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A48358 Holy characters containing a miscelany of theolocicall [sic] discovrses that is theology, positiue, scholasticall, polemicall, and morall built upon the foundation of scriptures, traditions, councils, fathers, divided into two books / written by George Leybvrn ... Leyburn, George, 1593-1677. 1662 (1662) Wing L1938; ESTC R18553 388,184 688

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sacrifice vnder the forms of bread and wine wherin consist's the similitude of Melchisedechs sacrifice Again to deny that Christ instituted and appointed Priest's as his substitutes to offer euen to the end of the world the sacrifice that himselfe celebrated at his last supper were to deny Christ to be a Priest for euer there being no other meanes to establish his eternall Priesthood then by the sacrifice of Priest's instituted by and substituted vnder him Priesthood being but a power or faculty * Hebrae 5. omnis Sacerdos Pontisex est institutus vt offerat dona sacrificia to offer sacrifice which Christ sitting at the right hand of his diuine Father cannot do in his own person sacrifice taken in the proper sense for an outward visible act of supream worship as of necessity it must be taken wherby plainly followeth that whosoeuer does take away Christ his power to sacrifice does destroy his Priesthood also or render it vnprofitable and vseless and to allow Christ improper spirituall and metaphoricall sacrifice only is not enough to make good his Priesthood as to the order of Melchisedech who offered outward sensible sacrifice of bread and wine Neither can Christ in respect of spirituall sacrifice only be counted more a Priest then euery faithfull man or woman that offereth to God contrition of a penitent heart which is an insensible spirituall sacrifice Psalmo 50. Furthermore Melchisedech in meeting Abraham as he returned from the victory ouer the kings and blessing him is a mysterious representation of Christ who meeteth and blesseth his faithfull seruants returning to their Country of Paradise whence their first parent Adam was eiected with the spoiles of the deuill that eiected him lastly Melchisedeck in taking (e) Abraham payd Tithes to Melchisedech as a duty or homage and not for his own person onely but euen for Leui then vnborn and consequently for the whole Priesthood of Leui's stock acknowledging thereby Melchisedech to be Priest and his superior and of all the leuiticall order payment of tithes is a naturall duty which is done to Priests that thereby they may receiue both honour and liuelihood Iacob vowed to pay tithes Gen 28. Moses appointed them Leuit. 27. num 18. and the ancient Fathers proue them to be due to the Church Pastours Namely S. Cyprian Epis 66. S. Hierom. Epis 1 7. S. Austin ser 1 ●● de Tempore tithe of Abraham is a type of Christ also who can in equity exact as tithe seruice and obedience of all reasonable creatures whom he hath deliuered out of captiuity by the merit of his death and passion CHAR. IV. OF SACRAMENTS THE CONTENTS The Sacraments of the new law by diuine institution are enabled to produce inward grace vnto iustification of life ex opere operato that is through their own outward sensible working They be soueraign remedies against all kinds of spirituall infirmities the Catholick Church the shop that keepeth the medicinall Sacraments Christ the diuine Apo●●ecary no sinner ought to despaire of s●luation while he abideth in a shop of sauing remedies which is the catholick Church SAcraments taken in a large generall sense be outward visible ceremonies employed in corporall creatures or elements wherby men as birds of one feather flock together and * Aug. l. 9. Con. Faustū cap 11. in nulla inquit religione homines colligantur inter se sine consortio Sacramentorū id est sine aliquibus caer●monijs sensibilibus Et S. Chrysos hom 83. ideo ait Deum nobis dedisse intelligibilia sub sensibilibus quia constamus anima corpore si vero essemus incorporei incorporea et●am dedisset dona id est Sacramenta vnite in the profession of some one Religion true or false the worship of a thing that is indeed or counted a God depending necessarily therof Pagans worshipped the sensible elements (a) Through human weaknes and the crafty dealing of the Deuil certaine people haue been brought to that height of madnes as to think and worship for Gods and godesses the four elements namely fire aire water and earth as likewise other parts of the vniuers especially such as conduced to the generation of any thing From hence the vitall spirit was called the God Iupiter fire the God Vulcan aire the godess Pallas and the earth the godess Ceres of their ceremonies ascribing a diuinity euen to the meanest creatures Iews worshipped the true God vnder corporall creatures wherin they vsed their ceremonies but the multitude therof being numerous difficult and greiuous made their Religion a yoke of bondage The society of christian people are deliuered from the Pagans Idolatry and the Iew 's seruitude being called vnto