not lost totally nor finally so as that the elect Beleeuers cannot perish vtterly which is proued not onely from all which hath beene said before for proofe of the certainty of saluation but also by other manifold reasons of great force to perswade hereto I. From God the Father and thus First from his decree which altereth not for in him is no variablenes nor shadow of turning Iam. 1. 17. he changeth not Mal. 3. 6. no more doth his decree but his counsell shall stand Now God hath decreed who shall be saued Rom. 8. 30. and he hath decreed that such shall beleeue Act. 13. 48. that they shall be holy and blamelesse in loue Eph. 1. 4. be confirmed to the Image of his Sonne Rom. 8. 29. walke in good workes Eph. 2. 10. bring forth fruit and that the same shall remaine Ioh. 15. 16. Therefore by this decree of God neither they nor these their graces shall finally decay Secondly From his Couenant which is an euerlasting Couenant not to turne away from vs to do vs good but to put his feare in our hearts that we shall not depart from him Ier. 32. 40. Therefore by this euerlasting Couenant they cannot perish Thirdly From his gifts among which is faith to beleeue in Christ to suffer also for him Phil. 1. 29. But these gifts and callings of God are without repentance Rom. 11. 29. Therefore can they neuer be lost nor they that haue them perish Fourthly From Gods working all in vs both the will and the deed Phil. 2. 13. and all things for vs Esay 26. 12. reioycing ouer vs to do vs good Ier. 32. 41. Psal 147. 11. and 14 9. 4. and to beautifie vs with saluation Psal 149. 4. for what worke he beginneth the same will he perfect to the end Phil. 1. 6. For euery branch that beareth fruite the Father purgeth that it may bring forth more fruit Ioh. 15. 2. Such a branch then shall neuer wither or fall away Therefore the worke of our saluation being begun and continued of God and not being our worke but his who can hinder our saluation Fiftly From Gods promises which are infallible neuer failing in any thing which he hath promised Ios 21. 45. and 23. 14 15. 1. King 8. 56. Now he hath promised First that he will neuer suffer his to be tempted aboue their abilitie 1. Cor. 10. 13. Secondly that he will giue the issue with the temptation that they may be able to beare it 1. Cor. 10. 13. Thirdly that though the iust man be so ouertaken that he doth fall yet shall he not be vtterly cast downe Psal 37. 24. Therefore cannot the Elect fall finally and perish Fourthly From Gods power who establisheth and keepeth vs from euill 2. Thess 3. 3. vpholdeth all that fall and raiseth them vp Psal 145. 14. for he vpholdeth them with his hand that they may not be vtterly cast downe Psal 37. 24. and so are kept by his power vnto saluation 1. Pet. 1. Fifthly therefore except a power be to ouermaster Gods power the Elect cannot perish Sixtly and lastly From the prime cause of all this dealing of God thus with his people why he hath thus decreed couenāted giuen gifts wrought his worke made such promises and so supporteth them which is the good pleasure of his will Eph. 1. 5. his kindenesse his loue and mercie Tit. 3. 3 5. Ioh. 3. 16. without any desert of ours Tit. 3. 5. Now the same cause euerlastingly remaining in him which moued him to chuse vs is that which continueth euer his goodnesse towards vs and therefore cannot the Elect finally perish Thus farre reasons from God the Father II. From God the Sonne Iesus Christ First he is not onely the Authour but also the finisher of our faith Heb. 12. 2. Therefore our faith cannot be lost Secondly in him all the building fitly framed together groweth into a holy Temple Eph. 2. 21. That therefore which groweth doth not decay nor can perish Thirdly He saueth his people Matth. 1. 21. loseth nothing nor casteth any out that come to him Ioh. 6. 37 39. nor can any plucke them out of his hand but he giueth to them eternall life Ioh. 10. 28. How is it possible then that any of his should perish Fourthly He hath prayed God for all his whom his Father hath giuen him who either haue beleeued or shall beleeue in him Ioh. 17. 9 20. that he would keepe them through his Name from euill ver 11. 15. and he also doth still make continuall intercession for his Rom. 8. 34. Heb. 7. 25. and appeareth for them in his Fathers presence Heb. 9. 24. Now vnlesse men will say that Christs prayers are not heard contrary to Ioh. 11. 42. and that God is not well pleased with him contrarie to Matth. 3. 17. it cannot be that his faithfull children should perish and lose their faith III. From God the holy Ghost who dwelleth in vs 2. Tim. 1. 14. and abideth in vs 1. Ioh. 2. 27. who is called Gods earnest in our hearts 2. Cor. 1. 22. and 5. 5. and so are we sealed therewith Eph. 1. 13. and thus not here for a time but euen vnto the day of Redemption Eph. 4. 30. Therefore is it not possible for the Elect to perish except this earnest of our God and this his Heauenly Seale be of no validity IIII. From the words of Scripture speaking so confidently of true Beleeuers saluation He that beleeueth in the Sonne hath euerlasting life Ioh. 3. 36. and shall not come into condemnation but is passed from death vnto
