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A14710 An hundred, threescore and fiftene homelyes or sermons, vppon the Actes of the Apostles, written by Saint Luke: made by Radulpe Gualthere Tigurine, and translated out of Latine into our tongue, for the commoditie of the Englishe reader. Seene and allowed, according to the Queenes Maiesties iniunctions; In Acta Apostolorum per Divum Lucam descripta, homiliƦ CLXXV. English Gwalther, Rudolf, 1519-1586.; Bridges, John, d. 1618. 1572 (1572) STC 25013; ESTC S118019 1,228,743 968

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First let vs here consyder howe when the tyme of promise drew nigh God raysed vp such a king as oppressed his people with tyranny and so intreated them that scarce they had any more hope to be deliuered Thys is Gods vsage of olde to mixe aduersitie and prosperitie togyther and then to suffer Tyrannes most to rage when their destruction draweth nighest By thys meane he vseth to trye the fayth of his people and is verie carefull that they by carelesnesse abuse not their liberty There are euerywhere examples hereof in Dauid Ezechiel and infinite others Hereto belongeth that that came to passe after the people returned from Babilon about the restoring againe of the church when neyther the authoritie of Cyrus could represse the attemptes of their enimies and Cambyses his sonne following encouraged the enimies of the church by his supportacion insomuch that they that wrought vpon the walles of the Citie were fayne to worke with one hande and fight with an other It is for our profite diligently to consyder these things that we be not to bolde in prosperitie least we be entangled in securitie but rather that we consyder howe we must tryumphe vnder the crosse and that we therefore must prepare our selues vnto the same howsoeuer all things seeme to laugh vpon vs. Next we haue to consyder that he sayth a king arose which knew not Ioseph And if we searche the Chronicles we shall finde it to be scarce fiftie yeares betwene the death of Ioseph and the raigne of this tyranne For Ioseph at thirtie yeares of age was made ruler of Egypt Then followed the seauen yeres of plentie and in the seconde yeare of the dearth he sent for his father Iacob to come vnto him Wherefore if we allowe them anye time to prepare for their iourney and to iourney in we shall finde that Israell came into Egypt not long after Ioseph was fortie yeres of age Ioseph lyued yet after this three score and tenne yeares for Moses sayth he dyed when he was an hundred and ten yeares olde Now the Israelites were in Egypt two hundred and ten yeares from which if we take the three score and ten yeres of Ioseph and the foure score yeares that Moses liued before he brought out the people there shall but three score yeares onely remaine betweene the death of Ioseph and the byrth of Moses from which yet must be taken ten yeares at the least that Amram liued in matrimonie in the tyme of persecution before Moses his sonne was borne For it is playne that Aaron was borne three yeares before Moses And when Moses was founde by the ryuer side his sister Marie was of that age that she was able to talke with Pharaos daughter and to giue hir counsell howe to saue and bring vp the childe The consideration of these things teache vs howe little remembraunce princes of this worlde haue of good turnes that men doe vnto them seing the kings following within so little a space are ignoraunt of Ioseph through whose counsell Egypt was preserued and the kings power so greatly increased For being drunken with prosperitie and good successe they easily waxe prowde and thinke it an heynous matter to acknowledge themselues debters to any man Therefore Dauid both truely and wisely sayth Put not your trust in Princes nor in anye childe of man for there is no helpe in them Agayne It is better to trust in the Lorde than to put any confydence in Princes We are also taught howe hurtfull a thing it is to forget or to be ignorant in the auncient actes lawes and priuiledges For this place plainely testifieth that this thing was the cause of most cruell tyrannie and at length of most horrible destruction Therfore notable is the custome of the Persians and Medians whose kings as Hystoriographers saye are contynually occupied in the reading of the Chronicles For howe much profite ensueth thereof the onely hystorie of Mardocheus aboundantly declareth Thirdlye let vs consider the craftes that tyrauntes vse in oppressing their subiectes For Pharao seemeth not to vse his absolute power but craftily circumuenteth the people of Israel and so vseth the matter that he seemeth to haue great regarde both of publike tranquillitie and equitie and yet in deede he cruelly persecuteth a people spoyled of their auncient libertie For vndoubtedly he complayned that it was not reason and right that a straunge Nation shoulde be free and haue more