A Reformed Catholic: OR, A DECLARATION SHOWING HOW near WE MAY COME TO THE PRESENT Church of Rome in sundry points of Religion: and wherein we must for ever departed from them: with an Advertisement to all favourers of the Roman religion, showing that the said religion is against the Catholic principles and grounds of the Catechism. PRINTED BY JOHN LEGAT▪ Printer to the University of Cambridge. 1598. TO THE RIGHT WORSHIPFUL, SIR WILLIAM BOWS KNIGHT, etc. Grace and peace. RIght Worshipful, it is a notable policy of the devil, which he hath put into the heads of sundry men in this age, to think that our religion and the religion of the present Church of Rome are all one for substance; and that they may be reunited as (in their opinion) they were before. Writings to this effect, are spread abroad in the French tongue, & respected of English Protestants more than is meet, or aught to be. For, let men in show of moderation, pretend the peace and good estate of the Catholic Church as long as they will; This union of the two religions can never be made, more than the Union of light & darkness. And this shall appear, if we do but a little consider, how they of the Roman church have razed the foundation. For, though in words they honour Christ, yet in deed they turn him into a Pseudo-Christ and an Idol of their own brain. They call him our Lord, but with this condition that the Servant of Servants of this Lord may change and add to his commandments: having so great a power, that he may open and shut heaven to whom he will; & bind the very conscience with his own laws, and consequently be partaker of the spiritual kingdom of Christ. Again they call him a Saviour, but yet in Us: in that he gives this grace unto us, that by our merits we may be our own saviours: and in the want of our own merits, we may partake in the merits of the Saints. And they acknowledge that he Died and Suffered for us, but with this caveat, that the Fault being pardoned, we must satisfy for the temporal punishment either in this world or in Purgatory. In a word, they make him our Mediator of Intercession unto God; but withal, his Mother must be the Queen of heaven, and by the right of a mother command him there. Thus, in word they cry Osanna, but in deed they crucify Christ. Therefore we have good cause to bless the name of God, that hath freed us from the yoke of this Roman bondage, & hath brought us to the true light & liberty of the gospel. And it should be a great height of unthankfulness in us, not to stand out against the present church of Rome, but to yield ourselves to plots of reconciliation. To this effect and purpose I have penned this little Treatise, which I present to your Worship, desiring it might be some token of a thankful mind, for undeserved love. And I crave withal, not only your Worshipful (which is more common) but also your Learned protection; being well assured, that by skill and art you are able to justify whatsoever I have truly taught. Thus wishing to you and yours the continuance and the increase of faith and good conscience, I take my leave. Cambr. june 28. 1597. Your Worships in the Lord, William Perkins. THE AUTHOR TO THE Christian Reader. BY a Reformed Catholic, I understand any one that holds the same necessary heads of religion with the Roman Church: yet so, as he pares off and rejects all errors in doctrine whereby the said religion is corrupted. How this may be done, I have begun to make some little declaration in this small Treatise: the intent whereof is to show how near we may come to the present Church of Rome in sundry points of religion: and wherein we must for ever dissent. My purpose in penning this small discourse is threefold. The first is, to confute all such politics as hold and maintain, that our religion and that of the Roman Church differ not in substance, and consequently that they may be reconciled: yet my meaning is not here to condemn any Pacification that tends to persuade the Roman church to our religion. The second is, that the papists which think so basely of our religion, may be won to a better liking of it: when they shall see how near we come unto them in sundry points. The third, that the common protestant might in some part see and conceive the point of difference between us and the Church of Rome: an● know in what manner and how far forth, we condemn the opinions of the said Church. I crave pardon for the order which I use, in handling the several points. For I have set them down one by one, as they came to mind, not respecting the laws of method. If any Papist shall say, that I have not alleged their opinions aright, I answer that their books be at hand, and I can justify what I have said. Thus craving thine acceptation of this my pains, and wishing unto thee the increase of knowledge and love of pure and sound religion, I take my leave and make an end. The places of doctrine handled, are 1 Of Free-will. pag. 11 2 Of Original sin. 28 3 Assurance of Salvation. 38 4 justification of a sinner. 61 5 Of merits. 103 6 Satisfactions for sin. 117 7 Of Traditions. 134 8 Of Vows. 151 9 Of images. 170 10 Of Real-presence. 185 11 The sacrifice of the Mass. 204 12 Of Fasting. 221 13 The State of perfection. 232 14 Worshipping of Saints departed. 245 15 Intercession of Saints. 258 16 Implicit faith. 266 17 Of purgatory. 278 18 Of the Supremacy. 283 19 Of the efficacy of the Sacraments. 297 20 Of Faith. 305 21 Of Repentance. 316 22 The sins of the Roman church. 331 REVELAT. 18. 4. And I heard another voice from heaven say, Go out of her my people, that ye be not partakers of her sins, and receive not of her plagues. IN the former chapter S. john sets down a description of the whore of Babylon, and that at large as he saw her in a vision described unto him. In the sixteenth verse of the same chapter, he foretells her destruction: and in the three first verses of this 18. chapter, he goeth on to propound the said destruction yet more directly and plainly; withal alleging arguments to prove the same, in all the verses following. Now in this fourth verse is set down a caveat serving to forewarn all the people of God, that they may escape the judgement which shall befall the whore: and the words contain two parts: a commandment, and a reason. The commandment, Come out of her my people, that is, from Babylon. The reason, taken from the event lest ye be partakers, etc. Touching the commandment, first I will search the right meaning of it, and then set down the use thereof and doctrine flowing thence. In history therefore are three Babylon's mentioned: one is, Babylon of Assyria standing on the river Euphrates, where was the confusion of languages, and where the jews were in captivity: which Babylon is in Scripture reproached for Idolatry and other iniquities. The second Babylon is in Egypt standing on the river Nilus, and it is now called Cayr; of that mention is made 1. Pet. 5. v. 13. (as some think) though indeed it is as likely and more commonly thought, that there is meant Babylon of Assyria. The third Babylon is mystical, whereof Babylon of Assyria was a type and figure; and that is Rome, which is without question here to be understood. And the whore of Babylon, as by all circumstances may be gathered, is the state or regiment of a people that are the inhabitants of Rome and appertain thereto. This may be proved by the interpretation of the holy Ghost: for in the last verse of the 17. chapter the woman that is the whore of Babylon is said to be a city which reigneth over the kings of the earth: now in the days when S. john penned this book of Revelation, there was no city in the world that ruled over the kings of the earth but Rome; it then being the seat where the Emperor put in execution his Imperial authority. Again in the seventh verse she is said to sit on a beast having seven heads and ten horns which seven heads be seven hills, v. 9 whereon the woman sitteth, and also they be seven kings. Therefore by the whore of Babylon is meant a city standing on seven hills. Now it is well known, not only to learned men in the Church of God, but even to the heathen themselves, that Rome alone is the city built on seven distinct hills, called Caelius, Aventinus, Exquilinus, Tarpeius or Capitolinus, Viminalis, Palatinus, Quirinalis. Papists to help themselves, do allege that old Rome stood on seven hills, but now is removed further to the plain of Campus Martius. I answer, that howsoever the greatest part of the city in regard of habitation be not now on seven hills, yet in regard of regiment and practice of religion it is: for even to this day upon these hills are seated certain Churches and Monasteries & other like places where the Papal Authority is put in execution: and thus Rome being put for a state and regiment; even at this day, it stands upon seven hills. And though it be come to pass that the harlot in regard of her later days even changed her seat, yet in respect of her younger times in which she was bred and borne, she sat upon the seven hills. Others, because they fear the wounding of their own heads, labour to frame these words to an other meaning, and say, that by the whore, is meant the company of all wicked men in the world wheresoever, the devil being the head thereof. But this exposition is flat against the text: for in the second verse of the 18. chapter, she is opposed to the kings of the earth with whom she is said to commit fornication:) and in the last verse she is called a city standing on seven hills and reigning over the kings of the earth (as I have said,) & therefore must needs be a state of men in some particular place. And the Papists themselves perceiving that this shift will not serve their turn, make two Rome's, heathenish Rome, and that whereof the Pope is head: now (say they) the whore spoken of, is heathenish Rome, which was ruled by cruel tyrants, as Nero, Domitian, and the rest: and that Rome whereof now the Pope is head, is not here meant. Behold a vain and foolish distinction: for Ecclesiastical Rome in respect of state, princely dominion, and cruelty in persecuting the Saints of God, is all one with the heathenish Empire: the See of the Bishop being turned into the emperors court, as all histories do manifest. But let the distinction be as they suppose, yet by their leaves, here by the whore must be understood not only heathenish Rome, but even the Papal or Ecclesiastical Rome: for v. 3. of this chapter the holy Ghost saith plainly, that she hath made all natious drunk with the wine of the wrath of her fornication: yea it is added, that she hath committed fornication with the kings of the earth, whereby is signified that she hath endeavoured to entangle all the nations of the earth in her spiritual idolatry, and to bring the kings of the earth to her religion. Which thing cannot be understood of the heathenish Rome, for that left all the kings of the earth to their own religion and idolatry: neithet did they labour to bring foreign kings to worship their Gods. Again chapt. 18. v. 16 it is said, that the ten horns, which be ten kings, shall hate the whore, and make her desolate and naked, which must not be understood of heathenish Rome, but of popish Rome: for whereas in former times all the kings of the earth did submit themselves to the whore, now they have begun to withdraw themselves, and make her desolate; as the king of Bohemia, Denmark, Germany, England, Scotland, and other parts: therefore this distinction is also frivolous. They further allege that the whore of Babylon is drunk with the blood of the Saints and Martyrs, chap. 17. 6. shed not in Rome, but in jerusalem: where the Lord was crucified: and the two prophets being slain lie there in the streets, Rev. 11. ●8. But this place, is not meant of Jerusalem, as Hierome hath fully taught, but it may well be understood oh Epist. 17. E●st●. & Paula ad Marcellam. of Rome: Christ was crucified there, either because the authority, whereby he was crucified was from the Roman Empire, or else because Christ in his members was and is there daily crucified, though locally in his own person he was crucified at jerusalem. And thus, notwithstanding all which hath been said, we must here by the whore understand the State and Empire of Rome, not so much under the heathen Emperors as under the head thereof the Pope: which exposition, besides the authority of the text, hath the favour and defence of ancient and learned Serm. in Cant. 33. Epist. 125. men. Bernard saith, They are the ministers of Christ, but THEY SERVE ANTICHRIST. Again, The beast spoken of in the Apocalyps, to which a mouth is given to speak blasphemies, and to make war with the Saints of God, is now gotten into Peter's chair, as a lion prepared to his pray. It will be said, that Bernard speaks these latter words of one that came to the Popedom by intrusion or usurpation. It is true indeed: but wherefore was he an usurper? he rendereth a reason thereof in the same place: because the Antipope called Innocentius was chosen by the kings of Almain, France, England, Scotland, Spain, Jerusalem, with consent of the whole Clergy and people in these nations, and the other was not. And thus Bernard hath given his verdict, that not only this usurper, but all the Popes for this many years are the beast in the Apocalyps; because now they are only chosen by the college of Cardinals. To this agreeth the decree of C. in nomine dist. 23. Pope Nicolas the second, ann. 1059▪ that the Pope shall afterward be created by the suffrages of the Cardinal bishops of Rome, with the consent of the rest of the clergy and people, and the Emperor himself: and referent juello 2▪ Thess. 2. all Popes are excommunicate & accursed as Antichristes, that enter otherwise, as all now do. joachimus Abbess saith, Antichrist was long since borne in Rome, and shall be yet advanced higher in the APOSTOLIC SEE. Petracrh saith, Once Rome, now Babylon. And Ireneus book 5. chap. last, said before all these, that Antichrist should be Lateinus, a Roman. Again, this commandment must not so much be understood of a bodily departure in respect of cohabitation & presence, as of a spiritual separation in respect of faith & religion. And the meaning of the holy Ghost is, that men must departed from the Romish Church in regard of judgememt and doctrine, in regard of their faith and the worship of God. Thus than we see that the words contain a commandment from God, enjoining his Church and people to make a separation from Babylon. Whence I observe, That all those who will be saved, must departed and separate themselves from the faith and religion of this present Church of Rome. And whereas they are charged with schism that separate on this manner; the truth is, they are not schismatics that do so, because they have the commandment of God for their: warrant: and that party is the schismatic in whom the cause of this separation lieth: and that is in the church of Rome, namely the cup of abomination in the whore's hand, which is, their heretical and schismatical religion. Now touching this duty of separation I mean to speak at large, not standing so much to prove the same, because it is evident by the text, as to show the manner and measure of making this separation: & therein I will handle two things. First how farforth we may join with them in the matter of religion: secondly how farforth and wherein we must dissent and departed from them. And for this cause I mean to make choice of certain points of religion, and to speak of them in as good order as I can, showing in each of them our consent and difference: & the rather, because some harp much upon this string, d Examen pac●●q●●, imprimè de now v●●u a Caen 1590. that a union may be made of our two religions, and that we differ not in substance but in points of circumstance. The first point wherewith I mean to begin shall be the point of free-will: though it be not the principal. 1. Our consent. Free will both by them and us, is taken for a mixed power in the mind and will of man; whereby discerning what is good and what is evil, he doth accordingly choose or refuse the same. I. Conclus. Man must be considered in a fourfold estate, as he was created, as he was corrupted, as he is renewed, as he shallbe glorified. In the first estate, we ascribe to man's will liberty of nature in which he could will or nill either good or evil: in the third, liberty of grace: in the last, liberty of glory. All the doubt is of the second estate: and yet therein also we agree, as the conclusions following will declare. II. Conclus. The matters where about free-will is occupied are principally the actions of men, which be of three sorts, natural, human, spiritual. Natural actions are such as are common to men with beasts, as to eat, drink, sleep, hear, see, smell, taste, and to move from place to place: in all which we join with the Papists, and hold that man hath free will, and even since the fall of Adam by a natural power of the mind doth freely perform any of these actions or the like. III. Conclus. human actions are such as are common to all men good and bad, as to speak and use reason, the practice of all mechanical and liberal arts, and the outward performance of civil and ecclesiastical duties, as to come to the Church, to speak, and preach the word, to reach out the hand to receive the sacrament, and to lend the ear to listen outwardly to that which is taught. And hither we may refer the outward actions of civil virtues; as namely, justice, temperance, gentleness, liberality. And in these also we join with the church of Rome, & say (as experience teacheth) that men have a natural freedom of will, to put them or not to put them in execution. Paul saith, Rom. 2. 14. The Gentiles that have not the law do the things of the law BY NATURE, that is, by natural strength: and he saith of himself, that before his conversion touching the righteousness of the law, he was unblame able, Phil. 3. 6. And for this external obedience, natural men receive reward in temporal things. Mat. 6. 5. Ezech. 29. 19 And yet here some caveats must be remembered, I. that in human actions, man's will is weak and feeble, and his understanding dim & dark; and thereupon he often fails in them. And in all such actions with Augustine I d Hypogn. 3. understand the will of man to be only wounded or half dead. II. That the will of man is under the will of God, and therefore to be ordered by it; as jeremy saith, chap. 10. v. 23. O Lord I know that the way of man is not in himself: neither is it in man to walk or direct his steps. FOUR Conclus. The third kind of actions are spiritual more nearly concerning the heart and conscience, and these be two fold: they either concern the kingdom of darkness, or else the kingdom of God. Those that concern the kingdom of darkness are sins properly: and in these we likewise join with the Papists & teach, that in sins or evil actions man hath freedom of will. Some peradventure will say, that we sin necessarily, because he that sinneth can not but sin: and that free-will and necessity can not stand together. Indeed the necessity of compulsion or coaction, and free-will can not agree: but there is another kind of necessity which may stand with freedom of will: for some things may be done necessarily and also freely. A man that is in close prison, must needs there abide and cannot possibly get forth and walk where he will; yet can he move himself freely and walk within the prison: so likewise, though man's will be chained naturally by the bonds of sin, & therefore cannot but sin: and thereupon sinneth necessarily, yet doth it also sin freely. V Conclus. The second kind of spiritual actions or things, concern the kingdom of God; as repentance, faith, the conversion of a sinner, new obedience, and such like: in which we likewise in part join with the Church of Rome and say, that in the first conversion of a sinner, man's free-will concurs with God's grace, as a fellow or co-worker in some sort. For in the conversion of a sinner three things are required: the word, God's spirit, and man's will: for man's will is not passive in all and every respect, but hath an action in the first conversion and change of the soul. When any man is converted, this work of God is not done by compulsion, but he is converted willingly: and at the very time when he is converted, by God's grace he wills his conversion. To this end said Augustine, He which made thee Ser. 15. de verb. Apost. without thee, will not save thee without thee. Again, that is certain, that our will is required de great. & ● arbitr. 1. in this, that we may do any goodthing well: but we have it not from our own power but God works to will in us. For look at what time God gives grace, at the same time he c Posse velle, & actu velle recipere. giveth a will to desire & will the same grace: as for example when God works faith, at the same time he works also upon the will causing it to desire faith & willingly to receive the gift of believing. God makes of the unwilling will a willing will: because no man can receive grace utterly against his will, considering will constrained is no will. But here we must remember, that howsoever in respect of time the working of grace by God's spirit, and the willing of it in man go together: yet in regard of order, grace is first wrought, and man's will must first of all be acted and moved by grace, & then it also acteth, willeth, and moveth itself. And this is the last point of consent between us and the Roman church touching free-will: neither may we proceed further with them. II. The dissent or difference. The point of difference standeth in the cause of the freedom of man's will in spiritual matters, which concern the kingdom of God. The Papists say, man's will concurreth & worketh with god's grace in the first conversion of a sinner by itself, and by it own natural power; and is only helped by the holy Ghost. We say, that man's will worketh with grace in the first conversion, yet not of itself, but by grace. Or thus; They say, will hath a natural cooperation: we deny it, & say it hath cooperation only by grace, being in itself not active but passive; willing well only as it is moved by grace, whereby it must first be acted and moved, before it can act or will. And that we may the better conceive the difference, I will use this comparison: The Church of Rome sets forth the estate of a sinner by the condition of a prisoner, and so do we: mark then the difference. It supposeth the said prisoner to lie bound hand and foot with chains & fetters, and withal to be sick and weak, yet not wholly dead but living in part: it supposeth also that being in this case, he stirreth not himself for any help, & yet hath ability and power to stir. Hereupon if the keeper come and take away his bolts and fetters, and hold him by the hand and help him up, he can and will of himself stand and walk and go out of prison: even so (say they) is a sinner bound hand and foot with the chain of his sins; and yet he is not dead but sick, like to the wounded man in the way between jerico and jerusalem. And therefore doth he not will and affect that which is good; but if the holy Ghost come and do but untie his bands, and reach him his hand of grace, then can he stand of himself and will his own salvation, or any thing else that is good. We in like manner grant, that a prisoner fitly resembleth a natural man, but yet such a prisoner must he be, as is not only sick and weak but even stark dead; which cannot stir though the keeper untie his bolts and chains, nor hear though he sound a trumpet in his ear; and if the said keeper would have him to move & stir, he must give him not only his hand to help him, but even soul and life also: and such a one is every man by nature; not only chained and fettered in his sins but stark dead therein; as one that lieth rotting in the grave, not having any ability or power to move or stir: and therefore he cannot so much as desire or do any thing that is truly good of himself, but God must first come and put a new soul into him, even the spirit of grace to quicken and revive him: and then being thus revived, the will beginneth to will good things at the very same time, when god by his spirit first infuseth grace. And this is the true difference between us and the Church of Rome in this point of free will. III. Our Reasons. Now for the confirmation of the doctrine we hold, namely, that a man willeth not his own conversion of himself by nature either in whole or in part, but by grace wholly and alone; these reasons may be used. The first is taken from the nature and measure of man's corruption, which may be distinguished into two parts. The first is the want of that original righteousness, which was in man by creation: the second is, a prones and inclination to that which is evil, and to nothing that is truly good. This appeareth Gen. 8. 21. The frame of man's heart (saith the Lord,) is evil even from his childhood: that is, the disposition of the understanding, will, affections, with all that the heart of man deviseth, f●rmeth, or imagineth, is wholly evil. And Paul saith, Rom. 8. 5. The wisdom of the flesh is ENMITY against God. Which words are very significant: for the word [〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉] translated wisdom, signifieth that the best thoughts, the best desires, affections, and endeavours that be in any natural man, even those that come most near to true holiness, are not only contrary to God, but even enmity itself. And hence I gather, that the very heart itself, that is, the will and mind, from whence these desires and thoughts do come, are also enmity unto God. For such as the action is, such is the faculty whence it proceedeth; such as the fruit is, such is the tree; such as the branches are such are the roots. By both these places it is evident, that in man there is not only a want, absence, or deprivation of original righteousness, but a prones also by nature unto that which is evil▪ which prones includes in it an inclination not to some few, but to all and every sin; the very sin against the holy Ghost not excepted. Hence therefore I reason thus. If every man by nature do both want original justice, and be also prone unto all evil, then wanteth he natural free-will to will that which is truly good. But every man by nature wants original justice, and is also prone unto all evil. Ergo: Every man naturally wants free-will, to will that which is good. Reason II. 1. Cor. 2. 14. The natural man PERCEIVETH NOT the things of the spirit of God: for they are foolishness unto him, neither CAN HE KNOW them, because they are spiritually discerned. In these words Saint Paul sets down these points: I that a natural man doth not so much as think of the things revealed in the Gospel. II. that a man hearing, and in mind conceiving them; can not give consent unto them▪ and by natural judgement approve of them, but contrariwise thinketh them to be foolishness. III. that no man can give assent to the things of God, unless he be enlightened by the spirit of God. And hence I reason thus. If a man by nature doth not know and perceive the things of God: and when he shall know them, can not by nature give assent unto them: then hath he no power to will them. But the first is evidently true. Ergo. For first the mind must approve & give assent, before the will can choose or will: and when the mind hath not power to conceive nor give assent, there the will hath no power to will. Reason III. Thirdly the holy Ghost avoucheth, Eph. 2. ●. Colloss. 2. 13. that all men by nature are dead in sins and trespasses: not as the Papists say, weak, sick, or half dead. Hence I gather, that man wanteth natural power not to will simply, but freely and frankly to will that which is truly good. A dead man in his grave cannot stir the least finger, because he wants the very power of life, sense, & motion: no more can he that is dead in sin, will the least good nay if he could either will or do any good, he could not be dead in sin. And as a dead man in the grave, cannot rise but by the power of God; no more can he that is dead in sin rise, but by the power of God's grace alone, without any power of his own. Reason IU. Fourthly, in the conversion and salvation of a sinner, the scripture ascribeth all to God, and nothing to man's free-will. john 3. 3. Except a man be borne again, he cannot see the kingdom of God. Eph. 2. 10. We are his worekmanship CREATED in Christ jesus to good works. And c. 4. v. 24. the new man is CREATED to the image of God. Now to be borne again, is a work of no less importance than our first creation; and therefore wholly to be ascribed to God as our creation is. Indeed Paul, Philip. 2. 12. 13. biddeth the Philippians work out their salvation with fear and trembling: not meaning to ascribe unto them a power of doing good by themselves. And therefore in the next verse he addeth, It is God that worketh both the will and the deed: directly excluding all natural free-will in things spiritual: and yet withal he acknowledgeth, that man's will hath a work in doing that which is good, not by nature but by grace. Because when God gives man power to will good things, than he can will them: and when he giveth him a power to do good, than he can do good, and he doth it. For though there be not in man's conversion a natural cooperation of his will with God's spirit, yet is there a supernatural cooperation by grace, enabling man when he is to be converted, to will his conversion: according to which S. Paul saith, 1. Cor. 15. 10. I have laboured in the faith: but least any man should imagine, that this was done by any natural power: therefore he addeth▪ yet not I, that is, not I by any thing in me, but God's grace in me, enabling my will to do the good I do. Reason V The judgement of the ancient Church. c August. de correp. & great. c. 12. August. The will of the regenerate is kindled only by the holy Ghost: that they may therefore be able because they will thus: and they will thus, because God WORKS IN THEM TO WILL. And, d Epist. 105. We have LOST OUR free-will to love God by the greatness of our sin. Serm. 2. on the words of the Apostle. Man when he was created, receive a great strength in his free-will: but by sinning HE LOST IT. e Fulgent. lib. Prad. Fulgentius, God giveth grace freely to the unworthy, whereby the wicked man being justified is enlightened, WITH THE GIFT OF GOOD WILL, and with a FACULTY OF DOING GOOD: that by mercy preventing him, he may BEGIN TO WILL WELL, and by mercy coming after he may do the good he will. Bernard saith, f Bernard. l. de lib●ro arbitrio. It is WHOLLY THE GRACE OF GOD that we are created, healed, saved. Council. Arausic. 2. cap. 6. To believe and to will is GIVEN from above by INFUSION, and inspiration of the holy Ghost. More testimonies and reasons might be alleged to prove this conclusion, but these shall suffice: now let us see what reasons are alleged to the contrary. III. Objections of Papists. Object. I. First they allege that man by nature may do that which is good, & therefore will that which is good: for none can do that which he neither willeth nor thinketh to do, but first he must will and then do. Now (say they) men can do good by nature, as give alms, speak the truth, do justice, and practise other duties of civil virtue: and therefore will that which is good. I answer, that a natural man may do good works for the substance of the outward work: but not in regard of the goodness of the manner: these are two divers things. A man without supernatural grace may give alms, do justice, speak the truth, etc. which be good things considered in themselves as God hath commanded them; but he cannot do them well. To think good things and to do good things are natural works: but to think good things in a good manner, and to do them well, so as God may accept the action done, are works of grace. And therefore the good thing done by a natural man is a sin, in respect of the doer: because it fails both for his right beginning, which is a pure heart, good conscience, and faith unfeigned; as also for his end which is the glory of God. Object. II. God hath commanded all men to believe and repent: therefore they have natural free will, by virtue whereof (being helped by the spirit of God) they can believe and repent. Answ. This reason is not good: for by such commandments God showeth not what men are able to do; but what they should do, and what they can not do. Again, the reason is not well framed, it ought rather to be thus: Because God gives men commandment to repent and believe, therefore they have power to repent & believe, either by nature or by grace: & then we hold with them. For when God in the Gospel commandeth men to repent and to believe, at the same time by his grace he enableth them both to will or desire to believe and repent, as also actually to repent and believe. Object. III. If man have no free-will to sin or not to sin, than no man is to be punished for his sins: because he sinneth by a necessity not to be avoided. Answ. The reason is not good: for though man can not but sin, yet is the fault in himself, & therefore he is to be punished: as a bankrupt is not therefore freed from his debts, because he is not able to pay them: but the bills against him stand in force, because the debt comes through his own default. The second point: of Original sin. The next point to be handled, is concerning Original sin after baptism: that is, how farforth it remaineth after baptism. A point to be well considered, because hereupon depend many points of popery. I. Our consent. I. Conclus. They say, natural corruption after baptism is abolished, and so say we: but let us see how far it is abolished. In original sin are three things: I. the punishment, which is the first and second death. II. Guiltiness, which is the binding up of the creature unto punishment. III. the fault or the offending of God, under which I comprehend our Guiltiness in Adam's first offence, as also the Corruption of the heart: which is, a natural inclination & proneness to any thing that is evil or against the law of God. For the first we say, that after baptism in the regenerate, the punishment of original sin is taken away: There is no condemnation (saith the Apostle) to them that be in Christ jesus. Rom. 8. 1. For the second, that is the guiltiness, we further condescend and say; that is also taken away in them that are borne anew: for considering there is no condemnation to them, there is nothing to bind them to punishment. Yet this caveat must be remembered, namely that the guiltiness is removed from the person regenerate, not from the sin in the person; but of this more afterward. Thirdly, the guilt in Adans' first offence is pardoned. And touching the corruption of the heart, I avouch two things: I. That, that very power or strength whereby it reigneth in man, is taken away in the regenerate. II. That this corruption is abolished (as also the fault of every actual sin passed) so far forth as it is the fault and sin of the man in whom it is. Indeed it remains till death, and it is sin considered in itself, so long as it remains, but it is not imputed unto the person: and in that respect is as though it were not; it being pardoned. II. The dissent or difference. Thus far we consent with the Church of Rome: now the difference between us stands not in the abolishment, but in the manner, and the measure of the abolishment of this sin. Papists teach, that Original sin is so far forth taken away after baptism, that it ceaseth to be a sin properly: and is nothing else but a want, defect, and weakness, making the heart fit and ready to conceive sin: much like tinder, which though it be no fire of itself, yet is it very apt and fit to conceive fire. And they of the church of Rome deny it to be sin properly, that they might uphold some gross opinions of theirs, namely, That a man in this life may fulfil the law of God; and do good works void of sin: that he may stand righteous at the bar of God's judgement by them. But we teach otherwise, that though original sin be taken away in the regenerate, and that in sundry respects: yet doth it remain in them after baptism, not only as a want and weakness but as a sin, and that properly: as may by these reasons be proved. Reason I. Rom. 7. 17. Paul saith directly: It is no more I that do it, but sin that dwelleth in me: that is, original sin. The Papists answer again, that it is so called improperly: because it cometh of sin and also is an occasion of sin to be done. But by the circumstances of the text, it is sin properly: for in the words following, Saint Paul saith, that this sin dwelling in him, made him to do the evil which he hated. And v. 24. he crieth out, O wretched man that I am, who shall deliver me from this body of death? whence I reason thus. That which once was sin properly, and still remaining in man maketh him to sin, and entangleth him in the punishment of sin, and makes him miserable: that is sin properly. But original sin doth all these. Ergo. Reason II. Infants baptized and regenerate, die the bodily death before they come to the years of discretion: therefore original sin in them is sin properly; or else they should not die, having no cause of death in them: for death is the wages of sin, as the Apostle saith, Rom. 6. 23. and Rom. 5. 12. Death entered into the world by sin. As for actual sin they have none, if they die presently after they are borne before they come to any use either of reason, or affection. Reason III. That which lusteth against the spirit, and by lusting tempteth, and in tempting enticeth and draweth the heart to sin, is for nature sin itself: but concupiscence in the regenerate lusteth against the spirit, Gal. 5. 17. and tempteth as I have said, jam. 1. 14. God tempteth no man, but every man is tempted when he is drawn away by his own concupiscence, and is enticed: then when lust conceiveth, it bringeth forth sin. And therefore it is sin properly: such as the fruit is, such is the tree. e Aug. contra jul. l. 5. cap. 3. August. Concupiscence against which the spirit lusteth IS SINN●, because in it there is disobedience against the rule of the mind: and it is the punishment of sin because it befalls man for the merits of his disobedience: and it is the cause of sin. Reason V The judgement of the ancient Church. August. epist. 29. Charity in some is more, in some less, in some none: the highest degree of all which cannot be increased, is in none, as long as man lives upon earth. And as long as it may be increased, THAT WHICH IS LESS THAN IT SHOULD BE, IS IN FAULT: by which fault it is, that there is no just man upon earth that doth good and sinneth not: by which fault none living shallbe justified in the sight of God: for which fault, if we say we have no sin, there is no truth in us: for which also, though we profit never so much, it is necessary for us to say, forgive us our debts, though all our words, deeds, and thoughts be already forgiven in baptism. Indeed August. in sundry places seems to deny concupiscence to be sin after baptism: but his meaning is, that concupiscence in the regenerate is not the sin of the person in whom it is. For thus he expounds himself, c ad Valer. lib. 1. c. 24. This is not to have sin, not to be guilty of sin. And, d Lib. 2. contra jul. The la of sin in baptism is remitted and not ENDED. And, e Tract▪ 42. in joh. Let not sin reign: he saith not, let not sin be, but let it not reign. For as long as thou li●est, of necessity sin will be in thy members: at the least, look it reign not in thee, etc. Objections of Papists. The arguments which the Church of Rome allegeth to the contrary, are these. Object. I. In baptism men receive perfect and absolute pardon of sin; and sin being pardoned is taken quite away: and therefore original sin after baptism ceaseth to be sin. Ans. Sin is abolished two ways: first in regard of c quoadimputationem. imputation to the person: secondly in regard of d quoad ex●●tiam. existing and being. For this cause, God vouchsafeth to man two blessings in baptism, Remission of sin, and Mortification of the same. Remission or pardon abolisheth sin wholly in respect of any imputation thereof unto man, but not simply in regard of the being thereof. Mortification therefore goeth further, & abolisheth in all the powers of body and soul, the very concupiscence or corruption itself, in respect of the being thereof. And because mortification is not accomplished till death, therefore original corruption remaineth till death, though not imputed. Object. II. Every sin is voluntary; but original sin in no man after baptism is voluntary: and therefore no sin. Ans. The proposition is a politic rule pertaining to the courts of men, and must be understood of such actions as are done of one man to an other: and it doth not belong to the court of conscience, which God holdeth & keepeth in men's hearts, in which every want of conformity to the law is made a sin. Secondly I answer, that original sin was voluntary in our first parent Adam: for he sinned, and brought this misery upon us willingly: though in us it be otherwise upon just cause. Actual sin was first in him, and then original corruption: but in us original corruption is first, and then actual sin. Object. III. Where the form of any thing is taken away, there the thing itself ceaseth also: but after baptism in the regenerate, the form of original sin, that is, the guilt is quite removed: and therefore sin ceaseth to be sin. Answ. The guilt, or obligation to punishment, is not the form of original corruption, but (as we say in schools) an accident or necessary companion thereof. The true form of original sin, is a defect and deprivation of that which the law requireth at our hands in our mind, will, affections, and in all the powers both of soul and body. But they urge this reason further, saying; where the guilt and punishment is taken away, there is no fault remaining: but after baptism the guilt and punishment is removed: and therefore, though original corruption remain, it is not as a fault to make us guilty before God, but only as a weakness. Ans. Gild is removed, and not removed. It is removed from the person regenerate, which stands not guilty for any sin original or actual: but guilt is not removed from the sin itself; or, as some answer, there be two kinds of guilt, actual, and potential. The actual guilt is, whereby sin maketh man stand guilty before God: and that is removed in the regenerate. But the potential guilt, which is an aptness in sin, to make a man stand guilty if he sin, that is not removed: and therefore still sin remaineth sin. To this or like effect saith Augustine, b contra Iu●. l. 6. c. 6. We say that the guilt of concupiscence, not whereby IT IS GVILTIE (for that is not a person) but that whereby it made man guilty from the beginning, is pardoned, and that the thing it SELF IS EVIL so as the regenerate desire to be healed of this plague. Object. III. Lastly, for our disgrace they allege that we in our doctrine teach, that original sin after baptism is only clipped or pared, like the hair of a man's head, whose roots still remain in the flesh, growing and increasing after they are cut, as before. Ans. Our doctrine is abused: for in the paring of any thing▪ as in cutting of the hair or in lopping a tree, the root remains untouched, and thereupon multiplieth as before. But in the mortification of original sin after baptism, we hold no such paring: but teach, that in the very first instant of the conversion of a sinner, sin receiveth his deadly wound in the root, never afterward to be recovered. The third point: Certainty of salvation. I. Our consent. I. Conclus. We hold and believe that a man in this life, may be certain of salvation: and the same thing doth the Church of Rome teach and hold. II. Conclus. We hold and believe that a man is to put a certain affiance in God's mercy in Christ for the salvation of his soul: & the same thing by common consent holdeth the foresaid Church: this point maketh not the difference between us. III. Conclus. We hold that with assurance of salvation in our hearts is joined doubting: and there is no man so assured of his salvation, but he at some time doubteth thereof, especially in the time of temptation: and in this the Papists agree with us, and we with them. iv Conclus. They go further and say, that a man may be certain of the salvation of men, or of the Church by catholic faith: and so say we. V Conclus. Yea they hold that a man by faith may be assured of his own salvation through extraordinary revelation, as Abraham and others were, and so do we. VI They teach that we are to be certain of our salvation by special faith in regard of e Bellar. l. 3. pag. 1129. cl. God that promiseth: though in regard of ourselves and our indisposition we can not: & in the former point they consent with us. II. The dissent or difference. The very main point of difference lies in the manner of assurance. I. Conclus. We hold that a man may be certain of his salvation in his own conscience even in this life, and that by an ordinary and special faith. They hold that a man is certain of his salvation only by hope: both of us hold a certainty, we by faith, they by hope. II. Conclus. Further, we hold and avouch that our certainty by true faith is unfallible: they say, their certainty is only probable. III. Conclus. And further though both of us say, that we have confidence in God's mercy in Christ for our salvation: yet we do it with some difference. For our confidence cometh from certain and ordinary faith: theirs from hope, ministering (as they say) but a conjectural certainty. Thus much of the difference: now let us see the reasons two and fro. III. Objections of papists. Object. I. Where there is no word there is no faith: for these two are relatives: but there is no word of God saying, Cornelius believe thou, Peter believe thou: or thou shalt be saved. And therefore there is no such ordinary faith to believe a man's own particular salvation. Ans. The proposition is false, unless it be supplied with a clause on this manner. Where there is no word of promise, nor any thing that doth countervail a particular promise, there is no faith. But (say they) there is no such particular word. It is true, God doth not speak to men particularly, Believe thou, and thou shalt be saved. But yet doth he that which is answerable hereunto, in that he giveth a general promise, with a commandment to apply the same: and hath ordained the holy ministery of the word to apply the same to the persons of the hearers in his own name: and that is as much as if the Lord himself should speak to men particularly. To speak more plainly, in the Scripture the promises of salvation be indefinitely propounded; it saith not any where, if john will believe he shall be saved, or if Peter will believe he shall be saved: but whosoever believeth shall be saved. Now then comes the minister of the word, who standing in the room of God, and in the stead of Christ himself, takes the indefinite promises of the Gospel, and lays them to the hearts of every particular man: and this in effect is as much as if Christ himself should say, Cornelius believe thou, and thou shalt be saved: Peter believe thou, and thou shalt be saved. It is answered, that this applying of the Gospel is upon condition of men's faith and repentance, and that men are deceived touching their own faith and repentance: and therefore fail in applying the word unto themselves. Answ. Indeed this manner of applying is false in all hypocrites, heretics, and unrepentant persons: for they apply upon carnal presumption, and not by faith. Nevertheless it is true in all the Elect having the spirit of grace, and prayer: for when God in the ministery of the word being his own ordinance, saith, Seek ye my face: the heart of God's children truly answereth, O Lord, I will seek thy face. Psal. 17. 8. And when God shall say, Thou art my people, they shall say again: The Lord is my God, Zach. 13. 6. And it is a truth of God, that he which believeth knoweth that he believeth: and he that truly repenteth knoweth that he repenteth; unless it be in the beginning of our conversiou, and in the time of distress and temptation. Otherwise what thankfulness can there be for grace received. Object. II. It is no article of the Creed, that a man must believe his own salvation: and therefore no man is bound thereto. Ans. By this argument it appears plainly, that the very pillars of the Church of Rome do not understand the Creed: for in that which is commonly called the Apostles Creed, every article implieth in it this particular faith. And in the first article, I believe in God, are three things contained: the first, to believe that there is a God, the second to believe the same God is my God, the third to put my confidence in him for my salvation: and so much contain the other articles, which are concerning God. When Thomas said, joh. 20. 28. 29. My God, Christ answered, Thou hast believed Thomas. Where we see that to believe in God, is to believe God to be our God. And Psal. 78. v. 22. to believe in God & to put trust in him are all one, They believed not in God, and trusted not in his help. And the articles concerning Remission of sins and Life everlasting, do include, and we in them acknowledge our special faith concerning our own salvation. For to believe this or that, is to believe there is such a thing, and that the same thing belongs to me: as when David said, I should have fainted except I had believed to see the goodness of the Lord in the land of the living. Psal. 27. 