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A01624 The course of Christianitie: or, As touching the dayly reading and meditation of the holy Scriptures very requisite and necessary for all Christians of what estate or condition soeuer: tvvo bookes. Translated out of Latine into English, by Iohn Ludham vicar of Wethersfeld. 1579.; De sacrae Scripturae lectione as meditatione quotidiana. English Hyperius, Andreas, 1511-1564.; Ludham, John, d. 1613. 1579 (1579) STC 11755; ESTC S120317 159,740 250

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hys worde but he prouided especially by his wonderfull prouidence that the same shoulde be committed to writing and so commended to euerlasting memorye For GOD him selfe wyth hys owne finger wrote his Lawe in two tables of stone and then commaunded that by Moyses and the reste of the Prophetes hys sayings and doings shoulde be putte in wryting Exodus 17.24.34 Deutronomie 6.31 Iosue 24. Ieremie 36. Psalme 102. By these what thyngs so euer are written they are called by the name of Scripture Whervpon Christ himselfe by the Scripture vnderstandeth the bookes of Moyses of the Prophetes and of the Psalmes Iohn 5. Luke 24. To the same bookes do the Apostles and Euangelistes wyl vs to haue recourse whylest to the confirmation of theyr owne assertions they oftentimes and that desirouslye alleage the Testimonies of Scripture But wée muste knowe that euen the Bookes of these also are accounted wyth the reste in one and the selfe same order of Scriptures whether they beare the name and tittle of Gospels or Actes or Epistles For it is out of all doubte and controuersie that whatsoeuer is comprehended in the whole bodye of the Canonicall bookes is the verye true and healthsome worde of GOD published and putte forthe by his commaundemente All Scripture sayeth the Apostle 2. Timoth. 3. is enspired of GOD. And Peter in his 2. Epistle Chap. 1. Prophesie sayeth hée came not in olde time by the wyll of man but holy men of GOD spake as they were moued by the holy GHOST And like as the writers as well of the Olde as of the Newe Testament receyued a commaundement from one and the selfe same GOD and our and the selfe same spirite enspired theyr myndes gouerned theyr handes and pennes Psalme 68. Actes 2.1 Corinth ●● Ephes 4. euen so all the whole Scripture is in a manner one Booke reuealing wyth wonderfull consente thyngs moste diuerse and manifolde as Ieremie expounding the 29. Chapter of Esay and Saint Augustine in hys preface to the 150. Psalme doe learnedly gather Whyche things séeing they are so we doe with greate cause vehementlye speake in the commendation of thys Booke not in respecte of the paper or parchmente and of thys or that tongue or of one kinde of letter or other or of the Golde or diuersitie of colour wherwyth it is garnished and sette forthe but euen in respecte that it conteyneth the moste holye and sacred wordes of GOD hymselfe and therefore doe affirme that out of it men ought to learne both by reading and hearing what GOD hathe decréed of vs and of oure saluation For we muste knowe that to this ende especiallye all Bookes are written euen that they shoulde diligentlye be reade and by often reading ouer be fullye vnderstoode that so desyred fruytes myghte redounde to the vnderstanders of them Nowe there be thrée special causes why we shoulde bestowe more diligence in pervsing this latter Booke than the former FIRST Greater is the dignitie of GODS word than of the whole worlde The world in déede was created of the same that the word came from which we so greatly commende and eyther Booke is indifferentely called the Booke of GOD yet neuerthelesse the latter excelleth for so much as wée finde recyted in it the selfe same worde that GOD vsed when he made the worlde of nothing For we reade GOD sayde Let there bee light and the lighte was made Againe God sayde Let there be a firmamente and there was made a firmament and so forth of other things And whereas by the former Booke we perceyue onely that there is a worlde by the latter we maye perceyue what was before the worlde and from whence and by what meanes the same tooke beginning Therefore whether we were neuer able to aspire in searching of causes by the conducte of naturall reason thyther are wée broughte by Faith whyche Faith is intentiuelye fixed on the worde of GOD reuealed read or harde For Faith commeth by hearing of the worde and by Faith wee vnderstande that the worlde was ordayned throughe the worde of GOD so that the thyngs which are seene were made of things that appeared not Rom. 10. Heb. 11. SECONDLY Whatsoeuer thyngs are necessary to be knowen as touching the will of GOD and oure saluation are clearelye and expreslye declared in the written worde of GOD but howe farre shorte should we come to thinke that the same are as apparantly represented in the frame of the worlde Greate is the darkenesse of mennes mindes and oft times euen in those thyngs that are supposed to be moste manifeste by Nature they are more blynde than is the Owle in the noone dayes And then doe we all commonlye moste fouly ouershoote and deceiue our selues when we beginne once to dispute of GOD and of matters appertayning to saluation For proofe whereof are so manye and so absurde fonde and fantasticall I wyll not saye ridiculous opinions whyche the Philosophers deuised as touching GOD and their Summum bonum whereof the number grewe as Marcus Varro recounteth in Augustine in his Booke 19. Chapter 1. Of the Citie of GOD to a hundred fourescore and eighte And Hermias a Christian Philosopher reconed vp some of them and laugheth them well fauouredlye to scorn in his booke entituled A deriding of the prophane Philosophers But vndoubtedly hée shall at length be frée from all error and shall gather to hymselfe substantiall knowledge that neuer at anye tyme departeth from the footesteppes of the Prophetes and Apostles It were a haynous offence to determyne anye thyng of Religion or of the state of a better lyfe onlye by the direction of Nature excepte the censure bée giuen out of the tables of GODS worde and as well the Scripture it selfe as nature bee founde to sumpe togyther in one And therefore wisely the Prophete Psalme 19. After discourse hadde of the glory of GOD to be discerned by the workemanshippe of the Heauens and of the Firmamente addeth immediately a commendation of the Lawe and written worde of god The Lawe of the Lorde sayeth he is vndefyled conuerting the soule the testimonie of the Lorde is sure giuing wisedome to the simple the Statutes of the Lorde are right reioycing the heart the precepts of the Lorde are pure giuing light to the eyes As though he shoulde say we can by no meanes atteyne to the Sanctuarie of the eternall and simple truth without the brighte brands of Scripture burning before vs Which thing no doubte was signifyed by those wise men who comming from the East parts of the worlde although for a space they rightly followed the Starre as the rule of reason yet was it néedefull for them to the intente they myghte fynde out CHRIST the Kyng and worship him to be resolued out of the Oracles of the Prophetes as concerning the place where hée shoulde bée borne Math 2. The holy man Antonius myghte in déede saye wyth a safe conscience that thys huge and vnmeasurable Worlde was to him in stead of a Booke for so much● as
behoofe of many ages and to be short turne thē into diuers and sundry languages and finally transport them ouer withoute any businesse into Countreys and Prouinces both farre and néere This most holesome purpose and aduise therefore accomplished by the wonderfull prouidence of God and taken in hand for our incomparable benefite that man vndoubtedly séemeth ouermalapartly to despise that maketh not accompte of the Bookes of holy Scripture as he ought to doe and so refuseth eyther to reade them or heare them But as oft as I call to remembrance the diligence of the auntiente Fathers whiche liued long before the Bookes were published by GODS commandement and againe consider the great sloth and sluggishnesse of the people of our time verily I am vehementlye moued in mind and do in a maner whollie quake for feare Neyther doe I sée by what force of spéeche or with what thundering words so great dulnesse may I say of ours or malice or rather both ioyned togither can sufficientlie bée dashed and ouerthrowen The very first maysters and teachers of our Religion whiche were Adam and suche as liued in his time conceyued the diuine misteries alonely by the instiction of the holy GHOSTE and of them were other immediately taught by a liuely expressed voyce who agayne by a long continuance of time as it were from hand to hand louingly imparted the same vnto others and so whereas they had all of them but memorie onely in stead of Bookes they neuerthelesse for the space of many hundred yeares kept and reteyned in their families doctrine polluted with no maner of blemishes or defilements at all So feruente a care was in them of Religion so greate constancie faithfulnesse consent and diligence both in learning and teaching But as for vs we haue Bookes wherein wée may reade the selfesame doctrine both cléerely and purely expressed We haue Bookes Printed and put forth in the very same tong that those auntiente Fathers spake in we haue Bookes most faithfully translated into sundry languages we haue the Bookes not only of Moses and the other Prophets but also of the Apostles and Euangelistes wherof the one sort were vtterly vnknowen to all that went before Moses the other sort altogyther vnheard of as many as were before CHRISTES incarnation we haue Bookes that doe most plenteously and wyth incredible perspicuitie declare whatsoeuer is necessarie to our saluation we haue Bookes in all places and at all times most easie with little cost in such readinesse and yet notwithstanding this most excellente and soueraigne benefite of Bookes wherewith GOD hath enriched and after a sort blessed vs before an innumerable multitude of our holy auncesters we do in no wise worthelie weigh and cōsider yea verily as though we neyther euer heard of them at any time nor yet saw them we doe wyth deafe eares and blinde eyes passe ouer many great commodities we lette slippe from vs manyfolde occasion of profiting we suffer sincere doctrine to shrinke and fall downe to the grounde And finally which the very vnworthinesse of the thing compelleth me to adde a number but suche as are Christians onely in name doe vtterly contemne all Religion scoffe at it speake againste it and euen by all possible meanes trample it vnder their féete O strange ingratitude oh monstrous malice oh wickednesse worthy of GODS hastned vengeance But what shall we thinke a great number of vs would do if so be we had no Bookes of holy Scripture at all verily I beléeue we would not so muche as thinke of GOD or of any thing belonging vnto GOD all our life long neyther should we liue in any better estate than that wretched Nabuchadnezar who as we may reade in Daniel 4. kepte companye for certayne yeares with brute Beastes was depriued of reason and vnderstanding wente groueling vppon the ground and susteyned himselfe with fodder and grasse But why doe we not at the length rouze vp our selues lay to oure eares open our eyes by the example of the said Nabuchadnezar and lift them vp to heauen that being restored to our right mind we may more attentiuelie behold the greatnesse of the benefite whereby GOD hathe enriched vs with the Bookes of holy Scripture and being stirred vp and enlightened with the reading of them may prayse him giue him thanks glorifye him to be short may religiously vse and enioy the same holye Bookes to all those endes and purposes where vnto it is euident GOD so ordeyning they are written and putte 〈◊〉 Now it may be that some subtill trifeler séeking the defence as well of his owne as of others slouthfulnesse and coueting to vndermine the felicitie of the faithfull will make exceptions and say that the commandement of God whiche a little before was recited out of Deuteronomie perteyned only to the Iewes and dothe in no case bind the Christiās to the obseruation of it but such are in no wise to be heard or hearkned vnto for why no man is ignorant that of the precepts of the law whereof some are Morall some Ceremoniall and other some Iudiciall the two later kindes onely are abrogate for the one kind conteyned nothing else than types and shadows of things afterward to be accōplished by CHRIST Heb. 10. the other was giuen peculiarly to the nation for the framing and well ordering of their common weale Wherfore seing all things lōg agone shadowed in rites and Ceremonies are now throughly perfited finished by CHRIST and séeyng againe that their whole common wealth is vtterlie subuerted and ouerthrowen it followeth that those two kindes of lawes likewise are vtterly repealed and taken away It remayneth then that the preceptes of the firste sort or kinde I meane as touching maners are yet still in force and common to all as well Christians as Iewes But that in these or within the compasse of these commandements ought to be placed that which we alleadged before out of Deuteronomie who can denye yea and whatsoeuer is auaileable to the declaration of oure Faith in GOD and the loue toward our neyghbour and briefely to the framing of a godly and vnblamable life that whether it be found discussed in the Bookes eyther of the old or newe Testament let euery Christian man knowe assuredly to belong also to himselfe to the intente he shoulde whollie kéepe and obserue the same But nowe dothe our Sauiour CHRIST himselfe repeate the selfesame commaundemente and will haue it for euer ratifyed and established whilest in the fifth of Iohn he commandeth vs to Search the Scriptures which do paynte him forth in their couloures and declare hym to be the Sauiour and protector of mankinde Whyche words if a man would contend that they were vttered onely to the Iewes and therefore alleadge that they agrée not vnto Christians that man as Saincte Augustine doth learnedly gather entreating De verbis Domini sermone 45. might as wel saye that he woulde neyther knowe Christe nor be acknowledged of CHRISTE Wherefore Saint Peter dealing as an interpreter
places it is not obscurely signified firste that the Bookes of holy Scripture were in times paste by Readers from an hyghe Pulpit with a cleare voice whyche all myghte heare and in the common tongue whyche all might vnderstande accustomed to be recited Secondlye that by name were rehearsed Moses the residue of the Prophets the Psalmes the Gospels the Actes of the Apostles the Apostolicall Epistles and that for the moste parte these bookes were read through from the beginning to the ende Lastly that this order was obserued that the reading wente alwaies before and then followed a more large declaration of the thinges that were read by some one that was excellent in the gifte of Prophecie In the meane time the godly Doctors and Teachers neuer ceassed to exhorte their godlye hearers that they woulde daylye also reade ouer the holy Scriptures at home at their owne houses that they woulde priuatelye call to minde the things that they hadde publikely heard and that by the example of those of Berea they would duly weigh and examine them by the ballaunce and touchstone of the Scriptures And of the peoples diligence profiting at that time in reading the holy Scriptures this is no doubtfull argument for that it was not néedfull for the Doctours themselues thoughe some men in these oure dayes doe very weywardly and importunately vrge it to expresse at all times the names of the Authours and Chapters of the holy bookes In as much as the people themselues so soone as they hadde hearde any place alleaged and broughte forth by and by vnderstood in what Author in what booke and in what parte of the booke the same was to be founde as they that were verye well exercised by reason of their daylye and domesticall reading Therefore the thinges that in so many ages and in euerie place were with singular care great commendation and with no lesse fruite accustomed to be done in sacred assemblies or méetings wherevnto all Christians of all estates and degrées whatsoeuer vsually came togither We may iudge also to be verye séeming and sitting for all the professours of Christianitie in these oure dayes neither can we suppose them to bée within the compasse of Christes flocke or folde that shall contemptuouslie refuse eyther to heare the holy Scriptures in the Churche or to reade them oftentymes at home by themselues Wherefore if thou dwellest in suche a place where as the Propheticall and Apostolique writings are not accustomed to bée recited in holy publike assemblies then forsooth is it most requisite and necessarie that thou shouldest prescribe vnto thy selfe a perpetuall and vnchangeable Lawe as touching the dayly reading of them at home at thy house But if thou dwellest where they are publikelie recited in a tong knowen vnto thée it is well and thou hast good cause to reioyce wyth thy selfe as one in farre more happie estate than infinite thousands of men whome a man may finde euery where in Cities Townes Villages and stréetes vtterly voyde and destitute of the knowledge of Heauenly and Spirituall thyngs but thou must prouide neuerthelesse with all possible diligence that thou mayest profite and goe forwarde in the wholesome doctrine of GODS worde not onely in the Lordes house or Temple but also in thine owne priuate house by all occasions and to the vttermost of thy power according to the holye admonitions of godly and learned Pastors For true Christianitie consisteth not in thys that a man doth oftentimes conueygh hymselfe bodilie from hys House to the Churche but in that a man both at home and in the Churche shoulde bende hys whole heart and mynde to the true vnderstanding of the mysteries of GODS holye worde But why doe we not alleadge some of the exhortations that the holy Fathers vsed to make to their hearers when they coueted to stirre them vp to the priuate reading of the sacred Scriptures forsooth I trust they wyll no lesse profite now a great number than it is certayn they profited in times past For they prouided their painefull workes both for vs and our whole posteritie And certes for m●ne owne part I confesse I coulde not deu●se either more pithy or profitable exhortations than th●irs are Origē therfore about the yeare of our Lord 230. being a Doctor of the famous schole and Church of Alexandria from when his voyce sounded into the whole world namely whilest out of his Auditory there came on euerye side innumerable wise gouernours of Churches whom also Mammea mother of Alexāder Seuerus the Emperor called vnto hir for a time to Antioch whilest hir desire was to be instructed of hym the same Origē I say expounding the booke of Leuiticus in his homilie 9. hath these words For those only doeth the high Priest aduocate propitiator Christ pray that are the Lords inheritaunce that wayte for him before the gates that depart not frō the tēple but giue thēselues to fasting and prayer Dost thou thinke that scarcely cōmest to the Church on holy and festiual dayes neyther giuest thy selfe to heare the word of God nor applyest thy diligēce to keepe his cōmaundements that the Lords inheritance can light vpon thee Neuerthelesse we wish that by the hearing of these things you would bend your selues not only in the Church to hearken to the worde of God but also in your own houses to be exercised and to meditate in the law of the Lord day night for Christ is euē there also and euery where present to all those that seeke after him For therfore is it commaunded in the law that wee should thinke vpon it when we go by the way when we sit in the house and when we ly in our bed and when we rise vp and this is in very deed truely to waite before the dores for the high Priest tarying within in the holye place and to become the Lords inheritaunce Againe in the self same homilie not much after he inueigheth sharply against those the when they heare the Scriptures red do not as they ought to do giue diligent héed vnto thē And at length hauing exhorted thē to bridle the flesh to stir vp the spirite he addeth immediatelye these wordes as touching the hearing reading of the word of GOD If thou cōmest often to the Church loke thou giue eare to the hearing of the holy scriptures see thou takest hold of the meaning of the heauenly cōmaundements For as the flesh is nourished with meat drinke euē so is the spirite strengthned with the liuely sense and working of the word of God which being made more strōg wil enforce the flesh to stoop vnto him to be obediēt to his laws The nourishments therfore of the spirite are the reading of the Scriptures cōtinual prayers teaching cōference of the word With these meats it is norished with these it is strēgthned with these it getteth the vpper hād Which things bycause ye do not loke ye cōplaine not of the infirmitie of your flesh The same
