Selected quad for the lemma: cause_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
cause_n faith_n justify_v meritorious_a 1,894 5 11.9130 5 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A16556 An exposition of the festiuall epistles and gospels vsed in our English liturgie together with a reason why the church did chuse the same / by Iohn Boys ... ; the first part from the feast of S. Andreuu the Apostle, to the purification of Blessed Mary the Virgin. Boys, John, 1571-1625. 1615 (1615) STC 3462.3; ESTC S227 247,989 326

There are 7 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

considered especially 1. An iniurie done to God and that is for giuen 2. An inordinate act the which once being done cannot be vndone but is a blot or staine whereby the soule is defiled and that is laid here to be couered and elsewhere to be washed away 3. The guilt of eternall death and that is not imputed Whosoeuer then is in Christ hath all his sinne and euery thing in all his sinne for giuen couered not imputed for these three signifie the same because that which is couered is not seene and that which is not seene is not imputed and that which is not imputed is forgiuen All his sin is put out of Gods remembrance cast as it were behinde his backe so couered with Christs grace so buried in Christs graue that not so much as the print of one little fault appeares in the words of Augustine Sitexit peccat a Deus noluit aduertire si noluit aduertere noluit animaduertere sinoluit animaduertere noluit punire neli●t agnoscere malutt ignoscere so that the saying of the Prophet Blessed is the man whose vnrighteousnesse is forgiuen and whose sinne is couered containeth a definition of iustification It is Gods free pardon in remitting our iniquities for the Publican is said expresly to be instified in that God was mercifull to him a sinner Luke 18.13.14 This makes against Osianders deified righteousnesse as also the Popi●h inherent iustice for God is our righteousnesse and Christ our holinesse 1. Cor. 1.30 Being iustified freely by grace through faith in him who iustifieth the vngodly Imputat ' D●us homini iustiti●m vt compati●ns vt dissensans vt beneu●lens Dimissio etenim ad compassion ● obiectio ad dispersion●m non imputar● ad bene●●lentt●m pertinet See Epistle 25 Sund. after Trinitie Whereas it is obiected that the blessed man is iustised by workes in part because in his spirit there is no guile as the text runnes in Dauid how soeuer omitted here by Paul Augustine answereth aptly that the blessed man hath in his heart no guile for that he doth not disse●nble his sinne but humbly confesse his faults I said I will acknowledge my sinnes vnto the Lord and so thou for gauest the wickednesse of my sinnes Euery Christian may ●●y with our Apostle When I am weake then am I strong And God also saith vnto such as feele their infirmities as hee did vnto Paul My grace is sufficient for thee for my power is made perfect through weaknesse 2 Cor. 12.9 And therefore the true penitent bragges not or his vertue● as the Pharisie but of his infirmities as Paul acknowledging ingeniously that his happinesse consists in the remission of his sinnes He● omnibus sol● perfectio si se mueriur imperfectos And whereas some further obiect how Dauid saith elsewhere Blessed is the man that hath not walked in the counsell of the ungodly c. And blessed is he that considereth the poore c. And blessed are they that are vndefiled c. Our Diuines answer that those place and the like presuppose faith a waies according to that Apostolicall axio●e Whatsoeuer is not of faith is sinne Faith is the ne●t of 〈◊〉 albeit our birds be neuer so faire yet they will bee lost except they bee brought forth in true b●l●efe The sparrow hath 〈…〉 an house and t●e swallow a rest where ●he may lay her young euen thine Altar O Lord c. Psalm 84.3 Such as are faithfull hauing their 〈…〉 for giuen and their sinne couered are blessed men and all their worker as being laid vpon Christs Altar are most acceptable to God But faith Augustine Heretickes and ●●●●dels in doing glorious acts and honourable deeds haue not where to lay their young and therefore they must of necessitie come to nought as the Fathers of our Common Law speake Meritur act● cum person● their a lions are damnable with their persons See Gospell on all Saints day Came this blessednesse then vpon the Circumcision It is fit in vrging Abrahams example to reconcile S. Iames affirming in his Epistle cap. 2. vers 21. that Abraham was instified through workes and S. Paul auowing heere that faith was reckoned to Abraham for righteousnesse Our Diuines answer that S. Paul speakes of the causes of his iustifying before God but S. Iames of the signes of his iustifying before men S. Paul of Abrahams iustification exprior● S. Iames of Abrahams iustification ex posteriori S. Paul of the iustifying of Abrahams person Saint Iames of the iustifying of a particular act in offering Isaac be sonne Now Paul proues Abraham to be iustified by faith ex ordine can●arum in the 9.10.11.12 verses And then ex causa promissionis in the 13.14 The cause preceeds or at the least is alway conioined with his effect but Abraham was iustified when he was yet vncircumcised Ergo Circumcision was not the meritorious cause of his iustification Abraham as Melan●thon obserues out of the Scriptures euidence was called out of Haran and iustified when he was seuentie fiue yeeres old Gen 12.4 But circumcised in the ninetie ninth yeere of his age Genesis 17.24 Abraham then was iustified 24. yeere before Circumcision was instituted and as our Apostle theweth elsewhere foure hundred and thirtie yeeres afore the Law was giuen Ergo father Abraham had the pardon of his sinne not by Circumcision or any other