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A06863 A booke of notes and common places, with their expositions, collected and gathered out of the workes of diuers singular writers, and brought alphabetically into order. A worke both profitable and also necessarie, to those that desire the true vnderstanding & meaning of holy Scripture By Iohn Marbeck Merbecke, John, ca. 1510-ca. 1585. 1581 (1581) STC 17299; ESTC S112020 964,085 1,258

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bloud ¶ By all these foresaid Authours and places with manie moe it is plainlie proued that when our Sauiour Christ gaue bread vnto his Disciples saieng Take and eate this is my bodie and likewise when he gaue them the cup saieng Drinke this among you and drinke you all of this for this is my bloud hée called then the materiall bread his bodie and the verie wine his bloud ¶ Thus much out of Cranmers booke fol. 118. 119. How bread is a figure of Christs bodie ¶ Christ himselfe saith Tertulian did not reprooue or discommend bread which doth represent his bodie ¶ For the vnderstanding of this place you must know that there was an Heretike called Marcion which did reproue creatures saide that all manner of creatures were euill This thing doeth Tertulian improue by the Sacrament and saith Christ did not reproue or discommend bread the which doth represent his bodie As though he should saie If Christ had counted the bread euill then would hée not haue lefte it for a Sacrament to represent his bodie meaning that it is a Sacrament token signe and memoriall of his bodie not the bodie it selfe And that this his meaning doth plainlie appeare in his sourth booke as followeth Christ taking bread and distributing vnto his Disciples made it his bodie saieng This is my bodie But this could not haue bene a true figure of it except Christ had had a true bodie for a vaine thing or fantasie can take no figure ¶ For the vnderstanding of this place you must marke that this Heretike Marcion against whom this Authour writeth did holde opinion that Christ had no naturall bodie but onelie a phantasticall bodie the which Tertulian improueth by the Sacrament of the Altar saieng The Sacrament is a figure of his bodie Ergo Christ had a true bodie for a vaine thing or fantasie can take no figure After the mysticall Easters Lambe fulfilled and that Christ had eaten the Lambes flesh with the Apostles hée tooke bread which comforteth the heart man and passeth to the true Sacrament of the Easters Lambe that as Melchisedech brought foorth Bread and Wine figuring him so might he likewise represent the truth of his bodie c. ¶ Héere doth Saint Hierome speake after the manner of Tertulian before That Christ with his bread and wine did represent the truth of his bodie For except he had had a true bodie he could not leaue a figure of it nor represent it vnto vs for a vaine thing or fantasie can haue no figure nor cannot be represented As by example how canne a man make a figure of a Dreame or represent it vnto our memorie But CHRIST hath left vs a figure and representation of his bodie in bread and wine Therefore it followeth that he had a true bodie This thing S. Bede doth more copeouslie set forth writing vpon S. Luke You shall not eate this bodie that you sée nor drinke that bloud which they that crucifie me shall shed out I haue giuen a certeine Sacrament vnto you if it be spirituallie vnderstood it quickeneth you but flesh profiteth nothing This is plaine enough spoken ¶ Thus much out of Frith Looke Figure How bread remaineth after the consecration Theodoretus saith The mysticall signes after the blessing of the Priest depart not from their owne nature For they remaine in their former substaunce figure and forme Further he saith yet the same bread and wine remaining as they were before are vnderstood and beléeued and adored as y● things that they are beléeued The saieng of Thomas Salisburiensis No man saith hée be he neuer so simple or neuer so wise ought preciselie to beléeue that this is the bodie of our Lord that the Priest hath consecrate but onelie vnder this condition if all things concerning the consecration be done as apperteineth For otherwise he shal auouch a creature to be the creator which were Idolatrie Surelie the Sacrament of the bodie and bloud of Christ which we receiue are a godlie thing and therefore through them are we made partakers of the godlie nature and yet doth it not cease to be the substaunce and nature of bread and wine but they continue in the properties of their owne nature And surelie the Image and similitude of the bodie and bloud are celebrated in the act of the mysteries ¶ Looke Oyle That which you sée saith S. Austen in the Altar is the bread and the cup which also your eies doe shew you but faith sheweth further that bread is the bodie of Christ the cup his bloud ¶ Héere he declareth two things That in the Sacrament remaineth bread wine which we maie discerne with our eies that the bread and wine be called the bodie and bloud of Christ. Craumer He that called his naturall bodie saith Theodoretus wheate and bread and also called himselfe a Uine the selfe same called bread and wine his bodie and bloud and yet chaunged not their natures And in his second Dialogue he saith more plainelie For saith he as the bread and wine after the consecration loose not their proper nature but kept their former substaunce forme and figure which they had before euen so the bodie of Christ after his ascention was chaunged into the godlie substaunce Although ye make mée to abide yet I will not eate of your bread ¶ This Hebrue worde Lechem signifieth not onelye bread but sometime meate in vniuersall yea and sometime flesh also Héereof was inuented the subtiltie of the Papists to whom when we saie the bread remaineth in the Eucharist and proue it by that which Paule writeth The bread which we breake is it not the communicating of the bodie of Christ they aunswere that the bread in that place maie signifie flesh as it doth oftentimes in the holie Scriptures But they ought to remember that Paule wrote these words in Gréeke not in Hebrue But Arnos that is bread in Gréeke cannot signifie as Lechem maie in Hebrue Farther in the holie Supper the flesh of Christ is not broken but they are Symboles or Signes which are broken Pet. Mar. vpon Iudic. fol. 205. How the sacramentall bread ought not to be reserued Saint Cipriane saith this bread is receiued and not shut vp Clemens saith Let there be as manie hoasts or so much bread offered at the Altar as maie be sufficient for the people if anie thing remaine let it not bée kept vntill the morning Origen or Cyrillus saith The bread that our Lord gaue to his Disciples he lengered if not nor bad it to be kept til the morning whose reason is grounded vpon Christs institution for Christ said not take and kéepe but take and eate Of the breaking of bread And brake bread in euerie house ¶ This place ought not to be vnderstood of the Communion or Sacrament of the bodie and bloud of Christ as the place before but of the hospitalitie that was among them that
is spoken by a figure taking the cup for that which is conteined in the cup. And againe the Hebrues vnderstande by this word cup sometime the manner of punishment which is rendered to sinne as Psal. 11. 6. or the ioie that is giuen to the faithfull As. Psal. 23. 5. and sometime a lotte or condition As Psal. 16. 5. What the Cup of the new Testament signifieth This Cup is the new Testament in my bloud This Cup or Chalice is the new Testament that is this Cup or Chalice which I deliuer vnto you doth signifie the new Testament ¶ Héere it is plaine the Cup is not the new Testament but doth signifie the new Testament Therefore the bread is not the bodie but doth signifie the bodie I. Frith ¶ The signe of the new Testament which is established and ratified by Christs bloud Geneua ¶ As the Cup is the new Testament so the bread is the bodie of Christ. By the new Testament he vnderstandeth the forgiuenesse of sinnes Heb. 8. 12. But the Cup doth onelie represent vnto vs the new Testament that is to saie the forgiuenesse of our sinnes that we haue in the bloud of Christ. Sir I. Cheeke ¶ Héere is a double Metonymia For first the vessell is taken for that which is conteined in the vessell as the Cup for the wine which is within the Cup. Then the wine is called the Couenant or Testament whereas in déede it is but the signe of the Testament or rather of the bloud of Christ whereby the Testament was made neither is it a vaine signe though it be not all one with the thing it representeth Beza What is meant by the Cup of saluation I will take the Cup of saluation and call vpon the name of the Lord. ¶ In the lawe they vsed to make a banket when they gaue solempne thanks vnto God and to take the Cup and to drinke in signe of thanks-giuing Geneua ¶ I will take the Cup c. In token of my deliueraunce The Bible note ¶ He alludeth to the manner that was vsed vnder the law For when they gaue solempne thanks vnto God there was also a feast made whereat was made an holie drinking in token of gladnesse and because this dooing was as a Sacrament of their deliuerance out of Aegypt hée tearmed it the Cup of saluation Caluine Of the cup of blessing Is not the Cup of blessing which we blesse partaking of the bloud of Christ c. ¶ That is to saie they that doe eate of the bread and drinke of the Cup of the Lord with thanksgiuing are the Communion of the bodie and bloud of Christ that is to saie the congregation of them that are washed in the bloud of Chrst beeing made his bodie and members Sir I. Cheeke The Cup of blessing ¶ Of thankesgiuing wherevpon that holye banket was called Eucharist that is a thankesgiuing Is it not the Communion c. A most effectuall pleadge and note of our knitting together with Christ and ingraffing to him Beza Is not the Communion c. ¶ The effectuall badge of our coniunction and incorporation with Christ. Geneua How the Cup is taken for the drinke in the Cup. Drinke of it all for it is my bloud of the new Testament ¶ For it is that is to saie the drinke that is in the Cup or if ye list the Cup is my bloud of the new Testament taking the Cup for drinke by a manner of speaking vsed in all tongues as when we saie I haue dronke a Cup of good wine wée take there the Cup for the wine my bloud of the new Testament that is to saie my bloud for whose shedding sake this new Testament and couenaunt is made vnto you for the forgiuenesse of sinnes Tindale How by the Cup is signified Christs passion Ye shall drinke of my Cup. ¶ By the Cup and Baptime be vnderstood his bitter passion and death as he himselfe testifieth a little after saieng Let this Cup passe from me Sir I. Cheeke How the Cup is taken for the crosse of affliction Are ye able to drinke of the Cup c. ¶ He setteth the crosse before their eyes to drawe them from ambition calling it a Cup to signifie the measure of the afflictions which God hath ordeined for euerie man The which thing also he calleth baptime Geneua Of the Popes golden Cup. Hauing a Cup of golde in her hand ¶ Hee speaketh of vntoward and counterfet doctrine The Pope boasteth himselfe to haue the Scripture but he corrupteth it with his bloudie gloses and maketh men to drinke of the troubled or rather stinking water of puddles in stéede of Gods pure wordes which is the meate and drinke of our saules These blasphemous and abhominable decretals which the Romish Antichrist serueth his guests withal are yet extant howbeit y● he serueth them in a golden Cup that is to wit vnder the name of Christs Uicarship vnder the coulour of the Gospell and vnder such glorious names as that all things procéede of the instinct of the holye Ghost and that hée cannot erre c. This is the golden Cuppe which hath beguiled manie c. Marl. vpon the Apoc. fol. 242. CVRSE What this word curse impôrteth AS concerning this word curse let vs marke that it giueth vs not scope to wish the mischiefe or confusion of the partie I meane through desire of vengeaunce as oftentimes wée bée so carried awaie by our passions as there reigneth nothing in vs but heart burning and bitternesse or at least wise a foolish and vndiscrete zeale But whereas it is sayd that Eliphas cursed the wicked mans house it importeth nothing else but that he hold him to that which the scripture teacheth and sheweth vs. And therefore it is not for vs to bée Iudges for it were too great a rashnesse if we should take so much preheminence vpon vs as to saie O that man shall make an euill ende or such a man shall come to shame A man must not presume so farre but it belongeth to God onelie to curse or to blesse Cal. vpon Iob. fol. 80. Of two manner of cu●ses Upon mée bée thy curse my sonne ¶ There are two manner of curses in the Scripture the one is in the soule that perteineth to the soule as sinne and wickednesse And the other to the bodie as all temporall miserie and wretchednesse As Gen. 3. and Deut. 23. T. M. Of the curse of good men What strength the curse of holy men oppressed with wrong hath to bring the vengeaunce of God vpon the oppressors may appeare by Ioathan the sonne of Ierobaal and likewise by Eliseus the Prophet And cursed them in the name of the Lord. ¶ Perceiuing their malicious heart against the Lorde he desireth God to take vengeaunce of that iniurie done vnto him Geneua The meaning of this place following Cursed be he that doth the worke of the Lord negligentlie and cursed be he that kéepeth backe his
times alwaies his praise shall be in my mouth Chrisostome saith when God is blessed and thanks be giuen of men vnto him then more plentious blessing is wont to be giuen of him for their sakes by whom he is blessed For he that blesseth maketh him debter of a greater blessing Calfehill fol. 116. By blessing vnderstand not the wagging of the popes or Bishops hand ouer thy head but praier as when we saie GOD make thée a good man Christ put his spirit in thée or giue thée grace and power to walke in the truth to followe his commaundemēts as Rebeccaes friends blessed hir when she departed saieng Thou art our sister growe into thousand thousands thy séed possesse the gates of their enimies And as Isaac blessed Iacob saieng God giue thée of the dew of heauen and of the fatnesse of the earth abundance of corne wine and oile And Gen. 28. 3. Almightie God blesse thée and make thée grow and multiplie thée that thou maist be a great multitude of people giue to thée and to thy séede after thee the blessing of Abraham that thou maist possesse the land wherein thou art a straunger which he promised to thy grandfather such like Tindale fol. 145. What Gods blessings are Gods blessings are his giftes as in the first Chapter of Genesis he blessed them saieng Grow and multiplie haue dominion And in the. 9. Chapter he blessed Noe his sonnes and gaue dominion ouer all beasts authoritie to eate them And God blessed Abraham with cattel and other riches And Iacob desired Esau to receiue the blessing which he brought him that is the present and gift God blessed the. 7. daie That is gaue it a preheminence that men should rest therein from bodilie labour and learne to know the wil of God and his lawes how to worke their works godlie all the wéeke after God also blessed all nations in Abrahams séed that is he turned his loue and fauour vnto them giueth them his spirit and knowledge of the true waie and lust and power to walke therein and all for Christs sake Abrahams sonne Tindale fol. 5. Who is blessed and sanctified of God He is blessed which kéepeth himselfe that which he is by new birth that is to wit which continueth in walking in newnes of life according to the which Christ saith Blessed are they which heare the word of God and kéepe it Luke 11. 28. Also Blessed is he to whom the Lord imputeth no sin in whose heart there is no guile Psal. 32. 1. 2. Rom. 4. 8. Marl. vpon the Apoc. fol. 276. ¶ Blessed is that man of the Lord yea holie iust and perfect maie he be reported also of all men which hath portion conuenient in y● first resurrection with Dauid Magdalene Zacheus Peter Happy are they which hearing the word of God retaineth it in their liuing for they being renued with the glad tidings of life are depured by the spirit of Christ sanctified so made the habitacles of the holie Ghost Bale vpon the Apoc. fol. 59. Some peraduenture will aske who be they that be blessed and sanctified of God truelie all they whome Christ hath sanctified in his bloud and washed their sinnes in his bloud that hath faith and doth beléeue their sinnes onelie to bée taken awaie by Christ and his bloudshed for their remission of sinnes which will beléeue surelie till they die These be they which be truelie hallowed and sanctified in God the father and these bée holie and blessed whether men do blesse them or curse them Other there be that be sanctified as of men and of the Pope of the Cardinalls of Bishops or Abbots but these be not holie nor blessed except that Christ hath sanctified them in his bloud and hath remission of their sinnes by Iesus Christ which thing they beléeue surelie or els they be not sanctified of God nor blessed be they neuer so oftentimes blessed of the popes holy hand and all his thrée crosses with all the miters of his Cardinalls and Bishops Bibliander in the exposition of Iude. Of the sacramentall blessing Iesus tooke bread blessed c. ¶ To blesse is not to make a crosse but rather to giue thanks as he himselfe doth expresse by by when he speaketh of the cup. Againe where Marke vseth this word blessed Mathew Luke and Paule doe saie he gaue thanks both in Gréeke and in the Latine Sir I. Cheeke And when he had blessed ¶ Marke saith had giuen thanks and therefore blessing is not a consecrating with a coniuring of murmuring force of words and yet the bread the wine are chaunged not in nature but in qualitie for they become vndoubted tokens of the bodie and bloud of Christ not of their owne nature and force of words but by Christ his institution which must be recited and laied foorth that faith maie finde what to laie holde on both in the word and the element Beza The cup of blessing which we blesse c. ¶ When I spake saith Chrisostome of blessing I spake of thanksgiuing and speaking of thanksgiuing I open all the treasure of the goodnesse of God and rehearse those great giftes of his For with the cup we adde the vnspeakable benefites of God and whatsoeuer we haue obteined So we come vnto him we communicate with him thanking him that he hath deliuered mankinde from errour that when we had no hope and were wicked persons he admitted vs brothers and companions to himselfe with those and such other rendrings of thankes we come vnto him Héere ye sée what Chrisostome tooke blessing to be Calfehil fol. 106. What it is to blesse the Lords name Blessed be the name of the Lord. ¶ We maie not onelie picke out the words but also consider of what minde they procéede and that they be spoken trulie and vnfainedlie for how is it possible that we should blesse the name of God if we doe not first acknowledge him to be righteous But he that grudgeth against God as though he were cruell and vnkinde cursseth God because that as much as in him lieth he lifteth himselfe vp against him He that acknowledgeth not God to be his father and himselfe to be Gods childe ne yéeldeth record of his goodnesse blesseth not God And why so For they which taste not of the mercie and grace that God sheweth vnto men when he afflicteth them must néedes grinde their téeth at him and cast vp and vomit out some poyson against him Therefore to blesse the Lords name importeth as much as to perswade our selues that he is iust and righteous of his owne nature and not onelie that but also that he is good and merciful Lo● héere how we maie blesse Gods name after the example of Iob that is by acknowledging his Iustice and vprightnesse and moreouer also his grace and fatherlie goodnesse towards vs c. Caluine vpon Iob. fol. 32. ¶ Héereby he confesseth that
the Iewes did weare borders on their garments ANd make large borders on their garments ¶ Read N● 15. chapter and verse 38. and there thou shalt learne why the Iewes did weare such borders on their garments Sir I. Cheeke ¶ Looke Gardes Philacteries BORNE ¶ Looke Water and Spirit BOSOME How it is diuer●lie taken For I haue giuen my maide into thy ' Bosome ¶ Bosome after the manner of the Hebrues is taken for companieng with a woman And it is also taken for faith as in Luke 16. 23. of Lazarus T. M. In the Bosome of the father ¶ This is a speach borrowed out of the custome of 〈…〉 For when we will signifie that we will commit our secret to anie we saie we will admit him to our Bosome So the meaning is that he meaning Christ is priuie to all Gods secrettes and therefore can shew vs such heauenlie mysterie as no man can declare And this exposition Saint Austen followeth Cyrill thinketh that in the Bosome is as much to saie as in the Father and of the Father and as you vsing manie wordes in the inward part of the Father for he is not a péece cut off and deuided from the substaunce of the Father as it fareth in mans begetting but hee so begotten as he is still in the Father Traheron● Of the bosome of Abraham Looke Abraham BRAMBLE The propertie of a bramble compared to Abimelech Plinie in his 24. book● and 14. Chapter writeth of this kind of Thorne And as ●ou●hing this matter these are the properties thereof ●t is a 〈…〉 it was Abimelech who was a bastard and borne of an handmaide so that he was not to be compared with his bretheren And as he without any vtilitie gouerned the Israelites so is the bramble wont to bring foorth no fruit The Bramble also pri●keth euen as Abimelech verie much huried the Israelites Moreouer some write that the boughes of Brambles are 〈…〉 〈…〉 so vehementlie shaken and moued with the winde that out of the●● is fire kindeled where with not onelie they themselues brent but the whole woode wherein they growe is burnt which thing Iothan now foretelleth to come to passe of Abimelech wherefore the properties doe wonderfullie well agrée Pet. Mar. vpon Iudic. fol. 160. ¶ Sée more in Abimelech BOOVV DOVVNE What it is to Boow downe TO bowe downe is to cap and● to knée to ducke with the head and bend the bodie to fall downe to honour to worship and to reuerence Bullinger fol. ●22 Bowe downe their backes c. ¶ To bowe downe their backes doth not onelie signifie that they should be brought vnder of the Gentiles and oppressed● with all kinde of euill but that● they should not once● looke vp to call on the Lord with sure beliefe of heart Tind●le BOVVE How the Gospell is likened to a Bowe ¶ Looke Gospell BRAVNCHES Who are the braunches cut off Though some of the braunches be broken of The braunches that are broken off are the Iewes which are forsaken and cast off The wilde Oliue trée are the Gentiles The right Oliue trée is the Couenaunt or faith and vocation of the Sainte The fatnesse thereof is the grace of God and the glorie of the elect The Iewes then being come of the fathers were as a man might say naturallie grafted in the couenaunt but the Heathen being come of Idolaters were as wilde Oliue trees grafted therein Sir I. Cheeke ¶ These broken braunches were the vnbeléeuing Iewes which for their vnbeliefe were cut off from the promise of God in whose stéede was the wilde Oliue that is the Gentiles grafted through faith The Bible note BREAD What Bread is in Scripture BRead in scripture is taken for all that is necessarie to this present life And I will fet a morsell of Bread to comfort your hearts withall And as we saie in our Lords praier Giue vs this daie our dailie Bread Tindale How Bread is called Christs bodie Ireneus writing against the Valentinians in his fourth booke saith that Christ confessed bread which is a creature to be his bodie and the Cup to be his bloud and in the same booke hée writeth thus also The Bread wherein the thankes be giuen is the bodie of the Lord. And yet againe in the same booke hée saith that Christ taking bread of the same sort that our bread is off confessed that it was his bodie and that the thing which was tempered in the Chalice was his bloud And in the fift booke he writeth further that of the Chalice● which is his bloud a man is nourished and doth growe by the bread which is his bodie ¶ These words of Ireneus be most plaine that Christ taking verie material bread a creature of God and of such sort as other bread is which we doe vse called that his bodie when hée said This is my bodie and the wine also which doth féede and nourish vs he calleth his bloud ¶ T●ertulian in his booke written against the Iewes saith that Christ called bread his bodie And in his booke against Marcion he oftentimes repeateth the selfe same words ¶ Saint Cipriane in the first booke of his Epistles saith that Christ called such bread as is made of manie cornes ioined together his bodie and such wine he named his bloud as is pressed out of manie Grapes and made into wine And in his second booke he saith these words Water is not the bloud of Christ but wine And againe in the same Epistle he saith that it was wine which Christ called his bloud and that if wine be not in the Chalice then we drinke not of the fruite of the Uine And in the same Epistle he saith that meale alone or water alone is not the bodie of Christ except they be both ioined together to make thereof bread ¶ Epiphanius saith that Christ speaking of a loafe which is round in fashion and cannot see nor féele said of it This is my bodie ¶ Saint Hierom writing ad Hedibiam saith these words Let vs marke that the bread which the Lord brake and gaue to his Disciples was the bodie of our Sauiour Christ he said vnto them Take and eate this is my bodie ¶ Saint Augustine saith that although we maie set foorth Christ by mouth by writing and by the Sacrament of his bodie and bloud yet we call neither our tongue nor words nor inke letters nor paper the bodie and bloud of Christ but that we call the bodie and bloud of Christ which is taken of the fruite of the earth and consecrated by mysticall praier Also he saith Iesus called meate his bodie and drinke his bloud ¶ Cyrill vpon Saint Iohn saith that Christ gaue to his disciples péeces of bread saieng Take eate this is my bodie Cyrill in Iohn li. 4. ca. 14. ¶ Theodoretus saith When Christ gaue the holie mysteries he called bread his bodie and the cup mixt with wine and water he called his
