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A10133 Iacobs vovv, opposed to the vowes of monkes and friers The first volume in two bookes; of the Holy Scripture, and euangelicall counsels. Written in French by Mr. Gilbert Primerose, minister of the word of God in the Reformed Church of Burdeaux. And translated into English by Iohn Bulteel minister of the gospel of Iesus Christ.; Voeu de Jacob. English Primrose, Gilbert, ca. 1580-1642.; J. B. (John Bulteel), d. 1699. 1617 (1617) STC 20390; ESTC S112003 232,060 268

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by tradition from our fathers not with corruptible things as siluer and gold but with the precious bloud of Christ as of a Lambe without blemish and without spot As many titles and names of God so many arguments for God against vs. r Isai 66.2 To whom will I look to him that trembleth at my word His Counsell is his word He is our Lord and Father ſ Mal. 1.6 A sonne honoureth his father and a seruant his master If then I bee a Father where is mine honor and if I be a Master where is my feare This honor and feare consists principally in that we obey his voice that we say vnto him with Samuel t 1. Sam. 3.10 Speake Lord for thy seruant heareth He is our shepheard and we are his sheepe and this is the marke of his sheepe u John 10.27 My sheepe heare my voice and I know them and they follow me Hee that heareth him not is none of his x Iohn 8.47 He that is of God heareth Gods words yee therefore heare them not because ye are not of God said Christ vnto the Iewes y 1. Pet. 2.9 We are a chosen generation a peculiar people saith Saint Peter and Saint Paul z 1. Cor. 6.19.20 Yee are not your owne for yee are bought with a price And therefore we ought not to haue any will but his whose wee are to follow it in all things If these Counsels depended on our wil we should be our owne against the Apostle and against the right whereby the slaue is subiect in all things to him that hath purchased him and is despoiled of all libertie and disposing of his owne will I appeale now vnto the conscience of the Author of the Pastorall Letter that he tell me vpon his soule if he thinke that God can Counsell a thing vnto man whereunto man is not bound to yeelde and render quicke and speedie obedience which hee may reiect without putting his soule in danger The clause of his conclusion sheweth euidently that he thinketh so For if he esteemes not his pretended Counsels to be Commandements If he beleeues that they may bee reiected without offending God with what equitie conscience hath he stormed and thundered against those yea made a seisure of the possessions of those that haue reiected them V. But whatsoeuer hee thinkes the truth shall bee alwaies one and the same and if hee will denie it shee will defend her selfe and will get her selfe credit against his credit Hee saith that Saint Pauls aduice and iudgement is a Counsell She saith euen by the mouth of Saint Paul that it is a Commandement for the Apostle hauing said both touching marriage and single life a 1. Cor. 7.17 As God hath distributed to euery man as the Lord hath called euery one so let him walke Which is an expresse Commandement and altogether necessarie in a Common-wealth and in the Church b 1. Cor. 7.25 he addes and so ordaine I in all Churches where he vseth a Greeke word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifying to ordaine and commaund precisely as it appeares by the 25 verse where he saith 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Concerning virgins I haue no Commandement of the Lord. This will more euidently appeare by a like manner of speech which the Apostle vseth in this very same Chapter vers 12. where being asked if the partie that beleeueth ought to remaine with the party that beleeueth not who is ioyned to him by mariage he saith but to the rest speake I not the Lord. For God had set downe nothing thereof in the old Testament and the Lord had not giuen any Commandement thereof to his Disciples because the religion was yet limited within the borders of Iudea there was not then any diuersitie nor difference of religion betweene the husband and the wife But the Gospell hauing been carried vnto the Gentiles it happened that one while the husband did imbrace it another while the wife the one or the other remaining an Infidell Now the aduice that the Apostle giues them is a formall and flat Commandement * 1. Cor. 7.12 If saith he any brother hath a wife that beleeueth not and shee bee pleased to dwell with him let him not put her away c. They are words of command the reasons which hee addes to his aduice doe witnesse it First The vnbeleeuing husband is sanctified by the wife Vers 14. and the vnbeleeleeuing wife is sanctified by the husband So that their mutuall coniunction and conuersation cannot defile the partie which beleeueth Vers 15. Secondly But if the vnbeleeuing depart let him depart a brother or a sister is not vnder bondage in such a case And then if the vnbeleeuing remaine and consents to dwell with the beleeuing the beleeuing is bound in such a case Thirdly God hath called vs to peace wherefore he that beleeueth ought not to disturbe the peace of the house Fourthly For what knowest thou Vers 16. O wife whether thou shalt saue thy husband Or how knowest thou O man whether thou shalt saue thy wife Now all are bound by Gods Commandement to doe all that which can saue a soule from death Vers 17. But as God hath distributed to euery man as the Lord hath called euery one so let him walke And who can denie but that euery one is bound to follow the gift and calling of God Behold how impertinent it is to conclude that the Apostles iudgement is a Counsell left to a mans deuotion and will and not a Commandement because it is he that hath giuen it first and that the Lord had said nothing thereof before him VI. Notwithstanding let vs see what this pretended Counsell is The Apostle saith d 1. Cor. 7.39.40 Cui vult nubat Beatior autem si sic permanserit secundum meum consilium puto autem quod ego spiritum Deihabeam The virgin is a● liberty to be maried to whom she will but she is happier if she so abide after my counsell I thinke also that I haue the Spirit of God This translation is the Authors of the Pastorall Letters translation wherein there is a notable falsehood for the Apostle speaketh here of a widdow The wife is bound by the Law as long as her husband liueth but if her husband be dead she is at liberty to be maried to whom she wil c. And the Author of the pastoral letter expoūds these words of a virgin that hath not the right and power to marrie her selfe to whom she will being vnder the fathers authoritie and power vnto whom alone the liberty of giuing her in marriage appertaineth as the Apostle declareth e 1. Cor. 7.38 Qui iungit virginem suam benè facit qui non iungit melius facit He that giueth her in marriage namely his virgin doth well but he that giueth her not in marriage doth better A Text alleaged by the Author of the Pastorall Letter against himselfe for
Scribit sibi millia quinque Esse domi Chlamydum parten● vel tolleret omnes Exilis domus est vbi non plura supersunt Et Dominum fallunt prosunt furibus But in lieu and recompence of that they take all the bootie skin and all of the poore misused and guld foole who is desirous of their Merchandize he shal and must giue all his goods to the Cloyster will leaue by his testament hunger to his children pouertie to his parents and bequeath to the Monks and Friers and to their paunches and bellies all his goods his body to the Monastery his soule to their deuotions they refuse nothing they take all like the horseleech that hath two daughters which crie r Pro. 30.15 16. Giue giue and like vnto the graue the barren wombe and the earth that is not filled with water and the fire that saith not It is enough Their saying is Hic datur expoui paradifus venditioni Let them also heare that which Saint Peter saith to Simon the Magician ſ Act. 8.20 Thy money perish with thee because thou hast thought that the gift of God may be purchased with money And that of an Ancient registred in the Canon Law t 1. quaes 1. caus 12. Quicunque anathema danti anathema accipienti c. Accursed be the giuer Accursed be the receiuer This is the Simoniac all heresie How then if they be accursed and are not holy can they sanctifie others How can he that is accursed blesse IIII. Notwithstanding all this brokage and all this traffick if we will accept and admit of the saying of those that admire it is an Euangelicall life grounded vpon that which they tearme u Bellar. prafat in lib. de monachis Counsels of perfection Euangelicall Counsels which are the baste ground and foundation of the whole monasticall building Counsels which the Author of the Pastorall Letter exhorts euery one to follow with great promises of superabundance of glory to the superabundance and supererogation of their workes and with threatnings of excommunication and cutting off from the Church in this world and of eternal death in the other world to all them which shall disswade and diuert their children their parents or any others from so holy a purpose or they that oppose themselus to it or that hinder it Thus did the false Prophets in old time promise and threaten they did fill and stuffe with vaine and deceitfull hopes those whom they could seduce and with frighting and terrour those which would not heare them Wherefore if we shew as plainely and clearely as the Sunne is at noone-tide that Christ hath neuer counselled these things the Apostles neuer heard a word of them that there is no mention of them neither in the Law nor in the Gospell and that falsely they crie the Lord hath said it when as the Lord hath neuer spoken it may we not lawfully apply old things to new and cry and say vnto these faire promisers and terrible threatners x Ezech. 