libertie than the Egyptians Furthermore he sheweth that it was a daungerous matter and to be feared least they should ioyne with some forreyne Nation and aspyre to the kingdome of Egypt But if we consider the falling out of the matter the ende was altogither couetousnesse which taught the Egyptians howe to waxe rich by oppressing and abusing the labor of others Hereof followed a crueltie passing all other which the very infantes new borne coulde not escape So lawfull thinke they it is for them to doe all things which once haue violated and broken all lawe and right and haue tasted any priuate aduantage or profite thereby Let vs marke these crafts that we may learne the easilier to beware of thē Yet let vs not be discouraged forasmuch as it commeth to passe many times that tyraunts enterprises set forth the power glory of God who can most easily ouerturne the deuises of people as the godly prophet teacheth and as appeereth came to passe in this place Nowe Steuen goyng forth with his narration bringeth forth Moyses in whome the Iewes as in their Captaine deliuerer and lawe maker chiefely gloried And he prooueth that he was preserued and aduaunced to so high a dignitie through the singuler goodnesse of God and had nothyng wherein to reioyce Wherevpon it is easie for euery man to conclude that they which were deliuered by his ministerie and receyued the lawe of him were much more bounde to the goodnesse of god There are three reasons whereby he prooueth that that we haue sayde First arguing of the time he sayth he was borne when the tyranne most raged and when he coulde by none other meanes be saued than by the secret working and goodnesse of god He addeth another poynt that euen when he was newe borne there appeared manifest tokens of Goddes fauour which surelye can be ascribed to no deserte of Moyses In the meane season we must note howe he was then borne to be their deliuerer when there was almost no hope of deliuerie and when himselfe was lyke to bee in daunger before he coulde declare anye token of his valiauntnesse in deliuering of them So God vseth to succour his people when all hope is past and as Esaye sayeth that he maye doe his worke his straunge worke and to forget it as it were that he may execute it afterwarde with the more glorie For it is Gods proper worke to saue men which he then doth when all hope and helpe seemeth to them quite past The lyke thing fell out in Christes
brethren nor the shamefull slaunder of his mistresse nor the rashe vnrighteousnesse of Putiphare could depriue Ioseph a faythfull worshipper of God of his helpe And that that came to passe in him falleth out in all those that be godly For the eyes of the Lord are ouer the righteous and his eares are open vnto their prayers And we maye also saye with Dauid when my father and mother forsake me the Lorde taketh mee vppe For as Christ sayde he was not alone though all his Disciples forsooke him so can not they be alone that are graffed in Christ by fayth forasmuch as to them belong the promises of Christ such as are I will not leaue you comfortlesse I am with you euen vnto the ende of the worlde In the meane whyle lette vs marke that Ioseph was tossed with diuers calamities although he was vpholden by the present helpe of god For he is solde by his brethren he is tempted by his mystresse he is in daunger of his lyfe by meane of hir accusation He is a long while kept in prison Let no man therfore thinke that God is with him but onely when he is in safetie and at libertie Let no man also vpon presumption of Gods helpe promise himselfe all kinde of rest and securitie of flesh But let vs vnderstande that God doth not so defende and deliuer vs but that sometimes we must beare the crosse and yet that we be neuer more vnder Gods protection than when we be most tried by afflictions For then he telleth our fleetings and our teares are gathered togither as into a bottell Next let vs note howe Ioseph had wisedome and fauour giuen him Ergo whatsoeuer good or excellent thing we haue it is the gift of god And it is his benefite if we be able so profitably to vse the giftes that be in vs that others accept or fauour vs the more for the same For if we consider the nature of man all things are corrupt in him Our negligence perceyueth not the things belonging to the spirite Our will followeth but earthly things and is ruled after the desires of the fleshe whose imaginations are euill euen from our youth We haue no strength to doe good Except therfore the Lorde regenerate vs and endue vs with his spirite there will be nothing sounde or whole Agayne except he cause vs and our doyngs to please others we shall nothing preuayle For what shall he be able to doe with others that is not able to teach and gouerne himselfe As therefore it was Gods gift that Iosephes counsell was well accepted with Pharao so except God inclyne the hearts of men to lyke vs all