to the xi day before Easter lette the fiue bookes of Moses be read From the fifteenth day before Easter to the Supper of the Lord the Prophet Ieremy From the Octaues of Easter to the Octaues of Pentecoste the Apocalyps the Actes of the Apostles the Canonicall Epistles From the eyght daye beefore Pentecost to the Calendes of August the bookes entituled of the Kings and Paralipomenon From the firste Sonday of August to the Calendes of September the Bookes attributed to Salomon namely the Prouerbs and Ecclesiastes the Booke of Wisedome and Ecclesiasticus From the firste Sondaye of September to the Calendes of October Iob Tobias Esther Ezras of some is added also Iudith From the first Sonday of Nouember to the Calendes of December Ezechiel Daniel and the twelue small prophets From the firste Sondaye of December to the natiuitie of the Lorde Esay From the firste Sonday following the natiuitie of the Lorde to Septuagesima the Epistles of S. Paule the Apostle These Bookes therfore among whiche notwithstanding we sée some ●o be placed of the Bishops which the olde purer Church acknowledged not for Canonicall and againe some whiche are reckned in the Canon to be pretermitted were vsually read and expounded of readers wh●n and at suche time as the faithfull come togither in the morning and oft times before dailight We gather hereby a most certaine argument as touching the prayers which they call morning prayers and are yet still in vse in many Churches and in whiche certaine parcels oute of the Bookes of the olde Testament are vsually read Againe the Bookes of the Euangelistes concerning the doctrine and doyngs of Christe they did in like maner and peraduenture in the time of Euening praier reade ouer and expounde But now in these daies this practise is vtterly worne out of Churches only the beginnings or parcels of certaine Bookes are slightly tasted of a nūber of newe-founde and vnnecessary songs being brought in cleane contrarye to the decrées of the auntient fathers as in déede many other things moe in time paste holesomly ordeined we sée now either vtterly to be decaied or wonderfully to be peruerted and corrupted And ther is now no place left so muche as to the bookes of the Euangelists that they might be red ouer once in a yere but on the sondayes onlye certaine Histories out of thē are by piecemeale picked out whereas of our auncestours the Euangelicall bookes especially were wonte to be expounded wholye without interruption to the people I graunt indéede that in some places in the holy feastes chiefely of Easter and Whitsontide and likewise at the Natiuitie of the Lord for as much as then commonly those that had profited sufficiently in the doctrine of the Cathechisme or in the principles of Christian religion were with great preparation and to the incredible reioycement of all the godly baptized the interpretation of the holy booke begun and not ended was a little intermitted and left off and the mysteries of the natiuitie and resurrection of CHRIST of the sending of the holye GHOST also the doctrine as touching the vse of Baptisme diligētly declared But assoone as those holy dayes were past it was prouided that the same bookes should agayne be taken in hande and continued whych thyng Sainct Augustine doth not obscurely signifye in the beginning of his exposition of the Epistle of Saint Iohn But to what purpose is it to stande longer in these things When as ofte therefore as I beholde consider the diligēce example of the fathers me thinketh verylye that it were no harde matter to finde a meane whereby euē nowe also anye manne maye once or oftner in a yeares space reade ouer the whole Bible or certaine bookes of it according as he himselfe shal thinke good For there is no lette to the contrary but that a man may appoint this lawe vnto himselfe namelye to pervse ouer the holy bookes in the selfesame order and time that as we declared euen now they are reckened and distinguished in by G●e●i●n Euery man may easily obserue that forme and order that is of him prescribed But for so much peraduenture as that order and disposition wil not be liked of all men wherein be recounted some bookes whiche are not in the Canon and againe othersome that being Canonicall and right worthy to be read are omitted I meane the volumnes of the foure Euangelistes and the Psalmes of Dauid wée as by the pointing of a finger will shewe another way and that truely more easie and more certaine as comprehending all the Canonicall bookes and likewise least any man should complayne the residue also called Apocrypha Go too therefore first of all lette vs place by themselues the Canonicall bookes according as they are of the auntient Hebrues and also of the Gréekes and Latines but especially of Origē Epiphanius Hilarius Hierome Augustine and the counsel of Loadicea digested and sette downe and withall let vs mark into how many Chapters euery booke is diuided These bookes following belong to the olde Testament Genesis hath Chapters 50 Exodus hath Chapters 40 Leuiticus hath Chapters 27 Numeri hath Chapters 36 Deutronomy hath Chapters 34 Iosua hath Chapters 24 Chronicles 1. hath Chapters 29 Chronicles 2. hath Chapters 36 Ezra 1. hath Chapters 10 Ezra 2. hath Chapters 13 Esther hath Chapters 9 Esay hath Chapters 66 Iudges hath Chapters 21 Ruth hath Chapters 4 Samuel 1. hath Chapters 3● Samuel 2. hath Chapters 24 Kings 1. hath Chapters 22 Kings 2. hath Chapters 25 Ieremy hath Chapters 52 Lamentations hath Chapters 4 Ezechil hath Chapters 48 Daniel hath Chapters 12 Hosea hath Chapters 14 Ioel hath Chapters 3 Amos hath Chapters 9 Abdias Conteyneth Chapters 1 Ionas Conteyneth Chapters 4 Micheas Conteyneth Chapters 8 Nahum Conteyneth Chapters 3 Habacuc Conteyneth Chapters 3 Sophony Conteyneth Chapters 3 Haggeus Conteyneth Chapters 2 Zacharie Conteyneth Chapters 14 Malachie Conteyneth Chapters 4 Psalt hath psal Chap. 150 Iob hath psal Chap. 42 Prouerbs hath psal Chap. 31 Ecclesiastes hath psal Chap. 12 Song of Salomō hath psal Chap. 8 Out of all these bookes a man maye lawfullye fetche proofes and allegations to fortify and confyrme the doctrine of religion and they are in authoritie before the other bookes and fragments which are called Apocrypha and be in lesse price wherefore we shall not without good cause bestowe our greatest care and diligence in reading and learning of the same Therefore in this wise and order I iudge they maye once or oftner in a yeares space readilye and without trouble be red Now I holde best that we take our beginning at the Psalter and that it be reade apart yea sometimes read againe by reason of the manifolde profite and vtilitie thereof For it is manifest that in it is contained as yée woulde saye an Epitome or abridgement of the whole Scripture Therefore there is offred alwayes in it that which maye profitablye be learned there commeth alwayes next to hande something whereby the minde in
knowlege of Christe Let vs sée now what was done in certaine ages folowing It is the fashion of some of the common sorte whē there is anye newe doctrine or maner of teaching especially in Philosophie firste sette abroache to flocke by by togither by heapes to be sodainely inflamed with a feruent desire of learning But as soone as they haue receiued any smacke or tast fo suffer their heate by little little to waxe colde in continuance of time to be quyte extinct aswel their doctrine as their whole secte if anye were risen to vanish away Much like as if a greate fire being kindled after it hathe for a certaine space shewen forth a huge light bin séene a great waye off by little little ceasseth to caste foorth any sparke or flame and last of all hath nothing lefte but smoake ashes whereof yet the one goeth into the ayre and the other are scattered with the winde But so muste we not iudge of the holy Scriptures For albeit the Apostles died were buried yet was by no means the studie Diuinitie buried with them The Iewes had an antient custome among them namely throughout euerie Citie when they come togither in their Sinagogues on the Sabaoth dayes to recite publikely certaine Chapters oute of the Lawe the Prophets which forthwith some one or other expounded in a familiar kinde of order to the capacitie and instruction of the hearers The selfe same forme of reading and interpreting was by the Apostles brought into the congregations or assemblies whiche in respecte of that time the faithfull were suffered to haue as maye appeare Luc. 4. Act. 13 15. 1. Corinth 14. That which the Apostles obserued in their time their successours the Pastors of Churches neuer suffered to be intermitted or broken off no not so muche as turn then when the affaires of the Christians were broughte into greate extremities and Tyrantes soughte by all meanes to worke their decaye For they neuer ceassed to haue their méetings and assemblies as appeareth euen by the testimonie of Plinie in his Epistle to Traiane the Emperoure They vse sayth he before day light to come ordinarily togither What was accustomed to be done in these assemblies manye credible writer doe reporte Iustine who liued in the yeare of Christes incarnation 1●0 in his seconde Apologie which he wrote for the Christians hath these words On the day whiche is called Sunday all that remaine in the townes or fieldes doe come togither into one place where the bookes of the Prophets or Apostles are read so long as an houres space will suffer Then when hee which readeth leaueth off hee that is chiefe among vs admonisheth and exhorteth that wee shoulde diligently follow and embrace those good lessons that are read thē rise we all and praye togither Clemens Alexandrinus who florished Anno. 200 lib. 7. Stromatum sayeth that the sacrifices whiche they vsed in those dayes were prayers and thanksgiuings and lessons of the Scriptures which they read before meate From these Disagréeth not Tertullian who liued Anno. 230. Apologetici Cap. 39. Wee come togither sayth he to the reading of the holy Scriptures if the qualitie of the times present enforceth vs to forewarne or reknowlege any thing Forsooth with holy words we feed our faith we erect our hope we establish our trust and neuerthelesse with often repetitions and suggestions we confirme the discipline of preceptes Dionisius also the author of the Ecclesiastical hierarchie about the. 300. yere of our Lord entreating of the mysterie of the Lords supper saith very plainly By the office of the Ministers is orderly recited the lesson of the holy Scriptures And a little after The most sacred songs and readings of the Scriptures do minister vnto them directions as touching the gouernement of life and whiche in order goeth before teacheth the amendment of their corrupte affections and most pernicious nature Who wold require no witnesses to be produced And séeing Iustine liued in Asia as borne in Nicopolis a town of Palestine as Ierom reporteth was conuersant at Rome and else where in Europe Tertullian in Affrica Clemens at Alexandrîa in Egipt for as touching Dyonisius wée haue as yet no certaintie It is euident hereby that there was euery where in those daies so far forth as concerned the reading of the holy Bible a greate wonderfull consent But when as after the stormes and tempestes of persecutions were once by the singular prouidence of God appeased assuaged the godly had a time of respite grāted vnto them the Churches beganne nowe to be increased which came to passe if not in the time of Philip the Emprour Anno. 250. whom Eusebius lib. 6. cap. 25. Orosius lib. 7. cap. 20. doe reporte to haue bin the firste Christian Prince of any power that euer was after Christe yet certes vnder Constantine aboute the yere of Grace 320 thou shouldest haue séene if a man may credite Eusebius high and stately temples builded vp to the Lord wherein were practised the selfe same things that late before wer vsed in priuate houses And leaste that anye thing in this behalfe shoulde at any time be confusedly or negligently done there were appointed in all Churches readers vnto whom was enioined by the Bishop the office of Reading who deliuered vnto them in the presence of all the people the holy and sacred Bible As touching whiche matter thou mayste reade in the 8. canon of the fourthe councell of Carthage and in Gratian distinct 23. Moreover leaste any other Bookes than those that are accompted to be Canonicall shoulde be read it was prouided by the councell of Laodicea whiche was helde anno 370. canon 59. and by the third councel of Carthage canon 47. And that Iohn Chrisostome and many others who were afterwarde of great authoritie in the Churche first supplied the office of Readers before they aspired to anye higher promotions maye be auouched verye clearely by Histories Nowe the Homilies that is to saye the Sermons diuised and made by the holy fathers whyche are extante euen from the time of Origen to the Empires of Charles the greate during whose raigne Alcuinus and Beda two of the laste Authors in a maner of these Sermons flourished do proue euidentlye that the same custome whiche wée spake of euen now was obserued in all Churches Reade I pray you but the beginnings only of the homilies of Origen vpō the bookes of Moses certain others reade likewise the beginnings of Chrisostome prefixed before his expositions vpon a good part of the bookes of holy Scripture made vnto the people reade the dyuers sundrie entries of Sermons of Saint Augustine especially where he entreateth De verbis Domini Serm. 15.33 De verbis Apostoli Serm. 1. Again very many of Maximus the Bishop Bede and other mo● and euen forthwith in the very shorte exordiums or beginnings of their Sermons ye shall perceiue howe by them though they were Doctours of diuers times and
enclosed in this small but yet very noble case of his bodye whyche wythout ceasing do prouoke hym to procure a more plentifull knowledge of GOD and of hys wyll and whiche declare that hée is altogyther vnworthye the name of a manne that doeth not endeauoure him selfe wyth newe succoures and the same reuealed by GOD hym selfe to illustrate establishe and adorne those common lights of knowlege concerning GOD by nature engrauen in hym But to the intente that menne might of all times aspire to the knowledge and vnderstandyng of the power and will of God God himselfe hathe set forth openly in the sight of all men two large and ample bookes stuffed and replenished with manifolde doctrine whereout all things pertayning to the same his diuine power and will are fully and sufficiently to be learned The one of them is all this vniuersall worlde whiche of vs is inhabited and lyeth open on euerye side to the surueyall of oure senses the other is the worde of God comprised in the bookes and writings of the Prophets and Apostles Of whiche twoo bookes the dignitie and aucthoritie is wonderfull greate as in whyche are founde the Oracles and monumentes that doe not onely teache and instructe vs but also after a certaine secreate manner pricke vs forwarde to the performaunce and accomplishment of all and euery duty whatsoeuer And as touching the former booke that I may here enterlace somewhat who is he I beséeche you that in beholdyng as well by the eye sighte as in the insighte of the mynde thys moste noble and glorious frame of the worlde wyth all the partes thereof beginneth not by and by to thinke wyth hymselfe that hée of necessitie is moste myghtye moste wyse most excellente that hathe so wonderfullye from the begynning created all these thinges and that farre more wonderfullye and wiselye preserueth them and kéepeth them in order The heauens sayeth the Hebrewe king and Prophete Psalme 19. for why shoulde wée not rather borrowe fitte matter of proofe out of the holy Prophetes than out of Cleanthes of whome Tully speaketh or out of anye other Phylosopher besyde declare the glorie of GOD and the firmament sheweth his handy worke Againe the thyngs that are vnderneath these as namelye the Cloudes Windes Raines the Sea the Floudes the Mountaines Valleyes trées fishes stickering in the waters beastes both wilde and tame doe vncessauntlye as in the Psalme 104. prayse and magnifye god Nowe all these thynges togyther doe signifye vnto men that there is one certayne GOD whome for hys vnsearcheable Wisdome for hys righteousnesse and power for hys goodnesse for the benefites whyche wée daylye receyue of hym we oughte continuallye to reuerence to feare to loue to giue thankes vnto and finally for hys maiestie than the whych none can bée greater to worshippe hym to call vppon hym to glorifye hym and to pursue him with all manner of diuine honours and dueties whatsoeuer Which thing also the Apostle Rom. 1. concealed not For as much sayth he as that which maye be knowen of GOD is manifest to them for GOD hath shewed it vnto them For the inuisible things of hym that is his eternall power and godheade are seene by the creation of the world being considered in his works to the intente that they shoulde be without excuse And how many and wayghtie points and principles of religion are expressed in the holye Scriptures by similitudes comparisions and other suche like proues verye fitlye deriued from the nature and propertie of thyngs Truelye the whole Booke of Iob a good parte of the Psalmes and very manye of the Sermons of the Prophetes of Christe and the Apostles are full of examples Therefore Antonius an Hermite of the wildernesse in Egypt as we read in the Tripartite Historie booke 8. chap. 1. when on a time a certaine Philosopher demaunded of him howe he coulde attaine to contemplation of heauenlye thinges séeing he was destitute of all furniture of written bookes wisely aunsweared That all this world was to him in stead of a Librarie furnished with all maner of bookes and that this Library was at al times and in all places at hand and in a readinesse wherin he might reade so often as he woulde things heauenly and diuine Long before this Antony Clemens Alexandrnus lib. 6. Stromat defined that the creation of the worlde was the Scripture of GOD and that the preceptes of the Decalogue was promulgate and might be reade euen in the workes of nature With these agréeth Sainct Chrisostome in his 7. homily vppon the former Epistle to the Corinthians again in two other Homilies wherof the one is entituled Of fasting and of the reading of Genesis the other is accounted the 9. To the people of Antioche But it pertayneth not to our purpose at thys presente to vse anye further entreatye as touching this booke it is ynough to haue shewed in this order that al men at all times when so euer they beholde this world and the most beautiful partes thereof ought religiously to meditate of GOD and of things belongyng vnto GOD and so to take occasion both of well thinking and of well doing As for those in the meane time in whome appeareth a greater force sharpnesse of witte than in others we both exhorte and also louinglye beséeche them to bestowe a further diligence in searching the natures of thyngs And that not onlye bycause thys kynde of Phylosophye procureth a certaine honeste pleasure and delectation but much more for that when they haue once founde out the wonderfull force and operation of anye thyng they maye adore and extoll wyth prayse the greate power and Wisdome of GOD of whome such thyngs are created moreouer they maye quicken theyr Fayth and hope in GOD considering that all things are created for our behoofe and that all things necessarye for the sustentation of our weakenesse shall neuer at any time be wanting vnto vs Last of al they may discretely vse the things that are lawfull and giue thankes vnto GOD for them Vnto these thrée endes as vnto a scope or marke to ayme at shall the studious of naturall Phylosophye alwayes haue regarde vsing in the meane season euerye where thys caution or foresight namely that the Creatures be in no wise preferred before the Creator In whyche one poynte GOD the Creator as witnesseth the Apostle Paule Rom. 1. shoulde be dishonoured with a moste shamefull despight Wyth thys iudgemente who so euer shall haue studiouslye ensearched the natures and propertyes of thynges hée vndoubtedlye may bée estéemed to haue and that not a little profited in the Booke of Nature and to haue well deserued the prayse and worthye commendation of a diligente Scholler As touching the other Booke that is to saye the worde of GOD or the holye Scripture wée haue especiallye at thys tyme to entreate And that it is rightelye tearmed a Booke it maye appeare by this that GOD thoughte it not ynoughe by anye kynde of waye howsoeuer it were to publishe and proclayme