beléeued Therefore they that by this place doe take a boldnesse to vse the communion priuelie in their house haue no example at all of that thing in the Scripture and therefore they doe naught vnlesse they be thereto driuen by sicknesse Sir ●●●eeke Béeing come togethor 〈…〉 to breake bread ¶ By this it is euident and plaine that in the administration of the Sacraments we are bound neither to time nor yet to place For Paule did breake the bread and did minister the Communion in the night time and we doe it in the daie time Againe hée did both preach Christ and minister the Lordes supper in a Parler and these things are we not wont customablie to do in the Church Howbeit all things ought to be done in a due decent order Sir I. Cheeke And when he had broken them ¶ The breaking of bread was so common and vsuall with Christ that by the same hée was knowne to his two Disciples as they were going to Emaus This manner of broaking of bread was verie fatherlike and commendable among the elders of olde time as it is hetherto in manie places and after the same sort best beséeming and belonging vnto Christ by whom we are all fed Furthermore this breaking of bread hath in it selfe a signe to diuide as appeareth by this place of the Prophet Breake thy lofe to the hungrie For a lofe cannot refresh manie without it be broken and diuided And by this meanes it aunswereth and is agréeable to the mysterie of the communicating the bodie of the Lord. The Apostle saieng The bread which we breake is it not the participation of the bodie of the Lord not that the bodie of Christ is therefore said to be broken because it hath in it selfe some cut but because it is made communicable that is apt and meete to be participated and receiued of manie The Apostle Paule saith in an other place in the person of Christ. This is my bodie which is broken for you in stéed of the which Saint Luke hath which is giuen for you c. Marlorate Of three kindes of Breads The Hebrues as Lyra saith hath thrée kinds of Breads Panis propositionis siue facierum panis oblationis panis laicos siue cōmunis Holie shew bread set before the face of the Lord vpon the propiciatorie seate and this bread belonged onelie to Aaron and his sonnes Hoc est soli Sacerdotibus The bread offered vpon the oltar of Holocaust that was not to be eaten but of the Leuits And ther was common bread indifferent for euerie man that list Ric. Turnar BRETHREN OF CHRIST Who are called the bretheen of Christ. THen came his mother and his brethren ¶ Héere they are called Christs brethren which in déed were not his naturall brethren but his cosins and kinsfolks euen as Lot is called Abrahams brother which was his brother Arams sonne Conferre the sixt of Marke and the. 13. of Mathew with the 19. of Iohn and thou shalt finde the virgin Marie had neuer no moe sonnes and daughters but Christ onelie Sir I. Cheeke Is not his Mother called Marie and his brethren Iames and Ioses and Symon and Iudas c. This place and the first of the Acts and Gal. the first Helindius bringeth to proue that Marie Christs mother was no virgin Aunswere In the Scripture a man is said to be our brother 4. manner of waies that is to saie by nature by countrie by kinred and affection By nature brethren are as Esau and Iacob the twelue Patriarches Andrew and Peter Iames and Iohn By Countrie brethren are said to be as the Iewes which among themselues were called brethren as in Deut. If thou buy thy brother which is an Hebrue he shal serue thée six years And so S. Paule I haue wished my selfe to be accursed from Christ for my brethren and kinsmen according to the flesh By kinred they are said to be brethren which come of one house that is when of one stocke a multitude doe spring as in Genesis Abraham said to Lot Let ther be no contentiō betwéene thée and me and betwéene my Shepheardes and thy Shephearde because we are all brethren And againe Laban said to Iacob because thou art my brother thou shalt not serue me fréelie for nothing Those that bée brethren by affection are diuided into two sortes into spirituall and common They are spirituall brethren which are Christians as in the Psalme 133. Beholde how ioyfull a thing it is brethren to dwell together in vnitie Commonly we be called brethren because we came all of one brother By this diuision it is apparaunt that they were sayde to be the brethren of CHRIST by kinred not by nature not by Countreie nor affection Therefore as Ioseph was called the Father of Christ euen so were they said to be his brethren that both in one respect For Ioseph was thought to be the Father of Iesus and so were Iames Ioses and others thought to be his brethren But none will contend about this but such as be too curious Mar. fol. 20. ¶ Looke Christ. BRIDE-GROME Who is the Bride-grome and whereto the parable tendeth TO méete the Bride-grome ¶ It is verie corruptlie added of the olde interpretour in that he saith to méet the Bridegrome and the Bride séeing it is found in none of the Gréeke bookes And as for Chrisostom Hillarius Theophilact they make no mention of the Bride For Christ is the Bridegrome And the whole parable tendeth to this end that he comming we should go foorth to méete him No part of the parable perteine to the Bride naie they which come to méete the Bridegrome in good time euen they I saie are the Bride Saint Augustine expounding this place in a sermon which he made of the words of Christ out of the 22. of Mathew neither readeth nor maketh anie mention of this word Brid Marl. fol. 592. ¶ The pompe of Bridealls was wont for the most part to be kept in the night seasons and that by Damsels Bez● When the Bride-grome shall bée taken from them ¶ The Bride-grome is taken from vs when euill affections concupicense and lustes doe driue Christ out of our heartes Then ought we to vse abstinence therby to tame our wanton flesh and to giue our selues to earnest praiers that so the spirit of God maie be renued in vs. Sir I. Cheeke BROOKE CEDRON Wherefore it was so called OUer the Brooke Cedron ¶ Some thinke that this Brooke was called the brooke of Ceders because many Ceder trées grew about the same but it is verie like notwithstanding that this name came vp through errour For of the vallcie or brooke of Cedron there is mention oftentimes made in the Scripture where the Hebrue worde doth not signifie Ceder trées but dimnesse or darknesse Concerning the which brooke we read in the booke of kings This place was so called because of the darknesse because it was a déepe valle●e
euen in this that thou hast not gone awaie confessed that thou art one of the number of them at the least thou doest not partake had it not b●ne better that thou hadst not b●ne present Thou wilt saie I am vnworthie therefore neither wast thou worthie of the Communion of praier which is a preparing to the receiuing of the holie mysterie Cal. in his Insti 4. li. cap. 17. Sect. 45. How the Sacrament at the Communion ought to be receiued in both kindes WE haue found saith Gelasius that some receiuing onely the portion of the holie bodie doe abstaine from the Cup let them without doubt because they séeme to be bound with I wot not what supersticion either receiue the Sacraments whole for the deuiding of this mysterie is not committed without great sacriledge Cal. in his Inst. 4. b. cap. 17. sect 49. Reasons made of the Catholikes to proue a Communion in one kinde Aunswered 1. Reason Christ brake bread to his Disciples in Emaus and vanished out of their sight before he tooke the Cup blessed it Of which place they gather y● the communion was ministred in one kinde Aunswere S. Augustine Gregorie Iulianus Dionisius Lyra Winford with others saie it was not the Sacrament but the breaking of bread there was hospitalitie and enterteining of strangers Their words be these First S. Augustine saith because they were giuen to hospitalitie they knewe him in breaking of the bread whom they knewe not in the expounding of the Scriptures Gregorie saith they laie the table and set foorth bread and meate and God who they knewe not in the expounding of the Scriptures they knew in breaking of bread Dionisius He tooke bread and blessed it but he turned it not into his bodie as he did at his Supper but onelie as the manner is to saie grace or to blesse the meate Antonius Iulianus He tooke bread blessed it brake it and gaue it to them as his manner was before his passion Lyra saith They knewe him for that he brake the bread so euen as if it had bene cut with a knife Winford It cannot be gathered saith he neither by the texte of S. Luke nor by the Glose nor by the auntient Doctours that the bread that Christ brake after his resurrection was the consecrate or sacramentall bread therfore I sai● that foolishlie by consequence that falselie he alledgeth S. Augustin to his purpose Thus by these authorities it is proued not to be the sacrament In the text ther is no mention made of consecration neither yet y● either Christ himself or the Apostles did eate the bread 2. Reason The breaking of bread in the 27. of the Acts of the Apostles by S. Paule they affirme to be the Sacrament Aunswere If S. Paule gaue the Sacrament being at that time in perill of shipwracke he gaue it onelie to Infidels that knew not Christ. And Chrisostome enlarging S. Pauls words saith thus I praie you take some sustenaunce it is behouefull that ye so do y● is to saie take some meate lest perhaps ye die for hunger 3. Reason Egesippus witnesseth of S. Iames that he neuer drank wine but at our Lords Supper Aunswere S. Hierom saith that S. Iames continued Bishop in Hierusalem the space of 30. yeares vntill the seauenth yeare of Nero. If it then be true that Egesippus writeth of S. Iames that he neuer dranke wine but at our Lords Supper then it must néeds follow y● being bishop in Hierusalem the space of 30. yeres he neuer said Masse or els consecrated in one kinde which thing by Gelasius is counted Sacriledge 4. Reason Melciades Bishop of Rome ordeined that sundrie Hoasts should be consecrated and sent abroad among the Churches Parishes that Christen folkes should not be frauded of the holie Sacrament whereof they doe gather a Communion in one kinde because the wine could not be so conuenientlie caried Aunswere Whereas the maintainers of the Communion in one kind make so great a matter of the carieng of the wine defrauding the people of one kinde of Christs institution marke this that followeth S. Hierom writing of Exuperius Bishop of Tholouse in Fraunce saith thus There was no man richer then he that caried the Lords bodie in a wicker basket and his bloud in a glasse Also Iust●us Martir declaring the order of his Church in his tune saith thus Of the things that be consecrate that is the bread water and wine euerie man taketh part the same things are deliuered to the deacons to be caried vnto them that be awaie Héere ye sée it was a common vsage in those daies to carie the Sacrament in both kindes 5. Reason The Councell of Nice decréed that in the Church where neither Bishoppes nor Priests were present the Deacons themselues bring foorth and eate the holie Communion which cannot be referred saie they to the forme of wine for cause of sowring and corruption if it be long kept Aunswere Rufinus writeth in this sort In the presence of the priests let not the Deacons deuide or minister the Sacrament but onlie serue the Priests in their office But if there be no Priest present then let it be lawfull for the Deacon to minister Héere is no mention made of these words Let them bring it foorth themselues and eate Which wordes in verie déede is neither found in the Gréeke nor in the decrees nor in the former ediction of the Councell nor yet alledged by Gracian Therefore the meaning of the Counsell of Nice is not that the Deacons shall goe to the Pix and take the Sacrament reserued and eate it But in the absence of the Priest they might consecrate the holie mysteries and deliuer the same vnto the people as maie be gathered by the words of Rufinus before rehearsed 6. Reason Women receiued the Sacrament in a linnen cloth Tertulians wife receiued it at home before meate S. Cipriane saith a woman kept it at home in a chest These examples they alledge to proue that the people receiue the Sacrament in one kinde and not in both Aunswere That women and other kept the Sacrament and caried it about them and that in both kindes is manifestlie proued by these Authorities following Gregorie Nazianzene writing of his Sister Gorgonia saith thus If hir hand had laied vp anie token of the pretious bodie and of the bloud mingling it with hir teares c. Héere hée saith shée had laied vp both parts Againe Amphilochius saith that a certeine Iewe came and receiued among the faithfull and priuelie caried part of either home with him how or wherein it is not written Truly the thrée examples aboue rehearsed are nothing els but méere abuses of the Sacrament and therefore as it appeareth by Saint Cipriane God shewed himselfe by myracle to be offended with it fraieng the woman that so had kept it with a flame of fire And it was decréed in the Councell holdon at Cesarea Augusta in Spaine that if a man receiued the Sacrament and eate not the
other Beholde the ouerboldnesse that hath alwaies reigned in the world which is that men will néeds be maister and make lawes at their owne pleasures and GOD must be faine to accept whatsoeuer they haue forged after that manner But contrariwse the holie Ghost telleth vs that wée must not lift vp one foote to go forward but onelie in the waie which God sheweth vs. Caluine vpon Iob. fol. 419. From whom popish deuotion sprong When men thought to serue God after their owne fashion and framed lawes for themselues saieng This will bée and such a thing will bée acceptable vnto God it was because they would make him like vnto themselues as though he delighted in all the small toyes which they had inuented That is to wit outward things and so doing they transformed God as though they would pull him out of his heauenly seate and drawe him downe hether or as though hée were a creature or a fleshlye thing For then we see all these fonde deuotions vsed in the papacie and tearmed their diuine seruice sprang of this namelie that they knowe not the highnesse of God for then would they haue concluded thus God is not delighted in the things which séemeth good in our owne eies for he is of an other nature then we bee he is a spirit and therefore must we serue him after a cleane contrarie fashion vnto that which pleaseth our nature neither must we in this case attempt anie thing of our owne heades but haue his lawe in which he hath declared his will vnto vs. Hée hath prescribed vs our rule let vs holde vs to that This is the sobrietie which God requireth by his worde and wherevnto he would haue vs to submitte our selues without swaruing anie thing at all there-from Caluine vpon Iob. fol. 399. DIFFERENCE To make difference of the Lords bodie what it is WHo so eateth drinketh vnworthelie he eateth drinketh his owne damnation making no difference of the Lordes bodie ¶ To make no difference of the Lords bodie is vnworthely to eate the Lords bread and to drinke of his cup c. Saint Austen in his 26. treatise vppon Iohn saith The Apostle speaketh of those which receiued the Lordes bodie without difference and careleslie as if it had bene anie other kinde of meat whatsoeuer Heere therefore if he be reproued which maketh no difference of the Lordes bodie that is to saie doth not discerne the Lordes bodie from other meates how then should not Iudas be dampned who came to the Lords table feining that he was a friend but was an enimie Bullinger fol. 1108. DISOBEDIENCE Examples thereof out of Scripture Through Adams disobedience we were all made sinners and subiect to death ¶ As by one mans disobedience manie wer made sinners so by the obedience of one shall manie be made righteous Rom. 5. 19. For as by Adam all die euen so in Christ shall all be made aliue ¶ Christ rose first from the dead to take possession in our flesh for vs his members And where he saith all shall be made aliue he meaneth the faithfull Geneua Lots wife for disobeieng the Lord was turned into a piller of Salt Of the plagues curses promised to the disobeiers of Gods word Read Deut. 28. and Iere. 29. The man that gathered stickes on the Sabboth daie was stoned to death Whosoeuer did not obeie the true minister of God and the Iudge was put to death Acan for his disobedience was stoned Iosu. 7. Saule for his disobedience was reiected and cast out of Gods ●auour The Prophet for disobeieng the word of the Lord was denoured of a Lion The Iewes for their disobedience were carried into captiuitie 4. Reg. 17. 23. Queene Vasthi for her disobedience was diuorced from the king Ahasuerus Iohanan disobeied the word of the Lord and carried the people into Aegypt Ionas for his disobedience was cast into the Sea Ionas 1. 15. Of disobedience to the Gospel Read Rom. 10. 16 the 16. 26 2. Thessa. 1. 8. and the. 3. 4. Of disobedience to parents Read Rom. 1. 30. 2. Tim. 3. 2. Exo. 18. Deut. 21. 18. Of disobedience to rulers Read 2. Pet. 2. 10. Iude. 8. DIVORCEMENT How and wherefore married folke maie be diuorsed THe same authoritie hath the woman to put awaie the man that the man hath to put awaie the woman Mar. 10. 11. 12. Christ saith there is no lawfull cause to dissolue matrimonie but adulterie For when the woman giueth the vse of her bodie to an other man shée is no more her first husbandes wife nor the husband no longer the husband of his wife then he obserue the faith of matrimonie with her Wheresoeuer the fault happen and can be proued by certeine signes and lawfull testimonies the persons maie by the authoritie of Gods word and ministrie of the magistrates be separated so one from the other that it shall be lawfull for the man to marrie an other wife and the wife to marrie an other husband And Christ saith Math. 5. 32. and. 19. 9. So that a man shall not néede to kéepe at home with him a woman that is no more his then an other mans neither the woman such an husband as is no more hirs then an other womans Mar. 10. 11. 12. Saint Paule 1. Cor. 7. 12. sheweth an other cause of diuorcement when one of the persons being married is an Infidell and of a contrarie faith If this person will not dwell with the other that is his fellowe in matrimonie and a christen man it is lawfull to breake the faith of matrimonie and marrie with an other So saith Saint Ambrose writing in the place of S. Paule Non debetur reuerencia c. The reuerēce of matrimonie is not due vnto him y● contemneth the author of matrimonie And in y● same place the contempt of God breketh y● right of matrimonie cōcerning him y● is forsakē least he should be accursed béeing married to an other Thus thou séest that the Lord Ma● 5. and 19. giueth license for adulterie to diuorse and marrie againe Saint Paule for infidelitie Whooper Christ speaketh expreslie of the man that he maie for fornication put awaie his wife but he sheweth not whether the woman maie leaue her husbande if he commit whooredome the reason is because he doth onely answere vnto that was demanded of him But if a generall question be moued on this behalfe there is a common and a mutuall right of either parte euen as there is a mutuall knotte of faith and promise otherwise the husbande is the heade of the wife and the wife in subiection to her husband But as farre foorth as perteineth vnto chastitie of matrimonie and to the faithfulnesse of the bed the like lawe is prescribed vnto the wife The man saith Saint Paule hath no power ouer his owne bodie but the wife neither hath the woman power of hir owne bodie but the man There is like libertie therefore if the
that his body was slaine and his bloud shed for thy sins beléeuest it so art thou saued iustified therby if not so helpeth it thée not though thou herest a thousand Masses in a day or though thou dost nothing els al thy life long then eat his body drink his bloud no more then it shuld help thée in a dead thirst to behold a bush at a Tauerne dore if thou knewest not therby the ther wer wine wtin to be solde Tin This word sacrament did not signifie the same with the olde Writers as it doth now in the Church for they call a sacrament the oth or religious bond which was of the strength of an oth So they called y● souldiers oth wherby they sware when they shuld go a warfare for the Common wealth that they would serue faithfully The souldiers sacrament as we may perceiue by Seruius and Vigetius in their bookes of warre matters Augustine defineth a sacrament in this sort The visible sacrifice saith he is the sacrament of the inuisible sacrifice that is to say the holy signe And againe A sacrament saith he is a visible forme of an inuisible grace c. Musc. fol. 272. S. Austen describeth a sacrament thus The word of God comming to the Element maketh the sacrament And againe in another place he saith A sacrament is a thing wherin the power of God vnder the forme of visible things doth worke secret saluation And the Master of the sentences doeth describe a sacrament none otherwise A Sacrament saith he is an inuisible grace and hath a visible forme and by this inuisible grace saith he I meane remission of sinnes In the b. of Mar. fo 1352. What the Sacrament doth signifie The signification and substaunce of the Sacrament is to shewe how we are fed with the body of Christ that is that like as materiall bread feedeth the body so the body of Christ nailed vpon the Crosse embraced and eaten by faith féedeth the soule The like representation is also made in the Sacrament of Baptime that as our bodies is washed cleane with water so is our soules cleane with Christs bloud How the sacrament is called the body of Christ. It is called the body of Christ that is to say it signifieth the body of Christ. Glosa de consecra dist 2. Hoc est The right consecrating of the sacrament The same Christ that did adorne and beautifie the Table is now present and he doth consecrate the same also For it is not men that doth make these things that be set before vs of the consecration of y● Lords table to be y● body bloud of Christ but the same Christ which was crucified for vs. The words are pronounced by the mouth of the Priest but the things are consecrated by the power grace of God This is saith he my body by this word are the things y● are set before vs consecrated And euen as y● voice which saith grow be multiplied replenish y● earth was but once spoken but yet doth at all times by the work of nature féele effect to generation so that voice also was but once spoken yet it giueth sure staye to the sacrifice throughout al y● tables of the Church euen to this daye from henceforth til his comming ¶ Chrisostome doth héere compare y● words y● Christ spake at y● insitution of his supper to the words y● God spake when he appointed man to be multiplied by generation affirmeth y● the same power y● worketh stil in the one doth stil work in the other also Not to charm out the substance of bread● to charme in y● substance of Christ vnder the accidēts of bread as you do teach meaning Watson But y● as by naturall order y● generation of mankind is continued according to the first voice so the inuisible graces y● wer promised by the death bloudshedding of our Sauiour Christ are by y● sacramentall vse of these creatures according to his commaundement continually preached to our senses and by ●aith receiued into our soules Crowley How the sacrament is a memoriall or signe of Christs death If Iesus haue not dyed whose memoriall and signe is this Sacrifice Thou seest what diligence he gaue that we shuld continually keepe in memory that he dyed for vs c. ¶ Héere Chrisostome calleth the Sacrament a memoriall or signe of Christ and that it was instituted to kéepe his death in perpetuall remembraunce And where he calleth it a Sacrifice he meaneth it to be a remembraunce of that holy sacrifice that Christ made vpon the C●osse once for all for he can be sacrificed no more seeing he is immortall I. Frith How the sacrament is receiued with our mouth Rabanus Maurus saith The sacrament is receiued with the mouth of our body but the body of Christ is receiued into the inner man and that with the spirituall mouth of our soule How the sacrament is more then bare bread or wine Our Bread and Cup be not of the common sort as in stéede of Christ bound togethers in eares of corne and twigs as they that is the Maniches do foolishly imagine but by vndoubted consecration it is made vnto vs mystical or sacramental bread it doth not growe such wherefore that foode that is not so made although it be bread and wine it is a nourishment of refection but not a sacrament of religion otherwise then that we blesse and giue thankes to God in all his gifts not onely spirituall but corporall also How the sacrament is made of two natures Ireneus saith that the Sacrament is made of two natures of an heauenly nature of a terrenall earthly nature now take away the substaunce of bread what earthly nature or substaunce remaineth in this holy Sacrament How sacraments are no cause of grace In Sacraments the onely promise of God by Christ both by word and signe are exhibited vnto vs which promises if we apprehende by faith then is the grace increased in vs and the gifte of God by faith receiued is by the Sacrament ●ealed in vs. What ought to be considered in sacraments S. Augustine saith in Sacraments we must consider not they be indéede but what they signifie All misteries or sacraments must be considered with inward eyes that is to say spiritually How the sacraments are holie whether the minister or receiuer be good or bad S. Augustin in this place against the Donatists shooteth not at this But whether Christs verye naturall bodie be receiued with our mouths but whether the Sacraments in generall bee receiued both of good and bad And he declareth that it is all one water whether Symon Peter or Symon Magus be christened in it all one Table of the Lord and one Cup whether Peter sup thereat or Iudas all one Oyle whether Dauid or Saule were annoynted therewith Wherefore he concludeth thus Memento ergo sacramentis Dei c. Remember
saith S. Austen that the manners of euill men hinder not the sacraments of God that either they vtterly be not or be lesse holy but they hinder the euill men themselues so y● they haue the sacraments to witnesse of their damnation not to helpe of their saluation And all processe spoken there by S. Austen is spoken chiefely of Baptime against the Donatists which said y● Baptime was naught if either the Minister or receiuer were naught Against whom S. Austen concludeth that the sacraments themselues be holy and be all one whether the Minister or receiuer bée good or bad Cranmer fol. 63. What the olde fathers doe teach of the sacrament Ireneus S. Agustine and other auncient Doctors yea and the Canon law doth teach there must be both the outward Element which in Baptime is water and in the Lords supper bread and wine and the outward grace as the two principalls thereof Take away the bread and wine and then it is no sacrament How the sacrament is our body Because Christ hath suffered for vs he hath betaken vnto vs in this sacrament his body and bloud which he hath made also euen our selues for we also are made his body by his mercie we are euen the same thing that we receiue And after hée saith Now in the name of Christ ye are come as a man wold say to the Chalice of the Lord there are ye vpon the Table and there are ye in the Chalice ¶ Héere ye may sée that the Sacrament is our body and yet it is not our naturall body but in a mysterie I. Frith If you wil vnderstand the body of Christ heare the Apostle which saith Ye are the body of Christ members 1. Cor. 12. 27. Therefore if ye be the body of Christ members your misterie is put vpon the Lords Table ye receiue the mysterie of the Lord vnto that you are you aunswere Amen and in aunswering subscribe vnto it ¶ Héere we may sée the Sacrament is also our body and yet is not our naturall body but onely our body in a mysterie that is to say a figure signe memorial or representation of our body For as the bread is made of many graines or cornes so we though we be many are bread one body for this propertie and similitude it is called our body beareth the name of the very thing which it doth represent and signifie I. Frith As the sacrament of the Altar is our body euen so it is Christs First vnderstand ye that in y● wine which is called Christs bloud is admixed water which doth signifie the people y● are redéemed with his bloud so that y● head which is Christ is not without his body which is the faithful people nor the body without the head Now if the wine when it is consecrate be turned bodely into Christs bloud then it is also necessary that the water which is admixed be bodely turned into the bloud of the faithfull people for wheras is one consecration must folow one operation whereas is like reson ther must follow like mysterie But whatsouer is signified by the water as concerning the faithfull people is taken spiritually therefore whatsoeuer is spoken of the bloud in the wine must also néedes be taken spiritually This is Bartrams reason vpon a. 700. yeares since How in the sacrament there can be no accident without his substance In the sacrament of the Altar saith I. Puruay after y● consecration ther is not neither can be any accident with y● substance but ther verely remaineth the same substance the very visible incorruptible bread likewise the very same wine y● which before y● consecratiō wer set vpon the Altar to be consecrate by y● Priest likewise as whē a Pagā or Infidel is baptised he is spiritually cōuerted into a mēber of Christ yet remaineth y● very same mā which he before was in proper nature substāce B. of M. 649. Of a new article inuented in the sacrament Innocentius the third Pope was the head of Antichrist who after the letting loose of Satan inuented a new Article of our faith a certaine fained veritie touching the sacrament of t●e Altar that is to say that the Sacrament of the Altar is an ●●cident without a substance But Christ his Apostles do teach manifestly y● the sacrament of the Altar is bread the body of Christ together after y● manner y● he spake And in y● he calleth it bread he wold haue the people to vnderstand as they ought with reason that it is very and substanciall bread no false nor fained bread In the b. of Mar. fol. 649. Of the sacramentall chaunge Of the sacramentall chaunge S. Bede which was about 900. yeres agoe saith thus The creature of the bread wine by the ineffable sanctification of the spirit is turned into the sacrament of Christs flesh and bloud In sacraments saith S. Augustine we must consider not what they be of themselues but what they doe signifie S. Ambrose saith What sawest thou in thy Baptime water no doubt but not onely water Againe he saith Before the blessing of the heauenly words it is called another kinde but after the consecration the body of Christ is signified Of the sacramentall word Let the word saith S. Austen be added to the element and there shall be made a Sacrament For whence commeth this so great strength to the water to touch the body wash the soule but by the word making it not because it is spoken but because it is beléeued For in the very word it selfe the sound which passeth is one thing the power which abideth is another This is the word of faith which we preach saith the Apostle whervpon in the Actes of the Apostles it is said By faith cleansing their hearts c. Cal. in his Inst. 4. b. chap. 14. sect 4. How in the sacrament remaineth bread wine That which you sée saith S. Austen in the altar is the bread the cup which also your eyes doe shew you but faith the weth you further the bread is the body of Christ the cup his bloud ¶ Heere he declareth two thing● y● in the sacrament remaineth bread wine which we may discerne with our eyes that the bread and wine be called the body and bloud of Christ. He that called his naturall body saith Theodoretus wheate and bread and also called himselfe a Uine the selfe same called bread and wine his body and bloud and yet chaunged not their nature And in his Dialogue he saith more plainely for saith he as the bread and wine after the consecration lost not theyr proper nature but kept their former substaunce forme figure which th●y had before euen so the body of Christ after his Ascention was chaunged into the godly substaunce Of the sacramentall eating ¶ Looke Eating What is to be wondred at in the sacraments The wonder is not
