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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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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
and exhortations If so be that euerie church had such a pastour which wold not easily forsake the flocke howe great fruite I pray you shoulde we hope for Wherefore not without cause are we commanded incessantly and earnestly to praye vnto God that he woulde giue faythfull wise godly and diligent Pastours vnto his Churche Thus haue I hitherto spoken of the doctrine of byshops in the church of god And vnlesse a byshop teach after this manner and do those thinges which are ioyned to teaching he is vnworthy eyther of the name of a Byshop Pastour or Doctour howe so euer he pretend an Apostolique title For certeine thinges are ioyned to the doctrine of the Churche which also are required of a preacher of the Gospell and belong to his office as are these to gather together an holie assembly wherein he may preache conceiue prayer and minister the sacraments But of these things shall be spoken in their place Nowe there resteth to be considered howe byshops may gouerne the Churche of Christe with holy example of their life The Lorde in the Gospell sayth to his Apostles Ye are the light of the world A citie that is set on an highe hill can not be hid neither doe men light a candle and put it vnder a bushell but on a candlesticke and it giueth light vnto all that are in the house Let your light so shine before men that they maye ●ee your good woorkes and glorifie your father whiche is in heauen Wherefore Pastours not onely in doctrine but in holie life do giue light vnto the Churche whiche beholding their life agréeable to their doctrine is her selfe also moued to practise innocencie of life For the exāple of a good man much preuaileth to the furthering of the loue of vertues And cōtrariwise the Scripture witnesseth that the corrupt example of the sonnes of Helie the chiefe rulers in religion was verie analyeable to corrupt the people For the Scripture sayth And the sinne of the children of Helie was to abhominable before the face of the Lorde so that the people beganne to abhorre the sacrifices of the Lorde For men séeing the corrupt life of the ministers of the church begin somwhat to dout of the whole doctrine crying If the pastor thought those things true whiche he teacheth vnto vs he him selfe would not liue so dissolutely Therefore such teachers are sayde to ouerthrowe that with their naughtie life whiche they haue builded with wholesome doctrine Wherefore Paul requireth a byshop or pastor of the people which shuld be blamelesse that is to say whiche can not rightly and worthily be reprehended of the ●aythfull For otherwise by howe muche euerie Bishop shall be more sincere and vpright by so much more shall he be subiect to slaunders and reproches of the wicked the Lord him selfe foretelling the same in the Gospell If they haue called saythe he the Lorde of the house Beelzebub how much more shall they call them of his housholde And If they haue persecuted me they will also persecute you And againe Blessed are ye when men shall reuile you and persecute you and lying shall say all manner of euill saying againste you for my sake Reioyce and be glad for great is your rewarde in heauen Therfore a pastor ought verie carefully and as muche as in him is to take héede that both at home and abroad he liue a life worthy of him selfe and his calling Let him liue chastely as well being single as married Let temperaunce sobernesse thriftinesse or good husbandry hospitalitie and other vertues which I haue before rehersed out of the Apostle flourish in a bishop Let him gouerne his owne houshold wisely and godlily instruct thē and so bridle them that he giue not occasion of offence to the Church through riotousnesse or other misdéedes For so also the Apostle Paule hath commaunded who frameing againe the exercises of a byshop sayeth Till I come giue attendaunce to reading to exhortation and doctrine He requireth of Timothie a diligent reading that is to say a continuall studie whereby he may more perfectly exhort and teach But Paule requireth of him that hath bene brought vp in the knowledge of the Scriptures from a childe as elswhere he writeth a continuall studie of the Scriptures Howe great diligence then doth the Apostle require of them who as they haue not obtained so plentifull gifts of the spirit as Timothie had so they are not exercised in the Scriptures from their infancie Let a sorte of them therefore be ashamed of their vnskilfulnesse let them be ashamed of leasure not bestowed in studie and of their trauelsome idlenesse For as manye reade not any thing at all but continually liue idlely and as it were rot away in idlenesse so a number of innumerable others are busied in those thinges which nothing become Byshoppes Therefore the Apostle saythe No man which goeth a warrefare intangleth him selfe with the affaires of this life that hee may please him which hath chosen him to be a souldier Here were a fitte place to speake of stipendes due vnto Pastours but we will deferre it to an other place But if Byshoppes come abroade among the people at any time for businesse sake and be present in assemblies of honest men with no lesse care ought they to indeuoure leaste eyther by déede or worde or by apparell or companie kéeping or finally in the whole course of their life they giue any iust occasion