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A48286 The only vvay to rest of soule in religion here, in heaven hereafter: shewed plainly and succinctly by pure scripture, in three treatises: demonstrating, I. That the church was left by Christ, as the means to teach us his gospel. 2. Which is she that was left in that office. 3. What it is, she teacheth for gospel. By I.L. Bach of Div. Licensed by the university of Oxford, to preach throughout Engalnd, and late rector of L. in the county of S. now a Catholike. Lewgar, John, 1602-1665. 1657 (1657) Wing L1832A; ESTC R218105 64,778 221

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soon after him he left or at least designed they should leave something to remaine as the ordinary or perpetual means to teach it to others What is meant by the means Where by the means of teaching it I mean not any sort of meanes humanely authorized onely or fallible in its teaching or instrumentall only to some other creature or profitable only or necessary in some respects onely or sufficient to teach some part of it onely or to some creatures onely but the proper principall necessary and sufficient to teach every creature every particular of it and divinely authorized and assisted to that end and so deserving to be stiled in absolute and simple sense the Angel of the Lord or interpreter of his will to humane creatures the guide of mankind in the way to heaven the light of the world the Pillar or ground of the truth the Judge of the Christian Law the Chaire of Christ the Schoole of the Gospell the steward depositary or dispenser of the mysteries of faith the store-house or treasury of divine knowledge wisedome or truth the power or powerfull instrument of God unto salvation of all that believe or use it and its voice doctrine or teaching the word law oracles doctrine or Gospell of God Christ truth grace life or salvation c. the faith the truth the seed of grace the faithful word the sword of the spirit the forme of sound words or doctrine the depositum or treasure of heavenly truth left by Christ or his Apostles the whole revealed will or counsell of God the guide of faith the rule of religion c. Or of which it is or may be said it shall teach you religion if there arise a matter too hard for thee thou shalt goe to it to enquire ask or seek the Law of God at it or its mouth in controversie it shall stand in judgement it shall preserve knowledge it shall shew thee what thou oughtest to doe follow it make it your rule or guide prove all things by it by it we know the spirit of truth and spirit of error it is able to make you wise to salvation or to save your soules or to shew you the way to eternal life he that believes or followes it shall be saved or unto which God Almighty ever said Teach people or teach the Gospell To whatsoever creature these attributes offices properties phrases speeches or any one of them or any other to the same sense is rightfully given or appertaines that 's the meanes I speak of 8. Ground This meanes what ever it be is somewhere or other in H. Scripture set forth and named to us in most plain and expresse manner as being the fundamental of all fundamentals as to us within the Christian religion without which first known and certaine it is in vain for any man to talk of religion or to presume to judge of what is true or false pious or superstitious necessary or not necessary in any matter pertaining to it and which when it is known and certaine no more remaines for any man to doe that desires to know what he is to believe doe or avoid to obteining eternall salvation but only to find it out and hear believe and practice what it teaches comands or forbids as Gospell §. 2. The Question to he handled proposed Hither to you and we agree in our principles as rational men and Christians But then the Question is What is that means And it lies betwixt two The Church and H. Scripture For either he left them in quality of a Society or Community such as our Lawyers call a body corporate to have a permanency by succession and then the Church will be it or they were to leave some writing to teach in their stead or office at their death and then the Scripture will be it or he left them in quality of a Society as to some part of the office and they were to leave the Scripture in the other part and then both will be it By the Church then throughout this treatise What is meant by the Church I meane nothing els but a company or some company of men For this is description sufficient for the intent of this Treatise which is onely to distinguish her from the Scripture and the persons of the Apostles Nor do I mean by her the whole society so called nor any part of her as to any effect of justifying grace or salvation but properly and immediately that part by which she teacheth as I speak by my mouth and a University teaches by her Professors In which sense our B. Saviour used the name when he said Tell the Church Mat. 18.17 and S. Paul the Church is the pillar of truth 1 Tim. 3.15 And so in fine the quaestion is Whether the Church or the Scripture or both be the meanes left by Christ or his order for teaching his Gospell §. 3. The importance of it And it is as appeares sufficiently by what is said already the most transcendently-fundamental one possible to be within the Christian religion seeing by this meanes it is to be taught and all questions in it to be resolved And consequently it is of most transcendent importance what wee hold in it as you will quickly see if you but reflect on the consequences of it For 1. If H. Scripture be it 1. All reading of other books consulting Ministers or Divines going to Church to hear their Catechising or Sermons conferring or arguing one with another or any other acts or meanes whatsoever to this end to instruct or direct our selves in religion will be vain and superfluous yea improper but every one is to goe to the Bible and it alone and by it self alone For supposing it left in this office there will be no denying but it is as plain and intelligible by it self alone to any child or other novice having the use of reason as to the learnedst Divine in the world 2. No creature using it for his guide can offend God by any heresie superstition or prophanesse unlesse he believe or practice contrary to what it teacheth him according to his understanding of it 3. It will be out of the power of the Church to hinder or restraine any creature from reading and using it at his pleasure in any language 2. On the other side if the Church be it 1. all reading of Scripture by the people unto this end will be vain and superfluous yea improper but every one is to seek the Gospel at her mouth and hers onely 2. It will be in the power of the Church to permit or restrain the use of the Bible unto the people more or lesse thereafter as she in her prudence all things considered and not some only and in her charity to their souls shall judge it most expedient for them to their salvation 3. No man though baptized in Christs faith though believing never so humbly and firmly and practising never so fervently all that he finds in Scripture may
