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A18772 A postil or orderly disposing of certeine epistles vsually red in the Church of God, vppon the Sundayes and holydayes throughout the whole yeere. Written in Latin by Dauid Chytræus, and translated intoo English by Arthur Golding. Seen and allowed according too the order appoynted Chytraeus, David, 1531-1600.; Golding, Arthur, 1536-1606. aut 1570 (1570) STC 5263; ESTC S107883 320,443 478

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you VVee knowe that wee are translated from death vntoo lyfe bycause wee loue the brethren He that loueth not his brother abideth in death Whosoeuer hateth his brother is a manslear And yee knowe that no manslear hath eternall lyfe abyding in him Hereby perceyue wee loue bycause he gaue his lyfe for vs and wee ought too giue our liues for the brethren But who so hath this worldes good and seeth his brother haue neede and shutteth vp his compassion from him how dwelleth the loue of God in him ▪ My babes let vs not loue in woorde neyther in tong but in deede and in veritie The disposement THis Epistle is of those sort that persuade For first there is a comfort too bée set ageinst the hatreds of the world Secondly there is an Exhortation too louingnesse and liberalitie towardes a mannes neyghbour The first place MAruell not my brethren though the world hate you Mannes reason iudgeth of the tooyles and troubles of the godly and specially of the contentions among the teachers euen for all the world after the same manner as Salust sayeth in his preface too the warres of Iugurth Too labour in vayne and too preache nothing else by ouertooyling a mānes selfe but hatred and slaunder is a poynt of vtter madnesse For all the godly and specially the Ministers of the Gospel who performe the déedes of most singular louingnesse and most earnestly séeke the euerlasting welfare of their héerers and execute their dutie most faithfully doo reape in manner none other reward than most bitter hatred and vtter vnthankfulnesse at the hands of those vppon whom they haue bestowed greatest benefites Ageinst this temptation and the bitter fordoomes spyghts and hatreds of the wysemē of the world whereby many are woont too bée withdrawen from the ministerie Iohn comforteth vs in these woordes Maruell not my brethren though the world hate you as if he had sayd the iudgement of God and of the godly is farre of another sort than is the iudgement of the wicked worlde The greater that any man is before God the more contemned and abiect is he before the world And seing that at many mennes hands there is no token of a thankfull mynd rendred too God for his excéeding great benefites which he poureth out by heapes vppon all men but all kynd of spyght Let not vs wonder if the world hate vs also For the Diuell enuying vs this so greate felicitie that wée are conueyed from death too euerlasting lyfe stirreth vp his instrumentes and inflameth mennes hatreds ageinst vs Therefore ageinst the most bitter hatred of the world and of the vngodly let vs set Gods good will and fatherly loue towardes vs which the sonne of God hath shewed by this notable token that he hath spent his lyfe for vs and deliuering vs from death by the death of him selfe hath restored vs to the possession of eternall life Wherefore let eche of vs bee so disposed in mynd that they may with a true harte say thus It is sufficient for mée hauyng my full delyght in Chryst too doo those things which are godly and to speake such as are godly The second place AN exhortation too louingnesse and liberalitie towards a mannes neybour and the argumentes of this exhortation are three Of the honestnesse of it Of the profitablenesse of it And of the example of Chryst FIrst of the honestnesse or the necessary couplyng of the cause and the effects I knowe that we are translated from death too lyfe bycause wee loue the brethren or bycause our fayth is effectuall by loue For too this end are wee washed from our sinnes by the bloud of Chryste and translated from death intoo lyfe that wee shoulde hereafter eschue sinne and earnestly execute loue towardes God and our neybour which is the fountayn of all vertues Now like as mouing in a mannes bodie is an vndouted token effect of lyfe yet left in the body euen so louingnesse is the next effect and an vnfallible signe of fayth shyning in the hart wherby wée are translated from deathe vntoo lyfe And like as in this Euthymeme I knowe there is lyfe still in him bycause there is stirring yet left in his bodye it foloweth not that stirring is the efficient cause of life but by the effect I gather according too reson that the cause is present so in this place of Iohns wee know wee are translated from death to life bycause wee loue the brethren this part of spéeche bycause betokeneth not the efficient cause of whiche is spoken in the fifth of Iohns Gospell in this wyse He that beleeueth in the sonne is passed from deathe vnto lyfe but it betokeneth the effect whervpon the argument is gathered that we are verely translated from deathe vntoo lyfe like as Luke in his vij Chapter reasoneth vppon the effect that many sinnes are forgiuen too the sinfull woman bycause she loued muche Likewise as if I should say I knowe for a certeintie that the Sunne is vp bycause I sée the sunne beames glaring in my chamber And in this selfesame Epistle is sayde In this haue wee knowne his loue bicause he hath spent his life for vs. The second argument of the profitablenesse or of the necessitie of holding faste Fayth lyfe and euerlasting saluation For he that loueth not hath not lyfe euerlasting abyding in him but he continueth in deathe according also as Paule sayth j. Cor. vj. No whoremongers Idolaters abusers of themselues with the mankynde pillers c. shall inherite the kingdome of god Therefore too the intent wee lose not the remission of sinnes receiued the deliueraunce from Deathe the grace of GOD and the euerlasting lyfe wée must of necessitie fall to louingnesse and new obedience agréeable with Gods will. And yet it foloweth not therevppon that oure louingnesse or newe obedience deserueth forgiuenesse of sinnes and eternall lyfe For this louingnesse cannot so muche as bée begon neyther pleaseth it God except remission of sinnes be first freely giuen for Chrystes sake and that faith shyne in the hart Bréefly euen altoogyther after the manner of Logicke hath Iohn included this argument in the forme of reasonyng agréeing to the moode Celarent But in the first place he hath put the conclusion in the second the minor and in the last the maior Ce Euery murderer hath not lyfe euerlasting abyding in him or abydeth in death la Euery one that hateth or loueth not his brother is a murtherer before god Math. v. rent Ergo he that loueth not his brother abydeth in Death or hath not eternall lyfe abyding in him The third Argument OF the example of Chryste who spent his soule or his lyfe for vs as he sayth in Iohn xv Greater loue than this can no man haue than that a man shoulde giue hys lyfe for his freends Paule Rom. v. GOD commendeth his owne loue towardes vs in that when wée were his enemies Chryst dyed for vs. Vntoo these three arguments Iohn addeth a warnyng
Maries song and the grammaticall exposition of the woordes thereof will not bée misliked of those that bée well minded The Epistle vppon the feast day of Sainct lames ¶ The Epistle Rom. viij FOr wee knowe that all things worke for the best vnto them that loue God which also are called of purpose For those which he knew before he also ordeyned before that they should be like fashioned vnto the shape of his sonne that he might bee the first begotten sonne among many brethren Moreouer whiche hee appointed before them also he called And which he called them also he iustified and which he iustified them he also glorified What shall wee then say to these things yf God be on our side who can bee ageynst vs which spared not his own sonne but gaue him for vs all how shall he not with him giue vs all things also VVho shal lay any thing to the charge of Gods chosen it is God that iustifieth who then shall condemne it is Christ whiche is dead yea rather which is risen ageyne which is also on the right hand of God and maketh intercession for vs VVho shall separate vs from the loue of God shall tribulation or anguish or persecution eyther hunger eyther nakednesse eyther perill eyther sword as it is written For thy sake are wee killed all day long and are counted as shepe apointed to be slayne Neuerthelesse in all these things wee ouercome strōgly thorow his help that loued vs For I am sure that neyther death neyther lyfe neyther Aungels nor rule neyther power neyther things present neyther things to come neyther hygh neyther low neyther any other creature shall bee able to depart vs from the loue of God which is in Christ Iesu our Lord. The disposement THis Epistle is persuasiue And the state or proposition principall thereof is a comforte of the Churche subiect to the crosse in this lyfe The places of the comfortings or the chéef argumentes are foure 1 Of the finall cause or the end and issue of affictions What things so euer are good and healthful to the godlie ought to bee suffered with a quiet minde and with a certeyne gladnesse Afflictions miseries are good and healthfull to the godly there shall assuredly follow deliueraunce and a most ioyfull issue in the euerlasting life for this is the méening of the sayd saying all things woorke for the best too the profit of them that loue God that is to say all afflictions turne to the profite of them that loue God or of the godly as it is sayde Psal 119. It is good for mée O Lorde that thou hast afflicted mée Ergo afflictions are to bée suffered by the godly paciently and with a certeine gladnesse For the manifestation of the second part of this argument let the ten endes or commodities of afflictious bée borowed hither out of the place that concerneth the crosse and calamities And let yong men beare well in minde this saying of Plato which doutelesse he tooke out of the doctrine of the Church of the holy fathers Thus must we thinke of a godly man that whither hee liue in pouertie or bee turmoyled with death or other aduersities these things shall doo him good eyther alyue or dead For God neuer neglecteth him that hath his hart full bent too liue rightuously and earnestly followeth vertue that he may as much as is possible for man become like and conformable vnto God. The second Argument is taken of the example of the sonne of God. WHomsoeuer God hath foreknowen and forechosen to lyfe and glorie euerlasting must of necessitis become like to the Image of the sonne of God. But the sonne was fayne first to suffer and to bée crucified and afterward to bée glorified Ergo also the Church and all the godly shall bée glorified by tribulation and affliction The third argument is of the efficient cause or of the will of God. ALl godly persones must reuerently obey the order of Gods wisdome and rightuousnesse But God by his wisdome hath apointed this order that all they that are chosen to eternall life should first be called secondly iustified then distressed with tribulacion and affliction and lastly bée adorned with ioy and glorie euerlasting Ergo it behooueth vs to obey this order reuerently The fourth argument is of the forcing cause and of Gods help THe louingnesse and fatherly good wil of God towards vs is to bée preferred before all sorowes miseries and temptacions God assuredly beareth vs good will and is on our side he loueth helpeth defendeth and saueth vs for his sonnes sake Ergo the sorrowes and miseries that are layd vppon vs by God our Father are to abidden paciently Now forasmuch as there bée two terrible obiections that assault the minor of this argument Paule disproueth them in few woordes First None that bée defiled with sinnes are beloued of God. Wée are defiled with sinnes and giltie of Gods wrath and endlesse damnacion Ergo wée are not beloued of God. Paule aunswereth first to the maior or first proposition thus that none which are defiled with sinne that is to wit whicherepent not and flée not by fayth to the Sonne of God the Mediator that was deliuered for vs are belo uedof God. And to the minor or second part of the argument he answereth thus Wée are in déede gilty of Gods wrath and euerlasting damnation as in respect of our owne vnclennesse and vnworthinesse but in asmuch as wée acknowledge and bewayle our sinnes and by fayth doo flée to the sonne of God the Mediator who dyed and rose ageyn for vs and maketh intercession for vs at the right hand of God wée are beloued of God and wée are iustified defended and saued for the sounes sake who was put too death and raysed ageyne for vs vppon this sonne sitting at the right hand of the Father and making intercession for vs and not vpon our owne sinnes let vs fasten the eyes of our minde The second obiection REason would that they should bée well at ease which are beloued of God for no man dooth harme to those whom he loueth Wée Christians in this lyfe are of all men most miserable oppressed with afflictions anguish hunger and nakednesse and wée are slayne all the day long c. Ergo wée are not beloued of God. I aunswer first to the maior The godly ought in déede to bée well at ease howbeit after that order and manner which the wisdome of God hath vttered in the Gospell The godly must bée made like too the Image of Gods son They must suffer and dye and so enter into glorie as he did ij God mindeth not to endue the godly with the short shadowish benefites of this lyfe but with euerlasting rewards iij. These calamities are not a tokē of gods wrath or hatred towards vs but rather of his fatherly good will according to this saying whom the Lord loueth him he chastiseth and he skourgeth euery sonne whom he receyueth
is the scepter of thy kingdom But the Angels are but only the seruauntes of this king and impart not their rightuousnesse vnto any others 5 Christ is verely and naturally the sonne of god Ps. 45. O God Christ thy God the eternall father hath anoynted thée with the oyle of gladnesse for thy felowes sakes Now the Angels are not God but creatures 6 Christ is anoynted with fulnesse of the holy Ghost too the entent he may annoynt his felowes that is too say the rest of the members of the church The Angels are not anoynted with fulnesse of the holy Ghost neither can they of their owne power anoynt others and garnish them with the giftes of the holy Ghost 7 Christ sitteth at the right hand of the eternall Father that is too say reigneth in equal maiestie and glory with the euerlasting father The Angels sit not at the right hand of the Father nereigne in equall power with the eternall father but are the ministers of Christ and of the whole churche pitching their tents round about all those that feare him according as is sayd more at large concerning the office and benefites of the holy Angels vppon S. Michaels day ¶ The second Epistle Titus iij. BVT after that the kyndnesse and loue of our sauiour God to manward appeared not of the deedes of righteousnesse which we wrought but of his mercie he saued vs by the fountayn of the newe byrth and with the renewing of the holy Ghost whiche he shed on vs abundantly thorowe Iesus Chryst our sauiour that we once iustifyed by his grace should be heyres of eternal lyfe thorowe hope This is a true saying The disposement IT perteyneth too the kynd of caces that instruct For it is a doctrine cōcerning the benefits of our Lord Iesus Christ the sonne of God borne too vs and giuen too vs comprehending a summe of the Gospel concerning our iustification saluation Now forasmuch as there is no wisdom more néedful and profitable for mākynd neither any other good thing greater to bée sought of mē with more earnest desyre and endeuer than the doctrine that concerneth the maner meane how too atteyne euerlasting lyfe and saluation Let the doctrine of this epistle bée with singular héede and diligence fastened in the innermost closets of mens harts For the righter consideration and weying wherof I wil reduce the same too the accustomed places of instruction or orderly questions This woord Saluation comprehendeth all the good things that God bestoweth vppon his Church for hys sonnes sake which was giuen to vs and borne too vs of the virgin Marie that is too wit forgiuenesse of sinnes attonement with God deliuerance from Gods wrath from sinne from death and from the Deuils tyrannye the gift of the holy ghost regeneration renewing of our nature abolishment of sin and death and restorement of rightuousnesse lyfe and endlesse ioy All these benefits dooth Paule méene in this place when he sayeth he saued vs And the Angell in the first of Mathew Thou shalt call his name Iesus for he shall saue his people from their sinne Paule distinguisheth the parts of Chrystes benefits intoo twoo members which cleaue toogither as it wer the cause the effect namely rightuousnesse and lyfe and these things repeteth he in sundry woords Wée are iustified that is too saye wée obteyne forgiuenesse of sinnes and are accepted for rightuous through his grace or frée good will and are made heires of euerlasting lyfe The same Paule had sayd a little before that wée are saued by the wasshing of regeneration that is too say by Baptim wherwith wee are dipped in token of remissiō by renewing of the holy ghost by whom a new lyfe rightuousnesse is kindled in our harts The chéef efficient cause of our saluation is God regenerating vs iustifying vs and receyuing vs too the inheritāce of euerlasting life of his excéeding great goodnesse and loue towards mankynd and of his frée mercie and grace And the woords are piththye effectual wherwith Paul describeth the efficient cause of our saluation in this place The gréeke woord Chrestótes signifieth properly goodnesse coueting too doo good too profit all men of a frée good will. It cōmeth of the woord Chraomai which signifieth too vse and therupō cōmeth Chrestós which signifieth such a one as willingly easly yéeldeth himself vnto other mē to vse him such a one is Chryst in déed a good man yea a cōmon good thing ▪ Philanthropia louingkindnesse betokeneth not only a courtesie gentlenesse to speak vnto or a méeldnesse in ordinarie méetings in coūtenance in spéech in outward behauiour but in especially a burning loue towards mākind which y sonne of God hath vttered by this notable warrantyze in that he hath by euerlasting and indissoluble bond cuppled too himself the masse of our nature and is becomme our Emanuell and brother flesh of our flesh and bone of our bones and vndertooke the most bitter tormentes of death for vs. Of this louing kindnesse is spoken 1. Iohn 4. Herein is the louing kindnesse of God towardes vs made manifest that he hath sent his only begotten sonne intoo the world that wée might liue through him Also Christ Iohn 3. So God loued the world that he gaue his only begotten sonne c. Eleos Mercy is too bée touched with the féeling of another mannes miserie too succor the distressed and too asswage and take away their miseries of a fréeharted goodnesse and pitifulnesse which executeth not the sharp extremity of the law Therfore albeit that al calamities death and euerlasting torments too which wée are subiecte by reason of sinne bée most rightfull punishments yet notwithstanding God of his excéeding goodnesse pitying vs is in déede sory for our losse lyke the louingharted father that is strikē with great gréefe for the miserie of his sonne and of his woonderfull gentlenesse and mercy helpeth vs and by sending his sonne who for vs was borne crucified and raised from death againe hath restored vntoo vs rightuousnesse and euerlasting saluation Grace signifieth the frée good will or fauor or the mercie of God receiuing vs for his sonnes sake The forcing cause or the mediator and spokesman that moueth God too bestow euerlasting saluation vpō vs wretches and vnwoorthy is the only sonne of God our Lord Iesus Christ who by his birth hath deliuered vs from the Deuils power and voutsaued too become the sonne of man that he might make vs the sonnes of God hath taken vpō him the shape of a seruaunt that he might set vs at libertie And by dying vanquished death that he might giue too vs mortal wightes immortalitie life and glory euerlasting This man alonely dooth truly possesse the name of Iesus or of the sauyoure of mankind neither imparteth he this his honor too any creature too any vertues or too any deserts of oures And like as the Arians by taking away the
