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A09869 Want of charitie iustly charged, on all such Romanists, as dare (without truth or modesty) affirme, that Protestancie destroyeth salvation in answer to a late popish pamphlet intituled Charity mistaken &c. / by Christopher Potter ... Potter, Christopher, 1591-1646. 1633 (1633) STC 20135.3; ESTC S4420 135,510 274

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regula posita est cedat turiositas fidei Nihil ultrà scire est omnia scire This rule ordained by Christ is not questioned by any among us but by heretiques Valentinus Marcion and the like All beyond and beside this rule is but curiosity and exercise of wit The faith which saves consists in this rule Let curiosity yeeld to faith to know no more is to know all And a little d Ibid. cap. 8. Hoc primùm credimus nihil esse ultrà quod credere debeamus before This first of all we beleive that no more ought to be beleived as necessary to all e In Symb. initio fine 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Athanasius of his Creed received by the Catholique Church This is the sound Catholique faith If this be the Catholique faith then it is not onely a peece or parcell of it then there is no part of the Catholique faith besides or beyond this more or lesse then this The Fathers of the f Patres Concilii Chalced. Act. 5. in fine post recitata Symbola 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chalcedon Councell The Symbole is sufficient to the perfect knowledge and confirmation of piety Gregory the g Nazianz. Orat. 52. init 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Divine It is a short breviary or boundary or rule of the faith and sence of Christians h Cyril Hierosol 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Catech. 4. Symbolum est 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Iterum Cat. 5. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Cyrill of Hierusalem It is the summe of all necessary doctrines Againe That no soule might be lost through ignorance we have all the doctrine of faith comprized within the little compasse of the Creed which we must carefully conserve as the onely provision for our journey towards heaven regarding no other for point of beleife For herein are collected out of all the Scriptures the most usefull maine articles of our Religion and as a small graine of mustard seed containes within it selfe many branches so doth the Creed in a few sentences all the substance of godly knowledge revealed in the old and new Testament i Cyril Alexandr in Ep. ad Joan. Antioch cítatus à Marco Ephesio in Cōcil Florent Sess 5. statuit 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The other Cyrill of Alexandria It is utterly unlawfull any way to alter by adding detracting one word or Syllable in the holy Creed k Epiphan in Exp. fide● Cath. num 19. exedit Petau 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Epiphanus This confession is the pillar or foundation of truth our life our hope and the assurance of our immortall happinesse l Hil. ad Constan Aug. post confessam juratam in baptismo fidem nō oportet quicquā aliud vel ambigere vel innovare Et mox Tutissimum est primam ac solam Euangelicā fidem co●fessā in baptismate intellectámque retinere Hilary of Poictiers After that faith which we all confessed and avowed in our Baptisme it is not fit to adde or innovate or doubt of any thing It is the safest course for all Christians to retaine constantly that first and sole confession of Evangelicall doctrine m Hier. ad Pam. Ep. 61. c. 9. In Symbolo fidei spei nostrae omue Christiani dogmatis Sacramentum concluditur in Prov. c. 2. lit 1. Fides dominica in Symbolo continetur quam se die baptismatis servaturum quisque promittit Hierome All the holy doctrine of Christianity is concluded within the Creed which is the profession of our faith hope which we all promised to keepe at our Baptisme n August de Symb. ad Catech lib. 3. c. 1. Noveritis hoc Symbolum esse fidei Catholicae fundamentum super quod aedificium surrexit Ecclesiae constructum manibus Apostolorum Prophetarum Idem August de Tem. Serm 115. Symbolum comprehensio est fidei nostrae atque perfectio simplex breve plenum ut simplicitas consulat audientium rusticicati brevitas memoriae plenitudo doctrinae totius Catholicae legis fides Symboli colligitur brevitate Serm. 119. Symbolum est breviter complex a regula fide ut mentem instruat nec oneret memoriam Serm. 131. Doctrina Symbols virtus est Sacramenti illuminatio animae plenitudo credentium breve est verbis sed magnum est Sacramentis parvum ostendens imminutione latitudinis sed totum continens compendio brevitatis exiguum est ut memoriam non obruat sed diffusum ut intelligentiam supercedat confirmans omnes perfectione credendi desiderio confitendi fiduciâ resurgendi Quicquid praefiguratum est in Patriarchis quicquid nunciatum est in Scripturis quicquid praedictum est in Prophetis totum hoc breviter Symbolum in se continet Eadem verba repetit Serm. 181. Serm. 181. Sancti Apostoli certam regulam fidei tradiderunt quam Symbolum vocaverunt per quam credentes