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A18981 The true ancient Roman Catholike Being an apology or counterproofe against Doctor Bishops Reproofe of the defence of the Reformed Catholike. The first part. Wherein the name of Catholikes is vindicated from popish abuse, and thence is shewed that the faith of the Church of Rome as now it is, is not the Catholike faith ... By Robert Abbot ... Abbot, Robert, 1560-1618. 1611 (1611) STC 54; ESTC S100548 363,303 424

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nihilo inquit saluos faciet illos haud dubiū qum iustos qui nō proprio merito sed Dei saluantur clementia He will saue them for nothing as who are saued not by their owne merit saith he but by the mercy of God For y Gregor Moral l. 8. c 9. Iusti perituros se absque ambiguitate praesciunt si remota pietate iudicētur quia hoc ipsum quoque quòd iustè videmur viu●re culpa est si vitā nostram cum iudicat hanc apud se diuina miserecordia non excusat iust men saith Gregory know before-hand that they shall perish without doubt if God set mercy aside in the iudging of them because euen that which seemeth our iust life is but sinne if Gods mercy when he iudgeth it doe not excuse the same Hitherto then it appeareth that I want no armour or weapons to fight against him yea who seeth not him rather to be a beggarly companion who taketh vpon him to contradict me vpon no other but only his owne word As for pouerty of spirit he sheweth his prophanenesse in iesting at it because Christ hath pronounced a blessing to it z Mat. 5. ● Blessed are the poore in spirit for theirs is the Kingdome of heauen But now before he giue ouer that text he will finde a weapon there to fight against me In the next verse saith he it is plainly shewed that God did grieuously punish all them who liued wickedly notwithstanding they held the right faith The wordes of that verse are these a Vers 18 The wrath of God is reueiled from heauen against all vngodlinesse and vnrighteousnesse of men which with-hold the truth in vnrighteousnesse Where it being manifest that the Apostles wordes haue reference to Gentiles and Heathens who had no knowledge of God but only by natures light the Apostle accusing them for suppressing and drowning euen that which they vnderstood or might vnderstand by the creation of the world I might question with what discretion it is that M. Bishop attributeth vnto them the holding of the right faith But not to trouble my selfe or the Reader further then is needfull I let that passe and looke to his inferences that he maketh out of those wordes Whence it followeth first saith he that men may haue a true faith without good workes Which though it haue no manner of sequele from the Apostles wordes there being nothing as I haue said which importeth the hauing or holding of true faith yet with great opportunity he mentioneth because he giueth me occasion to shew that though the righteousnesse of God be only from faith to faith yet that faith wherein this righteousnesse consisteth neuer is nor can be without due correspondence of good workes and godly life And to this belongeth that which the Apostle saith that b Rom. 3. 31. by faith we establish the law because we doe not by faith establish the law if we preach such a faith as may stand with the contempt of the law and wilfull neglect of the commandements of God Surely if faith may be without charity and it be by an after-supply of charity that wee haue the will to keepe Gods commandements then should not the Apostle say that by faith but rather by charity we establish the law But because without saith there is no charity and charity is the necessary sequele of the regeneration of faith therefore the Apostle rightly saith that by faith we establish the law as whereby we c Gal. 3. ●4 Ezech. 36. 26. 27 receiue the promise of the spirit of God the effect and d Gal. 5. 22. fruit whereof is charity whereby e Rom. 7. 22. we delight in the law of God as touching the inward man and are grieued at the remainder of carnall concupiscence whereby we are hindered that f Gal. 5. 17. we cannot doe the things that we would The faith which the Gospell teacheth is that and no other wherof we reade that g Acts 15. 9. by faith God purifieth our hearts which is called h Gal. 5. 6. faith working by loue of which St. Iohn saith i 1. John 3. 3. Euery one that hath this hope purgeth himselfe euen as he is pure k Ephes 3. 17. by which Saint Paul againe saith that Christ dwelleth in our hearts and l Rom. 8. 