13.22 With lyes ye haue made the heart of the righteous sad whom I haue not made sad and strengthe ●●d the hands of the wicked that he should not returne from his wicked way that I should saue his life A Father bringing vp his children in that religion which is approued by the parties is threatned with excommunication and eternall damnation for this onely cause that beleeuing himselfe to be a Christian by consequent not beleeuing the Christian religion to be tied to any order he requires of his children the honour and obedience that they owe him according to God and the children who either by seducing or vitious inclination doe steale and go away from their fathers and mothers forsakes them and rebells against them are incouraged and imboldened in their impiety and rebellion by the promises of a Paradise in picture and of I know not what greater perfection of glory then euer had Adam and Eue the parents of all the liuing Abraham and Sarah the parents of the faithfull the Patriarches then Dauid Iehosaphat Iosias then all the Prophets all the Apostles and Euangelists and a thousand million of Saints that were neuer Monkes or Friers euer had y Iob 13.12.13 Your remembrances are like vnto ashes and your bodies to bodies of clay hold your peace let mee alone that I may speake and let come on me what will CHAP. II. I. The Author of the Pastorall Letter saith that the Euangelicall Counsels are of the Law II. That is refuted by the declaration of the difference there is betweene the Law and the Gospell III. The Law alwaies commaunds and neuer counsels IIII. If the Counsels were of the Law all should be bound to obserue them V. As they are not of the Law so are they not of the Gospell THe Lord said of the Prophets of Iuda which prophesied out of their owne hearts a Ier. 23.22 If they had stood in my counsell they had caused my people to heare my words If then the Author of the Pastoral Letter who preacheth to vs nothing but Euangelicall Counsels hath stood in the Gospell of God hee will proue his Counsels by Gods words All the words of God are in the holy Scriptures he will then proue them to vs by the holy Scriptures The holy Scriptures are wholly comprehended in the Law and in the Gospell hee will then finde them and light on them either in this or in that in the one or in the other he makes them parts of the Law let vs here his words Now deare soules Pag. 8. The Law of God consists in two points to depart from euill and to imbrace and doe good The first comprehends all that is forbidden which wee terme negatiue precepts The second that which is commanded to be done and that againe is diuided into Precepts and Counsels c. II. Iob said to his friends whom he called b Iob 13.4 5. forgers of lies Physicians of no value O that you would altogether hold your peace c Prou. 17.28 and it should be your wisedome euen a foole when he holdeth his peace is counted wise and he that shutteeh his lipps is esteemed a man of vnderstanding That should haue been practised here for there is no truth no wisedome in all his words these Counsels are termed by the Author of this Letter Euangelicall Counsels How then doth he say that they are of the Law I think that he knowes not that the Law and the Gospell differ not in circumstance onely but in substance first the Law proposeth and sets forth the iustice of God wholly naked simple absolute without any mention of mercie the Gospell propounds and sets before our eyes the Iustice of God ioyned with his Mercy the Iustice of God on Iesus Christ our pledge d 2. Cor. 5.21 who hath been made sinne for vs the Mercy of God towards vs that are made the righteousnesse of God in him So Saint e Acts 13.39 Paul By
strength is to loue him pro viribus according to his strength He saith somewhat but he sayes not all for God lookes not to that which the sinner apostat bankrupt of his graces can now doe He askes and exacts that which man whom hee hath created according to his image inricht with all his blessings made a guardian of all his goods doth owe him That man hath receiued of God his bodie his soule all his faculties all the powers of his soule he owes then himselfe wholly vnto God and there is nothing in him which ought not to be incessantly bandied and bent to his seruice and to the seruice of his neighbour for his sake without reseruation and exception of degree without restriction of condition without limitation of time All that which man thinkes saies doth ought to be thought said done for Gods glory and there r 1 Cor. 10.31 is no place time action in the which hee ought not but procure and aduance his glory He is bound and obliged to him in a threefold manner First by right of Creation for he is bound to doe all that Adam did in his state of innocencie Adam by bond of nature did loue God with all his heart with all his soule with all the faculties of his soule with all the powers of all his faculties Euery man ought to doe as much we haue wasted and consumed Gods goods and by our owne fault are brought to that extremitie that we haue not wherewith to pay But pouertie and specially that which proceeds from bad husbandry and vnthriftinesse is no acquittance and binds not the creditor to cancell and blot out our bill and obligation and cannot hinder the creditor to aske iustly that which is his due Secondly by right of redemption we are the redeemed of our Lord Iesus he hath purchased vs with his owne pretious blood And there is nothing in vs for the which he hath not spilt his bloud nothing therefore but ought to bee for him but we are bound to dedicate and consecrate to his glorie in the highest degree and with the greatest intention that can be possible to the creature This is the argument of the Apostle Saint ſ 1. Cor. 6.19 20 Paul Ye are not saith he your owne far ye are bought with a price therefore glorifie God in your bodie and in your spirit which are Gods We ought therefore to glorifie God in all that with belongs vnto him wee ought to giue him all that which hee hath purchased and bought hee hath purchased and bought whole man all that is in man is his therfore he ought to dedicate himself to him in heart with his mouth and in effect saying with Dauid t Psal 103.1 Blesse the Lord O my soule and all that is within me blesse his holy name This is not arbitrable and at the will and pleasure of man but necessarie Thirdly by expresse commandement euery commandement is of necessite The Commandement is u Luk. 10.27 Thou shalt lone the Lord thy God with all thy hart and with all thy soule and with all thy strength and with all thy minde A Commandement which comprehends all the degrees and all the perfection of the loue of the creature towards his Creator For if there be any degree of loue which God hath not commanded surely the Law of God is not perfect and Dauid shall haue deceiued vs in saying x Psal 19● The Law of the Lord is perfect and naming it y Ps 119.105 a 〈◊〉 vnto his feets and alight vnto his path for there should bee certaine degrees of charitie the which he could not see by the light of the same law God himselfe should haue deceiued vs z Deut. 12.32 forbidding vs to adde to his Law or diminish from it and propounding it to vs in his Law as a perfect rule of all perfection conuenient and sutable to the creature in the highest degree and place It should also follow that it is not the image of holinesse which was in Adam before he did cast himselfe headlong from the height of himselfe that chartie is not a Rom. 13.10 that fulfilling of the Law against that which we haue learned of Saint Paul there being some charitie which the Law doth not commaund or some perfection which surpasseth the bounds and limits of charitie and climes higher then the loue of God and of our neighbour can doe That God could not exact of man a perfect charitie God not being able to demaund iustly that which man might iustly refuse him as not being bound to doe it These are the absurdities in the which they implicate and i●tangle