our doyngs shall be vnprofitable and vayne Which thing Paule well marked in the ministerye of the worde when he sayde hee is nothing that watereth neyther hee that planteth but God that giues the encrease The consideration hereof maketh vs not to be prowde of Gods giftes and to vse them as we ought to doe For what hast thou that thou hast not receyued And if thou hast receyued it why gloryest thou as though thou hadst not receyued it And if thou hast receyued it surely thou shalt hereafter giue an account of that thou hast receyued and layde out as Christ hath taught vs in the Parable of the Talentes Math. 25. Last ofall it shall not be vnprofitable ifwe consider the figure of Christ which Ioseph purporteth forasmuch as the ende and marke of all Steuens oration was to bring the Iewes vnto christ For as the brethren would not acknowledge Ioseph for their Lorde and king so when Christ came among his owne his owne woulde not vouchsafe to receyue him As Ioseph was solde by his brethren so Christ was solde by Iudas and afterwarde was deliuered vnto the Gentyles by the Iewes which after the fleshe were his brethren As Ioseph suffred many thinges with the Baker and Cupbearer whereof the one was put to death the other was saued so we reade Christ suffered in the middle of two theeues whereof the one through the grace of God was saued the other damned As Ioseph came vnto honor by manye daungers and horrible aduersities so Christ by the bitter and horrible death of the Crosse entred into the glorye of the father and hath obteyned a name which is aboue all names whereat euery knee ought to bowe and obeye I omyt diuers other thinges which in their time and place may be more commodiously intreated It is our partes wyth true faith to embrace Iesus Christ whose figure Ioseph bare and through the manifolde perils and hazardes of this lyfe to aspyre to the inheritance of the kingdome of heauen Which is prepared from euerlasting for them that beleeue and purchased with the precious bloude of Christ to whome be prayse honor power and glory for euer Amen The .xlvj. Homelie THERE came a dearth ouer all the lande of Aegypt and Chanaan and great affliction that our fathers found no sustenaunce But when Iacob heard that there was corne in Aegypt he sent our fathers first And at the seconde tyme Ioseph was knowne of his brethren and Iosephs kynred was made knowne vnto Pharao Then sent Ioseph a message and caused his father to be brought and all his kinne lxxv soules And Iacob descended into Aegypt and dyed both he and our fathers and were caried ouer into Sichem layde in the Sepulchre that Abraham bought for money of the sonnes of Hemor the sonne of Sichem THe godly Martyr Steuen goeth on in hys discourse of the thinges done in olde tyme touching the fathers the chiefe ende wherofis to prooue that he firmely holdeth the auncient religion of the fathers who as it is playne without Temple and ceremonies pleased God and were saued Wherof he gathereth that the temple nowe also is not necessarie but that the people should haue respect rather to hym that was prefigured thereby And among other things he treateth the hystorie of Ioseph diligently bicause he as I sayde in the last Sermon was a figure of Iesus christ And in the same hystorie he noteth chiefely howe Ioseph was solde into Egypt and howe there through the fauour of God he was not onely preserued but also made Gouernour of Egypt After this is declared the going downe of the whole people of Israell into Egypt whereof Ioseph hymselfe is the occasion and author And thys part of the discourse is to be applyed to the same ende whervnto we sayde the things gone before were to be referred For Steuens meaning is to teache them that true religion and the way of mans saluation did so little depend vpon that worship which Moyses appoynted and was for manye yeares obserued in the lande of Chanaan that the fathers in tyme past by reason of a great dearth were compelled to come from thence into Egypt where about a two hundreth and tenne yeares for so many are reckoned from the children of Israels comming into Egypt to their goyng
out were accepted for the people of God although they neyther had Church nor other ceremonies of the lawe And that therefore nothing letted why they might not at this daye also be saued without a Temple yea that it ought to be abrogated with all the ceremonies leuiticall forasmuche as it was playne he was already come and exhibited of whome all such things in tyme passed were but signes and shadowes The storie is written in Genesis 42.43 and in other Chapters following where at large are set forth those things which Steuen toucheth but briefely But least we lose the commoditie ensuing of the discourse it behooueth vs to note the chiefe points by themselues and so to apply them to our instruction Let vs examine therefore the cause that mooued the people to go into Egypt