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A02919 The faith of the church militant moste effectualie described in this exposition of the 84. Psalme, by that reuerend pastor, and publike professor of Gods word, in the famous vniuersitie of Hassine in Denmarke, Nicholas Hemmingius. A treatise written as to the instruction of the ignorant in the groundes of religion, so to the confutation of the Iewes, the Turkes, atheists, Papists, heretiks, and al other aduersaries of the trueth whatsoeuer. Translated out of Latine into English, &c. by Thomas Rogers. Hemmingsen, Niels, 1513-1600.; Rogers, Thomas, d. 1616. 1581 (1581) STC 13059; ESTC S118432 286,633 582

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sacrificing did please But Caine sacrificed without faith presuming vpon the dignitie of his worke And therefore no maruel though God had no regard vnto his offering The summe of al is this that sacrifice spiced with faith pleased as fat and grateful but that voide of faith it displeased as drie vngrateful But Dauid moste plainlie of al sheweth in his 51. Psal. when the sacrifices of burnt offeringes do please for thus he saith The sacrifices of God are à contrite spirit à broken heart O God thou wilt not despise Ioining there-vnto by and by Then shalt thou accept the sacrifices of righteousnes euen the burnt offering and oblation then shal theie offer calues vpon thine altar Therfore let y e beginning of each good worke proceede from an heart purified through saith without which euerie worke seeme it to the eie neuer so holie is abominatiō before God This I haue spoken the more at large because of some among the fathers who not wel vnderstanding the wordes of Dauid and of Isaiah do agre with Porphirie who most wickedlie did slander the sacrifices of the Iewes which were in vse so long as the common-weale of Moses did stand But the fathers somwhat to excuse these Iewish sacrifices saide howe God did not command but onlie suffer them to the ende theie might keepe the Iewes from idolatrie wherunto theie were inclined Now let vs see the causes of Iewish sacrifices in order as we did propose in y e second place First therfore the cause commanding offereth it selfe who is God himselfe Who for that he is moste wise not without great wisdome did command and appoint this ceremonie Against whome albeit dust and ashes wil set himselfe and obiect manifolde absurdities yet content we our-selues with the moste wise counsel of God the which let vs oppose not onelie against that Atheist Porphirie but also against the diuel and his members who dare to oppose the dotinges of their foolish braine against the wisedome of God Let vs knowe that the saieng of Paul is true who saith The wisdome of the flesh is enimitie against God Thorough this cause commanding the godlie among the Iewes did knowe both how their sacrifices pleased God when through faith theie were done vnto Gods glorie with true meditation of the spiritual signification and also that theie were bound vnto obedience vntil Christ came of whome those sacrifices were figures and who by his owne and perfect sacrifice should set an ende to all figuratiue sacrifices But seeing the Iewes at this daie do obiect to vs howe their sacrifices should not be abolished because God is vnchaungeable I doe answere so long as the cause and condition of the decree is in force so long doth God himselfe abide constant and vnchangeable The material cause of Iewishe sacrifices was either the fruite of earth or cleane beastes which by certain tokens are distinguished in Leuiticus from the vncleane It was furthermore enacted that theie should not vse either leauen or honie in their sacrifices but that theie shold season euerie sacrifice with salt For God the law-giuer would haue them to acknowledge him to be auctor of al aswel of such things as doe spring from the earth as of al liuing creatures beside that are breade and also craue his blessing refer the vse of al thinges vnto his owne glorie The formal cause was the verie manner of sacrifising which for that it was diuers it were much to prosecute the same in this place and therefore I remit the reader vnto the book of Moses caled Leuiticus The endes of the sacrifices instituted were foure whereof the first was that the people prone vnto idolatrie might be reclamed therfrom by these exercises The second y t Gods people might bee kept in the seruice of one God and haue à dailie occasion to exercise godlines The thirde that the people might haue à type of Christe the sacrifice to come The fourth that by thinking of Christ the sacrifice to come the Iewes might be warned of the grieuousnes of sinne the which forsomuch as it could not be cleansed by the bloud neither of buls nor of goates theie might know howe to be cleansed throughlie from their sinne theie had neede of the bloud of the immaculate lambe that is of the promised seede or Messiah who alone could tel howe both to abolish the workes of the diuel sin and death and also pacifie the offended father Secondlie that in this minde theie should flie vnto the mercie of God proposed in the forenamed seede and by faith depend vpon that seede glorifieng y e Lord both in al their mind heart wil conuersation who of his infinite goodnes and wise counsel would after such à sorte redeeme mankind With such motions did the fathers Habel Noah Abraham Isahac Iaacob Moses Dauid Salomon Elias and manie other which feared God sacrifice For these knew right wel how by the outwarde worke onelie God was not pleased but that he respected besid the faith and the mind of the offerers Notwithstanding some as hypocrites wicked liuers among this people did thinke that God regarded the outwarde worke and thereby was pacified as by an expiatorie sacrifice And therefore the Lorde doeth testifie that their sacrifices were both abhominable to him and neuer exacted of him In the third place the kindes of the olde sacrifices doe folow the principal and cheefe diuision whereof is this That one kinde was expiatory caled Olah burnt sacrifice which was offered for sinne by à certaine showe of purging For in verie deede it purged not sinne but onelie bare à figure of the purging to come through the onlie sacrifice of Christ al this being lifted vp vpon the altar was consumed with fire Whereby was signified that Christ the Priest and the sacrifice shoulde be lifted-vp vpon the altar of the crosse with the fire of loue be burned for our sinnes Another was of testification called Hodah For it was done either for supplication or thankesgiuing sake or else for exercise of godlinesse the which of the principal ende thereof was tearmed eucharistical as that other ilstical that is propiciatorie For as Paul interpretes y e same it signified purging to come through the blood of Christ. For so he saith Whom God hath set-forth to be à reconciliation through faith in his bloode Whatsoeuer other sortes be mentioned they are contained vnder these Touching the figuratiue signification of olde sacrifices the Epistle vnto the Hebrewes teacheth generalie howe al were figures of that onelie sacrifice Iesus Christ which being offered al other thinges as figuratiue ought to cease But more particularlie we wil in this place set-downe some things especialie those which maie leade vs as it were by the hande vnto à spiritual instructing of our life and maners First therefore commeth-forth the consecration of Priestes whose dutie was to offer the sacrifice they had foure
them either quicke or deade This champion of the Lord for sooth first à theefe afterward à seditious souldier then a runne-agate after that à capitane of à rebellious hoste perswadeth light heads enimies to the true religion howe he is the messenger of God wherebie we maie gather howe greate the power of Satan is in them whiche imbrace not the trueth Whereof it is that at this daie that aduersarie of God defendeth his blasphemies against God by Turkishe and Mahometical force according to the prophecie of Daniel It foloweth that we speake of the lawes of Mahomet which are partlie political partlie ceremonial or of seruice but of these I wil touche verie fewe wherebie it wil be easie to iudge of the rest First of al to his Arabians that is to poore men accustomed to liue vpon the spoile he aloweth theft and setteth à lawe of reuengement Hurt him saith he which hurt you He saith also He that either killeth his enemie or is killed by his enemie entreth into Paradise He permitteth men to haue manie wiues He aloweth diuorcement for a trifeling cause and receauing againe vpon smal occasion Nowe I praie you what is more against nature than such lawes if theie maie be caled lawes which peruert the lawe of nature that is common to all men On the otherside he hath giuen some lawes which make to the increase of loue and goodwil among men He commandeth almes to be giuen and promiseth paradise to such as giue liberalie if so be theie haue couragiouslie foughten against the enemies He willeth punishment to be giuen to the poore for their offences But to the good law he annexeth impietie namelie how therebie theie doe merite remission of sinnes He hath ceremonies washings circumcisiō fiue times in à daie he compelleth his to praie in the temple But that hypocrisie helpeth no whit seeing theie are voide of the propiciatorie without which there is none accesse vnto GOD. He willeth to absteine from swines fleshe Hetherto of the lawes The fables which he intermixeth as diuine mysteries be verie ridiculous and foolish of which I wil recite foure y t by them the rest as the Lion by his talantes maie be iudged This stout souldior of the Lord Mahomet by name telleth how by the conduction of Gabriel the Angel he ascended into heauen to talke with God Where first of al meeteth with him an Angel ten thousand times huger than the whole worlde for whome he got à pardon of God whom he had offended beeing requested to make intercession vnto God for him Which done God put his hand vppon Mahomet whereby he was stroken with so extreme à colde that it pearced vnto the verie marrowe of his backe He saide that God was carried in à chaire by eight Angels whose head he vainelie reporteth is of such à bignes that the swiftest birde that is in a thousand yeeres can-not flie from one part thereof vnto an other The second fable like the same where-vppon the prohibition of wine is builded is this There was saith he two Angels of God namelie Horroth and Marroth sent from God on à time from heauen into the world appointed to gouerne and to instruct mankinde with these commandementes that theie should neither kil nor iudge vniustlie nor drinke wine So à long time theie were so taken and knowen to be iudges ouer the whole worlde Vpon à certaine daie à woman of al other the fairest came vnto them hauing à matter against her husband who to make the iudges like her cause inuited them vpon à certaine daie vnto dinner And beeing at their good cheere she herselfe bringeth fine meates furnisheth the table with boules of wine yea she serueth and seeth that theie lack nothing biddeth thē to eate to drinke spare naught What needs many words her faire words ouercame them and drunke with wine theie burned after their faire hostesse see the chastitie of Mahomets Angels being ouercome theie desired her companie she promiseth vpon à condition if one of them would tel her howe theie vse to ascend into heauen and the other howe she might descend The condition they like When she had learned the same suddenlie she was lifted-aloft and ascended into heauen Which when GOD sawe and had sifted the cause he made her the daie star as beautiful among the Starres as euer she was among women To the Angels called before his iudgement seate he appointed that theie should choose either the paines of this life or of the world to come who chose the paines of this life Wherefore theie are hanged vpon iron chaines with their heades downewarde in the pit Behil vntil the daie of iudgement For which cause the vse of wine is forbidden to the folowers of Mahomet least theie fal into the like peril Such like stuffe is the fable touching the prohibition of swines fleshe When al liuing creatures saith he were in the Arch of Noah the Elephant caste-backewarde whereof sprang an hogge who with his snoute turned vp dongue whereof sprang à mouse the which gnawed the hempe wherewithal the boordes of the ship were ioined Hence Noah was stroken with à maruelous terror and constrained to aske counsel of the Lorde who for remedie at that pinch willed Noah to strike à lion vpon the fore-head from the nostrels of which Lion being moued lepped-out à cat which hunted the mouse and deliuered mankinde from so greate daunger This was the greeuous cause forsooth whie the fleshe of swine is forbidden to bee eaten of the Saracens Here-vnto let vs adde the fable concerning y e last iudgement Of this he saith God shal giue the Angel of death in charge that he kil euerie creature which doth breath aswel al the Angels as al the diuels and all men sheepe fishes beastes and cattel that al maie be dead except God himselfe This done he wil cal the Angel of death saieng O Adriel is anie thing yet remaining of al my creatures And he shal aunswere Nothing Lorde but I thie weake and feeble seruant Then shal the Lorde saie vnto him seeing thou hast killed al my creatures goe thou thie waies betweene Paradise and hel and afterwarde kil thie selfe and die So the vnhappie wretch departed and in that prescribed middle-place lieng on the ground wrapped in his winges he choaked him-selfe with such an horrible roaring as had the celestial spirites and earthlie creatures bin aliue theie could not choose but haue died thereat After which time the world shal stande voide 40. yeeres together Which expired the Lorde holding heauen and earth in his fiste shal saie as foloweth Where be nowe the Kinges Princes Potentates of this worlde Whose is the Kingdome the Dominion and the power Speake if ye haue anie truth in your words And these wordes thrice repeated he wil raise-vp Seraphuel and saie to him Take this trumpet and descend into Ierusalem and sounde there Then Seraphuel hauing receaued the trumpet which is as long as à