13. It is answered, that in those articles we only profess ourselves to believe remission of sins, and life everlasting, to be vouchsafed to the people and Church of god. Ans. This indeed is the exposition of many, but it stands not with common reason. For if that be ●ll the faith that is there confessed, the devil hath as good a faith as we. He knoweth and believeth that there is a god: & that this god imparteth remission of sins and life everlasting to his Church. And to the end that we being Gods children, may in faith go beyond all the devils in hell, we must further believe, that remission of sins and life everlasting belongs unto us: and unless we do particularly apply the said articles unto ourselves, we shall little or nothing differ from the devil, in making confession of faith. Object. III. We are taught to pray for the pardon of our sins day by day, Math. 6. 12. and all this were needless, if we could be assured of pardon in this life. Ans. The fourth petition must be understood not so much of our old debts or sins, as of our present & new sins: for as we go on from day to day, so we add sin to sin; and for the pardon of them must we humble ourselves and pray. I answer again, that we pray for the pardon of our sins: not because we have no assurance thereof, but because our assurance is weak & small; we grow on from grace to grace in Christ, as children do to man's estate by little & little. The heart of every believer is like a vessel with a narrow neck, which being cast into the sea is not filled at the first; but by reason of the strait passage, receiveth water drop by drop. God giveth unto us in Christ even a sea of mercy, but the same on our parts is apprehended and received only by little and little, as faith groweth from age to age: and this is the cause why men having assurance pray for more. Our reasons to the contrary. Reason. I. The first reason may be taken from the nature of faith on this manner. True faith is both an unfallible assurance and a particular assurance of the remission of sins and of life everlasting. And therefore by this faith, a man may be certainly and particularly assured of the remission of sins and life everlasting. That this reason may be of force, two things must be proved: first that true faith is a certain assurance of God's mercy to that party in whom it is. Secondly that faith is a particular assurance thereof. For the first that faith is a certain assurance, Christ saith to Peter, Mat. 14. 31. O thou of little faith, wherefore didst thou doubt. Where he maketh an opposition between faith & doubting: thereby giving us directly to understand, that, To be certain, & To give assurance is of the nature of faith. Rom. 4. 20. 22. Paul saith of Abraham, that he did not doubt of the promise of God through unbelief: but was strengthened in faith, and gave glory to God, being fully assured, that he which had promised was able to do it: where I observe first, that doubting is made a fruit of unbelief; and therefore unfallible certainty and assurance, being contrary to doubting must needs proceed from true faith; considering that contrary effects come of contrary causes: and contrary causes produce contrary effects. Secondly I note that the strength of Abraham's faith, did stand in fullness of assurance: for the text saith, he was strengthened in the faith, being fully assured: & again Heb. 11. 1. true saving faith is said to be the ground and subsistence of things hoped for: & the evidence or demonstration of things that are not seen: but faith can be no ground or evidence of things, unless it be for nature certainty itself: & thus the first point is manifest. The second, that saving faith is a particular assurance, is proved by this, that the property of faith is to apprehend and apply the promise, and the thing promised, Christ with his benefits. joh. 1. 12. As many, saith S. john, as received him, to them he gave power to be the sons of God, namely to them that believe in his name. In these words to believe in Christ, and to receive Christ, are put for one and the same thing. Now to receive Christ, is to apprehend and apply him with all his benefits unto ourselves, as he is offered in the promises of the Gospel. For in the sixth chapter following, first of all he sets forth himself not only as a Redeemer generally, but also as the bread of life and the water of life: secondly he sets forth his best hearers as eaters of his body and drinkers of his blood: and thirdly he intends to prove this conclusion, that to eat his body and to drink his blood, and to believe in him, are all one. Now than if Christ be as food, and if to eat and drink the body and blood of Christ, be to believe in him, then must there be a proportion between eating and believing. Look then as there can be no eating without taking or receiving of meat, so no believing in Christ without a spiritual receiving and apprehending of him. And as the body hath his hand, mouth, & stomach, whereby it taketh, receiveth, and digesteth meat for the nourishment of every part: so likewise in the soul there is a faith, which is both hand, mouth, and stomach to apprehend, receive, and apply Christ and all his merits for the nourishment of the soul. And Paul saith yet more plainly, that through faith we receive the promise of the spirit. Gal. 3. 14. Now as the property of apprehending and applying of Christ belongeth to faith, so it agreeth not to hope, love, confidence, of any other gift or grace of God. But first by faith we must apprehend Christ, and apply him to ourselves, before we can have any hope or confidence in him. And this applying seems not to be done by any affection of the will, but by a supernatural act of the mind, which is to acknowledge, set down, and believe that remission of sins, and life everlasting by the merit of Christ, belong to us particularly. To this which I have said agreeth Augustine Tract. 25. on joh. why preparest thou teeth & belly: BELIEVE AND THOU HAST EATEN. and Tract. 50. How shall I reach my hand into heaven, that I may hold him sitting there? Send up thy faith, and thou layest hold on him. And Bernard saith, homil. in Cant. 76. Where he is thou canst not come now—; yet go to follow him and seek him—: believe and thou hast found him: for TO BELIEVE IS TO FIND. Chrysost. on Mark. Homil. 10. Let us believe and we see jesus present before us. Ambr. on Luke lib. 6. cap. 8. By faith Christ is touched, by faith Christ is seen. Tertul. de resurrect. carnis. he must be chewed by understanding, and be digested by faith. Reason II. Whatsoever the holy Ghost testifieth unto us, that we may, yea that we must certainly by faith believe: but the holy Ghost doth particularly testify unto us our adoption, the remission of our sins, and the salvation of our souls: and therefore we may and must particularly and certainly by faith believe the same. The first part of this reason is true, and cannot be denied of any. The second part is proved thus: Saint Paul saith. Rom. 8. 15. We have not received the spirit of bondage to fear: but the spirit of adoption, whereby we cry Abba, father: adding further, that the same spirit beareth witness with our spirits, that we are the children of God. Where the Apostle maketh two witnesses of our adoption: the spirit of God, and our spirits, that is, the conscience sanctified by the holy Ghost. The Papists to elude this reason, allege that the spirit of God doth indeed witness of our adoption, by some comfortable feelings of God's love and favour, being such as are weak and oftentimes deceitful. But by their leaves, the testimony of the Spirit is more than a bare sense or feeling of God's grace: for it is called the pledge and earnest of God's spirit in our hearts. 2. Cor. 1. 21. and therefore it is fit to take away all occasion of doubting of our salvation: as in a bargain the earnest is given between the parties, to put all out of questistion. Bernara saith, that the testimony of the spirit is a most sure testimony. Epist. 107. Reason III. That which we must pray for by God's commandment, that we must believe: but every man is to pray for the pardon of his own sins, and for life everlasting; of this there is no question: therefore he is bound to believe the same. The proposition is most of all doubtful: but it is proved thus. In every petition there must be two things: a desire of the things we ask, and a particular faith whereby we believe, that the thing we ask shall be given unto us. So Christ saith, Whatsoever ye desire when Mark. 11. 24. you pray, believe that you shall have it, and it shall be given unto you And Saint john further noteth out this particular faith, calling it our assurance that God will give unto us. whatsoever we ask according to his will. 1. joh. 5. 14. And hence it is, that in every petition there must be two grounds: a commandment to warrant us in making a petition, and a promise to assure us of the accomplishment thereof. And upon both these, follows necessarily an application of the things we ask to ourselves. Reason FOUR Whatsoever God commandeth in the Gospel, that a man must and can perform: but God in the Gospel commandeth us to believe the pardon of our own sins: and life everlasting: and therefore we must believe thus much, and may be assured thereof. This proposition is plain by the distinction of the commandments, of the law, and of the Gospel. The commandments of the law show us what we must do, but minister no power to perform the thing to be done: but the doctrine & commandments of the Gospel do otherwise; and therefore they are called spirit and life; god with the commandment giving grace joh. 6. ●6. that the thing prescribed may be done. Now this is a commandment of the gospel, to believe remission of sins: for it was the substance of Christ's ministery, repent and believe the Gospel. And that is not generally to believe that Christ is a Saviour, and that the promises made in him are true (for so the devils believe with trembling:) but it is particularly to believe that Christ is my Saviour, and that the promises of salvation in Christ belong in special to me, as Saint john saith: This is his commandment, that we believe in the name of jesus Christ: now to believe in Christ is to put confidence in him; which none can do, unless he be first assured of his love and favour. And therefore in as much, as we are enjoined to put our confidence in Christ, we are also enjoined to believe our reconciliation with him, which standeth in the remission of our sins, and our acceptation to life everlasting. Reason V Whereas the Papists teach, that a man may be assured of his salvation by hope: even hence it follows, that he may be unfallibly assured thereof. For the property of true and lively hope is never to make a man ashamed. Rom. 5. 5. And true hope followeth faith and ever presupposeth certainty of faith: neither can any man truly hope for his salvation unless by faith he be certainly assured thereof in some measure. The popish doctors take exception to these reasons on this manner. First they say, it cannot be proved that a man is as certain of his salvation by faith, as he is of the articles of the creed. I answ. First they prove thus much that we ought to be as certain of the one as of the other. For look, what commandment we have to believe the articles of our faith; the like we have enjoining us to believe the pardon of our own sins, as I have proved. Secondly these arguments prove it to be the nature of essential property of faith, as certainly to assure man of his salvation, as it doth assure him of the articles which he believeth. And howsoever commonly men do not believe their salvation as unfallible, as they do their articles of faith: yet some special men do; having God's word applied by the spirit as a sure ground of their faith, whereby they believe their own salvation, as they have it for a ground of the articles of their faith. Thus certainly was Abraham assured of his own salvation: as also the Prophets and Apostles, & the martyrs of God in all ages; whereupon without doubting they have been content to lay down their lives for the name of Christ; in whom they were assured to receive eternal happiness. And there is no question, but there be many now, that by long and often experience of God's mercy, and by the inward certificate of the ho● Ghost, have attained to a full assurance of their salvation. II. Exception. howsoever a man may be assured of his present estate, yet no man is certain of his perseverance unto the end. Ans. It is otherwise: for in the sixth petition, lead us not into temptation, we pray that God would not suffer us to be wholly overcome of the devil in any temptation: and to this petition we have a promise answerable, 1. Cor. 10. That God with the temptation will give an issue: and therefore howsoever the devil may buffet, molest, and wound the servants of God, yet shall he never be able to overcome them. Again he that is once a member of Christ, can never be wholly cut off. And if any by sin were wholly severed from Christ for a time, in his recovery he is to be baptized the second time: for baptism is the sacrament of initiation or engrafting into Christ. By this reason we should as often be baptized as we fall into any sin, which is absurd. Again S. john saith, 1. joh. 2. 19 They went out from us, but they were not of us: for if they had been of us, they would have continued with us. Where he taketh it for granted, that such as be once in Christ, shall never wholly be severed or fall from him. Though our communion with Christ may be lessened, yet the union & the bond of conjunction is never dissolved. III. Exception. They say, we are indeed to believe our salvation on god's part: but we must needs doubt in regard of ourselves: because the promises of remission of sins are given upon condition of man's faith and repentance. Now we cannot (say they) be assured that we have true faith and repentance, because we may lie in secret sins; and so want that indeed, which we suppose ourselves to have▪ Answ. I say again, he that doth truly repent and believe, doth by God's grace know that he doth repent & believe: for else Paul would never have said, Prove yourselves whither you be in the faith or not: and the same Apostle saith, 2. Cor. 12. We have not received the spirit of the world, but the spirit which is of God, that we might KNOW THE THINGS WHICH ARE GIVEN OF GOD: which things are not only life everlasting, but justification, sanctification, and such like. And as for secret sins, they cannot make our repentance void: for he that truly repenteth of his known sins, repenteth also of such as be unknown, and receiveth the pardon of them all. God requireth not an express or special repentance of unknown sins; but accepts it as sufficient, if we repent of them generally: as David saith, Psal. 19 Who knows the errors of this life: forgive me my secret sins. And whereas they add that faith and repentance must be sufficient. I answer that the sufficiency of our faith and repentance, stands in the truth and not in the measure or perfection thereof; and the truth of both where they are, is certainly discerned. Reason VI The judgement of the ancient Church. c de verbis Dei. serm. 28. August. Of an evil servant thou art made a good child: therefore PRESUME not of thine own doing, but of the grace of Christ: it is not arrogancy BUT FAITH: to acknowledge what thou hast received, is not pride but devotion. And, d Tract. 5. epist. joh. Let no man ask an other man, but return to his own heart; if he find charity there, he HATH SECURITY for his passage from life to death. Hilar. on Math. 5. The kingdom of heaven which our Lord professed to be in himself, his willis that it must be hoped for WITHOUT ANY DOUBTFULNESS OF uncertain WILL. Otherwise there is no justification by faith, if faith itself be MADE DOUBTFUL. Bernard. epist. 107. Who is the just man but he that being loved of God, loves him again: which comes not to pass but by the SPIRIT REVEALING BY FAITH the eternal PURPOSE OF GOD of his SALVATION to come. Which revelation is nothing else but the infusion of spiritual grace; by which, when the deeds of the flesh are mortified the man is prepared to the kingdom of heaven—. Together receiving in one spirit that whereby he MAY PRESUME that he is loved and also love again—. To conclude, the Papists have no great cause to dissent from us in this point. For they teach and profess, that they do by a special faith believe their own salvation certainly and unfallibly in respect of God, that promiseth. Now the thing which hindereth them is their own indisposition and unworthiness (as they say) which keeps them from being certain otherwise then in a likely hope. But this hindrance is easily removed, if men will judge indifferently. For first of all, in regard of ourselves and our disposition we cannot be certain at all, but must despair of salvation even to the very death. We cannot be sufficiently disposed so long as we live in this world, but must always say with jacob, I am less than all thy mercies, Gen. 32. and with David, Enter not into judgement with thy servant, O Lord, for none living shall be justified in thy sight: and with the Centurion, Lord I am not worthy, that thou shouldest come under my roof, Matth. 8. Secondly God in making promise of salvation respects not men's worthiness. For he chose us to life everlasting when we were not: he redeemed us from death being enemies: and entitles us to the promise of salvation, if we acknowledge ourselves to be sinners, Matth. 9 If we labour and travail under the burden of them. Matth. 11. If we hunger and thirst after grace. joh. 7. 37. And these things we may certainly and sensibly perceive in ourselves: and when we find them in us, though our unworthiness be exceeding great, it should not hinder our assurance. For God makes manifest his power in our weakness, 2. Cor. 12. and he will not break the bruised reed, nor quench the smoking flax. Isa. 42. Thirdly if a man love God for his mercy's sake, and have a true hope of salvation by Christ, he is in Christ and hath fellowship with him: and he that is in Christ, hath all his unworthiness & wants laid on Christ, and they are covered and pardoned in his death: and in respect of ourselves thus considered AS WE ARE IN CHRIST, we have no cause to waver, but to be certain of our salvation, & that in regard of ourselves. The fourth point: touching the justification of a sinner. That we may see how far we are to agree with them and where to differ: first I will set down the doctrine on both parts: & secondly the main differences wherein we are to stand against them, even to death. Our doctrine touching the justification of a sinner, I propound in four rules. Rule I. That, justification is an action of God, whereby he absolveth a sinner, and accepteth him to life everlasting for the righteousness and merit of Christ. Rule II. That, justification stands in two things: first in the remission of sins by the merit of Christ his death: secondly in the imputation of Christ his righteousness; which is an other action of God whereby he accounteth and esteemeth that righteousness which is in Christ, as the righteousness of that sinner which believeth in him. By Christ his righteousness we are to understand two things: first his sufferings specially in his death and passion, secondly his obedience in fulfilling the law; both which go together: for Christ in suffering obeyed▪ & obeying suffered. And the very shedding of his blood to which our salvation is ascribed, must not only be considered, as it is passive, that is, a suffering, but also as it is active, that is, an obedience, in which he showed his exceeding love both to his father and us, and thus fulfilled the law for us. This point if some had well thought on, they would not have placed all justification in remission of sins, as they do. Rule III. That, justification is from God's mere mercy and grace, procured only by the merit of Christ. Rule IU. That, man is justified by faith alone; because faith is that alone instrument created in the heart by the holy ghost, whereby a sinner layeth hold of Christ his righteousness, and apply the same unto himself. There is neither hope, nor love, nor any other grace of God within man, that can do this, but faith alone. The doctrine of the Roman Church touching the justification of a sinner is on this manner. I. They hold that before justification there goes a preparation thereunto; which is an action wrought partly by the holy Ghost and partly by the power of natural free-will, whereby a man disposeth himself to his own future justification. In the preparation they consider the ground of justification, and things proceeding from it. The ground is faith, which they define to be a general knowledge, whereby we understand and believe that the doctrine of the word of God is true. Things proceeding from this faith are these; a sight of our sins, a fear of hell, hope of salvation, love of God, repentance, and such like: all which, when men have attained, they are then fully disposed (as they say) to their justification. This preparation being made, then comes justification itself: which is an action of God, whereby he maketh a man righteous. It hath two parts: the first, and the second. The first is, when a sinner of an evil man is made a good man. And to effect this, two things are required: first the pardon of sin, which is one part of the first justification: secondly the infusion of inward righteousness, whereby the heart is purged and sanctified: and this habit of righteousness stands specially in hope and charity. After the first justification, followeth the second; which is, when a man of a good or just man, is made better and more just: & this, say they, may proceed from works of grace: because he which is righteous by the first justification, can bring forth good works: by the merit whereof, he is able to make himself more just and righteous: and yet they grant that the first justification cometh only of God's mercy by the merit of Christ. 1. Our consent and difference. Now let us come to the points of difference between us and them touching justification. The first main difference is in the matter thereof, which shall be seen by the answer both of Protestant and Papist to this one question. What is the very thing, that causeth a man to stand righteous before God, and to be accepted to life everlasting? we answer, Nothing but the righteousness of Christ, which consisteth partly in his sufferings, and partly in his active obedience in fulfilling the rigour of the law. And hear let us consider, how near the Papists come to this answer, and wherein they descent. Consent I. They grant, that in justification sin is pardoned by the merits of Christ, & that none can be justified without remission of sins: and that is well. II. They grant, that the righteousness whereby a man is made righteous before God, cometh from Christ, & from Christ alone. III. The most learned among them say, that Christ his satisfaction, and the merit of his death is imputed to every sinner that doth believe, for Bellar. d● justif. lib. 2. cap. 7. his satisfaction before God: and hitherto we agree. The very point of difference is this, we hold that the satisfaction made by Christ in his death, and obedience to the law; is imputed to us and becomes our righteousness. They say, it is our satisfaction and not our righteousness whereby we stand righteous before God: because it is inherent in the person of Christ as in a subject. Now the answer of the Papist to the former question is on this manner: The thing (saith he) that maketh us righteous before God, and causeth us to be accepted to life everlasting, is remission of sins, and the habit of inward righteousness, or charity with the fruits thereof. We condescend and grant that the habit of righteousness, which we call sanctification is an excellent gift of God: and hath his reward of God: and is the matter of our justification before men: because it serveth to declare us to be reconciled to God, and to be justified: yet we deny it to be the thing, which maketh us of sinners to become righteous or just before God. And this is the first point of our disagreement in the matter of justification: which must be marked: because if there were no more points of difference between us, this one alone were sufficient to keep us from uniting of our religions: for hereby the church of Rome doth race the very foundation. Now let us see by what reasons we justify our doctrine: and secondly answer the contrary objections. Our Reasons. Reason I. That very thing which must be our righteousness before God, must satisfy the justice of the law, which saith, do these things and thou shalt live. Now there is nothing can satisfy the justice of the law but the righteousness or obedience of Christ for us. If any allege civil justice it is nothing: for Christ saith, Except your righteousness exceed the righteousness of the Scribes and Pharisees, you cannot enter into the kingdom of heaven. What? shall we say that works do make us just? that can not be: for all men's works are defective in respect of the justice of the law. Shall we say our sanctification, whereby we are renewed to the image of God in righteousness and true holiness? that also is imperfect and cannot satisfy God's justice required in the law: as Isai hath said of himself and the people, all our righteousness is as a menstruous cloth. To have a clear conscience before God is a principal part of inward righteousness; and of it Paul in his own person saith thus, I am privy to nothing by myself, yet am I not justified thereby, 2. Cor. 4. 4. Therefore nothing can procure unto us an absolution and acceptance to life everlasting, but Christ's imputed righteousness. And this will appear, if we do consider, how we must come one day before God's judgement seat, there to be judged in the rigour of justice: for when we must bring some thing that may countervail the justice of God: not having only acceptation in mercy, but also approbation in justice: God being not only merciful, but also a just judge. II. Reason. 2. Cor. 5. 21. He which knew no sin, was made sin for us, that we might be made the righteousness of God which is in him. Whence I reason thus. As Christ was made sin for us, so are we made the righteousness of God in him: but Christ was made sin, or, a sinner by imputation of our sins, he being in himself most holy; therefore a sinner is made righteous before God, in that Christ's righteousness is imputed and applied unto him. Now if any shall say, that man is justified by righteousness infused; then by like reason, I say Christ was made sin for us by infusion of sin, which to say is blasphemy. And the exposition of this place by S. Hierome is not to be despised. Christ (saith he) being offered for our sins, took the name of sin that we might be made the righteousness of God in him, NOT OURS NOR IN US. If this righteousness of God be neither ours nor in us, them it can be no inherent righteousness, but must needs be righteousness imputed. And Chrys. on this place saith, It is called God's righteousness, because it is not of works, & because it must be WITHOUT ALL STAIN or want: & that cannot be inherent righteousness. Anselme saith, he is made sin as we are made justice: not ours but gods, not in us but in him: as he is made sin not his own but ours: not in himself, but in us. Reason III. Rom. 5. 19 As by one man's disobedience many were made sinners: so by the obedience of one, shall many be made righteous: mark here is a comparison between the first and second Adam. And hence I reason thus. As by the disobedience of the first Adam men were made sinners: so by the obedience of the second Adam, are we made righteous. Now we are not only made sinners by propagation of natural corruption, but by imputation. For Adam's first sin was the eating of the forbidden fruit: which very act is no personal offence, but is imputed to all his posterity, in whom we have all sinned. The d Iren. lib. 5. cap. 17. Chrysostom. homil. ad Neoph. Fathers call this very sin Adam's handwriting, making us debtor unto God. And therefore in like manner the obedience of Christ is made the righteousness of every believer, not by infusion but by imputation. iv Reason. A satisfaction made for the want of that justice or obedience which the law requires at our hands, is accepted of God as the justice itself. But Christ's obedience is a satisfaction made for the want of that justice or obedience which the law requires, as the Papists themselves avouch. Therefore this satisfaction is our justice. And me thinks, the Papists upon this consideration have little cause to dissent from us. For if they make Christ's obedience their satisfaction, why should they not fully close hands with us, and make it their justice also. V Reason. The consent of the ancient Church. Bernard saith, epist. 190. The JUSTICE OF ANOTHER is assigned unto man: who wanted his own, man was indebted and man made payment. The SATISFACTION OF ONE IS IMPUTED to all. And, why may not justice be from an other as well as guiltiness is from an other. And in Cant. serm. 25. It sufficeth me, for all righteousness to have him alone merciful to me, against whom I have sinned. And, Not to sin is God's justice, MAN'S JUSTICE is the MERCIFULNES OF God. And serm. 61. Shall I sing mine own righteousness, Lord I will remember thy righteousness alone: for IT IS MINE ALSO: in that even thou art made unto me righteousness of God. What, shall I fear lest that one be not sufficient for us both? it is not a short cloak that cannot cover two: it will cover both thee and me largely being both a large and eternal justice. August. on psal. 22. He prayeth for our faults, and hath made our faults his faults, that he might make HIS JUSTICE OUR JUSTICE. Objections of Papists. Objections of the Papists proving inherent righteousness to be the matter of our justice before God, are these. I. Object. It is absurd, that one man should be made righteous by the righteousness of an other: for it is as much as if one man were made wise by the wisdom of another. Ans. It is true, that no man can be made righteous by the personal righteousness of an other, because it pertains only to one man. And because the wisdom that is in one man, is his altogether wholly, it cannot be the wisdom of another; no more than the health and life of one body, can be the health of an other. But it is otherwise with the righteousness of Christ: it is his indeed, because it is inherent in him as in a subject: it is not his alone, but his and ours together by the tenor of the Covenant of grace. Christ as he is a Mediator is given to every believer as really and truly, as land is given from man to man: and with him are given all things that concern salvation; they being made ours by God's free gift: among which, is Christ his righteousness. By it therefore, as being a thing of our own, we may be justified before God, and accepted to life everlasting. II. Object. If a sinner be justified by Christ his righteousness, than every believer shall be as righteous as Christ: and that can not be. Ans. The proposition is false: for Christ his righteousness is not applied to us according as it is in Christ; neither according to the same measure, nor the same manner. For his obedience in fulfilling the law, is above Adam's righteousness, yea above the righteousness of all Angels. For they were all but creatures, and their obedience the obedience of creatures: but Christ his obedience is the obedience or righteousness of God; so termed Rom. 1. 17, 18. 2. Cor. 5. 21. not only because God accepted of it, but because it was in that person which is very God. When Christ obeyed, God obeyed: and when he suffered, God suffered: not because the godhead suffered or performed any obedience, but because the person which according to one nature is God, performed obedience and suffered. And by this means his righteousness is of infinite value, price, merit, and efficacy. Hence also it cometh to pass, that this obedience of Christ serveth not only for the justifying of some one person (as e namely for himself. adam's did) but of all and every one of the elect: yea it is sufficient to justify many thousand worlds. Now to come to the point, this righteousness that is in Christ, in this largeness and measure; is pertaining to us in a more narrow skantling▪ because it is only received by faith f as any one star partakes in the whole light of the Sun with the rest of the stars; so farforth as the said light makes it to shine. so farforth, as it serveth to justify any particular believer. But they urge the reason further, saying: If Christ his righteousness be the righteousness of every believer, than every man should be a Saviour: which is absurd. Ans. I answer as before, and yet more plainly thus: Christ his righteousness is imputed to the person of this or that man, not as it is the price of redemption for all mankind, but as it is the price of redemption for one particular man: as for example, Christ his righteousness is imputed to Peter, not as it is the price of redemption for all, but as it is the price of redemption for Peter. And therefore Christ his righteousness, is not applied to any one sinner in that largeness and measure, in which it is in the person of Christ: but only so farforth as it serveth to satisfy the law for the said sinner, & to make his person accepted of God as righteous, and no further. III. Object. If we be made righteous by Christ his righteousness truly, than Christ is a sinner truly by our sins: but Christ is not indeed a sinner by our sins. Ans. We may with reverence to his majesty in good manner say, that Christ was a sinner, and that truly: not by any infusion of sin into his most holy person; but because our sins were laid on him: thus saith the holy Ghost, he which knew no sin was made sin for us, and he was counted with sinners, Isa 53. 13. yet so, as even then in himself he was without blot, yea more holy than all men and angels. On this manner said Chrysostome 2. Cor. 3. God permitted Christ to be condemned as a sinner. Again, He made the just one to be A SINNER, that he might make sinners just. iv Object. If a man be made righteous by imputation, than God judgeth sinners to be righteous: but God judgeth no sinner to be righteous, for it is abomination to the lord Ans. When God justifieth a sinner by Christ his righteousness, at the same time, he ceaseth in regard of guiltiness to be a sinner: & to whom god imputeth righteousness them he sanctifieth at the very same instant by his holy Spirit; giving also unto original corruption his deadly wound. V Object. That which Adam never lost, was never given by Christ: but he never lost imputed righteousness: therefore it was never given unto him. Ans. The proposition is not true: for saving faith, that was never lost by Adam, is given to us in Christ: and Adam never had this privilege, that after the first grace should follow the e we have & posse & velle: he had no more, but posse si vellet, & he wanted velle quod posset. August. de corrept. & great. cap. 11. second; and thereupon being left to himself, he fell from God: and yet this mercy is vouchsafed to all believers, that after their first conversion God will still confirm them with new grace: and by this means, they persevere unto the end. And whereas they say, that Adam had not imputed righteousness: I answer, that he had the same for substance, though not for the manner of applying by imputation. VI Object. justification is eternal: but the imputation of Christ his righteousness is not eternal, for it ceaseth in the end of this life: therefore it is not that which justifieth a sinner. Answ. The imputation of Christ's righteousness is everlasting: for he that is esteemed righteous in this life by Christ his righteousness, is accepted as righteous for ever: and the remission of sins granted in this life, is for ever continued. And though sanctification be perfect in the world to come, yet shall it not justify: for we must conceive it no otherwise after this life, but as a fruit springing from the imputed righteousness of Christ, without which it could not be. And a good child will not cast away the first garment, because his father gives him a second. And what if inward righteousness be perfect in the end of this life, shall we therefore make it the matter of our justification? God forbidden. For the righteousness whereby sinners are justified, must be had in the time of this life, before the pangs of death. II. Difference about the manner of justification. All, both Papists and Protestants agree, that a sinner is justified by faith. This agreement is only in word, and the difference between us is great indeed. And it may be reduced to these three heads. First, the Papist saying that a man is justified by faith: understandeth a general or a Catholic faith, whereby a man believeth the arcicles of religion to be true. But we hold that the faith which justifieth, is a particular faith whereby we apply to ourselves the promises of righteousness and life everlasting by Christ. And that our opinion is the truth: I have proved before: but I will add a reason or twain. I. Reason. The faith whereby we live, is that faith whereby we are justified: but the faith whereby we live spiritually, is a particular faith whereby we apply Christ unto ourselves, as Paul saith, Gal. 2. 20 I live, that is, spiritually, by the faith of the son of God: which faith he showeth to be a particular faith in Christ, in the very words following, who hath LOVED ME and given himself FOR ME, particularly: and in this manner of believing Paul was and is an example to all that are to be saved, 1. Tim. 1. 16. and Phil. 3. 15. II. Reason. That which we are to ask of God in prayer, we must believe it shall be given us, as we ask it: but in prayer we are to ask the pardon of our own sins, and the merit of Christ's righteousness for ourselves: therefore we must believe the same particularly. The proposition is a rule of God's word, requiring, that in every petition we bring a particular faith, whereby we believe, that the thing lawfully asked, shall be given accordingly. Mark. 11. 24. The minor is also evident, neither can it be denied: for we are taught by Christ himself to pray on this manner, Forgive us our debts: and to it we say, Amen, that is, that our petitions shall without all doubt be granted unto us. Aug. serm. de Temp. 182. And here note, that the Church of Rome in the doctrine of justification by faith cuts off the principal part and property thereof. For in justifying faith two things are required: first Knowledge revealed in the word touching the means of salvation: secondly an Applying of things known unto ourselves, which some call affiance. Now the first, they acknowledge, but the second, which is the very substance and principal part thereof, they deny. III. Reason. The judgement of the ancient Church. b de verbis Dei. serm. 7. August. I demand now, dost thou believe in Christ, O sinner? Thou sayst, I believe. What believest thou? that all THY SINS may freely be pardoned by him. THOU HAST THAT WHICH THOU HAST BEELEEVED. c Serm. 1, de Annunc. Bern. The Apostle thinketh that a man is justified freely by faith. If thou believest that thy sins cannot be remitted but by him alone against whom they were committed: but go further and believe this too, that by him THY SINS ARE FORGIVEN THE●. This is the testimony which the holy Ghost giveth in the heart, saying: thy sins are forgiven thee. d Serm. de Natal. Cyprian. God promiseth thee immortality, when thou goest out of this world, and DOST THOU DOUBT? This is indeed not to know God, and this is for a member of the church in the house of faith not to have faith. If we believe in Christ, let us believe his words & promises, and we shall never die, and shall come to Christ with JOYFUL SECURITY. with him to reign for ever. The II. difference touching faith in the act of justification, is this. The Papist saith, we are justified by faith, because it disposeth a sinner to his justification after this manner: By faith (saith he) the mind of man is enlightened in the knowledge of the law and gospel: knowledge stirs up a fear of hell with a consideration of the promise of happiness, as also the love and fear of God, and hope of life eternal. Now when the heart is thus prepared, God infuseth the habit of charity and other virtues, whereby a sinner is justified before God. We say otherwise, that faith justifieth because it is a supernatural Instrument created by God in the heart of man at his conversion, whereby he apprehendeth and receiveth Christ's righteousness for his justification. In this their doctrine is a twofold error: I. that they make faith which justifieth, to go before justification itself, both for order of nature as also for time: whereas by the word of God, at the very instant, when any man believeth first, he is then justified and sanctified. For he that believeth, eateth and drinketh the body and blood of Christ, and is already passed from death to life, john 6. 54. The second is, that faith being nothing else with them but an illumination of the mind, stirreth up the will; which being moved and helped, causeth in the heart many spiritual motions: and thereby disposeth man to his future justification. But this indeed is as much as if we should say, that dead men only helped, can prepare themselves to their future resurrection. For we are all by nature dead in sin, and therefore must not only be enlightened in mind, but also renewed in will, before we can so much as will or desire that which is good. Now we (as I have said) teach otherwise: that faith justifieth as it is an instrument to apprehend & apply Christ with his obedience; which is the matter of our justification. This is the truth, I prove it thus. In the Covenant of grace▪ two things must be considered; the substance thereof, & the condition. The substance of the covenant is, that righteousness and life everlasting is given to God's Church and people by Christ. The condition is, that we for our parts, are by faith to receive the foresaid benefits: and this condition is by grace as well as the substance. Now then, that we may attain to salvation by Christ, he must be given unto us really, as he is propounded in the tenor of the foresaid covenant. And for the giving of Christ, God hath appointed special ordinances, as the preaching of the word, and the administration of the sacraments. The word preached is the power of God to salvation to every one that believes: and the end of the sacraments is to communicate Christ with all his benefits to them that come to be partakers thereof: as is most plainly to be seen in the supper of the Lord, in which the giving of bread and wine to the several communicantes, is a pledge and sign of God's particular giving of Christ's body and blood with all his merits, unto them. And this giving on God's part cannot be effectual without receiving on our parts: and therefore faith must needs be an instrument or hand to receive that which God giveth, that we may find comfort by this giving. The III. difference concerning faith, is this: the Papist saith, that a man is justified by faith; yet not by faith alone, but also by other virtues, as hope, love, the fear of God, etc. The reasons which are brought to maintain their opinion are of no moment: I. Reason. Luk. 7. 47. Many sins are forgivenher, Particula non causalis: sed illativa vel ratio na lis. BECASE she loved much. Whence they gather that the woman here spoken of, was justified and had the pardon of sins by love. Ans. In this text, love is not made an impulsive cause to move God to pardon her sins, but only a sign to show and manifest that God had already pardoned them. Like to this is the place of john, who saith, 1. joh. 3. 14. We are translated from death to life, because we love the brethren: where love is no cause of the change, but a sign and consequent thereof. II. Reason. Gal. 5. 6. Neither circumcision, nor uncircumcision availeth any thing, but FAITH THAT WOEK●TH BY LOVE. Hence they gather that faith doth justify together with love. Ans. The property of true faith is, to apprehend and receive something unto itself: and love, that goes always with faith, as a fruit and an unseparable companion thereof, is of another nature. For it doth not receive in, but as it were give out itself in all the duties of the first and second table towards God and man: and this thing faith by itself cannot do: & therefore Paul saith that faith worketh by love. The hand hath a property to reach out itself, to lay hold of any thing: and to receive a gift: but the hand hath no property to cut a piece of wood of itself without saw or knife, or some like instrument; and yet by help of them, it can either divide or cut. Even so it is the nature of faith, to go out of itself and to receive Christ into the heart: as for the duties of the first and second table, faith cannot of itself bring them forth; no more than the hand can divide or cut: yet join love to faith, and then can it practise duties commanded concerning God and man. And this I take to be the meaning of this text, which speaketh not of justification by faith, but only of the practice of common duties, which faith putteth in execution by the help of love. III. Reason. Faith is never alone, therefore it doth not justify alone. Ans. The reason is nought, and they might as well dispute thus. The eye is never alone from the head, and therefore it seethe not alone; which is absurd. And though in regard of substance the eye be never alone, yet in regard of seeing, it is alone: & so though faith subsist not without love and hope and other graces of God, yet in regard of the act of justification it is alone without them all. iv Reason. If faith alone do justify, than we are saved by faith alone: but we are not saved by faith alone: and therefore not justified by faith alone. Ans. The proposition is false: for more things are requisite to the main end then to the subordinate means. And the assumption is false: for we are saved by faith alone, if we speak of faith as it is an Instrument apprehending Christ for our salvation. V Reason. We are saved by hope: therefore not by faith alone. Ans. We are saved by hope, not because it is any cause of our salvation. Paul's meaning is only this; that we have not salvation as yet in possession, but wait patiently for it, in time to come to be possessed of us, expecting the time of our full deliverance: that is all, that can justly be gathered hence. Now the doctrine which we teach on the contrary is, That a sinner is justified before God by faith: yea, BY FAITH ALONE. The meaning is, that nothing within man, and nothing that man can do either by nature or by grace concurreth to the act of justification before God, as any cause thereof, either efficient, material, formal, or final, but faith alone. All other gifts & graces, as hope, love, the fear of God, are necessary to salvation, as signs thereof, & consequents of faith. Nothing in man concurs as any cause to this work but by faith alone. And faith itself is no principal but only an instrumental cause by we receive, apprehend, and apply Christ and his righteousness for our justification. Reason I. john. 3. 14. 15. As Moses lift up the serpent in the wilderness, so must the son of man be lift up: that whosoever believeth in him should not perish but have eternal life. In these words Christ makes a comparison on this manner: when any one of the Israelites were stung to death by fiery serpents: his cure was not by any physic surgery, but only by the casting of his eye up to the brazen serpent, which Moses haderected by God's commandment: even so in the cure of our souls, when we are stung to death by sin, there is nothing required within us for our recovery, but only that we cast up and fix the eye of our faith on Christ and his righteousness. Reason II. The Exclusive forms of speech used in scripture prove thus much. We are justified freely, not of the law, not by the law, wiihout the law, without works, not of works, not according to works, not of us, not by the works of the law but by faith. Gal, 2. 16. Alboasting excluded: only believe. Luc. 8. 