represented by the Paschall Lambe should abstaine from leauened bread Yea how dare your Priests eate anye leauened bread at anye time sith that they doe eate and drinke the bodie and bloud of Christ almost euery day How the Lords death is shewed As often as ye shall eate this bread drinke of this Cup ye shall shew the Lords death c. ¶ The Lords death is not shewed except both parts of the Sacrament be ministred because in his death the bloud was diuided from the bodie it is necessary that the same diuision be represented in the supper otherwise the supper is not a shewing of the Lords death Latimer SHOE What Gods shooe is OUer Edom will I stretch out my shooe ¶ Edom is the earth The Apostles féete be his shooes for it is writtē How bewtifull are the feete of them which bring glad tidings of peace He stretched out his shooe vppon the earth when he sent them to preach to all creatures for their sound went into all lands their words to the ende of the world SHORT LIFE How short life is not a generall rule of Gods indignation IT is a certaine token but no sure token of Gods indignation when a man is snatched away with vnripe death in his flourishing age Then what shall we saye to the sentence written in the Booke of Sapience 4. chapter The iust man is snatched out of this world that the mallice of men and wickednesse of the worlde shoulde not tourne his minde and least lyeng should deceiue his soule And againe The righteous man what death soeuer he be preuented withall his soule shall go to rest The Innocents that Herod did murther for Christs cause Iohn Baptist whom he did behead are the blessed Martirs of Christ. This must néedes be graunted y● sometime God taketh out of this world the righteous onely because the world is not worthy to haue them among them sometime least the mallice lewd example of men shoulde tourne their hearts to vngodlinesse But now this taking away of righteous men out the world is not a rule nor an order generall that God vseth with men but it is onely Per accidens because that troublesome times are at hand as of famine warres and such others and in such perticular cases It is true that Christ saide Beati sterilis c. Happye are the barren and the wombes that neuer bare c. And yet the rule generall of all women is this that fruite of their wombe is a blessing the contrary a woman to be barren is a displeasure a plague more grieuous to them then pouertie or hunger Ric. Turnar SICERA What kinde of drinke it was THis Sicera as Hierom writeth to Nepotianus was a kinde of drinke much like vnto wine which was made either of Wheate or of Apples or of Dates or els of other fruits Pet. Mar. vpon Iudic. fol. 202. SICLE What a Sicle is A Sicle as Iosephus saith cōteined 4. drams of Athens And a dran● of Athens as Budens gathereth in his booke de ass conteined 3. shillings of Towers A shilling of Towers is y● half part of a Ba●se Wherefore a dram was as much in value as a shilling of Argentine that is thrée halfe Batses that is foure shillings But there were two manner of Sicles one was vsuall and prophane and the other was of the Sanctuary The holy sickle was double so much as the prophane Wherefore Ezechiel in his 45. chapter verse 12. saith that a prophane sickle containeth 20. halfe pence but the sicle of the Sanctuary 40. Pet. Mar. vpon Iudic. fol. 238. ¶ A Sicle was a péece of money in value worth 4. grotes equiualent with that which is called Stater whereof the halfe part of this sicle is two grotes that is to saye the 5. part of a French Crowne as they went in Fraunce as very exactly declareth the learned Master William Budns in his booke De Assi Marl. fol. 390. ¶ A Sicle after the Hebrues is an Ounce but after the Gréekes and Latines it is but th● fourth part of an Ounce and is contained 12. Geras as in Exo. 30. 13. which is ten pence sterling or thereabout T. M. Take 5. Sicles of euery head ¶ Sicles were of two sorts the one common the other belonging to the Sanctuary and that of the Sanctuary was double the waight of the common The common Sicle weighed two grotes and the Sanctuary Sicle 4. The Scripture in this place and in the 30. of Exo. us Ezechiel fortie and fiue saith that the Sanctuary Sicle doth weigh 20. Geras which the Grecians doe call Obolus and we in English an halfe peny when 8. grotes of our money was an ounce and the Hebrues do think that Obolus doth weigh the waight of 16. barly Cornes The Bible note SICHEM What Dauid meaneth by the deuiding of Sichem SIchem was the most richest and the most strongest Citie in all the Tribe of Ephraim wherof Isboseth was king ouer all Israel beside The Tribe of Iuda onely except which stucke vnto Dauid Now where the Prophet doth prophecie make his bost in God saieng Dominus loquutus est è sanctuario suo laetabor diuidam Sichem The Lord hath spoken it out of his holy place I will reioice and diuide Sichem is no more to say but that Dauid should conquere Sichem and be king therof and diuide it and lot it as Iosua did as all conquerours do when they conquer any countrey or lande And as Dauid shoulde conquere Sichem so was it saide that hée shoulde meate out y● valley of Sucoth for Dauid reioysing afore hand of Gods goodnesse towards him saith Ego vallem s●coth demetiar It is not Isboseth that shall long continue king of sucoth but it is I whome the Lord hath appointed to be king of sucoth and as I haue now sayd of sichem and sucoth so will I saye of Galaad and Manasses Meus est Galaad meus est Manasses Galaad is mine and Manasses is mine And to know what Sucoth Galaad and Manasses were ye shall vnderstande that sucoth was a vale nigh vnto the citie of sichem in the land of Canaan In the which vale Iacob pitched his tents after he had met his brother Esau and was departed from him And of his pitching his tents there the va●le had this name sucoth giuen him for Sucoth by interpretation and turning of the word into Latine is as much to say as Tabernacula Galaad was the name of a little hillocke as we read in Gen. 31. When Iacob fled away sodeinly and priuely from Laban his father in lawe with his wiues Lea and Rachel Then at the ende of seauen daies iourney Laban ouertooke Iacob in mount Galaad where he reproued him not onely of running away deceitfully but also of theft which when he coulde not proue Laban cooled himselfe and so did shake hands with Iacob And in witnes of friendship of vnfeined reconciliation
that we haue by the same with all giftes and graces of the same The second is to yéelde thankes vnto him to giue testimonie of our faith towards him and of our charitie which we haue towards our bretheren and of the vnion with the Church The third to represent to vs by the bread and wine which are ther distributed the whole and perfect spiritual nouritour which we haue by the meanes of the body flesh and bloud of Iesus Christ to the end we may be spiritually nourished into eternall life according to our benefit which we haue already receiued by our regeneration whereof the Baptime is to vs as a Sacrament in the which we haue in the Supper as it were a gage of our resurrection the which we doe beléeue and waite for There euen as the bread and wine be giuen vnto vs visibly and bodely euen so are the body and bloud of Iesus giuen vnto vs indéede but inuisible and spiritually by the meanes of faith and by the vertue of the holy ghost for he is the meane by which we haue true communion and true vnion with Iesus Christ and all his Church the which is his body whereof all true Christians be members Pet. Viret Why the Supper of the Lord was called a Sacrifice The Supper of the Lord was not called a sacrifice because Christ shuld be offered in it but because he offereth presenteth himselfe vnto vs and that we doe through faith receiue him and giue him thankes for the great benefite that we haue receiued by the merites of his death and passion bloud shedding confessing and professing that we holde none other for our Sauiour but him and that we doe accept knowledge none other sacrifice but his onely for this cause was the Lordes Supper called Eucharistia which word doth signifie thankes giuing Thus doth S. Austen and all other Doctors of the Church expound it Veron in his b. of Purg. The Doctors mindes vpon the Supper of the Lord. If ye should sée the Sonne of man ascend vp where he was before ¶ What is this By that he resolueth those whom hée hath knowen of that he manifested the thing whereby they haue offended for they did thinke that he would giue vnto them his body but he saith that he will ascende vp into Heauen all whole saieng When ye shall sée the Sonne of man ascende where he was before at y● least you shall sée then that hée doth not giue his body in the same manner as ye thinke iudge at the least you shall then vnderstand that his grace is not consumed by morsells c. Aug. vpon S. Iohn in the 27. treatise vpon the 6. Chapter If faith be in vs Christ is in vs. For what other thing saith the Apostle Christ dwelling in your hearts by faith but that through the faith which thou hast of Christ Christ is in thy heart August in his 49. treatise vppon Saint Iohn 11. Chapter After he had ended the solemnitie of the auncient Passeouer the which he made in remembrance of the auncient deliuerance out of Aegypt he passeth forth to the new solemnitie y● which the church desireth to celebrate in remembrance of hir redemption to the end that putting the Sacrament of his flesh and of his bloud vnder the lykenesse of bread and wine in stéede of flesh and of the bloud he sheweth himself to be him vnto whom the Lord hath sworne and will not repent Thou art a Priest for euer c. It followeth after because the bread doeth fortifie the flesh and that the wine causeth the bloud in the flesh the bread is referred mystically to the body of Christ and the wine to his bloud Bede vpon the 22. Chapter of Saint Luke Let vs not staye héere belowe on the bread and wine which are set on the Lords Table but let vs lift vp our spirits on high through faith Let vs consider that the Lambe of God which taketh away the sinnes of the world is in that holy Table which is not offered in sacrifice by the Priestes after the manner of beasts And in taking his precious body and his bloud let vs beleeue that they are the signes and tokens of our resurrection And for the same cause we eate not much but a lyttle to the end we may know y● the same is not ordeined for to fill our bellyes withall but for to serue to sanctitie and holinesse c. ¶ Looke Bread Body Bloud Figure Signe Sacrament Sacrifice How the Lords death is Shewed in the supper As often as ye shall eate this bread and drinke of this Cup ye shall shew the Lords death c. ¶ The Lords death is not shewed except both parts of the Sacrament be ministred and because in his death the bloud was diuided from the body it is necessary that the same diuision be represented in the Supper otherwise the Supper is not a shewing of the Lords death Latimer The meaning of this place of Iohn And when the Supper was done There be some which thinke that it ought to be thus reade And Supper béeing prepared for it may be doubted whether these things were done after the supper or in supper time It is very likely that supper was not fully ended that is to say that the Table was not yet taken away séeing it followeth by and by that the Lord tooke a morsell of bread and offered the same to Iudas Marl. vppon Iohn fol. 456. SVPREMACIE Proues against the supremacie IN the Councel of Carthage it is said thus The Bishop of Rome himselfe may not be called vniuersall Bishop Dist. 99. Prima sedes S. Gregory saith thus Nullus decessorum meorum● c. None of my predecessors Bishope of Rome euer consented to vse this vngodly name no Bishop of Rome euer tooke vpon him this name of singularitie we the Bishops of Rome will not receiue this honor being offered vnto vs. Greg. li. 4. Epist. 32. and. 36. Where pride and hypocrisie beareth sway there humilitie can haue no place Hesychius sen. li. 4. dist 7. Chrisostome saith Quicunque desiderauerit c. Whosoeuer desi●eth Primatum in earth in heauen he shall finde confusion Neither shall he be counted among the seruants of Christ that will once intreate of Primacie Iewel fol. 118. 119. SVRE How we are sure of our saluation ¶ Looke Saluation SVRPLESSE From whence the wearing of Surplesses came NIcholaus Leonicenus saith Isidis Sacerdotes in Aegypto c. The Priests of the Goodesse Isis in Aegypt vsed to weare linnen Surplesses and euermore had their heads shauen which thing séemeth to haue bene deriued from them vnto our time from hand to hand For they that among vs minister Gods seruice and serue the holy Altars are forbidden to suffer the haire of their heads or their beards to grow and in their diuine seruice vse lynnen garments Nicholaus Leonicenus in varia historia li. 2. ca. 21.
the horns of the Unicornes By these Vnicornes vnderstande the common people of the Iewes which cruelly and furiously put themselues in prease against Christ crieng Crucifie him Crucifie him Mat. 27. 22. T. M. VNIVERSALL CHVRCH What it is THe vniuersall Church is a multitude gathered of all manner of nations which béeing sette a sunder and dispearsed by distaunce of places doth neuerthelesse consent in the one truth of the heauenly doctrine and is knitte together in one selfe same bonde of religion But for as much as it is not possible for all Christs members to growe together into one place vnder the vniuersall Church are comprehended the seuerall Churches which are disposed in euery Towne and Uillage according as mans necessitye requireth So as each one of them doth worthely beare the name and authoritie of the Church In the same sense doth Paule saye that he had a dayly care for all Churches 2. Cor. 11. 28. Marl. fol. 7. Whether Christs Church or the Popes be the vniuersall Church That the Church of Christ and not the Romish Church is that true vniuersall Church that hath alwaies remained and euer shall read S. Augustine to Casulane Epist. 80. where yée shall see the Romish Church and other Westerne Churches agreeing with her gui●e exempted frō Christs vniuersal church as one departed from the faith of Christ. Proues against the vniuersall head ¶ Looke Pope VNQVIETNESSE OF THE FLESH Looke Messenger of Satan VNSAVERIE The meaning of this place of Iob. THat which is vnsauerie shall it be eaten without Salt ¶ Canne a mans taste delight in that that hath no sauour Meaning that none toke pleasure in affliction seeing they cannot awaye with thinges that are vnsauerie to the mouth Geneua VNTILL What this word Vntill doth signifie KNew her not vntil she had brought forth her first begotten sonne ¶ This word Untill also doth sometime signifie the certeintie and appointed time And sometime it signifieth the time infinit without end or ceasing as in these places that followeth I am I am and vntill you waxe olde I am Now in this place because hée sayth vntill they be old he will be their God will be therefore when they are olde cease or leaue off to be their God And our sauiour Christ to his Apostles Behold I am with you euen vnto the end of the world will the Lord after the consummation of the world forsake his Disciples Againe the Psalmist saith ● He shall reigne vntill he haue put all his enimies vnder his f●●●e shall he therfore when his enimies are subdued reign● no long●● Againe as the eyes of the maide doe wa●te vppon thee handes of her mistres euen so doe our eies waie vppon thée vntill thou haue mercie vppon vs when the Lorde therefore hath compassion and mercie vppon vs shall we waite no longer In the lyke sense this word Untill is to be taken in this place for the Euangelist saith He knew hir not vntill she had brought foorth hir sonne that we may much more perceiue and gather that he knew hir not after Marl. vpon Mat. fol. 19. ¶ Christ is héere called the first borne because she had neuer any before and not in respect of any she had after neither yet doth this word Untill import alway a time following wherein the contrary may be affirmed as our Sauiour saieng that he will be present with his disciples vntill the ende of the world meaneth not that after the end of the world he will not be with them Geneua This little word Untill in the Hebrue tongue giueth vs to vnderstand also that a thing shall not come to passe in time to come As Michol had no childe vntill hir death daye 2. Samuel 6. 23. And in the last Chapter of the Euangelist Behold I am with you vntill the ende of the world Beza VNVVORTHELY Of the vnworthy receiuing of the Sacrament SAint Paule doth not say that Iudas did eate the bodye of Christ vnworthely for he speaketh not of his body vnworthely but of the Sacrament vnworthely For he saith Whosoeuer eateth of this bread and drinketh of this Cup vnworthely eateth and drinketh his owne damnation because he maketh no difference of the Lords body and not because he eateth the Lords body If Iudas did eate Christs body it must néedes follow that Iudas was saued For Christ saith in the 6. of Iohn ve 45. Whosoeuer eateth my flesh drinketh my bloud hath eternall life and I will raise him vp in the last day R. Woodman in the b. of Mar. fol. 2181. Who eateth Christs body in the Sacrament vnworthely He eateth this bread vnworthely which regardeth not the purpose for the which Christ did institute it which commeth not to it with spirituall hunger to eate through faith his very body which the bread representeth by the breaking distributing of it which commeth not with a merry heart giuing God hartie thankes for their deliueraunce from sinne which doe not much more eate in their heart the death of his body then they doe the bread with their mouth Obiection He that eateth and drinketh this Sacrament vnworthely shal be guiltie of the body and bloud of the Lord. Now say they how shal they be guiltie of the Lords body and bloud which receiue it vnworthely except it were the very body bloud of the Lord. Aunswere He that despiseth the Kings seale or letters offendeth against his owne person He that violently plucketh downe his graces armes or breketh his broad seale with a furious minde or with violence committeth treason against his own person yet his armes broad seale are not his own person He y● clippeth the Kings coyne committeth treason against the Kings person the Common-wealth yet y● mony is neither the Kings person nor y● Cōmon-wealth S. Paule saith y● euery man which prayeth or precheth w e couered head shameth his head his head is Christ shal we therfore imagin y● Christ is naturaly in euery mās head S. Austen saith that he doth no lesse sin which negligently heareth the word of God then doth the other which●vnworthely receiueth the sacrament of Christs body bloud ¶ Héere it is plaine y● Christs natural body is not in the word when it is preched yet he sinneth no lesse saith S. Austen the negligently heareth it then doth he that vnworthely receiueth the Sacrament S. Peter witnesseth that our harts are purified by faith true faith therefore is the cleanesse of Christians whervpon S. Austen saith The vnbeléeuers eate not the flesh of Christ spiritually but rather eateth drinketh the sacrament of so great a thing to his owne condempnation because being vncleane hée hath presumed to come to Christs Sacraments which no man receiueth worthely but he that is cleane of whome it is said Blessed be the cleane in heart for they shall sée God Bull. 1107. VOICE The meaning of this place HEaring his voyce but séeing no man ¶ They heard Paules voice for
104. Of the beasts that came into the Arke eodem Of the beast called B●oz eod Of foure sortes of beasts eod Bethel Of the situation of Bethel eod It is the name of a Citie and also of a mount 105. How it Bethauen are not both one eo How Bethel is taken heere eod Of two Bethels eo Of the finding to Ta●ob in Bethel eod Of the false worshipping at Bethel eod Bethleem How it was made famous 106 Bethphage What manner of Uillage it was eod Bethseda What the word signifieth eod Betraieng What it is to betray 107. Bible In whose daies it was translated in eod Bilney Of the comfort he had of his 108 His aunswere to a proud Papist 109. Binding and loosing What it meaneth 110 Bishop What a Bishop is 111. How Bishops were chosen eod Of the ordinaunce of Bishops and ministers 112. Of vnpreaching Bishops and Pastors eod How they are vnlike they were in Pauls time 113. What regard they ought to haue in feeding the poore eod Of the equalitie of Bishops 114. What is meant by Bishops Deacons 115. The Bishops oth to the Pope eod Of the rebellion of Bishops 116. Blasphemie What blasphemie is eod What blasphemie of the holy spirit is eo Blesse What it is to blesse and c. eod What Gods blessings are 119. Who is blessed sanctified to God eod Of the sacramentall blessing 120. What it is to blesse the Lords name 121. A place of the. 24. Psalme expounded eod Blinde Who be blinde 122. Why God is said to blinde men eod The meaning of the place eod Bloud What is ment by bloud 123. How our cleansing is by Christs bloud eod How flesh and bloud is not in the Sacrament 124. How the bloud of Martirs is the seede of the Church 125. Body What a naturall body is eod What a spirituall body is eod How the body of Christ is in one place 128. Booke What the booke of lyfe is eod Who be written in the booke of life eod Of what credit the booke of Machabees be in the scripture 129. Bookes of holy scripture lost 130. Of the booke of the law found 131. Borders Borders on the Iewes garments eod Borne Of water and spirit eod Bosome How it is diuersly taken eod Of the bosome of Abraham eod Bramble The propertie of a bramble cōpared c. 132. Boow downe What it is to boow down eo Bowe The Gospell likened to a bowe eod Braunches Who be the braunches cut off eod Bread What bread is in Scripture 133. How bread is called Christs body eod How it is a figure of Christs body 134. How bread remaineth after the consecration 136. How the sacramental bread ought not to be reserued 137. Of the breaking of bread eod Of three kindes of bread eod Bretheren of Christ. Who are so called 139. Bridegroome Who is the bridegroome 140 Brooke Cedron Wherfore it was so called eod Brused reede What it signifieth 141. Buddas Of his heresie and finall ende eod Bull. The Bull of Pope Clement the sixt eod Of the Priest that cast the Popes Bul at his feete 142. Doctor Whittington slain with a Bull. eod Of the Bulls of Basan 143. Burden What is meant by this worde Burden 144. The burden of the Lord. eod Of the burden of Babel 145. Buriall How it is a looking Glasse c. eod The pompe of buriall forbidden eo What the Greeks Hebrewes call it eo What it is to be buried with Christ. 146. Of the buriall of Iohn Baptist. eod Burne What it is to burne eod What burning lights doe signifie eod Of burnt offerings and peace offerings eodem Why it was called a whole burnt offering 147. How the christians do offer burnt sacrifices eod C. CAin How he was slaine 148. Of a certeine Sect called Cayni eo Caiphas How he was the mouth of God and the c. 149. Call What it is to call vpon the name of God eod Of three manner of callings eo Of two manner of callings 151. Calfe Of the calfe that Aaron made 152 Camel How Camelum is taken two waies eod Candles and Tapers Against them 153. Candlesticke The Church likened to a Candlesticke 154. Captiuitie The meaning thereof eo Care What care is forbidden 155. What care we ought to care for 156 Carpocrates Of his wicked opinions eo Carren or carkas 157. Castor and Pollux What they were eod Cau● or Denne The difference eod Cause What the cause of vnbeleefe is 158 God is not the cause of sinne eo The successe maketh not the cause either good or bad 159. Cenchrea What Cenchrea is eo Cerdon 160. Ceremonies What Paule ment by cere eo Whē they may be reteined whē not eo How ignorance sprang out of them eod What ceremonies or traditions are to be refused 161. Cesarea Philippi Two cities so called eod Chalcedon Of y● nature of this stone 162. Chamber What the word signifieth eod Charybdis and Scilla What these are 163. Chariot What a chariot is how c. eo Charitie What Charitie is 165. Chastice What the word betokeneth 166. Chastitie How it is expounded eod How is Chastitie the one part may offend and not c. eod Of counterfeit chastitie 167. Chaunce How nothing cōmeth by chance 168. Chaunter What this word signifieth 169. Cheeke What is meant by turning of the cheeke 170. Chemarims What they were eod Cherinthus Of this opinions eod Of his sodeine death 171. Cherub What a Cherub is eo Cherubin What the Cherubins wer 172 Chiefe Priest eod Children How they are not forbidden to come c. eod How they ought to be brought vp 174. Of children adopted eodem Of the children of this world eo How the children of God are holpen eo What is vnderstood by children in this place eo Chilassis Of his fond opinions 175. Chore. A Psalme made by the children of Chore. 176. Chosen Wherefore we are chosen eod How God hath chosen vs and not wee him 177. Not chosen many wise men eod Of Mary Magdalens good choosing eod How God chooseth two manner of waies 178. Of the choosing of ministers eo Chrisolite The nature of this stone eod Chrisoprace the descriptiō of this stone eo Christ. How he was first promised to Adam 179. How he grew in age and wisdome eod How he is called Dauids sonne eod How Christ had money eod Why Christ became man 180. Why Christ fasted eo Why he is called holy 181. Why he is called true eod Why he was borne of a woman eod Why Christ died for vs. eod The time of Christs crucifieng 182. Of his calling vpon God in his passiō eo How he baptised and baptised not eod Of his humanitie eod Of his descending into hell 183. Of his ascention 186. How he is the end of the lawe 187. How Christ dwelleth in vs. eod What Christ is in the holy Script 189. How he entered the doores being shut eo How his naturall body is in one place eo How
as Fil●●s fil●orum dicuntur etiam filij auorum The sonnes sonnes daughters are also called the sonnes daughters of the grandfather And so she was Abrahams sister because she was his brothers daughter How Abraham did eate Christs bodie When this promise was established to Abraham by the word of God which said In thy séed shal all the nations of the earth be blessed he beléeued which was counted to him for righteousnesse and did both eate his bodie drinke the bloud of Christ through faith beléeuing verelie that Christ should take our nature and spring out of his séede as touching the flesh also that he should suffer death to redéeme vs. And as Christ testifieth he heartelie desired to sée the daie of Christ who sawe it reioiced He sawe it in faith had the daie of Christ that is to saie all those things that shuld chance him plainlie reuealed vnto him albeit he were dead manie hundred yeres before it was actuallie fulfilled reuealed vnto the world by that faith was he saued yet neuer did eate his flesh with his téeth nor neuer beléeued y● bread shuld be his bodie wine his bloud And therefore sith he was saued without that faith and the same faith shall saue vs that saued him I thinke we shall also be saued if we eate him spirituallie as he did although we neuer beléeue that the bread is his bodie I. Frith vpon the Lords supper against Moore How Abraham sawe the daie of Christ. ¶ Looke My daie Of the communication betwene Abraham and the glutton The communication that the glutton had with Abraham happened spirituallie for so thought the glutton with himselfe in his torments and such aunswere receiued he in his owne conscience Heming How God tried Abrahams faith Take now thy sonne c. and offer him vp there ¶ Héerein stoode the chiefest point of his temptation séeing he was commanded to offer vp him in whom God had promised to blesse all the nations of the world Geneua How Abraham is said to be a Prophet Deliuer the man his wife againe for he is a Prophet ¶ That is one to whom God reuealeth himselfe familiarlie Geneua ¶ Of the doubting of Abraham Looke Doubt ¶ Of Abrahams riches Looke Lazarus ABSOLVTION How no mortall man can absolue from sinne THeir absolution also iustifieth no man from sinne for with the heart do men beléeue to be iustified with all faith Saint Paule Rom. 10. ver 10. that is through faith beléeuing the promises are we iustified as I haue sufficientlie proued in other places with the scripture Faith saith Saint Paule in the same place commeth by hearing that is to saie by hearing the preacher that is sent from God and preacheth Gods promises Now when they absolue in latine the vnlearned heareth not for how saith Paule 1. Cor. 14. ver 16. when thou blessest in an vnknowne tongue shall the vnlearned saie Amen vnto thy thankes giuing for he wotteth not what thou saist So likewise the laie man wotteth not whether thou loose or binde or whether thou blesse or cursse In like manner it is if the laie vnderstand Latine or though the Priest absolue in English for in his Absolution he rehearseth no promise of Christ but speaketh his owne words saieng I by the authoritie of Peter and Paule absolue and loose thée from all thy sinnes Thou saist so which art but a lieng man and neuer more then now verelie Thou saist I forgiue thée thy sinne and the scripture Iohn the first that Christ onelie forgiueth and taketh awaie the sinnes of the world and Paul Peter and all the Apostles preacheth that all is forgiuen in Christ for Christs sake Gods word onely looseth thou in preaching that mightst loose also els not T●m● fo 149. How absolution standeth not in the will of the Priest Gratian saith Voluntas sacerdotis c. The will of the priest can neither further nor hinder but the merite of him that desireth absolution Iewel fol. 138. ABSTINENCE What the abstinence of a Christian man is THe abstinence of a Christian man is to withdrawe himselfe from sin As it is said in Toby how that he taught his sonne from his youth vp to feare God to refraine from sinne And S. Paule exhorteth the Thessalonians from fornication and other sinnes Tindale What difference is betweene fasting and Abstinence True fasting is a religious worke ordeined to testifie our humilitie and to make the flesh the more obedient vnto the spirit that we maie be the quicker to praie to all good workes But Abstinence from this or that meat with opinion of holinesse supersticious it maie easilie make a man but holie it cannot S. Paule saith It is not meat that maketh vs acceptable vnto God 1. Cor. 8. ver 8. Againe It is good to confirme the heart with grace not with meates wherein they that haue walked haue found no profit Heb. 13. Ver. 9. The meate serueth for the bellie the bellie for the meate the Lord will destroie them both 1. Cor. 6. ver 13. And againe The kingdome of God is not meate drinke Rom. 14. ver 17. Likewise Christ saith The thing that entreth into the mouth defileth not the man Ma● 1● ver 〈…〉 Héere it is easie to sée that fasting is one thing abstinence from flesh another The Nazaries in the Testament absteined not from flesh yet they fasted Elias 3. Reg. 17. ver 6. was fed with flesh Iohn the Baptist eate y● flesh of loc●stes yet they both fasted Socrates saith that manie Christians in y● Lent season did eate fish birds Manie ab●●ained vntill 3. of the clock in the afternoone then receiued all kind of meats either fish or flesh wtout difference Likewise Epiphanius saith some eate all kind of birds or fowle absteining onelie from the flesh of foure footed beasts And yet they kept their lent trulie fasted as well as anie others Wherefore abstinence from anie one certeine kinde of meat is not of it selfe a work of religion to please God but onelie a méere positiue policie S. Austine saith Non quaero c. I demaund not what thou eatest but wherein thou hast pleasure And Saint Hierome saith of the Maniches Ieiunant illi c. They fast in déed but their fasting is worse then if they filled their bellies Iewell fol. 15. ABVSES By whom they ought to be reformed THe abuses that he in the Church ought to be corrected by Princes Let euerie soule saith Saint Paule submit himselfe to the higher powers Hezekia destroied the brasen Serpent when he sawe the children of Israel abuse it Iosaphat sent abrode his commission to suppresse and banish all Idolatrie and superstition out of his land Iosia cleansed his land from Idolatrie witchcraft sorceries and all other abuses Ioas destroied the house of Baal brake downe the Altars and corrected manie other abuses within his dominions