themselues which doe expound the word of God according to their fancies and humor and restraine them only to the qualitie of our charitie God hauing extended them to the quantity by the word All. For he which hath made al will haue all or will not haue at all hee will haue no parther hee which hath giuen vs all our strength demaunds all being more then reasonable and iust that wee should imploy them all in and to his seruice as well as to our owne Let vs now retort vpon Bellarmine his owne exposition All are commanded to loue God with all their strength that is to say omni virtute proviribus with al their power according to their strength saith he Now the Monkes and Friers can doe nothing but that which is according to their force and strength therefore they can doe nothing but that which they are commaunded to doe and so the Counsels vanish away Againe wee must loue God according to our strength and force but our heart hath his strength our soule hath hir force our mindes haue their powers wee must therefore vnite and knit all this strength and might and put them together in working to do the Lords businesse we must not doe like b Acts 5.1 2. Ananias and Saphira who hauing vowed and dedicated all their possession to God kept backe part of the price of the same and reserued it for themselues We haue made a vow to him of all that wee are and that haue we done in our Baptisme we will then pay our vow all of vs ought to doe it he that keepes backe from him a part of himselfe or the least parcell of any part goes not roundly to work with him and is accursed by the holy Ghost crying c Ierem. 48.10 Cursed be he that doth the worke of the Lord deceitfully that is to say He that is slacke and remisse to doe the worke of the Lord and slacke indeed is he that goeth not to work with all his strength powers and faculties that diuides and shares them out betweene the heauen and the earth betweene sinne and pietie betweene man and God d Rom. 1.36 For of him and through him and to him are all things to whom bee glory for euer Amen VII Let vs prosecute the refutation and goe on with it There are say
way of exclusion by that which hee comprehends not and positiuely by that which he comprehends he retaines not the things of the Spirit of God the mysterie of the Crosse of Christ the great things which God hath done to vs the things which God will haue vs to doe i Mat. 16.17 Flesh and bloud reueale not these things but the Father which is in heauen k 2. Cor. 3.5 And we are not sufficient of our selues to thinke any thing as of our selues but our sufficiencie is of God He comprehends the things of God as things which are not of God l 1. Cor. 1.23 We preach saith the Apostle Christ crucified vnto the Iewes a stumbling blocke and vnto the Greekes foolishnesse Behold the distribution and diuision of a man that hath no excellencie in himselfe but his soule either he is a Iew and Christ is a stumbling block vnto him or elsen Greeke and Christ is foolishnesse vnto him He vnderstands the things which are displeasing vnto God vnderstands not those things which are pleasing vnto him God said of his people m Ierem. 4.22 My people is foolish they haue not knowne me they are sottish children and they haue none vnderstanding they are wise to doe euill but to doe good they haue no knowledge VVhat would he then say or what would not he say of them which are not his people Before the Floud n Gen. 6.5 God saw that the wickednesse of man was great in the earth and that euerie imagination of the thoughts of his heart was onely euill continually After the Floud he said * Gen. 8.21 The imagination of mans heart is euill from his youth Heere is no place for cauilling hee saith not some imagination of the thoughts but euery imagination of the thoughts hee sayes not that this imagination of the thoughts is for the most part euill but that it is altogether euil yea more plainely that it is onely euill and that not by respits and pauses but continually The reason is the naturall man is onely flesh the Scripture saies that he is flesh that he is in the flesh that is to say that he is corrupted yea drowned in corruption euen vnto the very highest part of his soule which is his vnderstanding as the Apostle speaketh of Infidels that o Tit. 1.15 their minde and conscience is defiled p Col. 2.18 and vainely puft vp by their fleshly mindes This is all that their good wit and spirit serues vnto to make them swel and puffe vp with presumption as Toades do with venome for as for God q Rom. 8.7 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The carnall minde is enmitie against God for it is not subiect to the Law of God neither indeede can be Christ Iesus speaking of these things saith r Mat. 6.22.23 The light of the body is the eye if therefore thine eye be single thy whole body shall be full of light but if thine eye be euill thy whole body shall be full of darkenesse If therfore the light that is in thee be darkenes how great is that darknesse The Lord teaching vs by these words that if the minde and vnderstanding which is the light of the soule be darkenes man cannot thinke will say doe any thing which is good and iust for the will to will well must be ruled by the minde vnderstanding well and the bodie to doe well must bee gouerned by the will willing well that which is good Now the Scripture saith of the vnregenerated man that ſ Esay 48.4 his neck is as an iron sinew and his brow brasse VVhat is harder then iron or brasse such is the will of man but the iron is tractable and plyant to the hammer the fire can mollifie it and make it pliant it can bee framed and fashioned in diuers formes by the hammer It is not so with mans will it cannot bee softned wherefore the Scripture compares it vnto a stone and by such a comparison declares that it is inflexible vnto good as a stone that breakes but neuer bowes t Ezech. 36.26 A new heart will I giue you and a new Spirit will I put within you and I will take away the stonie heart out of your flesh and I will giue you an heart of flesh Our heart is naturally so inflexible to godlinesse that God promiseth not to correct it or strengthen it but to take it away and to giue vs in stead of that an heart of flesh a pliable heart a heart framed and fashioned to the obedience of his commandments He promises to change the whole nature not in regard of the substance of it but in respec of the euill qualities thereof which are ours and make vs saplesse and without life when question is of the things of God in stead of which he will put in vs holy qualities by the which hee will fashion vs and transforme vs to his will After this sort our will is described priuatiuely and exclusiuely God hath described it also positiuely saying u Ier. 17.9 The heart is deceitfull aboue all things and desperately wicked In a word all they that are out of Christ Iesus are termed by the holy Ghost x Ephes 2.1 dead in trespasses and sinnes and by consequent destitute of all principle of mouing and of spirituall life what knowledge soeuer they haue of this life and what dexterity industrie and addresse soeuer they shew in the things of this world and therefore wee must not thinke it strange if the Apostle calls all of vs y Ephes 2.3 children of wrath Let a man iudge now if those that are such naturally vnapt vnto all good inclined naturally vnto all euill they that are the obiect of Gods anger can bee called good to begin nay to think any good thing To be good trees we must be taken away from our stock and stemme plucked out from the old Adam transported and transplanted in a new soile grafted into the free Oliue tree in corporated in Christ Iesus who hath pronounced this sentence z John 15.5 I am the Vine ye are the branches he that abideth in me and I in him the same bringeth forth much fruit for without me ye can doe nothing They that are not regenerated are not grafted into Christ the meanes of the vnion of the Elect with Christ is his Spirit and these are a Iude 19. sensuall hauing not the Spirit Some of them may haue and haue the Spirit bridling and restraining them staying and repressing the boyling and surging of their flesh as it is happened vnto many Heathen which haue been esteemed vertuous men because God willing to preserue the states and families of this world by good order and ciuill gouernement gaue them the gift to hide their vices but none of them euer had the sanctifying spirit to mortifie their flesh It is the priuiledge of the members of Christ Iesus of those that in him are made by grace the childrē of God