to the Church in publishing and dispersing her decrees and to their doctrine that it was by her approved 16.4 4. As they went through the Churches they delivered them the decrees of the Councell for to keep Act. 16.4 which was more then we finde they did any book of Scripture 5. When the good Christians heard what the Councell had decreed they rejoyced for the consolation of being certain now what was true doctrine in that point 15.31 6. And thus were the Churches established in the saith 16.5 8 Proofe Act. 20.20 27 32. 1. The Apostles by word of mouth committed unto the Church all things needfull nay but profitable only for them to know for the full discharge of their office unto salvation of themselves and their flock And so made her the depositary of what Christ had committed to them 2. That which they thus committed by word of mouth to the Church was in simple sense the word of grace nay expressely the whole counsell of God 3. This forme of doctrine thus taught by tradition was left and expressely recommended by the Apostles unto rhe Church for her sufficient rule and guide And now brethren I commend you to the word of Gods grace which is able to establish you c. v. 32. 4. And this at their death or as good as their death when they were never like to see one anothers faces more in this world I know that after my departure c. 5. So at their deaths they left the Church to continue for ever in all the same office and authority for feeding and ruling the flock of Christ wherein they then were or had been at any time afore and namely afore the writing of the New Testament Take heed to your selves and to the flock over the which the H. Ghost hath made you Bishops or as yours prophanely overseers to feed the Church c. CHAP. V. Proving it from the Epistles TO the practice and proceedings of the Apostles in their History accord the rules instructions exhortations and admonitions in their Epistles all setting forth and recommending unto us the Church for our guide and her teaching for our rule in such manner as if there were no such book as Scripture nor to be To name a few of the principal for instance 1 Proofe Rom. 1.1 Gal. 6.6 Eph. 1.13 Heb. 5.12 Iude 3.2 Io. 9. 1. It is their ordinary language to call the Churche's doctrine the word doctrine oracles Gospell c. of God Christ life salvation c. the faith the truth c. in simple sense 2. And not that preached by the Apostles only but by the Pastors among whom it was by accident if any were an Apostle Rom. 10.8 17. Heb. 13.7 Iam. 1.21 3. Nay that which was preached by Pastors of whom the Apostles none for certaine Col. 1.5 3.16 Nor can you say it was so called because it was the Scripture preached or in regard of its consonancy to it For 1. The Old Testament could give neither the matter nor rule for Evangelicall doctrine and very little of the New was written when S. Paul called it so in the first Epistle by him written 1 Th. 2.13 and S. Peter in the first that was written 1 Pet. 1.12 25. 2.2 2. Many Evangelicall doctrines then revealed were not written then to wit those mentioned in S. Iohn's Gospells and Epistles more then are in the other namely the institution of the Sacrament of Priestly absolution Ioh. 20.21 Christ's committing his flock to S. Peter Ioh. 21.15 3. The Epistles themselves expressly require all Traditions to be held unwritten as well as written and not those onely taught by the Apostles but by their Pastors Timothy Silvanus c. among whom it was by accident that S. Paul was one Hold the traditions which you have been taught whether by word or our Epistle 2 Thess 2.15 2. Proof Ro. 1.16 12.6 Eph. 6.16 1 Tim. 3.9 6.20 2 Tim. 1.13 2.2 Tit. 1.9 Iam. 1.21 Iude 23. The Churches teaching or doctrine by her taught is called also in simple sense the power i.e. powerful instrument of God unto salvation of all that believe it the rule or as you call it proportion of faith the sword of the Spirit the mysterie of faith the good thing depositum or treasure of heavenly truth the form of sound words or doctrine committed by the Apostles to the Church the faith once delivered to the Saints the faithful word able to save the souls of all that follow it 3. Proof Rom. 10.14 17. The Apostle expressely averrs he knows no means wherby men may come to faith but the word preached and thereupon concludes absolutely Faith comes by hearing and hearing by the word of God As much as to say the ordinary means of faith is hearing the word preached 4. Proof Rom. 12.6 1 Tim. 1.3 3.9 2 Tim. 1.13 3.14 Tit. 1.7 9. The rule of teaching to the Pastors was the doctrine they had received And it was the rule even to Prophets to If any man prophecy according to the analogie rule or as you render it proportion of faith Rom. 12.6 that is the known doctrine of the Church For that it could not mean the Scripture see the reasons given sup pag. 59. 5. Proof Ro. 16.17 2 Th. 3.6 Heb. 13.7 17. Iud. 3.1 Ioh. 2.24 4.2 6. 2 Ioh. 6 9. The rule of belief and holy practice to the people was the doctrine wherein they had been Catechised called by S. Iohn the unction of the H. Ghost 1 Ioh. 2.20 and generally the doctrine or institutes of the Church Hereby know we the spirit of truth and the spirit of error He that knows God hears us he that is not of God heareth not us 1 Ioh. 4.6 This doctrine of our Catechisme is given unto all Christians supposed catechised by a lawfull Pastor as the Galatians were as a rule of that supream authority and infallible certainty as by it we are to try the spirits of Prophets 1 Thes 5.21 yea even of Apostles or heavenly Angels Gal. 1.8 if possible for them to teach repugnant to it And if a rule whereby to judge of the Apostles preaching of their writing also it being as impossible for them to write as to preach repugnantly to it and their writing being of no greater authority then their preaching Consequently this text Gal. 1.8 which your men use to urge against Traditions gives so great authority to them as it implicitely warnes us on perill of our soul not to beleive or receive any text of H. Scripture it self in any sense repugnant if possible for it to have any as it is not to the doctrine of our Catechisme suppose it given by a lawfull Pastor Nor can you say that this subsists not with what we teach that any particular Pastor yea Pope and all as such may teach false doctrine for we will not say that any lawfull Pastor can doe it which who is we shall see in next Treatise 6 Proofe 1 Cor. 4.1
THE ONLY VVAY TO Rest of Soule IN RELIGION HERE IN HEAVEN HEREAFTER SHEWED Plainly and succinctly by pure SCRIPTURE IN THREE TREATISES DEMONSTRATING 1. That the Church was left by Christ as the means to teach us his Gospel 2. Which is she that was left in that office 3. What it is she teacheth for Gospel By L. L. Bach of Div. Licensed by the University of Oxford to preach throughout England and late Rector of L. in the County of S. now a Catholike 1 Tim. 3.15 The Church is the pillar and ground of the truth Printed for the Author 1657. ADVERTISEMENTS Of the Author to the Reader I Suppose you to be a pious and sober-minded Protestant having a love to the truth not much further learned than the English Bible regarding it as Gods word and no authority but it s in matters of religion 2. You are not to think we use this way of proving our grounds by Scripture either as necessary or as wanting other for we are able to prove them independently of it and praecedently to it to any rational man by the same means as Moses Exod. 4.1 and the other Prophets 1 Kin● 17.24 did theirs afore any word of the Old and Christ Iohn 5.35 and his Apostles 2 Cor. 12.12 