that by that instrument he worketh manie things c. Pet. Mar. fol. 325. And his arme shall rule for him ¶ His power shal be sufficient without helpe of anie other and shall haue all meanes in himselfe to bring his will to passe Geneua ¶ Where the Lord saith he hath made bare his holie Arme is as much to saie as he is readie to smite his enimies and to deliuer his people Geneua Therefore mine owne Arme helped me ¶ God sheweth that he hath no néede of mans helpe for the deliueraunce of his and though men refuse to doe their dutie through negligence ingratitude yet he himselfe will deliuer his Church and punish the enimies Read Chap. 59. 10. Geneua ARMINIANS Of their hereticall and damnable opinions THese people were of the Countreie of Armenia and of late yeares christened but now they be subiect to the Turkes They in some things erred from the Church of the Latines and Greekes They haue one great Bishop whom they cal Catholicum They celebrate much like vnto our fashion They kéepe holie neither the Natiuitie of Christ nor his Baptime saieng he néeded not to be purged nor clensed of sin Also they tooke from all sacraments the vertue to confer grace They eftsoones baptise those that came from the Church of the Latines to them saieng that we be not of the Catholike faith but they They saie that no man maie be christened vnlesse he receiue the Sacrament of the Altar that Infants néed not to be baptised affirming that in them is no Originall sinne That the holie Ghost procéedeth of the Father and not of the Sonne That the Sacrament of the Altar maie not be consecrated of bread cleane without leauen Also in the consecration they put no water into the wine Moreouer they saie that the receiuing of the Sacrament profiteth onelie the bodie That when Christ descended into Hell he led with him all that wer there That Matrimonie is no Sacrament and may bée dissolued at the will of the man or woman That Christ did rise the Saterdaie after good Friday All these and other heresies are condempned by sundry generall counsailes and the consent of all Christendome Eliote ARRIVS Of his heresie and lamentable end ARrius borne in Libia yet a Priest of Alexandria hearing Alexander the Bishop intreating curiouslie of y● Trinitie thought verilie that he maintained the opinion of Sabellius set himselfe against the Bishop and said that the sonne of God had a beginning of essence that there was a time when he was not he said that God was not alwaies a Father that the sonne was not from euerlasting but had his beginning of nothing Béeing called before the Emperour he would subscribe to the Nicene counsell and sweare to His deceipt was to carrie in his bosome his hereticall opinion written in a péece of paper and when he came to the booke he would sweare y● he thought as he had written meaning in his bosome His end was lamētable for comming from the Emperour after the oth he had taken with great pompe through the stréet of Constantinople he was taken with sodeine feare withall he felt a laske immediatlie he asked of them where there was anie house of office thither he went and voided his guts As manie as went by were wont to point at the place with the finger and saye in yonder Iakes died Arrius the heretike Socrates li. 1. cap. 3. 25. Epiphan Haeres 68. 69. ¶ About the yeare of our Lord. 499. Transamandus king of the Vandales in Afrike banished 220. Bishops for that they withstood and resisted the heresie of Arrius ¶ About the yeare of Christ. 522. Iustine the Emperour banished all the Bishops of the Arrians Maniches and other heretikes and indeuoured to restore againe the pure and sincere Christian faith But shortlie after he fearing of the power of Theodorich the king of the Ostrogothes permitted the Arrians to turne to their Churches ¶ About the yeare of our Lord. 591. Leonigildus king of Spaine slew his own sonne Hermogile because he would not consent to the heresie of Arrius Cooper Of the con●utation of the Arrians Looke Christ. ARROVVES What the Arrowes of the Almightie are FOr the Arrowes of the Almightie is in mée c. ¶ The Arrowes of the Almightie after some mens opinion are the sorenesse of his iudgement and his wrath After some other they are the trouble which the lawe moueth in the hearts of men while they therby are stirred to hate themselues so are healthfullie killed as it is said Psalme 38. 2. Some againe expound them to be the crosse of miserie and wretchednesse wherein God had now wrapped him For the Saints saie they receiue their crosse of the hand of God The same wil that this sentence be an increasing and amplifieng of that which his aduersarie had fierslie laide against him Eliphas in the beginning of the fourth Chapter had said that the plague was come vpon him had touched him With this say they meteth he now Beholde it not onelie toucheth mée but woundeth mée with Arrows and those venoumed with venome haply with the gall of Dragons with which touching both my bloud waxed wood and all my spirit is suppled vp Moreouer God hath not onelye throwne these dartes vppon mée but also his dreadfull feares that is whatsoeuer hée hath that is terrible laieth he on mée T. M. How Arrowes are sometimes taken ●or thunder and lightnings Then he sent his Arrowes that is to saie his lightninges and scattered them Read Psalme 77. 17. Geneua How they are sometimes taken for sicknesse For thine Arrowes haue light vppon mée ¶ Thy sicknesse where with thou hast visited mée Geneua ASIA What Asia is ASia is one of the three parts of the world conteining Asia the lesse Lidia Caria Bith●●●a Galatia Capadocia Armenia Cilicia Sarmatia Assiria Arabia Persia Hircania Media the two Indies with manie mo as Ptolome describeth in his twelue Tables Cooper Of whom Asia was first possessed Sem the first sonne of Noe Prince of Asia called also of some Melchisedech a iust and peaceable King a Priest of Almightie God from whome Christ liniallie descended possessed Asia with his children For of Elam came first the Persians of Assur the Assirians of Arphaxat the Chaldeans of Lud the Lidians and of Aram the Sirians Grafton ASKING The manner of asking of God THis saith Dauid Kimhi was the manner of asking of God Hée which would enquire concerning anie publike affaire or otherwise of anie weightie matter came vnto the Priest and hée putting on an Ephod stoode before the Arke of the Lord. In the Ephod or in the brest plate were 12. precious stones wherein were written the name of the twelue Tribes And there were also set the names of Abraham Isaac and Iacob And in those stones were all the letters of the Alphabet The asker ought to turne his face vnto the Priest and to aske not in déede so apertlie that his
same presentlie in the Church he should be accursed for euer 7. Reason Basil saith Amphilochius being once made Bishop besought God that he might offen vp the vnbloudie Sacrifice with his owne words be fell in a traunce came againe to himselfe so ministred euerie daie On a certaine night Christ with his Apostles came down to him from heauen brought bread with him awoke Basil had him vp and offer the Sacrifice Up he rose was straight at the Altar said his praiers as he had written them in his paper lifted vp the bread laid it downe againe brake it in peeces receiued one reserued another to be buried with him hung vp the third in a golden Doue And all this was done Christ his Apostles being still present who came purposelie from heauen to helpe Basil to Masse Aunswere This storie is a méere fable put foorth vnder the name of Amphilochius as shal appeare by the circumstaunce weighing of the likelihood Basile besought God that he might make the sacrifice with his owne words And shall we thinke he had more fancie to his owne wordes then he had to the words of Christ He awoke stoode vp and sodeinlie was at the Altar at midnight What shall we thinke he was the Sextine there or laie all night like Elie Samuel in the Church and yet being so famous a Bishop had no man to tend vpon him He diuided the bread and laide vp the third part of it in a golden Doue that hang ouer the Altar which Doue was not yet readie made For it followeth immediatly in the next lines After Basile had done th●se things and had communed with Eubolius and other mo the next daie he sent for a golde-smith made a Doue of pure golde If this Doue were made before howe was it made afterwarde and if it were not made afore howe could it hang ouer the Altar or how could Basile put his bread therein before it was made and to what end was the bread so kept in the Doue and wherein or where was the other third part kept that Basile thus reserued purposelie to be buried with him which portion in the end of seuen years he receiued in his death bed Now iudge what kinde of bread y● would haue ben after seuen yeares kéeping to be giuen to a sick man The true Amphilochius was a godlie and worthie Bishoppe But this Amphilochius which wrote the storie of Thomas Becketts life 700. yeares before he was borne was a manifest and an impudent lyar Iewel Bucers opinion of the communion bread The third Chapter saith he is of the substance forme and breaking of bread which all doe well inough agrée with the institution of Christ whom it is manifest to haue vsed vnleuened bread and easie to be broken For he brake it and gaue it to his Disciples péeces of the bread broken Touching the forme and figure whether it were round or square there is nothing declared of the Euangelist And because this bread is commonlie vsed for a signe not for corporall nourishment I sée not what can be reprehended in this description of the bread which is in this book● except some would peraduenture haue it thicker that it maie the more fullie represent the forme of true bread D. W. fol. 594. CONCOMITANCIA A new word deuised of the Papists AFter that a new religion was deuised it was necessarie for aide of the same to deuise new wordes Whereas Christ saith This is my bodie they saie this is my bodie and my bloud Whereas Christ saith This is my bloud they saie this is my bloud and my bodie and in either part they saie is whole Christ God and man If ye demaund how they knowe it they saie not by the word of God but by this new imagination of Concomitancia CONCORD A definition of concord COncord is a sure consent of mindes and wils in anie matter so that whatsoeuer God saith to will the same whose parent and concernatrice similitude as farre foorth as the nature of thinges doe beare and suffer bringeth all thinges to vnitie Who is the mother of concord Similitude by interpretation is called likenesse and it is named among learned men to be the mother of concord because that whereas men be of like faith there is peace and vnitie and whereas they be not there is strife and debate A praise of concord Salust called as I maie vse Saint Austens words Historicus veritatis that is to saie a writer of true stories saith that by concorde small substaunce doth increase And againe by discorde most greate riches will waste awaie and come to naught Publius a writer of merrie verses neuerthelesse full of wise sentēces affirmeth weak help to be made strong by sure consent The Psalmograph or the writer of Psalmes commending concord as a necessarie thing saith Behold how good and ioyfull a thing it is for brethren to dwell together in vnitie And in the last end of the Psalme it followeth there hath the Lord promised his blessing and life for euermore Can Giusta a Scithian which made or builded the dominion of the Tartarians exhorting his xii sonnes which dieng he left behind him vnto concord as vnto the only sure stabilitie of the publike weale by the example of a sheafe of Arrows which being surelie bound together none of them was able to breake a sunder But the shaftes being loosed one from an other they did verie easille cracke them in péeces Chria Serterius by the like example afore did bring his hoast into a concord shewing that the strongest men of warre could not drawe out the haires of an horse taile all at once but taking the weake haires diuided asunder they might soone pull them out one after an other without anie paino Bibliander CONCVBINE How a Concubine is taken in holie Scripture A Concubine and an whoore after the manner of our English speach is all one For we in England do vnderstand by a Concubine a woman that is not married yet secretlie vnlawfullie keepeth companie with anie man as though shée wer his wife But the Scripture doth not so take this word Concubine As by these examples Abraham was a good man yet he had both a wife two concubines For Sara was his obedient louing wife Agar Ketura were his concubines as it is expreslie written in the 25. of Genesis on this wise Abraham beside Sara had an other wife called Ketura by Agar he had onlie one sonne by Ketura he had sixe sonnes Now when Abraham died he gaue his inheritaunce and his chiefe possessions to Isaac Filijs autem concubinarum largitus est munera But vnto the sonnes of his concubines Abraham gaue rewards and legacies and yet was Abraham no fornicatour nor Agar neither Ketura were no whoores Also in the. 8. Chapter of Iudicum ye reade that Gedeon had 70. sonnes Hée had one named Abimelech Natus de Concubina whose name as Iosephus saith was Droma This Abimelech
seuerally at seueral times they think thēselues purer thē other people Epipha de haere The Esseans saith Iosephus Antiquit. lib. 15. cap. 13. exercise the like trade of life as Pythagoras deliuered among the Grecians Againe lib. 13. cap. 8. They affirme all things to be gouerned by destenie They marie no wiues They thinke Bel. Iud. li. 2. ca. 7. that no woman will kéepe hir selfe to one man They haue nothing proper but all common They are in number aboue 4. thousand Antiq. li. 18. ca. 2. There is a second sort of Esseans saith Iosephus Bel. Iud. li. 2. cap. 7. which agrée with the other in all things mariage onlie excepted They commend mariage for the maintenaunce of succession Their manner is for thrée yeares space to behold the health and behauiour of maidens then if they sée them healthie and fit for procreation they marie them Of the people called Esseni or Essei A people inhabiting Iudea toward the West which doe liue without women and contemne gold siluer and all other riches They liue by ea●ing of Dates There resorteth continuallie vnto them by the prouidence of God men from diuers parts so that their companie neuer faileth but none is receiued vnlesse the merite of his vertue and chastitie do aduance him Eliot ESTRICH The nature and propertie of the Estrich THis Bird hath such a waightie bodie that he cannot mount vp to flie aloft but flickereth in such wise as he cannot be ouergone A man maie wel runne post after him but he cannot ouertake him For what with his halfe leaping vpon his clées and what with his halfe flieng with his wings he passeth all the swiftnesse that can be in horses or in anie other beast They haue this pollicie to take vp stones by the waie throwe them at such as follow after them But againe there is such foolishnesse in them that if they once hide their head they thinke that all their bodies are hidden and yet the huge carkasses of them are séene still And as touching their Egges they sit not vpon them But forasmuch as they kéepe in hot Countries they hide them in the sande and the Sunne giuing warmnesse vnto them doth by that meanes hatch them c. Caluine vpon Iob. fo 716. EATING Of the eating of Christs flesh and drinking his bloud WHen our Lord Iesus Christ spake of his bodie Except saith he a man eate my flesh and drinke my bloud hee shall haue no life in himselfe for my flesh is verie meate my bloud is verie drinke The spirituall vnderstanding saueth him that beléeueth for the letter killeth but the spirit quickeneth August in ser. ad infantes ¶ Heere it is plaine that the text must be taken spirituallie Marke saith Origen that they are figures which are written in the Scripture of God and therefore examine them as spirituall men and not as carnall vnderstand those things that are spoken For if thou follow after the letter this saieng that is spoken Except ye eate the flesh of the Sonne of man and drinke his bloud you can haue no life in you this letter killeth Origen in Leuit. 7. He that eateth my flesh and drinketh my bloud abideth in me and I in him This is therefore saith S. Austen the eating of that meate and drinking of that bloud is to abide in Christ and haue him abiding in vs. And therefore he that abideth not in Christ and in whom Christ abideth not without doubt hee eateth not Christs flesh nor drinketh his bloud although he eate drinke the Sacrament of so great a thing vnto his owne damnation Augu. sermo circa feria pas ¶ Héere it is plaine that he which abideth not in Christ that is to saie he that is wicked vnfaithfull doth not eate his flesh nor drink his bloud although he eate and drinke the Sacrament of so great a thing And so must it néedes follow that the Sacrament is not the verie naturall bodie of Christ for then the vnfaithfull should eate his flesh séeing he eateth the Sacrament of his bodie but that doth S. Austen denie Wherefore it must néedes be but onelie a token of a remembraunce and a signe of his bodie breaking and a representation of his passion He that abideth not in me and in whom I abide not let him not saie or think that he eateth my bodie or drinketh my bloud They abide not in Christ which are not his members which make themselues the members of an harlot ¶ Héere it is plaine that the wicked and vngodlie or vnfaithfull which are not the members of Christ do not eate his bodie nor drinke his bloud and yet they doe eate the Sacrament as well as the other Wherefore it must néeds be that the Sacrament is not the verie bodie of Christ but a figure token or memoriall thereof The bread saith Saint Ambrose that goeth into the bodie is not so gréedelie sought of vs but the bread of euerlasting life which vpholdeth the substaunce of our soule so he that discordeth from Christ doth not eate his flesh nor drink his bloud although he receiue y● sacrament of so great a thing to his damnation and destruction Ambrose de Sacra ¶ Heere S. Ambrose confirmeth S. Austens saiengs before Though we doe verelie eate Christ yet it it followeth not that we doe groselie and naturallie eate him with our mouth And though Christ be verie meate yet it followeth not that he is therefore reallie fleshlie in the Sacrament S. Austen saith What preparest thou thy téeth or thy bellie beléeue and thou hast eaten In another place he saith Beléeuing in him is the eating of the bread of life You shall not eate this bodie that you sée nor drinke that bloud which they that crucified me shed out I haue giuen a verie sacrament vnto you if it be spirituallie vnderstood it quickeneth you but the flesh profiteth nothing Augu. prefa psal 98. ¶ This is plaine enough spoken Frith He that discordeth from Christ saith this Doctour doth neither eate his bodie nor drinke his bloud although he receiue indifferentlie the sacrament of so great a thing vnto his condemnation of his presumption These are also the verie wordes of Bede vpon the 11. chapter of the first Epistle to y● Corinthians ¶ Therefore saith S. Cipriane he that drinketh of the holie Cup remembring this benefite of God is more thirstie then he was before lifting vp his heart vnto the liuing God is taken with such a singular hunger and appetite that he abhorreth all gallie and bitter drinking of sinne all sauour of carnall pleasure is to him as it were sharpe and sower vineger And the sinner being conuerted receiuing the holie mysterie of the Lordes supper giueth thankes vnto God and booweth downe his head knowing that his sinnes be forgiuen and that he is made cleane and perfect and his soule which God hath sanctified hée rendreth to God againe as a faithfull
pledge and then he glorieth with Paule and reioiceth saieng Now it is not I that liue but it is Christ that liueth within me These things be practised and vsed among faithfull people and to pure mindes the eating of his flesh is no horrour but honour and the spirite deliteth in the drinking of the holie and sanctified bloud and dooing this we whet not our teeth to bite but with pure faith we breake the holie Bread These be the words of Cipriane De coena Domini The Word saith Origen was made flesh verie meate which who so eateth shall surelie liue for euer which no euill man can eate For if it could be that he that continueth ill might eate the Word made flesh séeing that he is the Word and Bread of life it should haue bene written Whosoeuer eateth this Bread shall liue for euer Origen in Mathew chapter 15. The Authour of this tradition Saint Cypriane said that except we eate his flesh and drinke his bloud we should haue no life in vs instructing vs with a spirituall lesson and opening to vs a waie to vnderstand so priuie a thing that we shuld know that the eating is our dwelling in him our drinking is as it were an incorporation in him beeing subiect vnto him in obaieng ioined vnto him in our wills and vnited in our affections the eating therefore of this flesh is a certaine hunger and desire to dwell in him S. Austen saith vpon the Gospell of Iohn that he that doth not eate his flesh and drinke his bloud hath not in him euerlasting life and he that eateth his flesh and drinketh his bloud hath euerlasting life But it is not so in those meates which we take to sustaine our bodies for although without them we cannot liue yet it is not necessarie that whosouer receiueth them shall liue for they maie die by age sicknesse and other chaunces But in this meate and drinke of the bodie and bloud of our Lord it is otherwise for both they that eate and drinke them not haue not euerlasting life And contrariwise whosoeuer eate drinke them haue euerlasting life Who doe eate and drinke the bodie and flesh of Christ. They which doe beléeue in Christ and doe assuredlie perswade themselues that he died for their sakes they I saie doth both eate the flesh of Christ and drinke his bloud to which vse the Simboles or fignes for that they stirre vp the senses are verie much profitable not that the flesh bleud of Christ are powred into the bread wine or are by any means included in those Elements but because these things are of the true beléeuers receiued with a true faith For they are an inuisible norishment which is receiued onelie in the minde as Augustine hath faithfullie admonished saieng Why preparest thou the téeth and the bellie beléeue and thou hast eaten Pet. Mar. vpon Iudic. fol. 212. What it is to eate God To eate God is to haue the fruition of the diuine nature to be incorporate into God But the Maiestie of God so farre surmounteth the capacitie of man that as he is in himselfe in nature and Godhead no naturall creature is able ot conceiue him but onelie in the face and sight of Iesus Christ the sonne of God Therefore S. Paule saith Christ is the brightnesse of the glorie and the expresse Image of the substaunce of God Iewel fol. 240. Of the true sacramentall eating and of the true eating of Christs bodie The Sacrament that is to saie the Bread is corporallie eaten and chawed with the téeth in the mouth The verie bodie is eaten and chawed with faith in the spirite Ungodlie men when they receiue the sacrament they chaw in their mouths like vnto Iudas the sacramentall bread but they eate not the celestiall bread which is Christ. Faithfull christian people such as bée Christs true disciples continuallie from time to time record in their minde the beneficiall death of our Sauiour Christ chawing it by faith in the cud of their spirit and digesting it in their hearts féeding and comforting themselues with that heauenlie meat Also they dailie receiue not the sacrament therof so they eate Christs bodie spirituallie although not the sacrament therof But when such men for their more comfort confirmation of eternal life giuen vnto thē by Christs death come vnto the Lords holie Table then as before they fedde spirituallie vpon Christ so now they féede corporallie also vpon the sacramentall bread By which sacramentall féeding in Christs promises their former spirituall feeding is increased and they growe and waxe continuallie more strong in Christ vntill at the last they shall come to the full measure and perfection in Christ. This is the teaching of the true Catholike Church as it is taught by Gods word And therefore Saint Paule speaking of them that vnworthelie eate saith that they eate the bread but not that they eate the bodie of Christ but their owne damnation Cranmer fol. 79. ETERNALL LIFE How Eternall life is sometime called a reward ETernall life is sometimes in the holie Scriptures called a reward but then it is not that reward which Paule writeth to be giuen according to debt but is all one as if it shuld be called a recompensation Gods will and pleasure was that there should be this coniunction that after good workes should followe blessednesse but not yet as the effect followeth the cause but as a thing ioined with them by the appointment of God Therefore we maie not trust vnto workes for they are feeble and weake and doe alwaies wauer stagger Wherfore the promises of God depend not vpon them neither haue they in themselues as they come from vs that they can mooue God to make vs blessed We saie therefore that God iudgeth according because according as they are either good or euill we shall obtaine either eternall life or eternall damation But thereby it followeth not that workes are the cause of our saluation Pet. Mar. vpon the Rom. fo 39. EVANGELISTS Who be Euangelists EUangelists were next vnto Apostles and had their Office much like them sauing that they were beneath them in degrée of dignitie These gaue themselues chiefelie to instructing of the people and preaching the Gospell to them as plainlie and simplie as might be of which sort was Timothie and such like For although Paule match Timothie with him in dooing commendations yet doth he not make him his followe in Apostleship but kéepeth that name peculiarlie to himselfe 2. Cor. 1. 1. Col. 1. 1. And in writing to him he saith thus Be watchfull in all things harden thy selfe in afflictions go through with the worke of an Euangelist 2. Tim. 4. 5. EVER How this word Euer is taken ANd to thy séede for euer ¶ Euer is not héere taken for a time without ende but for a long season that hath not his ende appointed T. M. ¶ Meaning a long time and till the comming of Christ. And spirituallie this is
