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A19355 One God, one fayth. Or A discourse against those lukewarm-Christians who extend saluation to all kinds of fayth and religion; so, that the professours do belieue in the Trinity, the Incarnation, the passion &c. howsoeuer they differ in other inferiour articles. VVritten by VV. B. Priest. Anderton, Lawrence. 1625 (1625) STC 578; ESTC S118955 85,092 194

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erroneous opinions touching Fayth against the then present Church of God But to returne more particulerly to the Subiect of this Treatise The source from whence this Libertinisme in beliefe impugned heere by me did take it origen and beginning is the contempt of the authority of Christs Church and the assumed authority of ech mans priuate Spirit For thus reasoneth the Neutrallist in Religion Both the Papists and Protestants do agree in belieuing the Trinity the Incarnation the Passion c. But they maynly dissent touching Purgatory praying to Saints Freewill Sacrifice of the Masse c. Therefore I will imbrace and follow the acknowledged doctrine of them both meaning the Doctrine of the Trinity the Incarnation the Passion and hould it necessary only to Saluation since in it all sides do conspire But seeing the dissentions in religion amonge the Papists and the Protestants are of these secondary and lesse principall points only to wit Purgatory prayer to Saints c. and seeing it is impossible that both the Protestant and the Papist should teach truly in the sayd Articles for they teach meere contrary doctrines therein so as if the one side teach true it necessarily followeth that the other side teacheth false And further seeing I haue no more reason once reiecting the authority of Gods visible Church to belieue the one partie more then the other and it is impossible for me to belieue them both Therfore my priuat Spirit biddeth me to belieue neyther but to hould the doctrines of Purgatory prayer to Saints Freewill c. and all other controuerted points of Fayth at this day betweene the Papist and the Protestant to be matters meerely accessory and of such indifferency as that neyther the true or false beliefe of them can further nor hinder my Saluation Thus farre argueth our Newtrallist who whyles he wil be of all Religions is indeed of no Religion Then which as if Religion were but a meere abstracted Notion in the mynd what can be excogitated to be more impious and Athiestical in it selfe more repugnāt to the sacred Scriptures more crosse to the practise of all Antiquity and as heerafter shall be proued more aduerse to all naturall Reason But good Reader as vnwilling to trāsgresse the accustomed limits of a Preface I will detayne thee no longer only for some delibation and tast of the Subiect heerafter handled I will conclude with the sentence and iudgment of S. Augustin passed vpon the Pelagians who belieued in the Trinity in Christ and his Passiō were men of honest and morall conuersation yet for houlding That only by the force of Nature without the assistance of Gods grace a Man was able to exercise vertue flie vice a point no more fundamental then most of the Cōtrouersies betweene the Catholikes the Prostants they are registred for Heretikes by S. Augustin and consequently not to be in his iudgment in state of Saluation His words are these (9) Epist. 120. c. 37. Nec tales sunt Pelagiani quos facilè contēnas sed continenter viuentes atque in omnibus operibus laudabiles Nec falsum Christum sed vnum verum aequalemque Patri coaeternum veraciterque hominem factum venisse credentes venturum expectantes sed tamen ignorantes Dei iustitiā suam constituere volentes Haeretici sunt Thus S. Augustin with whom I end leauing thee Curteous Reader to the deliberate and studious perusall of these ensuing Leaues and intreating most earnestly the prayer of all good Catholikes for the remission of my infinite sins for a happy hour● of the dissolution of my old and decayed Body Thy Soules wellwishing friend VV. B. P. The Contents of the ensuing Treatise THAT a man who belieueth in the Trinity the Incarnation the Passion c. And yet belieueth not all other Articles of Christiā Fayth cannot be saued And first of the definition of Heresy and of an Heretike Chap. 1. The foresayd Verity proued from the Holy Scripture Cap 2. The same proued from the definition nature and propriety of Vnity in Fayth Cap. 3. The same proued from the want of Vnity in Fayth between the Catholike and the Protestant touching the Articles of the Creed Cap. 4. The same euident from the like want of vnity of Fayth betweene the Catholike and Protestant in Articles necessarily to be belieued and yet not expressed in the Creed Cap. 5. The same proued from the authority or priuiledge of Gods Church in not erring eyther in her definitions of Fayth or condemnation of Heresies and first by Councells Chap. 6. The same proued from the like infallillible authority of the Church in not erring manifested from the testimonies of particuler Fathers Cap. 7. The foresaid Truth euicted from that Principle that neither Heretikes nor Schismatikes are members of the Church of God Chap. 8. The same proued from the punishment anciētly inflicted vpon Heretikes by the Church Chap. 9. The same proued by arguments drawne from Reason Chap. 10. The same proued from the different effects of Catholike Religion and Protestancy touching Vertue and Vice Chap. 11. The same Veritie proued from the feareful deaths of the first broachers of Protestancy Ch. 12 The same confirmed from the doctrine of Recusancy taught by Catholikes Protestāts Ch. 13 The same manifested from the writings of the Catholikes and Protestants reciprocally charging one another with Heresy and from the Insurrections Warrs and Rebellions begun only for Religion Chap. 14. The same proued from the Protestants mutually condemning one another of Heresy Chap. 15. The same demonstrated from the many absurdities necessarily accompanying the contrary doctrine Chap. 16. The Conclusion of the whole Chap. 17. THAT A MAN WHO BELIEVETH IN the Trinity Incarnation Passion c. And yet belieueth not all other Articles of Christian fayth cannot be saued And first of the definition of Heresy and an Heretike CHAP. I. BEFORE we come good Reader to dispute particulerly of the Subiect of this Discourse I hould it most conuenient in place of a short Prolegomenon or Preface to prefixe and set downe the true definition of Heresy or an Heretike since this method will giue light to this whole ensuing Treatise diuers passages therof being principally founded vpon the definition and nature of Heresy and will best manifest what opinions be Heresyes and what men Heretikes and consequently seing Heresy is incompatible with saluation and cannot stand with the purchase of Heauen will demonstrate that not any one Religion professing the name of Christians which doth maintaine but one Heresy can iustly promi●● to it selfe the hope of Eternall life Well then Heresy or Haeresis as w● tearme it in Latin is a Greeke word ●●gnifying as much as Electio Election 〈◊〉 Choyce comming of the Greeke ver●● 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in Latine Eligo to Choose or ma●● Choyce of as (a) lib. de praescript c. ● Tertullian and S. I●rome (b) in c. 5. Epist. ad Galat. do well note so that this wo●● Haeresis
more then darke● an produce light since Truth himselfe 〈◊〉 taught vs (i) Luc. 6. That we cannot gather figges ●ornes nor grapes of bushes And hence by premises we are to vnderstand that we ●n entyre perfect fayth that by the ●h we belieue all supreme articles of the Trinitie Incarnation Passion c. an● all the articles of the Creed expressely articulately in their true sense and do belieue all other inferiour articles at least implicitely that is that we haue a readie preparation of mind to belieue all other articles which the Church of Christ dot● propound to be belieued so as that thoug● we do not belieue euery article of Chr●stian Religion with an explicite and expresse faith yet we are bound vnder pain● of damnation nor to belieue any doctrin● contrary or repugnant to the said article● which the Church of Christ doth pr●pound to be belieued from which it vnauoydably followeth that once grauntin● that the Church of Christ propoundeth 〈◊〉 be belieued that there is a Purgatory ● that we may pray to the Saints he incureth damnation who belieueth that the● is no Purgatory or that we ought not 〈◊〉 pray to Saints Now in this third place we will touc● that inseparable Attribute of true Chr●stian fayth which is Vnity in fayth 〈◊〉 doctrine This marke is so indissolub●● annexed to the true fayth of Christ as th● we find his Apostles euer readie most ●●riously to inculcate the same to their d●ciples Thus accordingly the Apos●● exhorteth the Ephesians saying (k) Ephes 4. Be you carefull to keepe the vnity of the spirit in the bond of peace And immediately againe (l) Ephes vbi supra There is one Lord one fayth one Baptisme Where we see that Vnity in fayth is expressely set downe As also in another place (m) Ephes loc cit I beseech you that you speake all one thing be you k●it together in one mind and one iudgment And as this was the exhortation of the Apostle To we read that the first belieuers followed ●he same of whom S. Luke thus saith The (n) Act. 4. multitude that belieued were of one hart and ●ne soule And hence it proceedeth that the Church of Christ which comprehendeth the Professours of this vnanimous faith is ●tyled by Gods holy writ (o) Rom. 12. One Bodie one (p) Cant. 6. Spouse (q) Ioan. 10. one flocke of sheepe A truth ●o euident as that besides the frequent te●timonies of the Fa●hers (r) Athanasius orat 1. con Ani. Chrysost opere imperfecto in Mat. Hom. 20. Tertullian de praescript Irenaeus l r. c. 5. confirming the ●ame euer the Protestants subscribe in iudg●ent heerto For thus (ſ) Luther tom 3. Wittenberg in psal 5. fol. 166. Luther himselfe to omit (t) see her●●●f the Deuines of Mansfeild against the Sacramentaries And the Deuines of Heidelberg against the Anabaptists others writeth A kingdome deui●ed in it selfe shall not stand neither haue any ●eretikes at any tyme bine ouercome by force or ●btility but by mutuall dissention neither doth ●hrist fight with them otherwise then with a spi●●t of giddines and disagreement Now then this Vnitie of faith is so to be ●nderstood as that it is not repugnant therto that one and the same point should at one time not be houlden as necessary to be belieued the which after it hath vndergone a definitiue sententionall decree of Gods Church is necessarily to be belieued As for example it was not necessary in the beginning of Christianity to belieue that the booke of the Machabees the Epistle of S. Iames S. Iude the second Epistle of S. Peter the second and third of S. Iohn to be Canonicall Scripture till they were defined so to be by the third Councell (u) Can. 47. of Carthage at which S. Augustine was present But after this Councell had by the assistance of the holy Ghost defined them to be Canonicall and this after confirmed by the consent of the whole Church then it was and is Heresy to deny them to be Canonicall And the reason of this disparity is because it is Gods good pleasure wisdome not to reueale to his Church all articles of faith in the beginning and at one time but at seuerall times and vpon seuerall occasions as to his diuine Maiesty best seemeth expedient Thus the fayth of a Christian is capable of dilatation and of a more large vnfoulding or exposition but not of any contrariety in beliefe chaunge or alteration An● thus to insist in the former example y● may well stand with Christian faith in the ●eginning not to accept the former bookes or Canonicall till the authority of the Church had pronounced them for such But it standeth not with sound faith that one man should positiuely belieue now after the Churches definition therof giuen as an article of fayth that the Machabees and the rest of the bookes aboue specified are not Canonicall Scripture but the prophane writings of man and another man should belieue as an article of Faith that they are Canonicall Scripture since the one of these contrary beleifes must be Hereticall This verity of the Vnity of faith being warranted by the word both of God and man as is aboue said we will take into our consideration the Catholike and Protestant Religions both which ioyntly do professe to belieue in generall in the Trinity in Christs Incarnation his Passion and the Creed of the Apostles and so we shall discerne whether the faith of all these seuerall Professours doth inioy the foresaid marke of vnity in doctrine or noe But seing this Subiect is most ample and large I will therfore sepose this ensuing chapter for the more full and exact discouery of the many and great disagreements betweene the Catholikes and the Protestants in their fayth and Religion THE SAME PROVED FRO● want of vnity in fayth betweene Catholikes an● Protestants touching the Articles of the Creed CHAP. IIII. VNDERTAKING in this place t● set downe the multiplicity of opinions betweene Catholikes an● Protestants though they all iointly belieue in the Trinity the Incarnation o● Christ his Passion and the like and consequently that this their general beliefe wanteth that true Vnity of fayth which out of th● holy Scriptures Fathers the Protestants I haue aboue shewed to be most necessary to Saluation I will first examine how the Protestants and Catholikes doe differ touching the beliefe of the Creed made by the Apostles Next I will demonstrate that supposing all Professours of both Religions should agree in the true sense and meaning of the Creed yet there are diuers other dogmaticall points necessarily to be belieued and are at this instant belieued both by Protestants and Catholikes which are not expressed or mentioned in the Creed nor by any immediate inference can be drawne from thence Lastly I wil set down the great difference betweene Catholiks Protestāts in other points of fayth of which the Creed makes no intimation or