Catholicam tenerent unitatem per quam haereticam convincerent pravitatem Illi enim in diversa ituri normam priùs sibi futurae praedication is in commune statuerunt ne diversum vel dissonum praedicarent his qui ad fidem Christi invitabantur arque hanc it a credentibus dandam esse regulam instituerunt Ambros Serm 38. de Iejun quadrag ad fin Duodecim Apostolorum Symbolo fides sancta concepta est qui velut periti artifices in unum convenientes clavem coelorum suo consilio conflaverunt Clavem enim quandam ipsum Symbolum ●ixerim per quod reserantur diaboli tenebrae ut lux Christi adveniat Ruffinus in praefat ad expos In his verbis Symboli Sp. S. nihil ambiguum nihil obscurum nihil à reliquis dissonans providit poni Apostoli enim discessuri breve istud futurae praedicationis unanimitatis fidei suae indicium fidei normam munimentum turrim in commune constituunt atque hanc credentibus dandam esse regulam statuunt Hoc indicium est seu tessera per quam agnoscitur is qui Christum vere secundùm Apostolicas regulas praedicat In Ecclesia urbis Romae mos servatur antiquus eos qui gratiam baptismi suscepturi sunt publicè i. e. fidelium populo audiente Symbolum reddere utique adiectionem unius saltem sermonis eorú qui precesserunt in fide non ad mittit auditus 〈◊〉 Rom. Epist 1. ex versione Ruffini ad med Apostoli discedentes ab invicem Symbolum condiderunt ut hance regulam per omnes gentes praedicarent summam totius fidei Catholicae recensentes in qua integritas credulitatis ostenditur Cunctis credentibus quae continentur in praefato Symbolo salus animarum vita perpetua bonis actibus praeparatur Leo. Ep. 13. ad fin Symbolum brevis est perfecta confessio instruct a munitione coelesti ut omnes haereticorú opiniones solo ipsius possint gladio detruncari Cujus Symboli plenitudinē si Eutyches puro simplicivoluisset corde concipere in nullo deviaret ib. Singulare est Sacramentum
Equals the acts and vnion of Charity because they deny what they owe not to her their subiection and seruice this is an vnsufferable and schismaticall arrogance whereof the Church of Rome hath now for many ages beene deepely guilty Many other things are said against vs but surely the most capitall r Valent. in Th. 2. 2. Tom. 3. disp 1. qu. 1. punct 7. in explic quaest § Quibus amnibus Omninò verè Orthodoxè docetur ad Summum Pontificem pertinere explicationem editionem Symboli fidei id est eorum quae à fid elibus credi debent Quae veritas vsque adeo continet summam caput totius Christianae Religionis vt nemo Catholicus esse possit qui illam non amplectatur neque vllus sit Haereticus qui illam non neget Id. ibid. punct 7. §. 40. Postremo idipsum Ab exordio Ecclesiae constat controuersias omnes de religione motas ex D. Petri Cathedrâ fuisse judicatas eosquo tandem solos communi Ecclesiae judicio Haereticos esse habitos qui repugnârint definitioni ejus Cathedrae Heresy Schisme of Greekes Protestants c. is that they refuse to bee commanded and gouerned by him who will needs be perpetuall Dictator at Rome and from thence giue lawes to all the world Communion with the Catholique Church may bee distinguished and measured according to those different degrees of vnion which men may haue with Christ for vpon this vnion that communion is founded Christ may bee considered either as a King or Ruler in regard of the whole visible militant Church or as a Sauiour and Head in regard of his mysticall body or his true spirituall members Among the Kings liege people that liue in outward obedience to his Lawes some carry in secret euill and disloyall affections to him others loue and obey him with th● heart So it is with our Lord. All tha● liue within the pale of the Church professe to honour him as their Prince and Gouernour euen though they deny th● power of godlinesse by hypocrisy o● dissolution others constantly and vnfainedly serue him in all the duties of holinesse He rules them all as King they are his Subiects but he is a Sauiour onely to these latter who liue and dye in hi● true faith and feare who are therefore liuing members of his mysticall body to whom he communicates by his Spirit effectuall graces spirituall motion and eternall life This blessed Company is said in Scripture s Col. 2. 19. to hold the head and is called t Heb. 12. 23. the Church of the first born who are written in heauen and u Gal. 4. 20. the Mother of vs all When some of the Ancients speake of the Catholique Church w Clem. Alexandr Strom. lib. 7. pag. 514. edit Heinsianae 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 iterum in fin libr. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Origen contr Cels lib. 6. p. 318. Geaec. Haeschel 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Isidor Pelus lib. 2. Epist 246. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Aug. de Bapt. cont Donat. lib. 5. cap. 27. Ecclesiam veram intelligere non audeo nisi in sanctis justis Et sic passim many times they vnderstand it in a strict notion onely for this fellowship of the Saints as it containes all and onely them that haue spirituall vnion and communion with Christ as their Sauiour When Saint Cyprian compares the Church to Noahs Arke the paraleil runnes most fully and properly on the Church in this sence For of the Arke and this Church it is true whosoeuer is without is saued whosoeuer is without perisheth neither of which perhaps is truly said of any visible Church And thus x 1 Pet. 3. 