therefore rightly doth y e Church saie He is the verie lambe of God who hath taken awaie the sinnes of the worlde who by his death hath destroied death and repaired life by rising againe And Ambrose So great was our sinne that vnlesse the sonne of God had died for vs the debters of death wee coulde neuer haue beene saued Wherefore when it is said that the sonne of man hath redeemed vs through the merite of his passion à worke of an infinite price and valor is named to wit the worke of the Sonne of man who is verie God too when it is said howe the death of Christ is à satisfaction an infinite price is proposed euen of that man who also is the onelie begotten Sonne of God And although the God-head neither suffered nor died for howe can it bee that either an vnchangeable thing shoulde suffer or an immortall thing suffer death yet the eternal person which is God hath suffered yet not in the diuine but in the humane assumed nature which coulde suffer Therefore Paul doeth saie God hath purchased the Church with his owne blood And Peter affirmeth how Christ hath suffered in the fleshe that is in the humane nature in soule and bodie And the Epistle vnto the Hebrewes doeth saie that Christ tooke part of bloode and flesh that he might destroye through death him that had the power of death that is the diuel signifying plainlie thereby howe the diuinitie coulde not suffer but flesh did and because the diuine nature could not suffer he tooke y t which could suffer And Theodoret doth saie He therfore tooke flesh that through it which coulde suffer that which could not suffer might sustaine punishment Therefore in respect of the vnion of the diuine and humaine nature in one person the price and merite of Christ his suffering is infinite for time valor and efficacie For if you respect the time it extendeth vnto all ages vnto all generations of men If you marke the valor it is able to purge the sinnes of all mankinde if the efficacie the force thereof is euident in al and with-drawen from none which doe heare the gospel and by faith repent For the death of Christ doeth abolishe alike the sinnes of Adam and of Euah and of Peter and of Paul and of such as haue bene since the time of Christ. And this is it which is saide in the Reuelation where hee is called The lambe which was slaine from the beginning of the worlde As sone therefore as our first parentes gaue credite to this promise The seed of the woman shal bruise the serpentes heade by the power of Christ his death which was then appointed to be in the ende of the world they were iustified sanctified and redeemed from eternal death By this faith Iob erected himselfe in the extreeme miseries when hee saide I am sure that my redeemer liueth And of Abram it is written Abram beleeued the Lorde and hee counted that to him for righteousnesse And Dauid was persuaded his adulterie and murder coulde be washed awaie by the merite of Christe his bloode when hee saide Purge me with Hysop and I shall be cleane And therefore in an other place he saith With the Lorde is mercie and with him is great redeemption It is great in deede because it is infinite and can not bee conteined within the bounds of anie time or estimation So that the vertue of Christ his death extendeth vnto all times and to al ages and is of sufficient force to wipe al the sinnes of al mankinde Because it is the death not of à simple man but of that man who also was the onelie begotten Sonne of God and à verie God too deliuered vnto death for our sakes as Paule doth saie Hee spared not his owne sonne but gaue him for vs all to death CHAP. 36. 1. The horrible ingratitude of man toward God for the so infinite price of his redemption 2. The causes of mans ingratitude with remedies for them THus howesoeuer wee see both of what price the death of the sonne of God is and also for whō Christ the Lorde of glorie hath suffered nowe on the otherside let vs consider howe alas vngratefull the maior part of mankinde is for the same For the Iewes Turkes and manie prophane people can not abide so much as to heare the name of Christ. For the Iewes blinded with enuie couetousnes and ambition doe interprete the benefite of Christ to be their hurt The Turkes possessed with Mahomets furie like mad men are carried tyrannicallie to abolishe the name of Christ. Manie barbarous nations with the auncientnes of error as it were with a leprosie polluted will not permit the gospel to bee founded Others vnder the name of Christe and pretence of religion to fight vnder the ensigne of satan and endeuour by the blood of saincts to hinder the course of the gospel as doth the Pope the Cardinals the mitred Bishoppes Abbats and al the rablement of y e Antichristian kingdome Manie are altogether indifferent looking for the euent that they rise-vp to that part which hath the better hand Who although they becounted gospellers and called defenders of the faith yet in trueth they bee meere Atheistes such as measure the felicitie of man by honor auctoritie wealth and pleasure Among these although some do couer the prophanenesse of their minde by à certaine outwarde ciuilitie● yet the most part doe imitate Nero and Heliogabalus more truelie thā Christ of whō they haue their name Of this extreeme ingratitude of the world the Lord by the Prophete Isaiah complaineth on this wise I haue nourished and brought vp children but they haue rebelled against me The oxe knoweth his owner and the asse his masters crib but Israel hath not knowen my people hath not vnderstande This ingratitude also the Lord bewayleth when he saith Howe often woulde I haue gathered thy children together as the henne gathereth her chickins vnder her winges and yee would not Againe where hee saith Manie are called but few are choosen By which saying the Lorde both commendeth the infinite mercie of God inuiting all men vnto the knowledge of his sonne that by him they maie be saued and reprooueth the intollerable blindnes and ingratitude of verie manie men who as if they were mad laie violent hande vppon the Phisition that woulde heale and set vpon him as if hee were an enemie rendring for life and celestial promotion offered death and euil wordes This ingratitude is by so much the greater as the benefite is greater that is contemned So that it is worthie the euerlasting hatred of all the chaste Angels and electe of God If you respect y e heaps of wicked men smal is the nūber of them which esteeme the benefites of Christ as they ought Who I beseech you can sufficientlie bewaile with teares this phrensie of mē But of force it must be some detestable euil thing which can with-draw
man formed after the image of God from so great good vnto such euil from life vnto death from à friende to an enimie vnto à traitor from à sauiour vnto damnation from saluation brieflie frō God the fountain of al goodnes righteousnes life saluation happines and honor vnto the diuel the auctor of al wickednesse vnrighteousnesse death damnation and perpetuall infamie But this euil which indeede is manifolde the blinded man perceaueth not And although sometime as it were through à casement it beholdeth à certaine shadowe thereof yet by and by it forgettes the same as he who hath seene his face in à glasse Which thing doubtlesse is greatlie to bee lamented For the first steepe vnto health as they saie is to knowe the sickenesse For the knowledg of the disease stirreth such as loue their health to seeke à Phisition Let vs therefore as the skilfull Phisitions doe in healing diseases seeke-out the causes of so great euill that knowing them both a Physition maie bee sought and remedie maie be applied to heale the same Wee then wil search-out the causes of mans vsual ingratitude and contrariwise oppose medicines for this common euil that so by comparing them together the contrarie causes of contrarie effectes maie the better both bee knowen and discerned Paul writing vnto the Ephesians doeth recite sixe causes aswell of this euil as of all other wickednesse raigning in the world which in order wee wil declare The first cause is that which he calleth the fleshe that is the wickednes of the corrupted nature in men after the fal of Adam This wickednes is like à filthie fountain from which pestilent vapors doe issue whereby all the cogitations al the counsels and actions of man are infected and corrupted as it were with deadlie poison And although this fountaine can not wholie bee stopped but oftentimes it wil breake out yet the course thereof as much as maie be is to be repressed which is done after thiswise The Gospel of Christ must be harkened vnto which when we beleeue we are endued with the holie Ghost which is à newe spring in the heart of man from whence floweth pure water springing vnto euerlasting life For frō this new foūtan wherby y e course of y e filthie spring which we haue throgh y e corruptiō of nature is stopped do issue godlie cogitations counsels and works like riuers frō an euerlasting fountane The seconde cause of this euil ingratitude is the lust of the fleshe that whereby the flesh or original sinne doth work to bring out most abhominable fruite The force of this concupiscence al mortal men doe feele in thēselues though diuerslie And it is as à litle riuer slowing from the fountaine and infecting whatsoeuer it meeteth with y e horrible stinch it hath Against this the lust of the spirite is opposed the which like à pleasant riuer floweth from the holie Ghost wherewith such as haue turned from their sinnes are endued the which maketh the cogitations and actions to spring at it were and to prosper But concerning the workes of the lust of the flesh and the fruite of the lust of the spirit reade the 5. chapter vnto the Galathians The thirde cause of ingratitude and of other sinns is the cogitation of the flesh to wit when y e cogatatiō raised-vp by concupiscence enterpriseth to reason and to dispute of those thinges which concupiscence doeth offer as gratefull and pleasant to the fleshe This Paul to the Romanes calleth the Wisedome of the flesh and enimitie against God For seeing it swarueth not from her beginning that is from the fleshe and the lust thereof it cannot sauour those things which are of God To this the wisedome of the spirite is opposed which the Apostle vnto the Romanes nameth The wisedome of the spirite This wisedome of the spirite when it taketh the ground of her reasoning from her fountane as from à beginning it cannot by reasoning conclude any other thing but that which is of the spirit God whome alwaies it beholdeth The fourth cause of our ingratitude and disobedience towarde God is The wil of the fleshe and of the minde As Paul saith This laboreth to attaine enioie that which y e wisedome of the flesh persuaded vnto as delectable For in this will there is election and lust whose end is the vse of the thing desired And although the will of reason doe sometime reclame the reasoning of the fleshe yet for the most parte by the violence of the fleshe it is borne-awaie euen as à shippe is violentlie carried-awaie by contrarie windes striue the marriner neuer so much For this will of the fleshe the