Selected quad for the lemma: soul_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
soul_n believe_v body_n spirit_n 3,628 5 5.0359 4 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A10250 Propositions and principles of diuinitie propounded and disputed in the vniuersitie of Geneua, by certaine students of diuinitie there, vnder M. Theod. Beza, and M. Anthonie Faius ... Wherein is contained a methodicall summarie, or epitome of the common places of diuinitie. Translated out of Latine into English, to the end that the causes, both of the present dangers of that Church, and also of the troubles of those that are hardlie dealt vvith els-vvhere, may appeare in the English tongue.; Theses theologicae. English Bèze, Théodore de, 1519-1605.; La Faye, Antoine de, 1540-1615. aut; Penry, John, 1559-1593. 1591 (1591) STC 2053; ESTC S101754 189,778 296

There are 11 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

Father 2. In respect that his humanity being conceaued by the holy Ghost dooth by personall vnion subsist in that aeternall Sonne of God 10 But he is our Father in respect of Adoption that is in regarde that he doth vouchsafe vs being spirituallie engraffed into Christ by Faith to be called children as those whome being elected in him he justifieth will one day glorifie 11 Therefore this worde teacheth vs againe that beliefe in the Father through the Sonne must go before our Prayers the which if it bee not present prayers are not only not acceptable but euen sins in the presence of God 12 Wee are also by this meanes taught that if we will be heard we are bound to come in the presence of God not onlie wihout anie consideration of our merites which can be none at all but contrariwise that we conceaue our prayers trusting in his onelie free Adoption and mercie in Christ Iesus 13 Lastly this word FATHER doth require that we pray vnto God with a true sense of our sinnes past and a firme purpose to amend our liues otherwise our prayers are in vaine For the impudencie were not tollerable to call him Father whome wee are not sorie that wee haue offended and whome euer after wee meant not to feare and reuerence OVR 14 This doth put vs in mind of 2. things both being of great moment in true Praier 1. of our Adoption wherof wee haue spoken whereby it commeth to passe that he who hath that onelie Sonne by nature coaeternall with himself doth account vs his sonnes adopted in him without whome there is no saluation nor anie true confidence in calling vpon God 2. That true loue is to bee joined with faith that as the Father who is but one is yet in his Sonne the common Father of all the faithfull so we shuld think that they cannot be acknowledged for sonnes who are not in loue with their brethren otherwise they should bee accounted to bee in the bodie who seuer themselues from the members thereof which cannot be 15 This conjunction consisteth partlie in the agrement of doctrine and religion partlie in the affections And therefore before we can trulie call vpon God we must be members of the Catholicke Church and haue a regarde to maintaine peace and concord one with another in such sort as all vnkindnes and hatred being laid aside we must pray from our hearts euen for our enemies 16 But this conjunction cānot be perfect while we liue heere For all of vs know but in part and often not in the same part now in respect of mutuall liuing together there is none but in some thinges hee sheweth himselfe to be a man But as the imperfection of faith doth not hinder the effect thereof the same is to be said of our mutuall agreement both in Religion and also in affections so that wee be displeased with our selues for those our imperfections and be more and more desirous of a growth in our obedience 17 Seeing this communion of faith doeth not onelie comprehend the elect that are alreadie indued with faith and striue togeather with vs in this life against sinne But euen those that are to beleeue and lying as yet vncalled knowne onelie vnto God our prayers also doe belong vnto them 18 But as for those whose Spirits are already gathered with Christ and whose bodies are a sleepe in the graue our Praiers for them should bee altogether vaine and vnprofitable as also for those whose soules are already condemned An addition That custome therefore though auncient of reckoning vp the names of the Apostles and certaine martyrs in common prayers though it may bee thereby excused in that such prayers were meere thanks-giuings doth neuertheles want a ground and therefore is to bee abolished as the verie issue of it hath proued for it is certaine that from hence did arise by little and little both inuocation of the dead who were assuredlie beleeued to bee in heauen and also prayer for the departed vnto whome superstitious men did according vnto their owne fancie appoint Purgatorie fire WHICH ART IN HEAVEN 19 It is needfull that vnto the assurance of Gods fatherlie goodwill towards vs we adjoine his power Majestie both to let vs know that he is not onlie willing but also able to bestow vpon vs whatsoeuer wee craue of him by true faith and also that the consideration of his majestie may retaine vs in that reuerence which is due therevnto 20 We holde that God as a most simple beeing being in regard of his infinite essence in euerie thing in all things at once but not in or of their substance is without and beyond all things whollie in himself preseruing and gouerning all his creatures not mixed with any thing contrarie vnto the rauing dotage of the Manichaees 21 He is then said to be IN HEAVEN that thereby his supreame excellencie power dominion aboue al things may be declared whereas by the name of Heauen we vnderstand the highest place of this visible worlde which is conspicuous vnto vs in regard of the vnspeakeable most certaine motion thereof wherewith the Lord hath moste excellentlie garnished the same Wherein as the Prophet DAVID saith God hath engrauen testimonies of his vnchangeable truth 22 The same God is said to be aboue al those heauens the Scripture also declaring that the place of aeternal happines is appointed euen aboue all the coelestiall spheres whereunto Christ beeing entred doth receaue the soules of his children according vnto that saying This day shalt thou be with me in Paradise and that of the Apostle I desire to be dissolued and to bee with Christ Whence also we beleeue that he will come and where he will entertain all his when they haue receaued their bodies againe being made incorruptible and will cause them to liue there with him aeternallie 23 Nowe as that glorie which wee hope for is at this day incomprehensible vnto vs so wee are not curiouslie that is without Gods woorde to make enquirie of these blessed mansions but deuoutlie to reuerence that which the Scripture teacheth vs to hope to beleeue touching them vntill the time that indeed we shall see heare and receaue those thinges which eie hath not seene eare hath not heard nor euer entred into the heart of man Defended by IAMES HABEERVTERVS of Bearne PRINCIPLES TOVCHING THE PETITIONS OF THE LORDS PRAYER IN GENERALL AND PARTICVLARLIE OF THE FIRST OF THEM LXV HAVING HANDLED THE PRAEFACE which was the first part of the Lords Prayer the second is now to bee opened which containeth the petitions or the substance of the Prayer it selfe 1 CHRIST framed these petitions according vnto the present nature and state of man vz. in respect that we are in the want of all thinges and sinners in this worlde which whollie lieth in wickednesse as it is said IOHN 15.19 and not vnto the first condition wherin ADAM was created pure and vpright before his fall 2 For there had bene no
vtterly denied that there were anie angels And ORIGEN likewise who with PLATO affirmed that those spirituall minds as often as they offended were fallen and thrust into bodies APELLES the heretick also who said that the bodies which the Angels tooke vpon them were neuer created and LACTANTIVS FIRMIANVS who dreamed that Angels were not presentlie at the beginning of the world appointed to guide and protect man In summe wee condemne all those who either make them coaeternall with God or attribute vnto them the worke of the Creation as did SIMON MAGVS CERINTHVS SATVRNINIVS and CARPOCRATES Defended by IOHN IAMES COLER of Tigurine PRINCIPLES CONCERNING MAN XII 1 SEing that man is the most excellent of all the visible workes of God for whose cause next vnto Gods all other things were created we holde it a matter belonging vnto a Diuine to entreat of the nature of Man 2 Man is neither the bodie nor the soule seuerallie considered but composed of both that is of soule and bodie joined together by a most straight and most louing band 3 The truth of Gods worde doeth witnes that there was but one man created at the first who was to bee the originall of all other men And so all those that proceded from him should be tyed together by a common bond of blood Wee doe then reject the opinion of such Philosophers as haue denied one certaine man to haue had his beginning first of all other 4 The bodie of that first man was formed by God of the dust of the earth that is as wee interprete it of the foure elements that it should not be a graue of the soule as PLATO thought but a most excellent and a most meete instrument to performe the faculties of the minde 5 Now in respect that this bodie was made of qualities repugnant one to the other it was mortall in the first creation of it for repugnancie or discord is the authour of dissolution yet by the appointment of God it was made immortall that it should be the habitation of the immortall soule but