being past feeling haue giuen themselues ouer vnto lasciuiousnesse to worke all vncleannesse with greedinesse This is the description of a man not regenerated and renewed of the Iew as well as of the Gentill of him that is vnder the Law as well as of him which is without the Law of the Christian who is in the Church as of the Infidell which is out of the Church II. g Isai 64.6 New we are all as an vncleane thing and all our righteousnesse are as filthie raggs This is the description of the regenerate and renewed the confession of the greatest Saints which say h Dan. 9.5 c. we haue sinned and committed iniquitie and haue done wickedly and haue rebelled 〈◊〉 by departing from thy precepts and front thy iudgements neither haue we hearkened vnto thy seruants the Prophets which spake in thy name O Lord righteousnesse belongeth vnto thee but vnto vs confusion of fa●et to our Kings our Princet and our Fathers because wee haue trespassed against thee As the prayer of euery one is Forgiue w●●●● trespasse● Those can doe no good they haue neither the will nor the power These say with Saint Paul i Rom. 7.18 To will is present with me but how to performe that which is good I find●●●t Therefore these also cannot keepe the Law in that perfection which it requires of men in this life they aime and make towards the perfection and doe aduance and draw neere vnto it more and more but they shall not attaine vnot it vntill that being vnclothed of this body of sinne which doth beset them they bee clothed vpon with their house which is from heauen and that will we proue by fiue arguments III. First the most regenerate and holy are not more renewed more holy then the holy Apostle who said of himselfe and of all the Saints k Rom. 8.23 We haue the first fruits of the Spirit The first fruites are as it were an handfull taken from the whole heape our sanctification therefore in this life is little in comparison of the full haruest which wee shall rape in the life to come for we are regenerated and renewed but in part successiuely and by degrees much of the old infirmitie remaining in vs and drawing vs to sinne with such vigor and force that the Apostle himselfe complaines saying l Rom. 7.21 I finde a law that when I would doe good euill is with me He had that from the originall malice which remained as yet in him and m August in Ioan trac 41. Minuitur in vita proficientium quod in vita consumitur perfectorum which diminisheth onely in the life of those which profit and goe on as it is fully consumed in the life of those which haue attained vnto perfection whence else-where he saith of himselfe n 2. Cor. 4.16 Though our outward man perish yet the inward man is renewed day by day Which words Saint Austin hath well peised and pondered and from whence he bath drawne this doctrine o Aug. de peccat merit lib. 2. c. 7. Prefect● qui de die in diem ●dbuc renouatur nondum totus est renouatus in quantum nondum est renouatus in tantum adbuc in ve tustate est He which is renewed day by day is not as yet wholly renewed and in as much as he is not altogether renewed so much is hee in his old nature And by consequent a child of this world euen as in so much as he is renewed he is the childe of God and such are all the regenerate of whom the Apostle saith that in them p Gal. 5.17 The flesh Insteth against the Spirit and the Spirit against the flesh and these are contrary the one to the other so that yee cannot do the things that ye would The flesh is that which is not as yet renewed in the minde in the will in the affections as it appeares by this that the Apostle attributes to the flesh a certaine q Rom. 8.7 wisedome r Col. 2.18 reason and vnderstanding and placeth among the works of the flesh ſ Gal. 5.20.21 Idolatrie and the heresies that are conceiued and borne in the minde and exhorts vs t Ephes 4.23 to be renewed in the Spirit of our minde In which respect he saies of himself * Rom. 7.18 I know that in me that is in my flesh dwelleth no good thing vnderstanding by his flesh not his body for if he said vnto the Corinthians u 1. Cor. 6.19 Know ye not that your body is the Temple of the holy Ghost did hee not know that his was but this infirmitie or rather peruersitie which did as yet dwel in al the parts of his soule although it did not rule there was indeede mortified but not as yet dead The Spirit therefore is that which is renewed in the minde in the will in the affections and in all the parts of the soule and of the body The flesh is the old man the Spirit is the new man these two men are in euery true Christian they are both together at one time in one and the same subiect of the minde of the will of the affections in the minde and vnderstanding knowledge and ignorance of the same thing faith and vnbeleefe in the will confidence and distrust in the affections loue and hate c witnesse the father of the lunatick who confessed saying x Mark 9.24 I beleeue and thereupon presently prayde to Christ saying helpe thou mine vnbeliefe It is with the regenerate man Similitude 1 who is flesh and spirit as with a man raised vp from a long and grieuous maladie who makes a few turnes in his chamber but trailing his leggs after him and will stand vpright but it will be in leaning on his staffe hauing in him as yet by reason of the reliques of his sicknesse an vniuersall indisposition in all the parts of his body Or else it fareth with such a man Similitude 2 as with the aire in the dawning or breake of day which is not altogether cleare and light as it is at noone it is not partly light partly darke as the Moone is in the increase and waine but is in all her parts cleare and blacke obscure and enlightned Wee may also compare it vnto luke-warme water Similitude 3 which in all her parts is mixed with heate and cold Similitude 4 or vnto a liquor mingled with water and wine wherein is neither pure wine nor pure water but the whole is wine and water together euen vnto her most insensible parts although such a liquor will sauour somtimes more of water then of the wine and again somtimes more of wine then of water as the regenerate man in the beginning of his regeneration is more carnall then spirituall and in the progresse of the same is more spirituall then carnall These two men therefore doe fight in vs in lusting the one against the other the flesh lusteth two waies First it
of the imperfect worke on Saint Matthew o Chrysost in Matth. c. 3. hom 4. To be made righteous and worthy of heauen and therefore to bee washt in his bloud to be renewed and sanctified by his spirit which are the two significations of Baptisme IIII. If any among the liuing should haue beene cleane and pure from sinne The Virgin Marie the holy Virgin the mother of our Lord Iesus Christ ought to haue been of whom the holie Ghost witnesseth that p Luke 1.42 she is blessed among women and whom vntill the worlds ende q Luke 1 48. all generations shall call blessed Blessed certaine for hauing receiued that grace to be the mother of our Sauiour and not for being without sinne and exempted from the number of those which haue neede of a Sauiour for shee was conceiued in sinne according to the Lords sentence r John 3.6 That which is borne of flesh is flesh To be borne of flesh is to bee borne by generation according to the ordinarie course of nature whosoeuer is so borne is flesh ſ August de fide ad Pet. Di●conum c. 26. Account surely saith Saint Austin that he is borne in originall sinne subiect to impietie subiect vnto death and therefore the childe of wrath The reason is rendred by Saint Paul t Rom. 5.12 where he saith By one 〈◊〉 sinne entred into the world and death by sinne so death passed vpon all men for that all haue sinned And there is none exempted from this number but Iesus Christ u Chrysost de quinta feri● passionis hom 6. who alone knoweth not what is sinne alone doth not participat with our fault and did one nothing to sinne and death saith S. Chrysostome following Saint Paul the Apostle who attributes vnto Christ alone the prerogatiue to haue been x Heb. 7.26 holy harmelesse vndefiled separate from sinners because indeed he alone y Pet. diaconus ad Fulgentium is borne after a new manner of generation borne I say of man of the substance of a chosen virgin but not by man not by naturall generation but by the supernaturall operation of the Holy Ghost who of the substance of the virgin formerly sanctified by him did appropriate and fit a body to our Sauiour and inspired in the same a most pure and a most holy soule This new manner of generation and conception without spot hath caused that our Lord hath not felt the contagion of earthly corruption being hee alone a Dan. 2.45 who hath beene cut out of the mountaine without hands being the immediate worke of the hand of God which not appertaining to the holy Virgin conceiued and borne after the manner and common order of other men she hath had neede of Gods grace and mercie as other men haue she hath prayed forgiue vs our debts as well as other men and as a member of the Church shee hath beleeued for her selfe all the Articles of the beliefe and this Article among the rest I beleeue the remission of sinnes To be short seeing that she died as other men doe she was a sinner as other men are b 1. Cor. 15.56 for the sting of death that which giueth life