Philosophers yea and Paul too calleth Selfe-loue which is à blind vndiscrete sauage loue of the bodie hurteful both to him that hath it and to others which Socrates not knowing the fountane of euil calleth the heade and the spring of al wickednesse Because it taketh awaie mutual charitie whereof all mischiefe ariseth among men while through the instinct hereof they seeke after wealth auctoritie preferment and pleasure wherein they doe place the soueraigne felicitie of man Against this wil of the fleshe and of the minde is opposed the will of the spirite the fourth cause of good workes and commaundeth such thinges as bee contrarie to the flesh and her will Which wil of the spirite maie bee called also Selfe-loue but yet à right cōmendable loue such as foloweth not the sense of the fleshe but the iudgement of the spirite This right and commendable Selfe-loue driueth à man to endeuour to labor and with earnest praiers to craue to beg that y e most excellent part of vs which is the minde maie be endued with true godlinesse and virtue and that to this ende that it maie bee ioined to God the soueraigne good in whom onelie the true felicitie of man doth consist This difference betweene this double Selfe-loue our Sauiour doth teach when hee saith He that hateth his life yeelding nothing therevnto in these casual and transitorie things he doth as hee shoulde loue it desireth to be saued but he y t loueth by yeelding he hateth it seketh y e destructiō of his soule As there is thē a doble self loue so there is à double selfe hatred One according to the right iudgement of the minde whereby we auoide the enticements of the flesh withdrawing vs from God the other of the foolishnesse of the fleshe whereby we despise the thinges concerning vertue goodlines and honestie This is à prophane and hurtful the other is holie and à necessarie hatred The fifth cause of mans vnthankefulnesse to God is the peruerse dealing of the world the infinite offences and the innumerable examples of all manner wickednesse This euil custome of the worlde is the fodder of all iniquitie naughtinesse and peruersitie whereby manie euen of such as purposed to feare God
are carried-awaie so that they become wilde oftentimes and spurne against GOD. Hereof it is that we see in all states such contempte of the Gospell which reprooueth this darkenesse Hereof spring the detestable behauiour of parentes the il bringing-vp of children For while men doe looke-vppon the multitude auctoritie and power of such as sinne they excuse themselues by example as they did who dispising the spirite of Christ in Noah at the length suffered due punishment in the floude This wickednesse doeth deserue that men shoulde bee punishod with à reprobate minde as Paule saith GOD deliuered them vp into à reprobate minde according to the threatening of the lawe The LORDE shall smite thee with madnes and with blindnes with astonieng of hart For such as are forsakē of God for their custome of sinning are by little and little so berest of their wits blinded and strucken with astonishment of heart that they become without feeling and giue themselues to wantonnesse not vse Paul his wordes calling vertue dishonestie good euil wholesome thinges hurtfull and iudge cleane amisse than which no paine can bee imagined more grieuous When therefore we beholde the most part of mankinde to rushe headlong as it were into al manner wickednesse let vs call into minde the greatnesse of Gods displeasure who by his moste righteous iudgement permitteth that mans rebellion bee punished with madnesse Of which madnes Paul writeth when hee saith Because they receiued not the loue of the trueth that they might bee saued God sent them strong delusion that theie shoulde beleeue lies But most horrible is it that this punishment shoulde sticke in the posteritie according to the saying of Salomon He that rewardeth euil for good euil shal not depart from his house Therefore when wee see men to bee delighted in the filthines of sinne let vs auoide y e examples of iniquitie against thē let vs set the obedience of y e chast spirits the examples of the sancts who deemed nothing either more pleasant or more auncient or better then faith and obedience whereby we are ioined to God And let euerie man take heede that he be not taken with the deceitful counsels of the flesh For there be which doe purpose but most foolishlie before their death to repent not considering how by too much vsing to sinne that sinne becommeth euen à nature as it were For as Augustine doth saie while custome is not resesied it becommeth necessitie And the Poet When à sickenes hath taken roote If thou take Phisicke it wil not boote The sixt cause of mans disobedience and of all wickednes raigning in the worlde is the Prince of this aer as the Apostle saith euen the diuel himselfe He is present to all those causes aboue recited as à chiefe capitane For hee insinuateth himselfe to the corrupted nature and stirreth vp the concupiscence by obiectes poisons and confirmeth the cogitations of the flesh and moueth the will by wonderful slights snares encreaseth the wicked manners of men to spread abroad his kingdome the farder and to abolish the kingdome of Christ by little and little Againste this prince of the aër is opposed the prince of the Church euen the Lorde of hostes who is hier than the heauens from whome are the causes of godlie actions aboue recited For he doeth giue the holie Ghost cherishe the lust of the spirite strengthen good cogitations keepe the wil and proposeth the examples of holie men but chieflie his owne example to be imitated of vs. Or in fewer wordes A liuelie faith in Iesus Christ is the general remedie againste all the wickednesse and peruersitie of y e world For this is the victorie that ouercōmeth the world euen our faith For by this Christ the conqueror of darkenes is possessed by this à new spirit whereby we resist y e flesh is obteined by this the whole bodie of sinne is killed and mortified and by this in al troubles wee doe flie vnto the name of the Lorde that is vnto praier the safest sanctuarie the righteous runneth vnto it and is exalted CHAP. 37. 1. Of Christ his intercession for vs 2. And of diuerse notable thinges to be considered in the same THE thide and last parte of Christ his Priesthood is his intercession for y e whole Church and for each particular member of the same For as Christe alone by the sentence of the law is perfectlie righteous and alone hath giuen himselfe à ransome for the redemption of all So hee and none beside is the mediator of intercession inasmuch as intercession dependeth vppon the merite of righteousnes and of the price giuen for à redemption And therefore Paul doeth saie There is one mediator betweene God and man euen the man Christ Iesus who gaue himselfe à ransome for all men Vppon this place Theodoret writeth thus There is one peace maker who hath ioined those thinges which were contrarie and distant Hee called Christe à man because hee called him an intercessor for man was made intercessor And as hee that woulde reconcile two ioining their handes together doth put himselfe betweene and taking one by the right hande and the other by the lefte doeth ioine them together So Christe when hee had vnited the diuine nature to the humane did procure such à friendeshippe as can neither bee violated nor broken And Paule vnto the Romanes doeth saie Who shall condemne It is Christe which is deade yea or rather which is risen againe who is also at the right hande of GOD and maketh request for vs. Heere the Apostle against condemnation setteth the intercession of Christ sitting at the right hand of the father and making intercession for the Church and for euerie member thereof And vnto the Hebrewes it is thus written of him This man because he endureth euer hath an euerlasting Priesthood Wherefore hee is able also perfectlie to saue them that come vnto God by him seing he euer liueth to make intercession for thē As therefore the force of y e obedience of y e law in christ y e price of his passion is of infinit valor merit so his intercessiō is most effectual and pretious So that it can not bee but his praier on our behalfe for whome hee maketh intercession must bee hearde And for them principalie he maketh intercessiō who are made his members through faith Notwithstanding the difference is herein because when hee was in this worlde hee was à fulfiller of the law And with one oblation once made hath hee consecrated for euer them that are sanctified But as yet hee maketh intercession for vs with his father as the eternal priest of the Church For so saith Iohn If anie man sinne wee haue an aduocate with the father Iesus Christ the iust Wherefore Christ maketh intercession both now and alwaie for y e Church whose intercession dependeth vppon the merite of his righteousnes and the
himselfe a Church wherein his truth is sounded and showen from age to age and for admitting vs into that companie which both in this worlde doe professe his Name and in the worlde to come shal euerlastinglie extoll his goodnes And secondly it is our dueties by all the giftes and meanes which God hath imparted vpon vs to aduance and promote this trueth Which they among others do worthilie that by preaching but they as I thinke best of al performe which by writing publish spread-abroad the same and that not onely because for y e time present they do greatly profit but especialie for that they prouide both for the instruction and comfirmation of the posteritie to come For bookes wil teach and strengthen testifie and consute when men happilie cannot In which respect we are much beholding to the Prophets much to the Apostles to the Fathers much and much to the Godlie learned of our age For by their bookes and writings wee knowe the trueth which otherwise smallie or not so perfectlie coulde be vnderstoode Of which truth I doe nowe present vnto your Honor noble Comitisse à most singular descriptiō drawen out of the pure fountanes of Gods holie word and to the ouerthrowe of al aduersaries of the same whether theie be Iewes Turks Papists Atheistes or whatsoeuer heretikes written in the Latine tongue by that learned and paineful Pastor in the Church of Christ at this day Nicholas Hemmingius publique professor of diuinitie at Haffine à famous Vniuersitie in Denmark Which treatise I haue translated into English for these causes One is that the ignorant sort of people may see howe Protestants are not so as the Papists giue out at variance among themselues For this work with infinite other good bookes of foraine writers in our English tongue doth shew that touching the substance of Religion we varie not neither wil by Gods grace though Satan gladly would bring it so to passe ●nother is that it may bee knowen from time to time that the Religion which al the Protestants in the world doe maintaine is not à seruice of God newlie found-out by Luther Melancton Caluine and others as the Papists vntruely report but is verie ancient and grounded altogether vpon Gods holy worde For this trueth here described is builded not vpon the weake in ●entions of man but vpon the holie scriptures as may easilie appeare The third that it may be more knowen and cōmon then hitherto it hath bine For this is proper to true Religion which thing is not proper either to Poperie or to any sect of heretikes that the more it is knowen the more it is desired the more common the more commended The last is seing how good Christians do both studiouslie reade and also gratefulie accept good Books in our vulgar tongue at this day to giue them an occasion when either for the ignorance negligence or Non residence of their Pastors or for other causes they can not heare y e word preached to inflame their zeales by the reading of this Booke which in al respectes is so necessarie and singular as in mine opinion though there be manie good yet but fewe better Bookes And that it maie be read with more pleasure and vnderstoode with more ease I haue not onlie illustrated the same with the places of Scripture but also diuided the Booke into Chapters the one sheweth the integritie of the doctrine and the other openeth the excellencie of the method And these my labors I am bolde nowe to publishe vnder your name Noble Comitisse moued thereunto partlie by the good reporte generalie giuen of your Honor as one which maketh no smal account both of Christian religion and of them who are Christianlie religious and partelie by that fauour which my selfe haue found at your handes the which I beseech your goodnesse accept wel in worth God almightie euen for his sonnes sake confirme your Ladieship in that truth vntil