10. if Christ be in you saith he the body is dead as touching sinne but the spirit is life for righteousnesse sake As for that faith which is without workes it is by equiuocation only called faith as the picture of a man is called a man this being yeelded to custome of speech and to the conceipt of men who giue names oftentimes for semblance and shew where there wanteth the substance and truth of them To which purpose the wordes of Leo Bishop of Rome are very remarkeable m Leode Quadrages serm 7. Charitas robur fidei fides fortitudo est charitatis tunc verum nomen verus est fructus ambarum cum insolubilis man●t vtriusque cōnexio Vbi enim non simul fuerint simu desunt quia in●icem sibi inuam●n lumen sunt donec desiderium credulitatis impleat remuneratio visionis incommutabilitèr videatur ametur quod nunc sine side non dilig●tur sine dilectione non creditur Charity is the strength of faith and faith is the strength of charity and then is there the true name and the true fruit of both when there abideth an ins●parable coniunction of them for where they are not both together they are both wanting because they are the helpe and light each of other vntill reward of seeing fulfill the desire of beleeuing and that be vnchangeably beholden and loued which now is neither loued without faith nor beleeued without loue Where we see a difference signified by Leo betwixt the true name of faith and that which is vulgarly termed faith so that though sometimes we speake of faith without workes applying the name of faith to the outward profession of faith as he himselfe also doth yet n Idem de Collect. eleemos serm 4. Multis quibus auserre non potuit fidem sustulit charitatem agro cordis ipsorum auaritiae r●dicibus occupato spoliauit fructu operum quos non priuauit cons●ssione labiorum the true name of faith is not appliable where there is not charity ioyned with it neither can there be true beleefe where there is no loue Hereto accordeth Gregor in Ezech. hom 22. Fidem Spem Charitatem ●tque operationē quamdiu in hac vita viuimus aequales sibi esse apud nosmetipsos inuenimus c. Nam nunc quantum credimus tantum amamus quātum amamus tantum de spe praesumimus De fide quoque operatione Ioannes Apostolus fa●etur dicens Qui se dicit nosse Deum c. Notitia quippe Dei ad fide pertinet mandatorum custodia ad operationem Cùm ergò
in his former life without which God is not wont to lay his hand so heauily vpon any o Job 4. 7. Remember I pray thee saith he who euer perished being an innocent or where were the vpright destroyed This hee amplifieth and prosecuteth vnto the end of that Chapter and then saith to the same effect againe Call now if any will answere thee and to which of the Saints wilt thou turne thereby willing him to aske and enquire whether there were any that could tell that euer any of the Saints any iust and vpright man had tasted of that misery that was now lying vpon him To the same purpose Bildad also afterwards saith p Cap. 8. 8. Enquire I pray thee of the former age and prepare thy selfe to search of their Fathers shall not they teach thee and tell thee and vtter the words of their heart c. Behold God will not cast away an vpright man This being manifestly the drift and purpose of these wordes and nothing appearing whereby to draw them to inuocation of Saints wee must thinke M. Bishop to be very destitute of proofe that would apply them to that end neither can they serue thereto because of all the Saints departed we must conceiue the same then that expresly we reade of some p Esa 63. 16. Abraham is ignorant of vs and Israel knoweth vs not The words are somewhat otherwise expounded by Gregory B●shop of Rome but yet so as that for inuocation of Saints he findeth nothing in them He referreth the first part to God the other part to liuing Saints such as Dauid speaketh of q Psal 16. 3. My delight is vpon the Saints that are in the earth as if Eliphaz had told Iob that he neglected their company in his prosperity and therefore that now in his affliction they yeelded no helpe or comfort to him r Greg. Moral l. 5. cap 31. Ac si apertè dicat Qua● tumlibet afflictus clames Deum tibi respondentem non habes quia vox cum in tribulatione non inuenit quem mens in tranquillitate contempsit Vbi adhuc deriden●o subiungit Et ad aliquem Sanctorum conuertere acsi despiciens dicat Sanctos quoque inuenire in afflictione adiutores nō vales quos habere socios in ●ilarita●e roluisti He saith Call if there be any to answere thee as if he plainly said Howsoeuer in thy affliction thou crie yet thou findest not God to answere thee because the prayer findeth not him in trouble whom the minde in tranquillity hath despised Where yet further in derision hee addeth saith he And turne thee to any of the Saints as if by way of despight he said Thou canst not finde the Saints thy helpers in affliction whom thou wouldest not haue for thy companions in thy mirth and welfare In a word we finde not in the words that Iob was counsailed to pray to Saints neither doe we finde it any where else that Iob followed any such counsell neither is there any example of any other of those Fathers that they did so and therefore neither in this can M. Bishop finde their religion in the Fathers The next matter is concerning Merit and Free-will for which he bringeth two texts which are already wrested from him being by himselfe ſ Of Free-will Sect. 10. 