all misdoing and offence the welspring is concupiscence And it is most manifest y the more part of miseries and mischéeues do grow of a desire of excellencie honor riches reuengement pleasures lustes that are in all mankynd The kindes of good workes he deuideth intoo stayednesse rightuousnesse and godlinesse Stayednesse which of the Gréekes is called Sophrosyne of the Latines modestie frugalitie or temperaunce signifieth not only a sobernesse or sparenesse of diet in meate and drinke but also a maistering or brideling of all the affectiōs and motions of the mind and body in behauior in gesture in talke in apparell and in all other things Rightuousnesse includeth within his compasse an vniuersarl obedience too the magistrates and lawes the other vertues of the second table Godlynesse conteyneth the vertues of the first table as the true knowledge of God louingnesse hope inuocation thankesgiuing patience and such other And so Paule hath comprehended the dueties of all vertues or all good works in thrée woords Of the second THe forcing causes that must stirre vp euery man too the studie of vertue and the exercise of good woorkes are in this Epistle reckened too bée foure The first is Gods commaundement teaching vs most streightly charging vs too renoūce or shun vngodlynesse and sinfull lustes and too liue soberly vprightly and godlily The second is blissed hope of the appeering of the great God and of our sauior Iesus Chryst who at his glorious cōming too iudge the quicke and the dead shall giue most ample rewardes too the godly Saincts that haue liued soberly vprightly and godlily in this present world and shall with euerlasting punishment ouer whelm the vngodly which haue abandoned themselues too worldly lustes in this lyfe The third is the finall cause for which Christ was sent the sonne of God our Lord Iesus Chryst was therefore born rose ageine not that wée myght welter in our sinnes and from hēcefoorth still defile our selues with the foul filthinesse of our misdeedes but that he might redéeme vs and set vs frée from al vnrightuousnesse and that sinne euerlasting death myght bée taken from among vs and that wée being clēsed from sinne not only by imputation of ryghtuousnesse but also by beginning too putte away sinne it selfe shoulde from henceforth earnestly with a singular loue and ardent zele doo good woorks and serue God in all rightuousnesse and holinesse before him all the dayes of our life This matter is intreated of at length by Paule Rom. vj. The fourth cause is of the nature of correlatiues that is of things that haue relation one too another The churche is the people of purchace or the peculiar and proper people of God chosen out of the rest of mankind and halowed too the one Lord God Ergo the Church must with singular zele obey and doo the things that are acceptable too this hir redéemer and Lord. It is thought that the Gréek woord Periousion answereth too the Hebrew woord Segula which in Exod. xix is trāslated a holy people and in Ps. cxxxiiij possesion in Pet. j. Ep. ij chap. the people of purchase that is too say a people purchased and redéemed with the blud of Christ that they should be his propre and peculiar people iij. How good woorks may be doone how they may please god Although that the outward limbes as the eyes the tung the hands c. may after a maner bée bridled by mannes diligence and by the proper strength of mannes will so as they may doo honest iust woorks not fall intoo manifest offences for bidden by the law of God according too that which is sayd in the former Epistle Tit. iij. not by the woorks of rightuousnesse which wée our selues did yet notwithstanding the inward obedience the obedience that pleaseth God the true feare of God the true trust in gods mercy the true and earnest calling vpō God true pacience stedfastnesse in bearing out aduersitie death cannot bée performed except the wil which is a prisoner bondslaue too sin bée set at libertie ayded by Christ according as Christ himself saith without mee yée cā doo nothing And in this place Paul sayth expresly that Chryst hath redéemed and clensed vs too the intent wée should folowe good woorkes Therfore in the accōplishment of good works there méet thrée causes The first and principal is Christ redeming and clensing vs from all iniquitie by his holy spirit kindling in our mind the light of true acknowledgement of God and mindfulnesse of Gods cōmaundement concerning true obediēce to be performed vntoo him mouing enforsing helping the will that it may bée able too obey Gods cōmaundement The second cause is Gods word by which Christ is effectual in instructing vs too renounce all vngodlinesse worldly lustes and too liue soberly vprightly and godly The third is the mind and wil of mā not striuing ageinst Christ when he teacheth vs ruleth our members that they may yeeld themselues in rightuousnesse to God vnto sanctification Also for this Chrystes sake our owne good woorkes please God although they doo not as yet fully satisfie Gods law but bée ioyned with great weaknesse and vnclēnesse of nature remaining in vs For as the person of man becōmeth good rightuous and acceptable too God only through fayth for Chrystes sake who gaue himselffor vs c so the woorkes that are wrought by a person that is iustified and reconciled too God doo please God not for their owne woorthinesse but through the grace of God which woorketh saluation too all men or for Christes only sake through faith as is said Heb. xiij By him doo wée offer the sacrifise of praise alwayes vnto god And j. Pet. ij Offer yée spiritual sacrifises acceptable too God through Iesus Christ Vppon the day of S. Steuen the first Martyr ¶ The Epistle Actes vj. and .vij. chapters ANd Steuen ful of faith power did great wōders and miracles amōg the people Thē there arose certein of the sinagoge which are called Libertines Cyrenites of Alexādria Cilicia Asia disputed with Steuē And they could not resist the wisdom the spirit with which he spake Then sent they in men which sayd we haue herd him speake blasphemous woordes ageinst Moses and ageinst god And they moued the people and the elders the Scribes and came vppon him and caught him and brought him too the counsell and brought foorth false witnesses which sayd This man ceaseth not too speake blasphemous woords ageinst this holy place and the law for wee herd him say this Iesus of Nazareth shall destroy this place and shall change the ordinances which Moses gaue vs And all that sate in the counsell looked stedfastly on him and sawe his face as it had bin the face of an Angell The .vij. Chapter THen sayd the cheefe Prest is it euen so And he sayd yee men
doctrine This precept may bée amplified by distribution and may bée bréefly spoken of all the articles of Christen doctrine Or he that exhroteth in exhortation Exhortatiō to repentance and al good woorks is one of the kinds of Ecclesiastical sermons .j. Tim. iiij Giue diligence too reading exhortatiō Tit. j. Let him bée able too exhort by sound doctrine He that giueth let him doo it with singlenesse That is too say he that bestoweth vppon his héerers either doctrine coūsel or mony let him doo it with singlenesse and with ryght hart in déed Let him marre nothing let him loke for nothing in reward or recompence Let him that ruleth doo it with diligence Whither he bée a temporall or spirituall gouernor let him in his office bée héedfull diligent and faithfull like Iosaphat .ij. Paralip xix who was diligent in all partes of gouernment He ordered Churches ciuill iudgementes and consistories and made warres c. Paule is a diligent teacher Our princes neglect the chéefest parts of their office namely the care of Churches of iudgemēts of discipline of studies and of doctrine the defence of innocentes and the punishmēt of offenders And either they are slouthfull or busie about mooneshine in the water or else they doo hurtful things they build they hauke and hunt they make great shewes feasts and they moue vnnecessary warres He that sheweth mercy let him doo it with cheerefulnesse This precept is of mercy benefiting which must procéede frō a chéerful welwilled mind ▪ God loueth a chéerful giuer Let loue bee vnfeined Héere followeth a register of preceptes concerning the dueties of loue or concerning all vertues the declaration of which may bée fetched out of my litle boke of the rules of life The loue of a mannes neibor comprehendeth all the vertues of the .v. vj. and vij commaundemēts But in especially vntoo frendship is the first sentence too bée applied let loue be vnfeined That is too say let your good will towarde your frends and generally toward your neibor be true vncorrupted vncounterfetted let it not rise of an euill cause but let your wils bée coupled or knit togither in the loue of goodnesse Bee kind one too another with brotherly loue Let there be among Christians as among brethren true goodwill kindnesse ▪ that is too say naturall and earnest loue such as parēts are woont too beare toward their children For God hath put a natural louing kindnesse or charinesse intoo the harts of fathers mothers to the intēt to put vs in mind of his loue toward his own sōne Iesus Chryst towards vs his sōnes by adoption and too the intent they should bée as bondes of alyance and mutuall good will betwéene man and man. In giuing honor goe one before an other Reuerence is a vertue of the fourth commaundemēt acknowledging Gods giftes in other men and yéelding too them their place and honor and by the example of it selfe alluring others too méeldnesse and reuerence The two vices that beset it are flattery or soothing and pride or disdeinfulnesse Bee not slouthfull in that yee take in hand Diligence is a vertue of the fourth commaundement executing the labors agreable too a mannes vocation faithfully diligently constātly The vices that beset it are slouthfulnesse or restinesse and ouerearnestnesse or too much medling Be feruent in spirit A zele burning in the loue of God and of ryghtuousnesse and béeing angry with all those that deface Gods glory perteineth too the first commaūdement and the fifth The vices that beset it are fumishnesse or rigorousnesse and coldnesse or pliablenesse Apply your selues too the time It is a kind of wisdome which neglecteth not occasions offered to dispatch a mannes matters wel considereth what thing with what persons what time and in what place it may bée earnestly pursued and obteined howbéeit sauing alwayes our duety too God the stedfastnesse of our profession and honest discipline Reioyce in hope Hope of eternall life certeinly promised for Chrystes sake and the looking for asswagement of the miseries in this lyfe according too Gods will dooth singularly susteine chéere and strengthen mennes harts Rom. v. and viij And Nazianzene nothing is wōt too chéer vs so much as a good conscience and a good hope The vices that beset it are despaire presumption and the folish and vain hopes of men Bee patient in tribulation Patience ageine perteineth too the first precept The vices that beset it are impatiencie and wilfull stubbornnesse As for example the stubbornnesse of Seruetus and of the Anabaptists Continue in prayer The true calling vppon God belongeth too the first and second commaundemēt The vices that encounter it are omitting too cal vppon God or nonpraying and heathenish babling without faith and al false Inuocations or misprayings Distribute too the necessitie of the Saincts Dooing of good turnes perteineth too the seuenth commaundement The vices that encounter it are harmefulnesse gripplenesse and wastfulnesse Bee redy too harbour Hospitalitie perteineth too the .vij. commaundement The vices that encounter it are harborlesnesse nigardship and lauishnesse Blisse them that persecute you Méeknesse is a vertue of the fifth commaundement repressing wrathfulnesse and desire of reuenge and laying aside hatred and grudge for God and the common quietnesse sake The vices that encounter it are hatred desire of reuenge spitefulnesse reioycement at other folkes harmes and shéepishnesse Bee mery with them that bee mery Fréendlinesse is a vertue that wisheth well too the good and reioyceth in their good successe The vices that encounter it are enuiousnesse spitefulnesse and lightnesse of beléefe Weepe with them that weepe Pitifulnesse is a vertue of the fifth commaundement which is touched with the féeling of good mennes misfortunes and helpeth those that are in distresse The vices that encounter it are crueltie reioycement in other folkes harmes and fond pitie Bee of like affection one too an other Desire of concord or peaceablenesse is a vertue of the fifth commaundemēt The vices that beset it are quarelousnesse debatefulnesse and lazynesse Bee not high minded But make your selues equall too the lower sort Lowlinesse and mildnesse are vertues of the first and fourth commaundement The vices that encounter thē are pride and feyned holinesse Concerning these vertues and the vyces that encounter them there are measurable expositiōs set out wyth good sentences and examples in my litle booke of rules of life which I would wishe too bée added to the disposements of the Epistles in the end of this booke Vppon the third Sunday after the Epiphanie ¶ The Epistle Rom. xij BE not wise in your owne opinions Recōpence too no man euill for euill Prouide aforehand things honest not only before God but also in the sight of all men If it bee possible as much as is in you liue peaceably with al men Dearly beloued auenge not your selues but rather giue
things and thy neibor as thy self .j. Tim. j. The summe of the commaundement is loue from a pure hart .j. Ioh. iij. He that loueth not abideth in death Héeruppon Paul reasoneth that the loue of a mannes neybor is too bée preferred beforethe gifts of tungs eloquence miracles learning c whiche are not needfull for all Christians Straunge and vnknowē languages are no more too the profit of the héerers than sounding brasse or a tingling cimball that lulleth the eares with a vayne sound Ageine the giftes of Tungs without charitie is not true godlynesse ne maketh a man a right Christian nor acceptable to god So like wise Prophesying which is able too opē euen the darkest places of al the scripture faith or y gift of working miracles al vnderstanding or the knowledge of all Arts without louingnesse is not the chéef and most excellent seruice of God. Much wrangling is there in the disputations of these dayes about this saying If I haue all fayth and yet haue not loue I am nothing and it séemeth that there is not any more notable saying y can bée set ageinst this proposition Onely fayth iustifyeth But I answer First by the rule of Logicke The truenesse of propositions Hypothetical that is to say of sentences grounded vppon if is not too bée measured by the vntwyning of the proposition intoo his partes but by the knitting togither of his members matching rightly or otherwise among themselues As for examples sake If an Asse flye he hath fethers This proposition or ground is true but the members of it being vnknit are most false An Asse flyeth An Asse hath fethers Also .j. Cor. xv If Chryst bée not risen in vayne is our preaching vayne is your fayth This proposition in the partes knit togyther is true but the partes being vnknit are most vntrue So also this proposition I● I haue fayth and yet haue no loue I am nothing is very true But if yée take asunder the proposition intoo his partes and say y fayth is nothing or he y is endued w true faith is nothing or is not a godly mā in déed that loue may bée pulled away from fayth all men perceyue that this dissolution or dismembering is false and too bée found fault with Other some answere that Paule in this place speaketh not of the iustifying Faith but of the gift of woorking miracles which may bée euen in the vngodly Mathew vij But were it so that Paule spake of the iustifying Fayth yet can it not bée concluded thereby that wée are not iustified by fayth only or for Chrystes sake only For certeine it is that the loue of God and a mannes neybor doo of necessitie go ioyntly toogither with fayth Like as with the rising of the sunne there goeth ioyntly of necessitie the spreading foorth of his beames or lyght Euen so of necessitie loue foloweth Fayth in those that are iustified in so much as he that loueth not abydeth in death Like as that body wherein there remayneth no féeling or mouing liueth not and yet it foloweth not therupon that feeling and mouing are the cause of lyfe but lyfe is the cause of mouing Euen so the efficient cause of our iustification is God for the obedience passion and death of Chryst only And fayth is the instrument wherby wée take hold of Chryst our ryghtuousnesse Now must the loue of God and a mannes neybor of necessitie folow Fayth in him that is iustified like as mouing and féeling doo of necessitie folow lyfe But loue can not procéede but of fayth like as there can grow no good frutes but of a good trée Of the second A register of the woorkes of charitie or of the vertues that flow out of the true loue of God and a mannes neybor as out of a fountaine LEt them bée conueyed intoo preceptes agréeing too the ten commaundements let them bée set out by adding their definitions and laying the vices too them Loue is long suffering j Long sufferance or patience is a vertue that represseth wrathfulnesse desire of reuenge And though it haue cause too hurt others yet for Gods sake the common peace it remitteth offences beareth with him that did the displeasure as Aristides bare with Themistocles Scipio with the Tribunes and Dauid with Saule It perteyneth too the fifth of the tenne commaundements The vyces that encounter it are desyre of reuenge as in Marius and Sylla also crueltie as in Tyberius Nero And ouermuch forbearing or silinesse Courteous or Gentle. ij Courteousnesse or Gentlenesse not only letteth offences slip and forgiueth them but also by all meanes it cā deuise as by counsell trauell and ayde dooth good to others as well fréends as foes For the Gréeke woord Chrestos which commeth of Chraomai to vse dooth properly signifie such a one as easly and willingly yéeldeth him self to other folk too vse as Aristides by his counsell and trauell benefiteth the common weale of Athens which had bannished him It perteyneth to the fifth and seuenth commaundements The vyces that encounter it are discourtesie or vngentlenesse frowardnesse or chorlishnesse also fond lauishnesse or wastfulnesse and counterfet courtesie or feyned gentlenesse Loue enuieth not iij Freendlynesse modestie or myldnesse which acknowledgeth and loueth Gods gifts in other men willing good too the good and reioycing in their prosperitie Ageinst this vertue fyghteth Enuyousnesse which is gréeued that an other man should excell vs or bée preferred afore vs and longeth too remoue him or take him away to the intent wée lose no part of our estimation as Saul enuyed the glorie of Dauid Pompey enuyed the power of Cesar Marius repyneth for spyght ageinst Sylla Loue dealeth not frowardly or is not giuen to lewdnesse or is not malapert and vngraciouse iiij Good meening modestie or myldnesse which lyeth not in wayte for other folks like the brothers called Perperanes who of a singular vngraciousnesse lewdnesse laying wayt for other mennes lyues were at length taken by Hercules and he hung them vp at his backe vppon his club It perteyneth to the fifth commaundement Thou shalt not kyll Loue swelleth not v Lowlynesse repressing pryde acknowledging a mānes infirmitie submitting himself vnto others and employing his gifts to the behoof of others without disdeyne It perteyneth to the first and .iiij. cōmaundements The vyces that beset it are pride puffed vp with ouer wéening of itself trusting in his own vertue wisdom welth other gifts and despysing othermen Euery mā may behold an example of pryde in his own hart Loue is not disdeynfull neyther is shee vncomly vj Grauitie whiche is too doo rightful necessarie things constantly so to rule al the outward gestures dooings that they may agrée with the order of nature of persones and of places The vyces that encounter it are lyghtnesse skornfulnesse which proudly disdeyning others doth with vncomlygestures expresse the pryde or the hatred or
Gods iustice The duetie of a redeemer hygh preest Sinne damnation Mannes saluation The benefites of Chrystes birth How Christes benefites are applied too vs. How and why glory is giuen too God. Peace Gladnesse Chrysts apperings too the Fathers in old tyme. A description of the second persone in the Trinitie Proues of Christs Godhead Iohn 1. Iohn 5. Chryst onely purgeth sinne What Angels bee The definition of saluation rightuousnesse and life are the sum of Christs benefites The efficient cause of saluation Goodnesse Louing kyndnesse Mercifulnesse Grace Our mediator or spokesman Who they bee that dishonor Christ Our owne rightuousnesse is of no desert The gospell and baptim are instrumēts of saluation Faith the instrumēt vvhervvith vvee take holde of saluation Renevvment of nature The effects of iustification Good vvorkes must folovv iustification Good workes or new obedience Vngodlynesse Concupiscence or lustfulnesse Stayednesse Rightuousnes Godlynesse The causes that moue too good workes Gods commaundement Hope of glory Abolishment of sinne Thankfulnesse How woorks become good Chrystes working in vs by his spirir By his woord By mannes willingnes The points vvherof Steuē is accused Atteynment of gods promises Worshipping of God. The institutiō of a new law What martyrdoome is The parts of martyrdoome Confessors Martyrs The holy Ghost Gods woord Mannes mynd Chryst is alwayes with his Churche The matter that maketh a Martyr Gods glorie Maintenāce of true religion Strengthening of the weake Certeintie of doctrine Witnessing of the immortalitie Reteynement of saluation vertues that go with martyrdoome Vices that fight ageynst martyrdome Chryst is very God. Chryst is very man. Redemption Adoption The gift of the holy ghost Inheritance of endlesse lyfe A warning for Pauls mening The workyng of the lavve The dueties of the lawe too teach vs too knowe God and our selues To frame our maners aright Too correct offenders The law dryueth vs too Chryst In whom Chryst is effectuall The law a shadow of things doo come Things to bee noted concerning the Epiphanie or twelfth day Of the wyse men that came vntoo Chryst The tyme of their cōming The names of the wise men Earnestnesse in receyuing and keeping the truthe The sondry names and glory of Chryst Iehouah or Lord. The glory of the Lord. What it is too giue glory to God. Why Chryst is called our light Who are the true Churche Why God dyd put a difference betweene the lewes and the Gentils The prerogatiues of the lewes The wretched state of the Heathen Gods vnchaūgeable rule in calling men to saluation Saluation is of free gift and not of desert The true seruice or woorshipping of God. What is represented by gold What is represented by Frākincense The Altar of attonement is Chryst Sacrifyce Quicke or liuing Holy. Reasonable seruice Worldlynesse Renevvment of mynd Myldnesse Ouervveening misvveening forvveening Christen wisdome Worldly wisdome Mannes boūds The right vse of gods giftes Prophesie Heretical prophesying Papistical prophesying Ministers Teachers Exhortation How to giue How too rule God graunt there bee none such in England How to shew mercie Loue towards ones neibor or true frendship Brotherly loue ▪ Reuerence Diligence Zele Taking of time Hope Patience Prayer Liberalitie Hospitalitie or house keping Meeknesse Frindlinesse or gladsomnesse ▪ Pitie Concorde Lowlinesse mildnesse Mildenesse Meekenesse Shunning of stumbling blockes Reuengment Rightuousnes comprehendeth all vertues The lawe of God and of nature What it is too loue our neybor The seuerall sorts or degrees of loue towardes ones neybor Gods commaundement is the rule of vertues Antimonians The loue of God. Wee can do no vvoorks to iustify our selues Hovv loue engendreth in vs What is to bee done in all intents drifts and purposes of this lyfe The common ende and drift of al a mannes dooings The endes of authoritie or ciuil gouernement The ends of the ministerie The endes of learning Settlednesse The descriptiō of a good and skilfull minister Vnnecessary dealings The fiue naked Games or exercyses of Actiuitie Running Buffeting Leaping Coyting it vvas like our throvving of the hammer Wrestling The dyet demean or of those that contended in the sayd Games their revvards An excellent similitude A furlong The revvarde of victorie Interpretation of the Greeke vvoords Of the behoue fulnesse of doing vvell Of the discom moditie of doing yll Examples One church of God in al ages gathered by one meane fed vvith one foode Figures of Baptim Figure of the Lords supper The causes of the Lentō fast True glorie or boasting False Apostles Reprofe of vaynglorie Example of christen bosting Who are the children of Abraham Labours Strypes Death Strypes Whippings Stoning Shipwrecke Trauell Ieoperdy Loke for these names in the table in th end of this booke Austin Aretas How manye sortes of visions of reuelations there be Visions of three sortes Difference of heauens Heauen or Paradyse Languages Prophesying and fayth Mark wel this discourse and beare it away True faith and true loue are vnseparable Patience Gentlenesse Freendlynesse Modestie or myldnesse Good meening Lowlynesse Grauitie Iustdealing Equitie Meeknesse Freendlynesse Ryghtfulnesse and mercy Rightuousnesse truthe Patience Freendlynesse Hope Patience Prophesy Tungs Knowledge Differences of knowing God Duties or poynts of a true preacher Vertues that ought too bee in ministers Patience Painfulnesse The touchstone of Religion What patiēce is Look for these in the table at the end of this Booke Why lent was ordeined The first author of the Lenton fast Diuersitie in keeping the Lent. Austin a mainteyner of the Lenton fast Saturdays and Emberdayes Diuersitie of allegoricall fastes Papisticall fast reproued The iudgemēt of gods woord concerning fast How too obserue the outward fast aryght Scripture the rule of christianitie Christians must proceede continually not stay Chastitie a mark of Gods church Tertullians saying Buying and selling Honest Profitable Good counsell Bargaining merchandyse appoynted by God for singular good purposes Confutation of Meritmōgers Necessitie of cōmaundemēt Necessitie of eschewing paynes Necessitie of Gods graces and gifts Rewardes Chastitie Couetousnesse Followers of God. Too walke Sacrifyse Sweete smell Sainctes Whoo is an Idolater Darknesse A Testament or last will. A definition of the new Testament A definition of the old Testament The difference betweene the old ▪ Testamēt and the new Agar Sara Ismael and Isaa● A very good argument The heauenly Ierusalem What preesthod is in general A definition of the hyghest preest or of Chryst Gods iustice medled with mercy was the cause of christs sacrifyce Why the sacrifysing of beasts was ordeyned The sacrifises of the Hēathē Differences of Chrystes sacrifise and the Leuiticall sacrifises Eternall saluation Leuitical sacrifises are figures Chrystes sacrifice once for al Christ purgeth by his own blud Chryst is entered into heauē Marcion the Manichees Chrystes humilitie IESV Why Chryst was made a sacrifyce The first part of Chrystes Passion Testimonies of gods wrath ageinst sinne The seconde part of Chrystes passion The third part of his passion The loue of