and strength to death is sinne take away the sting from death and it is dead whosoeuer is without sinne as all of vs shall bee in the Kingdome of heauen may boldly defie death and vpbraide it with the Apostle c 1. Cor. 15.55 O death where is thy sting O graue where is thy victorie That is the reason why Christ could not haue died if God d 2. Cor. 5.21 had not made him to be sinne for vs that is to say if he had not imputed vnto him our sinne as to him who had constituted himselfe the pledge and suretie for sinners and their prayer vnto the very last farthing or mite I beleeue religiously that the Virgin hath been a lesse sinner then other men but I also beleeue that a woman-sinner she hath beene as well as other men because she her selfe hath taught me to beleeue it so I read her Song and I see her publishing with a loud voyce e Luke 1.47 that her spirit hath reioyced in God her Sauiour In God therefore who hath forgiuen her her sinnes for Christ is not otherwise a Sauiour f Mat. 1.21 Thou shalt call his name Iesus saith the Angell to Ioseph for he shall saue his people from their sinnes and shall not saue them otherwise as he himselfe protesteth saying g Mat. 9.13 I am not come to call the righteous but the sinners to repentance h Mat. 15.24 I am not sent but vnto the lost sheepe of the house of Israel i Mat. 18.11 The Sonne of man is come to saue that which was lost for them alone hath he beene sent k Isai 61.1.2.3 Luke 4.18.19 to preach good tidings vnto the meeke and vnto the poore to bind vp the broken-hearted to proclaime libertie to the captiues and the opening of the prison to them that are bound to comfort all that mourne c. To them onely came he and them alone he calles vnto him l Mat. 11.28 Come vnto me all ye that labour and are heauie laden m Iohn 7.37 If any man thirst let him come vnto me n Mat. 9.12 that are sicke declaring that they that are whole and holy haue no neede of him wherefore either the Mother of our Sauiour was a sinner or our Lord and Sauiour was not her Sauiour and Redeemer and shee should haue sung for others and not for her selfe that the Lord o Luke 1.53.54 hath filled the hungry with good things and hath remembred his mercie which mercie she should neuer haue felt she should neuer haue thirsted after seeing shee should neuer haue felt the miserie of sinne nor the wrath of God the iust wages of sinne This is so cleare and apparent that it needeth not any longer and ampler proofe V. Notwithstanding if the consent of the Church can bee of some weight to make it the more credible it is the common and ordinarie voyce of the Church that p August cont Iulianum All humane flesh Christs flesh onely excepted is fl●sh of sinne because that q Idem contra Pelagium lib. 2. c. 40. ex Ambrosio of man and of the woman that is to say of the coniunction of their bodies none is without sinne and he that is without sinne is ingendred and borne without this conception And so all the rest Origen Chrysostome Anselme Fulgentius Bernard and Peter Lombard the Master of the Schoolemen all which write that the holy Virgin was conceiued in sinne and borne in iniquitie as all other men are And from thence Saint Bernard drawes an argument to condemne the feast of the conception of the Virgin Marie then newly instituted and ordained saying that r Bernard ad Canonicos Lugdun epist 174. Quum ritus ecclesiae
nescit non probat ratio non commendat antiqu● traditio the custome of the Church is ignorant of it reason approues it not neither doth ancient Tradition recommend it ſ Origen in Luc. homil 17. Origen goes further euen to her actuall sinnes and saith that she was scandalizd in the death and passion of our Lord that if she had not suffered scandall Christ should not be dead for her sinnes Saint Chrysostome accuseth her of ambition of ostentation and of vaine glorie in that when our Sauiour taught the people she with his brethren stood without and interrupted him t Mat. 12.46 desiring to speake with him u Chrys in Mat. homil 45. Consider saith hee the importunitie both of the mother and of the brethren for in stead that they should haue entred within and heard with the people or staied without vntill the end of the Sermon and then should haue resorted vnto him stirred vp with ambition and ostentation they call him forth in the presence of all the people to the ende they might seeme to commaund Christ easily and with great power and authoritie whence it appeareth that they were moued by some vaine glorie not making as then any great reckoning or estimation of him x Chrysost in Joan. homil 20. As much saith he expounding the miracle done by our Sauiour at the marriage in Cana of Galilee and surely when shee adrest her selfe to Christ saying vnto him y Iohn 2.3 4. They haue no wine If she had not done amisse nor had failed either in that she would prescribe vnto him a time to work miracles or in desiring by human affection and infirmity to be in more esteeme for his sake Christ had neuer answered her so Woman what haue I to doe with thee z Tertul. de Carne Christi c. 7. Tertullian saith no lesse and a Salmer comment in epist ad Rom. c. 5. disput 51. Salmeron the Iesuit tells vs that some haue proued and verified by two hundred Fathers some by three hundred Ca●etan by fifteene and they saith he irrefragable that the holy Virgin hath not beene preserued from all sinne VI. I write not these things to dishonour or disgrace the holy Virgin nor to match or equall any man with her in holinesse I render her all the honour can be giuen to a creature without transporting to her the honour due to the Creator I honour her remembrande I esteeme her I beleeue I say that b Luke 1.48 she is blessed according as she her selfe hath foretold I giue God thankes for the grace he hath done to her for the grace he hath done to the Church by her in making her the Mother of him who is the head the Spouse and Sauiour I striue and endeuour to ●mitate her humilitie her faith her meekenesse and other Christian vertues wherewith God had adorned and graced her and pray to God to giue mee grace to doe it This is all the honour which is due vnto Saints he which giues them more is an idolater he honours them not but dishonors them I reserue vnto Christ Iesus my onely Sauiour my onely Head my onely Redeemer my onely All the honour which the Scripture giues him and giues to none but him c Tertul. de pr●s●r c. 3. Soli enim Dei filio seruabatur sine delicto permanere For it was reserued to the onely Sonne of God to liue to be and abide without sinne Of all others it is written d Rom. 3.22 That all haue sinned and come short of the glory of God that is to say of the honour which God had giuen them creating them after his image in knowledge righteousnesse and holinesse that e Rom. 11.32 God hath concluded all in vnbeliefe that he might haue mercie vpon all VII In the second ranck after the Virgin I place the Apostles and I behold them acknowledging confessing bewailing their sinnes Saint Paul Saint Paul some twentie yeeres after his conuersion alreadie an Apostle and so farre yea so much aduanst in sanctification that he is not afraid to protest f Gal. 2.20 I liue yet not I but Christ liueth in me g Rom. 7. describes vnto vs an horrible warre that he felt in himselfe a perpetuall warfare of the flesh and the spirit by the which he was so diuided and distracted betweene euill and good that he cries out h Vers 14. I am carnall sold vnder sinne He had his minde enlightened and knowing the good he had also his will inclined to follow the direction of the minde and vnderstanding and to obey the Law and that had he as touching the inward man and as touching that that was renewed in him but he complaines that he had also in himselfe his flesh impugning and thwarting his good will and repugning his vnderstanding and the Law of God and haling him wil he ●ill he to commit the sinne he hates i Vers 15. for saith he that which I do I allow not behold the minde and vnderstanding enlightened condemning the euill for what I would that doe I not but what I hate that doe I. Loe the sanctified will abhorring the euill and notwithstanding he feeles in himselfe so great a peruer●itie that he doth the euill which he hates and condemnes and this peruersenesse is sinne the corruption of his nature withdrawing him from good and drawing him to euill k Vers 16. If then I doe that which I would not I consent vnto the Law that it is good l Vers 17. now then it is no more I that doe it but sinne that dwelleth in me And this sinne is his flesh his naturall corruption spred ouer all the parts of the soule and body which hinders him to doe the good hee would and forceth him to doe the euill hee hates as hee addes m Vers 18.19 For I know that in me that is in my flesh dwelleth no good thing for to will is present with me but how to performe that which is good I finde not for the good that I would I doe not but the euill which I would not that I doe c. And so continues his complaint and declares that not onely hee knowes approues wills the good but also loues it and takes delight in it n Vers 22. For saith he I delight in the Law of God after the inward man what was the cause then that he did it not or rather that he found not the meanes to perfect it The outward man his flesh which he termes o Vers 23. the Law of his members as he termes the inward man the Law of his minde as it followeth But I see another law in my members warring against the law of my minde and bringing me into captiuitie to the law of sinne which is in my members And surely those members are all the parts of the soule and body infected with sinne and this combat is so sharpe and harsh and the euent thereof so heauie