the word of God should be saued by the fi●e of this examination F. N. B. the Italian If anie man build vpon this foundation golde siluer precious stones wood haie or stubble c. Heere the Apostle woulde haue vs to be feruent in good workes and earnest to doe wel he wisheth vs to be occupied in y● labou● which when the iudge of all shall come maie in his sight be acceptable maie to his word be commendable and that we should well beware what works we build vpon our foundation he plainlie sheweth that at the last daie all our d●●ing shall be opened and that then the same shall be so tried as the golde-smith in fining his mettalls trieth out the drosse and base matter from the pure perfect and fine The daie saith he of our Lord shall declare it because it shall appeare in fire The daie of our Lord is the daie of iudgement the thing is so plaine as no man though he be verie peruerse maie denie it But when shall it appeare in fire euen then at the generall iudgement so is the Text. This place is onelye spoken of those which shall be saued of such as build vpon Iesus Christ vpon which foundation as all cannot builde golde precious stones and siluer as all cannot be perfect neither by martirdome be crowned nor yet by good learning shine like the starres of heauen So thereon building being b●t wood or haie be it but verie stubble though the worke it selfe be in the ende burned though he himselfe receiue no such reward as y● others yet shall he be saued and hom As it were through fire Not through fire but through the greate feare wherein he then shall stand of the iustice and iudgement of God O how comfortable is this doctrine How farre passeth it all their painted fires and ●ained flames of Purgatorie You see now that the Scripture admitteth no such place you sée the right meaning of the Apostle c. L. Euans The meaning of these places following And he heard him from heauen in fire vpon the Altar of whole burnt offerings ¶ God declared that he heard his request in that he sent downe fire from heauen for els they might vse no fire but of that which was reserued still vppon the Altar Leuit. Chap. 6. 13. and came downe from heauen Chap. 9. 14. as appeareth by the punishment of Nadab and Abihu Leuit. cap. 10. ● Geneua Shal be worthie to be punished with he●fire ¶ The Iewes vsed foure kindes of punishments before their gouernement was taken awaie by Herode hanging beheading stoning and burning This is it that Christ shot at because burning was the greatest punishment therefore in that he maketh mention of a iudgement a counsell and a fire he sheweth that some sins are worse then other some but yet they are all such y● we must giue an account for them and shall be punished for them Beza FIGGE-TREE Of the Figge-tree that Christ cursed ANd spied a Figge-trée in the waie and came to it and found nothing thereon but leaues onelie ¶ By this Figge-tree Christ doth sufficient lie shew that the Iews although they had an appearaunce of holinesse by their ceremonies yet neuerthelesse they had not the fruite of charitie by which he signified y● they should worthely be depriued put from this false appearance by the destructiō of Hierusalem Mar. 13. 2. Luk. 21. 6. Tin Cut it downe whie combereth it the ground ¶ Unles we do beléeue also bring foorth fruite worthie repentance we shall with the vnprofitable figge-trée be cut downe also our talent shall be taken from vs and giuen vnto an other that shall put it to better vse Sir I. Cheeke FIGVRE Proues how the bread in the Sacrament is a figure of Christs bodie THe Lord doubted not to saie This is my bodie when hée gaue a signe of his bodie And after in the same Chapter he expoundeth it For trulie so the bloud is the soule Christ was the stone And yet the Apostle doth not say the stone did signifie Christ but he saith the stone was Christ. ¶ Héere Christ calleth the figure of his bodie his bodie saith S. Austen doth compare the thrée texts of scripture This is my bodie The bloud is the soule Christ was the stone Declaring them to be one phrase and to be expounded after one fashion August contra● Adam The Priest saith make vs this ●●lation acceptable c. For it is a figure of the bodie of our Lord Iesus Christ. ¶ Héere he calleth it plainlie a figure of Christs bodie Ambrose li. 3. de Sacra ●et that saieng be expounded by a figure I saie the thing that is spoken is not true indéede but figured vnder the cloude of an allegorie Hierom● aduers. 〈…〉 Ye haue heard that it is a figure Therefore meruaile not ● And béeing a figure require not al things to agrée for otherwise it were no figure Chrisostome in Gen. Homil. 35. First of all thou must take heede that thou take not a figuratiue speach according to the letter for that is it wherof Saint Paule saith The letter killeth For when the thing that is spoken vnder a figure is so taken as if it wer plainlie spoken ther is a fleshlie vnderstanding neither is there anie thing that may better be called the death of the soule August de doct Chri. li. 3. ca. 5. Figures be in vaine serue for no purpose when the things of them signified be present Lactan. insti li. 2. ●ap 1. A figure of a bodie saith Tertulian presupposeth a verie naturall bodie for of a shew or a fancie ther can be no figure But Christ gaue vnto his Disciples a figure of his bodie therefore it must needs follow that Christ had a verie naturall bodie His words be these Christ taking the bread and distributing it to his Disciples made it his bodie saieng This is my bodie that is to say This is a figure of my bodie but a figure it could not bée vnlesse there were a bodie of a truth and indeede for a voide thing as is a fantasie can receiue no figure Tertulian contra Mar. li. 4. There is a figure saith Hilarie for bread and wine be outwardlie seene And there is also a truth of that figure for the bodie and bloud of Christ be of a truth inwardlie seene This Hilarie was within lesse then 350. yeares after Christ. Crisostome affirmeth saieng that if a man vnderstand the words of Christ carnallie he shal surelie profit nothing therby For what meane these words the flesh auaileth nothing He meant not his flesh God forbid but he ment of them that fleshlie and carnallie vnderstood those things that Christ spake But what is carnall vnderstanding To vnderstand the words simplie as they be spoken nothing else For we ought not so to vnderstand the things which we see But all mysteries must be considered
with inward eyes that is spirituallie to vnderstand them ¶ In these wordes S. Chrisostome sheweth plainlie that the words of Christ concerning the eating of his flesh and drinking of his bloud are not to be vnderstoode simplie as they be spoken but spirituallie and figuratiuelie Chrisostome in Iohn Homil. 46. Tertulian writing against Marcion saith these words Christ did not reproue bread whereby he did represent his verie bodie And in the same booke he sayth That Iesus taking bread and distributing it among his Disciples made it his bodie saieng This is my bodie that is to saye sayth Tertulian a figure of my bodie And therefore saith Tertulian that Christ called bread his bodie and wine his bloud becaus● that in the old Testament bread and wine were figures of his bodie and bloud Tertulian contra Marcionem The wine refresheth and augmenteth the bloud ●or that cause the bloud of Christ is not vnproperlie figured by the same Inasmuch as al that commeth vnto vs from him doth make vs glad with a true ioie and increaseth all our gladnesse c. A little before he saith the Lord gaue vnto his Disciples the Sacrament of his bodie in remission of their sinnes for to kéepe loue and charitie to the end that hauing remembrance of that déede he would doe alwaies in a figure that which he thought to doe for them and should not forget that charitie This is my bodie that is is to saie a Sacrament c. Druthmarus Monke of S. Benet in his Comment vpon S. Ma. ¶ Looke more in Bodie Bread Bloud This is my bodie Figures of Christs resurrection Christs resurrection saith Saint Austen was prefigured in our first father Adam because like as Adam rising after sléepe knew Eue shaped out of his side So Christ rising againe from the dead builded the Church out of the wounds of his side Iosua Ioseph Samson Iames were figures of Christs resurrectiō FIGVRATIVE SPEACH How to know a figuratiue speach TO knowe a figuratiue speach S. Austen hath these words Whensoeuer the Scripture of Christ séemeth to commaund anie foule or wicked thing then must that text be taken figuratiuelie and that it is a phrase allegorie and manner of speaking and must be vnderstood spirituallie and not after the letter Except saith he ye eate the flesh of the sonne of man and drinke his bloud ye shall haue no life in you he séemeth saith S. Austen to commaund a foule wicked thing it is therefore a figure ¶ Now seeing that Saint Austen calleth it a foule thing to eate his flesh we maie soone perceiue that he thought it as foule as wicked a thing to eate his bodie séeing his bodie is flesh And then consequentlie it must followe that either this word eate where Christ said take this and eate it must be taken spirituallie or els y● this saieng of Christ. This is my 〈…〉 spoke● But this word 〈…〉 is taken after the l●tter for thy did indeed ●●o bread must bée figuratiuelie spoken I. Frith Wee euen v●e to saie when Easter draweth nigh that tomorrowe or the next daie is the Lords passeouer and yet it is manie y●a●es sin●e he suffered and that passion was neuer done but once And vppon that Sundaie we saie This daye the Lorde did rise againe and y●t it is manie yeares since hée rose Now is there no man so foolish to reproue vs as liars for so saieng because wee name those dayes after the similitude of those in which those things were done So that it is called the same daie which is not the same but by the reuolu●ion of time like it And it is named to be done the same daie through the celebration of the Sacrament Through keeping the men●oriall of the thing once done which is not done y● daie ●●t was done long before Was not Christ once crucified in his owne person yet in a mysterie which is the remembraunce of his verie passion he is crucified for the people not onlie euery ●east of Ea●●er but euerie daie Neither doth he lie which when he is asked a●●swereth that he is crucified For if Sacraments had not certeine similitudes of those things whereof they are Sacraments then should they ●e no Sacraments at all And for this similitude for the most part they take the names for the v●rie things And therefore after a certeine manner t●e sacrament of Christs bodie and the sacrament of Christs bl●ud is Christs bloud So the Sacrament of faith is faith for it is none other to beléeue then to haue faith And therefore when a man aunswereth that the infant beleeueth which hath not ●he effect of ●aith he aunswereth that it hath faith for the Sacrament of faith And then it turneth it s●lfe to God for the Sacrament of conuersion For the aunswere it selfe perteineth vnto the ministring of the Sacrament As the Apostle write●h of Baptime We be buried saith hée with Christ through baptime vnto death he sayth not wée signifie buri●ng but vtterly sayth we are buried He called also the Sacrament of so great ● thing euen with the proper name of the verie thing it selfe c. ¶ Heere doth Saint Austen plainlie set foorth the matter For euen ●s the next good Fr 〈…〉 e shal be called the day of Christs passion and yet he shal not suffer death againe vpon that day for he died but once and nowe is immortall euen so is the Sacrament called Christes bodie And as that daye is not the verie daye he dyed vppon but onelie a remembraunce of his bodie breaking and bloud-shedding And likewise as the next Easter daye shall bée called the daye of his resurrection not that it is the verie same daye that Christ did rise in but a remembraunce of the same euen so the Sacrament is called his bodye not that it is his bodie indéede but onelie a remembraunce of the same c. I. Frith Of Figuratiue speaches The Arke was called God 1. Reg. 4. 7. Iohn is Helias Math. 11. 14. My Father is an husbandman Iohn 15. 1. I am the Uine you are the braunches Iohn 15. 5. One of you is a Diuell Iohn 6. 70. Herode is a Foxe Luke 13. 32. This is the Lordes passe-by or passe-ouer Exo. 12. 1●● This is my bodie Math. 26. 26. This is the newe Testament Luke 22. 20. ¶ Looke Flesh. FINDING OF THINGS LOST How they ought to be restored and not kept SAint Austen toucheth this thing in his 19. Sermon De verbis Apostolis And it is had in the Decrees 14. Questi 5. Chap. Si quid inuenisti Where he sayth That thinges which are founde must be restored Which thing if thou doe not thou hast rapt them for as much as thou hast done what thou couldest so that if thou haddest founde more thou wouldest haue rapt more c. There the Glo●●r verie well declareth what is to be done with thinges that are founde Either sayth hée the same thinges are counted for thinges
in remēbring y● benefits of God This inuention although at the first sight it might séeme trim yet it agréeth not with Christs libertie For we must think vpon the benefits of God and our great ingratitude other most gréeuous sinnes not only fortie daies but also continally Further by this meanes they opened a most wide window to liue securely rechlye For if they once had performed fullye these fortie daies they thought that all the whole yeare after they might giue themselues wholy to all kinde of pleasures lusts For they referred the time of repentaunce to these fortie daies And although the elders had a Lent yet as Eusebius saith in his 5. booke and 24. Chapter it was left frée vnto all men For Ireneus after this manner intreated with Victor Bishop of Rome when he would have excommunicated the East Church because in the obseruing of Easter it agréed not with the Church of Rome What sayth he can we not liue at concord although they vse their owne cities as we vse ours for some fast in Lent two dayes some foure dayes some x. daies some fiftéene daies some twentie and other some forty dayes And yet is concord neuerthelesse kept in the Church Pet. Mar. vpon Iudic. fo 279. LEPER What the Leper signifieth THe Leper signifieth properly mans doctrine which spreadeth abrode like a canker And to be short all infection of vngodlynesse therefore must the Leuites giue diligent héede thereto for a little leauen sowreth all the whole lumpe of dowe T. M. ¶ He meaning the Priest shall iudge the plague to be cleane ¶ For it is not that contagious leper that infecteth but a kind of scurffe which maketh not the flesh rawe as the leprosie doth Geneua ¶ Of the leprosie in clothes which was vsed among the Iewes let them iudge This is euident that we in our time suffer ouer many leprosies in clothes T. M. ¶ The leprosie in houses is anye thing thereto perteining whereby the dweller might take anie harme in health of bodie in hurting of his goods or otherwise as if it stoode in an euill ayre T. M. If I send the plague of leprosie in an house c. This declareth that no plague nor punishment commeth to man without Gods prouidence and his sending Geneua How a Leper was knowne A leper had these fiue marks to be knowne by his garment was vpon him and cut in twaine his head vncouered his face mufled his dwelling from the companie of men proclaimed openly to be a leper and vncleane Hemmyng Of the leprosie that Christ healed The leprosie that Christ healed in S. Mathewes Gospell was not like the leprosie that is now but was a kinde thereof which was vncurable Geneua LESSE The meaning of this place following NOtwithstanding he that is lesse in the kingdome of heauen is greater then he ¶ Christ which humbled himselfe to the crosse was of lesse reputation in this world then Iohn Baptist was yet in the kingdome of heauen Christ was greater then hée Tindale The least of them that shall preach the Gospell in the new estate of Christes Church shall haue more knowledge then Iohn and their message shall be more excellent Geneua LETANIES What the Letanies are LEtanies are nothing else but humble praiers and supplications to God to procure his fauo●r and turne awaye his wrath and wer receiued long before procession came in place Some be called Minores the lesse some Maiores the greater The lesse were instituted by Mamartus Bishop of Vienna in the yeare of our Lord. 469. as Sigebertus sayth 02. 488. as Polichronicon reporteth The order of them was but a solempne assembly of people vnto prayer at such time as we call the rogation wéeke The cause was for earthquake and tempests and inuasion of wilde beasts which then did greatlye destroye the people The greater Letanie was deuised by Gregorie the Pope Anno. 592. When as the cause béeing lyke as before the superstition beganne to be more for by the reason of a great pestilence following a floud the Bishoppe by Ceremonies thought to appease the wrath of God and therefore made Septiformen Laetanian a seauenfold Letanie One of the clergie an other of the Monks one of men an other of their wiues One of maidens an other of widowes the last of poore and children together These people so distinct in the seauen orders shoulde come from seauen seuerall places and then it was thought they should be heard the sooner but in their Procession fourescore persons were striken with the plague to shewe howe well God was pleased with them Notwithstanding how thinges of a good deuotio● instituted in time doe growe to great abuse For what the order and solempnitie of them was we reade in the counsell of Mentz celebrated 813. yeares after Christ. The words of the decrée be these Placint nobis c. Our will is that the greate Letanie bée obserued of all Christians thrée daies And as our holye Fathers haue ordeined it not riding nor hauing precious garments on them but bare footed in Sackcloth an Ashes vnlesse infirmitie doe let Thus farre the Counsell LETTER What the Letter signifieth AVgustine in his third booke and. 5. Chapter De doctrina Christiana writeth that they sticke in the Letter which take the signes for the thinges and that which is figuratiuely spoken in the holy Scriptures they take it so as if it were spoken properlye And so lowe crope they on the ground that when they heare the name of the Sabboth they remember nothing but the seauenth day which was obserued of the Iewes Also when they heare of a Sacrifice they thinke vppon nothing but the sacrifices which were killed And though ther bée some seruitude tollerable yet hée calleth that a miserable seruitude when wée take the signes for the thinges wherein there is a greate offence committed in these dayes in the Sacrament of the Eucharist for howe manye shall a man finde which beholding the outwarde signes of the Sacrament calleth to memorye the death and passion of Christ whereof it is most certeine that they are signes or which thinketh within himselfe that the bodye and bloud of Christ is a spirituall meate for the soule through fayth euen as breade and wine are nourishmentes for the bodye Or which weigheth with himselfe the coniunction of the members of Christ betweene themselues and with the head These thinges are not regarded and they cleaue onelye to the sight of the signes and men thinke it is inough if they haue looked vppon bowed the knée and worshipped This to imbrace the Letter and not to giue eare vnto the sayde Augustine who in the place wée haue now cited and a little afterwarde most appertlye affirmeth that to eate the bodye of Christ and to drinke his bloud are figuratiue kinde of speaches So are the Iewes accused because they cleauing onely to the Letter and circumcision were transgrassers of the lawe Pet. Mar. vpon the Rom. fol. 49.
wine is to vs which thing appeareth more plaine by the words of Saint Austen following which be these Manducauit Moses Manna c. Moses did also eate Manna Aaron Phinehes did eate of it which pleased God are dead wherfore because they vnderstood y● visible meat spiritualy They wer spiritualy an hūgred they tasted it spiritualy y● they might be spiritualy replenished They did all eate the same spirituall meate and all dranke the same spiritually which we doe and they all did drinke the same spirituall drinke They dranke one thing and we another but that was in the outward appearaunce which neuerthelesse did signifie the same thing spiritually How dranke they the same drinke They saith the Apostle dranke of the spirituall stone following them and that stone was Christ. And thereto Saint Bede addeth these words Videte autem fide manente signa variata Behold that the signes are altered and yet the faith abideth one Of these places it may plainely be perceiued that it is no Article necessary to be beleeued vnder paine of damnation that the Sacrament should be the naturalll body of Christ seeing the olde fathers neuer beleeued it And as they were saued without beleeuing that Manna was altered into Christes body euen so shall we be saued without beleeuing that the substaunce of bread is turned into his naturally body for the same faith shall saue vs that saued them And we are bound to beléeue no more vnder paine of damnation then they wer bound to beleeue I. Frith MARANATHA What this word Maranatha signifieth LEt him be had in execration Maranatha ¶ By these words is betokened the seuerest kinde of cursse and excommunication that was among the Iewes and the words are as much to say as our Lord commeth So that his meaning maye be this Let him be accursed euen to the comming of the Lord that is to say to his deaths daye euen for euer S. Hierome doth expound this word Maranatha the Lord commeth as if he should say If a man doe not beleeue our Lord Iesus Christ let him be accursed and let him be sure that the the Lord against whō no hatred can preuaile doth come Some againe doe expound it thus Let him be as a rotten member cut off and perish vtterly Sir I. Cheeke ¶ Maranatha a word wherewith the accursed or vyle person in the extreame degrée is signified The Bible note MARCION Of the damnable heresies of this man MArcion of Pontus encreased the doctrine of Cerdon He liued in the time of Iustinus Martir which wrote a booke against him He met Policarpus and asked of him Knowest thou vs Policarpus I knowe thée for the first begotten of Satan Euseb. li. 4. cap. 11. 14. He said the soule onely should bée saued and not the body He thought that Cain with the Sodomites Aegyptians c. were saued when Christ went downe to Hell Irenaeus li. 1. ca. 29. Epiph. haeres 42. writeth of him that he was a Bishops sonne who when he had de●●oured a Uirgin was by his own father excommunicated the church afterward he fled to Rome Being there because they admitted him not into the Church he began to preach detestable doctrine That there were three beginnings good iust and euill That the new Testament was contrarye to the olde He denied the resurrection of the body A comparison betweene the Marcions doctrine and the Popes The Marcions receiued no man to be a Christen man except he would refuse mariage The Pope receiueth no Priests except they fo rs weare mariage So that there is no diuersitie betwéene these heretikes and the Pope but that these Heretikes doth except a greater number then the Pope doth and speaketh more generally but the thing is all one For the Marcionites indgeth mariage vncleane for their sort and so doth the Pope for his sort Farther more Marcion saith that among christen men may be no temporall mariage but all conjunction must be turned into a spirituall mariage And the selfe same thing saith the Pope of his Priests wherfore seeing y● they do graunt how that S. Paule and also holy Fathers hath condemned this heresie of the Marcionites it must néedes followe that the opinion of the Pope is likewise damned But héere will some obiect and say as Eckius hath written that the Pope doth not condemne mariage but he causeth men alonely to keep his vowe Aunswere First the Pope compelleth them and if they will be Priests to vowe fo rs weare mariage For if ther wer no statute made afore of the Pope y● all Priests shuld fo rs weare mariage thē shuld ther no vowes he made of priests against mariage but the thing shuld be frée So y● the vowe commeth out of the Popes decrée prohibition not the decrée out of the vowe Ergo the prohibition goeth before the vowe wherefore this euation can haue no place Example The Emperour maketh a statute that no man shall be admitted into his seruice except he first sweare to be an enimie vnto the Kings grace of England Is not now the Emperour first an enimie vnto the Kings person and then also a forbidder of loue and fauour towards the Kings grace of England I thinke his grace will take his acte none otherwise For though he doe not nor cannot make all men the Kings enimies yet he maketh all that appertaine vnto him to be the kings enimies So likewise the Pope though he doe not forbidde all men mariage yet he forbiddeth as many as will be Priests yea and he will admit no man to be Priest except he first forswears mariage So that the vowe is first made or the Priesthood bée giuen D. Barnes A notable example of Marcions chast life Marcion and Montanus two ranke Heretikes anone after the Apostles daies sprong vp and fained such a chaste holinesse of life that they forbad and damned mariage But Epiphanius writeth that Marcion when he was receiued as a guest in the house of a certaine Deacon in Cipres he caried away his Hosts wife deceiued with his holy pretence of his new chast religion And when Doctor Marcion had taken his pleasure of hir and cast hir vp the miserable woman constrained to returne to hir husband lamenting hir fault asked him forgiuenesse This carefull woman saith Epiphanius was afterward a good warning for many other women monishing them to beware of Bishop Marcion his doctrine This Marcion and Montanus were the onely beginners of the lawe of wiuelesse and husbandlesse chastitie and the first authours and patrons of the Monkes religion Melancthon MARCVS The d●testable heresies of this man MArcus of whom Marcosij Colorbasus of whom Colorbasij and Heracleon after whom the Heretikes are called Hera●leonites sacrificed with witchcraft to amaze their auditory they pronounced Hebrue words they said vnto the women open your mouthes and prophecie through the power which commeth from vs. Many women came to the Church and vnder colour of prophecie confessed
to suffer anie thing then they will bée lyke vnto the wicked finally they are such which doe not resist euill but doe ouercome euill 〈…〉 dooing that which is good Marl. fol. 77. How the meeke shall pssesse the earth Blessed are the méeke for they shall possesse the earth ¶ By the earth vnderstand all that we possesse in this worlde which all God will keepe for vs if wée bée soft and méeke And whatsoeuer 〈…〉 arise yet if we will be patient and abide the end will go● on our side As it is written in the Psalme 37. 9. The wicked shall bée wéeded out but they that abide the Lords leasure shall inherit the land And againe within a while the wicked shall be gone thou shalt see his place where he was and he shall be away but the meeke shall inherite the earth Euen as Be still and haue thy wilt of a little medling commeth great 〈…〉 for a patient man shall weare out all his en●mied Tindale fo 210. How that God doth guide the Meeke in iudgement Dirigit mansu●tos in iudicio docebit mitos via● suas Them that bée méeke shall be guide in iudgement and such as be gentle them shal he teach his waies ¶ To guide y● méeke in iudgement is not meant onely to be their helpe onely when they shall come before the Iudges of this world but to guide them in iudgement i● héere meant to make them through his grace knowledge of his law to liue orderly vprightly in all their doings with right iudgement true discerning of vertue frō vice This great gift doth God of his gratious goodnes giue vnto men that be sinners but yet saith the Prophet not to all manner of sinners but onely to those y● be méeke gentle Vniuersa via Domini misericordia veritas requirentibus testamentum eius testimonia eius All the wayes of the Lord are mercie truth but yet sayth the Prophet Requirentibus testamentum eius testimonia eius Unto such as kéepe his couenaunt and testimonies To the sturdy rebellious sinners Via Dominni odor mortis fuit The wayes of y● Lord is a deadly sauour and a pestilent stinke which neuerthelesse of themselues and namely to all good men are Odor vitae the sweete odour of life So that to the wicked the wayes of the Lorde his commaundements are the occasion of their great damnation but vnto the méeke and such as feare the Lord they are light vnto life ouerlasting through the mercie and truth graunted vnto vs in and by Iesus Christ our Lord. Ri● Turn MELCHISEDECH How he is a figure of Christ. WIthout Father without Mother without kinne c. ¶ So called because that Moses maketh no mention of his parents kinsfolkes but as he had bene sodeinly sent of God into the world to be a figure of Christ or euerlasting Priest and shortly taken out of the worlde againe So Christ as touching his humanitie had no Father and concerning his diuinitie had no mother Geneua ¶ It is sayd that Melchisedech is without father mother because that no mention at all in Scriptures is made of his parents nor yet of his genealogie And thus doth the Scripture declare y● he is a liuely figure of Christ which as touching his Godbead is without mother being begotten of his father without all beginnings and as touching his manhood is without father being conceiued by the mighty operation of the holy Ghost Sir I. Cheeke How Melchisedech and Sem is one person Lyra sayth that Melchisedech was the same person which in Scripture is called Sem the first son of No● And S. Paule Heb. 7. saith that Melchisedech was without father without mother without kinne and hath neither beginning of his dayes nor yet end of his lyfe So that by this it should séeme Melchisedech Sem not to be one person To this aunswere is made on this wise that the Apostle reporteth Melchisedech to be without father mother because the Scripture maketh no mention of them not that he was without parents kinsfolks c. For although y● Scripture make mention of y● father mother of Sem and of his Genelogie yet it is not vnder the name of Melchisedech but vnder the name of Sem. And so is y● Apostle to be vnderstood that vnder the name of Melchisedech no mentton is made in the Scripture of his father and mother Lyra. The meaning of Saint Paule in making mention of Melchisedech Saint Paule writing to the Hebrewes goeth about to disswade them from the vaine confidence they had in the sacrifices and ceremonies of Moses lawe to perswade them to put their trust in that onely sacrifice that Christ had offered himselfe once for all And least they shoulde reiect his doctrine as hauing no ground in holy Scriptures he putteth them in minde of Melchisedech who was a figure of Christ and of his Priesthoode which was also a figure of Christs Priesthoode First he was a figure of Christ saith Saint Paule in that he was called Melchisedech which is by interpretation the king of righteousnesse the king of Salem which is the king of peace And in that hée was a Priest of the most high God and hath neither beginning nor ende of dayes noted in holy histories his Priesthoode séemed to be an euerlasting Priesthood and therfore saith Saint Paule he is likened to the sonne of God that is euerlasting and hath an euerlasting Priesthoode and is alwaie able to saue them that séeke saluation at his handes because he lyueth euer to make intercession for vs. This is the minde of Paule And not that Melchisedech was a figure of Christ and of his Priesthood in that he vsed to offer to God a sacrifice of bread and wine c. Crowley How Melchisedech is brought in of the Papists to mainteine the sacrifice of the Masse Melchisedech say they was a figure of Christ for hée was y● Priest of the highest And as Dauid saith Christ is an eternal Priest after the order of Melchisedech and therefore he offered bread and wine vndoubtedly Melchisedech was a figure of Christ but Saint Paule manifestlye declareth in what thinges he was the figure of Christ. In the rehearsing of the honours and dignitie of Melchisedech which is that he was an eternall Priest and king of peace and righteousnesse There is not one word of bread and wine They cannot finde in the booke of Genesis that Melchisedech did sacrifice vnto God but that he offered bread and wine to Abraham for sustenaunce of his people as Christ offered to vs his worde Melchisedech brought bread and wine and Abraham paide him tithe Christ after the same sorte gaue vs the Sacrament of his bodye and bloude but he did not offer it to God The Scripture sheweth forth Melchisedech vnder the figure of an eternall and onely Priest But the Papists appoint other Priests to bée Christs Uicars after his ascention into