worke of the Law but only by faith apprehending and applying Gods holy promise concerning the blessed seed See Epistle 13. Sunday after Trinitie Wherefore then serued Circumcision It was vnto him a signe and a seale of the righteousnesse of faith verse 11. Signum Memoratiuum a signe of commemoration of the Couenant betweene God and Abraham and of the promise which he receiued to wit 1. Of the multiplying of his seed 2. Of inheriting the land of Canaan 3. of the Messias which should be borne of his seed And for this cause the signe was placed in the generatiue part Representatinum a signe representing Abrahams excellent faith as it is afterward called a seale of the righteousnesse of faith Distinctinum a signe whereby the Iewes were distinguished from all other people Demonstratinum a signe shewing the naturall disease of man euen originall ●inne and the cure thereof by Christ. Prafiguratinum a signe prefiguring Baptisme and the spirituall circumci●ion of the heart A Seale For that it is a witnesse of faith receiued As being an expresse signe of the thing signified Abraham beleeued his seed should be multiplied ideo congrueuter accep it signum in membro generationis As sealing vp secretly this mysterie that the Sauiour of the world should be borne of the seed of Abraham Because it was a confirmation of Gods promise to father Abraham as the Letters Patent of Kings are sealed for better assurance Vt obsignaret iustitiam fidei to seale
〈◊〉 And the 〈◊〉 in ourage who following the 〈◊〉 He 〈◊〉 hold it l●● full to distemble their faith 〈◊〉 the Magistrate As also the Nicodem●●es ashamed of Christ and exp●●●cating 〈◊〉 forswerring their P●ie●hood and the Pope their holy father vpon e●e●y pretended occasion of danger In a word all weather ●ise professors adue●tring no more for the glorious Gospell then one ●●tely did for his horrible blasphemie who being bound to the stake suffered only the lingeing of his beard This open acknowledging of Christ is necessa●ie● not only 〈◊〉 morris at the point of de●h as Lira●us or in the daie of persecution as Lombard but at all time and in euery place when occasion is offered lustly ●aith 〈◊〉 Forseeing it is an af●●rm●t●ue pr●cept 〈…〉 As Christ in his Gospel expres●ely 〈…〉 Whereas 〈…〉 〈…〉 the faith not sufficient vnto 〈…〉 mouth and other ●od●● 〈◊〉 as efficient cause concure with it in the 〈…〉 may be taken out of his old Schoole 〈…〉 and Cardinall 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 doth af 〈…〉 confession 〈◊〉 act of faith according to that of the P●●mi●● I 〈…〉 haue I spoken And in his second 〈…〉 this Chapter he that is 〈◊〉 by faith ought to be filled with the fruit of righteousnesse Postquam homo per fide mest instificatus oportet quod eius fides per dilectionem operatur ad consequendam sal●tem And Cardinall Tolet in plaine termes Oris confessio n●s non iustificat à peccato c. sed iustificati tenemur eam palàm profiteri c. Confession of the mouth doth not iustifie vs but being iustified wee are bound publikely to professe it afore we can attaine to saluation Herein agreeing with our Protestant Interpreters affirming that good workes are consequents and effects of a true faith as if Paul should haue said here we are iustified by faith onely but yet this faith is operatiue bringing foorth liuely fruits as the confession of the mouth and the profession of the life for they be necessarie to saluation albeit faith alone be sufficient in the act of iustification as you may see further Epist. Quinquages and Sund. 2. in Lent In the words and beleeue in thine heart that God hath raised him vp from the dead three points are considerable namely Faiths Act Obiect Subiect Faiths act is to beleeue and to beleeue hath these degrees as the Schoole teacheth out of Augustine Credere Deo credere Deum credere in Deum A wicked man and a wretched deuill may so farre proceed in faith as to beleeue there is a God and in grosse to beleeue God but a true Christian endued with a sauing faith ascends higher and beleeueth in God also That is he knowes God as hee hath reuealed himselfe in his word acknowledging him onely for his God and thereupon put his whole trust in him applying to himselfe Gods mercifull promise made to father Abraham and his seed with the heart vnto iustification and confessing the same with the mouth vnto saluation He disclaimes not his part in Christ as the deuils Ab what haue we to do● with thee thou Iesus of Nazareth art thou come to torment vs before the time but he challengeth his portion in the bloud of his Sauiour saying with the Church in her loue-song My welbeloued is mine and with Paul Christ is become to vs wisdome righteousnesse sanctification and redemption H●s bodie is in heauen there shall I finde it mine his diuinitie is on earth and heere doe I feele it mine his word is in mine eare to beget him mine his Sacrament is in mine eie to confirme him mine his spirit is in mine heart to assure him mine Angels are mine to fight for mee Prince mine to rule for mee Church mine to pray for me Vniuersitie mine to studie for me Pastour mine to p●each for me all mine whether it be Paul or Cephas or the world or life or death whether they be things present or things to come euen all are mine I am Christs and Christ is Gods Faiths obiect is all holy scripture the summe whereof is the Creed and this one point how God raised vp Iesus from the dead is nexus articulorum omnium as it were the bond or tying knot on which all other linkes of our beleefe depend For if it were not true that Christ is risen againe then were it neither true that hee did ascend vp to heauen nor that hee sitteth at the right hand of his father in heauen nor that he sent downe the holy spirit from heauen nor that hee shall come from thence