50. These distinctions, whereby works and the law are excluded in the work of justification, do include thus much: that faith alone doth justify. Reason III. Very reason may teach thus much: for no gift in man is apt and fit as a spiritual hand to receive and apply Christ and his righteousness unto a sinner, but faith. Indeed love, hope, the fear of God and repentance, have their several uses in men, but none serve for this end to apprehend Christ and his merits; none of them all have this receiving property: and therefore there is nothing in man, that justifieth as a cause but faith alone. Reason IU. The judgement of the ancient Church. Ambr. on Rom. 4. They are blessed to whom WITHOUT ANY LABOUR OR WORK DONE, iniquities are remitted and sin covered: NO WORKS OF REPENTANCE required of them, but ONLY THAT THEY BELIEVE. & cap. 3. Neither working any thing, nor requiting the like, are they justified by FAITH ALONE through the gift of God. And, 1. Cor. 1. This is appointed of god that whosoever believeth in Christ, shallbe saved without any work BY FAITH ALONE, freely receiving remission of sins. b de verbis D●●●. ser. 40. Augustine, There is ONE propitiation for all sins, to believe in Christ. Hesyc. on Levit. lib. 1. c. 2. Grace which is of mercy is APPREHENDED BY FAITH ALONE, and not of works. Bern. c supra Cant. serm. 22. Whosoever is pricked for his sins and thirsteth after righteousness, let him believe in thee, who justifieth the sinner, and being justified by FAITH ALONE, he shall have peace with God. Chrysost. on Gal. 3. They said, he which resteth on faith alone, is cursed: but Paul showeth, that he is blessed which resteth ON FAITH ALONE. Basil. de humil. Let man acknowledge himself to want true justice, and that he is justified ONLY BY EAITH in Christ. Origen. on c. 3. Rom. We think that a man is justified by faith without the works of the law: and he saith that justification by faith alone sufficeth, so as a man only believing may be justified. And, Therefore it lieth upon us—, to search who was justified by faith without works. And for an example, I think upon the thief who being crucified with Christ cried unto him, Lord remember me when thou comest into thy kingdom: and there is no other good work of his mentioned in the Gospel: but for this alone faith, jesus saith unto him, This night thou shalt be with me in Paradise. III. Difference. The third difference about justification is concerning this point, namely how farforth good works are required thereto. The doctrine of the Church of Rome is, that there be two kinds of justification: the first and the second, as I have said. The first is, when one of an evil man is made a good man: and in this, works are wholly excluded, it being wholly of grace. The second is, when a man of a just man is made more just. And this they will have to proceed from works of grace: for (say they) as a man when he is once borne can by eating and drinking make himself a bigger man, though he could not at the first make himself a man: even so a sinner having his first justification, may afterward by grace make himself more just. Therefore they hold these two things: I. That good works are meritorious causes of the second justification, which they term Actual: II. that good works are means to increase the first justification, which they call Habitual. Now let us see how farforth we must join with them in this point. Our consent therefore stands in three conclusions. I. That good works done by them that are justified do please God, and are approved of him, and therefore have a reward. II. Good works are necessary to salvation two ways: first, not as causes thereof, either conservant, adiuvant, or procreant: but only as consequents of faith: in, that they are inseparable companions and fruits of that faith, which is indeed necessary to salvation. Secondly they are necessary as marks in a way, and as the way itself directing us unto eternal life. III. We hold and believe, that the righteous man, is in some sort justified by works: for so the holy Ghost speaketh plainly and truly, jam. 2. 21. that Abraham was justified by works. Thus far we join with them: and the very difference is this. They say, we are justified by works, as by causes thereof: we say, that we are justified by works as by signs & fruits of our justification before God, and no otherwise: and in this sense must the place of S. james be understood, that Abraham was justified, that is, declared and made manifest to be just indeed by his obedience, and that even before God. Now that our doctrine is the truth, it will appear by reasons on both parts. Our reasons. I. Rom. 3. 28. We conclude that a man is justified by faith without the works of the la. Some answer, that ceremonial works be excluded here: some, that moral works: some, works going before faith. But let them devise what they can for themselves: the truth is, that Paul excludeth all works whatsoever, as by the very text will appear. For v. 24. he saith, We are justified FREELY by his grace: that is, by the mere gift of God: giving us to understand, that a sinner in his justification is merely passive, that is, doing nothing on his part whereby God should accept him to life everlasting. and v. 27. he saith, justification by faith excludeth all boasting: and therefore all kind of works are thereby excluded; and specially such as are most of all the matter of boasting, that is, good works. For if a sinner, after that he is justified by the merit of Christ, were justified more by his own works, than might he have some matter of boasting in himself. And that we may not doubt of Paul's meaning, consider and read Eph. 2. 8, 9 By grace (saith he) you are saved through faith: & that not of yourselves, it is the gift of God: not of works lest any man should boast himself. Here Paul excludes all and every work, and directly works of grace themselves: as appears by the reason following, For we are his workmanship CREATED in Christ jesus UNTO GOOD WORKS: WHICH GOD HATH ORDAINED that we should walk in them. Now let the Papists tell me, what be the works which God hath prepared for men to walk in, and to which they are regenerate, unless they be the most excellent works of grace: and let them mark, how Paul excludes them wholly from the work of justification and salvation. II. Gal. 5. 3. If ye be circumcised, ye are bound to the whole la, and ye are abolished from Christ. Here Paul disputeth against such men as would be saved partly by Christ, and partly by the works of the law: hence I reason thus. If a man will be justified by works he is bound to fulfil the whole law, according to the rigour thereof: that is Paul's ground. I now assume: no man can fulfil the law according to the rigour thereof: for the lives and works of most righteous men are imperfect, and stained with sin: and therefore they are taught every day, to say on this manner; forgive us our debts. Again our knowledge is imperfect, and therefore our faith, repentance, and sanctification is answerable. And lastly the regenerate man is partly flesh and partly spirit: and therefore his best works are partly from the flesh, & in part only spiritual. Thus then for any man to be bound to the rigour of the whole law, is as much as if he were bound to his own damnation. III. Election to salvation is of grace without works: therefore the justification of a sinner is of grace alone without works. For it is a certain rule, that the cause of a cause is the cause of a thing caused. Now grace without works is the cause of election, which election is the cause of our justification: and therefore grace without works is the cause of our justification. FOUR A man must first be fully justified before he can do a good work: for the person must first please God before his works can please him. But the person of a sinner cannot please God till he be perfectly justified: and therefore till he be justified, he can not do so much as one good work. And thus good works cannot be any meritorious causes of justification, after which they are both for time, and order of nature. In a word, whereas they make two distinct justifications: we acknowledge that there be degrees of sanctification, yet so as justification is only one, standing in remission of sins and God's acceptation of us to life everlasting by Christ; and this justification hath no degrees but is perfect at the very first. Objections of Papists. Psal. 7. 8. judge me according to my righteousness. Hence they reason thus, if David be judged according to his righteousness then may he be justified thereby, but David desires to be judged according to his righteousness: and therefore he was justified thereby. Ans. There be two kinds of righteousness, one of the person, the other of the cause or action. The righteousness of a man's person, is whereby it is accepted into the favour of God into life eternal. The righteousness of the action or cause is, when the action or cause is judged of God to be good and just. Now David in this psalm, speaketh only of the righteousness of the action, or innocency of his cause, in that he was falsely charged to have sought the kingdom. In like manner it is said of Phineas, Psal. 166. 31. that his fact in kill Zimri and Cosbie, was imputed to him for righteousness: not because it was a satisfaction to the law, the rigour whereof could not be fulfilled in that one work; but because God accepted of it as a just work, and as a token of his righteousness and zeal for God's glory. II. Object. The Scripture saith in sundry places, that men are blessed which do good works. Psal. 119. 1. Blessed is the man that is upright in heart, and walketh in the law of the Lord. Ans. The man is blessed that endeavoureth to keep God's commandments. Yet is he not blessed simply, because he doth so; but because he is in Christ, by whom he doth so: and his obedience to the law of God is a sign thereof. III. Object. When man confesseth his sins and humbleth himself by prayer and fasting, God's wrath is pacified and stayed: therefore prayer and fasting are causes of justification before God. Ans. Indeed men that truly humble themselves by prayer and fasting, do appease the wrath of God: yet not properly by these actions, but by their faith expressed and testified in them, whereby they apprehend that which appeaseth God's wrath, even the merits of Christ, in whom the father is well pleased; and for whose sake alone he is well pleased with us. iv Object. Sundry persons in Scripture are commended for perfection: as Noah, and Abraham, Zacharie, and Elizabeth: and Christ biddeth us all be perfect; and where there is any perfection of works, there also works may justify. Answ. There be two kinds of perfection: perfection in parts, and perfection in degrees. Perfection in part is, when being regenerate, and having the seeds of all necessary virtues, we endeavour accordingly to obey God, not in some few, but in all and every part of the law: as josias turned unto God according to all the law of Moses. Perfection in degrees is, when a man keepeth every commandment of God, and that according to the rigour thereof, in the very highest degree. Now than whereas we are commanded to be perfected, and have examples of the same perfection in Scripture: both commandments and examples must be understood of perfection in parts, and not of perfection in degrees, which cannot be attained unto in this life; though we for our parts, must daily strive to come as near unto it, as possibly we can. V Object. 2. Cor. 4. 17. Our moment any afflictions work unto us a greater measure of glory: now if afflictions work our salvation, then works also do the same. Answ. Afflictions work salvation, not as causes procuring it, but as means directing us thereto. And thus always must we esteem of works, in the matter of our salvation, as of a certain way, or a mark therein, directing us to glory, not causing and procuring it: as Bernard saith they are, VIAREGNI NON CAUSA glib. de great. & lib. arbit. regnandi. The way to the kingdom, not the cause of reigning there. VI Object. We are justified by the same thing whereby we are judged: but we are judged by our good works: therefore justified also. Ans. The proposition is false: for judgement is an act of God, declaring a man to be just that is already just: and justification is an other distinct act of God, whereby he maketh him to be just, that is by nature unjust. And therefore in equity the last judgement is to proceed by works: because they are the fittest means to make trial of every man's cause, and serve fitly to declare whom God hath justified in this life. VII. Object. Wicked men are condemned for evil works: therefore righteous men are justified by good works. Ans. The reason holdeth not: for there is great difference between evil and good works. An evil work is perfectly evil, and so deserveth damnation▪ but there is no good work of any man that is perfectly good: and therefore cannot justify. VIII. Object. To believe in Christ is a work, and by it we are justified: and if one work do justify, why may we not be justified by all the works of the law. Ans. Faith must be considered two ways: first, as a work, quality, or virtue: secondly as an Instrument, or an hand reaching out itself to receive Christ's merit. And we are justified by faith, not as it is a work, virtue, or quality; but as it is an instrument to receive and apply that thing whereby we are justified. And therefore it is a figurative speech to say, We are justified by faith. Faith considered by itself maketh no man righteous: neither doth the action of faith which is to apprehend justify; but the object of faith, which is Christ's obedience apprehended. These are the principal reasons commonly used▪ which as we see, are of no moment. To conclude therefore we hold: that works concur to justification, and that we are justified thereby as by signs and effects, not as causes: for both the beginning, middle, and accomplishment of our justification is only in Christ: and hereupon john saith, If any man (being already justified) sin, we have an Advocate with the father, jesus Christ and he is the propitiation for our sins. And to make our good works means or causes of our justification, is to make every man a Saviour to himself. The U. point. Of merits. By merit, we understand any thing or any work, whereby God's favour and life everlasting is procured; and that for the dignity and excellency of the work or thing done: or, a good work done, binding him that receiveth is to repay the like. Our Consent. Touching merits, we consent in two conclusions with them. The first conclusion, that merits are so far forth necessary, that without them there can be no salvation. The second, that Christ our Mediator & Redeemer, is the root and fountain of all merit. The dissent or difference. The popish Church placeth merits within man, making two sorts thereof: the merit of the person, and the merit of the work. The merit of the person, is a dignity in the person, whereby it is worthy of life everlasting. And this (as they say) is to be found in Infants dying after baptism, who though they want good works, yet are they not void of this kind of merit, for which they receive the kingdom of heaven. The merit of the work, is a dignity or excellency in the work, whereby it is made fit and enabled to deserve life everlasting for the doer. And works (as they teach) are meritorious two ways: first, by covenant, because God hath made a promise of reward unto them: secondly, by their own dignity, for Christ hath merited, that our works might merit. And this is the substance of their doctrine. From it we descent in these points. I. We renounce all personal merits, that is, all merits within the person of any mere man. II. And we renonuce all merit of works, that is, all merit of any work done by any mere man whatsoever. And the true merit whereby we look to attain the favour of God, & life everlasting, is to be found in the person of Christ alone: who is the storehouse of all our merits: whose prerogative it is, to be the person alone in whom God is well pleased. God's favour is of infinite dignity, & no creature is able to do a work that may countervayle the favour of God, save Christ alone; who by reason of the dignity of his person, being not a mere man but God-man, or Man-God, he can do such works as ate of endless dignity every way answerable to the favour of God: and therefore sufficient to merit the same for us. And though a merit or meritorious work agree only to the person of Christ, yet is it made ours by imputation. For as his righteousness is made ours, so are his merits depending thereon: but his righteousness is made ours by imputation, as I have showed. Hence ariseth an other point, namely that as Christ's righteousness is made ours really by imputation to make us righteous: so we by the merit of his righteousness imputed to us, do merit and deserve life everlasting. And this is our doctrine. In a word, the Papist maintaineth the merits of his own works: but we renounce them all, and rest only on the merit of Christ. And that our doctrine is truth, and theirs falsehood, I will make manifest by sundry reasons; and then answer their arguments to the contrary. Our reasons. The first shall be taken from the properties and conditions that must be in a work meritorious, and they are four. I. A man must do it of himself, and by himself: for if it be done by another, the merit doth not properly belong to the doer. II. A man must do it of his own free-will and pleasure, not of due debt; for when we do that which we are bound to do, we do no more but our duty. III. The work must be done to the profit of an other, who thereupon must be bound to repay the like. iv The reward and the work must be in proportion equal, for if the reward be more than the work, it is not a reward of desert, but a gift of good will. Hence follows a notable conclusion: That Christ's manhood considered a part from his godhead, cannot merit at God's hand: though it be more excellent every way then all both men and angels. For being thus considered, it doth nothing of itself, but by grace received from the godhead; though it also be without measure. Secondly Christ's manhood is a creature, and in that regard bound to do whatsoever it doth. Thirdly, Christ as man cannot give any thing to god, but that which he received from God: therefore cannot the manhood properly by it self merit, but only as it is personally united unto the godhead of the Son. And if this be so, then much less can any mere man, or any angel merit: yea it is a madness to think, that either our actions or persons should be capable of any merit whereby we might attain to life eternal. Reason II. Exod. 20 8. And SHOW MERCY upon thousands in them that love me, and keep my commandments. Hence I reason thus: where reward is given upon mercy, there is no merit: but reward is given of mercy to them that fulfil the law: therefore no merit. What can we any way deserve, when our full recompense must be of mercy? And this appears further by Adam: if he had stood to this day, he could not by his continual and perfect obedience, have procured a further increase of favour at God's hand, but should only have continued that happy estate in which he was first created. Reason III. Scripture directly condemneth merit of works. Rom. 6. 23. The wages of sin is death: but THE GIFT OF GOD IS eternal life through jesus Christ our Lord. The proportion of the argument required that S. Paul should have said: The reward of good works is eternal life, if life everlasting could be deserved, which cannot: because it is a free gift. Again, Tit. 3. 5. We are saved not by works of righteousness which we have done, but according to his mercy he saved us. And Ephes. 2. v. 8, 10. By grace you are saved through faith, and that not of yourselves, it is the gift of God: not of works which God hath prepared that we should walk in them. If any works be crowned, it is certain that the sufferings of Martyrs shall be rewarded: now of them Paul saith, Rom. 8. 18. The sufferings of this life are NOT WORTHY of the glory to come. Where then is the value & dignity of other works? To this purpose ` Ambr. saith, The just man though he be tormented in the brazen bull is still just, because he justifieth God, and saith he suffereth LESS THAN HIS SINS DESERVE. Reason IU. Whosoever will merit, must fulfil the whole law: but none can keep the whole law: For if we say we have no sin we deceive ourselves, 1. joh. 1. And he that sins against one commandment is guilty of the whole law. And what can he merit, that is guilty of the breach of the whole law? Reason V We are taught to pray on this manner, Give us this day our daily bread. Wherein we acknowledge every morsel of bread to be the mere gift of God without desert; and therefore must we much more acknowledge life eternal to be every way the gift of God. It must needs therefore be a satanical insolency for any man to imagine, that he can by his works merit eternal life, who cannot merit bread. Reason VI Consent of the ancient Church. De interpollatione David. 4. v●l. ps. 72. Bernard, Those which we call our merits, are the way to the kingdom, and not THE CAUSE OF REIGNING. August. Manuali. cap. 22. All my hope is in the death of my Lord. His death is my merit—: my MERIT IS THE PASSION OF THE LORD. I shall not be void of merits, so long as God's mercies are not wanting. Basil. on psal. 114. Eternal rest is reserved for them, which have striven lawfully in this life: not FOR THE MERITS of their doings, but upon the grace of the most bountiful God, in which they trusted. August. on ps. 120. He crowneth thee, because he crowneth his own gifts, not thy merits. And, psal. 142. Lord thou wilt quicken me in thy justice, not in mine: not because I have deserved it, but because thou hast compassion. Objections of Papists. Object. I. In sundry places of Scripture, promise of reward is made to them that believe and do good works: therefore our works do merit; for a reward and merit be relatives. Ans. Reward is twofold: of debt, and of mercy. Life everlasting is not a reward of debt but of mercy, given of the good will of God, without any thing done of man. Secondly, the kingdom of heaven is properly an inheritance given of a father to a child, and therefore it is called a reward not properly, but by a figure or by resemblance. For as a workman having ended his labour, receiveth his wages; so after men have lead their lives & finished their course in keeping faith and good conscience, as dutiful children; God giveth them eternal life. And hereupon it is termed a reward. Thirdly, if I should grant that life everlasting is a deserved reward, it is not for our works, but for Christ's merit imputed to us, causing us thereby to merit: and thus the relation stands directly between the Reward and Christ's Merit applied unto us. Object. II. Christ by his death merited that our works should merit life everlasting. Answ. That is false: all we find in Scripture is, that Christ by his merit procured pardon of sin, imputation of righteousness, and life everlasting: and it is no where said in the word of God, that Christ did merit, that our works should merit: it is a dotage of their own devising. He died not for our good works to make them able to satisfy God's anger: but for our sins, that they might be pardoned. Thus much saith the Scripture, & no more. And in that Christ did sufficiently merit life eternal for us, by his own death: it is a sufficient proof that he never intended to give us power of meriting the same: unless we suppose that at some time he gives more than is needful. Again, Christ in the office of mediation as he is a King, Priest, and Prophet, admitteth no deputy or fellow. For he is a most perfect Mediator, doing all things by himself, without the help of any. And the ministers that dispense the word are not his deputies, but reasonable and voluntary instruments, which he useth. But if men by works can merit increase of grace and happiness for themselves, then hath Christ partners in the work of redemption: men doing that by him, which he doth of himself, in procuring their salvation. Nay, if this might stand, that Christ did merit, that our works should merit, than Christ should merit that our stained righteousness being for this cause not capable of merit, should nevertheless merit. I call it stained; because we are partly flesh and partly spirit: and therefore in ourselves deserving the curse of the law, though we be regenerate. Again, for one good work we do, we have many evil, the offence whereof defaceth the merit of our best deeds, and makes them too light in the balance of the law. Object. III. Our works merit by bargain or covenant, because God hath promised to reward them. Ans. The word of God sets down two covenants: one legal, the other evangelical. In the legal covenant life everlasting is promised to works, for that is the condition of the law; do these things and thou shalt live. But on this manner can no man merit life everlasting, because none is able to do all that the law requires; whether we respect the manner, or the measure of obedience. In the evangelical covenant, the promises that are made are not made to any work or virtue in man, but to the worker: not for any merit of his own person or work, but for the person and merit of Christ. For example, it is a promise of the Gospel, Be faithful unto death, and I will give thee the crown of life. Revelat. 2. 10. Here the promise is not made to the virtue of fidelity, but to the faithful person; whose fidelity is but a token that he is in Christ: for the merit of whose obedience god promiseth the crown of life: and therefore Christ saith further: I come quickly and will give to every man according to his works, mark, he saith not to the work or for the work, but to the worker according to his works. And thus the bond of all other promises of the Gospel, in which god willingly binds himself to reward our works, do not directly concern us, but have respect to the person, and obedience of Christ, for whose sake alone God binds himself as debtor unto us, and gives the recompense or reward, according to the measure of our faith testified by our works. And therefore it cannot be truly gathered: that works do merit by any promise or covenant, passed on God's part to man. Some may say, if works merit not why are they mentioned in the promises? I answer, not because they merit, but because they are tokens that the doer of the work is is in Christ, for whose merit the promise shall be accomplished. Object. VI Good works are perfect and without fault, for they are the works of the holy ghost, who cannot sin: therefore they merit. Ans. If works did proceed only and immediately from the holy ghost, there could not be any fault in them: but our works come from the holy ghost, in and by the will and understanding of man: & by this means they are tainted with sin: as water in the fountain is both clear and sweet, yet the streams there of passing through the filthy channel, are defiled thereby. Again they reason thus; That which we are bound to do hath no fault in it; but we are bound to do good works: therefore they are perfect. Ans. The proposition must be expounded: that which we are bound to do, in itself, according to the intention of the commander, hath no fault: or, that which we are bound to do according as we are bound to do it, hath no fault, yet in regard of the intention of the doer, or in regard of our manner of doing, it may be faulty. Object. V Christ saith Revel. 3. 4. that the faithful in the Church of Sardis shall walk with him in white: for they are worthy: therefore believers merit. Ans. Every believer is worthy to walk with Christ: yet not worthy in himself, but in Christ, to whom he is united, and made bone of his bone, & flesh of his flesh. And by reason of this conjunction `it is, that men are said to be worthy ', because they are enriched with Christ's merits and righteousness. Object. VII. 2. Tim. 4. 8. Everlasting life is termed a crown, and a crown of righteousness to be given of a just judge: therefore man for his part by his works deserves the same. Ans. Everlasting life is called a crown only in resemblance. For as he which runneth a race, must continue and run to the end, and then be crowned: even so must we continue to walk in good works unto the end, and then receive eternal life. And it is called a crown of righteousness, not because it belongs to any man by due and desert; but because God hath bound himself by a promise to give it, in performing whereof he is termed just: and by virtue of this promise, it is obtained and no otherwise. These are the principal objections, by which we may judge what the rest are. And thus we see what is the truth, namely that merit is necessary to salvation; yet neither merit of man's work, or person, but the merit of Christ imputed to us, whereby we being in him do procure and deserve the favour of God and life eternal. The sixth point. Of satisfaction. Our consent. Conclus. I. First, we acknowledge and hold Civil or Politic satisfaction: that is, a recompense for injuries, and damages offered any way to our neighbours. This Zacheus practised, when at his conversion he restored fourfold, things gotten by forged cavillation. Again by civil satisfaction I understand, the imposition of fines, mulcts, and penalties upon offenders, and the inflicting of death upon malefactors. For all these are satisfactions to the law, and societies of men when they are wronged. All these we maintain as necessary, for neither Church, nor common wealth can well be without them: considering they are notable means to uphold civil peace; and otherwhiles they are fruits of true faith, as the satisfuction of Zacheus was. Conclus. II. We acknowledge canonical or Ecclesiastical satisfaction: and that is, when any having given offence to the church of God or any part thereof, do make an open public testimony of their repentance. Mirian for murmuring against Moses, was stricken with leprosy, and afterward by his prayer she was cleansed, and yet for all that she must go seven days out of the tent and congregation, that she might make a kind of satisfaction to the people for her trespass. And in the old testament, sackcloth and ashes were signs of their satisfaction. Conclus. III. We hold that no man can be saved, unless, he make a perfect satisfaction to the justice of God for all his sins: because God is infinite in justice, and therefore will either exact an everlasting punishment, or satisfaction for the same. The dissent or difference The points of our difference and dissent are these. The Church of Rome teacheth and believeth, that Christ by his death hath made a satisfaction for all the sins of men, and for the eternal punishment of them all: yet so, as they themselves must satisfy the justice of God for the temporal punishment of their offences, either on earth or in purgatory. We teach and believe, that Christ by his death and passion hath made a perfect and all-sufficient satisfaction to the justice of God for all the sins of men, and for the whole punishment thereof both eternal and temporal. Thus we differ, and herein we for our parts must for ever stand at difference with them so as if there were no more points of variance but this one, it should be sufficient to keep us always from uniting our religions, and cause us to obey the voice of Christ, Come out of her my people. For as in the former points, so in this also, the Papists err, not in circumstance, but in the very foundation and life of religion. Our reasons. I. A satisfaction that is made imperfect either directly or by consequent, is indeed no satisfaction at all. But the Papists make Christ's satisfaction imperfect, in that they do add a supply by human satisfactions: & thus much a learned schoolman, Biel in plain words confessed. Although (saith he) the passion Super. lib. 3. dist. 19 concl. 5. of Christ be the principal merit, for which grace is conferred, the opening of the kingdom and glory: yet IS IT NEVER THE ALONE AND TOTAL MERITORIOUS CAUSE: it is manifest, because always with the merit of Christ, there concurreth some work, as the merit of congruity or condignity of him that receiveth grace or glory, if he be of years and have the use of reason: or of some other for him, if he want reason. For that which admits a supply by an other, is imperfect in itself. Therefore human satisfactions cannot stand. Learned Papists make answer, that Christ's satisfaction and man's may stand well together. For (say they) Christ's satisfactions is sufficient in itself to answer the justice of God for all sin and punishment: but it is not sufficient to this or that man till it be applied: and it must be applied by our satisfaction made to God for the temporal punishment of our sins. But I say again, that man's satisfaction can be no means to apply the satisfaction of Christ: and I prove it thus. The means of applying Gods blessings and graces unto man are twofold: some respect God himself, and some respect man. Those which respect God, are such whereby God on his part doth offer and convey his mercies in Christ unto man: of this sort are the preaching of the word, baptism, and the Lords supper, and these are as it were the hand of God whereby he reacheth down and giveth unto us Christ with all his benefits. The other means of applying on man's part, are those whereby the said benefits are received. Of this sort there is only one, namely faith, whereby we believe that Christ with all his benefits belong unto us. And this is the hand of man whereby he receiveth Christ as he is offered, or exhibited by God in the word and sacraments. As for other means beside these, in Scripture we find none. Foolish therefore is the answer of the Papist, that make men's satisfactions means to apply the satisfaction of Christ unto us: for by human satisfactions, Christ's is neither offered on God's part, nor yet received on man's part: let them prove it if they can. Others, not content with this their former answer, say; that our satisfactions do nothing derogate from the satisfaction of Christ: because our works have their dignity & merit from Christ's satisfaction: he meriting that our works should satisfy God's justice for temporal punishments. But this is also absurd and false, as the former was. For if Christ did satisfy that man might satisfy, than Christ doth make every believer to be a Christ, a jesus, a Redeemer, & a Priest in the same order with his own self. But to make sinful man his own redeemer, though it be but from temporal punishments, is a doctrine of devils. For the holy Ghost teacheth that the priesthood of Christ is incommunicable, & Hebr. 7. 24. cannot pass from him to any other. Now to make satisfaction for sin or any part of the punishment thereof, is a duty, or a part of Christ his priesthood, and therefore to make satisfaction is a work that cannot pass from his person to the person of any man. Again, if Christ by his satisfaction give power to man to satisfy, than man doth satisfy by Christ, and Christ beside his own satisfaction upon the cross, must daily satisfy in man, to the end of the world: but this cannot be, for Christ upon the cross, when death was upon him, said, It is finished, that is, I have fully satisfied for all the sins of mankind, both in respect of the fault and punishment. As for Christ's burial and resurrection which followed his death, they served not to satisfy but to confirm and ratify the same. Again Paul saith, 2. Cor. 5. 12. He that knew no sin was made sin for us, that is, the punishment of sin for us; but if the Church of Rome say true, that Christ doth daily satisfy, than Paul spoke too short, and should have said further, that Christ was made sin for us, and in us too: and that God was not only in Christ but also in us reconciling the world to himself. But Paul never knew this learning: and therefore let them turn themselves which way they will, by putting a supplement to Christ's satisfaction, they do indeed annihilate the same. Reason II. In sundry places of Scripture, especially in the Epistles of Paul: we are are said to be redeemed, justified, and saved Freely: which word freely, doth import that we are justified and saved without any thing done on out part or by ourselves in the matter of our salvation: and if this be so, then can we do nothing at all that may satisfy the justice of God for the least punishment of our sins. If we satisfy in our own persons we are not saved freely: and if we be saved freely, we make no satisfaction at all. Reason III. We pray daily, forgive us our sins: now to plead pardon, & to satisfy for our sins be contrary: and for all things, for which we can make satisfaction, we need not crave a pardon; but we are taught in the foresaid petition wholly and only to use the plea of pardon for our sins, and therefore we acknowledge that we cannot make any satisfaction at all. Reason IU. The judgement of the ancient Church. Tertul. de Baptism. Guiltiness being taken away, the PUNISHMENT IS ALSO TAKEN AWAY. Serm. 37. de verbis Apost. August. Christ, by taking upon him the punishment and not the fault, hath done away both the fault and THE PUNISHMENT. And Tom. 10. hom. 5. he saith, when we are gone out of this world, there will remain no compunction or satisfaction. Some new Editions have foisted in the word [aliqua] and so have turned the sense on this manner: There will remain no compunction or some satisfaction. But this is flat against Augustine's meaning who saith a little before, that when the way is ended there is no compounding of our cause with any. Chrysost. proem. in Esa. Say not to me, I have sinned: how shall I be freed from so many sins? Thou canst not: but thy God can. Yea, and he will so blot out thy sins that there shall REMAIN NO PRINT OF THEM: which thing befalls not the body, for when it is healed there remains a scar: but God as soon as he exempts thee Luc. 22. Petrinegat. from punishment, he giveth thee justice. Ambrose saith, I read of Peter's tears, but I read De bono mer not OF HIS SATISFACTION. Again, Let us adore Christ that he may say unto us, fear not thy sins of this world, nor the waves of bodily sufferings: I have remission of sins. Hierome saith in Psal. 31. The sin that is covered is not seen, the sin that is not seen is not imputed: that which is NOT IMPUTED, IS NOT PUNISHED. Chrysostome in Matth. hom. 44. Among all men, some endure punishment in this life and the life to come: others in this life alone: others alone in the life to come: others neither in this life nor the life to come. There alone, as Dives, who was not lord so much as of one drop of water. Here alone, as the incestuous man among the Corinthians. Neither here nor there, as the Apostles and Prophets, as also job and the rest of this kind: for they endured NO SUFFERINGS FOR PUNISHMENT, but that they might be known to be conquerors in the fight. Objections of Papists. I. Object. Levit. 4. Moses according to God's commandment prescribed several sacrifices for several persons; and they were means of satisfaction for the temporal punishments of their daily sins. Ans. Those sacrifices were only signs and types of Christ's satisfaction to be offered to his father in his alone sacrifice upon the cross: and whosoever offered any sacrifice in the old testament, did thus and no otherwise esteem of it, but as a type and figure of better things. Secondly, the said sacrifices were satisfactions to the Church, whereby men did testify their repentance for their offences, and likewise their desire to be reconciled to God and men. And such kind of satisfactions, we acknowledge. II. Object. Men, whose sins are all pardoned, have afterward sundry crosses and afflictions laid upon them, unto the end of their days: therefore in all likelihood they make satisfaction to God for temporal punishments. As for example, the Israelites for murmuring against the Lord in the wilderness were barred all from the land of promise: and the like befell Moses and Aaron for not glorifying God, as they should have done at the waters of strife. Ans. Man must be considered in a twofold estate, as he is under the law, and as he is under grace. In the first estate, all afflictions are curses or legal punishments, be they little or great: but to them that are in the second estate and believe in Christ, though the same afflictions remain, yet do they change their habit or condition, and are the actions of a Father serving to be trials, corrections, preventing, admonitions. 1. Cor. 11. 32. When we are judged, we are nurtered of the Lord and Heb. 12. 7. If we endure chastisement, God offereth himself unto you as children. and Chrysost. saith, 1. Cor. hom. 28. When we are corrected of the Lord, it is more for our admonition then damnation: more for a medicine then for a punishment: more for a correction then for a penalty. And whereas God denied the believing Israelites, with Moses and Aaron to enter into the land of Canaan, it cannot be proved that it was a punishment or penalty of the law upon them. The scripture saith no more but that it was an admonition to all men in all ages following, to take heed of like offences, as Paul writeth, All these things came unto them for ensamples, and were written for our admonition, 1. Corinth. 10. 11. Object. III. David was punished after his repentance for his adultery, for the child died, and he was plagued in his own kind, in the incest of Absalon: and when he had numbered the people he was yet punished in the death of his people after his own repentance. Ans. I answer as before that the hand of God was upon David after his repentance: but yet the judgements which befell him were not curses unto him properly, but corrections for his sins, and trials of his faith, and means to prevent further sin, & to renew both his faith and repentance: as also they served to admonish others in like case; for David was a public person and his sins were offensive, both within the Church of God and without. Object. iv The Prophets of God, when the people are threatened with the plague, famine, sword, captivity, etc. exhort them to repent and to humble themselves in sackcloth and ashes; and thereby they turned away the wrath of God that was then coming forth against them. Therefore by temporal humiliation, men may escape the temporal punishments of the lord Ans. Famine, sword, banishment, the plague, and other judgements sent on God's people, were not properly punishments of sin but only the corrections of a father whereby he humbled them that they might repent: or thus, they were punishments tending to correction, not serving for satisfaction. And the punishments of God are turned from them, not because they satisfy the justice of God in their own sufferings, but because by faith they lay hold on the satisfaction of the Mesias, and testify the same by their humiliation & repentance. Object. V Dan. 4. 24. Daniel giveth this counsel to Nabuchadnezar, redeem thy sins by justice and thine iniquities by alms deeds. Behold (say they) alms deeds are made a means to satisfy for man's iniquities. Ans. The word which they translate to redeem, (as the most learned in the Chalde tongue with one consent avouch) doth properly signify to break off; as if the Prophet should say: O King, thou art a mighty Monarch, & to enlarge thy kingdom thou hast used much injustice & cruelty, therefore now repent of thine iniquity, and break off these thy sins, testify they repentance by doing justice, and give alms to the poor whom thou hast oppressed. Therefore here is nothing spoken of satisfaction for sin, but only of testification of repentance by the fruits thereof. Object. VI Math. 3. 2. Do penance; and bring forth fruits worthy of penance, which (say they) are works of satisfaction enjoined by the priest. Ans. This text is absurd: for the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, signifieth thus much, change your minds from sin to God, and testify it by good works, that is, by doing the duties of the moral law; which must be done, not because they are means to satisfy God's justice for man's sin, but because they are fruits of that faith and repentance which lies in the heart. Object. VII. 2. Cor. 7. 10. Paul setteth down sundry fruits of repentance: whereof the last is revenge, whereby repentant persons punish themselves, thereby to satisfy God's justice for the temporal punishment of their sins. Ans. A repentant sinner must take revenge of himself, & that is only to use all means which serve to subdue the corruption of his nature, to bridle carnal affections, and to mortify sin: and these kind of actions are restrainments properly, and not punishments: and are directed against the sin and not against the person. Lastly, they make three works of satisfaction, prayer, fasting, and alms deeds. For the first, it is mere foolishness to think, that man by prayer can satisfy for his sins. It is all one as if they had said, that a beggar by ask of alms should deserve his alms: or, that a debtor by requesting his creditor to pardon his debt, should thereby pay his debt. Secondly, fasting is a thing indifferent, of the same nature with eating & drinking, and of itself conferreth nothing to the obtainement of the kingdom of heaven, no more than eating and drinking doth. Thirdly and lastly alms deeds cannot be works of satisfaction for sins. For when we give them as we ought, we do but our duty, whereunto we are bound. And we may as well say, that a man by paying one debt, may discharge another: as to say that by doing his duty he may satisfy God's justice for the punishment of his sins. These we confess be fruits of faith, but yet are they no works of satisfaction: but the only and all-sufficient satisfaction made to God's justice for our sins, is to be found in the person of Christ, being procured by the merit of his death, & his obedience. And thus our doctrine touching satisfaction is cleared: and it is to be learned carefully of our common people, because the opinion of human satisfaction is natural and sticks fast in the heart of natural men. Hereupon when any have sinned, and feel touch of conscience any way, their manner is, then to perform some outward humiliation and repentance, thinking thereby to stop the mouth of conscience, and by doing some ceremonial duties to appease the wrath of God for their sins. Yea, many think to satisfy God's justice by repeating the Creed, the Lords prayer, and the ten Commandments, so foolish are they in this kind. The seventh point. Of Traditions. Traditions, are doctrines delivered from hand to hand, either by word of mouth, or by writing, beside the written word of God. Our consent. Conclus. I. We hold that the very word of God, hath been delivered by tradition. For first God revealed his will to Adam by word of mouth: and renewed the same unto the patriarchs, not by writing, but by speech, by dreams, and other inspirations: and thus the word of God went from man to man for the space of two thousand and four hundred years, unto the time of Moses, who was the first penman of holy scripture, For as touching the prophesy of Enoch, we commonly hold it was not penned by Enoch, but by some jew under his name. And for the space of this time, men worshipped God & held the articles of their faith by tradition, not from men but immediately from God himself. And the history of the new testament (as some say) for eighty years, as some others think, for the space of twenty years and more, went from hand to hand by tradition, till penned by the Apostles, or being penned by others was approved by them. Conclus. II. We hold that the Prophets, our Saviour Christ, and his Apostles, spoke and did many things good and true which were not written in the scriptures: but came either to us, or to our ancetours only by tradition. As 2. Tim. 3. 20. it is said, that jannes' and jambres were the Magicians that withstood Moses: now in the books of the old testament we shall not find them once named, and therefore it is like, that the Apostle had their names by tradition, or by some writings then extant among the jews. So Hebr. 12. 21. the author of the Epistle recordeth of Moses, that when he saw a terrible sight in Mount Sinai, he said, I tremble and am afraid: which words are not to be found in all the books of the old testament. In the Epistle of Jude mention is made, that the devil strove with Michael the Archangel about the body of Moses: which point (as also the former) considering it is not to be found in holy writ, it seems the Apostle had it by tradition from the jews. That the Prophet Isai was killed with a fullers club is received for truth, but yet not recorded in Scripture: and so likewise that the virgin Marie lived and died a virgin. And in Ecclesiastical writers many worthy sayings of the Apostles and other holy men are recorded, and received of us for truth, which nevertheless are not set down in the books of the old or new Testament. And many things we hold for truth not written in the word, if they be not against the word. Conclus. III. We hold that the Church of God hath power to prescribe ordinances rules, or traditions, touching time & place of God's worship, and touching order and comeliness to be used in the same: and in this regard, Paul, 1. Cor. 11. 2. commendeth the Church of Corinth for keeping his traditions, and Act. 15. the Council at jerusalem decreed that the Churches of the Gentiles should abstain from blood, and from things strangled. This decree is termed a tradition, and it was in force among them so long as the offence of the jews remained. And this kind of traditions whether made by general Counsels or particular Synods, we have care to maintain and observe; these caveats being remembered: first that they prescribe nothing childish or absurd to be done: secondly that they be not imposed as any parts of God's worship: thirdly, that they be severed from superstition or opinion of merit: lastly that the Church of God be not burdened with the multitude of them. And thus much we hold touching Traditions. The difference. Papists teach, that beside the written word, there be certain unwritten traditions, which must be believed as profitable and necessary to salvation. And these they say are two fold; Apostolical, namely such as were delivered by the Apostles and not written; and Ecclesiastical, which the Church decreeth as occasion is offered. We hold that the Scriptures are most perfect, containing in them all doctrines needful to salvation, whether they concern faith or manners: and therefore we acknowledge no such traditions beside the written word, which shall be necessary to salvation; so as he which believeth them not, cannot be saved. Our reasons. Testimony I. Deutr. 4. 