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A17183 Fiftie godlie and learned sermons diuided into fiue decades, conteyning the chiefe and principall pointes of Christian religion, written in three seuerall tomes or sections, by Henrie Bullinger minister of the churche of Tigure in Swicerlande. Whereunto is adioyned a triple or three-folde table verie fruitefull and necessarie. Translated out of Latine into English by H.I. student in diuinitie.; Sermonum decades quinque. English Bullinger, Heinrich, 1504-1575.; H. I., student in divinity. 1577 (1577) STC 4056; ESTC S106874 1,440,704 1,172

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wicked man he is not worshipped withsūptuous cost neither is he delighted with the sight of solemn tragedies as a wicked man is but his delight is in vertue in a mind that purposeth to doe good workes and righteousnesse Wherefore euery one must indeuour him selfe as muche as he may both to doe wel and wil wel if he desire to haue God to his friend c. Cicero in his second booke De natura deorum saith The best worshipping of the Gods and the moste holy and pure religion is alwayes to honor them with a pure perfect and vncorrupted minde and voice Seneca also in his fifte booke Ad Lucil. sayth Our vsuall custome is to teache men howe the Gods are to be worshipped Let vs giue commaundement that on holye dayes no man set pearchers or taper light before the Gods for they are much delighted with lightes as men halfe smouldered haue pleasure in smoake Let vs forbid these morning greetings and solemne knelings at the Temple dores This more then neding fiddle faddle smacks somwhat of ambitiō He worshippeth god that knoweth god Let vs forbid to bring napkins rubbars to Iupiter to hold a looking glasse to Iuno God seketh not such seruice Why so Bicause he him self forsooth doth serue and supply all mens necessities He is present euery where at hand with al mē Let euery mā heare therefore howe he ought to worship God as he shold He shal neuer verily be sufficiently cleare frō troublesome superstitions vnlesse he in his minde thinke of God as he should do that is that he hath all things that he giueth all things and that he bestoweth benefites freely not looking for any recompence at all What is the cause that the Gods doe good Their nature forsothe He is deceiued who so euer thinketh that they eyther will or possibly can doe harme they can neither take wrong nor yet do wrōg For to do harme and to suffer harme are coupled together The chiefest and most excellent nature of al is the nature of them which are themselues exempt from peril and are not by nature hurtful to others The first point of worship due to the Gods is to beleue that there are Gods then to giue them the maiestie due vnto them and to ascribe to them their goodnesse without the whiche their maiestie is none at all To confesse that they are they that gouerne the worlde that they rule all thinges as their owne that they doe generally looke to the safegarde of all mankinde and sometime to are carefull for peculiar men They neither doe nor haue any euill at all But some they chastise keepe vnder and punish somtime by whipping in hope to make them good Wilt thou please the Gods and make them thy friends Be good thy selfe thē He hath sufficiently worshipped them whosoeuer hath imitated them in goodnesse In these wordes of Seneca although notable in déede and agréeable to true religion I finde default notwithstanding of two thinges The first is bycause not so seldome as once he maketh mention of Gods when as neuerthelesse in an other place he doth frankly confesse that God is one in substance no more Neyther dare I vndertake for him that he spake after the manner of the Scripture which calleth God Elohim as if you should say Gods bycause of the mysterie of the most reuerend Trinitie And yet I know very well that learned men of our religion haue gone about to proue euē by the testimonies of the Gentiles that the Gentiles also did acknowledge the mysterie of the Trinitie The seconde is that for as muche as I can sée Seneca with the other wise men of the Gentiles doth not expresly set downe and teache the sounde truste and confidence that should be had in God. Moreouer there was not among the Romans any image of God in any temple that they had for the space of 170. yeres after Rome was builded For Plutarch in the life of Numa Pompilius sayth As for the decrees that Numa made touching Images of the immortall Gods how like are they almost in euery point to the doctrine of Pythagoras Pythagoras thought that that first beginning he meaneth God is not subiect to sense or any troublesome affection but is an inuisible and vncreated spirite And on the other side Numa forbad the Romans to thinke that the shape of God hath the likenesse of a man or else the figure or similitude of any liuing thing Neyther was there among them of the old time any painted or fashioned Image of God but in the firste 170. yeares they builded Temples and set vp houses for seruice to be done in vnto the Gods but bodily similitudes they did not make euen as if it were a detestable thing to liken the better vnto the worse and as though God could not otherwise be perceiued but by reason knowledge only The very same doth Marcus Varr● testifie touching the Romans in the 31. chap. of Augustines booke De Ciuitate Dei. For hée sayth That the Romans worshipped the Gods. 170. yeares without any Images at all and going further hée addeth this Which if it had endured till nowe the Gods verilie should haue been more purely reuerenced Neither doubteth hée to conclude that place with these words and to say That they which first brought in Images amonge the people diminished deuoute feare augmented foolish errour in the Cities where they gouerned Wisely iudgging thereby that the Gods may easily be despised vnder the fondnesse of imagined likenesses c. Now as concerning the name of God how much the Gentiles did set by it it is euident to bée séene by the great religion that they had in taking or giuing an othe There is extant to be séene a notable discourse of this in the 18. Cap. and the 7. booke of Gellius where among the rest this is to be founde written An othe among the Romans hath bene had and kept holy and vncorrupted which is declared by many lawes and customes And if so be that among the Gentiles any man shoulde speake opprobriously against God he was reputed faultie most sharply to be punished Furthermore the Gentiles had their religion their festiuall dayes ceremonies and priestes of their religion Melchizedech and Iethro were notable priestes of the Gentiles And although Paule doth flatly say that the things which the Gentils offered were not offered to God but to deuils yet notwithstanding bycause they had in reuerence religion and holy ceremonies they did therby declare that God had printed in the mindes of men a familiar knowledge of reuerence and religion which afterward is corrupted by false doctrine and wrong opinions touching God and his holy seruice For the honouring of Parents and Magistrates for the bringing vp of children and touching the duetie of children there are excellent precepts and sentences of the wiser sorte of Gentiles Hierocles among his other writings sayth If any man shal cal his Parents certaine seconde or