theirs afore any word of the New Testament was written to wit Miracles such as no other doth Ioh. 15.24 joyn'd with eminent Sanctity as shal be shewn in next Treatise but onely because in it you think to have eternall life Ioh. 5.39 3. Out of my great desire of brevity I have often omitted to quote the texts at large And therefore I could wish you would take the paines to read them in your Bible for there is not one of them put for shew onely as is too much used on your side but is pertinent to confirm or illustrate what it is quoted for 4. Out of the same desire I have many times omitted divers proofes on our side and sometimes some on yours If therefore you misse any doe not think it was either of craft or for any dread of it for I hope by that time you have read it over you will not say I have pleaded your cause partially but either because it escaped me or was contemned by me or I thought the answer given to some other would serve it 5. Above all things I am to beseech your charity afore you censure our opinion or drift of the book as tending to derogate from the honour office or authority of H. Scripture you will read over the 5th § in the Praeface And if any expression used afterward in the book seem to have any sense varying from what is there set down not to understand it in any such sense THE PRAEFACE To the first Treatise Stating the quaestion explicating the tearmes c. § 1. Grounds agreed upon leading to the Quaestion 1 Ground WIthout faith it is not possible to please God Heb. 11.6 and without holines no man shall see him Heb. 12.14 2. Ground 2. What faith and holinesse it is as he requires and will accept from his creature to this pleasing and seeing of him cannot enter into the heart of man yea or Angel by any light possible in nature but it is necessary he reveale it to us by his holy Spirt 1 Cor. 2.9 3. Ground This revelation he makes not immediately to every one but to some one person or company at first and so makes use of that one divinely authorised and assisted by him to that end as his instrument to teach it to others in an ordinary way by word of mouth or writing because this way is sufficient the other miraculous which therefore he useth not without some necessity See examples hereof if you please Gen. 18.19 Exod. 18.16 S. Mat. 28.20 Act. 9.6 10.6 What is meant by teaching By teaching I meane instructing in religion in such manner as the Scholar may and untill he doe without it be his own fault understand it aright and perfectly so far as is needfull to his Soules health And when it is spoken of as the act of a reasonable creature I mean by it instructing as afore by word of mouth in way of publike office And it includes divers acts as principal and most necessary The first is to give the first instruction called by a proper name Catechising The other which is to give the perfecting instruction hath two acts 1. In quality of a Judge to decide all emerging controversies 2. In quality of a Guide or Councellor to direct in and resolve all cases of conscience And all the same I understand by preaching When I say by word of mouth or writing I mean either of that first or of others from or under him in the same manner divinely authorized and assisted for else no man may much lesse can be obliged to believe it by divine faith no more then they could the teaching of the first What is meant by divinely authorised Divinely authorised includes three properties 1. free from all error in its teaching 2. obliging all creatures under penalty of aeternal torments to believe and obey it 3. securing all that doe of an aeternall recompence 4. Ground In this immediate way in sundry manners and at sundry times he spake of old to the Fathers by the Prophets Adam Abraham Moses c. Heb. 1.1 Some of whom by him moved 2 Pet. 1.20 committed their revelations unto writing now called the Old Testament 5 Ground The rule delivered by these his servants Heb. 3.5 being when at best but imperfect Heb. 7.19 and for the greatest part of it but temporary Gal. 3.19 at length himself in the visible person of Iesus Christ vouchsafing to become a Teacher of it he as became him the Lord taught it perfectly and as it was to endure to worlds end Whence he is styled our one Master Mat. 23.8 the author and finisher of our faith Heb. 12.2 What is meant by Religion and the Gospel And this forme doctrine law or rule of faith and holinesse thus by God Almighty revealed is called by a proper name Religion and as by Iesus Christ revealed or promulgated is called the Christian Religion or in Scripture-phrase the Gospel Mar. 16.15 6 Ground Tbis Gospell he taught to his Apostles and so left them as the first and temporary meanes to teach it to others Consequently at their death all teaching of it by or from him immediate ceased at least regularly speaking Whence as one reason at least those dayes of his and their teaching in the flesh are called the last dayes Esa 2.2 Heb. 1.1 the fulnesse of time Gal. 4.4 and the ends of the world 1. Cor. 10.11 And so he that will know any thing touching it must goe to the Gospel by them taught and left as the fountaine of all both saveing truth and discipline of manners so our late H. Councel of Trent calls it Sess 4. to all succeeding generations 7 Ground They in their persons being to die
Mount Sinai So she Mother of us Christians vvas called Mount Zion Gal. 4.26 And this must of necessity be granted to the truth of this and divers other places which all agree in this that the Church and publique preaching of the Gospel by her was to begin on that Mount Psa 2.6 48. per totum 110.3 c. So this for certain is one of those Prophecies of which our Saviour said Thus it is written and thus it behoves that the Gospel be preached in all Nations beginning at Ierusalem Lu. 24.43 The sense of the place thus opened it yeelds four points most plainly and fully to my purpose viz. 1. That the Church was to be the ordinary meanes for teaching mankind the Gospell They shall say Come let us go up to the house of God and he in or by that house will teach us his wayes c. 2. That her teaching was to be Gods teaching he to be the principall teacher though invisible she but his mouth He shall teach us According to what is elswhere assured to all her children or scholars they shall be al taught of God Esa 54.13 3. That the word by her taught is heere called 1. Gods word and Law therefore it of divine authority and she a teacher divinely authorised 2. In simple sense the Law and the word of the Lord 4. That she is to continue in all the same office and authority of teaching wherein she began at Mount Zyon untill she have taught the Gospel to all nations which will not be till neare the worlds end Mat. 24.14 Second proof Esay 59.20 Again Esay The Redeemer shal come to Zion And this is my covenant with them of Zion saith the Lord My Spirit which is upon thee and my words which I have put in thy mouth shall not depart out of thy mouth nor out of the mouth of thy seed nor out of the mouth of thy seeds seed saith the Lord from henceforth and for ever Not possible to be understood of any person or company but the Church Consequently assuring unto Gods Elect under the Gospel that he will teach them unto the worlds end all the same word of his by the mouth of the same Church with all the same divine authority and assistance as he did the primitive Saints at Mount