the liberty wherwith Christ hath made them free to serue and worship one true God vnder * Aug. l. 38. c. 9. ae doc Chris l. 19. con Faus cap. 13. Sacramenta inquit mutata sunt facta sunt faciliora pauciora salubriorae a few ceremonies most proper for an agreable exercise both of body and soul being sensible things most cleane in reference to the body and most precious in order to the soul to wit seuen Sacraments (b) The decree of Pope Eugenius set down in the end of the Councill of Florence asserteth seuen Sacraments which catholick assertion the Council of Trent hath defin'd sess 7. can 10. and Caluin l. 4. instit c. 19. confesseth that the opinion of seuen Sacraments is grounded in antiquity and was vniuersally approu'd mysteriously figured in the seuen pillars wisdome hewed out in the building of her howse Prouerb 1. that is which Christ the eternall wisdome hewed (c) According to S. John the Euangelist cap. 19. When the souldiers savv that Jesus vvas dead one of them vvith a speare pearced his side and fortvvith came there out blood and vvater wherby are signifyed mystically all the Sacraments though two especially namely Baptism which openeth the door vnto and the Euchariste which is the end of all the other Sacraments wherfore S. Austin c. 120. in Ioan. infer's that the Sacraments of the new law came from the side of Christ out of his side in the erecting of his Church Also mysteriously represented in Naamans washing himselfe seuen times in Iordan and in the fiue breads and two fishes wherwith Christ fed and satisfyed many Thousands and taken in the strict proper sense they be outward visible signes or rites of inward invisible sanctity and (d) The Council of Trent cast's an Anathema vpon those which shall assert that the Sacraments of the new law do not containe the grace which they signifie or that they be not effectuall instruments Ex opere operato through their own working of the same grace This Catholick assertion is conform to the doctrine of the ancient Fathers in the first Council of Nice which speaking of Baptism say Aquam vides considera vi●ti●tem Dei in aqua absconditam Thou beholdest water consider the virtue of God that lie's hid
Rom. 5. Inuisibilia Dei à creatura mundi per ea quae facta sunt intellecta conspiciuntur in his works visible CHAR. IJ. OF ADAM THE CONTENTS The integrity of Adams creation his fall from originall Iustice through the euill managing of his free will all his posterity concerned in his fall ADam was the first man that God made * Gen. 1. creauit Deus hominem ad imaginē similitudinē suam in his own image and after his likeness (a) S. Hieron l. 3. com in epis ad Ephes calleth Adam the first man and first Prophet because he fore told the mysterious Incarnation of the Son of God in saying This novv is bone of my bone and flesh of my flesh which the Apostle nameth magnum Sacramentum For as much as it importes Christs nuptiall conjunction or marriage with the Church his Spouse the first Prophet that prophesied of the mysterious Incarnation of the Son of God and the first prodigall son that vnhappily managed his patrimony (b) Eccl 1. God made man vpright that is according to the interpretation of great S. Austin l. de cor gra God gaue him in his creation sanctifying grace And the same S. Austin l. 13. de civit Dei expresly teacheth that the first man was created in grace and l. 12. de civit affirmes that the Angels in their creation received grace together with their nature His heavenly Father had setled him in a fair estate of originall iustice as to his soul * Sap. 2. Creauit hominē inexterminabilē and immortallity as to his body and he made away with both wilfully for the obedience that was onely required to the conseruing thereof * Non foret homo animal rationale nisi ei inesset libera boni mali electio nec Deus foret iustus si impossibilia iuberet Aug. ser de tem laid in his power And it was necessary to injoyne * Aug. l. 8. gen oportebat vt homo sub Domino Deo positus aliundè prohiberetur him the performance of that vertue for if nothing had been commanded him or he forbidden from nothing he would haue had nothing to know his own inferiority and to acknowledge his Creatours superiority The Command that God laid vpon Adam was that he should not cate of the tree of knowledge of good and euill so named not in reference to the fruit that in it selfe was good * Gen. 1. omnia quae fecerat Deus erant valde bona for all that God created was very good but in order to transgression that taught him to discern between good and euill between the good of obedience as to the perpetuating of grace and life and the euill of disobedience as to the introducing of sin and death Yet God had no part in Adams transgression for his diuine goodnes had bestowed on him sufficient auxiliaries to continue him in obedience and did nothing to necessitate his disobedience (c) Ecclus. 