counsel of the Godhed for mankind and turning vppon himselfe the most rightful wrath of God against sin ioyning too himself our nature by euer lasting and indissoluble bond Secondly the holy ghost hath sanctified the flesh taken of the substance of the virgin Marie and fashioned in Maries wombe the body of Chryst redy too bée borne Luke j. The causes inforcing the birth and Incarnation of the Sonne of God our mediatoure were chéefly foure First the excéeding loue and mercy of God towardes mankind which he would not haue forlorne for euer Secondly Gods iustice binding men either too obedience or too sufficient punishment Therefore when man had transgressed it was of necessitie that the punishment should be performed by man Thirdly Now that the pryce might bée of full value and the greatnesse of the desert might excéede the greatnesse of the sinne it béehoued the redéemer too excell all creatures and too bée a person of the Godhed Fourthly It is the duetie of a redéemer and high priest too appease Gods wrathe and too ouercome sinne and death and too bée at hand in all places and too héere and defend the Churche and too restore ryghtuousnesse and eternall life vntoo it But this can no man doo that is not also Emanuell that is too say in very déede and by nature God. The outward forcing cause is sinne and the most sorowfull damnation of all mankind which God wold not should vtterly perish The finall cause is shewed in the Sermon of the Angell Beholde I bring you tidings of great ioy for there is borne too you a sauioure Chryst the Lord. For the highest benefit that the sonne of God hath wrought vntoo vs by his birth is saluation that is too say deliuerance from Gods wrath from sinne from death from curse of the law from the tirannie of the deuil and from endlesse damnation and on the other side attonement with God ioy of conscience adoption too be the sonnes of God the gift of the holy ghost rightuousnesse and euerlasting life Too bée short the woord of God Iesus Christ is become that which wée bée too the intent he might make vs fully that which he is For that I may vse the woordes of Ciprian Chryst the sonne of God voutsaued too become the sonne of man to the intēt he might make vs men the sonnes of God He tooke vppon him the shape of a seruant too the intent he might set vs frée that are the seruauntes of sinne and death He was wounded that he might heale our wounds and it was his will too die that he might giue vs mortal wights immortalitie These benefits are brefly conteined in the promises made too Adam Abraham In thy séede shall all nations be blissed Also the womās séede shall tread downe the serpents head And the summe is vttered in cléere and lyghtsome woords by Paule Galath 4. After that the fulnesse of time was come God sent his sonne borne of a woman made vnder the lawe too the intent he myght redéeme those that were vnder the law that wée myght bée adopted the sonnes of God of which notable sentence I will intreat more at large the next Sunday The .iij. Of the applying NOw forasmuch as these are great good things which the sonne of God bringeth the sorowful minds demād how wée wretches defiled with sinnes can atteine them That do the Angels teach vnto you is borne a sauior And Esay a child is born vnto vs a sonne is giuen vntoo vs And hereuppon is grounded this sentence Iohn 3. So God loued the world that he gaue his only begotten sonne to the intent that all y beleeue in him should not perish but haue lyfe euerlasting For too this purpose was the sonne of God sent that wée al whoo are vtterly vnwoorthy and horibly defiled should bée accepted of God for his sake and atteyne remission of sinnes and eternall saluation And wee are most straightly commaunded of God too beléeue assuredly that these good things are giuen vs for his sonnes sake and through this faith shining before vs too sing all our life long with the Angels 1 Glorie bee too God on high that is too say nowe that the sonne is borne for the same sonnes sake is true and perfect glorie yéelded vntoo God not only for that he is God wyse rightuous and a iudge but also for that he is mercifall and certeinly accepteth vs for his sonnes sake and rewardeth vs with eternall life This glorie doo neyther heathenmen nor Turkes nor hipocrites but only they that beleeue in the sonne that is borne too vs and giuen too vs yéelde vntoo God. 2 In earth peace that is too say men haue God reconciled and fauorable too them and mainteine mutuall loue among themselues 3 Too men gladnesse that is too say although miseries and distresses befal them yet are their hartes quiet and merie and rest stedfastly in this souereine goodnesse that the sonne is borne too vs and giuen too vs. ¶ THE CONCLVSION In the knitting vp let the thrée places bée repeted and let a thanksgiuing bée added for the sending of the sonne and a prayer that God will voutsaue to gather a churche too his sonne among vs and kindle our mindes and hartes with his holy spirit so as wée may looke somewhat more déepely intoo this woonderfull deuise of our redemption and magnifie it with thankfull hartes Vppon Christmas day ¶ The Epistle Heb. j. GOd in times past diuersly many ways spake vntoo the fathers by Prophets but in these last days he hath spokē vntoo vs by his own sonne whom he hath made heire of all things by whō also he made the worlde Which sonne beeing the bryghtnes of his glory and the very image of his substāce ruling al things with the woord of his power hath by his own person purged our sinnes and sitteth on the right hand of the maiestie on hie beeing so much more excellent than the Angels as he hath by enheritaunce obteined a more excellent name than haue they For vntoo which of the Angels said he at any time Thou art my sonne this day haue I begottē thee And agein I wil bee his father and he shal bee my sonne And agein when he bringeth in the first begotten sonne intoo the world he saith And let all the Angels of God woorship him And of the Angels he saith he maketh his Angels spirits and his ministers a flame of fire But vnto the sōne he saith thy seat o God shal be for euer and euer The scepter of thy kingdom is a right scepter Thou hast loued rightuousnesse and hated iniquitie Wherefore God euen thy God hath anointed thee with Oile of gladnesse aboue thy fellowes And thou Lord in the beginning hast laid the foūdation of the earth And the heauens are the woorkes of thy handes They shall perish but thou endurest They all shall wex old as dooth a garment and as a vesture
and honour that is too maynteyne it chaste and holye and not to defyle it with lustes of concupiscence as the Heathen haue giuen themselues leaue without controllement In this place is to bée repeted the whole doctrine concerning chastitie wedlocke and in especially the eyght causes for which al the godly must with singular héede and diligence defend the honour of chast shamefastnesse Which causes are recited in the declaration of the vertues of the sixth commaundement in my rules of lyfe Now will I adde but only one saying of Tertulliā most woorthye to bée borne away Inasmuch as wée all are the temple of God by putting into vs the holy Ghoste who haloweth vs the Churchwarden and chéef Chaplein of that temple is chastitie which may suffer no vncleane or vnholy thing too bée brought in thither least GOD who dwelleth there taking displeasure too sée his abode defyled should vtterly forsake it The third part concerning interchaungeable ryghtfulnesse which shunneth deceyt in bargayning THis is the will of God that no man deceyue and beguyle his brother in chapmanship bycause the Lord is the punisher of all such things The proposition or ground is Let no man deceyue his brother in bargeyning or bée yée iust in your bargaynings The reasons are twoo THe first reason is for that it is honest This is the will of God that no man misuse or deceyue his brother The second is for that it is profitable Bycause God is the punisher of all such things Althoughe the sent of lukre by any meanes séeme swéete for a whyle and that they think it hygh pollicie that their craftinesse is not espyed yet will god fynd out the offender yet hath God a reuenging eye God the reuenger séeth all things And experience proueth the méening of Hesiodus verse too bée true By euill meanes seek not too gain such gain as rendreth losse and pain God hath by wonderfull forecast ordeyned and established lawfull bargayning among men and he hath so diuersly distributed among them the goods that perteyne too the mayntenance of this mortall lyfe that eche hath néede of others help too the intent that in exchaunging of things and in bargeyning they should put in vre ryghtfulnesse loue towardes their neyghbour and other vertues and that many being knit bound togither with these bondes should liue in companie and conuersation toogither and shewe the doctrine concerning God one too another and the examples of vertues one to another Therfore God alloweth lawfull bargenings will haue indifferencie and vpryghtnesse kept and vsed in them And in this place by expresse woords he forbiddeth defrauding which keepeth not equalitie in bargeynes but catcheth too himself a greater part than he ought of ryght too haue For the woord that Paule vseth signifyeth the same thing that it dooth in the fifth booke of Aristotles Ethicks that is too wit Pleonectein of pleon echein whiche is as much too say as too haue more thā ryght or too take of another mānes goods without recompensing as much for it or too encrease a mannes owne stock too another mannes losse The vertue that encounters it is interchaungeable vpryghtnesse which in marchandyze or bargening beguyleth not other men but maynteyneth proportionable indifferencie according too the Lawes of Nature Thou shalt not steale Loue thy neyghbour as thy selfe Doo not too another which thou wouldest not haue doone too thyself Vppon the Sunday called Oculi or the third Sunday in Lent. ¶ The Epistle Ephes v. BEe you the followers of God as deere chyldren and walke in loue euen as Chryste loued vs and gaue himself for vs an offeryng and a sacrifice of a sweet sauour too god As for fornication and all vnclennesse or couetousnesse let it not bee once mamed among you as it becommeth Sainctes or fylthynesse or foolish talkyng or iesting which are not comely but rather giuyng of thankes For this yee know that no whoremonger eyther vncleane persone or couetous persone which is a worshipper of ymages hath any inheritaunce in the kyngdome of Chryste and of god Let no man deceyue you with vayne wordes For bycause of such thyngs cōmeth the wrath of God vppon the chyldren of disobedience Be not yee therfore companions of them Yee were sometymes darknesse but nowe are yee lyght in the Lord walke as chyldren of lyght for the fruite of the spirite consisteth in all goodnesse and ryghtuousnesse and truthe Accept that whiche is pleasing vntoo the Lorde and haue no fellowship with the vnfruiteful workes of darknesse but rather rebuke them For it is a shame euen too name those things which are done of them in secrete but all things when they are brought foorth by the lyght are manifest ▪ For whatsoeuer is manifest the same is light wherfore he sayeth awake thou that sleepest and stand vp from death and Chryste shall gyue thee lyght The disposement THe state of this Epistle is an Exhortation too newe obedience or too good woorkes by name it giueth preceptes of these thrée vertues 1 Of the loue of God and a mannes neyghbour 2 Of chastitie which shunneth whordome filthynesse and all vnclennesse 3 Of frankhartednesse or liberalitie esche wing couetousnesse which is the seruice of Idols And in this exhortation ▪ Paule vseth six Argumentes of which the first is gathered 1 Of the example of God. 2 Of the dutie of children 3 Of the exāple of Chryste who hath loued vs in such wyse that he hath giuen himselfe too bée an offring and sacrifice for vs. 4 Of the comlynesse as it beséemeth the Saints 5 Of the punishements of wickednesse For these things commeth the wrath of God vppon all that bée disobedient 6 Of the finall cause Therefore are yée deliuered out of the darknesse of sinne and endued with a newe lyght and with the holy Ghost that yée should exercise gentlenesse vpryghtnesse and truthe This disposement of the principall members of this Epistle being considered there may a twoo or thrée of the notabler places bée the easlyer picked out and entreated of An exhortation too newnesse of lyfe or too good woorkes in generall MAny when they héere that a man deserueth not forgyuenesse of sinnes by his good woorkes what néede wée say they to employ any studie or care to doo well Therefore let vs giue our selues ouer to all entycements of pleasure and sinne The wicked and horrible talke of these men is playnly confuted by Paule in this Epistle Wée are not able by our vertues to deserue forgiuenesse of sinnes and eternall lyfe but the only sonne of God our Lord Iesus Chryste hathe obteyned these moste hygh benefites for vs by his obedience and death Neuerthelesse there are other foure ryght weightye causes for whiche wée ought too stryue ageynst the entycementes of sinne and to exercyse ryghtuousnesse truthe liberalitie chastitie and other vertues First necessitie of the commaundement and the det For this purpose were men created by God and afterward redeemed
warres destructions of Cities and other innumerable miseries of all men and the slaughters of all the Sainctes as of Abel and Iohn Baptist by which notwithstanding Gods wrath could not bée pacifyed but that the sonne of God must bée made a sacrifyse Ageine the greatnesse of Gods wrath is after some manner shewed by the examples of many men who for the conscience of one wickednesse haue bin striken with most heauie fearfulnesse which hathe driuen them too fordoo themselues As the examples of Orestes of Aristobulus king of the Iewes of Iudas the traitor of Theodorich of Verona and of dyuers others Now if the féeling of Gods wrath ageinst one sin alone doo bréede so bitter sorow in the hart that it dispatcheth a mā of his life What an vnmeasurable huge heape of Gods wrath and of horrible sorowes think you wer thronged vppon Chryst who susteined not one sinne alone or the sinnes of some only one mā but mine and thine yea and al mennes offences Idoll gaddings and murders all their sinfull inclinations affections and outward faultes toogither with the fire of Gods wrath ageinst these sinnes Being ouerwhelmed with this houge burthen of Gods wrath he cryeth out Psalm xxij O God my God why haste thou forsaken mée My hart is become like melting wax my strength is withered like a potsherd and thou hast brought mée downe too the dust of death This féeling of the houge and horrible wrathe of God ageinst al the sinnes of all men was the first and chéefest part of Chrystes passion The second part was the heauinesse and excéeding great torment rysing in his hart for the féeling of Gods wrathe ageinst sinnes and for the feare of death and tearing of his bodie which so appalled all the partes of his bodie that he swet droppes of blud The third and lyghtest part of all was the tearing of his bodie and streyning of his sinewes when he was whipped ▪ buffeted and fastened too the crosse with nailes The causes of Chrystes passion IT is not the wisdome of any creature that can serche out the causes of Gods woonderfull purpose concerning the redemption of mankynd too bée brought too passe in this wyse that the sonne of God should make intreatance for vs take our nature vpon him and bee sacrifysed for vs neuerthelesse God will haue the consideration of this woonderfull Decrée begonne in this lyfe The principall efficient cause is the will of Gods sonne making intercession of his owne mere motion for mankind falne intoo sinne and death and offering himself too this obedience and punnishment wherby he myght make satisfaction for mankynd Iohn .x. I am the good shepeherd and I giue my life for my shéepe The inward cause that moued or enforced him too doo so is the vnmeasurable mercy of God tēpered with his iustice For sith that God is vnchaungeably iust he is in déede and horribly angry with sinne and destroyeth sinners like a consuming fire Neyther relenteth he his anger ageinst sinne of a fondnesse lyghtnesse but vnchaungeably most streightly kéepeth this rule of iustice that men shall eyther performe due obedience or else abyde the fire of Gods wrath Therefore God receiueth not men that are faln without equal and sufficient amends which forbicause mākind was not able to yéeld therfore was too bee cast intoo endlesse torments the sonne of God béeing inflamed with vnmeasurable loue and mercy towards mankynd maketh intretance for vs and too the entent Gods iustice should be satisfied he vndertaketh him self the punishmēt amends making for our sinnes taking our nature vppon him becometh a sacrifise susteining Gods dreadful wrath ageinst sin payeth too Gods maiestie a rāsome too the full value of our sin vanquishing sin and death and restoring men too ryghtuousnesse and eternall lyfe The outward cause that moued or enforced him so too doo was the fal of our first parents the sin that frō thens did shed it self intoo all vs who for the same must haue perished in euerlasting paynes had not the sonne of God bin sacrifysed The instrumentall and outward woorking cause are the Diuels and their instruments the Iewes who burning in hatred ageinst Chryste for finding fault with their wickednesse and false opinions coueted too rid him away and too destroy him too the entent they myght without checke maynteine their hypocrisie and wicked lustes These enforcing and finall causes make an infinite difference betwéene the will of the Iewes crucifying Chryste and the will of God Who béeing moued by his owne exceeding mercie toward mankynde and through the entreatance of his sonne would haue Chryst too suffer too dye and too ryse alyue agein too the entent he might restore men too lyfe and euerlasting saluation The matter wherin as in moulds Christes Passion was wrought are the mynd will hart and body of Chryste The forme or manner is the very feeling of Gods horrible wrath and the anguishe as well of Chrystes mynd as of his bodie and his chyldly obedience through which he willingly submitted himselfe with true reuerence and woonderfull lowlynesse too the eternal father and without grudging or repyning endured Gods wrathe poured out vppon him and most bitter formentes for the loue of Gods iustice and mannes saluacion The end of his Passion is first that mankynd béeing redéemed with sufficient ransome from Gods wrath and euerlasting damnacion myght bée rewarded with ryghtuousnesse and euerlasting lyfe Iohn .iij. Like as Moyses lifted vp the Serpent in the wildernesse so must the sonne of man be lifted vp too the entent that all that beléeue in him should not perishe but haue lyfe euerlasting Secondly that wée myght become conformable too the image of Gods sonne that is too say that wée myght bée like the sonne of God our patterne in bearing the Crosse Romaines .viij. Thirdly that wée should folowe the example of Chrystes patience and méeknesse .j. Peter ij Fourthly that wée in all our lyfe should expresse the humilitie that Chryste performed in his passion Philip. ij Through lowlynesse of mynde let euery man estéeme others better than himselfe And let the same mynd bee in you that was in Iesus Chryst Fifthly that being dead to sinne wée might liue vprightly and blamelesse For like as Chryst caryed downe our sinnes intoo his graue and abolished them by his death euen so wée mortifying the dregges of sinne as yet sticking in our flesh must performe new obedience and ryghtuousnesse agréeing with the will of god j. Peter ij Chryste bare our sinnes in his bodye vppon the trée that wée béeing dead to sinne should lyue too ryghtuousnesse The effectes of Chrystes passion are all his benefites which for instruction sake wee will distribute intoo eyght formes FIrst the redemption of mankynde from Gods wrath sin death and the diuels tyranny j. Tim. ij There is but one mediator betwéene God and man the man Iesus Chryste who gaue himselfe for vs too redéeme vs The