after the entrance of sinne into the worlde it returned vnto the former necessitie of mortality The PELAGIANS therefore do erre in holding that the bodies of men were naturallie subject vnto death and in attributing the cause of death to be onely the discord of the contrary qualities Other points that belong vnto the frame and beautie of mans body we leaue to be discussed by naturall Philosophers and phisitians As also manie things that they teach concerning the powers of the soule becaus we think it meet that we containe our selues within the bonds of diuinitie And now we will speak of the essence of the soule 6 The essence of the soule can scarce be knowne for it is not to bee perceaued by the instrument of any the senses of our bodies yet by the faculties and operations of it it doth in a sort open it selfe vnto vs. And therefore it is vsuallie described and pointed out after this plaine maner 7 The soule of man is an essence created according vnto the image of God infused into the bodie that man cōsisting both of bodie and soule should be capable to know and glorifie God 8 The soule of man is properlie trulie called a soule for that facultie which is in beasts and plants is by reason of the scarcity of words so called of the Latines For seeing the same doth not subsist of it self that it is nothing els but a power arysing out of the properties of the matter forme it scant retaineth the name of a being much lesse deserueth to be called a soule 9 The soule of man is of a spirituall and not of a bodily nature subsisting by it selfe not vnaduisedlie made of moates not a fire or anie other of the foure elementes or yet anie thing compact of the elementes not any number not an harmony not any facultie brought forth out of the matter brieflie not anie part cut as it were out of the Deitie but wiselie created of nothing after a manner vnknowne vnto vs by God who woorketh most freely 10 Now although it hath a beginning yet doeth it remain immortal not onlie because of it owne substance it is vncompounded and voide of al contrarieties and bodilie accidents but especiallie in asmuch as it is so created of God that of it selfe it can liue exist and continue for euer And it doth rather afforde life vnto the bodie than deriue it from the same The which wee doe beleeue in asmuch as it is proued vnto vs by the most sure testimonies of the holy scriptures rather then because it is demonstrated by philosophicall reasons Wee condemne therefore the MANICHAEES GNOSTICKES and PRISCILLIANISTS who haue said that the soule was of a double nature whereof the one was from a good beginning vz. a good God The other from an euill The SELEVCIANES HERMINIANES PROCLIANES who held that the soule was not made by God but by Angels The LVCIFERIANES and TERTVLLIANISTS who were of opinion that it was a bodilie substance and such as could fall off or be shelled from the bodie and remooue from one bodie to an other The ARABIANES and the NAZARITES who thought it mortall the ORIGENISTS who judged that all soules shoulde aeternallye liue in heauen and the APOLLINARISTS whose opinion was that one soule was begotten of another 11 Neither is the soule of the same nature and sort that the Angels are as ORIGEN thought who made onlie an accidentall and not a substantiall difference between Angels and the soules of men Now that essentiall difference although it cannot be easilie knowne is yet in some sort perceaued by this adjunct vz. that Angels can not be ordinarilie joined vnto bodies wheras the soules may Now the soule is also not onelie the first mouer of the bodie but euen the verie cheef and especiall forme of a man whereby first of all and of it selfe A man is that which hee is and for whose cause the bodie is so framed as it is to the ende that a most honorable lodging should be prepared for a most honorable ghuest 12 The soules of all men are not one as THEMISTIVS and the followers of AVERROIS thought but of euerie particuler man there is a perticular soule which can as naked and bare formes consist and remaine when they are seuered from the bodie as in deed they do for a time when as they being out of the bodie do expect the aeternall and indissoluble conjunction that they are to haue with the same 13 And seing that the form of euerie thing doth not onlie make vp the whole but also euery part thereof and no part can effect the office thereof except the forme bee present and seeing when the same departeth it ceaseth from doing wee do defend that common opinion out of AVGVSTINE vz. that the soule is whollie in the whole and whollie in euery part Although there be this diuersitie of the being of it in the whole and in the
day which went before the Sabaoth lay in the graue the whole Sabboth according to the custome of the Iewes which account a naturall day from Euening to Euening and rose againe the beginning of the next which was the first daye of the weeke 13 Concerning this Article of the descension of Christ into Hell it is manifest that there is no mention made of either in the Nicene or in any other of the ancient creeds and RVFFINVS witnesseth that it was not read in the Church of Rome 14 No man therefore ought to wonder if some question be made of the meaning thereof 15 That the Creede which is called the Apostles was written by the Apostles themselues before they departed from Ierusalem euerie one of them bringing in his seueral Article it is a meere fabulous tale as the very number of these Articles do shew 16 Yet it is cleare that they were faithfullie and truely gathered out of the preaching of the Apostles acounted euen frō the most ancient time as a square a rule of faith 17 Now their opinion is verie probable who doe take these words he descended into Hel if this Article was at the first in the common creed expressed in so many words not for any distinct Article but for a summary comprehension of the last and lowest degree of Christes humiliation which should bee pointed out by the wordes of suffering crucifiyng death and burial as this kind of speach is somtimes in the Scriptures Metaphorically vsed for the lowest estate of anguish and dejection So that He suffered was dead buried and descended into Hell should be but one Article of faith 18 But who can beleeue that the Fathers of Nicene and so many Synods that afterward followed and the very Church of Rome it self would haue rashly blotted out this Article if it had bin written in so many words in the common Creed 19 Either of the two therefore must needs bee necessarie namelie that either this kinde of speach in that sense that wee haue spoken though familiar vnto the Hebrues was not yet receiued in all Churches as being ambiguous and not necessary seeing it was sufficiently vnderstood by the former and so by a little and a little grewe out of vse or that this Article also was then inserted into the common Creed when as their opinion which hath bene of ancient time had by degrees taken place who thought that the soule of our Sauiour Christ beeing separated from his bodie went into I know not what place where the Spirits of the beleeuing Fathers should haue their aboad 20 But this opinion though it hath bin of a long time receaued by a common and an olde growen error cannot bee confirmed any wise by any testimonie of the Euangelicall Historie but is manifestlie ouerthrown thereby seeing it is very apparant by the woordes of the Euangelists that the Spirite of Christ being departed out of his bodie was there receaued into whose hands hee committed it when hee gaue vppe the Ghost that is into the place of aeternall blessednes whereof speaking vnto the Theefe he said this day shalt thou be with me in Paradise 21 Nowe that there was any place allotted vnto the Spirits of the Fathers that departed before the incarnation of Christ whence afterward the Spirite of Christ comming thither indeed shuld bring them with him into heauen it can in no wise bee confirmed by any colourable testimonie of the Scriptures Neither would the Euangelists haue omitted any such thing in the storie of the passion of Christ But this opinion seemeth to arise partlie in that manye are written to haue risen either by Christ or with Christ partly out of the PSALME 16.8 which PETER citeth Act. 2.25 and out of two other places also of 1. PET. 3. wrongfullie interpreted 22 Out of this error arise two other that are more absurd the one of those who beeing ledde by the misvnderstanding of the words of PETER thought that the soule of Christ went indeed into Hell to the ende that as in bodie hee had preached the Gospell vpon earth vnto those that were liuing so also he should preach the said Gospel in his Spirit vnto the Spirites of those that were dead as though that after death there were any place left for preaching repentance 23 The other errour is of those who dreamed that the Spirite of Christ should goe vnto the soules of the damned that hee might there also suffer in his soule the paines ordained in hell for the damned as though that the soule of Christ whilest it was in his bodie did not beare those punishmentes for our sake as both that horrible agonie which hee sustained in the Garden and also that fearefull crie My God my God c. which vpon the Crosse made Heauen and earth to tremble doe beare witnesse or as though that speache It is finished wherein our whole hope consisteth were vntrue 24 But wee omitting the whole controuersie concerning the putting in or the blotting out of this Article do simplie vnderstand by the Descension of Christ into hell those things which Christ being made a curse for vs suffered in his soule for our