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placed in horrible regions, reserved to the judgment of the great day; the other have their souls carried by choirs of angels into places of rest. S. Gregory Nazianzen expressly affirms, that "after this life there is no purgation:" "for after Christ's ascension into heaven, the souls of all saints are with Christ," saith Gennadius, "and going from the body, they go to Christ, expecting the resurrection of their body, with it to pass into the perfection of perpetual bliss ;" and this he delivers as the doctrine of the catholic church": "In what place soever a man is taken at his death, of light or darkness, of wickedness or virtue, ἐν ἐκείνῳ μένει τῷ βαθμῷ καὶ τάξει, in the same order, and in the same degree; either in light with the just, and with Christ the great King, or in darkness with the unjust, and with the prince of darkness," said Olympiodorus. And lastly, we recite the words of S. Leon, one of the popes of Rome, speaking of the penitents who had not performed all their penances: "But if any one of them for whom we pray unto the Lord, being interrupted by any obstacles, falls from the gift of the present indulgence" (viz. of ecclesiastical absolution), "and before he arrive at the appointed remedies" (that is, before he hath performed his penances or satisfactions), "ends his temporal life, that which remaining in the body he hath not received, when he is divested of his body, he cannot obtain." He knew not of the new devices of paying in purgatory what they paid not here, and of being cleansed there, who were not clean here: and how these words, or of any the precedent, are reconcilable with the Roman doctrines of purgatory, hath not yet entered into our imagination.

To conclude this particular; we complain greatly, that this doctrine, which in all the parts of it is uncertain, and in the late additions to it in Rome is certainly false, is yet with all the faults of it passed into an article of faith by the council of Trent. But besides what hath been said, it will be more than sufficient to oppose against it these clearest words of scripture, Blessed are the dead which die in the Lord, from henceforth: even so, saith the Spirit, that they may rest from their labours. If all the dead that die in Christ be at rest, and are in no more affliction or labours, then the doctrine of the horrible pains of purgatory is

1 Orat. 5. in Plagam Grandinis, et orat. 42. in Pascha. De Eccles. Dog

mat. c. 79.

m In Eccles. c. 11.

n Epist. 59.

o Rev. xiv. 13.

as false as it is uncomfortable. To these words we add the saying of Christ, and we rely upon it; He that heareth my word, and believeth on him that sent me, hath eternal life, and cometh not into judgment, but passeth from death unto lifer. If so, then not into the judgment of purgatory: if the servant of Christ passeth from death to life, then not from death to the terminable pains of a part of hell. They that have eternal life suffer no intermedial punishment, judgment, or condemnation after death; for death and life are the whole progression, according to the doctrine of Christ: and Him we choose to follow.

SECTION V.

Transubstantiation a novelty. Their doctors confess it is not necessarily proved from scripture. A disputable question in the ninth and tenth ages: made first an article of faith, 1215, in the Lateran council. P. Lombard, a little before, doubted of a substantial change. Durandus afterward maintained, that the matter of bread after consecration might remain without absurdity. What Berengarius owned in his recantation, is now renounced. Plain testimonies of the Fathers against it. Horrid questions it has occasioned. It implies many contradictions.

THE doctrine of transubstantiation is so far from being primitive and apostolic, that we know the very time it began to be owned publicly for an opinion, and the very council in which it was said to be passed into a public doctrine, and by what arts it was promoted, and by what persons it was introduced.

For all the world knows that by their own parties, by Scotus9, Ocham', Biels, Fisher bishop of Rochester', and divers others, whom Bellarmine" calls most learned and most acute men, it was declared, that the doctrine of transubstantiation is not expressed in the canon of the Bible; that in the scriptures there is no place so express as (without the church's declaration) to compel us to admit of transubstantiation, and therefore at least it is to be suspected of novelty. But further, we know it was but a disputable question in the ninth and tenth ages after Christ; that it was not pretended to be an article of faith till the Lateran council in the time of pope Innocent

P John v. 24.

9 In 4. lib. sent. d. 11. q. 3. Ibid. q. 6.

s Lect. 40. in Can. Missæ.

t Cap. I. contr. Captiv. Babyl.

a De Euchar. 1. 3. c. 23. sect. Secundo dicit.

the Third, 1200 years and more after Christ; that since that pretended determination, divers of the chiefest teachers of their own side have been no more satisfied of the ground of it than they were before, but still have publicly affirmed that the article is not expressed in scripture; particularly Johannes de Bassolis, cardinal Cajetany, and Melchior Canus, besides those above reckoned and therefore, if it was not expressed in scripture, it will be too clear that they made their articles of their own heads, for they could not declare it to be there if it was not; and if it was there but obscurely, then it ought to be taught accordingly and at most, it could be but a probable doctrine, and not certain as an article of faith. But that we may put it past argument and probability, it is certain, that as the doctrine was not taught in scripture expressly, so it was not at all taught as a catholic doctrine, or an article of the faith, by the primitive ages of the church.