all this haue I hether to rehearsed out of Sainct Augustine The last and hindermost cause of the calamities which oppresse that holy Sainctes of God is because the Lord in afflicting his friends deeth thereby giue a most euident testimonie of his iuste iudgement which shall fall vppon his enimies for their contemning of his name and Maiestie For Saint Peter sayth The time is that iudgment must beginne at the house of God if it first beginne at vs what shal the ende bee of those which beleeue not the Gospell of God And if the righteous scarsely bee saued where shall the vngodly and sinner appeare And like to this is that notable sentence of the Lords which hée spake when hée went to the place of execution saying If they doe this in a moyst tree what shall bee done in the drie If the Saincts by whom are meante the fruitefull trées bringing foorth most pretious fruites of good woorkes are by the su●●eraunce of God in this world so miserably tormented and wofully vexed what shall wée say I pray you of the wicked which are so farre from vertue and good woorks They shal vndoubtedly bee plagued with vnspeakable paynes and punishments For touching the causes of those calamities wherewith the wicked are tormented they can bée none other than the heynous crimes which they commit from day to day and are therefore punished by Gods iuste iudgement to the end that all men may perceiue that God hateth wicked men and wickednesse alike So wée reade that Pharao was afflicted Saul fell vppon his owne sword and was slaine in the mounte Gelboe wyth many thousand Israelites because he had sinned against the Lord which purposed to destroy him for an example of his iudgement and a terrour to them that should followe after Antiochus Epiphanes Herode the great Herod Agrippa and Galerius Maximianus the Emperour were taken horriblie wyth gréeuous diseases and died of the same The reason was because they sinned against GOD and his seruaunts on whome hee determined to take a vengeaunce and to make them proofes of his iuste iudgemente so to bee examples for tyrauntes to perceiue what plagues remayne for those which séeke the bloud of the godly and faithfull And although oure good God doth ordeyne all thinges for the beste to his creatures and sendeth in a manner all calamities and miseries to drawe vs from wickednesse yet beecause hypocrites and wicked people despise the counselles and admonitions of GOD and neither will acknowledge God when hee striketh nor turne to him when hee calleth them all thinges doe turne to their destruction euen as to them which loue the Lord all thinges woorke to the beste and therefore doe they perishe in their calamities for in this world they féele the wrath of the Almightie God in most horible punishmentes and in the world to come when once they are parted oute of this life do for euer beare farre greater and bitterer paynes than any tongue can tell But if it happen that the wicked and vngodly sorte doe not in this life féele anye plague or greeuous affliction then shall they bée punished so much the soarer in the woorld to come There is no man that knoweth not the Euangelicall parable of the riche vnmerciful glutton who when as in this life hee liued as hée iusted in passinge delightes was notwythstanding in hell tormented wyth vnquencheable thyrste and parched wyth fire which neuer ceassed burning The felicitie therefore of the wicked in this life is nothing else but ertreeme miserie For Saint Iames the Apostle sayth Yee haue liued in pleasure vpon earth and beene wanton ye haue nourished your harts as in a day of slaughter which I say wil turne to you as to well fedd beastes that are fatted vp to be slaine to make meate of For Ieremie goeth a litle more plainly to woorke and sayth O Lord thou art more righteous than that I should dispute with thee yet notwithstanding I will talke with thee Howe happeneth it that the waye of the vngodly doeth prosper so well and that it goeth so wel with them which without shame offend in wickednesse Thou haste planted them they take roote they growe and bring forth fruite And immediatly after But drawe thou them out O Lord like a sheepe to be slaine and ordeine or appoint them against the day of slaughter Wyth this also doeth that agrée which the Prophete Asaph after hée had roundly and largely reckoned vp the felicitie of the wicked addeth saying Thou verilie hast set them in slipperie places thou shalt cast them downe head long and vtterly destroy them O wyth howe soudaine calamities are they oppressed they are perished swallowed vp of terrours Euen as a dreame that vanisheth so sone as one awaketh thou Lord shalt make their image contemptible in the citie For Dauid also before him did cry saying Yet a little and the vngodly shal bee no where and when thou lookest in his place he shall not appeare I haue seene the vngodly in great power slourishing like a greene Bay tree and I went by and loe he was gone I soughte him but hee could not bee found In like maner also doth Malachie the Prophet witnesse that there is great difference in the day of iudgement betwi●te the worshipper and despiser of God and betwixt the iuste and vniust dealer For the day of the Lord shall come in which the proude and those that woorke wickednesse shal be burnt as stubble with fire frō heauen so that there shall remaine vnto them neither roote nor braunch They that are wise therefore wil neuer hereafter be offended at the felicitie of the wicked they will neuer desire and long to be made partakers of their vnhappie prosperitie they wil not grudge at all to beare the miserie of the Crosse which they do daily heare to be layd by God vppon his Saintes to the end they may be tried and fined from the drosse of the fleshe and this vncleane world Thus farre haue I sufficiently reasoned of the causes of calamities Let vs now sée my reuerend brethren howe and in what order the godly and sincere worshipper of God doth behaue himselfe in all calamities and worldly afflictions His courage quayleth not but kicketh rather all desperation aside because hee vnderstandeth that hee must manfully in faith beare al sorts of euils Therfore doth he arme himselfe with hope patience and prayer There are verily among men some which so soone as they féele any affliction do presently crie as the common voyce is That it had béen best if they neuer had béen borne or else destroyed assone as they were borne A verie wicked saying is this and not worthie to be heard in a Christian mans mouth But farre more wicked are they which sticke not to destroy them selues rather than by liuing they would be compelled to suffer any longer some smal calamitie or abide the tauntes of the open world And yet on the other