of offence to the Churche Let there appeare in Pastoures in all places and at all times holy vprightnesse méete ripenesse of iudgement honest behauiour wisedome modestie humanitie humilitie and authoritie worthy of Gods ministers But let the contrarie vices and wicked misdéedes be farre from them In these fewe wordes I thinke are conteyned those thinges whiche other haue handled at large intreating of the discipline and behauiour of the Clergie For all ages vnderstoode that a dissolute and loose life was euill in all degrées and kyndes of men but in the ministers of the Churche worsse and moste intollerable For what can a minister of the Churche doe in the Churche whose authoritie is altogether lost Authoritie therfore is requisite in Pastors Of the want hereof manye doe complayne and séeing it vnder foote goe about to reare it vppe agayne with I can not tell what kynde of proppes of titles and ceremonies But authoritie is not gotten with suche light and vayne thinges It is rather obteyned by the Grace of God through the loue of trueth and vprightnesse of life if happily God touche mens heartes so as they vnderstande that GOD worketh his worke in the Churche by his ministers as by his instruments if they perceiue that ministers do the worke of the Lorde with feruentnesse of spirite and not coldly not fearing any thing in a good cause no not the wicked and mightie men of this world but doe resist them and yet that they doe nothing of hatred or malice but doe all
more wickedly digestinge the thing that before was naughtily come by Let them put no trust or cōfidence in their ill gotten riches neither let them giue them selues to ydlenesse but still be busie in some honest thing But yet most commonly it commeth to passe that yll gottē goods are spent very lewdly The best way therefore is either to bee heire to a good iust and liberall man or else to seeke meanes by their owne toyle and trauaile to haue of thine owne wherewithall to susteine both thine owne life and the liues of thy familie But many men make a doubte here call it into question first whether bargaining and buying and selling be lawfull or no and then what one occupation it is among all other that doth best beseeme a godly man Them which stick vpon these doubts I wishe to consider these reasons that followe First it is manifest that cōtractes are for the moste parte voluntarie and that bargaines are made with the mutuall consent of the buyer and seller so that each one maye take deliberation and make choice of that which he woulde haue to see whether it be best for his purpose or no. Of this sorte are the exchaunge of thinges suretiship letting hiring morgaging borrowing lending couenanting buying selling and other mo like vnto these These things as experience doth proue euen the holiest men cannot be without so long as they lyue in this fraile world Neither doth the Lorde of the lawe in any place forbidde these kinde of contractes but planteth them rather in his common weale of Israell that the people might knowe acknowledge them to be the ordinaunces of God the abuse deceipt guyle confidence in them is flatly forbidden by the worde of the Lorde If therfore any man do vse thē moderately not staying him selfe wholy vpon them nor reposing his trust in them in so vsing them he sinneth not And here againe let vs heare the wordes of the Apostle who saith Let them which haue wiues be as though they had none and them which wepe as though they wept not and them which reioyce as though they reioyced not and them which buy as though they possessed not and them which vse this world as though they vsed it not For the facion of this world doth passe away In like maner we do in no place reade that iust and lawfull gaines haue beene at any time forbidden yea the Lorde doth blesse the labour and trauaile of his seruaunts which loue him that euen as in vertue so also thei may increase in richesse and substance This do the examples of Abraham Isaac Iacob euidently testifie And the verie Apostles bidde vs not to looke after no gaine but charge vs onely to keepe our selues from gaping after filthie gayne There are among men many and diuers occupations And the state conditions wherin men are do stand in néede of many and sundry thinges There is an occupation or 〈◊〉 kinde of labour which is put in practise by force of hand and strength of bodie rather then by arte althoughe it wanteth not altogether witt and discretion There is also a more fine and subtile labour of the witt which although it be not done without the bodie and strength of man is yet notwithstanding accomplished by the witt rather then by the bodily force of him which laboureth Of the firste sorte are all those occupations or sciences which are commonly called handicraftes and in that number we reckon also merchaundising husbandrie and grasing of cattell Of the latter sorte are the studie of tongues of Physicke of lawe of Diuinitie especiallie and of Philosophie and lastly the gouerning of a common weale The Patriarches verilie who were most innocent and excellent men did for the most parte either exercise husbandrie or else bréede and feede vpp cattel to increase There are many examples of Abell Noe Abraham Isaac Iacob Iob and other more The Leuites and Prophets lyued by their studye and ecclesiasticall ministerie The feate of merchandising is no where condemned throughout the holye Scriptures but those merchauntes are condemned which neither feare nor seeke after God but