throghout the world spending their whole liues in spreading and defending the same by their wrytings Finally seeing God did cut them off by such calamitous miserable and prodigious deaths which is to be feared were but presages of the eternall deaths of their soules who can otherwise be perswaded but that all this was wrought by the iust hand of God not so much for their personall sinnes proceeding of humane frailty for there were and are many others as great sinners as they and yet escaped such dreadfull ends but for their first inuenting maintayning and preaching of the Protestant fayth and Religion and empoysoning almost all Countreyes with such their false sensuall doctrines which being graunted how then can it with any truth of reason be supposed that the positions of Protestancy impugned by the Catholikes should contayne nothing but matters of Indifferency or that a man whether he belieue them or not belieue them may alike and indifferently be saued THE SAME PROVED FROM the doctrine of Recusancy taught both by Catholikes and Protestants CHAP. XIII I Haue thought good to draw another argument from the common taught and approued doctrine of Recusancy in euery Religiō though this head may seeme to haue a speciall reference to the reason afore touched in part be therein implicity included wherein is shewed that nature herselfe hath imprinted in the professours of all Religions a Religious care punctually to keep and preserue euery article of their Religion Now heere we are to premonish that if in the iudgement of all learned men both Catholike and Protestant it is thought an action most wicked vnlawfull and not to be performed but without finall repentance vnder payne of eternall damnation that a man should communicate only in going to the Church and in hearing but a sermen contrary to that Religion which himselfe belieueth for true though this may seeme to be coloured vnder pretense of obseruing the Princes commaundement for feare of loosing our temporall estates I say if this action be thought vnlawfull wherin neuerthelesse the performers thereof doe not punctually vndertake to maintayne or belieue any one Hereticall or erroneous position how then can it be reputed as consonant to reason or Religion that men belieuing different opinions of fayth and promiscuously communicating in prayer with a contrary Religion to their owne should neuerthelesse all be saued since the first fault cōsisteth as some would interprete though falsely only in an externall and materiall as the Schoolemē speake going to the Church of a different Religion whereas this other doth directly and openly rest in defending articles at least in its owne iudgment of a Religion contrary to the truth of Christian Religion for such is the case herein eyther of Catholikes or Protestants But before we particulerly enter into this discourse we will heere insist as most pertinent to our purpose in relating the two most religious Examples of Eleazar and the Widow with her seauen Sonnes recorded in the Bookes of the Machabees Touching the first we reade (1) 2. Machab c. 6. that Eleazar being a most auncient graue and learned Man was so far from eating of the meates sacrifized to Idolls according to the prohibition of the Iewish lawe that when certaine men as tendring his old age and moued thereto as the Text sayth iniqua miseratione through vnlawfull pitty proffered him other flesh to eate vnder colour whereof they would tell the Tyrant King thereby to saue his lyfe that he had eaten of the sacrifized meates that he did choose rather to vndergoe a most cruell death then to feigne that he had eaten of the sayd sacrifized flesh And so accordingly he suffered ● most glorious Martyrdome thus speakin● to God in the middest of his torments (2) Vbi supra For thy feare ô Lord I do suffer these things As concerning the (3) 2. Machab c. 7. Widdow with b● seauen Sonnes O what spirituall resolutio● appeared in them all Indeed able to vpbrayd vs Christiās with our luk-warmnest in professing our fayth They all suffered most exquisit torments and in the end most bloudy deaths only because they would not at the Kings command eate of Swynes flesh which was contrary to the Lawe of Moyses And this both the Mother still exhorting her sonnes to constancy heerein all her seauen Sonns performed with such an admirable resolution both in their answeres to the Tyrant during their torments and in their patience of suffering death as that considering her sex and the tendernes of their yeares it might be truly sayd that weaknes was heere able to instruct strength and youth old age Now from these two most remarkable Examples I thus argue The tyme of the old Testament was much inferior in worth dignity and many priuiledges to the new testament seing to them in the Old things as the (4) 1. Cor. 10. Apostle witnesseth did happen as in a figure whereas the new Testament (5) Hebr. 8. as the sayd Apostle affirmeth is established in better promisses But now if in the old Testament men did choose to endure most cruel deaths rather then they would contrary to the Law eate forbiden Meates which in themselues were lawfully to be eaten were it not for the prohibition annexed vnto them And seeing though they had consented to the eating of them yet this being but an● externall Act or Ceremony they might neuerthelesse inwardly haue retayned and kept their true beliefe touching the Law yet since the performāce of so small a matte● as it appeared in outward show could no● be without greate sinne and damnation o● the party so offending Shall any Christian thinke that now in the tyme of Grace an● of the New Testament which tyme exacteth more perfection at our hauds for 〈◊〉 (6) Luc. 12. whome much is giuen of him much shal be r●quyred that men professing to belieu● with contempt of the Churches authorit● interposed therein contrary articles touching Christian Religion and dying suc● their different fayths in which the one syd● must of necessity mantayne a false fayth that men I say of both these sides can b● saued it is against all force of Reasō again●● the iudgment of the Primitiue Church ● finally against Gods Iustice And thus far concerning the two fore sayd exāples in the Machabees Which Booke admitting them for the tyme not to be diuine Scripture yet it is acknowledged o● all sydes that the Histories recorded in the are true and that Eleazar and the Wid● with her seauen Sonns performed most worth examples of piety and Religion and that they had yielded to the Kings Command in eating of forbidden meates they had as violating the law giuen to them by God without repentance incurred damnation And this is the iudgment of the auncient Fathers Catholike Doctours and the learned Protestants But let vs descend more particulerly to the doctryne of Recusancy and examine whether it be lawfull to exhibite our selues present at that Church in tyme of diuine seruice
whom he sheweth all his Euidences some of which Euidences do cary a title only in grosse and in generall others proue a more particuler more restrayned right to the sayd Lands Imagine further that vpon the diligent perusall of these Euidences the ioynt consent and iudgment of all the sayd Lawyers should after their longe and serious Demurrs conspyre in this one point to wit that for the recouering obtayning of the said Lands the foreshewed Euidences in generall are not sufficient alone seeing diuers other men not hauing any true interest in the sayd Lands may neuerthelesse insist and vrge their like generall clayme but that with the help of the sayd Common Euidences he must more punctually relye for the gayning of his presumed inheritance vpon other more particuler and personall Conueyances and Assigments Now all these learned Counsellours agreeing in this sentence fortyfying their iudgments herein with their owne experience in the like case with the new Reports warranting the same with the authority of all the auncient learned Reuerēd Iudges before them lastly with the force of reason confirming no lesse If some one Empericke Atturney or other skilfull only by a litle experience in making a Nouerint vniuersi should steppe forth armed only with impudency and ignorance pronounce the foresayd sentence of all those learned Sages to be false and that the party pretending right to the sayd lands were sure by his generall Title and Euidences only to obtayne the same all other his more particuler Euidences being but vnnecessary needelesse theerunto who might not heere iustly contemne and reiect the rash censure of such a fellow Or could not the party clayming the former inheritance be worthily reprehended if by reiecting the graue Counsell of the learned Lawyers and following the aduyce of this ignorant man should finally loose all clayme title and possibility to his sayd Inheritance Our case is not much vnlike heerto Wee all pretend a right to the Inheritance of the kingdome of Heauen for we reade (*) lac 1. Coronam vitae praeparauit Dominus diligentibus se Our title in generall therto is our beliefe in the Trinity the Incarnation the Passion c. the beliefe whereof is most necessary but not sufficient All eminēt men for learning both Catholikes and Protestants do proue from the Scriptures from the authority of Gods Church from the nature of Heresy from the definition of true fayth from diuers other principles and reasons aboue expressed that no man can attayne to his heauenly Inheritance by belieuing only the former fundamentall points of Christianitie if so he haue not a true and particuler fayth of many other lesse principall Articles of Christian Religion Nowe commeth heere a dissolute gamnelesse ignorant fellowe not practised in any kind of good literature for it is obserued as aboue is sayd that all our most forward Neutrallists are mē for the most part voyde of Learning Vertue and Conscience who perēptorily out of his Pythagorean chayre that is without any proofe affirmeth that a beliefe in generall of the Articles of the Trinity the Incarnation the Passion is only sufficient to mans saluation that the doctrines of Purgatory Freewil Reall Presence and other Controuersies betweene the Catholiks Protestants are not in any sort necessary to the purchasing of our eternall welfare what way soeuer we hould but are to be reputed in respect of that end points indifferēt vnauayleable and as the Greeke is meerely 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or Bye-matters Who would heere not commiserate the folly and ignorance of such a man but especially pittie the soules seduced by so blind a Guyde THE CONCLVSION of the whole Treatise CHAP. XVII HITHERTO Good Reader it is sufficiently I hope demonstrated that euery Religion though professing the name of Christ and belieuing in the Trinity the Incarnation and the like fundamentall points of christian Fayth if their beliefe in other secondary lesse principall points be erroneous cannot promise to it selfe any security of Saluation and consequently that the controuerted articles at this day betweene Catholikes and Protestants touching Purgatory Freewill Praying to Saints Sacrifice c. are of that great importance as that the professours on both sides to vse the phrase of a blessed martyr (*) Camp in decem rationib rat 10. in the same case vnū caelū capere non potest It now remayneth to shew that seeing at this day there are originally but two different Religions among christians to wit the catholike Religion and the Protestant within which are included all its branches and descendents whether the catholike or the Protestant Religion is that wherein a man may be saued But seeing this Subiect is most learnedly and painefully intreated ●f by many Catholike wryters who from 〈◊〉 authorities both Diuine humane haue ●efragably euicted the truth of their owne ●eligion and falshood of the Protestants ●ofession and consequently that in the ●atholike not in the Protestant fayth the ●ules eternall happynes is to be purchased ●erefore I doe remit the reader for his grea●er satisfactiō therin to the perusal of the said ●ookes particulerly to the studying ra●er thē to the reading only of that most ela●orate learned and vnanswerable Worke ●f the Protestants Apology of the Roman Church Only before I heere end I must make ●ould to put the Reader in remēbrance with that the Protestant Religion in this former Treatise though but casually and incident●y is most truly charged to wit First with ●articuler cōdemnations passed vpon diuers ●f its chiefest articles euen by seuerall sentē●es iudgements of the Primitime church ●nd that therefore those doctrines so condē●ed yet after defended with all froward ●ertinacy agaynst the church of God are hereby discouered for playne and manifest Heresies this point being further euicted ●mplicitely both from the testimonies of ho●y Scripture as also from the definition of Heresy aboue expressed Secondly that the doctrinall speculations and positions in th● Protestants fayth most strongly mooue t● Wills of such as beliefe them to all vice ●●berty and sensuality Thirdly that God o● of the infinite abisme of his Iustice hath p●nished euen in this world as earnest giuen 〈◊〉 far greater punishment reserued in the ly● to come with most fearefull vnnaturall 〈◊〉 prodigious deaths the first Inuētours in o● age Promulgatours of the sayd doctrine● and such deathes as his diuine Maiesty is accustomed to send to his professed enemyes Fourthly that Protestancy is torne asunde● with intestine diuisions diuers Professour● of it charging their Brethren-Professour● with Heresy despayring of their future saluatiō From all which we may conclude that except Heresy dissolution of manners most infamous and calamitous deathes an● disagreements in doctrine betweene one the same sect be good dispositions mean● to purchase Heauen the Protestant Religio● can neuer bring her Belieuers thereto What then remayneth but who will expect saluatiō should seeke it only in the Catholike