11. before alleaged and by me fully answered But yet obserue briesly how well they make for that for which he alleageth them If thou doe well saith God to Cain shalt thou not receiue His argument hence must be this He that doth well shall receiue therefore he meriteth that which he shall receiue It followeth not because that which he receiueth is of the bountifulnesse of the giuer not of the merit or desert of workes as through the whole question of merits I haue declared at large Such is his other argument from those wordes of Moses t Deut. 30. 19. I haue set before you life and death choose life that thou maiest liue by louing the Lord thy God c. For God thus setting life before vs doth not tell vs what we by right deserue but what it is his pleasure to giue to those that loue and obey him We choose life by louing the Lord our God and obeying him and cleauing vnto him but in all this wee doe but our duty and cannot presume to merit any thing thereby No better successe hath he for Free-will albeit in that manner as he propoundeth it we deny it not for wee grant that man hath by Gods grace free-will to doe good works we deny only that free-will which they hold as a power of nature and not the effect of the grace of God whereby man himselfe doth something for himselfe beside that which God doth We doe well who denyeth it but it is only of the grace of God that we doe well We choose life it is true but it is of the gift of God that we choose life u August de Praedest sanct cap. 10. Ipse sacit vt illi saciant quae praecepit Who maketh vs to doe those things saith St. Austin which he hath commanded to be done As for that which M. Bishop saith that power is giuen to the wicked to doe well if they will it is an absurd speech because they cannot will till God worke in them to will neither can they haue any power to doe well vntill they haue the will For the forbearing of outward hainous acts we deny not but that God hath left in man euen in the wicked some power of free-will else in vaine were all lawes and admonitions neither could there continue any society amongst men Be it that the wordes cited by M. Bishop doe yeeld so much to Cain but to the conuerting of the heart to the inward renewing of the soule to the embracing of the loue of righteousnesse to true repentance faith obedience the will of man hath nothing at all but what is wrought in it by the grace of God But of all these things I haue spoken so fully before that it is not fit here to stand vpon them any more For workes of supererogation he is faine to betake himselfe to the ceremoniall law of Moses thereby leauing vs to take it as of his owne confession that before that time which was the space of two thousand and almost fiue hundred yeares the Church of God knew no such and hereuppon to conclude that because they stood only in ceremonies which were not meerely for themselues to bee reckoned in the number of good workes therefore the ceremoniall law being abolished in Christ those workes of supererogation must therein haue an end But the workes of supererogation which they maintaine and whereof I spake are workes of the morall law the precepts and righteousnesse whereof hath concerned the whole Church from the beginning and before the written law and therefore which must needes haue beene found in the Church from the beginning if there were in them that righteousnesse
all that Christ taught and all that he commanded his Apostles to deliuer to all nations R. ABBOT THe wordes of mine answere are As they worshipped God so sauing ceremoniall obseruations we also worship him Consider now I pray thee gentle Reader from what braine M. Bishops illation proceedeth Then should we sacrifice to him Beefs Muttons Calues Lambs and our sacrificers should be of Aarons issue and order and we all circumcised Why M. Bishop are not all these in the number of ceremoniall obseruations Forsooth no I omit all their ceremonies saith he because M. Abbot excepteth them But did not M. Abbot in excepting all their ceremonies except circumcision and sacrifices and the whole Priest-hood of the law What is M. Bishop ignorant that circumcision and sacrifices and the whole rites and rules of the Leuiticall Priest-hood doe all belong to the ceremoniall law and that our Sauiour Christ in abrogating the ceremoniall law is vnderstood to haue abolished all these Is he to be set to schoole againe to learne what is meant by the name of ceremonies It were a shame to send a Doctor of Diuinity to his Catechisme for his credits sake I will referre him to a greater booke of Thomas Aquinas where he saith that a Tho. Aquin. sum 12. q. 101. art 4. Per tot In veteri lege