in the temple was rent from the top to the very ground whereby all men might vnderstand that the way was opened into the Sanctum fanctorum that is into the very heauens that satisfaction was made for all men in respect of the law In the tabernacle also did hange other vayles which were as shadowes of y flesh of Christ Those vayles did hange at the very entrie into the Sanctum and the Atrium Now Christe our Lord is the way and the doore by whose incarnation and death wée haue an entrie made into the kingdome of god Yea Christ himselfe is oure tabernacle in whom wée dwel liue and in whome we worship and please our God he is the curtaine and seeling the rafter ornament of his Church hée is the trustie most assured couering that doth 〈◊〉 vs from the iniuries of man and the diuel hée is the barre of the Church which ioyneth the members thereof together kéepeth them in the vnitie of faith he is the piller and sockett of his Church hée is the head and onely all-in-all both of our life and true saluation In those figures therfore they of old had the chiefe mysteries hidden of Christe and the Church in which Christ is now no etherwise to be behold than he was in the beginning of the world beheld of the auncient Patriarchs to wit very God and very man the onely and highest king and priest the true Sauiour of the world in whome and by whome alone the faithfull haue their whole saluation To procéed now this Tabernacle by the Lords appointment was erected in Silo as soone as they came into the land of promise and did continue there vntill the time of Heli as is euident in the 18. of Iosue and 1. Samuel 1. and 3. Chap. Vnder Heli the Arcke was taken by the Philistines and caried into Palestine frō whence it was restoared againe and placed in Bethsemes from thence againe it was carried to Kiriathiearim into the house of Abinadab in Gibea that is on the hill For his house was set vppon an high place For in the 6. of the second booke of Samuel wée read Dauid wente with all the people to Baala Iuda which is in the 15. of Iosue called Kiriathiearim to fetch from thence the arke of God. And presently after And they fetched it out of the house of Abinadab that was in Gibea that is on the hill For there was an highe place in Kiriathiearim wherein Abinadab dwelte Some other which take Gabaa for the proper name of the towne doe say that the Arcke was translated from Palestine into Gabaa But this is sure the Arcke was conueyed from the house of Abinadab into the house of Obededom and from thence into the citie of Dauid that is into Sion For so is the citie Dauid expounded in the eighth Chap. of the 3. booke of kinges In Sion did Dauid pitche a newe tabernacle for the Arcke of God wherin hée did place it and appointed priestes to minister there before the Lord as it is at large described in the 16. Chapiter of the first booke of Chronicles And yet by building that new tabernacle Dauid neglected not the old tabernacle of appointment For after the time of Heli the taking of the Arcke by the Philistines it séemeth that it was translated diuersly from place to place Silo verilie wherein it was first placed was desolate as is to bee séene in the 78. Psalme and the seuenth Chapiter of Ieremie Therefore when Saule did reigne it appeareth to haue beene pitched in Gilgal where hée offered peace offeringes in signe of thanckesgiuing vnto the Lord for victorie against the Ammonites as is to bée seene in the 11. Cap. of the first booke of Samuel In the 21. cap. of y same booke it is apparant that the tabernacle was for a time in Nob a towne not very farre from Hierusalē Esaie 10 where Abimelech the priest gaue to Dauid the fresh Shew bread that was takē from the golden table In the time when Dauid reigned it was erected in Gabaon a citie of the Beniamites For in the 21. of the first of Chro. thus we read The tabernacle of the Lord which Moses made in the wildernes the altar of burnt offerings was at that time when the Angel appeared to Dauid wyth a sword ready drawen in the hill of Gabaon In that place was it also in the reigne of Solomon and to that hill did Solomon goe to praye to the Lord before the temple was builded For in the first Chapiter of the second booke of Chrenicles wée finde And Solomon wyth all the Congregation went to the highe place that was at Gabaon For there was the tabernacle of Gods appointment which Moses the seruaunt of the Lord made in the wildernesse But the Arcke of GOD had Dauid brought from Kiriathiearim into the place which Dauid had prepared for it For hee had pitched a tent for it at Hierusalem Moreouer the brasen altar that Bezaleel the sonne of Vri had made was there before the tabernacle of the Lord and Solomon and the Congregation wente to visite it Therfore where as wée read in the 3. Chapiter of the third booke of Kinges Solomon loued the Lord and walked in the wayes of his father Dauid onely hee sacrificed and burnte incense in the highe places that is not spoken in the dispraise but in the praise of Solomon as hée that did not at aduentures sacrifice in euery place but in the highe places to witt vppon that consecrated altar whiche was appointed of the Lord whereof I spoake euen now before Other there are which think that Solomon was not simplie blamed in these words for offering vppon the altar of burnt offerings for that was altogether lawful but because he had til thē deferred the building of the temple But that which goeth before followeth after doe make greatly that those words were speken in that sense and signification which I did first alledge The same Solomon when the temple was builded did cōmaund see that the old Arck with al the instrument● longing thereunto should be brought by the priests as a precious treasure from Gabaon and placed in the temple which hee had caused to be builte for that purpose the holy Scripture bearing witnesse thereunto and saying And they brought the Arcke of the Lord and the tabernacle of appointment and all the holy vessells that were in the tabernacle the priestes and Leuites I say brought them into the temple The 3. of kinges 8. Cap. and the 2. of Chronicles 5. Cap. And so was the tabernacle of the Lord which stoode 478. yeares abrogated at the last and in stéede thereof the temple was erected Touching the temple of the Lord which was prepared by Dauid but builded and made an end of by Solomon I néed not make many woords in the description thereof because it is in the 3. of Kings and 2. of the Chronicles very busilie set downe painted out at the