to iudge the quicke and the dead In a word the matter of the whole Creed concerneth either God or the Church his spouse Now the raising of Christ from ●he dead is the worke of God the Father Acts 2.32 of himselfe being God the Sonne Iohn 10 18. of God the holy Ghost also Rom. 1.4 Christ as God only raiseth and is not raised as man he is onely raised and raiseth not as the Sonne of God or second person in the blessed Trinitie both the Father raiseth him and he raiseth himselfe The Father raiseth the Sonne by the Sonne ●nd the Sonne raiseth himselfe by the spirit of holinesse by which he was declared to be the Sonne of God As for the Church our Apostle sheweth elsewhere that Christ died for her sinnes and rose againe for her iustification and that ascending vp on high he bestowed on her gifts as to be Catholike holy knit in a communion and prerogatiues in her soule namely remission of sinnes in the body resurrection of the flesh in both euerlasting life Wherefore Paul here mentioneth only the resurrection of Christ from the dead not exclusiuely but synecd●checally because this one article presuppose●h all the rest and takes them as granted as if hee rose from the graue then he died and his death is a consequent of his birth Or because this article was and is most doubted in the world for the Iewes and Gentiles acknowledge the death of Iesus whereas the Christians only confesse his resurrection Or because the rest vnlesle Christ had risen againe would haue profited vs little for he triumphed in his resurrection ouer death hell damnation opening the kingdome of heauen to all beleeuers And so the meaning of our text is plaine If thou confesse with thy mouth that Iesus is the Lord that is that Lord of whom all the Prophets inquired as being the desire of all Nations euen the light of the Gentiles and consolation of Israel And if thou beleeue in thine heart that this Iesus whom almightie God hath made both Lord and Christ offered himselfe a sacrifice to purge thy conscience from dead workes and take away thy sinnes putting out and fastening vpon the Crosse the Lawes obligation against vs and that hauing ouercome death and the deuill he
shewes to bee most excellent in regard of Himselfe Vnto mee the least of all Saints is this grace giuen Other God Vnsearchable riches of Christ ●idde in God c. Angels Vnto rulers and powers in heauenly things c. Men to make all mensee what the fellow shippe of the mystery is and that by Christ wee might haue boldnesse c. The summe of all which is seeing I haue receiued so much good and endured so much euill for your sake seeing the great mystery concerning the common saluation as S. Iude speakes in his Epistle was not in times past opened vnto the ionnes of men on earth or to the blessed Angels in heauen as it is now declared by the spirit seeing I say yee may see what is the fellowshippe of the mysterie which euen from the beginning hath 〈◊〉 hid in God I desire you not to faint in your course but to continue stedfast in the profession of this holy faith vnto your liues end For this cause Some Diuines haue troubled themselues and other in examining the context heere but it is among words as among men affinnity which is neerest ought to be dearest and therefore seeing the first words of this chapter agree very well with the last of the former I take the coherence to b● 〈◊〉 ●●uer preached that you Gentile in 〈…〉 〈…〉 are no● citizens with the Saints 〈◊〉 together in Christ the ch●●● corner stone to be the 〈…〉 And for th● 〈◊〉 namely for that I have together that you Gentiles are 〈…〉 I 〈◊〉 hated of my countrimen accused in their Synagogue 〈◊〉 ●● their councels iniured by their off●cer● 〈…〉 appeale to Casar I was sent to 〈◊〉 where I am ap●●●●er as you may reade at large in the fast eight chap●● of the Acts of the Apostles A pri●●ner of Iesus C●r●● He was the prisoner of Ca●ar but Caes● had his authoritie from aboue for there is no power but of God Who●oeuer then is in prison is ●●●t●s Ie●u Christs though otherwise lib●●●●●e●u Christs suffering by Gods power and permittance ●ho can wh●n he w●ll and will as shall make mo●t for ●● glorie proclame lib●rtie to the captues and o●●ni●g ●● the prison vnto them that are ●●●●d Or he was ●●e pri●o●e● Ch●●●● as enduring his ●ond for Christs faith and seruice V●●●●s no●● Chrs to ●e●pro Christo. Namely for preaching among the Gentiles the e●searchable ●●hes of Chr●st as it is in the S. verse So that whereas two thing especially commend a Ma●tyr saith in Christ and lo●e to the Church bo●h are me● in the Apostle Hee suffe●ed for the true faith a p●i●on●r of Ie●●s Christ and out of vnfained loue to God● people F●r ●●u Gentiles as it i● in the hitteen●h verse ●or your sake● euen for your good and example tha● yee likewise may con●●nue con●tant in the sincere p●●fe●●ion of Christianitie F●●●●●● 〈…〉 is your glorie that ye h●●e such ●n in●tru●tor as is Christ●n ●n bo●d no● for any faction of your● or fault of his o●ne but ●●r confe●ence to●●●d God euen for the ●●●ir●●●n ●f the gr●●e wh●●h ●s ●●●en ●ee to you-ward See Epistle S●nday 16. after Trinitie Hitherto concerning the griefe which our Apostle suffered in Christs cause for the Gentiles I come now to treate of the grace which he receiued In respect of his knowledge being Certaine By reuelation shewed he the mysterie to me Full euen so perfectly reuealed that in a few words you may read and vnderstand ●y knowledge in the mysterie of Christ. Excellent which in other ages was not made knowne vnto the sonnes of men as it is now declared c. Practise whereof I am made a Minister according to the gift of the grace of God which is giuen vnto me c. If you haue heard of the ministration of the grace The calling of ' aul to be the Doctor of the Gentiles as it was knowne vnto himselfe by reuelation so to them by report If yee haue heard c. As if he should haue said if ye doubt not of my calling ye may be well assured of my doctrine But ye cannot doubt of my calling as hauing often heard how Christ in a vision appeared to me saying Saul Saul why persecutest thou me And when I had answered Lord what wil● thou haue mee to doe Iesus told Anani●●s in another vision Hee is a chosen vessell vnto mee to beare my name before the Gentiles and Kings and the children of Israel And so God separated mee from my mothers wombe and called me by his grace to reueale his sonne among the Gentiles as the Gospell ouer the circumcision was committed to Peter so the Gospell ouer the vncircumcision was committed vnto me being an Apostle not of men or by man Galat. 