vse odde shiftes and subtile sleightes to deceiue and coosen their brethren neighbours For Iames the Apostle of Christ our Lorde saith Go to now ye that saye to daye and to morrow let vs go into such a citie and continue there a yere and buy and sell winne and yet cannot tel what shall happen on the morrowe for what is your life it is euen a vapour that continueth for a little time and then vanisheth away For that ye ought to saye If the Lorde will and if wee liue let vs do this or that Neither is Lydia the seller of purple founde fault withall in the Actes of the Apostles for that shée did sell purple For Solomon where he setteth forth the praise of a good huswife doth commend her greatly for exercising merchaundise All notable kinges haue liued by gouerning of their common wealthes euen as Ioseph the preseruer of Aegypt and Daniel the chiefe next to the king in Babylon and Media did in like sort For as in mannes bodie there are many members and sundrie vses whereunto they are applyed when as notwithstanding they do all agrée in one and tende together to the preseruation and safegarde of the bodie euen so God hath ordeyned diuers artes and occupations for mē to labour in so yet neuerthelesse that he would haue them al to serue to the common weales commoditie But nowe it is not for mée definitiuely to pronounce which of al these occupations a godly man ought chiefly first to choose then to put in practise Let euery man weigh with him selfe the things that hetherto I haue alledged then let him searche make triall of him selfe to what kinde of life and occupation his minde is most willing and whereunto he him selfe is most fitt and profitable let him also haue a diligent regarde to consider what arts they are that be most simple and agréeable to nature and what occupations haue lest néede of crafte and deceipte and lastly what sciences do least of all drawe vs from God and iust dealing And when this is scande then let euery man choose to him selfe that whiche he taketh to bée best conuenyent and moste whoalesome bothe for his soule and also his bodie We cannot all of vs manure the ground neither are all heades apte to take learning a fewe among many do gouerne the common weale and all are not fitt to be handicraftes men Euery one hath his sundry disposition euery one is inspired by God euery one hath the ayde and counsell of his friendes and welwillers euery one hath sundry occasions and euery one hath the rule of Gods worde let him be content with and staye him selfe vppon them so yet that Gods comaundements may still haue the preeminence But for him that laboureth and taketh paines in his occupation these rules of admonition which followe
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
which god had threatened vnto him to wit that he shoulde so be humbled by the incest of his sonne c. And what is the cause that they demaund not if God for sinne did threaten that scourge why then when he had pardoned the sinne did he fulfill that whiche he threatened but for bicause they knowe if they demaund that question that they shall rightly be answered that the remission of the sinne was graunted to the end the man shuld not be by his sinne hindered to obteine eternall life but the effect of Gods threatening did followe after the remission of the sinne to the end that the godlinesse of the mā might be tryed and exercised in that humilitie In like manner God hath for sinnes layde bodily death as a punishment vpon the body of man and after the forgiuenesse of sinnes hathe not taken it away but left it in the body to be a meane to the exercise of righteousnesse Thus farre hath Augustine Nowe as concerning the punishments of the wicked If the most iust God doe in this worlde touch them with any let vs knowe that they bee the arguments of Gods iust iudgement who in this worlde beginneth to punishe them temporally and in the worlde to come doeth not ceasse to plague them euerlastingly The wicked verily perishe thorough their owne default For God beginneth to whippe them in this life to the end that they beeing chastened may begin to be wise and turne to the Lorde but they by his chasticement are the more indurate and murmur at the iudgements of God conuerting that to their owne destruction which was ordeined to haue bene to their health For as to them that loue GOD all thinges worke to the best so to them that hate the Lord all things do work to their vtter destruction This argument might bee extended further yet but for because I haue alreadie spoken a great deale to this effect in the third Sermon of this thirde Decade that whiche is here left out may there be founde therefore I referre you to the looking vpon that And so nowe hitherto touching sinne I haue with somewhat too long a Sermon dearely beloued by more than the space of two whole houres deteyned you here That therefore I may nowe make an end let vs humblie acknowledge our sinnes and méekely crye with prayers vnto the Lorde which sitteth in the throne of Grace saying Haue mercie vppon vs O Lorde for against thée haue wée sinned and do confesse our offences Thy debters are wée Forgiue thou vs our debtes as wée forgiue our debters and leade vs not into temptation but deliuer vs from euil Amen ⸫ The ende of the thirde Decade of Sermons The fourth Decade of Sermons written by Henrie Bullinger ¶ Of the Gospell of the Grace of God who hath giuen his sonne vnto the worlde and in him all thinges necessarie to saluation that wee beleeuing in