Zion on Whitsonday when he first put his Spirit upon her and his words into her mouth Act. 2.5 Third Proofe Ezek. 44.23 To the same effect Ezekiel Sadoc and his sons shall teach my people c. in controversie they shall stand in judgement c. This Sadoc was he upon whom the High-Priesthood was transferred from Eleazars line 1 Kin. 2.27 And so here the typical name of the Apostles upon whom it was transferred from Aarons line Consequently this place assures unto Gods people under the Gospel a race of faithful Pastors therefore teaching no errors in the office of teaching Religion unto the worlds end according to that I will raise me up a faithfull Priest and will build him a sure house and he shall walk afore my Christ for ever 1 Sam. 2.35 Fourth Proofe Mal. 2.4 Most plainly Malachy Ye shall know by the wonderfull performance of it that I have sent this Commandement unto you that my Covenant of teaching might be with Levi the Apostles and their Successors The Law of truth was in his mouth the Priests lips should it is their office preserve knowledge and they shall seek the Law at his mouth for he is the Angel or as yours prophanely the Messenger of the Lord of Hoasts See more if you please to the same purpose Psa 19.1 unto v. 7. compared with Rom 10.18 and Mat. 5.14 and Psalm 68.11 16 18. compared with Eph. 4.11 Esa 30.20 and 60.11 and 62.6 Ier. 3.14 and 33.15 to the end and 50.5 Ezek 37.21 all assuring unto the Church a race of Teachers divinely authorized unto worlds end Nor can you say these places meant the Church as preaching Scripture or her doctrine as consonant to it when you cannot shew that any of the Prophets foresaw that any one tittle of the Gospel was ever to be written CHAP III. Proving it from the Gospels ACcording to the exigence of these types and Prophecies as our Saviour himself saith S. Lu. 24.44 he instituted the office of teaching the Gospel in his Church as is manifest First Proofe S. Mat. 5.14 First from that attribute given by him to his Apostles as Pastors and consequently to his Pastors for the time being for ever Ye are the light of the world as much as to say the Sun or fountain of spiritual light unto mankind which therefore if it should once lose its light by teaching any error in faith the whole world must necessarily remain in darknesse and oh how great darknesse Mat. 6.23 ever after For wherewith should the Sun be enlightened Second Proofe S. Mat. 7.24 13.19 24 14. 26.13 S. Lu. 8.11 11.28 S. Ioh. 8.47 10.16 12.47 Secondly from those titles ordinarily given by him to his word as preached calling it in simple sense the word his word his voice the word of God the Gospel the seed of all grace in the soul whereof faith the first and constantly naming preaching as the ordinary means on his part of teaching it and hearing on the peoples part of coming to the knowledge of it Nor can you say by these titles he meant the Scripture preached or the Churches doctrine as consonant to Scripture when you cannot find he ever intended or as man foresaw that any one tittle of his Gospel should ever be written Third Proofe S. Mat. 18.17 Thirdly from that rule of his to all his for ever Tell the Church c. plainly implying he meant to leave her as the ordinary Supreame Iudge in all causes pertaining to his Court and a Judge divinely authorized for else none could be bound absolutely to hear her under pain of eternal damnation which is here implicitely threatened to such as neglect to hear her for no lesse is due to heathen and he would not have such refractory persons worse to us then they are to himselfe nay he saith it shall be more tolerable in the day of Iudgement for Heathen then for them S. Mat. 10.14 Fourth Proofe S. Mat. 28.19 Mar. 16.15 Fourthly most plainly and fully from the Charter it self for the founding of this office recorded by two of the Evangelists Iesus said to them his Apostles Goe ye into all the world teach all Nations preach the Gospel to every creature baptizing them teach them to observe all things whatsoever I have commanded you He that believes you or your teaching or the Gospell by you taught and is baptised shall be saved but he that beleeves not shall be damned In which words I am sure your self will not say but he left them as the first and temporary meanes of teaching his Gospell and baptizing And if for the first for the ordinary or perpetuall by vertue of those incorporating
2 Cor. 5.20 Phil. 2.25 Tit. 1.7 The Pastors in common among whom it was by accident if any one were an Apostle are styled in simple sense the ministers of Christ his embassadors the stewards depositaries and dispensers of the mysteries of God whereof those of faith the first 7 Proofe Gal. 2.1 So supreame at that time was and consequently to worlds end was to be for els wherefore read we the Scriptures now the authority of the Church as God Almighty seeing how S Pauls teaching was with less fruit because opposed by other Teachers who called themselves Apostles of Christ 2 Cor. 11.13 yea pretended to teach the doctrine of the Church Act. 15.1 willed him by revelation to go up to the chief Pastors residing then by accident at Ierusalem to confer his doctrine with them and procure their approbation to it Nay S. Iohn himself though an Apostle in ordinary for the greater credit and fruit of his Gospel as to the people in regard of the great opposition was like to be made against it by the hereticks that denied Christs Divinitie and were verie malapert against him for asserting it 3 Ioh. 9. was moved by the H. Ghost to procure and insert in the close of it the testimonie of some Pastors we know that his testimony is true Ioh. 21.24 A singular instance to shew in what high esteem and authority the testimonie of the Church even to the truth of H. Scripture it self as to us and much more to the sense of it then was and was left by the Apostles at their death for ever to be amongst all good Christians 8. Proof Eph. 4.11 The Apostle delivers our tenet in almost express words plainly and fully in sense VVhen Christ ascended he gave some Apostles c. for the perfecting of the Saints c. that is as the ordinary means to that end until we all come in unity of faith which will not be till the second coming of Christ c. that we henceforth be no more as children tossed to and fro c. which end is not possibly attainable if those Pastors may be supposed liable to teach an errout in faith 9. Proof 1 Tim. 3.15 The Church is called in simple sense 1. The House of God meaning without doubt that School house for teaching Religion of which Esay foretold Esay 2.2 2. The pillar of truth not of the written truth only but of the truth absolutely that is of all truth revealed And not a pillar upon which Scripture is promulged or notified only to the people as Princes edicts upon some post but such a pillar as is also the foundation to the whole frame of truth Therefore he saith in the next word 3. The ground of the truth Which in simple sense absolutely is the incommunicable attribute of God Almighty the first truth in sense wherein it may be given to any created meanes that is as to us or our attaining to the knowledge or certainty of truth is here given to the Church And so it comprises our Tenet in the fullest highest sense possible and particularly the infallibility of the Church in her teaching For 1. If she the ground of all truth then of this