singula praedicta Sacrificia Sacramenta sacra obseruantiae ceremoniae vocantur in the old law Sacrifices Sacraments sacred vtensils and implements and obseruances of singular or speciall conuersation are all called ceremonies and this I would haue him learne against the next time His next exception is against that I say As they prayed so and in the same wordes we also pray Then saith he they doe sometimes pray vnto God to remember Abraham and Isaac and Iacob and for their sakes to take mercy on them as Moses did Which in part we acknowledge and professe to doe to pray God in like manner as Moses did to remember Abraham and Isaac and Iacob and for their sakes to take mercy vpon the seede of Abraham but not to take mercy vpon vs. God bound himselfe to the seede of Abraham b Genes 17. 7. by an euerlasting couenant to be their God by reason whereof we beleeue that in this forlorne estate wherein they now be God still standeth entirely respectiue to the preseruation of that nation and though c Rom. 11. 28. as touching the Gospell they be enimies for our sakes yet as touching the election as the Apostle faith namely whereby God of old elected them to be his people they are beloued for their Fathers sakes Their present infidelity then is an interruption only not any finall reiection of them and the time will come when the effect of that loue will appeare by restoring that nation againe to the society and fellowship of the Church of Christ What hindereth then but as they are beloued for their Fathers sakes so we may pray God to remember their Fathers Abraham and Isaac and Iacob and for their sakes to shew his loue and to returne vnto them in mercy and compassion d 2. Cor. 3. 15 16. To take away the veile that is laid before their hearts that they may bee turned to the Lord Which notwithstanding we say not for our selues because God hath made no promise to vs properly and personally in Abraham but only e Genes 22. 18. 〈…〉 ls 3. 25. in the seede of Abraham f Gal. 3. 16. which is Iesus Christ by whom and in whom it is and not by Abraham himselfe that we are become the children of Abraham As for the text which he alleageth to proue that it was the expresse order and commandement of the Patriarchs that their posterity should so pray hee sheweth his ignorance in the abusing of it because no otherwise did Iacob say g Genes 48. 16. Vulg. Innocetur super cos nomen meam Let my name be named vpon them and the name of my Fathers Abraham and Isaac then as seuen women in a time of desolation are brought in by the Prophet saying to one man h Esa 4 1. Vulg. Innocetur nomen tuum super nos Let thy name be named vpon vs these women hereby crauing that they might be called the wines of such a man and the Patriarch desiring that Ephraim and Manasses should be seuerally reckoned for Tribes of the seed of Abraham and Israel as if they had beene immediately descended from him euen as Iacob himselfe a litle before expresseth his owne meaning saying i Genes 48. 5. Thy two sonnes Manasses and Ephraim which are borne vnto thee in the land of Aegypt before I came to thee into the land of Aegypt shall be mine as Ruben and Simeon are mine But now vpon this that hath beene said that they prayed God for those Fathers sakes to be mercifull to them M. Bishop being resolutely impudent to make all good that is starke naught groundeth a defence of a diuellish and horrible blasphemy which the Church of Rome had brought of old into the seruice of the Church Concerning Thomas Becket Archbishop of Canterbury in the time of King Henry the second slaine then without due and lawfull proceeding but yet dying no other but an insolent rebell and traitour to his Prince they haue beene wont to pray thus k Breuiar in trāslat S. Thomae Cantuar. Jesu Christe per Thomae vulnera Quae nos ligant relaxa scelera Tu per Thomae sanguinem quem pro te impendit Fac nos Christe scandere quò Thomas ascedit O Iesus Christ by Thomas his wound Release the sinnes wherewith we are bound By the bloud of Thomas which for thee he did spend Make vs O Christ to climbe whither Thomas did ascend In which prayers wee see how by the wounds and bloud of this holy Saint of theirs they aske at Gods hands remission of sinnes and euerlasting life which Christian faith abhorreth to aske by any other but only the bloud of Iesus Christ Yea so harshly it soundeth in Christian eares and so contrary is it to the common sense of Christian profession as that the Rabbines of the Roman Synagogue were content euen for very shame to blot it out of their Portesse thereby acknowledging that it was by apostasie and errour that it came first in But M. Bishop a man more wise and learned or rather a man of harder fore-head then they were taketh vpon him to assure vs that there was nothing amisse in that praier and that it might very conueniently and lawfully haue beene retayned still And why Marry because of old time they prayed thus Remember Abraham and Isaac and Iacob and againe Lord remember Dauid and all his mildnesse For saith he if they did then desire God to remember the excellent vertues of his seruants and for their sakes to shew mercy vpon others why may not we doe the same now why may we not as well beseech God to remember the constant fortitude