sake in those torments especiallie which were so greeuous as nothing could be no not imagined more horrible 25 By the word DESCENSION therefore is not ment any remoouing from a higher place to a lower because that can properlie agree neither vnto the Deitie which is euery where nor vnto the bodie which of it selfe lay dead in the Graue neither vnto the soule which beeing commended vnto the Father was straight way in Paradise after it was separated from the body 26 Now the word HELL which in the Scripture is diuersly taken signifieth neither the Graue because that explanation should bee superfluous and obscure neither yet the place of the damned as it is cleare out of the former Principles 27 Therefore this Descension of Christ into Hel which had an ende at his death went before the Article of his buriall but yet it is placed after the same in the order of speach euen because it was thought meet to set downe in one tenor of speach whatsoeuer did belong to the humiliation of his body Defended by HILLARIE FANTRART an English-man of Guernzy PRINCIPLES CONCERNING THE RESVRRECTION OF IESVS CHRIST XLV 1 HItherto wee haue heard Christes combate with death wherein he might seeme to be ouercome by death because it so far preuailed against him as it threw his dead bodie into the graue 2 Now we are to speake of Christs victorie ouer death the beginning whereof was the preseruation of his dead bodie in the graue vncorrupted and that without the help of anie art of the Apothicarie 3 His full victorie manifested it selfe in the resurrection of his bodie seeing that life is directlye opposite vnto death 4 Now that onlie is said to rise again which lay down and therefore neither the Deitie nor the soule of Christ rose againe Yet notwithstanding the resurrection after a
to haue bene able vtterlie to haue abolished them Wee doe therefore condemne those who dream that the soules hauing lost their former bodies by corruption shall assume other bodies in their steede 14 This change shall bee done at a moment in those whome Christ shall finde aliue at his second comming 15 The Axiome of the Philosophers that the generation of one thing is the corruption of an other hath no place in this matter and the similitude of PAVLE drawne from the seed sowen in the ground is not to be drawn anie farther than vnto the change of the quality 16 Wee affirme that the one and the selfe same man in number shal arise both in respect of his bodie which is his matter and also in respect of his forme that is of his soule which shall quicken the one and the selfe same bodie although by the retaking againe of the forme the person might in a nice sort seeme to be an other in number than it was before 17 By reason of this change of the qualities and not because the very bodilie quantity and circumscription are taken away for they are perpetuall circumstances or adjuncts of a bodie PAVLE doth affirme that the natural bodie is changed into a spirituall Great therfore is their errour and meerelie contrary vnto the Resurrection of the bodies who teach that the bodies are essentiallie changed by Resurrection into a spirituall nature For by this meanes death should so abolish the nature of the bodie as the Resurrection cold not restore the same and the analogie also betweene Christs Resurrection the resurrection of his members should be destroied 18 By this means furthermore the threatning of the punishments of that aeternal fire and paine should be altogether Allegoricall yea and after the resurrection both the godlie and the wicked shuld become some third spirit compact or braied together as it were of the natural spirit and the bodie accidentallie transformed into the nature either of the same or of a diuers spirit 19 But they doe verie greeuouslie erre who imagine that the bodie of Christ after his glorification which ensued vpon his Resurrection became not onelie of a spirituall nature which though it were graunted not to bee circumscribed in regard of quantitie yet they must needs yeild that the same is bounded within the propriety of the nature of it but also of a diuine seeing the Deitie alone is euerie where by a proprietie altogether vncommunicable vnto anie thing els Neither hath the Resurrection abolished the true bodilie humaine nature of Christ but the infirmities of his naturall bodie beeing laid aside God hath endued the same humane nature with most excellent supernaturall guifts 20 The qualities of the bodies beeing glorified cannot be knowne vnto vs while we are in this life neither are we curiouslie to enquire of them Yet may it be gathered by the woordes of Christ comparing the Saincts vnto the brightnesse of the Sunne and affirming them to be aequall with the Angels by the storie of the Resurrection and Ascension of Christ also out of the first to the CORINTH and both the Epistles of PAVLE to the THESSALONIANS that besides their incorruption they shall bee also bright or shining and of a more refined quick substance than now they are 21 Of the contrarie side it may in some sort be gathered how horrible and fearefull the state shall be of those men who are to be adjudged vnto the secōd death which is the euerlasting curse of God Seeing their soules shall therefore neuer bee seperated from their bodies euen because that their vnspeakable torments may be aeternall Defended by ABEL BARRERIVS a Gascoigne PRINCIPLES CONCERNING ETERNALL LYFE LXXXI 1 THe Article concerning the Resurrection of the flesh being handled at large in the former principles we are now at the length come to the exposition of that which is touching Aeternall life 2 This Article is therefore set last in the belief because it is the end and shutting vp of all those things which are there propounded vnto vs to be beleeued 3 We make life in this place to be that power and facultie whereby the soule doth not onelie moue it self but doth also giue motion sense vnto the body and this latter effect thereof in this life doth PAVL cal 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is naturall as being applied vnto the vse of this present life of which sort also was the life of ADAM before his fall although it was neither subject vnto mortalitie neither vnto those things which tend vnto death as he was after his fal But the soule being againe ioyned to the bodie shall both moue it self by a farre more excellent power and shall also quicken the bodie in a far diuers sort from that naturall life which shall be done away namelie by a spirituall life and aequall vnto the Angels as also the verie bodie shall rise again endued with far more excellent qualities whervpon it was called of PAVLE a spirituall bodie not in regard of the substance but of the qualities thereof 4 To liue therfore the etetnall life is to be in that state wherein the elect being after the blessed resurrection most fully joyned with Christ their head shal know God in heauen together with the Angels after a manner altogether vnknowne vnto vs at this day enjoy his prescence and glorifie him eternally We do therfore justlie condemne the error of the CHILIASTES 5 By the worde ETERNAL in this place we vnderstand that which hath a beginning but neuer shall haue an end 6 Touching curious and difficult questions as concerning the sight of God which we are to haue in the life to come and such like wee thinke meete to omitte them because it is sufficient for vs to knowe that God hath prepared for vs those thinges which neither eie hath seene eare hath heard nor enterd into the hart of man 7 The Author of that life is God who freely bestoweth the same vpon those whome of his meere mercie he hath chosen in Christ before the foundation of the world from whome as from the head this blessed immortallitie dooth flowe in a most full sorte into his members that are joyned vnto him 8 For the foundation both of our resurrection vnto life and also of that eternall life is that resurrection and glory of Christ our head because hee is the first fruites of the rising from the deade of those for whome hee prayed that they should be there where he is 9 That life therfore is not without respect generally bestowed vpon all men but only vpō the elect as being those who onelie are found in Christ according vnto that saying of PAVL ROM 11. The elect haue obtained it the rest are hardened and according vnto that voice of Christ Come yea blessed of my Father 10 This blessed immortallitie shal be common in deed vnto all the elect but not in the same measure as it may be probablie gathered by the consideration of the contrarie