there was a Iesus of Nazareth of this there is a Scripture of this there is a H. Ghost nay of this there is a God 2. If these and other revealed points be infallible truths she the ground of them must be infallible So as if possible for her ever once to totter in the truth of her testimony touching any one point by either affirming something to be Gospell which is not or denying something to be which is the whole frame of the truth and certainty of Christian Religion as to us must necessarily totter with it as any building must whose foundation does and as we could not believe the Scripture in any thing if we found it false in any one thing Nor can you evade this place by saying he gives this attribute here to a particular Church namely that of Ephesus in which Timothy was to behave himself which we will not say was infallible For that Church being then a part of the Catholick though it were not infallible yet he being immediately Pastor of it was mediately a Pastor of the Catholick whose attribute that was As he that came into any gate lane or house of Ierusalem came into the Holy City Mat. 27.53 though that gate lane or house were not so 10. Proof 2 Tim. 1.13 2.2 Tit. 1.9 1 Pet. 1.12 The means prescribed and named by the Apostle for preserving to worlds end the knowledge or doctrine of the Gospel was Tradition of the Pastors from hand to hand The things thou hast heard of me commit thou to faithful men who shall be able to teach others also A means subject indeed to corruption in tract of time if the depositaries be considered as men but not if as men assisted to the pure and uncorrupt keeping of it by the H. Ghost to that end sent down from heaven upon them Act. 2.3 with such admirable graces as even the Angels desire and are delighted to behold 11. Proof Apoc 2.1 The Pastor of a particular Church is called the Angel of it Consequently by the rule of proportion the whole company of them is the Angel of the Church universal that is the ordinary means under God to illuminate and guide them and interpret Gods will to them in spiritual things 12. Proof Apoc. 21.23 Finally the teaching of the New Ierusalem which in the first sense means without doubt the Catholick Militant Church of Christ in opposition to the Synagogue the old earthly Ierusalem is called the light in which shall walk the nations of them that are saved Acts 2.47 13.48 whose light is not the Sun or Moon any created corruptible means but God himself and the Lamb Mat. 28.20 so as there shall never be any night of error in that City because its Sun shall never set c. Esa 60.20 You see how expresly how abundantly H. Scripture from first to last sets forth our principle It had been easie to have quoted ten times more texts to the same purpose but to whom this is not enough nothing would Now let 's see what you have to object against it THE SECOND PART Defending the Catholick Tenet CHAP. I. Solving Objections against the Churche's authority THe true reason wherefore your Ministers deny unto H. Church this office of teaching Religion is because they are conscious both of their having no title to the church and of being sure to be condemned if they should submit to any judge but a mute one And yet under colour of interpreting Scripture by it self they finde a way to exercise all the same office themselves as they deny to her and with much greater arrogance The pretended reason is because forsooth she is liable to error in her teaching except when she teaches Scripture and therefore is limitted to it as to a bar-rule beside or beyond which
guide or direct us in matters of practice or conscience must be able to consider and judge of the person and case in all its circumstances and apply his counsel and resolution to every one severally which S. Paul calls rightly dividing the word 2 Tim. 2.25 To Souldiers one counsel to Merchants another S. Lu. 3.10 To new vessels one sort of wine to old another Mat. 19.17 To tender souls one sort of doctrine the Lord is sweet to all c. Psal 145.9 to presumptuous ones another It is a fearful thing to fall into the hands of the living God Heb. 10.31 In one case to say thou maist not bow down to or afore any Idol in another thou maist 2 King 5.18 In one case to say thou maist not do any work on the Sabbath in another thou maist Mat. 12.5 And to this end must be able to be interrogated by his consulter Mat. 19.3 22.17 1 Cor. 7.1 yea again and again if need be Mat. 19.7 For many times the resolution to one question begets more and new doubts yea and to interrogate him too to see if he understand the resolution aright and to proceed with him till he do For we are apt through passion interest self-love c. to mistake not onely the cases but their resolution too 3. Again every one hath different principles or notions in his understanding whereby he judges of things differently from another and is apt to interpret the Scripture or doctrine of the Church to be for his opinion or sense and hence arise Sects When therefore any controversie is on foot needing decision the judge must of necessity be able to hear and weigh what is alledged proved on both sides and thereupon to give sentence in such manner as the parties litigant and all other concerned may and until they do without their own pervicacy be in fault know and understand for which side it is given and so cease further strife touching it Nay many times the very sentence it self will beget new controversies touching its sense requiring another sentence and that another c. and so the judge must be able from time to time as there is occasion to explicate even his own sentence Other teaching then this is a meer Chymaera devised by the Devil and his instruments to delude souls Now this therefore the Scripture is no way proper of or by it self alone because it is void of these faculties for it saith nothing in speech properly so called and what it saith in its kinde of speech Rom. 4.3 or God in or by it is no more then mute letter or word and so one and the same to every reader And so the reader without some one to interpret that mute word may easily think it speaks to him or his case when it is to another or saith such a thing in sense when it doth the contrary §. 4. Not Plain Proved first from 2 Pet. 3.16 The fourth reason because it is not plain no not in fundamentals as you call them without the Church for its interpreter And for this needs no other proof but to shew you the Sects now afore your eyes in England and betwixt Divines even your learnedst and in points fundamental if any may be called so but these that there is a God a Christ a Scripture But I shall give you three proofs for it out of Scripture it self The first shall be that speech of S. Peter The unlearned wrest Paul's epistles as they do other Scriptures also unto their own destruction 2 Pet. 3.16 Spoken no doubt of Christians and at least past their Catechisme nay its very probable of Divines and them alone My reason is because it is not like he would have called them whose duty or calling it is not to be learned the unlearned but rather the simple or ignorant And it is in charity and reason to be supposed they whoever he spake of if Christians read it with a love of the truth and desire to finde it there and of a godly intent to promote themselves in knowledge and piety and not without humble and hearty prayer to God to give them his H. Spirit to illuminate them to the understanding of it Yet presuming to expound it to themselves without the means apponted by God for its interpteter their prayer and diligence was abominable to him and therefore they left by him to strong illusions of the Devil in misunderstanding of it and that in points fundamental for in no other can damnable error be committed Nor will it help to say he speakes not of all things in Scripture but some onely For there being no Catalogue given of those some nor rule or mark for discerning them from the other and all people being apt to think those things true and plain in Scripture which they have been bred up in the belief of his speech is in effect as if he had said indefinitely The things in Scripture are hard to be understood but by the learned As if a Physician should say of a book of pills In this are some pills which the unskilful mistake to the poysoning themselves it would be in effect as to say The pills in it are dangerous to be used but by the skilful §. 