your liues ende whereof nowe you are not neither neede to be ashamed and graunt to your Honor and to the Right Honourable your husband both the perfect felicitie of this life to your hearts desire and in the worlde to come those thinges which he hath prepared for such as vnfeinedlie doe loue him Amen The fourth of Nouember Anno 1581. At your Honors commandement Thomas Rogers ¶ TO THE HONOrable and for wisdome godlines and vertue the renowmed Lorde Peter Oxe Lord of Gisselfelde Master of the Palace both of the King and also of the Kingdome of Denmarke c. his most gratious Lord and worthie Pation NICHOLAS HEMMINGIUS wisheth al peace safetie and prosperitie in his godlie enterprises HOWE great the darkenes of mans minde is concerning God and his prouidence right Honorable not onelie the infinite sectes in à manner of Philosophers but also the lamentable securitie of verie manie men who by their life and conuersation doe shewe that either they acknowledge no God at al or thinke that God as it is in Homer doth so dallie-out the time among I knowe not what Ethiopians that he hath no leasure to see vnto the state of mankinde doe witnes Such is the darkenes the vanitie of men is such euer since the fal of our first Parentes and mightilie hath it beene confirmed partlie through euil education partlie by the examples of those who doe seeme to excell others both in wisedome and vertue This loathsome darknes none other way cā be depelled thā by the torch of god his world Hitherto keth that question and answere of Dauid Wherewith shal à yong man redresse his waie In taking heede to thy worde Now seeing that as youthis such is age as Salomon saith it foloweth that without the worde of God which is the only remedie for wickednesse the whole life of man is altogether vncleane And that vncleanenes which cleaueth in al men vntil it be through God his worde washed-awaie is not so much à bodily as à spiritual inwarde blot cōsisting of many partes Whereof the firste which is the spring of others is theignorance both of the trueth and of goodnes is compared vnto grosse darkenes and vnto blindnes wherebie the whole soule of man as it were an ouglie monster gropeth in the darke The second is to haue an erronius opinion of heauenly matters to imbrace and loue the same as the most euident trueth As manie Philosophers and heretikes had who by stiffe mainteining opinions touching heauenlie mysteries rushed-headlong into damnation Thā which nothing could be more lamentable The thirde is in thought to yeelde vnto wicked affections For as the minde is wickedlie informed So the affection of the minde raised-vp by sinister iudgement is carried-awaie into that which is worst The fourth is to consent vnto sinne after which ensueth an horrible swarme of al manner wickednes as Paul in his first chapter vnto the Romans disputeth vntil man be vtterlie drowned in euerlasting miserie From these lamentable spots the soule of man is
fewe attaine-vnto could for all that persuade the people howe theie were to be folowed Hitherto generalie haue we spoken of heauenlie miracles now come we vnto y e markes wherebie diuine are distinguished from diuelish and true from from fained miracles The notes are sixe namelie the truth of the nature the power the manner of doing the efficient cause the cause mouing before it be wrought and the ende By these notes as it were by à touch-stone miracles aswell of Christ and of the Saintes namelie diuine as fained and diabolical as of Magicians and inchanters are to be examined For the first therefore The truth of the essence is to be considered All the miracles of Christ haue the trueth of the essence that is are such in deede as theie seeme to be Lazarus had lien foure daies in the graue stoonk againe therefore without doubt he was dead Therefore Christ raising him from the dead wrought à true miracle in deede For beeing raised he liued truelie he eate and dranke wherebie manie Iewes that knew him marueled much at the miracle Neither was there wanting which sought to kil Lazarus that so theie might either blemishe or denie the dead And therfore it was à true miracle But the miracles of the diuel and of magicians are done by iuggling and deluding the eies as those were in times passed that happened in Epidaurus and els where or by secret and natural philosophie For the diuel who exactlie perfectlie knoweth both the nature power of things can secretlie applie either herbes or stones the effect whereof is counted of ignorant men for a miracle albeit it be the worke of nature The second note whereby true miracles are knowne from false is the power whereby theie are wrought the which if it exceede the power of nature is doubtles diuine and the miracles so done haue God for the author of them This diuine power may diuerslie be seene in the miracles both of the Saintes and of Christ himself First in y e verie action as for y e sūne to staie his course or to returne frō the west vnto the East for a man to walke vpon the waters as vppon drie land which thing we reade our Sauiour to haue done Secondlie in the subiect vppon whom the deede is done as to giue to the blinde sight and life to the dead For nature may giue both light and life too but not either to the blinde or to the dead as our Sauiour did Thirdlie by the order also and manner wherby they are done as suddenlie to cease à tempest and the troubled sea suddenlie to heale the sicke So do we reade our Sauiour Christe to haue commaunded the windes and the sea and the tempests which forth-with obeied him manietymes euen with à becke and suddenlie to haue healed leapers and others Fourthlie by the worker as to behold the heartes of men which thing belongeth onlie vnto God How often I pray you do we reade that Christ sawe the verie cogitations sometyme of his owne disciples somtyme of his aduersaries Fiftlie by the instrument wherwithal the miracle is done as with claie to restore sight to y e blind wheras claie naturalie wil make blinde rather but the Lord vsed claie in healing the blind that the curing might seeme to proceede not from nature but from the God of nature And so Christ did worke al sortes of miracles that if anie man as the mindes of men are very diuers should suspect or not be throughlie persuaded in some one so manie and so diuers were added that now al matter and occasion of doubting is quite remoued so y e none may dout whether y e miracles of Christ were done by the power of God But neither the diuel nor anie other power that is finite can worke such miracles And although manie thinges do seeme to be miracles yet in truth theie are not because they be wrought by the power of nature as by herbs or some other thing which the diuel secretlie can applie And therefore manie thinges are done which are knowen to the skilful in the nature of thinges that y e rude people accounte for miracles as are those thinges which are done by Art magike as aboue also we haue noted The thirde note followeth to wit the maner of working miracles Sometime Christ by onely commanding shewed miracles to declare how he was the Lorde of nature sometime he did so by inuocation to giue men to vnderstand from whome he had all thinges and also to meete with their slander who said that in the name of Beelzebub the chiefe of the diuels he cast-out diuels somtime by y e vse of one thing or another as by clay or spittle to shew that God worketh somtime by meanes somtime with-out means somtime contrarie to the nature of the meanes sometimes thorough the touching of his garment sometime by his onelie pleasure being absent But the illusions of diuels which haue likenes of miracles are done after foolish and verie ridiculous meanes whereby it maie easelie be perceaued who is the author of them For y e diuel that no man maie suspect them to be done by the power of nature commandeth wordes to be vsed that agree nothing at al to the matter as if an horse be to be healed these wordes are to be said The sea is salt and frosen in the Winter and some such thing more absurd Somtime y t woulfe putteth on à lambes skin and wil haue the wordes of the holie Scripture to be vsed as some verse of the Psalter to be recited or à sentence out of the Gospel to be hung about y e necke or à Masse or moe to be said somtime he wil haue beanes or other things to be put vnder an holie clout of lynen But who can bring al his toies into remembrance the which are better knowen to the bond-slaues of Satan than to the godlie The 4. note is the efficient cause Christ at no time sought occasion to work miracles but alwaies vsed y e occasiō offered He tooke neither time nor place to shewe his cunning but suddenlie alwaies according to the matter ministred But y e diuel deluders of the simple seeke both time place conuenient for their iuggling and haue their certain preparations Againe Christ who excelled in true holines wrought miracles both by him selfe by his good and godlie disciples but Satan doth his fained miracles by wicked by naughtie persōs witches vncleane men by wisemen by fairies by the reprobate who no man can doubt doe worke by guile and fradulentlie The fifte note is the cause mouing before the thing be don The Sonne of God other good men at no time respected their own cōmoditie but the profite of others y t it might appeare how in their miracles they sought not their own glorie but were brought
man woulde worship the water either to be sprincled vpon à man to be baptized or sprincled alreadie and reserued for worship sake Nowe whereas the Papistes doe attribute to the reciting of the wordes of the supper virtue to transsubstantiate to speake as they do the elements surelie they haue learned that of the Magicians and witches rather than of Christ. For he alone it is and none other that by his diuine power worketh in the supper by the hands of his ministers reacheth to vs when wee doe communicate his verie bodie and his verie blod after an vnsearchable maner And wheras in reformed Churches the ministers of the Gospel doe pronounce the historie of the institution of the supper with à loude voice in à knowen tongue they doe it not that anie virtue by that reciting shoulde passe-ouer into the elementes but otherwise for à most holie and profitable purpose For they know nothing is more comfortable to the godlie than to heare the historie of the instituted supper which containeth the causes of the institutiō and commendeth to them the greate loue betweene Christ and his Church And therefore as the Papistes by mumbling with themselues the wordes of the supper commit hainous sacriledge by keeping close the doctrine of Gospel the summe whereof is contained in the historie of the institution of the supper So doe I iudge it an intollerable thing sorelie to be punished if anie woulde celebrate the Lord his supper without repeating the historie of the same taken either out of the Euangelistes or out of Paul Here some perchance wil arise saie in the celebration of the supper in the reformed Churches y e bread is cōmonlie adored euen as in y e papacie Herevnto I doe thus answere If anie in our Churches do worship the bread and the cup he sticketh as yet in à papistical error from which he is to be reuoked by the godlie ministers of the Gospel Then I distinguish betwene the worship of the bread and the reuerence towarde the maiestie of Christ present in the supper which reuerence we do testifie by bowing the knee and by outward gestures of the bodie while we are occupied in the celebration of the supper The which reuerence as I iudge it laweful and godlie and commended to vs by the Apostle Paul so I doe thinke the worship of the breade and of the wine is wicked prophane both because we haue no cōmandemēt to doe without which à godlie minde can appoint nothing in religion and also because it is meere presumption as that which is not cōtent with that vse of the sacrament which the Lorde requireth The sixt It is contrarie to the institution and nature of the Lorde his supper that one seueralie by himselfe shoulde haue à banket without moe communicants For thus doeth Paul saie When ye come together into one place this is not to eate the Lordes supper For euerie man when they shoulde eate taketh his owne supper afore Againe as no man can baptise himselfe alone So neither is it lawful for à priest to minister the Lordes supper priuatelie to himselfe alone If then this Lordes supper be not à priuate banket surelie in vaine do those sacrificers vaunt howe with fiue wordes they can pluck-downe the bodie of Christ from heauen vpon their altar For y e bodie blood of Christ is onelie in y t place where the institution of Christ is maintained and the