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A10958 The faith, doctrine, and religion, professed, & protected in the realme of England, and dominions of the same expressed in 39 articles, concordablie agreed vpon by the reuerend bishops, and clergie of this kingdome, at two seuerall meetings, or conuocations of theirs, in the yeares of our Lord, 1562, and 1604: the said articles analised into propositions, and the propositions prooued to be agreeable both to the written word of God, and to the extant confessions of all the neighbour churches, Christianlie reformed: the aduersaries also of note, and name, which from the apostles daies, and primitiue Church hetherto, haue crossed, or contradicted the said articles in generall, or any particle, or proposition arising from anie of them in particular, heereby are discouered, laid open, and so confuted. Perused, and by the lawfull authoritie of the Church of England, allowed to be publique. Rogers, Thomas, d. 1616.; Rogers, Thomas, d. 1616. English creede. 1607 (1607) STC 21228; ESTC S116041 208,079 284

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THE FAITH DOCTRINE and religion professed protected in the Realme of England and dominions of the same Expressed in 39 Articles concordablie agreed vpon by the reuerend Bishops and Clergie of this Kingdome at two seuerall meetings or Conuocations of theirs in the yeares of our Lord 1562 and 1604 THE SAID ARTICLES ANALISED INTO Propositions and the Propositions prooued to be agreeable both to the written word of God and to the extant Confessions of all the neighbour Churches Christianlie reformed THE ADVERSARIES ALSO OF NOTE AND name which from the Apostles daies and primitiue Church hetherto haue crossed or contradicted the said Articles in generall or any particle or proposition arising from anie of them in particular heereby are discouered laid open and so confuted Perused and by the lawfull authoritie of the Church of England allowed to be publique Rom. 16.17 I beseech you bretheren Marke them diligently which cause diuisions and offences contrarie to the doctrine which yee haue receaued and auoide them PRINTED BY IOHN LEGATT PRINTER to the Vniuersitie of Cambridge 1607. TO THE MOST REVErend Father in God his right honorable good Lord Richard by the diuine prouidence Archb. of Canterburie and Primate of England and Counselar to the most high mighty Prince Iames King of great Brittaine France Ireland MOst reuerend Father in God there is no one thing in this world that of men truly zealous Christian in these latter daies of the world with greater earnestnes hath bin desired then that by a ioynt common consent of all the Churches rightly according to the canons of the sacred Scriptures reformed there might be a draught made and diuulged containing and expressing the summe substance of that Religion which they doe all both concordablie teach vniformely maintaine That holy man of happie remembrance D. Cranmer who sometime enioyed that roome in our Church which your Grace nowe worthily possesseth in the daies of that most godly young Prince King Edward the sixt employed a great part of his time and studie for the effecting of that worke and imparted his thoughts with the most principall persons and of rarest note in those daies for their wisdome pietie and credit among the people of God throughout Christendome M. Caluin vnderstanding of his intent addressed his letters vnto the sayd Archbishop and offered his seruice saying that might his labours stand the Church in steede ne decem quidem maria it would not grieue him to saile ouer ten Seas to such a purpose 2. But this proouing a worke of much difficultie if not altogether vnpossible in mans eies especially in those daies to be brought about the next course and resolution was that euerie Kingdome and free state or principalitie which had abandoned the superstitious and Antichristian religion of the Church of Rome and embraced the Gospell of Christ should diuulge a Briefe of that religion which among themselues was taught and beleeued and whereby through the mercie of God in Christ they did hope to be saued Which to God his great glorie the singular benefit comfort of all Churches both present and to come as the extant Harmonie of all their confessions doth most sweetely record with no great labor was notablie performed This worke of theirs tolde the Churches in those daies and doth vs and will enforme our posteritie that not only in euery particular State Kingdome but also throughout Christendome where the Gospell was entertained the primitiue and Apostolicall daies of the Church were againe restored For the multitudes of them that did beleeue I speake both ioyntly of all and seuerally of each reformed people not of euery particular person fantastique False-apostles and peruerse teachers or professors in any Church who were not wanting euen in the Apostles daies touching the maine and fundamentall points of true religion were then of one hart and of one soule and did thinke and speake one thing and liue in peace 3. The said Archbishop for vnto whom better after God and the King can we ascribe the glorie of this worthy act hee wrought this Vnitie and Vniformitie of doctrine in this kingdome in the Halcyon daies of our English Iosias K. Edward the sixt of that name and the same doctrine so by his meanes established in the time of peace a notable worke of peace like a manly haeroicall and heauenly Capitane vnder our Generall Iesus Christ he resolutely euen with his heart blood in the fierie torments afterwards confirmed in the daies of persecution A certaine learned man speaking of the Religion heere then professed and wrighting vnto the Lords of our late Queenes Counsell doth say he meaning the Papist his aduersarie who charged our Church with discord and disagreements about matters of religion He ought saith he if hee had bin able to haue brought out the publike Confession and Articles of faith agreed in K. Edwards time and haue shewed any in England that professing the Gospell dissenteth from the same So esteemed hee and with him many thousands of learned and iudicous men of the doctrine then ratified by authoritie and professed in this kingdome But those daies of our Churches peace continued not long through our vnthankefulnesse and sinnes neither on the other side was our persecution permanent through the goodnes of god though for the time exceeding vehemt violent For nubecula fuit cito transiit it vanished away quickely as do many raging stormes euen vpon the suddaine yet not through the power of Gunpowder and treasons but through the force of ardent praiers vnto the Almightie For arma ecclesiae preces 4. Wee finde that M. Latimer that sacred and reuerend Father addicted himselfe very seriously in those daies vnto the exercise of prayer and his principall and most vsuall praiers were first for himselfe next for the afflicted church of England and lastly for Lady Elizabeth the deceassed K. Edwards and Q. Maries sister For himselfe hee praied that as God had made him a minister and Preacher of his truth so hee might constantly beare witnesse vnto the same haue the grace and power to maintain it in the face of the world euen till the hower of his death For the church of Enlād hee praied that God would be pleased once againe to restore the free Preaching of the Gospell to this realme and this withall possible feruencie of Spirit hee craued at the hands of God And for Lady Elizabeth that hee would preserue and make her a comfort to his then comfortlesse people in England And the almightie and our heauenly Father both heard and granted all and euery of his petitions M. Gualter that learned painfull excellent diuine at Tigure dedicating his holy and Christian comments vpon the lesser Prophets vnto D. Parkhurst Bishop of Norwich who in the daies of the forementioned Q. Mary voluntarily had exiled himselfe so farre as Switzerland for his preseruation if it might be vnto better times
that the church of Rome neither hath nor can erre Erraverunt aliae ecclesiae saith Di. Stella other churches as of Antioch Alexandria Constantinople c. haue erred sed nunquam ecclesia Romana but the church of Rome neuer yet erred Id constanter negamus saith Costerus the Iesuit we constantly deny that christ his Vicars Peters successors the Bishops of Rome haue either taught heresies or can propound errors God preserueth the truth of christian religion in the Apostolike sea of Rome and It is not possible that the church meaning the church of Rome can erre or hath erred at any time in any point say the Rhemists 20. Article Of the authoritie of the Church 1 The Church hath power to decree rites or ceremonies 2 and authoritie in controuersies of faith And yet it is not lawfull for the Church 3 to ordaine any thing that is contrarie to Gods word 4 neither may it so expound one place of Scripture 5 that it be repugnant to another VVherefore although 6 the Church be a witnesse and a keeper of holy writ yet as it ought not to decree any thing against the same so 7 besides the same ought it not to enforce any thing to be beleeued for necessitie of saluation The propositions 1. The church hath power to decree rites or ceremonies 2. The church may not ordaine what rites or ceremonies shee will 3. The church hath authoritie to iudge and determine in controuersies of faith 4. The church hath power to interpret and expound the word of God 5. The Analogie of faith must be respected in the exposition of the Scripture 6. The church is the witnesse and keeper of Gods written word 7. The church may not enforce any thing to be beleeued as necessarie vnto saluation that is either contrarie or besides the word of God 1. Proposition The church hath power to decree rites or ceremonies The proofe from the word of God THe churches authoritie to decree rites or ceremonies is warranted in the word of God first by the example of the Apostles who did ordaine rites and ceremonies among other things that In the church men should not be couered Women should keepe silence and be couered A knowen tongue vnderstood of the common auditorie should be vsed with other things Next by the generall and binding commandement of God himselfe who at all times will haue euery thing in the church to be done vnto edifying honestie and by order as beeing not the author of confusion but of peace All churches protestant confesse the same Errors adversaries vnto this truth This power being giuen by the Supreame authoritie vnto the Church they doe greatly offend which doe condemne either generally all or particularly some rites and ceremonies orderly and lawfully established of the former sort are 1. The Familie of Loue who say of themselues how they are a free people in bondage vnto no creature nor to any created thing they haue no seuerall distenting or variable religions either ceremonies 2. The Brownists who teach that euery Christian is to ioyn himselfe vnto that people among whome the Lords worship is free and not bound or withholden with any iurisdiction of this world 3. The Puritanes whereof some would haue all matters of ceremonies to be left in christian libertie vnto euery man Others would haue both temples to be left without seruice Sermons and Sacraments and Princes to be scared with the feare of vproares and sedition and all because they would be freed from the obedience vnto ceremonies not impious of themseluees imposed by the Church the Father of these men was Illyricus of whome Melancton writeth Of the latter kinde be 1. The Familie of Loue againe who vtterly dislike our Churches or Temples also our Liturgies formes of seruing our God and finally our designed times of meeting together for the worshippe of God Our Churches there blasphemously tearme Common houses and so we tearme Brothell houses or the stewes Our Lyturgies and manner of seruing of God they call Foolishnes of taken on seruices false and seducing Gods seruices of no man to be ordained nor to be obeied or vsed when they are established with these ioyne the Barrowists who doe write that to haue Leiturgies and formes of common praier is to haue another Gospell and another Testament Our Sabboths they contemne yea they condemne for they say There ought to be no Sabboth day Our Sabbatarians goe not so farre yet come they neere unto these Familists when they divulge that The Church hath no authoritie ordinarily and perpetually to sanctifie any day but the seuenth day which the Lord himselfe had sanctified The church cannot take away this libertie of working sixe daies in the weeke These assertions are against all holy daies lawfully established Barrow yet goeth further then doe these men for he saith how the obseruing of times as it is in our church is an error fundamentall They also be alike culpable who approouing some rites and ceremonies do yet tie the church or people of God to the obseruation of the ceremonies either Mosaicall as many haue donne and doe or of the Romish Church as doe the Papists and the halfe papists the Familie of Loue Finally they are out of the way which thinke that either one man as the Pope or any certaine calling of men as the clergie hath power to decree and appoint rites or ceremonies though of themselues good vnto the whole church of God dipersed ouer the vniuersall world 2. Proposition The Church may not ordaine what rites and ceremonies shee will The proofe from Gods word As it is a cleere truth that the church may ordaine ceremonies so true is it also that the church hath no power to appoint what rites or ceremonies shee will For shee must decree none which be Either for their owe nature impious like the ordinances manners and Idols of our forefathers teachers of vanitie and of lies Or for vse superstitious like the brazen Serpent which king Ezekiah brake in peices Or for their weight ouer heauie and greiuous to be borne like the Iewish constitutions Or for their worthines in the eies of the ordainers either of equall price or of more account then the very ordinances of God so as for the performance of them the lawes of God must be left vndone such were many of the Pharisaicall tires and traditions Or against the libertie of christians and to the entangling of them againe with the yoake of seruile bondage Or last of all any way contrary to the commandements word and will of God But the rites ceremonies and constitutions of the church they must make altogether and tend both to the nourishing and encrease of loue friedship and quietnes among christians and also to the retaining of Gods people in the holy seruice worship