1.1 Or after man Gal. 1.11 but the ministration of Gods grace was giuen vnto me by the reuelation of Iesus Christ. The word mimstration or dispensation may bee construed either passiuely being a grace giuen and dispensed to Paul or actiuely for that Paul was dispenser of it vnto other 1. Cor 4.1 Let a man so thinke of vs as of the ministers of Christ and disposers if the secrets of God His office then is called a dispensation For that it consisteth in the dispensing of Christs vnsearchable riches And the Gospell is called here Gods grace for that it is faithfully deliuered and fruitfully receiued nor by mans merit but onely through Gods free grace Preaching in the teacher and beleeuing in the hearer are both the faire gifts of God Or the Gospell is called Gods grace because the summe thereof is nothing else but the preaching of Gods exceeding rich mercies in Christ intimating that our iustification is not by the workes of the Law but freely by grace through faith As I wrote afore in few words I finde that some construe this of that which is written in other Epistles vnto other men as to Philemon and other Churches as to that of Colossus and Philippi Marlorat is of opinion that our Apostle wrote another Epistle though it bee not extant vnto the Church of Ephesus Other referre this clause to that which is deliuered in this present Epistle to wit vnto that which is sayd in the two former chapters Or to that in chap. 1. vers 9. or chap. 2. vers 14. He is our peace which hath made of both one and hath broken the step of the partition wall In this little briefe is contained all that great mysterie which in times past was not opened vnto the sonnes of men as it is now declared by the spirit that the Gentiles should bee fellow heires and of the same body and partakers of the same promise in Christ by the Gospell Which mysterie in times past was not opened vnto the sonnes of men This verse cannot easily bee digested as one sayd without a graine of
after child-birth according to the doctrine and discipline of the Church of England performed not out of custome but out of conscience not to make the act of honourable mariage vncleane but to blesse God for deliuerance from so manifold perils is not a Iewish ceremonie but a Christian dutie the which I thinke distasteth onely such as haue either an ouer flowing of their gall or an out●weening of their wit The Law saith in the 12. of Leuiticus If a woman by the seed of man shall conceiue and beare a child she shall be reputed vncleane A sus●●pto semine p●perere● c. but the power of the most high ouer shadowed Mary Christ was conceiued in her wombe not by the polluted seed of man but by the vertue of the holy Ghost and so by consequence not tied vnto the law for as the lawyers say where the reason of a statute doth cease there the statute hath his end But the reason of the law concerning purification had no place in Mary being a pure Virgine both in her conception and in her childbirth also See S Ambros epist. 81. Augu●●in● contra Iulian. lib. 1. cap. 2. de cum lib. 22. cap. 8. Thomas part ● quaes● 28. ●rt 2. Erasmus 〈…〉 de sur●●m Euchari●● 1. b. ● cap. 6. That Christ might appeare to be man hee was b●●●● of a woman and yet that he might appeare to be God he was borne of a Virgin 〈…〉 See Creed born of the Virgin and Epist. allotted for the Annunciation Mary then obserued the 〈◊〉 of purification as Bernard excellent ● not for her selfe but for our example Christ was circumcised for vs and Mary purified for vs he needed no Circumcision who was the end of Circumcision and she needed no purification as hauing conceiued by the holy Ghost yet hee did vndergoe the one and shee performe the other Hereby teaching vs to submit our selues vnto the present gouernment of the Church vnder which we liue teaching vs I say so farre to seeke the peace of Ierusalem as that wee should bee content to depart euen from our owne priuate right rather then in any sort scandalously preiudice the common good of the Church enduring rather a mischiefe in our selues then an inconuenience in the state Mary knowing obedience to bee better than sacrifice performed the rites of purifying albeit shee was not bound to the same But schismatikes in our daies enioyned to keepe the ceremonies of the Church euen by that law which saith expresly Let euery soule be subsed vnto superiour authority hold dissolutenesse a resolutenesse and breaking of ecclesiasticall orders a point of deuotion and piety shedding as it is said of Ioab the blood of warre in peace But if their zeale were such vnto the Gospell as Maries was to the Law they would rather wring themselues in the particular then wrong the Church in the generall I read in Plin● how two Goates meeting on a narrow bridge non vim sed viam fecere they did not make a way each other but make way one for the other as Mutianus an eye witnesse tels the tale the one lying downe on his bellie suffered the other to passe