him from Least hée bée compelled to pay his debt with double disprofite one that his milstone is idle in the meane time another that he is constrained to come further in debt otherwise to sell his necessarye goods without which he cannot liue to make payment T. M. ¶ By the neather or vpper milstone is vnderstoode anye thing whereby a man getteth his liuing Geneua MINISTER What the Minister is by the word of God THE true Minister is the eye of the bodye The workman in the haruest Math. 9. 38. The messenger that calleth to the marriage Math. 22. 3. The Prophet that telleth the will of the Lorde Math. 23. 34. The Scribes that doth expound the lawe The seruaunt that occupieth his Maisters talent vnto gaine Math. 25. 16. The witnesse that beareth testimonie of Christ to all people Luke 24. 48. The dispensers of the mysteries of God 1. Cor. 4. 1. The Stewardes that giueth meate in due season vnto the residue of the householde Math. 24. 45. The Sacrificer of the Gospell of GOD to make the oblation of his flocke acceptable Rom. 15. 16. The Minister by whome the people doe beléeue The labourers of God to till the husbandry The Shepheard to féede the Church of God which he hath purchased with his bloud What men ought to be Ministers in the Church of God As in the olde lawe it was forbidden that anye man shoulde prease to come to the altar and to offer the bread of God which had anye manner blemish or deformitie in the bodye So ought no man nowe to take vppon him the preaching of Gods holye worde and ministration of the holye Sacramentes that is deformed with vice but innocent pure faultlesse and vncorrupt both in lyfe and doctrine Theo. Basil. The qualitie of Gods Minister They must be blamelesse watchfull sober modest herberous wise gentle apt to teach able to conuince the aduersarie such as gouerne wel their whole families no drunkards no quarellers no contentious men these be y● qualities that God requireth How ministers ought to be Preachers He is a dead Priest saith Gregorie and therfore no Priest no more then a dead man is a man which doth not preach for he kindleth the wrath of God the great iudge against him if he walke without the sword of preaching Againe he saith you Priests encrease your owne sinnes with the death of others and you kill and murther so manye as you sée daily without all care holding your peace go to their death How Ministers ought first to be doers and then teachers But whosoeuer doeth and teach the same c. This that is spoken héere perteineth to the ministers of the word He teacheth them therefore what perfection is required of them namely that they expresse declare those thinges in their life which by their doctrine they declare teach Saint Paule did chastise his bodie and brought it into subiection least when he preached to others he himself shuld be a castaway And writing to Timothy Be saith he vnto them the beléeue an example in word in conuersation in loue in spirit in faith in purenesse And to Titus he saith in all things shew thy selfe an example of good works in the doctrine with honestie with grauitie with the wholesome worde which cannot be rebuked that he which withstandeth may be ashamed hauing no euill to say on you The lyke wordes hath Saint Peter in effect Marl. fol. 92. ¶ Whosoeuer doth c. Christ maketh mention first of the worke and then of the doctrine for if the workes goe before though the doctrine doe not followe yet shall the verye worke more suffice to teach them that looke vpon vs then any words shall doe First of all teach with works and then with wordes least the saieng of Saint Paule be obiected Thou that teachest another teachest not thy selfe The saieng of Cato The things which in other thou art wont to blame Be well ware that thou offend not in the same For it is very shame when a man will preach If that his deeds against his words doe teach The saieng of Menander The manners of the speaker are they that perswade not that which is spoken How the Ministers of the Church are called Starres The seauen Stars are the Angels of the seauen Churches ¶ The ouerséers of Churches are in Scriptures called Stars and Angels Starres in respect of the brightnesse both of their heauenly doctrine and of their heauenly conuersation Angels because they report vnto vs the will of God the Father According also as in the same respect Christ is called the Angell of the Testament Mal. 3. 1. And Iohn Baptist is called an Angell Mal. 3. 1. Math. 11. 10. So also in this place the rulers of the Churches are called Angells which thing appeareth chieflye héerby that héereafter in y● second chapter the first verse they be willed to repent which thing coulde in no wise agrée with the heauenly spirits Therfore like as the Starres shine in the Skie so must the ministers of Gods word shine in y● Church goe before other in purenesse of doctrine and christen conuersation But a great part of them alas for sorrowe walke as enimies of Christs crosse whose end is damnation whose God is their belly and their glorie is shame which séeke after earthly things when as notwithstanding their conuersation ought to be heauenly Phil. 3. 18. Marl. fol. 28. How ministers were chosen in the olde time Ministers in the olde time were elect and chosen by the whole consent of the people as Cypriane reporteth The common people themselues haue before all other power either to choose worthy Priests or to refuse the vnworthy This order tooke his beginning of Gods authoritie for God sayd to Moses Take thy brother Aaron and Ehazarus his sonne and set them on the mount before all the co●gregation and put off Aarons apparell and put it vpon Eleazarus his son which declareth that ministers ought not to be admitted vnto the ministrie but with the consent and knowledge of the people Theo. Basil. In olde time none was receiued into the companie of clarkes without the consent of all the people insomuch that Cipriane laboured earnestly to excuse y● he appointed one Aurelius to be a reader without asking aduise of y● church because y● was done beside the custome though not without reason For this he saith before In ordering of clarks déere brethren we are wont to aske your aduise and by common counsell to weigh y● manners deseruings of euery one But because in these lesser exercises there was not much perill because they were chosen to a long proofe and not to a great office therfore y● consent of the people ceased to be asked Afterward in the other degrées also except the Bishoprick the people commonly left y● iudgement and choise of them to the Bishop the Priests that they should examine who were méet and
out of the way so that they cannot but perish for their vnkindnesse that they loued not the truth to liue thereafter and to honour God in their members How miracles are done in these daies The Church of Christ is a little flocke which the diuel the king of darknesse and Antichrist the people do persecute and bend all their force against it And yet Gods so miraculously defendeth the same that all they without Gods permission cannot touch the least number thereof This presence of God in his Church is miraculous inough so that we néede not to seeke any other miracles Hemmyng MIRRHE ALOES AND CASSIA A briefe declaration of these three wordes MIrrhe is a little shrubby trée growing in the hot countrey called Arabia foelix the fruitfull Araby or the wealthy plentifull Araby so called in respect of the other that is but barren This Mirrhe trée is lowe and full of prickes as our thornes and briers be The ●auour and smell of the woode is singularly pleasant so likewise is the iuyce or the Gumme thereof called Guttaa distillando like as of the Greekes i● is called Stacte In steede of this worde Gutta or State some Interpreters doe translate Aloes Aloes is a shrub●e growinge in Arabia also whereof there bée two kindes the one cleane contrary to the other for the one hath a very stinking sauour and is of a meruailous bitter tast And of that kinde of Aloes speaketh Iuuinal or rather the prouerbiall sentence vsed by Iuuinal Plus Aloes quam melles habet It is a thing that hath more bitternesse then swéetnesse in it As if a man would say to beare office séemeth to be a pleasant thing but if the displeasure and daunger therof be well considered Plus Aloes quam mellis habet There is another kinde of Alos of most pleasant and swéet sauour of which mention is made in y● 7. chapter of y● Prouerbs Salomon counterfaiting the pleasant speach of an harlot alluring young men vnto her sensuall purpose saith in her person on this wise I haue made me a gorgeous chamber Et cubile meum odoratum reddidi mirrha Aloe Cynamome And I haue made my bed excéeding swéet not with damask water but with Mirrhe Aloes and Cynamome Of Mirrhe Aloes Nichodemus that came to Christ in the night seson made a fine and costly mixture therwith to anoint the dead bodie of Christ lieng in the sepulchre Cassia is of like oderiferous a pleasaunt sauour y● Mirrhe and Aloes be which thrée being ioyned togethers must néeds make a swéete smell as it is spoken of the Prophet by Salomon Mirrham Guttam siue stactem siue Aloen Cassiam redolent omnia vestementa tua All thy garments doe smell of mirrhe aloes and Cassia that is to say thy garmentes are excéeding pleasant and swéete Ri. Turn MYSTERIE What a Mysterie is● A Mysterie is a thing secret or hid in words or ceremonies or a ceremonie wherein some secret thing is understoode Eliote Christ is crucified euery bay in a mysterie that is to saye euerie day his death is represented by his Sacraments of remembraunce The bread is Christs body in a mysterie that is to say it representeth his bodie that was broken for us kéepeth it in our remembrance The Communion is Christs pason in a mysterie that is to say it representeth his person and kéepeth it in our memorie I. F●rith MOLOCH What manner of Idoll this Moloch was THat giueth of his séede to Moloch c. ¶ Under the name of Moloch is forbidden all manner of Idolatry specially the exercising children therto for that is abhominable before the Lord. Moloch was an Idoll of the children of Ammon whose Image was hollow hauing in it seauen closets one was to offer therein Fine floure an other for Turtle doues the third for a shéepe the fourth for a Ram the ●ift for a Calfe the sixt for an Oxe And for him that would offer his sonne was opened the seuenth closet And y● face of y● Idoll was like the face of a Calfe his hands made plaine redy to receiue of thē that stood by T. M. ¶ Moloch was a certeine Idoll of copper proportioned like vnot a man which Image was made holow within And when the people would offer their children in sacrifice to this Idoll a fire should be made within the holow place of the Image vntill it were red hot and when the childe should be put into the Idols hands the Priests wold make such a noise with drumslades Timbrells and Tabrets that the parents shoulde not heare the voice of the childe but beléeue tha the Gods receiued y● soule of y● childe that it died quietly without paine Lyra. MONEY How Christ had Money SHall we go and buy 200. pennyworth of bread c. ¶ Wée learne héere that Christ had money else the Apostles wold not haue sayd Let vs goe and buy 200 pennyworth of bread Then it is lawfull for Preachers to haue money with them wherewith to buy meate and drinke and clothing with other necessaries Sir I. Cheeke MONTHES The. 42. Monthes in the Apocalips expounded ANd power was giuen him to do 42. months ¶ As ther is no doubt but by the ●east with 7. heads bearing the whoore of Babilon dronken with the bloud of Saints is signified y● citye of Rome So in my iudgement y● power of making 42. monthes in y● 13. of the Apocalips is to be expounded taking euery month for a sabboth of years y● is reckoning for 7. years a month so y● fortie two such sabboths of yeares being gathered together make vp y● yeares iust betwéene the yeares of Christs death to the last yeare of the persecution of Maxentius when Constan●inus fighting vnder y● banners of Christ ouercame him made an end of al persecutiō within y● Monarchy of Rome The number of which yeares by plaine computation come to ● 294. to the which ●294 yeers if we adoe the other 6. yeers vnder the persecutiō of Licinius in Asia then it filleth vp full the number of 300. yeares And so long continued the persecutiō of Christs people vnder the heathen tyrants and Emperours of the Monarchie of Rome according to the number of 42. mon●thes which the beast had power to make specified in the. 13. of the Apocalips In the booke of Mar. ●ol 139. MONETARIVS Of this man sprang vp the sect of the Anabaptists ¶ Looke Anabaptists MONTANVS The first that wrote lawes of ●asting MOntanus whereof the Montanists are called taught in Phrigia héereof it is that the heresie is called Phrigian Epiphan saith it began about the. 19. yeare of Antonius Pius which succéeded Adrian This Montanus was taken in Phrigia for the holy Ghost Priscilla and Maximilla for Prophitesses He forbad marriage commaunded abstinen●e from certeine meates as vnlawfull In the end Montanus and Maximilla hāged themselues Eus. 1. 5. cap. 13● 14. 15. 16. 17. The Montanists otherwise called Cataphrigians pricked a boy with bodkins drew the
to forgiue him all such and secret hid sinnes wherein hée had offended the most pure and perfect lawe of God but also he desireth him vtterly to pourge him of all his secret and subtill sinnes saieng Ab occultis meis munda me vnto this place of the Prophet séemeth the saieng of Saint Paule to agree very well when he saith Nihil mihi conscius sum sed non in hoc iustificatus sum Mine owne conscience accuseth me of no fault and yet I am not because of that iustified before God for we sinne vpon a good intent and so by ignoraunce commit great offence against God In all such cases a man offendeth not his owne conscience and yet he offendeth God Ric. Turnar OFFERINGS What Offerings did signifie vnto the people THe Offerings were signes and did certefie a man that God was at one with him and was his friend and loued him For the fat of the beast was offered and wine thereto as though God had sate and eate and dronke with them and the rest they and their housholds did eate before God as though they had eaten and dronken with God and were commaunded to bée merry to make good chéere full certified that God was at one with them and had forgotten all olde offences and now loued them that he woulde fulfill all his promises of mercie with them Tindale OYLE What Oyle doth signifie in this place following ANd make of them holy annoynting Oyle ¶ This holy annoynting Oyle doth figure the vertue of the Holy ghost declared or shewed by the word of God and descending downe first on the head of Aaron which is Christ and consequently vpon the Apostles and all the faithfull As Psalme 133. 2. T. M With my holy Oyle haue I annoynted him ¶ By the holy Oyle is vnderstood the holy Ghost the grace the mercie and word of God by the which the soule is refreshed and deliuered from paine to spirituall ioye Geneua Is lyke the Oyle that runneth vpon the head c. ¶ The oyntment was a figure of the graces which came from Christ the head vnto the Church Geneua What the Oyle of gladnesse is The Oyle of gladnesse is the gifte of the spirite of God gladnesse to our selues because it filleth vs with ioye in the Lord and gladnesse to other because it powreth grace into our lippes to comforte the weake hearted and to make vs a swéete sauour of lyfe vnto lyfe to all that hearken vnto vs. Deering Thy God hath annoynted thée with the Oyle of gladnesse ¶ Hath established thy kingdome as the figure of Christ which is the peace and ioye of the Church Of the Oyle that Saint Iames speaketh off Annoynt him with Oyle in the name of the Lord. ¶ Among those Nations vnto which S. Iames wrote this Epistle it was the manner to annoynt their bodye with Oyle which thing Christ commaundeth his Apostle to doe And Oyle is to manye diseases as a wholesome medicine We where such annoynting is not vsed maye vnder the name of Oyle vnderstande the Office and duetie of Charitie in ministring vnto the sicke such things as he néedeth Tindale ¶ Oyle was much vsed in Palestina and was counted medicinable Mark 6. 13. Luke 10. 34. Therefore where the Apostles doth commaund that Elders should annoynt with Oyle the bodies of the sicke his meaning is that they shall in no wise despise those meanes that God hath appointed naturally to be vsed for the healing of the sicke Sir I. Cheeke ¶ The Oyle that S. Iames speaketh of was not a necessary Sacrament of the Church to continue for euer but it was a miraculous gifte of healing lasting for the time lyke as other miracles did Iewel And they annointed many with Oyle that were sicke and healed them ¶ This oyle was a signe of this miraculous working and not a medicine to heale diseases so that the gifte of miracles ceasing the ceremonie is to no vse How the Oyle that the Papists doe vse came not from the Apostles The Apostles in olde time gaue the Holy ghost by laieng on of hands but now a daies because Bishops he not so holy order hath bene taken that they should giue this Sacrament with Chrisme Iewel ¶ Extreme vnction as they tearme it was that Ceremonie which the Apostles vsed oftentimes when they healed the sick annoynting thē with Oyle For as they laied their hands vpon those whom they baptised giuing to them the Holy ghost visibly so lykewise when they healed any sicke man they did eftsoones annoint him with Oyle to signifie vnto him from whence the gift of health did come that is from the Holy ghost F. N. B. the Italian How the Oyle is compared to the bread in the Sacrament Cyrillus writing of the Oile saith thus Beware thou think not this to be Oyle onely For as the bread of the Sacrament after the inuocation of the Holy ghost is no longer common bread but the body of Christ so this holy Oyle is no longer bare or common Oyle but it is the grace of Christ. ¶ By these words there appeareth lyke chaunge in the Oyle and bread For as the Oyle is the grace of God so is the bread the bodye of Christ and as the nature and substaunce of the Oyle remaineth still although it be not bare or common oyle so the nature and substaunce of bread remaineth still although it be not common or bare bread OLDE MAN What is vnderstood by our olde man KNowing this that our olde man is crucified with him ¶ By the olde man he vnderstandeth our naturall disposition that we haue of our first parents which is slow to vertue but most prone and ready to sinne It is also called the body of sinne Sir I. Cheeke Olde wine ¶ Looke Wine ONELT FAITH How onely faith iustifieth proued by the Doctors SAint Ambrose saith They are iustified freely because working nothing requiting nothing they are iustified by onely saith through the gift of God Againe he saith in the same place This was Gods determination that the lawe surcea●● the grace of God should require onely faith vnto saluation Againe he saith Rom. cap. 9. Onely faith is laied or appointed for saluation He knoweth himselfe to be voide of true righteousnes and to be iustified by onely faith in Christ. Theodorus saith Not by any workes of ours but by onely ●aith he haue got the mysticall good things Origen saith Wher is now thy boasting of thy good works it is shut out Paule saith that the iustification of only faith iustifieth so that all men onely beléeuing maye be iustified although he haue done no good workes at all Chrisostome saith they sayd Who so stayeth himselfe by onely faith is accursed Contrariwise Saint Paule saith that whosoeuer stayeth himselfe by onely faith he is blessed They be manifestly blessed whose wickednesse be forgiuen without any labour or worke and their sinnes hidden without any workes of
What a Proselite is IEwes and Proselites ¶ By the Iewes he meaneth them that were both Iewes by birth and Iewes by profession of Religion though they were borne in other places And they were Proselites which were Gentiles borne and embraced the Iewes religion Theo. Beza And Proselites ¶ To wit such as were conuerted to the Iewes Religion which were before Panims Idolaters Ge. PROTESTANTS How the name of Protestants came vp THe originall of the name of Protestants began in Germany about a decrée that was made at Speres against y● Gospell Anno. Dom. 1529. which Decrée the Princes electours of Germany resisted vnto whose protestation certain of the chiefe Cities to the number of 14. did subscribe with them The number of the Protestants 7. Princes 24. Cities Sledane PROVIDENCE Of the prouidence of God what it is PRouidence is not onely that vnspeakable power whereby it commeth to passe that God hath foreséene all things from euerlasting and most wisely prouided for al things before hand But also that eternall decree or ordinaunce of the most wise righteous God whereby that euery thing that hath bene hath bene and euery thing that is is and euery thing that shall be shall be according as it liked him to appoint from euerlasting Beza We meane by the prouidence of God that euen as he is creator of all things he is also the conseruer which doth by his eternall power and wisedome guide and gouerne them and by his souereigne goodnesse in such sort that nothing commeth by aduenture neither in heauen nor in earth without his counsell and ordinaunce and his most iust will be it in generall or in perticular Peter Viret No good or euill doth happen without a cause or by fortune without Gods prouidence but all things doth happen after his iudgement Hierom. vpon Eze. Prouidence is Gods appointed vnmoueable and perpetuall administration of all things Pet. Mar. Prouidence is sometime as much to say as knowledge and foreknowledge of things to come Sometime it signifieth an ablenesse to foresee for others of things necessary so it is sayde that God in heauen doth foresee and care for all Againe some doe define the prouidence of God after this wise Prouidence is the euerlasting and vnchaungeable kingdome and administration of all things They doe meane saith Musculus by the word of kingdome dominion and power and by the word of administration the temperature of the dominion which they added because of the finding and giuing of all things vnto vs which séemeth in shewe to be a condition of ministery as well as of dominion Musc. fol. 425. and. 426. Gods prouidence we call that souereigne Empire and supreme dominion which God alwaies kéepeth in the gouernement of all things in heauen and earth contained And these two that is prescience prouidence we so attribute vnto God that with the Apostle we feare not to affirme that in him wée haue our beeing mouing and life We feare not to affirme that the way of man is not in his own power but that his foot-steps are directed by the eternall God That the sorts lots which appeare most subiect to fortune goe so soorth by his prouidence that a Sparrow falleth not on the ground without our heauenly Father And thus we giue not to God any prescience by an idle sight and a prouidence by a generall mouing of his creatures as not onely some Philosophers but also moe then is to be wished in our dayes doe but we attribute vnto him such a knowledge prouidence as is extended to euerye one of his creatures In which he so worketh that willingly they tende incline to the ende to the which they are appointed by him c. Knox. fol. 21. Because we knowe not all things saith S. Austen which God doth concerning vs in most good order that therefore in only good will we do according to the law because his prouidence is an vnchaungeable law Therefore sith God doe claime vnto himselfe the poore to rule the world which is to vs vnknown Let this be a lawe to vs of sobernesse and modestie quietly to obay his souereigne authoritie that his wil may be vnto vs the onely rule of Iustice as the most iust cause of all things I meane not that absolute will of which the Sophisters doe babble seperating by wicked prophane disagreement his Iustice from his power but I meane that prouidence which is the gouernesse of all things from which proceedeth nothing but right although the causes be hidden from vs. Caluine 1. booke chapt 17. Sect. 3. PROOVING What proouing and examining of a mans selfe is THis proouing and examining of a mans selfe is first to think with him with what lust desire he commeth to the Maundie and will eate that bread Whether he be sure that he is the childe of God and in the faith of Christ and whether his conscience doe beare him witnesse that Christs body was broken for him And whether the lust that he hath to prayse God and thanke him with a faithfull heart in the middes of the bretheren doe driue him thetherward or els whether he doe it for the meates sake or to kéepe the custome for then were it better he were away For he that eateth and drinketh vnworthely eateth and drinketh his owne damnation because he maketh no difference of the Lordes bodye that as it is sayde before he that regardeth not the purpose for which it was instituted and putteth no difference betwéene his eating and other eating for other eating doe onely serue the belly but this eating was instituted and ordeined to serue the soule and inward man And therefore he that abuseth it to the flesh eateth drinketh his owne damnation c. I. Frith ¶ Looke Trye Examine PTOLOMEVS Of this mans hereticall opinions PTolomeus of whom Ptolomei are called taught the hereticall opinions of the Gnostici and of Valentinus adding therevnto of his owne certaine heathenish doctrine out of Homer He wrote vnto Flora a woman of his faith and indeuoured to peruert hir Epiph. haere 33. PVBLICAN What the Publicans were The Publicans bought in great the Emperours Tribute and to make their most aduauntage did ouerset the people Tind Of their receiuing before the Iewes The Publicans and Harlots shall come into the kingdome of God before you ¶ The Harlots and Publicans repenting truly and with amendement of life submitting themselues to the mercie of God are more acceptable vnto God then the proud workmongers that trust in their owne righteousnesse S I. Ch. PVNISHMENT How the punishment of the law doth not satisfie for sinnes MOses in the law commaunded that such should be stoned ¶ They recite the law out of the. 20. chap. of Leuit. where it is said the man that commiteth adulterie with another mans wife because he hath committed adultery with his neighbors wife the adulterer the adultresse shal both dye the death But the law doth not therefore punish