him might obteine eternall life The first Sermon AFter the expositiō of the lawe and those poyntes of doctrine that depende vppon the lawe I thinke it it best nowe to come to the handling of the Gospell which in the exposition of the lawe other places else hath bene mentioned often times Nowe therefore dearely beloued as I haue béene hitherto helped with your prayers to God so here againe I request your earnest supplications with mee to the father that I by his holie spirite may speake the trueth to your edification in this present argument Euangelium is a Gréeke woorde but is receiued of the Latines Germanes and at this day vsed as a worde of their owne It is compounded of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifieth good and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to tell tydings For Euangelium signifieth the telling of good tydings or happie newes as is wont to be blowen abroade when the enimies being put to foyle wee rayse the siege of any citie or obteine some notable victorie ouer our foes The worde is attributed to any ioyfull luckie newes concerning any matter luckily accomplished The Apostles did willingly vse that terme not so much because the Prophets had vsed it before them as for that it doth wonderfully conteine and doth as it were laye before our eyes the manner and woorke of oure saluation accomplished by Christe wherevnto they haue applyed the worde Euangelium The Prophet Esaie as Luke interpreteth it bringeth in Christe our Lorde speaking in this manner The spirite of the Lord vpon mee because he hath annoynted mee 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is to preache the Gospell hath he sent me to heale the broken harted to preach deliuerance vnto the captiue and recouering of sight vnto the blind● freely to sett at libertie them that are brused and to preach the acceptable yere of the Lorde Lo here the Sauiuiour of the worlde doe●h in the Prophet and the Euangelist expounde to vs what Euangelium is and wherevnto it tendeth The father sayth hee hath sent mee to preache Euangelium the Gospell to the poore And immediately after to shew who those poore should bee hee addeth whiche are broken hearted or broken minded to wite suche as finde in them selues no soundnesse or health but vtterly despairinge of their owne strength do wholy depend vpon the help of Christ their cunning and willing Physician Nowe the Gospell or good tydings which is shewed to the afflicted is this that the sonne of God is descended from heauen to heale the sicke and diseased soules To which also to make it more euident hee addeth another cause saying that the sonne of God is come to preache deliueraunce vnto captiues and the recouering of sight to the blinde c. For all men are helde captiue in the bondes of damnation they doe all serue a sorrowfull slauerie vnder their cruel enimie Satan they are all kept blinde in the darknesse of errors And to them it is that redemption deliuerance and the acceptable yere of the Lorde is preached Now this ioyfull tydings is called Euangelium the Gospell Therefore the Gspell is of all men in a manner after this sorte defined The Gospell is a good and a sweete worde and an assured testimonie of Gods grace to vs warde exhibited in Christe vnto all beléeuers Or else the Gospell is the moste euident sentence of the eternall God brought downe from heauen absoluing al beléeuers from all their sinnes and that too freely for Christe his sake with a promise of eternal life These definitions are gathered out of the testimonies of the Euangelistes Apostles For Sainct Luke bringeth in the Angel of the Lorde speaking to the amazed shéepeheards saying Feare not for behold I bring you good tydings of greate ioye that shal be to all people for vnto you is borne this daye in the citie of Dauid a Sauiour which is Christ the Lorde Lo here he taketh from the sheepeheardes all manner of feare with the 〈…〉 of good tydinges that is with 〈…〉 of health which is a 〈…〉 is full of
be altogether perished in the captiuitie Furthermore they were called the sonns of the Prophetes for the affection which they bare towards their schole maisters as if they had bene their parentes and for their obedience and daily studie towards them But how muche the more noble and wise the Princes were so much the more diligence they employed in repayring scholes and restoring Ecclesiasticall orders Which a man may sée not in Dauid and Solomon onely but also in Iosaphat Ezechias and Iostas who were moste vertuous and moste happie Princes In the captiuitie and after the captiuitie of Babylon the Lordes people was dispersed and scattered into many kingdomes farre and wide But whether so euer they were carried they erected scholes or synagogues and when the citie of Ierusalem was restored then they often came vnto the same For therefore the Actes of the Apostles make mention that at what time Sainte Paule preached the worde of God among the Gentiles he went into the synagogues And Sainte Iames the Apostle saythe Moses of olde time hath in euerie citie them that preache him in the synagogues Where he speaketh not of the cities of Iude● and Galilee but of the cities of the gentiles in Syria Cilicia and Asia But that which we reade in the Actes doth shew that they being dispersed and scattered abroade did sometime come vnto the holie citie of Ierusalem There were dwelling at Ierusalem certeine Iewes religious men of all nations that are vnder heauen And that also whiche Saint