2. Thou shalt not add to the words that I command thee, nor take any thing there from: therefore the written word is sufficient for all doctrines pertaining to salvation. If it be said that this commandment is spoken as well of the unwritten as of the written word, I answer: that Moses speaketh of the written word only: for these very words are a certain preface which he set before a long commentatie made of the written law, for this end to make the people more attentive, & obedient. Testimony II. Isai 8. 20. To the law and to the testimony. If they speak not according to this word, it is because there is no light in them. Here the Prophet teacheth what must be done in cases of difficulty. Men must not run to the wizard or southsaier, but to the law and testimony, and here he commends the written word as sufficient to resolve all doubts and scruples in conscience whatsoever. Testimony III. john, 20. 31. These things were written that ye might believe that jesus is the Christ, and in believing might have everlasting life. Here is set down the full end of the Gospel, and of the whole written word: which is to bring men to faith and consequently to salvation: and therefore the whole scripture alone is suffient to this end without traditions. If it be said, that this place must be understood of Christ's miracles only: I answer, that miracles without the doctrine of Christ and knowledge of his sufferings, can bring no man to life everlasting, & therefore the place must be understood of the doctrine of Christ and not of his miracles alone, as Paul teacheth, Gal. ●. 1: 8. If we or an Angel from heaven preach unto you any thing BESIDE THAT which we have preached, let him be accursed. And to this effect he blames them that taught but a divers doctrine to that which he had taught, 1. Tim. 1. 3. Testimony FOUR 2. Tim. 3. 16, 17. The whole Scripture is given by inspiration of God and is profitable to teach, to improve, to correct, and to instruct in righteousness, that the man of God may be absolute, being made perfect unto every good work. In these words be contained two arguments, to prove the sufficiency of Scripture without unwritten verities. The first: that which is profitable to these four uses; namely, to teach all necessary truth, to confute all errors, to correct faults in manners, and to instruct in righteousness, that is, to inform all men in all good duties; that is sufficient to salvation. But Scripture serveth for all these uses: and therefore it is sufficient: and unwritten traditions are superfluous. The second: that which can make the man of God, that is, Prophets, and Apostles, and the ministers of the word, perfect in all the duties of their callings: that same word is sufficient to make all other men perfect in all good works. But God's word is able to make the man of God perfect. Therefore it is sufficient to prescribe the true and perfect way to eternal life, without the help of unwritten traditions. V The judgement of the Church. Tertull. de resur. carnis. saith, Take from heretics the opinions which they maintain with the heathen, that they may defend their questions by SCRIPTURE ALONE, and they cannot stand. Again, We need no curiosity after Christ jesus, nor inquisition after the Gospel. When we believe it, we desire to BELIEVE NOTHING BESIDE: for this we first believe that there is NOTHING MORE which we may believe. Hierome on Matth. 23. writing of an opinion that john Baptist was killed, because he foretold the coming of Christ, saith thus: This, because it hath not authority from Scriptures, may as easily be contemned as approved. In which words, there is a conclusion with a minor, and the mayor is to be supplied by the rules of logic thus. That which hath not authority from Scriptures, may as easily be contemned as approved: but this opinion is so: therefore. Behold a notable argument against all unwritten traditions. Augustine book 2. c. 9 de doct. Christ. In those things which are plainly set down in Scripture, are found ALL THOSE POINTS WHICH CONTAIN FAITH AND MANNERS of living well. Vicentius Lirinen. saith, the Canon of the Scripture is perfect, and fully sufficient to itself FOR ALL THINGS. Beside these testimonies, other reasons there be that serve to prove this point. I. The practice of Christ & his Apostles, who for the confirmation of the doctrine which they taught, used always the testimony of Scripture, neither can it be proved, that they ever confirmed any doctrine by tradition. Act. 26. 22. I continue unto this day, witnessing both to small and great, saying, NONE OTHER THINGS THAN THOSE which the Prophets and Moses did say should come. And by this we are given to understand, that we must always have recourse to the written word, as being sufficient to instruct us in mats of salvation. II. If the believing of unwritten traditions were necessary to salvation, than we must as well believe the writings of the ancient Fathers as well as the writings of the Apostles, because Apostolical traditions are not else where to be found but in their books. And we may not believe their sayings as the word of God, because they often err being subject to error: and for this cause their authority, when they speak of traditions, may be suspected: and we may not always believe them upon their word. Objections for Traditions. First they allege, 2. Thess. 2. 15. where the Apostle bids that Church keep the ordinances which he taught them either by word or letter. Hence they gather, that beside the written word, there be unwritten traditions, that are indeed necessary to be kept and obeyed. Ans. It is very likely, that this Epistle to the Thessalonians was the first that ever Paul writ to any Church, though in order it have not the first place; and therefore at the time when this Epistle was penned, it might well fall out, that some things needful to salvation were delivered by word of mouth, not being as yet written by any Apostle. Yet the same things were afterward set down in writing, either in the second epistle or in the epistles of Paul. Object. II. That, Scripture is Scripture, is a point to be believed, but that is a tradition unwritten; and therefore one tradition there is not written, that we are to believe. Answ. That the books of the old and new Testament are Scripture, it is to be gathered and believed not upon bare tradition, but from the very books themselves, on this manner. Let a man that is endued with the spirit of discerning, read the several books, withal let him consider the professed author thereof which is God himself, and the matter therein contained, which is a most divine and absolute truth full of piety: the manner and form of speech, which is full of majesty in the simplicity of words. The end whereat they wholly aim, which is the honour and glory of God alone, etc. and he shall be resolved that Scripture is Scripture, even by the Scripture itself. Yea, and by this means he may discern any part of Scripture, from the writings of men whatsoever. Thus then scripture proves itself to be scripture: and yet we despise not the universal consent or tradition of the Church in this case: which though it do not persuade the conscience, yet is it a notable inducement to move us to reverence, and regard the writings of the Prophets & Apostles. It will be said, where is it written that scripture is scripture? I answer, not in any one particular place or book of scripture, but in every line and page of the whole bible to him that can read with the spirit of discerning, & can discern the voice of the true pastor, as the sheep of Christ can do. Object. III Some books of the canon of the scripture are lost, as the book of the wars of God. Num. 21. 14. The book of the just. josua. 10, 13. the books of Chronicles of the kings of Israel and juda. 1. King. 14. 19 the books of certain prophets, Nathan, Gad, Iddo, Ahiah, and Semiah: and therefore the matter of these books must come to us by tradition. Ans. Though it be granted that some books of Canonical scripture be lost: yet the scripture still remains sufficient because the matter of those books (so farforth as it was necessary to salvation) is contained in these books of scripture that are now extant. Again, I take it to be a truth (though some think otherwise) that no part of the Canon is lost: for Paul saith, what soever things were written aforetime, were written for our learning, that we through patience and comfort of the Scriptures, etc. Rom. 15. 4. Where he takes it for granted, that the whole canon of holy Scripture was then extant. For if he had thought, that some books of scripture had been lost, he would have said: whatsoever was written and is now extant, was written for our learning and comfort. For books that are lost serve neither for learning nor comfort. Again to hold that any▪ books of scripture should be lost, calls into question God's providence, and the fidelity of the Church, who hath the books of God in keeping, and is therefore called the pillar and ground of truth. And touching the books before mentioned, I answer thus: The book of the wars of God, Num. 21. 14. might be some short bill or narration of things done among the Israelites, which in the days of Moses went from hand to hand. For sometime a book in scripture, signifieth a roll or Catalogue, as the first chapter of Matthew, which containeth the genealogy of our Saviour Christ, is called the book of the generation of jesus Christ. Again, the book of the just, and the books of Chronicles, which are said to be lost, were but as the Chronicles of England are with us; even politic records of the acts and events of things, in the kingdom of juda and Israel: out of which the Prophets gathered things necessary to be known; and placed them in holy scripture. As for the books of Iddo, Ahiah, Semiah, Gad, and Nathan, they are contained in the books of the Kings and Chronicles, and in the books of Samuel, which were not written by him alone, but by sundry prophets, 1. Chr. 29. 29. as also was the book of judges. As for the books of Solomon which are lost, they did not concern religion and matters of salvation, but were concerning matters of philosophy and such like things. Object. iv Moses in Mount Sina, beside the written law, received from God a more secret doctrine, which he never writ, but delivered by tradition or word of mouth to the Prophets after him: and this the jews have now set down in their Cabala. Ans. This indeed is the opinion of some of the jews, whom in effect and substance sundry Papists follow: but we take it for no better than a jewish dotage. For if Moses had known any secret doctrine beside the written law, he would never have given this commandment of the said law, thou shalt not add any thing thereto. Object. V Heb. 5. 12. God's word is of two sorts milk and strong me at. By milk we must understand the word of God written wherein God speaks plainly to the capacity of the rudest: but strong meat is unwritten traditions, a doctrine not to be delivered unto all, but to those that grow to perfection. Answ. We must know, that one and the same word of God is milk and strong meat, in regard of the manner of handling and propounding of it. For being delivered generally and plainly, to the capacity of the simplest, it is milk; but being handled particularly and largely, and so fitted for men of more understanding, it is strong meat. As for example: the doctrine of the creation, of man's fall, and redemption by Christ, when it is taught overly and plainly, it is milk: but when the depth of the same is thoroughly opened, it is strong meat. And therefore it is a conceit of man's brain, to imagine that some unwritten word is meant by strong meat. Object. VI Sundry places of Scripture be doubtful: and every religion hath his several exposition of them, as the Papists have theirs, and the Protestants theirs. Now then, seeing there can be but one truth, when question is of the interpretation of scripture, recourse must be had to the tradition of the Church, that the true sense may be determined Aug. de doct. Christ. l. 1. & 2. and the question ended. Ans. It is not so: but in doubtful places Scripture itself is sufficient to declare his own meaning; first by the analogy of faith, which is the sum of religion gathered out of the clearest places of scripture: secondly, by the circumstances of the place and the nature and signification of the words; thirdly by conference of place with place. By these and like helps contained in scripture, we may judge which is the truest meaning of any place. Scripture itself is the text and the best gloss. And the scripture is falsely termed the matter of strife, it being not so of itself, but by the abuse of man. And thus much for our dissent concerning traditions, wherein we must not be wavering but steadfast, because notwithstanding our renouncing of popery; yet popish inclinations and dispositions be rise among us. Our common people marvelously affect human traditions: yea man's nature is inclined more to be pleased with them, then with the word of God. The feast of the nativity of our Saviour Christ, is only a custom and tradition of the Church, and yet men are commonly more careful to keep it then the lords day, the keeping whereof stands by the moral law. Positive laws are not sufficient to restrain us from buying & selling on the sabbath: yet within the twelve days no man keeps market. Again see the truth of this in our affection to the ministery of the word: let the preacher allege Peter and Paul, the people count it but common stuff, such as any man can bring: but let men come and allege Ambrose, Austin, and the rest of the fathers: oh, he is the man, he is alone for them. Again, let any man be in danger any way, and strait he sendeth to the wise man or wizard: God's word is not sufficient to comfort and direct him. All this argues that popery denied with the mouth, abides still in the heart: and therefore we must learn to reverence the written word by ascribing unto it all manner of perfection. The eight point. Of vows. Our consent. Touching vows this must be known, that we do not condemn them altogether, but only labour to restore the purity of doctrine touching this point, which by the Church of Rome from time to time hath been corrupted and defaced: We hold therefore that a vow is a promise made to God touching some duties to be performed unto him: and it is two fold, general, or special. The general vow is that which concerns all believers: and it is made in the covenant both of the law, and of the Gospel. I will here only speak of the vow which is made in the covenant of the Gospel, in which there be two actions: one of God, the other of man. God in mercy one his part promiseth to men the remission of sins and life everlasting▪ and man again for his part promiseth to believe in Christ, and to obey God in all his commandments. All men ever made this vow unto God, as the jews in circumcision: which also they renewed so often as they received the Passeover: and in the new testament all that are baptized do the like. And in baptism this vow is called the stipulation of a good conscience, whereby we purpose to renounce ourselves, to believe in Christ, & to bring forth the fruits of true repentance: & it ought to be renewed so oft as we are partakers of the supper of the Lord. This vow is necessary and must be kept as a part of the true worship of God; because it is a promise, wherein we vow to perform all duties commanded of God either in the law or in the Gospel. It may be demanded, considering we are bound to obedience, how we bind ourselves in baptism thereto. Ans. Though we be already bound partly by nature and partly by the written word, yet may we renew the same bond in a vow, and he that is bound may further bind himself, so it be for this end, to help his dullness for want of zeal, and to make himself more forward in duties of love to men and the worship of God: to this end David swore to keep the law of God, psal. 119. 116. though he were bound unto it by nature and by the written law itself. The special vow is that, which doth not reach to the person of all believers, but only concerns some special men upon some special occasions. And this kind of vow is twofold. The first, is the vow of a ceremonial duty in the way of service to God: and it was in practice in the Church of the jews under the old Testament: examples hereof are two especially, the first was the vow of the Nazarites, whereto no kind of men were bound by God's commandment, but they bond themselves: God only prescribing the manner and order of keeping the same with rites pertaining thereto, as abstinence from wine, the not cutting of their hair, and such like. The second example is of the jews, when of their own accords they vowed to give God house or land, sheep, or oxen, or any like things, for the maintenance of the legal worship: and of this also God prescribeth certain rules, Levit. 27. Now these vows were part of the jewish pedagogue or ceremonial law, wherein God trained up the jews in the old testament: and being observed of them they were parts of God's worship: but now under the gospel they are not: being all abolished with the ceremonial law, to which Christ put an end at his death upon the cross. It is true Paul made a vow, and since kept the same, in the time of the new Testament, Act. 18. yet not as a part of God's worship; but as a thing indifferent for the time: wherein he only condescended to the weakness of the jews, that by this means he might bring them the better unto Christ. And whereas Christ is called a Nazarite, Math. 2. 23. we may not think he was of that very order, because he did not obstain from wine: but he was so termed because he was the verity and accomplishment of this order. For by it was signified that God's church was a peculiar people severed or chosen out of the world, & that Christ in respect of holiness was also separated from all sinners. And the words in S. Matthew, he shallbe called a Nazarite, are borrowed from the book of judges, cap. 13. where they are properly spoken of Samson, and in type or figure of Christ. For as Samson saved Israel by his death, so did Christ save his Church. And as Samson killed his enemies more by death then by life, so did Christ. It is plain therefore that this kind of vow bindeth not us: for there are no more ccremonies to be kept under the gospel for parts of God's worship, but the outward rites of Baptism and the lords Supper. Vows concerning meats, drinks, attire, touching, tasting, times, places, days were proper to the jews. The second kind of special vow is that whereby a man promiseth freely to perform some outward and bodily exercise, for some good end: and this vow also (if it be made accordingly) is lawful, and belongs both to the Church of the old and new testament. In the old we have the example of the Rekabites. jer. 35. who by the appointment of jonadab their father abstained from strong drink, and wine, from planting vineyards and orchards: whereby jonadab intended only to break them before hand, and to acquaint them with their future condition and state, that they should be strangers in a foreign land; that so they might prepare themselves to endure hardness in the time to come. And now in the new testament we have warrant in like manner to vow: as if a man by drinking of wine or strong drink, find himself prone to drunkenness, he may vow with himself to drink no more wine nor strong drink for so long time, as he feels the driuking thereof will stir up his infirmity, and minister occasion of sinning. Of this kind also are the vows in which we purpose and promise to God, to keep set times of fasting, to task ourselves in prayer and reading of holy scriptures, and to give set alms for special causes known to ourselves, and to do sundry like duties. And that we be not deceived in making such vows, certain rules must be remembered: I. that the vow be agreeable to Gods will and word: for if it be otherwise, the making as also the keeping thereof is sin. Vows must not be the bonds of iniquity. II. It must so be made, that it may stand with christian liberty. For we may not make such things necessary in conscience, which God hath made free. Now christian liberty allows unto us the free use of all things indifferent, so it be out of the case of offence. Hence it follows that vows must be made and kept or not kept, so far forth as in conscience they may stand or not stand with our liberty purchased by Christ. III. The vow must be made with consent of superiors, if we be under government. Thus among the jews the vow of a daughter might not stand, unless the consent of parents came thereunto. FOUR It must be in the power and ability of the maker thereof, to do or not to do. A vow made of a thing impossible, is no vow. V It must be agreeable to the calling of him that maketh it: that is, both to his general calling as he is a Christian, and to that particular calling wherein he liveth. If it be against either one or both, it is unlawful. VI It must be made with deliberation. Rash vows be not lawful, though the things vowed may be done lawfully. VII. The end must be good, which is to preserve and exercise the gifts of faith, prayer, repentance, obedience, and other virtues of the mind: as also to testify our thankfulness unto God for blessings received. These are the principal rules which must be observed in making of vows: and herewithal must be remembered that vows made on this manner, are by themselves no part of God's worship, but only helps and furtherances thereunto: and thus are we to esteem of all the vows of the new Testament. And thus much of special vows, and of our consent herein. The dissent or difference. The points of difference between us touching vows are especially three. I. The Church of Rome teacheth that in the new testament we are as much bound to make vows, as was the Church of the jews, and that even in external exercises. We say no: considering the ceremonial law is now abolished: and we have only two ceremonies by commandment to be observed, baptism, and the supper of the Lord. Again we are not so much bound to make or keep vows as the jews were; because they had a commandment so to do, and we have none at all. But they allege to the contrary the Prophet Esay, cap. 19 20. who speaking of the time of the gospel, saith, the Egyptians shall know the Lord, and shall vow unto him and keep it. I answer two ways: first, that the Prophet in this place expresseth and signifieth the spiritual worship of the new testament by ceremonial worship then used: as he doth also in the last chapter where he calleth the ministers of the new testament Priests and Levites. Secondly, we grant, the Church of the new testament makes vows unto God, but they are of moral and evangelical duties: which must not be left undone and if vowing will indeed further than, it is not to be neglected. And therefore so oft as we come to the lords Table, we in heart renew the vow and promise of obedience. And though vows be made of things and actions indifferent, yet are they not any parts of God's worships which is the point to be proved. Again they allege. Psal. 75. 11. Vow unto God and perform it. And they say that this commandment binds all men. Ans. That commandment first binds the jews to the making of ceremonial vows. Again David here speaks of the vowing of praise and thanksgiving unto God: and so he expounds himself, Psal. 56. 12. My vows are upon me, I will offer praises unto God; and this vow indeed concerneth all men because it respects a moral duty, which is to set forth the praise of God. II. Point of difference. They also hold that vows made even of things not commanded, as meats, drinks, attire, etc. are parts of God's worship, yea that they tend to a state of perfection, in that the keeping of them brings man to an higher estate than the keeping of the law can do. We flatly say, no: holding that lawful vows be certain adminicul● cultus diun●. stays and props of God's worship, and not the worship itself. For Paul saith plainly 1. Tim. 4. 8. Bodily exercise profiteth little, but godliness is profitable for much. Again, as God's kingdom is, so must his worship be: and God's kingdom standeth not in outward things, as in eating, drinking, and such like actions: and therefore his worship standeth not in outward things. III. Point of difference. They maintain such vows to be made, as are not agreeable to the rules before named: and herein also we are to dissent from them. The first and principal is, the vow of continency, whereby a man promiseth to God to keep chastity always in single life, that is, out of the estate of wedlock. This kind of vow is flat against the word of God: and therefore unlawful. For Paul saith, 1. Cor. 7. 9 If they can not continue let them marry. 1. Tim. 4. 1. It is a doctrine of devils to forbid to marry. Heb. 13. 4. Marriage is honour able among all, and the bed undefiled. Again, this vow is not in the power of himself that voweth: for continency is the gift of God, who giveth it not unto all, but to whom he will and when he will, and as long as he will. They allege, that in the want of continency, fasting and prayer obtain it. Answ. It is not so: Gods gifts be of two sorts some are common to all believers, as the gift of faith, repentance and the fear of God, etc. others are peculiar to some only, as the gift of continence, 1. Corinth. 7. 7. I would that all men were as I myself am, but every man hath his proper gift of God, one this way, an other that way. Now, if we fast and pray for the increase of the common gifts of God, as faith, repentance, and all such as are needful to salvation, we may obtain them in some measure, but the like can not be said of particular gifts. The child of God may pray for health or wealth, and not obtain either of them in this world; because it is not the will of God to vouchsafe these blessings to all men: & Paul prayed three times to be delivered from a temptation, and yet obtained not his suit. And so may we likewise pray for chastity in single estate, and yet never obtain it: because, it may be, it is the will of God to save us without it. This vow therefore we abhor as a thing that hath heretofore and doth still bring forth innumerable abominations in the world. Yet here mark in what manner we do it. First of all, though we mislike the vow; yet we like and commend single life. Marriage indeed is better in two respects: first because God hath ordained it to be a remedy of continency to all such persons as cannot contain: secondly because it is the seminary both of church and common wealth; and it bringeth forth a ▪ seed of God for the enlarging of his kingdom. Yet single life in them that have the gift of continency, is in some respects to be preferred. First because it brings liberty in persecution. Thus Paul saith, 1. Cor. 7. 26. I suppose it to be good for the present necessity for a man so to be. Secondly, because it frees men from the common cares, molestations, and distractions that be in the family, v. 2. 28. Such shall have trouble in the flesh, but I spare you. Thirdly because single parties do commonly with more bodily ease and liberty worship God; it being still presupposed, that they have the gift of continency. v. 34. The unmarried woman careth for the things of the Lord, that she may be holy both in body and spirit. Again though we mislike the vow, yet we hold and teach, that men or women being assured that they have the gift of continency, may constantly resolve and purpose with themselves to live and lead a single life, 1. Cor. 7. 38. He that standeth firm in his own heart that he hath no need, but hath power of his own will, and hath so DECREED IN HIS HEART that he will keep his virgin, he doth well. And we embrace the saying of Theodoret. on 1. Tim. c. 4. For he doth not (saith he) blame single life or continency, but he accuseth them that by LAW ENACTED COMPEL men to follow these. And men made themselves chaste for the kingdom of heaven. Math. 19 12. not by vow, but by a purpose of heart, which is far less than a vow, and may be changed upon occasion, whereas a vow cannot, unless it do evidently appear to be unlawful. Thirdly, for such persons as are able to contain, to live single for the ends before named, indeed we hold it to be no counsel of perfection, yet do we not deny it to be a Counsel of expedience, or outward ease; according to that which Paul saith, v. 25. I give mine advice—, and 35. I speak this for your commodity not to entangle you in a snare. Lastly, we think that if any having the gift of continency, do make a vow to live single and yet afterward marry (the said gift remaining) they have sinned. Yet not because they are married but because their vow is broken. And thus said Augustine of widows that married after their vow. lib. de bono viduit. cap. 9 The second is the vow of poverty and monastical life, in which men bestow all they have on the poor: and give themselves wholly and only to prayer and fasting. This vow is against the will of God, Act. 20. 35. It is a more blessed thing to give than to receive. Prov. 28. 7. Give me neither riches nor poverty. Deut. 28. 22. poverty is numbered among the curses of the la; none whereof are to be vowed. And it is the rule of the holy Ghost, 2. Thess. 3. 10. He that will not labour, namely in some special and warrantable calling, must not eat. And v. 12. I exhort that they work with quietness and eat their own bread. Now when as men live apart from others, giving themselves only to prayer and fasting, they live in no calling. And it is against the general vow made in baptism, because it freeth men from sundry duties of the moral law, and changeth the proper end of man's life. For every man must have two callings. The first is the general calling of a christian, by virtue of which he performeth worship unto God, and duties of love to men. The second is a particular calling, wherein according to his gift he must do service to men in some function, pertaining either to the Church or common wealth whereof he is a member. And the first of these twain must be performed in the second: and the second in and with the first. The end of man's life is, not only to serve God by the duties of the first table, but by serving of man in the duties of the second table of serve God. And therefore the love of our neighbour is called the fulfilling of the whole law, Rom. 13. 10. because the law of god is practised not apart; but in and with the love of our neighbour. This being so, it is manifest that vowed poverty in monkish life makes many unprofitable members both of Church and common wealth. And though we mislike this vow also, yet we do it, holding these conclusions. I. that a man may forsake all his goods upon special calling; as the Apostles did, when they were sent to preach the gospel through the whole world. Secondly goods may be forsaken, yea wife, children, parents, brethren, and all, in the case of confession, that is when a man for the religion of Christ is persecuted and constrained to forsake all he hath. For then the second table gives place to the duties of the first. Mark. 10. 29. II. That, for the time of peesecution, men may withdraw themselves (just occasion offered) and go apart to wildernesses or like places, Heb. 11. 37. yet for the time of peace I see no cause of solitary life. If it be alleged that men go apart for contemplation and spiritual exercises, I say again that God's grace may as well be exercised in the family as in the cloister. The family is indeed as it were a school of God, in which they that have but a spark of grace may learn and exercise many virtues, the acknwoledgement of God, invocation, the fear of God, love, bountifulness, patience, meekness, faithfulness, etc. Nay here be more occasions of doing or taking good, then be or can be in a cloister. III. That, we condemn not the old and ancient Monks, though we like not every thing in them. For they lived not like idle-bellies, but in the Zozom lib. 1. cap. 13. sweat of their own brows, as they ought to do: and many of them were married: d Epiph. bar. 78. & in their meat, drink, apparel, rule, vow, and August. de mon. Eccl. l. 1. c. 31. & de opere Monach. cap. 17 whole course of life, differed from the Monks of this time; even as heaven from earth. The third vow is of regular obedience, whereby men give themselves to keep some devised rule or order, standing most commonly in the observation of exercises in outward things, as meats and drinks, and apparel, etc. This vow is against christian liberty, whereby is granted a free use of all things indifferent, so it be without the case of offence. Gal. 5. 1. Stand fast in the liberty wherein Christ hath made you free. Coloss. 2. 16. Let no man judge you in meat and drink. To conclude, whereas the Papists magnify these their vows, and yet make no such account of the vow in baptism: we for our parts must be contrary to them, not only in judgement, but also in practice: & we ought to have special care to make good the vows we have plight to God according to his commandment. In our creation we made vow of obedience: and being received into the covenant of grace, we vowed to believe in Christ, and to bring forth fruits of new obedience, and this vow is renewed as oft as we come to the Lords table: our duty therefore is, to perform them also to God, as David saith, Vow unto God and keep it: and if we keep them not, all turns to our shame and confusion. Men stand much on the keeping of that word which they have passed to men, and it is taken for a point of much honesty, as it is indeed. Now then, if there be such care to keep touch with men, much more should we have care to keep covenant with God. The ninth point. Of Images. Our consent. Conclusion I. We acknowledge the civil use of images as freely and truly as the Church of Rome doth. By civil use I understand, that use which is made of them in the common societies of men, out of the appointed places of the solemn worship of God. And this to be lawful, it appeareth: because the arts of painting and graving are the ordinance of God: and to be skilful in them is the gift of God, as the example of Bezaleel, and Aholiab declare, Exod. 35. 30. This use of Images may be in sundry things. I. In the adorning and setting forth of buildings: thus Solomon beautified his throne with the image of lions. And the Lord commanded his temple to be adorned with the images of palm trees, of pomegranates, of bulls, cherubes, and such like. II. It serves for the distinction of coins: according to the practice of Emperors and princes of all nations. When Christ was asked, Matth. 22. whether it was lawful to give tribute to Cesar or no? he called for a penny and said, whose image or super scription is this, they said, Caesar's: he than said, give to Cesar the things that are Caesar's; not condemning but approving the stamp or image upon his coin. And though the jews were forbidden to make images in way of representation, or worship of the true god: yet the Sycle of the sanctuary, which they used, specially after the time of Moses, was stamped with the image of the Almond tree, and the po●te of Manna. III. Images serve to keep in memory friends deceased whom we reverence. And it is like, that hence came one occasion of the images that are now in use in the Roman Church. For in the days after the Apostles men used privately to keep the pictures of their friends departed: and this practice after crept into the open congregation; and at last, superstition getting head, images began to be worshipped. Conclus. II. We hold the historical use of images to be good and lawful: and that is, to represent to the eye the acts of histories, whether they be human, or divine: & thus we think the histories of the Bible may be painted in private places. Conclus. III. In one case it is lawful to make an image to testify the presence or the effects of the majesty of God, namely when God himself gives any special commandment so to do. In this case Moses made and erected a brazen serpent, to be a type, sign, or image to represent Christ crucified. joh. 3. 14. And the Cherubs over the mercy seat served to represent the majesty of God, to whom the angels are subject. And in the second commandment it is not simply said, Thou shalt not make a graven image: but with limitation, Thou shalt not make to thyself, that is, on thine own head upon thine own will and pleasure. iv The right images of the new testament, which we hold and acknowledge, are the doctrine and preaching of the gospel, & all things that by the word of God pertains thereto. Gal. 3. Who hath be witched you that ye should not obey the truth to whom jesus Christ was before DECSRIBED IN YOUR SIGHT AND AMONG YOU CRUCIFIED. Hence it follows, that the preaching of the word, is as a most excellent picture in which Christ with his benefits are lively represented unto us. And we descent not from Origen. contra Cels. lib. 8. who saith, We have no images framed by any base workmen, but such as are brought forth and framed by the word of God, namely patterns of virtue, and frames resembling Christians. He means that Christians themselves are the images of Christians. The difference. Our dissent from them touching images stands in three points: I. The Church of Rome holds it lawful for them to make images to resemble God, though not in respect of his divine nature; yet in respect of some properties & actions. We on the contrary, hold it unlawful for us to make any image, any way to represent the true God: or, to make an image of any thing in way of religion, to worship God, much less the creature thereby. For the second commandment saith plainly, Exod. 20. 4. Thou shalt not make to thyself any graven image, or the likeness of anything in heaven, etc. The Papists say the commandment is meant of the images of false Gods. But, will they nill they, it must be understood of the images of the true jehovah: and it forbids us d so saith Roman Catech. on 2. Com. to resemble God, either in his nature, properties, or works, or to use any resemblance of him for any sacred use; as to help the memory, when we are about to worship God. Thus much the holy Ghost who is the best expounder of himself, teacheth most plainly, Deut. 4. 15, 16. Thou sawest no image at all (either of false or true god) and therefore thou shalt not make any likeness of any thing. And again the Prophet Esay, chap. 40. 18. reproving idolaters, asketh to whom they will liken God, or, what similitude will they set upon him. And v. 21. Know ye nothing? have you not heard? hath it not been TOLD you FROM THE BEGINNING? as if he should say, have ye forgotten the second commandment, that God gave unto your fathers? And thus he flatly reproves all them that resemble the true God in images. But they say further, that by images in the second commandment are meant idols, that is (say they) such things as men worship for gods. Ans. If it were so, we should confound the first & second commandments. For the first, Thou shalt have no other gods before my face, forbids all false gods, which man wickedly frames unto himself, by giving his heart and the principal affections thereof, to them: and therefore idols also are ●here forbidden, when they are esteemed as gods. And the distinction they make that an Image is the representation of true things, an Idol of things supposed, is false. Tertullian c de Idol. ●. 3. saith, that every form or representation is to be termed an Idol. And Isidore d Etym. l. 8. saith, that the heathen used the names of image and idol indifferently in one and the same signification. And S. Steven in his apology, Act. 7. 41. calls the golden calf an Idol. Hierome e on Isa. 37. saith, that idols are images of dead men. Ancient Divines accord with all this which I have said. Lactantius saith, Inst. lib. 2. cap. 19 Where images are for religions sake, there is no religion. The Council of Elibera, can. 36. decreed, that nothing should be painted on the walls of Churches, which is adored of the people. f contra Celsum. lib. 7. Origen. We suffer not any to worship jesus at altars, images, and temples: because IT IS WRITTEN, Thou shalt have none other Gods. And Epiphanius saith, It is against the Epist. ad joh. Hierus. authority of the Scriptures to see the image of Christ, or of any Saints hanging in the Church. In the seventh Council of Constantinople these words of Epiphanius are cited against the Encratitae. Be mindful beloved children not to bring images into the Church, nor set them in the places where the Saints are buried, BUT ALWAYS CARRY GOD IN YOUR HE ARTS: neither let them be suffered in any common house: for it is not meet that a Christian should be occupied by the eyes but by the meditation of the mind. Arguments of the Papists. The reasons which they use to defend their opinions are these. I. In salomon's temple were erected Cherubins, which were Images of angels, on the Mercieseat where God was worshipped: and thereby was resembled the majesty of God, therefore it is lawful to make images to resemble God. Answ. They were erected by special commandment from God. who prescribed the very form of them and the place where they must be set: and thereby Moses had a warrant to make them; otherwise he had sinned: let them show the like warrant for their images if they can. Secondly the Cherubins were placed in the holy of holies in the most inward place of the Temple, and consequently were removed from the sight of the people, who only heard of them: & none but the high priest saw them, and that but once a year. And the Cherubins without the veil though they were to be seen, yet were they not to be worship ped. Exo. 20. 4. Therefore they serve nothing at all to justify the images of the Church of Rome. Object. II. God appeared in the form of a man to Abraham, Gen. 18. 1▪ ●3. and to Daniel, who saw the ancient of days sitting on a throne, Dan. 9 Now as God appeared, so may he be resembled: therefore (say they) it is lawful to resemble God in the form of a man or any like image in which he showed himself to men. Ans. In this reason the proposition is false, for God may appear in whatsoever form it pleaseth his majesty; yet doth it not follow, that man should therefore resemble God in those forms: man having no libcrtie to resemble him in any form at all: unless he be commanded so to do. Again, when God appeared in the form of a man, that form was a sign of God's presence only for the time when God appeared and no longer: as the bread and wine in the sacrament are signs of Christ's body and blood, not for ever but for the time of administration: for afterward they become again, as common bread and wine. And when the Holy Ghost appeared in the likeness of a dove, that likeness was a sign of his presence no longer than the holy Ghost so appeared. And therefore he that would in these forms represent the Trinity, doth geeatly dishonour God, and do that for which he hath no warrant. Object. III. Man is the image of God, but it is lawful to paint a man, and therefore to make the image of God. Ans. A very cavil: for first a man cannot be painted, as he is the image of God, which stands in the spiritual gifts of righteousness and true holiness. Again, the image of a man may be painted for civil or historical use, but to paint any man for this end to represent God, or in the way of religion, that we may the better remember and worship God, it is unlawful. Other reasons which they use, are of small moment, and therefore I omit them. II. Differ. They teach and maintain, that images of God and of saints may be worshipped with religious worship, specially the crucifix. For Thomas of Watering f Summ. part 3. quest. ●5. art. 3. saith, Seeing the cross doth represent Christ, who died upon across, and is to be worshipped with divine honour: it followeth that the cross is to be worshipped so too. We on the contrary, hold they may not. Our principal ground is the second commandment, which containeth two parts: the first forbiddeth the making of images to resemble the true God: the second forbids the worshipping of them, or God in them; in these words. Thou shalt not bow down to them. Now, there can be no worship done to any thing less than the bending of the knee. Again the brazen serpent was a type or Image of Christ crucified. joh. 3. 14. appointed by God himself: yet when the people burned incense to it, 2. King. 18. 4. Hezekias broke it in pieces, and is therefore commended. And when the devil bade our Saviour Christ, but to bow down the knee unto him, and he would give him the whole world: Christ rejects his offer, saying, Thou shalt worship the Lord thy God, and him only shalt thou serve, Math. 4. 10. Again it is lawful for one man to worship another with civil worship, but to worship man with religious honour is unlawful. For all religious worship is prescribed in the first table: and the honour due to man is only prescribed in the second table and the first commandment thereof, Honour thy father; which honour is therefore civil and not religious. Now the meanest man that can be, is a more excellent image of God, than all the images of God or of Saints that are devised by men. de morib. Ecles' cap. 35. lib. 9 epist. 9 Augustine, and long after him Gregory, in plain terms denieth images to be adored. The Papists defend their opinions by these reasons. I. Psal. 99 5. Cast down yourselves before his foot stool. Ans. The words are thus to be read: Bow at his foot stool; that is, at the Ark and Mercyseat, for there he hath made a promise of his presence: the words therefore say not, bow to the Ark, but to God at the Ark. Object. II. Exod. 3. 