punishment of the wicked 11 The especiall ende for the which eternall life is bestowed vpon vs is this namly that acknowledging the immeasurable and infinit mercy of God wee may attribute vnto him eternall praises as it is meete 12 We shall at the time when God hath appointed be put in full posession of that life at which time the number of those that are to bee saued being fulfilled Iesus Christ shall be seene of vs who looke for him to our saluation to come as a redemer from Heauen 13 Seeing the Lord hath put this day in his own power to be inquisitiue when the same shal be is a point of extreame madnes We do therefore condemne those both olde and new writers who breaking into the secrets of God do think that they can set downe when that day shall be whereas the knowledge heereof is not giuen no not to the Angels themselues 14 It is our dutie therefore rather to be watchful least being drowned with the delightes of the worlde and the flesh and as it were overwhelmed in a dead sleepe that last day do come vpon vs being vnprepared at vnawares 15 Now although the full perfection of that life which wee hope for be referred vnto the very last day yet notwithstanding it taketh certaine beginnings in our mindes even while we are heere when as the holy Ghost dooth by the preaching of the worde dispell the darcknes of our minde and indue the same with the true knowledge of God whence afterwarde doth proceed a willing minde to obey his commandements and that hope which cannot deceaue them that beleeue 16 Vnto this eternall life which shall bring vnspeakable felicitie vnto the elect death eternall is oposed which shall bring vnto the wicked that destruction which neuer shall haue an end 17 Even as that most happie felicitie cannot nowe be comprehended of vs so also that miserie of the damned is altogether incomprehensible 18 This most horrible state is called the second death not because that either the soul is thereby seperated from the bodie or that the soule or the body of the damned do suffer death but because that as by the first death the body and the soul of the wicked is dissolued the one of them hastning vnto putrefaction the other going to haue a tast of the eternall paines even so by this second punishment both the soule and the body are not only wholie excluded for euer from Gods fauor but also adjudged vnto his most fearefull and neuer ending curse 19 For the like cause is this death called eternall fier because that fier is a most sharp vehement punishment but wee are not here curiouslie to dispute touching the paines of Hell lest that wee thereby run into poeticall fables 20 Yet do these verie fables teach vs that the doctrine concerning the eternall punishment which the wicked are to vnder goe euen after this life did alwaies sound in the worlde The Epicures therefore and such as deny the immortallitie of the soule are confuted not onely by the word of God but also by common sense 21 That these punishments are eternall whereunto eternall life is oposed it is manifest by the expresse●●ord of God and also by the infinit nature of Gods majestie who is offended The Church therfore justly condemned the Origenists whoe dreamed that the wicked and the Diuells themselues hauing fulfilled those punishments should at the length be deliuered 22 Yet dooth our Sauiour Christ manifestlie witnes MAT. 10.13 that the state of the damned in respect of the measure of their punishments shall not be alike Defended by IAMES TREMVLAEVS of Geneua FINIS THE TABLE AND ORDER OF THE PRINCIPLES CONTAINED in this Treatise 1 PRinciples concerning God pag 1. 2 Of the holy and vnsearchable Trinitie 3. 3 Of God the Father and the Sonne 5. 4 Of the holy Ghost 9. 5 Of the attributes of God in general 10. 6 Of the omnipotencie of God 12 7 Of the knowledge that is in God 13. 8 Of the will of God 15. 9 Of the goodnes grace loue and mercie of God 16. 10 Of Gods prouidence 17. 11 Of Gods eternall Praedestination 19 12 Of the creation of all things and their diuision 23. 13 Of good and euill Angels 26. 14 Of man 30. 15 Of the faculties of the soule of man 33. 16 Of Free-will 35. 17 Of Sinne. 37. 18 Of the diuision of Sinne. 39. 19 Of the restoring of man-kind 41 20 Of the personall vnion of the two natures in Christ 43. 21 Of the office of Christ 25. 22 Of Faith 47. 23 Of the causes and effects of faith 49. 24 Of mans justification in the sight of God 52. 25 Of Sanctification 54. 26 Of the justification of sinfull man in the sight of God 56. 27 Of good works 60. 28 Of the Law of God 63. 29 Vpon the preface of Gods Law and the first Commandement 66. 30 Vpon the second Commandement 68 31 Vpon the third Commandement 72. 32 Concerning vowes 75. 33 Vpon the fourth Commandement 78. 34 Vpon the fift Commandement 82. 35 Vpon the sixt Commandement 86. 36 Vpon the seuenth commandement 89 37 Vpon the eight Commandement 92. 38 Vpon the ninth Commandement 94. 39 Vpon the tenth Commandement 97. 40 Concerning Repentance 100. 41 Of the conception of Iesus Christ 104 42 Of the natiuitie circumcision and baptisme of Christ 108. 43 Of the Passion and death of our Lord Iesus 111. 44 Of his buriall and descention into hel 115. 45 Of his Resurrection 121. 46 Of his ascension into heauen 125 47 Of his sitting at the right hand of the Father 128. 48 Of his comming againe to judge the quicke and the dead 131. 49 Of faith in the holie Ghost 136. 50 Vpon the Article I beleeue that there is an holie Catholicke Church 139. 51 Vpon the Article I beleeue that there is a Communion of Saints 144. 52 Of the word of God 147. 53 Of Traditions 151. 54 Of Councels and Fathers 153 55 of the Sacraments 160. 56 Of the agreement and difference betweene the Sacraments of the olde and new testament 167. 57 Of the numbers of the Sacraments of the new Testament 169. 58 of Baptisme being the first Sacrament of the new Testament 172. 59 The second sort of principles concerning Baptisme 177. 60 Of the Lords Supper 180. 61 of the popish masse 185. 62 of Consubstantiation 189. 63 Of prayer or the inuocation of Gods name 193 64 Vpon the preface of the Lords praier 197. 65 Touching the Petitions of the Lordes praier in general and particularly touching the first of them 202. 66 Of the second petition 208. 67 of the third petition 208. 68 Of the fourth petition 212. 69 of the fift petition 216 70 of the sixt petition 219 71 Vpon the conclusion of the Lordes prayer 222. 72 of the sacred ministerie of the Church where the doctrine of the Law and the Gospell are compared together 274 73 of the ministers of Gods worde vnder the Gospel 281. 74 of the false ministerie of the Gospell 233 75 of the Ecclesiasticall functions that ar depraued and retained onely in name in the counterfait Romish church 238 76 of the power and authoritie of the Church 242. 77 of Ecclesiasticall censures and excommunication 251. 78 of the magistracie 258. 79 of remission of sinnes and the sinne against the holie Ghost 263. 80 of the resurrection of the fleshe 266. 81 of Eternall life 272. FINIS Beare good Reader with the false pointing in some places of the booke correct the nomber of the Principles according vnto the Table and mend these faultes with thy Pen. Pag. 10. lin 5. by for be Pa 16. lin 33. beget for begotten Pag. 19. lin 33. vvhich for of Pag. 20. lin 31. Read The Lord then vvas so far from bereauing c. Pag. 34. lin 2. adde grovving lin 23. ad in Pa. 35. ad subiect vnto none the supreame gouernour of himselfe Pa. 43. lin 23. seemeth for serueth Pag. 44. lin 34. This for the. Pa. 48. lin 29. as for for Pa. 49. lin 25. lost for left Pa. 52. lin 24. adde that hee pag. 62. lin 21. adde revvard of and 24. ad or Pa. 72. lin 5. derogate for degenerate Pa. 79. lin 35. signifiing for signified Pa. 83. lin 25. dele honor and 26. ad honor Pa. 93. lin 9. dele as Pag 103. lin 6. read 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Pag. 114. lin 3. Read and although he vvas at the first pronounced innocent by Pilate c. Pa. 117. lin 5. Read for vs into c. Pag. 129. lin 30. Read tvvo sittinges Pa. 132. lin 20. Read those things vvhich Pag. 148. lin 7. olde for nevve Pa. 153. lin 3. councelles for counsellers Pag. 154. line 13 Read or primacie Pag. 168. line 38. in for into Pag. 207. line 16. summe for some Pag. 209. line 1. are for or Pag. 209. line 18. fift for first Pag. 221. line 5. in Pag. 223. line 29. Being for Seeing Pa. 227. line 17. either for ever Pag. 232. line 28. by the for of Pag. 135. line 1. for for from line 19. this for thus and 23. that vvhen c. 37. cyties for rites Pag. 246. line 3. it is c. Pag. 251. line vlt. rulers for rules Pag. 259. line 2. better for more Pag. 262. for for that
indeed from all aeternitie or els because they will haue the fleshe of Christ to be taken out of the substance of the Godhead or as some do nowe affirme because all the proprieties of the Deity were poured into the humane nature when the worde was incarnate or to be briefe by what other dotage soeuer they goe about to obscure the coaeternall generation of the Sonne Defended by IOHN HENRY SCHINTYER of Tigurine THE FOVRTH SORT OF PRINCIPLES CONCERNING THE HOLY GHOST HITHERTO CONCERNING THE PERSONS of the Father and the Sonne it followeth now that we speake of the holie Spirit 1 VVHereas the word SPIRIT is diuersly taken in the scriptures we in this doctrine do vnderstand by the holie spirit the third person in Trinitie 2 The holie Spirit is that Essentiall and working power who is essentially subsisting in the Father and the Son from whome the whole Deity wherein also they doe subsist being communicated vnto him after an vnspekable maner though he procedeth or if we may so speake is as it were breathed yet is he not at all seperated in respect of this his proceding but is in regard of the maner of his being distinguished from the persons of the Father and the Sonne And therefore he is not without cause reckoned the third person in nomber seing in consideration of his being hee is referred vnto the Father and the sonne yet not as vnto two beginnings but as vnto one 3 The Deity thus communicated by issuing and proceeding is not multiplied in substance seing he is most simple and single Whence it is that the holie Ghost in regard of his person is and euer hath bin coessentiall and coaeternall with the Father and the sonne and in regarde of his substance is that one onely true God in himselfe Wherevpon also the name of God is sometimes personally attributed vnto him The holy Ghost is therefore to be worshipped by the one and the same faith and inuocation that the Father and Son are 4 And although the works of the Trinnitie which they cal outward or external are vnseperable yet in the effecting of them