15. God made man from the beginning and left him in the hand of his counsel gaue him his commandements .... they shall conserue thee he hath set vvater and fire before thee stretch out thy hand vnto vvhich thou vvilt before man is life and death good and euill vvhat liketh him shall be giuen him This sacred Text giues clear euidence of Adams free will as to accepting or rejecting diuine grace that might haue led him to euerlasting life and indeed S. Austin infers from the same text free will in all men lib. de gra lib. arb arguing from thence that though God giues to euery one his mercifull grace vnto obtaining of heauenly blessednes neuertheles he necessitates none to accept of it being in the liberty of each one to reject it And herein according to the Council of Trent Consisteth the reconciling of mans free will and grace together Morouer the holy writer of Genesis clearly demonstrats mans free will after Adams fall for cap. 4. God said to Cain who was troubled and angry to see his brother Abel and his offerings respected aboue his own Why is thy Countenance cast dovvn if thou doe vveli shalt thou not be accepted and if thou doest not vvell sin lyeth at the door but the lust therof shall be vnder thee and thou shalt haue rule ouen it that is saith S. Austin l. 13. Civit. Dei cap. 7. thou shalt bear dominion ouer sin Where by is evident that mans free will was not extinct through Adams fall and this Catholick assertion is yet more plainly taught Deutr. 30. I call heauen and earth to vvithess this day saith Moses to the People of Israël that I haue set before you life and death blessing and cursing chuse therefore life These last particles evidence enough that God gaue man liberty to chuse good or euill which is the consistency of liberum urbitrium free will S. Ambros in Psal 40. v. 10. for he left him in the hands of his own counsell election and deliberation which euinces Adams free will for what is necessary or impossible requires noe consultation or deliberatnes these being manifest tokens of free actions Besides it is not agreeable vnto reason that he who was established absolute lord of all liuing thing created to the vse of man * Aug. l. de cor gra docet obseruationem praecepti Adamo impositi dependisse ab eius libero arbitrio should want dominion and free vse of his own will and liberty Howeuer Adams fall seems a strange thing he hauing nothing in himselfe that inclined to disloyalty for God had made him vpright and the integrity of his creation extended to all his faculties spirituall and sensible in his will was integrity of sanctifying charity in his vnderstanding integrity of both naturall and supernaturall knowledg and in his sensible parts integrity of order with subordination and peace with quietnes whereby plainly appeares that his fall did not proceed from himselfe originally Neuertheles t' is certain that he did fall yeelding to a weak temptation of which himselfe was not author Simple Eue whom God made for his meet helpe ill counsel'd by the crafty serpent propounded vnto him the eating of the forbidden fruit vnder a fair colour of bettering his and her own condition in the knowledg Of good and euill Adams condescention to this out ward suggestion occasioned his fall wherin he imbarqued all men to ruine leauing nothing behind him for their reparation * Zach. 13. Adam exeplum metem ab adolescentia mea saue his own example of sacrilegious disobedience to make them be wary how to ingage in the future against the vertue of obedience CHAR. IIJ. OF ORIGINALL SIN THE CONTENTS The innate propriety of Originall sin the difference between Originall sin and Adams personall offence and between Originall sin and carnall concupiscence ORiginall sin is the * Aug. Epis 130. vocat peccatum originale vitium haereditarium debitum paterni chyrographi
this Iesus in reuerence and reference not to the materiall elements or sound of the name it selfe but to the son of the Virgin Mary God and man which kind of Religious honour was neuer exhibited to the name of Iesus Naue or Iesus the son of Iosedech and the best antiquity counted the said Custom of bowing at the name of Iesus a distinctiue mark to the distinguishing of Christians from Iewes who hearing the name Iesus spoken did no more bow their stiffe neckes and proud heades then they did hearing the names Pharach or Satan * S. Hieron l. 3. Commentar ait suo tempore Christianos hac nota à Iudais cognitos fuisse quod hi nunquam genuflecterēt audito nomine Iesu Besides the ancient Christians were piously accustomed to weare about their necks the name of this Iesus formed in Agnus Deies and Crosses which they counted as Religious table books to preserue the memory (g) According to S. Austin there is no such soueraign medicin against sin as is a reflexion on the grieuous sufferings which Christ God and man endured for our sake and who is writeth S. Bernard so voluptuous as will not abstain so ambitious that will not repent or so full of wrath that will not grieue when he takes into his serious consideration the passion and death of Christ of their God crucifyed dead and buried knowing well that if they would not carry the name of the diuine son in tables of their hearts they