mention at al and yet the different beliefe of them is houlden necessary to Saluatiō both by Catholike Protestant From all which it shall appeare how farre distant the Catholike and Protestant Religion are from that vnity in doctrine so necessarily required to that fayth wherby a Christian is to be saued I do heere begin with the Apostles Creed first because the articles of the Trinity the Incarnation the Passion are included in the Creed Secondly by reason there are many Adiaphorists in Religion as I may terme them who seeme to deale more largly and liberally heerin seeing they are cōtent to extend the necessary Obiect of Fayth not only to the articles of the Trinity the Incarnation and the Passion but to all points set downe in the Creed who assure themselues that God exacteth at our hands the beliefe of no other articles then are contayned in the Creed Now heere aforehand we are to conceaue that true Fayth resteth in the true sense meaning of the words of the Creed which was intended by the Apostles and not in the words themselues seeing both in the iudgment of all learned Catholikes and Protestants to belieue the words of the Creed in a sense different from the intended sense of the Apostles and consequently in a false sense is no better then not to belieue the Creed at all And the reason herof is because a false construction drawne from the Creed no lesse then from the Scripture is not the word of God but of man and cōsequently the sayd letter of the Creed so interpreted is subiect to the same censure wherunto the word of man is lyable from whence it followeth that whosoeuer belieueth the words of the Creed in another sense then was intended by the holy Ghost and the Apostles doth not belieue the Creed at all but only belieueth the word of man which euer standeth subiect to errour and mistaking So as that sentence of S. Ierome deliuered only of the Scripture may iustly be applyed to the Creed (a) In Epistola ad Paulinum Scripturae non in legendo sed in intelligendo consistunt Scriptures or Creed do not cōsist in the letter but in the sense and true vnderstanding of the letter This then being thus iustly presupposed let vs beginne to examine the articles of the Creed and see how we Catholikes and Protestants do differ in the construction vnderstanding therof And first touching the first article of our Beliefe in God obserue how different it is The Catholikes do belieue that their God no way formally cooperateth or willeth sinne in man that he hath but one simple and expressed will touching Sinne and this in detesting or hating of Sinne that he will not punish vs for not keeping of such precepts the which are not in our power to keepe that he imputeth sinnes to euery man that committeth sinne briefly that he giueth to all sufficient grace to saue their soules and desireth that al men may be saued Wheras the Protestants belieue the meere contrary to all these points for they belieue that God (b) Beza his display of Popish practises p. 102. saith God exciteth the wicked will of one thiefe to kill another see Swinglius tom 1. de Prouiden c. 6. fol. 365. Calu. Instit l. 2. c. 18. sect 1. cooperateth forceth and willeth a man to sinne That he hath a double will and therfore a dissembling will the one expressed in Scripture according to which he forbiddeth man to sinne the other concealed to himselfe by the which he impelleth man to sin that he will (d) D. Reynolds in his 2. Conclusion annexed to his Conference p. 697. punish vs for transgressing the ten Commaundements it not being in our power to keep the sayd Commaundements (e) Luther tom 2. wittenb de capt Babilon fol. 74. D. VVhitaker de Eccl. contra Bellarm controuersia 2. quaest 5. p. 301. that to the faythfull sinning neuer so wickedly no sinne shal be imputed Finally that to (f) Calu. de Inst l. 30. 23. sayth Confilio nutuque c. God doth ordaine by his counsaile that among men some be borne to certaine damnation frō their mothers wombe See Willets Synopsis p. 554. affirming the same certaine men he giueth not sufficient meanes of Saluation but purposeth and decreeth from all eternity that some men lyuing in the eye of the world in their owne consciences neuer so vertuously shal be damned thrall to sempiternall perdition Thus we see how great a difference there is betweene the Catholikes and the Protestants in beleiuing the first article of the Creed And how necessarily it followeth that eyther the Catholikes or Protestants do stand subiect and obnoxious to that saying of S. Augustin (g) q. 29. sup Iosue Who imagineth God such as God is not he carieth euery where another God a false God in his mind Touching the second article which is And in Iesus Christ his only Sonne We (h) Concil Trid. Catholikes belieue in Christ who is God of God and equall to his Father a Sauiour who suffred death quoad sufficientiam for all mankind and who accomplished the function of his Sauiourship only according to hi● humanity a Sauiour who dyed only in body and not in soule finally a Sauiour who from his first conception was endewed with all knowledge wisdome and prouidence and exempt from all ignorance passion and perturbation Wheras diuers cheife Protestants do belieue in Christ as their Sauiour who according to their faith is God of (i) D. Whitaker approueth this opinion alleadging Caluin in prooffe therof Contra Cāpianum p. 121. himselfe and (k) Melancton in loc comm edit 1561. p. 41. inferiour to the Father who dyed only for the (l) So doth D. Willet teach in Sinopsi printed anno 1600. p. 780. as also Caluin and Beza in whole Treatises Elect who performed his mediation not only according to his humanity but also according to his diuinity though in the iudgment of all earned men true Diuinity is impassible who in the time of his Passion besides the death of the body as insufficient for our ●aluatiō suffred in soule the tormēts (m) Melancton vbi supra D. fulke in his retent p. 89. (m) So teacheth Caluin Instit l 2. c. 16. sect 10. D. Whit. contra Duraeum l. 8. p. 556. of Hell briefly who laboured with ignorāce (n) So teacheth Beza in resp ad act Colloq Montisb part 1. p. 147. D. Willet Synop. p. 599. 600. passion and euen desperation it selfe Touching the Article of Christs descen●●ng into Hell the Catholikes do belieue ●●ereby that Christ descended in soule after his Passion into that part of Hell with is called Lymbus Patrum to deliuer from thence the soules of the Iust there detayned till ●is comming of which iudgment are also some learned Protestants But the greatest part of (o) So D. Bilson in his Suruey of ●●●ists suffring c. p. 650. 651. 652.
against Gods Church shal be damned But here I will stay my selfe wading no further in the disquisition and search of the great dissentions betweene Catholikes and Protestants touching faith and beliefe only I will reflect a litle vpon the premises And heere it is made most euident first that the Catholikes and Protestants do mainly differ in the sense and construction of the Articles of the Creede and consequently seing the sense and not the words do make the Creed that they both do not belieue one and the same Creede but haue to themselues seuerall Creedes from which point is sufficiently discouered the want of Vnity in faith among them both which Vnitie is so necessarily required to mans saluation as in the precedent chapter is demonstrated Secondly that though by supposition they did belieue the Creede and the true sense therof with an vnanimous consent yet it is proued there are diuers other articles not contayned in the Creed which are indifferently belieued as necessary to saluation both by Catholike and Protestant Thirdly seing also there are sundry Controuersies in Religion as is aboue exemplified which immediatly concerne saluation being houlden as necessary meanes therof by Catholikes but disclaymed from and abādoned by the Protestants as mayne errours and false doctrines Therfore from all the former premises I do auerre that it is a manifest errour to make the Creed the sole rule of Fayth and that he who maintaynes that both the Catholikes and Protestants notwithstanding their great disparitie of beliefe and fayth the one side necessarily belieuing maintayning Heresie can be saued or enioy one heauen is wholy depriued of all true iudgement reason and discourse and for want thereof may deseruedly be ranged among them of whome the psalmist speaketh (h) Psal 11. nolite fieri sicut equus mulus quibus non est intellectus THE SAME PROVED FROM the authority and priuiledge of the Church in not erring in her definitions and condemnation of Heresies and first of Councels CHAP. VI. FROM the inuiolable vnitie of faith we will next descend to the priuiledges of Gods true Church Of which priuiledges I will at this time take only one into my consideration that is that the Church of God is endued with a supreme priuiledge and prerogatiue of not erring in her definitions of fayth or condemnatiō of heresie This point is warranted by innumerable texts of holy Scripture as where it is sayd (i) Esay 72. Vpon thy wall ô Hierusalem I haue set watchmen all the day and all the night they shall not be silent But God did not set watchmen ouer his Church to teach errour And agayne The (a) 2. Tim. 3. Church of God is the pillar and foundation of the truth what more perspicuous And further whereas ech man ●s commaunded to repayre in difficulties matters of small consequēces to the Church it is threatned by Christ himselfe that who wil not heare the Church shal be accompted ●s an Heathen or Publican according to ●hat his commination Si Ecclesiam non au●ierit (b) Mat. 18. sit tibi sicut Ethnicus Publicanus where we find no restriction but that in all things we are to heare the Church Agayne Christ himselfe speaketh to his Apostles and in them to the whole Church He (c) Luc. 10. that heareth you heareth me But if the church could erre neither would Christ refer vs to the church especially vnder so great a penalty neither by hearing the church could we be iustly sayd to heare Christ Finally the Church is so gouerned by Christ as its head or spouse and by the holy Ghost as its soule as therefore we find the Apostle thus to write (d) Ephes 1. thereof God hath made him head speaking of Christ ouer all the Church which is his body And agayne (e) Ephes 4. One body and one spirit yet more The (f) Ephes 5. man is the head of the woman as Christ is head of the Church From which texts it followeth that if the church should erre in its definitiōs or resolutions of fayth and condemnation of Heresy this erring might well be ascribed to Christ and to the holy Ghost and consequently it followeth that the Apostles in making the creed would haue omitted that Article I belieue in the Catholike Church For why should we be bound to belieue the church if the church could erre This truth I meane that the church of Christ cannot erre in her sententionall decrees is so illustrious and euident that Tertullian speaking of certaine Heretikes of his tyme obiecting the erring of the whole church thus figuratiuely or Ironically writeth Age Omnes (g) in l. de praescript c. 28. Ecclesiae errauerunt nullam respexit spiritus Sanctus vti eam in veritatem deduceret ad hoc missus à Christo ad hoc postulatus de Patre vt esset doctor veritatis c. That is Go to Belike all the Churches haue erred and the holy Ghost hath regarded no Church that be might lead it into truth being sent for this purpose by Christ and to the same end begged by Christ of the Father ●hat it might be the teacher of truth And S. Augustine Disputare (h) Epist 118. contra id quod Ecclesia vniuersae sentit insolentissimae insaniae est To dispute agaynst any point maintayned by the whole Church is extreme madnes To whose iudgment herein most of the more sober and learned Protestants do indisputably subscribe since diuers of them doe with all feruour earnestnes maintayne that (i) D. Bancrost in his Sermon printed anno 1588. Fox Act. mon. fol. 464. b. art 4. The deuines of Geneua in their propositions and principles disputed c. p. 141. and diuers others the church of Christ cannot erre and that what she defineth for truth is most true or what for Heresy or ●alshood is hereticall and to be condemned This Basis or foundatiō of the church not ●rring being thus firmely layde we are heereupon to conclude that what points of Religion the catholike church of Christ hath condemned for Heresies the same are by vs to be reputed for Heresies since the churches condemnation or approbation is most infallible and the maintayners of the sayd Heresies for Heretikes and consequently that such Heretikes as departing out of the Church of God by their houlding of the sayde Hereticall opinions cannot be saued Now because the iudgment of the Church in matters of fayth is discouered two wayes first by the sentence of generall Councells secondly by the frequent attestations of the sayd chiefe Doctours of the Church in euery age in their particuler wrytings they not being contradicted therin by any other Orthodoxall Fathers or Doctours of the same age I will therefore distributiuely handle both these wayes shewing that both in generall by Councels and also by the particuler iudgement of the learned Fathers many opinions though not touching the Trinity the Incarnation the Passion or the expresse Articles of
obiect of implicite fayth th● which articles as a man is bound implicitely to belieue in the fayth of the church so ●he is bound expressely not to belieue any thing contrary to the sayd articles Seing then diuers Controuersies betwene the Catholikes the Protestants are included vnder this implicite fayth and that the church of God houldeth of them but one way It manifestly followeth that the contrary belieuers of those points doe erre in their beliefe and consequently for want of this true implicite and necessary Fayth cannot be saued 3. A third reason may be this It is proper and peculiar to vertues infused such ●e Fayth Hope Charity that euery such vertue is wholy extinguished by any one act contrary to the said vertue Thus for example one mortall sinne taketh away all cha●ity and grace according to that (f) Matth. 