wee are to obserue a distinction not onelye of the persons but also of the personall actions 5 The proper and the peculiar action of the holie Spirit in all the workes of the Deity bee they naturall and ordinary or els extraordinary was and is to effect in his time and maner those things which the father from all aeternitie hath decreed in his owne wisdome that is in his Son and the Son hath ordered and disposed to come to passe 6 Yet is not the holy spirit any instrumental cause affording his helpe as a seruaunt vnto the Father or the Son but working together with them without any inferioritie or inaequallitie 7 But the power and working of the holy spirit is especiallie seene in the planting and gouerning of the Church In which particular respect he is called the holie spirit even because that he who is most holie doth stirr vp and nourish all the holie motions that are in the elect For he it is by whose inspiration all the holie prophets haue spoken it is he that giueth eares to heare and a hart to beleeue who appointeth Pastors and doth enable them with necessary gifts who stirreth vp the slouthfull and being the true comforter indeed doth comfort the afflicted soule By whome those that are borne againe of him do cry Abba father he also formed the fleshe of Christ in the wombe of the virgine and did most aboundantlie anoint his humane nature to conclude it is he by whose strength we stand vntill we overcome Wherefore we doe abhor and renounce the SABELLIANS who confound the persones with the substance of the Godhead the ARRIANS and the MACEDONIANS who deny the holie Ghost to bee coessentiall with the Father and the Son the GRECIANS of later time who affirme that hee doth onlie proceed from the father and those also who by the holie Ghost will haue nothing els to be ment saue certaine motions and inspirations onely together with those who deny that he is to be invocated by the one and the selfesame faith with the Father and the Sonne and to be briefe we detest all those that any waies oppugne the Deity of the holy Ghost either in his substance or person Defended by IOHN IAMES COLER of Tygurine THE FIFT SORT OF PRINCIPLES CONCERNING THE ATTRIBVTES OF GOD IN GENERALL HITHERTO WE HAVE SPOKEN OF GOD both as far as wee are able to attaine vnto bee the light of nature also as he is laied before vs in the holy Scripturs to be three in person and one in substance now it followeth that we intreat of his attributes wherby in a sort we are taught what maner of God he is 1 ALthough there be no composition in God nor yet any accidentall qualitie seeing hee is a substance most single and euery way one yet to the end that according vnto our capacitie we might vnderstande what a God hee is he himselfe in the scriptures is accustomed to attribute vnto himselfe many things as qualities 2 By attributes in this place then we vnderstande the essentiall proprieties of the Deity which are attributed vnto him in the scriptures 3 These things are so attributed vnto him that notwithstanding they place nothing in him that is cōpoūd or diuers from his substance but look whatsoeuer they point him out to be the very same he is in his owne most simple substance 4 For both these proprieties and also their actions doe in very deede differ no whit from the substance of the Godhead but onely in some consideration we are to holde them diuers both from the diuine substance and also the on from the other 5 Now these things are attributed vnto the Deity sometimes substātiuely somtims adjectiuely as they speak that we may thereby knowe him to be a being that subsisteth indeede and that he is such a one not by participation and imperfectlie but of himselfe and that most perfectlie 6 Of attributes we make two kinds the one is of them which are so proper vnto the Deitie that they can bee in no sort communicated vnto creatures neither haue they anie other respect vnto creatures saue that by them the Deitie is distinguished from creatures of this kind are aeternity simplenes vnmeasurablenes omnipotencie 7 The other kind is of those who although simply and as far as they are in the Deitie they cannot be communicated yet creatures may be partakers of them not properly but by analogie and a kinde of agreement and that not essentially but in regarde of qualitie and but in part neither such ar wisedome goodnes and the rest of that kind Therefore OSIANDER erred grosly whoe taught that the essentiall righteousnes of God was communicated vnto vs and at this day their error is intollerable who recalling back again the blasphemie of EVTYCHES holde that al the proprieties of the Deitie were powred by personall vnion into the flesh which
partes as that it is first and of it selfe in the whole whereas it is in the parts but after a secondarie manner Defended by IOHN CASTOLL of Geneua PRINCIPLES CONCERNING THE FACVLTIES OF THE SOVLE OF MAN XV. HAVING SET DOWN WHAT WE ARE to beleeue according vnto the Scriptures concerning the essence of the soule of man nowe wee are to entreate of the powers thereof 1 GOD alone is a most simple and a most meere beeing And therefore although the essence of the soule be a spirituall and no bodilie substance yet it is endued with faculties agreeable vnto the nature of it which by their owne spirituall manner are inhaerent in the essence thereof as in their subject We do not therefore allow the opinion of the PERIPATETICKS who taught that the faculties of the soule doth not differ from the essence of it in deed but after a sort 2 And although the very essence and substance of the soule doeth by the grace of God continue without all change and alteration yet the powers thereof were created of a changeable nature 3 Now as man was created in one of his parts like vnto all other liuing creatures aswell in regarde of the substance of their bodies as of their naturall life though in a far more excellent state So it behoued that that other part of his should bee endued with faculties meet for the preseruation of the naturall life of his said bodie namely with the faculties of nourishing and the power of outward senses whereof whatsoeuer might be farther spoken wee leaue vnto Phisitians and naturall Philosophers 4 The other faculties are proper vnto the soule of man for the spirituall and immortall excellencie whereof it is also and not only for the very essence of the soule trulie said to be created according to the image of God 5 Yet in asmuch as the soule in bringing forth the effects of these proper qualities doeth vse the instrument of the bodie whereunto it is personallie vnited in this respect also man wholie considered but not in part may be truly held to be created after the image of God We do condemne therfore the dotage of the ANTHROPOMORPHITES who placing the image of God in the very bodie of man did therefore dreame that God was a bodilie substance as also the madnes of OSIANDER who referred the same vnto the incarnation of the world 6 These faculties we holde to bee two the vnderstanding which is also called the minde and the will or as sometimes they are called in the holie Scriptures the spirite and the soule taken in a more narrow signification 7 This Image considered these two faculties is expressed of PAVL by the names of righteousnes and true holines whereby hee declareth the agreement which it had with the patterne according vnto which it was created A wonderfull light being powred into the facultie of vnderstanding whereby it was endued with a most cleare knowledge and such as was obscured by no darknes of the true God and his diuine will And an inward force being ingraffed into the will whereby it was able to stirre vp it self by holy motions without all shew of resistance vnto that end for the which man was created the bodie to be short beeing framed in a most wonderfull decent sort to yeeld obedience most redily and without all wearisomnes vnto the soule when it moued the same 8 Vnto this agreeablenes of man with God and to the agreement and proportion that all the partes of man had among them selues was adjoined as it were another shining brightnes of the diuine Maiestie the dominion of all the inferiour creatures granted vnto man that by this meanes also man might shine here beneath as a president of the majestie and glory of God 9 To the execution of this gouernment there was giuen vnto man an exact knowledge not gotten by labour and vse but naturallie ingraffed in him both of the natures of all things that he was to gouerne and also of the best way to rule them Wherunto of the contrary side the good and right disposition and inclination which all the creatures that were vnder mans gouernment had to obey man was answerable the which harmony and agreement of the whole world MOSES doth expresse by the name of the goodnes that was in euery creature Defended by IOHN FLORIDES of Augiers PRINCIPLES CONCERNING FREE-WILL XVI THE FACVLTIES OF THE VNDERstanding and the will are alwaies accompanied with that power which is commonlie called Free-will whereof wee will now speake 1 FREE-WILL which the Graecians cal 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 if the force of the word be strictlie considered is giuen neither to man nor Angell nor yet shall euer bee granted but trulie and absolutely doth agree vnto God alone for he onlie is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2 Yet of this high and soueraigne authority there were certaine lineaments shadowed in Angels and men at their first creation when as both the one and other were endued by the Lord with vnderstanding will whereby they were made capable of knowledge and