then their going downe and last of all what is sayde of the Patriarches death and buriall The cause that Iacob went downe into Egypt was a great dearth wherewith he was troubled in the lande of Chanaan and which he coulde by no meanes more commodiously auoyde bicause through Iosephs counsell Egypt onely had store of corne layde vp for such vse Here it is worthy to be well consydered howe God suffreth Iacob a true worshipper of him and a verie holye man to be troubled and molested with famine Thys might be imputed to his childrens naughtinesse if we read not how the like had bene seene in Abraham and Isaac And there are manye examples that teache vs howe the faythfull and true worshippers of God haue bene afflicted also with other aduersities and calamities Hereof we gather that aduersities and afflictions are not alwayes arguments of Gods wrath and that we should not dispaire in them as though we were quyte out of the fauour of god For eyther God of a fatherly care hereby preuenteth our naughtinesse and bringeth downe our hawtie courage least we shoulde grieuously offende hym or else lyke a father correcteth our faultes and by correction bringeth vs into the waye or else by thys meane executeth hys secret iudgementes not yet perceyued of vs as in thys present hystorie we see it commeth to passe For Iacob with all his familie is constrayned by famine to come into Egypt to make away to the Oracle wherein God had sayde vnto Abraham that his seede shoulde soiorne in a straunge lande out of which after many afflictions God should bring them agayne And the daylie effectes of our afflictions sufficiently teache vs that God bringeth many things to passe by his iust and wholsome iudgement which we before had no vnderstanding of But thys hath in it a singuler comfort that as he would haue Iacob feele the smarte of famine so he sent Ioseph before into Egypt and made hym ruler of all the countrie that by his counsell and prouision he and all hys familie should be fed This goodnesse and trust in God is set forth in the hundreth and fifth Psalme where it is thus sayde God called for a dearth vpon the lande and destroyed all the prouision of breade But he had sent a man before them euen Ioseph which was solde to be a bonde seruaunt c By him therefore had Iacob most succour in whom he supposed he had greatest cause of sorrowe For he had mourned and lamented bitterly for Ioseph whome he thought was deade through whose liberalitie he is nowe notwithstanding mainteyned and cherished Ioseph acknowledged thys counsell of God where he comforteth his brethren being feared with the remembraunce of their wickednesse saying that he was sent before into Egypt by Gods prouydence for the benefite and publike vtilitie of many And oftentimes it commeth to passe that the things that our enimies vniustly and vngently procure agaynst vs serue to our benefite and commoditie And yet their wickednesse is not to be excused therefore bycause they in their doing goe not about to fulfill Gods counsell or purpose but to satisfie their owne vnruly lustes as hath oftentimes already bene declared Also we haue here to consyder both Pharao and Ioseph For Pharao deserueth no small commendation of wisedome and kindenesse in that he maketh Ioseph whome he seeth to be of more wisedome counsell than his other men gouernour of hys kingdome although he knewe he was both a straunger and bonde man and in that he saw things prospered according to his deuise and counsel he liberally considereth rewardeth both him and all his kinsfolke Of which example men in authoritie may learne not onely thankefulnesse but also howe profitable a thing it is to put them in office that worship God truely bicause the blessing of God followeth suche and that which is done vnto them God taketh as done vnto himselfe Thys thing Putiphar before that perceyued well ynough whome God prospered in all his doings whyle Ioseph was ruler of hys house although he little considered the same The same doth Pharao nowe finde where by Iosephs industrie and wisedome he perceyueth himselfe greatly inriched and all Egypt and the nations adioyning preserued and mainteyned So afterwarde in this booke for Paules sake as manye as sayled in his companye were saued from drowning And as by the godly great commoditie vseth to come vnto many so oftentimes through a fewe that be wicked if they be of authoritie and power and may doe what they list ensueth great inconuenience and mischiefe Achan onely through his sacriledge as close as it was was the occasion of a publike calamitie And Ionas flying from Gods sight endaungereth not only himselfe but also the Mariners and as many passengers as were in the shippe So perillous and hurtfull a thing the company of the wicked is What maye therefore be hoped for where such are put in office and authoritie Surely none other but that they will be the cause of publike calamitie