ouer his backe and so both escaped the danger of the ditch In the time of the Go●●● wa●s I find also that a Romane souldior and a Barbarian casually falling into the same pit as they marched along the countrie were so farre from contending one with another as that they both agreed mutually to relieue each other and so necessity making them friends as Procopius reportes they were drawne out of that hell and safely deliuered againe to their Captaines and Companies I would to God the separatist ●● case had so much good wit as the Goat or else● much good will as the Go●h They brought him to Ierusalem to present him vnto the Lord as it is written in the Law of the Lord euery man-child that first openeth the matrix shall be called holy is the Lord Almighty God in deliuering his Israel out of Egypts bondage sinate all the first borne in the land of Egypt from the first borne of Pharaoh that sat on his throne vnto the first borne of the captiue that was in prison And therefore that his people might alway remember this benefit hee commanded in his law that they should consecrate all their first borne to him Exod. 13.2 For this reason is rendred by God himselfe Numb 8.17 All the first borne of the children of Israel are mine both of man and of beasts since the day I smote euery and horne in the land of Egypt I sanctified them for myselfe Now Christ is the 〈◊〉 borne in many respects first in his Diuinity being Gods onely begotten sonne Secondly in his humanity being Maries first borne sonne for she bare none before him or after him Thirdly the first borne in grace for he was the first man borne which being offered vnto God was accepted of himselfe Fourthly in power being the first borne of the dead Fifthly the first borne for that all of vs are new borne through him And therefore though he were not tied vnto the rites of the law yet he suffered himselfe to be presented in the Temple for these reasons especially First to shew that the same God is author both of the Gospell and of the Law Secondly in that the Law giuer himselfe obeyed the law he reacheth all Princes to giue good example in obseruing their owne statutes For an Emperour faith Euagrius is not to be counted thereafter as he gouerneth other but as he ruleth and guideth himselfe making his life a light for his subiects to follow For this cause the chiefe Magistrates among the Romans had burning lamps carried before them Publica minurum rectum ibi con●t●t aquum Imperium cumrex quod suber ipse facit Thirdly he submitted himselfe vnto the law that hee might redeeme those that were vnder the law God became man that men hereby might bee made Gods He who was free became seruant vnto all to make all free Fourthly because the first borne presented in the Temple was a figure of Christ the first borne among many brethren Rom. 8.29 Fifthly that hee might auoid occasion of scandall among the Iewes and exhibite a patterne of meeknesse vnto all Sixthly that being presented in the publike Temple many good people might beare witnesse to him as here you see Simeon and Anna did Seuenthly that the world might be put in possession and sesin of the Sauior He was offered twice first in the Temple which is called his morning sacrifice then on the Crosse which is termed his euening sacrifice In the one he was redeemed in the other he did redeeme giuing himselfe for vs an offering and a sacrifice of a sweet smelling sauour to God Ephes. 5.2 By this precept of Moses and practise of Mary parents ought to learne that
Sund after Easter and Gospell on Saint Thomas day Here pause and pray Almighty father which hast giuen thine onely sonne to die for our sinnes and to rise againe for our iustification grant vs so to put away the leauen of malice and wickednesse that we may alway serue thee in purenesse of liuing and truth through Iesus Christ our Lord Amen The Epistle E●HES 4.7 Vnto euery one of vs is giuen grace according to the measure of the gift of Christ c. SAint Paul doth especially two things in all his Epistles 1. treate 2. entreate Hauing sufficiently treated in the former Chapters of doctrinals he commeth in this present to morals entreating his Ephesians in generall to walke worthy of the vocation whereunto they were called in more particular to support one another thorough loue keeping the vnity of the spirit in the bond of peace pressing this one point with arguments of two sorts The first of which epist. 17. Sund. after Trin. is taken from such things as are common vnto the whole Church as being in all the faithfull one and the same there is one body and one spirit and one hope one Lord one faith one baptisme one God and father of all which is aboue all and through a● and in you all As if he should argue thus if the Church your mother bee but one God your father but one Christ your Lord but one the holy spirit your comforter but one if ye haue but one hope one faith one baptisme I see no cause why ye should not liue together and loue together as all one labouring to keepe the vnity of the spirit in the bond of peace The second contained in our present text is taken from such graces as are in euery one diuerse shewing that this inequality of gifts is not an hindrance but rather a furtherance to vnitie for asmuch as all of them are giuen by the same author for the same end Vnto euery one of vs is giuen some gift vnto none all he that hath most hath but a measure As then in the naturall body the eye can not say to the hand I haue no need of thee nor the hand againe to the feet I haue no need of you but euery part seeketh anothers and not his owne good Euen so in the Church which is Christs mysticall body God made not all Apostles or all Prophets or Euangelists c. but some Apostles some Prophets some Euangelists c. There be diuersities of gifts and diuersities of administrations and diuersities of operations 1. Cor. 12. euery one standeth in need of anothers gift and thereupon is occasioned to support one another in loue preseruing the vnity of the spirit in the bond of peace See epist. 