vnderstanding 3 For man is not onlie stirred to desire by a naturall liuelie motion but euen according vnto aduise or electiō which cannot be without either the true or the apparant knowledge of the thing it desireth 4 Such furthermore was the state of the first man before sinne that his vnderstanding and will did altogether agree with the wil of God and were wholly subject which is the cheefest libertie vnto his commandement without all resistance or strife that the affections had against the minde 5 At that time therefore man was in deed the Lord of his owne actions that is endued with free-will Yet because he was mutable and changeable both wayes he did so encline from good to euill that as AVGVSTINE saieth by sinning he lost both him-self and his libertie 6 Not that hee was turned vnto a stock and so bereaued of judgement and will For sinne hath not vtterlie abolished nature although it hath lamentablie polluted the same but such a libertie remaineth as can will nothing but what is euill and that euillie For whatsoeuer is done without faith is sinne 7 Now in things that are subject vnto vs as many actions both naturall and morall are free choise is left vnto man that he can either will or not will as he hath will either to speake or to hold his peace to studie or not studie and such like 8 But in supernaturall things as are to know God to loue him and to obey his will as we ought we are altogether weake and blinde or rather deade as PAVLE speaketh Wee do condemne therefore the PELLAGIANS who say that the force of will remaineth in vs vnblemished and that sinne may bee auoided by the meere light of nature And the PAPISTS also who holde that it is but blemished onely 9 For we acknowledge as the Scripture teacheth that wee are nowe our nature being corrupted dead in sinne the children of wrath and enemies vnto
hand of God Defended by FRANCIS PEFAVRIVS of Bearne PRINCIPLES VPON THAT ARTICLE OF THE BELIEF WHEREIN IS SAID that Christ shall come to iudge the quick and the dead XLVIII 1 HAving done with the treatise of the incarnation of the mediatour Iesus Christ and also of his lyfe death resurrection ascension and exaltation vnto the right hand of the Father which is the power that hee hath receaued ouer all creatures the which he dooth now so exercise as hee seemeth in his members rather to striue and to be kept vnder then to raigne and in regard of his enemies rather in some sort for the most part to bee vanquished then to ouercome It followeth that vnto the former we adjoine which thinges appertaine vnto the ful administration of this gouernment 2 Christian Faith therefore dooth teach that Christ who striueth with his enemies vntill the nomber of all those that were giuen him of the Father be finished the time appointed for the executing of Gods wrath against Sathan his Angels and the world be expired shall come again from heauen and execute his full power both in the finall deliuerie of all his children in the vtter ouerthrow of all his enemies 3 The vniuersall restitution of the world which is earnestlie desired of all the creatures themselues in generall shall serue for the setting forward of the saluation of the elect 4 But it is curious and prophane to enquire what manner of the restitution that shall bee any farther then the word of God doth reueale it 5 Now that that judgement whereunto all men some to be whollie absolued others to be whollie condemned shall be subject is to be Vniuersall and euerlasting may be proued by arguments drawne from humane reason and euen from that very principle whereby the wicked go about to displace Gods prouidence namely that God must needes bee just and therefore that it cannot bee but it should aeternallie go well with the good and euill with the bad 6 But the vndoubted proofes of this article as also of all the rest are to be fetched from Gods word We do condemne therefore the Epicures who denie Gods prouidence as though the casuall as they call it succession and change of things were to continue for euer The Platonikes who granting the world to haue had a beginning do yet teach that it shall neuer haue an end The Aristotelians who dreame that the world neither had a beginning nor euer shall haue an end And all other mockers who think that there shall neuer bee anie judgement because it is so long differred as PETER setteth downe 2. PET. 3.3 Yet doe wee not ground our selues in this point vpon the opinion of the Stoickes who taught by naturall reason that the world shoulde bee consumed with fire but vpon the authoritie of the word 7 This judgement in regarde of the power and decree thereof is jointlie of the Father the Sonne and the holie Ghost but the promulgating and execution of the same is committed to the Sonne that in his humaine nature In the which nature it pleaseth the Father mediatly to rule all creatures 8 Christ therefore shall come from heauen in his true visible and finite bodie yet cloathed with that Diuine glorie and majestie whereby he hath gotten a name aboue all names That dotage therefore of the Vbiquitaries is most vaine who do oppose the majestie of Christs flesh vnto his locall and organicall circumscription and doe imagine a double reall presence of his bodie the one visible and finite which is of his dispensation the other inuisible and infinite which they call omni-majesticall which cannot bee grounded vppon anie place of the word 9 Before the tribunall seat of this Iudge shall all men without exception that euer were since the beginning of the world stand to be judged 10 All therefore that haue beene dead shall bee joined again to their bodies and as for those that shall be found aliue they shal be chaunged in a moment to the end that some of them may enjoy that blessed perpetuall felicitie with Christ their head others that they may be adjudged vnto euerlasting tormentes which Sathan their head and his wicked Angels and so Christ may trulie and perfectlie raigne for euer Wee condemne therefore the opinion of ORIGEN and of the Chiliasts who held that all men should be saued after a thousand yeares 11 This judgement shall Christ exercise in respect of the elect both according to the law which hee hath fulfilled for them and also according to the Gospell which was giuen vnto them that they should embrace the same with a true and a liuelie faith and in regard of the wicked according vnto the lawe onelie which pursueth euerie man with aeternall punishment and therefore also hee shall crowne the one of them being acquired throw his meere fauour and shall punish the other in just seueritie We refuse therefore both those who attribute the reward of aeternall life vnto the satisfactorie and meritorious works of men them also who ascribe the dānation of the wicked vnto a kinde of absolute and soueraigne power that is in God beyond the judgement of the law 12 Christ shall then yeeld the kingdome vnto his Father that is shall absolutelie performe in deed the office which he receiued of the Father and the Father on the other side shall performe vnto him together with his that aeternall triumphe promised vnto him when hee hath put all his enemies vnder his feet 13 The place and the time of this judgement hath God manifested vnto none but would retaine the knowledge therof vnto himself both that he might contain vs watchfull in our duties lest that either we should be astonished with fear or abuse the deferring of his comming and also that he might exercise our faith and patience yet hath he foretolde vs MAT. 24. the signes that go before his comming so that none can be on the sodaine ouertaken therby saue onely those who wittingly and willingly remaine vnprouided They are therefore worthie to be reprehended in the Church who presume to set downe the time thereof by the aspects of the Starres or vpon some imaginarie suppositions or Prophesies 14 Nowe the Lorde according vnto his secrete wisedome dooth deferre that day partly that the number of his elect may bee finished and partly that the wicked may be made more and more vnexcusable 15 That last vniuersall judgement hindreth not but that the Lorde may in the meane time execute his particular judgements in this life either vppon his elect for their saluation or vpon the reprobate for their vndoing neither doth it also hinder but that hee may after their departure gather the soules of his elect into that blessed life and torment the spirit of the wicked in the prisons that are knowen vnto himself even vntil the time that he accomplisheth the full happines of the one and the vtter confusion of the other 16 And euen as he would haue his last