should not find their own names put down in the table book of the diuine Father which is the book of life since none can come to the Father but by the son and the merits of his passion Wherby is plain that to a good Christian the name of Iesus the Son of the Virgin Mary * Bonauo●tura in vita● S. Francisci scribit eum solitum fuissa labia sua lambere diâ legerot nomē Iesu S. Bernardus ser 13. in Cant. Iesus inquit mel in ore in aure melos in corde Iubilū is hony in the mouth melody in the care and gladnes in the heart Further more the very name of Iesus (h) Lactantius l. 4 c. 24. affirmes that many men were deliuered from deuils through the name of Iesus and the sign of the crosse that represents his passion and death The same is asserted by S. Justin the Martyr in his dialogue with Tryphon this name Iesus saith he forceth deuils to flie Again the name of Iesus according to Origen heales wounds cures diseases deliuers from death and expells deuils hath produced marueillous effects ouercame temptations expelled deuils and cured all manner of infirmities in reference to him whose proper name it is to witt the son of the Virgin Mary who is also the son of God CHAR. VIJ. OF THE NAME OF CHRIST THE CONTENTS The exposition of the word Christ his Priest hood wherby he was constituted Chief Gouernour of souls vnto bringing them to the knowledge of truth and to healing the wounds also which sin had inflicted in the Cure wherof Christ performed the seuen works of mercy CHrist is a second name properly belonging to the son of the Virgin Mary so named because he was anointed by the holy Ghost in respect of (a) Psal 44. thy God hath anointed thee vvith the oile of gladness aboue thy fellovvs Christ was anointed in regard of his hypostaticall vnion in consequence of which he was both peculiarly and incomparably anointed and endued with abilities and graces aboue all other kings and Priests the hypostaticall union of his diuine and human nature in one diuine person so that at once and in a most eminent degree he was both king and Priest and endued with guifts and abilities effectually necessary for the performance of each charge (b) The Royall Prophet Psal 49. assertes Christs rule and dominion ouer the whole world As king his inheritance was the whole world and the plenitude of all things therin contained though while he liued on the earth he did not exercise Regall power As Priest he was chief Gouernour of soules being maried to the Church in mercy and compassion * Oseae 2. Spensabo te mihi in aeternum for euer and this spirituall gouernment he executed in two kindes of waies As to the first (c) S. Iohn the Euangelist cap. 1. attesteth Christ to be the true light that enlighteneth euery man that cometh into the world from whence S. Austin l. 1. de Gen. Con. Manich. c. 3. inters that euery man may keep the Commandements if he will himselfe because saith he that light Christ lightneth all men that come into the world and indeed as S. Anselm teaches no man wanteth the light of grace because God doth not giue it but because man will not accept it being as S. Austin often inculcates left to the free will of each one to consent vnto or dissent from diuine grace which beginneth euery good work and if not hindred through the resistance of our flexible nature effectually perfects the work it beginneth he was a generall light offering on his part to enlighten euery one in darknes of ignorance and sin insomuch that such as are not enlightened it is because they * Ioa. 3. lux venit in mundum dilexeruns homines magis tenebras qua lucem loue darknes more then light like vnto certaine Ethiopians who haue so great an abhorrence from the clear beames of the sun that at the rising therof they retire into woods or dens to eschew the brightnes of it such are * S. Ansel homo nō habet gratiam non quia hanc nō dat Deus sed quia hanc nō accipit homo sinners which through willfull blindnes of errour doe * Job 24. ipsi erāt lumini rebelles declinauerūt oculos suos ne viderent solem rebell against the light of diuine grace shutting the eyes of their vnderstanding that it may not shine vpon them And as wood wherin is much water doth hardly take fire the form of water mainly resisting the introducing of the form of fire so such loue not the light of grace as are delighted with darknes of sin darknes being an enemy to light When Christ the son of the Virgin Mary was born the generall light of the world he offered his enlightning grace as the rising sun its shining beams to all though the celestiall quiers of Angells did communicate the glad tydings of this light vnto the shepherdes of Bethlem the place of his birth and diuinely sung glory to God in the highest heauens for sending it yet they did not proclaime peace as to the reconciling earth and heauen together but only to men Bonae voluntatis * Luc. 2. in terra pax hominibus bonae voluntatis of good will plainly shewing therby that the reconciliation of man vnto God should depend of the free will of each one prepared by the said light of grace * Aug.