saith of the said Parkhurst that when he liued in Tigure Lady Elizabeth was euer in his mouth her Faith her wisedome her magnanimous spirit her virgineous and chast behauiour hee would euer celebrate with high words and commendations and that God would gard and safegard her person for the good of his people was his daily praier yea saith the same Gualter orabant idem te cum pii omnes it was not your praier onely but all Gods people so praied besides And their prayers were not made in vaine For both Q. Mary liued not long and L. Elizabeth was placed in the royall throne superstition was expulsed and true religion againe to the singular comfort and multiplication of Gods people in this kingdome very solemnely restored .5 Nothwithstanding an Vniformitie of doctrine to be taught embraced and professed by authoritie of the Prince and State was not published till certaine yeares after the Queenes attaining the kingly diademe but then Articles of religion to the number of thirty-nine drawē yet three yeares afore were commended to the consideration and perusall of the whole clergie of both Prouinces in an orderly and lawfull assembly or Convocation of theirs at London and by a sweete and vnanimous readines thereupon by them allowed This was effected in the yeare of our Lord 1562. the same yeare that the mercilesse Massacre at Vassey in France was committed by the Duke of Guize and the same very time also that all the Protestants in that country of France for holding and professing the same doctrine were sentenced vnto death and destruction by the Parliament at Paris after which their condemnatiō ensued those horrible and more then sauage murders and slaughters of the Religious and onely for this Religion at Carrascone at Tholouse Amiens Towres Sens Agen Aurane and many other citties townes and villages throughout France A principall contriuer of this Vniformitie in religion and thereby Vnitie among vs was another Predecessor of your Graces euen D. Parkar the first Archbishop of Canterburie in the said Queenes daies Here vpon Beza from Geneva Doctrinae puritas viget in Anglia Pure syncere religion flourisheth in England Zanchius from Strasborough Per hanc reginam factam by her meaning Q. Elizabeths comming to the Crowne God againe hath restored his doctrine and true worship and Daneus The whole compasse of the world hath neuer seene any thing more blessed nor more to be wished then is her gouernenment So now againe flourished those Apostolicall times as I may say of vnitie and Vniformitie of doctrine in our Church For then were there no contentions nor dissentions nor thornie pricking disputations among vs about questions of religion tantum res nobis fuit cum satellitibus quibusdam Pontificiis as Bishop Iewell said wee then skirmished onely with the Papists As it was at the building of Salomons temple so was it with vs then Wee set vpon the building of Gods house which is his Church without deane without noyse and stirres The adversaries without heard vs and heard of our doings abroad by the pens of the learned Iewel Nowel Calfehill and such other Architects of ours to our selues wee were comely as Ierusalem to our enemies terrible as an armie of Banners 6. Also what afore viz. an 62. they had agreed vpon the same at another Assembly at London an 71. and the 13. of Q. Elizabeth according to a Act of Parliament then made the said Clergie of England the Archbishops and Bishops first beginning and giuing the example by their seuerall Subscriptions with their owne hands most readily did approoue Howbeit in the yeare next ensuing sciz an 72 a yeare many waies memorable especially for the great and generall Massacre of aboue an hundred thousand Protestāts in France chiefly in Paris and the country thereabout adioyning begun on S. Bartholemewes eeue for Pope Gregories excommunicating of Q. Elizabeth for defending this doctrine and religion which here wee speake of and thirdly for the erecting of priuate Presbyteries now first in England diuers of the inferior ministers in and about London and else where in this kingdome not a little disturbed the quiet of our state and peace some of them by vntimely and inconsiderate Admonitions pamphelets and Libels others by obstinate refusing to subscribe as both Lawe did enioyne and their Fathers in Christ and superiors afore them had done But these men speedily both by learning were answered and by authoritie censured suspended or depriued 7. And yet not one of these Recusants and so not one of Englāds clergie either now or afore did euer oppugne the receiued publike and catholike doctrine of our Church but most willingly approued and applauded the same as the truth of God For euen the admonitioners themselues which said that they did striue for true Religion and wished the Parliament euen With perfect hatred to detest the church of England whereof notwithstanding they were members euen they doe say how they meaning the Bishops and their partakers they hold the substance of Religion with vs and wee with them And againe Wee all of vs confesse one Christ. And their Champion doth acknowledge that her maiestie hath deliuered vs from the spirituall Egypt of Poperie So that for doctrine I meane still for the maine points of doctrine there was now a sweete and blessed concord among vs which Vnitie continued all that holy and reuerend Fathers I meane Archbishop Parkers time which was till the 17. yeare of Q. Elizabeth 8. After him succeeded in the said Archiepiscopall chaire B. Grindall a right famous and worthy Prelate and for religion so sound as in K. Edwards daies had the Prince liued a while longer he had bin promoted vnto the Bishoprick of London vpon the translation of B. Ridly vnto Durham for these things had the State then in purpose But God otherwise had decreed for their advancements as that the one of them should passe through the fire vnto the kingdome of heauen and the other escape the dangers of many stormes and waters before hee came vnto any preferment at all And so accordingly Ridley was burned and Grindall banished and both of them depriued either of life or liuing or both and that for one and the same cause and doctrine which they had preached and wee professe But the tempest being ouerblowen and Q. Elizabeth her selfe hauing likewise escaped the bloody hands of her cruel enemies yea and Gunpowder traines and Treasons too in most barbarous manner laid to haue blowen vp her saint-like sanctified Body and Soule into the heauens and all for her constant fauouring and embracing this very doctrine her Maiestie not forgetfull what he had endured for the cause of Christ and his Church aduanced this zealous Confessour and tried Souldier vnto the See first of London afore designed him next of Yorke and lastly of Canterburie The care of this Archbishop was great to further the glory of God but through the enuy and malice
see at all or Ouersee and what likewise the points of doctrine newly now reuealed their aeternum Euangelium which without great danger may not be preached in England no more then the doctrine and Articles of the Church of England may bee preached at Rome and for defence wherof they ought to afford euen their very liues weare they so many as the haires of euery of their heads is and bee they demonstrate themselues to be most childishly vaine and idle in their imaginations which they take yet to be illuminations of the spirit 13. For all their doings and discourses to say the best of them are but to erect a newe which they tearme a true ministerie and their Discipline among vs. Themselues doe say The controuersie betwixt them and vs is not as the Bishopes and their welwillers they would beare the world in hand for a Cap a Tippet or a Surplesse but for greater matters concerning a true ministerie and regiment of the Church according to the word the one whereof that is a true ministery they shall neuer haue till Archbishops and Bishops be put downe and all Ministers made equall the other also will neuer be brought to passe till Kings Queenes doe subiect themselues vnto the Church and submit their scepters and throwe downe their Crowes before the Church and lick vp the dust of the feete of the Church and willingly abide the censures of the Church that is of the Presbyterie For as the Church is subiect vnto the ciuill magistrate in respect of his ciuill authoritie so must the magistrate the King and Queene subiect themselues and bee obedient to the iust and lawfull authoritie of the Church The ciuill magistrate is none officer at all of the Church For Church officers bee non Magnates aut Tetrarchae not gracious or honorable Lords but Ministers of the Church The Presbyterie is the Church and euerie Congregation or Church should and must in it haue a Presbyterie This is the Light which indeede the Martyrs neuer sawe the Religion which our Brethren striue for the Truth which they may not preach not Childish doctrine like the Bishops Articles but the wise Gospell the maine and materiall points of religion nowe in these last daies last of all yea after the eight Thorowe breaking of H. N. his Euangelium regni reuealed and for furtherance whereof they are to lend and spend euen all their liues if occasion be ministred 14. Strange and strong delusions First to take these and other such assertions for Truths and heauenly mysteries which are but the fancies of troubled braines not grounded nor truly gathered from Gods word Next to teach one another and al their fauorers howe they should be as readie and prepared euen for these matters to giue ouer their liuings and to giue their liues were they as many as the haires of all their heades as Cranmer Ridley Latimer did and Parker Grindall and all other Preachess would and euery Christian man and woman should if they bee called thereunto for the Apostolicall and Catholique doctrine of our Church which all Gods people doe knowe and the Brethren themselues as afore hath bin noted doe confesse is originally from God and his written word These and many moe too many heere to be recapitulate such phantasies of theirs or phrenesies rather this first subscription brought first to light and yet happie had it bin for Gods Church and people they had neuer bin broached 15. Semblablie the next Subscription called for by the last Archb. your L. predecessor an 84. discouered euen the verie thoughts and desires of those Brethren before but nowe stiled faithfull Brethren which haue and doe seeke for the Discipline and reformation of the Church Many Treatises afore but nowe and diuers yeares ensuing they flewe about and abroad like Atomies and by them the same things which afore but in a differing sort and in other words they publish For touching Church officers they name who and howe many sorts they be of them viz. Doctors Pastors Gouernors Deacons and Widdowes no moe no fewer They say Euerie Church must be furnished with a Teacher and a Pastor as with two Eies with Elders as with Feete with Deacons as with Hands Euerie Congregation must haue Eies Hands and Feete and yet neither all nor at all any Congregation is to haue an Head answerable to those Feete Hands and Eies The doctor by their doctrine must be a distinct minister from the pastor and onely teach true doctrine and neither exhort nor apply his doctrine according to the times and his auditorie nor minister the Sacraments For these things the pastor is to performe Which pastor also whensoeuer he administreth the Sacraments must necessarily make a Sermon or els he cōmitteth Sacriledge And concerning discipline by their doctrine euery Congregation must haue absolute authoritie to admonish to censure to excommunicate and to anathematize all offending persons yea euen Kings and Princes if they be of the Congregation And no Prince but must be of some parish and vnder one Presbytery or other alwaies Where this power is not in their iudgements one of the tokens of a true Church is wanting For this Discipline with them is a Marke of the Church and numbred among the Articles of their Faith 16. This say they is the great cause the holy cause which they will neuer leaue suing for though they should be a thousand Parliaments in their daies vntill either ther obtaine it or bring the Lord in vengeance and blood against the Stare and the whole land for repelling the same The Discipline is Gods holy yoke Gods sceptre the kingdome and throne of Christ. Our controuersie say they is whether Iesus Christ shall be King or no. Againe the end of all our trauaile is to build vp the walles of Ierusalem in to set vp the Throne of Iesus Christ our heauenly King the middes thereof the aduauncing whereof is a testimonie vnto vs that wee shall haue part in that glorie which shall be reuealed heereafter So learne we nowe from their said bookes learned and demonstratiue discourses which the Fathers and our fore fathers neuer sawe nor had learned both that their Discipline established and exercised is a visible marke of a true Church and to desire the aduauncement of the same an inuisible token of an elect childe of God so as neither is that a Church at least no true Church where their Discipline is not neither they but titular christians no true christians indeede which either sigh or seeke not to haue it established and Presbyteries in euerie parish to be aduaunced 17. The Articles of our religion concluded vpon by the reuerend Clergie of our Church with these learned and all seeing Brethren are but the Bishops decrees the Articles of the Conuocation house and reueale some little truth but these wise Brethren so faithfull haue they bin betweene God and his Church they haue not failed to shewe vs the whole counsaile of God And