there is no shadow of likelyhood that one should tell the Pope such a tale to his face or that Erasmus being in most points a Catholike would report it But for the inducing of his Reader to this opinion see a trick of this honest man For if he had truly quoted the place as he found it by me set downe he thought his Reader would perhaps looke the place and so would finde it to be as I had said But to preuent this whereas I had noted in the margent Erasm de rat Concion lib. 3. hee setteth downe in steede thereof Erasmus de ratione that the Reader vvhen he should search for such a booke of Erasmus and finde no such written by him might thinke me to be as very a cozener as Doctor Bishop himselfe now is found to be Let me tell him once againe that Erasmus hath written a vvorke entituled Ecclesiastes or de ratione Concionandi in g Pag. 291. as it was printed at Basil by Frobenius 1535. the third booke whereof he hath left to future memory those vvorthy stories of Robertus Liciensis which I haue before reported For conclusion of this passage he termeth me a poore Robin simple and poore-blinde that can finde nothing in the Apostles writings for their Catholike cause telling vs that he hath shewed the contrary already and will further shew it in those very points which I my selfe haue made choise of But what he hath done already we haue seene it remaineth to examine the rest that follow that it may appeare whether the simple Protestants doe well or not in taking the Apostle St. Paul to be wholly for them W. BISHOP §. 2. TO beginne with the first there is plaine testimony that we are iustified before God by workes which I cited before VVith God the doers of the law shall be Rom. 2. vers 13. iustified There is much for free-will witnesse this Let not sinne therefore raigne in your mortall body Ibid. 6. vers 12. 13. that you obey the concupiscence thereof but neither doe you exhibite your members instruments of iniquity vnto sinne but exhibite your selues to God of dead men aliue and your members instruments of iustice to God for sinne shall not haue dominion ouer you for you are not vnder the law but vnder grace See how the Apostle maketh it in the power and will of euery man indued with Gods grace either to doe well or to doe euill and that sinne hath no such dominion ouer them but that they may doe well if they will concurre with Gods grace Item that it is not grace which doth all but a man must worke with grace and exhibite the powers of his soule as instruments towards the producing of good workes which is flatly our doctrine of free-will And before we depart from this matter of iustification as M. Abbot doth very quickly you shall heare more of it out of the same Apostle he teacheth expresly that a man in the state of grace may fulfill the law in these wordes For that which was impossible to the law Ibid. cap. 8. v. 3. in that it was weakned by flesh God sending his Sonne in the similitude of the flesh of sinne euen of sinne damned sinne in the flesh that the iustification of the law might bee fulfilled in vs who walke not according to the flesh but according to the spirit Which is seconded in the thirteenth Chapter where he concludeth loue to be the fulnesse of the law hauing Ibid. v. 9. 10. before said that he who loueth his neighbour fulfilleth the law And as for that certainty of saluation which many Protestants bragge of the Apostle doth wholly dispossesse them of it first in the place before cited where he willeth them that stand right in the true Rom. 11. ver 20. faith to beware that they fall not and assureth them that they shall fall as others had done before them if they did not diligently looke vnto it Elsewhere he aduiseth vs with feare and trembling to worke our Philip. 