Now for this, we need no proof but the confession and acknowledgment of the greatest doctors of the church of Rome. Scotus says, that before the Lateran council, transubstantiation was not an article of faith, as Bellarmine a confesses; and Henriquez affirms, that Scotus says it was not ancient; insomuch that Bellarmine accuses him of ignorance, saying, he talked at that rate, because he had not read the Roman council under pope Gregory VII, nor that consent of Fathers which (to so little purpose) he had heaped togetherb. Rem transubstantiationis patres ne attigisse quidem, said some of the English Jesuits in prison: the Fathers have not so much as touched or meddled with the matter of transubstantiation; and in Peter Lombard's time it was so far from being an article of faith, or a catholic doctrine, that they did not know whether it were true or no: and after he had collected the sentences of the Fathers in that article, he confessed he could not tell whether there was any substantial change or no. His words are these: "If it be inquired what kind of conversion it is, whether it be formal or substantial, or of another kind? I am not able to define it: only I know that it is not formal, because the same accidents remain, the same colour and taste. To some it seems to be substantial,

x Venere tum quidem multa in consultationem, nec decerni tamen quic. quam aperte potuit. Platina in Vita Innocen. III.

y Apud Suar. tom. iii. disp. 46. sect. 3.

z Loc. Com. 1. 3. c. 3. fund. 2.

a L. 3. de Euch. cap. 23. sect. unum tamen Sum. 1. 8. c. 20.

b Discurs. Modest. p. 13.
c Lib. 4. Sent. Dist. 11. lit. a.

saying, that so the substance is changed into the substance, that it is done essentially. To which the former authorities seem to consent. But to this sentence others oppose these things, If the substance of bread and wine be substantially converted into the body and blood of Christ, then every day some substance is made the body or blood of Christ, which before was not the body; and to-day something is Christ's body, which yesterday was not; and every day Christ's body is increased, and is made of such matter of which it was not made in the conception." These are his words, which we have remarked, not only for the argument's sake, (though it be unanswerable,) but to give a plain demonstration that in his time this doctrine was new, not the doctrine of the church: and this was written but about fiftyd years before it was said to be decreed in the Laterane council; and therefore it made haste, in so short time, to pass from a disputable opinion to an article of faith. But even after the council, Durandusf, as good a catholic and as famous a doctor as any was in the church of Rome, publicly maintained, that even after consecration, the very matter of bread remained; and although he says, that, by reason of the authority of the church, it is not to be held, yet it is not only possible it should be so, but it implies no contradiction that it should be Christ's body, and yet the matter of bread remain ; and if this might be admitted, it would salve many difficulties which arise from saying that the substance of bread does not remain. But here his reason was overcome by authority, and he durst not affirm that of which alone he was able to give (as) he thought) a reasonable account. But by this it appears, that the opinion was but then in the forge, and by all their understanding they could never accord it; but still the questions were uncertain, according to that old distich,

Corpore de Christi lis est, de sanguine lis est,

Deque modo lis est, non habitura modum.

And the opinion was not determined in the Lateran, as it is now held at Rome; but it is also plain that it is a stranger to antiquity. De transubstantiatione panis in corpus Christi rara est in antiquis scriptoribus mentio, said Alphonsus a Castros: "There

d A. D. MCLX.

e A.D. MCCXV.

A. D. MCCLXX secund. Buchol. sed secundum Volaterranum MCCCXXXV.

In lib. 4. Sent. Dist. 11. qu. 1. sect. propter tertium.

g De Hæres. 1. 8. Verbo Indulgentia.

is seldom mention made in the ancient writers of transubstantiating the bread into Christ's body." We know the modesty and interest of the man; he would not have said it had been seldom, if he could have found it in any reasonable degree warranted; he might have said, and justified it, "there was no mention at all of this article" in the primitive church: and that it was a mere stranger to antiquity, will not be denied by any sober person, who considers that it was with so much uneasiness entertained, even in the corruptest and most degenerous times, and argued and unsettled almost 1300 years after Christ.

And that it was so, will but too evidently appear by that stating and resolution of this question which we find in the canon law. For Berengarius was by P. Nicolas commanded to recant his error in these wordsh, and to affirm, Verum corpus et sanguinem Domini nostri Jesu Christi sensualiter, non solum in sacramento, sed in veritate, manibus sacerdotum tractari, frangi et fidelium dentibus atteri: "That the true body and blood of our Lord Jesus Christ sensually, not only in sacrament, but in truth, is handled by the priest's hands, and broken and grinded by the teeth of the faithful." Now although this was publicly read at Rome before an hundred and fourteen bishops, and by the pope sent up and down the churches of Italy, France, and Germany, yet at this day it is renounced by the church of Rome; and, "unless it be well expounded," (says the gloss,) "will lead into a heresy, greater than what Berengarius was commanded to renounce;" and no interpretation can make it tolerable, but such an one as is in another place of the canon law, statuimus, i. e. abrogamus; nothing but a plain denying it in the sense of pope Nicolas. But however this may be, it is plain they understood it not, as it is now decreed. But as it happened to the Pelagians in the beginning of their heresy, they spake rudely, ignorantly, and easily to be reproved; but being ashamed and disputed into a more sober understanding of their hypothesis, spake more warily, but yet differently from what they said at first so it was and is in this question; at first they understood it not; it was too unreasonable in any tolerable sense to make any thing of it; but experience and necessity hath brought it to what it is.

But that this doctrine was not the doctrine of the first and h Cap. Ego Berengarius, de Consecrat. Dist. 2.

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