and generall destruction Whereof we haue an example in Manasses through whose bloudye and cruell wickednesse it came to passe that God being greatly offended agaynst the Iewes lette them be caryed to Babylon hauing their Citie and Temple first destroyed by fire and sworde Therefore in choosing of Officers for common weales and the Church the chiefe care must be that they be godly vnlesse we will haue destroyers reygne ouer vs rather than benefactors And surely the onely consideration of this place is sufficient to teache vs what the chiefe cause of the euils in our dayes is seeing such are euerywhere put in office and authoritie as are touched with no care of godlynesse nor religion In Ioseph we haue to consider the nature of loue tempered with the rule of equitie and iustice For he acknowledged his brethren who had handled him very naughtily and vncourteously and giueth them foode most liberally but yet he trieth their mindes with a certaine counterfaite a usteritie and sharpnesse of wordes and would not make himselfe knowne vnto them till he sawe they repented and were sorie Herein he followed the propertie of God the father
they were buried And these ceremonies might be suffred for a whyle in the primitiue Church vntill they were become so perfite to renounce them altogither In the meane season we are taught that Christian people shoulde deale decently with their corses For although there ought to be no mourning after the maner of the Heathen amonge them which knowe there shall be a resurrection 1. Thes. 4. nor no neede of Iewishe ceremonies bicause all things belonging to our saluation are abundantly fulfilled in Christ yet a diligent consideration must be had both of honestie and godlynesse which both the law of charitie and Christian religion commaundeth vs to obserue by reason that our bodies be the Temples of the holy ghost Why therfore shoulde those bodies vngently be reiected which the spirite of Christ not long before did vouchsafe to dwell in Surely the Prophete doth chiefely vpbrayde the Moabites for that they forgetting all humanitie burned the bones of the king of the Edomites Therefore their offence is grieuous in these dayes which lyke brute beastes vse crueltie agaynst the deade and vnmanerly throwe and cast their carcasses rounde about But they yet vse one other courtesie For they send messengers for Peter whome they hearde was at Lydda and was so famous a man by reason of his myracles which was no small deede of faith and charity For they hope that the Minister of Christ was able to restore hir to lyfe agayne and that they greatly desired bicause they knewe the Church of Christ had neede as yet of such a member This is also the propertie of fayth that despaireth not no not in death bicause it knoweth that Christ hath ouercome death and who once embrace fayth with sincere affection of loue them she casteth not of no not after death Here also appeareth a singular rewarde of christian godlynesse liberalitie For where Dorcas while she lyued was much giuen herevnto there wanted not that faythfully cared for hir when shee was deade Thus God vseth to preserue the memorie of those that be his And oftentimes it commeth to passe that they which seemed to be hated of all men bicause of their godlynesse after they are deade they finde many defenders of their good name whereof we haue example in our heade Iesus christ For after he was put vnto the shamefull death of the crosse Ioseph and Nichodemus which before that were but secrete Disciples buried him honorably Let no man therfore shunne to suffer shamefull death for Christes sake since that God so faythfully preserueth the remembrance of those that be his Ouer and beside all this they declare in the presence of Peter the griefe they had conceyued by hir death through weeping and they shewe vnto the Apostle the garmentes which she caused to be made for the poore whyle she liued Where beside the dutie of charitie wherof we haue spoken may be seene what be the true reliques of the Saintes and faythfull of Christ which the godly ought both openly to shewe and to worship and kisse that is to saye the workes of their charitie and steppes of their life Of these it is sayd that they follow the deade and remayne when they be rotten These things Christ commended in Marie and bicause of that last annoynting of him that she bestowed vpon him he promised the remembraunce thereof shoulde alwayes remayne in his Church The Ecclesiasticall hystories shewe vs euerywhere such Reliques as these These it becommeth vs of dutie to prayse and by diligent imitation of them to worship But to worship their bones after a superstitious sort we are commaunded by no testimonie or example of Scripture Moreouer as it is a great prayse of the godly to leaue behinde them for posteritie examples and presidentes of charitie so is it a dishonest and shamefull thing to leaue after them when