without all filthie vncleane beastlynesse Last of all hee willeth the Gentiles to be restrayned of eating bloud and strangled He addeth the cause why and saith For Moses of olde time hath in euery citie them that preache him in the Synagogues where hee is read euery Sabboth daye Of which constitution touching bloud and strangled I spake somewhat before that I made this same digression Nowe therefore since the matter is at that pointe it is euident that they are without a cause offended with Sainct Iames which thinke that he did without all right and reason make and publishe this decree and that the fruite of that Synode was verie perillous nothing healesome and flatly contrary to Christian libertie For it is assuredly certeine that the meaning of Iames did in no poynte differ from the minde of Sainct Paule who neuerthelesse did verie well and praisworthily saye Let vs followe the things that make for peace and thinges wherewith we may one edifie an other Destroy not the work of God for meates sake All thinges are pure but it is euil for that man that eateth with offence It is good neither to eate flesh nor to drinke wine nor any thing whereby thy brother stumbleth or falleth or is made weake c. Romanes 14. It is also moste certeine that Sainct Paule who was so sharpely set to defend the Christian libertie that hee withstood Peter openly at Antioche would not haue beene behinde hand to resist Sainct Iames if he had thought that this constitution either had béen or should bée preiudiciall to Christian libertie Verily hee woulde neither haue preached nor yet commended this tredition of y Apostles to the churches of the Gentiles if hee had not thoughte that it had béene both hoalesome and profitable for them all to embrace But he did preache and commende it vnto the churches as is to be séene in the sixtéenth of the Actes and therfore is sainct Iames without a cause murmured against of some because hee for badd to eate bloud and strangled Finally the conclusion of their Epistle is From which if ye keep your selues ye do well So fare ye well They praise that abstinence and teach it as a good woorke because it is also commended to vs in all the Scriptures Thus haue I digressed not farre I trust from our purpose to speake of the decrée of the apostolique Synode helde at Hierusalem and thus muche at this time touching the abrogation of the ceremoniall lawes It remaineth here for mée to saye somewhat concerning the abrogation of the Iudiciall lawes Nowe therefore the Iudiciall lawes doe séeme to be abrogated in this sense because no Christian common weale no citie or kingdome is compelled to be bound to receiue those verie same lawes which were by Moses in that nation according to the time place state published and set out of olde Therefore euery countrie hath frée libertie to vse such lawes as are best and most requisite for the estate and necessitie of euery place and of euery time and persons so yet that the substance of Gods lawes be not reiected troden downe and vtterly neglected For the things which are agréeable to the lawe of nature and the tenne commaundements and whatsoeuer else God hath commaunded to bee punished must not in anye case bee either cleane forgotten or lightly regarded Nowe the ende whereunto all these lawes do tende is that honestie maye flourish peace and publique tranquillitie be firmely mainteined iudgement and iustice be rightly executed Of which because I haue at large disputed in the exposition of the precept Thou shalt doe no murther I will here be cōtent to be so much the briefer The holie Apostle Paule commaundeth to obey the magistrate he aloweth of the authoritie of the sword which he confesseth that the magistrate hath not in vaine receiued at the hande of god And therefore he did not dissallowe or finde faulte with the election of the magistrate the vse of the sworde the execution of the iudgement and iustice nor with vpright ciuil lawes Now whosoeuer doth conferre the lawes and constitutions of Princes kings Emperours or Christian magistrates which are to be found either in the Code in the booke of Digestes or Pandectes in the volume of newe Constitutions or else in anye other bookes of good lawes of sundrie nations with these Iudiciall lawes of God he must néedes confesse that they drawe verie néere in likenesse and do verie well agrée one with an other Iustinian the Emperour forbad by law either to sel or otherwise to make awaye the possessions of the church things consecrated vnto god For the sincere confessing and pure mainteining of the catholique faith the Emperours Gratian Valentinian Theodosius did make a moste excellent holie law Constantine the great gaue charge to Taurus one of his lieuetenauntes to shutte the idol temples and with the sworde to destroye suche rebeiles as went about to sett them open and to do sacrifice in them That lawes were made for the reliefe of the poore and that kinges and emperours had a care ouer them it is to be séene in more places than one of the Emperours lawes and constitutions It is verie certeine y whosoeuer readeth the Code lib. 1. tit 2. he shal finde much matter belonging to this argument For the honest trayning vp of children and the liberal susteining of aged parents there are verie commēdable lawes in the bookes of the heathens Concerning the authoritie y parentes haue ouer their childrē there is m●ch● many things to be found in writing● likewise of wedlock of inc●st 〈◊〉 marriages Honoriꝰ A●cadiꝰ many other princes haue made verie tollerable laudable decrées where they speake also verie well and wisely of the lawe of diuorcement But if I go on to add or oppose to euery seuerall title of the Iudiciall lawes conteined in this sermon sundrie and peculiar lawes out of the decrées of Christian Princes I shall I knowe be too tedious vnto your patience For then would this treatise passe the time of an ordinarie sermon Let it therefore suffice vs at this time by the declaration of these notes to haue opened and made a way to the diligēt louers of the truth to come to the vnderstanding of other things which we haue here omitted and that they may beléeue that the substance of Gods Iudiciall lawes is not taken awaye or abolished but that the ordering and limitation of them is placed in the will and arbitrement of good Christian princes so yet that they ordeine and appoinct that which is iuste and equall as the estate of the time place and persons shall best require that honestie and publique peace may be thereby preserued and god the father duely honoured through his onely begotten sonne Christe Iesus to whome all praise is due for euer For we do sée that the Apostles of Christe did neither require nor cōmaunde any nation in the administration of politique affaires to binde them selues to