28. He that ●ffendeth mone is made guilty of all One act of Despayre destroyeth the whole vertue of Hope then by the same reason one Heresy wholy corrupteth extinguisheth all true ●ayth Therefore seeing Fayth is a Theolo●icall and infused Vertue this fayth is de●royed with one act of Heresy whether it ●e about Purgatory Prayer to Saints Freewil or any other Controuersy between the Catholiks the Protestāts Therfore whosoeuer denyeth Purgatory or any of the rest graunting their doctrines to be true is depriued of all infused fayth touching any articles of Christian Religion whether they concerne the Trinity or the Incarnation or any other fundamentall point which he may seeme to belieue But without (f) Hebr. 11. Fayth that is without true infused and Theologicall Fayth it is impossible to please God as the Apostle assureth vs. 4. A fourth reason shal be this It is most certaine that what generall propension nature or rather God himselfe by nature as by his instrument hath engrafted in all men the same is in it selfe most true certayne and warrantable As for example Nature hath implanted in each mans soule a secret remorse of conscience for sinnes transgressions committed as also a feare of future punishment to be inflicted for the sayd sinnes perpetrated therefore from hence it may infallibly be concluded that sinne it selfe is to be auoyded and that after this life there is a retribution of punishment for our offences acted in this world since otherwise it wold follow God should insert in mans soule idlely vainely and as directed to no end certayne naturall impressions and instincts which to affirme were most derogator● to his diuine Wisdome and repugnan● to that aunciently receaued Axiome God Nature worketh nothing in vayne Now to apply this we find both by history and by experience that diuers zealous feruent Professours of al Religions whatsoeuer both true and false haue bin most ready to expose their liues in defence of any impugned part or branch of their Religion From which vndaunted resolution of theirs we certainly collect that this their constant determination of defending the least point of their Religion proceedeth from a general instinct of God impressed in mans soule teaching each man that death it selfe is rather to be suffered then we are to deny any part of our Fayth and Religion And thus according heereto we find that euen the Athenians who were Heathens though they did err touching the particuler Obiect heerin as worshipping false Gods were most cautelous that no one point should be infringed or violated touching the worship of their Gods The like Religious seuerity was practized by the Iewes as Iosephus witnesseth And God himselfe euen in his owne written word threatneth that (g) Apoc. 22. Whosoeuer ●hall eyther adde or diminish to the booke of the Apocalyps written by the Euangelist from him he wil take away his part out of the booke of life Now ●f such daunger be threatned for adding to or taking from more or lesse then was set downe by the Euangelist in this one booke how can then both the Catholiks and Protestants haue their names written in the booke of life Since it is certayne graunted on all sides that eyther the Catholike addeth more to the fayth of Christ then was by him instituted or the Protestant taketh from the sayd fayth diuers Articles which Christ and his Apostles did teach But to returne to our former reason From all this we deduce that no points of true Christian Religion are of such cold Indifferēcy as that they are not much to be regarded or that they may be maintayned contrary waies by contrary spirits without any daunger to mans Saluation but that they are of that nature worth and dignity as man is to vndergoe all kind of torments yea death it selfe before he yield or suffer the least relapse in denying any of the sayd verityes 5. The fift and last reason to proue that the maintayning of false doctrines now questioned betweene the Christians of these tymes are most preiudiciall and hurtfull to the obtaining of our Heauenly blisse wherin at this tyme I will insist may be taken from the consideration of the different effects which the contrary doctrines particulerly betweene the Protestants and Catholikes produce in mens soules touching the exercising of vertue or vice Since most vndoubted it is that the belieuing of such opinions which of their owne nature do impell and as it were violently draw the soule to vice loosenes and impurity of manners and conuersation cannot stand considering Gods infinite hate to sinne and sinners with the hope of eternall happynes And the chiefe reason hereof besides others is this In that the Will which is the seate of vertue or vice doth necessarily irresistably worke as the Vnderstanding in which resideth Fayth all false doctrine doth dictate to the Will Now then the Vnderstanding being infected with Heresies tending directly to the planting of vice and eradicating of all vertue in the soule it of necessity followeth that the Will must worke and exercise it selfe according to those false principles which the Vnderstanding suggesteth to the will for true this with the greater facility in regard of the pronesse of mans nature throgh our first Parents fall enclined to liberty pleasure and sensuality But because the subiect of this reason is a large field to walke in and the truth therof is to appeare by seuerall instances drawne from diuers particuler doctrines maintayned at this present by the Protestants and all breathing nothing but vice dissolution and all turpitude in manners therefore I will reserue the ensuing Chapter for the fuller manifestation of the truth in this point THE SAME PROVED FROM the different effects of Vertue and Vice which Catholike and Protestant Religion doe cause in their Professours CHAP. XI THE first doctrine of this Nature wherein we will insist mantayned by the Protestants denyed by the Catholikes is the Impossibility of keeping Gods commaundements according heerto (a) Ser. de Moyse Luther sayth The ten commaundements appertayne not to Christians with whom Fox conspireth in
Articles of the Creed ●●t it is extended in it own nature consi●ering that according to al Art the definitiō●●d the thing defined ought to be of an e●all latitude or extent to any erroneous ●●inion whatsoeuer frowardly defended 〈◊〉 a man and impugned by the Church of ●od So as it is as perfit an Heresy and ●e belieuers therof are as true Heretikes to deny that there is a Purgatory or to deny Freewill praying to Saints the doctrine o● Indulgences the necessity of Baptisme o● any other Article affirmed by Catholikes granting the doctrine of Catholiks in thes● Articles to be true as to deny the Trinity the Incarnatiō of Christ his death Passion c. supposing the denyall of these to b● but Heresies And a man shal be aswell dāned in Hell for denying these former as fo● these other though the denyall of these l●ter do exceed the other in malice since th● blasphemies of them are in themselues mo● wicked heynous And thus much to●ching the definition of Heresy or an Heretik● which being iustly premised we will con● now to the mayne Controuersy handle● in this Treatise THAT EVERY CHRISTIAN CANNO● be saued in his owne Religion Proued from t● holy Scripture CHAP. II. NOw then to beginne to fortify an● warrant this vndoubted truth that eu●ry Christian cannot be saued in his owne Religio● I will draw my first kind of Proofe frō t● sacred wordes of holy Scripture And the● testimonies shal be of three sorts One cōce●ning Heretikes textes which are not-restr●ned to any particular Heresies but deliuered of Heresy in generall The second branch of authorities shall touch Heretikes euen for certaine particuler Heresies different from denying the Trinity the Incarnation of our Sauiour his Passion other like principall and fundamentall articles of Christian Religion The third shall containe the necessity and dignity of Fayth without any restriction to the pointes or articles which are to be belieued And first to beginne with the first We read the Apostle thus to speake of an Heretike in generall (a) Epist ad Tit. c. 3. A man that is an Heretike after the first or second admonition auoyd knowing that he that is such is subuerted and sinneth being condemned by his owne iudgment Where we see the Apostle commaundeth vs to auoid an Heretike which he would neuer haue done if the sayd Heretike had bin in state of Saluation The Apostle further adding this reason in that he sinneth and in that such a mā as being a pertinacious willfull Heretike is condemned by his owne proper iudgment that is because he aduaunceth his own iudgment aboue the iudgment of Gods Church and because he needeth not that publike cōdemnation of the Church which vpon other offenders by way of Excommunication is inflicted Of which text of the Apostle Tertullian both pithily and excellently giueth his glosse saying (b) Lib. de praescript c. 6. Quia in qu● damnatur sibi elegit Moreouer the Apostle elsewhere coniureth as it were in the name of Christ tha● we should auoyd all false belieuers in thes● words (c) 2. Thess cap. 3. We denounce vnto yow Brethren i● the name of our Lord Iesus Christ that you withdraw your selues from euery Brother walking in ordinatly and not according to the Tradition whic● they haue receiued of vs. This place concernet● Fayth and doctrine as the whole Chapte● sheweth But if those men heere to be eschewed were in state of Saluation the● ought not then to be eschewed Agayne this text cannot haue referēce to those wh● deny the Trinity Incarnation and Passiō seeing the denyers of those high Article● are not Brethren in Christ and yet the Apostle styleth them Brethren whom he hee● reprehendeth The Apostle also in anoth●● place thus forewarneth (d) Epist. ad Galat. c. 5. The workes of th● flesh be manifest which are fornication vncleane● impurity c. dissentions (*) or Heresies according to the Testament of an 1576. Sects c. They whic● do these things shal not obtayne the kingdom of Go● where we see there is expresse mentio● made of Sects and that the maintainers o● any Sects in opinion of Fayth much mor● of any Heresy which is euer auerred wit● greater contumacy and frowardnes an● with neglect to the Churches Authority shall not enter into the kingdome of Heauen From which testimony we may fur●her conclude that as one only act of fornication barreth a man from the kingdome of God so also one Heresy excludeth him frō the same A fourth place is this (e) Epist. ad Rom. c. 16. I desire you Bre●hren to marke them that make dissentions and scandalls contrary to the doctrine which you haue learned and auoyd them for such do not serue Christ our Lord. But if such men be to be auoyded and do not serue Christ then no doubt they continuing in that state cannot be saued Fiftly the Apostle speaketh of certaine men saying of them (f) 1. Tim. 1. Quidam circa fidem maufragauerunt Certaine men haue made shipwracke of their Fayth Where the Apostle vseth the Metaphore of shipwracke therby to expresse more fully that Heretikes once falling out of the shippe of the Church of Christ are cast into the sea of eternall damnation To conclude the Euāgelist S. Iohn speaketh of all Heretikes in generall not imbracing the Doctrine of Christ within which all secondary questions of Christian Religion are contayned in this sort If any (g) 2. Ioan. man come to you and bring not the doctrine of Christ receaue him not into your house nor s●● God saue you vnto him But a man is bound ● charity to suffer any one which is in sta● of Saluation to come into his house and ● salute him or say God saue him Now wh● can be replyed against these former texts ● cannot be sayd that they are meant only ● such Heretikes as deny the mysteries of t● Trinity the Incarnation of Christ h● Passion and such like supreme points ● Christian Religion This I say cannot 〈◊〉 auerred for these reasons following Fi● because those who in the Apostles tym● denyed these principall points of Christi●nity could not be truly termed Heretike● but rather Iewes or Heathens seeing he 〈◊〉 an Heretike truly as is aboue shewed wh● was once a member of Christs Church b● Fayth 〈◊〉 1 but after ceaseth to be therof by erring in some secondary points touchin● Christian Fayth Secondly by reason tha● according to the true definition of Heres●● or Heretikes aboue set downe the forme● texts haue a necessary reference to all Heresies and Heretikes whatsoeuer whethe● the subiect of the sayd false opinions be sma●● or great Thirdly because that in the former texts of Scripture there is no restriction of the word Haereticus or Haeresis to the chiefe or highest points of Christian Religion but it is extended to all kind of Here●ikes and Heresies whatsoeuer euen by the Apostle without exceptiō who no doubt ●f he had vnderstood Heretikes or
Heresies only in the greatest points admitting such mē for Heretikes would accordingly haue restrayned his words at least in some one ●ext or other among so many only to these kind of Heretikes But not to leaue the least ●hew of refuge or euasion herein I will produce some passage of holy Scripture in wch●he mantayners of particuler errours euen ●n lesser points then the highest articles of Christianity are censured by Christs Apo●tles to be depriued of eternall Saluation And first we find S. Paul thus to prophesie In the later (h) 1. Tim. cap. 4. times certaine shall depart from the Fayth attending to spirits of errour and doctrine of deuills and forbidding to marry and to abstaine from meates c. Heere the Apostle prophesieth according to the iudgment of (i) Hom. 12. in 1. Tim. S. Chrysostom (k) Vpon this place Ambrose (l) l. contra Iouin cap. 1. Ierom (m) Haer. 25. 40. Augustin of the Heretikes Encratites Marcionistes Ebionites c. who denyed matrimony as a thing altogeather vnlawfull prohibited absolutly and at all times the eating of certaine meates as creatures impure Now these Heretikes belieued in the Trinity the Incarnation c. yet euen for these two former Heresies touching mariage and eating of meates they are sayd b● the Apostle to depart from the Fayth of Chris● and to attend to the doctrine of deuills But suc● as leaue the Fayth of Christ and atten● to the doctrine of Diuells are not i● state of Saluation In my iudgement th● one authority alone is sufficient to oue●throw this phantasie of our Newtrallists 〈◊〉 since the words are diuine Scripture th● Heresies reprehended no fundamental● points of Religion but of as little or lesse● consequence then the Controuersies betwixt the Catholikes and the Protestants yet the maintainers of them are accompted to depart from the Fayth of Christ and to attend to the doctrine of deuills A second place shal be that of the former Apostle who writing of certayne Heretikes erring touching the Resurrection of the Body though the article of the Resurrection it selfe they belieued sayth thus (n) 2. Tim. cap. ● Their speach spreadeth like a Canker of whome is Hymenaeus and Philetus who haue erred from the truth saying That the Resurrection is allready past and haue subuerted the Fayth of some These men belieued all the mysteries of the Trinity the Incarnatiō c. yet for erring only touching the Resurrection of the body they are sayd to erre from the truth to subuert the Fayth of some and that as Canker neuer leaueth the body till ●y little and little it wasteth it away so ●heir speaches by degrees poyson and kill ●he soules of the hearers From which it ●uidently followeth that these Heretikes ●ontinuing and dying in the foresaid Here●ie could not be saued since that faith which ●rreth from the truth which subuerteth the true ●aith of Christ in others and which in killing and ●estroying resembleth a Canker cannot affoard Saluation to its Professours Another passage which heere I will vrge ●s that of S. Iohn who calleth certaine He●etikes Antichrists saying (o) 1. Ioan. c. 2. Now there are be●ome many Antichrists who went out of vs were not of vs for if they had byn of vs they would surely haue remayned with vs. These Heretikes belieued in the Trinity in the Incarnation of Christ that he dyed for the saluation of the