communion according to the institutiō It is needful then that at the least there be one to minister and another to receaue The seauenth By the helpe of this masse the kingdome of Antichrist which was erected by the diuel is augmented established For the storehouse of al vngodlie worshippings whereby the kingdome of Antichrist is vp-holden is the masse Which therefore the more forceablie doeth deceaue because it hath à forme quite contrarie to y e nature therof For it seemeth goodlie whereas nothing is more abhominable The eight The application of the masse for the dead y t they maie be deliuered frō purgatorie is à meere diuelish inuention For no man is forgiuen without he haue faith wherfore they most horriblie deface the glorie of Christ which do faine that that offering doth merite that remission of sinnes for the deade Furthermore al which depart out of this life doe depart either in faith or without faith In in faith they are blessed according to that Blessed are the dead which die in the Lorde And Peter saith The end of faith is the saluation of soules But if they die without faith the sentence of Christ standeth sure He that beleeueth not on the sonne the wrath of God abideth on him So then there is à double waie to wit à waie of saluation which is of the faithful and à waie of death or damnation which is of al such as refuse in this worlde to beleeue on Christ. Where then is purgatorie frō whence the soules by masses be redeemed for monie Notwithstanding albeit the trueth touching the idolatrous masse of Papistes bee not vnknowen to the Church of God yet the Papistes to shew that they haue some ground doe obiect three thinges as buclers for their defence For first they bring-out the deede of Melchizedech Secondlie they oppose à place of Malachie touching the sacrifice to come among the Gentiles with the like Lastlie they doe amplifie the worthines of the people of the new Testamēt But what force they are of let vs brieflie consider The deede of Melchizedech from whence the Papistes do seeke to haue their cause countenanced is thus described Gen. 14. And Melchi-zedek king of Shalem brought-foorth breade and wine and hee was à Priest of the most high God Therefore he blessed him saieng Blessed art thou Abraham of God most high Hence do they most impudentlie inferre that Priestes must offer to God bread and wine for peace offeringes With as good a consequent might one make this argument Philip is in Spaine therefore the sea is sweet For first they doe corruplie reade He offered for He brought-foorth and in place of the particle And they reade For. Wherby they testifie who is their master euē the diuel the corrupter and slanderer of gods worde Secondlie they doe verie naughtilie distinguish the thinges which are to be compounded and mingled the thinges that are to be distinguished For there be two distinct members of the narration in Moses The former is of the king his deed The latter of the priest his deed Melchi-zedek brought-forth bread wine you haue the king and his deed And he was à Priest of the most high God therefore he blessed him Where you haue the priest and his deed Melchi-zedek therefore in bringing forth bread and wine showed himselfe a liberal king whereby he would refresh the wearied host of Abraham And in blessing Abraham he shewed himself a Priest For it was the office of Priestes to blesse the
of righteousnes and of life from which we are fallen by sin it was needful y t he should both take vpon himselfe the curse of the law with the cause that is our sinnes being made accursed and subiect to death for our sake For so saith Paul Christe hath redeemed vs from the curse of the lawe when hee was made à curse for vs and also restore the blessing of the lawe to vs which he hath deserued for vs by his perfect obedience towarde the lawe vnder which he was made not for his owne sake but for ours And this doeth Paul meane where he saith Christ is the ende of the lawe for righteousnes vnto euerie one that beleeueth And because the resurrection of Christ is à most euident testimonie of this fulfilling the lawe Paul affirmeth howe he is risen againe for our iustification By the merite of his praiers and intercession he hath made an entrance for vs vnto the father as Paul saith vnto the Romans Who shal laie anie thing vnto the charge of Gods chosen c. It is Christ that maketh intercession for vs. Therefore when Christ is said to offer his merites to the father the general sacrifice of Christ containing thistriple merit namelie of his obedience to the law of his passion and of his praiers must be vnderstoode Otherwhile y e sacrifice of Christ is morespecialie taken for his death passion which death passiō is the only propitiatorie sacrifice The figures wherof were y e sacrifices of the Iewes by à singular forme of speech was caled propitiatorie because it was à shadow of this eternal propitiatorie sacrifice euē Iesus Christ. But because aboue where we shewed the vanitie of the Iewes who as yet do looke for the messiah we haue spoken of shadowes in this place we wil speake onlie of the sacrifice of Christe which the scripture calleth expiatorie or propitiatorie from the effect thereof which sacrifice may rightly be defined on this wise The passion of our Lord Iesus Christ the eternal Priest is the propitiatorie sacrifice wherein the eternal sonne of God made man and of the father appointed an eternal Priest by obeieng the father in suffering euen vnto the death of the crosse offered himselfe through the eternal spirite to the eternal father vppon the altar of the crosse sustaining the curse of the law truelie to the end that by this one and most perfect oblation he might satisfie the iustice of God for the offence and punishment of mākinde pacifie the iust displeasure of God and by this onelie sacrifice merit for al which from the creation of the world either haue beleeued or til the ende of the same shal beleeue euen eternal sanctification that is deliuerance from the cursse of the lawe grace benediction life and euerlasting saluation that so being cōformable to Christ theie maie praise and glorifie God for euer and euer This large definition Christe in verie fewe wordes doth comprehend Iohn 17 where he saith For their sakes sanctifie I my selfe that theie also maie be sanctified through the truth But the holie spirit in the Epistle vnto the Hebrewes doth verie copiouslie entreate of this matter and that which scatteringlie is spoken to this purpose in that Epistle I haue gathered together as it were into one bodie that at one sight as it were we maie behold this wonderful worke and after a sort esteeme the greatnes of the benefite and be thankeful to God for this infinite mercie shewed to vs in Christe Augustine saith howe in euerie sacrifice there be foure thinges to be considered namelie who is y e offere● to whō it is offered what is offered and for whō it is offered which foure things are both expreslie distinctlie contained in this our definition For y e sonne of God made man of God the father himselfe ordained an eternal priest is y e offerer For this priest as he alone is holy righteous and hier than the heauens so could he alone offer à perfect sacrifice for euermore Because in that he was à iust man hee might lawfulie take vppon him the cause of vs al especialie seeing one man had brought the rest of the posteritie into the state of damnation with himselfe and in that hee was hier than the heauens to wit verie God hee was of power to offer such a sacrifice as was perfect and effectual for euermore againe in that he was one person al the deedes of his manhood are most pure and of an infinite price To whome doeth this priest offer Euen to God himselfe For to him alone the sacrifice was due that his iustice might be satisfied whome our first parentes and we in them offended that the sentence of condemnation for our transgressing the lawe being vtterlie abolished we might be made partakers of eternal blessednes through his merit What doeth this priest offer to God The sonne of God the eternal priest hath offered himselfe to the father vppon the altar of the crosse taking our cause that is our sinne and punishment vpon himselfe For the Epistle vnto the Hebrewes doeth witnesse that the sonne of God was made partaker of our flesh and bloode that he might haue that which he might offer And Augustine doeth saie What was more meete to bee taken of men for their oblation than the fleshe of man And what so apt for this sacrifice as mortal fleshe And what so cleane for the sinnes of the worlde as without al contagion flesh borne in the wombe out of the wombe of à virgin And what so gratefulie could be either offered or receaued as the flesh of our sacrifice the made bodie of our Prieste Furthermore seeing euerie sacrifice in the olde lawe ought first to be separated from other things of the same kinde secondlie to be applied to the altar the hande of the Priest laide there-vpon thirdlie to be offered vpon the altar fourthlie being done rightlie according to the lawe it was à sacrifice accepted of God let vs see howe these foure thinges do aggree to our sacrifice First therefore Christe this our sacrifice was segregated from other men not by nature whereby he was to be ioined to them but by puritie innocencie and excellencie wherin he surpassed al other men Secondlie he was applied to the altar being consecrated to God through his wonderful obedience For he was offered euen because he woulde Thirdlie hee was offered vppon the altar hanged on the woode of the crosse bearing vppon his owne heade our cause that is both sinne and the punishment of sinne namelie the wrath and curse of God Which thing was in olde time figured in the goate vpon whose heade Aaron hauing confessed first his owne sinnes and the sinnes of the people of Israel laide his owne sinnes and al the sinnes of the sonnes of Israel and sent him awaie by the hande of a man appointed into the wildernes The truth of
that theie knowe the celestial doctrine Which doctrine is for that cause tearmed the waie of the Lord because it is to man as à waie prepared of God to goe therebie from death vnto life and from the troubles of this world vnto blessed immortalitie Walke in my commandementes saith the Lorde by the Prophet Againe Blessed are theie which walke in the Lawe of the Lorde Moreouer the knowledge of this waie that is of heauenlie doctrine somtime is powred in by à secrete blast and inspiration from God without the labor and care of man as maie appeare in the Prophetes and Apostles Sometime it is gotten by the labor and paines of man Which labour hath two partes The first and principal whereof is burning and continual praier vnto God that he would direct vs in his trueth teach vs and lighten the eies of our minde For except the Lord build the house theie labour in vaine that builde it The other part is an earnest studie of God his worde and wil. Nowe that men be rightlie framed vnto that studie sixe thinges be necessarilie required of which breefelie we will speake The first is dailie reading of the scripture Which who so wil reade with profite must haue the knowledge both of those tongues wherin the scripture was at the first written without which neither the kinde of speech nor the phrazes can be vnderstoode and beside not onelie Logique to espie the order methode of the matter but the knowledge beside of other artes and especialie of that part of philosophie caled natural philosophie Paul commendeth this studie of continual reading vnto Timothie when he saith Giue attendance vnto re●ding The second is an obseruation and collection of the principal pointes of heauenlie doctrine without which the paines in reading is to smal purpose For as in al artes this care is necessarie to him that would be substantialie learned so litle shal he profite in the sacred Scripture which obserueth not the chiefe heads of religion neither bringeth al that he readeth vnto some special common place The thirde is à diligent regard vnto common axioms sentences which are as general rules ministring iudgement in doubtful causes as Rhetoriciās of general thesees which therefore theie call consultations do iudge of particulars and causes in controuersie Hitherto maketh obseruation of examples from which the determinations of matters in doubt are fetched oftentimes The fourth is à sure reteining of the premises in minde that when occasion serueth theie maie be drawen out of the treasurehouse of memorie The fift is contemplation wherebie as it were at the first sight of the minde we behold the whole course of the Scripture By this we compare thinges like and vnlike together