and dolefull in this life that nothing is left to him but to bemoane his miserie and call after death to be deliuered of it p Vers 24. O wretched man that I am who shall deliuer me from the body of this death Who Surely God by Iesus Christ who by the corporall death will deliuer and free the members of his body from the necessitie of sinning and will make them fully victorious ouer the flesh whence he concludes with this solemne action of thanksgiuing q Vers 25. I thanke God through Iesus Christ our Lord and comforts all those that are excercised with the like combat assuring them that r Rom. 8.1 Now there is no condemnation to them which are in Christ Iesus VIII The Pelagians ſ Hieron aduers Pelagian lib. 2. in principio in Saint Ieroms time did expound all these words of the vnregenerate man affirming that the Apostle speakes in the name and person of a man not as yet called iustified sanctified and not in his owne person There are some now adayes which maintaine the same opinion t August lib. 1. Retract c. 13. Saint Austin was at the beginning of this opinion but afterwards ouercome by the truth he retracts and recants acknowledging that in the words of the Apostle u Idem contra Iulian. li. 6. c. 11. is the groaning and heauie lamentation of the Saints warring against the concupiscence of the flesh After him x Prosper contra Collatorem c. 8. Vox vocati est sub grati● constituti Prosper writing against Cassian S●mipelagian and Father of many of our time saith that this sentence For to will is present with me but how to performe that which is good I finde not is the voice of a man called and that is vnder grace All the circumstances of the Text doe shew and expresse as much The Apostle speakes alwaies of himselfe and in the present tense I am carnall sold vnder sinne The things whereof he complaines cannot belong to any other then to the regenerate man for he allowes the good he wills the good he consents vnto the Law that it is good he delights in the same That is proper peculiar to a regenerate man y Psal 1.2 whose delight is in the Law of God he wills not the euil when he doth it he hates it when he doth it it is perforce as a poore gally-slue tied to his chaine is forced to goe where he would not shall we say that these words are of an infidell of a carnall man which drinketh iniquitie like water Surely the language of a carnall man is I doe that which is euill and I will doe it I doe not that which is good and I will not doe it It is his free will to will to doe euill to will not to doe good On the other side the speech of a spirituall man in this life is Alas I doe the euill which I would not doe for I hate it I doe not and cannot perfect the good I would doe I desire to perfect it for it is my delight As the language of man glorified in heauen is I doe not that which is euill and I will not doe it I doe that which is good and I will doe it Moreouer the Apostle writes that hee delights in the Law of God after the inward man there is no inward man in a carnall man he is all outward he thinkes meditates wills desires pursues and followes eagerly after outward and worldly things The Apostle feeles after such a sort his sinne and esteemes yea findes it so heauie a burden that he publisheth himselfe as it were by proclamation miserable and wretched for the same and desires death with great affection to be deliuered and freed of it The man not renewed esteemes himselfe wretched when hee sinnes not he will not liue but to sin and would not die but when he can sinne no more The Apostle comforts himselfe in the grace and mercie of Christ Iesus his Sauiour and giues him thankes for it The man not regenerate who is such a one as wee haue described in the fifth and sixth Chapter knoweth he Christ Or if he knowes him doth he loue him or call vpon him Christ may be z Ier. 12.2 neere in their mouth but farre from their reines The marke wherewith God designes them is a Psal 14.4 They call not vpon the Lord. This doctrine hath excellent vses The regenerate man is compounded of the outward and inward man of the old and new man of the flesh and spirit he hath as yet in him the infirmities of the flesh it is a remedie against pride He hath in him the Spirit of Iesus Christ his sinnes are pardoned and forgiuen him and he shall not come into condemnation This is a remedie against despaire But of this we will hereafter speake IX If Saint Paul b 2. Cor. 12.4 who was caught vp into Paradise and heard vnspeakable words which it is not lawfull for a man to vtter found and felt himselfe faint and weake and often carried away captiue by his most secret and deare infirmities if hee confesse that c 2. Cor. 12.7.9 he hath had a thorne in his flesh for remedie against the which he had neede of the grace of God none of the other Apostles could boast or glorie to haue liued without sinne Not Saint Iames for hee rankes himselfe with sinners Saint Iames. saying d Iames 3.2 In many things WE offend all e Hierom. aduersus Pelagian lib. 2. Non pauca peccata sed multa nec quorundam sed omnium posuit Saint Peter He hath not saith Saint Ierome put downe a few sinnes but many not of some few persons but of all Not Saint Peter for hee hath also said that f 1. Pet. 2.24 Iesus Christ bare OVR sinnes in his owne bodie on the tree g Hier. aduers Pelag. lib. 1. J●reprehensibilis aut nullus aut rarus qui● enim est qui non quasi in pulchro corpore aut nae●um aut ve●rucam habeat There is none that is faultlesse or they are very rare saith Saint Ierome for who is he that hath not as in a faire body a mole a wart or some naturall marke for if the Apostle saith of Saint Peter h Gal. 2.14 Saint Iohn that hee walked not vprightly according to the truth of the Gospell and was to be blamed in so much that Barnabas also was carried away with the like dissimulation who would chafe and be angry if that which the Prince of the Apostles hath not had be denied to him Not Saint Iohn who being the well beloued Disciple leaned on Iesus bosome for he also placeth himselfe amidst the number of sinners and saith i 1. Iohn 1.8 If WE say that WE haue no sinne WE deceiue our selues and the truth is not in VS And this is the voice of Saints k Aug. de peccat merit lib. 2. c. 7. Austin A
voice from whence Saint Cyprian inferres l Cypri de ●pere El●emosia The Martyrs that none can bee without sinne that there remaines as yet to those which are healed some wounds that whosoeuer saith he is without sinne is either proud or senselesse Not the Martyrs for it is written of all of them m Reuel 7.14 That they washed their robes and made them white in the bloud of the Lambe Then had they them soiled and distained and haue not found any thing in themselues wherewith to make them white n Reuel 14.5 These are such in whose mouth was found no guile Surely saith Saint Austin o August de peccat merit lib. 2. c. 7. because they haue reproued themselues sincerely and therefore no guile was found in their mouth For if they said that they had had no sinne they should deceiue themselues and truth should not be in them and where truth is not there is vntruth X. Not the whole Church The whole Church which so long as it warres in this vale of miserie beleeues by an article of faith the remission of sinnes not surely the sinnes of others but her owne sinnes for sinnes are pardoned to none but to the Church This is her voice p Canticles 1.5 I am blacke but comely She is not saith Saint q Bernar. in Cant Serm. 25. Bernard without some spot of blacknesse but surely here in the place of her pilgrimage for the time will 〈◊〉 when the Spouse of glory will make her glorious without spot without wrinkle and such like things But if she should now say that she hath no blacknesse at all she should deceiue her selfe and truth should not be in her Neither saith she so but contrariwise she cries incessantly vpon God in all her members r Mat. 6.12 Forgiue vs our trespasses in her most holy members For as Saint Austin saith ſ August in Psal 142. The excellent Rammes amongst Christe sheepe haue receiued commandement to pray so Then how much more the rest whereof none can say that he is without the