the sonnes of men reioyceth to be named 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is to saye the Word and the same preaching without intermission or ceasing hath declared the wil of his heauēly father Prouerb 8. Ioan. 1. Heb. 1. And moreouer amongst the things that are exercised in the Church the Word holdeth the chiefe place yea and euen the very force and dignitie of the mysticall actions or Sacramentes dependeth vppon the worde of god Wherevppon it pleased some of the learned fathers and especiallye Augustine vppon Iohn in his Sermon 80. and against Faustus booke 19. Cap. 16. to tearme the same very Sacramentes visible wordes What néede anye long circumstaunce GOD by his worde openeth bothe himselfe and all his benefites and graces vnto man and by faith in the worde man is ioyned vnto GOD and made partaker of eternall blessednesse Wherefore we maye moste truely auouch that to reade the holy Scripture with a godly affection is euen all one to talke and conferre with GOD and to heare God talking and conferring with vs Certes as often as thou readest of precepts exhortations promises threatnings iudgements rewardes punishmentes and other things of like sorte so ofte doest thou heare God himselfe of a truth speaking vnto thée Againe as ofte as thou readest of any confession of sinnes crauing of pardon prayer giuing of thanks or anye suche like so ofte dost thou thy selfe speake vnto god For in these pointes chiefly do consist the naturall commonings betwixte God and men and in these things resteth the substaunce of all sacred sayings and sentences Wherefore then to goe aboute to forbidde or withholde anye man from the reading hearing and vnderstanding of the holy Scriptures is euen as much in effecte as to commande him to dissemble or deny himselfe to be a man that so he mighte be depriued of the power of speaking and of the fruite and benefite of reason Hierome maruelleth and stomacketh the matter and counteth it intollerable if anye man shoulde so presume Forsomuch saith he in the proheme of his exposition of the Epistle of Saint Paule to the Ephesians as we differ from all other creatures in this point chieflg that we are endued with reason and haue the vse of speaking and al reason and holy speach is contayned in the bookes of God by which we both learne to know God and also to what ende wee be created I maruaile greatly at some who either giuing themselues to slouthfulnesse and slepe wil not learne the things that are excellent or else seeke to reproue others that bend themselues that waye Which men whereas I might more straightly stop their mouths shortly send thē packing either eased or pleased in vouching that it is much better to reade the Scriptures than to gape so greedily after the encreasing and hourding vp of riches I will content my selfe onelye in saying this whiche I maye obtaine euen before a moste incompetent Iudge namely that my vocation from labor and quiet solitarinesse of mind is more pleasant vnto me than al other solemnities whatsoeuer Hitherto Hierome Where if so be nowe it belongeth to mans duetie to loue and learne the words of God declared at large in the holy Scriptures forasmuche as we haue giuen vnto vs of God the power and vse of speaking howe muche more ought we wholly to be addicted vnto them which professe our selues to be Christiās For truly how honorable the name of Christian is and what thinges it putteth vs in minde of it shoulde be good for vs oftentimes and déepely in minde to consider He that nameth a Christian comprehendeth in one worde whatsoeuer maye be added to the dignity of a man He that nameth a Christian vnderstandeth a man to be of the number of those whome God himselfe hath pronounced to be a chosen generation a kingly Priesthoode a holy Nation a people freely purchased Exod 19.1 Pet. 2. He that nameth a Christian signifieth a man to be chosē of God the father before the foundations of the worlde were layed to bée deliuered by the son of God Iesus Christ out of most miserable captiuitie and out of the bondage of most cruell Tirants the Diuel Sinne and Death to be regenerate by the holy Ghost into the Churche of CHRISTE to bée adorned wyth newe Righteousnesse wyth Fayth Loue and other vertues and spirituall graces vnto whome lastely is appointetd prayse and immortall glorie and also eternall felicitie bothe of bodye and soule bringing with it more bountifull and large benefites than the eie of anye man can sée the eare heare or the hart be able to conceiue Ephes 1. Rom. 8. Esay 64.1 Corinth 2. Suche and so greate is the excellencie of a Christian man But whence I praye you taketh a Christian this name Thou wilt say I am sure of CHRIST Act. 11. But howe then commeth a Christian man by those incomparable benefites and by euerlasting blessednesse Forsooth euen by the knowlege of GOD the father and of his sonne oure sauiour IESVS CHRIST This is eternall life saith our sauiour Christe Ioan. 17. To knowe thee the onely true GOD and Iesus Christe whome thou haste sente And Peter Act. 4. saith There is no other name giuen vnto men vnder Heauen wherein wee can bee saued but onely the name of Iesus Christe Paule in like maner 1. Corinth 1. saith CHRIST became vnto vs the wisedome of GOD and righteousnesse and sanctification and redemption But there is no mā that can distinctly and without ambiguitie know GOD the father or his sonne Iesus Christe the authour and beginner of Christianitie oute of that former booke Concerning the nature of things or out of anye inuentions of mans wisedome whatsoeuer but onely and alone by the reading of the holy Scripture reuealed from aboue Whiche thing to be true oure Sauioure Christe himselfe testifyeth Ioan. 5 saying Search the Scriptures for they are they that testifye of mee And to the intents the sonne oure Sauioure might be the better knowen of his Disciples he interpreteth many places of the Scriptures as touching his owne person The like did the Apostles also and Euangelistes with greate diligence Therefore whosoeuer he be that desireth to be saluted by the name of a Christian and to be accounted among those that knowe Christe and that looke for saluation promised in Christe him truely it standeth vppon to acquainte himselfe with the holy Scriptures and to make them as familiar vnto him as is possible As no manne can make the Iewes beléeue that he is of the Iewish secte which holdeth none of the traditions of their Thalmud and as the Turkes will receiue none for a worshipper of Mahomet that cannot alleage at the leaste some of his decrées oute of their Alcoran ●o is it not likely that he in good earnest and from his hearte shoulde be a Christian that cannot in some measure oute of the bookes of the Prophets and Apostles declare who Christe is and what inestimable benefites he hathe purchased to mankinde For in verie
Author vpon Cro in his 12. Homily chydeth thē that when the Scriptures are red expounded in the Church haue not their mindes prepared to heare thē much lesse to examine thē or conferre them with others What is it sayth he to be conuerted If we vtterly renounce al the things of the world of the fleshe with our whole study care practise apply our selues to the word of GOD meditate in his law day and night if forsaking al other things we depend onely vpon GOD and be exercised in his testimones this is truely to be conuerted to the lord Thou therfore wouldest haue thy son to learn the liberal Sciences as they cal thē to be acquainted with the Art of Grammer or Rhetorick dost thou not rid him set him free frō all things Dost thou not cause him to omit al other things applye himselfe only to this study Thou prouidest him tutors Schole-maisters Bookes expenses yea thou sufferest hym to wante nothyng vntill hee beare awaye the perfitte price of his purposed studye Whyche of vs doeth so conuert himselfe to the study of GODS law which of vs doth so apply our diligence Which of vs doth with so great care and industrie seke after heauenly things as we haue sought after earthly And why then do we complayne if we be ignorāt of the things which we haue not learned Some of you so soone as ye haue heard recited the things that are redded by by depart your way making no maner of enquirie one of another of the things that are spoken no conferēce at al no remēbrance of that cōmandemēt wherin Gods Law doth admonish thee Aske thy fathers and they shal tel thee aske thine elders and they shal shew thee Other some wil not tarie by their good wils no not til the lessons be redde in the Church Some againe there be that know not whether there were any red or no but in the outleetes of the Church are occupied about fables or otherwise entangled about worldly and vnprofitable matters Of whom I dare be bold to say that whē Moses is red they haue not now a couer only but euen a certain wall bulwarke also placed ouer their hearts For if he which is present which heareth intentiuely marketh which canuasseth and examineth the things that he doth heare that which he can not atteyne vnto diligently fearcheth out learneth can hardly come to the libertie of knowledge how can he which of purpose stoppeth his eares least he shuld heare turneth his back to the face of the Reader be sayd to haue a couer ouer his hearte to whom not so much as the couer it self of the letter wherin the sense is wrapped which is the sound of the voyce hath as yet come All this hath he in that place Manye things mo beside mayst thou find in his Commentaries spoken to the selfesame effect Vpon Leuiticus Homi. 4. he auoucheth thē to offer a thankeful sacrifice and memoriall vnto GOD that do day night meditate in the Law of the Lord and keepe in mind all the Scriptures or if they can not do that yet at least cōmit to memorie the things that are taught or recited in the Church and after they are gone out of the Church like vnto good sounde Beasts chewing their cud call back the same things to remēbrance so study finally to fulfil the cōmandemēts of GOD. In his exposition of the. 12. Chap. of the Epistle to the Romanes he affirmeth flatly that our senses can not possibly be renued but by the exercises of wisedome the meditation of GODS worde and the spiritual vnderstanding of his Law and that by how much a man dayly profiteth by reading of the Scriptures and his vnderstanding pierceth more déepely into them by so much alwayes is he more and more renewed By and by hée addeth I know not whether the sense or feeling of hym that is slouthfull towarde the reading and hearing of the holy Scriptures and towarde the exercises of spirituall vnderstanding whereby he might not only vnderstande those things that are written but also applye them more diligently and sette them foorthe can be renewed or no. Vpon Iosue in his twentith Homilie he declareth in many words That the reading of the Scriptures is both allowed of GOD and his Angels and also very profitable vnto vs albeit we doe not perfitely vnderstande them In his Prologue ad Canticum Salomonis whiche worke notwithstanding it pleaseth the learned to remoue out of Origens Librarie he telleth that there was a fashion among the Iewes that All the Scriptures except the beginning of Genesis certayne places in the beginning and ending of the Prophete Ezechiell and the canticle of Salomon shoulde be taughte vnto their chyldren by teachers and wise men appoynted for that purpose But how and after what sorte Christian children also were accustomed to learne of their Parents out of the holy Scriptures the principles of Religion and agayne generally what the householde studie was in old time in reading and repeating of the Scriptures wée maye in the life of Origen himselfe as it is described by Eusebius in the sixth Booke and second Chapter of hys Ecclesiasticall Historie as in a paynted Table behold Origen sayth he began immediately to be instructed of his father in the holy Bookes who by dropmeale as it were betweene whiles gaue vnto him among the secular studies wherem he was trayned in his tender age some things also out of our Scriptures to be red Thē afterward by little little he taught him likewise to preferre these before his sholasticall exercises And euen incōtinent he envred the child in like maner being of himselfe not vnwilling but very prompt readie to learne whatsoeuer was taught him to take forth euery day certain lessons in the holy Scriptures to cōmend thē to memory Now he truly the child conceruing a wonderfull delectatiō in reading of these things semed not to be cōtent only with a bare vnderstading of thē but would busie his father oft times about questions touching the sense meaning of the Scriptures enquiring of him diligently what such such a thing meant amongst other what the meaning of that was where it is said that The Scripture is enspired by the holy Ghost or what diuine misterie this simplicitie of words might cōteyne But he the father feined himselfe for the time gētly to rebuke him to forbid him to aske any questiō beyond the cōpasse of his age but with himself notwithstāding he reioyced excedingly giuing harty thankes to almighty GOD who had graunted him to be the father of suche a childe This out of Eusebius But with what words I pray you maye this spectacle of so godly a Father conferring with his most déere child as touching holy heauēly matters be I say not only adorned set forth but plainely and distinctly also declared Who cā expresse sufficiently the chéerefulnesse feruencie of the sonne
togither let vs giue good heede to the things that are read that hauing reaped the greater fruite thereby we maye so depart And not much after he addeth That wee oughte so to giue our selues to the studies of holye Scripture as that we maye haue things not only sufficient for our owne vse but what also wee maye minister vnto others as well sayth he in reforming of our wiues children and seruants as also of our neyghbours friends and enimies For such is the nature of spiritual doctrines that they may be propounded in common to al there is no diuersitie in them except it be when one bringeth a minde more attentiuely bente than another and whē one surmounteth another with a more feruente desire c. Neyther can I ouerpasse the chiding speache or expostulation that the same holye father in his thirtéenth Homily vppon the Gospell of Iohn sometyme vsed although it be somewhat long and tedious Let vs blushe sayeth he and be ashamed the woman that had had fiue husbandes and was a Samaritane vseth so greate diligēce in learning that shee coulde neyther in the time of the daye nor by any other lettes or occasions be withdrawn from the doctrine of Iesus Whereas wee doe not onlye not enquire after any thyng that might tende to oure instruction in heauenly things but also are verye carelesse in all thynges and alwayes like affected and therefore passe for no manner of thyng that good is Which of vs I praye you when hee commeth home taketh in hande anye worke worthy of a Christian who searcheth for the meaning of the Scriptures None truely but as for dice and tables we finde them commonly bookes verye seldome which yet if any haue they keepe as though they hadde them not close in theyr Coffers or else all theyr studye consistes in setting forth the leaues and couers and in making the letters beautifull to the eye not to the intent to reade them neyther to gette any profite by them but to vaunte of their riches to shewe their ambition therefore studye they in them So greate is their vaine glorie I heare of no ambitious person that vnderstandeth his booke but hee is in loue onely with the glittering glose of the golden letters What gaine call yee this I beseeche you The Scriptures are not therefore giuen vs that we should haue them in bookes alone but that we shoulde engraue them in our heartes Therefore this outwarde possession of bookes is a token of the ambitiousnesse of the Iewes to whom the commaundemēts were giuen in letters to vs are they not so giuen but in fleshly tables of the heart Howbeit I forbidde no manne to buye bookes but I admonishe and with all my heart desire that we may buye them yet so as we maye oft times ponder both the letters and their meanings in our mindes and by thys meanes haue a pure minde wrought within vs For if in what house so euer the Gospell be there the Diuel dare not enter then how muche lesse power shall the Diuell or Sinne haue ouer that soule that is acquainted with it by continuall readings Sanctify therefore they soule san̄ctifye thy body this shall come to passe if thou haue alwayes the Gospell both in thy heart and tongue Where if the filthinesse of thy tong defyleth the soule if it call vppon Diuels it is euident that by spirituall reading the same is sanctified and the grace of the holy Ghost abundantly powred into it The Scriptures be as it were diuine charmes From them let vs fetch a remedy for our griefe for the maladies of our soule the vtilitie wherof if we would consider we should with attentiuenes apply oure study in them These things I oftentimes touch Is it not a thing very preposterous that common market menne shoulde beare in minde the names of Cartars and Dauncers their kinds countreis actions maners and tell likewise of