5. God said to Moses, Stand a far off and put off thy shoes, for the place is holy. Now if holy places must be reverenced, then much more holy images, as the cross of Christ, and such like. Answ. God commanded the cermony of putting off the shoes, that he might thereby strike Moses with a religious reverence, not of the place but of his own majesty, whose presence made the place holy. Let them show the like warrant for images. III. Object. It is lawful to kneel down to a chair of estate in the absence of the king or Queen: therefore much more to the images of God and of Saints in heaven glorified, being absent from us. Ans. To kneel to the chair of estate, is no more but a civil testimony, or sign of civil reverence, by which all good subjects when occasion is offered, show their loyalty and subjection to their lawful princes. And this kneeling being on this manner, and to no other end, hath sufficient warrant in the word of God. But kneeling to the image of any Saint departed, is religious and consequently more than civil worship, as the Papists themselves confess. The argument than proveth nothing, unless they will keep themselves to one and the same kind of worship. III. Differ. The Papists also teach, that God may be lawfully worshipped in images, in which he hath appeared unto man: as the Father, in the image of an old man: the Son in the image of a man crucified: and the Holy Ghost in the likeness of a dove, etc. But we hold it unlawful to worship God in, by, or at any image: for this is the thing which (as I have proved before) the second commandment forbiddeth. And the fact of the Israelites, Exod. 32. in worshipping the golden calf is condemned as flat idolatry; albeit they worshipped not the calf but God in the calf: for v. 5. Aaron saith, To morrow shall be the solemnity of jehovah: whereby he doth give us to understand, that the calf was but a sign of jehovah whom they worshipped. Object. It seems the Israelites worshipped the calf. For Aaron faith, vers. 4. These be thy Gods (O Israel) that brought thee out of Egypt. Answ. Aaron's meaning is nothing else, but that the golden calf, was a sign of the presence of the true God. And the name of the thing signified is given to the sign, as upon a stage he is called ad Simplic. lib. 2. q. 3. a King that representeth the King. And Augustine saith, that images are wont to be called by the names of things whereofthey are images, as the counterfeit of Samuel is called Samuel. And we must not esteem them all as mad men to think that a calf made of their earrings, being but one or two days old, should be the God that brought them out of Egypt with a mighty hand many days before. And these are the points of difference touching Images▪ wherein we must stand at variance for ever with the Church of Rome. For they err in the foundation of religion, making indeed an idol of the true God, and worshipping an other Christ than we do, under new terms, maintaining the Idolatry of the heathen. And therefore have we departed from them: and so must we still do because they are Idolaters; as I have proved. The X. point. Of real presence. Our consent. I. We hold and believe a presence of Christ's body and blood in the Sacrament of the Lords supper: and that no feigned, but a true and real presence: which must be considered two ways; first in respect of the signs, secondly in respect of the communicants. For the first, we hold and teach, that Christ's body and blood, are truly present with the bread and wine, being signs in the sacrament: but how? not in respect of place, of coexistence: but by sacramental relation, on this manner. When a word is uttered, the sound comes to the ear; and at the same instant, the thing signified comes to the mind; and thus by relation the word and the thing spoken of, are both present together. Even so at the Lords table bread and wine must not be considered barely, as substances and creatures, but as outward signs in relation to the body and blood of Christ: and this relation, arising from the very institution of the Sacrament, stands in this, that when the elements of bread & wine are present to the hand and to the mouth of the receiver; at the very same time the body and blood of Christ are presented to the mind: thus and no otherwise is Christ truly present with the signs. The second presence is in respect of the communicants, to whose believing hearts he is also really present. It will be said, what kind of presence is this? Ans. Such as the communion in the sacrament is, such is the presence: and by the communion must we judge of the presence. Now the communion is on this manner: God the father, according to the tenor of the evangelical covenant, gives Christ in this sacrament as really and truly, as any thing can be given to man, not by part and piecemeal (as we say) but whole Christ God and man, on this sort. In Christ there be two natures, the godhead, and manhood. The godhead is not given in regard of substance, or essence: but only in regard of efficacy, merits, and operation conveyed thence to the manhood. And further, in this sacrament Christ's whole manhood is given both body and soul, in this order. First of all is given the very manhood in respect of substance, and that really: secondly the merits & benefits thereof, as namely, the satisfaction performed by and in the manhood, to the justice of God. And thus the entire manhood with the benefits thereof, are given wholly and jointly together. For the two distinct signs of bread and wine signify not two distinct givings of the body apart and the blood apart: but the full and perfect nourishment of our souls. Again the benefits of Christ's manhood are diversly given, some by imputation, which is, an action of God accepting that which is done by Christ as done by us: and thus it hath pleased God to give the passion of Christ & his obedience. Some again are given by a kind of propagation, which I cannot fitly express in terms, but I resemble it thus. As one candle is lighted by an other, & one torch or candlelight is conveyed to twenty candles: even so the inherent righteousness of every believer, is derived from the storehouse of righteousness which is in the manhood of Christ: for the righteousness of all the members, is but the fruit thereof, even as the natural corruption in all mankind, is but a fruit of that original sin which was in Adam. Thus we see how God for his part gives Christ, and that really. To proceed, when God gives Christ, he gives withal at the same time the spirit of Christ, which spirit creates in the heart of the receiver the instrument of true faith, by which the heart doth really receive Christ given of God, by resting upon the promise, which God hath made that he will give Christ and his righteousness to every true believer. Now then, when God gives Christ with his benefits, and man for his part by faith receives the same as they are given, there riseth that union which is between every good receiver and Christ himself. Which union is not forged, but a real, true, and near conjunction; nearer then which, none is or can be: because it is made by a solemn giving and receiving that passeth between God and man: as also by the bond of one and the same spirit. To come then to the point, considering there is a real union, and consequently a real communion between us and Christ, (as I have proved) there must needs be such a kind of presence wherein Christ is truly and really present to the heart of him that receives the sacrament in faith. And thus far do we consent with the Romish Church touching real presence. The dissent. We differ not touching the presence itself, but only in the manner of presence. For though we hold a real presence of Christ's body and blood in the sacrament, yet do we not take it to be local, bodily, or substantial, but spiritual and mystical; to the signs by sacramental relation, and to the communicants by faith alone. On the contrary the Church of Rome maintains transubstantiation, that is, a local, bodily, and substantial presence of Christ's body and blood, by a change and conversion of the bread and wine into the said body and blood. Our reasons. I. This corporal presence ouerturnes sundry articles of faith. For we believe that the body of Christ was made of the pure substance of the virgin Marie, and that but once, namely when he was conceived by the holy Ghost, and borne. But this cannot stand, if the body of Christ be made of bread and his blood of wine, as they must needs be, if there be no succession or annihilation but a real conversion of substances in the sacrament: unless we must believe contrarieties, that his body was made of the substance of the Virgin, and not of the Virgin; made once and not once but often. Again, if his body & blood be under the forms of bread and wine, then is he not as yet ascended into heaven, but remains still among us. Neither can he be said to come from heaven at the day of judgement: for he that must come thence to judge the quick and dead, must be absent from the earth. And this was the ancient faith. Augustine saith, that Christ according Tract. 1. in job. to his majesty and providence and grace is present with us to the end of the world: but according to his ASSUMED FLESH HE IS NOT always with us. Cyril saith, He is ABSENT IN Lib. 9 in. cap. 21. BODY and present in virtue, whereby all things are governed. Vigilius saith, That he is Contra ●●tich. lib. 1. & 4. gone from us according to his humanity: he hath left us in his humanity: in the form of a servant absent from us: when his flesh was on earth, it was not in heaven: being on earth, he was not in heaven: and being now in heaven, he is not on earth. Fulgentius saith, One Lib. 2. ad Thrasi mundum. and the same Christ, according to his human substance, was absent from heaven when he was on earth: and LEFT THE EARTH when he ascended into heaven. Reason II. This bodily presence ouerturnes the nature of a true body, whose common nature or essential property it is, to have length, breadth, and thickness, which being taken away a body is no more a body. And by reason of these three dimensions, a body can occupy but one place at once, as d cap. de categor. quant. Aristotle said, the property of a body is to be seated in some place, so as a man may say where it is. They therefore that hold the body of Christ to be in many places at once, do make it no body at all: but rather a spirit, and that infinite. They allege that God is almighty; that is true indeed, but in this and like matters we must not dispute what God can do, but what he will do. And I say further because God is omnipotent, therefore there be some things which he cannot do, as for him to deny himself, to lie, and to make the parts of a contradiction to be both true at the same time. To come to the point, if God should make the very body of Christ to be in many places at once, he should make it to be no body while it remains a body: and to be circumscribed in some one place and not circumscribed, because it is in many places at the same time: to be visible in heaven and invisible in the sacrament; and thus should he make contradictions to be true: which to do is against his nature, and argues rather impotency than power. Augustine saith to this purpose. De Symb. ad Catech. l. 1. cap. 1. If he could lie, deceive, be deceived, deal unjustly, he should not be omnipotent. And, Therefore he is omnipotent, because he can not do these things. Again, He is called domnipotent by doing that which he will, and not by doing that which he will not: which if it should be fall him, he should not be omnipotent. Reason III. Transubstantiation ouerturnes the very Supper of the Lord. For in every sacrament there must be a sign, a thing signified, and a proportion or relation between them both. But popish real presence takes all away: for when the bread is really turned into Christ's body, and the wine into his blood, than the sign is abolished, and there remains nothing but the outward forms or appearance of bread and wine. Again, it abolisheth the ends of the sacrament, whereof one is to remember Christ till his coming again, who being present in the sacrament bodily, needs not to be remembered: because helps of remembrance are of things absent. Another end is to nourish the soul unto eternal life: but by transubstantiation the principal feeding is of the body and not of the soul, which is only fed with spiritual food▪ for though the body may be bettered by the food of the soul, yet can not the soul be fed with bodily food. Reason iv In the sacrament the body of Christ is received as it was crucified: and his blood, as it was shed upon the cross: but now at this time Christ's body crucified, remains still as a body, but not as a body crucified: because the act of crucifying is ceased. Therefore it is faith alone, that makes Christ crucified to be present unto us in the sacrament. Again, that blood which ran out of the feet and hands and side of Christ upon the cross, was not gathered up again and put into the veins: nay, the collection was needless, because after the resurrection, he lived no more a natural but a spiritual life: and none knows what is become of this blood. The Papist therefore cannot say it is present under the form of wine locally: and we may better say it is received spiritually by faith, whose property is to give a being to things which are not. Reason V 1. Cor. 10. 3. The fathers of the old testament did eat the same spiritual meat, and drink the same spiritual drink: for they drank of the rock which was Christ. Now they could not eat his body which was crucified, or drink his blood shed bodily, but by faith: because than his body and blood were not in nature. The Papists make answer, that the fathers did eat the same meat, and drink the same spiritual drink with themselves, not with us. But their answer is against the text. For the Apostles intent is to prove, that the jews were every way equal to the Corinthians, because they did eat the same spiritual meat, and drank the same spiritual drink with the Corinthians; otherwise his reason proves not the point which he hath in hand, namely that the Israelites were nothing inferior to the Corinthians. Reason VI And it is said, the sabbath was made for man: and not man for the sabbath: so it may be said, that the sacrament of the lords supper was made for man, & not man for it: & therefore man is more excellent than the sacrament. But if the signs of bread and wine be really turned into the body and blood of Christ, then is the sacrament infinitely better than man; who in his best estate is only joined to Christ, and made a member of his mystical body: whereas the bread and wine are made very Christ. But the sacrament or outward elements indeed are not better than man: the end being always better than the thing ordained to the end. It remains therefore that Christ's presence is not corporal but spiritual. Again in the supper of the Lord, every believer receiveth whole Christ, God and man, though not the godhead: now by this carnal eating, we receive not whole Christ, but only a part of his manhood: and therefore in the sacrament there is no carnal eating, and consequently no bodily presence. Reason VII. The judgement of the ancient Church. Theodoret saith, The same Dialog. 1. immutab. Christ, who called his natural body food and bread, who also called himself a vine, he vouch safed the visible signs the name of his own body, NOT CHANGING NATURE, but putting grace to nature; whereby he means same dialog. consecration. And, The mystical signs after sanctification lose not their proper nature. For they REMAIN IN THEIR FIRST NATURE, and keep their first figure and form; and as before, may be touched and seen: and that which they are made, is understood, believed, adored. Gelasius saith, Bread and wine Lib. de duob. nat. Christ. pass into the substance of the body and blood of Christ, yet so as the SUBSTANCE OR NATURE OF BREAD AND WINE CEASETH NOT. And they are turned into the divine substance, yet the bread and wine REMAIN STILL IN THE PROPERTY OF THEIR NATURE. Lombard saith, If it be asked what conversion Lib. 4. dist. 11. this is, whether formal, or substantial, or of an other kind, I am not able to define. And that the Fathers held not transubstantiation, I prove it by sundry reasons. First, they used in former times Hesych. lib. 2. c. 8. in Leviticum. to burn with fire that which remained after the administration of the Lords supper. Secondly by the sacramental union of the bread and wine with the body and blood of Christ, they used to confirm the personal union of the manhood of Theodore●. dialog. 2. Christ with the godhead against heretics: which argument they would not have used, if they had believed a popish real presence. Thirdly it was a custom in Constantinople, that if many parts of the sacrament remained after the administration thereof was ended, that young children should be sent for from the school to eat them; who nevertheless Evang lib. 4. Niceph. l. 17. c. 25. were barred the lords table. And this argues plainly that the Church in those days, took the bread after the administration was ended, for common bread. Again, it was once an order in the Roman church, that the wine should be consecrated by dipping Amala. 2. lib. de off. ecc●es c. 12. & 15. into it bread, which had been consecrated. But this order cannot stand with the real presence, in which the bread is turned both into the body and blood. Nicholaus Cabasilas saith, After he hath used some speech to the people, he erects their minds, Lib. de expos. L●●urg. c. 26. and lifts their thoughts from earth, & saith, Sursum corda, Let us lift up our hearts, let us THINK ON THINGS ABOVE, and not on things that are upon the earth. They consent & say, that they lift up their hearts thither, where is their treasure, and where Christ sits at the right hand of his father. Objections of Papists. I. Their first reason is, joh. 6. 55. My flesh is meat indeed, and my blood is drink indeed: therefore (say they) Christ's body must be eaten with the mouth, and his blood drunk accordingly. Ans. The chapter must be understood of a spiritual eating of Christ: his body is meat indeed but spiritual meat, and his blood spiritual drink, to be received not by the mouth, but by faith. This is the very point that Christ here intends to prove, namely that to believe in him is to eat his flesh and to drink his blood are all one. Again, this chapter must not be understood of that special eating of Christ in the sacrament: for it is said generally, v. 53. Except ye eat the flesh of Christ and drink his blood, ye have no life in you: and if these very words (which are the substance of the chapter) must be understood of a sacramental eating, no man before the coming of Christ was saved: for none did bodily eat or drink his body or blood; considering it was not then existing in nature, but only was present to the believing heart by faith. II. Object. another argument is taken from the words of the institution. This is my body. Ans. These words must not be understood properly but by a figure: his body being put for the sign and seal of his body. It is objected, that when any make their last wills and testaments, they speak as plainly as they can: now in this supper Christ ratifies his last will and testament; and therefore he spoke plainly, without any figure. Ans. Christ here speaketh plainly and by a figure also: for it hath been always the usual manner of the Lord in speaking of sacraments, to give the name of the thing signified to the sign: as Gen. 17. 10. circumcision is called the covenant of God▪ & in the next v. in way of exposition, the sign of the covenant. & Exod. 12. 11. the paschal lamb is called the Angels passing by or over the houses of the Israelites; whereas indeed it was but a sign thereof; & 1. Cor. 10. 4. The rock was Christ 1. Cor. 5. 7. The Passeover was Christ. And the like phrase is to be found in the institution of this sacrament concerning the cup, which the Papists themselves confess to be figurative: when it is said, Luk. 22. This cup is the new testament in my blood, that is, a sign, seal, and pledge thereof. Again the time when these words were spoken must be considered, and it was before the passion of Christ, whereas yet his body was not crucified nor his blood shed: and consequently neither of them could be received in bodily manner, but by faith alone. Again, Christ was not only the author, but the minister of this sacrament at the time of institution thereof: and if the bread had been truly turned into his body, and the wine into his blood, Christ with his own hands should have taken his own body and blood, and have given it to his disciples: nay, which is more, he should with his own hands, have taken his own flesh and drunken his own blood, and have eaten himself. For Christ himself did eat the bread and drink the wine, that he might with his own person consecrate his last supper, as he had consecrated baptism before. And if these words should be properly understood, every man must be a manslayer in his eating of Christ. Lastly by means of popish real presence, it comes to pass, that our bodies should be nourished by naked qualities without any substance, which in all philosophy, is false and erroneous. To help this & the like absurdities, some Papists make nine wonders in the sacrament. The first, that joh. de Com. bis comp. Theolog. lib. 6. cap. 14. Christ's body is in the Eucharist in as large a quantity as he was upon the cross, and is now in heaven, and yet exceeds not the quantity of the bread. The second, that there be accidents without a subject. The third, that bread is turned into the body of Christ, and yet is not the matter of the body, nor resolved to nothing. The fourth, that the body increaseth not by consecration of many hosts, and is not diminished by often receiving. The fifth, that the body of Christ is under many consecrated hosts. The sixth, that when the host is divided, the body of Christ is not divided, but under every part thereof is whole Christ. The seventh, that when the priest holds the host in his hand, the body of Christ is not felt by itself nor seen, but the forms of bread and wine. The eight, that when the forms of bread and wine cease, the body and blood of Christ ceaseth also to be there. The ninth, that the accidents of bread and wine have the same effects with the bread and wine itself, which are to nourish and fill. On this manner it shall be easy for any man to defend the most absurd opinion that is or can be, if he may have liberty to answer the arguments alleged to the contrary by wonders. To conclude, seeing there is a real communion in the sacrament between Christ and every believing heart, our duty therefore is, to bestow our hearts on Christ, endeavouring to love him, and to rejoice in him, and to long after him above all things: all our affiance must be in him, & with him; we being now on earth must have our conversation in heaven. And this is the true real presence, which the ancient Church of God hath commended unto us: for in all these liturgies these words were used, and are yet extant in the popish mass, Lift up your hearts: we lift them up unto the Lord. By which words the communicants were admonished to direct their minds and their faith to Christ sitting at the right hand of God. Thus said Augustine, If we celebrate Serm de Ascens. 1. the ascension of the Lord with devotion: let us ascend with him, and lift up our hearts. Again, they which are already risen with Christ in faith and hope are invited Serm. 14. 2. fer. p●sc●. to the great table of heaven, to the table of Angels, WHERE IS THE BREAD. The eleventh point. Of the sacrifice in the Lord's Supper, which the Papists call the sacrifice of the Mass. Touching this point, first I will set down what must be understood by the name Sacrifice. A sacrifice is taken properly, or improperly. Properly it is a sacred or solemn action, in which man offereth and consecrateth some outward bodily thing unto God for this end, to please and honour him thereby. Thus all the sacrifices of the old testament, and the oblation of Christ upon the cross in the new Testament are sacrifices. Improperly, that is, only by the way of resemblance, the duties of the moral law are called sacrifices. And in handling this question, I understand a sacrifice both properly and improperly by way of resemblance. Our consent. Our consent I propound in two conclusions. Conclus. I. That the supper of the Lord is a sacrifice, and may truly be so called as it hath been in former ages; & that in three respects. I. Because it is a memorial of the real sacrifice of Christ upon the cross, and contains withal a thanksgiving to God for the same, which thanksgiving is the sacrifice and calves of our lips. Hebr. 13. 15. II. Because every communicant doth there present himself body and soul a living, holy, and acceptable sacrifice unto God. For as in this sacrament God gives unto us Christ, with his benefits; so we answerable give up ourselves unto God as servants to walk in the practice of all dutiful obedience. III. It is called a sacrifice in respect of that which was joined with the sacrament, namely the Alms given to the poor as a testimony of our thankfulness unto God. And in this regard also, the ancient Fathers have called the sacrament, an unbloody sacrifice: and the table, an altar; & the ministers priests: and the whole action an oblation not to God but to the congregation, & not by the priest alone but by the people. A Canon of a certain Council saith, We decree Concil. Ma●iscon. 2. c. 4. that every Lord's day the oblation of the altar be offered of every man and woman both for bread and wine. And Augustine saith, that Epist. 122. women offer a sacrifice at the altar of the Lord, that it might be offered by the priest to God. And usually in ancient writers the communion of the whole body of the congregation is called the sacrifice or oblation. Conclus. II. That the very body of Christ is offered in the lords Supper. For as we take the bread to be the body of Christ sacramentally by resemblance and no otherwise: so the breaking of bread is sacramentally the sacrificing or offering of Christ upon the cross. And thus the fathers have termed the Eucharist an immolation of Christ, because it is a commemoration of his sacrifice upon the cross. Aug. Epist. 23. Neither doth he lie which saith Christ was offered. For if sacraments had not the resemblance of things whereof they are sacraments, they should in no wise be sacraments: but from a resemblance, they often take their names. Again Christ is sacrificed in the last supper, in regard of the faith of the commmunicants, which makes a thing past and done as present. Augustine Lib. 2. quaest. vet. & Nou. Test. Ad Rom. saith, When we believe in Christ, he is offered for us daily. And, Christ is then slain for every one, when he believes that he is slain for him▪ Ambrose saith, Christ is sacrificed Lib. 2 de Virg. daily in the minds of believers, as upon an altar. Hierome saith, He is always offered Ad Damas. to the believers. II. The difference. They make the Eucharist to be a real, external, or bodily sacrifice offered unto God: holding and teaching, that the minister is a priest properly: and that in this sacrament he offers Christ's body and blood to God the father really and properly under the forms of bread and wine. We acknowledge no real, outward, or bodily sacrifice for the remission of sins, but only Christ's oblation on the cross once offered. Here is the main difference between us, touching this point: and it is of that weight and moment, that they stiffly maintaining their opinion (as they do) can be no Church of God. For this point raseth the foundation to the very bottom. And that it may the better appear that we avouch the truth, first I will confirm our doctrine by scripture, and secondly confute the reasons which they bring for themselves. III. Our reasons. Reason. I. Heb. 9 v. 15. and 26: and cap. 10. v. 10. The holy ghost saith, Christ offered himself but once. Therefore not often: and thus there can be no real or bodily offering of his body and blood in the sacrament of his supper: the text is plain. The Papists answer thus. The sacrifice of Christ (say they) is one for substance, yet in regard of the manner of offering it is either bloody or unbloody, and the holy ghost speaks only of the bloody sacrifice of Christ: which was indeed offered but once. Ans. But the author of this epistle takes it for granted, that the sacrifice of Christ is only one, and that bloody sacrifice. For he saith, Heb. 9 v. 25. Christ did not offer himself often, as the high priests did. & v. 26. For them he must have often suffered since the foundation of the world: but now in the end he hath appeared once to put away sin by the sacrifice of himself. and v. 22. WITHOUT SHEDDING OF BLOOD is NO remission of sin. By these words it is plain, that the scripture never knew the two fold manner of sacrificing of Christ. And every distinction in Divinity not founded in the written word, is but a forgery of man's brain. And if this distinction be good, how shall the reason of the Apostle stand▪ He did not offer himself but once, because he suffered but once. Reason II. The Romish Church holds that the sacrifice in the lords Supper is all one for substance, with the sacrifice which he offered on the cross: if that be so, than the sacrifice in the Eucharist, must either be a continuance of that sacrifice which was begun on the cross, or else an iteration or repetition of it. Now let them choose of these twain which they will: if they say it is a continuance of the sacrifice on the cross, Christ being but the beginner and the Priest the finisher thereof, they make it imperfect: for to continue a thing till it be accomplished, is to bring perfection unto it: but Christ's sacrifice on the cross was then fully perfected, as by his own testimony appears, when he said, consummatum est, it is finished. Again, if they say, it is a repetition of Christ's sacrifice, thus also they make it imperfect, for that is the reason, which the holy ghost useth, to prove that the sacrifices of the old testament were imperfect, because they were repeated. Reason III. A real and outward sacrifice in a sacrament, is against the nature of a sacrament and especially the supper of the Lord: for one end thereof is to keep in memory the sacrifice of Christ. Now every remembrance must be of a thing absent past and done: and if Christ be daily and really sacrificed, the sacrament is no fit memorial of his sacrifice. Again the principal end for which the sacrament was ordained, is that God might give & we receive Christ with his benefits: and therefore to give and take, to eat & drink are here the principal actions. Now in a real sacrifice God doth not give Christ & the priest receive him of God; but contrariwise he gives & offers Christ unto God, and God receives some thing of us. To help the matter they say, that this sacrifice serves not properly to make any satisfaction to God, but rather to apply unto us the satisfaction of Christ being already made. But this answer still maketh against the nature of a sacrament, in which God gives Christ unto us: whereas in a sacrifice God receives from man, and man gives something to god: a sacrifice therefore is no fit means to apply any thing unto us, that is given of God. Reason IU. Heb. 7. 24. 25. The Holy Ghost makes a difference between Christ the high priest of the new testament, and all Levitical priests in this, that they were many, one succeeding another: but he is only one, having an eternal priesthood, which cannot pass from him to any other. Now if this difference be good, than Christ alone in his own very person must be the priest of the new testament, and no other with, or, under him: otherwise in the new testament their should be more priests in number then in the old. If they say, that the whole action remains in the person of Christ, and that the priest is but an instrument under him (as they say) I say again it is false; because the whole oblation is acted or done by the priest himself; and he which doth all, is more than a bare instrument. Reason V If the priest do offer to God Christ's real body and blood for the pardon of our sins, than man is become a mediator between God and Christ. Now the Church of Rome saith, that the priest in his mass is a priest properly, and his sacrifice a real sacrifice differing only in the manner of offering from the sacrifice of Christ upon the cross: and in the very Canon of the mass they insinuate thus much, when they request God to accept their gifts and offerings, namely Christ himself offered, as he did the sacrifices of Abel and Noe. Now it is absurd, to think that any creature should be a mediator between Christ and God. Therefore Christ cannot possibly be offered by any creature unto God. Reason VI The judgement of the ancient Church. A certain Counsel held at Tolet. Concil. 12. c. 5. Toledo in Spain reproveth the Ministers that they offered sacrifice often the same day without the holy communion. The words of the Canon are these. Relation is made unto us that certain priests do not so many times receive the grace of the holy communion, as they offer sacrifices in one day: but in one day, if they offer many sacrifices to God, in ALL THE OBLATIONS, THEY SUSPEND THEMSELVES FROM THE COMMUNION—. Here mark, that the sacrifices in ancient Masses were nothing else but forms of divine service; because none did communicate, no not the priest himself. And in an other Counsel the name of the Mass is put only for a Mileue● Cap. 12. form of prayer. It hath pleased us, that prayers, supplications, Masses, which shall be allowed in the Council—, be used. And in this sense it is taken when speech is used of Council Tolet 4. c. 12. etc.▪ jacob. de consecr. dip●. the making or compounding of Masses: for the sacrifice propitiatory of the body & blood of Christ admits no composition. abbot Paschasius saith, because we sin daily d Lib. de corpor. & sang▪ dom. cap. 9 Christ is sacrificed for us MYSTICALLY, and his Passion is given in mystery. These his words are against the real sacrifice: but yet he expounds himself more plainly, cap. 10. The blood is drunk IN MYSTERY SPIRITVALLY: and, it is all SPIRITVAL which we eat. and c. 12. The priest—, distributes to every one not as much as the outward sight giveth, but as much as FAITH RECEIVETH. c. 13. The FULL similitude is outwardly, and the immaculate flesh of the lamb is FAITH INWARDLY—, that the truth be not wanting to the sacrament, and it be not ridiculous to Pagans that we drink the blood of a killed man. c. 6. One eats the flesh of Christ spiritually and drinks his blood, another seems to receive not so much as a morsel of bread from the hand of the priest: his reason is, because they come unprepared. Now then considering in all these places he makes no receiving but spiritual, neither doth he make any sacrifice but spiritual. IV. Objections of Papists. I. Gen. 14. v. 18. When Abraham was coming from the slaughter of the Kings, Melchizedek met him, and brought forth bread and wine; and he was a priest of the most high God. Now this bread and wine (say they) he brought forth to offer for a sacrifice; because it is said he was a priest of the most high God: and they reason thus. Christ was a priest after the order of Melchizedek: therefore as Melchizedek offered bread and wine, so Christ under the forms of bread and wine offers himself in sacrifice unto God. Ans. Melchizedek was no type of Christ in regard of the act of sacrificing, but in regard of his person, and things pertaining thereto, which are all fully expounded, Hebr. 7. the sum whereof is this. I. Melchizedek was both king and priest: so was Christ. II. He was a prince of peace and righteousness: so was Christ. III. He had neither father nor mother: because the Scripture in setting down his history makes no mention either of beginning or ending of his days: and so Christ had neither father nor mother: no father, as he was man; no mother, as he was God. IV. Melchizedek being greater than Abraham blessed him, and Christ by virtue of his priesthood blesseth, that is, justifieth and sanctifieth all those that be of the faith of Abraham. In these things only stands the resemblance and not in the offering of bread and wine. Again the end of bringing forth the bread and wine, was not to make a sacrifice, but to refresh Abraham and his servants, that came from the slaughter of the Kings. And he is called here a priest of the most high God, not in regard of any sacrifice; but in consideration of his blessing of Abraham, as the order of the words teacheth, And he was the priest of the most high God, and therefore he blessed him. Thirdly, though it were granted, that he brought forth bread and wine to offer in sacrifice, yet will it not follow, that in the sacrament Christ himself is to be offered unto God under the naked forms of bread and wine. Melchizedeks' bread & wine were absurd types of nobread and no-wine, or, of forms of bread and wine in the Sacrament. II. Object. The paschal lamb was both a sacrifice and a sacrament: now the Eucharist comes in room thereof. Answ. The paschal lamb was a sacrament, but no sacrifice. Indeed Christ saith to his disciples, Go and prepare a place to sacrifice the Passeover in, Mark. 14. 12. but the words to offer, or to sacrifice, do often signify no more but to kill. As when jacob and Laban made a covenant; it is said, jacob sacrificed beasts, and called his brethren to eat bread, Gen. 31. 54. which words, must not be understood of killing for sacrifice, but of killing for a feast: because he could not in a good conscience invite them to his sacrifice, that were out of the covenant, being (as they were) of another religion: secondly, it may be called a sacrifice, because it was killed after the manner of a sacrifice. Thirdly, when Saul sought his father's asses, and asked for the Seer, a maid bids him go up in haste: for (saith she) there is an offering of the people this day in the high place, 1. Sam. 9 12. where the feast that was kept in Rama, is called a sacrifice; in all likelihood because at the beginning thereof, the priest offered a sacrifice to God: and so Deutr. 16. 2. the Passeover may be called a sacrifice, because sacrifices were offered within the compass of the appointed feast or solemnity of the passover: & yet the thing itself was no more a sacrifice then the feast in Rama was. Again, if it were granted that the Passover was both, it will not make much against us: for the supper of the Lord succeeds the Passeover only in regard of the main end thereof, which is the increase of our communion with Christ. III. Object. Malac. I. II. The prophet foretelleth of a clean sacrifice that shall be in the new testament: and that (say they) is the sacrifice of the Mass. Ans. This place must be understood of a spiritual sacrifice, as we shall plainly perceive if we compare it with 1. Tim. 2. 8. where the meaning of the prophet is fitly expounded. I will (saith Paul) that men pray in all places, LIFTING UP PURE HANDS, without wrath or doubting. And this is the clean sacrifice of the Gentiles. Thus justin Martyr saith, That supplications and Dialog. eum Triph. thanksgivings are the ONLY perfect sacrifices pleasing God, and that Christians have learned to OFFER THEM ALONE. And Tertullian Ad Scapu, lamb. saith, We sacrifice for the health of the Emperor—: as God hath commanded with pure prayer. And Ireneus saith, that this Lib. 4. c. 3●. clean offering to be offered in every place, is the prayers of the Saints. Object. iv Hebr. 13. 10. We have an altar, whereof they may not eat, which serve in the tabernacle. Now (say they) if we have an altar than we must needs have a priest: and also a real sacrifice. Ans. Here is meant not a bodily, but a spiritual altar; because the altar is opposed to the material Tabernacle: and what is meant thereby is expressed in the next verse, in which he proves that we have an altar. The bodies of the beasts, whose blood was brought into the holy place by the high priest for sin, were burnt without the camp; so Christ jesus, that he might sanctify the people with his own blood, suffered without the gate. Now lay the reason or proof to the thing that is proved, and we must needs understand Christ himself, who was both the altar, the priest, and the sacrifice. Object. V last, they say, where alteration is both of law & covenant: there must needs be a new priest and a new sacrifice. But in the new testament there is alteration both of law and covenant: and therefore there is both new priest and new sacrifice. Ans. All may be granted: in the new testament, there is both new priest and sacrifice: yet not any popish priest, but only Christ himself both God and man. The sacrifice also is Christ as he is man: and the altar, Christ as he is God, who in the new testament offered himself a sacrifice to his Father for the sins of the world. For though he were the lamb of God slain from the beginning of the world, in regard of the purpose of God, in regard of the value of his merit, and in regard of faith which maketh things to come as present, yet was he not actually offered till the fullness of time came; and once offering of himself, he remaineth a priest for ever, & all other priests beside him, are superfluous: his one offering once offered, being all-sufficient. The twelfth point. Of fasting. Our consent. Our consent may be set down in three conclusions. I. We do not condemn fasting, but maintain three sorts thereof: to wit, a moral, civil, and a religious fast. The first being moral, is a practice of sobriety or temperance, when as in the use of meats and drinks, the appetite is restrained, that it do not exceed moderation. And this must be used of all Christians in the whole course of their lives. The second being civil, is when upon some particular and politic considerations, men abstain from certain meats: as in this our commonwealth the Law enjoins us to abstain from flesh-meat at certain seasons of the year, for these special ends; to preserve the breed of cattle, and to maintain the calling of the fisherman. The third, namely a religious fast, is when the duties of religion, as the exercise of prayer and humiliation are practised in fasting. And I do now specially entreat of this kind. Conclus. II. We join with them in the alloweance of the principal and right ends of a religious fast, and they are three. The first is, that thereby the mind may become attentive in meditation of the duties of godliness to be performed. The second is, that the rebellion of the flesh may be subdued: for the flesh pampered becomes an instrument of licentiousness. The third, and (as I take it) the chief end of a religious fast is, to profess our guiltiness, and to testify our humiliation before God for our sins: and for this end in the feast of Nineve, the very beast was made to abstain. Conclus. III. We yield unto them, that fasting is an help and furtherance to the worship of God: yea & a good work also if it be used in a good manner. For though fasting in itself being a thing indifferent, as eating and drinking are: is not to be termed a good work, yet being applied, and considered in relation to the right ends before spoken of, and practised accordingly; it is a work allowed of God, and highly to be esteemed of all the servants and people of God. The difference or dissent. Our dissent from the Church of Rome in the doctrine of fasting stands in three things. I. They appoint & prescribe set times of fasting, as necessary to be kept: but we hold and teach that to prescribe the time of a religious fast, is in the liberty of the Church and the governors thereof as special occasion shall be offered. When the disciples of john asked Christ, why they and the Pharisees fast often, but his disciples fasted not, he answered, Can the children of the marriage chamber mourn as long as the bridegroom is with them: but the days will come when the bridegroom shall be taken away from them, and THAN SHALL THEY FAST. Math. 9 15. where he gives them to understand, that they must fast, as occasions of mourning are offered. Where also I gather, that a set time of fasting is no more to be enjoined then a set time of mourning. It was the Epist. 86. opinion of Augustine, that neither Christ Contra Psychicos. nor his Apostles, appointed any times of fasting: and Tertullian saith, that they of his time fasted of their own accords freely, without law or commandment, as occasions and times served. And Eusebius saith, that Montanus Hist. l. 5. c. 17. was the first that made laws of fasting. It is objected, that there is a set time of fasting prescribed, Lev. 16. 29. Ans. This set and prescribed fast was commanded of God as a part of the legal worship, which had his end in the death of Christ: therefore it doth not justify a set time of fasting in the new testament, where God hath left man to his own liberty, without giving the like commandment. It is again alleged, that Zacharie, 7. 5. there were set times appointed for the celebration of religious fasts unto the Lord, the fifth and the seventh months. Ans. They were appointed upon occasion of the present afflictions of the Church in Babylon, and they ceased upon their deliverance. The like upon like occasion may we appoint. It is further objected, that some Churches of the Protestants observe set times of fasting, Answ. In some Churches there be set days and times of fasting, not upon necessity or for conscience or religions sake, but for politic or civil regards: whereas in the Romish Church it is held a mortal sin, to defer the set time of fasting till the next day following. Secondly we descent from the Church of Rome touching the manner of keeping a fast. For the best learned among them allow the drinking of wine, water: electuaries, & d Navarre c. 21 num. 27. that c Molan. tract. 3. c. 11. often within the compass of their appointed fast: yea they allow the eating of one meal on a fasting day at noon tide, and upon a reasonable cause, one hour before: the time of fasting not yet ended. But this practice jud. 20. 26. 2. Sam. 1. 12. indeed is absurd, & contrary to the practice of the old testament: yea it doth frustrate the end of fasting. For the bodily abstinence is an outward means and sign whereby we acknowledge our guiltiness and unworthiness of any of the blessings of God. Again they prescribe a difference of meats, as white-meat only to be used on their fasting days, and that of necessity and for conscience sake in most cases. But we hold this distinction of meats both to be foolish and wicked. Foolish: because in such meats as they prescribe, there is as much filling and delight, as in any other meats; as namely in fish, fruits, wine, etc. which they permit. And it's against the end of a religious fast to use any refreshing at all; so far as necessity of health and comeliness will permit. Thus the Church in times past used to abstain not only from meat & drink, but from all delights whatsoever, even from soft apparel and sweet ointments. joel 2. 15.— Sanctify a fast—: let the BRIDEGROOM GO FORTH OF HIS CHAMBER, and the bride out of her bride chamber. Dan. 10. 3. I eat no PLEASANT bread, neither came FLESH NOR WINE within my mouth, neither did I ANOINT myself at all, till three weeks of days were fulfilled. 1. Cor. 7. 5. Defraud not one an other, EXCEPT it be with consent for a time, that ye may give yourselves to FASTING and prayer. Again, we hold this practice to be wicked, because it taketh away the liberty of Christians: by which, unto the pure all things are pure. And the Apostle, Gal. 5. bids us to standfast in this liberty, which the Church of Rome would thus abolish. For the better understanding of this, let us consider how the Lord himself hath from the beginning kept in his own hands as a master in his own house; the disposition of his creatures for the use of man, that he might depend on him and his word for temporal blessings. In the first age, he appointed unto him for meat every herb of the earth bearing seed, and every tree wherein there is the fruit of a tree bearing seed. Gen. 1. 18. And as for flesh, whether God gave unto him liberty to eat or not to eat, we hold it uncertain. After the flood the Lord renewed his grant of the use of the creatures, and gave his people liberty to eat the flesh of living creatures: yet so as he made some things unclean: and forbade the eating of them: among the rest, Act. 10. 6. 1. Tim. 4. the eating of blood. But since the coming of Christ he hath enlarged his word, and given liberty to all both jews & Gentiles, to eat of all kinds of flesh. This word of his, we rest upon; holding it a doctrine of devils, for men to command an abstinence from meats, for conscience sake; which the Lord himself hath created to be received with thanksgiving. Socrates a Christian historiographer saith, that the Apostles left it Trib. hist. lib. 9 cap. 38. free to every one to use what kind of meat they would on fasting days, and other times. Spiridion in lent dressed swine's flesh, and set Hist. trip. l. 1. c. 10. ●. it before a stranger, eating himself and bidding the stranger also to eat: who refusing & professing himself to be a Christian, therefore (saith he) the rather must thou do it: for to the pure all things are pure, as the word of God teacheth us. But they object jer. 35. where jonadab commanded the Rechabites to abstain from wine: which commandment they obeyed, and are commended for doing well in obeying of it▪ therefore (say they) some kind of meats may lawfully be forbidden. Ans. jonadab gave this commandment not in way of religion, or merit, but for other wise and politic regards. For he enjoined his posterity not to drink wine, not to build houses, not to sow seed, or plant vineyards, or to have any in possession: but to live in tents to the end they might be prepared to bear the calamities, that should be fall them in time to come. But the Popish abstinence from certain meats, hath respect to conscience and religion; and therefore is of another kind, and can have no warrant thence. II. Object. Dan. 10. 3. Daniel being in heaviness for three weeks of days, abstained from flesh: and his example is our warrant. Ans. It was the manner of holy men in ancient times, when they fasted many days together of their own accords freely to abstain from sundry things, and thus Daniel abstained from flesh. But the Popish abstinence from flesh is not free, but stands by commandment, and the omitting of it, is mortal sin. Again, if they will follow Daniel in abstaining from flesh, why do they not also abstain from all pleasant bread and wine: yea from ointments: and why will they eat any thing in the time of their fast; whereas Tract. 3. c. 11. council S. they cannot show that Daniel eat any thing at all till evening. And Molanus hath noted that our ancetours abstained from wine and dainties, and that some of them ate nothing for two or three days together. Thirdly they allege the diet of john Baptist: whose meat was Locusts and wild honey; and of Timothy, who abstained from wine. Ans. Their kind of diet, and that abstinence which they used, was only for temperance sake; not for conscience, or, to merit any thing thereby: let them prove the contrary if they can. Thirdly and lastly, we descent from them touching certain ends of fasting. For they make abstinence itself in a person fitly prepared, to be a part of the worship of God: but we take it to be a thing indifferent in itself: and therefore no part of God's worship: Mark. 7. 6. and yet withal, being well used, we esteem it as a prop or furtherance of the worship, in that we are made the fit by it to worship God. And hereupon some of the more learned sort of them say, Not the work of fasting done, but the devotion of the worker, is to be reputed the service of God. Again, they say, that fasting in, or, with devotion, is a work of satisfaction to God's justice for the temporal punishment of our sins. Wherein we take they do blasphemously deerogate from Christ our Saviour, who is the whole and perfect satisfaction for sin; both in respect of fault and punishment. Here they allege the example of the Ninevites, and Achabs' fasting, whereby they turned away the judgements of God denounced against them by his Prophets. We answer, that God's wrath was appeased towards the Ninevites not by their fasting but by faith laying hold on God's mercy in Christ, and thereby staying his judgement. Mat. 12. 41. Their fasting was only a sign of their repentance: their repentance a fruit and sign of their faith, whereby they believed the preaching of jonas, As for Ahabs' humiliation it is nothing to the purpose: for it was in hypocrisy: if they get any thing thereby, let them take it to themselves. To conclude, we for our parts do not condemn this exercise of fasting, but the abuse of it: and it were to be wished, that fasting were more used of all Christians in all places: considering the Lord doth daily give us new and special occasions of public and private fasting. The thirteenth point. Of the state of perfection. Our consent. Our consent I will set down in two conclusions. I. All true believers have a state of true perfection in this life. Math. 5. 48. Be you perfect as your father in heaven is perfect. Gen. 6. 9 Noah was a just and perfect man in his time, and walked with God. Gen. 17. 