21. S. Peter seemes to apply that similitude and sayes the Arke was a type or representation of the inward Baptisme or the Lauer of regeneration wherein the sprinkling of Christs blood purges the conscience and saues the soule Communion then with this Church is no lesse necessary to Saluation then vnion with Christ nor can he haue God for his Father who hath not this Church for his Mother Which Sentence S. Cyprian the Author y Epist ad Pompeium vses not of the Church of Rome as the Mistaker seemes to beleeue but where he vehemently disputes against it Whosoeuer either wilfully opposes any Catholique veritie maintained by this Church or the Catholique visible Church as doe Heretiques or peruersly diuides himselfe from the Catholique communion as doe Schismatiques the condition of both these is damnable The Scriptures and Fathers cited here by the Mistaker proue this and no more and therefore proue nothing against Protestants who neuer denied it We deny that * What this importeth see the next §. pag. 58. Popery is any part of the Catholique Church or maintaines any one Catholique verity We deny also that Protestants are in any degree dislinked from the Catholique Church or from the Church of Rome it selfe or from any Church or Christian on earth so farre as they communicate with the Catholique The contrary is easily and vsually affirmed but not so easily proved by firme and conuincing Arguments Charity Mistaken Cap 6. 2. THis unity is directly broken betweene Romane Catholiques and Protestants who are not both professors of this one Religion or members of this one Church For they differ in prince and maine points of faith in which the Reformers haue departed from the Church The Protestants are not at unitie among themselues and therefore much lesse with Roman Catholiques Their bitter contentions and speeches one against another declare them to be of different Churches and Religions And hence it followes that R. Catholiques and Protestants are not both saueable in their contrary waies Answer Sect. 3. THe true difference betweene the Romane and Reformed Parts of the church Protestants haue rejected nothing but Poperie that is corrupt superadditions to the faith confessed by learned Romanists to be doubtfull vnnecessary novelties Errors and Abuses of Rome reformed by vs without Schisme Those errors damnable how and to whom Of the dissentions of Protestants among themselues They differ not in any point fundamentall THe a See D. Abbot True ancient Romane Catholique Ch. 2. p. 81. Ch. 3. §. 3. p. 111. p. 113. 114. Protestants never intended to erect a new Church but to purge the old the Reformation did not change the substance of Religion but onely cleansed it from corrupt impure qualities We preach no new faith but the same Catholique faith that ever hath beene preached Whatsoever is good and true in the Roman profession we approue Wee haue abandoned nothing but Popery which is no branch of Religion but the shame and staine of it nor any part of the Church but a contagion or plague in it which dangerously affected the whole body though by Gods great mercy the vitall parts kept out the poison Naaman was still the same man before and after he was cured of his ieprosie
but a man before distempered after sound and healthy In the prime grounds or principles of Christian Religion wee haue not forsaken the Church of Rome wee leaue her onely in her intolerable errors and abuses Shee hath mingled with Gods Bread her owne sowre leauen and with good milke some drammes of poison We haue cast out onely this poison and leauen and feed Gods people with the true bread of life and the sincere milk of his word Where the late Popes wander in by-paths we leaue them that wee may more safely walke with the old good Bishops of Rome in the old and good way And in the issue that which distinguishes a true Papist from a true Protestant is no more but this the former will needs be a Romane the latter only a Catholique The difference at this day betweene the Reformed part of the Westerne Church and the Romane consists in certaine points which they of Rome hold for important and necessary articles of the Christian faith which the Protestants cannot beleeue or receiue for such Whereas contrarily the things which the Protestants beleeue on their part and wherein they b Voiez Vray vsage des Peres par Iean Daillé Ch. 1. iudge the life and substance of Religion to be comprized are most if not all of them so evidently and indisputably true that their Adversaries themselues doe avow and receiue them as well as they For they are verities cleerely founded vpon Scripture expressely acknowledged by all Ancient Councells and Doctors of the Catholique Church summarily deliuered in their Symboles or Creeds vnanimously receaued by the most part of Christians that haue ever beene in the world Such are the verities which make vp the faith of Protestants and which are c Semper vbique ab omnibus credita Lirin properly Catholique hauing carried the consent of all ages and Parts of the Church vniversall And if all other Christians could be content to keepe within these generall bounds d Erasm Epist ded ad Arch. Warhamum Praefat. 