2. Sun after Epiphan and 10. after Trinity In the whole 4. points are to be considered especially 1. Who Christ and that is proued out of the 68. Psal. verse 18. hee led captiuitie captiue and gaue gifts vnto men 2. When when hee ascended vp on high euen aboue all heauens to fulfill all things 3. What hee made some Apostles some Prophets some Euangelists c. 4 Why for the perfiting of the Saints for the worke of the ministry for the edifying of the body of Christ. Concerning the first in that our Apostle doth auowe here that the diuersity of grace bestowed on the Church is the gift of Christ whereas he saith elsewhere that God the father ordained Apostles and Prophets and teachers and that the spirit worketh ad these things vnto euery one seuerally distributing as he will we may learne two conclusions in diuinity 1. That all the workes of the sacred Trinity quoad extra without it selfe are common and communicable to euery person of the three 2. That God the sonne is equall in might and mercy to God the father he being ascended aboue all heauens is the giuer of gifts vnto men and here we must accord the Prophet and our Apostle The one saith he receiued gifts for men the other he gaue gifts vnto men and these two seeme to contradict each other Answere is made that Dauid speakes of this deuotion in time to come but Paul of thi● donation already past and accomplished Dauid of the promise Paul of the performance Or Christ as he was God gaue gifts in he●●●n and as man he re●●●ed gifts on earth or he receiued in that his members receiued according to his owne saying Mat. 25.40 ●n as much as ye haue done it vnto one of the least● these my brethren yee haue done it vnto mee or he receiued to giue as Exod. 25.2 Speake to the children ●f ●srael that they receiue an offering for me that is according to the translation of our present Church bible ●●at they bring● where reioycing as Abb●n Ez●a notes is giuing and so Paul alluding rather to the sense then to the words of Dauid saith he 〈…〉 Touching the second point it is demanded how Christ is said here to haue made some Apostles and some Prophets c. When he went 〈…〉 and led captiuity ●aptiue seeing wee reade in the Gospels history that he chose his Apostles and Disciples and gaue them a commission to preach in his life time and that after his resurrection he confirmed them in his office by breathing on them and giuing the holy Ghost and saying as my father sent mee euen so send ●y ●● goe teach all nations baptizing them in the name of the father and the sonne 〈◊〉 the holy ghost Answere may bee that Christ is reported in this Scripture to haue giuen Apostles vnto the Church after he went vp on high in respect of their gifts extension and 〈◊〉 Extension as hauing after Christs ascens●ou receiued the gifts of the holy ghost after a more glorious manner and in a farre greater measure So the text the ●●ly ghost was not yet giuen because that Iesus was not yet glorified and If I goe not away the comforter will not come vnto you but if I depart I will send him vnto you And Christ at his ascension also charged them to waite for this promised power of the holy ghost See gosp Sun after ascension day O●tension and that 1. in respect of the solemne inauguration into their Apostleship on the feast of Pentecost in the sight of Gods people gathered together at Hierusalem out of euery nation vnder heauen It is reported of Dauid that he was first annointed King of Israel in the middest of his brethren 1 Sam. 1.10 and afterward in Hebron 2. Sam. 2. But hee was not called King vntill he was annoynted solemly before all the tribes of Israel 2. Sam. 5. Euen so though it bee granted that the Apostles were nominated and elected to their office before Christs death and confirmed in their calling after Christs resurrection yet they were not apparantly knowen vnto Gods people to bee so till he went vp on high and gaue
such as our Apostle meaneth in his Epistles often I say for such as haue an especiall gift in interpreting the Scripture whether in vnfolding the deepe mysteries thereof vnto the learned or in expounding the plaine sense thereof vnto the people then it must of necessity be granted that they be perpetuall officers in the Church as Pastors and Doctors Saint Ambrose therefore construeth our text thus Apostles are Bishops Prophets are Interpretours of the Scriptures Euangelists are Deacons And Hyperius saith that God will alwayes haue these degrees in the Church and Peter Martyr in his Commentaries vpon the 12. to the Romanes is of opinion that our Apostle describeth in that place such gifts as are necessarie for the Church at all times among which hee mentioneth as a chiefe one prophesying To be short Bullinger vpon this text obserues that the words Apostle Prophet Euangelist are confounded and the Pastors of Zurich in the latter confession of Heluetia chap. 18. write thus the m●nisters of the new testament are termed by diuerse names for they be called Apostles Prophets Euangelists Bishops Elders Pastors and Doctors And here Protestant Diuines haue well obserued against the Church of Rome that Paul among all these degrees of the ministry names not the Popes office the which he would not haue forgotten if it had bin so necessary for the deciding of controuersies and preseruation of vnity in truth as our aduersaries pretend And whereas the Rhemists reply that Bishops Elders Deacons are not mentioned in this catalogue Answere is made that the functions