of these is like that of the false Apostles which came from Iudea vnto Antioch and taught the Brethren that vnlesse they were Circumcised after the manner of Moses they could not be saued Whome the Apostles Paul and Barnabas first and afterwards Peter Iames and the rest at Ierusalem both zealously did resist and in their first Synod or conuocation powerfully suppresse The latter as bad as that hath bin the mother of many hereticall assertions and horrible conclusions I haue read and many there be aliue which will iustifie it how it was preached in a Mercate towne in Oxfordshire that to doe any seruile worke or businesse on the Lords day is as great a sinne as to kill a man or to committe adultery It was preached in Sommersetshire that to throw a bowle on the Sabboth day is as great a sinne as to kill a man It was preached in Norfolke that to make a Feast or wedding dinner on the Lords day is as great a sinne as for a Father to take a knife and cutte his childes throate It was preached in Suffolke I can name the man and I was present when hee was conuented before his ordinary for preaching the same that to ring moe Bels then one vpon the Lords day to call the people vnto Church is as great a sinne as to commit murder When these things I read and heard mine heart was strucken with an horror and so is it still when I doe but thinke of them and calling into minde the Sabboth doctrine at London printed for I. Porter and T. Man an 95 which I had read afore wherein very many things are to this effect I presently smelt both whose disciples all those preachers are and that the said doctrine had taken deepe impression in mens hearts and was dispersed while our watchmen were otherwise busied if not asleepe ouer the whole kingdome 23. It is a comfort vnto my soule and will be till my dying houre that I haue beene the man and the meanes that these Sabbatarian errors and impieties are brought into light and knowledge of the State whereby whatsoeuer else sure I am this good hath ensued namely that the said bookes of the Sabbath comprehending the aboue mentioned and many moe such fearefull and haereticall assertions haue beene both called in and forbidden any more to be printed and made common Your Graces predecessor Archb. Whitegift by his letters and Officers at Synods and visitations an 99. did the one and Sir Iohn Popham L. chiefe Iustice of England at Burie S. Edmonds in Suff. an 1600. did the other And both these most reuerend sage and honorable Personages by their censures haue declared if men will take admonition that this Sabbath doctrine of the Brethren agreeth neither with the doctrine of our Church nor with the lawes and orders of this kingdome disturbeth the peace both of the Common-weale and Church and tendeth vnto Schisme in the one and Sedition in the other and therefore neither to be backt nor bolsterd by any good Subiect whether hee bee Church or Common-weale man 24. Thus haue errors and noisome doctrines like boiles and Botches euer and anone risen vp to the ouerthrowe of our Churches health and salfety if it might be but yet such hath beene the Phisicke of our discipline as what by launcing purging and other good meanes vsed the Bodie still hath beene vpholden and preserued from time to time And well may errors like grosse humors and tumors continue among vs as neuer Church was or will be quite without them while it is militant heere vpon earth yet are they not of the substance at all of our Religion or any part of our Churches doctrine no more then ill humors which bee in are of the Bodie or dregs in a Vessell of wine bee any part either of the Vessell or Wine which remaneth as at the first most sound and vncorrupted and so continued euen vntill the dying day of that most illustrious religious Princesse Queene Elizabeth The verie Brethren themselues doe write that In regard of the common grounds of Religion and of the Ministerie We are all one We are all of one Faith one Baptisme one Bodie one spirit haue all one Father one Lord and be all of one Heart against all wickednes superstition idolatrie haeresie and we seeke with one Christian desire the aduancement of the pure Religion worshippe and honor of God We are Ministers of the word by one order we administer prayers and Sacraments by one forme we preach one Faith and substance of doctrine And wee praise God heartily that the true Faith by which we may be saued and the true Doctrine of the Sacraments and the pure Worshipe of God is truly taught and that by publike authoritie and retained in the booke of Articles Hitherto the said Brethren And this was their verdict of our Churches doctrine in the last yeare saue one of Q. Elizabeths raigne then which nothing was euer more truely said or written And this Vnitie and puritie of doctrine shee left with vs when shee departed this world 25. Nowe After Elizabeth raigned Noble Iames. Who found this our Church as all the world knoweth in respect of the groundes of true Religion at Vnitie and that Vnitie in Veritie and that Veritie confirmed by publike and regall approbation These ecclesiasticall ministers therefore though a thousand for number who at his Maiesties first comming into this kingdome either cōplained vnto his Highnes of I know not what errors imperfections in our Church euē in points of doctrine as if shee erred in matters of Faith or desired that an Vniformity of doctrine might be prescribed as if the same had not alreadie bin done to his hands or as weary belike of the old by Queene Elizabeth countenaunced and continued desired his Maiestie to take them out a newe Lesson as did the the 71. Brethren of Suffolk are not to be liked Neither can we extoll the goodnes of our God sufficiently toward our King and vs all for inspiring his royall heart with holy wisedome to discerne these vnstaied and troublesome spirits and in abling his Highnes with power and graces from aboue to decree orders and directions for the generall benefit and peace of the whole Church neither suffered hee his eies to sleepe nor his eie-lids to slumber nor the temples of his head to take any rest till he had set them downe afore all other though neuer so important and waightie affaires of the Crowne and Kingdome 26. My selfe haue read and thousand thousands with an hundred thousand of his Subiects besides haue either read or heard of Proclamations after Proclamations to the number of sixe or seauen at the least of bookes and open speeches of his Maiestie vttered in the Parliament house and all of them made vulgar within a yeare and little more after his happie ingresse into this kingdome taking the administration of this most famous flourishing Empire vpon himself
wherby the doctrine in this land allowed publiquely graced imbraced of all sorts at his entrance into the Realme hath been not only acknowledged to bee agreeable to Gods word sincere and the very same which both his Highnes and the whole Church and kingdome of Scotland yea and the primitiue Church professed but also by his authoritie regall and paramont as one of the maine pillers supporting his Estate ratified to continue and all hope either of allowing or tolerating in this kingdome of any other doctrine religion or faction whatsoeuer opposite or any way thwarting the Faith and confession of the Church of England in most plaine pithy and peremptorie words and speeches cut off The yeare 62. was not more famous for the Vniformitie of doctrine in religion then concluded then the yeare 604. is memorable and will be for seconding the same neither gotte the Clergie in those daies more credit in composing the Articles of our Vnitie in Faith then did the last Conuocation whereat your Grace then Bishop of London was present and President in ratifying the Acts and Articles of their Antecessors neither was Q. Elizabeth more honoured in establishing them at the first then is our K. Iames renowned and more and more will be for approouing vnder the great Seale of England the late and last Constitutions and Canons ecclesiasticall 27. Whereby no person shall hereafter be receiued into the ministery nor neither by Institution or Collation admitted to any ecclesiasticall liuing nor suffered to preach to catechize or to be Lecturer or Reader of Diuinitie in either Vniuersitie or in any Cathedrall or Collegiat Church Cittie or Market towne Parish Church Chappell or in any other place in this realme except c. and except hee shall first Subscribe to these three Articles c. Whereof the third is that he alloweth the booke of Articles of Religion c. Nor any licensed to preach Read Lecture or Catechize comming to reside in any Diocesse shall be permitted there to preach read lecture catechize or minister the Sacraments or to execute any other ecclesiasticall function by what authoritie soeuer he be thereunto admitted vnlesse he first consent and Subscribe to the three Articles Neither shall any man teach either in publike schole or in priuate house except he shall first subscribe to the first and third Articles simply c. Neither shall any man be admitted a Chancellar Commissarie or officiall to exercise any ecclesiasticall iurisdiction except c. and shal Subscribe to the Articles of Religion agreed vpon in the Conuocation in the yeare 1562 c. And likewise all Chancellours Commissaries Registers and all other that doe nowe possesse or execute any places of ecclesiasticall iurisdiction or seruice shall before Christmas next in the presence of the Archbishop or Bishop or in open Court vnder whome or where they execute their offices take the same Oathes and Subscribe as before is said or vpon refusall so to doe shall be suspended from the execution of their Offices vntill they shall take the said Oathes and Subscribe as afore said 28. In which Constitutions the wisedome of his Highnesse sheweth it selfe to be excellent who indeede as exceeding necessary both for the retaine of peace in the Church and preuenting of newe doctrine curious speculations and offenses which otherwise daily would spring vp and intolerably encrease calleth for Subscription in testimonie of mens cordiall consent vnto the receiued doctrine of our Church but exacteth not their Oathes as some doe much lesse Oathes Vowes and Subscription too but onely in a particular respect and that of a very fewe in publike office as our neighbours haue done Againe hee requireth Subscription but not of ciuill magistrates not of the Commons as else-where some doe not of euery man yea of womē aswel as of men as did the persecuted Church at Frankeford in Q. Maries daies not of Noble Gentlemen and Courtiers as in Scotland was exacted in our Kings minoritie but onely of ecclesiasticall Ministers Teachers and spirituall Officers or of those which would be such and so doe the reformed Churches in France and Germanie at this very day Last of all his Maiestie calleth for Subscription vnto Articles of religion but they are not either Articles of his owne lately deuised or the old newely turkened but the verie Articles agreed vpon by the Archbishopes and Bishops of both Prouinces and the whole Clergie in the Conuocation holden at London and that in the yeare of our Lord God 1562 and vnto none other euen the same Articles for number thirtie nine no moe no fewer and for words sillables and letters the verie same vnaugmented vndiminished vnaltered 29. And beeing the same the whole world is to knowe that the Church of England is not in religion changed or variable like the Moone nor affecteth noueltie or newe lessons but holdeth stedfastly and conscionably that truth which by the Martyrs and other Ministers in this last age of the world hath bin restored vnto this kingdome and is grounded vpon Gods written word the onely foundation of our Faith And being the same all men againe may see that we are stil at Vnitie both among our selues at home and with the neighbour Churches abroad in all matters of cheifest importance fundamentall points of religion though our adversaries the Papists would faine beate the contrarie into the common peoples heads And being the same there is nowe as also from the first restauration of the Gospell among vs there hath beene an Vniformitie likewise of doctrine by authoritie established which at the King his first arriuall among vs was so much desired by the Brethren And finally being the same let vs not doubt but perswade our selues that we shall find the Antichristian Church of Rome too the same which for the same doctrine and for none other cause prosecuteth all Christian churches but ours of England especially with sworde fire and powder in most hostile yea and hellish manner the effect of whose hatred against vs as we haue often seene so especially had wee felt the same the next yeare after our Kings ratification of these Articles had not our euer mercifull God most miraculouslie detected both the Treason and Traitors For which his fauours his holy Name be glorified of vs and our posteritie throughout all generations 30. So our Church is the same But be the Brethren the faithfull and godly Brethren too the same nowe which they haue also beene If they bee then will they not denie which an 72. they writ that We hold the substance of religion with them nor which an 602. they published is afore remembred that the true Faith by which we may be saued and the true doctrine of the Sacraments the pure worship of God be truly taught and that by publike authoritie and retained in the booke of Articles And in this Confession I pray God they may constantly perseuere Howebeit euen these men which in a
generalitie doe allowe the doctrine of our Church being called by authoritie to acknowledge their assent vnto euerie Article thereof in particular they doe not a little debase the estimation of this doctrine of our● and shewe themselues but too apparent and professed disseruors from the same And though all of them doe and will approoue some yet not one of them will subscribe vnto all and euery of the Articles For vnto the Articles of religion and the Kings Supremacie they are willing to subscribe And they may subscribe as afore hath beene noted vnto such of them as containe the summe of Christian Faith and the doctrine of the Sacraments But vnto the same Articles for number 39. agreed vppon in this Conuocation at London an 62. they neither will nor dare nor may subscribe For neither the rest of the Articles in that booke nor the Booke of common prayer may bee allowed no though a man should be depriued from his ministerie for it say the sayd Brethren in a certaine Classical decree of theirs The late Politician is not affraide to mooue the high and most honorable Court of Parliament that Impropriations may bee let to Ferme vnto Incumbent ministers viz. which faithfullie preach in the Churches the true doctrine of the Gospell according to the Articles of religion concerning Faith and Sacraments meaning that such Ministers as preach the same doctrine if they proceed to the rest of the Articles Concerning either Conformitie in externall and ceremoniall matters or Vniformitie in other points of doctrine contained in that booke should not be partakers of that benefit or of Benefices Impropriat 31. If it be demaunded what the causes may be why they will vnto some but will not vnto all or why they will vnto those Articles which concerne Faith and the Sacraments but will not vnto the rest subscribe The reasons hereof be two whereof The one is for that in their opinion there is no Law to compell them to subscribe vnto all For say the brethren resiant I know not where Wee haue alwaies beene readie to subscribe to the Articles of religion concerning the doctrine of Faith and of the Sacraments which is all that is required by Lawe Also the Brethren in Deuonshire and Cornewale Wee are readie say they to subscribe to the third which concerneth the booke of Articles of religion so farre as wee are bound by Statute concerning the same viz. as they concerne the doctrine of the Sacraments and the confession of the true faith And the 22 London Brethren tell K. Iames to his head how the Subscription which he calleth for is more then the Lawe requireth Their other reason is because as the Lincolnshire doe say sundry as the London Brethren affirme many things in that booke be not agreable but contrary to Gods word 32. If these things be true which they doe alleadge surely then are those men to be chronicled for the Faithfull the godly and innocent Brethren indeede whome neither present Benefices can allure nor the angry countenance and displeasure of a king euen of the puissant and powerfull king of great Brittaine can force to doe any thing at his beck and pleasure either against Lawe or for which there is no law and who had rather to forgoe all their earthly commodities liuings yea to goe from their charges and ministery and to expose themselues their wiues and children to the myseries of this world grieuous for flesh and blood to endure then to approoue any thing for true and sound by their hands which is opposite or not agreeable to the reuealed will and Scriptures of God But if these allegations of theirs be but weake and sinfull surmises or rather apparently most false scandalous and slaunderous imputations to their Prince their mother Church and this State then doubtlesse as they euen Christians now liuing cannot but take them so the ages to come will