professing haue erred concerning the faith Answ Faith as before is here the sound and wholesome Doctrine of faith For it is opposed to prophane and vaine babblings and oppositions of sciences falsely so called verse 20. Also the word erred shewed as much for errour is to bee vnderstood of Doctrine and not of the gift of faith it selfe And thus is Faith taken in 1. Tim. 4. 1. Reuel 2. 5. Remember from whence thou art fallen Answ 1. Here is no mention of losse of faith of which the question is Secondly by falling here is not to be vnderstood of a totall or finall falling away but onely the decay of loue not being in him in such a degree as at the first For this Angell had yet very excellent graces in him workes labour patience zeale against false Teachers hating those whom God hated hauing patience and not fainted Reuel 2. 3 6. If he fainted not he had not lost his faith This place is therefore rather against our Aduersaries then any thing for them But our Gagger gazing about without iudgement where-euer hee found a word sounding to his fancy though nothing to purpose that hee will set downe He should haue remembred that euery sticke will not make a gagge for euery mouth Luk. 19. 24. Take from him the pound Answ 1. This is a Parable and therefore affordeth no sound demonstration by argument in a matter of controuersie Secondly if the words be to be vrged he lost not his pound but it was taken from him and then when iudgement was to bee executed vpon him Mat. 25. 30. Our question is of losing it here before iudgement Thirdly by pound here is not meant sauing faith of which the question is but some common graces afforded to Castawayes such as this man was Matth. 25. 30. which if not wel vsed or abused God may depriue a man of But where is it read that God will take away his sauing grace from any man and damne them Matth. 25. 8. And the foolish said vnto the wise Giue vs of your oyle for our Lamps are gone out Answ 1. This is a parabolicall speech and therefore is not fit for argumentation in a controuerted point Secondly by Lamps and Oyle are meant not iustification or iustifying faith or adoption or Christ being made our Wisedome for then could not the receiuers bee deciphered by the name of foolish Virgins But some other more common graces which in some receiuers vanish in others are fed and increased vnto a due progresse of life and light putting them into a true state of iustification This was only in the wise Virgins The foolish had onely a false fire or blaze of some good beginning which neuer came to growth and herein they represent the Reprobates Heb. 6. 4 5 6. It is impossible for those which were once enlightened and haue tasted of the heauenly gift and were made partakers of the holy Ghost and haue tasted the good Word of God and the powers of the world to come if they should fall away to renew them againe to repentance c. Answ 1. This is but a supposition with an If they should fall away He teacheth not positiuely that such may fall away Secondly grant that such may fall away It is meant of Reprobates and not of the Elect For they here are said to be enlightened and but to taste of the heauenly gift and Word of God c. But the Elect doe more then taste for they receiue it digest and concoct it and finde nourishment and strength thereby Againe these are such as cannot be renued by repentance which is such a falling as neuer happeneth to the Elect. Moreouer these are such as make a generall Apostacie crucifying to themselues afresh the Sonne of God and euen sinne against the holy Ghost which the Elect in Christ cannot doe So by this Text we see that they which haue these gifts and illuminations may fall totally from Christ But there bee proper graces to the Elect and such things as accompany saluation which as the Apostle was perswaded were in the Hebrewes though he thus spake vnto them verse 9. Ezek. 18. 24 26. When a righteous man turneth away from his righteousnesse Ans 1. There is a righteous man seeming so before men Mat. 9. 13. but is not before God such a one may turne from his righteousnesse and such a one is here meant For this righteous man here so falls as that he may commit all the abominations that the wicked doth verse 24 and dye therein verse 26. and so apostate finally but a righteous man before God doth not so for he shineth more and more vnto the perfect day Prou. 4. 18. and shall be in euerlasting remembrance Psal 112. 6. and his memory is blessed Prou. 10. 7. Secondly there is a double righteousnesse the one Legall and the other Euangelicall which is the righteousnesse of faith that is the righteousnesse of Christ applyed to vs by faith and so made ours which cannot be lost because it is Christs But the other may and this is the righteousnesse which here the Prophet speaketh of For this righteousnesse is such as is blotted out by sinne and which in the day of trespasse shall not be mentioned as not being able to cleere him before God vers 24. But Euangelicall righteousnes is not blotted out in the day of mans transgression but is able to pacifie Gods wrath and keepe the repentant in Gods fauour Besides these many obiected places against the assurance of saluation they alledge reasons especially these which to the ignorant carry a great shew Obiection First that God in the Scripture doth not speake particularly by name to any that he shal be saued And therfore no mā can haue faith to beleeue certainly himselfe to be saued because there is not any such particular word of personall saluation to any man Answ There is in effect as much counteruailing a particular promise as if the true-hearted Beleeuer were personally named The promises are propounded in general It is true that in Gods book we find the proposition only in this māner Mar. 16. 16. He that beleeueth and is baptized shall be saued Ioh. 3. 15. Whosoeuer beleeueth in him shall not perish but haue life euerlasting Act. 10. 43. Whosoeuer beleeueth in him shall receiue remission of sinnes and shall not be ashamed Rom. 9. 33. 10. 11. The assumption or Minor is suggested by experience I beleeue Thence the conscience with comfort inferreth the conclusion necessarily following Therefore I shall not perish but haue life euerlasting First these and such like promises in generall to all include particular persons Whence it is that sometime they are propounded singularly in the second person If thou confesse with thy mouth the Lord Iesus and beleeue in thine heart thou shalt bee saued Rom. 10. 9. Awake thou that sleepest and arise from the dead and Christ shall giue thee light Ephes 5. 14. Thus speaking as to particular men Secondly Gods Ministers