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A17643 A commentarie vpon the Epistle of Saint Paul to the Romanes, written in Latine by M. Iohn Caluin, and newely translated into Englishe by Christopher Rosdell preacher. Whereunto is added a necessarie table for the better and more readie finding out of certayne principall matters conteyned in this worke; Commentarius in Epistolam Pauli ad Romanos. English Calvin, Jean, 1509-1564.; Rosdell, Christopher, b. 1553 or 4. 1583 (1583) STC 4399; ESTC S107213 360,940 450

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if it be true that the grace of God doth help vs so much the more bountifully and largely as we haue beene ouerwhelmed with a greater weight of sinne there is nothing more expedient for vs then that wee being drowned in the depth of sinne shoulde oftentimes by newe offences prouoke the wrath of God Obiection For so at length we shall feele greater plentie of grace then the which nothing is more to be wished for As for the maner of refutation we shall see it afterwarde 2 God forbid Some think that the Apostle doeth onely by the way of a sharpe correction reprehende so vnreasonable a madnesse but by other places it doth appeare howe familier an answere this is with him yea in much disputation or many arguments as here also he wil shortly with great diligence refute the obiected obloquie yet first by this particle of one detesting he doth reiect it that he might admonishe the readers there is nothing more vnlike then that the grace of Christe the repayrer of our righteousnesse shoulde nourishe our vices The grace of Christ abolisheth sinne and therefore doth not nourish it Whiche are dead to sinne This is an argumen taken from the contrary For it is certaine that he which sinneth liueth to sinne but we are dead to sinne by the grace of Christ therefore is it false that that shoulde nourishe sinne which doth abolish it For thus the case standeth the faythfull are neuer reconciled vnto God without the gift of sanctification yea to this ende are wee iustified that after warde we might worship God in holinesse of life For Christe doth not otherwise washe vs with his blood and by his satisfaction reconcile God vnto vs then whiles hee maketh vs partakers of his spirite which reneweth vs into an holy lyfe It were therefore too preposterous an inuersion of the worke of God if by occasion of that grace which is offered vs in Christe sinne shoulde gather any strength For the medicine is not the nourishour of that it extinguisheth Finally we must remēber that I touched of late namely that Paule doth not here say what God doth finde vs to bee whiles he calleth vs into the societie of his sonne but what wee shoulde bee after he hath had mercy vpon vs and hath adopted vs freely For by a verbe of the future tēse he sheweth what manner of chaunge should followe righteousnesse 3. Know ye not that all wee which haue beene baptised into Iesus Christ haue beene baptised into his death 4 Wee are buried then with hym by baptisme into his death that like as Chirste was raised vppe from the dead by the glory of the father so wee also should walke in newnesse of life 3 Know ye not He proueth the former sentence namely that Christ killeth sin in his by the effect of baptisme wherby we are incorporated into his faith For it is out of questiō that wee put on Christe in baptisme Then do we truly grow vp into the body of christ when his deathe bringeth foorthe fruit in vs. and with this condition are we baptised that we shoulde be one with him Now Paule taketh another principle namely that we do then indeede grow vp into the body of Christ when his death bringeth foorth his fruite in vs. Yea he teacheth that this participation of death is principally to be respected in baptisme For not onely purgation but also mortification and the dying of the old man is proposed there whereby it is manifest after we are receiued into the grace of Christ the efficacie of his death appeareth straight wayes Finally what this societie with the death of Christe auaileth it followeth straightwayes 4 Being buried then with him Now he beginneth to shew although he doe not plainely declare whereunto it apperteineth that we are baptized into the death of Christ namely that we being dead vnto our selues might become new men For from the participation of his death he passeth conueniently vnto the participation of life because these two hang together by an inseparable connexion Mortificatiō newnes of life go together namely the old man to bee abolished by the death of Christ that his resurrection might restore righteousnes and make vs new creatures And surely seeing Christ is giuen vs vnto life to what end shold we die with him except we might rise againe vnto a better life And therfore to no other ende hath he flaine that is mortal in vs but that he might truly quicken vs. Furthermore let vs note that the Apostle doth not simply heere exhort vs to imitate Christ as if he said the death of Christ is in steed of an example which all Christians ought to follow For he surely goeth higher deliuering doctrine out of the which afterward he draweth exhortatiō as it is easie And this is the doctrin that the death of Christe is effectuall to extinguish and banish the prauitie of the flesh and his resurrection to raise vp the newnes of a better nature and that by baptisme we are receiued into the participation of this grace This foundation being laide a man may very aptly exhort Christians that they striue to aunswere their calling Moreouer it forceth not that this vertue doeth not appeare in all those are baptized For Paule after his manner because he speaketh vnto the faythful conioyneth the substance effect with the