oure forefathers did not pray to any other but God alone the onely creatour of all thinges and did b●leeue verilie that hée would be mercifull vnto mankinde for the blessed séedes sake And although they did not so vsuallie call vppon God as wée at this day doe thorough the mediatour and intercessour Christe Iesus euen as the Lord in the Gospel did himselfe testifie and say Hetherto haue ye not asked any thinge in my name aske and ye shall receiue yet were they not vtterly ignoraunt of the mediatour for whose sake they were heard of the lord Daniel in the ninthe Chapiter of his Prophecie maketh his prayer and desireth to be heard of God for the Lords sake that is for the promised Christ his sake Finallie so often as the holy Saincts did in their prayers say Remember Lord thy seruaunts Abraham Isaac and Iacob they did not looke backe to the persons or soules of the deceased Patriarches but to the promise that was made to the Patriarches Now since that promise is In thy seede shal all the kinreds of the earth be blessed and since Paule doeth testifie that Christ is that blessed seed it followeth consequently that the holy fathers in their prayers had an eye to the blessed seede and that they did desire God to heare them for Christ his sake For in one place also the Lord promiseth deliueraunce to king Ezechias saying I will defend this citie for mine owne sake and for my seruaunt Dauids sake But in the 7. and 28. Chapter of Esaies Prophecie it is manifest that the citie was spared for Christe his sake the sonne of the Virgin whiche is the foundation placed in Sion whome Ezechiel in the 34. Chapiter calleth by the name of Dauid and the Gospell calleth Dauids sonne Last of all the Apostle Paule doth shewe that the auncient fathers had amongest them the very same Sacramentes which wee nowe haue as hee doth in other places also make vs partakers and applie to vs both circumcision and the Passeouer the Sacramentes whiche were giuen to them of old as doeth appeare in the second to the Col●ssians 1. Cor. the fifth cap. In the tenthe Chapiter he threateneth gréeuous punishment to the Corinthians at the handes of God vnlesse they absteine from thinges offered to idols and from all heathenishe sensualitie And thereuppon he bringeth in the example of the Israelites which he doth after this manner applie to his purpose I would not brethren that ye should be ignoraunt that our fathers were the Church of God and that they had the same sacraments which we at this day haue For they were all baptised vnto Moses that is by Moses or by the ministerie of Moses in the cloude and in the sea For the cloude and the sea were figures of baptisme And they did also eate of the same spirituall meate and did drincke of the same spirituall drincke And immediately after hée interpreteth his owne meaning and saith For they drancke of the spirituall rocke that followed them which rocke was Christ Mannaverily and the Rocke did typicallie represent the spirituall foode wherewith Christ refresheth both vs them who is himselfe the bread and drincke of eternall life But although they did bodilie outwardly visiblie receiue these Sacramēts yet for because they were destitute of faith and the holie Ghost because they were defiled with the worshipping of idols with surfetting and fornication they displeased God were by him destroyed in the desarte And therefore vnlesse ye also absteine from those filthie vices neither shall baptisme nor the sacrament of the Lords supper auaile you but ye shall vndoubtedly bée destroyed of the lord Since therefore it is by most euident proofes of Scripture declared that the old fathers had the same Sacramēts the same inuocation of God the same hope expectation and inheritance the same spirite the same faith and the same doctrine which we at this day haue the marcke I hope whereat I shot is fullie hit and I haue I trust sufficiently proued that the faithfull fathers of the old testament and wée the beléeuers of the newe couenaunt are one Church and one people which are all saued vnder one congregation vnder one only testament and by one and the same manner of meanes to wit by faith in Christ Iesu Thus much haue I hetherto said touching the likenesse the agréement and the vnitie betwixt the old newe testament or people of god I wil now add somewhat touching the diuersitie betwixt them and the thinges wherin they differ In the verie substaunce truly thou canst find no diuersitie the difference which is betwixt them doth consist in the maner of administration in a f●w accidents and certeine circumstāces For to the promise or doctrine of faith and to the chiefe and principall lawes there were annexed certeine external thinges whiche were added vntill the time of amendment so that the whole Ecclesiasticall regiment the manner of teaching the doctrine of Godlinesse and the outward worship of God was amonge the old fathers of one sort and is amonge vs of an other But the especiall things wherin they differ may be rehearsed and sett downe in thefe fewe principall poinctes First and foremost all things of the newe couenaunt are more cleare and manifest thā those of the old testam●t The preaching of the old couenaunt had alwayes in it for the most parte some mystie or cloudie thing and was still couered and wrapped vpp in shadowes and dimme sh●wes But the publishing of the newe testament is cleare and manifest so that it is called the light which is without all mystes and darckenesse Moses did with a vayle couer his face neither could the children of Israel behold his countenance but wée beholding not only the countenance of Moses which is nowe vncouered but the pleasant and amiable face of Christ himselfe doe greatly reioyce to see our saluation openly reuealed before our eyes In that sense 〈…〉 say that his disciples were happ●● where hée brake out into these w●●ds Happie are the eyes which see the thinges that ye see For I say vnto you that many Prophets and kinges desired to see the thinges that ye see and sawe them not and to heare the thinges that ye heare and heard them not The iust man Simeon did in this sense call himselfe as happie a man as liued and did thereupon promise that hee was willing to die saying Lord now lettest thou thy seruaunt depart in peace according to thy woord For mine eyes haue seene thy saluation which thou hast prepared before the face of al people to be a light to lighten the Gentiles and to be the glorie of thy people Israel But althoughe our forefathers had not so much light as doeth shine to vs in Christe since his comming in the fleshe yet was that little light whiche they had sufficiēt to the getting of saluation by faith in Christ E●en wée our selues although wée sée him farre more clearelie than oure forefathers did