by this we reconcile contrarie places and by this we seeke definitions diuisions distinctions interpretations of obscure places yea and make à constitution of the bodie of doctrine The sixt is tradition of elders This declareth what the holie fathers haue thought of euerie thing This tradition if it be confirmed by the worde of GOD is of authoritie and weight In which respecte wee faithfullie imbrace at this daie the Creede both of the Nicene councel of Athanasius of Ambrose and that which is caled the Apostles Creede because theie are euident groundes gathered out of God his worde But if the tradition be not proued out of the word of God then is it either contrarie to the worde and therefore we abhorre the same as the voice of the serpent that seduced Euah or it is beside the worde and we receaue it in respect of such as deliuered the same out vntil it be drawen into an euil conclusion by the enimies of true doctrine With this knowledge of the heauenlie doctrine there should be ioyned as in al men so especialie in the ministers of the Gospel á liuelie feeling in the heart without which knowledge doth not profite but hurt rather through the fault of man This liuelie sense proceedeth from faith and other motions agreeing to the Lawe of God which the holie spirite stirreth-vp in the heartes of beleeuers And this sense is called the path-waie of God because as God requireth the same so through it we approch and are ioined vnto God And therefore Paule requireth these two thinges namelie knowledge and feeling together whē he thus writeth This I praie you that your loue maie abound yet more and more in knowledge and in al iudgement that ye maie discerne thinges that differ that ye maie be pure and without offence vntil the daie of Christ filled with the fruites of righteousnesse which are by Iesus Christ vnto the glorie and praise of God So that the end of knowledge is that we should iudge proue and approue those thinges which are the better and most profitable To feeling is subiect synceritie which is à good cōscience before God innocencie of life that we offend no man and plentie of fruits of the righteousnes of faith which proceede from the grace of Iesus Christ and tend vnto the laude praise of God If this liuelie sense with the knowledge of heauenlie doctrine be not in the teachers of the Churche nothing is more cursed in the whole worlde than theie are For when they reproue other mē for sinning theie condemne themselues when theie lift vp others with comfort theie ouer-throwe themselues when theie teach others themselues are confounded to be short whatsoeuer theie doe in the ministerie committed to their charge it is à testimonie to their owne damnation For theie are verie-like the makers of Noahs arke For as theie when the arke was builded wherin Noah and his familie was saued perished in the floud so these men shal perish in the floud of hel fire when such as gaue credite vnto the worde theie preached shal be saued Wherefore let both them which are in the ministerie and them also which purpose to enter into the same consider howe grieuous the punishment is that hangeth-ouer their heades if the feeling in the heart and their life answere not to their doctrine againe what great glorie is laide-vp for them if theie doe builde the Church of Christ with both hands namelie with doctrine and with example Of whiche glorie afterwarde we wil entreate Moreouer the teachers of the Churche ought to shewe the waie of the Lord to men that goe astraie For which cause theie are called the guides of the flocke in the Scriptures that going-before them both in learning and life theie maie both prepare the waie and animate others to followe them And therefore in the prophesie of Isaiah it is written Go-through goe-through the gates prepare you the waie for the people caste-vp caste-vp the waie and gather out the stones and set-vp à standerd for the people Let preachers therefore of the worde vnderstand that as theie ought to goe before other men both by example of
watering of the newe plantes springing-vp in the Church So that à Martyr in suffering doeth not suffer for himselfe onelie as Ambrose saith but also for euerie man For himselfe hee suffereth to bee crowned for euerie man hee suffereth to giue them an example For himselfe to his rest for euerie man to their welfare And although the verie feare of GOD onelie bee à sufficient cause why that Martyrs shoulde endure tormentes couragiouslie for the feare of God shoulde worke so that wee must contemne all other feares after the example of y e Apostles who at the first being sharpelie whipped greeued no whit thereat but triumphed sorowed not but reioiced that they were counted worthie to suffer rebuke for the name of Iesus yet the auncient writers doe make foure causes of the same which they mention on this wise The loue of Christ commaundeth Fortitud● ouercommeth feare Faith confirmeth the mind patience endureth But in à Martyr I require these thinges in order The firste is à firme knowledge and demonstration of the doctrine of the Church the seconde a liuelie faith in Christ the thirde a constant confession and defence of the doctrine the fourth courage of mind to beare the crosse the fifth obedience or patience vnder the crosse the sixte an inuincible hope the seauenth inuocation of GOD to which together with the cause he shoulde commende his soule All which are euident in Stephan the Proto-martyr For neither as Augustine saith can they haue the life of Martyrs who haue not the liues of Christians seeing it is not the punishment but the cause that maketh à Martyr Wherefore the punishment of Anabaptistes and other obstinate heretikes is not martyrdome but a iust punishment due to them by God and the lawes Manie fanatical heads indeede approch without feare vnto the tormentes but it is because they are deluded by Sathan who endeuoreth by their paines to confirme erroneous opinions vnto the destruction of the Church And therefore let vs duelie consider the cause whie we suffer martyrdome least through the delusiōs of y e diuel we be bewitched for to suffer persecutiō to be in prison to be whipped to be kept frō libertie to be killed is no praise but this is praiseworthie to haue a good cause For y e praise consisteth in y e goodnes of cause not in the bitternesse of punishment Neither would I haue anie man for some certaine opinion not contrarie to the foundation of religion to bring himselfe into danger especialie if the iudgementes of the godlie which agree-together in the grounde are diuerse which notwithstanding maie stande without shaking the foundation I meane the article of faith Heere happilie some enquirer of the iudgementes of GOD maie demaunde howe it commeth to passe that God beeing most righteous can suffer his sainctes whome most entirelie hee doeth loue to bee torne after such an horrible sorte and to be mangled and deformed with such contumelies and that of Sathan and his members Heere wee must open the eie not of reason but of faith not the sense of fleshe but of the spirit must be consulted withal that we maie clerelie beholde the trueth and knowe that nothing commeth to the Sainctes of God without his prouidence vnder the shadow whereof they are couered I confesse indeede it is à trim sight for the Diuel to see Abel murthered of his owne brother Daniel cast into the Lyons denne Iob spoiled of his goodes and replenished with botches Steuen to bee stoned yea and all the sainctes with tormentes and shame to bee executed to death But I confesse too that in the eies of God who testifieth that in his sight the death of his Saintes is pretious it is à much more goodlie sight yet not of it selfe but in respect of the euent And therefore both God and the diuel also wil the punishment of the saintes but not both alike but with à diuers affection and purpose For God of mercie suffereth his Saintes to be afflicted but the diuel persecuteth them of malice God that theie maie be crowned the diuel that theie maie be confoūded God as à Father the diuel as à tyran and hangman God for his owne glorie the diuel to his owne confusion Of these causes Augustine speaketh on this wise Euerie wicked man in himselfe hath à will to hurt but yet hath no power in himselfe that he maie hurte that he would he is now accused that he maie through the secrete dispensation of God he is giuen to one to be punished to another to be proued to another to be crowned To be punished the Israelites were deliuered into the handes of strangers because theie had sinned against God To be proued Iob was deliuered to Satan And Iob was proued but Satan put vnto shame To be crowned the Martyrs were tormented of bloudie persecutors And therefore à great deale more happie are the martyrs in their torments than the moste mightie monarches in their delitiousnes riches honour and pleasures Which thing Augustine also doth witnesse when he saith The men of this world are vnhappilie happie but the Martyrs were happilie vnhappie For theie were vnhappie for à time but theie are happie for euer According to the worde of the LORDE Blessed are theie which suffer persecution for righteousnes sake This successe of the Martyrs is notablie described by the Psalmist in these words Theie that doe sowe in teares shall reape in ioie Theie went weeping and carried pretious seede but theie shal returne with ioie and bring their sheaues And hence it is that the holie Martyrs of God doe cast their eies and their minde not vnto the time of sowing and to the purpose of Sathan that would vtterlie ouerwhelme y e Church of God in the streames of blood but especiallie vnto the most ioieful time when the sheaues shalbee gathered together with gladnes and vnto the reuerend prouidence of God who after this maner by his wise counsel wil haue his saintes to be exercised in this life that theie maie be like his sonne both in the crosse in glorie Whence it is that the holie Martyrs of God doe comfort them-selues in the middes of tormentes For theie knowe That light affliction which is but for à moment causeth vnto them à farre more excellent and an eternal waight of glorie that as it is in the Epistle vnto the Hebrues Chastising bringeth the quiet fruite of righteousnes Hitherto maketh that adhortation of Peter Reioice in asmuch as ye are partakers of Christes sufferings that when his glorie shal appeare ye maie be glad and reioice By the remembrance of this prouidence of God let vs strengthē our minds against the offence of the crosse think-vpō à ioiful euent to wit howe theie who in this world beare witnes to Christ shal in y e worlde to come be eternalie blessed with Christ. Furthermore it maie be asked with what seruice are y e martyrs to be worshipped especialie for
not want enimies whome notwithstanding they shall ouercome through the power of GOD wherewith they are strengthened Moreouer the enimies with whome the souldiers of the Church that is the preachers of the worde do encounter they are the diuel and his garde tyrantes sophisters hypocrits and Epicures Against these enimies the ministers of the Gospell enter into the feelde being armed with spirituall armor of which armor wee haue alreadie spoken The Diuel he laieth snares both for the doctrine and for the life of the ministers of the worde that by either or by both he maie ouerthrowe vs. Against this enimie we are to fight by synceritie of doctrine by innocencie of life and by ardent calling-vppon the Lorde of hoastes Submit your selues to God saith Iames resist the diuel and he wil flie from you And as he is obedient to GOD which giueth credite to his worde and liueth according vnto the same So hee resisteth the Diuel inuading the worde and the life who retaineth synceritie of doctrine liueth innocentlie and calleth earnestlie vppon GOD. But when this thadgeth not well with him that is when hee is not able either to corrupte the doctrine or to marre the life hee flieth and confesseth himselfe to bee ouercome And because hee is much more mightier than man is this promise is deepelie to be engrauen in the heart And he will flie from you that is nothing will hurt you he shall not ouerthrowe you by his subtilties so longe as yee abide grounded vpon faith For faith is the victorie of the world that is of the diuel and of al his warriers But for somuch as there is perpetual warre betweene Satan and the Church of Christ we ought then especialie to be in armes when he seemeth to flie awaie For he flieth not as one without al hope of anie buckling againe but that after an other waie he maie returne out of his ambushes with greater force For as he is vnconstant and craftie and of greate experience