God. 4 He maketh mention of one of the finall causes of good woorkes Namely too the entent the slaunders of the vngodly which father horrible wickednesses vppon the Christen religion myght bée proued vntrue and by our godlynesse modestie and other examples of vertues many may bée allured too learne and loue the Doctrine of the true Churche and thereuppon turning vntoo Christ glorifie God as is said in the fifth of Mathew Let your lyght so shyne before men that they may sée your good woorkes and glorifie your father which is in heauen The second place of the ciuill Magistrate NO worldly power no armyes doo more strongly fortifie and maintein the authoritie of the ciuill ordinaunce and the obedience due too the magistrate than these commaundementes of god j. Peter the second and Romaines the xiij which doo most streytly charge men too obey the magistrate and all mannes ordinaunce or ciuill order which in déede is the woorke of God and a singular witnesse of his wisdome ryghtuousnesse and goodnesse For God by his wisdome hath made differences in the degrées of persones whiche rule and are ruled as of Magistrates and subiectes Husbandes and wyues parents and children c. Also he hath by his owne voyce set foorth Lawes of vertues ▪ and of al duties to bée performed too Godward too the Magistrates and too other men and hath appoynted and established a forme of iudgements which are the defence and execution of the Lawes a Rule of vpryghtnesse too bée obserued in bargayning handycraftes néedfull for the lyfe Lawes of successions punishmentes of transgressers defences of good men lawfull taxes and tallages warfare and the lawe of armes and all other partes of eiuill order and policie ▪ too the intent he may bée knowen too bée present in all common weales and that the duties of iustice may bée vnderstood and executed and that honest discipline peace the Vniuersities and Schooles of lerning and other good things may bée maynteyned among mankynd This ciuill order is with great ●●ede too bée discerned frō the vyces and confusions which the f●endes and their instruments that is too wit vngodly and Tyrannicall Gouernours doo foyst intoo the order appoynted by god And let the diffinition of a Magistrate bée considered whiche Paule Rom. xiij and Peter in this Epistle haue set foorth A Magistrate is a Minister appoynted by Gods ordināce and armed with Lawes and swoord too bée the keeper of outward discipline and peace and too punish th 〈…〉 dooers and too defend and prayse the well dooers Peter willeth men too obey the worldly Magistrate and the ordinances and lawes made by man that is a Lawfull Magistrate for the Lord Gods sake who most streightly cōmaundeth obedience and will haue Magistrates too bée his deputies and ministers and the setters foorth of his wisdom and the executers of his diuine Iustice and therefore he vouchsaueth Magistrates the name of Gods. Psal lxxxij I haue sayd yée are Gods. And hereuntoo also may the most graue sentence of Plutarch bée referred Iustice is the end of the Lawe the Lawe is the woorke of the Gouerner the Gouerner is the Image of God who beautifieth all things and by vertue the gouerner maketh himselfe like vntoo God. Wherefore for Gods sake who is the author of ciuill gouernement let vs bée subiect too our King and his Capteyns which are sent by him that is too say by God or the King too punish the vngratious and too maynteyne the good and too honor them with rewardes For in that respect are they called gracious Lords Luc. xxij And men must patiently obey not only the good courteouse and gracious but also the rough hard crabbed and froward Lords or Maisters yea and bondage euen though it bée somwhat with the streyghtest is too bée endured as long as wée may obey without sinne But all seruices become harder and gréeuouser in this old age of the forworne world for as the sinnes of the worlde increase so also the punishements and miseries as well publike as priuate are heaped one vppon another Therefore wée must the more patiently beare the burthens of the Magistrates though they bée euen with the forest And although wée haue before God deserued all punishments yet notwithstanding when wée haue vniust burthens layd vppon vs by the Magistrate or by others wée may beare the burthen with so much the more quiet mynd bycause our conscience is assured that wée are blamelesse For what soeuer a man suffereth vnwoorthily is to bée borne patiently But when the pain ensewes desert it comes too worke thee wo and smart And therefore S. Peter in this place sayeth It is woorth thanks if a man suffer punishment for conscience sake to Godward That is too say it deserueth thanks or prayse or it is acceptable too GOD when a man beareth out iniuries patiently in a iust quarell or in Gods behalfe For it is the cause that makes a Martir and not the martyring of him The third place CHristen libertie is not a lawlesnesse too folowe all kynd of concupiscence and wickednesse to doo what a man listeth as the seditious Bowers dreamed who thought them selues exempted frō payment of tributes frō obedience too bée performed too the ciuill Magistrate bycause all Christen men are in●raunchysed intoo the libertie of the sonnes of God through Chryst Uerely these men made the Christen libertie a cloke of their malice For the christen libertie is a cleere riddance from sinne from Gods wrath from curse of the Lawe and from endlesse death giuen too vs by and for the sonne of God who was as a seruant and dyed for vs and not an exemption from the obedience that is too bée performed too God or too the ciuill Magistrates as is shewed more at large in an other place Vppon the Sunday called Cantate or the fourth Sunday after Easter Sing vntoo the Lord a new song c. Psal 97. ¶ The Epistle Iames. j. EVery good gifte and euery perfect gift is from aboue and commeth downe from the Father of lyghtes with whom is no variablenesse neither shadow of chaunge Of his owne will begate he vs with the woorde of truthe that wee should bee the first frutes of his creatures Wherefore deere brethren let euery man bee swifte too heare slowe to speake slowe too wrath For the wrath of man worketh not that which is ryghtuous before god Wherfore laye a parte all filthynesse and superfluitie of maliciousnesse and receyue with meekenesse the woord that is graffed in you which is able to saue your soules The disposement The cheef places are fyue The first place is AN euident proofe that God is not the cause of euill For the beginning of this Epistle matcheth with y discourse going before in whiche Iames hath taught that God tempteth no man that is too say enforceth no man too sinne or too fall but that eche man is tempted of his own concupiscence that is too say of his own
stayednesse For drūken folkes do soone slip vnwares into great offences by quenching theyr fayth earnestnesse in prayer in their studies and affaires are euen layd like naked vnarmed folke in daunger of theyr most cruell enemie the Diuell The third chéef defence ageinst the slights of sathan specially ageinst the first kind of temptacions which are most perilous of all is sound fayth not giuing way to the thoughts which the deuill or our owne flesh putteth in our heads but fastening most stedfastly the eyes both of body mind vpon the onely word which god hath deliuered vs which is the onely Ancor of our life and welfare from whiche it muste not suffer it selfe to bee pulled by any thoughts by any prosperitie or by aduersitie The fourth is the example of brotherhoode or of all the brethren and godly men in the worlde who susteyne the same temptations and sleyghts of the Diuell as well as we and yet ouercome them and put them to flight by the help of Gods sonne and by fayth staying vppon the worde of God and by the comfort of the godly brethren The fifth is the God of all grace who hath called vs to his euerlasting glorie by Iesus Christ who suffereth vs not to bée tempted aboue our power but rayseth and settleth and strengtheneth and stablisheth the buylding of our faith that it sinke not but continue and stand stedy and vnmonable against all the stormes of temptacions that the very true God may be truely honored Vppon the fourth Sunday after Trinitie ¶ The Epistle Rom. viij YF we be sonnes we are also heyres the heyres I meane of God and heyres annexed with Christ yf so be that wee suffer with him that wee may also be glorified with him For I suppose that the afflictions of this life are not worthy of the glory which shal be shewed vppon vs For the feruent desire of the creature abideth loking when the sonnes of God shall appere because the creature is subdued to vanitie against the wil therof but for his wil which hath subdued it in hope For the same creature shall bee deliuered frō the bondage of corruption into the glorious libertie of the sonnes of God. For wee know that euery creature groneth with vs also and trauayleth in payne euen vntoo this time Not onely it but euen wee also whiche haue the firste frutes of the spirite mourne in our selues and wayte for the adoption euen the deliueraunce of our bodyes For wee are saued by hope But hope that is seene is no hope For howe can a man hope for that which he seeth But and yf we hope for that we see not then do we with patience abide for it Likewise the spirite also helpeth our infirmities For wee know not what to desire as we ought but the sprite maketh intercession mightily for vs with gronings which can not be expressed with toong And he that searcheth the heartes knoweth what is the meaning of the sprite for he maketh intercession for the Sainctes according too the pleasure of God. The disposement THis Epistle is persuasiue For it is a comforte of the Church vnder the Crosse in this life The proposition or ground of it is The godly must beare the crosse or suffer tribulation paciently and quietly The arguments of comfort are six THe first is vppon the efficient cause or the order established by God and also vppon the example of Gods sonne All godly men are bound to obey Gods wisdome and Iustice méekely and reuerently But Gods wisedom hath appoynted this order that al the children of God and heires annexed with Christ shold bée made conformable too their patterne the sonne of God our Lord Iesu Chryst who suffered excéeding great miseries persecution and death before hée was glorified Ergo all the godly muste reuerentely obey this order of Gods wisedome and become lyke their pattern the Son of God in persecution patiently abide the small troubles of this lyfe whiche are the wicket to life and glory euerlasting Now this conditionall phrase If wee suffer with him signifieth not a cause or desert but the order stablished by God that he whiche desireth to come to the marke of life and glorie euerlasting should paciently endure the peynes and troubles of so short and needfull a iourney For eternall life is giuen fréely for the sonne of Gods sake as it is sayd in Ro. vj. Iohn iij. and .vj. c. And in this place he sayth expressely that our afflictions are not woorthy or deserue not the glorie to come The second chéef argument is grounded vpon the end of persecution or vpon our most gladsome riddance out of all miseries Light discommodities which shall fall out in the end to our welfare and bée recompenced with excéeding great and endlesse glorie are to bee endured with a manly and a quiet minde After the crosse tribulacions of the godly there shall assuredly ensue to them a most ioyfull end and eternall gladnesse and glorie wherwith we shal be crowned after wée haue wrestled out of all miseries and enioying the sight companie of God his Church we shal be filled w the light wisdome of God euerlastingly For to al those that exercise godlinesse the ende shall bée moste swéete Ergo wée must in this very shorte race of our lyfe paciently and with willing mindes endure some troubles of so needfull a iourney Paule enlargeth the minor by a comparison of things that are not matches that is too wit of the miseries of this life the glorie to come For as there is no comparison of one little waterdrop to the whole huge Sea or of one small grayne of duste to the mountayne Imaus euen so the light short troubles of this most short race are not worthy to bée compared with the great eternall glorie of the life to come as is sayd ij Cor. iiij The small continuaunce lightnesse of our afflictions procureth an excéeding eternal weyght of glorie vnto vs while we consider not the thinges that are séene but the things that are not séene So fayeth he héere that the glorie of the godly which is to come is not seene with eyes but that the reuelement thereof is to be wayted for by fayth and hope The 3. argumēt is groūded vpon an exāple of the whole nature of all things or of the frame of the whole world The harmes that are common to many are to be borne the more quietly bycause it is ageinste righte to couet oddes and to refuse such burthens as other men that are much better than our selues are compelled to beare All the whole world is subiect to the fondnesse or abuse of the vngodly to the thraldome of corruption and carefully wayteth for deliueraunce to the intent it may serue to the glorie of Gods children for whom it was made Therefore let vs also suffer the common miseries the quietlyer beare with the
delay For afterward no doute but the reuelacion of the glorie of Gods children shall follow though it be put off for a while Haue patience then a while and stay great profites springs of small delay He enlargeth this minor by the figure Expolition by ●eyning a person in y he sayeth that al creatures do grone endure throwes like women laboring of child which creatures notwithstanding do want sense But the feeling of the peyne commeth to the church the godly which grone for the sorow of Ioseph are sory that the vngodly abuse the creatures that the godly are afflicted murthered as yf I shuld say that the very walles of the church bewaile Luther it were as much to say as the godly men in the Church lament that Luther preacheth no more in that place The. 4. is grounded vpon the exāple of the Apostles The sorowes miseries cōmon to men with the chéefest lightes of the Church that is to wit the Apostles who had the first frutes of the spirite or the more excellent gifts of the holy Ghost are to be borne patiently The miseries gréefes of the godly y moorne in thēselues with earnest longing looke for the glorie that shall bee shewed openly vppon Godschildren are but the same that the Apostles suffered Ergo they are too bée endured patiently The fifth argument is grounded vppon the manner of saluacion or of the full deliueraunce of all troubles The maner of saluacion appointed by God is this that in this present lyfe wée should for Christ the mediators sake receyue forgiuenesse of sinnes imputacion of rightuousnes inheritaunce of the glorie to come and the holy Ghost the comforter the earnest penny thereof that in the meane season wée should in this lyfe be subiect too the Crosse and to death and paciently by hope looke for our full saluacion or deliueraunce from the present miseries Wée are saued by hope that is to wit the full deliueraunce from sinne death and all miseries is yet too bée hoped for and looked for but the hope that is séene that is to say of thinges presente that are séene with the eyes is no hope Or the obiect which is séene before vs is not hoped for But the full deliueraunce or glorification of the godly is hoped for Ergo it is too be wayted for by patience And wheras the Papists argue in this wise ▪ Saluacion is Iustification We are saued by hope Ergo we are iustified by hope and not by fayth onely I answer I deny the consequent bycause there is a guyle in the double meening of the woord Saluation For in the maior or first proposition it signifieth remission of sins or recōcilemēt to God the heritage of eternall lyfe And in the minor or second proposition it signifieth ful deliuerance frō all euils or euerlasting glorification as with the mouth is acknowledgmēt of saluacion the is to say he that will be glorifyed must néedes perseuer The vj. argumēt is groūded vppon the efficient or furthering cause or vpon possibilitie For mens mindes can not of theyr owne strength onely yéeld quiet or by any meanes willing obediēce too God specially in greate troubles And therefore the holy Ghoste the comforter aydeth vs wretches and weakelings and as it were stretcheth out his hand to vs as wee are falling and holdeth vs vp and stayeth vs and strengtheneth vs that wée may bée able to beare out the burthen layde vppon vs like as hee strengthened Steuen Iohn Husle Laurence others He kindleth our mindes to true prayer and ruleth the sighes and gronings of our heartes that desire too bee soone dispatched out of these miseries inclining them to theyr obedience due to God that wée may pray too bée deliuered according too Gods fatherly good will and not after our owne deuises For wée know not what to pray as wée ought to doo But he taketh pitie of our ignorance as Bernard sayeth and accepting our prayer gently giueth not that thing which eyther is vtterly vnprofitable for vs or not néedefull to be graunted so soone But as for the prayer it shall not bee vnfruteful For eyther it shal obteyne that which we demaund or els that which shall bée more for our profite like as a Father or Phisician doo gently graunt not all things that the childe or the sicke person desire but suche things as they know bée méete for them Vppon the fifth Sunday after Trinitie ¶ The Epistle j. Pet. iij. BE you all of one minde and of one harte loue as brethren be pitifull be curteous meeke not rendring euill for euill or rebuke for rebuke but contrariwise blesse knowing that ye are therunto called euen that ye should bee heyres of the blessing For he that doeth long after life and loueth to see good dayes let him refrayne his tong from euill and his lippes that they speake no guyle Let him eschue euill and doo good let him seeke peace and ensue it For the eyes of the Lorde are ouer the righteous and his eares are open vntoo their prayers Again the face of the Lord is ouer them that do euill Moreouer who is he that wil harme you if ye folow that which is good yea happy are yee if any trouble happen vntoo you for ryghteousnesse sake Bee yee not afrayd for any terror of them neyther bee yee troubled but sanctifie the Lord God in your hearts The disposement THis Epistle is exhortatiue conteyning preceptes of good woorks or the dueties of many vertues of which dyuers perteyne too the fifth commaundement From thence therefore may the orderly expositions of euery of them bée fetched intoo this Epistle The first is of one myndednesse or desire of concord to the mayntenance wherof there are thrée vertues chéefly necessary of which is spoken Ephes iiij With all lowlynesse méeknesse longsufferance or patience endeuering to kéep the vnitie of the spirit in the bond of peace The vices that encoūter it are quarellousnesse which soweth discordes and debates cowardnesse which fighteth not euen for things néedful as in defence of the truth of Gods doctrin the glory of god c. The second is of like affectionednesse which is touched with the féeling of other folkes estates reioycing in the prosperitie of good men and lamenting their aduersities Or as Paule sayth which is mery with them that bée mery wéepeth with them that wéepe But as Pindarus sayth the most part of mē are gréeued with their own affairs haue no care for others Peter therfore commaūdeth like affectionednesse which cōsisteth of twoo parts First of fréendlynesse which norisheth not maliciousnesse spitefulnesse enuiousnesse but willeth well too the good and is glad of their welfare And secondly of pitifulnesse which is touched with the feling of good mennes miseries is sory that they should fare amisse The vices that encounter it are diuelishnesse which is too reioyce at good mennes harmes and stonehartednesse