that he reconciled vnto Christ to testifie our duties vnto God and to shewe our selues thank●ull vnto him and therefore they be called Sacrifi●es of laudo praise and thankes giuing The first kinde of sacrifice Christ offered to God for vs. The seconde kinde wée our selues offer to God by Christ. And by the first kinde of sacrifice Christ offered also vs vnto his Father and by the seconds we offer our selues and all that we haue vnto him and the Father And this sacrifice generally is our whole obedience vnto God in kéeping his lawes and commaundements of which manner of sacrifice speaketh the Prophet Dauid saieng A sacrifice to God is a contrite heart And S. Peter saith of all Christian people that they be an holy Priesthood to offer spirituall sacrifices● acceptable to God by Iesus Christ. And Saint Paule saith that alwayes we offer vnto God a sacrifice of laude and praise by Iesus Christ. Cranmer How the Priests cannot offer vp Christ in sacrifice No man saith S. Paule can offer vp a greater sacrifice then himselfe The Priests therefore cannot offer vp Christ in sacrifice because Christ being offered vp must néedes be the greatest sacrifice and so can he not be when a Priest sacrificeth him selfe for if the Priest sacrificed himselfe he should be y● greatest sacrifice y● he could offer for no man can offer a greater sacrifice thē himself yea god requireth none other sacrifice but our selues as writeth S. Paul Giue your selues a liuing sacrifice to God And the Psalmist The sacrifice that God accepteth is a penitent spirit a contrite and an humble heart Whereby it is manifest that the Congeegation redeemed by the sacrifice offered on the Crosse doth not nor cannot offer by the sacrifice of Christs body for as S. Paule writeth he cannot be offred vp but be dyeth Wherefore he offered vp himselfe once for all because hee could not dye but once c. Crowley How it is to offer our bodies a quicke sacrifice Make your bodyes a quicke sacrifice ¶ The sacrifices of the new Testament are spirituall This is a sacrifice most acceptable vnto God if we mortifie our mortall bodyes that is to say if we kill and ●lay our fleshly concupiscenc●s carnal lusts and so bring our flesh through the helpe of the spirit vnder the obedience of Gods holy lawe Sir I. Cheeke ¶ The Iewes in Moses law were commaunded to offer vp the carkases of beasts but Christians should exhibite their own liuely bodyes for a sacrifice to God in mortifieng their carnall lusts and seaming themselues by faith to godlinesse and charitie The Bible note ¶ In stéede of dead beasts liuely sacrifice In steede of the bloud of beasts which was but a shadowe and pleased not God of it selfe the acceptable sacrifice of the spiritual man framed by faith to godlinesse and charitie Geneua What manner of sacrifice we offer to God By him therefore offer we the sacrifice of land ¶ We béeing a liuely priesthood doe offer 3● manner of sacrifices The first is the sacrifice of praise and thanks giuing which S. Paul doth héere call the fruite of our lips The seconde is mercie towarde our neighbour as the Prophet Ose saith I will haue mercy and not sacrifice Read the. 25. Chap. of Mathew The third is when we offer our bodies a liuely and an acceptable sacrifice to God mortifieng our carnall and fleshly concupiscences Rom. 12. 1. Sir I. Cheeke Of the sacrifice of the table and of the sacrifice of the crosse S. Cipriane opening the difference of these two sacrifices saith thus Our Lord at the table wheras he sate at his last supper with his disciples with his owne hands gaue not his own very body and very bloud realy and indeed but bread and wine but vpon the Crosse he gaue his owne body with the souldiers hands to be wounded What the sacrifice of righteousnesse is Then shalt thou be pleased with the sacrifice of righteousnesse c. ¶ The sacrifice of righteousnesse is the mortifieng of the flesh and meekning of the hearts the praising of God and knowledging our selues sinners T. M. Offer the sacrifice of righteousnesse ¶ That is serue God purely and not with outward ceremonies The difference betweene a sacrifice a sacrament If a man say of the sacrament of Christs body and bloud that it is a sacrifice as well for the dead as for the quicke and therfore the very déede it selfe iustifieth and putteth away sinne I answere that a sacrifice is the slaieng of the body of a beast or a man wherfore if it be a sacrifice then is Christs body ther slain and his bloud there shed but that is not so And therefore it is properly no sacrifice but a sacrament and a memoriall of that euerlasting sacrifice once for all which he offered vpon y● crosse now a. 15. hundred yeres agoe and preacheth only to them that are alyue c. Tindale What sacrifices do signifie Sacrifices doe signifie the offering of Christs body on the Crosse. D. H●ynes Of the Leuiticall sacrifices When any of you will bring a sacrifice vnto the Lord. ¶ That the Leuiticall sacrifices were preachings of the passion and death of Christ and of his Gospell which should afterward be published throughout all the world men hath not dremed it but the Holy ghost hath taught it by many testimonies as wel of the olde Testament as of the new As Psa. 39. Esay 41. Ioh. 1. 1. Pet. 1. Heb. 10. c. Of sacrifices made by fire Euen a sacrifice made by fire ¶ In the whole Burnt-offering all was consumed but in the Offering made by fire onely the inwards were burnt The Bible note What the sacrifice of thankes is The Sacrifice of thankes is our obedience in walking in those good workes that God hath prepared for vs to walke in Crowley He shall bring vnto his thanke offerings vnleauened bread ¶ The Hebrue word signifieth to praise and giue thanks this sacrifice they vsed when any man knowledged himselfe to bée a sinner and confessed his sinnes vnto the Lord willingly to reconcile himselfe vnto him The Bible note ¶ Peace offerings containe a confession and thankes giuing for a benefite receiued and also a vowe and a free offering to receiue a benefit Geneua The sacrifice of the olde law what it ment Although in the olde Testament there were certaine sacrifices called sacrifices for sinne yet they were no such sacrifices that could take away our sinnes in the sight of God but they were ceremonies ordeined to this intent that they should be as it were shadowes and figures to signifie before hande the excellent sacrifice of Christ that was to come which shoulde bée the very true and perfect Sacrifice for the sinnes of the whole world Cranmer SACRILEDGE What Sacriledge is SAcriledge is rashly to touch or to vsurpe vnto himselfe holy things which are dedicated vnto God
to make thee an Infidell and not to beléeue in Christ. Yea he séeketh as much as lyeth him to make God a lyar in whom not in thée is the certeintie of thy faith grounded F. N. B. the Italian How our saluation is neerer now then when we beleeued For now is our saluation néerer then when we beléeued ¶ The farther we go the néerer are we to the end now therefore our perfect and full saluation is néerer vnto vs then when we began first to beléeue The Bible note ¶ Before we beléeued it had ben in vaine to tell vs these things But now seeing our saluation is néere let vs take héede that we neglect not this occasion Geneua To worke out our saluation what it meaneth Worke out your owne saluation ¶ Our health hangeth not of our works yet are they said to worke out their health who doe runne in the race of iustice for although we be saued fréely in Christ by faith yet must we walk by the way of iustice vnto our health The Bible note ¶ Runne forward in that race of righteousnesse wherin God hath fréely placed you through Iesus Christ conducteth you his children by his spirit to walke in good workes so make your vocation sure Geneua SALVTE The meaning of these places following SAlute no man by the way ¶ This is spoken after the manner of a figure which men vse when they put downe more in words then is meant vsually among the Hebrues when they cōmaund a thing to be done spéedely without delay As Reg. 4. 29. For otherwise curteous and gentle salutations are pointes of christen duetie as for this calling it was but for a season Beza He willeth that they should dispatch this iourney with diligence not occupieng themselues about other dueties Math. 10. 12. Mar. 6. 10. Geneua When Heliah sent Gehazi his seruaunt to the Sunamite he charged him saieng If thou meete any salute him not and if any salute thée answere him not as though he shuld say Make spéed as nothing may let thée by the way Geneua SAMARITANES Of their opinions THE Samaritanes as Iosephus Antiq. li. 11. cap. vlt. denye the Iewes in aduersitie in prosperitie they call them cosins deriuing their pedigrées from Ioseph Ephraim Manasses c. They onely receiue the fiue bookes of Moses denieng all the prophesies after him They reteine all the Iewish ceremonies except the abhorring of the Gentiles They denie moreouer the resurrection of the dead Epiphan Praefae li. 1. de heraes SAMVEL How these words of Samuel in this place are to be vnderstood HOw can this be true that Samuel sayd to Saule I will not returne with thée and yet he went with him It is to bée vnderstood that Samuel spake it for the time present and not for the time following As our Sauiour Christ in the 7. of Iohn sayth I will not goe vp to the feast yet afterward he went priuely So Samuel intending not at that time to returne with Saul●● but after his minde being chaunged for certeine causes went with Saule Ly●a Of the raising vp of Samuel And Saule perceiued that it was Samuel ¶ To his imagination albeit it was Satan indéed who to blinde his eies toke vpon him the forme of Samuel as he can doe an Angell of light Geneua SANCTA SANCTORVM What the meaning of these words are THis bread and this cup are the holy things of the holy You sée that he saith not onely they are holy things but he addeth beside of the holy As if he would say This bread is not common to all men nor euery vnworthie but it is the bread of the holy How much more may we saye the same of Gods worde This worde is not of men or of euery body but of the holy There S. Chrisostome saith that the Priest was wont to shew forth the bread in the time of the holy mysteries and say Sancta sanctis holy things for the holy And this is the meaning of Sancta sanctorum SANCTIFIE What it is to Sanctifie SAnctifie to cleanse and purifie to appoint a thing to holy vses and to separate from vncleane and vngodly vses Tindale And for their sakes sanctifie I my selfe ¶ To sanctifie is to separate to diuine vses I sanctifie my selfe that is I dye for them that they by my death may bée filled with the spirit of sanctification and may bee made the holye vessels of God by the reuealed spirit of the Gospell Marl. vpon Iohn fol. 568. Sanctifie them with thy truth ¶ To sanctifie is to select and choose out a thing from a prophane vse to the true worshipping of God the faithfull then are by the truth of Gods worde sanctified that is to saye selected and chosen out from the stocke of Adam béeing cleansed by the bloud of Iesus Christ from the filthinesse of this world Christ doth sanctifie himselfe when he offereth himselfe vpon the crosse for vs. Heere we must note that Christ doth in this place pray as a very natural man and not as God Blessed the seauenth day and sanctified it ¶ Sanctifie in this place is as much to say as to dedicate and ordeine a thing to his owne vse As Exo. 13. 2. Tindale The meaning of this place following For both he that sanctifieth and they which are sanctified are all one ¶ That is to saie as well Christ that doth sanctifie as we that are sanctified be all of one Father which is Abraham whose seede Christ tooke vpon him and not Angels that so by offering of his body and shedding of his bloud he might sanctifie vs for euer Sir I. Cheeke ¶ The head and the members are of one nature So Christ which sanctifieth vs and wee that are sanctified are all one by the vnion of our flesh Geneua How our meates are sanctified For it is sanctified by the word of God and praier ¶ We confesse and acknowledge that God is the maker and giuer of these creatures which we vse Secondly that we are of y● number of those who through Christs benefits haue receiued that right ouer all creatures that Adam lost by his fall Thirdly by our praier we craue of the Lord that we may vse those meats with a good conscience which we receiue at his hands Fourthly we make an ende of our eating and drinking with thankes giuing and praier so are our meates sanctified vnto vs. Beza SANCTVARIE Of the praiers made in the Sanctuary MIttat tibi auxilium de sancto de Syon tueatur te The Lord send thée helpe from the Sanctuary and strengthen thée out of Syon ¶ This is a praier for the King and the second verse of the. 20 Psalme And albeit the power of God is as ready and as able to helpe vs calling vnto him in the broade fields or in the wilde woods with seruent faith as if wee make our prayers in the Sanctuary that is the holy place
so ashamed that they hid themselues from the presence of God and founde the meanes to couer their nakednesse with Figge leaues SHAPE OF GOD. What it is to be in the shape of God WHich being in the shape of God ¶ To be in the shape of God is to be equall with God in all things yea to be a very naturall God which thing we ought to vnderstande of Christ which being a true naturall God did for our saluation take vpon him the shape of a seruaunt that is to say vouchsafe to be borne a very naturall man being in all things lyke vnto vs sinne onely being excepted Sir I. Cheeke If Christ being very God equall with the father laid aside his glory and being Lord became a seruaunt willyngly submitted himselfe to most shamefull death shall we which are nothing but vile slaues through arrogancie tread downe our brotheren and preferre our selues Geneua SHAVE ¶ Looke Woman taken in warre Wherefore Hanon shaued the beards of Dauids Ambassadours ANd shaued thē cut off their garments by y● halfe ¶ They shaued off the halfe of their beards to put them to shame villanye whereas the Ambassadours ought to haue bene honoured and because the Iewes vsed to weare side garments and beards they thus disfigured them to make them odious vnto others Geneua ¶ Looke Sion SHEEPEFOLD ¶ Looke One sheepefold SHEPHEARD The opening of these places following WHich is not the Shepheard neither the Sheepe are his owne ¶ These words containe some difficultie for if they are not shepheards in the church of Christ whose shéepe are none of their owne there shall be neuer a Pastour in the church but Christ onely What meaneth then the Apostles to saye God hath ordeyned some in the Church to bée Apostles some Euangelists and some Shepheardes and Teachers Also Christ said to Peter Féede my shéepe for he is the Pastour which féedeth and he is the teacher which teacheth Peter therefore was a shepheard although he fed none of his owne but the shéepe of Christ. But let vs remember that they which are guided by the spirit of God they count that their owne which belongeth vnto the head not to vsurpe power vnto themselues but faithfully to keepe that which is committed to his charge For he which is truly ioyned vnto Christ will neuer accompt that to be none of his owne which hath bene so deare vnto him Marl. vpon Iohn fol. 369. Their shepheards haue caused them to goe astray c. ¶ Their Gouernours and ministers by their examples haue prouoked them to Idolatry Geneua ¶ Looke Nahum 3. 18. Woe be vnto the shepheards of Israel that féede themselues should not the shepheard féede the flocke ¶ By the Shepheards he meaneth the Kings and Magistrates Priests Prophets● Ye seeke to enrich your selues by their commodities and so spoyle their riches and substaunce But the office dutie of a good shepheard is to loue and succour his flock and not to be cruell towards them Eze. 34. 4. The propertie of a good shepheard For now we liue if we stand fast in the Lord. ¶ A good shepheard doth alwaies count the welfare and prosperous estate of Christs flock to be his owne For while it goeth well with the congregation it goeth wel with him also But if he seeth y● church to be in any peril or weaknes then he is werie of his own● life he can haue no ioye Who is weake saith S. Paule I am not weake who is offended I burne not This affection is not in them that seeke their owne lucre or their owne glory Beza Of the restoring of good shepheards For I will deliuer my sheepe from their mouths c. ¶ By destroieng the couetous hirelings and restoring true shepheards whereof we haue a signe so oft as God sendeth true preachers which both by doctrine and lyfe labour to féede his shéepe in the pleasaunt pastures of his word Geneua Of the outward gouernment of a foolish shepheard Take to thée yet the instrument of a foolish shepheard ¶ Signifieng y● they shall haue a certain kinde of Regiment outward shew of gouernment but in effect it shuld be nothing for they should be wolues and deuouring beasts in stéede of Shepheards Geneua Of the sword that should come of the shepheards Arise O sword vpon my shepheards c. ¶ The Prophet warneth the Iewes that before this great comfort should rise vnder Christ there should be an horrible dissipacion among the people for their gouernours and Pastours should be destroyed the people should be as scattered shéepe and the Euangelist applyeth this to Christ because he was y● head of all Pastors Mat. 26. 31. Geneua Of foure kinde of shepheards One kinde there is that both teacheth well and liueth wel following the examples of the Prophets Apostles and Christ himselfe Another kinde there is that teacheth euill lyueth euill these pull downe the Temple of God with both hands The third are they which teach well and lyue euill and these what they build with their right hand they pull it down with the left and are altogether lyke to the shipwright that builded and prepared the Arke of Noe for others to be saued perished themselues There is also a fourth kind that teacheth euil and lyueth well and these through hypocrisie doe most harme of all For when the people doe gaze at the outward appeara●nce of their conuersation they are easely drawen to imbrace their doctrine c. Hemmyng SHEVV BREAD Wherefore it was called Shew bread SHew bread ¶ Because it was euer in the sight of the Lord. T. M. Obiection Dauid did eate of the Shewe bread notwithstanding it was forbidden Aunswere He was forced thereto by extremitie of famine He neuer decréed that it should be lawfull for all other to doe the lyke Obiection If it were necessary as by the words of S. Hierom y● they which would eats the Shewe bread should abstaine from their wiues how much more is it necessary that they that eate the bodie of Christ dayly as the Priests do shuld kéepe themselues chast and be altogether without wiues If they eating of the figure doe require such a cleannesse from women what shal the veritie of the thing it selfe doe Aunswere God gaue a commaundement that when the Paschall lambe should be eaten the Israelites should vse no leauened bread by the space of 7. daies and that whosoeuer did eate or keepe any in his house all that while his soule should perish from among his people now may I make mine argument after this manner If it was necessarie that they which did eate the paschall lambe should abstaine from leauened bread not onely when they did eate the Easter Lambe but also whole sixe dayes after how much more is it requisite and necessary that they which doe eate the Sacrament of the body and bloud of Christ which as ye say was figured signified and
How our sinnes shall not be thought vpon with God They shall not be thought vpon c. ¶ The sophisters haue a proper solution for this text such like which testifieth y● God so forgiueth that he will not after call again his forgiuenes punish True it is say they God forgiueth the sin but not the punishment due vnto sin Seauen yeares punishment as they praie must we abide in Purgatory for euery sin whō it is forgiuē If this be not to mocke with God his holy word I wot not what is mo●king If God can do as they affirme giue me punishment due vnto my sin so that he neither giue me too much nor too little paine therfore yet not once thinke on my sin surely he hath a wonde● fult remembraunce And that hée will not thinke on it the text doth héere plainely affirme By this sophistry might the king giue a man pardon for his theft and after ha●g him vp For he might say Sir I forgaue you your theft but not your hanging which is due vnto it Such pardon would they be lo●h●to haue that first imagined it If the king which is but a man be more faithfull then to deale so with prisoners whome he forgiueth how should God then which is our heauenly Father and which is euen goodnesse it selfe haue such a subtill and vnperfect forgiuenesse that shuld after punish But héereof will I now speake no more least yée should haply smell y● this solution were imagined to pick mens purses th●ough Masse pence Dirge grotes Trentals yearemindes month mindes c. Because that although God can and may forgiue the sin yet must such things obtein the forgiuenesse of the punishment thervnto or that the Priests benefits were not sufficient for them to liue on without such pillage Or yet that the poore people could by anye other meanes bee milked from that thing wherewith their wiues their householde and children should liue T. M. THIS IS MY BODY The interpetation of these words TRuth it is indéede that the wordes be as plaine as may b● spoken but that the sense is not so plaine it is manifest to euery man that wayeth substancially the circumstances of the place For when Christ gaue bread to his Disciples and sayd This is body ther is no man of any discretion that vnderstandeth the English tongue that he may well knowe by the order of the speach that Christ spake those words of the bread calling it his body As all the olde authors also do affirme although some of the Papists denie the same Wherefore this sentence cannot meane as the words séeme and purport but there must néeds be some figure or mysterie in the speach more then appeareth in y● plaine words For by this manner of speach plainly vnderstoode without any figure as the words do lye can bée gathered none other sense but that bread is Christs body and that Christs body is bread which all christian eares do abhor to heare Wherefore in these words must néeds be sought out an other sense and meaning than the words of themselues do beare ¶ Looke Bread how it is called Christs body Cranmer Druthmarius expoundeth these wordes This is my body on this manner that is to say this is my body in a mysterie I. Frith fol. 134. This is my body ¶ This is a figuratiue speach which is called M●tonymia y● is to say the putting of one name for another so calling the bread his body which is a signe Sacramēt of his body And yet notwithstanding it is so a figuratiue and chaunged kinde of speach that the faithfull doe receiue Christ indeede with all his gifts though by a spirituall manner become one in him Beza ¶ The thing which signifieth hath of custome ben called of the name of the thing which it signified as it is written the seuen eares are seuen yeares the scripture saith not y● they signifie seuē years And y● seuen kine are seuen yers many things In like manner S. Paule saith that the Rocke was Christ and not that it signified Christ but as it had bene him in very deed y● which notwithstanding was not Christ by substaunce but by figuration August vpon Leuiticus ¶ When God gaue the Circumcision to Abraham he made his counenaunt before the Circumcision and yet hée calleth the Circumcision his couenant or alliance saieng Hoc est pactum meum This is my couenaunt S. Paule expounding the same saieng Abraham hath receiued the signe of Circumcision as a seale of the righteousnesse of faith God saide to the Prophet Ezechiel Thou Sonne of man take a tyle stone and lay it before thée describe vpon it y● citie of Hierusalem After he saith This same is Hierusalem Denis in the ecclesiastical Hierarch THOMAS How Thomas and Didimus is one name THen said Thomas which is called Didimus ¶ In that he saith Thomas was called Didimus is not so to be vnderstood as though Thomas were his proper name and Didimus his sirname For the same which the Greekes call Didimus the Hebrues call Thomas Marl. vpon Iohn fol. 405. How he was reproued for his vnbeleefe Looke Happy Of his death and martirdome Thomas as it hath bene deliuered vnto vs saith Dorotheus preached the Gospell of our Sauiour Christ Iesus vnto the Parthians Medes and Persians He preached also vnto the Caramans Hircans Bactrians and Magitians He rested at Calamina a Citie in India béeing slaine with a Darte which they call a Speare or Iau●lin where he was also honouradly buryed Dorotheus fol. 532. THOVGHTS How euery thought is not sinne WE teach not that euery thought is sinne but euery euill thought that riseth in the heart of man and is not resisted but with delight followed although it be not accomplished in act the same is deadly and damnable if it be not repented Mat. 5. 28. 1. Iohn ● 8. But there 〈…〉 betwéene these thoughts which our will 〈…〉 ●and with loue imbraceth and these ●ogitations which after the man 〈…〉 of a darke shaddow are wont to passe ouer the minde and but euen only in passing ouer to shew themselues which the Greekes call Tulous y● is a bare or naked 〈…〉 or shadowing of any thing or at y● least betwéen those which came into the mind with a certain 〈…〉 resisteth For y● losse of y● which as it sorroweth so it reioy●eth y● they are driuen out In those truly which shew thē selues softly to the minde doe declare them as it were flieng away● the● is neither sinne at all nor yet battaile But in these with y● which for a spa●e the soule striueth against y● which the wil resisteth ther is an equal fight for either we cons●nt are ouercome or els we withstand doe ouercome and in battaile get the victory Some therefore are the children of the world yet are not the children of the diuell For albeit the diuell is the author chiefs worker of all
bread in the Sacrament is chaunged into the substance of Christs body And therefore Dunce himselfe vtterly refuseth shunneth it And thinketh it better to hold that the bread departeth getteth it selfe away that then in place of it succéedeth Christs body When it was first inuented That which is former saith Tertulian is true that which is latter is false But the doctrine of Transubstantiation is a late doctrine for it was not defined generally afore the Councell of Laterane about 1215. yeres after Christs comming vnder Pope Innocentius the third of that name for before y● time it was frée for all men to beléeue it or not beléeue it as y● B. of Duresme doth witnes in his booke of the presence of Christ in his supper lately put forth Ergo y● doctrine of transubstātiatiō is false Brad. Reasons against Transubstantiation That the Lord gaue to his disciples bread wine called it his body the very scripture do witnes For he gaue that called that his body which he tooke in his hands whereon hée gaue thanks which also he brake gaue to his disciples y● is to saye bread as y● fathers Ireneus Tertulian Origen Cypriane Epiphanius Augustin all the residue which are of antiquitie do affirme but inasmuch as the substaunce of bread wine is an other thing then the substance of the body and bloud of Christ it plainly appeareth that there is no Transubstantiation The bread is no more transubstantiate then y● wine but that the wine is not transubstantiate S. Mathew and S. Marke doe teach vs for they do witnes y● Christ said that he would drinke no more of the fruite of y● vine which was not bloud but wine and therefore it doth follow that there is no Transubstantiation Chrisostome vpon Mathew and S. Cypriane doe affirme this reason As y● Bread of the Lords supper is Christs natural body so is it his mysticall body for the same spirit that spake of it This is my body did say also for we being many are one bread one body c. But now it is not his mysticall body by transubstantiation therfore it is not his natural body by trāsubstātiation The words spoken ouer the bread in S. Luke Paule are not so mightie and effectuall as to transubstantiate it For then it or that which is in it shuld be transubstantiate into the new Testament therfore the words spoken ouer the bread are not so mightie to make Transubstantiation Bradford How it hath made the Turkes power to increase It was decréed of y● transubstantiation as they call it in the yere of Christ. 1215. Nocentius the third being Pope Which decrée hath confirmed the most horrible prodigious Idolat●y that euer was And anone after in the yeare 1250. began Othoma●s kingdom to prosper And so shortly after this Idolatrye once confirmed his kingdome began to arise and increased aboue all other Regions and brought foorth weapons against the West part of the world to punish the filthie spottes of the Romane Church So that as soone as this Idolatry of the Masse began to be confirmed of the people the Turkes power did increase to scourge it in Christ. And shall yet more and more grow prease vpon vs till this Idolatry of the Masse be taken quite away c. The cause wherefore the opinion of Transubstantiation is holden and defended The words of scripture saith Iohannes Scotus otherwise called Dunce might be expounded more easely and more plainly without Transubstantiation but y● Church did chuse this sense which is more hard being moued therevnto as it seemeth chiefely because that of the Sacraments men ought to holde as the holy Church of Rome holdeth but it holdeth that bread is transubstantiate or turned into the body wine into the blood as is shewed De summa trinitate side catholica ●irmiter credimus Cranmer Gabriel who of all other wrote most largly vpon y● Canon of the Masse saith thus It is to be noted that although in the scripture that the body of Christ is truly contained receiued of Christian people vnder the kindes of bread wine yet how the body of Christ is there whether by conuersion of any thing into it or without conuersion the body is there with the bread both the substance accidents of bread remaining there still it is not found expressed in the Bible Yet forasmuch as of the sacraments men must hold as the holy church of Rome holdeth as it is written De hereticos ad abolendū that Church holdeth hath determined that the bread is transubstantiated into the body of Christ the wine into his bloud therfore is their opinion receiued of all that be Catholike that the substance of bread remaineth not but really truly is turned transubstantiate and changed into the substaunce of the body of Christ. Cranmer TREE The tree falling compared to death WHether the trée fall to the South or to the North looke in what place the trée falleth there shall it lye ¶ That is to say looke in what case the righteous Iudge shall finde thée at the houre of thy death such shalt thou be iudged to be Hemmyn ¶ He exhorteth to be liberall while we liue for after there is no power Geneua What the tree of life the tree of knowledge meaneth The trée of life also in the middest of the garden the trée of knowledge of good and euill ¶ The one was a signe of the life receiued of God the other of miserable experience which came by disobeying God Geneua TRESPASSE How trespasse in this place is vnderstood WHen that person shall trespasse This text is to be vnderstood of such trespasses wherewith we hurt our neighbor in worldly goods as they call them and therefore must y● hurt be restored and the fift part thereto If the partie remained not to whome the restitution was due nor anye of his lawfull heires then must it be the Priests wages which at that time had no other liuelode What trespasse offering signifieth Trespasse offering that is an offering for a trespasse Trespasse after the order of the scripture signifieth sometime all the life past which we haue liued in infidelitie being ignoraunt of the veritie not onely in doing open sinnes but also when wée haue walked in our owne righteousnesse TREASVRE What this treasure in earthen vessells is BUt we haue this treasure in earthen vessels ¶ By this treasure Christ himselfe and the wholesome doctrine of the Gospell is vnderstood Mat. 13. 44. By the earthen vessells the frailnesse of our flesh is ment God for his own laude doth set forth himselfe by those things that are weak and féeble because that the whole glory should be giuen vnto God alone and not vnto men that is made of earth Ambrose Sir I. Cheeke ¶ Albeit the ministers of ●y ● Gospell be contemptible as touching their persons yet the