the prowesse of horses and what euerye one coulde doe and they that come hither goe their wayes knowing nothing at all no not so muche as the number of the holy Bookes Thus muche hath this most excellent Preacher questionlesse in that place who in other places also ofte times singeth the selfe same song as in verye déede that song is neuer thoughte to be oute of season whych is acceptable to the eares of all men especiallye of suche as are skilfull in Musicke and is of it selfe verye swéete and delectable for in his two and fiftith Homilie vppon Iohn he againe wisheth all men to haue the Bookes of holye Scripture in their houses and diligentlye to peruse them throughe In hys fourtéenth Homilie hée requireth greate diligence to be bestowed in searching of the Scriptures And euerye where in the beginnings of hys Sermons and likewise in the latter endes or perorations hée entreateth of the manifolde vse of the Scriptures Vppon whyche occasion hée eftesoones vrgeth requyreth enforceth and pricketh forwarde all menne that whensoeuer oportunitie shall serue they woulde as well at home as abroade conferre togither of the doctrine of godlynesse that they would as touching doubtfull places both aske the opinion of others and also now and then shew their owne iudgement that they would draw this practise as a custome and perpetually kéepe it in vre But what if yée shoude haue hearde Chrysostome himselfe vttering his owne words for let it be lawfull to me I beséeche you to vsurpe the selfesame words of this mā that Aeschines sometimes did of Demosthenes whome he enuied onely for desire of glorie Albeit we haue this priuiledge after a sort graunted vnto vs euen to heare hym also whylest the things whiche he moste swéetely pronounced in the chiefe Citie and seate of a most mightye Empire we may reade in Authētical writing published throughout the whole worlde euen in like sorte as the edictes and proclamations of kings and princes are out of one notable place heard a farre off and take effect in all prouinces But least any man shoulde suppose that the Gréeke writers and Doctours of the East Churches whome otherewise some affirme let them sée with what iudgemēt and with what right they speake it to disagrée and erre in many things from the Latines and west Churches were only and altogither of this minde heare I beséech you likewise the voyces of the Latine writers as touching the selfe same cause What accompt makest thou of Hierom what of Augustine Thou grauntest them I am sure to be of the number of the chiefe and principall Diuines Then marke what Hierome hathe noted vppon those wordes of the second Epistle to the Corinthians the thirtéenth Chapter Laste of al my brethren fare yee well bee perfect be of good comforte It is to be noted sayth he that writing to the whole Churche he telleth them they oughte to be perfite and that the Laitie ought one to exhort an other Again vpon those words of Paule to the Colossians Cap. 3. Let the word of Christ dwel in you Here it is shewed that
thy mind this taske perform thou to thy Lorde and mayster Neither giue thy members to reste before thou haste filled the hamper of thy breaste with this oufe And not contented with this diligence he willeth widowes oftentimes to reade the commentaries of learned men to aske counsell of learned men After the holy Scriptures sayeth he reade the treatises of learned men of those especiallye whose faythe is known Thou hast neede to seeke gold in clay with many precious stones purchase one pearle Stande vpright as Ieremy sayth in many wayes that thou mayst come to that way that leadeth vnto peace Transferre the loue of collers iewels and silken garments to the knowlege of the holy Scriptures Againe Thou hast Exuperius of an approued age and Fayth which may oftimes enstruct thee with his godly admonitions He commēdeth moreouer Furiaes sister for hir exquisite knowlege in the holy Scriptures O that thou sawest sayth he thy sister mightest but heare face to face the sweete eloquence of hir sacred mouth thou shouldest see in a litle body what wonderfull courage of minde there were Thou shouldest heare the plentifull furniture of the olde and newe Testament to flame out of hir heart What a number of Epistles furthermore doeth the same Ierome wryte to diuerse virgins and matrones and the same stuffed with manifolde doctrine of godlynesse with sundry places of Scripture expounded and declared and with many pretye knottes and questions dissolued and loosed He wryteth to Laeta to Demetriades to Saluina to Furia to Geruntia the widowe to Celantia to Mercella to Principia the virgin to Eustochium to Paula to Theodora to Brisilla to Castorina to Nitia to Asella to Sunia to Fretela to Hedibidia to Algasia to Vrbica What maye be sayde of thys moreouer that he dedicateth certaine of his workes wherein he expoundeth many of the bookes of holy Scripture to Paula to Eustochium and Marcella and rendereth a reason of this his doing in his preface to Sophony the Prophete And in all these to whō he writeth he alwayes for the moste parte either prayseth or accounteth prayse worthy partly their loue and study of the holy Scriptures partlye their knowledge and vnderstandyng or whyche is leaste of all to the intent they myghte endeauour to bring to passe somethyng worthye of commendation in perceyuing the doctrine of religion hée both beséecheth them by commaūdyng and commaundeth them by beséeching In many other places besides when occasion serueth he handleth the selfsame cause In the proeme of his thirde booke of Commentaries vpon the Epistle to the Ephesians and euen incontinentlye in the enarration it selfe againe in the tenth Chapter of Ecclesiastes he saith that al ought to get wisedome by dayly reading of the Scriptures and to meditate without ceassing in the Lawe of the Lorde In his exposition of the firste Chapter of the Epistle to Titus he blameth them whyche doe contemne those that are studious of holye learning as vnprofitable and vaine But that is very worthy the noting and properly to be vnderstanded of our times whyche in the end of his Commentarie vpon Nahum the Prophete he sayth woulde come to passe namely that aboute the comming of Christ to execute iudgement the people euery where shoulde flocke togither to learne the holye Scriptures Now then that the comming of Christ is euen at hand it is forsooth more certaine and sure than that it is lawfull for any man to doubt Furthermore frō Ierome disagréeth not Au. thē who for the defence of sound doctrine against the treacheries of Heretickes no man hath sustayned more paineful labours He therefore writing to volusianus in his Epistle 3 auoucheth that the Scriptures are to be redde not only of the learned but also of the vnlearned and euen of all sortes of men whatsoeuer For why it was prouided by GOD that the holy Oracles should be written in a simple and playne kynde of speache leaste anye manne should pretende that hee vnderstoode nothing in them The very phrase of speaking saith he wherein the holy Scripture is indited albeit it be easie vnto al yet are very fewe able to pierce into it the thinges that are apparant are as a familiar friend speaking without guile to the hearte as well of the learned as vnlearned But those thinges whiche the holy Ghost wrappeth in misteries neyther doeth hee lyfte vp with proude eloquence anye otherwise than euen the drooping and vnlearned soule may be bold to approch as a poore man to a ritche but he inuiteth al men with his lowly maner of speeche whome hee doth not onelye feede with manifest truth but also exercise in secrete veritie being of like nature in things easie as he is in things hidden But least the things that are open plaine should breed contempt the same again are hiddē to the end they should be longed after being longed after should after a sort be renued being renued should sweetely be embraced Hereby are bothe crabbed wits holsomly corrected small wits norished great wits delighted That mind is an enimy to this doctrine that either throgh error knoweth it not to be most holsome or in being sicke hateth to bee healed Thus much in the place It is thoght also the some of the fathers did of a set purpose put forth certaine of their workes in a homely kind of stile to the intent euery one euen among the common sorte and vnlearned artificers vnto whome notwithstanding the Latine tongue was at that time euerye where familiar howbeit somewhat corrupted might the more willingly peruse them ouer and all both learned and vnlearned enioye in common togither the commodities of godly doctrine As touching whych matter D. Erasmus Roterodamus as moste sharpe and seuere Iudge if euer there were anye of an other mans stile in writing hathe discoursed at large in an Epistle whyche hée prefixed before the Commentaries of Arnobius vppon all the Psalmes The same man where hée sheweth his iudgement as touching sundrye bookes of Saint Augustines admonisheth that there is a booke extant of the maners of the Catholike Church compiled and written by Saint Augustine in a wonderfull elegant stile but in that whiche followeth as concerning the maners of the Mainchees that the forme of spéech is debaced to the capacitie and vnderstanding of the vulgare people Thou wouldest suppose that it were not the same Authors but Charitie whereby they acknowledge themselues with the Apostle to be debtors both to the learned and vnlearned Rom. 1. couet indifferently to prouide for all men alike enforceth them to vse diuers and sundrye kindes of speaking But that we may retourne to the iudgement of Saint Augustine as touching the reading of the holye Scriptures he in the seconde booke and. 38. Chapter of his Retractations testifyeth that Laie men studious of the diuine Oracles had sent vnto him certaine writings concerning the doctrine of Religion and that the againe as was méete and conuenient had made aunswere vnto them
that time counted for moste precious householde stuffe and euery house was after a sorte I say not only a schole but euen a Churche also adorned and beautifyed with the dayly exercises of reading the Scriptures interpretations and prayers Of whyche houses it is certaine that the Apostlement whē to the Romaynes the sixtéenth he saluted the Churche which was in the house of Prisca and Aquila and when as writing to Philemon he wisheth well to the whole Churche that remayned in his house But what thinkest thou woulde those holye fathers saye if it were so that they might now liue again They gently friendly admonishe they seuerely cōmaunded one while publikely to all another while priuately to euery one that they shoulde themselues with all care and enforcemente fashion and conforme their mindes by the reading of the holy Scriptures and this did they at that time wherin the Common weales were on euery side afflicted with warres and tumultes wherein the Churches were with the stormes of Heresies and Schismes vtterly in a manner ouerwhelmed and torne in sunder wherin was a horrible and lamentable confusion almoste of all humaine affaires wherein men were constrained to paye verye deare for their bookes written in parchments and yet notwithstanding they had innumerable hearers of euery sort age and sexe which gently toke in good parte their godly admonitions and most willingly obeyed the same But now when as al things are indifferently quiet both at home and abroade and we inioye if no continuall rest yet at the least a releasement of many troubles when the copies of the holy Bookes by reason of the newe art of Printing found out by the prouidence of GOD are in all partes of the worlde solde for little eyther howe many prouinces may we see in which neyther Byshop nor doctour nor Pastor nor elder nor yet any other maketh any mention at all of buylding pervsing at home of the bookes of the holy Byble Nay rather whyche is farre more bitter and shamefull to be spoken as that whyche tendeth to the vnspeakeable reproche of Gods glorie and of the true and Catholike Churche there are founde in some places Prelates of Churches whiche with grieuous threatnings and penalties doe vtterly forbidde the people to reade them or once to meddle with them Yea and we haue tryed by experience that some good men haue bene sore punished of suche for that they had begunne to reade how little soeuer it were at home in their houses And whych thou mayste more maruell at when the wicked rage of some cursed persons coulde not with thys crueltie be satisfied they tooke delighte moreouer to bring to passe that the like outrage shoulde be shewed euen to the harmlesse bookes themselues For euen in our time the holy Bibles haue in some places openly and by publike officers bene cursed to the fire and consumed to ashes As who shoulde say there were come vnto vs againe from Hell Iehioachim and his rablement of flatterers presuming to burn the Sermons whiche Baruch receyued from the mouth of Ieremye Ieremie 36. As thoughe there were come againe the tyraunt Antiochus whose men of war tare the volumes of the lawe in péeres and set them on fire intendyng by that meanes to gratifye their maister whome they knewe to be fullye minded vtterly to roote out all the Iewish religion 1. Machab. 1. And as though there were come againe Dioclesian who for the hatred he bare vnto Christ and to the Christians as witnesseth Eusebius in his booke 8. Chap. 2. of the Ecclesiasticall Historie deliuered al the bookes of the Prophetes and Apostles not sparing so much as one of them to the fire to be burned How long O Lord shal these abuse thy patience Seest thou so many and so greate iniuries to be done vnto thy name and yet deferreft thou to take vengeaunce To thée oh GOD to thee that art Lord of al reuengements we leaue vengeaunce thou when thou séest thy time wilt repaie But how am I fallen into this sincke whiche the more it is stirred the more foule and pestilent sauours it breatheth forth Truely this dolefull mention as touching the burning of Bibles is slipped from mée against my will but yet it is very true and the vnworthynesse of the thing enforced me vnto it But where there be none as I began to say to stir vp the people to the reading of the scriptures there must all of necessitie sticke in darkenesse and that more grosse and palpable than was the darkenesse of Egipt and as those that are attached with the disease called the Lethargie alwayes sléepe till they snort againe in the selfe same mischife and finally without all hope of recouerie die and be buried in a miserable ignoraunce of all heauenly and spiritual things Verily whilest I behold more néerely the great slouthfulnesse negligence of our Countrymen in this behalf I féele my selfe forth with to be so disquieted that I had much liuer to wéepe than to saye any thing at al. Let the men of our time yea let a number of proude ouer masterly Prelates as they cal them the fatte engrossers of Churches be ashamed be ashamed I saye to sée that in reading of the scriptures in debating of Christiā religiō poore séely maydens women of the auntient age wherein the famous doctors a little before named liued should far away surmount excell them without al cōparision Of these maydens and matrones some led their liues in the furthest partes of all Europe toward the North and yet with no smal charge and peril they sent messengers ouer Sea and lande some to Ierome into Asia othersome to saint Augustine into Africa others to be short into other places and all to this ende and purpose that they mighte haue certaine darke and obscure places of the Scriptures more clearely opened and expounded vnto them Who I beséech you would not willinglye imbrace these godly heartes so greately inflamed with desire of perceyuing the truth And yet in these our dayes there is founde euerye where and in all sortes of men so great slouthfulnesse dulnesse ignorance barbarousnesse I knowe not well what tearme apte ynough I shoulde vse that no man will eyther come or sende to the schole open in the nexte towne by no man will repayre to the Churche standing harde before his doores and alwayes open for all men to come vnto no man wil resort to his neyghbours house thoughe neuer so neare vnto hym of purpose to require anye thing to be declared vnto hym out of the scriptures yea they oftentimes come togither vnder one and the selfesame roofe they eate dayly at one common table and yet are they so estraunged as it were with a certaine lothsomnesse and fulnesse of stomacke that one is ashamed to aske and learne any thing of another Verily I can scarcely beléeue that our auncestoures in whome there was so feruente a desire of vnderstanding the holy scriptures if they should but sée