prouidence permitteth them is good for God suffereth them to be that the approu'd as gold in the fire tryed may be manifested and discouered from the holow hearted members of the Church The supream prouidence suffereth them to be that the carnall thereby may be stird vp to seek and the spirituall to clear the truth the supream prouidence tolerateth them to the end that many may be raised out of their sleep to see the day of God and be glad therof S. Aug. c. 8. de verae religione the supream prouidence suffereth them to be choosing rather to draw good out of euill then to permit no euill at all But woe to such as through their fault commit the euill that God suffereth to be CHAR. XV. OF CHRISTIAN HOPE THE CONTENTS Good works supported by diuine promises haue a good claim to the glory of Heauen which is the consistency of Christian hope God by promising maketh himselfe mans debter the assurance that man hath that God cannot faile of his promise doth not render him sure of the thing promised till he shall performe the condition of the promise made which is full perseuerance in the exercise of good works whereof no man can be certain the death of Christ brought forth Hope of life CHristian Hope is a certaine * S. August vocat Christianā spem certam exspectationem gloriae futurae expectation of future glory supported by diuine promises and perseuerance in good works the condition of the promises proceeding from diuine grace through the merits of Christ And as God cannot faile of his promise who is * 2. Thessal 3. fidelis autem Deus est faithfull in all he promiseth or falsify his word who is the eternall truth so works done a right cannot be frustrated of the reward promised being * Bona opera quae procedunt ex gratia sunt quasi pignora arahae regni caelestis pledges of full assurance which render God their (a) According to Tertull. l. depenit a good worke makes God mans debter likewise S. Austin ser 31. de verbis Domini Saith that God vnder his hand-writing hath giuen us an engagement of his promises debter not because God owes any thing that is not his own who is lord of all things and good works themselues are his (b) According to S. Austin in Enchir. c. 107. good works are the gifts of God and God by crowning our works crownes but his own gifts and indeed euery good worke conducing to heauenly blessednes proceedes from druine grace which is Gods free liberall gift gifts deriued from his grace that make them good but because the reward that his goodnes gratis and frankly promises justice performes * Hebrae 6. non enim iniustus Deus vt obliuiscatur operis vestri dilectionis quā ostendistis in nomine ipsius qui ministrastis sāctis ministratis for God is not vnjust to forget the worke and labour of loue shewn towards his name Holy Ioh hauing this full assurance of diuine promises shut vp in the cabinet of his heart was not a more illustrious king sitting in his Regall Throne then he was glorious lying on his dunghill where he rejoyced and gloried in the assurance of promised glory through Christ his Redeemer though he (c) Though I vvere saith holy Iob c. 9. perfect neuerthess my soul is ignorant therof and Salomon Prouerb 20. Who can say my heart is clean I am clean from sin and the Apostle 1. Cor. 4. durst nost pronounce him selfe iustifyed albeit his conscience was not guilty of euill Again S. Austin l. 1. de ciuit c. 12. teacheth that though we can be certain of the reward of perseuerance neuertheless we cannot besure of perseuerance it selfe since no man can know certainly without a speciall reuclatiō that he shall cōtinue in the exercise of good works till the end of his life was not sure of saluation nor yet or his own iustification Hence euidently appeares the eminency of diuine Hope aboue any human expectation for this is like dust that is blown away with the wind or like the smoake that is dispersed here and there with a tempest to the confusion of him that placeth his trust in the arme of flesh but diuine Hope doth not make ashamed it is the ancre of the soul and holds it firme and stedfast in the greatest storme of tribulation and affliction And as the ancre of a ship doth not fix in water but in the firm earth below (d) The Apostle Hebr. 6. assures us that Christian Hope entereth into those parts which are within the vail that is Sanctum Sanctorum which is an allegory taken from the ancient Tabernacle or Temple of the Iews the inward part whereof was called Sanctum Sanctorum which the interposition of a vail seperated from that part where the people assembled together This inward part was a type of the diuine Tabernacle and represented euerlasting blessednes wherasthe other part was a figure only of enjoyments proper to the present life so Christian Hope doth not stay at the porch or entry of the vaile of the Tabernacle which misteriously represents the floating waters of transitory and visible enjoyments but passeth into the inward parts