euerlastingly note and censure them both for disloyall Subiects that so traduce a truly and most christianly religious King il deseruing children that so abuse their honourable and reuerend Fathers and superiors of State and authority turbulent spirits not peaceable men which raise such broiles troubles and diuisions in the Church and kingdome the issues whereof no tongue can foretell and are fearefull being thought of without cause and finally neither faithfull nor godly Preachers but vngodly broachers of vntruthes and slaunders and the very authors and fautors of horrible cōfusion faction in Gods Church whose peace they shold seek promote euē with their deerest blood 33. Since the Statute for Vniformitie in rites and doctrine was first enacted moe then 35. yeeres haue passed in all which space neither the Brethren nowe being nor the Brethren afore them liuing haue hetherto shewen of the 39. Articles for names and titles Which for number Howe manie the Articles be which ecclesiastical Ministers necessarily must howe many which they may not or neede not vnlesse they list subscribe vnto which I am sure they or some of them at one time or other would haue expressed had the Lawe fauored their recusancie and they beene able to haue iustified their Maxime which is That they are not compellable by subscription to approoue them all Againe since the first establishment of that Statute Lawe the most reuerend Fathers and truely reformed Ministers of this Church sound for iudgement profound for learning zealous for affection sincere for religion faithfull in their Churches painefull in their charges more profitable many waies of as tender consciences euery way as any of these Brethren combined according both to their bounden duties and as they are perswaded to the very purport and true intent of the said Statute haue alwaies both with their mouthes acknowledged and with their pennes approoued the 39. Articles of our religion for truthes not to bee doubted of and godly Yea and the Brethren too themselues which nowe so scrupulouslie when they are orderly called thereunto doe holde backe their hands and will subscribe but choisely vnto some of them euen they with their mouthes which is equiualent and all one haue that according to the Statute or else their liuings be void vpon their first entrance into all and singular their ecclesiasticall benefices openly both read and testified their consent vnto the said Articles for number euen nine and thirty acknowledging them I say all of them to be agreeable to Gods word whereof the people in there seuerall charges be ready witnesses to testifie so much before God the world 34. Againe of these Brethren that will subscribe but vnto which they please of these Articles there be some who faine would beate into mens heads if they could tell howe to make it credible that the Doctrine of our Church is altered from that it was in the raigne of Queene Elizabeth But this assertion being too grosse egregiouslie vntrue and no way iustifiable they secondly giue out and report so industrious be they to inuent newe shifts to
cloake their inueterate and rooted pertinacie howe the purpose if not doctrine of our Church is of late altered from that it was And therefore though they can be wel content to allowe of the old doctrine and auncient intention yet vnto the old doctrine and newe Intention of our Church they cannot subscribe might they either gaine much or loose whatsoeuer they haue thereby Besides this newe Intendement contrarie to the old purpose if not doctrine of our Church is become nowe the maine principall obstacle why they cannot subscribe vnto the booke of Cōmon prayer booke of Ordination as earst they some of them foure times haue done when aswell the Intention as Doctrine of our Church was pure and holy Lastly they seeme not obscurely to intimate vnto the State that were they sure or might bee assured that the purpose of our Church were the same which it was neither varied from the doctrine they would be prest and as readie euen foure if not fortie times moe to subscribe vnto the fore mentioned bookes of Common prayer and of Ordination as afore times they did when they were out of doubt the Intention of our Church was correspondent to her Doctrine that it was sound good I haue foure times subscribed saith a Brother to the booke of Common prayer with limitation reference of all things therein contained not vnto the purpose only or doctrine only but vnto the purpose doctrine of the church of England Yet cannot the same man with a good conscience so much as once more subscribe which formerly and that with a good consciēce had subscribed foure times His reasō is Because the purpose if not doctrine of our Church to which hee referred his subscriptiō appeareth to him by the late Canons booke of cōference some speeches of men in great place others to be varied somewhat from that which he before not without reason tooke it to be 35. The purpose of our Church is best knowne by the Doctrine which shee doth professe the Doctrine by the 39. Articles established by Act of Parliament the Articles by the words whereby they are expressed and other purpose then the publique Doctrine doth minister and other Doctrine then in the sayd Articles is contained our Church neither hath nor holdeth and other sense they cannot yeeld then their words doe impart The words be the same and none other then earst and first they were And therefore the sense the same the Articles the same the Doctrine the same and the purpose Intention of our Church still one the same If then her purpose be knowne by her Doctrine and Articles and their true sense by their very words needes must the purpose of our Church be the same because her Doctrine and Articles for number words sillables and letters euery way be the very same And so our Churches intention in her publique Doctrine and Articles reuealed being good at the first it is to still For her purpose continuing one the same cannot be ill at the last which was good and so beleeued and acknowledged euen by the Brothers subscription at the first or good in good Queene Elizabeths and ill in illustrious King Iames his daies 36. If the premisses sufficiently explane not the constancy of our Churches purpose in professing religion sincerely then cast we our eies vpon the Propositions which she publiquely maintaineth and if wee find them the same which euer they haue beene then neede wee not doubt the Brethren themselues being Iudges but the Articles againe their sense the Doctrine purpose and Intention of the Church of England the Propositions interpreting as it were the said Articles is the very same it euer was Now that the Propositions pregnantly and rightly gathered and arising from the articles be the same for substance vnaltered though vpon good considerations some fewe be added to the former and all of them approoued for true and Christian by the lawfull and publike allowance of our Church the booke here ensuing plainly wil declare and so demonstrate withall not the Doctrine onely but intention also of our Church to be the same and not changed and being vnchanged the bookes then of common prayer and of ordination too cōsidered in the purpose and intention of the Church of England and reduced to the Propositions as the Brethren would haue them be well allowed and authentically approoued and the said brethren with as good conscience nowe againe and afresh may subscribe vnto all the Articles euen concerning the Booke of common praier and of ordination aswell as of the Kings supremacie and of Religion as afore often and alwaies they did 37. Fot my selfe most reuerend Father in God what my thoughts be of the religion in this realme at this instant professed and of all these Articles if the premisses doe not that which here followeth will sufficiently demonstrate Twentie yea 22 yeares agoe voluntarily of mine owne accord and altogether vnconstrained I published my subscription vnto them my Faith is not either shaken or altered but what it then was it still is yeares haue made those haires of mine gray which weare not and time much reading and experience in theologicall conflicts and combates haue bettered a great deale but not altered one whit my iudgement I thanke God Nothing haue I denied nothing gainesaid which afore I deliuered Thē Propositiōs are and yet not many moe the method altered quotations added both for the satisfaction of some learned and iudicious freinds of mine requesting it at mine hands and for the benefit both of the common and vnlearned of the studious and learned Reader The whole worke expresseth aswell my detestation and renunciation of all adversaries and errors opposite crossing or contradicting the doctrine professed by vs and protected by our King or any article or particle of truth of our religion as my approbation of that truth which in our Church by wholesome Statutes and ordinances is confirmed There is not an heretike or Schismatike to speake of of any speciall marke that from the Apostles time hitherto hath discouered himselfe and his opinions vulgarly in writing or in print against our doctrine but his heresie fancie or phrensie may here be seene against one propositiō or other The Sects and Sect masters adversaries vnto vs either in the matter or maine points of our doctrine or Discipline to one of our Articles or other wholly or in part which here be discouered to be taken heed of and auoided are many hundres 38. This and whatsoeuer els here done either to the confirmation of the truth or detestation of heresies and errors I doe very meekely present vnto your Grace as after God and our King best meriting the patronage thereof My selfe am much the whole Church of England much more bound vnto your Lordship yea not wee onely nowe liuing but our successors also and posteritie shall haue cause in all ages while the world shall continue to magnifie almightie God for the
themselues are no better then Turkes The Papists also which say that The present Church of Rome is Gods Church Gods catholike church the mysticall body of Christ Papists Catholikes and true christians are all one Muncer and the Anabaptists tearmed themselues cleane opposite to the church of Christ the elect of God and said that all other men were wicked and worthie to be slaine The Familie of Loue who publish how themselues onely are the Church and all other men are Heathen and Beastes themselues onely are the Catholike Church of God the Saints of God and his acceptable people and that such as are no Familists they haue no liuing God and shall perish The Puritanes finally they say If God haue any Church or people in the land no doubt the title Puritane is giuen them Notable wordes either God hath no Church in England or Puritanes are the Church The Marprelate is not afraide to vtter this speech They against whome I deale namely the ecclesiasticall officers as Bishops and their fauourers and partakers haue so prouoked the anger of the Lord and praiers of his Church as stand long they cannot others of the said Bishops and the like write thus they bidde battell to Christ and his Church and it must bid defiance to them till they yeeld 3. Proposition The visible Church is a Catholike Church The proofe from Gods word The visible Church properly vnderstood is but a part of the Catholike yet forasmuch as it is a Congregation of the faithfull who are for calling Gouernours and subiects noble and base rich and poore teachers and learners for sexe men and women for age old and young for nation Iewes and Gentils Grecians and Barbarians for time and continuance in all ages euen from our first parents it may rightly be called a Catholike Church This is groūded vpon Gods word where wee finde that excluded is no calling no sexe none age no nation and that the Church as it hath bin from the worldes beginning so shall it continue to the end And this is the confession of the Churches Errors and Adversaries vnto this truth Vnsound be they in religion therefore which haue and doe as it were tie the church to a certaine country as the Donatists did to Africa a people as the Iewes to themselues persons place calling or time as doe the Papists To certaine persons when they say The Church is founded vpon Peter and his successours All that will be saued must of necessitie be subiect to the Bishop of Rome The true Church is vnited to the obedience of the Pope of Rome To a certaine place when they say The Church of Rome is the Catholike Church The Church of Rome is the mother of the faith To a certaine calling by their Petrus a Soto to Bishops and Prelates To a certaine time as when the said Papists affirme how The time was when holynes was onely in the virgine Mary when faith rested onely in the virgine Mary when all the faith was lost saue onely in our Lady It is a bold assertion also and very presumptuous of Apostata Hill that in England al men were Papists without exception from the first Christening thereof vntill the age of K. Henry the eight 4. Proposition The word of God was and for time is before the Church The proofe from Gods word Forasmuch as the visible Church of Christ is a Congregation of men either in the eies of God or in the iudgement of the godly faithfull it followeth that the word of God must be afore the Church for time as likewise for authoritie For time because Gods word is the Seede the faithfull the Corne and the Children Gods worde is the Rocke or foundation the faithfull the House For authoritie also the word is before the Church because the voice of the Church is the voice of man who hath erred and may erre from the truth but the voice of the word is Gods voice who cannot deceiue nor be deceiued Of this iudgement be the Churches reformed Aduersaries vnto this truth This maketh to the strengthning of vs against those Popish assertions of Vignerinus and such like viz. that the Church was before the word for time and is aboue the word for authoritie 4. Proposition The marks and tokens of the visible Church are the due and true administration of the word and Sacraments The proofe from Gods word There is the visible Church of Christ where the word of God sincerely is preached and the Sacraments instituted by our Sauiour are duly administred Hence is it that our Lord and Sauiour calleth them his mother and his brethren which heare the word of God and doe it and saith Hee that is of God heareth Gods word also My sheepe heare my voice and how shall they heare without a preacher saith S. Paul Likewise the Apostle S. Iohn He that knoweth God heareth vs he that is not of God heareth vs not Again they are of the world therefore speake they of the world and the world heareth them And touching the Sacraments first of Baptisme Goe therfore teach all nations baptizing them in the Name of the Father and the Sonne and the holy Ghost teaching them to obserue all things whatsoeuer I haue commanded you Wee haue bin baptized into Iesus Christ yee are washed yee are sanctified By one Spirit are wee all baptized into one Body Next of the Lords supper The Lord Iesus in the night that hee was betraied tooke bread and when he had giuen thankes he brake it and said take eate this is my body which is broken for you this doe in remembrance of me After the same manner also he tooke the cup when he had Supped saying This is the new Testament in my blood this do as oft as yee drinke it in remembrance of mee The Christians in all reformed churches acknoledge these things Some and they also many of them very godly men adde ecclesiasticall Discipline for a note of the visible Church But because the said Discipline in part is included in the markes here mentioned both wee and in effect all other well ordered Churches ouer passe it in this place as no token simply of the visible Church Neither tie wee the Church so strictly to the signes articulate that wee thinke all those to be without the Church and no Christians which neither doe heare the word ordinarily publikely read and preached nor participate in the Sacraments if so be they would and yet can neither heare the one nor receiue the other as it falleth out sometimes especially in the times of blindenesse and persecution The Errors and adversaries vnto this truth Wee renounce therefore as altogether vnsound Antichristian the opinions 1. Of the Papists who both denie