that the Clarks should vnderstand themselues to be twitched as it were by the eare couertly admonished of their dueties to the intent they mighte labour afterward better to execute the which became them to doe I mean the office of preaching and not willingly post it ouer vnto others Lastely there was good hope that by suche and occasion the learned of the Laitie mighte bée moued to addicte themselues sooner than otherwise they woulde haue done wholly to the ministery of the Churche And therefore also after that decrée the godly Byshoppes wente forwarde as béefore to exhorte the Laitie to a perpetuall studye of the holye Scriptures and as ofte as the case so requyred called them foorthe publikely to teache And that they did so muche the more iustely and willingly by howe muche the more they considered it was necessary that there shoulde be chosen from among the learned Laitie like as Tertullian sheweth in his Booke Of exhortation to Chastitie suche as mighte be substituted in the place of the ministers of the Church deceassed Certes if it had not bin lawful to choose some out of the Laitie to the Ecclesiasticall gouernemente the Churche shoulde neuer haue séene the moste excellent Byshoppes Nectarius at Constantinople nor Ambrose at Millayne of whome the one supplied the Pretorship of the Citie if we may credite Rufinus in his Ecclesiasticall Historie Booke 11. Chap. 21 the other was President of Millayne and of all the Countrey adioining as Theodoritus reporteth in his fourth Booke and sixte Chapter and which is not a little to be maruailed at the one baptized but a fewe dayes before thys other still conuersaunte among the Catechistes that is such as were newly instructed in the principles of religion For soothly so long were the Churches euery where verye well prouided for as menne of all sortes and degrées gaue themselues diligently to the reading and vnderstanding of the worde of god Whosoeuer hadde nowe openly exhibited any notable specialtie as wel of their godlinesse of life as also of their doctrine and learning those by the voyces nad frée consents of the godlye were aduaunced as yée woulde saye by degrées to the dignitie of a Deacon of a Prieste of a Pastor or finally of a Byshoppe Neyther was it any strange matter at that time that Churches shoulde be administred of those that soughte by some honest arte or trade to gette wherewith to sustaine their familie if at the leaste they were any thing well exercised in the knowledge of holy Scripture For why the Diuine Scripture teacheth yea and the Ecclesiasticall Histories and Canons doe proue that euen he also whyche is alreadye placed in the gouernement of the Churche maye withoute reproche exercise some crafte whereby hée maye nourish both himselfe and so manye as appertaine vnto him The Apostle Paule reporteth of himselfe that since the time he beganne to preache the Gospell oftentimes laboured with his own hands to gette thynges necessary for his liuing 2. Corinth 11 1. thess. 2.2 thess. 3. Actes 20. And there is mention made Actes eightéene of Aquila a man excellentlye well séene in the holye Scriptures and by whose direction the greate learned man Apollo was muche furthered in the waye of saluation the same Aquila in the meane time vsing the crafte of Tente making to gette his liuing by There is commended Coloss 4. the minister of the Gospell and Phisition Luke like as also by the same arte of Phisicke no fewe Bishoppes are read to haue prouided for themselues as Basyll Byshoppe of Aucyra Eusebius of Alexandrîa Boazanes of Persia Theodotus of Laodicea Cyrus of Alexandría Basill the Greate As for Spiridion Byshoppe of Trimmythus in Cyprus the Author of the Tripartite Historie firste Booke and tenth Chapiter auoucheth that hée was giuen to the tillage of Lande and kéepyng of Cattell And we reade Distinct 91. in the Canons of Pelagius and of the Councelles of Carthage and Constance that vnto ministers of Churches taking ouer small stipendes or wages Hushandrye is commended as moste fruitefull and conueniente for liberall natures And looke howe necessarye and expediente it was for the Laitie to apply diligently the reading of the Scriptures to the intente that Churches as is saide before might by their aide be preserued and increased euen so requisite also was is and euermore shall bée the selfe same study to the adorning of Common weales to the enlarging of Empires and Dominions or certainelye to the winning and adioyning of those peoples to the Christian Worlde that do nowe for the hatred they beare to Religion neuer ceasse to afflicte oure brethren with warres murthers inuasions and other infinite calamities Some manne peraduenture wyll maruaile and smyle to hymselfe to heare thys But to bee certaine and true that I saye it shall by and by verye playnelye appeare Hearken howe and by what meanes it came oftener than once to passe in times paste and thereby learne that the same maye nowe also in like maner come in vre Whereas Byshops and Preachers coulde neuer at anye time safely trauaile to barbarous Nations and Countries a farre off there fréely to preache the Gospell of Iesus Christ some one notwithstanding of the common sorte getting his liuing by his handy labour or some Souldior or Phisition or Merchaunt or Chapman béeyng ledde away captiue or happily by chaunce or some other occasion hathe bin conueyed and carryed thither Some suche man therefore is this forsomuche as be hadde before at home perfectly larned the holy Scriptures and there withall coulde very readily speake to the rude and ignorant attempted to open the principles of Christian Religion firste to a fewe afterwarde to moe according as occasion serued and at the length with a wonderfull spirite grace and vehemencie procéeded so far forthe in dooyng the same that in the ende he moued a number of his hearers with folden armes as they saye to embrace oure Religion And thus commeth it to passe sometimes that whome neyther the care and vigilancie of Byshoppes nor the power of Kings and Princes nor anye force puissaunce or subtilty whatsoeuer coulde possiblye winne or reclayme to oure parties a little knowledge of the worde of GOD appearing euidentlye in some one séely soule of the Laitie hathe drawen to oure sides and ioyned vnto vs wyth and indissoluble hande of friendeshippe and amitie As touching whiche pointe I haue thoughte good to adde famous example oute of Ruffinus written in the tenth Booke and ninth Chapter of hys Ecclesiasticall Historie and likewise oute of Theodoretus hys firste Booke and twoo and twentith Chapiter Frumentius a childe beeng trayned vppe in the knowlege of good letters and also in the doctrine of godlinesse accompanied Meropius a Tyrian Philosopher into India where hee beeyng taken was dryuen into a miserable state and condition But afterwarde by some meanes winnyng fauoure and credite hee was broughte vnto the Courte and there beeyng verye well liked for the doyng of manye thinges hee had a principall charge of gouernmēt committed vnto
euē to those that were ouercome than if we shoulde perpetuallye striue with them by the doubtefull dint of sword It falleth not out alwayes well on our sides when wée indeauor to driue away force perforce craft with craft and as it is sayde in the prouerbe one nayle with another It behoueth a wise man first to trye all things before hée fall to they hazard of battel But especially when the case concerneth the affayres of religion or the saluation of soules then of necessitie must swordes giue place to doctrine rage to reason crueltie to humanity warres to peace In the Counsell holden at Vienna a Citie of Gallia Narbonensis in the yeare 1310. it was ordeyned that in al the noblest vniuersities of Europe th●re should be maintained professors of the Arabicke tong whyche tongue it is certaine that the Turkes doe vse in their Ceremonies and this cannot I construe to be done for anye other cause or consideration than that our Countreymen mighte be prouided and enstructed aforehande to common and treate at one time or other with the Turkes especially in the cause of religion But it belongeth not to this place to search ouer busily how the Turkes being the sworne enimies of our religion maye be reduced to a better minde and conioyned with vs in rites and doctrine It shal be good rather to speake vnto those that do proudely challendge to themselues the surname of Christians and yet in the meane time of nothing are lesse carefull all theyr life long than of the knowledge of CHRIST out of the holy Scriptures Gladly therefore woulde I learne of you what mindes ye would be off what aduice ye woulde take if at anye time being helde Captiue vnder the yoke of the Turkes yée should be driuen to such a straight as that ye should be suffred neyther to haue any bookes nor yet to heare any Christian preachers Truely I praye vnto GOD that hée woulde vouchsafe to withholde so great a mischiefe frō the neckes of all Christians neuerthelesse séeing there is none of vs all that oughte to stande in feare of the same or not muche vnlike misfortune distresse there is good cause why euery man should at the least in thoughte consider and deuise with himselfe what he woulde doe if at any time he were in that estate Thou therefore being driuen into miserable bondage and perchāce fast fettered in yrons if thou shouldest heare dayly villanous opprobries vomited out against the sacred name of CHRIST if thou shouldest heare al the parts of our religion to be shamefullye intreated and misused wyth tauntes and mockes if sundry arguments should dayly be obiected to carry thée away from godly sinceritie if thou shouldest continually be commpelled to sée heare and doe those things that are altogither vnméete for Christians that is to say for Godly vertuous minds tell me I pray thée how and by what meanes wouldst thou then confirme and establishe thy hearte in Faith how any by what meanes wouldest thou be comforted in the middest of so many temptations that from thy childhode neuer learnedst anye thing at all out of the Bookes of the Prophets and Apostles that mighte help thée therevnto I am sure and certayne whosoeuer will weigh and consider these things vprightely as is méete he shall be enforced to confesse that in very déede there is nothing more miserable than a Christian man oppressed and consumed in a manner wyth suche anguishes both of body and mind and all bycause he is vtterly destitute of all solace and cōfort of GODS word For as muche therefore as it is very playne and euident that the diligence of Laie men in learning the holye Scriptures is verye requisite and necessarie as well to the conseruation of the succession of ministers in Churches as also most profitable and commodious to the adorning of Common Weales and to the amplifying or rather pacifying of Kingdomes and Empires Let all both Kings and Prelates not withoute good cause in a common Councell determine and declare that all Christians withoute exception of what estate or condition soeuer they be ought so long time to be instructed in the holy Scriptures as they maye atteyne at the least some indifferent knowledge of the articles of our Religion and become able after a sorte to declare the same vnto others And would to God that all good men and especially those that are in authoritie aboue the rest would sufficiently consider how necessarie it were for them oftentimes to consult and deliberate about this matter No man is ignorant how in certaine ages past Churches were possessed of vnlearned ideotes and of mē without all religion such for the most parte as haue lepped out of Kings and Bishops Courtes Pantries Buttries wrastling places banquetting houses nourceries by whose meanes the pure doctrine of the Gospell yea all the whole order of preaching hath bin vtterly banished out of holy assemblies neyther did they busie themselues about any thing else saue the stincking traditiōs of men and a number of colde ceremonies whereof in some there was a great deale more superstition I had almost said sacrilege than was in times past in the fond obseruatiōs of the Heathen And as for the Scholes thēselues what should a mā haue found in them but vgly rudenesse holding the highest roome togither with vnsauery and yet subtill sophistrie Againe the Romaine Empire hath with shame ynough for the space of these 4. C. yeares bin thrust out of ioynt shakē torne in sunder and the partly by the Turkes who taking occasiō by our sinnes haue purloined frō vs now these prouinces nowe those partly by Christian Princes themselues through whose vnquenchable discordes the sinewes of the Christian cōmon weale haue bin cut asunder and the whole strength therof vtterly wasted and consumed to speake nothing in the meane time of a million of mischiefes broughte into Europe by the ambition pride of certain Bishops To be short such hath of lōg time bin the state of things amōg Christians as we reade to haue bin amōg the Iewes when they were oppressed with the hard yoke of Ieroboam Achab Manasses the Kings of Babylon and such like for why ouer besides most cruell warres innumerable slaughters common calamities not to be named the sincere worship of the true GOD hath bin quite and cleane abolished superstitiōs haue borne the greatest sway faithfull teachers haue bin flayne or thrust out of their places finally the very Bookes of holy Scripture themselues haue bin vtterly lost and rare in very déede was that man to be founde that thoughte anye better of Religion than did godlesse Diagoras For soothly so it is when it pleaseth GOD to punishe barbarous and faithlesse men he strippeth them starke naked as a man would saye and depriueth them of all power But when he determineth to punish his own those people whether they be of the Iewes or Gentiles he bereaueth them of the noble and pretious treasure of his worde whyche
should be limited out certayne orders kindes of life functions and besides that sundry duties should of sundry mē according to their seuerall natures qualities be perfourmed and accomplished yet it can not be denyed but that there are some things also found cōmon indifferent to all without exception As in mēs bodies we sée alwaies great difference in their stature lineamentes voyce countenance but greater in theyr gestures motiōs which expresse the affectiōs of their mindes so likewise in those large and ample bodyes of ciuile societie wonderfull diuersities doe euery where appeare whilest namely some duties are executed by Kings Princes Iudges othersome by Lawyers Phisitions Souldiours Merchant men Artificers yea in a small house or familie some by the husband and the wife some other by the sonnes and daughters othersome finally by the seruants and handmaydes But agayne like as in this poynte all men and women are very like and egal that they consist of soule and body and are partakers of one and the selfesame substance and are all subiecte to the common lawe of being borne into the world and departing out in which behalfe verily none is saide to be aboue other nor none inferioure vnto other euen so must thou néedes graunte whether thou wilt or no that there are no small number of actions to the accomplishing whereof partly for the reteyning of the dignitie of the minde partly for the conseruation of the body all men mortall are bounde For if we haue regard to the body it selfe truly whether wée meane to speake of the most rich King Croesus or if the most vile begger Irus or of any other that by reason of outward respectes do very farre differ betwéene themselues we must néedes confesse that all of them oughte héere vnto to apply their diligence and indifferently to ioyne in this namely that they betwéene whiles refresh their bodies with meate and drinke that they take their swéete sléepe and rest being wéerie that they preserue and maynteyne their health that they recouer it when it is lost that they séeke to nourish it when it is recouered that they couer and defend their bodies with apparell c. There is no néede why we should procéede any further in this reckning In like maner if we consider the minde no man whether he be of the highest degrée of honour or of meane worship or of the lowest and basest estate of all can be vtterly voyde of all knowledge of God no man can bée ignorante of the will and Commaundementes of God according wherevnto we discerne good things from euill and are moued to follow the one and eschue the other no man can auoyde but that he must néedes yéelde obedience vnto GOD as vnto him that is most high most mightie most excellent and most iust But séeing that whatsoeuer things be of this kind are most plentifully declared in the Bookes of the Prophetes and Apostles and that we speake all this while to Christians which doe highly reuerence and embrace these Bookes wée worthelie conclude that it is the dutie of all Christians both to reade and heare the said Bookes and to gather out of them the knowlege of GOD and his most holy misteries This studie and this diligence euery one oweth vnto his owne soule for the dignitie health and saluation whereof we ought to leaue nothing vnassayed nothing vnattempted Looke how déere thyne owne Soule is vnto thée and so farre shouldest thou be off from foreslowing the studie and practise of Gods holy word But as touching the duties which for the dignitie of their minds are common indifferētly to all Christians we shall haue occasion agayne anon after to speake Now we will shew that to the end euery man may according to his calling and kind of life duly execute those manyfolde and seuerall offices whyche are alotted vnto him it is good yea very necessarie before he beginne or attempt any action which at leastwise may become vprighte and acceptable to God to heare the counsell and iudgement of the holy Scriptures and in all things to follow and be aduised by the same For in very déede neyther king nor Prince nor Iudge nor any other man else whatsoeuer can possibly performe to any purpose the things that belong to his office and calling vnlesse he firste shall haue learned as well as the Minister of the Churche the manner and forme of good actions out of the Propheticall and Apostolike writings As touching whiche poynt least any manne shoulde doubte we will not sticke of diuers degrées of men to set downe so much in effect as to this presente businesse shall séeme expedient Wherfore if thou be a King or Prince verily there is so much the more cause why thou shouldest continually and attentiuely reade the holy Scripture For it is thyne office to gouerne and preserue Common Weales to make iust and vpright lawes to defend the innocent to punishe malefactors But howe and after what sort these things shou●d rightly and according to Gods holy ordinance be done and accomplished it is most certaynely to be learned out of the sacred Scriptures And for the same cause did GOD commaunde Kings and Princes by name studiously to reade the holy Bookes in giuing forthe a statute as touching thys matter Deut. 17. When the King sitteth sayth he on the seate of his kingdome he shall lay before him a patterne of the Booke of this Law in the sight of the Priests and Leuites and it shal remaine with him and he ought to reade in it al the dayes of his life namely that he may learne to feare the Lord his GOD and to obserue all the wordes of this Lawe and these Statutes to do them In which place more matter touching the office of a King both goeth before and followeth after I omitte to tell that in the 1. Samuel Chapter 8.12 and 1. king 5.8.10 2. king 22. 2. Chron. 1.9 Prouerbs 20.21.25.29.31 Eccles 10. Psalme 20.101 Ieremy 22. and in other infinite places mo many things bée declared whyche are most néedefull to be knowen and obserued of all Kings and Princes if at leastwise they couet to obteyne anye place in the Kingdome and Court of the most mightie King IESVS CHRIST if they will from their heart testifye and declare that they according to the counsell of the most holy King and Prophet Dauid Psalm 2. doe in dede kisse and adore the Sonne sent of GOD the Father into the earthe to whome the Father hathe gyuen the Gentiles for an inheritance and all the coastes of the earth for a possession and therewithall also power and authoritie to destroy all the wicked and vngodly from the face of the earth Againe further both all the Courtiers and all the whole nobilitie must indeuour to frame and conforme themselues after the example of the King must wyth a certayne holy kind of ambitiō striue among thēselus to the intent that by reading learning the Diuine philosophie and true Christianitie