For when wicked men obiected vntoo Paule if good woorkes deserue not forgiuenesse of sinnes iustification and saluatiō there is no need why wée should regard too doo wel or it néedeth not too doo good woorks Paule turneth this obiection vppon them and raesoneth thus For this cause dooth grace surmount aboue sinne and for this cause are forgiuenesse of sinnes and the holy Ghost giuē vs through frée mercy that sinne and death should bée taken from vs and new ryghtuousnesse and lyfe bée kindled in vs. All Christians or as many of vs as are baptised intoo Iesus Christ haue obteined remission of sins through frée mercy for Christes sake and sin is dead buried in vs by baptim Ergo it is of necessitie that all Christians or all those that are baptised must no more sin héereafter but must begin a new obedience and life agréeable with the will of God. The second argument is of the efficient cause That which is dead dooth nothing and so sinneth not Wée are dead too sin that is too say sin is dead or released and abolished yea and drowned buried in baptim that is to wit by the frée remission of the sin and by the imputacion of Christes rightuousnesse by the beginning of such mortificatiō or abolishmēt of sin that hēcefoorth although sin be not vtterly suppressed yet not withstanding it may not reigne any more Ergo sin must not héerafter bée effectuall and woorkfull any more in thse that bée baptised or those that bée baptised must not sin any more The third argument is of the efficient cause also That which liueth and reigneth is woorkfull and effectuall that is too say is alwayes dooing of somewhat Newnesse of life or rightuousnesse is kindled by the holy ghost in those that bée borne a new or iustifyed by fayth Ergo the regenerate must néedes from hencefoorth walke in newnesse of lyfe that is too wit in new lyght and knowledge of God and in new ryghtuousnesse and obedyence according too all the commaundements of God. Then folow thrée similitudes or rather arguments groūded vppon the effectualnesse of the baptim and of the death buriall and resurrection of Chryst First of his Baptim Like as in baptim a man is ducked intoo the water and ducked out of the water ageine so likewise sin or the old man is by the effectualnesse of baptim drowned in vs and the new man or new lyfe and obedience ought too ryse out and fiorish ageine Secondly of the death and resurrection of Chryst ▪ Like as Chryst béeing raised from death liueth vntoo God so wée also béeing set frée from sin in true repentance or mortifying of sin by Chryst or in the effectuall woorking of Chrystes death and resurrection must héereafter not sin any more but liue vntoo God that is too say enter intoo a new lyfe and obediēce acceptable too God. Thirdly of Chrystes buriall Like as Chryst béeing buryed rose ageine so wée also béeing buryed with Chryst or hauing killed and buryed sin in our selues through Chryst must ryse agein and yéeld vntoo him the seruiceablenesse of a new life acceptable too God. These arguments grounded vppon the effectualnesse of baptim and of Chrystes death buryall and resurrection are repeted foure times by Paule with exchaunge of woordes in this Epistle As many of vs as are baptised in Iesus Chryst are baptised too dye with him Then are wée buryed with him by baptim for too dye that like as Chryst was raised vp from death so wée also should walke in newnesse of lyfe That is to say all that bée borne ageine by baptim through fayth or all Christen folke are by the merite and operation of Chrystes death dead and buryed vntoo sin or set frée from sin and by the operation of Chrystes resurrection new ryghtuousnesse and lyfe is kindled in them Therefore like as Chryst rose ageine from Death and from his graue So wée also hauing deathe killed and buryed in vs by Baptim and Fayth that leaneth vppon the Death and Resurrection of Chryst must walke in newnesse of lyfe that is too say in new lyght or knowledge of God and in new ryghtuousnesse and obedience acceptable too God. He repeteth the same sentence with exchaunge of woords in the next processe folowing For if wee bee graffed in death or bee made partakers of death like vntoo him wee shall bee partakers of his resurrectiō also knowing this that our old mā is crucified with him also that the body of sin might be vtterly destroyed that wee shuld no more bee feruaunts vnto sin for he that is dead is iustifyed from sinne That is too say like as Chryst hauing bin dead is risen ageine So also our nature béeing dead in Baptim and by true conuersion from sinne vntoo God and set frée from sinne by the merit of Christes death must rise ageine and not sinne any more but lead a new life such a one as pleaseth god Our old man or sinne sticking in vs or our sinnefull nature is crucifyed dead and buryed with Chryst that is too say is clensed and set frée frō sinne by the merite and operation of Chrystes death and resurrection and is mortifyed by true repentance persecution troubles that the body of ūnne or our sinfull nature may bée put away not so as it should vtterly perishe but that it should no more bée subiect too sinne For he that is dead too sinne is iustified or set frée from sinne or sinne which is dead and put away and buryed with Christ must not from hencefoorth woorke and bée effectuall any more The third tyme he repeateth the same sentence in other exchaunge of woordes thus For if wee bee dead with Chryst wee beeleue that wee shal liue with him also And the fourth tyme he repeateth euen the selfe same sentence in somwhat more euidēt woords Knowing that Christ beeing raysed from death dyeth no more Death hath no more power ouer him For in that he dyed too sinne he dyed once and in that he liueth he liueth too god So thinke you also your selues too bee dead as touching sinne but too bee alyue vntoo God in Chryst Iesu our Lord that is too say like as Chryst hauing died once for our sinnes and risen ageine dyeth no more but liueth too God So wée being dead vntoo sinne and béeing set frée from sinne through the operation of Chrystes death by baptim and fayth must not sin any more nor liue in subiection too sinne but vntoo God in Christ Iesu who kindleth new life and rightuousnesse in vs and maketh the same acceptable and pleasant vntoo God. This is the disposement as it wer a short enlargement of the text of this Epistle in which wée sée set foorth the doctrine concerning the new obedience whiche of necessitie is too bee performed by those that are borne a new And therefore a summe of the whole place concerning good woorkes may bée opened too the full vntoo the people Whither
are debters not too the fleshe too liue after the fleshe For if yee liue after the fleshe yee shall dye But if yee through the spirit doo mortifye the deedes of the body ye shal lyue For as many as are ledde by the spirite of God they are the sonnes of god For yee haue not receyued the spirit of bondage to feare any more but ye haue receyued the spirit of adoption whereby yee crye Abba Father The same spirite certifyeth our spirite that we are the sonnes of god If wee bee sonnes then are wee also heyres I meane of God and heyres annexed with Chryste if so bee that wee suffer with him that wee may bee also glorifyed togyther with him The disposement THis Epistle perteyneth too those kynd of cases that are persuasiue For it is an exhortation too new obedience The ground thereof is Wee are detters not too liue after the fleshe or new obedience is needfull or those that bée reconciled too God by fayth must néedes from hencefoorth fight ageinst sinne and begin a new obedience agréeing with the will of God. The arguments of his exhortation are seuen drawen out of the places that are of the persuasiue kynd The first is of the impulsiue cause THat which is due must of necessitie bée performed New obedience is due vntoo God. Ergo New obedience must néeds bée performed Or thus ALl reasoneble creatures must néeds reuerently obey the euerlasting and vnchaungeable order of Gods wisdome and iustice But it is the euerlasting and vnchaungeable order of Gods wisdome and rightuousnesse that men who are created by God and by the sonne of GOD redéemed should obey God their creator and redéemer and eschue sinnes which fight ageinst the will of God. Ergo wée must néeds reuerētly obey our creator redemer no more liue after the flesh or yéeld our selues too sinne The second is of the effect of sinne or of the vnprofitablenesse ALl that liue according too the flesh that is too wit which willingly and wilfully folowe sinne or wicked inclinations and affections become giltie of Gods wrath and of endlesse death and damnation All those that bée borne a new by faith must not ageine procure themselues Gods wrath and euerlasting death Ergo they must not liue any more after the flesh but must performe newe obedience agréeable with the will of God. The third is of the profitablenesse or of the rewards of new obedience ALl that are borne a new by faith must with all endeuer and diligence hold fast and mayntein the euerlasting life which is giuen them fréely for Chrysts sake All that mortifie the déeds of the fleshe by the spirite that is too say which bridle and represse their sinfull inclinations and affections and mortifie them not only by philosophicall diligence but also by the spirite or by true fayth prayer and héedfulnesse stirred vp and furthered by the holy ghost doo hold fast Gods grace and euerlasting life Ergo all that be borne a newe must mortifie or bridle put away the déeds of the flesh or the sinfull inclinations and affections of corrupt nature or must eschue sinne The fourth is of the efficient cause THe holy Ghoste woorketh such motions in them that bée borne a new as he himself is The holy Ghost is not the spirit of bondage sinne death but is the spirite of the adoption of Gods children the spirit of true inuocation of vertue of loue and of sobernesse as is sayd ij Tim. j. Ergo in all that be borne ageine of the holy Ghoste there must néedes bée kindled such motions as he himselfe is that is too wit childly obedience inuocation and loue of God eschewing all sinnes that displease GOD their Father The fifth is of the honestnesse of the matter or of the dutie of sonnes CHildren doo by Gods ordinance owe honor obediēce too their parents Christen folk or those that be receiued by Chryst and borne a new by the holy Ghoste are the children of God Ergo they are bound by Gods ordinance too performe obedience too God their father The sixth is Of the possiblenesse of the matter THe holy Ghost confirmeth our mynds that wée may persuade our selues for a certeyntie that wee are the childrē of GOD and helpeth our weaknesse that wée may bée able too stand stedily ageinst the sleyghts of the Diuill the assaultes of our sinfull nature and the enticements of pleasures and bée able too eschue sinne and exercise vertue The seuenth HE repeteth the Argument of the profitablenesse or of the rewardes by fayth and newe obedience in eternall lyfe whereof although wée bée made heyres fréely for Chrystes sake yet is it there withall a recompence or wages which is yéelded too our woorkes not of desert but of promise j. Timot. iiij Godlynesse hath promises of the lyfe present and too come These are the chéef Argumentes wherewith Paule in this Epistle exhorteth all men too eschue sinne warely and too doo good woorkes And there withall are propounded many notable places of doctrine which I wil picke out as bréefly as may bée The first is of the necessitie of new obedience and of the endeuer too doo good woorkes and of sinning no more after the receyuing of remission of sinnes and the holy Ghost The second is of the difference of deadly sinne and venial sinne There remayne in all men yea euen in the Sainctes that are borne a new many euils that fight ageinst the law of God ageinst which sinnes they that bee borne a newe of the spirit doo notwithstanding stryue that is too wit great dimnesse and doutes concerning God and gods promises and thretnings which doutes doo frō tyme to tyme breke in vpon the mind many euil inclinations fleshely carelesnesse selfouer wéening sinful flames of affections many defauts of ignorance ouersight Paule himself complaineth of the remaynder of these euils in him euen after he was borne a newe Rom. vij The good that I would doo that doo I not but the euil that I wold not that doo I. I sée another law in my membres fyghting lyke an enemie ageinst the law of my mynd subduing mée vnto sin Eccl. vij Ther is no ryghtuous man vpō the earth the dooth good sinneth not Agein it is certen that there be som kind of sins wher withal if the saints defile themselues they lose y holy ghost eternal life like as Saul forwent Grace and it is sayd of Aaron that the lord wold beat him into pouder Therfore it is néedful to cōsider the difference betwéen the sins or defaults euil inclinations that remayn in the saints and other sins or offences ageinst conscience which make of saints no saints but thralles of Gods wrath and endlesse damnatiō Which thing is aduouched in this saying If yée liue after the fleshe yée shall dye but if yée mortifie the déedes of the flesh by the spirit yée shall liue The third is an euident testimonie concerning the holy ghost
of theyr places Of this fayth he speaketh thus in the chapter folowing If I haue neuer so greate fayth yea that I can remoue mountaynes out of their places Such fayth was in the Apostles and in our dayes with Luther who with a stout and vnabashed courage of hart did spred abroade the doctrine of the Gospell when all the worlde was ageinst him iiij The gifte of healing as the Apostles healed the diseased and S. Pantaleon restored health to many that were sicke in Maximilians Court. v. Operations of power or mightie operacions or working of miracles and wonderfull deliueraunces as Esay deliuered Hierusalem from beséeging or of the dueties of a mans owne calling like as Paule is paynfull and laboursome in his vocation and spréedeth the Gospel further abroade than the rest of the Apostles vj. Prophesying that is to wit the gift of foretelling things too come suche as was in Agabus Act. xj and .xxj. and in the daughters of Philip the Gospeller Act. xxj or els a singular aptnesse and fitnesse in expounding the prophesies of the scriptures and such a singular aptnesse was there in Luther euen by the witnesse of Erasmus vij Iudgement to discerne spirites or discernement of opinions whiche are decked with a counterfet colour of truth like as Malchion was the firste that discouered the slightes of Samosetane Alexander spyed out that Arius taught false doctrine and Hilarius found fault with the crafty conueyaunce of Auxentius viij Diuersitie of tongues as Ierome was séene in diuers tongues as in the Latin Gréeke Hebrew Slauonish and the Chaldey tongues ix The interpretacion of tongues or the ablenesse too translate forreyne languages properly and expressely intoo a mans owne toong as Luther with a singular cléernesse turned the Psalmes and the Prophetes intoo the Dutch toong or generally it is an eloquence or gifte of vtteraunce and handsome expounding of entangled opinions in controuersie whereof many ryse onely of the ignoraunce of the toong and of the phrases of the same Hitherto I haue reckened vp a beadroll of the cheef giftes of the holy Ghost The second place THe efficient cause or author and giuer of all spirituall gifts is the one and self same holy Ghost which distributeth seuerally to eche mā according as he listeth Then it is the greatest foly in the world too bee proude of an other mans goods whiche neyther are in our power nor can bee gotten by our owne cunning and too vaunt ones self aboue other men for them and too kindle harteburning and cherish hatred for them as it happened in the Church of Corinth and in other places at all times The third place IF God of his goodnesse haue bestowed any gifts vpō vs they are to be vsed reuerently not to boasting or to the disdeyne and contempt of other folkes the nurrishment of such like fond affections but too the common profite welfare of the whole Church like the members of mans body which though they bee one vnlike another and some haue more excellent offices than the rest yet striue they not ambitiously among themselues but employ all theyr workings to the common welfare of the whole body And hereuntoo may this most honest sentence of Euripides bée referred If euery man taking the benefite or good gift of God bestowed vppon him would regard it and employ it too the common profite of his countrey then should Cities bée afflicted with fewer inconueniences and become happy hereafter The fourth place LEt the notable testimonie concerning the person and benefites of the holy Ghoste set foorth in this Epistle bée considered For by expresse woordes the title of Lord and God and the peculiar woorkes of the diuine and almightie nature are attributed vnto him which do conuince that the holy Ghost is God in very déede and by nature and that he is of one substaunce and of one continuaunce with God the Father and the sonne But a more plenteous and full declaracion of this doctrine may bée fetched out of the place that concerneth the holy Ghost Vppon the .xj. Sunday after Trinitie ¶ The Epistle j. Cor. xv BRethren as perteyning to the Gospell which I preached vnto you whiche ye haue also accepted and in the which ye continue by the which ye are also saued I do you to wit after what maner I preached vnto you yf ye kepe it except ye haue beleeued in vaine For first of all I deliuered vnto you that which I receyued how that Christ died for our sinnes agreeing to the scriptures and that he was buryed and that he rose ageyne the thirde day according to the scriptures And that he was seene of Cephas then of the twelue After that he was seene of moe than fiue hundreth brethren at once of whiche many remayne vnto this day and many are fallen a sleepe After that appeared he too Iames then to all the Apostles And laste of all he was seene of me as of one that was borne out of due time For I am the least of the Apostles whiche am not worthy to bee called an Apostle bycause I haue persecuted the cōgregacion of God. But by the grace of God I am that I am And his grace which is in me was not in vayne But I laboured more aboundantly than they all yet not I but the grace of God whiche is with me Therfore whether it were I or they so wee preached and so ye haue beleeued The disposement ALl the whole xv Chapter of the firste Epistle too the Corinthians perteyneth too those kinde of cases that instructe For it is a doctrine concerning the resurrection of the dead And the partes of the whole discourse are thrée 1. Whither there shall bée any rysing ageyn of the dead 2. What manner of rysing that shall bée or what maner a bodyes they shall rise withall 3. What is the cause of the rising ageyne of our bodies that is to wit the death and resurrection of Christe whereby he hath swalowed vp our sinne and death restored lyfe and glorie euerlasting to his Church The firste parte of this discourse namely that there shall bée a rising ageyn of the dead is confirmed by Paule with foure reasons of the whiche the firste in this dayes Epistle is taken of the efficient cause Christ hauing bin dead is risen ageyn Ergo wée also shall ryse ageyn He proueth the antecedent first by the holy scripture as Psal xv Esa. liij Ose vj. and also by the story of Ionas And secondly by the record of many that with theyr eyes saw Christ risen from death For Christe the same day that he rose ageyne to lyfe appeared first too Marie Mawdline alone Iohn xx Mar. xvj Secondly to the rest of the womē togither Mat. xxviij Thirdly too the twoo men that were going intoo the féeldes whom the Apostles beléeued not Mar. xvj Fourthly too Simon Peter or Cephas Luk. xxiiij j. Cor. xv And sixthly to all the Apostles at once as
they were gathered toogither sauing Thomas Iohn xx Luk. xxiiij and .j. Corinthians xv And all these discoueries were made in one day on which day Ierom supposeth that Christ shewed himself to Iames the lesse also Afterward he shewed himselfe certeine times too the Apostles when Thomas was with them and at the sea of Tyberias Iohn xx and .xxj. Also in Galilée too mo than fiue hundred brethren at once Mat. xxviij j. Cor. xv Also hée appéered too all the Apostles or Disciples And this is the proofe of the Antecedent And the consequent of this argument is euidently confirmed by this Syllogisme Whatsoeuer Chryst bothe will and can bring too passe shall out of all dout take effect Chryst bothe will call the dead too lyfe ageine as the sayings of Iohn doo witnesse Iohn v. vj. and .xj. And also he can restore lyfe too the dead for by his death he hath swalowed death intoo victorie and by his Resurrection be restoreth lyfe euerlasting too vs when wée bée dead Ergo wée also shall out of all dout bée called too lyfe ageine The cheefe places THe first and most principall place is the doctrine concerning the rysing agein of the dead which perteyneth to the Article of our Créede I beléeue the resurrection of this flesh and the life euerlasting This is the end mark of the whole lyfe and fayth of christen folke and the chéefest and most stayed comfort in all the tribulations of this most miserable and flyghtfull lyfe yea and in death also that wée for a certeintie persuade our selues beléeue that wée are not created too the miseries of this troublesome and mortall lyfe only but that after the death of this bodie there remaineth assuredly a blissed and euerlasting lyfe in which receyuing ageine the same bodyes howbéeit renued and the same flesh which wée now beare about vs and that béeing set vtterly frée from all sinne labor and sorow wee shall face to face enioy the sight of the whole Godhead and so béeing filled with heauenly lyght rightuousnesse life and gladnesse shal praise God for euermore The doctrine of this Article is most euidently confirmed by many Sermons of Chryst of the Prophets and of the Apostles and most bryghtly set foorth in this fiftene Chapter of the first too the Corinthians Too the intent therefore that wée may surely fasten in the inward bowels of our hartes this wholsom and most effectuall comfort in all miseryes Let the chéefest textes bée alwayes in our sight As these Iob. xix I knowe that my redéemer liueth and I shall ryse out of the earth in the latter day and shall bée compassed agein with my skin and in my flesh shall I sée my God whom I shall beehold euen I my selfe and myne eyes shall behold him and none other for mée This hope is layd vp in my bosome Iohn v. The houre shall come that all which are in their graues c. Iohn vj. This is the will of the father that sent mée that euery one which séeth the sonne beléeueth in him should not perish but haue lyfe euerlasting and I will rayse him vp at the last day Ioh. xj I know that he shall ryse agein at the last day The foundacion and cause of the rysing ageine of our bodyes and of lyfe and saluation euerlasting is the Resurrection of our Lord Iesus Chryst the sonne of God whereby he hath swallowed vp sinne death hell and the diuell intoo victorie and conueyeth all those that flée vntoo him from death vntoo a blissed and endlesse lyfe And this is the cause why Paul in this Epistle confirmeth this sentence with so many woordes that Chryst is risen from death in déede I doo you too wit of the Gospell The second place THe enterance intoo this Epistle dooth vs too vnderstand that the true wholsome and necessary Doctrine concerning the chéef Articles of the christen faith ought oftentimes and continually too bée repeated yea and the self same things too bee beaten intoo the héerers eares in the self same woords that they may déepely sinke and stedfastly sticke in their mindes as Paule sayth Phil. iij. It is no paine vnto mée but it is for your welfare that I wryte one thing oftentymes béeware of dogges which chaunge and marre the doctrine of the Gospell which I deliuered you Therefore let those that teache faythfully repete oft times one doctrine that is profitable and necessary as that wyse man sayd that he speaketh the selfe same things too the selfe same persons And this most profitable rule of studyes giuē by Epictetus is wel knowne Knowe thou that it is not easie for a man too bée lerned vnlesse that he doo euery day either heare or read suche things as he would be grounded in and likewise vse them in this lyfe So Paule in this place sayeth that he deliuereth not a new Doctrine too them but that he putteth them in mynd of the Gospel by the same woordes that he had preached it too them before The third place OF the effectualnesse of the Gospell or of the liuely woord sounding in the mouth of the ministers by which woord only and not otherwyse God imparteth the true knowledge of himselfe true faith the holy Ghost and euerlasting welfare too those that beléeue Therefore sayth Paule in this place by the Gospell which I haue preached vntoo you which you haue embraced and by which you are saued if yée hold it fast by fayth onlesse perchaunce which God forbid yée haue now shaken of the faith and beléeued héeretoofore in vaine And it agréeth fully with this sentence Rom. j. The Gospel is the power of God too the saluation of euery one that beléeueth Act. xj Peter shal speake woords too thée by which thou and thy house shalt bée saued Such other texts as these wée shall héere in the Epistle of the next Sunday which are too bée set ageinst the Enthusiastes who imbrace the woorking of the woord sacraments and looke for new enlightenings and heauenly traunces without the woord The fourth place OF the passion death and resurrection of Christ and of the witnessings of the Prophets in the scripture as Esa. liij Dan. ix Psal xxij Zach. xiij in which places Chrystes death and passion is foretold and of the causes benefites of Chrystes death which things wée haue made mencion of alreadie vppon good Friday last The fifth place OF Paules modestie in boasting who termeth himselfe the least of the Apostles and vnwoorthy the name of an Apostle yet declareth of himself that he hath labored more than the rest of the Apostles Modestie or mildnesse and true glory are cousin vertues like as sparingnesse and liberality vprightnesse streightnesse true dealing and streight iustice Modestie acknowledging a mans owne weakenesse and filthinesse is not proud ne exalteth himself either in conceit or in talke or in dooings aboue that he is able too performe but vppon trust of Gods help diligently executeth