the Bible be translated into the mother tongue of all Christian people Therefore wee doe also condemne the said Papists who will not allow of such translations 13 This same word of God ought to be faithfully and sincearlie expounded vnto the people by euerie Pastour and out of the same are exhortations consolations and reprehensions to be drawne whence also the gainsayer is to be conuinced and put to silence 14 This worde of GOD is said to haue life in it not that this life is placed in the letters syllables or wordes for they are to be counted witches and enchanters who attribute anie deuine power vnto the letters and woordes themselues but because it is an instrument whereby God doth make knowne vnto vs that which he will haue vs to vnderstand for our saluation 15 To conclude this is an absolute perpetuall and necessarie note of the Church namely that the purity of doctrine be maintained therin and that the pillar ground of the truth be in the same Defended by IOHN GIGORDVS Baeterrenensis PRINCIPLES CONCERNING TRADITIONS LIII 1 HAuing last of al disputed concerning the written Worde of God this present Treatise is to bee touching Traditions which some call by the name of vnwritten word and doctrine 2 Those which the Greek cal 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 are commonly called Traditions amongst the Latines which they affirme not to bee contained in writing but to haue beene conueied by word of mouth as it were from hand to hand deliuered from one to an other 3 Now there are two sorts of Traditions mentioned in the Scriptures whereof some are commendable as proceding from the Spirit of God of which sort are those which are mentioned to haue beene receaued from Christ his Apostles others were inuented by the wit of man as those which Christ calleth the Traditions of the Fathers and the commandements and doctrines of men 4 The former of these were not at the first as being in the infancy of the church committed to writing but now since that time that they haue beene put into the writings of the Apostles they are not to be taken as vnwritten but to haue credit amongst all as being the verie written word of God 5 Of these there are two sorts for some do appertaine vnto the record of the hystorie and the things that were done as that which LVKE speaketh cap. 1. 2. of the things that were done by Christ some do appertaine vnto doctrine and that in a twofold difference 6 For some were concerning the Doctrine it selfe as those things touching the Lords Supper which PAVL affirmeth to haue deliuered as he receiued them of the Lord Some are concerning the rites and the good order of the Church as that touching the blood of thinges that were strangled the couering of womens heads that men should not bee couered in the time of praier and such like 7 Those thinges which are concerning the substaunce of doctrine are to be perpetually obserued in the Church but as for the things which apertain to outward rites they in consideration of diuers circumstāces as of time place person may bee chaunged yet so as regard be alwaies had which must be generally obserued in al indifferent things vnto that which maketh most for the glorie of God the aedification of the Church 8 As touching other traditions which haue risen from the bare will of man though they haue neuer so glorious a shewe of antiquitie holines and wisedome yet if they agree not with Gods word they are to be accounted for no better then will-worship and so they are to be vtterlie cast out with all other superstitions that are either directlie or indirectlie against Gods word Of this sort are the obseruations of the difference of meat garments daies praier for the dead invocation of Saints departed Mouckery single life and a thousand such like either foolish or impious toyes wherewith Christians are now much more burthened then the Iewes were in times past with their Ceremonies 9 For in the worshippe of God this hath bene is and shall be the onely rule Whatsoeuer is without faith is sin and that faith dependeth not vpon the inuentions of men but vpon the hearing of Gods worde and that there can be no obedience where there is no commandement 10 And seeing the minde of the Lord is onely knowen vnto himselfe it belongeth not vnto man to set downe what is acceptable or what is odious in his sight but vnto God onely who hath therefore taught vs how hee will be worshipped and would not leaue that point to our choise 11 The word of God furthermore is euery way perfect and thervnto nothing is to be added or detracted for it is able to make the man of God absolute Wherefore we do constantly affirme that we are bound onely to cleaue vnto it rightly vnderstoode and that wee must not depart one jote from the same The vnderstanding of it is to be drawen from the analogie of faith and the conferences of other places of Scripture 12 We hould that it is lawfull neither for counsellors nor Bishops nor for anie man to impose lawes vppon the consciences of men which onelie belongeth to the alone Bishop of our soules and our Law-giuer Christ or vnto the Apostles hauing his commaundement For although true Pastors and Doctors of the Church haue beene and are in the place of the Apostles yet haue not they the same commission that the Apostles had For the Apostles being immediatlie inspired by the spirite of God could not erre and we are bound in euerie point to beleeue them But as for Pastors and Teachers they may such is mans weakenesse oftentimes slipp and therefore they are onelie to be followed so farre as they followe Christ and his Apostles Wee condemne therefore the olde Pharisies and those which haue followed them as the Iewes who haue coined vnto vs their CABALA and manie other dotages of their TALMVD the Papists and all other false Christians who haue polluted the seruice of God with their own dreames and inuentions and as it is written ISAY 29. MAT. 15. doe worship God in vaine in teaching mens traditions Defended by IOHN RVE of CADOMA in Normandie PRINCIPLES CONCERNING COVNCELS AND FATHERS LIIII 1 VVE haue shewed in the former treatise what the authoritie of Traditions can be it followeth that wee entreat of those thinges which appertaine vnto the confirmation of them wherefore wee will first of all deale with counsels next with Fathers 2 Seeing all things in the Church of God ought to be done orderlie and that the Church is gathered out of all people and nations the parts as it were of the Catholicke or vniuersal church were not without cause deuided which parts we call particular churches 3 Whereas this diuision was by little and little framed according to the example of the Prouinces and Diocesses or seuerall jurisdictions of the Romaine Empire as both the thing it selfe and also the very names doe shew it
and whatsoeuer is contrary or besides the will of God 12 The word BE DONE that is be fulfilled doth teach vs that we are to obey Gods will with the whole affection of our soule with all our mind and thoughts 13 Whereas it is set down passiuelie BE DONE it seemeth that it may bee gathered thereby that man before the first grace is onelie considered passiuelie as beeing to bee wrought vppon but not working so that euen to will what is right is giuen of God Next wee gather that after the first grace the continuaunce of willing that which is good and the perfection therof is in the hand of GOD onelie euen thence that we are commanded to craue that Gods will may be done whereas wee doe not craue those things that are in our owne power 14 BE DONE IN EARTH AS IT IS IN HEAVEN the word HEAVEN and EARTH are to bee vnderstood Metonymically that which doth containe beeing put for that which is contained 15 The will of God vpon earth is in deede performed onelie by men vnlesse a man will referre the word OBEYING Metaphorically vnto other creatures yet not by all men but by them onely who are regenerated Although as AVGVSTINE saith the will of God is doone concerning but not by the rest 16 Now because humaine frailty which by Gods decree doth alwaies cleaue vnto man in this life can beare no more it commeth to passe that the will of God is but begun to be performed by the regenerate here vpon earth and that onely in affection and in faith this also being the will of God that besides the loue which wee are commanded to yeeld vnto God and our neighbour we should also beleeue in Christ But when God shal be al in all we shall then perfectlie and fully obey his will 17 Neither is there any more then this meant by the note of the similitude AS which doth not point out an aequall qualitie but a likenes and an agreement therein not that the regenerate should vppon earth performe the will of GOD in as great measure but in the like affection operation that the Angels do execute the same in heauen 18 Now IN HEAVEN al those that remaine therin as the soules that are in blisse and the Angels doe obey the will of God 19 Yea and the Sonne also in respect that the Mediatour Christ doeth as yet the will of his Father in Heauen when as he doth make intercession for vs and bringeth to passe whatsoeuer doeth belong vnto the edification of the Church 20 The soules also that are in blisse doe in heauen celebrate the praises of God and do desire after their manner both the deliuerance of their brethren that are heere militant vppon earth and also the punishment of the enemies 21 Now those blessed ministering Spirits do performe the will of God diuers waies as by singing that song Holie holie c. by procuring the saluation of the elect and punishing the wicked as it pleaseth GOD to vse their seruice 22 Now all these Spirites doe execute Gods will I Most willingly bicause they obey him without murmuring II Most readily and surelie because they make no delaies but presently betake themselues vnto that which they are commanded to doe III Most faithfully because they both heare and also performe in deede their whole charge and not a part onely and being once sent they neuer cease vntill they be called backe againe 23 We desire therefore of God that hee would giue vs both the will and the power to obey and that wee may be seruice-able and obedient vnto his majestie according vnto the same Spirit manner affection readines and cherfulnes of the will that the Angels in heauen do obey him And we doe also craue the taking away of all those things which either directly set themselues against his will or do anie wise withstand the same Defended by IOSIAS sonne vnto IOSIAS SIMLERVS of Tigurine PRINCIPLES TOVCHING THE FOVRTH PETITION OF THE LORDS PRAYER LXVIII THE THIRD PETITION OF THE LORDS Prayer hath beene opened