thee to sende thy children to learning and to prouide them Scholemaysters and to see that nothing bee wanting for their instruction and in the meane time not to bring them vp in the nourture and chastisement of the Lorde Therefore do euen we first of all reape the fruite of this thing that is to say through our owne defaulte we haue harebraynd vngracious disobediente and vnmanerly children Let vs not then thus do but let vs obey this blessed Apostle who giueth vs good councell let vs bring them vp in the instructiō and information of the lord Let vs set before them an example causing them from their tender youth diligently to apply the reading of the Scriptures Wo is me whilest I am thus continuallye speaking I seeme to do nothing else but trifle howbeit I will not ceasse for all that to do that which mine office bindeth me to do These things hath he All that Sermon of his is very worthye to be read as in whiche hée sheweth with manye reasons that those when all is said do best prouide for their children and lay open vnto them the way to riches peace and tranquilitie of life happie estate and to preferment in Princes courts whiche haue a care ouer them that they be instructed euen from their infancie in the holy Scriptures To bée short the husbande and the wife the parentes and children the maisters and seruantes the mistresses and maydes may find in the holy Bookes infinite as well preceptes as examples whiche it is not néedefull to rehearse as touching all those things that it behoueth euery one of them to doe in their seuerall state and calling The same must thou thinke to be spoken both vnto widowes and virgins of whose care and diligence like as also of the instruction of children in the holye Scriptures we haue aboue somewhat discoursed So far-forth therefore is that true which Saint Augustine sayth De verbis Domini Sermone 19. namely that vnto all estates of mē there is prescribed in the sacred bookes a rule to liue by and that all and euery sexe age and degree is prouoked to leade an vprighte and godly life Therefore as we began to saye before not onely those that are appoynted to the Ecclesiasticall ministerie but also generally all Christians of what estate or condition soeuer they be ought dayly to bestow sometime at the least in reading and pervsing the Bookes of the Prophets and Apostles The continuall meditation of the Scriptures is not the priuate and peculiar office of some fewe persons but the common and publike dutie of all Christians I graunt in déede that the godly and learned Pastors of Churches shoulde goe before but yet muste all other states and degrées followe after There is none neyther one nor other that can bée debarred from this daunce There is no man in this life in all respectes so perfite vnto whome remayneth not some thing more to be learned no man so exactly accomplisheth his dutie but that some good man for I speake not of anye slaunderous and enuious cauiller may say vnto him this would be amended Wherefore I beléeue there is not any man liuing whiche by the rules and exhortations of the holy Scriptures may not onely become better learned but also better qualified and which by reading of the word of God may not bée made more strong and couragious to all good actions of life whatsoeuer A greate offence it were doubtlesse to surmise that the Philosophers or anye other persons besides shoulde be able better to prescribe what euerie one ought to do or to leaue vndone than God himselfe Certes the Philosophers Lawmakers and other worldly wise men when they dispute of duties doe oftentimes erre Euidente proofes héereof we haue in Plato Aristotle Panaetius Cicero and such like whyche doe commonly one carp and controll another Neyther doe they commend any thing as comely and honest but so far-forth as it is déemed to be suche by the opinion of men But the Prophetes and Apostles coulde not erre bicause they were taught by the holy Ghost who is the spirit of truth and voyd of all error yea they so vrged commanded all things as they knew the same to be allowed of god But to frame the life and maners in suche wise as God maye be pleased with them is no doubte a most soueraigne thing highly to be desired of all men And in déede the Philosophers cā after a sort tell vs what one man oweth vnto another but what mā oweth vnto god how God shuld rightly be worshipped of true faith in God remissiō of sins of the inward spirituall righteousnesse of the heart of other things like vnto these they do not so much as make any mētion at al much lesse cā they perfitly declare thē As oft as in the writings of the Philosophers ther happen any place as touching God or as touching the duty of man towards God we sée how coldly slenderlye and obscurelye they runne ouer it Which truely that it shoulde so come to passe God vndoubtedly had ordeyned that eyther for bycause they were conuicted in their owne cōsciences and stayed not vpō any sure foundation in these their disputations or else for that it was not their proper charge but was reserued for others the Prophets I meane Apostles their Disciples and finally for so much as God would haue all men to be admonished by this meanes that the perfite knowledge of God and of his will is to be learned not out of the Bookes of the Philosophers but only and alone out of the holy Scriptures And this is that in effect whiche the Apostle meaneth 2. Timoth. 3. when he saith That the holy Scripture inspired of God is profitable to instruct in righteousnesse that the man of God may be perfect and prepared to all good works Wherevnto Sainct Augustine hauing respecte in hys 2. Sermon vpon the 90. Psalme very wittily said That the holy Scriptures are letters patents sent downe from the heauenly Citie to vs which do exhort vs all to lyue well Wherfore whosoeuer coueting to reade the holy Bible wherein is most absolutely cōprised all the discipline cōcerning the duties of all and euery Christian as wel towards God as towards men and to reforme his maners accordingly requireth the same Bible to bée reached vnto him he shal more truely a great deale say of it Giue me my Maister then long ago Cyprian vsurped the like saying as oft as he meant or spake of the most famous writer Tertullian if we may credit Hierome But I will procéede somewhat further to speake of certayne dueties which are common to all Christians and yet in the meane time can not rightly be performed of any man without the reading and knowledge of the Scriptures Howbeit I will speake only of the chiefe principall wherevpon depend other almost infinite In the explication whereof we will gather togither those reasons wherewith the consciences I hope of
For in very déede euerye mannes owne proper cause is here handled And it behoueth vs all oftetimes to consider that the Churche is a publike and common Schoole instituted of GOD oure heauenly father wherein the moste excellent teacher of trueth the holye Ghoste teacheth and professeth of frée cost and louingly allureth vs all vnto him The Scholers admitted into this Schoole are euen so many as are baptized into the name of CHRISTE There is but one booke and that is gyuen indifferently to all containing the writings of the Prophets and Apostles in whiche Booke is nothing else declared in effecte than howe by IESVS CHRISTE righteousnesse and eternall saluation commeth to the beléeuers and againe howe all the Goldye oughte to indeuoure that their Faith Loue and Hope may become manifest and apparante vnto all men It standeth euerye one of vs in hande wisely to weigh and consider howe he behaueth hymselfe in this Schoole and what profite hée reapeth from tyme to tyme in the holye Booke For he that doeth daylye in expounding reading hearing and repeating of it diligently exercise hymselfe and be a meane to prouoke others to doe the lyke hée declareth hymselfe indéede to be the Scholler of GOD and to be well worthye of prayse and commendation But on the other side who soeuer he be that refuseth to reade heare and learne the sayde Booke also causeth others to abstaine from the same he doeth not obscurely signifye that hée is of hys father the Diuell For so leaste any man shoulde be offended wyth me as hauing spoken more boldelye than becommeth mée Christe hymselfe determineth Iohn 8. Hee that is of GOD sayeth he heareth Gods wordes you therefore heare them not bycause yee are not of God whome also a little before he had said flatly to be borne of their father the Diuell And this sentence béeyng of more force than all the definitiue sentences of the Iudges of the whole world as that whiche is pronounced not of any mortall manne but of the immortall GOD himselfe muste of necessitie abide firme and vnchaungeable Let euerye manne therefore diligently repute wyth himselfe what maner of iudgement maye be giuen of hym that is to saye whither he be addicted vnto GOD to euerlasting life or giuen ouer to the Diuell to eternall confusion ¶ OF THE READING and dayly meditation of the holy Scriptures very requisite and necessary for al Christians of what estate or condition soeuer The seconde Booke HE that will take vppon hym to persuade with a sicke man must not onelye tell him what medicine is of force against his sickenesse but also howe and in what order the same is to be vsed For it skilleth verye muche whether a thing be taken within the bodye or withoute of an olde manne or of a yong of a strong bodye or of a weake of a man or of a woman also at what tyme of the yeare and to be shorte in what order or manner tempered and made Saint Augustine reporteth in his fifte Epistle to Marcellinus that there was a man on a tyme throughe a certaine medicine ministred by the excellent Phisition Vindicianus restored to health after a fewe yeares when the verye same sickenesse came againe the sicke partie withoute asking any counsell of the Phisition vsed the selfe same medicine as before but it did him no good Anone there was running to Vindicianus of whome they demaunded what the cause should be why the medicine nowe lastelye taken did not auaile hée answered that it was therfore vnauaileable bicause he himselfe had not willed it to be taken but least they should suspecte any harme by his so saying he added that the manner of the vsing of a thing is greately to bée taken héde of and that all things are not méete for all ages In like manner therefore for so muche as we haue hytherto with sundrye and playne argumentes declared that it is the office of euery Christian dayly and continuallye to reade heare and learne something out of the holye Bible it remayneth nowe that we specifye and demonstrate howe and by what meanes a man maye readily and without any trouble or thinking of the time long so take in hande and poynte out thys office of reading euerie daye of the wéeke as that in a yeares space he maye well reade and pervse ouer all the holy Bookes especially so many as the olde and purer Churche hathe auouched to be Canonicall Wée haue indéede tarried longer in the former Booke than we were aware of inasmuch as no man is ignorante that there is a more laboure and diligence required of vs when mens minds are first of all to be prepared and inflamed vnto any thing séeming strange in the opinion of the vnlearned multitude and hard to outwarde appearance neyther truly shall it repente vs eyther of oure trauell or long standing if we maye by some meanes bring that to passe whyche we couet and desire but in the matters following we wyll bée more briefe as also the thing it selfe of whiche wée haue determined to speake maye well be dispatched in fewer wordes Whosoeuer hée be therefore that is truely and indéede so carefull of hys owne soules health as he would bée counted and knoweth assuredly that the knowledge of Gods wyll out of the holy Scriptures is very requisite and necessarie to saluation that manne maye easilie if he list finde oportunitie to reade and ensearch the same The thyng that a man hathe once earnestly sette hys minde vpon vnto that by striuing may he at length atteyne It is no hard matter wyth vs to deuise a way whereby at one time or other wée maye enioy that whiche we gréedily gape for The couetous sorte séeke narrowly and will be sure to gette both tyme and all manner of helpes that serue to the increase of their gayne and some can fynde the meanes to serue their turnes in gadding vppe and downe in riding too and fro othersome in quaffing and drincking in telling of fond Fables in playing at Dice c. in whyche besides the losse of their money are manye thyngs also hurtfull and noysome why mayst not thou therefore if thou wilte bestowe some parcell of time in the searching and pervsing of Gods holy mysteries Truely it is agaynste all reason that anye manne shoulde complayne that he wanteth time to reade the holy Bookes sith wée maye beholde the same dayly to loose manye good houres in things not necessarie and peraduenture vnséemely or at least wise vnprofitable And a very preposterous care it is springing of a peruerse iudgement to searche néerely and nimbly to prouide all manner of things that tend to the satisfying of the paunch the lust ambition pride and other suche lyke desires of a corrupted mind and when vertue commeth in question so to doubte so to wauer in minde so to weaue delayes so to pretēd lettes and impediments and I wote not what as though all wayes and entries vnto it were on euery side forestalled and shutte vppe
It may very truely bée sayde that it lyeth for the most parte in vs that a thing be made to be eyther easie or hard The gate vnto well doing is alwayes open so that we our selues do not shutte it vp or of our owne accord turne aside from it But I heare incontinently one that sayth vnto mée the reading whiche you so greately vrge hathe no little laboure and painefulnesse in it further it requyreth good leysure and oportunitie Verily to the intent I maye cutte off whatsoeuer appertayneth to thys excuse I will indeuoure in fewe wordes to shewe howe a man maye prouide that in reading hée shall féele neither laboure nor yrkesomnesse then next that it is not so harde a matter to finde both leysure and oportunity I will in one worde declare that whiche maye séeme sufficient Bring with thée to the reading of holy thyngs a godlye and willing minde and thou haste in effecte vtterly remoued all manner of incombraunces There are some diseases if we maye beléeue Galen writing De locis adfectis lib. 3. Cap. 6. in whyche the powers of the senses are so damnified and hurte that the patientes for so muche as they are continuallye attached wyth a kynde of heauinesse and feare doe imagine whatsoeuer they sée to be sharpe bitter and altogyther agaynste them wherefore they haue in suspition and ielousy all thynges that are done or sayde and doe eschue and abhorre the presence and company of men but yet after a while they are healed and deliuered frō thys maladie Euen in like case saye I the reading of the Scriptures séemeth harde and painefull vnto thée bycause forsooth thou doest so imagine it to be some euill spirite peraduenture beguiling and bewitching thy senses but the same no doubte will become swéete easie yea and pleasaunte also vnto thée when by the helpe of the holye Ghoste thou hast cast from thy mind that imagination And to what ende I beséeche you shoulde anye man thus colourably pretende these thinges sith wée maye sée daylye a greate number that thinke not the time long a whit when they reade the long and tedious tales stuffed wyth lies of certayne old Gréekes and the fantasticall Asse of Apuleius and the fonde dotages of Lucian I saye nothing al this whyle of the most vaine figmentes of Florandus Syr Lancelot Syr Tristram king Arthur the foure sonnes of Aymon of Magelona Melucina the rounde table I speak nothing of Amorous or rather venemous books ouerflowing in lasciuiousnesse and vncleanesse of the hundred Nouels of vnsauerie and ribaldly ●estes and of other dregges of like stampe whiche it were far better to be abolished with fire the so ofte times to be putte forth in print And in these toyes whylest Courtiers whylest noble men noble women yong men maydes whilest the worshipfull whilest the common sorte of men do spend certaine houres in the fore noone certaine in the afternoone again some after supper and oftimes a greate parte of the night there is not so much as one word whispered as touching any labour or pain in reading but as well the eyes as the eares yea and mindes both of the reader and also of the whole company sitting about him do abide intentiuely fixed vpon these trifles and neyther the noyse of the houshold nor the comming in of others can possibly breake off the base and loude-sounding voyce of the speaker And moreouer the labour of reading if at leastwise it deserueth to be called labour thou mayst now then diuide with the residue of thy familie so that thou that art gouernour of the house mayst read one while another while some one of thy company another while thy sonne or thy daughter another while thy wife another whyle some other in the house that can skill of reading As in other actions so in this also may one not without a cause succéede another resembling as a man wold say Hercules who as the Poets imagine rescued wearye Atlas by bearing vp heauen with hys shoulders Neyther truely oughte it to séeme a thing straunge or remoued from the vsage of the godly to commitet the office of reading and recyting holy bookes vnto wiues children seruaunts and other in the house Again if the reading of the scriptures be fitly pointed out and distinguished into certaine peculiar houres as it is expedient it should be then maist thou haue sufficient space both to breath in and also to recouer the powers of thyne eyes the sight whereof peraduenture is dazeled or of thy voyce if it be thy hap to read in the presence of other and this mayst thou doe albeit thou hast determyned to pervse ouer dayly many Chapters Moreouer there is no let to the contrarie but that thou mayst now and then to auoyde yrkesomnesse chaunge places For thou mayst very wel reade in thy chamber when as eyther thou risest in the morning or goest to bed at night in the Churche when there is eyther nothing or very little out of the Scriptures as it oftimes commeth to passe red or expounded to the people in thy parlour so long as thy dinner or supper is in makyng readie vntill thou be about to take thy meate whilest the dishes are brought too or carried from the table in thy Studie in thy garden to be short wheresoeuer thou wilt and art disposed Saint Augustine euen before the time of hys Baptisme reade with great feruencie and at all times and in euery place the holy bookes hée disputed as touching the sayings of the Prophetes and Apostles He reporteth in the 8. booke and 6. Chapter of his Confessions that he read Paules Epistles at the table Chap. 22. that he tooke in hand oft times the new Testamente in his Ortchard where he hearde once a voyce frō heauen saying vnto him Take read Wherby hée was vehemently moued prouoked to imbrace Christian religion as he recordeth also in other places moe Again being awaked in the night in the morning after dinner after supper and one while alone another while with his most swéete companions Licentius Trigetius Nauigius Alipius Nebridius and others he vsually and often and with an incredible desire of learning conferred as teaching the word of god By these meanes therefore the difficultly and tediousnesse if any be thought to spring out of reading is easilye eyther diminished or vtterly takē away For as the mouth that is out of taste can not away with anye meate thoughe neuer so deintie and holesome but when it is recouered is refreshed there with and can scarcely be satisfied so when a man beginneth first to read the holy scriptures he quickly loatheth them but when he hath once tasted the swéetenesse of the spirituall doctrine then he féeleth dayly more and more all things to become more pleasant acceptable vnto him and then singeth he with the Psalmist How sweete are thy testimonies to my throate yea they are sweeter than hony to my mouth But it remayneth nowe that we shewe howe and