therof which is Sanctum Sanctorum the holiest place mysteriously shewing the throne of the inuisible God whether is entred the fore-runner for all true beleiues IESUS-CHRIST the author of diuine Hope Christ came into the world as a great Phisician to heal the infirmities of man and he made of his own blood * Aug. sanguis medici factus est medicamentum phraenetici the phisick that healed him wherby he begot him vnto a full assurance of Hope so that it would be impossibile that he should hate him as to perdition for whom he hath shed his blood as to saluation Thus Christs death was made the Hope of life which his resurrection confirm'd Christ rising did perfect what dying he had merited and gloriously risen he entred into the inward parts of the vaile that is of his heauenly kingdom making way for all such (e) The Apostle Rom. 2. ascribes iustification to the doers not to the hearers of the law whereby is euident that not faith alone but the keeping of Gods commandements is of necessity required vnto obtaining heauenly blessednes as shall obserue his commandements to follow and to receiue the reward of eternall life that his death hath merited CHAR. XVJ. OF CHRISTIAN CHARITY TOWARD GOD THE CONTENTS God will not be lou'd for a reward that is not himselfe in the exhibition of loue God exacteth all the loue of God and the loue of the world are iuconsistent together whosoeuer loueth God a right keepeth his commandements where there is deadly transgression there is nothing of iustification as water extinguisbeth fire so each mortall sin driueth away charity out of the soul CHarity towards God is a supernaturall loue wherewith the soul being inuested loues God
only for the goodnes sanctity and perfection essentiall vnto him And God is not loued aright when he is loued for * Aug. in psa 52. Deus non propterea se amari vult quia dat aliquid praeter se sed quia dat se a reward besides himselfe who is the * Gen. 17. ego ait Deus Abrahamo protector tuus sum merces tua magna nimis great reward of right loue also the soul that loues God aright loues him with all its faculties strength and thought * Aug. medita 35. immensus es Domine ideò sine mēsura debes amari Et rursum totū amorem à te exigit Deus qui te tetum fecit for in the exhibition of loue God requires of man it all who made him all As a chast woman that loues her husband loues no other man besides him for to loue so where not at all or less to loue him then she ought so a chast soul that loues God its spouse loues no other reward besides him for that were not to haue at all or less affection for him who will not be loued for any reward that is not himselfe and indeed a riuer diuided into two riuolets or branches the more water it giues to one the less it bestowes on the other Furthermore as a woman doth not loue her husband that loues him for his mony goods and estate so a Christian soul doth not loue God that loues him for worldly enjoyments Aright louer of God does not stoope his loue to any creature but mount's vp and sixes it in the Creatour onely that is renounces all leagues of loue and friendship with the world And truly the. (a) According to S. Chrysostom hom 42. in Mat. a man if he loues God does not loue the world for if he loues the world he loues not God with all his heart a gain in an other place S. Chrysostom saith that whosoeuer will loue God of necessity must hate riches and whosoeuer will loue riches of necessity must hate God The loue of God and the loue of the world as contradictories are inconsistent together to loue God is to hate the world and to loue the world is to hate God * Iac. 4. amicitia huius mundi inimica est Dei. whosoeuer will be a friend of the world maketh himselfe the enemy of God As the same eyes of the body cannot behold the heauen and the earth together so the same eyes of the soul cannot look on God and the world at once this cannot flie vp on high when the wings of its affections are glewed to earthly delights God and the world are two contrary Masters and command contrary wise God command's man to abandon all terrene things for him and his faith and he will giue him eternall life the world saies to man denie or dissemble thy faith and Religion and I will bestow on thee riches and honours bring thee out of trouble and misery and make thee liue in peace and plenly at thine own house with they wife children and family The obseruation of Gods commands is the proofe and evidence of Christi an charity for whosoeuer loueth God * Joan. 14. si diligitis me mādata mea seruate Et cap. 10. haec inquit est charitas Dei vt mādata eius custodiamus quo modo dicit Aug. dlligis eum cuius odisti praeceptum quis est qui dicat diligo Imperatorē sed odi leges eius keepeth his commandements and doth those things which are pleasing in his sight and good works proceeding from the root of charity are without guilt of sin and consequently gratefull sacrifices vnto God * Io. Deus