and feare of God according to the rule of the Apostle afore mentioned let all things be done honestly by order All churches reformed consent hereunto Errors and Adversaries vnto this truth The premises beeing as they are most true most false then is it which the Papists doe publish viz. that The church hath power to change the Sacraments ordained euen by Christ himselfe Whatsoeuer the Apostles and Rulers of the Church command is to be kept and obeyed The authoritie of the of the Church is greater then of the Sacred Scripture 3. Proposition The Church hath authoritie to iudge and determine in controuersies of faith The proofe from Gods word Authoritie is giuen to the Church and to euery member of sound iudgement in the same to iudge in controuersies of faith and so in their places to embrance the truth and to auoid and improoue Antichristianitie and errors and this is not the priuate opinion of our Church but both the straight commandement of God himselfe particularly vnto all Teachers and hearers of Gods word and generally vnto the whole Church and also the iudgement of our godly brethren in forraigne countries The Errors and adversaries vnto this truth Vnsound therefore in iudgement are the Papists For first they maintaine That the Pope of Rome hath the power to iudge all men and matter but may be iudged of no man to decree without controlment against the epistles of S. Paul to dispense euen against the new Testament and to giue the sense and meaning of the holy Scripture to which sense or Interpration of his all and euery man without contradiction must yeeld and obey Next they publish hold that the power to iudge of religiō points of doctrine is either in Bishops onely as some of thē doe thinke or in their Clergie onely as other deeme and in the Church of Rome onely as all of them suppose 4. Proposition The Church hath power to interpret and expound the word of God The proofe from Gods word To interpret the word of God is a peculiar blessing giuen by God onely to the Church and companie of the faithfull though not to all and euery of them For No man knoweth the Sonne but the Father neither knoweth any man the Father but the Sonne and he to whom the Sonne will reueale him It is giuen to you to know the secrets of heauen saith our Sauiour vnto his disciples but to them it is not giuen The manifestation of the Spirit is giuen to euery man to profit withall For to one is giuen by the Spirit the word of wisedome c. and to another Prophecie If any thing be reuealed to another that sitteth by let the first hold his peace saith S. Paul vnto the Church at Corinth Yee haue an ointment from him that is holy and yee haue knowen all things c. yee neede not that any man teach you saith the Apostle Iohn Hereunto subscribe the Churches in Heluetia Wittemberg Boheme The errors and Adversaries vnto this truth Many sundry are the adversaries vnto this truth wherof Some thinke that to expound the word of God is so easie a matter as any Student endued with a good naturall wit by diligence and industrie of his owne may doe the same Some teach how to interpret the Scriptures is too hard a thing for any mortall man to attaine vnto so did Iohannes de Wessalia and doe many Anabaptists Some though they acknowledge that diuers haue the gift to open the sense of Gods word yet that some say they are not the knowen Preachers writers in the reformed and Christian assemblies whom the Familie of Loue in scorne doe tearme the scipture learned For saith the said Familie It is meere lies and vntruth c. whatsoeuer the Scripture learned through their knowledge out of the Scriptures institute preach and teach They preach the letre c. but not the wotd of liuing God but themselues onely haue that gift neither euery one of the Familie but the illuminate Elders For to them it is giuen to knowe the truth they are the Elders of the godly vnderstanding and of the manly wisedome the Primats or principalls in the Light Some doe suppose that to interpret the holy Scriptures is not so much a speciall gift of God vpon some chosen persons as an ordinary power annexed to the state and calling of Popes Bishops and Clergie men Others be so farre from giuing the people of God not being of the Clergie power to expound as they will not suffer them to read nor so much as to haue the Scriptures by them in a vulgar tongue except it be their owne most corrupt and barbarous translation which but of late yeares neither and that in part too is granted by the Papists but in place thereof they thrust vpon the Laitie their most idolatrous and blasphemous Fustinals Legendes Rosaries Horaries and Psalteries of our Lady as falsly they called her 5. Proposition The analogie of faith must be respected in their exposition of the Scripture The proofe from Gods word Forasmuch as no prophecie is of any priuate motion and whatsoeuer interpretation man giueth if it agree not to the analogie of faith which S. Paul gaue in commandement to be obserued is a priuate interpretation speciall heede is to be had that one place of Scripture be so expounded as it agree with another and al to the proportion of faith The Churches reformed approoue this assertiō by their subscriptions Errors Adversaries to this truth Of another iudgement are many For Some doe thinke the Scriptures may be expounded in what sense and to what purpose men list as the Pharisies the Seuerians and Papists among whome there be which from this opinion doe tearme the most holy word Scriptures of God most reprochfully A shipmans hoase a Leaden rule a Nose of waxe Some doe mislike all interpretations and written Commentaries vpon the Scriptures as vnnecessary and vaine such were Seruetus Valdesius Coranus with others of late yeares and are the Libertines Scwenkfeldians and Familie of Loue Some depend wholly vpon visions revelations as did the Enthusiasts Nicholaus Storch Thomas Monetarius the Anabaptists and our late English reformer Hacket Some dislike of the literall and preferre the Allegoricall sense of the Scriptures and thereby deuise what them list most monstrously from the word of God as did the Originists and doe the Libertines and Familie of Loue hence teaching on the other that the spirituall vnderstanding is the worde of God and that to embrace the literall sense is to commit Idolatrie Some of euery place of Scripture will haue an exposition both Analogicall Allegoricall historicall and morall as the curious Thomists and Monckes Some are addicted to an interpretation which they cal
that the king of Spain and their Catholike faith are so linked together as it is become a point of necessitie in the Catholike faith to put all Europe into the handes of the said King otherwise the Catholike religion will be vtterly extingvished and perish Others of them haue published a new Gospell called Euangelium aeternum Spiritus sancti which they say doth so farre excell the Gospell of Christ as the Cernell surpasseth the shell the Sunne the Moone light darkenes The author whereof was one Cyrellus a Carmelite And lastly the Puritanes and all the speculations of Brown Barrow Greene Penrie Marprelate T.C.E.G.R.H. A.C. I.B. with the newe Sabbatarians and their fancies 21. Article Of the authoritie of generall Councells Generall Councells 1 may not be gathered together without the commandement and will of Princes And 2 when they be gathered together forasmunch as they be an assemblie of men whereof all be not gouerned with the Spirit and word of God they may erre and 3 sometimes haue erred euen in things pertaining vnto God wherfore 4 things ordained by them as necessarie vnto saluation haue neither strength nor authority vnlesse it may be declared that they be taken out of holy Scriptures The propositions 1. Generall Councells may not be gathered together but by the commandement and will of Princes 2. Generall Councells may erre 3. Generall Councells haue erred euen in things pertaining vnto God 4. The things ordained by generall Councells are so farre to be embraced and beleeued as they are consonant to Gods holy word 1. Proposition Generall Councells may not be gathered together but by the commandement and will of Princes The proofe from Gods word GReat is the power and authoritie of Kings and Princes by the word of God For as the defense of Religion is committed vnto them so must they see that all men doe their duties That these things the better may be performed they are as iust occasion is offered not as men vnder the power of others to Simon but as Supreame gouernours within their own terretories and dominions to command all sorts of men to meete together and that either to the implanting of the truth where it is not or to the suppressing of sinne errors idolatrie and superstition where or in whomsoeuer it doth arise or is rooted Such Councells were holden both in the time of the Moisaicall gouernement by the commandement of the most godly Kings Dauid Salomon Asa Ezekiah and Iosiah and since the Gospell hath bin receiued into kingdomes and Commonweales by Christian Princes kings and Emperours who gathered Councells both Generall as the Nicene was by Constantine the great the Councell of Constantinople by Theodosius the elder the Counsell of Ephesus by Theodosius the younger the councell of Calcedon by Marcian Nationall and Prouinciall so the Counsell at Frankford Rhemes Taron Arelot and Moguntia by the will and commandement of Charles the great at Matison by Gunthranus at Paris and Orleance by the direction and appointment of Childebert were kept and holden And neuer yet hath there bin a councell either Generall or nationall or whatsoeuer I only except the councells held by the Apostles and Apostolicall men in a troublesome state and time of the Church there beeing then no Christian Princes Emperours to countenance the truth either begun or ended to the glorie of God but it hath bin I say not called onely but confirmed also by some godly Emperour King or Queene This in effect is granted by all reformed Churches The Errors and adversaries vnto this truth This assertion hath bin oppugned and that diuersly both by the Papists and Puritanes For the Papists they say Emperours and kings be the Pope his Summoners but of themselues are no absolute and powerfull commanders and callers of Councels There ought no councel to be kept without the determinate consent of the Bishop of Rome No councell euer yet had firme and lawful authority which was not confirmed by the Bishop of Rome The Popes of Rome and not Christian Princes haue the authoritie and power of making lawes ecclesiasticall and of calling Councells And the Puritanes do thinke that priuate persons without the leaue or priuitie of Princes may summon assemblies about Church causes at their pleasures and consult about the publike affaires of the Church Of this minde was Beza and be the disciplinarians both of South and North Brittaine Others aduersaries to both Puritanes and Papists are of minde that were the Pope a good man as he is nothing lesse he might and hee being wicked other good Bishops though subiect vnto Kings and Emperours may summon Counsells at their discretions An error of Seluererus The Muscouites haue a fancie that since the seuenth generall Counsell that was neither Prince nor Pope nor any other men els haue power to call a generall counsell 2. Proposition Generall coucells may erre The proofe from Gods word Generall Councells consisting first of men who may erre nothing more easily for all the imaginations of mans heart are onely euill continually euen from his youth but God onely is true and all men are yea and euery man is a Liar Next of men differing in yeares riches learning iudgement calling and authoritie whereby distractions of opinions often doe arise Thirdly of many mē wherof the wicked be for nūber commonly the maior part and the better in outward countenance of the world Lastly of men not al nor alwaies either gouerned with Gods holy Spirit and word or gathered together in the Name of Christ none of sounde iudgement in Religion do doubt but they may erre If Paphmitius had bin absent at Nice that Councell had erred If Hierome had bine away at Calcedon that Councell had erred At any time if some be beleeued be the Pope of Rome not present at such meetings either per se or per Legatum by himselfe or his Legate no Councell but must erre Therefore Councells may erre That which one Counsell doth establish another will disanull They will not wee must thinke reuoke that which is well decreed Therefore councells may erre The adversaries vnto this truth Therefore erre doe the papists which say that the holy Spirit is the director of all Councells and That councells cannot erre 3. Proposition Generall Councells haue erred euen in things pertaining vnto God The proofe from Gods word Councells both generall and particular haue erred and that in matters of Faith For in the holy Scriptures wee finde that it was ordained If any man did confesse that Iesus was the Christ hee should be excommunicate which could not be but by a Councell A councell was gathered to suppresse Christ and his doctrine A councell consulted how they might take Iesus by subtilty and kill him A councell sought for false witnesse to put him to death By a counsell