by what meanes a man may pick out leysure and oportunitie to reade the holy Scriptures Verily I dare auouch that there is no kind of calling so vnwrapped or intangled in businesses wherein may not be had a conuenient respite to think vpon and accomplish somthing for the safetie and preseruation of the soule Among the offices that are full of difficulties and daungers maye be reckoned the kingdome the state of Consuls Lieutenauntes Iudges the gouernement of armies and if there bée anye honourable function besides in a great and mightie Commonwealth And it is euident that a greate number of men béeing in the sayde seuerall authorities verye famous and renoumed euen in the troublesome state of things and in the greatest flouds of cares and perplexities gaue notwithstanding a certaine portion of time to reading writing meditation consultatiō of cōcerning difficult weighty affaires Examples of the Gentiles if any be delighted to heare he shall not néede to séeke farre for them It is reported that Alexander the Greate euen whilest he was busie in leadyng aboute his royall army of souldiours vsed to reade and write diuers and sundrye things and that if at anye tyme he was to ioyne battell with his enimy he woulde snatche vp some one booke or other for his purpose and reade whereby as by a counsailer and encourager he might be made both more apt and also more couragious to fight Octauius the Emperour if we maye credite Suetonius in a moste cruell battaile holden at Mutina a Citie of Gallia read wrote and declaymed dayly in the night time being awaked oute of sléepe he vsed a reader of Commentaries and when he was at home he would recite certaine writings of his owne to his familiar friends as vnto hearers in the Schooles Iulius Caesar as he happily fought sundry battells so put he the same himselfe as elegantly in writing and that euen in his Tentes in the noise of Trumpettes and in the confused clattering of armour and weapons so farre foorthe that a man maye doubte by whether of the two things he attained greater commendation And before thys man Cato Censorius famous for his skil both of warre and peace read very much year learned the Gréeke tong perfectlye when he was an olde man as afterwarde his graundchilde whome they called Vticensis wayting in the Courte till the Senate shoulde come togyther hadde his Bookes with him leaste any parte of the hour-glasse shoulde come forth without fruite Plinius Veronensis albeit hée was intangled with the affaires of the Courte of the lawe and of warfare yet didde hée neuer refraine hymselfe from Philosophie and from the insearching of hidden thyngs but whither he were taking his meate or iorneying or doing of some other thing he eyther read or hearde one reading wrote or indighted to one writing for him But omitting these Gentiles in whom no doubt shineth forth a wonderful industrie and care of good learning I thinke it muche better for godly and Christian people to haue the examples of godly men expounded that euen for the likenesse of religion and doctrine which they follow the mindes of all may become the more prompt and readie to imitate and imbrace the same Set before your eyes therefore the noble king Dauid a man strong and valiaunte both in war and in peace and right notable in battels and conquestes For hée whether it were so that flying the tyraunt Saule he one while wandered in obscure and forborne places another while susteyned woful banishment with the king of Geth or whither that he feared himselfe by reason of his sonne Absolon kindling the coa●s of ciuill warre against him or whither he should stande to the triall of battell abroade with his enimies or whither he ruled at home the raines of his kingdom was not only bent and inclined continually to the law which he had always about with him by gods cōm̄adement but also in those most dolefull troublesome turmoyles he wrote and sang manifolde Psalmes Hys sonne and successour Salomon so administred his kingdome that he brought the same to a peaceable and most flourishing estate he was in his owne person the chiefe dealer in matter of iustice and equity the ambassadors whych kings and Princes sent vnto him as desirous to heare his wisdome and Councels he most wisely aunswered he builded moreouer most gorgiously and sumptuouslye but in al these things he omitted nothing as touching his manner of reading and pervsing the holy lawe yea he put forth parables and verses or sentences in great number he disputed most sharpely as touching summum bonum or the chiefe ende of man as is to be séene in Ecclesiastes as touching trées and plantes of beastes of birdes of wormes of fishes 1. King. 4. And what thinke yée did Ezechias and Iosias during the time of their seuerall gouernements in the studye and meditation of the holye Scriptures who to the reforming and preseruing as well of the Churche as of the common wealth vsing the counsell and aduice of the wisest of the Priestes and Prophets that age was ennobled by the excellent Prophetes Esaias Hoseas Micheas Ieremias lefte no way vnsoughte nor no stone vnturned But yet before a greate number of other that honourable Eunuch for his wonderfull diligence deserueth commendation who was the chiefe treasourer to a Quéene and alwayes occupyed in giuing and taking in casting and recasting of accomptes whyche is a moste troublesome office especiallye in a womans Courte and yet not so muche as euen then wh●● hée iourneyed by the waye and rode in a Chariot suffered hée the time to passe awaye withoute the reading of the Scriptures Of whome forbycause we haue spoken before nowe it shall be sufficient briefly to haue repeated thus much Notable is the praise of Cornelius the Centurion Captaine of the Italian band whom Luke Acts 10. setteth forth to haue béen a louer of sincere religion to haue feared and worshipped GOD wyth al his house which himselfe no doubt had so taught enformed to haue giuē willingly almes to the poore and finally wyth feruent prayers to haue called vpon God withoute ceassing But that he was suche a one withoute the reading and vnderstanding of the Scriptures wée canne by no means suspect séeing that euen Peter in his oration whiche he made to those that were assembled in the house of Cornelius saith playnely that the word which the Lord sent to the children of Israel preaching Peace by Iesus Christe the Lorde of all men was knowen vnto them Thou sést therfore that Kings and Princes Courtiers Lieutenaunts Capitaines whome no man can deny to be euermore distracted into manye and diuers affayres euen at what time they were in a maner oppressed with the waighte and burthen of businesses coulde finde some oportunitie to the readyng and meditation of Gods word how can then the colde and far fetched reasons take place that a number doe alleadge in greate plenty and I wote not withoute what coloured pretences to excuse
and defende their own slouthfulnesse withall To be shorte there is no state or condition no function or office no laboures no causes incident either to publike or priuate dealings that can minister anye excuse sufficiently lawfull to discharge anye Christian from the reading and pervsing of the Sacred Bookes Nowe sith it is euident that no excuse or allegation whatsoeuer wyll goe for payment it is méete and requisite that euery man doe so distribute the times houres of hys actions as of them he may giue some daylye to the searching of the writings of the Prophets and Apostles And in good sooth it is not likely that the thinges shoulde otherwise be well done that are not accomplished in order and in a tyme appointed Some things are fit to be done in the nighte othersome in the dawning othersome in the morning othersome at noonetide othersome in the euening And looke howe muche more laborious the businesses are or labours busie whych it behoueth to deale withall so muche more duly shalte thou seuer and diuide them and indeuoure to execute euerye thing in certaine houres and peculiar distances of times and seasons We reade in Ammianus Marcellinus that Alexander the greate Iulius Caesar and the Emperour Iulianus who laboured to immitate those former in manye thinges diuided the nightes while they laye in their campes into thrée partes wherof the first parte they gaue vnto rest and to the satisfaction of nature the seconde to the doing of things néedefull the thirde to the studye of good artes and sciences But why doe we not rather turne our consideration vnto Christian princes Therefore to speake of Alfred king of Britain who first of all founded the famous schole at Oxforde we finde it recorded that he in like manner disseuered all the time into thrée portions and gaue eight houres dayly to the minde to read pray and meditate in other eight to the administration of his kingdome and the residue to bodily exercises Not muche vnlike vnto this man was Charles the great who vsed to féed his minde with good studies and meditatiōs but especially with the reading of the holy Scriptures and which not a fewe haue reported of him in the time of dinner and supper he wold alwayes haue some things recyted as well out of the sacred Bible as also out of the workes of Saint Augustine It is plain and euident that many other princes mo besides haue in learning the duties of godlynes out of the holy Scriptures troden the salfe same pathe Why do not euery one of vs therefore after the example of so worthy men especially of Alfred and Charles kings that deserued excéedinglye wel of Christian religion take counsel by by as touching ordinary houres to be appointed to the reading of the holy Bible I doe very willingly and euen purposely rehearse the factes of kings and princes in this cause partly to the intent the kings princes and noble men of our days may perceiue that they also are prouoked by the authoritie princely presidents of their auncestours to the like diligence in learning the doctrine of religion and partly to the ende that inferioure persons who are by no meanes like princes surcharged and in a maner ouerwhelmed with the waues of manifolde and difficult affayres may vnderstand and wil they nil they confesse that they haue no manner of excuse left vnto them wherby they might pretend that they want fit time and oportuniti to reade the holy Scriptures Be it therefore concluded and determined that it is no harde matter for any Christian to finde fit places times and houres to pervse ouer the bookes of the heauenly Philosophy that at leastwise considering what other excellent men haue done in the same matter will not sticke valiantlye to pricke forwarde himselfe to the doing of the like Therefore now as one letting his sute fall and acknowledging himselfe to be vanquished and ouercome some man demaundeth and would gladly learne of vs what time or what houres we déeme conuenient to be chozen to the reading of the sacred bookes I wil in few wordes declare what I thinke to be moste expediente The choyse ought especially to be in thy selfe to determine of the houres according to the manner of the fūction whiche thine office or kinde of life doeth require Doubtlesse GOD himselfe séemeth greatly to commend the time of the morning and euening when a Deut. 6. and 11. he sayth ye shall lay vp my words in your heart and in your soule And ye shall teache them your children speaking of them when thou sittest in thine house when thou walkest by the way when thou liest down and whē thou risest vp Thou séest the times to be pointed out which euery man euen without any informer shoulde effectuallye in déede consecrate vnto prayers thankesgiuing and meditation of things spirituall and heauenly Albeit where the Lorde addeth that when a man sitteth at home in his house and when he trauelleth by the way he oughte to talke of his word he doth not obscurely signify that not only in the morning and euening but also at all other times and houres whatsoeuer men may profitably be excused in learning the lawe of God and therefore that it muste be leafte frée to euerye manne to appoint certaine houres accordyng to the trade of hys lyfe and varietie of businesses whyche happen therein That whyche is of it selfe holesome and fruitefull at what time soeuer it be done is well done Let thy chiefe studye and care be this that what houres thou haste once appointed thou mayste without interruption and manger all lettes and impedimentes perpetually obserue For why all things that shall once in this behalfe reuerently be decréede are as by an inuiolable lawe and yet withoute superstition to be reteyned and kepte And if at any time peraduenture some odde businesse and vnlooked for doe fall out to the contrary then it behoueth theé very carefully to prouide that at some other tyme the want be supplied But againe thou askest howe muche shall I reade euerye daye in what space shall I once peruse ouer all the whole Bible I aunswere that as I vnderstand it was an ordinary matter with oure auncestours once in a yeares space to haue the Bible from the beginning to the ende publikely recited in holy assemblies to the common instruction of all that were present For to the intēt that thing might the more commodiously be done they admitted in those daies no other Psalmes or Books of Scripture in the sayde assemblies but suche as were Canonicall as wée haue shewed in the former Booke And that the same moste commendable vsage was kepte and continued manye ages following it is not to bée doubted For euen Gratian himselfe distinct 15. declaring what Bookes of holy Scripture were wonte to be read in hys tyme that is to say about the yeare after Christes byrth .1160 signifyeth that there was made onelye a verye small chaunge From Septuagesima sayth he
so great plentye and varietie of things maye be refreshed and therefore is the one only booke of the Psalmes before al other thought worthy to bée learned yea and to be kāned by hart of all men This booke moreouer consisteth of prayers prepared for euerye euent and purpose of thankesgiuing it minstreth doctrine of greate importaunce and excellēcie there be in it exhortations sharpe and seuere it aboundeth with most swéete consolations yea al things are so handled and deliuered in it that in euerye parte thereof both the glorie of GOD is celebrated and set forth and the minde of man informed to godlynesse of life and conuersation Wherefore euen they also are wonte that absteyne frō other books of holy scripture not vnwillingly to exercise themselues in reading reciting dayly both morning and euening certaine of the Psalmes Which things séeing they are thus we do not without good cause and consideratiō set down our aduertisement apart by it selfe as touching the reading and substanciall learning of the Psalmes Now the Psalmes doe amount in number to a hundred and fifty and the whole yeare consisteth of two fiftie wéekes one day If therfore thou be disposed to reade ouer the booke of Psalmes once in a yeares space thou shalt read euery wéeke thrée Psalmes so shal there remayn two wéeks to spare or if thou wilt thou maist pervse only two Psalmes in euery of the last 6. wéekes But if thou be determined to read ouer the Psalmes twice in one yeare then shalt thou reade euery wéeke sixe Psalmes which will most conueniently be done if thou repeate euery day after the Lords day one Psalme Howbeit so againe will be left two wéekes voyde vnlesse peraduenture it liketh thée in euerye of the foure laste wéekes to reade only thrée Psalmes Where if incase now by obseruing the selfsame order thou wilt recite euerye wéeke nine Psalmes then shalte thou reade ouer the whole Psalter thrice in one yeare vsing a Prouiso in the meane time that in some of the latter wéekes thou distribute the number of the Psalmes according to the proportion specified in the premisses Albeit thou mayst also in suche wise diuide and participate this labour as namely in one wéeke thou mayst recyt● eight Psalmes and in an other nine and so goe on with like proportion to the reste and at the length thou shalt perceyue fiftéene Psalmes to be kept in store to the last wéeke Last of all when thou shalt be minded to reade ouer the booke of Psalmes foure times in a yeare it is requisite that thou reade euerye wéeke eleuen Psalmes and in euery of the foure last wéekes fiftéene Psalmes and so there will remayne one only daye frée from reading Thou séest therefore an easye and open waye whereby thou mayste in twelue monthes space reade ouer the whole booke of the Psalmes once or twice or thrice or fouretimes euen as thou lyst thy selfe And is this so greate and troublesome a labour wherein thou accustomest to saye thrée Psalmes in a wéeke or euery daye one or two Psalmes and the one perhaps in steade of a prayer in the morning when thou risest and the other at nighte when thou goest to bed Let vs procéed now in like maner to the other bookes called Canonicall There are founde in these seauen hundred thréescore and sea●entéene Chapters Wherfore if a man wil reade euery wéeke fiftéene Chapters he shal dispatch al bookes which a litle before we numbred once in a yeares space and there shall remayne two dayes onlye to spare And it will be a very easye matter to dispatch the reading of fiftéene Chapters if in some one day of the seauen thou repeate thrée Chapters and in euery of the rest twayne Who is hée therefore that can iustly complayne that hée hath euen by this meanes an ouer heauye and importable burthen layde vpon him Nowe then as it shall please thée to multiply the number of the Chapter so will it be easye for thée to accompte how and in what order thou maist in a yeares spaces pervse ouer either twice or thrice all the bookes of the old Testament But in what estimation sayeth some man shall the bookes called Apocrypha be had Shall it be good to spende any time in reading of them also Why shoulde wée not say I whensoeuer oportunitie serueth euen extraordinarily reade them Or if it please thée to applye the reading of them to certaine peculiar tymes appointed there is no let but thou mayst do it Let vs therfore rehearse as well the names as Chapters of the sayde bookes and fragments Tobias hath Chapters 14 Iudith hath Chapters 16 Susanna hath Chapters 1 Bell dragon hath Chapters 1 Song of the threée children hath Chapters 1 Fragmentes of Esther hath Chapters 8 Ezra 3. hath Chapters 9 Ezra 4. hath Chapters 16 Machabees 1. hath Chapters 16 Machabees 2. hath Chapters 15 Baruch hath Chapters 6 Wisedome hath Chapters 19 Ecclesiasticus hath Chapters 51 The summe of the Chapters amounteth to a hundered thréescorne and thirtéene Reade therefore euerye wéeke thrée Chapters but the laste wéeke of the yeare saue one tenne Chapters and the laste of all thirtéene and thou shalt verye well dispatche all the whole matter But there is no cause as I haue also admonished before why thou shouldest bestow so much study in these as in those which the church hath long agone auouched to bée Canonicall Nowe it is requisite that we speake of the Bookes of the newe Testament And they are in this order by a receyued custome which no man wil lightly finde fault with placed and disposed Mathew Contayning Chapters 28 Marke Contayning Chapters 16 Luke Contayning Chapters 24 Iohn Contayning Chapters 21 Actes of the Apostles Contayning Chapters 28 Epistle of S. Paul to the Romaines Contayning Chapters 16 To the Corinthians the first Contayning Chapters 16 To the Corinthians the seconde Contayning Chapters 13 To the Galathians Contayning Chapters 6 To the Ephesians Contayning Chapters 6 To the Philippians Contayning Chapters 4 To the Colossians Contayning Chapters 4 To the Thessalonians the first Contayning Chapters 5 To the Thessalonians the secōd Contayning Chapters 3 To Timothy the first Contayning Chapters 6 To Timothy the second Contayning Chapters 4 To Titus Contayning Chapters 3 To Philemon Contayning Chapters 1 To the Hebrues Contayning Chapters 13 The Epistle of Iames Contayning Chapters 5 Of Peter the first Contayning Chapters 5 Of Peter the second Contayning Chapters 3 Of Iohn the first Contayning Chapters 5 Of Iohn the second Contayning Chapters 1 Of Iohn the third Contayning Chapters 1 Of Iude Contayning Chapters 1 Apocalyps Contayning Chapters 22 The Chapters in all are two hundred thrée score For in what place the Epistles of Peter the seconde of Iohn the seconde and thirde and one of Iude deserue to be put I do not nowe dispute who professe my selfe to followe the common opinion or rather custome Now if thou readest euery wéeke in the Newe Testament fiue Chapters thou shalt go