2. Tomo Epift. S. Hieron speaking of the Apostles Creed faith Nunquam suit sincer or castiorque Christiana fides quàm cùm vnoillo eoque breuissiino Symbolo contentus esset Orbis Vide eundem in Praefat. ad Hilar. in Paracles ad Lector ante Edit N. T. an 1519. Bafil the wofull Schismes and ruptures of Christendome worthy to be lamented with teares of bloud might the more easily bee healed and all the Disciples of the Prince of peace blessedly vnited in an holy linke of Faith and Charity of Loue and Communion The piety and wisdome of Antiquity did thinke fittest to walke in this latitude and cleerely rested satisfied with the simplicity of such a Catholique confession But no bounds of reason could ever limit the vnbounded extravagancies and excesses of the Court of Rome That body of faith which the Ancients thought complete enough to them seemes defectiue Therefore they haue adjoyned to that old Body many new Articles And to those twelue which the Apostles in their Creed esteemed a sufficient summary of wholsome doctrine they haue added many more in their new Romane Creed Such are for instance their Apocryphall Scriptures and vnwritten dogmaticall Traditions their Transubstantiation and dry Communion their Purgatory Invocation of Saints Worship of Images Latine Service traffique of Indulgences and shortly all the other new Doctrines and Decrees canonized in their late Synod of Trent These and the like very vaine imaginations our Mistaker calls the prime and maine points of Christian Religion Let him but change Christian Religion as his faction hath done into the Romane faith and he saies true hee is not mistaken Vpon these and the like new Articles is all the contestation betweene the Romanists and Protestants while they are obtruded on the one side as vndoubted verities and on the other side reiected as humane inventions cunningly devised to advance ambition and avarice without any solid ground or countenance of Scripture Reason or Antiquitie The most necessary and fundamentall truths which constitute a Church are on both sides vnquestioned and for that reason e Iunius lib. de Eccl. cap. 17. Falluntur qui Ecclesiam negant quia Papatus in eâ est D. Rain Thes 5. negat tantùm esse Catholicam vel sanum ejus membrum See the iudgment of many other of our writers in the Advertisement annexed to the Old Religion by the Reverend Bishop of Exeter The very Anabaptists grant it Fr. Johnson in his Christian plea pag. 123. learned Protestants yeeld them the name and substance of a Christian Church though extreamely f August de Donatistis Nonideo se putent sanos quia dicimus eos habere aliquid sanum De Bapt. contra Donat. lib. 1. cap. 8. defiled with horrible errors and corruptions And if they had fairely propounded their new opinions to bee discussed by the learned with reservation of liberty in iudgement conscience to themselues and others they had erred much more tolerably and much lesse disturbed the peace of the Church But they are farre from this modesty and moderation With vnsufferable tyranny the prevailing faction amongst them presses them vpon all Christians as matters of faith not only of opinion not as disputable problemes but as necessary truths hauing both canonized them in their Councell of Trent with a curse against all gaine-sayers and put them in their Creed by Pope Pius the fourth who hath obliged the whole Clergy of Rome to affirme that Creed by their subscription and solemne oath obliging also all Christians to beleeue it vnder paine of damnation In the latter ages before the Reformation though the Court of Rome by cunning and violence had subdued many noble parts of Christendome vnder her yoake yet the servitude of the Church and her misery was somewhat more supportable because these base and pernicious adjections were not yet the publique decisions or tenets of any Church but only the private conceits of the domineering faction Yet still the best learned and g Notissimae sunt querelae Bernardi Occhami Marsilis Clemangis Alvari Gersonis c. de corrupto Ecclesiae statu vide Espenc in Tit. 1. Digress ● conscientious of Europe called as loud as they could or durst for a Reformation Rome heard their complaints and h Adrian 6. PP Instruct pro Franc Cheregato in Fascic ror exper pag. 173. Sci●nus in hac sanctá sede aliquot jam annis multa abominanda fuisse abusus in spiritualibus excessus in mandatis omnia denique in perversum mutata Nec mi●um si aegritudo à capite in membra à summis Pontificibus in alios iuferiores Praelatos descenderit Omnes nos id est Praelati Ecclesiastici declinavimus vnusquisque in vias suns nec fuit iam diu qui faceret-bonum non fuit vsque ad vnum Subiecimus colla summae dignitati ad deformatam eius sponsam Ecclesiam Catholicam reformandam c. Staplet Relect. Contr. 1. q. 5.