whole world only they erred touching the Person Natures of Christ yet they are figuratiuely stiled Antichrists and are said to depart out of the Church of Christ but no saluation is reserued for Antichrists and Apostataes leauing the Church of Christ. And thus much out of Gods holy Writ expressely touching Heresie in generall particuler To these Texts I will adioyne though not immediately and directly raunged vnder the former head a place or two of Scripture in my iudgment most vnanswerable and by necessarie inference euicting the point heere vndertakē The first place is those words of S. Peter where he saith (p) 2. Ep. c. 3. In the Epistles of S. Paul there are certaine things hard to be vnderstood which the vnlearned and vnstable do peruert vnto their owne destruction Now heere I thus argue But these thinges hard to be vnderstood in S. Paul his Epistles did not concerne the doctrine of the Trinity the Incarnation the Passion c. and yet the misvnderstanding of them doth cause as the text saith the destruction that is the damnation of them who misunderstand them Therfore farre lesser points then the deniall of the Trinity the Incarnation the Passion c. doe iustly threaten to the false belieuers of them dānation and consequently it followeth that a bare beliefe of those supreme points is not sufficient to Saluation That those difficulties in S. Paules Epistles intimated by S. Peter did not concerne the Trinity the Incarnation the Passion c. I prooue seuerall wayes first because S. Peter maketh no such mention which no doubt he would haue done if the subiect of them had only touched those supreme mysteries and were not to be extended to other inferiour pointes Secondly it is acknowledged by the writings and ●ommentaries of all the Fathers besides ●at the Epistles themselues shew no lesse ●at S. Paul is most euident and cleere in 〈◊〉 his Epistles touching the Trinity the ●carnation the Passion c. and therfore ●ere is no reason why the difficulties of ●hem should be applyed to those articles such lesse restrayned to them alone Thirdly the Fathers do vnderstand these ●●fficulties in S. Paul his Epistles mentio●d by S. Peter chiefly touching Iustifica●ō as appareth by the testimony euen of S. ●gustine (q) l. de fide operibus c. 15. 16. himselfe who particulerly ●tanceth in that place 1. Corinth 3. If ● man build vpon this foundation gold siluer 〈◊〉 which text intreateth of Iustification ●nd workes and expresly saith that this is he of the difficult passages intended and ●ant by S. Peter With S. Augustine S. ●ome may seeme well to agree in these ●ords (r) Epist ad Algasiam quae 8. Epistola ad Romanos nimijs obscuri●bus inuoluta est The Epistle to the Ro●●ns is inuolued with many obscurities or ●ake places for it is found that the Epi●●le to the Romans most entreateth of Iu●fication and of faith and workes Four●ly and lastly the Protestants themselues 〈◊〉 vnderstand the said obscurities of S. Paul 〈◊〉 Epistles touching Iustification as appeareth to omit the testimonies of ● others herein from the words and Co●ment of Doctor Fulke against the Rh●mish Testament vpon the foresaid pla●● of S. Peter And this farre of this text whe● we find by an ineuitable deduction that false Fayth touching Iustification only ca●not stand with Saluation The second text of scripture is contain● in those words of the Apostle where thus sayth (c) c. 11. ad Hebraeos s Credere oportet accedentem ad D● quia
est inquirentibus se remunerator sit 〈◊〉 that commeth to God must belieue that God i● and is a rewarder to them that seeke him Hee is imposed a necessity as appeareth by t●● word Oportet to belieue not only that the is a God but that this God giueth rewar● to such as seeke him to wit eternall ly● But to belieue that God is a rewarder of go● men is an article in it selfe wholy distinct 〈◊〉 differēt from the articles of the Trinity th● Incarnation the Passion c. and in natu●● independent of these other for a man ma● belieue that God is a rewarder of good me● with eternall felicity and yet not belieu● these other supreme Mysteryes as man vertuous men no doubt did in the law o● nature and in the time of the old Test●ment and on the contrary side a man ma● belieue those chiefe articles of Christianity and yet not particulerly belieue that God is a rewarder of such as seeke him And yet we see the beliefe of this later point is necessarily exacted by the Apostle of all those who come to God consequently of all those who shal be saued seeing no man can be saued but such as come to God THE SAME PROVED FROM THE DEfinition Nature and Propriety of Fayth CHAP. III. IN this place we shall first take into our consideration the definition of fayth set downe by S. Paul Secondly the dignity worth of ●ayth much celebrated by diuers of the A●ostles Thirdly the inseparable propriety ●f Fayth which is Vnity for so doth the ●cripture delineate and describe Fayth ●●om all which it will ineuitably follow ●hat that Fayth which saueth man is not ●o be restrayned only to the Trinity the ●ncarnation and other such sublime points ●f Christian Religion though in other points it be erroneous but to all points whatsoeuer which the Church of God propoundeth to be belieued And to beginne with the definition of Fayth giuen by the Apostle He thus de●neth Fayth (a) c. 11. ad Hebraeos Fayth is the substance of thi● to be hoped for the argument of things not app●ring The sense wherof is this first th● Fayth through an infallible certainty ca●seth those things to subsist and haue a b●ing in the mind of man which are y● to come but hoped and looked for S●condly that fayth causeth the vndersta●ding to giue an assent to those points whi● it vnderstandeth not acknowledging the● to be more certaine then any other thin● whatsoeuer according to those words of 〈◊〉 Thomas (b) quaest 4. art 8. Multo magis homo certior est de eo q●● audit à Deo qui falli non potest quàm de eo qu● videt propria ratione quae falli potest Now hee● I trust no man wil deny but the Apostle d●fined that Fayth of a Christian which s●ueth him This being graunted for to den● it were both impious in the denier mo● iniurious to the Apostle we are to remember the nature of euery true definition s● downe by the Logitians to wit as is aboue intimated that the thing defined an● the definition be of one and the same exten● latitude so as whatsoeuer is comprehēded vnder the definitiō the same is also contayned vnder the thing defined This the● being presupposed by force of all reason fo● Logike is but an artificiall hādmaid to Reason we find that this definition of Fayth ●mpriseth in it selfe not only the Doctri●e of the Trinity of the Incarnation c. ●nd this not articulately but only by way ●deduction but also it containeth all se●●ndary points of Religion seeing the for●r definition doth predicate or may be ●●d of all the sayd secondary and lesse prin●all points of Religion controuerted bet●eene Christians at any time Therfore the ●ng heere defined which is the sauing ●ayth of a Christian is in like sort to ex●●nd it selfe to all the sayd secondary points ● Religion how indifferent soeuer they ●●me in mans iudgment This inference is 〈◊〉 demonstratiue being taken from the for●er definition of Fayth as that the Apostle ●●mselfe presently after the former words ●●ginning to instance the seueral Obiect of ●●yth among diuers other examples set●h downe that to belieue Noahs floud 〈◊〉 the deluge of the world by water for ●ne is an article of Fayth for thus he ●●yth By Fayth (c) Hebr. 11. Noah hauing receaued an ans●●re concerning those things which as yet were ●ot seene fearing framed the Arke for the sauing of ●is howse But to proceed further If the Articles of he Trinity the Incarnation and the like 〈◊〉 the only essentiall points of a true Christian Fayth it is more then wonderfull that the Apostle vndertaking to set down the true definition of an auailable Fayth and exemplifying it in it seuerall Obiects should wholy and silently omit the say articles of the Trinity Incarnation Passiō c. he in that Chapter not expresly speaking one word of them And thus much touching the definitio● of Fayth giuen by the Apostle from whic● definition we conclude that whosoeu●● seeketh to haue a true Fayth necessary to sa●uation must belieue besides the mysteri● of the Trinity the Incarnation c. diue● others dogmaticall articles of Christian R●ligion And therfore answereably ther● we assure our selues that when our Sauio● sayd He (d) Marc. 16. that belieueth not shal be condemne● he did speake of the belieuing of the who● corps of Christian Fayth and Doctrine a● not only of any part therof for so in this l●ter maner it would be both false absur● In like fort where our Blessed Sauiour 〈◊〉 the same Chapter sayth to his Apostle Preach the Ghospell to all creatures c. He d● vnderstand the whole Ghospell which c●●tayneth many other points besides the T●●nity Incarnation and Passion c. In this next place we will descend 〈◊〉 those passages of holy Scripture which much magnify the efficacy and vertue of ●●yth And accordingly heerto we find it 〈◊〉 said (e) Marc. vlt. He that belieueth and is baptized ●●albe saued but he that belieueth not shal be con●●mned Againe our Sauiour said to the ●ind men praying to receaue their sight According to your faith be it donne vnto you (f) Mat. 9. ●nd further (g) Hebr. c. 11. Without fayth it is impossible to ●ase God And more (h) 1. Ioan. c. 5. Our fayth is the virie which ouercommeth the world Now in ●●ese and many other such texts for breuity ●itted I demaund what fayth is vnder●od or meant If it be answered a true ●yre perfect faith belieuing all points Christian Religion proposed by Gods ●●urch it is true and that which I heare ●e to prooue Yf an vnperfect and mun●l faith belieuing some points of Chri●●●●● Religion and reiecting others and so ●rroneus faith being partly true partly ● I say it can neuer deserue these prayses ●n by the Euangelists and Apostles nei●●● can it produce such supernaturall ef● aboue specifyed no
Church S. Ierome distinguishing Schisme from Heresy thus discourseth Inter (m) In c. 3. ad Titum Haeresim Schisma hoc interesse arbitramur c. We take this to be the difference betweene Heresy and Schisme That Heresy maintayneth a peruerse and false Doctrine wheras Schisme ab Ecclesia pariter separat in like manner separateth a man from the Church in regard of dissention and disobedience i● our Bishops S. Augustine thus woundeth a Schisma●●ke (n) Lib. de fide sym c. ro Haeretici Schismatici congregationes ●as Ecclesias vocant c. Heretikes and Schisma●●kes do call their congregations the Churches But ●eretikes do violate their fayth in belieuing falsely ●●uching God whereas Schismatikes though they ●●lieue the same points which we belieue yet throgh ●●eir dissentions they do not keep fraternall Charity ●herfore we conclude that neyther an Heretike be●ogeth to the Catholike Church because he loueth 〈◊〉 God nor a Schismatike because he loueth not ●s neighbour To conclude (o) Lib de fide ad Pet. c. ● S. 3● Fulgentius agreeth ●ith the former reuerend Fathers thus say●●g Firmissimè tene c. Belieue for certayne and ●●ubt not that not only Pagans but also Iewes He●●tikes Schismatikes who dye out of the Church ●e to goe into euerlasting fire And thus far concerning Schismatikes ●ho because they be not of the Church cā●ot obtayne saluation which point being ●ade euident by so many authorityes both ●●uine humane then much more strong●● may we conclude that Heretikes as ex●●eding the Schismatiks in prauity and ma●e and being excluded with them in like ●●rt out of Christs Church cannot be sa●ed But before I end this Chapter giue me ●aue good Reader to expatiate a little beyōd my designed limits O then you Schismatik● heere in our owne Countrey whose soule● are wholly absorpt in earthy and mudd● considerations cast your eyes vpon you owne states and vse some small introuersion vpon your selues You see heere wha● a daungerous censure the Auncient church of Christ by the mouths of its chiefe Pastor● and Doctours hath thundred agaynst you It sayth you are not of Christs Church you a● aliens straungers thereunto It further pronounceth that dying in such your state yo● are depriued of all hope of saluation Goo● God! what stupor and dulnes of yours ● this Are you Christians preferre then Chri●● before the world Feare you God more the● man Giue then to God what is Gods and to Casaer what is Caesars Reflect vpon three principles of the Catholike and therefore you owne Religion The first that God ordinarily deriue● his grace into mans soule by the conduits o● the Sacraments and giueth absolution o● ones sinns particulerly by the Sacrament 〈◊〉 Pennance and confession not otherwise you wilfully depriue your selues of the participation of the Sacraments and thereby 〈◊〉 grace and of the remission of your sinnes are you not then as dryed branches void that heauenly iuyce which giueth lyfe the soule you want this grace and forgiuenes of your sinnes where then is your hope of eternall life remēber the Apostles words ●nd be afrayd gratia Dei vitae aeterna and do not disioyne those asunder which S. Paul ●ath so inseparably vnited The second is The vncertainty of any par●icular mans saluation which point is able ●o stryke you dead through feare and the ●ather since it is no small signe of a mans fu●ure damnation deliberately and wilfully yeare after yeare to deuide himselfe from Christs church and from all the spirituall ●nfluences streaming from thence The third That there is a Purgatory the ●aynes whereof though terminable yet are ●nsupportable Suppose then the best that 〈◊〉 that you finally dye with true Repentāce ●nd reconciled to Christs church which ●et is not in your owne power but out of ●he maine Ocean of Gods mercy neuerthe●esse your owne fayth assureth you that you must suffer in that place euen insufferable ●orments for your former disunction that ●our continuance in dissembling thus with God serues but as bellowes the more to ●low that dreadfull fire O how great inte●est then are you to pay in the end for the ●nioying of this your mispent tyme If you ●●e Catholikes though but in hart you belieue all heere sayd and therefore may the more assuredly presage of your owne future misery Yf you doe not belieue these three points of Catholike Religion then are you● damned no lesse for want of true Fayth in Christ then otherwise by your vnchaungeable Schismaticall liues for want of due cōformity to the church of Christ Therefore I wish you to awake out of that spirituall letargy of the soule daily meditate on tha● of the Apostle Corde creditur ad iustitiam or● fit confessio ad salutem (q) Rom. 10. With the hart we belieu● vnto iustice but with the mouth Confession is ma●● vnto saluation And lest that dreadfull commination and threate of our Lord and Sauiour preuayle with you heerein (r) Luke 12. 