5. Causes in the stile The second shall be a demonstration from the causes not all but a few of the principal and most common and obvious which are partly in the stile partly in the form Those I shall name in the stile are 1. That the sense of it is sometimes proper sometimes figurative and often without an interpreter unevident whether in fundamental points or importing to salvation for I shall be careful not to instance in any other For instance in these speeches This is my body VVhose sins ye for give 2. It hath oftentimes divers proper senses to wit literal and mystical and sometimes unevident whether e.g. in this speech Esau have I hated Rom. 9.13 3. It hath oftentimes divers literal senses to wit prophane or grammatical and Ecclesiasticial And sometimes unevident whether e.g. in this speech Not as Lords over cleron 1 Pet. 5.3 whether cleron signifie Clergie or Heritage 4. It hath oftentimes divers grammatical senses and sometimes unevident whether be it e.g. in this speech Thou art Petros Mat. 16.18 whether Petros signifie Peter or a rock And in this Esau have I hated whether hated mean a positive aversion or onely a not or less loving as it sometimes means Deut. 21.15 5. It abounds with phrases proper to the H. Ghost and terms of Art in Theologie which therefore without some Master in that science to interpret them to us are no better then so much Greek or Gibrish especially because the writers supposing the reader a Catholick understanding the language of the Church took no care to explicate them or annex a Dictonary Nor can you say their sense may be found out in time by it alone and an understanding reader by considering the occasion scope coherence of the
the man that was cured of his blindness by Iesus said to them VVil ye also be his disciples they reviled him and said Thou art or be thou his disciple Why not they O forsooth we are Moses disciples we know by Scripture that God spake unto Moses c. Ioh. 9.27 See the veil of Moses Law that lay upon and blinded their hearts against believing in him 2 Cor. 3.15 and so does to and at this day VVill you see the causes of it One was because they saw him teach command and practice some things evidently repugnant to the expresse words of Scripture For instance 1. It said Thou shalt do no manner of work upon the Sabboth Particularly Thou shalt not bear any burthen thorow the city Ier. 17.21 He commanded one whom he cured to carry no less a burthen then the bed he lay upon thorow the City on that day Ioh. 5.9 When therefore they saw him afterward work a manifest miracle in proof that he was the Christ what had they to choak the mouth of that evidence with but this This man is not of God for all his miracles because he keeps not the Sabboth day Iust the same as your men say sometimes of our Church She cannot be of God notwithstanding all her miracles because the worships images prays to Saints c. 2. Again it said Thou shalt keep these ordinances as everlasting statutes through all generations for ever Gen. 17.7 Exo. 17.10 31.17 Deut. 12.5 c. He said He was Lord of the Sabboth Mat. 12.8 discovered an intent to change it and all the ordinances of Moses and introduce others in their place viz. in stead of worshipping God by a carnal and figurative sacrifice in the Temple of Ierusalem onely the spiritual true pure worship that God longed for to be celebrated all the world over Ioh. 4.2 Mal. 1.11 in stead of the Passover the Sacrament of his Body and Blood Ioh. 6.32 53. instead of Circumcision Baptism Ioh. 3.3 Now how abominable a design they apprehended this in him may be guessed at from their charge against one of his disciples This man ceases not to speak blasphemous words against this holy place and the Law For we have heard him say that this Iesus of Nazareth shall destroy this place and change the customes which Moses delivered us c. Acts 6.13 3. Again it said There is but one God and he a pure simple Being Eternal Infinite Omnipotent c and appointed that if any one yea though a Prophet giving a sign of his Mission or Doctrine should entice them to the worship of any thing visible or created they should stone him to death as a false Prophet and Blasphemer Deut. 13.1 He a visible man cloathed with flesh and blood and all infirmities of humane nature born but the other day of a Carpenter c. said he was God or his Son equal to him and required to be worshipped as such And this they supposed to be evident blasphemy Ioh. 10.33 and that according to the express words of Scripture he ought as such to be put to death VVe have a Law and by our Law he ought to dye because he made himself the Son of God Ioh. 19.7 And this seemed so evident to them in Scripture as no doubt for that cause principally if not onely they vvould rather attribute his miracles as you do ours unto the Devil then entertain a doubt of his being the Christ Mat. 12.24 Another cause was because the prophecies touching the properties signs of the Messiah were not onely dark and in that respect needing an Interpreter to expound them Acts 8.34 17.3 yea even to Christians Lu. 24.27 45. 2 Pet. 1.9 but repugnant in express words and therefore needing an Interpreter to reconcile them And thence it was that they were able to urge it as plainly and aboundantly yea perhaps I should say true if I said more against his being the Messiahs as he for it For instance 1. In some he was to be Davids Lord Psal 110.1 yea God 's Son Psal 2.6 yea the everlasting God c. Esa 9.6 In other a visible mortal man like unto Moses Deut 18.15 God's servant Psal 78.70 Davids son Psal 132.11 now that one and the same person should be all these though it be easie now to us that are taught it by the Church in our childehood was such a riddle then to them Mat. 22.46 and still is to any creature in state of nature Mat. 16.17 1 Cor. 2.8 14. as is incomprehensible by any humane brain without special light and by any light in Scripture's self without an interpreter or any interpreter of less authority then Divine 2. In some He was not to bruise a broken reed c. Esa 42.3 In other to break in pieces the Potentates of the earth like a potsheard and rule them with a rod of iron Psal 2.9 3. In some he was to be the contempt of the common sort Psal 22.6 In other all Kings of the earth to lick the dust of his feet Psal 72.11 4. In some to have no form nor comelinesse in