thorough with it once in a tweluemonths space If thou pervse ouer ten Chapters thou shalt go thorough with it twice and one only day shal be left to spare If fiftéene Chapters thou shalt accomplishe it thrice If twentie thou shalte accomplish it foure times These things being thus declared it remayneth that euery godly man do repute with himselfe howe oft hée will reade ouer the holy Psalmes howe ofte the bookes of the olde Testament howe oft the newe Testamente in a yeares space Of whiche pointe when he hath once determined then shall it be néedefull for him to limit out the Chapters of the bookes according to the wéekes and dayes of the yeare after that forme and order whiche wée haue shewed in the premisses Howbeit partly to the intent the godlie disposed may the more willingly and easilye imbrace our counsayle and aduice partly leaste those that haue alreadye attempted to reade dayly the holye Byble at houres appointed should alleage for excuse that they do sooner than a man would thinke fayle and misse in the order or number of the Chapters I haue prouided a Calendar wherein for euery daye in euery moneth are noted and set downe certaine Chapters as wel of the worke of the Psalmes as of the other bookes of the old and new Testament and the same truely so digested and distincted in number that thou mayste verye well reade and pervse ouer once or oftner in a yeare as thou thinkest good al the said bookes of the holy Bible or at leastwise so many of them as thou hast most fancie to and canst best like of And in this order is this Calendar made First and foremost we haue giuen to euerye moneth two litle pages or sides of a leafe the one answering to the other and either of them with lines from aboue drawn directly downewarde disseuered and diuided into Columnes or pillers In the former page of the left side are drawen two suche lines betwéen which for as muche as they represent and make a very small and slender piller there is no greater space or distaunce than that by descending from the heade to the foote the letters A. b.c.d e. f g. A b.c. c whereby are wont to be noted in common Calendars the spaces of the wéekes and number of the dayes maye be writen But before this same piller towarde the left side there are set down certaine notes of numbers which whilest they aunswere to the sayde letters doe at the firste sighte declare what day of the moneth euerye daye in the wéeke is From the seconde line to the vttermost parte of the same side towarde the right hande is a great deale of space left wherein whosoeuer list maye at his owne choyce and libertie note the publike feasts and holydayes hapning throughout the whole yeare Though I who am fully resolued to consecrate this labour whatsoeuer it bée to the reading of the Scriptures and for this cause haue willinglye called it a Calendar of the holy Scripture do set downe the things memorable whiche the holy bookes reporte to be done on certaine dayes adding also some things in some places whiche the opinion onely of the learned warranteth to be done on the same dayes of which sort are the natiuitie and death of CHRIST the murther of Stephen the calling of Paule c. as touching whych things verile the holy Scripture expresseth no certain dayes and yet by the common consentes of all menne there are some certaine dayees appointed Thus much of the former ●age On the other side or page which stretchesh towarde the right hande there follow foure other distaunces or pillers marked out with fiue lines let downe to rights in manner of a plum line And of all of them well néere the bredth is alike sauing that the first is discerned to be somwhat narrower Whiche first is appointed only to the worke of the Psalmes and it conteyneth in suche wise the number and order of Psalmes affixed on certaine dayes as all men may pervse them ouer once euerye yeare But if a man be disposed to reade them twice or thrice or fouretymes in a yere there is no cause to the contrary but that he by his own choyce and industry multiplying the numbers of the Psalmes according to the rate and proportion of euery wéeke may frame to himselfe papers with columnes or pillers correspondent and fixe them in a table to his own vse concerning which thing we haue touched somewhat also aboue Next foloweth the seconde Columne wherein are placed the bookes of the olde Testament whiche our auncesters the most holy gouernours of Churches haue acknowledged to be Canonicall The names therefore of these bookes we haue sette downe in a decent order and likewise what and howe manye Chapters of them maye conuently be reade euerye daye The third Columne we haue giuen to the bookes of the Olde Testamente no numbred in the Canon wherof the titles and Chapters are in a number certaine distributed throughout the wéekes of euerye moneth And we haue purposelye sundered these bookes from the former neyther woulde wée mingle them togither in one and the selfesame distance For it came to my remembraunce to feare that that woulde not onely haue bin vnséemely but also to some very gréeuous For what if some mans stomacke could not well brooke the Bookes of the latter kinds or at least not thinke them worthy the reading euery yere Truely I for my parte will interprete my successe to be happy and my labour and diligence not to be vtterly loste if so be I shall obtaine but thus muche of good folkes namely that they will euen once in a yere reade ouer all the Canonicall Bookes Furthermore the fourth columne is dedicated to all the Bookes whyche are nowe euery where by a custome receiued ascribed to the new Testament the Chapters whereof we haue in such wise digested and disposed as that they may once in a yeares space be read ouer without any paines But if any mans minde shall be inflamed with so seruent a desire of reading the holy mysteries that he wyll assay to attempt greater matters and like as the Psalmes so peraduenture also couet to go through a twice or thrice wyth the Canonical Bookes of the olde and newe Testament it shall be an easie matter for him by doubling the numbers whiche we haue put or by conueying them somewhat otherwise to deuise an other way fit and profitable for hys purpose and to make another Calendar Moreouer aboue these Columnes in the pages of euery moneth there are fixed of vs in steade of pillar coronets certaine titles The firste and highest line extended throughout both the pages containeth the name of euery moneth in Latine and English then next how the Hebrues do call the same how many it is with thē in number finaly howe it is termed in the Atticke tongue of the Gréeks The line that is vnderneath this I meane in the former page ouer and aboue the firste
of CHRIST Luke 2. The tēple clensed 1. Mac. 4.   12. Cantic 1 39.40 19 26 c Stephen the Deacon Act 7.   2.3 41.42 20 27 d     4.5 43.44 21 28 e The children are slaine Matth. 2.   6.7 45.46 22 29 f     8 47.48   30 g       49.50   31 A       51   THou séest now and in what sort we haue ordeyned the Calendar of holy Scripture and brought it to an ende And to the intente the greater number of godlye readers maye reape of swéete and continual fruite by this our labour we haue prouided this Calendar and digested it in suche wise as that they may draw it forth in tables of paper or parchment and fasten them to the wals in their studie Parlour priuie chamber shoppe chappel Oratory and wheresoeuer they list themselues For my parte I couet nothing so muche as that all the godly woulde receyue this worke with that minde that it is of me offred Howbeit I goe not about to prescribe any thing as of necessitie to anye man but doe franckely confesse that euery man oughte to be at his owne choyce and liberty to appoint and determine more at large of and concerning all this whole businesse and therefore hardly let euery one choose suche a way of reading the holy mysteries as he shal suppose to be most fitte and conuenient for his purpose Yea if any man shal by his owne proper witte and industrie denise a more apt waye than this is and will not be grieued to impart the same vnto vs we protest that we shal be so farre of from enuying his good successe that we wil follow him rather for our guide and lodes man and render vnto him the expresse meaning of a thankeful minde when and so farre forth as in vs shall lye For why wée truely are not ashamed to confesse that after the maner of painters who vse with a cole or chalke to drawe the first lineamentes of their worke we haue shadowed out more truely than fully finished a certain slender and easie forme of distinguishing and limiting forthe certaine chapters of bookes to be reade euery day throughout the yeare And soothly of al other we couet least that any thing shoulde in this behalfe be superstitiously obserued Libertie is a thing of it selfe verye amiable neyther is it méete as perteyning especially to this matter that any thing should in such wise be commaunded or enioyned as though that he that did otherwise shoulde by and by bée put in fault and blame For doubtlesse it is very fitte and requisite to be permitted that a man shoulde at any time of the yeare beginne the holye Bible that he should dispose and digest in suche order and number as well the Bookes as Chapters as he himselfe can best like off againe that he shoulde pervse some certaine bookes out of whiche he hopeth to reade moste profit in the doctrine of religion so muche the oftner like as Saint Ambrose wished Augustine to reade before others the prophet Esay and other bookes more rarely and sparinglye But thys thing we are most of all desirous to perswade that it is very necessarie for euery Christian that he should dayly pervse ouer certaine Chapters of the sacred Byble And if so be the same man shal once in a yere go through with the reading of the whole Byble then we promise him that ouer and besides he shall deserue no smal commendation of his godly trauell with all men he shall also reape moste ample fruite and commoditie by this hys diligence I woulde haue thée therefore whatsoeuer thou art duely to consider with thy selfe whether anye man may iustly hereafter alleadge for excuse that it will bée as greate a matter for him to read ouer the holy Bible as a number wil séeme to make it What labour I praye thée is it to bestowe one houre or m●e p●raduenture in pervsing ouer thrée foure or fiue Chapters at the moste euerye daye in the wéeke In good faith he maye well blushe and be ashamed that dare hence forwarde so muche as once tomutter against these things Therefore let euery manne forthwyth without anye delay make prefix and inionye to himselfe a lawe and let him with all care and industrie indeauour to obey it so long as he liueth But if it shall happen through businesse falling out of the sodayne that lawe to be broken and interrupted then let him not spare hardlye to punishe and euen to be awreaked of himselfe No manne is better styrred vppe and reteyned in his dutie doing than he that of his owne accorde is both a lawe and a iudge to himselfe It is incredible howe acceptable a thing it is to GOD when a man willingly and without compulsion giueth himselfe fréely to godly exercises But nowe I woulde not haue thée to saye vnto me that thou art driuen awaye from the reading of the sacred Byble bycause all the matter thereof is harde and beyonde thy capacitie neyther canst thou atteyne vnto the things therein conteyned Naye thou séest further that of the things whiche thou readest or in some sorte vnderstandest thou canst not gather anye spirituall profitte for why thou arte ignoraunte howe or by what meanes thou mayste aptlye transfer the thyngs that the Scripture specifyeth to the instruction and information of thine owne life But I will not suffer theée I saye to vse herein anye longer cyrcumstaunce and for bycause it woulde grieue mée verye muche if there shoulde anye thyng As yet be a hyndraunce to thy godlye purpose and that thou whyche séemedst to be euen now redy bent and fully prepared to the reading of the holy mysteries shouldest yet be withdrawen from the enterprising therof I will also go aboute to remoue out of thy waye these lettes and impedimentes and as I maye so saye thornes and bryers First whereas thou thinkest and speakest honorablye as touching the worke of the holy Scriptures and arte fully resolued that in it are comprised things heauenly Diuine and in all respectes noble and excellent in good sooth thou dost very wel and godly and like a good Christian For in déede it behoueth that all the things therin comprehended be aunswerable to the maiestie of him frō whome the same proceeded Wherefore so oft as we take the Bible in our hands it is méete and requisite that we behaue our selues with al reuerence as if we were come to a pallace or Court furnished with all sumptuous and gorgious attyre wherein we had to talke and debate that of most weyghtie affayres with some mightie lord and Emperour sitting in a high and stately seate and garded about on euerye side with many noble menne and officers For in verie déede to reade the holy Scriptures is euen for a man to present himselfe vnto GOD and to make entreatie as touching euerlasting saluation Neyther can it be perceyued that any man is in good earnest conuersaunt in the sacred bookes except therewithall he lift vp his
importance It is sayth he quicke or liuely and mighty in working and operation for it pierceth and entreth throughe euen to the diuiding of the soule and the spirite in as muche as it moueth the whole manne after an incredible manner againe it discerneth the thoughtes and intentes of the hearte in asmuche as it findeth faulte with and iudgeth a man and bringeth hym to the knowlege of hymselfe and of God and compelleth him to humble hymselfe to confesse that he is a sinner and to flye vnfaynedly to Gods mercy The other howe that from the worde we maye passe sodainely to GOD hymselfe vnto whome all thinges thoughe neuer so secreate are wyde open and bare Therefore by the former pointe we must be moued to thinke and perswade oure selues that in the worde of GOD yea euen when it is read onelye or hearde there is a certaine maiestie and excellencie by reason whereof it deserueth to be imbraced of vs with all reuerence and lowlynesse of hearte And by this later it commeth to passe that wée belieue that God is not farre absent from his worde but when and so long as it pleaseth him worketh mightily by it as by a fit instrument accomplisheth most wonderfull things Not that the word as it consisteth of bare letters and sillables as it is written read pronoūced or heard is in it selfe of so great efficacie no verily our meaning is not so to perswade but we hold for truth that whilest the authour of the same word written read pronounced or heard is considered and whilest the things signifyed therein are diligently examined the diuine power in the meane season after a certaine imperceyueable manner approcheth wherewyth estsoones the mindes of readers or hearers are so moued pierced inflamed and enlightned that repētāce faith and other such like vertues do folow in them For we vnderstand that euen the very same consideration is to be had of the outward worde that all men do confesse to be had of the outward elementes in the Sacraments of CHRISTES Church The water if it be considered in it selfe is of no great force neyther can it in very déed wash away the filthinesse of the soule but as sone as the worde is added to the element according as CHRIST gaue in commaundemente it becommeth a Sacrament Howe be it in this word of the Sacrament we haue not so muche to marke the sillables and sounde of the letters as we haue to obserue the dignitie of him that first instituted that holy action the things signified by it especially the inuocation and calling vpon of the three persons in one diuine essence or substance of the Deitie And then forsooth so great is the power of the water through the working of the worde that it toucheth indéed the body but it washeth also the heart I vse the worde of S. Augustine in his treatise 80. vppon Iohn not bicause the word is spoke but bicause it is beleued for whereas GOD is thus called vpō by faith there he doth not disdaine by his power to worke heauenlie spirituall effectes in the heartes of those that are baptised We say then that euen in like case when the minde is wholly set vpon the word which is read heard or vnderstoode and hath regard vnto God the Author of the worde and besides weigheth in a iuste ballaunce the things signified in it that then the diuine power doeth wonderfully shewe forth it selfe and repentance faith hatred of sinnes endeuoure of true holinesse of life are stirred vp and euen the whole man both in body and in soule is chaunged and renued Of whych diuine workemanshippe there are proofes sette foorthe in the Sacred Scriptures verye playne and apparant to all men For Ezra read in the booke of the Lawe Nehemia 8. in the open streete that was before the watergate frō morning vntil midday in the presence of men and women that gaue heede vnto it and the eares of all the people hearkned vnto the Booke of the Law It foloweth a little after And al the people when they heard the words of the lawe The Apostle Peter Actes 2. rehearseth the Scriptures to the Iews and interpreteth them as touching Christ which being heard so many as were present were pricked in hearte and said vnto Peter and the rest of the Apostles Men and brethren what shal we do And vnto the Rom 10. But what sayth it The worde is neare thee euen in thy mouth and in thine hart This is the word of Faith which we preach to wit if thou shalt confesse with thy mouth the Lord Iesus shalt beleeue in thine hearte that God raysed him vp from the dead thou shalte bee saued For with the hearte man beleeueth vnto righteousnesse and wyth the mouth manne confesseth to saluation Againe in the same place Fayth commeth by hearing and hearing by the worde of GOD. Moreouer Peter Act. 10. making a plaine declaration of the summe of Christian doctrine oute of the holy Scriptures in the house of Cornelius the Centurion To this CHRIST sayth he beare all the Prophets witnesse that throughe his name whosoeuer beleeue in him shall receiue remission of sinnes While Peter yet spake these wordes the holy Ghoste fell on al them that hearde the worde Wée may therefore out of al question confirme this assertion namely that by the diligent and attentiue reading hearing and meditation of the worde of GOD a man is induced to the knowledge of GOD and of hymselfe to the detestation of his sinnes and to vnfayned repentaunce to Faith in Iesus Christe to the amendment of hys life and conuersation and to bée shorte receiueth the holy Ghoste and wyth hym most large and bountifull giftes That whyche wée knowe in tymes paste vsually befell to the readers or hearers of GODS word that the same also may happen nowe in these dayes wee flatly auouche wythout controlment For why if hée that beyng incensed with desire of profiting taketh in hand the holy Bookes do before al things craue the ayde of the holy Ghost thē next deuoutly reade or heare the word of GOD by which as by an instrument it pleaseth GOD to talke familiarly with vs after this also lifte vp his mind vnto GOD speaking by the Prophets or Apostles and duly discusse the things specified in thē there is no doubt but that God after his acustomed clemency putting to his hande will stirre vp purge teach and sanctifie the heart as well of the reader as the the hearer and graciously grante vnto him Repentance Faith the holy Ghost and other giftes and graces of hys spirite Furthermore to the intent that euery one furnished and affected in that sorte that we speake of maye in reading envre himselfe wisely and discretlye to note picke out and as by a certaine methode to distinguishe those things that may be profitable to all intentes and purposes and applyed to the attaynement of perfection and soule health we adde last of all that the very edge of