1. Walk before me and be perfect. And sundry kings of juda are said to walk uprightly before God with a perfect heart, as David, josias, Hezekias, etc. And Paul accounteth himself with the rest of the faithful to be perfect, saying, Let us all that are perfect, be thus minded, Phil. 3. 15. Now this perfection hath two parts. The first is the imputation of Christ's perfect obedience, which is the ground and fountain of all our perfection whatsoever. Heb. 10. 14. By one offering, that is, by his obedience in his death and passion, hath he consecrated, or made perfect, for ever them that believe. The second part of Christian perfection is sincerity, or, uprightness, standing in two things. The first is, to acknowledge our imperfection and unworthiness in respect of ourselves: and hereupon, though Paul had said he was Phil. 3. 13. & 15. perfect, yet he addeth further, that he did account of himself, not as though he had attained to perfection: but did forget the good things behind, and endeavoured himself to that which was before. Here therefore it must be remembered, that the perfection whereof I speak, may stand with sundry wants and imperfections. It is said of Asa 2. Chr. 15. 17. that his heart was perfect with God all his days, and yet he pulled not down the high places: and being diseased in his feet he put & 16. 12. his trust in the Physicians and not in the Lord. Secondly this uprightness stands in a constant purpose, endeavour, and care to keep not some few, but all and every commandment of the law of God, as David saith psal. 119. 6. Then should I not be confounded, when I have respect to ALL THY COMMANDMENTS. And this endeavour is a fruit of perfection, in that it proceeds from a man regenerate. For, as all men through Adam's fall, have in them by nature the seeds of all sin; none excepted, no not the sin against the holy Ghost: so by grace of regeneration through Christ, all the faithful have in them likewise the seeds of all virtues needful to salvation: and hereupon they both can and do endeavour to yield perfect obedience unto God, according to the whole law. And they may be termed perfect, as a child is called a perfect man: though it want perfection of age and stature and reason; yet hath it perfection of parts: because it hath all and every part and faculty both of body & soul, that is required to a perfect man. Conclus. II. There be certain works of supererogation: that is, such works as are not only answerable to the law, and thereupon deserve life everlasting: but go beyond the law, and merit more than the law by itself can make any man to merit. But where may we find these works? not in the person of any mere man, or angel, nor in all men and angels: but only in the person of Christ God and man: whose works are not only answerable to the perfection of the law, but go far beyond the same. For first the obedience of his life considered alone by itself, was answerable even to the rigour of the law: and therefore the sufferings of his death and passion, were more than the law could require at his hand: considering it requireth no punishment of him, that is a doer of all things contained therein. Secondly, the very rigour of the law requireth obedience only of them that are mere men: but the obedience of Christ was the obedience of a person that was both God & man. Thirdly, the law requires personal obedience, that is, that every man fulfil the law for himself, and it speaks of no more. Now the obedience which Christ performed, was not for himself alone, but it serveth also for all the elect: and considering it was the obedience of God (as Paul signified when he said, feed the Church of God, which HE purchased WITH HIS BLOOD) it was sufficient for many thousand worlds: and by reason the law requireth no obedience of him that is God; this obedience therefore may truly be termed a work of supererogation. This one we acknowledge, and beside this we dare acknowledge none. And thus far we agree with the Church of Rome, in the doctrine of the estate of perfection; and further we dare not go. The difference. The Papists hold (as the writings of the learned among them teach) that a man being in the state of grace, may not only keep all the commandments of the law, and thereby deserve his own salvation: but also go beyond the law and do works of supererogation which the law requireth not: as to perform the vow of single life, and the vow of regular obedience, etc. And by this means (they say) men deserve a greater degree of glory then the law can afoard. Of perfection they make two kinds: one they call necessary perfection, which is the fulfilling of the law in every commandment, whereby eternal life is deserved. The second, is profitable perfection, when men do not only such things as the law requires, but over and beside, they make certain vows, and perform certain other duties which the law enjoins not; for the doing whereof they shall be rewarded with a greater measure of glory, than the law designeth. This they make plain by comparison: Two soldiers fight in the field under one and the same captain: the one only keeps his standing, and thereby deserves his pay: the other in keeping of his place, doth also win the enemy's standard; or do some other notable exploit: now this man besides his pay deserves some greater reward. And thus (say they) it is with all true Catholics in the state of grace: they that keep the law shall have life eternal: but they that do more than the law, as works of supererogation, shall be crowned with greater glory. This is their doctrine. But we on the contrary teach, that albeit we are to strive to a perfection as much as we can, yet no man can fulfil the law of God in this life: much less do works of supererogation: for the confirmation whereof, these reasons may be used. I. In the moral law two things are commanded. First the love of God and man. Secondly, the manner of this love, now the manner of loving God is to love him with all our heart and strength. Luc. 10. 27. Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, and with all thy soul, & with all thy strength, AND WITH ALL THY THOUGHT, etc. As Bernard said, the measure of loving God, is to love him without measure, and that is to love him with the greatest perfection of love that can befall a creature. Hence it follows that in loving God, no man can possibly do more than the law requireth: and therefore the performance of all vows whatsoever, and all like duties, comes short of the intention or scope of the law. II. Reason. The compass of the law is large, and comprehendeth in it more than the mind of man can at the first conceive: for every commandment hath two parts, the negative and the affirmative. In the negative is forbidden not only the capital sin named, as murder, theft, adultery, etc. but all sins of the same kind, with all occasions and provocations thereto. And in the affirmative is commanded not only the contrary virtues, as the love of God, and the love of our neighbour's honour, life, chastity, goods, good name, but the use of all helps and means, whereby he said the virtues may be preserved: furthered, and practised. Thus hath our Saviour Christ himself expounded the law, Math. chap. 5. and 6. upon this plain ground I conclude, that all duties pertaining to life and manners, come within the list of some moral commandment. And that the Papists making, their works of supererogation means to further the love of God and man, must needs bring them under the compass of the law. Under which, if they be, they can not possibly go beyond the same. Reason III. Luc. 17. 20. When ye have done all those things that are commanded us we are unprofitable servants▪ we have done that which was our duty to do. The Papists answer that we are unprofitable to God but not to ourselves: but this shift of theirs is beside the very intent of the place. For a servant in doing his duty is unprofitable even to himself, and doth not so much as deserve thanks at his master's hand, as Christ saith, v. 9 Doth he thank that servant. Secondly they answer, that we are unprofitable servants in doing things commanded: yet when we do things prescribed in the way of counsel, we may profit ourselves, and merit thereby. But this answer doth not stand with reason▪ For things commanded, in that they are commanded, are more excellent than things left to our liberty; because the will and commandment of God gives excellency and goodness unto them. Again counsels are thought to be ha●der than the commandments of the law: and if men can not profit themselves by obedience of moral precepts, which are more easy; much less shall they be able to profit themselves by counsels which are of greater difficulty. Reason IU. If it be not in the ability and power of man to keep the law, then much less is he able to do any work that is beyond and above all the law requireth: but no man is able to fulfil the law, and therefore no man is able to supererrogate. Here the Papists deny the proposition: for (say they) though we keep not the law, yet we may do things of counsel above the law, and thereby merit. But by their leaves, they speak absurdly: for in common reason. if a man fail in the less, he cannot but fail in the greater. Now (as I have said) in popish doctrine, it is easier to obey the moral law then to perform the counsels of perfection. Objections of Papists. I. isaiah. 56. 4. The Lord saith, unto eunuchs that keep his sabbath and choose the thing that pleaseth him, will he give a place & a name better than the sons and daughters. Now (say they) an Eunuch is one that lives a single life, and keeps the vow of chastity, & hereupon he is said to deserve a greater measure of glory. Ans. If the words be well considered, they prove nothing less: for honour is promised to eunuchs, not because they make and perform the vow of single life, but because (as the text saith) they observe the lords Sabbath, and chose the thing that pleaseth God, and keep his covenant, which is to believe the word of God & to obey the commandments of the moral law. Object. II. Mat. 16. 12. Christ saith, There are some which have made themselves chaste for the kingdom of heaven: therefore the vow of single life is warrantable, and is a work of special glory in heaven. Ans. The meaning of this text is, that some having received the gift of continency, do willingly content themselves with single estate, that they may with more liberty without distraction further the good estate of the Church of God, or, the kingdom of grace in themselves and others. This is all that can be gathered out of this place: hence therefore cannot be gathered the merit of everlasting glory by single life. Object. III. Math. 9 21. Christ saith to the young man. If thou wilt be perfect go sell that thou hast and give to the poor, and thou shalt have treasure in heaven. Therefore say they, a man by forsaking all may merit not only heaven, but also treasure there, that is an exceeding measure of glory. Ans. This young man being in likelihood, a most strict Pharisee, thought to merit eternal life by the works of the law, as his first question imporieth; Good master, what shall I do to be saved: and therefore Christ goeth about to discover unto him the secret corruption of his heart▪ and hereupon the words alleged are a commandment of trial not common to all, but special to him. The like commandment gave the Lord to Abraham, saying, Abraham take thine only son Isaac: and offer him upon the mountain which I shall show thee, Gen. 12. 2. iv Object. 1. Cor. 7. 8. Paul saith, It is good for all to be single as he was: and v. 38. he saith, it is better for virgins not to marry: and, this he speaks by permission not by commandment, v. 26. Ans. Here single life is not preferred simply, but only in respect of the present necessity, because the Church was then under persecution: and because such as live a single life, are freed from the cares and distractions of the world. V Object. 1. Cor. 9 15. 17. 18. Paul preached that excelled in faith in the times of the old and new testament. II. They are to be honoured by giving of thanks to God for them, and the benefits that God vouchsafed by them unto his Church. Thus Paul saith, that when the Churches heard of his conversion, they glorified God for him, or, in him Gal. 1. 13. And the like is to be done for the Saints departed. III. They are to be honoured by an imitation of their faith, humility, meekness, repentance, the fear of God, & all good virtues wherein they excelled. For this cause the examples of godly men in the old and new testament, are called a cloud of witnesses by allusion: for as the cloud did guide the Israelites through the wilderness to the land of Canaan: so the faithful now are to be guided to the heavenly Canaan by the examples of good men, that have believed in God before us, and have walked the straightway to life everlasting. Concl. II. Again their TRVERELIQVES that is, their virtues and good examples left to all posterity to be followed, we keep and respect with due reverence. Yea if any man can show us the bodily relic of any true Saint: and prove it so to be though we will not worship it, yet will we not despise it but keep it as a monument, if it may conveniently be done without offence. And thus far we consent with the church of Rome. Further we must not go. The dissent. Our difference stands in the manner of worshipping of Saints. The Papists make two degrees of religious worship. The highest they call Latria whereby God himself is worshipped▪ and that alone. The second lower than the former, is called Doulia, whereby the Saints and Angels that be in the special favour of God, and glorified with everlasting glory in heaven, are worshipped. This worship they place in outward adoration, in bending of the knee, and bowing of the body to them being in heaven: in invocation whereby they call upon them: in dedication of Churches and houses of religion unto them: in sabbaths and festival days: lastly in pilgrimages unto their relics & images. We likewise distinguish adoration or worship: for it is either religious or civil. Religious worship, is that which is done to him that is Lord of all things, the searcher and trier of the heart, omnipotent, every where present, able to hear and help them that call upon him every where, the author and first cause of every good thing: and that simply for himself, because he is absolute goodness itself. And this worship is due to God alone, being also commanded in the first and second come mandements of the first table. Civil worship is the honour done to men set above us by God himself, either in respect of their excellent gifts, or in respect of their offices: & authority whereby they govern others. The right end of this worship is to testify and declare that we reverence the gifts of God, and that power which he hath placed in those that be his instruments. And this kind of worship is commanded only in the second table & in the first commandment thereof Honour thy father and mother. Upon this distinction we may judge, what honour is due to every one. Honour is to be given to God, & to whom he commandeth. He commandeth that inferiors should honour or worship their betters. Therefore the unreasonable creatures, & among the rest images are not to be worshipped, either with civil or religious worship: being indeed far base than man himself is. Again unclean spirits the enemies of God, must not be worshipped: yea to honour them at all, is to dishonour God. Good angels, because they excel men both in nature and gifts, when they appeared were lawfully honoured: yet so, as when the least signification of honour was given that was proper to God, they refused it. And because they appear not now as in former times, not so much as civil adoration in any bodily gesture is to be done unto them. Lastly, governors and Magistrates have civil adoration as their due: and it can not be omitted without offence. Thus Abraham worshipped the Hittites, Gen. 23. and joseph his brethren, Gen. 50. To come to the very point: upon the former distinction, we deny against the Papists that any civil worship in the bending of the knee or prostrating of the body, is to be given to the Saints, they being absent from us; much less any religious worship, as namely Invocation signified by any bodily adoration. For it is the very honour of God himself; let them call it latria, or doulia, or by what name they will. Our reasons. Reason I. All true invocation and prayer made according to the will of God, must have a double foundation; a commandment, and a promise. A commandment, to move us to pray: and a promise, to assure us that we shall be heard. For all and every prayer must be made in faith▪ & without a commandment or promise there is no faith. Upon this unfallible ground I conclude, that we may not pray to Saints departed: for in the Scripture there is no word, either commanding us to pray unto them, or assuring us that we shall be heard when we pray. Nay we are commanded, only to call upon God, Him only shalt thou serve, Matth. 4. 10. And, How shall we call upon him in whom we have not believed? Rom. 10. 14. And we have no promise to be heard but for Christ's sake. Therefore prayers made to Saints departed are unlawful. Answer is made, that invocation of Saints, is warranted by miracles and revelations, which are answerable to commandments and promises. Answ. But miracles and revelations had an end before this kind of invocation took any place in the Church of God: and that was about three hundred years after Christ. Again to judge of any point of doctrine by miracles, is deceitful; unless three things concur: the first is, doctrine of faith and piety to be confirmed: the second is prayer unto God, that some thing may be done for the ratifying of the said doctrine: the third is the manifest edification of the Church by the two former. Where any of these three are wanting, miracles may be suspected: because otherwhiles false prophets have their miracles to try men whether they will cleave unto God or no. Deut. 13. 1, 3. Again, miracles are not done, or to be done for them that believe, but for infidels that believe not: as Paul saith, 1. Cor. 14. 22. Tongues are a sign not to them that believe, but to unbelievers. And to this agree Chrysostome, Ambrose, and Isidore, who saith, Behold a sign is not necessary to believers which have already believed, but to infidels that they may be converted. Lastly, our faith is to be confirmed not by revelations and apparitions of dead men, but by the writings of the Apostles and prophets, Luc. 16. 29. Reason II. To pray unto Saints departed, to bow the knee unto them while they are in heaven, is to ascribe that unto them which is proper to God himself: namely, to know the heart, with the inward desires and motions thereof: and to know the speeches and behaviours of all men in all places upon earth at all times. The Papists answer, that Saints in heaven see and hear all things upon earth, not by themselves (for that were to make them Gods) but in God, and in the glass of the Trinity, in which they see men's prayers revealed unto them. I answer first, that the Saints are still made more than creatures; because they are said, to know the thoughts and all the doings of all men at all times, which no created power can well comprehend at once. Secondly I answer, that this glass, in which all things are said to be seen, is but a forgery of man's brain: and I prove it thus. The angels themselves, who see further into God than men can do, never knew all things in God: which I confirm on this manner. In the temple under the law, upon the ark were placed two Cherubins, signifying the good angels of God: and they looked downward upon the mercies at covering the ark, which was a figure of Christ; and their looking downward figured their desire to see into the mystery of Christ's incarnation, & our redemption by him; as Peter alluding, no doubt, to this type in the old Testament saith, 1. Pet. 1. 12. which things the angels desired to behold and Paul saith Eph. 3. 10. The manifold wisdom of God is revealed by the Church unto principalities and powers in heavenly places, that is, to the angels: but how and by what means? by the Church; and that two ways, first by the Church, as by an example, in which the angels saw the endless wisdom and mercy of God in the calling of the Gentiles. Secondly by the Church, as it was founded & honoured by the preaching of the Apostles. For it seems that the Apostolical ministery in the new testament revealed things touching Christ, which the angels never knew, before that time. Thus Chrysostome upon occasion Prologue. in job. of this text of Paul saith, that the Angels learned some things by the preaching of john Baptist. Again, Christ saith, that they know not the hour of the last judgement, Math. 24. 23. much less do the saints know all things in God. And hence it is that they are said to be under the altar, where they cry: How long Lord, holy and true! wilt thou Rev. 6. 9 not revenge our blood? as being ignorant of the day of their full deliverance. And the jews in affliction confess Abraham was ignorant of them and their estate. Isa. 63. v. 16. Reason III. Matth. 4. 10. Christ refused so much as to bow the knee to Satan upon this ground, because it was written thou shalt worship the Lord thy God and him only shalt thou serve. Hence it was, that Peter would not suffer Cornelius so much as to kneel unto him, though Cornelius intended not to honour him as God. Therefore neither Saint nor Angel is to be honoured so much as with the bowing of the knee: if it carry but the least signification of divine or religious honour. Reason IU. The judgement of the ancient Church. August. We honour the Saints de vera relig. c. 53. with charity, and not BY SERVITUDE: neither do we erect Churches to them. And, Let it NOT BE RELIGION for us to worship dead men. And, They are to be honoured for imitation, and not to be adored for religion. Epiphan. h●res. 79. Neither Tecla nor any Saint is to be ADORED: for that ancient ERROR may not overrule us, that we should leave the living God, and adore things made by him. Again, Let Marie be in honour; let the Father, Son, and holy Ghost be adored: let NONE ADORE MARIE: I mean neither woman nor man. Again, Marie is beautiful and holy and honoured, yet NOT TO ADORATION. When julian objected to the Christians that they worshipped their Martyrs as God, Cyril Lib. 9 & 10. grants the memory and honour of them, but denies their adoration: and of invocation, he makes no mention at all. Ambrose on Rom. 1. Is any SO MAD that he will give to the Earl the honour of the King—? yet these men do not think themselves guilty, who give the honour of God's name to a creature, and leaving the Lord, ADORE THEIR FELLOW SERVANTS, as though there were any thing more reserved for God. Objections of Papists. I. Gen. 48. 16. Let the angel that kept me bless thy children. Here (say they) it is a prayer made to angels. Ans. By the angel is meant Christ, who is called the angel of the covenant, Malac. 3. 1. and the angel that guided Israel in the wilderness, 1. Cor. 10. 9 compared with Exod. 23. 20. Object. II. Exod. 23. 13. Moses prayeth that God would respect his people, for Abraham's sake, and for Isaac and Israel his servants, which were not then living. Ans. Moses prayeth God to be merciful to the people, not for the intercession of Abraham, Isaac, and jacob, but for his covenants sake which he had made with them, Psal. 123. 10 11. Again by popish doctrine, the father's departed knew not the estate of men upon earth, neither did they pray for them: because than they were not in heaven but in Limbo patrum. III. Object. One living man makes intercession to God for another: therefore much more do the Saints in glory, that are filled with love pray to God for us: and we pray to them no otherwise then we desire living men to pray for us. Ans. The reason is nought: for we have a commandment, one living man to pray for another, and to desire others to pray for us: but there is no warrant in the word of God, for us to desire the prayers of men departed. Secondly there is great difference between these two: To request our friend either by word of mouth or by letter to pray for us: and by Invocation to request them that are absent from us and departed this life to pray for us: for this is indeed a worship, in which is given unto them a power to hear and help all that call upon them, at what place or time soever, yea though they be not present in the place in which they are worshipped: and consequently the seeing of the heart, presence in all places, an infinite power to help all that pray unto them: which things agree to no creature but God alone. Thirdly when one living man requests an other to pray for him, he only makes him his companion and fellow member in his prayer made in the name of one mediator Christ: but when men invocate Saints in heaven, they being then absent, they make them more than fellow members even mediators between Christ and them. The XU. point. Of intercession of saints. Our consent. Our consent with them I will set down in two conclusions. Conclus. I. The saints departed pray unto God, by giving thanks unto him for their own redemption, and for the redemption of the whole Church of God upon earth, Rev. 5. 8. The four beasts and the four and twenty Elders fell down before the lamb—, 9 and they sung a new song, Thou art worthy to take the book and to open the seals thereof: because thou wast killed and hast redeemed us to God—. 13. And all the creatures which are in heaven—, heard I saying, Praise and honour and glory and power be unto him that sitteth upon the throne and unto the Lamb for evermore. II. Conclus. The Saints departed pray generally for the state of the whole Church, Rev. 6. 9 And I saw under the Altar, the souls of them that were killed for the word of God—▪ & THEY CRIED, 10. How long Lord holy and true! dost thou not judge and avenge our blood on them that devil on the earth? whereby we see they desire a final deliverance of the Church, and a destruction of the enemies thereof; that they themselves with all the people of God might be advanced to fullness of glory in body and soul. Yea the dumb creatures, Rom. 8. 23. are said to groan and sigh, waiting for the adoption even the redemption of our bodies: much more than do the Saints in heaven desire the same. And thus far we consent. The dissent or difference. They hold and teach, that the Saints in heaven, as the virgin Marie, Peter, Paul, etc. do make intercession to God for particalar men, according to their several wants: and that having received particular men's prayers, they present them unto God. But this doctrine we flatly renounce upon these grounds and reasons. I. Isai 63. 16. The church saith to God, doubtless thou art our father, though ABRAHAM BE IGNORANT of us, and Israel KNOW US NOT. Now if Abraham knew not his posterity: neither Marie, nor Peter, nor any other of the Saints departed know us and our estate: and consequently they cannot make any particular intercession for us. If they say that Abraham & jacob were then in Limho, which they will have to be a part of hell: what joy could Lazarus have in Abraham's bosom, Luc. 16. 25. and with what comfort could jacob say on his death bed: O Lord I have waited for thy salvation. Gen. 46. 18. II. Reason. 2. King. 22. 20. Huldah the prophetess telleth josias, he must be gathered to his fathers, and put in his grave in peace, that his eyes may not see all the evil which God would bring on this place. Therefore the Saints departed see not the state of the Church on earth, much less do they know the thoughts and prayers of men. This conclusion Augustine confirmeth at large. III. Reason. No creature, Saint, or angel can be a mediator for us to God, saving Christ alone, who is indeed the only Advocate of his church. For in a true and sufficient Mediator there must be three properties. First of all, the word of God must reveal and propound him unto the Church, that we may in conscience be assured, that praying to him and to god in his name, we shall be heard. Now there is no scripture that mentioneth either Saints or Angels as mediator in our behalf, save Christ alone. Secondly, a mediator must be perfectly just, so as no sin be found in him at all, 1. joh. 2. 1. If any man sin we have an advocate with the father jesus Christ THE RIGHTEOUS. Now the Saints in heaven, howsoever they be fully sanctified by Christ, yet in themselves they were conceived and borne in sin: and therefore must needs eternally stand before God by the mediation and merit of an other. Thirdly, a mediator must be a propitiatour, that is, bring something to God, that may appease and satisfy the wrath and justice of God for our sins: therefore john addeth, and he is a PROPITIATION for our sins. But neither Saint nor Angel can satisfy for the least of our sins: Christ only is the propitiation for them all. The virgin Marie and the rest of the Saints being sinners, could not satisfy so much as for themselves. iv Reason. The judgement of the church. Augustine, All Christian men commend each Lib. 3. contra Parmen. c. 3. other in their prayers to God. And who PRAYS FOR ALL, and for whom NONE PRAYS, he is that one and true mediator. And, This Tract. in joh. 22. saith thy Saviour, thou hast NO WHITHER to go but to me, thou hast NO WAY to go BUT BY ME. Chrysostome, Thou hast NO NEED OF De perfectu evang. PATRONS to God, or much discourse that thou shouldest soothe others: but though thou be alone and want a patron, and by thyself pray unto God, thou shalt obtain thy desire. And on the saying of john, If any sin, etc. Thy prayers have no effect unless they be such as THE LORD COMMENDS unto thy Father. And August. on the same place hath these words, He being such a man said not, ye have an Advocate, but if any sin we have: he said not ye have, neither said he, YE HAVE ME. Objections of Papists. I. Rev. 5. 8, 9 The four and twenty Elders fall down before the lamb, having every one haps and golden vyals, full of odours which are the prayers of the Saints. Hence the Papists gather, that the Saints in heaven receive the prayers of men on earth, and offer them unto the Father. Answ. There by prayers of the Saints, are meant their own prayers, in which they sing praises to God and to the lamb, as the verses following plainly declare. And these prayers are also presented unto God only from the hand of the angel, which is Christ himself. II. Object. Luc. 16. 27. Dives in hell prayeth cap. 8. v. 4. for his brethren upon earth, much more do the Saints in heaven pray for us. Ans. Out of a parable nothing can be gathered, but that which is agreeable to the intent and scope thereof: for by the same reason it may as well be gathered that the soul of Dives being in hell had a tongue. Again, if it were true which they gather, we may gather also that the wicked in hell have compassion and love to their brethren on earth, and a zeal to God's glory: all which are false. III. Object. The angels in heaven know every man's estate: they know when any sinner repenteth and rejoiceth thereat: & pray for particular men: therefore the Saints in heaven do the like, for they are equal to the good angels, Luc. 20, 36. Ans. The place in Luke is to be understood of the estate of holy men at the day of the last judgement: as appears, Matth. 22. 30. where it is said, that the servants of God in the resurrection are as the angels in heaven. Secondly they are like the angels not in office and ministery, by which they are ministering spirits for the good of men: but they are like them in glory. Secondly we descent from the Papists: because they are not content to say that the Saints departed pray for us in particular; but they add further, that they make intercession for us by their merits in heaven. New jesuits deny this: but let them hear Lombard, Lib. 4. dist. 45. p. 6. I think (saith he, speaking of one that is but of mean goodness) that he as it were passing by the fire shall be saved by the MERITS and intercessions of the heavenly Church; which doth always make intercession for the faithful by request and merit, till Christ shall be complete in his members. And the Roman on second Command. Catechism saith as much. Saints are so much the more to be worshipped and called upon; because they make prayers daily for the salvation of men: and God for their merit and favour bestows many benefits upon us. We deny not, that men upon earth have help and benefit by the faith and piety which the Saints departed showed, when they were in this life. For God shows mercy on them that keep his commandments to a thousand generations. And Augustine saith, it was good for the jews, that they were loved of Moses, q. 149. super Exod. whom God loved. But we utterly deny, that we are helped by merits of Saints either living or departed. For Saints in glory have received the full reward of all their merits; if they could merit: and therefore there is nothing further that they can merit. The sixteenth point. Of implicit, or enfolded faith. Our consent. We hold that there is a kind of implicit or unexpressed faith; yea that the faith of every man in some part of his life, as in the time of his first conversion, and in the time of some grievous temptation or distress, is implicit or enfolded. The Samaritans are said to believe, Ioh 4. 14. because they took Christ for the Messiah, and thereupon were content to learn and obey the glad tidings of salvation. And in the same place, v. 51. the Ruler with his family is said to believe, who did no more but generally acknowledge that Christ was the Messiah, & yielded himself to believe and obey his holy doctrine; being moved thereunto by a miracle wrought upon his young son. And Rahab Heb. 11. 13. is said to believe, yea she is commended for faith even at the time when she received the spies. Now in the word of God we cannot find, that she had any more but a confused, general, or enfolded faith, whereby she believed that the God of the Hebrews was the true God & his word to be obeyed. And this faith (as it seems) was wrought by her by the report and relation of the miracles done in the land of Egypt: whereby she was moved to join herself unto the people of God and to believe as they did. By these examples than it is manifest that in the very servants of God, there is and may be for a time an implicit faith. For the better understanding of this point, it is to be considered that faith may be enfolded two ways: first in respect of knowledge of things to be believed: secondly, in respect of the apprehension of the object of faith, namely Christ and his benefits. Now faith is enfolded in respect of knowledge, when as sundry things that are necessary to salvation are not as yet distinctly known. Though Christ commended the faith of his disciples, for such a faith, against which the gates of hell should not prevail; yet was it unexpressed or wrapped up in regard of sundry points of religion: for first of all, Peter that made confession of Christ in the name of the rest, was at that time ignorant of the particular means whereby his redemption should be wrought. For after this, he went about to dissuade his master from the suffering of death at Jerusalem, whereupon Christ sharply rebuked him, saying, Come behind me Satan, thou art an offence unto me. Again, they were all ignorant of Christ's resurrection, till certain women who first saw him after he was risen again, had told them: and they by experience in the person of Christ had learned the truth. Thirdly, they were ignorant of the ascension: for they dreamt of an earthly kingdom, at the very time when he was about to ascend: saying, Wilt thou at this time restore the kingdom to Israel? Act. 1. 6. And after Christ's ascension, Peter knew nothing of the breaking down of the partition wall between the jews and Gentiles, till God had better schooled him in a vision, Acts 10. 14. And no doubt, we have ordinary examples of this Implicit faith in sundry persons among us. For some there be, which are dull and hard both for understanding and memory, and thereupon make no such proceed in knowledge as many others do: and yet for good affection and conscience in their doings, so far as they know, they come not short of any; having withal a continual care to increase in knowledge, and to walk in obedience according to that which they know. And such persons though they be ignorant in many things, yet have they a meaning of true faith: and that which is wanting in knowledge is supplied in affection: and in some respects they are to be preferred before many that have the glibbe tongue, and the brain swimming with knowledge. To this purpose Melancthon said well, We must 〈◊〉. phillip 〈◊〉. de g●ad. delict. acknowledge the great mercy of God, who puts a difference between sins of ignorance, and such as are done wittingly; and forgives manifold ignorances to them, that know but the foundation and be teachable; as may be seen by the Apostles, in whom there was much want of understanding before the resurrection of Christ. But, as hath been said, he requires that we be teachable, and he will not have us to be hardened in our sluggishness and dullness. As it is said, psal. 1. he meditateth in his law day and night. The second kind of implicit faith, is in regard of Apprehension; when as a man can not say distinctly and certainly, I believe the pardon of my sins, but I do unfeignedly desire to believe the pardon of them all: and I desire to repent. This case befalls many of God's children, when they are touched in conscience for their sins. But where men are displeased with themselves for their offences, and do withal constantly from the heart desire to believe, and to be reconciled to God; there is faith and many other graces of God enfolded: as in the little and tender bud, is enfolded the leaf, the blossom, and the fruit. For though a desire to repent and to believe, be not faith and repentance in nature, yet in God's acceptation it is, God accepting the will for the deed. Isai 42. v. 3. Christ will not quench the smoking flax, which as yet by reason of weakness gives neither light nor heat. Christ saith, Math. 6. 6. Blessed are they that HUNGER AND THIRST after righteousness: for they shall be satisfied: where by persons hungering and thirsting are meant all such, as feel with grief their own want of righteousness, and withal desire to be justified and sanctified. Rom. 8. 26. God hears & regards the very groans and sighs of his servants: yea, though they be unspeakable by reason they are oftentimes little, weak, & confused; yet God hath respect unto them, because they are the work of his own spirit. Thus when we see that in a touched heart desiring to believe, there is an enfolded faith. And this is the faith which many of the true servants of God have: and our salvation stands not so much in our apprehending of Christ, as in Christ's comprehending of us: and therefore Paul saith, Philip. 3. 12. he followeth, namely after perfection, if that he might comprehend that, for whose sake he is comprehended of Christ. Now if any shall say, that without a lively faith in Christ none can be saved; I answer, that God accepts the desire to believe for lively faith, in the time of temptation, and in the time of our first conversion, as I have said. Put case, a man that never yet repent, falls into some grievous sickness, and then begins to be touched in conscience for his sins, and to be truly humbled: hereupon he is exhorted to believe his own reconciliation with God in Christ, & the pardon of his own sins. And as he is exhorted, so he endeavoureth according to the measure of grace received, to believe; yet after much stri●ing he cannot resolve himself, that he doth distinctly and certainly believe the pardon of his own sins: only this he can say, that he doth hearty desire to believe: this he wisheth above all things in the world: and he esteems all things as dung for Christ: & thus he dies. I demand now, what shall we say of him? surely, we may say nothing, but that he died the child of God, and is undoubtedly saved. For howsoever it were an happy thing if men could come to that fullness of faith which was in Abraham, and many servants of God: yet certain it is, that God in sundry cases accepts of this desire to believe, for ttue faith indeed. And look as it is in nature, so is it in grace: in nature some die when they are children, some in old age, and some in full strength, and yet all die men: so again, some die babes in Christ, some of more perfect faith: and yet the weakest having the seeds of grace, is the child of God: & faith in his infancy is faith. All this while, it must be remembered I say not, there is a true faith without all apprehension, but without a Distinct apprehension for some space of time: for this very desire by faith to apprehend Christ & his merits, is a kind of apprehension. And thus we see the kinds of implicit or enfolded faith. This doctrine is to be learned for two causes: first of all it serves to rectify the consciences of weak ones, that they be not deceived touching their estare. For if we think that no faith can save, but a full persuasion, such as the faith of Abraham was, many truly bearing the name of Christ must be put out of the role of the children of God. We are therefore to know that there is a growth in grace, as in nature: & there be differences & degrees of true faith, and the least of them all is this Enfolded faith. This in effect is the doctrine of master Caluin: that, when we begin by faith to know somewhat, and just. lib. 3. c. 2. 9▪ 5. have a desire to learn more, this may be termed an unexpressed faith. Secondly this point of doctrine serves to rectify and in part to expound suudrie catechisms, in that they seem to propound faith unto men at so high a reach, as few can attain unto it: defining it to be a certain and full persuasion of God's love and favour in Christ: whereas, though every faith be for his nature a certain persuasion yet only the strong faith is the full persuasion. Therefore faith is not only in general terms to be defined, but also the degrees and measures thereof are to be expounded, that weak ones to their comfort may be truly informed of their estate. And though we teach there is a kind of implicit faith, which is the beginning of true and lively faith: yet none must hereupon take an occasion to content themselves therewith, but labour to increase and go on from faith to faith: and so indeed will every one do that hath any beginnings of true faith, be they never so little. And he which thinks he hath a desire to believe, and contents himself therewith: hath indeed no true desire to believe. The difference. The pillars of the Romish Church lays down this ground: that faith in his own nature, is not a knowledge of things to be believed: but a reverent assent unto them whether they be known or unknown. Hereupon they build: that if a man know some necessary points of religion, as the doctrine of the godhead, of the trinity, of Christ's incarnation, and of our redemption, etc. it is needless to know the rest by a particular or distinct knowledge, and it sufficeth to give his consent to the church, and to believe as the pastors believe. Behold a ruinous building upon a rotten foundation: for faith contains a knowledge of things to be believed, and knowledge is of the nature of faith: and nothing is believed that is not known. Isai 53. 11. The knowledge of my righteous servant, shall justify many. & joh. 17. 2. This is eternal life, to know the eternal God, and whom thou hast sent jesus Christ. In these places, by knowledge is meant faith grounded upon knowledge, whereby we know and are assured that Christ and his benefits belong unto us. Secondly this kind of assent is the mother of ignorance. For when men shall be taught, that for sundry points of religion they may believe as the Church believes Mol. tract. 3. c. 27. conclus. 15. that the study of the Scriptures is not to be required of them: yea that to their good they may be barred the reading of them, so be it they know some principal things contained in the articles of saith, that ●onauētura & Durande. common believers are not bound expressly to believe all the articles of the Apostles Creed: c Bann●s. ●. q. 2 art. 7. ascribes this opinion to Gul. Parisiensis, & to Altisiodoransis. that it sufficeth them to believe the articles by an implicit faith: by believing as the Church believeth, few or none will have care to profit in knowledge. And yet God's commandment is that we should grow in knowledge and that his word should dwell plenteously in us, Col. 3. 16. Again, the Papists say, that the devotion of the ignorant, is often service better accepted then that which is done upon Rhem. Test. on 1. Cor. 14 knowledge. Such (say they) as pray in latin, pray with as great consolation of spirit, with as little tediousness, with as great devotion and affection, and oftentimes more than the other, and always more than any schismatic Molam▪ tract 5. c. 30. con. 12. or heretic in his own language. To conclude, they teach that some articles of faith are believed generally of the whole Church only by a simple or implicit saith, which afterward by the Authority of a general Counsel are propounded to be believed of the Church by express faith. Rofsensis against Luther gives an example of Cantra a●●er. Iu●. 〈◊〉. 8. this, when he confesseth that Purgatory was little known at the first, but was made known partly by Scripture and partly by revelation in process of time. This implicit saith touching articles of religion we reject; holding that all things concerning faith and manners necessary to salvation, are plainly expressed in Scripture, and accordingly to be believed. The seventeenth point. Of Purgatory. Our consent. We hold a Christian Purgatory, according as the word of God hath set down the same unto us. And first of all by this Purgatory we understand the afflictions of God's children here on earth, jer. 3. The people afflicted say, thou hast sent a fire into our bones. Psal. 65. 12. We have gone through water and fire, Malach. 3. 3. The children of Levi must be purified in a purging fire of affliction. 1. Pet. 1. 7. Afflictions are called the fiery trial whereby men are cleansed from their corruptions, as gold from the dross by the fire. Secondly, the blood of Christ is a purgatory of our sins, 1. joh. 1. 7. Christ's blood PURGETH us from all our sins. Hebr. 9 14. It PURGETH our consciences from dead works. And Christ baptizeth with the holy Ghost and with fire; because our inward washing is by the blood of Christ: and the holy Ghost is as fire to consume and abolish the inward corruption of nature. To this effect saith Origen. in Levit. l. 9 apud Cyril. Without doubt, we shall feel the unquenchable fire, unless we shall now entreat the Lord to send down from heaven a purgatory fire unto us, whereby worldly desires may be utterly consumed in our minds. de Act. Falic. c. 21. August. Suppose the mercy of God is thy purgatory. The difference or dissent. We differ from the Papists touching purgatory in two things. And first of all, for the place. They hold it to be a part of hell, into which an entrance is made only after this life: we for our parts deny it, as having no warrant in the word of God; which mentioneth only two places for men after this life, heaven and hell, with the twofold condition thereof, joy and torment. Luk. 16. 25, 26. joh. 3. 36. Apoc. 22. 14, 15. and 21. 7, 8. Matth. 8. 11. Nay we find the contrary, Rev. 14. 13. they that die in the Lord are said to rest from their labours: which cannot be true, if any of them go to purgatory. And to cut off all cavils, it is further said, their works, that is, the reward of their works, follow them, even at the heels, as an Acoluth or servant doth his master. Augustin saith well, After this life Homi. 50. iom. 10. there remains no compunction or SATISFACTION. And, Here is all remission of sin: Enchir. c. 115 here be temptations that move us to sin: lastly here is the evil from which we desire to be delivered: but there is NONE OF ALL THESE. And, We are not here without sin, but we de verbis Apost. serm. 31. shall GO HENCE WITHOUT SIN. Cyril saith, They which are once dead can add nothing Lib. 3. in Es. to the things which they have done, but shall REMAIN AS THEY WERE LFFT, and wait for the time of the last judgement. Chrysostome, After the end of this life, ad pop. Anti▪ och. bo●. 22. there be NO OCCASIONS of merits. Secondly, we differ from them touching the means of purgation. They say, that men are purged by suffering of pains in purgatory, whereby they satisfy for their venial sins, and for the temporal punishment of their mortal sins. We teach the contrary, holding that nothing can free us from the least punishment of the smallest sin, but the sufferings of Christ, and purge us from the least taint of corruption, saving the blood of Christ. indeed they say, that our sufferings in themselves considered, do not purge, and satisfy, but as they are made meritorious by the sufferings of Christ: but to this I oppose one text of scripture, Hebr. 1. 3. where it is said, that Christ hath purged our sins BY HIMSELF: where the last clause cuts the throat of all human satisfactions and merits: and it giveth us to understand, that whatsoever thing purgeth us from our sins, is not to be found in us but in Christ alone: otherwise it should have been said, that Christ purgeth the sins of men by themselves, as well as by himself: and he should merit by his death, that we should become our own saviours in part. To this place I may well refer prayer for the dead: of which I will propound two conclusions affirmative, and one negative. Conclus. I. We hold that Christian charity is to extend itself to the very dead; and it must show itself in their honest burial, in the preservation of their good names, in the help and relief of their posterity, as time and occasion shall be offered. Ruth. 1. 