〈◊〉 that denyeth me before men shal be denyed before the Angells of God But I will stay my selfe remembring my vndertaken Subiect and will proceed to the next Head THE FORMER TRVTH PROVED from the consideration of the punishments anciently inflicted vpon Heretikes by the Churc● of Christ CHAP. IX HAVING in the precedent Chapters shewed the Iudgement of t●● church of Christ by way of doctrine speculation agaynst Heresy and Heretikes in generall we will in ●his place insist in relating the practice of the ●ayd church agaynst Heretikes consisting in ●he punishments aunciently inflicted vpon Heretikes by the authority of Gods church from the consideration wherof we may easily gather that the church of Christ in those ●ymes infallibly taught that Heretikes so liuing and dying could not be saued seeing ●t would neuer impose such multiplicity of ●euere punishments vpō men for their houlling of those doctrines which might stand with the saluation of the belieuers of them And first we are heere to obserue that the punishments inflicted vpon offendours by the church were eyther Ecclesiasticall or Politicall Ciuill The first of Ecclesiasticall punishments ●or Heretikes was Excommunication by the which Heretikes were driuen away from ●he Sacraments were depriued of the common suffrages and prayers of the whole church and finally banished from the community comfort of the godly and faythfull This censure of Excommunication of Heretiks is most auncient seeing that it had 〈◊〉 beginning from the first times that coun●ells began to be celebrated for the extirpa●ion and rooting out of Heresies is founded vpon all those places of Scripture in the foregoing chapters alleadged agaynst Heresy and Heretikes Another Ecclesiasticall censure agaynst Heretikes is the depriuing them of all the vse of spirituall power and authority whether it be of order or Iurisdiction This kind of power belongeth only to Ecclesiasticall Persons or the Cleargy according heereto if a Priest became an open Heretike he was
(b) Act. mon. p. 1335. these words The Commaundements were giuen not to doe them but 〈◊〉 know our damnation and to call for mercy to God Doctor Willet also saying The (c) In Sinop Papismi p. 564. law remayneth still impossible to be kept by vs through the we●kenes of our flesh neyther doth God giue vs ability● keep it but Christ hath fulfilled it for vs. And ●●nally Doctour Whitaker in that his se●tence (d) Contra Camp rat 8. Qui credunt ij non sunt sub lege sed sub gratia Quid plura Christiani execr●tione legis liberantur They who belieue are 〈◊〉 vnder the law but vnder grace What more in this point is to be sayed Christians are freed from the curse of the law Now then if Christians be freed from the curse of the law wherin the ten Commaundments are contayned how can the breach of them be any way hurtfull to the violators of them And if the Commandments were neither giuen vs to keep nor we haue power to keep them to what end should any man endeauour to keep thē Why should the Thiefe forbeare to steale or the Homicide to commit murther whoseeth not how this doctrine discourageth a man from liuing vertuously by bridling his vnruly and sensuall desires 2. Touching Chastity The Protestants do teach that Chastity is not in our power And hence it is that Luther thus wryteth It is (e) Tom. 5. Wittenb ser de matrimonio not in our power to be without a woman c. It is not in our power that it should be stayed or omitted but it is as necessary as to eate drinke purge make cleane the nose c. To whom omitting all others for greater breuity M. Perkins subscribeth saying The vow of (f) In his reformed Catholike pag. 161. Cōtinēcy is not in the power of him that voweth Now this doctrine being imbraced for true how forcibly doth it inuite or rather impell all people vnmaryed both men or women to satisfy their lust by their owne incontinent liues In like sort what great encouragemēt doth it giue to maryed persons to violate the bond of matrimony when either of the persons through absence or long sickenes or some other suddayne and accidentall impotency cannot render the act and due of matrimony And the partyes thus sinning eyther maryed or vnmaryed being expostulated and charged with their offence therein may they not iustly reply in excuse of themselues that they are not to be blamed or rebuked for their incontinency seing by their owne doctrine and Religion they are expresly taught that they haue not the guilt of chastity and that it is not in their power to liue chastly continently 3. The Protestants doctrine of Venial and Mortall sinne doth wonderfully extenuate and lessen the atrocity and malice of sinne in the belieuers of that doctrine For the Protestants do teach that there is no● such difference of sinnes in themselues bu● that the most grieuous sinnes whatsoeuer being perpetrated and committed by any one that hath true fayth are but veniall their reason heereof is because in their doctrine no sinnes are imputed to those wh● haue true fayth Thus accordingly D. Whitaker teacheth (g) De Eccles cont Bellarm. Controuer ● q. 5. p. 301. Si quis actum fidei habet 〈◊〉 peccata non nocent Sinne is not hurtfull to him wh● actually belieueth who did learne this of his great mayster Luther thus writing of this point (h) Luther in his sermons Englished printed 1578. pag. 176. No worke is disallowed of God vnles the authour therof be disallowed before All which being graunted as true doctrine it must needs follow that who shall take himselfe to be one of the Faythfull as euery Protestant is bound by his owne Religion to belieue of himselfe shall make small accompt of committing any sinne considering he is taught by the former doctrine to belieue that to vse the words of one of their owne maysters (i) Wotton in his answere to the lute Popish Articles pag. 92. Sinne is pardoned him as soone as it is committed 4. The Protestants doctrine of Reprobation and denyall of Freewill mightily disanimateth and discourageth the belieuers thereof from imbracing of vertue and eschewing of sinne for if it be true as this their Doctrine suggesteth that some men are borne euen from their mothers wombe Reprobats and thrall to damnation and cannot be saued to what end should they seeke their owne saluation by a true Fayth auoyding of sinne and practizing of a penitentiall vertuous lyfe Or if we haue not Freewill with the concurrence of Gods grace to do well as the former doctrine instructeth why should we giue our best endeauours to imbrace vertue and fly all vice Since it is not in our power according to the Protestants fayth to exercise the one and fly the other 5. To this may be adioyned the Protestāts like doctrine of Predestination and their supposed certainty of Saluation For admit that men be Predestinated without any respect or reference to their works and lyues and that do what wickednes they can imagine yet certaine it is that they shal be saued is not this Doctrine most potent and forcible to diswade all the belieuers therof from exercising an austere pious and Religious lyfe and to engulfe them easily in all kind of enormities and sinnes and the rather considering how precipitious headlong mans nature is to sinne to decline all rigorous and exemplar courses of vertue especially if so the case stands that man can neither aduantage or hurt himselfe by any such different maner of lyfe Now that by the Protestants Doctrine no sinne can endaunger the Predestinate in regard of their certainty of Saluatiō appeareth seeing according heerin we find D. Fulke thus to say of Dauids adultery (k) In his tower disput with Edm. Campian the 2. dayes cōference Dauid when he committed adultery was and remained the child of God And Beza himselfe to the like purpose thus wryteth therof (l) In Respons ad Colloq Montisbel part altera p. 71. Dauid by his adultery and murther did not loose the holy Ghost So powerfully do these their positions incline men to satisfye their desires in all vice impiety and sensuality 6. Touching the Protestants Doctrine of Iustification by Fayth only which potentially includes diuers of the other points heere set downe and which position of it owne nature excludeth from Iustification all works how vertuous and pious soeuer we find the Protestants thus to say And first Luther speaking heereof bursteth forth with wonderfull rashnes saying (*) Tom. 1. prop. 3. Fides nisi sit sine c Vnlesse fayth be without the least Good workes it doth not iustify nay it is not fayth That Iustification by fayth only extinguisheth all exercise of vertue is iustifyed not only by experience of these dayes but also by the acknowledgmēt euen of some learned Protestants for thus Iacobus Andraeas a famous
Protestant complayning and dislyking this Doctrine writeth (m) Conc. 4. in c. 21. Lucae A serious and Christian discipline is censured with vs as a new Papacy a monachisme they say we haue now learned to be saued by only fayth in Christ and we cannot satisfy by our fasting and prayer and therfore permit that we may giue ouer these seeing we may be saued otherwyse by the only grace of God And to the end sayth this Authour further that all the world may knowe they be no Papists nor trust in good workes they take course to put none in practice With whose true iudgment heerin M. Stubbs an English Protestant seemeth to conspire saying (n) In his Motiues to good works printed 1566. p. 42. The Protestant trusteth to be saued by a bare and naked fay● deceauing himselfe without good works th●●●fore either careth not for them or at least setteth litle by them And thus much touching goo● works wholly exiled and banished by th● Doctrine of Iustification by fayth only Now that this Doctrine of Iustification by only fayth doth incorporate as it were within it selfe and admit all kind of sinnes appeareth no lesse by the frequent acknowledgments of the most learned Protestants And first Luther thus wryteth thereof (o) Tom. 2. wittenb de capt Babilon fol. 74. A Christian baptized is so riche that although h● would he cannot loose his saluation by any sinn● how great soeuer vnlesse he will not belieue An● Luther in another place (q) Luther in loc com class 5. c. 27. As nothing iustifyeth but beliefe so nothing sinneth but vnbeliefe To which Doctrine D. Whtaker as aboue is shewed accordeth saying (r) Vbi supra Sinnes are not hurtfull to him that belieueth And thus much now touching the Doctrine of Iustification by fayth where we see euen by the confession of the Protestants that this Doctrine preuayleth in the professours thereof no lesse for the committing of all sinne and iniquity then for the expelling and banishing of all good works vertue and deuotion 7. Touching the Protestants particuler Doctrines of Fasting voluntary Pouerty and Chastity or Virginity the three steps of Iacobs adder by the which a vertuous soule ascen●eth to Heauen And first of fasting Perkins ●eacheth thus (s) In his Reformed Catholike p. 220. fasting in it selfe is but a thing ●ndifferent as is eating and drinking with whome cōspireth D. Willet in more full tearnes saying (t) In Synops pag. 243. Neither is God better worshipped by ea●ing or not eating Voluntary pouertie is so debased by the Protestants Doctrine as that the foresaid Willet thus teacheth thereof (u) In Synops pag. 245. He is an enemy to the glory of God who chaungeth his rich estate wherin he may serue God for a poore So contrary he is to the iudgement of our Sauiour saying (x) Mat. 19. If thou wilt be perfect goe sel thy substance giue to the poore and thou shalt haue a treasure in Heauen Lastly touching single lyfe in comparison of Marriage Luther thus sayth (y) Tom. 5. wittenb in exeg ad c. 7. 1. Cor. fol. 107. We conclude that Marriage is as gould and spirituall or single lyfe as dung And D. Whitaker likewyse teacheth thereof in this maner saying (z) Contra Camp rat 8. Virginity is not simply good but after a certaine maner it is neuer better then Mariage but in regard of the circumstance that is of the troubles accōpanying Mariage Now I heere demaund with what encouragement can any man goe about to practice these foresayd vertues of fasting voluntary pouerty and perpetuall virginity if he be firmely and inwardly persuaded that the Protestants former positions 〈◊〉 Doctrines touching the sayd vertues b● true and agreable to Christs sacred Institutions 8. But to hasten to an end in this matter I will conclude with the Protestant Doctrines touching Purgatory and Confession o● Sinnes And as concerning confession of Sinnes it is found by experience that besides the first Institution therof by (a) Mat. 18. Io●n 20. Christ a man is much debarred from sinninge through the shame that he is to endure by confessing his most secret sinnes to a Preist as on the contrary it much enbouldeneth one to sinne if he be persuaded by his owne Religion that confession of them alone to God is sufficient Touching the Doctrine of Purgatory How doth the denyall of this Doctrine open the sluce to all liberty and iniustice Since by the Protestants teaching that no temporal punishment remayneth for sinnes once remitted it taketh away all restitution of things wrongfully detayned all satisfaction for committing of former sinnes and finally all mortification of body and soule and to conclude it freeth a man of all feare of suffering any punishment after this lyfe and this vnder colour that Christ hath satisfyed for the sinnes of all the world by which reason we might take away prayer or that Christ prayed for all in the garden But now to cast our eye backe vpon the foresayd Doctrines If all the different opinions of fayth in Controuersie betwene the Catholiks the Protestants were meerely speculatiue without any reference to the vertuous or vicious working operation of the Will deryued from them then with greater shewe of reason in a vulgar iudgment it might be auerred that supposing they teach not the fundamentall points of Christian fayth they might be either affirmatiuely or negatiuely houlden without any daunger of saluation such were the Heresyes of (b) See heerof S. Augustine Haeres 43. Origen teaching that the Diuells in the end of the world should be saued Of Cyprian touching Rebaptization and diuers such like from the maintayning of which points either way the Will in respect of any externall working or operation drawne from thence can sucke noe poyson But the Case is farre different in the former Doctrines set downe aboue for we fynd that the sayd Doctrines which breath nothing but all dissolution and turpitude of manners euen in speculation do most forcibly immediately touch the pulse of the Will the Will strongly beating and indeed breaking out into outward actions of vic● and lyberty according as shee remayneth afore infected with the contagion and poyson of the former Doctrinall speculations Well then this vpon necessary inference being graunted so as the working effect and force of the sayd Doctrines are in the Will nothing but liberty dissolution of manners improbitie sensualitie and sinne I referre to the iudgment of any man whether the sayd Doctrines be but points of Indifferency o● noe and may be defended either way without preiudice to the beleiuers fayth and daunger to his Saluation as our Formallists doe auerre For can it possibly be conceaued that these Doctrines should be reputed as indifferent to mans Saluatiō or in themselues true which as is proued most strongly drawe the will to all vice against which God hath thundred out such dreadfull threats as where it is sayd Psal