contagion of ●●●ne that he neede not pray euen so Not Moses not Samuel not Elias not Iohn Baptist not Saint Peter not Saint Paul not Saint Iohn not any one of those that haue obtained good witnesse and testimony from God in the Scripture This voice this language ●aith t Gregor Nysse de orati domin Serm. 5. Gregorie of Nyssen appertaines vnto them all If they were now in the world liuing on earth in this humane frailty the necessitie of sinning would impose vpon them a necessitie of praying in regard of their sinnes past Forgiue vs our sinnes and in respect of their sinnes to come Leade vs not into t●ntation and that not onely for others but also for themselues not onely in humilitie as the Pelagians said but also in truth for saying they were sinners by humilitie and not being sinners truly they should lie through humilitie and in lying they should bee sinners as it h●th beene decided of old by u Concil Mileuit can 6.7.8 the Councell held at Mileui●um in Numidia with denunciation of Anathe●● and curse against those that made the Apostles and other Saints confessors of their sinnes for humblenesse sake in 〈◊〉 not in truth x Canon 8. Quis enim ferat ●rantem non hominibus sed ipsi D●min● menti●n●em It were saith the Councell to lie vnto God and not vnto men Let vs therefore conclude this argument with Saint Ierom● and say y Hieron ad Rusticum epist 44. If Abraham Isaac Iacob the Prophets also and Apostles haue not beene without sinne If the purest wheate hath had his straw and chaffe what can bee said of vs of whom it is written z Jerem. 23.28 What is the chaffe to the wheate saith the Lord CHAP. VIII I. The places aboue mentioned are expounded and vnderstood of veniall sinnes by Bellarmine II. Euery sinne is mortall in his nature which appeares III. If it be measured to God IIII. To the Law V. And to the death of Iesus Christ VI. All sinnes are veniall by grace to him that is in Christ Iesus VII Are notwithstanding some greater then othersome VIII The last Argument Neuer any Monke kept neuer could haue kept the Law BEllarmine a Bellar. de monach c. 13. §. 32.36 expounds all these places of veniall sinnes without the which we are not or are very rarely in this life notwithstanding for all this we may be iust and doe workes of supererogation II. This man when hee writ thus was doubtlesse cauterized and seated in his conscience in regard of the feeling of sinne And thus it is that now adaies they sew cushions vnder the elbow of the poore abused world and crie Peace peace to them for whom there is no peace they make many soules liue that should not liue flattering them in their sinnes by a wretched distinction of sinnes into mortall and veniall a distinction contrary vnto the Scripture which speaking of sinne in generall without distinction without limitation saith b Rom. 6.23 that the wages of sinne is death and denounceth plainely that c Ezech. 18.4 the soule that sinneth it shall die Let sinne be measured to God to the Law to Christ Iesus and they will finde that it is so III. To God d Psal 51.4 Against thee thee onely haue I sinned and done this euill in thy sight saith Dauid vnto God and the most holy men must say the like with him for can a man sinne without transgressing the Law of God and therefore without offending God And who will say that a trespasse against God is a veniall sinne Among vs men the sinne and offence multiplies according to the proportion of the person which is offended and of the place where it is committed The wrong done to a priuate person either in word or deede may bee repaired and satisfied by an honourable amends or by a pecuniarie fine and amercement but to thinke ill of his Prince is a crime of high treason to speake ill of him deserues not the gallowes not the sword but the pinsers the wheele the fire the extremest torments If a sonne rebell against his father if the seruant disobeieth his Master if the subiect despiseth the commandements of his Soueraigne the father thinkes he hath iust occasion to disinherit his son the Master to vse hardly his seruant the Lord to reiect his subiect to pursue him to pr●scribe him to put him to death And the Creator of all the King of Kings and the Lord of Lords the Father the Redeemer the Sauiour of vs all shall bee wronged and iniured in words in thoughts in bad and wicked deedes and actions by his creatures by his seruants by his children by his subiects and shall be wronged and offended in his owne house and in his presence and some one or many of euill seruants shall call and crie vnto their fellow-mates and companions that it
esse in fide In mulieribus errorem significauit Saint Ambrose expounding the words of the Apostle to the Corinthians that were married I am iealous ouer you with godly iealousie for I haue espoused you to one husband that I may present you as a chaste virgin to Christ He writes that the Apostle requires that they be virgines in the faith He alleageth to this purpose these words of Saint Iohn and saith He signified the error in women because that error began by a woman as also he names the woman Iezabel because of Achabs wife who by a zeale shee bare towards Baal killed the Prophets of God vnderstanding the idolatrie whereby the manners and the truth of faith are corrupted and tainted Excludis ab hac gloria sanctos quia omnes Apostoli exceptis Io●●ne Paul● ●xo●es habuerunt For if you vnderstand by the women light women indeede and thinkest that they are called virgines because they haue kept their bodies vntoucht thou excludest the Saints from this glory because all the Apostles except Iohn and Paul haue had wiues and see if it be f●●●t to accuse the Apostle Saint Peter who is the first among the Apostles how much more among the rest Let vs heare Saint Austin or whosoeuer is Author of the Homilies vpon the Reuelation g Jn Apocal. homil 11. Virgines hoc l●co non solum corpore castos intelligimus sed maximè omnem ecclesiam quae fidem puram tenet nulla adulterina haereticorum mixtione pollutam c. We vnderstand saith he by virgins not onely those that are chaste of body but principally the whole Church that holds a pure faith As the Apostle saith I haue espoused you to one husband that I may present you as a chaste virgine to Christ not polluted and defiled by the adulterous companie of heretickes nor tied by a wretched perseuerance to her liues ende vnto the dangerous alluring and deadly pleasures of this world without the remedie of repentance They are then virgins not corporall but spirituall not that haue kept their bodie from the lawfull touching of women but that haue preserued their soules from the vnlawfull touching of heresies compared to whores in the Scripture which being stored with cunning pranckes assurements and flatterings and which a thousand inticements doe make the ill aduised to swarue from their right way So the Antichristian heresie is called h Reuel 17.1.2 the great whore with whom the Kings of the earth haue committed fornication According to that which Moses and the Prophets say so often of the Idolaters that goe a whoring after the false gods l Origen in Leuit hom 12. Simplicitas fide● virginitas appellata est c. And contrariwise Origen saith that the simplicitie of faith is called virginitie c. and that the soule by the singlenesse of faith and puritie of hir actions is held to be a virgin We oppose therefore these Fathers to the others and doe affirme that these hundred and fortie and foure thousand are either the elect among the Iewes or all the elect of the Iewes and of the Gentiles few in number in comparison of the reprobates which haue not defiled themselues by whoredome with dumbe idols but haue followed in all their actions the conduct and leading of the Lambe of God adhering vnto him by faith as now they walke with him by sight enioying continually his glorious presence according as he had redeemed them by his blood and sanctified and separated them from the rest of the world for this ende as the first fruites were separated from the whole heape that remained common The spouse speakes of these virgins when she saith vnto her Spouse k Cant. 1.3 Because of the sauour of thy good ointments thy name is as ointment powred forth therefore doe the virgins loue thee Virgins surely not by vow of virginite and chastitie whereof there was no mention in Salomons time the parents thinking in that time that they did iniurie and wrong to their Virgins to their Families to their Tribe if they gaue not their daughters in marriage but virgins by spirituall chastitie and puritie as it hath been said CHAP. XX. I. The tenth obiection taken from examples II. The first example of the vestall virgins III. Impertinent and nothing to the purpose IIII. Saint Ambrose iudgement touching marriage V. And touching the vestall virgines VI. The second example of Iesus Christ who was neuer married VII Why Christ abstained from carnall matrimonie VIII Virginitie makes