We acknowledge y men inspired with singular grace of the spirit which foresée foreshew things to come and be excellent interpreters of the scriptures or Diuines illuminated may be called Prophetes as we haue shewed elsewhere more at large But in the order of byshops and elders from the beginning there was singular humilitie charitie and concord no contention or strife for prerogatiue or titles or dignitie For all acknowledged themselues to be the ministers of one maister coequall in all thinges touching office or charge He made them vnequall not in office but in giftes by the excellencie of giftes Yet they that had obteyned the excellenter gifts did not despise the meaner sort neither did they enuie them for their giftes S. Paule sayth Let a man so esteeme of vs as the ministers of Christe and disposers of the secretes of God. The same Paule in more than one place caleth the preaching of the gospel the ministerie For that tooke déepe root in the auncient byshops hearts which the Lorde when his disciples striued for dignitie and as they say for the maioritie that is which of them shuld be the greatest setting a childe in the middest of them sayde Verily verily I say vnto you except ye turne and become as little children ye shal not enter into the kingdome of heauen Truly the martyr of God Saint Cyprian standing in the counsel of the byshops at Carthage wisely sayde Neither hath any of vs appointed him selfe to be a byshop of byshops or by tyrannous feare compelled his fellowes in office to necessitie of obeying since euery byshop hath according to the licence and libertie of his power his owne free choyce as if hee might not bee iudged of an other since neyther he him selfe can iudge an other but let vs all looke for the iudgement of our Lord Iesus Christ who only and alone hath power both to preferre vs in the gouernement of his Church and to giue sentence of our doing Thus farre he At that time therefore byshoppes contended not for I knowe not what primacie or patrimonie of Peter but that one mighte excell the other in purenesse of doctrine and holinesse of life and mutually to helpe one an other And then vndoubtedly the affaires of the Church went forward prosperously in so muche that though the most puisant princes of the world should haue persecuted the Church of Christe with fire and sworde yet neuerthelesse against all the assaultes of the diuell and the worlde she had stoode vnmoueable hauing wonne the victorie and had daily béene more inlarged also renoumed Oh happy had we béene if this order of Pastors had not béene chaunged but that that auncient simplicitie of ministers that fayth humilitie and diligence had remained vncorrupted But in processe of time all things of ancient soundnesse humilitie and simplicitie vanished awaye whiles somethings are turned vpside down somethinges eyther of their owne accorde were out of vse or else are taken away by deceite somethings are added too Verily not many ages after the death of the Apostles there was séene a farre other Hierarchie or gouernement of the Churche than was from the beginning althoughe those beginninges séeme to be more tollerable than at this day all of this same order are Sainte Hierome saythe In times past churches were gouerned with the common counsel and aduise of the elders afterward it was decreed that one of the elders being chosen should bee set ouer the other vnto whome the whole care of the church should perteine and that the seedes of scismes should bee taken away Thus much he In euery citie countrie therefore he that was most excellent was placed aboue the rest His office was to be superintendent and to haue the ouersight of the ministers and the whole flocke He had not as wee vnderstoode euen nowe out of Cyprians words dominion ouer his fellowes in office or other elders but as the Consul in the Senate house was placed to demaunde and gather together the voyces of the Senatours and to defende the lawes priuileges and to be carefull least there should arise factions amonge the Senatours euen so no other was the office of a bishop in the church in all other thinges hee was but equall with the other ministers But had not the arrogancie of the ministers and ambition of bishops in the times that followed further increased we would not speake a word against them And S. Hierome affirmeth that That preferrment of bishops sprange not by Gods ordinaunce but by the ordinance of man These thinges haue wee remembred sayeth he to the end we might shewe that amonge the old fathers bishops and ministers were all one but by litle and little that the plantes of dissentions might be pluckt vpp all the care was committed vnto one Therfore as ministers knowe that they by the custome of the church are subiect to him whiche is set ouer them so let bishops know that rather by custom than by the truth of the Lords disposition they are greater than the other ministers and that they ought to gouerne the churches together in common following the example of Moses who when it was in his power alone to gouerne the people of Israel chose out threescore and tenne other with whom he might iudge the people Thus he writeth in his commentarie vppon the 3. cap. of the epist. of Paul vnto Titus But the auncient fathers kept not themselues within these boundes There were also ordeyned Patriarches at Antioche Alexandria Constantinople and Rome There are appointed Archbishops or Metropolitanes that is to ●aye such as haue gouernement ouer the bishops throughout prouinces And to bishops of cities or inferiour bishops there are added such as were called Chorepiscopi or bishops of the multitude that is to saye at such time as the countrie or region was larger than that the care and ouersighte of the bishop placed ouer the citie would suffice For these were added as vicars and suffraganes who might execute the office of the bishop throughout that part of the countrie But we know that the functions of suffraganes or vicars generall in these last times are of a farre other maner in bishops courtes and diocesses And also vnder deacons were placed subdeacons and when wealth increased there were archdeacons also created that is to saye ouerseers of all the goodes of the church They as yet were not mingled with the order of ministers or bishops and of those that taught but they remained as stewards or factours of the goods of the church As neither the monkes at the beginning executed the office of a priest or minister in the church For they were counted as laye-men not as clearkes and were vnder the charge of the pastors But these vnfortunate birdes neuer left soaring vntill in these last times they haue clymed into the topp of the temple and haue set themselues vppon bishops and pastours heads For monkes haue béene and are both Popes archbishops bishops and