the necessary dueties of his vocation and ruleth all his sayings and behauiours by graue iudgement True glorying or boasting is as Paule defineth it the witnesse of our owne conscience too acknowledge and mainteine the rightuousnesse of a good conscience and Gods gifts and the vertues wel doings and successes giuen vs of God and too set our selues ageinst the lesings of slaunderers that God may bée glorified and other folkes may not bée withdrawne from the ministerie by our misreport dishonestie but rather may bée allured too the knowledge of the gospell and too true godlynesse by the auouchment of our good name and our good examples Paule therefore sayeth that he is vnwoorthy the name of an Apostle that is too wit as in respect of his owne desert or as perteyning too his owne infirmitie and sinnes And agein he gloryeth that he hath labored more than they all that is too wit as in respect of the giftes and good successe of his vocation giuen vntoo him by the frée fauor and ayd of God. The sixth place COncerning the frée fauor and help of God néedfull too the ryght and prosperous performance of all the woorkes of our vocation And also concerning the difference of Gods grace woorking in vs and with vs which the schooles haue taken out of this place of Paules is spoken in the .xxv. and xxvj distinctions of the second booke of sentences Vppon the twelfth Sunday after Trinitie ¶ The Epistle ij Cor. iij. SVch trust haue wee thorowe Chryst too God-ward not that we are sufficient of our selues to thinke any thing as it were of our selues but our ablenesse commeth of God which hath made vs able too minister the new Testament not of the letter but of the sprite For the letter killeth but the sprite gyueth life If the ministration of death thorowe the letters figured in stones was glorious so that the children of Israel could not beholde the face of Moses for the glory of his countenance which glory is done away why shal not the ministration of the sprite be much more glorious For if the ministring of condemnation bee glorious much more doth the ministration of ryghteousnesse exceede in glory For no dout that vvhich vvas there glorifyed is not once glorifyed in respecte of thys exceedyng glorye For if that vvhich is destroyed vvas gloryous muche more shall that which remaineth bee glorious Seeing then that wee haue such trust wee vse great boldnesse and do not as Moises which put a vaile ouer his face that the children of Israell should not see for what purpose that serued which is put away But theyr mindes wer blinded For vntil this day remaineth the same couering vntaken away in the olde testament when they read it which vaile in Chrystis put away But euen vntoo this day when Moses is read that vaile hangeth before their harts Neuerthelesse when they turne to the Lord the vaile shall bee takē away The Lord no doubt is a spryte And where the sprite of the Lord is there is libertie But wee all beehold in a myrror the glory of the Lord with his face open and are changed vntoo the same similitude from glory to glory euen of the sprite of the Lord. The disposement THis Epistle is of those kynd that instruct for it is a Doctrine concerning the ministerie of the Gospell The cheefe places are three 1 Of the effectualnesse of the ministration of the gospell by which there is a new light or knowledge of God new ryghtuousnesse and lyfe kindled in the harts of the héerers 2 Of the efficient cause of conuersion or quickening and of all spirituall dooings that are stirred vp in vs by the Gospell 3 Of the letter and the spirite or the difference of the ministracion of the old testament and the new or of the law and the gospell Now forasmuche as the manner of spéeche and phrase in this whole third Chapter of the second Epistle too the Corinthians is somewhat darke and vneasie I wil toogither with the exposition of the places declare the full text of the whole chapter in a bréefe paraphrasis The first place concerning the effectualnesse of the ministration of the Gospell THe most part of the second Epistle too the Corinthians is spent in this auouchment which Paul setteth ageinst the slaunders of the false Apostles I auouch that I Paule am not a deceyuer or a huckster that corrupteth the truthe for ambition or gaines sake but a faythfull minister and that I haue faythfully deliuered too you the sincere and pure Doctrine of the Gospell vvythout corrupting it Concerning this auouchment he appealeth too the Corinthians themselues for record in the béeginning of this Chapter You are our Epistle vvritten in our hart vvhich is knowne and red of all men in that yee are manifested too bee the Epistle of Chryst ministred by vs and vvritten not vvith inke but vvith the spirite of the liuing God not in tables of stone but in fleshly Tables of the hart As if a man should say I confirme not myne auouchment with forreine and farre fet testimonials or letters of commendation in behalfe of my ministerie But you your selues beare witnesse with mée in my harte that I haue deliuered vntoo you the vncorrupted woorde of the Gospell faithfully as long as all men know and see that you hauing forsaken vngodlynesse and heathenish Idolles are turned too the true knowledge of Chryst by my ministration and as long as you your selues shew that your harts are Chrystes Epistle or the tables wherin Chryst himself is imprinted dwelling in you and woorking in you that there is kindled in you true knowledge of God new ryghtuousnesse and lyfe by the spirit of the liuing God who is effectuall by my ministerie And so the liuely law and obedience agréeing with Gods law is not grauē in tables of stone or in the tables of Moyses wherin were grauen the letters or words of the law written with the finger of God but in your fleshly or obedient hartes with the finger or spirite of the liuing God as is said Ier. xxxj I will put my law in their mindes and in their harts will I wryte it This effectualnesse of my ministerie is an euident token that I am a faithful minister of the gospel and that the woord of the gospel sounding in the mouth of mée and of all faithfull ministers is not a fond tale or emptie woords and a fable as good as a sick mans dreame but a thing effectual that worketh saluation in déede too euery one that beléeueth as is sayd Rom. j. Let such like testimonies full of cōfort bée alwayes in sight which auouche that the church is verely gathered too God by the voyce of the gospel and that by this ministerie God woorketh in déede and imparteth the true knowledge of himself ryghtuousnesse lyfe euerlasting too those that beléeue j. thess. ij Yée haue receiued not the woord of man but as it was in déede the woord of God which
and not in many séedes that is to say partly for Christes sake through fayth and partly for our owne good workes Fifthly Paule in expounding the promis made to Abrahā sheweth in this chapter the applyment of Christes benefits in these words They that are of fayth y is to say they y beléeue are blissed as faythful Abrahā was Sixthly of the calling of y Gentiles Seuenthly of original sin For all y promises commaūdementes of God are to be vnderstood with a certeine contrarietie as thus God promiseth his blessing too all men for Christes sake Ergo all men are cursed for sinne before And eyghtly the Article of our Créede concerning Christes conception and birth of the virgin Marie may bée buylded out of this promis For seeing it was of necessitie that the promised deliuerer who beyng blissed himself should blisse others must be voyd of al sinne that al which are cōceyued of mans seede are borne defiled with sin It foloweth that Christ was not conceyued borne of mans séede Concerning the law there be foure admonishments or lessons in this Epistle THe first is of the time of the publishing of the law vppon mount Sinay that is to wit the foure hundred thirtith yeare after that the séede Christe was promised to Abraham Now the first promis concerning the séede was reueled to Abraham Gen. xij in the thousand xxiij yeare of the world the thrée hundred thréescore seuenth yeare after the floud the thréescore and fiftéenth yeare of Abrahams age a thousand nyne hundred fortye yéeres before Christ was borne Now from the deliueraunce of the promis concerning the séede which was the .lxxx. yéere of Abrahams age Gen. xij vnto the byrth of Isaac were xxv yéeres Gen. xxj from Isaac to the birth of Iacob thréescore yéeres Gen. xxv from the birth of Iacob vnto the goyng down into Egipt which was the .xxxix. yéere of the age of Ioseph are a hundred thirty yéeres Gen. xlvij From the going down into Egipt to the death of Ioseph are thréescore and eleuen yeares Gen. l. From the death of Ioseph to the birth of Moyses are thréescore and foure yéeres From the birth of Moyses to the departure out of Egipt the publishing of the law are lxxx yeares And so the whole number is foure hundred and thirtie yeares The second admonishement is concerning the propre vse and effect of the morall law which was added bycause of transgression and not to iustifie men ▪ bring them to lyfe and saluacion euerlasting neyther alonly to restreyne mens misdooings and offences and to represse them and hold them short with commaundementes and penalties nor too bée a chastisement of wilfull and vnwilfull offences as Demosthenes defineth it but to augmente mens transgressions or sinnes and to make them greater by shewing vs the hugenesse horriblenesse of our sinnes and of Gods wrath ageynst sinne whiche things wée knew not of before and by horrible accusing fraying ▪ and condemning men for sinne and to worke most sorowfull dismayednesse and despayre in our harts vntill the promised seede do come and that the comfort of fayth bée kindled in the hart As for example the voyce of Gods law bewrayed accused and encreased the transgression of Adam and Eue and strake them with horrible dreadfulnesse and feare vntill the promis of the séede that should come was vttered by trust wherof they were deliuered out of the dread of sinne death the curse of the law Of this spirituall chéef vse of Gods law Paule speaketh in this Epistle he enlighteneth it with many woords in the Epistle to the Rom. the v. vij viij chapters The law entered in y sinne might abound Also what shal wée say Is the law sin God forbid But I had not knowen what sinment yf it had not bin for y law ▪ For I wist not that lust was sinne yf the law had not sayd Thou shalt not lust For without the law sinne is dead Also by the law sinne becommeth out of measure sinfull And ageyn the law is the power of sinne The third admonishment is of the efficient cause or the author of the law that is published The law was ordeyned by Angelles or deliuered by the ministerie of Angels vpon mount Sinay as it is sayd Act. vij Moyses was in the church in the wildernesse with the Angell speaking too him vpon mount Sinay who receyued the worde of lyfe that was too bee giuen to vs but your fathers would not obey him Also ▪ Ebr. ij For yf the woord that was spoken by Angelles was stedfast and that all transgression and disobedience hath receyued iust rewarde howe shall wée escape yf wée neglect so great saluacion vttered by the lord the very sonne of God The same setting togither of contraries dooth Paule vse in this place The promis was spoken vntoo Abraham immediatly from God himself but the lawe was vttered by his seruaunts the aungels and that in the hand of a mediator which was Moyses who in Deut. v. sayeth thus I was a meane went betwixt you God at that time brought you woord what he sayd for you were afrayd of the fyre went not vp into the mount Now séeing that the people was not able to abyde so much as to heare the voyce of the law much lesse the thunder lightning of Gods wrath darted forth by the law It is an euidēt matter that they are not iustified by the lawe but that they haue neede of the true Mediator of whom Moyses was a figure too go betwéene the two parties that is to wit betwéene God who beyng wroth with sin beateth mens hartes a péeces with the curse of the law as it were with a pestle or with thunder and men who are giltie of sin subiect to Gods displeasure to thintent that he participating both the natures of Godhead manhood may vndertake Gods displeasure for vs by his intreatance merite satisfie Gods iustice set vs in his good fauour grace For a mediator is not of one but goeth betwixt two parties namely God man that were at debate whiche debate the law discouereth nourisheth encreaseth confirmeth by be wraying accusing condēning sin But God is one who of his excéeding great frée goodnesse hath made a promis of the séede and sent his beloued son that he by taking mans nature vppon him should take away the debate the curse of the law giue to the beléeuers the blissing or rightuousnesse lyfe that was promised to Abraham Héere may the whole doctrine concerning the mediator ▪ concerning the office and benefites of the Mediator Christ and of the causes why it behooued the twoo natures too bée vnited in the Mediator bée repeted Fourthly Paule answereth to this question whither the law striue ageinst the promis of the Gospell bycause wée are iustified not by the law but by the promis
too endure it And héer withall let the whole doctrine concerning the true calling vppon God bée repeted in this place which must not roue douting too what God a man speaketh as Hecuba prayeth in Euripides O Iupiter who so euer thou art right hard too bée knowne nor bée directed too surmysed Gods or dead men but must speake vntoo the one true God the father of our Lord Iesus Chryst who hath disclosed himselfe in his Church by his assured woord by recorde of miracles and by sending his sonne our Lord Iesus Chryst which was crucifyed and raised ageine for vs that he myght set vs at one with the eternall father and make our requestes and prayers welcome and acceptable too him Of this true God the father of our Lord Iesus Chryst and of vs all of whom as of their father and creator all Angels and men and all things visible and inuisible in heauē and in earth haue their béeing and preseruacion let vs request not only the ordinarie and flyghtfull commodities of this present life but in especially the souereine and most néedfull gifts that according too his rich glorie and excéeding great goodnesse he will giue vs his holy spirite too strengthen vs with faith and stedfastnesse in the true acknowledgement of Iesus Chryst as touching the inward man which béeing borne a new by the woord of the Gospell and the woorking of the holy Ghoste may no more liue after the flesh but after the sprite that Chryst may dwell and bée effectuall in vs in such wyse that through the feruent and incomprehensible kyndnesse or loue of God towardes vs which he hath shewed by sending his sonne j. Iohn iiij Rom. v. wée béeing grounded in steadie fayth and fastened with déepe rootes may bée able to comprehend what is the bredth and length and depth and heigth of gods excéeding great goodnesse and mercy towards vs which he hath shewed by sending his sonne whereof is spoken in Psal Cij As far as the East is from the West so farre hath he set our iniquities from vs As high as the heauen is aboue the earth so hyghly is the Lords mercy stablished vpon them that feare him That wee may after some sort know the great and woonderfull loue of Chryste towardes vs which is farre more excellent and greater than that man can attaine too it and vnderstand it And that wee may bee filled with all fulnesse of God. That is too say that wée may bée filled too the full with heauenly lyght wisdome ryghtuousnesse and lyfe by God who shall bée all in all and that God himselfe dwelling in vs euerlastingly may euermore shine in vs and lyghten and fulfill our hartes with the flames of all vertues The fourth place IN thankes giuing wherewith he closeth vp this Epystle there is a notable text too bée considered for men too set ageinst Stoicall destinie For the Stoikes surmyse that God is bound too second causes or too the order of nature so as he cānot doo otherwyse thā as the second causes doo suffer This imagination which is slaunderous to God and hindereth the true calling vpon God in daungers that are vnauoydable by mannes wit is cléerely confuted by this sentence of Paules God is able aboue all things and abundantly too help beyond all that wee can aske or conceyue Like as hée helped Moyses standing at the red sea Ezechias beseeged of Sennacherib and the thrée Israelites in the burning Ouen at Babylon what tyme they were destitute of all mannes ayd and counsel and of all second causes altering the vsuall and accustomed order of nature And this is the peculiar and chéese wisdome of Gods Churche too settle our selues in God and his woord by faith and with quiet mindes stedfastly too wait for the promised deliuerance euen when wée were vtterly destitute of all second causes Vppon the .xvij. Sunday after Trinitie ¶ The Epistle Ephe. iiij I VVhich am a prisoner of the Lordes exhorte you that ye walk worthy of the vocation wherwith ye are called with al lowlinesse and mekenesse with humblenesse of minde forbearing one another through loue and bee diligent too keepe the vnitie of the spirit through the bond of peace beeing one body and one spirite euen as ye are called in one hope of your calling Let there bee but one Lorde one faith one baptisme one God and father of all which is aboue all and through all and in you all The disposement THis Epistle is of that sort of cases that persuade And the state of it is this Bee yee one minded It perteineth to the fifth commaundement of the ten Most weightie surely and necessarie in all trades of lyfe is the doctrine that concerneth the cunning too mainteine concord with ones companyons Which thing is set out more lernedly in this Epistle than any where else I will therfore tell 1 What vertues are chéefly néedfull too the maintenance of concorde 2 Of the causes that ought too moue and kindle euery mā too the endeuer of mainteining concorde First Of the vertues that are needfull to the mayntenance of concord PAule exhorteth the Ephesians and all godly folk too walke woorthye the vocation too which they are called that is to say too rule all the intentes endeuers and dooings of their lyfe in such wyse as they may agrée with their calling and the woord of GOD whereby they are called too the setting foorth of Gods glorie and too mutuall loue and concord For of all mennes deuyses and dooings these must bée the twoo chéef endes First that Gods glorie and the true doctrine cōcerning God may bée spred farre abrode and secondly that the fellowship and concord of the Church may bée cherished j. Corint x. Doo all things too the glorie of God and bée not a stumbling blocke too the Church But the foundation or head and welspring of all christen concord is the agréement in doctrine concerning GOD like as the sonne of God prayeth Iohn xvij Father I pray that they may bée one in vs And héere Paule counselleth them to endeuer too keepe the vnitie of the spirit that is too say to kéepe a consent in the one true doctrine which the holy ghost hath deliuered too the church And he reherseth in order three vertues whereof wee haue neede to the mayntenance of concord with our fellowes The vnderstanding of whiche will bée the cléerer if wée adde notable examples The first is Lowlynesse which represseth pryde that picketh quarelles without a cause whereof there are flames in euery man by nature For eche one coueteth by nature too séeme better than others and too bée reuerenced as Gods among men and too kéepe downe and darken others that are thought too shadowe their excellencie Out of this fountayne spring most or rather all debates in all kindes of lyfe Therfore such as bée of our companie haue néede of such a lowlynesse of mynde that they may abase them selues beneath others Like as Abraham Gen. xiij