not virgines like vnto Christ IX The third example of the foure virgins daughters to Philip the Euangelist X. This example is false and impertinent XI The fourth example of virgines in Iustines and Cyprians time XII As much impertinent as the rest THere is no good worke in all the Scripture The tenth obiection but hath a commandement to doe it a promise to them that doe it and examples of Saints which haue done it Vowes are good workes say our aduersaries and Bellarmine and the Author of the Pastorall Letter haue laboured much to authorize them both by the Counsels of Christ as also by large promises made vnto the obseruers thereof But they haue turmoiled themselues in vaine and haue alleaged nothing that serues to their purpose They haue seene vanity and haue written lies Let vs see if they speake better to the purpose in the allegation of the examples of Saints that haue kept their Counsels II. The first example is that of the Vestall virgins or Nunnes of the Heathenish Romans Pag. 34. For so reade we in the Pastorall Letter The onely light of nature had taught the Heathens the price and value of this vertue and although few followed it yet all bad it in admiration witnesse Augustus the Emperour who gaue great rewards and prizes to virginitie Tit. Liui. 1. decad lib. 5. And Albinus seeing the Vestall virgins goe afoote commanded his wife and children to come downe from their chariot and made the virgins get vp in their place To this purpose the Author alleageth a long sentence of Saint Ambrose taking an argument from the honour that men gaue in time past vnto the Vestall virgins to the honour due to Christian virgins III. And in all that how many faults To say that the Heathen haue acknowledged by the light of Nature that virginitie was a vertue of great price and therewith to cal it an Euangelicall Counsell For if it be of the Gospell it is vnknowne by Nature the Gospell a Ephes 3.4.5 Rom. 16.25.26 being a mysterie which in other places was not made knowne vnto the sonnes of men as it is now reuealed vnto his holy Apostles and Prophets by the Spirit Flesh and bloud reuealeth nothing of the things of the Gospell how then could the Heathens that were nought but flesh bloud haue knowne the value of this virginitie the price and merit thereof the Aureolas that are reserued to it in heauen in illa parte
things whereof there was neuer any mention made but vnder the Gospell Here then the Author of the Pastorall Letter contradicts himselfe and to his contradiction addes an vntruth The Heathen saith he haue knowne the excellencie and price of virginity by the light of Nature What Heathen the ●●ings that are naturall are indifferently obserued by all Nations All Nations know by the light of Nature that there is a God and therefore there was neuer any Nation found to bee without a God and without some kinde and smack of Religion But all the world hath continued vntill the time of Monkes without esteeming so much virginitie except some few bewitched by the diuell For nature teacheth that maides haue been made for marriage being a thing naturall to desire mariage and vse it as to bee an hungrie and drie as to eate and drinke During the Law of Nature God said b Genes 2.18 It is not good that the man should be alone I will make him a helpe meete for him This helpe is the woman expressely created of God to be a meete helpe for him in the state of marriage The Law of nature hath been renewed by Moses and there is no mention of any price of virginitie of any promise made to it but contrariwise there is often mention of marriage and great are the promises that God hath made to that state which cannot bee but most holy and of great value to the Church of Rome seeing that she hath made a Sacrament thereof although in effect marriage and virginitie are things indifferent wherein there is neither vice nor vertue nor any part of the seruice of God For that which the Apostle saith of meate and drinke is true of all outward things The kingdome of God is not meate and drinke but right 〈◊〉 and peace and ioy in the holy Ghost Chas●●y whether in virginitie or in marriage is a vertue but corporall virginitie is no vertue c Clemens Alexand str lib. 3. Quemadmodum autem humilitas est mansuetudo non afflictio corporis ita etiam continentia est animae virtus quae non est in manifesto sed in occulto For as humilitie is the meekenesse and not the affliction of the body so continencie is a vertue of the soule which is not manifest but secret faith Clement affirming d Jbidem Paulo ante Quid enim a● non ●iset etiam continenter vti matrimonio that a man may vse marriage 〈◊〉 continencie And to shew that the Romans did abuse themselves in that opinion which they had conceiued of virginitie commanding that the continuall fire should be kept by these Vestal virgins as if they had been holier then the married women God on the other side ordained that the Priests which were all married e Leuit. 1.7 should put fire vpon the Altar and lay the wood in order vpon the fire f Leuit. 6.12 and should keepe the fire burning continually vpon the Altar Whence I could also conclude in like manner that matrimony is a great vertue and the price thereof is great The honour that Augustus and Albinus yeelded and gaue vnto the Vestals had reference to their office and not to their virginitie Now their office was the seruice of Deuils And if this be a good argument Augustus and Albinus did much honour to the Vestall virgines therefore they did much honour Virginite This will bee a better one God aduanced in great dignitie the high Priests which were all married he would haue them to beare on their forehead a plate of pure gold with this inscription g Exod. 28.36 Holinesse to the Lord and expressely ordained that all should haue them in singular estimation and reuerence therefore he hath th●● honoured marriage Let vs now iudge of the worth of this proofe Wee seeke the examples of those that haue kept Euangelicall Counsels and they alleage the superstition and idolatrie of the Vestall virgines the price of their virginitie the esteeme that was made thereof by two idolaters that knew not God After this manner they finde out purgatorie in Plato and Virgil and so might they reduce and bring backe all the Paganisme of the Heathens Then should their Priests among them geld themselues to obserue so much the better a single life and cleare the world of their bastards for in this sort did the Priests of Cybele the grand mother of the gods geld themselues Thus many Friers doe whip themselues till they fetch bloud for so did the Priests of h 1. King 18.28 Baal cut themselues after their manner with kniues and la●cers 〈◊〉 the bloud gushed out vpon them i Lucia de Dea Syria Apule●us lib. 8. de Asino Thus the Priests of the Syrian goddesse did flash and mangle themselues begging from dore to dore and gathering into their waller cor●e pease cheese bread all fortes of meates the best wine in their great leather bottles in their purses all manner of coine of brasse siluer or gold Thus 〈◊〉 the Papists celebrate Candlemas day in honour of the Virgin Marie the Queene of Heauen for thus did the Heathen celebrate it in honour of Proserpina the Queene of Hell the seruice remaines but the name is changed So are the Churches full of images of men and women representing the Saints of either sexe because the Heathen had their Temples adorned with the like images representing their gods and goddesses so we neede not to enquire any more what God commands and what the Saints haue done according to his Commandement but the examples of the Heathens shall be the rules of our actions O Christians how long will yee loue beleeue and follow them which seduce you by their lies IIII. Saint Ambrose Rhetorick is better then his Diuinitie in his bookes of virgines he was accused by those of his time that he preached and exalted too much virginitie Hee glories in it saying k Ambros de virginit lib. 3. Vtinam possem reuocare nupturas vtinam possem flammeum nuptiale pro integritatis mutare velamine Would to God I could repeale and cal● back those that will marrie that I could change their nuptiall vaile into a holy vaile of integritie This is to taxe obliquely marriage of vice and pollution contrary to the Apostle that saith l Heb. 13.4 Marriage is honourable in all and the bed vndefiled This is to desire that which the Apostle forbids m 1. Tim. 5.14 I will faith he that the younger women marry beare children guide the house giue none occasion to the aduersarie to speake reprochfully This is to contradict himselfe and to make way for false dealing and periurie For some lines after he sets downe with his approbation the sentence of our Lord prohibiting to dissolue n Mat. 19.9 marriage except it be for fornication and that of Saint Paul Art thou bound vnto a wife seeke not to be loosed For they which marrie doe promise one another firmely to liue together so