all congregations of waters the Sea generallye but also because it was of olde time a constant opinion after the storyes that it hath his originall beginning from the Occean Sea Ye may also vnderstand by the drinesse of Nilus that it ouerflowed not the lande contrary to the olde accustomed manner thereof Some had leauer haue this to be figuratiuely applyed As there be certeine waters of the Gospell which the holy Ghost giueth so are there also the troubel●us waters of Aegypt that is of worldly doctrine Therefore when the word of God is ouerheard those waters drye vs. For the holy Ghost reprehendeth the world of sinne and openeth and declareth the works of darknesse In these waters doe Réede and Rush grow that is vaine trifling works such as are the works of hipocrits which after the outward shew and appearance séeme fresh but are within vaine and naught worth ¶ Hee sheweth that the Sea and Nilus their greate riuer whereby they thought themselues most sure shoulde not bée able to defend them from his anger but that he woulde ●●nd the Assirians among them that they should kéepe them vnder as slaues Geneua The meaning of this place following Iesus Christ that came by water and bloud ¶ The water and bloud that came out of his side declare that we hau● our sinnes washed by him he hath made full satisfaction for the same Geneua How water in the Sacrament signifieth the people The people is anexed in the Sacrament through the mixture of water therefore I meru 〈…〉 le much that they are so contentions and will not see that as the water is the people so the wine is Christs body that is to say in a mystery because it representeth Christs bloud as the water doth the people Cipriane ad 〈…〉 Whiles in the Sacrament water is anne●ed with the wine the faythfull people is incorporate ioyned with Christ and is made one with him with a certeine knot of per●●ct charitie ¶ Now whereas he sayth that we are ioyned and incorporate with Christ what fondnesse were it to contend sith we are there onely in a mysterie and not naturallye I. Frith VVAVE OFFERING What it signified ANd waue them for a waue offering ¶ This sort of offering● after the Priest had lif 〈…〉 d vp was moued into euery side of all coasts to signifie that God was Lord of all the earth T●e Bible note This sacrifice the Priest did moue toward the East West North and South Geneua ¶ Waue offering because it was wauen in the Priestes hands to diuerse quarters Tindale VVEDDING GARMENT What the wedding garment is and who be clothed therewith WHich had not on a wedding garment ¶ Many doe in vaine héere contend about the wedding garment whether it be fay ● or an holy and godly lyfe Séeing that fayth can neither be separated from good workes● neither canne good works procéede but from fayth But the onely meaning of our Sauiour Christ was this that we are called of the Lords vpon this condition that we should by the spirit be made lyke vnto him And therefore that wee might continuallye abide in his house wée must put off the olde man with all his pollutions and defiling spottes of sinne and must frame and giue our selues to a newe lyfe that our apparell maye aunswere so honourable a calling They therefore are clothed with this wedding garment which haue put on the Lord Iesus Christ and the new man which after God is shaped in righteousnesse and holynesse and as the wedding garment doth declare the minde to bee ioyfull affected towarde the wedding dinner and to reuerence the same euen so also by this wedding garment there is required that the guest● be such which with ioy with reuerence of the diuine maiestie and with giuing of thankes should obteine and enioy the heauenly benefits Marl. fol 499. ¶ The wedding garment is Christ himselfe whom in Baptime we put on through ●aith where from procéedeth loue and charitie which is the common badge of all true faithfull christians Sir I. Cheeke ¶ They that with their mouthes doe professe the Gospell and the true christian religion and so doe associate and a fellowship them●elues with the church and congregation and bee not inwardly sanctified with the spirit of God be without the bridegromes liu●rie ¶ Faith in Christs bloud maketh the marriage betwéene our soules and Christ and is properly called the marriage garment or the signe Tindale VVEDLOCKE ¶ Looke Marriage VVEAKE AND SICKE The meaning of Saint Paule in this place FOr this cause many are weake and sicke among you ¶ For this cause that is ●or lacke of good examining of our selues many are weake sicke in the faith many asleepe haue lost their faith in Christs bloud for lacke of remembrance of his body breaking bloudshedding not y● only but many are weak and sick euen striken with bodily diseases for abusing the Sacramēt of his body eating the bread with their téeth not his body with their heart minde peraduenture some slaine for it by the stroke of God which if they had truely iudged and examined themselues for what intent they came thether why it was instituted should not haue ben so iudged chastened of the Lord. For the Lord doth chasten to bring vs to repentance and to mortifie our rebellious members that we may remēber him Héere ye may shortly perceiue the minde of Paule Tindale fol. 164. ¶ Looke Examine VVEEKES How the weekes in Daniels prophesie be taken A Wéeke in Daniels prophesie is not taken for a wéeke of dayes but for a wéeke of years so that euery wéeke is counted for seuen yeares And the halfe yeare that he speaketh of is taken for the thrée years an halfe wherin Christ héere in earth stablished his Testament A wéeke is taken for seauen yeares As in Leuit. 25. 8. where the 70. wéekes that Daniel speaketh of are 190 yeares T. M. Then number 7. weeks of yeares ¶ A wéeke is sometimes taken for the number of 7. daies as before 23. 15. sometime for y● number of 7. yeares as heere and in Dan. 9. ver 24. 25. 26. T. M. VVELLES What the welles of the Sauiour are WIth ioy shall ye drawe water out of the welles of the Sauiour ¶ The wells of the Sauiour are the word of God the doctrine of the Gospell and promises of Christ wherewith trembling soules and afflicted consciences are refreshed Out of these saith he that they shal drawe water not out of mens traditions which are but puddles T. M. ¶ The graces of God shall be so abundant that ye may receiue them in as great plentie as waters out of a fountain● that is full Geneua VVENT OVT FROM VS What is meant by this place of Iohn Looke Vs. VVEEPE Causes why we should weepe AVgustine in his 4. Sermon of the first Sundaye in Lent writeth that there bée two
inferior more obscure then the bright shew of Christs works Mar. fol. 176. Though I beare record of my selfe yet my record is true The sense meaning is this Although euery man is suspected in his owne cause although it be prouided by lawes that no man speaking in his owne cause shuld be credited yet notwithstanding this can take no place in the son of God which is aboue the whole world for he is not to be reckoned in the order of men but hath this priuiledge from his father to gouerne all men with his word alone Mar. fol. 293. That which Christ denieth chap. 5. 37. héere he graunteth to declare vnto them their stubburnes saith that béeing God he beareth witnes to his humanitie likewise doth God the father witnes the same wher are two distinct persons though but one God Geneua At the mouth of two witnesses c. Not that the testimony of two witnesses are alwaies true but because it is to be counted true For otherwise the testimonie of men may be false as it is to be séene in the 3. of Kings chapter 21. 13. Math. 26. 6. Susanna 13. VVOE What woe is THis word Woe as Basil saith is a lamentable mone wherewith all they y● grone vnder the crosse doth vtter their griefe What is betokened by the 3. woes in the reuelation of Iohn One woe is past and behold two woes come yet heereafter ¶ The fi●st woe betokeneth the mischiefe that is brought into the world by the false prechers Cloister men which aduanced Antichrist vnto so great authoritie y● he began to be estéemed for a God and Sauiour when notwithstanding he was but a destroier rooter out loe saith the text ther came yet two woes after this y● is to wit in the opening of the trumpets of the sixt seuenth Angels For the second woe is ment of the time wherin Antichrist raigneth with most cruel persecutions against the godly through the whole world And the third is about y● ende destruction of Antichrist whome the Lord shall dispatch with the breath of his mouth and rid quite away through the brightnesse of his comming 2. The. 2. 8. Mar. fol. 135. VVOOD What it is to build on wood haye or stubble IF any doe build on this foundation wood haye or stubble ¶ That is if a man of good intent but yet through ignorance preach teach you to sticke vnto ceremonies mens traditions although they seeme neuer so glorious to such things as are not grounded on scriptures as S. Cyprian taught defended to rebaptise him that was once baptised after fallen into heresie yea many Bishops consented vnto him yet was it surely a great errour This is wood haye and stubble that cannot endure the fire of temptation light of Gods word c. I. Frith fol. 43. VVOLFE How a Wolfe is sometime taken in a good sense BEniamin is a rauishing Wolfe ¶ Wolfe is héere taken in ● a good sense and signifieth a feruent preacher of Gods word as was Paule in whom the text is verefied T. M. The meaning of these places following The Wolfe the Lambe shall féede together ¶ The meaning is that the most wicked cruell men shall at the comming of Christ agrée with the good peaceable that the Gentiles which for their beastly liuing are often signified vnder the name of beasts shal be at vnitie with the faithfull the one liue ioyfully with the other without strife The very selfe saieng haue ye in the 11. Chap. ver 6. T. M. The Wolfe shall dwell with the Lambe ¶ Men because of their wicked affections are named by the name of beasts wherin the like affections raigne but Christ by his spirite shall reforme them worke in them such mutuall charitie that they shal be lyke Lambes fauouring and louing one another cast off all their cruell affections Geneua VVOMAN Of the woman arayed in Purple ANd the woman araied in Purple c. ¶ This woman is Antichrist that is the Pope with the whole bodye of his filthy● creatures as is expounded ver ●8 whose beautie only stādeth in outward pompe and impudencie and craft like a strumpet Geneua ¶ The womans variable garments be tokeneth diuerse liueryes of religious orders or the Rose coulour may signifie a readinesse to shedde christen bloud The cup ●ull of abhominations c. the Popes decrées decrefalls Bulles dispensations suspensations and cursings The beast she sat on is the Papall seate Sir I. Cheeke Of womens apparell The Prophet Esay reckoneth vp their bracelets their tablets their bonets their nosegaies iewels their vailes their wimples c. ¶ In rehearsing all these things perticularly he sheweth the lightnesse and vanitie of such as cannot be content with comelye apparell according to their degrée Geneua Tertulian in his booke of the ●ttire of women setting forth a better new apparell of women saith thus Prodite vos feminae c. Come ye forth ye women hauing your beauties bettered with the helps and ornaments of the Apostles taking white liues of simplicitie and readynesse of shamefastnesse hauing your eyes painted with shamefastnesse and your spirits with secresie putting into your eares the word of God tieng to your neckes the yoake of Christ put vnder your neckes to your husbands and ye shall be well apparelled Haue alwaies what to doe in your hands and fasten your féete at home and ye shall bee better lyked of them and if ye were in gold Clad you with the silke of sinceritie with the saten of sanctitie with the purple of probitie Thus prune and pricke vp your selues and God himselfe shall be your paramour c. How women may not weare mans apparell The woman shall not weare that which perteineth to man c. ¶ It is not forbidden but that to eschew or auoide ieopardy or to passe the time merely or to beguile our enimies a womā may weare a mans harnesse or vestiments and contrariwise a man womans clothes but that they be not earnestly and customably vsed that due honour and dignitie may be obserued of both kindes seeing to doe contrariwise is vncomely T. M. Of the woman taken in adultery Neither doe I condemne thee goe and sinne no more ¶ Hée sayth not neither shall any man condemne thée because hée would not abrogate the office of y● lawful iudge Therfore they which gather heereby y● adultery is not to be punished by death by the same it is necessarie that they graunt y● an inheritaunce ought not to be diuided because Christ would not make himselfe an arbitrer or vmper in that businesse betwéene two bretheren yea let euery wickednesse be exempted from the punishment of the lawe if so be adulterers may escape vnpunished they open the gate to treason to murther to rapine and theft If the magistrate had lawfully condemned adulterye Christ would not haue absolued the same He absolued
referred to the true Children of Abraham borne according to the promise and not according to the flesh which are heires of the true Lande of Canaan Geneua Shall kéepe it holie for an ordinaunce for euer ¶ That is vntill Christs comming for then Ceremonies had an end Geneua And shall serue him for euer ¶ That is to the yeare of Iubile which was euerie fitieth yere Deut. 15. 17. Leuit. 25. 40. Geneua EVCHARIST What Eucharist is EVcharistia in Latine is Englished a Thankes-giuing and is now taken for the Sacrament of the Altar Eliote When the Fathers saie that Eucharist is but bread they speake hyperbolicallie and vnderstande that it is not bread onelie or alone or common bread because vnto the bread is added the word of God whereby it receiueth the nature of a Sacrament And this is a strong reason against the Anabaptists which haue euer in their mouth that saieng of Paule vnto the Corinthians Circumcision and vncircumcision is nothing but the obseruation of the Commaundements of God so they saie that Baptime the Eucharist the Ecclesiasticall mysterie are nothing but pretend onlie the obseruing of y● commaundements of God But we aunswere them that other things are nothing if they be alone without faith and pietie and a holie life Pet. Mar. vpon the Rom. fol. 49. EVTICHAE What manner of men they were THey were a sect of Heretikes called also Psalliani of whom Epiphanius maketh mention contra Massilianos Saint Austen de haeresibus who for mumbling vp of their long praiers wer called the praieng heretikes for so soundeth the Gréeke word luk●ea● They would neuer cease praieng and singing of Psalmes daie and night And so much they gaue themselues to praier that they thought themselues bound to doe nothing els not to get their liuing with the sweate of their browes not to trouble themselues with anie Office that concerned the Common-wealth not to studie or to put their hand to anie kinde of labour but to liue in continuall idlenesse in onlie eating drinkking sléeping and praieng Of whom also thus writeth the auncient Greeke Authour I heodoret And the miserable wretches being deceiued giue themselues to no kinde of worke for they call themselues spirituall men But giuing themselues to praieng they sléepe the most parte of the daie Pomet fol. 117. Eutiches maintained the opinions of Nestorius and said that our Lord consisted of two natures before the ●iuinitie was coupled with the humanitie but after the vniting of them to bée of one nature and that the bodie of Christ was not of one substaunce with ours The Councell of Constantinople deposed him but he appealed to Theodosius and procured the Councell of Ephesus to be summoned where Dioscorus the Heretike restored him Euagr. lib. 1. cap. 9. This Eutiches béeing condemned in the Councell of Chalcedon brake out into these wordes This is the faith that I was baptised in this is the faith that I haue learned of the Fathers and in this faith will I die Tom. 2. Concil EVCHRAITES What they were EVchraites were Heretikes after the Etimologie of their name continent The Authour of their heresie was Tacianus of Mesopotamia the disciple of Iustinus Martir He abhorred mariage he forbad the vse of liuing creatures he offered water in steede of wine in the Sacrament he denied that Adam was saued The Euchraites preuailed in Pisidia and Phrigia Euseb. lib. 4. cap. 27. Epiphan haeres 46. 47. EVILL MEN. How farre euill men are to be borne withall SAint Augustine saith the good are not to be forsaken for the euill but the euill are to bée borne withall for the good Héere ought to be adedd other words which the same writer hath expreslie in other places that is if those euill men doe cast abroad no séedes of false doctrine nor lead other to destruction by their example How euill men eate not Christ bodie Looke ¶ Eating EVNOMIVS Of his hereticall opinions EVnomius Bishop of Cyzicum and the Scribe of Aetius said y● God had no more knowledge then man He termed Aetius the man of God rebaptised all that came vnto him in the name of the vncreated God in the name of the Sonne created and in the name of the sanctifieng Spirite created of the created Sonne Socrat. li. 4. cap. 7. Theodor. li. 2. cap. 29. Epiph. haeres 76. He affirmed moreouer that they which kept the faith that he taught should be saued had they committed neuer so great a sinne and continued therein He was about the yeare of our Lord. 353. EVSTACHIVS Of his opinions and how they were condemned EVstachius Bishop of Sebastra in Armenia went in such attire as was not decent for a Priest He forbad marriage made lawes of fasting he parted maried couples asunder He caused such as refrained the Churches to raise Conuenticles at home He tooke seruaunts from their masters vnder colour of religion He commaunded his followers to weare the Philosophers habit He caused the women to be shauen He forbad the accustomed fasting daies commaunded they should fast on the Sundaie Hée detested the praiers of married men he abhorred the Offering and Communion of maried Priests not remembring that his owne Father was a Priest and Bishop of Caesarea in Cappadocia He was first condemned of his owne Father in a Councell helde at Caesarea afterwards in a Councell of Gangra and last of all at Constantinople Socrates lib. 2. cap. 33. EXALT What it is to exalt or humble a mans selfe EUerie one that exalteth himselfe shall be brought low he that humbleth himselfe shall be exalted ¶ The Pharisie exalted himselfe thinking himselfe righteous by his déedes of the Lawe which was nothing at all and therefore he was brought low by the sentence of damnation The Publican humbled himselfe acknowledging his sinnes by lawlie praier by trust in Gods mercie by Christ and therefore he was exalted Hemmyng EXAMINE How we should examine our selues before we goe to the Lords table BUt let a man examine himselfe and so let him eate of this Bread and drinke of this Cup. ¶ There be thrée principall points the which euerie man ought to examine and prooue himselfe before hée goe to the Table of the Lord The first is true repentaunce and a true acknowledging of his offences and sinnes for the which Iesus Christ died as he declareth vnto vs in the same Chapter The second is true faith in the onelie grace and mercie of God which is offered and graunted to vs in Iesus Christ and by Iesus Christ as that Sacrament also testifieth The third true Charitie and vnion towards all the members of Christ Iesus as it presenteth vnto vs in that wee there eate all of one felfe Bread and drinke of one selfe Cup. Viret This prouing and examining of a mans selfe is first to thinke with himselfe with what lust and desire he commeth to the Maundie and will eate that bread whether he be sure that he
is the childe of God and in the faith of Christ and whether his conscience doe beare him witnesse that Christs bodie was broken for him and whether the lust he hath to praise GOD and thanke him with a faithfull heart in the middest of the bretheren doe driue him thetherward or els whether hee dooe it for the meates sake or to kéepe the custome for then were it better that he were awaie For he that eateth or drinketh vnworthelie eateth drinketh his owne damnation because he maketh no difference of the Lords bodie Frith ¶ Looke Weake and Sicke ¶ We must marke that in this examination he sendeth no man to another but euerie man to himselfe The Papists bid thée goe to an auricular Confessour there to confesse thy selfe to receiue absolution and to make satisfaction for thy sinnes according to the forme that is commaunded thée But Paule the Doctour of the Gentiles and the vessell of election speaketh not a word of these things but saith simplie Let a man examine himselfe and so let him eate of that bread and drinke of that Cup for like as God is the searcher of the hearts and requireth the inward affection of the minde and hateth hipocrisie so none knoweth what is in the heart of man or what affections we beare to Godward but we our selues doe therefore he willeth vs our selues to examine euerie thing in our selues That is to saie he willeth euerie man to descend into himselfe and to examine himselfe Bullinger fol. 1109. ¶ Looke Prouing EXCOMMVNICATION What Excommunication is IT is the separation and reiection from the holie assemblie of our Lord Iesus Christ the which is done by the Church against open and obstinate sinners Tindale ¶ Excommunication is a censure of the Eldership whereby he that is guiltie of some most grieuous crime is without anie certaine prescription of time shut from the sacraments and banished the companie of the faithfull This is the sorest punishment of the Church which also is called of Saint Paule a deliuering vp to Satan of Christ to be as an Ethnike and Publicane which aunswereth the Iewes cutting them off from the Couenaunt so often repeated to the people of God by Moses Héereof is oft mention made in the new Testament Iohn 9. 18. And 1. Cor. 5. 4. 2. The. 3. 15. and in other places mo Now wheras it is so grieuous a punishment it is executed on none but on him that is guiltie of some heinous trespasse which kind of sinnes are rehearsed by Saint Paule 1. Cor. 5. 11. and 2. Thessa. 3. 14. Yet count him not as an Enimie but warne him as a Brother ¶ The ende of Excommunication is not to driue from the Church such as haue fallen but to winne them to the Church by amendement Geneua They shall excommunicate you ¶ In that he saith they shall be excommunicated his meaning is this They shall cast you out of their Sinagogues they shall condemne you of impietie and heresie they will refraine you of water and fire and such necessaries They will banish you and sell your goods and they will account you not for Israelites but for Gentiles and Atheists For the good as subiect not onelie to persecution but also to ignomie and reproach euen as saith the Apostle Paule Be thinketh that God hath set foorth vs which are the last Apostles as it were men appointed to death for we are made a gasing stocke vnto the world and to the Angells and to men Christ notwithstanding commaundeth to stande firme and stedfast against this temptation because though they bée thrust out of Synagogues yet neuerthelesse they shall abide in the kingdome of God Marl. vpon Iohn fol. 527. What S. Paule meant by the excommunicating of Alexander And Alexander which I haue deliuered to Satan ¶ Wheras Saint Paule saith that he did deliuer Alexander and Himeneus vnto Satan he meaneth none other thing therby but that he did excommunicate them openlie as no true Christians and that he did threaten them if they would not repent and tourne that GOD woulde punish them euerlastinglie by Satan and his Angells Sir I. Cheeke Saint Austen saith What is a man the worse if the ignoraunce of a man strike him out of the booke of the Church if his conscience strike him not out of the booke of life In this case saith Saint Austen it commeth sometimes to passe that there be manie Sheepe without the Church manie Wolues within the Church EXORCISTES What the Office of an Exorcist was THe Exorcists office was by a speciall gift of God seruing onelie for that time to call foorth foule spirites out of the bodies of them that were possessed Iewel fol. 98. EXTREMEVNCTION ¶ Looke Oile Face What the Face of Christ is IN the Face of Iesus Christ. ¶ That is to saie in the knowledge of Iesus Christ not in the Face of Moses which is the knowledge of the Lawe for by Christ came we to the knowledge of God Tindale What the Face of God is ¶ The face of God is the knowledge of his diuine nature of the which it is written Shew vs the light of thy countenaunce and we shall be whole that is graunt vs to knowe thée Otherwise Gods face doth signifie the inuisible nature of Christs Diuinitie Exo. 33. 23. You shall sée my hinder parts but my Face you cannot sée that is You shall sée Christs humanitie but his diuinitie cannot be séene The Face of God is that which is described in the 26. of Leuiticus I will tourne my face to you I will make you fruitfull I will giue you raine in season and peace in the earth the sword shall not come in the Land if ye wil walke in my statutes and kéepe my precepts c. Plenteousnesse and goodnesse and all Gods benefites that is Gods face T. Drant What is the Face or countenaunce of God It is not a shape like vnto a mans visage which hath nose eies mouth but the Face of God is the recorde which he giueth vs when we knowe his will God therefore sheweth vs his Face when he telleth vs why he doth this thing or that and it is all one as if wée sawe him before our Eies Contrariwise hée hideth his face from vs when hée afflicteth vs when things séeme straunge vnto vs and when we knowe no reason why he worketh after that sort Therefore when God holdeth vs in ignoraunce it is an hiding of his Face from vs. Cal. vpon Iob. fol. 629. ¶ Thou maist not sée my face for there shall no man see me aliue ¶ There shall no man see my face liue not that the face of God which is the face of life is the cause of death to them y● see it for the Saints that are in heauen do indeed sée it but none that liueth in the bodie can sée neither comprehend the maiestie of his face but must be first purified by death as Paule declareth it 1.