and glorified And in the hart stayednesse and obedience of all the affections and desires vnto the mynd with continuall and earnest ioy and gladnesse setled in God. The third WHerefore put away lying and speake euery man truth to his neighbour bycause we are members one of another The doctrine that concerneth the folowing of truthe and the shūning of lyes is very large wherof an abridgement is set forth in the exposition of the eighth commandement He nameth héere a lye not only the ordinary speches in common conuersation whiche agrée not with the things themselues but chéefly false opinions concerning God false doctrines and corruptions of the true doctrine Also slaunders in courtes of plea vntrouth backbytings railings missetalke fondnesse bragging dissimulatiōs c. Al these vyces dooth he wil men to lay away and contrarywise too embrace truthe which in the doctrine concerning God in trades necessary for mans lyfe in iudgmentes and in all the whole state of lyfe among men diligently hunteth after embraceth loueth and holdeth fast true méenings that is to say méenings that agrée with the things themselues such as they be in déede hating vntruth and sophistry and in all trades and conuersations of life continually saying doing such things as are true playnly vttered and wholsome and in manners so behauing himselfe as his speech and his gesturs may be all one with his mynde The fourth BE angry and sin not It is ment of méekenesse whiche is a vertue that represseth irefulnesse and desire of reuenge and which norisheth not hatred The eyght causes which should moue vs to refraine irefulnesse are reckned vp in the exposition of the fifth commaundement The fifth GIue no place to the backbyter It is ment of fréendlynesse whiche is a parte of truthe and conceiueth no mistrust of other folks willes and méenings without a reasonable lykelyhod ne nourisheth ill will rancoure suspition or hatred nor giueth credit to false reports whiche might haue withdrawne the mynd but maketh tryall of mens willes and méenings by resonable lykelyhode Ageinst this vertue there fyghteth maliciousnesse suspition distrust and lyght credite Of whiche is spoken in the fyfth and eight commaundments The sixth HE that hath stolne let him steale no more but rather let him labour with his hands the thing that is good that he may haue to giue to them that neede It is ment of paynefulnesse and labour which is therfore to be endured that wée may obey god who enioyneth vs labours agréeable to our calling and that we may eschue many sinnes and wickednesses wherof Idlenesse is the norishement and to get honestly things néedfull to the sustentation of oure selues and of ours and too be bestowed in almes déedes vppon the poore Ageinst this vertue fight slouthfulnesse Idlenesse théeuerie sluttishnesse c. Of which wée haue spoken in the .iiij. and .vij. commaundmentes In the ende let two or thrée of the places that bée expounded most at large bée repeted and committed too the héerers to learne by hart Vpon the .xx. Sunday after Trinitie ¶ The Epistle j. Cor. x. TAke heede therefore how yee walke circumspectly not as vnwise but as wise men redeming the tyme bycause the dayes are euill Wherfore be ye not vnwise but vnderstand what the wil of the Lord is and be not drunken with wine wherein is excesse But be filled with the spirit speaking vnto your selues in Psalmes and Himnes and spirituall songs singing and making melodie to the Lorde in your harts giuing thanks always for althings vnto God the father in the name of our Lord Iesus Chryst submitting your selues one to an other in the feare of God. The disposement THis Epistle is hortator●e conteyning precepts of good woorkes The cheefe places are three 1 A generall exhortation too good woorks that rule all the deuyses and dooings of oure lyfe with singular héede and circumspectnesse so as they may agrée with Gods will. 2 A precept of sobriety and of eschuing drunkennesse 3 Of songs and musike too be vsed in Gods seruice 4 Of thanks giuing to be yéelded to God. 5 Of obedience lowlynesse and the feare of God. The first place WAlke warely to walke signifieth the same thing that to leade a mans lyfe or to rule the deuises and doings of the lyfe Blissed are they that walke in the lawe of the Lorde that is whiche liue accordyng to the doctrine deliuered of GOD or whiche order their deuises and dooings according to Gods woorde all their lyfe long And Paule in this place counselleth vs too walke according too the will of our Lorde God warely and héedfully or with perfecte warenesse and circumspectnesse Therefore in this place may bée recited the doctrine that concerneth newe obedience and a man may entreate of the causes that ought to stir vs vp to the desire of weldoing which are Gods commaundement and necessitie of duetie and of holding fast the faith And moreouer to the intent wée may eschue paynes present and eternall and obteyn the promised rewards And in especially let men consider the pithynesse of the commandement walke warely bée not carelesse set not lyght by the sleyghts of the diuell cocker not your owne lustes but order your behauiour and lyfe with singular warynesse héede watchefulnesse and circumspectnesse least eyther by the diuels policies or by your owne fraylenesse yée bée throwne headlong ageyne ageyne intoo synne and death Haue a speciall care to eschue occasions of falling according to this saying To eschue occasions of synning is to eschue synne Shunne the leude companies of vngodly and filthy persones For it is moste true that Theognis sayeth Thou mayest learne good of the good but if thou companye wyth the wicked thou marrest thy selfe Fall to honest labours which of themselues are bridles of concupiscence and furtherances of vertue For Idlenesse yeldeth sinfulnesse And with your labours mingle calling vpon God and request him to assist you and gouerne you All these things dooth Paule comprehend in this one worde walke warely So Ioseph walked warely when he yelded not to the enticementes of the adultresse contrariwise Dauid beyng carelesse slydeth into horrible sinnes which afterward were punished with most horrible punishmentes This commaundement may be very aboundantly enlarged by a distribution and by a setting togither of the contraries when wée entreate of euery of the vertues of the ten Commaundementes in order and of their causes and of the vices that encounter them For to walke warely is the same thing the to know God aright to trust in God to loue God to feare God to vse patience in tribulacions to call vppon God hartely to gyue him thankes to professe him to spred abroad the true doctrine to obey Magistrates and ciuill ordinances to bée iust discrete and méeld to apply the dueties of a mans vocation buzily to bée méeke treatable mercifull peaceable chast sober soothfast and to eschue all sinnes that fight ageinste these vertues These beyng vnfolded into their partes
enlightned with Antithesies examples will bring forth plenteousnesse of matter both manifest and ample Not as vnwise folke men without the true knowledge of God and without the feare of God and fayth Redeeming the time neglecte not onely occasion of walking warely or of liuing godlyly and honestly or of deseruing well at other mens handes or els purchase oportunitie of atteyning the true knowledge of God euerlasting lyfe euen with the losse of all that yée haue Bycause the dayes are euill by reason of the malice and miserie of men It is a figure called Synecdoche wherin the thing that conteyneth is put for the thing that is conteyned For the dayes are good but men that liue in those dayes are euill and wretched Therfore let passe no occasion of liuing godlily and of dooing things acceptable too God to the welfare of men neyther suffer your selues to be plucked away from God by the most corrupt maliciousnesse of this age There happen many lettes many allurementes leude lustes which hale men away from true godlinesie But redéeme yée the time fighte ageynst these impedimentes and walke warely Not like fooles that is to say as folke ignorant of God and voyd of fayth and true godlinesse But as those that vnderstand what is the will of the Lord that is to wit which is reueled in Gods woord to whome as to a rule wée must referre all the deuises and dooings of our life This is the will of the Father that euery one that beléeueth in the sonne should haue lyfe euerlasting This is Gods will euen your holynesse that yée should not liue like the Gentiles that know not God. The second place BE not drunken with wine wherin is ryottousnesse The The doctrine that concerneth sobrietie the eyght causes for which drunkennesse is to bee eschewed and sobernesse followed may bée set out of the exposition of the vertues of the sixth commaundement The Gréeke woorde Asotia ryottousnesse comprehendeth excesse of fare wastfulnesse wantonnesse vncleane talke chamberings scoldings braulings quarrelinges manquellings and to be short a Cyclopish life ordinarie to dronken folke such as was the excesse or cyclopish life of Alexander the greate described by Plutarche pag. xlj And Cicero in his booke De finibus sayeth I like not of these belly goddes tha● shall spew into my dish and must bée caried away from the table which fall to cramming them selues fresh and fasting ageyne the next morow The third place Singing Psalmes Himnes and spiritual songs vnto the Lord. Of songs and Musick● GOd hath put intoo man the knowledge of numbers and tunes and in all ages would haue his doctrine and prayses too bée comprehended in verses and that musicke should bée vsed in his holy seruice chéefly for this cause that the true doctrine concerning God and all the exhortacions comforts prayses thankesgeuing being included in numbers verses or songs might the easlyer bée imprinted in mēs minds sinke déeplyer into their harts kindle more feruent motions of Godlinesse For al folke do more desirously take and with greater pleasure lerne more stedfastly kéepe in mind verses than prose Such an aliance haue our soules with harmonie nūber euen by nature And sith that for this commoditie chéefly singing is wont to be vsed that the holy woordes may sinke the déeper into the mindes of the héerers and kindle more earnest motions in their hartes It were good to reteyne Musicke in Churches not ouer cunning and curious but simple and graue so as the woordes that are knit in number might be hard and vnderstood of the common people Wée sée that both in the Church and also among the Heathen who conterfeyted the example of the first Fathers the doctrine concerning God and other good thinges and thankesgiuings and prayses of God were comprised in verses to be sung in holy seruice and els where The chéef Poetes of such Himnes and songs were Moyses Dauid Asaph the sonnes of Chora Heman Salomon Esay Ieremie c. And in our age God hath raysed vp Luther who as our Orpheus of Germanie hath comprised in Dutch verse the summe of Christian doctrine the holy stories the chéef of Dauids Psalmes hath added to thē so trim and fit notes and so apt to stirre vp mens affections that not onely they bée sung with exceeding pleasure and delight but also perce wondrously intoo the mindes and hartes of the héerers and kindle affections of true godlinesse faith gladnesse and earnest ioy in mens brests as by the note of the Song Christe lag in todes banden c. All the godly euen though they giue but meane héede may easly iudge And forasmuch as S. Basill in his preface to the Psalter hath spoken right grauely concerning this profitablenesse of Musike I will translate the whole place and write it hereunto Psalmes do with a certeine weltuned delightfulnesse and pleasure endue the minde with wholsome doctrine and wisdome For in asmuch as the holy Ghost saw that mankind could hardly bée bent to godlinesse and vertue bycause it neglecteth the manner of liuing well and is caried headlong vnto pleasure He mingled the delightfulnesse of melody with his precepts of instruction to the intent that with the swéetnesse of the delight the doctrine of God profitable thinges might slip into mens mindes according to the custome of wise Phisicians who season the mouth of the cup with a little honny when they minister any sowre medicine to a sicke body For this cause therfore was this fine writing of the Psalmes in méeter deuised that such as are youthfull both in yeares and vertue might in theyr owne opinion sing and in very déede instruct their minds For there is not any of the frantike sort that when he departeth out of the church home to his house doth easly beare away with sinne any Apostolicall or Propheticall precepte But as for the sayinges of the Psalmes they both sing them at home with delight and beare them about with thē to the market many beyng starke mad for anger as soone as they beare the tune of Psalmes that delight them returne home well at ease and quiet in themselues the féerce and heady motions of theyr minds are assuaged with singing Psalmes bring calmnesse to the minde alaying the troublesome waues of mēs thoughts settleth quietnesse in their barts méekeneth the sturdinesse of the mind restreyneth headynesse boweth ment to myldenesse and sobernesie procureth fréendship setteth folkes at one that were at variaunce and reconcileth enemies For who wil take him any longer for his foe with whom he hath with one voyce spoken vnto God therefore singing of Psalmes yeeldeth a most souereyne benefite namely mutuall loue in yelding harmonie as it were a certeine bande to knit mens mindes togither and the tune of one queere linketh togither the whole Church Psalmes chace a way féendes procure the help of Angels driue away feares of the nighte asswage
another place bring foorth frutes woorthy repentance that is too say agréeing too repentance that you may please him in all things or that you may please him thorowly Heere is too bée told howe good woorkes please god Which thing is declared in these foure Articles First the persone that bringeth foorth the frutes of good woorkes must bée Gods fauoure for Chryste the Mediatours sake by fayth For without Fayth it is impossible too please god Ebr. xj And all that is not of fayth is sinne Rom. xiiij 2 Wée must acknowledge that many inward sinnes sticke still in vs whiche are a let that our good woorkes are not perfect ne please God of their owne woorthynesse For there is no rightuouse man vppon the earth that dooth good and sinneth not 3 Yet notwithstāding wée must bée fully persuaded that it is Gods will that wée should walke agréeably too his wil and yéeld frute in all kynds of goods woorks 4 These good woorkes or new begoonne obediēce please God not of their owne woorthynesse but for Chryst the Mediatours sake through faith out of which as out of the trée of all good woorkes spring all good frutes This then is the true woorthinesse of good woorks that they bée Gods seruices and sacrifises acceptable too God through Chryst j. Pet. y. Offer yée spirituall sacrifises acceptable too GOD through Iesus Chryst Paule in this place reckeneth vp six good woorks of which may bée spoken in order The first is the true acknowledging of GOD or faith which is the piller and foundation of all the reste of the vertues The second is Manlynesse or Constancie and Perseuerance whiche continueth in the true knowledge of God and in faith vntoo the houre of death and by the almightie power of God valiantly ouercommeth the Diuels craftes the assaultes of corrupted nature and the outrages of Tyrants The third and fourth are Patience and Longsufferance which calmly outweareth the miseries that accompanie the profession of the Gospell and is not discouraged with continuance of long delay so as it should fret and repyne at God or séeke for other vnlawfull helpes Concerning these vertues is spokē alredy in the first and fifth commaundement The fifth is Ioyfulnesse of conscience settling and delighting in God which perteyneth to the first cōmandment The sixth is thanksgiuing wherof I haue spoken in the second commaundement The third place Of Christs benefits or of remission of sinnes and Iustification PAule sayeth VVhich hath made vs mete to be partakers of the lot of saincts in light that is too say who of his owne frée goodnesse and mercy and not thorough our power or for our deseruings hath made vs méete to becom partakers of the lyght or true knowledge of his Gospell and of the lot of the saintes or of the inheritance of lyfe and glorie euerlasting ▪ such shal be bestowed vpon al saintes who hath deliuered vs out of the power of darknesse that is to say of sinne and death wherthrough the diuel kepte all mankynd oppressed in most miserable thraldome and translated vs into the kingdom of his dere son that is to say hath adopted vs to bée the sonnes of God for his déere beloued sonnes sake by whome we haue redemption through his bloud that is to wit forgiuenesse of sinnes This sentence comprehendeth in singular lyghtsomnesse of woorkes a summe of the doctrine of the Iustification of a christen man and in especially these twoo places First what it is ▪ Iustification is a riddance of a man out of the power of darknesse sin death or it is the forgiuenesse of sins the adopting vs to bée the sons of God and a partnershyp with the saincts in lyght that is to say the inheriting of eternall lyfe lyght ryghtuousnesse and all good things whiche are giuen too the Sainctes for the price which our Lorde Iesus Chryst the son of God hath payed for vs by sheading his owne bloud Secondly what is the enforcing cause or the desert for which we are deliuered redeemed made partakers of this light lot of the godly y is to wit the only blud or passion death of our Lord Iesus Christ the sonne of god It was not the bloud of Abell it was not the bloude of the lamb and of all the sacrifises it was not the bloud of all the martirs and much lesse is it the ceremonies and rites of Moyses or of the munks or of the masse or oure owne vertues and good deedes that do it as is sayd more at large Rom. iij. we are iustified fréely by the grace of god through the redemption made by Iesus Chryst whome God hath set foorth a mercy feate through faith in his bloud Vppon the .xxv. Sunday after Trinitie ¶ The Epistle ij Pet. j. NOt with standing I thinke it mete as long as I am in this tabernacle to stirre you vp by putting you in remembrance forasmuch as I am sure how that the tyme is at hand that I must put of my tabernacle euen as our Lorde Iesus Christ hath shewed me I wilenforce therfore that on euery side ye might haue wherwith to stirre vp the remembrance of these things after my departing For we folowed not deceiuable fables when we opened vnto you the power and coming of our Lorde Iesus Chryst but with our eyes we saw his maiestie euen then verily when he receiued of god the father honor and glory and when ther came such a voyce to him from the excellēt glory This is my dere beloued son in whom I haue delite This voyce wee harde when it came from heauen being wyth him in the holy mount Wee haue also a ryght sure woorde of prophesy wherevnto if yee take heede as vnto● a lyght that shyneth in a darke place yee doo well vntill the day dawne and the day starte aryse in youre hartes See that yee fyrste knowe thys that no prophecie in the Scripture hath any priuate interpretation For the Scripture came neuet by the will of man● but holy men of God spake as they were moued by the holy ghost The disposement THis epistle is partly persuasiue and partly in structiue The proposition and summe of it is this I counsel you to reteyne stedfastly the true doctrine concerning Chryst deliuered by the Prophets and Apostles which is the only fountayn and rule of the true religion and of oure euerlasting saluation The cheef places of doctrine are these FIrst it belongeth to the duetie of a faithfull Bishop too repete oft and to beate into the heads of his héerers the sum of the true doctrin and to admonish and exhort them continually that they kéep it pure and vn corrupt vnto the last gaspe of theirly ●● and that they eschue false teachers The second and principal is that there is but one true religion and doctrine concerning GOD which is vttered in the writings of the prophets and Apostles whiche all the Godly are bound diligently to
remayne any sense of euill Ergo in death whiche vtterly quencheth a man bringeth him to nothing there is no euill at all The second THat whiche riddeth men from the troubles and miseries that hang ouer them and is the ende of all mischéeues and harmes is not to bée counted among euill things Death riddeth men from the troubles that hang ouer them and is the end and vttermost refuge from all miseries Ergo death is not euill The third THat which many excellent men haue of their owne accord or certeinly with a stout and quiet minde vndertaken is not to bée feared Many valiaunt and good men haue with stout courage vndertaken to dye for their countrey and for other causes as the Decians the Scipios Theramenes Socrates Leonides c. Ergo death is not to be feared as the chéef euill The fourth In sléepe there is none euill Death is like to sléepe Ergo there is none euill in death The fifth No naturall things are euill Death is due vnto nature who hath lent vs the occupying of lyfe as it were of money without setting any day of payment Ergo death is not euill The sixth No commendable thing is euill The deathes of such as excelled in vertue and specially of those that vndertooke them for their coūtry sake purchase euerlasting commendation Ergo they bée not euill These argumentes haue I bréefly set downe not onely to the intent the reading of the first Tusculane question may bee the playner to the yonger sort by shewing too them the framing and order of the argumentes but also to thintent the difference betwene the Christian doctrine and the doctrine of the Philosophers might bée séene the more euidently For Philosophie knoweth vtterly nothing at all of the restitution of our dead bodies and the resurrection of our flesh but déemeth that the same are resolued into their first matter whereof they were made and there vtterly perish for euer euen as the bodyes of beastes doo Neyther hath it any certeyn stable and stedy beleef of the immortalitie of the soule and of the euerlasting felowship with God and the blissed sort but floting ●o●●ing gazing about sticking and making many backe-turnings like a ship y is wether driuen on the huge sea like images the wauer in a troubled water w eout bringing any certeins and sound comfort too the mindes that are encountring and wrestling with death Therfore let vs with most thankfull mindes embrace Gods voyce auouched with the resurrection of his owne sonne whiche alonly sheweth both the causes of death and all miseries and the true and effectuall remedies of the same that is to wit the most ioyfull resurrection and lyfe and glorie euerlasting with God. Vppon the first Sunday in Aduent ¶ The Epistle Rom. xiij THis also we know I meane the season how that it is time that we should now awake out of sleepe For now is our saluation neerer than when we beleeued The night is passed and the day is come nye Let vs therfore cast away the deedes of darknesse and let vs put on the armour of light Let vs wake honestly as it were in the day light not in eating and drinking neyther in chambering and wantonnesse neyther in strife and enuying but put yee on the Lorde Iesus Christe And make not prouision for the flesh to fulfill the lustes of it The disposement THis Epistle is of that kind that is persuasiue For it is an exhortacion to watchfulnesse or diligence in learning the doctrine of the Gospel and in framing the whole lyfe after the rule of Gods word The state or summe of it is this I exhort you to embrace earnestly the Gospel wherin is offe●●d you euerlasting saluation by Iesus Christ and to worshi 〈…〉 with true fayth dutyfulnesse of all vertues The cheef places are three THe doctrine of the Gospell concerning Christes delight of the world by whom lyfe and euerlasting saluacion are offered giuen to vs must earnestly and with singular heedfulnesse and diligence bee of all the godly sort learned kept and spred abrode ij Of the faith of the Fathers and that all holy men of all ages obteyned eternall saluation by one selfe same way that is to wit by the voyce of the gospel for the only mediator Christes sake through faith iij An exhortation too new obedience or a lyfe agreeable with the Gospell or too good woorkes of which he reckeneth fiue kindes in order 1 Diligence and watchfulnesse in learning the Doctrine and folowing true godlynesse according too the lyght shewed in the Gospell 2 Sobrietie which eschueth drunkennesse and gluttonie 3 Chastitie or stayednesse which eschueth forbidden lusts and wantonnesse 4 Méeknesse and desire of concord which represseth wilfulnesse and enuiousnesse 5 Gouernement or brideling of all the affections Concerning these vertues sobrietie chastitie méeknesse and desire of concorde and concerning the vices that encounter them there bée orderly expositions set foorth in the declaration of the ten commaundements and in my rules of lyfe Which I would wish too bee matched with this booke conteining the disposements of the Epistles in the end thereof for this cause that there should not néed too tedious turning and returning too the morall preceptes or places of vertues and vices in euery seueral Epistle Now therfore wil I adde certeine aduertisements to the first two places of this dayes Epistle which are propre too the gospell and will expound certeine of the darker termes and spéeches ¶ THE ENTERANCE FIrst formost in this place the preacher may make some short preface concerning the tyme For our aunceters of old tyme termed the four Sundayes next before Christmas the Sundayes in Aduent And their méening was that their héerers should bée put in remembrance and prepared too discharge their mindes from all other cares desires and with greater care watchfulnesse sobretie reuerence and héedfulnesse too settle them selues too consider this woonderfull purpose of God concerning the redemption of mankynde by the comming of his sonne in the flesh And our forefathers made foure commings of Christ First in the flesh Secondly in the ministerie Thirdly too his Passion whereof is spoken in the gospel of this day And fourthly too the last iudgement wherof wée shall héere more this day seuennight Therefore too the intent that men might bée stirred vp too the more héedfull consideration of so great matters at this time which goeth next before the comming or birthe of our Sauior Iesu Christ the Epistle that is red this day was appoynted very fit for the time For in it Paul making mention of the tyme also exhorteth all the godly too wake out of their sléepe and darknesse of sinnes ignorance of God and carelessenesse which neglecteth GOD and letteth loose the reynes too all misdéedes and lustes and not too let slip the occasion of atteyning eternall saluation by the Gospell but too lerne the doctrine of it with singuler endeuer watchfulnesse and héede