2. ver 12. saluation Marke how two points of the Protestant doctrine be wounded in one sentence and two of ours confirmed both that we must worke our saluation it comes not then by only faith and that with feare and trembling we are not then assured of it before hand by the certainty of faith which excludeth all feare and doubt of it Now that we ought to haue a firme hope of saluation S. Paul teacheth vs VVe haue accesse through faith Rom. 5. vers 2. into this his grace wherein we stand and glory in the hope of the Sonnes of God Also For by hope we Ibid. 8. vers 24. are saued Item we giue thanks to God c. for the Clooss 1. vers 5. hope that is laid vp for you in heauen With whom S. Peter consorteth Blessed be God and the Father of 1. Pet. 1. vers 3. our Lord Iesus Christ who according to his great mercy hath regenerated you into a liuely hope vnto an incorruptible crowne c. laid vp in heauen Not to prosecute all the particular points of iustification which haue euery one good ground in the Apostle S. Paul as in that question may be seene the very faith whereby Abraham was and we are iustified is no such kinde of faith as the Protestants claime to be iustified by that is by an apprehension and drawing of Christs righteousnesse to themselues but that faith whereby we beleeue all things to be true which God hath reuealed as S. Paul declareth in the fourth to the Romans where he reporteth Abraham Rom. 4. vers 19. to haue beene iustified by beleeuing that God according to his promise would giue him a Sonne and make him the Father of many nations so that finally there is not a word in S. Paul which in his owne meaning maketh for any one peece of the Protestants iustification but heapes of testimonies for euery branch of iustification as we beleeue it R. ABBOT H 〈…〉 M. Bishop beginneth to muster his abundance of 〈◊〉 like an armie of men whereof some want a●mes some legges some looke another way some turne quite about and fight against him He setteth downe a number of places but whether they hit or crosse or come short what careth he let the Reader looke to that He saith they proue this or that but how they proue it id populus curet scilicet he is too busie to trouble himselfe about it As for example There is plaine testimony saith he that we are iustified before God by workes namely a Rom. 2. 13. with God the doers of the law shall be iustified But it doth not follow that because the doers of the law shall be iustified with God therefore we are iustified before God by workes because it doth not appeare that we are doers of the law Let him put in for his minor proposition But we are doers of the law and then his absurdity appeareth because
rebelleth against the law of the minde and holdeth vs captiue to the law of sinne l Gal. 5. 17. it lusteth against the spirit and these are contrary one to another so that we cannot doe the things that we would and therefore cannot fulfill the law Why will M. Bishop goe about to dispute against so certaine so cleare and manifest truth Now then vnderstanding the iustification of the law as he doth of the righteousnesse commanded by the law it is true that the end of Gods sending his Sonne was that sinne might be condemned in the flesh that the power and life thereof in vs might be abolished and it vtterly destroyed that sinne being taken away the iustification or righteousnesse of the law may be entirely and perfectly fulfilled in vs for euer This we say that God hath intended to doe and hath already begunne to bring it to effect but he hath begunne only and no● perfected this worke nor will doe till this body of ours raised againe from death and out of the dust of the earth haue cast the slough of sinne and become clothed with immortality and incorruption In the meane time m August de ciuit Dei l. 19. c. 27. Ipsa iustitia nostra tanta ●st in hac vita vt potiùs remissione peccatorum constet quàm perfectione virtutum our righteousnesse in this life saith St. Austin consisteth rather in the forgiuenesse of sinnes then in the perf●ction of vertues and n Greg. Mor. l. 5. c. 9. Ipsa perfectio nostra culpa non caret nisi hanc seuerus iudex in subtili lāce examinis misericorditèr penset our very perfection saith Gregory is not free from blame vnlesse God in the precise ball●nce of his examination doe mercifully waigh the same And from Gregory did St. Bernard learne to say that o Bernard in fest omn. Sāct fer 1. Si districtè iudicetur iniusta inuenietur omnis iustitia nostra minus habens Sir Greg Mor. l. 9. c. 11. l. 21. cap. 15 all our iustice or righteousnesse if it be narrowly sifted will be found v●iust and defectiue because p August cōt Iulian l. 2. Memores conscij illa ipsa corpora vitiorū omnium esse materiem pro qua polluti sordidi nihil in nobis mundū nihil innocens obtinem ex Plilario being polluted and filthy by reason of the corruptions of our sinnefull bodies as Austin alleageth out of Hilary we haue nothing in vs cleane nothing innocent q Hilar. in psal 118. Gimel Et nisi glorificat● in naturā spiritus corpore vita vera in nobis non potest esse natura neither can there be in vs saith he the nature of the true life vntill the body be glorified into the nature of the spirit Now seeing the case of our righteousnesse in this life i●●a●h certayne it is that the righteousnesse of the law is not so fulfilled in vs in this life as that thereby we can be iustified in the sight of God Yea r Leo in Anniuers suo ser 1. In isto seculo si iniquitates Dominus obseruaret nullus iudiciùm suum sustineret in this world saith Leo according to