These sayinges of the clarified body which is that whiche ascended and sitteth at the righte hande of the father repugne wholy with vbiquitie or being in euerie place and the insensibilitie of Christes body whiche notwithstanding must néedes be graunted if we procéede to inforce the reall presence of Christes bodye out of the wordes of the supper simply vnderstood Whervnto belongeth that whiche the Apostle disputing of the resurrection of the deade sayth If the deade doe not rise neyther is Christe risen But Christe is risen being the first fruites of them that sleepe and therefore shall wee rise also Wherefore by our owne bodies being raysed againe it appeareth what manner of bodye Christes glorious body was or is wherevnto our bodies are made like But our bodyes shall be true bodyes consisting of sinewes veynes fleshe skinne and bones visible not inuisible and remayning in some certeine place in heauen not euerie where wherevpon it foloweth that the lords bodye is not inuisible and euerie where But if any man thinke that to be no good argument whiche is fet from our raysed bodyes to the Lords raysed body or contrariwise let him accuse Saint Paul who hath taught vs this by his example Therefore the Catholique and righte auncient fayth constreyneth vs to expound the wordes of the Supper by a trope or figure Finally when as the Capernaites had hearde the Lord dispute touching the eating of his body and drinking of his bloud and did thinke and imagine of a carnall eating and drinking he sayde that he would ascend into heauen to wit that they shoulde not thinke on the eating of his naturall body since in the selfe same body he would ascend into heauen Neyther is there lefte here any place for the newe and friuolous deuice of certeine men whiche feigne that to ascend into heauen is nothing els than to lay downe the weake state and condition thereof and to receiue a supernaturall For Sainte Luke whome altogether we muste rather beléeue than suche subtile deuises or rather follies saith that the Lord was lifted vp on highe and carried vp into heauen from the sight of his disciples moreouer that his body was receyned by a cloude and that his disciples looked vp into heauen after him vntill they heard the Angels say vnto them that he would returne againe in the verie same manner altogether as they saw him depart away But who knoweth not that he shall come againe in the cloudes of heauē Therfore heauen into which the lord ascended is the name of a place not of a state or condition Also in the gospell he promiseth vs a place with him selfe saying If I go to prepare you a place I will come againe and take you vnto me that where I am there you may be also Yea he layd downe all the conditions and infirmities of a mortall body in his resurrection so that he had no néed to lay them down at his ascension I suppose that there is none of the faythfull that will denye that the Lorde instituted nothing to vs in vaine or without some singular and speciall commoditie to vs But when the Lorde sayde in the Gospell that his fleshe being corporally eaten auayled nothing where he speaketh of none other body than of that verie same whereof he spake in the words of the Supper to wit whiche he gaue for vs it followeth without all contradiction that the Lorde deliuered nothing vnto vs in the Supper but that would profite vs But he should haue deliuered that which would not haue profited vs if hee had giuen vs his body to be eaten corporally It is euident therefore that it is very necessarie the wordes of the Supper shoulde be expounded Herevnto belongeth the notable prophecie and manifest commaundement of oure Lorde Iesus Christe saying in the Gospell Then if they shall say vnto you Loe here is Christe or there is Christe doe not beleeue For there shal arise false Christes and false prophetes and they shall worke greate signes and wonders so that if it were possible the verie elect shall bee brought into errour Beholde I haue tolde you before If therefore they shall say vnto you Beholde where he is in the wildernesse goe not foorth Behold where he is in the innermost parts of the house in the closets or coffers I say For this word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifieth the most secrete and innermost partes of all the house wherein we vse to lay vp those things whiche we would haue safest kept which in Dutche we call Schryn schloss vnd ghalt doe not beleeue For like as the lightning goeth out of the east appeareth euen vnto the west so shall the cōming of the sonne of man bee But although this place is vsed to be expounded by many of the calamities of the Iewes yet that can not be denyed whiche S. Hierome also him selfe confesseth that in the same likewise the destinie of all the worlde is prophecied of euen vnto the end therof Wherefore this place which we haue alledged is concluded with the saying concerning Christes last comming into the worlde at the daye of iudgement And moreouer it cannot be denyed that the Lorde doth absolutely condemne that doctrine that defendeth that Christe remaineth or is presente in diuers places of the world in boxes or close places whiche not only the books of the teachers of transubstantiation are séene to do but also tabernacles whiche are erected vnto Christes body whiche they call meate tentes also chapells with famous temples and monasteries In all and euerie one of those places I say they shewe vs Christe saying Lo here is Christ and there is Christ Behold the breade of Angels Christe is wholy in all these sacrifices and he is fully and wholy in euery parte of them euen in suche sorte as he was when hee was borne of the virgine Marie and houng vppon the crosse Which thing they by and by confirm by myracles and wonders they also set it foorthe with circumstaunce of wordes saying that so greate mysteries are not to be inquired of but simply to be beléeued And that these thinges were wrought vnspeakably and inuisibly by the omnipotencie of God. Neyther did the Lorde dissemble howe muche this errour shoulde increase There shall be suche plentie suche great numbers of people that receiue this errour and running after Christe into the desarts innermost places of the houses the the very elect shal be in danger But in the mean while in so great perill and daunger of thinges what doth Christ teach his elect to do Immediately he addeth Do not beleue What do not beleue That Christe is here or there vppon earth in the wildernesse or in the innermost partes of the house or euen in the middest of the cities or in the fieldes He addeth moreouer Goe not foorth Followe not the multitude which by distance of place séeketh for Christe as if he were yet conuersant vpon the earth Therefore nowe if so be the