they are gone the tokens of couetousnesse lecherie vnrighteousnesse and intemperancie Such as are hourdes and heapes of treasure and whatsoeuer instruments else of wickednesse are thereby gotten which the Apostle sayth shall be hereafter the testimonie of iust condemnation O wretched state shall theirs be the memorie wherof widdowes and fatherlesse children by reason of their goodes taken from them shall testifye with weeping teares But more wretched shall they be who as though they had committed small offence in their lyfe time hange ouer their Sepulchres swordes and shieldes and stande in complete harnesse that the remembrance of their lyfe ledde in robberie and murthering maye remayne the longer O harde heart which the remembraunce of bitter death is not able to mollifie But let vs see at length what Peter did being sent for of them It is sayd that he straightwaies went with them that were sent vnto him Which is a great argument of readinesse and zeale in promoting the kingdome of christ Wherby we may easily gather with what spirite they are ledde that shew themselues daungerous in going about the things which serue to the setting forth of Christes glory and the saluation of others Further when he came to Ioppa and was brought into the chamber where the corps was layde not much regarding the weeping of the Wyddowes bicause by instinct of the holy ghost working in him he mynded another matter he put them all out of the Chamber falleth on his knees and turneth him vnto feruent prayer The holy Apostle truly followeth olde presidentes and examples forasmuch as it appeareth that Elizaeus the Prophete and Iesus Christ vsed the lyke trade in raysing vp of the deade For as prayers require a certaine going aside and solitarinesse so it seemeth to be a poynt of modestie that he woulde not shewe a thing of such importaunce among so many to seeke prayse thereby but woulde doe it by himselfe alone And whyle he maketh such earnest prayer he euidently declareth that all the successe and prayse of the myracle ought to be referred to Christ as vnto God whereof hath bene already manye times entreated When he had done his prayers he speaketh vnto the deade and biddeth hir aryse Which might seeme a ridiculous thing if Christ had not done the lyke when hee raysed vp Iairus daughter and Lazarus Such sayinges as these are the Preambles of that terrible and lowde voyce whereby at the later daye all the deade shall be raysed vp as Christ himselfe teacheth Iohn 5. Yea this is an infallible argument of the resurrection that shall be that at the voyce of a manne pronounced by the spirite and name of Christ we reade howe the deade are raysed agayne For the effect of the matter declareth that Peters speaking was not in vayne For forthwith Dorcas opened hir eyes and looked on Peter then she sitteth vppe last of all Peter reareth hir vp by the hande and sheweth hir alyue to all them that were called in By the which myracle is prooued that the doctrine that Peter taught was a lyuely doctrine and that Iesus Christ the author therof was
followed We are here taught that we must not alwayes cleaue to the iudgements and examples of notable men but rather trie and examine all things after the rule of the Scripture afore we imitate them For if they were so fowly deceyued which had the greatest dignitie among the people of God by his appointment what shall we hope of others They are also confuted which when we bring forth the worde of God bring vs the examples of Princes and great estates For the question is not what men doe but what is done according or contrarye to the worde of god Moreouer we are taught that the reading of the Scripture neuer so much preuayleth not if we well vnderstande not the meaning of the Scripture Moses the Prophets were read of ordinary among the Iewes in all their sinagoges But whereas they were deceyued in the affiance of their owne righteousnesse they knew not the ende of the lawe which was Iesus Christ and being ignorant thereof they fulfylled the Scriptures presumptuously putting him to death whom Moses the Prophets did prophecie should be their sauiour We see the same hath come to passe these many yeres in the papacie or Popedome The vnlearned Monkes and Priests reade and sing the holy scriptures Yet Christ whome the scriptures teach is despised of a great many and Antichrist is worshipped and glorifyed whome the scriptures with one consent warne vs to beware of And other cause of so fylthy an error is there none than for that men being puffed vp with a Iewishe affiance of their owne works are not able to see the righteousnesse of Christ while they go about to set vp their owne righteousnesse See Rom. 10. Secondly he alleageth the authoritie of Gods prouidence declaring that for this cause no manne ought to be offended at the death of Christ bicause he suffred nothing but that the Prophetes to whome the holye ghost