the words of the Psalme if the Lord would take knowledge of iniquities none should be able to beare his iudgement and therefore it remaineth which the same Leo elsewhere saith that ſ Leo Epist 81 In quo solo homo se inuenit innocentem in Christ only a man findeth himselfe innocent or iust t Greg. Moral lib. 3. cap. 11. Per hoc cuncta iustificat quod eum qui sine peccato est pro peccatoribus damnat God hereby iustifying vs as Gregory saith for that for vs sinners he condemneth him who is without sinne u Idem in Ezech hom 7. Justus aduocatus noster iustos nos defendet in iudicio quia nosmetipsos cognoscimus accusamus iniustos Our iust Aduocate therefore saith the same Gregory will in iudgement defend vs for iust if we know and accuse our selues to be vniust x Idem in Euāgel hom 25. Paratus est poenitentiam nostrā nobis ad innocētiam deputare God being ready for his sake to repute vnto vs our penitency for innocency Here is then our iustification before God not in that the righteousnesse of the law is fulfilled in vs but in that vpon our true repentance God reputeth vs innocent for Christs sake and in Christ whom as a sinner he condemned to death and punishment for our sakes Now by that that hath beene said appeareth the answere to his next place y Rom. 13. 8. 10. Loue is the fulfilling of the law and he that loueth his neighbour fulfilleth the law For what is said of iustice or righteousnesse must be also vnderstood of loue because our righteousnesse inherent consisteth in loue and according to the measure of our loue so is the measure of our righteousnesse z August de Nat. Grat. c. 70. Charitas inchoata inchoata iustitia est charitas prouecta prouecta iustitia est charitas magna magna iustitia est charitas perfecta perfecta iustitia est Charity begunne saith Austin is righteousnesse begunne charity increased is righteousnesse increased great charity is great righteousnesse perfect charity is perfect righteousnesse Sith then our iustice or righteousnesse is very defectiue and vnperfect as hath been shewed the like must be conceiued of our loue and therefore though loue be the fulfilling of the law yet in vs it is not the fulfilling of the law because in vs it is vnperfect and farre short of that which the law requireth As we haue the beginnings of loue so we haue the beginnings of fulfilling the law but that is not sufficient to iustification by the law because the law requireth absolute a Gal. 3. 10. continuance in all that is written therein Therefore St. Austin very directly to our purpose saith b Aug. Epist 29. Plenissima charitas qua iam augeri non potest quamdiu hic homo vi●it est in nemine Quamdiu autem aug●●●i potest prosectò illad quod minus est quàm debet ex vit●o est Ex quo vitio non est iustus in terra qui facit bonum non peccat Ex quo vitio non iustificabitar in co● spects Dei omnis viuens The most perfect charity which can now no further be increased so long as a man liueth here is found in none and so long as it may be increased that that is lesse then it ought to be is by reason of some vice or corruption in vs by reason whereof there is not a man iust vpon earth that doth good and sinneth not by reason wherof no man liuing shall be iustified in the sight of God In a word loue is the fulfilling of the law when as there is loue according to the tenour of the law The law saith c Deut. 6. 5. Luke 10. 27. Thou shalt
loue the Lord thy God with all thy heart with all thy minde with all thy soule with all thy strength But d August de perfect iustitiae Rat. 17. Cum est adhac aliquid con●up s●●a●ie carnalis quod vel continendo sraenetur non omnimodo ex tota anima d●ligitur Dens No● en●m taro sine an●ma concup●s●●t quauis caro concup●ctre dicatur quia carnaliter anima concupisc●t so long as there is any carnall concupiscence saith Austin which by temperancy or continency is to be refrained God is not perfectly loued with all the soule For the flesh lusteth not without the soule though therefore the flesh is said to lust because the soule lusteth according to the flesh It followeth therefore that so long as there remaineth any concupiscence of the flesh so long there is not that loue which is the fulfilling of the law But so long as here we liue there is found in vs the concupiscence of the flesh Therefore so long as here wee liue wee neuer attaine to the fulfilling of the law and therefore cannot be iustified thereby Neither doth the Apostle in the place by M. Bishop alleaged intend any thing concerning iustification but speaketh of fulfilling the law according to the modell of humane life and conuersation wherein we set the law before vs as the rule of our life and the marke whereat we a●me and whereto we tend to which we approch so much the nearer by how much the more we abound in loue though we neuer attaine so sarre as to be iustified thereby In the next place he againe opposeth against the certainty of saluation citing the words of the Apostle e Rom. 11. 