in the last Principles concerning the will of God so that the first part of the Prayer beeing expounded we come now to the second 1 AFter that Christ had taught in the three former petitions such things as do immediatlie respect the glorie of God he now adjoyneth those which thogh they are to be referred vnto Gods glorie do yet especiallie concerne vs and our profit 2 Now as man consisteth of two parts so these things are of two sorts corporall and spirituall 3 This first petition of the second part thē is touching corporall the other two are concerning spirituall blessings 4 Now whereas mention is made first of corporal benefites the reason thereof may seeme to bee in that corporall things and the profite that arise of them are better knowne vnto vs. And therefore the Lord to the end he might relieue the slownesse infirmitie of our nature dooth lift vs from common thinges vnto these that are lesse knowne vnto vs from easie vnto hard from earthlie vnto heauenlie matters 5 The summe of this first petition is that the Lord would bestow vpon vs things necessarie for this life to wit food and raiment especiallie next those things which are helpes of the outward necessities of this life that is such things as make for our peaceable being as far as long as the Lord thinketh expedient for vs. 6 The necessitie or rather the aequitie of this petition is manifold First it teacheth vs that we ought wholly to depend vpon Gods Prouidence by whome we are nourished maintained and preserued Secondlie that wee acknowledge him the giuer of all good things both spirituall and temporall Thirdlie that we may with quiet minds expect those things at his handes which otherwise would holde vs in a miserable care and perplexity 7 For our mercifull Father dooth not disdaine to receaue our bodies into his protection and custodie that by these small thinges hee may exercise our faith when as wee looke for all thinges at his handes euen the least crumb of bread and drop of water that we put into our mouthes I. The Marcionites and Manichaees therefore are out of their wits who haue endeuored to defend that God hath no care of these our bodies as though the same were vnbeseeming his Majestie and that our fleshe or our bodies were the worke not of God but of an euill beginning that is of the Diuell and therefore that it became not the good God to sustaine them seeing they are euill II. They are madd also who thinke that all thinges are disposed by the tossing of Fortune And the Epicures also togeather with those who houlde that God hath no care or respect vnto the thinges that are done vnder the or be of the Moone III Witches and Sorcerers in like sort are heere condemned and all those who either openlie or by anie secreat trade seeke their maintenance in this life of the Diuell and not of God 8
way vnto the gift of repentance 15 PAVLE therefore did not sinne against the holie Ghost who persecuted Christ and his members whome he knew not 1. TIM 1. 16 Although this sinne bee voluntary yet it followeth not that euery sinne which is voluntarie and committed against the conscience is irremissible 17 But contrariwise although these sins are horrible whether they be committed of infirmitie or of malice yet are they forgiuen vnto those that repent as they were vnto DAVID PETER and others 18 The counsel of God concerning the saluation of the elect cannot be dissanulled and therefore the elect cannot be guilty of this sinne 19 Neither doe all the reprobate necessarie fall vnto this sin seeing originall sin is sufficient to condemne them 20 This sinne is placed in the heart of man and therefore seeing God is the searcher of the heart diligent heed is to bee taken least that being carried away with a preposterous zeale we rashly passe sentence against any in judgeing them to be guilty of this sinne 21 Yet are they to be seriouslie admonished who continue to shewe themselues disobedient vnto the admonitions and judgements of God least that being at the length hardened by the Lords just judgement they run headlong vnto this downe-fall Defended by IOHN HALBERIVS CORTRACENVS PRINCIPLES CONCERNING THE RESVRRECTION OF THE FLESH LXXX 1 THe rest of the Articles of our faith being hitherto sufficientlie handled two of them remaine yet to bee discussed namely the resurrection of the flesh and life euerlasting 2 Although the Sonne of God by taking vpon him our nature by dying and rising againe hath performed the parts of our saluation Although also he doth bestow that quickning Spirite of his vpon all those that trulie beleeue the Gospell It remaineth as yet notwithstanding that what hath bene performed in him who is our head be also performed in vs being his members 3 Hence must the faithfull learne both day and night to meditate vpon the marke and shutting vp of their happinesse and to bee continuallie desirous of the same in such sort as although they bee tossed in this worlde by diuers and daungerous stormes of temptation raised vp against them by the Deuill the Worlde and the Fleshe they may yet continue firme and immooue-able in faith and in the hope of the liuing GOD and of the Lord Iesus Christ 4 Euen as death entred into the world by the sinne of the first ADAM whence the necessitie of death did arise Euen so wee affirme that death is abollished in the saints and chaunged vnto aeternall life by the vertue of the latter ADAM that is Christ to the end that as Christ did first of all rise againe vnto that aeternall life So all the elect may rise by him vnto the same 5 Now death is by a naturall generation conuaied vnto all the posteritie of the first ADAM whereas aeternall life is by spirituall ingraffing into the second ADAM deriued vnto his members 6 In this respect is the name of ADAM attributed vnto Christ namely that as ADAM was the stocke of mankinde breathing out poison according vnto the deadlie nature So Christ is made by grace the root of all the Saints powring the juice of eternall life into his members Wee doe therefore condemne the Philosophers who drewe the cause of death not from sinne but from this Aixome in naturall Philosophie vz. whatsoeuer is compounded is subject vnto dissolution Much more doe wee detest the PELAGIANS who teach that sinne and therefore death did arise not from the deprauation of nature in ADAM but from the voluntarie imitation thereof the which errour PAVLE dooth ouerthrowe as by manie Argumentes so by this most clearelie in that Infants themselues also are subject vnto death 7 Although that all sinnes which are the cause of death are truly remitted vnto the beleeuers yet notwithstanding are they no lesse subject vnto death then the very wicked themselues and that for two causes First because that the roote of sinne which is called originall sinne is not vtterlie abollished in them in this life but is brought to an end by death For then doth the strife betweene the flesh and the Spirite cease Secondly because that vnlesse they did shake of this life they could neuer be partaker of that other life which they hope for 8 And therefore we holde that the faithfull are depriued of this life rather by the mercie of God calling them vnto that aeternall kingdom then because that death is the reward of sinne 9 And on the other side that the vnfaithful do not rise by vertue of the resurrection of Christ which is alwaies vnto saluation and is bestowed vpon his members but by the force of that curse of God whensoeuer thou shalt eat of the fruit hereof thou shalt die the death 10 For seeing this degree doth comprehend both the deathes but especially the second which is eternall it must needes be that the vnfaithfull also shall rise againe whereas otherwise their bodies except they should bee joyned again with their soules should escape eternal paines which is ment by the second death 11 The whole person of euery man wholie considered but not in part is said to rise again For as the body only is said to lie down so the same alone to speak properly shall rise againe Whereas the soule seeing by death it hath suffered no detriment in the essence thereof can bee sayd to rise again but metaphorically as when it is brought by the Spirite of Christ from the seruitude of sinne wherein it was dead and wherein it could not so much as thinke much lesse will or doe the things that are of God into that holie libertie which is the way vnto eternall life We do therfore condemne them who dream that the soules seperated from their bodies are a sleepe and that they shall arise togeather with the bodies And we doe also detest the opinion of HYMENEVS and PHILETVS who did not distinguishe the spirituall from the corporall resurrection 12 The Scripture declareth by manifest testimonies that the soules of the faithfull who die in the Lorde are receiued of christ into that eternal paradise situated aboue all heauens whervnto Christ did ascend and that they are there conuersant with Christ being partakers in their measure of blessednes and felicity wheras on the other side the word of GOD and the consideration of thinges that are contrary doe shew that the soules of the wicked are thrust into hell and there tormented in their manner 13 The same bodies that lay down shal rise but not in the same qualities as the verie same body of Christ which was crucified buried did arise but not hauing those qualities wherewith it was endued when it was crucified dead and buried Yet this is the difference in that the bodie of Christ felt no corruption and therefore did ouer-come the power and effect of death euen in the verie house of death But our bodies are deliuered from corruption which seemed