Paul reciteth of him selfe confirmeth the same that being borne frée in the citie of Tharsus he trauelled to Ierusalem vnto Gamalieles féete that is to saye to the intent to heare the instruction and to be a scholer vnder Gamaliel So likewise we reade that at Ierusalem there were Colleges or Synagogues of the Libertines Cyrenians Alexandrines Cilicians and Asians This vse of scholes continued vntil Christs time yea and after his asce nsion into the heauens almost vntill the destruction of the citie although in the meane time it maye appeare to haue béene sundrie times depraued Christe also the sonne of God our king and high Byshoppe he him selfe instituted the most famous schole of all other calling ther vnto the twelue Apostles and the seuentie disciples chosen men I say to the number of fourescore and two Yea the Apostles them selues drewe vnto them verie many disciples and first of all Saint Paule the most chosen instrument of God to conuert the gentiles is read to haue had in his companie Sopater of Berrhoe Luke of Antioch Marke of Ierusalem Barnabas Sylua or Syluanus Caius and Timothie Aristarchus and Secundus Tychicus and Trophimus Titus and Linus Crescens and Epaphras Archippus and Philemon Epaphroditus and Artemas and many other He hath also commended most diligently vnto good men the studious and the ministers of the Churches exhorting all men vnto liberalitie that they maye want nothing And writing vnto Titus Bring diligently saythe he Zenas the Lawyer and Apollo vpon their waye that they maye want nothing Moreouer it maye be gathered by playne and manifest proofes oute of the thirtéenth chapter of the Actes that there was a verie famous and that an Apostolique schole at Antioche in Syria Eusebius also of Cesarea aboundantly witnesseth what noble scholes were at Alexandria in Egypt and in other renouned churches And we haue also declared the same more at large when time serued in a booke which we haue written of the institution of Byshoppes But in processe of time when al thinges apperteyning to the Churche beganne to decline to the worsse Ecclesiasticall scholes also degenerated into Abbaies or into Colleges of Canons and Monkes But of all these thinges whereof we haue spoken I thinke it not vnknowne vnto any man that scholes doe principally belong to the preseruation of the Churche and the maintenaunce of the holie ministerie in which scholes good artes might be exercised verie profitable for the furtheraunce of the studie of the holie Scriptures of which sorte chiefest of all are the studies and knowledge of holy tongs of Logicke naturall Philosophie and the Mathematicks and these moderately knowne directed vnto the certeine scope and ende of Godlinesse For a man may sometime finde wittes worne and waxed olde in diuers Artes and disciplines howbeit not once medling or inured with holie exercises and studies But I woulde to God that the wicked being too muche glutted with prophane studie would also leaue to contemne holie Scriptures as thinges playne barbarous A man also may find some wits so busied in the studie of the Mathematickes that they are more méete to be maisters of buildinges than gouernours or pastoures of Churches Yea they are so farre crept into the studie of Astronomie and the Astronomers heauen that they quite forget the blessed heauen which is the seate of the blessed Saintes any thing to perteine vnto them and that they shall be sufficiently happie if they can but once atteine vnto the knowledge of the motion of the visible heauē and to the course of the starres As for those that meddle ouermuch with the studie of Philosophie and the trifles of Logicke and the rules of Khetoricke neuer attaine vnto any ende nor earnestly thinke vpon the bestowing of their trauels to the edifying of the Church commonly they become contentious and brawling disputers for the most parte and arrogant controllers vnto whom nothing sémeth to be neatly and aptly enoughe eyther spoken or done of others but that whiche is tempered and as it were tuned to their great conceiuing heades and so agréeing with prescript rules that they swarne not there from no not so much as a haires bredth These men snarle and intangle all thinges with their doltishe disputations puffing out nothing else but quarelling controuersies taking vpon them moste arrogantly to iudge all mens doings sayings what so euer you though they be good and tollerable they snap at them and maliciously cauill against them being rather vayne babblers than Philosophers yea the verie plagues of scholes and Churches who spitte out the poyson of debates contentions variances strises and diuisions at and into the Church Against these Sainte Paule the Apostle to Timothie séemeth to speake For after he hadde briefly set downe the summe of sounde doctrine he addeth there vpon This teache and exhorte Who so euer teacheth otherwise and holdeth not him selfe contented with the healthfull worde of our Lorde Iesus Christe and the doctrine whiche is according vnto godlinesse he is puffed vp knowing nothing but spending his time aboute questions and contention in wordes whereof groweth hatred strife slander euill suspicions vaine conflictes of men corrupt in hart and destitute of the trueth whiche suppose gayne to bee godlinesse Avoyde the companie of such Truely it neuer went well with the Churche when learned and studious men forsaking the playnenesse and purenesse of the worde of GOD turned their eyes an other way and aymed not at the