he might leaue off from béeing a clerke for that no man could well be bothe a monke and a clerke since the one is an impediment to the other Then liued they not of the common reuenues of the Church but of the trauel of their owne hands as the lay people do S. Hierome disputing of the originall of monkes in the life of Paulus hath thus written Among many it hath oftentimes been called into question who first beganne chiefly to dwell in the wildernes of the monkes Some fetching the matter somewhat farre off beginne to reckon from Helias the holy prophet and S. Iohn of whome Helias seemeth to vs to haue beene more than a monke and that S. Iohn began to prophecie before he was borne But others in which opinion the moste part of all people doe commonly agree affirme that saint Anthonie was the firste beginner of that order which in part is true For he was not onely the first but also the motioner of all others therevnto Amathas Macarius saint Anthonies scholars whereof the first buried his maisters bodie do nowe affirme that one Paulus Thebius was the first beginner of that way whiche thing we also confirme not only in name but also in opinion And anon hee addeth that Paulus forsaking the citie being thereto inforced for feare of torments vnder the persecuters Cecius and Valerianus departed into the wildernesse where he found a ●aue and lay hid therein vntil hee was founde out by S. Anthonie The Emperours Decius Valerianus gouerned the Empyre about the yeare of our Lord 260. but it is saide that S. Anthonie dyed when he was an hundred fiue yeres olde in the yeare of our Lord 360. S. Augustine in the 80. epistle to Hesychius who reporteth of his own time howe that he liued in the yeare of our Lorde foure hundreth and twentie but Eutropius and Beda reporte howe that he died in the yeare of our Lord foure hundreth and thirtie in the thirtie and one chapter of the maners of the catholique church reciting the manners and institutions of the monkes in his time reporteth suche thinges as are verie farre from the orders institutions of our Monkes now a dayes In the time of Iustinian the Emperour who made certeine lawes of Monkes and Monasteries there liued one Benet whom many of the Monkes nowe a dayes do call father whose life I will recite vnto you out of Trittenheymius who died aboue fiftie yeares since to the intent you may vnderstande what power and dignitie they obteyned in processe of time who at the beginning were contemned of none authoritie Benet Abbat of Cassina sayeth he first founder beginner and gouernour of the monkes in the West wroate in eloquent style and with graue iudgement the rule for monkes in one booke whiche beginneth Giue care O my sonneto my precepts c. and it conteineth thrée score and thirtéene Chapters He died in the yeare of our Lord 542. But Marianus Scotus supposeth that hée died in the yeare of our Lord 601. in the last yeare of the Emperour Maurice He writeth also of twentie orders of Monkes that were vnder Benets rule Of S. Benets order there haue béene eighttéene Popes in the Sea of Rome Cardinals aboue two hūdred Archebishops in diuerse Churches to the number of one thousand sixe hundred Bishops almost foure thousand Famous Abbats who excelled in life doctrine and writings fiftéene thousand seuen hundred Of suche as are Canonized fiftéene thousand sixe hundred And that I may not recite many other orders of monkes it is knowne that the mendicant Monkes and Friers beeing the faithful diligent valiaunt Romane champions of the Pope and the spirituall Monarchie were confirmed by Honorius about the yeare of our Lorde one thousand two hundred twentie and two Hereby I would declare nothing else but onely that all men shoulde vnderstande that Monkerie was deuised by mannes inuention not deliuered vnto the Churche of Christe by the Apostles and that at the firste it sémed to be tollerable but afterward became altogether intollerable Howe profitable it is to the common wealth experience it selfe teacheth And who so euer knoweth not that it is quite repugnant to true religion knoweth nothing They feigne that it is meritorius before God and the state of perfection But who séeth not how repugnant it is to Christes merite and to the sincere doctrine of the Gospell What godlinesse or necessitie is it that moueth vs after that we haue wholy betaken our selues to one God in baptisme to betake our selues also and to make our vowes to Sainctes and to binde our selues by religiō of an othe to the obseruing of their rules True religion forbiddeth vs to vowe our selues to Saintes or by any meanes to depende in way of religion vppon them True religion forbiddeth vs to choose vs any other Fathers or Maisters True religion forbiddeth vs to deuise new māners of worshippings or new religions or to receiue them that are deuised by others The example of Ieroboam and his fellows maketh vs affeard True religion forbiddèth vs to sweare by the names of other GODS Religion referreth vs to one GOD by faith and obedience Superstition breaketh this bande and admitteth creatures S. Paul to the Corinthians saith Euerie one of you sayeth I am Paules I am Apollos I am Cephaes and I am Christes Is Christ diuided was Paule crucified for you Or were you baptised in the name of Paule Beholde Christ is our redéemer and our maister The faith of Christe hath made vs one bodie By baptisme we are baptised into one body that we might be called Christians not Petrines or Paulines S. Paule would not suffer that Christians shoulde take their name of the Apostles how much lesse would he abide that at this day some shoulde bee called Benedictines some Franciscanes some Dominicanes We are the Lordes inheritance and possession it is not lawfull for vs to binde our selues to the seruice of men But who so binde themselues they teare in sunder the vnitie of Christes body they prophane the crosse and baptisme of Christ The Apostle sayeth playnly Is Christe diuided was Paule crucified for you or wer you baptised in the name of Paul And therefore although they be commonly called Spirituall persons yet are they nothing lesse than spirituall For the Apostle sayth When one of you sayeth I am Paules and I Apolloes are ye not carnall To what end is it after the receiuing of the gospel of Christe Iesus and the doctrine of the Apostles whiche conteyne and deliuer vnto vs all godlinesse to inuent newe rules For truely when they had once founde out certeine peculiar lawes and meanes of liuing they separated themselues from the common sorte of Christians in all outward maner of liuing in their behauiour and in all their apparell to the intent that by that meanes they might make euident to all men that they woulde liue a-part as it were from that common laye and imperfect Church to liue more holily perfectly and