are to be admitted into the ministery They are causes which indeede are none to debarre men from the ecclesiasticall function as if men haue bin twice married an error of the Russeis be married haue had certaine wiues haue not receiued the Sacrament of Confirmation haue bin baptized of Heretikes these may not be Priests say the Papists or if either they haue not bin trained vp in the Familie or be not Elders in the said Familie of Loue 24. Article Of speaking in the Congregation in such a tongue as the people vnderstand not It is a thing plainely repugnant to the word of God and the custome of the primitiue Church to haue publike prayer in the Church or to minister the Sacraments in a tongue not vnderstood of the people The proposition Publike praier and the Sacraments must be ministred in a tongue vnderstood of the common people The proofe from Gods word THis assertion needeth small proofe For who so is perswaded as all true Christians of vnderstanding are that what is done publikely in the Church by a strange language not vnderstood of the people profiteth not the Congregation edifieth not the weake instructeth not the ignorant inflameth not the zeale offendeth the hearers abuseth the people dipleaseth God bringeth religion into contempt easily will thinke that where the praiers be said or the Sacraments administred in a tongue not vnderstood of the vulgar sort neither is the word of God regarded nor the custome of the purer primitiue Church obserued This article no church doth doubt of and very many by their extant Confessions doe allow Aduersaries vnto this truth But their is nothing either so true or apparent which hath by all men at any time bin acknowledged So contrary to this truth In old time the Ossens made their praiers vnto God alwaies in a strange language which they learned of Elxeus their founder and the Marcosians at the ministration of Baptisme vsed certaine Hebrew words not to edifie but to terrifie and astonish the mindes of the weake and ignorant people In these daies the Turkes performe all their superstitions in the Arabian language thinking it not onely vnmeete but also an vnlawfull thing for the common sort of persons to vnderstand their Mahometane mysteries The Iacobite preists doe vse a tongue at their church ministrations and meetings which the vulgar people cannot comprehend The diuine Lyturgie among the Russians is compounded partly of the Greeke and partly of the Sclavonian language The Papists will haue all diuine Seruice Praiers and Sacraments and that throughout the world ministred onely in the Latine tongue which but fewe men of the common people doe vnderstand some of them holding that It is not necessary that wee vnderstand our praiers and that praiers not vnderstood of the people are acceptable to God and all of them maintaining that hee is accursed whosoeuer doth affirme how the Masse ought to be celebrate onely in a vulgar tongue 25. Article Of the Sacraments Sacraments ordained of Christ 1 be not onely badges or tokens of Christian mens profession but rather they be 2 certaine sure witnesses and effectuall signes of grace and Gods good will toward vs by which he doth worke inuisibly in vs 3 and not onely quicken but also strengthen and confirme our faith in him 4 There be two Sacraments ordained of Christ our Lord in the Gospell that is to say Baptisme and the Supper of the Lord. Those fiue commonly called Sacraments that is to say 5 Confirmation 6 Penance 7 Orders 8 Matrimony and 9 extreame vnction are not to be compted for Sacraments of the Gospell beeing such as haue growen partly of the corrupt following of the Apostles partly are states of life allowed in the Scriptures but yet haue not like nature of Sacraments with Baptisme and the Lords Supper for that they haue not any visible signe or ceremonie ordained of God 10 The Sacraments were not ordained of Christ to be gazed vpon or to be carried about but that wee should duely vse them 11 And in such onely as worthily receiue the same they haue a wholesome effect or operation but they that receiue them vnworthyly purchase to themselues damnation as Saint Paul saith The propositions 1. The Sacraments ordained of Christ be badges or tokens of our profession which be Christians 2. The Sacraments be certaine sure witnesses and effectuall signes of grace and God his good will toward vs. 3. By the Sacraments God doth quicken strengthen and confirme our faith in him 4. Christ hath ordained but two Sacraments in his holy Gospell 5. Confirmation is no Sacrament 6. Penance is no Sacrament 7. Orders is no Sacrament 8. Matrimonie is no Sacrament 9. Extreame vnction is no Sacrament 10. The Sacraments are not to be abused but rightly to be vsed of vs all 11. All which receiue the Sacrament receiue not therewithall the things signified by the Sacraments 1. Proposition The Sacraments ordained of Christ be badges or tokens of our profession which be Christians The proofe from Gods word THe Sacraments are badges or tokens both of Christians and of Christianitie Of Christians For by them are visibly discerned the faithfull from Pagans and Christians Iewes Turkes and all prophane Atheists Of Christianitie For as Circumcision in the old Lawe was a token how the corrupt and carnall affections of the minde should be subdued and that the Lord required not so much an outward of the Body as an inward circumcision of the heart so Baptisme telleth vs that being once dead vnto sinne wee are to liue vnto righteousnes that all wee which haue bin baptized vnto Iesus Christ haue bin baptized into his death c. and must walke in newnesse of life c. for wee haue put on Christ by Baptisme And as the Paschall Lambe was to the Iewes a token that the flight of sinne should alwaies be fresh in memorie and that it should be celebrated not with old Leauen neither in the Leauen of maliciousnes but with the vnleauened bread of synceritie and truth so the participation of one Loafe and of one Cuppe in the Lord his Supper doth commend vnto our consideration a sweete concord a brotherly vnanimitie and a constant continuance in the true worship of God without fauouring of Idolatrie in ay respect This doe the godly in al their Churches and throughout the word both teach and testifie The Adversaries vnto this truth Vngodly therefore and in a cursed state are they which equall other things with the Sacraments to discerne Christians from Pagans So the Iacobites imprint the signe of the Crosse on their Armes Foreheades c. to be knowen for Christians which contemne the Sacraments as of none account Soe doe the Anabaptists Ther be saith D. Sarania which hold how the Sacraments were to be administred onely at the first plāting of the Church by the
visible Church can inflict vpon the wicked and vngodly of this world is Excommunication which is a part of discipline to be exercised and that vpon vrgent occasions and it is commended vnto the Church euen by God himselfe who in his word hath prescribed 1. Who are to excommunicate namely such as haue authoritie in the Church 2. Who are to be excommunicate euen two sorts of men whereof the one peruert the sound doctrine of the truth as did Hymeneus and Alexander the other be defiled with notorious wickednes as that inces●uous person as Corinth was 3. The manner of proceeding in Excommunication namely first by gentle admonition and that once or twice giuen with the spirit of meekenesse euen as to a brother if the fault be not notoriously knowne and next by open reprehension afterward by the publique sentence of the Church to put him from the companie of the faithfull to deliuer him vnto Sathan and to denounce him an Heathen and a Publican if none admonitions will serue and the crime and person be very offensiue A man so cut off from the Congregation and Excommunicated is of euery godly professor to be auoyded and not to be eaten with all not to be companied with all nor to be receaued into house This censure is had in great reuerence estimation among the faithfull seruants of God Errors adversaries vnto this truth 1. Aduersaries vnto this doctrine be they Who vtterly condemne all censures ecclesiasticall and so Excommunication saying how the wicked are not excommunicable so did the Paulicians Haeretickes holding other points of religion soundly for their priuate and singular opinions are not to be excommunicate so the Pelagians Christians cleauing vnto the foundation which is Christ are not by excommunication to bee thrust out of the Church for any other errors or misdemeanors whatsoeuer Of which opinion be sundrie Diuines of good regard 2. Which allowe the censure of Excommunication so it be done Not as with vs it is by Commissaries Chancelars or Bishopes but in euerie Parrish and that either By the whole Congregation or by the Eldership and the whole Church or by euerie Minister yea euery member of the Church or finally if not by yet not without the consent of his Pastor who is to be excommunicate 3. Which rightly vse not but abuse the censure of Excommunication drawing the same foorth Against what they list euen against dead bodies dumbe Fishes Flies and Vermie when they haue auoyded them For this the Papistes are famous or infamous rather The dead bodies of Wicliefe Bucer P. Fagius were excomunicated after they were dead and buried The Bishop of Can●●●●on anno D. 1593. verie Catholickely accursed the mute Fishes S. Bernard denounced the sentence of Excommunication against Flies And against whom they please so the Apostolikes excommunicated all that were married only for that they were married Diotrephes thrust the Brethren out of the Church The Brownists excōmunicate whol citties churches the Papists excōmunicate euē Kings Emperors Queene Elizabeth of blessed memorie was excommunicate by three Popes Pius quintus Gregorie the 13 and sixtus quintus The Puritanes mislike and find great fault that excommunication is not exercised against Kings and Princes Barrowe saith that a Prince contemning the censures of the Church is to be disfranchised out of the Church and deliuered ouer vnto Satan Also for what thinges they list euen for May-games and Robbin-hoode matters as sometime it was denounced in Scotland by the newe Presbyterie and for all crimes which by Gods lawe deserue death and for all things that to Gods people be scandalous yea not only for all matters criminall but also for the very suspition of auarice Pride c. 4. Lastly which fauour the right and true excommunication but exercise it not being bound thereunto 2. Proposition An excommunicate person truly repenting is to be receaued into the Church againe The proofe from Gods word Sundrie be the reasons and ends why Excommunication is vsed as That a wicked liuer to the reproach of the Gospell be not suffered among the godly and Christian professors of true religion That manie good men bee not euill spoken of for a fewe bad That good and virtuous persons may not bee infected through the continuall or much familiaritie of the wicked For as S. Paule saith a little leauen leaueneth the whole lumpe And that he which hath fallen through shame of the world may at the length Learne to blaspheme no more through repentance be saued Among all other causes therefore of Excommunication one is and not the least that the person Excommunicate may not be condemned vtterly but returne vnto the Lord by repentance and so be receaued againe into the visible Church as S. Paule willed the Incestuous man should be The Adversaries vnto this truth Contrariwise the Montanistes and the Nouatians are of opinion that so many as after Baptisme doe fall into sinne bee vtterly damned of God and therefore bee not to find fauour at the Churches hands 34. Article Of the traditions of the Church 1 It is not necessary that traditions and ceremonies be in all places one or vtterly like for at all times they haue bin diuers and changed according to the diuersitie of countries times and mens manners so that nothing be ordained against Gods word 2 whosoeuer through his priuate iudgment willingly and purposely doth openly breake the traditions and ceremonies of the Church 3 which be not repugnant to the word of God and be ordained and approoued by common authoritie ought to be rebuked openly that other may feare to doe the like as he that offendeth against the common order of the Church and woundeth the consciences of the weake brethren 4 Euery particular or nationall Church hath authoritie to ordaine change and abolish ceremonies or rites of the church ordained onely by mans authoritie so that all things be done to edifying The Propositions 1. Traditions or ceremonies are not necessarie to be like and the same in all places 2. No priuate man of a selfe will and purposely may in publike violate the traditions and ceremonies of the Church which by common authoritie be allowed and are not repugnant to the word of God 3. Ceremonies and traditions ordained by authoritie of man if they be repugnant to Gods word are not to be kept obserued of any man 4. Euery particular or nationall Church may ordaine change and abolish ceremonies or rites ordained onely by mans authoritie so that all things be done to edifying 1. Proposition Trad●tions or ceremonies are not necessarily to be like or the same in all places The proofe from Gods word IF a necessitie were laid vpon the Church of God to obserue the same traditions and ceremonies at all times and in all
not be the seruants of men and that none humane constitution in the Church doth binde any man to breake the least commaundement of God The consideration heereof hath caused other Churches also with a sweete consent to condemne such wicked ceremonies and traditions of men Errors Adversaries to this truth Such vngodly traditions ceremonies are all the ceremonies and traditions in a manner of the Antichristian synagogue of Rome Such also be the Sabbatarian traditions and ceremonies lately broached because they be imposed vpon the Church Necessarilie and perpetually to be obserued of all and euerie Christian vnder paine of damnation both of soule and body For say they speaking yet of their priuate and Classicall Iniunction about the Sabboth day The Lord hath commaunded so praecise a Rest vnto all sorts of men that it may not by any fraude deceipt or circumvention whatsoeuer be broken but that he will most seuerely require it at our hands vnder the paine of his euerlasting displeasure This viz. the manner of keeping the Sabboth praescribed by themselues the Lord requireth of all and euery one continually from the beginning to the end of our liues without any interruption Vnder the paine of euerlasting condemnation Another sort of people there is among vs which will obserue and vse all Ceremonies whatsoeuer as the temporizing Familistes who at Rome and such like places of Superstition will goe vnto idolatrous seruices and doe adoration vnto Idols and no where will they striue or varie with any one about Religion but keepe all externall orders albeit in their hearts they scorne all professions and Seruices but their owne tearming all Temples and Churches in derision Common houses and all Gods seruices or religions besids their owne Foolishnes To the Christian Reader Christian and beloued Reader let me request thee to obserue well the first section of the proofe of this present proposition and therein howe I speake of ceremonies and traditions apparently impious among which I doe reckon papisticall Crosses whereunto the Romanistes doe attribute diuine adoration as elsewhere in this booke and subscription of mine I haue declared and could more copiouslie but the reliques of a Libell of theirs left in the parrish church of Euborne in Barkshire an 1604 sufficiently shal expresse the thoughts of Papists touching their Crosse and Crossing whose words be these Nowe Ma. Parson for your welcome home Read these fewe lines you knowe not from whom You hold Crosse for an outward token and signe And remembrance only in religion thine And of the profession the people doe make For more then this comes to thou dost is not take