so hee setteth vppon the ministers of the Gospell nowe this waie and then an other waie and therebie sometime hee he maketh great slaughter as maie appeare in heretikes of al ages among whome there haue ben manie verie learned godlie men but being snarled and vtterlie blinded with the nets of Satan and arguments of blind reason theie haue yeelded And therefore the souldiers of God and guiders of the Church of Christ wil stand in the fore-fronte against the diuel vnder the banner of Christ keeping faith and à good conscience by all maner praiers and supplications praieng alwaies in the spirite and in watching therin with al earnestnesse that vtterance maie be giuen to them in the opening of their mouth with boldenesse that theie maie make the mysterie of God to be knowen for which theie are sent in embassage Tyrants also theie most furiouslie doe persecute the ministers of the Gospel theie kill and dispatch manie out of the world Notwithstanding they do not so much ouercome as theie are ouercome For as their better part to wit the minde is à slaue to filthie affections So the soules of the godlie in the middes of their troubles doe triumph in ioie For theie both comfort themthemselues with à constant hope of the glorie prepared for them and also with the eie of faith theie do behold the miserable destruction of such as persecute them Of which destruction Dauid speaketh after this wise God shall destroie thee for euer hee shal take thee and plucke thee out of thy tabernacle and roote the out of the lande of the liuing The righteous also shal see it and feare and shall laugh at him saying Beholde the man that tooke not God for his strength but trusted vnto the multitude his riches and put his strength in his malice But I shall be like à greene oliue tree in the house of God For I trusted in the mercie of God for euer and euer And therefore Nero in killing Paul was ouercome of Sathan through whose instigation hee persecuted and slewe the Apostle But Paul was crowned and went from victorie vnto victorie For not onelie hee himself receaued à crowne of righteousnes frō the righteous iudge but his blood beside was à certaine watering of the Lords feelde wherby the yong plants of the Church doth more more encrease But here springeth à question concerning flight Whether in the time of persecution godlie pastors maie shifte for themselues by flight to auoide the handes of tyrants especiallie seeing at the first showe there be contrarie sayings and exāples to in the scripture These places should see●e to be contrarie When they persecute you in this citie flee vnto another And An hireling seeth the woulfe comming and he leaueth the sheepe and flieth The examples Christ fledde into Egypt Paul was let-downe in a basket and so escaped from his persecutors On the otherside both Christ and Paul yea and infinite Martyrs and doctors of the Church haue voluntarilie yeelded themselues into the handes of tyrants The contrarietie of these sayinges and examples maie easilie be reconciled if we marke the causes wel He that by fleeing seeketh his owne and not the things which are Christes is much to blame Contrariewise he that by flieng seeketh the glorie of God and not his owne cōmoditie offendeth not And therfore saith Augustine The seruant of God sinneth not though seeing the rage of tyrantes greedelie bent to destroie his soule he changeth his aboade if so be that he commend his flocke to the hie shepherde sitting in heauen and saueth himselfe for their aduantage by flight But this commandement seemeth to bee contrarie therevnto Feare yee not them which kil the bodie but are not able to kil the soule Now what is flight I praie you but a feare If therfore feare be forbiddē flight also is forbidden I answerere when thou art in the hands of à Tyran thou must contemne death according to the cōmandement of the Lord Feare not them which kill the bodie but if thou art out of his clawes thou oughtest to flie from the persecutor not so much to saue thy selfe as for thy sheepe sake prouided alwaies that thy flight be not à betraing of the sheepe For he maketh à tyrant that prouoketh and he that shunneth correcteth him And therefore this distinction of Augustine is to be had in mind When persecution is hoat the ministers of Christe are to flie if so be that either there is no congregation where they are or if there bee when there be ministers enough to fulfil the ministerie which haue not such cause to flie But when the people shal abide and all the ministers flie awaie what else doe they showe themselues but euen cursed hirelings without all care of the sheepe But if Tyrantes doe persecute without all respect all the ministers of the gospel spare the common people what is then to be done Hereunto
For thou Lorde wilt blesse the righteous and with fauour wilt compasse him as with à shielde Againe Thou hast giuen mee the shielde of thy saluation and thy right hand hath staied mee For it seemeth good in the sight of God that the godlie shold not only be cōpassed about with y e crowne of his good wil but also be happie through euerlasting blessednes When Paul writeth vnto the Ephesians Take vnto you the shielde of faith wherewith yee maie quench all the fierie darts of the wicked hee signifieth y t then we are cōpassed-about with the shield of faith when reteining an vnshakened faith of doctrine with à confidence of mercie and à good conscience wee fight à good fight Now what thing I praie you can be more miserable than the enimies of God who haue not this shield For the king of darkenes hath ful power ouer them and casteth them down headlong from one wickednes vnto another til he bring them to vtter destruction The thirde and fourth benefites are Grace and glorie For thus hee saith The Lorde will giue grace and glorie Grace is the fauour of God both pardoning the sinnes of the faithfull for the deathes sake of his sonne also adorning the Church with an vnspotted garment namelie with Christ his obedience or righteousnes Nowe forsomuch as the faithfull doe please through this grace they can not bee otherwise than happie and blessed But they which are without the Church be destitute of this grace guiltie damned in respect of their wickednes Glorie is the attainement of adoption the inhabitation of the holie spirite and the hereditarie possession of eternall happinesse But so manie as bee not within the Church are the bondslaues of Sathan moued with the spirite of the Diuell and reserued for euerlasting shame The fifth good thing or commoditie of the Church which the vngodlie doe want is that which the Psalmist meaneth when hee saith No good thing will be depriue them of that walke innocentlie Here by the fruit iudgement is giuen of the tree For a good tree bringeth-foorth good and profitable fruite but à rotten tree can yeelde nothing but hurtful vnpleasant fruite To walke innocentlie or soundlie or perfectlie for the worde which the Psalmist vseth in this place is oftentimes expressed of interpretors by the worde perfection is when the man which is iustified preferreth obedience towarde God before euen the most pleasant thinges of the worlde This definition maie bee proued out of the 22. Chapter of Genesis Nowe there is a double perfection of Christians of imputation of obedience He is perfect by imputation that beleeueth in Iesus Christ according to that Christ is the ende of the lawe for righteousnes vnto euerie one that beleeueth Hee is perfect by obedience which loueth obedience to God warde more than all thinges of the worlde Yet is not this perfection an absolutnes of worke according to the rule of the law but it is a purpose an endeuorment and a studie of the minde whereby a man daielie more and more goeth forwarde vnto the marke of perfection Ths endeuorment throught the approbation of God is called perfection And that this Christian perfection is to be referred vnto the will and affection of the heart these testimonies ensuing doe witnesse Feare the Lorde and serue him in vprightnes in trueth of heart Againe And thou Salomon my sonne knowe thou the God of thy father and serue him with à perfect heart and with à willing minde Hezekiah in the prophecie of Isaiah doeth testifie howe hee fulfilled the same when hee saide I beseech thee Lorde remember now how I haue walked before thee in trueth and with à perfect hart and haue done that which is good in thy sight And this perfection Paul requireth when he saith Fight à good fight hauing faith and à good conscience For through faith the obedience of Christe which is the fulfilling of the Lawe is obteined à good conscience is kept by a willingnes to obeie whereby a godlie man preferreth obedience towarde God before all thinges although mā cannot fulfill the same in such absolute forme as the rule of the lawe doeth require Moreouer when the Psalmist doeth saie No good thing will he depriue them of which walk innocentlie it is to bee vnderstood concerning the rewarding of the obedience showen through faith For in this place hee speaketh not of the causes of saluation but of the effect of faith wherewith being iustified we are saued And therefore this and such like sentences of which sort there be manie in the scripture be thus to bee vnfolded They y t walke innocentlie shall not bee depriued of good thinges Whie so Because they which walke innocentlie doe beleeue And al beleeuers are righteous through Christ his righteousnesse imputed vnto them To the righteous life and abundance of all good thinges in such sorte is proposed that they shal desire nothing to the consummating of true happines And therefore so manie as walke innocentlie shall not be depriued of good thinges After which sort the like sentences are to bee vntied that wee maie be led from the proper effect vnto the proper cause and againe conclude frō the proper cause other effectes adioined and following of the same as when it is saide Blessed are they which suffer persecution for the confession of Christ heere mention is made not of the cause of blessednes but of the effecte of faith and of that which necessarilie doth followe faith And therefore the sentence is thus to be opened They are blessed which suffer persecution for the confession of Christ. Why so Because they doe beleeue For it is a proper effect of faith to confesse Christe in the time of persecution But the faithfull bee righteous through Christe his obedience And the righteous doe liue and are blessed by the hope of eternall felicitie Therefore they who suffer persecution for the confession of Christ are blessed Nowe the holie scripture vseth this manner of speech for two causes One is that we shoulde iudge of true and liuelie faith by the naturall properties which it hath leaste for the true faith wee embrace a fained and false faith Another is that we maie be stirred-vp with the promise of the rewarde of obedience the more cheerefullie to doe our dueties and not waxe negligent in respect of the manifold difficulties which happen manie times and make manie slouthful But touching this point wee haue spoken more at large aboue where wee confuted the errors of Papistes who verie naughtilie doe confounde the causes and effectes and manie times of the qualities affections and workes of y e saintes do make the causes of iustification and saluation whose errors bee ouerthrowen by the pretious bloode of our onelie mediator For in the matter of iustification al mans merites are quite contrarie vnto the merite of Christ his death Last of all seeing the wicked which