charitas est qui manet in charitate in Deo manet who is charity it selfe and in whom a Christian soul abideth whiles it abideth in charity * Quod charitas de fasto deperdatur totaliter quolibet peccato mortali est assertio fide certa ex Tridentino sess 6. cap. 15. can 27. read the character of luxury vvherein this Catholick doctrine is clearely prou'd and it is as impossible for charity to remaine with mortall sin as fire to burn in water for as water extinguisheth fire so each mortall sin driueth away charitv Lucifer was depriued of charity by the sin of pride Adam by the sin of disobedience king Dauid by the sinns of adultery and homicide and S. Peter lost his charity by denying of Christ though not * Iuxta antiquos Patres S. Petrus peccauit ex timore non ex infidelitate charitatem amisit non fidem his faith he sinning through feare only And albeit that some naturall works may be (b) S. Austin ser 52. de tempore c. 2. besides diuine supernaturall acknowledges human naturall charity and expresly affirmes that such meer morall affection if no euil circunstance interuene is laudable lawfull and honest in consequence of which he teacheth that pagans Jewes and other vnbelieuers may loue one another namely pagan husbands may loue their wifes and parents their children with a loue that is no deadly sin although it be not grounded on Christian faith wherby t is plain that S. Austin did not think as the new Teachers of these daies impose vpon him that euery morall action done by a pagan or Iew is a mortall sin because of the want of Christian faith neither matt'ers it that t is said Rom. 14. Whatsoeuer is not of faith is sin Fot the Apostle meaneth only as appeares by the same chapter that whatsoeuer worke a man does against faith or contrary to conscience is a sin ant doubtles it is not meant thereby that an infidel sinneth in honouring his parents giuing of almes fighting for his Country tilling his ground and in all other morall good works where vnto an insidel is bound by the law of nature good morally without both diuine charity and diuine faith for if liberum arbitrium free will could produce no good morall action at all without Gods speciall helpe by necessary consequeuce it would follow that it were wholy extinct for example he who could perceiue nothing of any coulour without a speciall concurrence and assistance of God would be counted wholy blind that is it would be thought that his sight or faculty of seeing were totally extinct Howeuer meer works of nature inuested with morall goodnes onely haue but withered leaues wanting reall fruits such as tend * Aug. l. 4. con Julia nullum bonū beatificum sine charitate hoc inquit amore opus est vt sit bonum beatificum to the glory of Heauen which is the centre of Christian charity CHAR. XVIJ. OF CHARITY TOWARDS OVR NEIGBOUR THE CONTENTS The loue of God bringeth forth loue towards our neigbour whosoeuer loueth God as he ought loueth his neigbour also euery man is euery mans neigbour those come the nearest to God in imitation which loue their enemyes without dissimulation the highest praise
autem contritio actus voluntatis non appetitus sensitiui a bitter griese and detestation that a penitent sinner voluntarily conceiues to the punishing of his sin as an offence against God together with a full purpose to confess satisfy and neuer to sin again As the innate heat of new wine put into a close vessel makes to boile the whole substance therof and thereby purgeth out the dregs so the fire of contrition kindled in a penitent soul makes it seeth in teares of bitter sorrow * Psal 50. cor cōtritum humiliatum Deus nō despiciet proinde peccator eliciens contritionem perfectam Deo reconciliatur wherby the filth and vncleanesse of sin together with the ill affection inclining thereto purge away As the heate of the sun doth disperse the black clouds which obstruct its brightnesse so the warmeness of a contrite heart dissipates sins which are the dark clouds obstructing the light therof But there (a) Loue that proceed's from the motiue of charity precisely is perfect and called Amor amicitrae the loue of friendship which imports remission of sinns Loue that comes of the motiue of Gods iustice or feare of him is named Amor benevolentiae loue of good will which is imperfect An example of remission of sinnes by perfect loue or perfect contrition which includes perfect loue without the Sacrament or penance is set down Deut. 4. Jf thou seek our lord God thou shalt finde him if thou seeks him vvithall thine heart and vvith all thy soul be two kinds of contrition the one perfect in as much as a penitent sinner grieueth for and detesteth his sin in regard precisely that he loueth God with all his heart that is maketh Gods own goodness the chief motiue of his loue and in respect therof preferreth him before all earthly enjoyments The other is imperfect and by vsage of speech named Attrition proceeding from a motiue far inferiour