Yet holy Church tells vs of holy Crosse much more Of power and virtue to heale sicke and sore Of holinesse to blesse vs and keepe vs from euill From fowle feend to fend vs and saue vs from Deuill And of many miracles which holy Crosse hath wrought All which by tradition to light Church hath brought Wherefore holy worship holy Church doth it giue And surely so will we so long as we liue Though thou saist Idolatrie and vilde superstition Yet we knowe it is holy Churches tradition Holy Crosse then disgrace not but bring it in renowne For vp shall the Crosse goe and you shall goe downe Of this Crosse I spake and mean● and of none other when I number it among things meerely impious and vnlawfull And therefore haue I not a little woundred at those my Brethren which drawe these words of mine in this section vnto the Crosse vsed in our church at Baptisme which I neuer thought nor take to be either papisticall or impious because none adoration not so much as ciuill much lesse diuine is giuen thereunto either by our church in generall or of any minister or member thereof in particular If they haue no other Patrons for their not vsing or refusing the ceremonie of the Crosse then my selfe they are in an ill case For both in my iudgement and practise I doe allowe thereof This their peruerting of my words contrarie to their sence and my meaning telleth mee that other mens wordes and names are but too much abused by them in that booke to the backing of schisme and faction in the Church and State which from our soules we doe abhorre 4. Proposition Euery particular or nationall Church may ordaine change abolish ceremonies or rites ordained onely by mans authoritie so that all things be done to edifying It hath pleased our most mercifull Lord and Sauiour Christ for the maintenance of his Church militant that two sorts of rites or ceremonies should be vsed whereof Some God his most excellent maiestie hath himselfe ordained as the ceremonie of Baptisme and the Lords Supper which are till the end of the world without all addition diminution and alteration with all zeale and religion to be obserued Others be ordained by the authoritie of each prouintiall or nationall Church that partely for comelinesse that is to say that by those helpes the people of God the better may be inflamed with a godly zeale and that sobernes and grauitie may appeare in the handling of ecclesiastical matters and partly for order sake euen that gouernors may haue rules and directions how to gouerne by Auditors and inferiors may know how to prepare and behaue themselues in sacred assemblies and a ioyfull peace may be continued by the well ordering of Church affaires We haue already prooued that these latter sort of ceremonies may be made and changed augmented or diminished as fit opportunitie and occasions shall be ministred and that by particular or nationall Churches which thing is also affirmed by our neighbours Adversaries vnto this truth This manifesteth to the world the intolerable both arrogancie of the Romish church which dare take vpon her to alter and applie to wrong vses the very Sacraments instituted euen by Christ himselfe and to prescribe ceremonies and rites not to some particular but to all Churches in al times and places It sheweth also the boldnesse of our home-adversaries the Puritane dominicanes which say that the Church nor no man can take away the libertie of working sixe daies in the weeke from men and driue them to a necessarie rest of the body vpon any day sauing the seuenth Againe say these men the Church hath none authoritie ordinarily and perpetually to sanctifie any day but the seuenth day which the Lord hath sanctified nor to set vp any day like to the Sabboth day The latter sort what in them is quench the peoples deuotion and hinder them from frequenting of Churches vpon all holydaies falling on the weeke daies and ordained by the lawfull authoritie of the Church 35. Article Of Homilies The second booke of Homilies the seuerall titles wherof we haue ioyned vnder this Article doth containe a godly and wholesome doctrine and necessarie for these times as doth the former booke of Homilies which were set foorth in the
prince and superior in matters of religion or regiment of his soule but in such things onely as concerne the publike peace and policie False also is it which the Puritanes doe hold namely that Princes must be seruants vnto the Church be subiect vnto the Church submit thier scepters vnto the Curch and throw downe their Crownes before the Church Magistrates aswel as other men must submit themselues and be obedient to the iust and lawfull authorite of the church that is of the Presbyterie Quis tandem reges principes who can exempt euen kings princes from this Non humana sed diuinâ Dominatione Not humane but diuine Domination meaning of the Presbytery saith Beza which Presbyterie they would haue to be in euery parish Quotquot ecclesiae Christi as many as be members of Christ and of the Church they must subiect themselues to the consistorian discipline Non hic excipitur Episcopus aut Imperator Neither Bishop or Emperour is excepted here Nulla hic acceptio aut exceptio est personarum Here is no acception or exception of persons 3. Proposition His Highnes may not execute the ecclesiasticall duties of Preaching and ministring the Sactaments and yet is to prescribe Lawes and directions vnto all estates both ecclesiasticall and Temporall The proofe from Gods word K. Ezekiah said vnto the Priests and Leuites of his time My sonnes be not deceiued For the Lord hath chosen you to stand before him and to serue him and to be his ministers and to burne incense So doe we say the Lord hath appointed a companie and calling of men to teach the people to expound the Scriptures to celebrate the Sacraments to handle the keies of the celestial kingdome insomuch as hee whosoeuer that shall presume to doe these things not called thereunto and that lawfully though he be a King or Prince he may feare that punishment which fell vpon Vzzah Notwithstanding all Kings Queenes and Princes in their places may yea and must as occasion serueth with K. Salomon build an house for the Lord and set the courses of preists to their office with K. Ezekiah breake the Images cut down the Groaues take away the high places appoint the courses of the Preists and Leuites and enioyne all the people to minister sustenance vnto the Priests with K. Iosiah put downe and burne the horses of the Sunne breake downe the houses of the Sodomites Purge Iudah and Ierusalem from the high places Groaues carued and molten Images appoint the Priests to their charges and compell all that are found in Israell to serue the Lord their God and with the K. of Niniueh proclaime a fast and command euery man to turne from his euill way c. Of the same iudgement be other Churches The Errors and adversaries vnto this truth Much therefore out of the way are and offend greatly doe first the Papists who publish that The care of religion pertaineth not vnto kings Religionis curam semper pertinuisse ad Reges dele say the Expugators Blot it out Queenes may not haue or giue voice either deliberatiue or definitiue in Councells and publike assemblies concerning matters of religion nor make ecclesiasticall lawes concerning religion nor giue any man right to rule preach or execute any spirituall function as vnder them and by their authoritie In matters of religion and of their spirituall charge neither Heathen nor Christian kings ought to direct Clergie men but rather to take direction from them The Emperour of the whole world if he take vpon him to prescribe lawes of religion to the Bishops and preists c. hee shall be damned assuredly except he repent Next the Anabaptists who beeing priuate men and no princes will take vpon them the ordering and reformation of the Church as did Monearius and Muncer in Germanie And thirdly the disciplinarian Puritanes whose doctrine is that 1. The making of Ecclesiasticall constitutions and ceremonies belongeth vnto the ministers of the Church and ecclesiasticall gouernours vnto the Elders who are to consult admonish correct and order all things pertaining to the congregation 2. Ciuil magistrates haue no power to ordaine ceremonies pertaining vnto the Church but are to ordaine ciuill discipline onely as being no Church officers at all 3. The ecclesiasticall Officers be Doctors Pastors Elders and Deacons the onely officers instituted of God or at the most Pastors Doctors Elders Deacons and widdowes These are all no mo eno fewer and are onely sufficient and wee are to content our selues with these and rest in them saith the Preacher In which number vnlesse the King be included hee cannot possibly haue any thing to doe in Church affaires in these mens opinions 4. Without the prince the people may reforme the Church and must not tarrie for the magistrate so thought Barrow Greenewood and Wigginton Hence Hackets Coppingers and Arthingtons insurrection at London an 1591. Without the Prince also the Lords and Burgesses of the Parliament haue power of themselues to reforme the abuses and take away the corruptions of the Church Hence their manifold petitions Supplications politike Assertions exhibited vnto the Parliament from time to time In one of which their supplications saith one speaking vnto the parliament You must enioine euery one according to his place to haue a hand in this worke You must encourage and countenance the Gentlemen and people that shall be found forward c. And you of the Parliament must not suffer an vncircumcised mouth to bring a slander vpon that land c. sciz vpon their discipline This hath Penrie 4. Proposition The king by his authoritie is to restraine with the materiall sword and to punnish malefacters whosoeuer ●hey be The proofe from Gods word The office of the ciuill magistrate is to restraine and if need be to punnish according to the qualitie of their offences the disturbers of the quiet and peace of the Common-weale and that as occasion shall require sometime by force of armes if the enemies of his State bee either forraigne or domesticall and they gathered together be many and mighty To this end Kings and Princes haue both men munition Subsidies and Tributes So against the enimies of God and good men went of Israell and Iudah the valiant Iudges and the noble and puissant Princes And sometimes they execute their wholesome and penall Statuts vpon the goods cartell Lands and Bodies of their disorderly and rebellious subiects For the King is the minister of God to take vengeance on him that doth euill Therefore Princes are to be feared not of them which doe well but of such as doe wickedly And this doe the people of God acknowledge to bee true Adversaries vnto this truth Contrarilie heereunto The Cresconians were of opinion that Magistrates were to punnish no malefactors One Rabanus maintained that magistrates
And touching the other sweare may we not either by Baal or by strange Gods or by the Lord and by Melchom that is by Idols or by any creatures But our Oathes must bee made in the Name of the Lord as the Lord liueth and all is to be done in truth iudgment and righteousnes and when the magistrate calleth vs therevnto All Churches ioyne with vs in this assertion and some testifie the same in their publique wrightings The errors and aduersaries vnto this truth Many bee the aduersaries one way or other crossing this truth For 1. Some condemne all swearing as did the Esseis who deeme all swearing as bad as forswearing and doe the Anabaptistes which will not sweare albeit thereby both the glorie of God may bee much promoted and the Church of Christ or Common-weale furthered 2. Others condemne some kind of Oathes and will not sweare though vrged by the magistrate but when themselues thinke good So the Papistes no man say they ought to take an Oath to accuse a Catholicke a Papist for his religion such as by Oathes accuse Catholickes that is Papists are damned So the Puritans oftentimes either will take none oath at all when it is ministred vnto them by authoritie if it may turne to the molestation of their Brethren or if they sweare finding their testimonie will bee hurtfull to their cause they wil not deliuer their mindes after they be sworne 3. Others hauing taken the Oath doe fowlie abuse the same as the Knights of the post like the Turkish Seiti Chagi who for a Ducket will take a thousand false Oathes afore the magistrate as also the Iesuits who in swearing which is little better then forswearing doe vti scientia that is cunning and equiuocations as also doe they who conscionablie and religiouslie keepe not their faith such are the forenamed Papistes For say they An Oath taken for the furtherance of false religion as they take the profession of all Protestantes to be bindeth not Againe Faith is not to bee kept with Haeritickes Which assertion little differeth from the opinion of some Puritanes who teach that promise or Faith is not to be kept when as perhaps by the not erecting of Presbyteries in euerie parish Gods honor and preaching of his word is hindered Subiects be discharged from their Oath of allegeance and may gather forces against their leige Soueraigne if hee eterprise any thing to the hurt of his Realme or of the Romish religion was a determination of the Sorbonistes in a certaine conventicle of theirs at Paris And that magistrates by their Subiects may be brought vnder the obedience of Lawes was a conclusion of certaine Scottish ministers in a priuate Conventicle of Edinburgh Seditiosi non sunt qui resistunt principibus politicum aut ecclesiasticū statū perturbantibus Nā qui resistit Principi seditioso seditiosus non est sed seditionem tollit saith a Frenchman yea saith an Englishman whose workes by T. C. are highly approoued and commended Hunc tollant uel pacifice vel cum bello qui ea potestate donati sunt vt regni Ephori vel omnium ordinum conuentus publicus Subiects may not respect their oathes made vnto such Princes which trouble the state of the Church or Common-weale Finally whatsoeuer Princes be good or bad if they bee Women say some oathes of allegeance vnto them are not to be kept Their words be these First aswell the States of the kingdome as the common people they ought to remooue from honour and authoritie that monster in nature so call I woman in the habit of man yea a woman against nature raigning aboue man Secondly if any presume to defend that impietie they ought not to feare first to prononce then after to execute against thē that is to say against women gouernours the sentence of death If any man be afraid to violate the oath of obedience which they haue made to such monsters let them be most assuredly perswaded that as the beginning of their oathes proceeding from ignorance was sinne so is the obstinate purpose to keepe the same nothing but plaine rebellion against God Last of all whereas euery minister of the word and Sacraments at his ordination doth sweare to obey his Diocesan in all lawfull matters certaine Gentlemen of the Puritane faction write thus vnto the Bishops of the Church of England and printed the same viz. The Canon law is vtterly void within the realme and therfore your Oath of Canonicall obedience is of no force and all your Canonicall admonitions not worth a rush D. Hilar. contra Constantium August Non recipit mendacium veritas nec patitur religio impietatem The truth admits no lie neither can religion abide impietie 1. Tim. 1. v. 17. Vnto the king everlasting immortall inuisible vnto God onely wise be honour and glory for euer and euer Amen FINIS The Printer to the Reader Gentle Reader many faults escaped the Author being absent and the coppie somewhat darke which if it please thee to correct take this direction The former number sheweth the page the latter the line m. the margen d. dele certaine figures are twice printed and so both in the table and here twice quoted Pag. 2. lin 30. who flatly 3.5 the inhabitants 8. liniaments 23. horae b. 4.36 Saturninus Menander Cerin 6.28 Eunome us 29. Tretheites 7.2 These did 6. Seruetus 19. Priscilianists 9.4 d. the. 10.32 Harmon 11.20 Valētiniās p 16.11 As man and. 20.4 d were 13. Him God 22.8 tures teach 23.9 assumed 29.14 precepts offendeth no lesse then if he contemned Gods expresse commandements k. And. 22. adversaries 30.24 Castellio 31.6 Barcobas Barcolf 24. all the. 34.16 Bethlehem 35.16 the redde sea 37.12 sacrifices 39.10 Antinomies 6. d. 0.40.11 d. in 17. for his 46.1 m. Carranza 47.15 may doe 48.22 naturall 49.22 d and the mind 23. the body 29. reveale 52.10 or Loues 53.1 m. Horae 8. scandere 9. for thee 54.17 the profit 55.3 as the. 8. Villauincentio 22. destitute 53.33 violating 35. them by the papists 58.19 they doe 61.7 as not 65.10 and fall 66.20 Hieracites 67.15 d. by 68.25 yee 33. vp 35. Onesimus 69.5 d. as 14. d. most 71.12 d. his 72.24 Hieracites 73.24 whom hee 74.24 Catabaptists 25. misery 32. Bolseck 77.36 Antinomies m. execut of iust 79.7 Hieracites 80 5. can away 81.12 or which are 84.3 be held 4. The obs 85.5 they revolted 19. Desider Burdegal 9217. Viguerius m. Theol. 95.18 because 96.21 d. a 97.30 Pius 5.100.31 they 103.11 embrace 104.6 interpretation 14. Villauincence 21 examinent vt 27. fetcht m. Hervaeus 106 m. next im 13. Festivalls 16. in the 107.29 the odde 108.3 Cusan 16. Heare 18 d. the 22. d. the. 110.34 disciplin● 111.5 Iobelaea of the Sci. 35. Cyrillus 112.8 to summon 23. Turon 114.24 Selneccerus 115.17 Paphnutius 27. d. h. 31. erre