him Esa 53.3 In other to be the fairest among the children of men Psal 45.2 5. In some to be slain for us Dan. 9.27 In other to live and reign a glorious King for ever Psal 72.15 Dan. 7.14 And therefore when the people heard him talk of his being lift up meaning upon a cross or gibbet they were not able to reconcile that with his being the Messiah seeing they had been alwayes taught out of Scripture that Christ abides for ever Ioh. 12.34 No doubt but he answered their texts and explicated his own so as to reconcile them one with the other But no doubt also they did the same with his and their own as they verily thought Nor can you say of all that it was only pride vain-glory malice or obstinacy of will that hindred them from seeing the truth of his sense For no question but multitudes of them Act. 13.27 compared with 1 Cor. 2.8 namely S. Paul Act. 26.9 were purely ignorant and sought the truth in Scripture according as it was alledged and opened on both sides with a love of the truth and a desire to finde it and with many a prayer and bitter tear to God Almighty for light to see it And yet were confirmed and by Scripture principally which they had known from children 2 Tim. 3.15 that they ought to do things contrary to the name of Iesus till God Almighty by some other means then it shew'd them the truth If you say Wherefore did he then send them to Scripture for it the answer hath been given already that it was not as to a Teacher of that point but a VVitness onely nor a witness of his choice but which they compelled him to by their obstinacy to the other nor as a witnesse proper or sufficient by it self alone but in company with the other for corroboration and as by him alledged and expounded and
Heb. 13.7 Iam. 1.21 1 Pet. 2.2 when naming the rule of faith Rom. 12.6 the ground of truth 1 Tim. 3.15 the means left by Christ for the perfecting of the Saints Ephes 4.11 finally when naming the end vvherefore Scripture vvas given by God and to which it is profitable 2 Timoth. 3.16 3. And how easily how soon had it been named in one or other of these occasions For example to have said to Timothy or Titus Teach Scripture or according to it c. or to the people Prove all things by Scripture or Make it your rule or guide or Obey your Pastors teaching out of or according to it or it was given or is profitable that the Christian man may be perfect c. 4. At least they might have given the people some advice or encouragement in plain words to read to sometimes or the Pastors some charge to read it sometimes to them 5. Nor was it of forgetfulness that they balked the giving these instructions For in their Epistles to the Pastors they could well remember to advise and encourage them to give diligence to the reading it 1 Tim. 4.13 2 Tim. 3.16 and in some Epistles to some Churches to charge the reading of some particular Epistles in some particular Congregations once 1 Thess 5.27 Col. 4.16 and S. Peter could once take occasion to speak of his brother Paul's Epistles and by that occasion of Scripture in general but what he saith of it is so far from encouraging people to read it much less to make it their guide or rule as it is enough to scare any one either people or Divines from meddling with it without a good interpreter 2 Pet. 3.16 6. Some of these Epistles were written by them when now ready to be offered 2 Tim. 4.6 2 Pet. 1.14 by S. Iohn when now 100. year old and all the other Apostles dead and perhaps rotten long afore and he saw the Churches round about him swarming with Sects and wrote to that end chiefly to confirm Catholicks in faith and nourish them against Sects and shew them the best means and way to discern and avoid them Nor could he but know in what a sad condition the sacred writings were like to be left by him Some corrupted by Hereticks Apoc. 22.18 some counterfeit 2 Thess 2.1 some uncertain Luk. 1.1 some lost vid. infr c. 5. arg 9. § 4. some in one Countrey some in another perhaps 500. miles asunder not so much as a Catalogue of their names or number c. yet he left the world as the rest had done afore him without any least mention of the New Testament or any part of it more then what he wrote himself or that as to any office of teaching Religion CHAP. II. Vrging the second Argument Scripture not for the people MY second reason is because it was never ordained or meant so much as for the peoples reading further then the Church should see expedient to permit it but given into the hand of the Church for her to teach it to them and to be an instrument helpful to her in her office of teaching As is manifest For 1. When God Almighty had written the ten Commandments the first piece of Scripture that was written though it were the plainest both for stile and matter and most proper and useful for the people and to be the principal part of their Catecism yet he delivered it not to them but to Moses with these words expressely declaring the whole intent of it as to the people I give thee the Law which I have written that thou maist teach it to them Exod. 24.12 2. In like manner when Moses had written the Law he delivered it not to the people though the whole Nation were then present afore him in Assembly but finally or supremely unto Iosuah or Eleazar the one chief Ruler or Pastor in ordinary the other in extraordinary with these words expressely declaring the whole intent of it as to the people and the right they were to have to it At the end of every seven years thou shalt read this c. Deut. 31.9 3. This copy delivered by Moses into the High-Priests hand was there to remain without any one to have a copy of for ought appears until there should be a King who was to share the supream office with the High-Priest who was not to be in 500. years after and he was to write him a copy of it out of that which was before the Priests Deut. 87.19 4. In their custody it remained 2 Chron. 17.9 Neh. 8.1 without any copy of it for certain in all the land of Israel after Ieroboam's schism 2 Chr. 15.3 and if not after most likely nor afore for we do not finde that he meddled at all with the Bible and but one in the Church of Iudah until after the Captivity to wit that in the Priests custody in the Temple as should seem by the great matter was made of the finding it when it had been lost some years and by Iosiah's proceeding thereupon to a Reformation by it which afore it seems he could not for want of it 2 Chron. 34.14 c. The same may be said for the New Testament For 1. S. Iohn's Apocalypse the onely book of it written by command was expressely written to the Angel or Pastor of the Churches to which it was to be sent and to him alone immediately Apoc. 2.1 c. 2. His Gospel was likewise without all question delivered by him to some Pastors to be by them taught and published as appears by their testimony to it Ioh. 21.24 3. Three of S. Pauls Epistles for certain were written to Pastors alone the first and second to Timothy and that to Titus and very probably a fourth to Philemon whom he calls his fellow labourer Phil. 1. 4. So were also probably S. Lukes Gospel and Acts Theophilus to whom they were dedicated being by some ancient Writers said to have been a Bishop 5. Two other of S. Paul's Epistles though dedicated to Churches yet were delivered immediately into the hand of the Pastor to be by him read to the people or else that charge of reading them to them had been superfluous Col. 4.16 1 Thess 5.27 So in his hand they remained also after the reading and at his discretion whether he would read them the second time and much more whether permit any of the people copies of them And by parity of reason the same is to be presumed of the other Gospels and Epistles dedicated to Churches or without dedication But what need I prove it thus by inferences and presumptions When the text affirms it expressely that the Scripture was written purposely for the Church and immediately for her alone to be an instrument in her hand for teaching the people and furthering and helpful to her for the better discharge of her office 6. So saith S. Paul touching his Epistle to Timothy These things write I unto thee that thou maist know how thou oughtest to behave