and by al meanes too embrace and hold fast the benefites that are offered in the same For the lyght of the gospell shyneth not at all tymes among the Iewes and the Gentyles But sometymes the blynd and sorowfull darknesse of not knowing the Gospell ouerdreepeth the greatest part of mankynde as before the comming of Chryst many hundred yéeres the Gentyles were left in ignorance of the Gospel Yea and among the Iewes also the lyght of the true Doctrine was for the more part quenched quite out And now also the wickednesse and vnthankfulnesse of men is punished with the blindnesse and outrages of Mahomet the Pope Therefore let vs acknowledge the exceeding great benefit of God that in this our time when the world is at the last cast he hath kindled agein so cléere and notable a lyght of his gospell concerning the office and benefites of Chryst our euerlasting saluation And let vs not like thanklesse persons hold skorne of gods so great gift but let vs with singuler watchfulnesse diligence and héede endeuer too embrace it hold it faste and spred it abrode For doutlesse as Plato sayth of another kynd of Doctrine There came neuer neither shall there come a greater gift And if the present oportunitie bée neglected and despysed within a whyle after there will folow new darkenesse and confusions of opinions Wherefore séeing that the lyght of the true Doctrine shyneth now among vs and that the Gospell of saluation is neerer or better knowne too vs than too our fathers let vs with all héede and watchfulnesse kéepe it For by the Gospell are such benefites offered vntoo vs as no other Doctrine is able too giue vs. Admit that Philosophie bée the guide of lyfe admit it bée the sercher of truth the expulser of vyce the foūder of lawes and the mistresse of manners and discipline as Cicero saith Admit that Eloquence bée the Quéene of al worldly things Bée it that a Troian is comparable too many other Yet doo all these Artes serue only for the darke nyght of this mortal lyfe neyther can they bring true lyght and eternall saluation The Gospel only is the power of God that woorketh saluation too euery one that beléeueth For by the Gospell and none otherwyse dooth God shewe his mightie operation in vs kindling in our mindes the day or light of the true knowledge of God and of true fayth and prayer giuing vs eternal saluation that is too say deliuerance from sinne from Gods wrath and from euerlasting death and new rightuousnesse lyfe ioy and glory euerlasting These heauenly and perpetuall benefites are offered too vs by the Gospell according as wée shall speake more at large of the profitablenesse of the Gospell in the Epistle of the next Sunday The second place AFter one and the selfe same manner doo all the Sainctes of all ages the Fathers the Prophets the Iewes and the Gentyles obteine eternal saluation that is too wit for the only son of Gods sake our Lord Iesus Chryst through fayth as it is plainly sayd Act. iiij There is not any other name giuē vntoo men vnder heauen wherin wée must bée saued Act. xv Wée beléeue our selues to be saued by the grace of our Lord Iesus Chryst as our fathers were And of Abraham it is expresly said Abraham saw my day And agein Abraham beléeued God and it was imputed too him for ryghtuousnesse VVhy then dooth Paule say that saluation is neerer too vs now than when we beleeued I answer for thrée causes First bicause Chryste the author giuer of euerlasting life whom the father 's looked for too come is now come in the sight of the world Secondly bicause a greater and bryghter light of the Gospel is kindled and spred further abrode now than before Chrystes comming And wee sée that the very Apostles did not cléerly perceiue before Chrystes resurrection what manner of kingdome Chrystes kingdome should bée And thirdly bicause the Gentyles also were called too the felowshippe of euerlasting saluation by the vniuersall preaching of the Gospell The third place PAule enlyghteneth his exhortation too new obedyence or a lyfe agreeable too the Gospel by an Allegorie of the light or of the day and of darknesse which Allegorie he vnfoldeth somewhat at large j. thess. v. Eph. iiij and .v. Concerning the causes that should moue vs too folowe good works earnestly and concerning the seueral sinnes which Paule warneth vs too shun in this place an exposition may bée fetched out of the place that entreateth of good woorkes and out of the exposition of the ten commaundements I will but shew the harder phrases at this tyme. Let vs lay aside the woorkes of darknesse that is too say ignorance of God carelessenesse which neglecteth the doctrine of the Gospell and euerlasting saluation all sinfull lustes and all outward offences fighting ageinst the law of God. And let vs put on the armor of lyght that is too wit true knowledge of God true fayth inuocation studie and profession of the true Doctrine patience lowlynesse hope and the rest of the weapons that are néedefull for the mayntenance of the honor of true godlynesse for the disappoynting of the diuels policies and for the repressing of the headinesse of sinfull nature all which Paule describeth Eph. vj. As in the day that is too say in the cléere knowledge of the Doctrine of the Gospell and in true fayth grounded vppon Chryst VValking after a comely sort That is too say let vs frame the purposes and dooings of our lyfe or let vs liue as it becommeth vs or as agréeth with the will woord of God. Not in feasting The Gréeke woord Comois signifieth drūken feastes ribaudly songes and wanton daunsings such as are woont too bée vsed by wildheaded and wanton yoongmen The contrarie vertue is sobrietie or stayednesse and shamefastnesse which perteyneth too the sixth commaundement Neyther in chambering and wantonnesse The latin word Lasciuia wantonnesse signifyeth a forewardnesse too iolitie gaming 's and diuersitie of pleasures which notwithstanding is not matched with craftynesse and desire to doo harm like horses which waring lustie through ouermuche rest and feeding become coltish and fall too kicking and winsing And Appius in Liuie sayeth that the common people doo rather ware wanton than cruell But the Gréeke woord Aselgia signifyeth somewhat more namely a more leaud and ruffianly sausinesse and reproche offered in the way of dishonestie It appéereth that Paule in this place speaketh of the filthinesse and vnclennesse whereuntoo the contrary vertue is chastitie perteyning too the sixth commaundement Neyther in stryfe and enuying or spytefulnesse The contrarie vertues are méekenesse desire of concord and modestie or mildnesse of which is spoken in the fourth and fifth commaundements Put on the Lord Iesus that is to wit in receiuing by faith the imputation of Chrystes ryghtuousnesse where withall our sinnes bée couered as with a cleane garment And agein by folowing Chrystes example in
the holynesse and ryghtuousnesse propre vntoo God and too bée imparted too vs for thy Sonnes sake and concerning the Gospell by which alonely God will bée glorifyed and by which the glory may bée giuen too God not only for ryghtuousnesse and almightinesse but also for mercy and soothfastnesse How bée it concerning the benefites of Angels let the héerers beare in mynde specially these twoo textes of the Psalme Psalme thirtie and thre The Angel of the Lord pitcheth his tentes about or entrencheth those that feare the Lord and shall deliuer them which saying is taken out of the .xxxij. of Genesis Where Iacob beholding the host of Angels named the place Mahanaim that is too say the camp or host of god Psalm xcj. He hath giuen his Angels charge of thée too keepe thée in all thy wayes These hath GOD made kéepers of our soules bodyes lyfe name houses children and substaunce These chase away the Diuels when they practyse the destruction of the Churche or of any seuerall persone And doubtlesse they fight ageinst the féendes according as the lesson of this dayes Epistle and the tenth Chapter of Daniel testifie And although wée vnderstand not what maner of encounters they bée yet considering the greatnesse of our daungers let vs the more earnestly giue thankes too God for these kéepers and gather toogither the sayings and stories of the holy Scripture and of other wrytings too our instruction and comfort The Angels deliuer Loth out of Sodom Genes xix And an Angell succoureth Agar and Ismael Genes xxj xvj Angels come vntoo Abraham and beare Rebecca companie Genes rviij xxij xxiiij and in other places An Angell deliuereth Iacob out of all perils Genes xlviij The Angels go before the Israelites and defend them at their going out of Egipt and in the wildernesse An Angell appéereth too Iosua An hoste of Angels defend Elizeus ageinst the Syrians iiij Reg. vj. Angels make a slaughter in the hoste of Sennacherib and deliuer Ezechias iiij Reg. xix Esay xxxvij An Angell leadeth Peter out of prison Act. xij A childe called Cygnaeus being in the middes of winter left in a wood ouercouered with snow was kept and fed the space of full thrée dayes toogither by the ministerie of an Angell Simon Grynaeus escaped the handes of certeine Serieantes by the warning of an Angell which storie woorthy of remembrance Philip Melancthon recyteth in his exposition of the .x. chapter of Daniel But the benefites of the good Aungels will the better bée perceiued if wée consider the manifold dangers that hang ouer our heads by meanes of the Diuell The third place THe Diuell is of the Hebrues named Sathan that is too say an enimie or foe The Gréekes call him Diabolos that is too say a slanderer He is a cruel suttle mercylesse spitefull enimie of God and of all mankind and specially of Gods church At the first truly all Angels were created good by God but some Angelles through Pride and Ambition wherethrough they sought for a hygher degrée of the image of God fell and were cast by God intoo endlesse damnation Now although in this lyfe wée bée not able too serche out the cause why God suffereth the euill Angels which are the authors of all sinne and wickednesse séeing he could vtterly destroy them if he listed yet must wée bothe thinke vppon and also beléeue the things that are reported in the woord of god Iohn viij He was a murtherer from the beginning abode not in the truthe Therfore there is no truthe in him when he speaketh lyes he speaketh of his owne For he is a lyer and the father of lying He is a lyer and the father of lying that is too say he dréepeth into mennes mindes false and wicked opinions concerning God and Epicurish and Academicall doutings he rayseth vp corruptions of Gods woord he confirmeth Epicurish blasphemies and al vntruthes in the first and second Table And this Sathan like an enimie or a Serpent in déede led Eue and all the whole world astray as it is sayd in the Epistle He is a murtherer for by his outrageous crueltie and most trayterous craftes he practyseth mischéefe too our soules too the lyfe of our bodyes too our wyues children landes and houses and finally manaceth destruction too whole realmes and kingdomes Ageinst this cruell enemie fighteth our Michael the sonne of God who came too destroy the woorkes of the Diuell He being captaine of the holy Angels casteth the Diuel out of heauen and out of the heauenly Church Therfore let vs giue God thanks y he hath appoynted the Angels too bée our kéepers in so great daunger of our soules and bodyes and of all that euer wée haue And let vs endeuer by godlynesse and chast behauyor too reteine them still Vppon the feast day of all Sainctes ¶ The Epistle Apoc. vij AFter this I beheld lo a great multitude which no man could number of all nations and people and tongues stode before the seat and before the Lambe clothed with long whyte garments and palmes in theyr handes and cryed with a loude voyce saying saluation bee ascribed too him that sitteth vppon the seat of our God and vntoo the Lambe And all the Angels stode in the cōpasse of the seat of the elders and of the foure beastes and fell before the seat on their faces and woorshipped God saying Amen Blissing and glory wisdome and thankes and honour and power and might bee vntoo our God for euermore Amen And one of the elders answered saying vntoo mee what are these which are arayed in long white garments and whence came they And I said vntoo him Lord thou wottest And he sayde too me these are they which came out of great tribulation and made their garments large and made them white in the bloud of the Lambe therfore are they in the presence of the seat of God and serue him day and night in his temple and he that sitteth in the seat will dwell among them They shall hunger no more neither thirst neyther shall the funne light on them neither any heat For the Lambe which is in the middest of the seat shall feede them and shall leade them vntoo fountaines of liuing water and GOD shal wype away all teares from their eyes The disposement ALl the whole booke of the Apocalyps is a Prophesie concerning the persecutiōs and troubles that were too come vppon the christen Churche and wherewithall it should bée disquieted partly by Tyrantes and partly by Heretickes through the instinct of the Diuell And euer now and then there * This is to be vnderstode of the memoriall of the promysed seede kept alwayes in the hartes of the faithfull and renued by preching and talk and not of the keeping of any appointed holyday Twoo natures in Chryst Why Christ is called the woord The sonne of God was alwayes with the fathers Why Christ is called the womans seede The creede of Athanasius Gods mercie and louing kindnesse
is too say Heretikes and Tyrants by feruent prayer stout standing too the truth and euident disprouing of errors But the sōne of God our Lord Iesus Christ is not a shepherd and Bishop of our soules only after the same manner that S. Peter and the rest of the Apostles and ministers that teach the gospel are but also he is our high préest and sacrifise taking vp the lost shéep vpon his shoulders and transferring all our sinnes making satisfaction for them with his death passion and euen by his owne proper power restoring euerlasting lyfe and rightuousnesse vntoo vs He giueth vs the holy ghost he kindleth in vs new lyght cōfort lyfe and ioy settled in God he defendeth vs from all daungers he vpholdeth such as are oppressed with persecution and miseries he healeth our misdeedes and wounds he ruleth the purposes of our vocation he giueth healthful successe he disapointeth the lets and snares of the Diuel he represseth the rage of Tyrantes and in the end deliuering vs from death and all miseries he raiseth vs vp too euerlasting lyfe glorie And so wée sée that in this short text of Peters there are conteyned the chéef and most ample places of Christen doctrine concerning sin true repentance or turning vntoo God the office and benefites of Christ and the health of our soules A more large and ful declaration of which things may bée repeted out of my wrytings that comprehend the summe of the doctrine and out of the proper and peculiar exercyses of repentance and fayth Vppon the Sunday called Iubilate or the third Sunday after Easter The Introit BEe ioyfull vntoo the Lord all the earth Halleluia Sing Psalmes vntoo his name Halleluia Giue glory vntoo his maiestie Halleluia Say vntoo God howe dreadfull are thy woorks O Lord in the abundance of thy power c. Psal lxv● ¶ The Epistle j. Peter ij DEerly beloued I beseech you as strāgers pilgrims abstein frō fleshly lusts which fight ageinst the soul and se that ye haue honest conuersation amōg the Gentiles that wheras they backbite you as euil doers they may see your good works and praise God in the day of visitatiō Submit your selues therfore to euery mā for the Lords sake whether it be vnto the king as vnto the chefe hed either vnto rulers as vnto them that are sēt of him for the punishment of euil doers but for the laud of thē that doo wel For so is the wil of God that with wel dooing ye may stop the mouthes of folish and ignorant men as free and not as hauing the liberty of a cloke for maliciousnesse but euē as the seruants of god Honor al mē loue brotherly felowship fear God honor the king ▪ Seruants obey your masters with all feare not only if they be good and curteous but also thoughe they be froward For it is thanks worthy if a man for consciēce sake towards God endure greef suffering wrongfully The disposement IT is of those kind of cases that persuade And the state of the Epistle is this I exhort you too liue honestly and too bée obedient too your superiors The places are thrée 1 A general precept cōcerning good maners or new obediēce 2 Of obedience too bée performed too the magistrate lawes of the countrie of bearing the burthens of the common weale yea though they bée somewhat too sore 3 Of Christen libertie and the abuse of the same The first place I Beseech you as strangers pilgrims ▪ that you absteine from fleshly lusts which fight ageinst the foul This first part of the Epistle is a generall exhortacion too the desire and diligēce of dooing wel or of repressing sinful lusts to gouern all the intents dooings of our lyfe after a godly holy maner Therfore the whole doctrine cōcerning good woorks or new obedience as what it is why it is to be performed how it may bée done in this our weaknesse and in what wise it pleaseth god may be repeated in this place The proposition is Be of good conuersation among the Gentiles that is to say liue honestly or gouern your life behauior honestly For conuersatiō signifieth the same thing that life or the purposes doings of a mans life This proposition doth Peter cōfirm and enlightē first by entretāce and secondly by setting down the contrary Abstein frō fleshly lusts that is to say eschue sin or féed not the sinful inclinacions affections of the flesh that is too say of nature corrupted and marred with sin which like enemies kéep war ageinst the mind lightned with the spirit or ageinst the law of God as is said Ro. 8. The méening of the flesh or what soeuer mans flesh méeneth thinketh desireth of it self with out the holy ghost is enmitie ageinst god Ro. vij I sée another law in my members the same law is it that he calleth héer fleshly lusts fighting ageinst the law of my mind renued by the holy ghost and subduing me to the law of sin which is in my members Gal. v. The flesh lusteth ageinst the spirite Now the fleshly lusts signifie not the very desires themselues created in the wil or sense by god but the headinesse of the wicked desires affections doings raging with great violēce ageinst the law of God as in the mind darknesse doutfulnesse cōcerning God In the wil distrust fleshly carelessenesse pride c. and in the hart vnlawful loues heats of irefulnesse of hatred of lusts of desire of reuenge of ambition of couetousnesse of singularitie and such other out of which as out of a fountain flow all outward offences and mischéeues according as it is truely sayd The groundes from whence all euils doo commence Is heady lust or foule concupiscence And in the first of the Epistle of S. Iames. Concupiscence conceyuing bringeth foorth sin Peter vseth a very notable and veheemnt kind of spéeche when he sayth that the fleshly lustes or sinfull affections doo keep war ageinst the soule that is to say like sturdy cruell souldiers marche foorth with violent and enemylike rage ageinst the iudgement or commaundement of reason renued by the holy Ghost Which encounter or deadly ●●●d betwéene the flesh and the spirit euen in those that bée regenerated Paule describeth with notable woords and sentences Rom. vij Gal. v. And the encoūter of fayth and vertues kindled by the holy Ghost ageinst vyces and lustes bidding them battell is excellently described in moste lyuely maner by Prudentius in the battell of the soule which encounter the godly doo euery one of them dayly féele within their owne hartes 3 Peter enlargeth his proposition with making mention of the enforcing cause I beseeche you as straungers and Pilgrimes For seeing wée haue not in this world a continuing Citie or a quiet seate and place of rest but that our home is in heauen let vs also cast away the desires and lusts of this world and lead a holy and heauenly lyfe acceptable too