of Bishops and Priests as they respect the externall gouernment and policie of the Church are named elsewhere generally and particularlie but in respect of teaching which is intended here more principally they are contained vnder Pastors and Doctors If the Pope will be reputed an Apostle then as Cardinall Caietane notes he must also be both a Prophet and an Euangelist and a Pastor and a Teacher for as he saith an Apostleship eminently comprehendeth all these graces it may be granted as I conceiue which Anselme collecteth here that Archbishops and Primates haue the roomes of Apostles in the Church but yet I see not how the Pope can be crouded into the text for if this absolute supremacie were necessary then assuredly Paul would not haue said Christ made some Apostles some Prophets some Euangelists c. But rather Christ gaue to the Church one Apostle some Prophets and many teachers The fourth and last obserueable point in our text is for what end Christ ascending vp on high gaue gifts vnto men and that is threefold Namely the Perfecting of the Saints the Worke of the Ministry the Edifying of the body of Christ. The first concernes such as are called already Saints The second such as are to cal exercising the worke of the ministry to wit Apostles Prophets Euangelists c. The third such as are yet to be called and to bee built vpon the foundation of the Prophets and Apostles Or the first concernes the people the second the Pastour and the third both For the edifying of the Saints I finde diuerse readings of this clause Some reade ad constitutionem or ad condendos sanctos agreeable to the present text of our Communion book here The Saints are of Gods houshold and the Church is Gods house Hebr. 3.6 The chiefe builders where of vnder Christ are Apostles Prophets Pastours and Teachers as I haue shewed Epist. on Saint Thomas day Other reade ad instaurationem for the repairing of such as are decayed in Gods building The iust man falleth seuen times in many things we sinne all eum dicimus optimum qui peccat minimum And therefore that we may not fall from grace finally wee need daily to be repaired and vnderpropt in Gods house by the powerfull exhortations of Pastors and teachers Our new translation herein agreeing with the Syriae and vulgar Latine reades for the perfecting of the Saints And it may be so construed in two respects first in regard of their daily growing from strength to strength vntill they bee perfect men in Christ for the word is profitable to teach improue correct and to instruct in righteousnesse that the man of God may bee perfected throughly furnished vnto all good works 2. For that their number is fully perfected and accomplished by the preaching of Apostles Prophets Euangelists Pastors Teachers According to this exposition the Geneua bible hath it for the gathering together of the Saints All of vs are by nature like sheepe which haue gone astray wherefore Christ as being the chiefe sheepheard gaue some Apostles some Prophets some Euangelists to gather vs together from East and West and to bring vs vnto his flocke that there may bee but one sheepfold and one sheepheard His sheepe heare his voice Pastors and teachers vttering his words are his voice he made therefore for the gathering together of his elect some Apostles some Prophets some Euangelists c. Other reade ad coagmentationem sanctorum for the ioyning and ioynting of the Saints He speaketh of the Church as of a body consisting of Gods elect as of many members a body coupled and knit together by euery ioynt vers 16. And therfore whereas the Saints through Adams originall transgression and their owne actuall offences are many times out of ioynt disunited from their head Christ and diuided also from his members it pleased the Lord out of his infinite wisedome and goodnes to giue some Apostles Prophets and Euangelists c. As Chirurgions and Physitians of the soule who might by the preaching of faith vnite them againe to their head and by the preaching of good workes knit them together among themselues in the bond of peace And here you may note the true cause why the worst men and members of a parish euermore regard a good Pastor least It is because they bee feet and legs and thighs and hands out of ioynt so cannot endure the touch of the Chirurgions hand whose chiefe care is to worke their cure He that is sicke of a lethargie desires to sleepe although he die for it and hee that is lulled asleepe in sinne cannot away with the watchman of God If a Minister shall either out of weaknesse suffer his drowsie people to snore stil in their vncleannesse or out of wickednesse sleepe with them a little himselfe then hee may peraduenture for a while bee reputed a good shepheard among those scabbie sheepe but if he shall once rouze them and raise them out of their security saying with Paul awake thou that sleepest and stand vp from the dead then instantly the wit-foundred drunkard cryeth out ●way with such a fellow from the earth it is not meet hee should liue for hee subuerts the state of the world and troubleth our city Then the couetous oppressor