a m. ● Test. 117.19 Epicurus 126. m. 35. vix 130.17 we may 131.25 3 or 26. ● before ibid. be 6 chosen 27. work 5 132.21 d. the. 136.26 but that 41. m. Towres 141.30 But there 144.12 Christians from the. 31. in any 145.9 Saravia 11. appertaine 147.12 Sacrament 149.8 Eutychites 14. Sacraments 30. d. of 154.10 d. be 12. Exorcists 29. the Cardinall 155.19 Acolyte 20. not alwaies in his Church 30. as a. 158.31 great 159.4 Alva 8. abused by 15. guise is 162.7 are but 20. Hēriciās 166.13 Not Manicheans 167.8 d. they 26. Iouinians 169.21 a sect a. 29. d. the 34. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 se sub ii 38 nowe 172.8 the Lords supper is a sacrament 173. m. 5. communion 19. sacrilegious 21. Antwerp an 17428. whole christ is 176. m. 14. vt substan 23. nil est 177.3 therefore 17. at Masse or borne about to the sicke he shall kneele downe deuoutly say his pater noster or 178.3 in the. 12. signe 179.14 doctrine 180.6 hath so 20. the Artotarites 23. Eucratites 183.8 d. and no woman 9. and came 185.4 religion 187.9 vncontinent life 188.30 alliteration 189.3 which error 4. Ochinites 191.21 ve●mine when they haue annoyed 195. m. 23. Sab. do 196.9 d. by 197.17 Rhene Frankeland and S●e●uland 36. 〈…〉 doest it 191.24 the well 192.3 d. both 194.24 vt plurimis 25. Smeton 199.22 consecration 26. d. l. 202.16 of the. 204.15 d. there 208.16 Monet●rius 211.13 Hugh Capet 215.4 goods Archb. Cranmer Vnitie of doctrine in all Churches reformed a Ab initio reformationis ardebant amore veritatis omnes Poli●ici ecclesiastic● plebei Jezler de diutur belli Euchar. p. 49. Vnitie of doctrine in the Church of Eng. in K. Ed. 6. his daies An. 1552. K. Edward 6. q. Mary The pr●iers of the persecuted Saints for the reducing of true religion into the realm F. Latimer B. Parkhurst Q. Elizab. True doctrine restored an 1558. and an vniformitie of the same established and publshed an 1562. An. 1562. Arch. Parker Subscription required vnto the Booke of Art an 1571. An. 1572. * Bartholomaeus flet quia gallicus occu●hat a●las Vnitie of doctrine still cōtinued Archbish. Grindall The f●ctious encrease and growe confident Vnity of doctrine stil holdeth among vs. An. 1583. Arch. VVhitegift Subscription the second time called for An. 1584. How basely the Brethren conceiue of the doctrine by the Bishops agreed vpon and established by the prince The vncoath doctrine of the factious Brethren Of the second Subscription vrged an 84. The Brethrēs diuine conceipts of their Discipline The Br. renue and continue their base cōceits of the publike Art of in our religiō comparison of their new Gospell An. 1588. Q. Elizabeth opposeth her authoritie against the Br. their bookes and writings Most learned worthy men set themselues against the Br. and the Presbyterian discipline A Stratagem of the Br. An. 1595. Certaine fruites and effects of the Sab. doctrine published by consent of the Brethren The summe of the Sa● doctrine broached by the Brethren The Br. doctrine of the Sabbath called in by authoritie and forbidden any more to be printed An. 1599. 1600. Purity of doctrine all Q. Eliz. raigne maintained in England An. 1602. K. Iames. An. 1603. K. Iames abused and troubled with false informations and petions of the Br. K. Iames patronizeth the doctrine religion countenaunced by Q. Eliz. Dominini Incarna●i an 1604. Subscription the third time vrged Of the subscription called for a Can. 2.127 b Ibid. The Church of England setled and cōst●nt in her Religion An. 1605. The Brethren no changlings VVhy the Br. will subscribe vnto some but not vnto all the Articles A late deuise of the Br. to shunne subscribtion The purpose and doctrine of our Church continue the same Neither the Doctrine nor purpose of our Church altered a Thou shalt haue none other Gods before me Ex. 20.3 the lord our God is Lord onely Deut. 6.4 Who is God beside the Lord Psal. 18.31 Hath not one God made vs Mal. 2 10. There is none other God but one 1. Cor. 8.4 b Mine heart and my flesh reioyce in the liuing God Psal. 84.2 Ye are the Temple of the liuing God 2. Cor. 6.16 c For a long season Israel hath bin without the true God 2 Chron. 15.3 The Lord is the God of truth he is the liuing God and an euerlasting King Ier. 10.10 This is life eternall that they know thee to be the onely very God c. Ioh. 17.3 Ye turned to God from idols to serue the liuing and true God 1. Thess. 1 9. d O my God c. thy yeares endure from generation to generation c. thy yeares shall not faile Psal 102. v. 24 26 27. He is the liuing God and remaineth for euer Dan. 6.16 e O Lord my God thou art exc●eding great thou art clothed with glorie and honour which couereth himselfe with light as with a garment c. Psal. 104. v. 1. c. God is a spirit Ioh. 4.24 The Lord is the spirit 2. Cor. 3.17 He is not a man that he should repent 1. Sam. 15.29 I will not execute the fiercenes of my wrath I will not returne to destroy Israel for I am God and not man Hos. 11.9 f The sound of the Cherubims wings was heard into the vtter court as the v●ice of the Almightie God when he speaketh Ezek. 10.5 I will be a Father vnto you c s●ith the Lord Almightie 2. Cor. 6.18 We giue thee thanks Lord God Almightie Reuel 11.17 g Great is our Lord and great is his power his wisdome is infinite Psal. 147.5 To God onely wise be honour and glorie for euer and euer 1. Tim. 1.17 To God I say onely wise be praise through Iesus Christ for euer Amen Rom. 16.27 h Praise ye the Lord because he is good for his mercie endureth for euer Psal. 106.1.107.1.108.1 c. i Art 1. k Confes. 2. ar 2. l cap. 3. m art 1. n art 2. o cap. 1. a Deos esse dubitabat Protagoras nullos esse omnino Diagoras Th●o●●rus Cyreniacus putauerunt M. T. Ci●e de Nat. Deor. l. 1. b Protagoras Deos in dubium vocavit Diagoras exclusi● Lactan. de fal Rel. cap. 2. c August contra Manich. l. 2 c. 1 2. d Clemen Alex. str l. 5. e Valentinus trigintae Deorum praedicator saith Cyril catech 6. f Epiphan g Exod. 32. h Gand. Merula demi●abil lib. 3. c. 56. i Piscem Syri venerantur Cic. de Senect k Merula de mirab l. 3. c. 48. l Histor. of Bel. m Gods are come downe to vs in the likenes of mē and they called Barnab●s Iupiter and Paul Mercurius c. Then Iupiters priest c. Act. 14.11 c. who knoweth not that the citie of the Ephesians is a worshipper of the great Goddesse Diana Act. 19.35 n Voiage of the Holland ships o Theodoret. l. 4. c. 10. p Tu es nostra fides in te credimus will the
mysticall and propheticall as Brocardus Morelius and others Some are of minde that the Gospell or Euangelicall word cannot be committed to letters and wrighting saith Lindanus Some doe thinke as afore also hath bin shewen how that is the olde and onely true sense of the Scriptures which is made and giuen by the Church and Pope of Rome Some doe maintaine that as the Church in time doth alter so the interpretation of the Scripture also therwithal doth vary wherby that which in the Apostles time was a truth in these daies shall be a falsehood In which error was Cardinall Cusanus 6. Proposition The Church is the witnesse and keeper of Gods written word The proofe from Gods word Though the Church hath authority to heare and determine in controversies of faith yet hath the Church power neither to iudge the word of God nor to iudge otherwise then Gods word doth iudge For it is saide to the Church and people of God I beseech you brethren marke them diligently which cause diuisions and offenses contrarie to the Doctrine which you haue learned and auoid them Here him To him giue all the Prophets witnesse Search the Scriptures whosoeuer trangresseth and abideth not in the the doctrine of Christ hath not God yee are c. built vpon the foundation of the Apostles and Prophets And of the holy Scriptures Thy word is the the truth They haue Moses and the Prophets let them heare them saith our S. Christ. Wee haue also a sure word of the Prophets saith Saint Peter And S. Paul The whole Scripture is profitable to teach c. If any man teach otherwise and consenteth not to the wholsome wordes of our L. Iesus Christ he is puft vp and knoweth nothing c And so with vs doe other Churches conceiue both of the Scriptures and Church yet all of vs do grant that the Church as a faithfull witnesse may yea of necessitie must testifie to the world what hath bin the doctrine of God his people from time to time and as a trustie Recorder is to keepe make knowne what the word of God which it hath receiued is which truly hath bin perfomed afore the word was written by the Patriarchs and after the same was committed to writing before Christ his incarnation by the Iewes in Christ his life time in the primitiue Church From the Apostles time by the godly Christians thoroughout the world Errors adversaries vnto this truth Be it farre therefore from vs to thinke which the Papists do not stick to write and say namely that The Church is to iudge the Scriptures and not the Scriptures the Church The Scripture is not of the essence of the Church Because without it a Church may be though not very well So said Card. Cusan The Scripture because in their opinion it is vnperfect cannot obscure may not ambiguous ought not be the iudge So Lindan Latomus Petrus a Soto Pighius Coster c. He is an heretike that cleaueth to the Scriptures So said Iacobus Hocstratus Againe the carefull keeping of the holy Scriptures by Gods people from age to age and time to time declareth first how the mother Church of Rome is not the onely keeper of the holy writ and next that cursedly they doe offend which either as greatly esteeme the Ethickes of Aristostle as the commandements of god the Odes of Pindar as the Psalmes of Dauid the workes and bookes of men as the writings of God which the Councell of Trent doth or before and aboue the scripture prefer vnwritten Traditions Hence Petrus a Soto Tradition saith hee is both more auncient and more effectuall the● the holy Scripture and Lindan The scriptures would be of no validitie neither had continued till this day but for traditions 7. Proposition The Church may not enforce any thing to be beleeued as necessary vnto saluation that is either contrarie or besides the word of God The proofe from the word of God Yee shall put nothing vnto the word which I command you neither shall yee take ought there from Put nothing vnto his words least hee reprooue thee and thou be found a liar Though it be but a mans couenant when it is confirmed yet no man doth abrogate it or addeth any thing thereto If any man shall adde vnto these things God shall ad vnto him the plauges that are written in this booke And if any man shal diminish of the words of the booke of this prophecy god shall take away his part out of the booke of life and out of the holy cittie and from those things which are written in this booke And so witnesse with vs the Churches reformed Whatsoeuer also is grounded vpon Gods written word though not by our common and vulgar tearmes to be redde therein wee doe reuerendly embrace which maketh vs for doctrine to embrace the Consubstantiality of our Sauiour with the Father and the holy Ghost which the Arrians would not a Trinitie of persons in the Godhead which the Sabellians would neuer doe the iustification by faith Onely which the Papists will not the baptisme of Infants and young children which the Anabaptists dare not and for discipline not to refuse of Church officers the names Archbishops Patriarches Primates Metropolitanes Suffragans Parsons Vicars c. of ecclesiasticall censures the tearmes Suspension Excommunication of Ceremonies none at all which tend either vnto order comelines or edification But from the heart wee abhor in matters both of doctrine and disciple whatsoeuer either agreeth not with the canon of the Scripture or is not grounded thereupon The Errors and adversaries vnto this truth Hence detest wee both all the old heretikes and their fancies with the newe prophets of Basilides the Manifestation of Marciō the mysteries of the Manichies the Iobolia of the Sathiās the Symbonia of the Archōtikes the Cabala of the Iewes the Alcaron of the Turkes and also all newe heretikes and Schismatikes with all their cursed opinions as first the Anabaptists and namely the Libertines the Dauigeorgians and Familie of Loue and all the codeified Elders thereof as Henry Nicholas Eliad Fidelitas Christopher Vitell Theophilus the Exile and the rest Next the Papists whereof Some haue commanded that all the Popes decrees should be taken as confirmed by the mouth of God himselfe so did Pope Agatho the first Some write as Busgradus that if the Pope beleeue there is no life to come as some Popes haue done wee must beleeue it as an article of our faith Some say if the Pope carrie innumerable soules with him vnto hell yet he may not be iudged so did Pope Boniface the 8. Some as Bellarmine conclude that it is a point of faith to hold that the Bishop of Rome hath succeeded Peter in the vniuersall regiment of the Church Others as the Iesuites perswade their Catholikes