8. joh. 19 23. II. Conclus. We pray further in general manner for the faithful departed, that God would hasten their joyful resurrection, and the full accomplishment of their happiness, both for the body and soul: and thus much we ask in saying, Thy kingdom come, that is, not only the kingdom of grace, but also the kingdom of glory in heaven. Thus far we come; but nearer the gates of Babylon we dare not approach. III. Conclus. To pray for particular men departed: and to pray for their deliverance out of purgatory, we think it unlawful: because we have neither promise nor commandment so to do. The eighteenth point. Of the supremacy in causes Ecclesiastical. Our consent. Touching the point of supremacy Ecclesiastical, I will set down how near we may come to the Roman Church in two conclusions. Conclus. I. For the founding of the primitive Church, the ministery of the word was distinguished by degrees not only of order but also of power, and Peter was called to the highest degree. Ephes. 4. vers. 11. Christ ascended up on high and gave gifts unto men, for the good of his Church: as some to be Apostles, some Prophets, some Evangelists, some Pastors and Doctors. Now, howsoever one Apostle, be not above another, or one Evangelist above another, or one pastor above another: yet an Apostle was above an Evangelist: and an Evangelist above all pastors and teachers. And Peter was by calling an Apostle, and therefore above all Evangelists and Pastors: having the highest room in the ministery of the new Testament, both for order and authority. Conclus. II. Among the twelve Apostles Peter had a threefold privilege or prerogative. I. The prerogative of authority. II. Of primacy. III. Of principality. For the first, by the privilege of authority, I mean a pre-eminence in regard of estimation, whereby he was had in reverence above the rest of the twelve Apostles, for Cephas with james and john are called pillars, and seemed to be great. Gal. 2. v. 6, 9 Again he had the pre-eminence of primacy, because he was the first named, as the foreman of the quest. Math. 10. 2. The name of the twelve Apostles are these, THE FIRST IS Simon called Peter. Thirdly he had the pre-eminence of principality among the twelve, because in regard of the measure of grace, he excelled the rest: for when Christ asked his disciples whom they said he was; Peter as being of greatest ability and zeal answered for them all. Math. 16. 16. I use this clause, among the twelve, because Paul excelled Peter every way, in learning, zeal, understanding, as far as Peter excelled the rest. And thus near we come to popish supremacy. The difference. The Church of Rome gives to Peter a supremacy under Christ above all causes and persons: that is, full power to govern & order the catholic Church upon the whole earth both for doctrine & regiment. This supremacy stands (as they teach) in a power, or, judgement, to determine of the true sense of all places of Scripture: to determine all causes of faith: to assemble general councils: to ratify the decrees of the said counsels: to excommunicate any man upon earth, that lives within the Church, even princes and nations: properly to absolve and forgive sins: to decide causes brought to him by appeal from all the parts of the earth: lastly to make laws that shall bind the conscience. This fullness of power with one consent is ascribed to Peter, and the Bishops of Rome that follow him in a supposed succession. Now we hold on the contrary, that neither Peter nor any Bishop of Rome hath any supremacy over the Catholic Church: but that all supremacy under Christ, is pertaining to kings and princes within their dominions. And that this our doctrine is good & theirs false and forged, I will make it manifest by sundry reasons. I. Christ must be considered of us as a king two ways. First as he is God: and so is he an absolute king over all things in heaven and earth, with the Father & the holy Ghost by the right of creation. Secondly he is a king as he is redeemer of mankind: and by the right of redemprion he is a sovereign king over the whole Church, and that in special manner. Now as Christ is God with the Father and the holy Ghost, he hath his deputies on earth to govern the world: as namely kings & princes, who are therefore in scriptures called gods. But as Christ is Mediator, and consequently a king over his redeemed ones, he hath neither fellow, nor deputy. No fellow: for than he should be an imperfect mediator. No deputy: for no creature is capable of this office to do in the room and stead of Christ that which he himself doth: because every work of the Mediator is a compound work, arising of the effects of two natures concurring in one and the same action, namely the godhead and the manhood: and therefore to the effecting of the said work there is required an infinite power, which far exceeds the strength of any created nature. Again, Heb. 7. 24. Christ is said to have a priesthood which cannot pass from his person to any other: whence it follows, that neither his kingly nor his prophetical office can pass from him to any creature, either in whole or in part: because the three offices of mediation in this regard be equal. Nay, it is a needless thing for Christ to have a deputy, to put in execution any part of his mediatorship: considering a deputy only serveth to supply the absence of the principal: whereas Christ is always present with his Church by his word and spirit: for where two or three be gathered together in his name: he is in the midst among them. It may be said, that the ministers in the work of the ministery are deputies of Christ I answer, that they are no deputies but active instruments. For in the preaching of the word there be two actions: the first is the uttering or propounding of it to the ear: the second is, the inward operation of the Holy Ghost in the heart: which indeed is the principal and belongs to Christ alone: the action of speaking in the minister being only instrumental. Thus likewise the church of God in cutting off any member by excommunication, is no more but an instrument performing a ministery in the name of Christ, and that is to testify and pronounce whom Christ himself hath cut off from the kingdom of heaven: whom he also will have for this cause, to be severed from the company of his own people till he repent. And so it is in all ecclesiastical actions: Christ hath no deputy, but only instruments: the whole entire action being personal in respect of Christ. This one conclusion over throws not only the Pope's supremacy, but also many other points of popery. Reason II. All the Apostles in regard of power and authority were equal: for the commission apostolical both for right and execution was given equally to them all, as the very words import: Math. 28. v. 19 Go teach all nations baptizing them, etc. and the promise, I will give to thee the k●●es of the kingdom of heaven, is not private to Peter, but is made in his person to the rest, according as his confession was in the name of in Mar. 16. the rest. Thus saith Theophylact. They have the power of committing & binding that receive in Psal. 38. the gift of a bishop as Peter. And Ambr. saith, What is said to Peter, is said to the Apostles. Therefore Peter had no supremacy over the rest of the Apostles in respect of right to the commission: which they say belonged to him only, and the execution thereof to the rest. But let all be granted, that Peter was in commission above the rest, for the time of his life: yet hence may not any superiority be gathered for the bishops of Rome: because the authority of the Apostles was personal, & consequently ceased with them: without being conveyed to any other: because the Lord did not vouchsafe the like honour to any after them. For first of all, it was the privilege of the Apostles to be called immediately, and to see the Lord jesus. Secondly, they had power to give the gift of the holy ghost by the imposition of hands. Thirdly, they had such a measure of the assistance of the spirit, that in their public sermons and in writing of the word, they could not err: and these things were all denied to those that followed after them. And that their authority ceased in their persons, it stands with reason also, because it was given in so ample a manner for the founding of the Church of the new Testament▪ which being once founded, it was needful only that there should be pastors and teachers for the building of it up unto the end of the world. Reason III. When the sons of Zebedeus sued unto Christ for the greatest rooms of honour in his kingdom (deeming he should be an earthly king) Christ answers them again, ye know that the Lords of the Gentiles have dominion and they that are great exercise authority over them: but it shall not be so with you. Bernard apply these very words to Pope Eugenius on this De consider. ad Eugen. lib. 2. manner. It is plain, saith he, that here dominion is forbidden the Apostles. Go to then: dare if you will, to take upon you ruling an Apostleship, or in your Apostleship rule or dominion: if you will have both alike, you shall lose both. Otherwise you must not think yourself exempted from the number of them, of whom the Lord complaineth thus: they have reigned but not of me: they have been and I have not known them. Reason IU. Eph. 4. mention is made of gifts which Christ gave to his Church after his ascension, whereby some were Apostles, some prophets, some Evangelists, some pastors and teachers. Now if there had been an office in which men as deputies of Christ should have governed the whole Church to the end of the world, the calling might here have been named fitly with a gift thereto pertaining; and Paul (no doubt) would not here have concealed it, where he mentioneth callings of lesser importance. Reason V The Pope's supremacy was judged by sentences of Scripture and condemned long before it was manifest in the world: the spirit of prophesy foreseeing and foretelling the state of things to come. 2. Thess. 2. v. 3, 4. The man of sin (which is that Antichrist) shall exalt himself above all that is called God, etc. Now this whole chapter with all the circumstances thereof, most fitly agrees to the sea of Rome and the Head thereof: and the thing which then stayed the revealing of the man of sin, vers. 6. is of most expounded to be the Roman Emperor. I will allege one testimony in the room of many. Chrysostome saith on this place, As long as the Empire shall be had in awe, no man shall straightly submit himself to Antichrist: but after that the Empire shall be dissolved, Antichrist shall invade the state of the Empire standing void: and shall labour to pull unto himself the Empire both of man and God. And this we find now in experience to be true: for the See of Rome never flourished, till the Empire decayed, and the seat thereof was removed from the city of Rome. Again Rev. 13. mention is made of two beasts, one coming out of the sea, whom the Papists confess to be the heathenish Roman Emperor: the second coming out of the earth; which doth all that the first beast could do before him: and this fitly agreeth to the Popes of Rome, who do and have done all things that the Emperor did or could do, and that in his vety sight. Reason VI The judgement of the ancient Church. Cyprian saith, Doubtless the De simplicit. Praelat. same were the rest of the Apostles that Peter was: endued with EQVAL fellowship both of honour and of POWER; but a beginning is made of unity, that the Church may appear to be one. Gregory saith, If one be called universal In Registro lib. 6. c 118. Bishop, the universal Church GOETH TO DECAY. And chap. 144. I say boldly, that whosoever calleth or desireth to call himself universal priest, in his pride is a FORERUNNER OF ANTICHRIST. And, Behold, in the Lib. 7. cap. 30 preface of the Epistle which ye directed unto me, you caused to be set a PROUD TITLE, calling me universal Pope. Bernard. Consider ad Eugen. l. 3 that thou art not a lord of Bishops, but one of them. Churches are MAIMED, in that the Roman Bishop draweth all power to himself. Again Gregory himself being Pope saith to the Emperor I which AM SUBJECT TO YOUR COMMANDMENT—; have every way discharged that which was due, in that I have performed mine allegiance to the Emperor, and have not concealed what I thought on God's behalf. And Pope Leo the fourth after Gregorre 200. years, acknowledged the Emperor Lotharius for his sovereign prince, and professed obedience without C▪ de capitulis. dist. 10. gainsaying, to his Imperial commandments. To conclude, whereas they say that there is a double head of the Church, one imperial which is Christ alone, the other ministerial, which is the Pope, governing the whole Church under Christ, I answer, this distinction robbeth Christ of his honour, because in setting up their ministerial head, they are feign to borrow of Christ things proper unto him, as the privilege to forgive sins o Alen. book of priesthood. properly, and the power to govern the whole earth, by making of laws that shall as truly bind conscience as the laws of God, etc. The nineteenth point, Of the efficacy of the sacraments. Our consent. Conclus. I. We teach and believe that the sacraments are signs to represent Christ with his benefits unto us. Conclus. II. We teach further, that the sacraments are indeed instruments, whereby God offereth and giveth the foresaid benefits unto us. Thus far we consent with the Roman Church. The difference. The difference between us stands in sundry points. First of all, the best learned among them teach, that sacraments are physical instruments, that is, true and proper instrumental Bellarmin. 〈◊〉 Sacr. l. 2▪ 6. causes, having force and efficacy in them to produce and give grace. They use to express their meaning by these comparisons. When the scrivener takes the pen into his hand and writes, the action of writing comes from the pen, moved by the hand of the writer: and in cutting of wood or stone, the division comes from the saw, moved by the hand of the workman: even so the grace (say they) that is given by God, is conferred by the sacrament itself. Now we for our parts hold, that Sacraments are not physical but mere voluntary instruments. Voluntary, because it is the will and appointment of God, to use them as certain outward means of grace. Instruments: because when we use them aright according to the institution, God then answerably confers grace from himself. In this respect only take we them for instruments and no otherwise. The second difference is this: They teach that the very action of the Minister dispensing the sacrament, as it is a work done gives grace immediately, if the party be prepared: as the very washing or sprinkling of water in baptism, and the giving of bread in the Lord's supper: even as the orderly moving of the pen upon the paper by the hand of the writer causeth writing. We hold the contrary: namely that no action in the dispensation of a Sacrament conferreth grace as it is a work done, that is, by the efficacy and force of the very sacramental action itself, though ordained of God: but for two other ways. First by the signification thereof. For God testifies unto us his will and good pleasure partly by the word of promise, and partly by the sacrament: the signs representing to the eyes that which the word doth to the ears: being also types and certain images of the very same things, that are promised in the word and no other. Yea the elements are not general and confused, but particular signs to the several communicants, and by the virtues of the Institution: for when the faithful receive the signs from God by the hands of the Minister, it is as much as if God himself with his own mouth should speak unto them severally, and by name promise to them remission of sins. And things said to men particularly, do more affect, and more take away doubting, then if they were generally spoken to an whole company. Therefore signs of graces are as it were an applying and binding of the promise of salvation to every particular believer: and by this means, the oftener they are received, the more they help our infirmity, and confirm our assurance of mercy. Again the sacrament confers grace in that the sign thereof confirms faith as a pledge, by reason it hath a promise annexed to it. For when God commands us to receive the signs in faith, and withal promiseth to the receivers to give the thing signified, he binds himself, as it were in bond unto us, to stand to his own word; even as men bind themselves in obligations putting to their hands and seals, so as they cannot go back. And when the signs are thus used as pledges, & that often: they greatly increase the grace of God: as a token sent from one friend to another, renews and confirms the persuasion of love. These are the two principal ways whereby the sacraments are said to confer grace namely in respect of their signification, and as they are pledges of God's favour unto us. And the very point here to be considered is, in what order and manner they confirm. And the manner is this. The signs and visible elements affect the senses outward and inward: the senses convey their object to the mind: the mind directed by the holy Ghost reasoneth on this manner, out of the promise annexed to the sacrament. He that useth the elements aright, shall receive grace thereby: but I use the elements aright in faith and repentance, saith the mind of the believer: therefore shall I receive from God increase of grace. Thus then, faith is confirmed not by the work done, but by a kind of reasoning caused in the mind, the argument or proof whereof is borrowed from the elements, being signs and pledges of God's mercy. The third difference. The Papists teach, that in the sacrament by the work done, the very grace of justification is conferred. We say no: because a man of years must first believe and be justified, before he can be a meet partaker of any sacrament. And the grace that is conferred, is only the increase of our faith, hope, sanctification, etc. Our reasons. Reason I. The word preached and the sacraments differ in the manner of giving Christ and his benefits unto us: because in the word the spirit of God teacheth us by a voice conveyed to the mind by the bodily cares; but in the sacraments annexed to the word, by certain sensible and bodily signed viewed by the eye. d Aug. lib. 19 contra Faust. cap. 16. Sacraments are nothing but visible words and promises. Otherwise for the giving itself they differ not. Christ himself saith, that in the very word, is eaten his own flesh, which he was to give for the life of the world: and what can be said more of the Lords supper. Augustine saith, that believers Serm. ad infant. ad al●ar. de Sacr. are partakers of the body & blood of Christ in baptism: and Hierome to Edibia, that in baptism we eat and drink the body and blood of Christ. If thus much may be said of baptism, why may it not also be said of the word preached. Again Hierome upon Ecclesiastes saith, It is profitable to be filled with cap. 3. the body of Christ and drink his blood, not only in mystery but in knowledge of holy Scripture. Now upon this it follows, that seeing the work done in the word preached confers not grace, neither doth the work done in the sacrament confer any grace. Reason II. Math. 3. II. I baptise you with water to repentance: but he that cometh after me is stronger than I,— he shall baptise you with the holy Ghost and with fire. Hence it is manifest, that grace in the sacrament proceeds not from any action in the sacrament: for john, though he do not disjoin himself and his action from Christ, and the action of his spirit: yet doth he distinguish them plainly in number, persons, and effect. To this purpose Paul, who had said of the Galatians, that he traveled of them & beget them by the Gospel, saith of himself that he is not 1. Cor. 7. 3. any thing, not only as he was a man, but as he was a faithful Apostle: thereby excluding the whole evangelical ministery whereof the sacrament is a part, from the least part of divine operation, or, efficacy in conferring of grace. Reason III. The blessed Angels, nay the very flesh of the son of God hath not any quickening virtue from itself: but all this efficacy or virtue is in and from the godhead of the son: who, by means of the flesh apprehended by faith, deriveth heavenly and spiritual life from himself to the members. Now if there be no efficacy in the flesh of Christ, but by reason of the hypotastical union: how shall bodily actions about bodily elements confer grace immediately. Reason IU. Paul, Rom. 4. stands much upon this, to prove that justification by saith is not conferred by the sacraments. And from the circumstance of time he gathereth that Abraham was first justified, and then afterward receive circumcision, the sign and seal of this righteousness. Now we know that the general condition of all sacraments is one and the same, and that baptism succeeded circumcision. And what can be more plain than the example of Cornelius, Act. 10. who before Peter came unto him, had the commendation of the fear of God, and was endued with the spirit of prayer: and afterward when Peter by preaching opened more fully the way of the Lord, he & the rest received the holy Ghost. And after all this they were baptised. Now if they received the holy Ghost before baptism, than they received remission of sins, and were justified before baptism. V Reason. The judgement of the church. Basil. If there be any grace in the water, it is Lib. de Sp. sanct. c. 15. not from the nature of the water, but from THE PRESENCE OF THE SRIRITE. Hierome saith, Man gives water but God gives the in Esa. 14. holy Ghost. Augustine said, Water toucheth the body and washeth the heart: but he shows his meaning elsewhere. There is one water (saith he) of the Sacrament, an other of the Tract. 6. in epist. joh. Spirit: the water of the sacrament is visible, the water of the Spirit invisible. That washeth the body AND SIGNIFIETH what is done in the soul. By this the soul is purged and sealed. Object. Remission of sins, regeneration, and salvation is ascribed to the sacrament of baptism, Act. 22. 21. Eph. 5. Gal. 3. 27. Tit. 2. Ans. Salvation and remission of sins is ascribed to baptism and the Lords supper, as to the word; which is the power of God to salvation to all that believe: and that, as they are instruments of the holy Ghost to signify, seal, and exhibit to the believing mind the foresaid benefits: but indeed the proper instrument whereby salvation is apprehended is faith, and sacraments are but props of faith furthering salvation two ways: first because by their signification they help to nourish and preserve faith: secondly because they seal grace and salvation to us: yea God gives grace and salvation when we use them well: so be it, we believe the word of promise made to the sacrament, whereof also they are seals. And thus we keep the middle way, neither giving too much nor too little to the sacraments. The XX. point. Of saving faith: or, the way to life. Our consent. Conclus. I. They teach it to be the property of faith, to believe the whole word of God, and especially the redemption of mankind by Christ. Conclus. II. They avouch that they believe and look to be saved by Christ and by CHRIST ALONE, and by the MERE MERCY of God in Christ. Conclus. III. Thirdly, the most learned among them hold and confess, that the obedience of Christ is imputed unto them for the satisfaction of the law, and for their reconciliation with God. Conclus. iv They avouch that they put their whole trust and confidence in Christ, and in the mere mercy of God, for their salvation. Conclus. V last they hold that every man must apply the promise of life everlasting by Christ, unto himself: and this they grant we are bound to do. And in these five points do they and we agree, at least in show of words. By the avouching of these 5. Conclusions, Papists may easily escape the hands of many magistrates. And unless the mystery of popish doctrine be well known, any common man may easily be deceived, and take such for good protestants that are but popish priests. To this end therefore that we may the better discern their guile, I will show wherein they fail in each of their conclusions, and wherein they differ from us. The difference. Touching the first conclusion, they believe indeed all the written word of God, and more than all: for they also believe the books Apocryphal, which antiquity for many hundred years hath excluded from the canon: yea they believe unwritten traditions received (as they say) from Councils, the writings of the Fathers, and the determinations of the Church: making them also of equal credit with the written word of God, given by inspiration of the spirit. Now we for our parts despise not the apocrypha, as namely the books of the Macchabees, Ecclesiasticus and the rest, but we reverence them in all convenient manner, preferring them before any other books of men, in that they have been approved by an universal consent of the Church: yet we think them not meet to be received into the Canon of holy scripture, and therefore not to be believed, but as they are consenting with the written word. And for this our doing we have direction from Athanasius, Origen, Hierome, and the Council of Laodicea. As for unwritten Traditions they come not within the compass of our faith, neither can they: because they come unto us by the hands of men, that may deceive and be deceived. And we hold and believe, that the right Canon of the books of the old and new Testament, contains in it sufficient direction for the Church of God to life everlasting, both for faith an manners. Here then is the point of difference, that they make the object of faith larger than it should be, or can be: and we keep ourselves to the written word; believing nothing to salvation out of it. In the second conclusion, touching salvation by Christ alone, there is a manifest deceit: because they craftily include and couch their own works under the name of Christ. For (say they) works done by men regenerate, are not their own, but Christ's in them; and as they are the works of Christ; they save, & no otherwise. But we for our parts look to be saved only by such works as Christ himself did in his own person: and not by any work at all done by him in us. For all works done, are in the matter of justification & salvation, opposed to the grace of Christ: Rom. 11. 6. Election is of grace not of works: if it be of works, it is no more of grace. Again whereas they teach that we are ●aued by the works of Christ, which he worketh in us, and maketh us to work; it is flat against the word. For Paul saith, We are not saved by such works as God hath ordained that men regenerate should walk in. Eph. 2. 10. And he saith further, that he counted ALL THINGS even after his conversion loss unto him, that he might be found in Christ, not having his own righteousness which is of the law. Phil. 3. 8. Again Heb. 1. 3. Christ washed away our sins by himself: which last words exclude the merit of all works done by Christ within man. Thus indeed the Papists overturn all, that which in word they seem to hold touching their justification and salvation. We confess with them that good works in us are the works of Christ: yet are they not Christ's alone, but ours also, in that they proceed from Christ by the mind and will of man: as water from the fountain by the channel. And look as the channel defiled, defiles the water, that is without defilement in the fountain: even so the mind and will of man defiled by the remnants of sin, defile the works, which as they come from Christ, are undefiled. Hence it is that the works of grace which we do by Christ, or, Christ in us, are defective: and must be severed from Christ in the act of justification, or, salvation. The third conclusion is touching the imputation of Christ's obedience, which some of the most learned among them acknowledge: and the difference between us stands on this manner. They hold that Christ's obedience is imputed only to make satisfaction for sin, and not to justify us before God. We hold & believe that the obedience of Christ is imputed to us, even for our righteousness before God. Paul saith, 1. Cor. 1. 30. Christ is made unto us of God, wisdom, RIGHTEOUSNESS, SANCTIFICATION, and redemption. Hence I reason thus. If Christ be both our sanctification, and our righteousness: then he is not only unto us inherent righteousness, but also righteousness imputed. But he is not only our sanctification (which the Papists themselves expound of inherent or habitual righteousness) but also our righteousness: for thus by Paul are they distinguished. Therefore he is unto us both inherent and imputed righteousness. And very reason teacheth thus much. For in the end of the world at the bar of God's judgement, we must bring some kind of righteousness for our justification, that may stand in the rigour of the law according to which we are to be judged. But our inherent righteousness is imperfect and stained with manifold defects and shall be as long as we live in this world, as experience tells us: and consequently it is not suitable to the justice of the law: and if we go out of ourselves we shall find no righteousness serving for our turns either in men or Angels, that may or can procure our absolution before God and acceptation to life everlasting. We must therefore have recourse to the person of Christ, and his obedience imputed unto us, must serve not only to be a satisfaction to God for all our sins, but also for our perfect justification: in that God is content to accept of it for our righteousness, as if it were inherent in us, or performed by us. Touching the fourth conclusion, they hold it the safest and surest course to put their trust and confidence in the mercy of God alone for their salvation: yet they condescend, that men may also * Bellar. l. 5. ●. 7. de justif. put there confidence in the merit of their own works, and in the merits also of other men, so it be in sobriety. But this doctrine quite mars the conclusion: because by teaching that men are to put confidence in the creature, they overturue all confidence in the Creator. For in the very first commandment, we are taught to make choice of the true God for our God, which thing we do when we give to God our hearts: and we give our hearts to God, when we put our whole confidence in him for the salvation of our souls. Now then to put confidence in men, or, in works, is to make them our Gods. The true and ancient form of making confession was on this manner: I believe in God the Father, In jesus Christ, and In the holy Ghost, without mention making of any confidence in works or creatures: the ancient Church never knew any such confession or confidence. Cyprian De duplici Martyr. saith, He believeth not in god, who putteth not affiance concerning his salvation in God alone. And indeed the Papists themselves when death comes, forsake the confidence of their merits, and fly to the mere mercy of God in Christ. And for a confirmation of this I allege the testimony of one Vlinbergius Lib. de causis cur Evang. p. 436. of Colen, who writeth thus. There was a book found in the vestry of a certain parish of Colen, written in the Dutch tongue in the year of our Lord 1475. which the Priests used in visiting of the sick. And in it these questions be found. c Supposed to be questions of Anselme. Dost thou believe that th●u canst not be saved but by the death of Christ? The sick person answered, Yea. Then it is said unto him, Go too then, while breath remains in thee, put thy confidence in this DEATH ALONE: have affiance in nothing else▪ commit thyself wholly to this death: with it alone cover thyself: dive thyself in every part into this death; in every part pierce thyself with it: enfold thyself in this death. And if the Lord will judge thee, say: Lord, I put the death of our Lord jesus Christ between me and thy judgement, and BY NO OTHER MEANS I contend with thee. And if he shall say unto thee, that thou art a sinner; say, Lord the death of my Lord jesus Christ, I put between thee and my sins. If he shall say unto thee, that thou hast deserved damnation, say: Lord, I oppose the death of our Lord jesus Christ between thee and my evil merits, and I OFFER HIS MERIT FOR THE MERIT WHICH I SHOULD HAVE, AND HAVE NOT. If he shall say, that he is angry with thee, say: Lord, I oppose the death of our Lord jesus Christ between me and thine anger. Here we see, what Papists do, & have done in the time of death. And that which they hold and practise, when they are dying; they should hold & practise every day while they are living. In the last conclusion they teach that we must not only believe in general but also apply unto ourselves the promises of life everlasting. But they differ from us in the very manner of applying. They teach that the promise is to be applied, not by faith assuring us of our own salvation; but only by hope, in likelihood conjectural. We hold that we are bound in duty to apply the promise of life by faith without making doubt thereof, and by hope to continue the certainty after the apprehension made by faith. We do not teach that all and every man living within the precincts of the Church, professing the name of Christ, is certain of his salvation, and that by faith: but that he ought so to be, and must endeavour to attain thereto. And here is a great point in the mystery of iniquity, to be considered: for by this uncertain application of the promise of salvation, and this wavering hope they overturn half the doctrine of the gospel. For it enjoins two things: first to believe the promises thereof to be true in themselves: secondly to believe, & by faith to apply them unto ourselves. And this latter part, without which the former is void of comfort, is quite overturned. The reasons which they allege against our doctrine, I have answered before: now therefore I let them pass. To conclude, though in coloured terms they seem to agree with us in doctrine concerning faith; yet indeed they deny & abolish the substance thereof, namely, the particular & & certain application of Christ crucified and his benefits, unto ourselves. Again they fail in that they cut off the principal duty & office of true saving faith, which is to apprehend and to apply the blessing promised. The XXI. point. Of Repentance. Our consent. Conclus. I. That, repentance is the conversion of a sinner. There is a twofold conversion, passive, and active: passive, is an action of God whereby he converteth man being as yet unconverted. Active is an action whereby man being once turned of God, turns himself: and of this latter must this conclusion be understood. For the first conversion, considering it is a work of God turning us unto himself, is not the repentance whereof the Scripture speaketh so oft, but it is called by the name of regeneration: and repentance, whereby we being first turned of God do turn ourselves, and do good works, is the fruit thereof. Conclus. II. That, repentance stands specially for practise, in contrition of heart, confession of mouth, & satisfaction in work or deed. Touching contrition there be two kinds thereof; Legal, and evangelical. Legal contrition is nothing but a remorse of conscience for sin in regard of the wrath and judgement of God, and it is no grace of God at all; nor any part, or, cause of repentance: but only an occasion thereof, and that by the mercy of God: for of itself, it is the sting of the law and the very entrance into the pit of hell. evangelical contrition is, when a repentant sinner is grieved for his sins, not so much for fear of hell, or, any other punishment; as because he hath offended & displeased so good & merciful a God. This contrition is caused by the ministery of the Gospel, and in the practice of repentance it is always necessary, and goes before as the beginning thereof. Secondly we hold, and maintain that confession is to be made, and that in sundry respects: first to God, both publicly in the congregation, and also privately in our secret and private prayers. Secondly to the Church, when any person hath openly offended the congregation by any crime, and is therefore excommunicate. Thirdly to our private neighbour, when we have upon any occasion offended and wronged him, Mat. 5. 23. If thou bring thy gift to the altar, and there remember'st that thy brother hath aught against thee, go first and be reconciled to him: now reconciliation presupposeth confession. Lastly in all true repentance, we hold and acknowledge there must be satisction made; first to God, and that is when we entreat him in our supplications to acecpt the death and passion of Christ, as a full, perfect, and sufficient satisfaction for all our sins. Secondly it is to be made unto the Church, after excommunication for public offences; and it stands in duties of humiliation that fitly serve to testify the truth of our repentance. Thirdly satisfaction is to be made to our neighbour: because if he be wronged, he must have recompense and restitution made, Luc. 19 8. and there repentance may justly be suspected, where no satisfaction is made, if it lie in our power. Conclus. III. That in repentance we are to bring forth outward fruits worthy amendment of life: for repentance itself is in the heart, and therefore must be testified in all manner of good works; whereof the principal is, to endeavour day by day by God's grace to leave and renounce all and every sin, and in all things to do the will of God. And here let it be remembered, that we are not patrons of licentiousness and enemies of good works. For though we exclude them from the act of our justification and salvation: yet we maintain a profitable and necessary use of them in the life of every Christian man. This use is threefold, in respect of God, of man, of ourselves. Works are to be done in respect of God, that his commandments may be obeyed, 1. joh. 5. 12. that his will may be done, 1. Thess. 4. 3. that we may show ourselves to be obedient children to God our father, 1. Pet. 1. 14. that we may show ourselves thankful for our redemption by Christ, Tit. 2. 14. that we might not grieve the spirit of God, Eph. 4. 30. but walk according to the same, Gal. 5. 22. that God, by our good works may be glorified. Math. 5. 16. that we may be good followers of God. Eph. 5. v. 1. Again, works are to be done in regard of men: that our neighbour may be helped in worldly things, Luc. 6. 38. that he may be won by our example to godliness, 1. Pet. 3. 14. that we may prevent in ourselves the giving of any offence, 1. Cor. 10. 32. that by doing good, we may stop the mouths of our adversaries. Thirdly & lastly, they have use in respect of ourselves: that we may show ourselves to be new creatures, 2. Cor. 5. 17. that we may walk as the children of light, Eph. 5. 8. that we have some assurance of our faith, and of our salvation, 2. Pet. 1. 8, 10. that we may discern dead and counterfeit faith, from true faith. I am. 2. 17. that faith and the gifts of God may be exercised and continued unto the end, 2. Tim. 1. 6. that the punishments of sin both temporal & eternal may be prevented, psal. 89. 32. that the reward may be obtained, which God freely in mercy hath promised to men for their good works. Gal. 6. 9 The difference. We descent not from the Church of Rome in the doctrine of repentance itself: but in the damnable abuses thereof, which are of two sorts, general and special. General are these which concern repentance wholly considered: & they are these. The first is that they place the beginning of repentance partly in themselves, and partly in the holy Ghost, or, in the power of their natural free-will being helped by the holy ghost: whereas Paul indeed ascribes this work, wholly unto God. 2. Tim. 2. 15. Proving if God at any time will give them repentance. And men that are not weak but dead in trespasses and sins, can not do any thing, that may further their conversion, though they be helped never so: no more then dead men in their graves, can rise from thence. The second abuse is, that they take penance, or rather repentance for that public discipline and order of correction that was used against notorious offenders in the open congregation. For the scripture sets down but one repentance, and that common to all men without exception: and to be practised in every part of our lives for the necessary mortification of sin: whereas open ecclesiastical correction pertained not to all and every man within the compass of the Church, but to them alone that gave any open offence. The third abuse is, that they make repentance to be not only a virtue, but also a sacrament: whereas for the space of a thousand years after Christ, and upward, it was not reckoned among the sacraments: yea it seems that Lombard was one of the first that called it a sacrament: and the schoolmen after him disputed of the matter and form of this sacrament: not able any of them certainly to define, what should be the outward element. The fourth abuse is touching the effect and efficacy of repentance, for they make it a meritorious cause of remission of sins and of life everlasting flat against the word of God. Paul saith notably. Rom. 4. 24. We are justified freely by his grace through the redemption which is in Christ jesus whom God hath sent to be a reconciliation by faith in his blood. In these words these forms of speech, redemption in Christ, reconciliation in his blood, by faith, freely by grace, must be observed and considered: for they show plainly that no part of satisfaction or redemption is wrought in us, or, by us: but out of us only in the person of Christ. And therefore we esteem of repentance only as a fruit of faith: & the effect, or, efficacy of it, is to testify remission of our sins, and our reconciliation before God. It will be said that remission of sins and life everlasting are promised to repentance. Ans. It is not to the work of repentance, but to the person which repenteth, and that not for his own merits or work of repentance, but for the merits of Christ, which he applieth to himself by faith. And thus are we to understand the promises of the gospel, in which works are mentioned: presupposing always in them the reconciliation of the person with God, to whom the promise is made. Thus we see wherefore we descent from the Roman Church touching the doctrine of repentance. Special abuses, do concern Contrition, Confession, and Satisfaction. The first abuse concerning contrition is, that they teach it must be sufficient and perfect. They use now to help the matter by a distinction: saying that the sorrow in contrition, must be in the highest degree in respect appretiatiuènon intensiué. of value and estimation, and not in respect of intention. Yet the opinion of qu 2 de paenit ar. 2. & quodlib. 5. ar. 3. Adrian was otherwise, that in true repentance a man should be grieved according to all his endeavour. And the Roman Catechism saith as much, that the sorrow conceived of our sins, must be so cap. de Sacr. paeni●. great, that NONE CAN BE CONCEIVED TO BE GREATER: that we must be contrite in the same manner we love God, and that is with all our heart and strength in a most VEHEMENT SORROW: and that the hatred of sin must be not only the greatest but also MOST VEHEMENT and perfect, so as it may exclude all sloth and slackness. Indeed afterward it follows, that true contrition may be effectual though it be imperfect: but how can this stand, if they will not only commend but also prescribe and avouch, that contrition must be most perfect and vehememt. We therefore only teach, that God requires not so much the measure, as the truth of any grace: and that it is a degree of unfeigned contrition to be grieved, because we cannot be grieved for our sins as we should. The second abuse is, that they ascribe to their contrition the merit of congruity. But this cannot stand with the all-sufficient merit of Christ. And an ancient council saith, God inspires into us first of all the faith and love of himself, NO MERITS GOIN● BEFORE, that we may faithfully require the sacrament of baptism, & after baptism do the things that please him. And we for our parts hold, that God requires contrition at our hands, not to merit remission of sins: but that we may acknowledge our own unworthiness, & be humbled in the sight of God, & distrust all our own merits: & further, that we may make the more account of the benefits of Christ, whereby we are received into the favour of God: lastly, that we might more carefully avoid all sins in time to come, whereby so many pains & terrors of conscience are procured. And we acknowledge no contrition at all to be meritorious, save that of Christ: whereby he was broken for our iniquities. The third abuse is, that they make imperfect contrition or attrition arising of the fear of hell, to be good and profitable: and to it they apply the saying of the Prophet, The fear of God is the beginning of wisdom. But servile fear of itself is the fruit of the law, which is the ministery of death and condemnation: and consequently it is the way to eternal destruction, if God leave men to themselves: and if it turn to the good of any, it is only by accident: because God in mercy makes it to be an occasion going before, of grace to be given: otherwise remorse of conscience for sin is no beginning of repentance, or the restrainment of any sin: but rather is & that properly the beginning of unspeakable horrors of conscience, and everlasting death, unless God show mercy. And yet this fear of punishment, if it be tempered and delayed with other graces & gifts of God in holy men: it is not unprofitable: in whom there is not only a sorrow for punishment, but also and that much more for the offence. And such a kind of fear, or, sorrow is commanded, Malac. 1. 6. If I be a father, where is my fear? if I be a Lord, where is my fear? And Chrysostome saith, that the fear of hell in the heart of a just man, is a strong man armed against thieves and robbers, to drive them from the house. And Ambr. saith, that Martyrs in the time of their sufferings, confirmed themselves against the cruelty of persecutors by setting the fear of hell before their eyeiss. Abuses touching Confession are these. The first is, that they use a form of confession of their sins unto God, uttered in an unknown language, being therefore foolish and ridiculous, withal requiring the aid and intercession of dead men and such as be absent: whereas, there is but one Mediator between God & man the man jesus Christ. The second is, that they in practice make confession of their sins not only to God but to the Saints departed: in that they make prayer to them, in which they ask their intercession for the pardon of their sins: and this is, not only to match them with God in seeing and knowing the heart, but also to give a part of his divine worship unto them. The third and principal abuse is, that they have corrupted Canonical confession by turning it into a private auricular confession: binding all men in conscience by a law made, to confess all their mortal sins, withal circumstances that change the kind of the sin (as far as possibly they can remember) once every year at the least, and that to a priest, unless it be in the case of extreme necessity. But in the word of God there is no warrant for this confession, nor in the writings of Orthodox antiquity for the space of many hundred years after Christ as one of their own side avoucheth. And the commandment of the holy Ghost; confess one for an other, and pray one for an other, Beatus Rhe●anus on Tertullib▪ de paenis. jam. 5. 17. binds as well the priest to make confession unto us, as any of us to the priest. And whereas it is said, Math 3. that many were baptized confessing their sins: and Act. 19 18. Many that believed came and confessed and showed their works, the confession was voluntary and not constrained: it was also general and not particular of all and every sin, with the necessary circumstances thereof. And in this liberty of confession the Church remained 1200. years till the Council of Lateran; in which the law of auricular confession was first enacted: being a notable invention serving to discover the secrets of men, and to enrich that covetous and ambitious See, with the revenues of the world. It was not known to Augustine Confess. lib. 10. c. 3. when he said, What have I to do with men that they should hear my confessions, as though they should heal all my diseases: nor to Chrysostome, when he saith, I do not compel De deinat hom. 5. ●om. 5. thee to confess thy sins to others. And, If thou be ashamed to confess them to any man, Hom. 2. in psal. 50. because thou hast sinned; say them daily in thine own mind. I do not bid thee confess them to thy fellow servant, that he should mock thee: confess them to God that cureth them. The abuse of satisfaction is, that they have turned canonical satisfaction which was made to the congregation by open offenders, into a satisfaction of the justice of God for the temporal punishment of there sins. Behold here a most horrible profanation of the whole Gospel, and specially of the satisfaction of Christ, which of itself without any supply is sufficient every way for the remission both of fault and punishment. But of this point I have spoken before. Hitherto I have handled and proved by induction of sundry particulars, that we are to make a separation from the present church of Rome, in respect of the foundation and substance of true religion. Many more things might be added to this very purpose, but here I conclude this first point: adding only this one caveat, that we make separation from the Roman religion without hatred of the persons that are maintainers of it. Nay we join in affection more with them, than they with us. They die with us not for their religion ( Deut. 13. 