long before reuealed the counsayles and ordinaunce of God prophecied he shoulde suffer Wherefore the Priestes when they vnderstoode not the scripture yet they fulfylled them in that they presumed to condemne and put Christ to death And it is no doubt but Paule in this place brought forth the oracles of the Scripture which are extant euerywhere touching Christes passion In that he sayth the Prophecies were fulfylled by the wicked enimies of Christ we learne that the very wicked also are the instruments of God by whome oftentimes he vseth to bring his ordinances and deuises to passe And yet they are not therfore to be excused bicause they doe that that God will haue to b● done For where they like Bedlems rage in impietie against God and go about to hinder and not to set forwarde his ordinances they are in the fault and God is to be praysed and glorifyed which can moderate and order their audacitie and boldenesse so well Also his inuincible power and infallible veritie appeareth in these examples For if hys deuises take effect through the meane of his very enimies also then must they needes stande fast for euer Therefore they whose infyrmitie is feared with the cruell deuises of the Princes of this worlde let them seeke comfort hereat But whereas it might notwithstanding be obiected that it was scarce credible that God would appoynt him to be our Sauiour who was made away by so slaunderous a death and such as was cursed euen by the lawe therefore in the thirde part he prooueth he was innocent and guiltlesse and sheweth that his kinde of death must not be so much considred as his cause when they founde by him sayth he no cause of death yet desired they Pylate to kill him These things might haue bene declared more at large as it is like Paule did bicause he spake vnto them which suspected all Christes doing Let it suffyse vs to holde fast the scope and ende of Paule that is howe no man ought to be offended at Christes death which he suffered being an innocent forasmuch as many times the holyest men of all vse to be put to death both vnworthily and vniustly Also the true vse of Christes innocencie must be well weyghed which consisteth in the purgation or clensing of our sinnes For if Christ had not bene free and cleere of all sinnes he coulde neuer haue bene able to haue satisfyed for our sinnes For howe can he make others cleane that is himselfe vncleane Or how shoulde one being indebted himselfe paye other mennes debtes Therefore it behooued Christ shoulde be innocent that we might knowe howe he who had deserued no death for his part suffred death for vs Esay maketh mention herof where he expoundeth the mysterie of our redemption cap. 53. And hereto belongeth that saying of Paule God made him to be sinne for vs which knewe no sinne that we by his meanes shoulde be the righteousnesse which before God is allowed And this is the chiefe cause why the Euangelistes be so earnest in setting forth the innocencie of christ Then if none ought to bee offended with Christes death bicause he suffred innocently by the same reason the vnworthy and vniust slaughters of the Saintes ought to offende no body whereby they are made partakers of Christes crosse to th ende to be glorifyed with him Fourthly least anye man shoulde thinke that Christ was ouercome by the force or power of his enimies and therefore shoulde deny that he were a sauiour or reuenger he teacheth that he receyued no losse or harme by the wicked enterprises of the Priestes They perfourmed all the thinges which were prophecyed of him while they killed him on the Crosse and pierced his side with a speare and at length tooke him down from the crosse and layd him in a sepulchre But for all this he was of neuer the lesse power or glory For God as he foreshewed raysed him vppe from death so that now he liueth for euer in a glorifyed body where they enuyed him this miserable and corruptible life But let it here offende no man that Christes buriall is permitted to his wicked enimies the honor whereof the Euangelistes ascribe to his faythfull disciples Ioseph and Nichodemus For Paule here speaketh howe they were not contented with his ordinary buriall but caused the grauestone to be sealed with Pylates signet and gotte souldiours to watch him and forceably to keepe him downe in his graue thinking that they of their owne power had killed him vpon the crosse and were ignorant that he layde downe his lyfe of his owne voluntary This diligent description of his buriall maketh for the more certaintie and truth of his resurrection For thus it appeareth there coulde be no frawde or deceyt in the matter and that it was a false rumour that the Priestes caused to be raysed by the souldiours being well bribed with money that his Disciples came and stole away his body In the meane season we may take a generall comfort hereof that the enimies of Christ fyght against him in vaine The same