20. Thou standest by faith be not high minded but feare c. Which text he hath cited f Chapt. 12. a little before and hath there had answere of it and therefore I omit it here To th●s he addeth another like a two edged sword cutting two waies at once The Apostle saith g Phil. 2. 12. Worke your saluation with feare and trembling Marke saith he how two points of the Protestants doctrine be wounded in one sentence and two of ours confirmed But it is neither so nor so the place neither hurteth vs nor helpeth him We must worke our saluation saith he it comes not then by faith only But that followeth not for it doth come by faith only and yet we must worke our owne saluation The title and right of saluation commeth by faith only but we must worke to our selues the possession of it our good workes being as St. Bernard saith h Bernard de Grat. lib. Arbit in sine Si propriè appellentur ea quae dicimus nostra merita via sunt regni non causa regnandi the way to the Kingdome though not the cause for which we obtaine the Kingdome i Ephes 2. 8. By grace we are saued through faith not of our selues it is the gift of God not of works lest any man should boast and yet k Vers 10. we are his workmanship created in Christ Iesus vnto good workes which he hath prepared for vs to walke in so to bring vs to the fruition of that saluation which by faith only he hath giuen vs freely for Christs sake As we are said l Acts 2. 40. to saue our selues so are we said to worke our saluation not for doing any thing by vertue whereof we are saued but for embracing the meanes and following the course whereby God hath ordained to giue effect and way to that saluation which Christ only hath purchased for vs. And thus our saluation is said m 2. Cor. 1. 6. to be wrought in the enduring of afflictions not for that afflictions haue any power to saue vs but because God hauing of his owne mercy in Iesus Christ appointed vs to be n 1. Pet. 2. 5. liuely stones for the building of his spirituall Temple vseth afflictions as his axe whereby to hew vs and square vs and fit vs to be laied in this building and o Col. 1. 12. maketh vs meete as the Apostle speaketh to be partakers of inheritance with the Saints in light To be short the Apostles intention is plaine to exhort the Philippians and by them vs that being entred into the state and way of saluation by faith in Iesus Christ wee goe on forward and continue constant in our way till God by his mercy bring vs to bee partakers thereof euen as if hee had said accordingly as wee translate make an end of your saluation in feare and trembling But if with feare and trembling we are not then saith M. Bishop assured of it before hand by the certainty of faith which excludeth all feare and doubt of it Which foolish paradoxe runneth strongly in his head a conceipt he hath gotten and his bable he will not leaue for the tower of London Faith saith he excludeth all feare and doubt But who knoweth not that there is greater faith and lesser faith and that the greater faith is the lesse there is of feare and doubt but yet all manner of faith excludeth not all feare and doubt If hee scorne to learne of mee let Gregory Bishop of Rome be Master in this behalfe both to him and me p Greg. Mor. lib. 22. cap. 14. Fides ipsa quae ad bona alia capessenda nos imbuit plerunque in exordijs suis nutat solida est tam certissimè habetur tamen de eius siducia adhuc sub dubitatione trepidatur Pars namque eius priùs accipitur vt in nobis postmodum perfectè compleatur Faith saith he which seasoneth vs to the receiuing of other graces commonly in the beginnings thereof is both wauering and sound wee already most certainly haue it and yet of the assurance thereof we feare and doubt for we first receiue a part of it that it may be afterwards perfectly fulfilled in vs. He bringeth for example hereof the poore man in the Gospell to whom Christ said q Mar. 9. 23. 24. If thou canst beleeue all things are possible to him that beleeueth and he answered Lord I beleeue helpe my vnbeliefe r Ibid. Vno codemque tempore clamabat se ctia credere adhuc ex incredulitate dubitare At one and the same time saith he he cryed that he did beleeue and yet did still doubt by vnbeliefe ſ Idē in Ezech. hom 15. Vno codemque tempore is qui necdum perfecte crediderat simul cred●bat mer●du●us erat At one and the same time saith he in another place hee which did not perfectly beleeue did both beleeue and was also vnbeleeuing And yet againe in another place he saith It often falleth out that faith now is growing in the minde and yet by doubting it languisheth in some part that certainty of sound faith strengtheneth one and the same minde which notwithstanding the winde of doubtfulnesse shaketh by some mutability of vnbeliefe As