thy self in the Church which is the ground of truth 1 Tim. 3.15 7. Nay touching the whole Scripture universally All Scripture is given by God and is profitable for doctrine c. that the man of God c. that is The whole Scripture is given by God unto the Pastor and is profitable to this end to furnish him perfectly for doctrine reproof correction instruction of the people in righteousness as you call it and for every other good work proper or pertaining to his function 2 Tim. 3.16 17. CHAP. III. Vrging the third Argument Scripture not proper c. MY third Reason is Because it is not proper to give the first instruction vvhich is the first incomparably principal and most necessary act of Teaching As appears 1. From that of S. Paul How shall any one believe in him of whom they have not heard or hear without a Preacher Rom. 10.14 2. From that of S. Peter The unlearned wrist the Scripture to their destruction 2 Pet. 3.16 Therefore to a profitable and safe use of it it requires and supposes a reader somewhat pre-instructed in Religion 3. From the form of it because not Catechistical but Historical c. 4. From the dedication of all the books in it vvhich have any vvhich is not to any but either Pastors or Catholick Churches the Romans Corinthians c. or at least Catholick persons walking in the truth 2 Ioh. 4. 3.3 5. From the stile of it vid. inf c. 4. § 2. 6. From divers passages in it expresly supposing the reader one needing no catechising 1 Ioh. 2.20 27. Insomuch as they check some in the Churches they vvrote to for needing it Heb. 5.12 nay they suppose him one not needing necessarily any instruction Luk. 1.4 Rom. 15.14 1 Cor. 1.5 Col. 3.16 c. And therefore declare the end of their vvriting those that declare any to be not to teach Catechistical or Fundamental doctrines but the higher perfecting mysteries 1 Cor. 3.1 Heb. 6.1 to exhort admonish stir up to remembrance encourage comfort establish rectifie some errours and abuses crept in among them to give the Pastors some advices and such like ends pertaining to doctrine Concionatory or perfecting Luk. 1.4 Ioh. 20.31 1 Cor. 11.23 15.2 1 Thess 4.1 9. 2.15 1 Tim. 3.15 Heb. 13.22 2 Pet. 1.12 3.1 Iude 3. Apoc. 3.2 3.3 c. Consequently it is so far from being useful or intended to teach us Doctrinally or Catechistically the articles of our Creed the form of Church-Government VVorship Sacraments c. as it is but incidently and as it were by accident that it mentions any thing of them CHAP. IV. Vrging the fourth argument Scripture not the principal A Fourth Reason is Because it is not the principal as to the effect of teaching but onely an instrument in the hand of the Church and one of her Scholars And consequently improper but as in their hand to give any Christian yea or Divine so much as his perfecting instruction And I shall give four proofs for it §. 1. Scripture for the Church The first shall be Because the Church was not ordained for it but it for her as it 's end to be helpful and furthering to her in and for the better discharge of her office As is proved supra cap. 2. §. 2. Not proper to Catechise The second because as appears by the former Chapter it is not proper to give the first instruction Consequently nor the second but to him the first right For the first instruction gives us our first and transcendent rule notion or instrument by which we measure and judge of all things we read or hear of afterward generally speaking in Religion Consequently one false principled is in as bad nay many times worse a condition for understanding Scripture then a novice as the eye is more deceived using a false spectacle then none at all and one that hath a wrong direction given him is many times worse for finding the way then he that hath none at all Now for giving men their first instruction right no means precedent to Scripture is imaginable but the Church Or briefer thus Because it supposes its reader a Catholick And therefore cannot be proper for any one's use but a Catholicks §. 3. VVants sense and reason The third and vvhich though I name it here onely is of as much or more force in giving the first instruction because it vvants understanding and sense faculties absolutely necessary to discharge the office of teaching Because 1. Every one is of a several capacity rank or form as I may call it in knovvledge so as vvhat is plain to one is dark to another And vve are all by nature 1 Cor. 2.11 dull of hearing in spiritual things Heb. 5 11. and very apt to understand them in carnal sense as vve see in Nicodemus Ioh. 3.4 the vvoman of Samaria Ioh. 4.15 the Capernaltes Ioh. 6.52 yea after vve have been a good vvhile in Christ's School to think vve understand them as vve ought vvhen God knovvs many times very sorrily and erroneously as vve see in the Apostles themselves Mat. 13.36 Luk. 24.45 Act. 1.6 And therefore that vvhich is to teach must be able to consider the scholars need capacity and apprehensions and accordingly to fit his instruction to every one severally to one thus to another thus to babes milk to men stronger meat 1 Cor. 3.1 Heb. 5.11 And to that end must be able to be interrogated by the scholar Mat. 13.36 Lu. 2.46 Acts 2.37 8.34 yea if need be again and again until he understand the instruction aright and fully as he ought yea and to interrogate him too to see if he do 2. Again every one is of a several calling quality humor state of soul or conscience degree in vertue c. So that which is useful counsel or doctrine to one is impertinent to another nay vvhat is one mans meat is often anothers poyson For many vices are like vertues and contrarily vertues like vices so as it is very apt for men vvithout good judgement and experience in such matters Heb. 5.14 to mistake one for the other And H. Scripture relates many things done ill by Saints well by wicked men without giving judgement which was well which ill done so as it will be very easie to erre in making it a rule by it self Besides the extreams come very neer another that which parts them many times no broader then the edge of a rasor nay vertue must be many times compos'd of somewhat of each extream duty tempered Mat. 10.16 Besides cases are altered by circumstances so as what is sound doctrine in one case may in another by the alteration of some one circumstance imperceptible to an ordinary or unexperienced judgement be false and pernitious And these circumstances varying cases are of that infinite variety as they are incomprehensible within any written rule although it should consist of more volumes then the world contain And therefore that which is to