to that of a full loue to God For example a sinner conceiueth an act of imperfect contrition or attrition when he grieueth to haue sinned and purposeth amendmēt in regard meerly of the deformity of sin which is it's formall essēce or feare of eternall fire which is the proper effect therof if mortall Perfect contrition was of absolute necessity vnto remission of sins in all times before the establishment of the new law No man euen in the old law did finde God that did not seek him with all his heart and with full tribulation of his soul Deut. 8. which imports perfect contrition notwihstanding the Sacraments and sacrifices thereof they being poor beggerly elements and no effectuall instruments of grace and life Yet in the new law of Christ which is not a law of bondage but of grace not of beggery but of plenty and consequently abounding with sauing priuiledges and prerogatiues aboue the other by diuine dispensation attrition (b) The Council of Trent fess 14. declar's that imperfect contrition called attrition though it be grounded in the feare of Hell or in a serious reflexion on the deformity of sin neuertheless if it exclude an affection to sinning is Donum Dei a gift of God and a motion of the holy Ghost And notwithstanding faith the Council that attrition of it selfe cannot bring a sinner vnto iustification of life howeuer in the Sacrament of Penance it disposeth him thereto Whereby euidently appears that attrition is not the same disposition seperate from that it is ioynt vnto the Sacrament in consequence of which the meaning of the Council is that seeing it is a remote disposition vnto iustification without sacramentall penance ioynt thereto is made an immediate disposition that of necessity procures iustifying grace that of it self is not sufficient enough to bring a sinner vnto iustification of life ioyned to and supported by the Sacrament of penance is an effectuall expedient for the obtaining it and indeed Christians vnder the new law were in a worse condition then the Israëlits vnder the old law if beside perfect contrition God should exact of them as a necessary requisit to remission of sins Confession since he required of the Israëlites perfect contrition only Deut. 4. Wherfore that the trouble implyed in confession of sins might be compensed by taking away the absolute necessity of hearing the other burthen implyed in perfect Contrition Christ hath so instituted the Sacrament of penance in his new law that as water which albeit according to its own naturall propriety hath nothing of heate yet made hot with fire can produce heate so Attrition which though in order to it 's owne vertue is no effectuall instrument of grace to the quickning a dead soul howeuer together with the help of the Sacrament can deliuer out of the lawes of death and restore it to newnesse of life Again if perfect Contrition were of absolute necessity penance ought not to lay claime * Poenitētia est Sacramētum mortuorum nam id ad quod est primo per se institutum est prima gratia sanctificans seu hominem baptizatum in peccata laepsum reconciliare Ita docet Trid. sess 14. can 1. to the Title of Sacramentum mortuorum that is Christ did not institute it for an effectuall help of such (c) The chiefe effect of sacramentall penance is to reconeile vnto God such as haue sinned after their baptism and because mortall sin is the death of the soul sacramentall penance that is specially instituted to confer the first sanctifying grace vnto remitting of deadly offences is called Sacramentum mortuorum a Sacrament of the dead as are dead in sin because it would presuppose allwayes the remission therof perfect Contrition including a full loue of God which is inconsistent with deadly sin and therby would plainly follow that the sacramentall Absolution of a Priest were a meer declaration of sins remitted afore In consequence of which sacramentall penance should not produce the effect which it signifyes to wit remission of sins which is contrary to the nature (d) It is an Article of catholick faith that the Sacraments of the new law produce sanctifying grace ex opere operato that is by the efficacy of their working after the manner of naturall causes which employe their whole actiuity while they worke so that the Sacrament of penance produces ex opere operato a greater or lesser measure of grace according to the greater or lesser dispositions of those which receiue it As to the form of speaking ex opere operato taken in the passiue signification it is ancient Pope Innocentius the third vsed it and the catholick Church in the Council of Trent receiu'd it which makes it a matter of faith of the Sacraments of the new law they being by vertue of their institution practicall Rites or signes for the effecting of sanctifying grace which indeed they signifie and to say that perfect contrition includeth a desire of the Sacrament of penance hath nothing of weight with it to weaken this