welter in their sinnes fighting vnder the standard of sathan are depriued of these blessings whiche the Church onelie is partaker-of doubtlesse there can bee nothing more miserable than to wander without the Church of God and to bee carried from sinne vnto sinne vntill theie fall headlong into euerlasting wretchednesse THE FOVRTH part of the Psalme CHAP. 1. 1. The summe of the fourth part of this Psalme 2. Whie the Church is happie THE fourth part of the Psalme is a conclusion expressed with an admiration wherein is declared howe the true cause of the Churches felicitie is a firme confidence in God The 12. verse O LORD OF HOSTES BLESSED IS THE MAN WHICH TRVSTETH IN THEE HItherto by qualities affections and sundrie actions hee hath shewen who are the citizens of the Church that shal be blessed saued now he laieth before our eies the cause of iustification and of happines namelie a trust in the mercie of God which is ratified in Christ alone Blessed saith he is the man which trusteth in thee This confidence springeth of knowledge according to the saieng of the Psalme Theie that knowe thie name will truste in thee for thou Lorde hast not failed them that seeke thee But whie is he blessed that trusteth in the Lorde Because he is the heire of eternal life Wherefore is he heire of eternal life Because he is righteous Whie righteous For that he is in Christ and of Christe hath that which the lawe requireth namelie righteousnes according to this sentence Christe is the ende of the lawe for righteousnes vnto euerie one that beleeueth And therefore confidence dependeth vpon the promise of free mercie Free mercie dependeth vpon fatherlie kindenes Fatherlie kindenes is grounded in the merite of the sonne the merite of the sonne is the ransome for the sinnes of the whole world which ransome is by faith applied to man For as the medicine not being applied vnto the diseased place bringeth no profite to the sick So the promise of fre mercie in Iesus Christ although of it selfe it be true and strong yet doeth it not profit man vnlesse he haue faith whereby application is made And yet maie it not bee thought that application through faith is made in respect of the merite or dignitie of the beleeuing man but for Iesus Christ his sake whome man through faith apprehēdeth that by his blood he maie be purged from sinne and endued with his righteousnes wherebie God maie accept him For the lawe hath nothing which it maie accuse in the faithful Because theie haue the righteousnes which the lawe exacteth and for which it promiseth life Notwithstanding after that man is iustified by faith he is to liue by the virtue of the spirite of faith For it cannot be that à man at one time can truely beleeue and liue after the flesh Therefore saith Paul If Christ be in you the bodie is dead because of sinne but the spirite is life for righteousnes sake Here the Apostle putteth à double effect of Christ dwelling in vs through faith to witte mortification and life So then wheresoeuer à liuelie and healthful faith is there also be the naturall properties of the same Hence it is that the scripture doth iudge of faith by the properties thereof and that to the ende that no man should deceaue himselfe with à vane shew of faith As therefore we gather the life of the bodie by the motion thereof So we knowe the life of faith by good workes But by the waie diligent heede is to be taken that we do not confoūd the faith wherebie Christ is apprehended either with his properties or with the qualities affections or actions of such as are iustified For theie which so doe ouerthrowe the doctrine of free iustification Moreouer the Hebrewe worde wherebie confidence in this place is signified is opposed against doubtfulnes and expressed by manie wordes of Paul among which are these Elenchos which is when the minde conuicted with firme reasons touching the truth of God doth rest it selfe Hupostasis wherebie the minde setteth it selfe against all obstacles or tentations Plerophoria by which à godlie man is carried with ful course into the hauen of blessednes Pepoithesis confidēce of which ariseth boldnes For these causes faith is compared by the Prophet Isaiah to à girdle about the loines by the Apostle Paul to à shield by Hosea the Prophet to à token of marriage and by Saint Peter to golde which is tried in the fire CHAP. 2. 1. Of iustification 2. The sundrie sortes of testimonies of the holie Scripture concerning iustification FOrsomuch as Dauid in this place doth pronounce those blessed that trust in God and no man can be blessed vnlesse he be righteous For the faithful are therefore blessed because they be righteous for no man euer yet was or shalbe blessed without righteousnes which righteousnes is the cause of life yea and of saluation and true blessednes I thinke it good in this place to adioin à briefe discourse touching the iustification of man before God And although this doctrine of iustification is plainlie deliuered both in the Vniuersities and Temples of this Realme yet forsomuch as much darkenes is often mixed to this cleare light especialie of politike fellowes and hypocrites whereof the one sorte applieng themselues to the Ciuil Courtes do measure righteousnes by the measure of reason and the other putting on the visor of righteousnes wil bee counted righteous and holie● and neither sort knowe rightlie to iudge betweene those testimonies of Scripture which properlie belong vnto the causes of iustification and betwene those other sentences to be applied vnto other purposes according as circumstances of places and the analogie of faith shall require I will propose foure sortes of testimonies of Scripture which are woont to bee handled in this matter wherebie it shall moste euidentlie appeare what is the true sentence of the Church of God concerning the iustification of man before God and of what account the obedience of the faithful toward God is The sorts of testimonies be these The first is about the extreme right of the lawe according to the rule of GOD his iustice The seconde of the most comfortable equitie of the Gospel according to the promise of grace The third touching the proper and necessarie fruites of faith and of the properties qualities and actions of such as are iustified The fourth of the rewarde of the good workes according to the promises of God This difference of testimonies being knowen it wil be an easie matter to iudge of this whole doctrine CHAP. 3. 1. The first sort of testimonies concerning iustification 2. That no man can fulfil the lawe 3. Against the Pelagians and Papistes 4. Argumentes that none can fulfil the lawe by the power of nature THe first order of testimonies concerneth the extreme right of the lawe according to the rule of Gods iustice which is the lawe it selfe Nowe the extreme right of the lawe is to
Martyrdome 421 kinds of martyrdome 421 profite of martyrdome 421 whie the godly suffer martyrdome 424. Martyrs who 421 423. Martyrs not to be worshipped 427 428. Masse The Masse 168 none indifferent thing 168 an harlot 203 the masse à sacrifice and à sacrament and howe 204 Canon of the Masse 205 the abomination thereof 206 whie it is abominable 207 not commanded of God 207 contrarie vnto the institution of Christ 208 the ground of purgatorie 216 the strength of Antichrist 216 with what argument maintained by papistes 222 the Popishe masse one thing their communion an other 230. Material cause of sacrifices 183. Christ our onelie mediator 302. Mediators betweene God and man 212 à Mediator whie needeful 486. Meditation what 144 fruit of holy Meditation 323 Meditation offered by baptisme 106. Men worshipped for Gods 191. Men by Aristomenes sacrificed 194 by the French men sacrificed 195 by Germans 195 sacrificed vnto Bacchus 193. vnto Ma●s sacrificed 193 sacrificed vnto Saturn 194. Merchants 96. God his mercie whereunto compared 266 what it comprehendeth 390 his mercie in punishing sin 414. Christ y e way by merit 123. Merits of the sainctes the treasure of the Church 214. Ministerie of the Gospel 129 difference betweene the ministerie and the ministers 397. Ministers Kindes of Ministers in the Church 150 auctoritie to make ministers à note of y e true church 172 the the holie spirit howe in ministers 398 ministers howe called 399 knowledge of Gods word required in à Minister 400 state of wicked ministers 404 true ministers aboue al subiect vnto affliction 408 cōforts for ministers in their troubles 450 ministers whie priests 361 and howe 362. Miracles Diuine miracles what and their effectes 64 whie wrought and whie not wroght in these daies 66 howe wrought 68 Miracles of Christ 28 howe to knowe false from true Miracles 67 diuelish Mira●les howe done 68 Miracles not wroght by the diuel 69. Miserie Miserie of man without Christ 258 cause of man his miserie 258 the degrees of mans Miserie 259 the ende of mans Miserie 262. The Moone worshipped for a God 191. Mount Zio● what 53. Musike why reteined in the Church 391. N Natural life 127. Natural philosophie 401. Nature of oile 345. Noblemens children sacrificed 194. O Obedience to the Lawe 373. Obedience to the Lawe a part of Christ his sacrifice 247. Obedience to Magistrates 430. Obseruation 402. Office of the Messiah 51 61. Office of the priest in the olde Lawe 186. Nature of Oile 345. Opinions of Christ 17. Oracle of Apollo 194. Order whie obserued in the Church 167. Ordinarie power of the Church 152. Organs why reteined in the Church 391. Original cause of idolatrie 189. Ouerseers 151. Oxen worshiped for Gods 191. P Paine followeth pleasure 380. Palenes worshipped for a God 191. Pallace of the Messiah 52. In the Papacie what good thinges 228. Papistes 16 they neglect the commandements of God for their owne traditions 512. Papistical seruice 2●● Papisticall good workes what 511 the causes of them 513. Papistical traditions diuers 511. Paradise of the Turkes 90. Parentes killed of their children in sacrifices 93 Parentes murtherers of their owne children in sacrifices 194 195. Partes of Christ his Priesthoode 242. Paschal Lambe compared to Christ. 35. The Passeouer whie instituted 26. Patience à sacrifice 359. Patriarchs 151. People of the Messiah 56. Perpetuitie of the Church 391. Persecution 441 à twofold persecution 467. Philosophie natural 401. Pleasure of y e bodie à vaine thing 380. Pomegranate 180. The Poore most readie to embrace the gospel 26. The Pope the keeper of Epicurns booke 100. Whom the Pope curseth 164 his punishing of transgressor● 168 205 The Pope a spiritual baude 203 whie forsaken of Luther 209 Popes vsurpers of auctoritie 151. The summe of Poperie 97. A Popish priest who 197. Popish priesthoode contrarie to the priesthoode of Christ 198 Popish baptisme 229. Power of the Church 152 156. Praier Praier 401 true praier what 456 à sacrifice 356 when accepted 301 302 signified by incense 197 publique Praier a note of the true Church 17● Praise of God a sacrifice 355. Praise of God 390 wherein it consisteth 390 who praise God 390 howe the creatures praise God 391. Whether Preachers in the time of persecution may flie 441. Preachers be the souldiers of Christ. 12. Preaching of Christ. 2● Preaching nccessarie 322. Preaching a note of y e true Church 171. Preaching to y e spirites 102. Presence of God in the Church 452. God whie present in the Church 451. Preseruation of y e Church 125. Priest The Priest his office in sacrificing 186 the necessitie of an hie Priest 237 his condition 239 Christians are priestes and howe 344 ministers are Priestes 361 ministers howe Priests 362 Priesthood of the new Testament 242. Popish Priesthood contrarie to the Priesthood of Christ 198. Princes idolatrous not to be obeied 430. Gift of prophecie not tied vnto any one calling of men 169. Prophecies of the Turkes 77. Propitiatorie sacrifice 235. 250. Prosperitie daungerous 338. Punishment Punishment of Dauid 5 of the vngodlie 118. 161. 190. 196. 323. 331. In deserued punishment what to be considered 411. God his iustice and mercie in punishing sinne 414. Purenesse in this life what 116. Purgatorie 216 à vane thing 221 grounded vppon the Masse 216. Puritie of the Church 115. Q Quantitie of God 84. R Reason of man is vane 370. Reiection of the Iewes 43 causes of the same 74. Religion 99. Diuersities of religion 104. Remission of sinnes wha● 496. Repentaunce a sacrifice 357. Resurrection of Christ 38. 45 confirmed by manie testimonies 46. Reward of sinne 162. Riches 146. Righteousnesse what 498. 500 à sacrifice 359. Righteousnesse of faith and workes oppugned 330 righteousnesse of workes oppugned 327 S True Sabboth what 62. Sacramentes howe manie 334. Sacrifice Sacrifices of the Iewes 177. 178 of the Gentiles 193 of Christians 235. Sacrifices of the Iewes of what kindes 185● the causes of them 182. Sacrifices of Christians howe manie 247. Burnt Sacrifice 185. Sacrifice eucharistical 185 236. 349. kindes thereof 352. Sacrifice of good workes 349 of Obedience 247. of patience 359. of praier 356. of Praise 355. of propitiation 235. 250. of repentance 357. of righteousnesse 359. of the Masse 204. Sacrifices of them-selues please not God 178. In a sacrifice what to bee considered 251. Sacrifices of the olde Law howe offered 253. Captiues 195 children 194 195. men 193. 194. parentes Sacrificed 193. Salt 188. Saintes Saintes cannot be intercessors for vs 213. Saintes inuocated a seruice of the diuel 214. their worship why inuented 429. Sanctification how it commeth 106. Satietie not in this life 377. Seede of Abraham 309. Selfe hatred 290. Selfe loue 289. twofolde 290. Serpent of brasse 31. Serpents taken for GOD 191. Seruice of the Churche 116. What Seruice of Papistes maie be heard 228. Societie with CHRIST 131. Sophisters 443. howe to be resisted 444. Soules of the righteous where 376. they Sleepe not vntil the