fundamentall points of the Trinity Incarnation c. but differing mainly in all other points of Religion yet neuerthelesse promiscuously communicating one with another in prayer and the Sacraments can ioyntly be saued especially seeing it is certayne that the one part defendeth not matters of Indifferency as is commōly supposed but iniustifiable errours or rather to speake as the truth is manifest and grosse Heresies THE SAME PROVED FROM the writings of the Catholikes and Protestants wherein reciprocally they charge one another with Heresy Also from the Insurrections War and Rebellions begun only for Religion CHAP. XIIII IF there were no other reason to be alleadged in disproofe confutation of this plurality of Religions them this following it might seeme fully preuayling in all cleare iudgements not wholy darkened with the myst of earthly and temporall respects It is this First the wonderfull and implacable Bookwarrs between Catholikes and Protestants wholy vndertaken in defence of their seuerall Religions and yet both the Catholikes and the Protestants professe to belieue in the Trinity the Incarnation the Passion c. Secondly the pressures and calamities with which diuers states and countreyes do afflict other states as also the Insurrection of Subiects agaynst their naturall Princes only for difference of Religion not contayning themselues till they burst forth into open hostility and armes for defending their owne Religion subuerting of the others Touching the first good God! how many men on all sides since the first appearing of Luther haue spent their whole times all their seruiceable yeares in writing disputing and preaching in defence of their owne Religion impugning of their aduersaryes accounting the maintayners belieuers thereof as Heretikes pronouncing eternall damnation agaynst them Witnesses hereof are the Libraryes of all the famous vniuersities of Christendome the Stationers shoppes in all great Cittyes and lastly the Annuall Mart of Bookes returned these many yeares from Frankford And is ●t possible that so much paynes trauayle labour of writing and otherwise accompanyed with so great charges should be vndertaken for questions only of Indifferency such as it importeth nothing at all touching ●he gayning of Heauen and auoyding of Hell what a man belieueth therein or of what side he relyeth Concerning the second point which is ●he calamityes afflictions warres which liuers States Countreyes and Kingdomes ●oe prosecute agaynst their neighbours and ●ll originally for matter of Religion ●s also touching the open rebellion of the Subiects agaynst their lawfull Soueraignes ●nly for the sayd occasion the last fifty yeares as also these very tymes do giue ouerlamētable examples hereof Witnesses of this matter purposely to forbeare the presidents of our own Coūtrey is Scotlād into which Countrey Knox Goodman and Bucanan with other their Agents and confederates first introduced Protestancy by force and armes A point so acknowledged that Docto● Bancroft late pretēded A chbishop of Canterbury as wholly inu●yghing agaynst suc● violent proceedings made a booke of tha● subiect entituling it Of the proceedings of th● Scottish Mynisters according to the Geneuian rule of Reformation Touching France who knoweth not that for this last fifty yeares till the last King of France became Catholike there haue by alwayes almost open warres betweene the State of France the Hugnotts of France vndertaken by the Hugnotts only for Religion And doth not the Citty of Rochell with some other Cittyes at this day stand out agaynst their King vnder pretext of defence of their Ghospell The occurrents of the Low Countreys the Hollanders are no lesse remarkable herein of whose first taking of armes agaynst thei● lawfull King only for Religion (a) In Epitom Cent. 16. p. 941. Osiander an earnest Protestant thus confesseth They of the low Countreys by publike wrytings renounced all subiection and obedience to Philip their Lord King And (b) Osiand vbi sup 81. agayne When foure hundred of them of good respect had sued for liberty of Religion and could not preuayle the impatient people stirred vp with fury at Antwerpe and other places of Holland Zeland and Flanders did throw and breake downe Images But of the proceedings Rebellion● of the low Countreymen agaynst their King only for cause of Religion it is needles to speake further seeing it is too well known to all men of any impartiall iudgment and vnderstanding I will not much insist in the Example of Switzerland which consisting of twelue or thirteene Cantons or Shyres halfe of the number of them did * See of this Osiander in Epitom Eccles histor Cen. 16. pag. 103. as also D. Bancroft in his suruey p. 13. and Cochlaeus in actis Lutheri ryse vp in armes against the other and by force of armes did set vp the Protestant Religion among them And so the halfe of the Cantons doe continue Protestant to this very day The battalls fought among them only for Religiō were many and most cruell and in one of them Zwinglius the chiefe inciter of the rest was slayne I passe ouer Geneua which Citty as the whole world knoweth did first withdraw it selfe from the allegiance of their temporall Liege Lord only by reason that agaynst his will and pleasure they would professe the Protestant Religion and so accordingly to this day they haue made themselues a State or Commonwealth wholly independent of Sauoy of which Citty thus D. (b) In his answere to a certayne libel supplicatory pag. 194. Sutcliffe confessedly wryteth They of Geneua did depose their Catholike Liege Lord and Prince from his temporall right albeit he was by right of succession their temporall Lord and owner of that Citty Territory In like sort I pretermit the many like examples of the Commons rysing agaynst their lawfull Princes and magistrates in (c) See Chitraeus in Chron 1593. 1594. Sueueland (d) See hereof the acknowledgment of M. Fulke in his answere to Farines declamations p. 35. Denmarke (e) See Osiander hereof in Epitom Cent. 16. pag. 115. Poland and (f) See the acknowledgement hereof by D. Bilson in his true defence part 3. pag. 270. 273. Germany And which rysings Insurrections and rebellions were originally vndertaken only for Religion and haue no doubt since Luthers first breach cost the liues in all places of many hundred thousand men haue actually deposed disthroned diuers Kings and Princes of their states and territoryes These things then for their euidency being cōfessed for true vndeniable many of which yet remayne fresh in our owne memory of the nature of which Actions I wil not heere dispute only I heere vrge that it is more then incredible that such rebellions and deuastations of Countreyes besieging of Cittyes deposing of Princes slaughter of so many hundred thousands of men should be practised almost throughout all Christendome within this last threescore yeares o●ly for admitting or not admitting the differences betweene the Protestants Catholikes Religion if both the contrary partyes were not persuaded
that vpon the true or false beliefe of these Controuersies in Religion their soules Salua●ion or damnation for all eternity were to depend For it is certayne that all these contrary partyes did agree and conspire in the generall beliefe of the Trinity Incarnation Passion death of our Sauiour and reciting of the Apostles Creed And therefore for these doctrines such bloudy proceedings were not attempted THE SAME PROVED FROM the Protestants mutually condemning one another of Heresy and for Heretikes CHAP. XV. IF Protestants doe maintaine that their different opinions seuerally houlden amonge themselues be Heresies and that the belieuers of them are for such their false beliefe if they so dye therein not capable of saluation then à fortiori may we be bould to pronounce that the Controuersies of fayth betweene the Catholiks and Protestants are not of that middle nature but that the opinions and sentences on the one syde are to be reputed for manifest Heresies and such as cannot stand with mans saluation This inference is most necessary since on all sides it is acknowledged that there is a farre greater disparity in Religion betweene the Catholikes and the Protestants then there is betweene the Protestants among themselues Now that the Protestants doe hould one another for Heretikes it cannot be denyed for to insist first in the Controuersies touching the reall Presence maintayned in their sense by the Lutherans but denyed by the Sacramentaries we find that Luther thus writeth of the Sacramentaries (h) Contra articulos Louanienses Thes 27. tom 2. We censure in earnest the Zwinglians and all the Sacramentaries for Heretikes and alienated from the Church of God And againe the same Luther thus writeth tom 7. Wittenb fol. 381. I do protest before God and the worlde that I doe not agree with the Zwinglians nor euer will while the world standeth but will haue my hands cleare from the bloude of the sheepe which these Heretikes marke his wordes do driue from Christ deceaue kill And againe in the former place Cursed be the charity concord of the Sacramentaries for euer and euer to all eternitie But Heretikes and men alienated from the Church of God and which do kill the sheepe of Christ during such their condition are not in state of Saluation Now of Luther and his doctrine we finde this bitter recrimination vsed by the Tigurine Deuines who were Zwinglians or Caluinists (i) Tigurini tract 3. contra supremam Lutheri Confessionem p. 61. Nos condemnatam execrabilem sectam vocat c. Luther calleth vs a damnable and execrable sect but let him looke lest he doth not declare himselfe an Arch-heretike being he cannot nor will not haue society with those that confesse Christ. And Zwinglius in tom 2. ad Respons Lutheri thus wryteth Behold how Sathan endeauours to possesse this man meaning Luther But to proceed to other points Nicolaus (1) In his Thesib Hypothesib Gallus an eminent Protestant and Superintendent at Ratisbone thus wryteth of the contentions betweene the Protestants themselues Non sunt leues c. The dissentions that are among vs are not light nor of light matters but of the greatest articles of Christian doctrine of the Law and the Ghospell of Iustification and good works of the Sacraments and vse of Ceremonies Cōradus (2) In Theolog. Caluin l. 1. art 23. Schlussenburge an other famous Protestant alleadgeth Pappus a Protestant thus complayning against the Caluinists Etsi initio de vno tantum articulo c. Although in the beginning one only article was called into doubt c. Not withstanding the Caluinists are now so far gone as that they call in doubt neither few neither the least articles of Christian Doctrine for now we dissent from them touching the Omnipotency of God the Personall vnion of two Natures in Christ c. But to come nearer home The (3) In their mild defence of the silenced ministers supplication to the Court of Parlamēt Puritanes heere of England thus complaine of the Protestants Doe we vary from the syncere Doctrine of the Scriptures Nay rather many of them doe much more swarue from the same c. And thus answereably we find that the Puritans hould the Bishops of England Antichristian whereas the Protestants do teach that of necessity Bishops are to be in the Church of God D. Willet (4) In his Meditation vpon the 122. Psalme speaking of diuers opinions taught by the more moderate Protestants as Hooker D. Couell and others thus wryteth From this foundation haue spronge forth these and other such wirlepooles and bubbles of new doctrine as that Christ is not originally God then after he thus concludeth Thus haue some bene bould to teach and wryte who as some Schismatikes meaning heerby the Puritans haue disturbed the peace of the Church one way in externall matters concerning discipline so they haue troubled the Church another way in opposing themselues by new quirkes deuices to the soundnes of Doctrine among Protestants M. Parkes in his booke dedicated to the then Archbishop D. Bancroft thus wryteth of the proceedings of some Protestants heere in England (5) Epist dedicat They are headstrong hardened in Errour they strike at the mayne points of fayth shaking the foundation it selfe and ca●ling to question Heauen and Hell the diuinity humanity yea the very soule and saluation of our Sauiour himselfe And agayne more plainely in the former place he sayth thus They haue pestilent Heresies and yet more They are Hereticall sacrilegious To conclude this point of their particuler sayings and redargutions heerein D. (6) In his defence of Hocker pag. 65. 74. 75. Couell repeating registring the Positions of the Puritans heere in England among other of their positions setteth downe these following The Statute congregations of England are no true Churches And agayne The Protestant Church of England is no Church at all And yet more The Protestant Church of England hath no forme of a Church Now that all these dissentions among English Protestants cannot be interpreted only about indifferencyes Ceremonyes or about Gouerment as some Protestants doe answere when they are charged heerewith by the Catholikes besides that their owne former Confessions are extended to diuers high articles the foresayd M. (7) Vbi supra pag. 3. Parks plainly and truly confesseth the contrary saying The Protestants deceiue the world and make men belieue there is agreement in all substantiall points they affirme there is no question among them of the truth Now the former point is furthermore made euident by the reciprocall deportmēt and demeanour of Protestants amongst thēselues for first besides the cha●ging one another with flat Heresy as is aboue shewed they do not only prohibit the (8) In Concil Theolog. part 1. pag. 249. reading of ech others bookes but also they set downe articles of visitation for the enquiry and apprehending (k) Hospinian vbi supra of such their aduersaryes