5. though they deserve it) but for the treasons which they intent and enterprise: we are ready to do the duties of love unto them enjoined us in the word: we reverence the good gifts of God in many of them; we pray for them, wishing their repentance and eternal salvation. Now I mean to proceed, and to touch briefly other points of doctrine contained in this portion of Scripture, which I have now in hand. In the second place therefore out of this commandment, Go out of her my people, I gather that the true Church of God is and hath been in the present Roman church, as corn in the heap of chaff. Though Popery reigned and overspread the face of the earth for many hundred years; yet in the midst thereof, God reserved a people unto himself, that truly worshipped him: and to this effect the holy Ghost saith that the dragon, which is the devil caused the woman, that is, the Church to fly into the wilderness, where he sought to destroy her but could not, and she still retains a REMNANT OF HER Rev. 12. 17. SEED which keep the commandments of God, and have the testimony of jesus Christ. Now this which I speak of the Church of Rome, cannot be said in like manner of the congregations of Turks and other infidels, that the hidden Church of God is preserved among them: because there is no means of salvation at all: whereas the church of Rome hath the Scriptures, though in a strange language; and baptism for the outward form: which helps God in all ages preserved, that his elect might be gathered out of the midst of Babylon. This serves to stop the mouths of Papists, which demand of us, where our church was fourscore years ago, before the days of Luther: whereby they would insinuate to the world, that our church and religion is green or new: but they are answered out of this very text, that our Church hath ever been since the days of the Apostles, and that in the very midst of the papacy. It hath been always a Church, & did not first begin to be in Luther's time: but only then began to show itself, as having been hid by an universal Apostasy, for many hundred years together. Again we have here occasion to consider the dealing of God with his own Church and people. He will have them for external society to be mixed with their enemies, and that for special purpose; namely, to exercise the humility and patience of his few servants. When Elias saw Idolatry spread over all Israel, he went a part into the wilderness, and in grief desired to die. And David cried out: Woe is me that I am constrained to devil in Mesheck, and to have my habitation in the tents of Kedar, Psal. 120. 5. And just Lot must have his righteous soul vexed with seeing and hea●ing the abominations of Sodom. Thirdly by this commandment we are taught, what opinion to carry of the present Church of Rome. It is often demanded, whether it be a Church or no; and the answer may hence be form on this manner. If by this Church be understood a state or regiment of the people, whereof the Pope is head: and the members are all such as do acknowledge him to be their head, and do believe the doctrine established in the Council of Trent, we take it to be no Church of God. Because Babylon, which I have proved to be the Church of Rome, is here opposed to the Church or people of God: and because we are commanded to come out of it▪ whereas we may not wholly forsake any people till they forsake Christ. Some will happily say, the Church of Rome hath the Scriptures and the Sacrament of baptism. I answer first of all; they have indeed the books of holy Scripture among them: but by the rest of their doctrine they overthrow the true sense thereof in the foundation, as I have proved before. And though they have the outward form of baptism, yet they overturn the inward baptism, which is the substance of all, standing in the justification and sanctification of a sinner. Again I answer, that they have the word and baptism, not for themselves but for the true Church of God among them: like as the lantern holdeth the candle, not for itself but for others. Secondly, it may be and is alleged, that if the Pope be Antichrist, he than sits in the temple, that is, the Church of God, and by this means the Roman Church shall be the true Church. Ans. He sits in the temple of God, but mark further how: AS GOD, that 2. Thess. 2. verse▪ 4. is, not as a member but as a manifest usurper: like as the thief sits in the true man's house. For the popish Church and God's Church are mingled like chaff and corn in one heap: and the Church of Rome may be said to be in the Church of God: and the church of God in the church of Rome; as we say the wheat is among the chaff, and the chaff in the wheat. Again he is said to sit in the temple of God; because the Roman Church, though falsely, takes unto itself the title of the true Catholic church. Some go about to delay and qualify the matter, by comparing this Church to a man lying sick full of sores, having also his throat cut, yet so as body and soul are joined together, and life is remaining still. But all things well considered, it is rather like a dead carcase, and is void of all spiritual life; as the popish errors in the foundation do manifest. Indeed a known harlot may afterward remain a wife and be so termed: yet after the bill of divorcement is given, she ceaseth to be a wife, though she can show her marriage ring: now the church hath received the bill of her divorcement in the written word, namely 2. Thess. 2. and Rev. 13. 11, 12, etc. Furthermore in this commandment we may see a lively portraiture of the state of all mankind. Here we see two sorts of men: some are pertaining to Babylon, a people running on to their destruction: some again are a people of God severed from Babylon, and reserved to life everlasting. If any ask the cause of this distinction; I answer, it is the very will of God vouchsafing mercy to some, and forsaking others by withdrawing his mercy from them, for the better declaration of his justice. Thus saith the Lord, Rom. 11. 4. I HAVE RESERVED seven thousand that never bowed the knee to Baal: and the prophet Isai saith, Unless the Lord had reserved arennant, we had been as Sodom and Gomorrha. By this distinction we are taught, above all things to seek to be of the number of God's people, and to labour for assurance of this in our own consciences. For if all should be saved, less care would suffice: but this mercy is not common to all: and therefore the more to be thought upon. Lastly, here I note the special care that God hath over his own children. He first giveth them warning to departed, before he begin to execute his judgement upon his enemies, with whom they live; that they might not be partakers of their sins or punishments. Thus, before God would punish jerusalem, an angel is sent to mark them in the Ex●●h. 9 forehead that mourned for the abominations of the people. And in the destruction of the first born of Egypt, the angel passed over the houses of the jews, that had their posts sprin kled with the blood of the paschal lamb: and this passing over betokeneth safety & preservation in the common destruction to those that have their hearts sprinkled with the blood of Christ. This blessing of protection should move us all, to become true & hearty servants of God. Men usually become members of those societies and corporations, where they may enjoy many freedoms & privileges. Well, behold; in the society of the Saints of God, which is the true church, there is the freedom from danger in all common destructions, & from eternal vengeance at the last day. When Hester had procured safety for the jews, & liberty to revenge themselves upon their enemies: it is said, that many of the people of the land became jews. Even so, considering Christ hath procured freedom from hell, death, and damnation for all that believe in him; we should labour above all things to become new creatures, joining ourselves always to the true Church of God. Hitherto I have spoken of the commandment: now followeth the reason thereof drawn from the end, that they be not partakers of her sins: and that they receive not of her plagues. Here I might stand long to show what be the sins of the Church of Rome: but I will only name the principal. The first sin is Atheism: and that I prove on this manner. Atheism is twofold, open, coloured. Open Atheism is, when men both in word and deed deny God and his Word. Coloured Atheism is not so manifest: and it hath two degrees. The first is, when men acknowledge God the creator and governor of heaven and earth, and yet deny the father, son, and holy ghost. Thus the Ephesians before they received the gospel, Eph. 2. 12. are said to be without God whom in their natural judgement they acknowledged: because they denied Christ, and consequently worshipped an Idol of their own brain, in that they worshipped God out of Christ. And in this respect though the Samaritans worshipped the God of Abraham, yet our Saviour Christ saith, they worshipped joh. 5. 46. they knew not what. And the Psalmist Psal. 96. 3. saith of all the Gentiles that their Gods are Idols. In this degree of Atheism are placed Turks and jews at this day: the Antitrinitaries, and Arians, and all that conceive and worship God out of the trinity. The second degree is, when men do rightly acknowledge the unity of the god head in the Trinity of persons: yet so, as by other necessary consequents partly of their doctrine, and partly of the service of God: they overturn that which they have well maintained. And thus I say, that the very religion of the church of Rome is a kind of Atheism. For whereas it makes the merit of the works of men to concur with the grace of God, it overthrows the grace of God. Rom. 11. In word, they acknowledge the infinite justice and mercy of God: but by consequent both are denied. How can that be infinite justice, which may any way be appeased by human satisfactions? And how shall God's mercy be infinite, when we by our own satisfactions must add a supply to the satisfaction 1. joh. 2. 23. of Christ? Again, He that hath not the Son, hath not the Father: and he that hath neither Father nor Son, denies God. Now the present Roman religion hath not the Son, that is, jesus Christ, God and man, the Mediator of mankind: but hath transformed him into a Feigned Christ. And I show it thus. For one jesus Christ, in all things like unto us in his Humanity, sin only excepted; they have framed a Christ, to whom they ascribed two kinds of existing: one natural, whereby he is visible, touchable, and circumscribed in heaven: the other not only above, but also against nature; by which, he is substantially according to his flesh in the hands of every priest, in every host, and in the mouth of every communicant, invisible, untouchable, uncircumscribed. And thus in effect they abolish his manhood. Yea they disgrade him of his offices. For one jesus Christ, the only king, lawgiver, and head of the Church; they join unto him the Pope not only as a Vicar but also as a Fellow: in that they give unto him power to make laws binding conscience, to resolve and determine unfallibly the sense of holy scripture, properly to pardon sin both in respect of fault and temporal punishment, to have authority over the whole earth and a part of hell: to depose kings, to whom under Christ every soul is to be subject, to absolve subjects from the oath of allegiance, etc. For one jesus Christ the only real priest of the new Testament, they join many secondary priests unto him, which offer Christ daily in the mass for the sins of the quick and the dead. For one jesus Christ the all-sufficient Mediator of intercession, they have added many fellows unto him to make request for us, namely as many Saints as be in the Pope's Calendar. Lastly for the only merits of Christ, in whom alone the Father is well pleased, they have devised a Treasury of the Church containing beside the merits of Christ, the overplus of the merits of saints to be dispensed to men, at the discretion of the Pope. And thus we see, that Christ, and consequently God himself to be worshipped in Christ, is transformed into a fantasy or Idol of man's conceit. Again there is always a proportion between the worship of God, and our persuasion of him: and men in giving unto God any worship, have respect to his nature, that both may be suitable, and he well pleased. Let us then see what manner of worship the Roman religion affordeth. It is for the greatest part mere will-worship, without any allowance or commandment from God, as Durande in his Rationale in effect acknowledgeth. It is a carnal service standing of innumerable bodily rises and ceremonies, borrowed partly from the jews, and partly from the heathen: it is divided between God and some of his creatures; in that they are worshipped both with one kind of worship: let them paint it as they can. Thus then, if by their manner of worshipping God, we may judge how they conceive of him, as we may: they have plainly turned the true God into a fantasy of their own. For God is no otherwise to be conceived them he hath revealed himself in his creatures & word, & specially in Christ: who is the engraven image of the person of the father. The second sin is Idolatry: and that as gros●e as was ever among the heathen. And it is to be seen in two things. First that they worship the Saints with religious worship, which without exception is proper to God. Yea they transform some of them into detestable idols, making them in truth mediators of redemption, specially the virgin Marie, whom they call a Lady, a goddess, a queen whom Bellar. lib. 1. de sanct. c. 16. Missali & Br●uiari● refor. Christ her son obeyeth in heaven a mediatresse: or life, hope, the medicine of the diseased: and they pray unto her thus: Prepare thou glory for us: defend us from our enemies, and in the hour of death receive us, lose the bon●s of the guilty, bring light to the blind, drive away all devils—. ●HEW THYSELF TO BE A MOTHER, let him receive the prayers. Again their idolatry is manifest, in that they worship God in, at, before images: having no commandment so to do, but the contrary. They allege that they use and worship images only in a remembrance of God. But this is all one, as if an unchaste wife should receive many lovers in to her house in the absence of her husband: and being reproved, should answer: that they were the friends of her husband, and that she kept them only in remembrance of him. Thirdly, their Idolatry exceeds the Idolatry of the heathen, in that they worship a Breadengod, or, Christ in and under the forms of bread and wine. And if Christ according to his humanity be absent from the earth, as I have proved, the popish Host is as abominable an Idol as ever was. The third sin is the maintenance of adultery. And that is manifest: first of all, in the Toleration of the Stews flat against the commandment of God. Deut. 23. 17. There shall be no whore of the daughters of Israel: neither shall there be a whore keeper of the sons of Israel. And this toleration is an occasion of uncleanness to many young men and women, that otherwise would abstain from all such kind of filthiness. And what an abomination is this, when brother and brother, father and son, nephew and uncle, shall come to one and the same harlot, one before or after the other. Secondly, their Law beyond the fourth degree allows the marriage of any persons: Greg cap. 9 de co●sang. and by this means, they sometime allow incest. For in the unequal collateral line, the person next the common stock is a father or mother to the brothers or sister's posterity, as for example. john 1 Nicholas Anne 2 Thomas 3 Lewes 4 Roger 5 Anthony 6 james Here Anne and Nicholas are brother and sister, and Anne is distant from james six degrees, he being her niece a far of●: and the marriage between them is allowed by the church of Rome, they not being within the compass of four degrees: which nevertheless is against the law of nature. For Anne being the sister of Nicholas, is in stead of a mother to all that are begotten of Nicholas, even to james and james posterity. Yet thus much I grant, that the daughter of Anne may lawfully marry james or Anthony, the case being altered: because they are not one to an other as parents and children. The fourth sin is Magic, sorcery, or witchcraft, in the consecration of the host in which they make their Breaden-god: in exorcisms over holy bread, holy water & salt; in the casting out or driving away of devils, Molan. tract. 2. c. 4. con. 3. by the sign of the cross, by solemn conjurations, by holy water, by the ringing of bells, by lighting tapers, by relics, and such like. For these things have not their supposed force, either by creation, or by any institution of God in his holy word: and therefore if any thing be done by them, it is from the secret operation of the devil himself. The fift sin is, that in their doctrine they maintain perjury: because they teach with one consent, that a Papist examined may answer Molan. tract. 2. c. 7 con. 1 prop 6 idem communiter ●mnes. doubtfully against the direct intention of the examiner: framing an other meaning unto himself in the ambiguity of his words. As for example, when a man is asked, whether he said or heard Mass in such a place: though he did, they affirm, he may say, No; and swear unto it: because he was not there, to reveal it to the examiner: whereas in the very law of nature; he that takes an oath, should swear according to the intention of him that hath power to minister an oath: & that in truth, justice, judgement. Let them clear their doctrine from all defence of perjury, if they can. The sixth sin is, that they reverse many of God's commandments, making that no sin which Gods word makes a sin. Thus they teach, that if any man steal some little thing, Molan tract. 2. c. 9 con. 1. prop. 5. idem caetera. that is thought not to cause any notable hurt, it is no mortal sin: that, the officious lie, and the lie made in sport are venial sins: that, to pray for our enemies in particular is no precept but a counsel: and that none is bound to salute his enemy in the way of friendship, flat against the rule of Christ, Matth. 5. 47. where the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, signifieth all manner of duty and courtesy: that, rash judgement, though consent come thereto is regularly but a venial sin: that, it is lawful other while to feign holiness that, the painting of the face is ordinarily but a venial sin: that, it is not lawful to forbid begging: whereas the Lord forbade there should be any Deut. 15. beggar in Israel. Again, they teach that Greg. de V●l. tom. 3. dis. 1. 9 13. & Caietane. men in their choler, when they are chiding, and swear, wounds and blood, are not indeed blasphemers. Lastly their writers use manifest lying, to justify their doctrine. They plead falsely that all antiquity is on their side; whereas it is as much against them as for them: and as much for us as them. Again their manner hath been and is still to prove their opinions by forged and counterfeit writings of men, some whereof I will name. 1 Saint james Liturgy. 2 The Canons of the Apostles. 3 The books of Dionysius Ariopagita, and namely De Higher archia Ecclesiastica. 4 The Decret all Epistles of the Popes. 5 Pope Clement's works. 6 Some of the Epistles of Ignatius. 7 Origens' book of repentance. His homilies in diversos sanctos. Commentaries on job: and book of Lamentation. 8 Chrysostom's Liturgy. 9 Basils' liturgy and his Ascetica. 10 Augustine's book de 8. quest. Dul●itij. A book of true and false repentance. Ser.▪ de festo commemorationis animarum. book de dogm. Ecclesiast. Sermon ad fratres in Heremo. Sermon of Peter's chair. Book of visiting the sick, etc. 11 justin Martyrs Questions and Answ. 12 Athanasius epistle to Pope Foelix. 13 Bernard's sermons of the Lords Supper. 14 Hieromes epistle ad Demetriadem savouring of Pelagius. 15 Tertullian de Monogamia. 16 Cyprian de Chrismate & de ablutione pe●um. 17 In the Council of Sardica the 3, 4, and 5, canons are forged. 18 In the Council of Nice all save 20. are forged. 19 Certain Roman Counsels under Sylvester are forged. For he was at this time dead, and therefore could not confirm them. Sozom. lib. 2. 20 To the sixth canon of the Council of Nice are patched these words, That the Roman Church hath always had the supremacy. 21 Lastly, I will not omit that Pope Sozimus, Bonifacius, ana Coelestinus falsified the canons of the council of Nice, to prove appeals from all places to Rome; so as the Bishops of Africa were forced to send for the true copies of the said Council from Constantinople and the Churches of Greece. I might here rehearse many other sins which with the former call for vengeance upon the Roman Church, but it shall suffice to have named a few of the principal. Now in this reason, our Saviour Christ prescribes another main duty to his own people: and that is, to be careful to eschew all the sins of the Church of Rome, that they may withal escape her deserved plagues and punishments. And from this prescribed duty I observe two things. The first is, that every good servant of God, must carefully avoid contracts of marriage with professed Papists, that is▪ with such as hold the Pope for their head, and believe the doctrine of the Council of Trent. For in such matches men hardly keep faith and good conscience, and hardly avoid communication with the sins of the Roman Church. A further ground of this doctrine I thus propound. In God's word there is mentioned a double league between man and man, country and country. The first is the league of concord, when one kingdom binds itself to live in peace with an other, for the maintenance of traffic without disturbance: and this kind of league may stand between God's church and the enemies thereof. The second is the league of amity: which is when men, people, or countries bind themselves to defend each other in all causes: and to make the wars of the one, the wars of the other: and this league may not be made with those that be enemies of God. jehosaphat, otherwise a good king, made this kind of league with Ahab: and is therefore reproved by the prophet, saying, wouldst thou help the wicked and love them that hate the Lord? 2. Chron. 19 2. Now the marriages of protestants with Papists are private leagues of amity, between person and person: and therefore not to be allowed. Again, Malac. cap. 2. vers. 11. the Lord saith, judah hath defiled the holiness of the Lord which he loved, and hath married the daughters of a strange god: where is flatly condemned marriages made with the people of a false god: now the Papists by the consequents of their doctrine and religion, turn the true jehovah into an idol of their own brain, as I have showed: and the true Christ revealed in the written word into a feigned Christ made of bread. Yet if such a marriage be once made and finished it may not be dissolved. For such parties sin not simply in that they marry, but because they marry not in the Lord, being of divers religions. The fault is not in the substance of marriage but in the manner of making it: and for this cause, the Apostle commands the believing party, not to forsake or refuse the unbelieving party, being a very infidel (which no papist is) if he or she will abide. 1. Cor. 7. 13. The second thing is, that every servant of God must take heed how he travels into such countries where popish religion is established, lest he partakes in the sins and punishments thereof. Indeed to go upon embassage to any place, or to travel for this end, that we may perform the necessary duties for our special or general callings, is not unlawful: but to travel out of the precincts of the church only for pleasures sake and to see strange fashions, hath no warrant. And hence it is, that many men which go forth in good order well minded, come home with crazed consciences. The best traveller of all is he, that living at home or abroad, can go out of himself, and departed from his own sins & corruptions by true repentance. FINIS. An advertisement to all favourers of the Roman religion, showing that the said religion is against the Catholic principles and grounds of the Catechism. GReat is the number of them that embrace the religion of the present church of Rome, being deceived by the glorious titles of Universality, Antiquity, Succession. And no doubt, though sun be wilfully blinded, yet many devoted this way, never saw any other truth. Now of them and the rest I desire this favour, that they will but way and ponder with themselves this one thing, which I will now offer to their considerations, and that is, That the Roman religion now established by the council of Trent, is in the principal points thereof, against the very grounds of the Catechism, that have been agreed upon ever since the days of the Apostles, by all Churches. These grounds are four: the first is the Apostles Creed: the second is the decalogue or ten commandments: the third is the form of prayer called the Lords prayer: the fourth is the Institution of the two Sacraments baptism and the Lords supper. 1. Cor. 11. 23. That I may in some order manifest this which I say, I will begin with the Symbol or Creed. And first of all it must be considered, that some of the principal doctrines believed in the Church of Rome are, that the Pope or Bishop of Rome is the vicar of Christ, & the head of the Catholic church: that there is a fire of purgatory after this life: that images of God and Saints are to be placed in Churches and worshipped: that prayer is to be made to Saints departed and their intercession to be required: that there is a propitiatory sacrifice daily offered in the mass for the sins of the quick and the dead. These points are of that moment, that without them the Roman religion cannot stand: & in the council of Trent the curse Anathema is pronounced upon all such as deny these or any of them. And yet mark: the Apostles creed which hath been thought to contain all necessary points in religion to be believed: and hath therefore been called the Key and rule of faith: this creed I say, hath not any of these points: nor the Expositions made thereof by the ancient fathers, nor any other creed or confession of faith made by any council or Church for the space of many hundred years. This a plain proof to any indifferent man, that these be new articles of faith never known in the Apostolic Church: and that the fathers and councils could not find any such articles of faith in the books of the old and new testament. Answer is made: that all these points of doctrine are believed under the articles, I believe the Catholic Church: the meaning whereof, they will have to be this, I believe all things which the catholic Church holdeth and teacheth to be believed. If this be as they say, we must needs believe in the Church: that is, put our confidence in the Church, for the manifestation and the certainty of all doctrines necessary to salvation: and thus the eternal truth of God the Creator, shall depend on the determination of the creature; and the written word of God in this respect is made unsufficient; as though it had not plainly revealed all points of doctrine, pertaining to salvation. And the ancient Churches have been far overseen, that did not propound the former points to be believed as articles of faith, but left them to these latter times. 2. In this Creed, to believe in God, and to believe the church, are distinguished. To believe in, is pertaining to the Creator: to believe, to the creature: as Ruffinus hath noted, Ruff. in Sym. when he saith, that by this proposition in, the Creator is distinguished from the creature, and things pertaining to God from things pertaining to men. And Augustine saith, It must be known that we must believe Ser. 131. de tempore. the Church, & NOT BELIEVE IN THE CHURCH: because the church is not God, but the house of God Hence it follows, that we must not believe in the Saints, nor put our confidence Rhem. Test. on Rom. 10. 14. Euseb. Emiss. hom. 2.ae Symb. in our works, as the learned Papists teach. Therefore Eusebius saith, We ought of right to believe Peter and Paul, but to believe in Peter & Paul, that is, to give to the servants the honour of the Lord, we ought not. And Cyprian saith, He doth not believe in God which doth not place in him alone the trust of his whole felicity. 3. The article, conceived by the holy ghost, Cypr. de dup▪ Martyr. is overturned by the transubstantiation of bread and wine in the mass, into the body and blood of Christ. For here we are taught to confess the true and perpetual incarnation of Christ, beginning in his conception, and never ending afterward: and we acknowledge the truth of his manhood, and that his body hath the essential properties of a true body, standing of flesh and bone: having quantity, figure, dimensions, namely length, breadth, thickness: having part out of part, as head out of feet, and feet out of head, being also circumscribed, visible, touchable: in a word, it hath all things in it, which by order of creation, belong to a body. It will be said, that the body of Christ may remain a true body and yet be altered in respect of some qualities, as namely circumscription. But I say again, that local circumscription can no way be severed from a body, it remaining a body. For to be circumscribed in place, is an essential property of every quantity: and quantity is the common essence of every body. And therefore a body in respect of his quantity must needs be circumscribed in one place. This was the judgement of Leo, when he said. The body of Christ is Epist. 70. by no means out of the truth of our body. And Augustine, when he said: ONLY God Tract 31. in joh. in Christ so comes, that he doth not departed; so returns, that he doth not leave us: but man according to body is in place, and goes out of the same place, and when he shall come unto an other place, HE IS NOT IN THAT PLACE WHENCE HE COMES. To help the matter, they use to distinguish thus. Christ's body in respect of the c t●talitate essentia, non t●lalitate quantitatis. whole essence thereof may be in many places; but not in respect of the whole quantity, whereby it is only in one place. But as I have said, they speak contraries: for quantity (by all learning) is the essence of a body, without which a body can not be. 4 In the Creed we confess that Christ is ascended into heaven, and there after his ascension sits at the right hand of his Father, and that according to his manhood. Hence I conclude, that Christ's body is not really and locally in the Sacrament, and in every Host, which the priest consecrateth. This argument was good when Vigilius against Lib. 4. Eutyches said, When it (the flesh) was on earth, it was not in heaven: and because it is now in heaven, it is not on earth: and he adds afterward that this is the Catholic faith & confession. And it was good when Fulgenti●s ad Thr●● said, According to his human substance he was absent from earth, when he was in heaven, and he left the earth, when he ascended into heaven. And, The same in separable Christ, according to his whole manhood LEAVING THE EARTH, locally ascended into heaven, and sits at the right hand, and according to the same whole manhood, he is to come to judgement. And it was good, when Cyril said, No man doubts but that when he ascended into heaven, though he be always present by the power of his spirit, HE WAS ABSENT IN Cyril. lib. 9 in job. RESPECT OF THE PRESENCE O● HIS FLESH. And it was good, when Augustine said, According to the flesh, which the Word assumed, he ascended into heaven, HE IS NOT HERE, there he sits at the right hand of the father: and he is here according to the presence of his majesty. And, He went as he was man, and he abode as he was God: he went by that whereby he was in one place: he abode by that whereby he was every where. 5 Again, in that we believe the Catholic church, it follows that the Catholic church is invisible: because things seen are not believed▪ And the answer commonly used, that we believe the holiness of the Church, will not serve the turn. For the words are plain, and in them we make confession that we believe not only the holiness of the church, but also the church itself. 6 Lastly the articles, Remission of sins, Resurrection of the body, and Life everlasting, contain a confession of special faith. For the meaning of them is thus much: I believe the remission of mine own sins, and the resurrection of mine own body to life everlasting: and that by the judgement of learned Antiquity. Augustine saith, If thou Symb ad Catech. lib. 4. c. 7. & lib. 2. cap. 10. also believe that thou shalt rise again and ascend into heaven (because thou art sure of so great a patron) thou art certain of so great a gift. And, Make not Christ less, who brings thee to the kingdom of heaven, for remission of sins. Without this faith, if any come to baptism, he shuts the gate of mercy against himself. And, Whosoever faithfully believeth, and holds this profession of his faith (in which all his sins are forgiven him) let him prepare his will to the will of God, Serm. 115. de Temp. and not fear his passage by death. And, The whole Sacrament of baptism stands in this, that we believe the resurrection of the body and remission of sins to be given us of God. And, He gave these keys to the Church—, that whosoever in his Church, should not believe de Doctr. Christ. l. 1▪ cap. 18. his sins to be forgiven, they should not be forgiven unto him: and whosoever believed▪ and turned from them abiding in the lap of the said Church, at length shallbe healed by faith and amendment of life. And, That Serm. 123. de Temp. which thou hast heard to be fulfilled in the glorious resurrection of Christ, believe that the very same shall be fulfilled in thee, in the last judgement and the resurrection of thy flesh, shall restore thee for all eternity. For unless thou shalt believe that thou art to be repaired by death, thou canst not come to the reward of life eternal. And in ancient time the article of the resurrection hath been rehearsed Ruffin. in Symb. August. de Symb lib. 1. c. 6. ad Catechu▪ & En●●i. c. 44. on this manner, The resurrection of THIS FLESH: and the last applied unto it, TO EVERLASTING LIFE. Hence then two main opinions of the church of Rome are quite overthrown, one that we cannot by special faith be certain of the remission of our sins, and the salvation of our souls: the other, that a man truly justified may fall away and be damned. Now this cannot be, if the practice of the ancient Church be good, which hath taught us to believe everlasting life jointly without remission of sins. To come unto the decalogue, first of all it is a rule in expounding the several commandments, that where any vice is forbidden, there the contrary virtue is commanded, and all virtues of the same kind, with all their causes, occasions, furtherances. This rule is granted of all: and hence it follows, that counsels of perfection, if they have in them any furtherance of virtue, are enjoined in and by the law, and therefore prescribe no state of perfection beyond the scope of the law. Secondly the commandment, Thou shalt not make to thyself any graven image, etc. hath two several parts. The first forbids the making of carved or graven images: the second forbids the adoration of them. Now the first part is notably expounded by Moses, Deutr. 4. 16. Take good heed unto yourselves, that ye corrupt not yourselves and make you a graven image or representation of any figure in the likeness of male or female. Mark the reason of this prohibition in the same place: for (saith he) ye saw no image in the day the Lord spoke unto you in Horeb. and v. 15. Ye heard the voice of the words but saw no similitude save a voice. Now the reason being understood of the image of God himself: the prohibition must needs be so understood. Again there is no question; that God directs his commandment against a sin in speculation, but against some common and wicked practice of the jews, and that was to represent God himself in likenesses and bodily forms. Esai 40. 18. And that was also the practice of the Gentiles, that were far more gross in this kind than the jews. Rom. 1. 23. This then is plain to any indifferent man, that the first part of the commandment forbids the making of graven images or likenesses of the true jehovah: & thus the Roman Catechism understands the words. As for the second part, it must be understood according to the meaning of the first: and therefore it forbids us, to bow down to any image of God. Hence than it follows, that to worship God or Saints in, or, at images, & to worship images with religious worship is abominable idolatry. And common reason might teach us thus much. For they that adore and worship the true God in images, do bind the presence of God, his operation, grace, and his hearing of us, to certain things, places, signs, to which he hath not bound himself, either by commandment or promise: and that is, otherwise to worship God, and to seek for his blessings, than he hath commanded himself to be worshipped, or promised to hear us. Upon this ground, is plainly overthrown the excuse which they make, that they worship not images but God and Saints in images: for neither God nor the Saints do acknowledge this kind of honour, but they abhor it. Whence it follows necessarily, that they worship nothing beside the image, or, the devise of their own brain, in which they feign to themselves such a God as will be worshipped, and receive our prayers at images. It will be said, that the Papists do no otherwise tie the worship and invocation of God to images, than God tied himself to the sanctuary and the temple of Solomon. And I say again, it was the will of God that he would show his presence, and be worshipped at the Sanctuary, and the jews had the warrant of God's word for it: but we have no like warrant, either by promise or commandment to tie God's presence to an image or crucifix. Again, reason yet further may discover their idolatry. They, which worship they know not what, worship an idol: but the Papists worship they know not what: I prove it thus. To the consecration of the host, there is required the intention of the priest, at the lest virtually, as they say, & if this be true, it follows that none of them can come to the Mass, or pray in faith, but he must always doubt of that which is lifted up by the hands of the priest in the mass: whether it be bread or the body and blood of Christ. For none can have any certainty of the intention of the priest in consecrating this bread and this wine: but rather may have a just occasion of doubting by reason of the common ignorance and looseness of life in such persons. Thirdly the commandment touching the Sabbath, gives a liberty to work six days in the ordinary affairs of our callings: and this liberty cannot be repealed by any creature. The Church of Rome therefore erreth, in that it prescribeth set and ordinary festival days, not only to God but also to Saints: enjoining them as straightly and with as much solemnity to be observed, as the Sabbath of the Lord. Fourthly, the third commandment, or (as they say) the fourth, enjoins children to obey father and mother in all things, specially in matters of moment, as in their marriage and choice of their callings: and that even to death: and yet the Church of Rome against the intent of this commandment, allows that clandestine marriages, and the vow of religion shall be in force, though they be without, and against the consent of wise and careful parents. Fiftly, the last commandment of lust, forbids the first motions to sin, that are before consent. I prove it thus. Lusting is forbidden in the former commandments as well as in the last, yea lusting that is joined with consent: as in the commandment, thou shalt not commit adultery, is forbidden lusting after our neighbour's wife; and in the next, lusting after our neighbour's goods, etc. Now if the last commandment also forbidden no more but lust with consent, it is confounded with the rest: and by this means there shall not be ten distinct words, or, commandments: which to say is absurd: it remains therefore that the lust here forbidden goes before consent. Again, the Philosophers knew that lust with consent was evil, even by the light of nature: but Paul a learned Pharisee and therefore more than a philosopher, knew not Lust to be sin, that is forbidden in this commandment, Rom. 7. Lust therefore that is forbidden here, is without consent. Wicked then is the doctrine of the Roman Church teaching, that in every mortal sin is required an act commanded Molan ●●act. c. 27. con. 4. of the will: and hence they say many thoughts against faith and unclean imaginations are no sins. 6 Lastly, the words of the second commandment. And show mercy to thousands on them that love me and keep my commandments, overthrows all human merits. For if the reward be given of mercy to them that keep the law, it is not given for the merit of the work done. To come to the third part of the Catechism: the Lords prayer is a most absolute and perfect form of prayer. For which cause it was called of Tertullian, the breviary of the Gospel: and Caelestinus saith, the law of praying is the law of believing and the la of working. Now in this prayer we are taught to direct our prayers to God alone, Our father, etc.▪ and that only in the name and mediation of Christ. For God is our father only by Christ. It is needles therefore, to use any invocation of Saints, or to make them our Mediators of intercession unto God: and it is sufficient, if we pray only unto God in the name of Christ alone. 2. In the fourth petition, we say thus, Give us our daily bread. In which words, we acknowledge that every morsel of bread is the mere gift of God. What madness then is it, for us to think that we should merit the kingdom of heaven by works, that can not merit so much as bread? 3 In the next petition, Forgive us our debts, four opinions of the Roman religion are directly overthrown, The first is concerning human Satisfactions. For the child of God is here after his conversion taught, to humble himself day by day, and to pray for the pardon of his daily sins: now to make satisfaction and to sue for pardon be contrary. The second opinion here overthrown, is touching merits. For we do acknowledge ourselves to be debtor unto God, yea bankrupts: and that beside the main sum of many thousand talents, we daily increase the debt: therefore we can not possiby merit any of the blessings of God. It is mere madness to think, that they which cannot pay their debts, but rather increase them day by day, should deserve or purchase any of the goods of the creditors, or the pardon of their debts: & if any favour be showed them, it comes of merre goodwill without the least desert. In a word, this must be thought upon, that, if all we can do, will not keep us from increasing the main sum of our debt, much less shall we be able by any merit to diminnish the same. By good right therefore do all the servants of God cast down themselves and pray, Forgive us our debts. The 3. opinion is that punishment may be retained, the fault being wholly remitted: but this cannot stand, for here sin is called our debt: because by nature we own unto God obedience, & for the defect of this payment, we further own unto him the forfiture of punishment. Sin then is called our debt in respect of the punishment. And therefore when we pray for the pardon of sin, we require the pardon not only of fault, but of the whole punishment. And when a debt is pardoned, it is absurd to think that the least payment should remain. The fourth opinion is that a man in this life may fulfil the law, whereas in this place every servant of God is taught to ask a daily pardon for the breach of the law. Answer is made, that our daily sins are venial and not against the law but beside the law. But this which they say is against the petition: for a debt that comes by forfiture is against the bond or obligation. Now every sin is a debt causing the forfiture of punishment: and therefore is not beside, but directly against the law. 4. In this clause, as we forgive our debtor, it is taken for granted, that we may certainly know that we are in love and charity with me●▪ when w● make reconciliation: why then may not we know certainly that we repent and believe and are reconciled to God: which all Roman Catholics deny. 5. In the last words, and lead us not into temptation, we pray not, that God should free us from temptation (for it is other whiles good to be tempted, Psal. 26. 1.) But that we be not left to the malice of Satan, and held captive of the temptation, for here to be bed into temptation, and to be delivered, are opposed. Now hence I gather, that he which is the child of God truly justified and sanctied, shall never fall wholly and finally from the grace of God: and I conclude on this manner. That which we ask according to the will of God, shall be granted, 1. joh. 5. but this the child of God asketh, that he might never be wholly forsaken of his father, and left captive in temptation. This therefore shall be granted. 6 This clause Amen, signifies a special faith touching all the former petitions, that they shall be granted: and therefore a special faith concerning remission of sins: which the Roman Church denieth. To come to the last place, to the Institution of the sacrament of the Lords Supper. 1. Cor. 11. v, 23. In which first of all the Real presence is by many circumstances overthrown. Out of the words, he took and broke, it is plain that, that which Christ took was not his body: because he cannot be said with his own hands to have taken, held, and broken himself, but the very bread. Again Christ said not: under the form of bread, or in bread: but This, that is, bread is my body. 3. Bread was not given for us but only the body Christ: and in the first institution, the body of Christ was not then really given to death. 4. The cup, is the new testament by a figure: why may not the bread be the body of Christ by a figure also? 5. Christ did eat the supper, but not himself. 6. We are bidden to do it, till he come: Christ then is not bodily present. 7. Christ bids the bread to be eaten in a remembrance of him: but signs of remembrance are of things absent. 8. If the Popish real presence be granted, than the body & blood of Christ are either severed or joined together. If severed, than Christ is still crucified If joined together, than the bread is both the body & blood of Christ: whereas the institution saith the bread is the body, and the wine is the blood. 2 Again, here is condemned the administration of the sacrament under one only kind. For the commandment of Christ is, drink ye all of this, Math, 26. 27. And this commandment is rehearsed to the Church of Corinth in these words, do this as oft as ye drink it in remembrance of me. v. 25. And no power can rehearse this commandment: because it was established by the sovereign head of the Church. These few lines, as also the former treatise, I offer to the view and reeding of them, that favour the Roman religion: willing them with patience to consider this one thing, that their religion, if it were Catholic and Apostolic (as they pretend) it could not be contrary so much as in one point, to the grounds of all Catechisms, that have been used in all Churches, confessing the name of Christ, ever since the Apostles days. And whereas it crosseth the said grounds in sundry points of doctrine, (as I have proved) it is a plain argument that the present Roman religion, is degenerate. I writ not this despising or hating their people for their religion, but wishing unfeignedly their conversion in this world, and their salvation in the world to come. FINIS. To the Reader. Pag. 235. l. 20. I say, that Christ obaied the law for himself, not because he did by his obedience merit his own glory: but because he was to be a perfect and pure high priest, not only in nature but also in life: and as he was a creature, he was to be conformable to the law. Faults to be amended thus. Pag. 1. l. 1. for 3. read 4. p. 9 l. 2. read Apostolic. p. 19 l. 17. read formeth. and l. 23. read endeavour. p. 39 l. last, read, too. p. 48. l. 18. read, or. p. 55. l. 2. read, holy. p. 126. l. 2. read, be. p. 138. l. 13. read, pertaining. p. 142. l. 23. read, matters. p. 161. l. 5. read, contain. and l. last, read, chastity. p. 168. l. 5. read, persecution. p. 187. l. 7. read, men. p. 192. l. last. read, cannot. p. 222. l. 5. read, right. p. 260. l. 9 read, particular. p. 265. l. 14. read, I think. p. 284. l. 2. read, deputies. Faults escaped in the places of Scripture. Pag. 1. v. 3. pro 4. p. 4. c. 18. pro 17. p. 6. c. 18. pro 17. p. 7. v. 18. pro 8. p. 19 v. 5. pro 7. p. 22. v 2. pro 1. p. 43. v. 20. pro 28, & 29. p. 50. v. 21. pro 22. p. 52. v. 36. pro 63. p 75. v. 13. pro 12. p. 127. v. 12. pro 21. p. 135. v. 20. pro 8. p. 139. c. 8. v. 1. pro c. 1. v. 8. p. 164. v. 38. pro 37. p. 227. v. 18. pro 29.