solemnized to the praise of God in comme notation of the ioyous Martyrdome of two blessed Apostles Saint Philip who for the constant profession of the Christian faith as Hyppositus reported was vnder Domitian the cruell Emperour crucified with his head downeward and S. Iames euen for the same cause being Bishop of Hierusalem was cast downe headlong by the Scribes and Pharisees from the pinnacle of the temple and afterward stoned and finally brained with a Fullers club This exhortation to constant cheerefulnes vnder the crosse for the Gospell is pressed here by diuers and sundry reasons as expositions haue well obserued all which in breife may bee reduced either to the fruit or else to the root of this Christian vertue The fruit in this world knowing this that the trying of your faith gendreth patience and let patience haue her persit worke c. There is a twofold temptation as Augustine told Consentius vn a deceptionis alter a probat onis a temptation to deceiue which is from the diuell and our owne concupiscence verse 13.14 of this present Chapter Againe there is a temptation to proue and improue the which is from God and so suffering for the Gospell is termed here ●temptation and a triall of our faith The fruit in the world to come is eternall happines vers 12. Blessed is the man that endureth temptation for when he is tryed he shall receiue the crowne of life which the Lord hath promised to them that loue him See Gospell appointed for this day As for the root if any lacke wisedome that is true iudgement how to beare the crosse let him aske it of God he is a giuing God from him is euery good and perfect gift verse 17. Ergo he giueth also this he giueth vnto all indifferently without any respect of person exclude not thy selfe from an vniuersall number he liberally giueth and vpbraideth not after he hath giuen hee giues for the measure fully for the manner cheerefully Wherefore come to him and aske of him in saith and it shall be giuen vnto you See Gospell Sun 5. after Easter The Gospell Iohn 14.1 Iesus said to his disciples let not your hearts be troubled c. THe Prophet Dauid saith a troubled spirit is an acceptable sacrifice to God and it was good for me that I was in trouble How then is it true which is here said by the sonne of Dauid let not your hearts be troubled answere is made that the passions of the minde as anger feare delight and the like are in their owne nature neither simplie commendable nor yet absolutely vituperable but either good or bad as their obiects and endes are good and bad To bee troubled for sinne is a godly sorrow causing repentance to saluation not to bee repented of and therefore grieue for offending God and grieuing his spirit yea grieue much because thou canst grieue no more But an inordinate trouble for the things of this world arising either out of enuy sluggishnes or impatience is forbidden in this sentence let not your hearts be troubled The disciples as yet ambitiously sought after worldly honour conceiuing that Christ ere it were long would restore the kingdome of Israel and so prefer them in his kingdome on earth at his right hand and at his left as yet they did expect a crowne not a crosse Wherefore Christ vnderstanding that they were dismayed at his words in the former Chapter at the 43. verse little children yet a little while am I with you ye shall seeke me but whether I goe can ye not follow me now he commeth in this present vnto that which is Euangeli● caput summa the cheife part in the whole body of his Gospel namely to binde vp the broken hearted and to comfort such as mourne in Sio● Isaac the signe of Christ is interpreted laughter insinuating that Christ should be the consolation of Israel and great ioy to all his people Luke 2.10.25 scare not as one notes is the first word in the first annunciation of his conception and the first word in the first annunciation of his birth and the first word in the first annunciation of his resurrection and almost the last words in his last exhortation a little before his death are let not your hearts be troubled and be of good comfort strengthening his followers and sweetening his crosse by diuers forcible reasons in our text by two more principally The 1. Is taken from the buckler of faith ye beleeue in God beleeue also in me 2. From the holde of hope in my fathers house are many mansions c. me● Concerning the fourefold reading of these words examine Iansen concord cap. 134. Erasmus annot Maldonat com in loc I take them as I find them here ye beleeue in God c. the Saints in olde time thorough faith haue subdued kingdomes wrought righteousnes obtained the promises stopped the mouthes of Lyons quenched the violence of fire escaped the edge of the sword of weake were made strong waxed valiant in battell and turned to flight the armies of Aliants In a word faith is a shield where with ye may quench all the fiery darts of the diuell Ephes. 6.16 If ye beleeue them in God and cast all your care on him he that is the father of mercies and God of all comfort will assuredly so care for you that yre shall not any longer be troubled in your hearts a little faith euen so small as a graine of mustard seed is able to remoue mountaines of distrust out of your soule faith is a buckler and a buckler guarde th especially the head and the heart that is the vnderstanding and the will vt non turbetur intellectus non formidet affectus Here humane weaknes doth obiect as Philip at the 8. verse Lord shew vs the father and it sufficeth vs. It is true that we beleeue God and beleeue in God also but yet our hearts are troubled thirsting after his sight and sensible knowledge we would faine see that we beleeue so Moses in the 33. Chapter of Exodus I beseech thee shew me thy glory to whom answere was made by the Lord thou can't not see my face for there shall no man see my face and liue yet behold there is a place by me and thou shall stand and vpon the ro●ke and while my glorie passeth by I will put thee in a cleft of the rocke and will couer thee with mine band whiles I passe by then I will take away mine hand and thou shalt see my backe parts but my face shall not be seene This rocke is Christ as Paul in another case 1. Cor. 10.4 and the Church is a d●ue in the holes of the rocke Ca●t 2.14 Whosoeuer then is placed in Christs Church and hath faiths eye may see God in his hinder parts as in the world hee passeth by that is in