defence of the Apology Kēnitius in exam Concil Trident. part 1. p. 74. diuers others Protestants themselues exempt her from errour most truly insufferably erred in condemning certayne opinions which are not fundamentall for Heresyes and their maintayners for Heretikes and consequently the Scripture and Christ himselfe haue deceaued vs by ascribing to the church an (m) Mat. 18. Luc. 10. 1. Tim. 3. c. infallibility of erring in her definitions of fayth and condemnation of Heresies and by commaunding vs to obey the churches authority and sentence in all things as styling her the pillar and foundation of truth And further it should follow that the Church should thus intollerably erre both in generall councells the highest Tribunalls heere vpon earth as also in the priuate Authorities and sentences of all the learned Fathers in those firster tymes And thus for example the councell of the (n) Act. 15. Apostles should haue erred in decreeing it vnlawfull to eate in those tymes bloud strangled meates In like sort the first councell of (o) Euseb l. 3. de vita Constant Epiphan haeres 70. Nice should haue erred in condemning the Quartadecimani for Heretiks because they would not keep Easter day according to the custome of the Church And to pretermit all the other Councells aboue alleadged the Councell (p) Euseb l. 6. Hist. cap. 33. of Rome vnder Cornelius for condemning the Heresy of the Nouatians who reiected the Sacrament of Pennance as also for condemning of Anabaptisme And thus farre of Councels condemning points of seeming Indifferency for open wicked Heresies But now heere graunting that the sayd points as they were houlden by the maintayning of them were not Heresyes that the belieuers of them be saued then two mayne absurdities doe immediatly follow the first as is sayd is the erring of the whole Church of God in cōdemning them for Heresies they being not Heresies but true doctrines The second the inconsiderate cariage of the Church in these matters For to what end or purpose were all these Councells consisting of many hundreds of the most graue and Reuerend men of all Christendome celebrated with such labour trauayle out of all countreys infinite charges if the doctrines for the impugning resistng and condemning whereof they were gathered might be indifferently maintayned defended on all sides without breach of true fayth or daunger of Saluation The erring of the church is no lesse manifested in the sentences and condemnations giuen by many of the most auncient famous le●rned Fathers in the Primitiue Church not any one Orthodoxall Father contradicting them therein agaynst diuers maintayning opinions that seemed in regard of the Trinity Incarnation c. of small importance ●f so those opinions be not Heresies nor the belieuers of them Heretikes but men in state of Saluatiō And thus according heerto Flo●inus though he taught God to be the Au●hour of sinne might be saued In like sort the Heretikes who in S. Ie●ome his dayes denyed the possibility of the Commaundements The Manichees who ●enyed freewill The Eunomians who ●aught that only fayth doth iustify The Ae●ians who denyed prayer sacrifice for the ●ead and tooke away all fasting dayes Vigilantius who taught that Priests might marry and that we ought not to pray to Saints Iouinian who held marriage better then virginity The Donatists who taught the Inuisibility of the Church And finally to omit many others for breuity sake the Pelagians who denyed the necessity of Baptisme in Children All these men I say might be saued notwithstanding their former doctrines if so it be that euery man might expect Saluation in their Religion And yet we find that the foresaid men were branded for wicked Heretikes their doctrines for damnable Heresies as in the seauenth chapter aboue is shewed by Ireneus Ierome Epiphanius Philastrius Augustine Theodoret and others diuers of which holy Fathers writing catalogues o● Heresies did place the foresayd doctrines their Authours within the sayd catalogues this they did without any reluctation o● gain-saying of any other auncient and learned Father of their tymes From which consideration I doe gather if those opinions were not iustly condemned for Heresies and their Authou● for Heretikes Then not only the churc● did fouly erre in so great a matter but al● euen the aforesaid alleadged Fathers to wi● Ireneus Ierome Epiphanius Austine wit● many such others should deseruedly be reputed for Heretikes for their condemning of true Doctrines for Heresies and the belieuers of them for Heretikes and on the contrary syde Florinus the Manichees the Eunomians Vigilantius Iouinian the Donatists Pelagius many other such should be accompted for their teaching of true Doctrines Orthodoxall Authors and might haue iustly complayned of their insupportable wronges and indignities proceeding from the pens of the foresaid fathers An absurdity which I thinke no man enioying the benefit of his fiue senses wil allow And yet the admittance of our Newtrallists Paradoxe inanoidably draweth on this inferēce Another Absurdity accompanying the former doctrine is this that Heretikes should be true members of Christs church This I thus deduce for seing by the consent of all learned men none can be saued but such as are true members of Christs church for otherwyse Turkes and Iewes dying in the state of Turcisme and Iudaisme might be saued and seing the foresaid registred Doctrines and their Authours are condemned for Heresies Heretiks both according to the Authority of Gods church according to the true definition of Heresy aboue in the beginning set downe for the said Heretikes haue made choyce of those their heresies and do maintaine them most frowardly against the whole church of God not submitting their iudgments to it must of necessity follow that if those men could be saued then Heretikes continuing Heretikes are members of Christs true church then which what Paradoxe can in it selfe be accompted more absurd or in the iudgment of learned men more incredible considering with what acerbity of comportement the Apostles and all the Orthodoxall learned pious Fathers both in their wrytings and otherwyse haue in all ages entertayned Heretikes as aboue I haue manifested Furthermore if an Heretike continuing an Heretike can be saued then hath the auncient church of Christ vsed great tyranny to diuers such Professours by vndeseruedly punishing such mē with losse of Goods Imprisonments Excommunication Banishment sometymes with death it selfe for such were the punishments appointed by the auncient church and Christian Emperours against Heretyks as I haue shewed in the nynth chapter Againe supposing the truth of the doctrine of these Omnifidians yet obserue how repugnant it is to all reason and otherwise absurde eue● in it owne nature I will heere passe ouer diuers reasons alleadged in the precedent Chapters insist a little in some few of them The first It is certaine that that Faith which belieueth some articles and yet belieueth not other articles which are no lesse true and
such is the fayth of our Newtrallists is no true supernaturall fayth seing it beleiueth nothing through the authority of God and his church both which reueale propound all articles alike and indifferently to all men to be belieued Now what more crosse to reason then that a bare opinion not relying vpō any supernaturall grounds as neither hauing God for its Reuealer nor the Church for its Propounder conceaued only through morall inducements and therfore euer standing obnoxious to errour and mistaking should be able to purchase eternall Saluation to mans soule Againe how aduerse is it to all true iudgment to auerre that it is no preiudice or hinderance to mans saluation to belieue those principles of Religion which teach aduaunce all libertie sensualitie in cōuersatiō manners do depresse disparage all Chastity Fasting voluntary Pouertie keeping of the Commaundements and finally all serious and painfull labours and works of vertue piety and mortification for it is most contradictory in the very tearmes and no lesse repugnant to Gods sacred word that that doctrine which (u) 2. Pet. 3. promiseth lybertie and (x) Iudae vers 4. transferreth the grace of God into wantonnesse should be accounted the (y) Mat. 7. Luc. 13. straite way which leadeth vnto lyfe Furthermore can it be conceaued as sorting to Gods most mercifull proceeding with man that he should cut off the liues of those men with most fearefull sodaine and prodigious deaths and particulerly of Caluin who was eaten away with lyce a death peculiar to diuers of Gods most capitall Enemyes as to Antiochus Herod Maximinus others who first broached the Doctrines of Protestancy if the sayd Doctrines had either bene true in themselues or at least of that coldnes and indifferency as that they might comport and stand with the soules saluation No. God is iust withall mercifull therfore neuer extraordinarily punisheth but for extraordinary sinns Poore men that they were who comparted as it should seeme both in the diuulging of their mendacious and lying Doctrines as also in their vnexpected and sudden deaths with the false Prophets (z) 3. Reg. of Achab But to hasten to an end in the enumeration of the Absurdities following the foresaid Paradox of saluation in euery Religion and to come to that which within its owne largenes inuolueth many improbabilities If Catholikes Protestants notwithstanding the disparity of their fayth can both attayne to Heauen in vayne then is the doctrine of Recusancy ioyntly taught on both sides in vayne haue so many scores of Reuerend and Learned Priests and others of the Laytie in our owne Countrey whose blessed soules I beseech to pray to God daylie for the remission of my many sinnes suffered cruell deaths in the late Queenes raigne only because they refused to present themselues at the seruice of the Protestants But they are gone and most happily gone for (a) Tertul. de Praeser Clauis Paradisi sanguis Martyrum In vayne likewyse these later yeares haue diuers lay Persons endured cōtrary to his Maiesties naturall inclination most prone to mercy and commiseration great losses disgraces and imprisonments only for the said cause But who can thinke that vertuous and learned men are so prodigall of their lyues and bloud and English Lay Catholikes so insensible of their temporall states children and posterity as that they would wilfully precipitate and cast themselues into those miseries only for not belieuing and exercising points of Indifferencie and such as may stand with their soules eternall Happines In vayne also then haue the Learned men on both sydes spent out their whole liues in defending ech man his owne Religion in their most painfull and voluminous bookes and wrytings if so they dissented one from another in matters of such supposed small importance In vayne and without iust cause and therfore most cruelly haue many States in Christendome in our age imposed proscription banishments and other insupportable disgraces to such of their owne subiects as will not imbrace their owne doctrine though both sydes did conspire and agree in the fundamentall points of fayth In vayne also both euer since Luthers reuolt as also at this present haue there byn and still are such Insurrections of Subiects against their Princes such bloudy and implacable warres betweene absolute Princes themselues such deuastation and depopulation of whole Countreys such maine battayles and fieldes fought with losse of diuers hundred thousand lyues and lastly such incessant and interrupted besieging and taking of great Citties townes with effusion for the most part of much innocent bloud of Women and Children and all this originally and principally for matter of Religion I say in vayne and most iniuriously haue all these attempts actions byn vndertaken if the disagreements in Religiō for which they were vndertaken betweene Catholikes and Protestants were of that reconcileable nature as that the professours on both sydes notwithstāding their diuersity of fayth might ioyntly be saued What can we now reply heereto in the behalfe of our Newtrallists Shall we say that the most learned men of all Religions that Kings Princes States and many hundred thousand subiects of Christendome were and still are actually mad and out of their senses in menaging these their deplorable attempts for Religion that the all-reconciling peaceable Newtrallist who throgh his pliable sterne of disposition in these spirituall matters is become of the halfe-bloud with the Atheist and who wanteth as is commonly noted both learning grace vertue is particulerly enlightened by God in setting downe what articles of fayth are only necessary to mans Saluation and what are to be reputed but as accessory and of smaller importance To such straites we see is the defence of the former doctrine driuen vnto Seeing therefore this doctrine of our Omnifidians or rather Nullifidians for indeed while they seeme to allow all Religions they take away all Religion is encompassed on all sides with so many notorious absurdityes as are displayed in this Chapter and seing it cannot be true except there be a retrogradation of all matters heere on earth and a turning of the world as they say vpside downe that is except the most learned become most madde and the most ignorant most wise Therfore since such comportment and carriage of thinges is not sorting to Gods Prouidence and Charity towards manking let euery man who thinketh he hath a soule to saue or loose vndoubtedly assure himselfe that there is but one true Fayth or Religiō wherin he may auaileably expect saluation and that the sauing fayth of Christ wherewith the soule is cloathed is like vnto the inconsutible garment of Christ both being incapable of diuision renting or partition Now for the greater illustration of this point by way of similitude and as tending towards the closure of this treatise Imagine that a man pretendeth right and title to certaine Lands taketh aduice of all the learned Lawyers Coūsellours of the whole Realme to