external signe For we know that by their faith is established ratified whatsoeuer the Lord offereth by the visible pledge To be briefe he teacheth what is the veritie of baptisme rightly receiued So to the Galathians he testifieth Gal. 3.27 When the sacraments are effectuall pledges and when the● be but bare signes that all they whosoeuer are baptised in Christ haue put on Christe For so a man must say so long as the institution of the Lord and the faith of the godly agree together For we neuer haue bare and idle signes but when our vnthankfulnes and wickednes hindereth the working of Gods bountifulnes By the glory of the father That is through his notable power whereby hee hath declared himselfe truely glorious and hath as it were manifested the greatnes of his glory So oftentimes in scripture is the power of God which hath shewed it selfe in the resurrection of Christ set foorth by some excellent title and not without cause for it is grealy materiall that by such expresse mention of the incomparable power of God not onely the faith of the last resurrection which far exceedeth the capacity of flesh but also other fruits which we receiue by the resurrection of Christ shold be highly extolled with vs. 5 For if we be graffed into the similitude of his death euē so also shall we be partakers of his resurrection 6 Knowing this that our olde man is crucified together with him that the body of sin might be destroyed that wee should not serue sinne any more 5 For if wee be graffed By plainer wordes hee prooueth the argument which he hath put
with howe blynde loue of our selues we are taken whiles we are plunged in the mistes of sinne that we esteeme not of so great vncleannesse in vs. It is onely the light of the Lorde which can open our eyes that they may see the corruption lurketh in our flesh Who is truely indued with the principles of Christian religion To conclude therfore he is indued with the principles of Christian philosophie who indeede is displeased with himselfe hath learned wel to be ashamed of his owne misery Finally by the cōsequent he sheweth yet more plainely how greatly they ought to be ashamed when they vnderstand that they were euē at the threshold of death destruction yea were already entered the gates of death if they had not beene drawen backe by the mercie of God A twofold end of sinne and righteousnes 22 You haue your fruite As before he put downe a twofolde ende of sinne so nowe of righteousnes Sinne in this life bringeth the tormentes of an euill conscience and after this life eternall death Of righteousnesse in this life wee reape for fruite sanctification in time to come wee hope for eternall life These thinges vnlesse wee were too sottishe ought to begette in vs a hatred and horrour of sinne and a loue and desire of righteousnesse And whereas some doe take this woorde Telos for tribute I thinke it is not the meaning of the Apostle For although it is true that we suffer the punishment of death for sinne yet that worde cannot agree to the other member wherunto it is applyed of Paule For life is not called the tribute of righteousnesse 23 For the wages of sinne There are some whiche thinke that heere is noted displeasauntly howe harde a wage is payde to sinners whiles Paule compareth death to cates which word with the Grecians sometime is taken for the dyet of souldiers But rather he seemeth indirectly to checke the blynd appetites of those who daungerously intangle themselues with the inticementes of sinne no otherwise then fishes with the hoke Howbeit it shal be more simply to take it for stipendes or wages For surely death is a very sufficient reward for the reprobate And it is the conclusion as it were the Epilogue of the former sentence And yet is it not in vayne that he repeateth the same thing in other wordes agayne for by doubling the terrour he woulde make sinne more detestable But the gift of God They are deceiued which translate this proposition thus What is meant by the gifte of God and what fruite the same bringeth worth in vs. life eternall is the gifte of God as though righteousnesse were the subiectum and gift of God predicatum Because that sence shoulde make nothing vnto the contraposition But as before he taught that sinne bringeth foorth nothing but death so now he addeth that this gifte of God namely our iustification and sanctification bringeth vnto vs the blessednesse of eternall life Or if you hadde rather as sinne is the cause of death so righteousnesse wherewith wee are indued by Christ hath restored eternall life vnto vs. In the meane while here we may most certainly gather that our saluation is wholly of the grace meere bountifulnesse of God He might otherwise haue said the wages of righteousnes is eternall life that one member might haue aunsweared another but he saw it was the gift of God whereby wee obteyne life and not our merite And that gifte also is not one nor single for wee beeynge clothed with the righteousnesse of the sonne are reconciled to God and by the vertue of the spirit renued into holinesse of life And therefore hee addeth in Christ Iesus our Lord that he might drawe vs from all opinion of our owne worthinesse CHAP. 7. 1 DOe yee not know brethren for I speake to them know the law that the lawe hath dominion ouer a man as long as he liueth 2 For the woman which is in subiection to a man is boūd by the law to the mā whiles he liueth but if the man be dead she is deliuered from the law of man 3 So then if while the man liueth she take another man she shal be called an adulteresse but if the man be dead shee is free from the law so that she is not an adulteresse though she take another man 4 So yee my brethren are dead also to the law by the bodie of Christ that yee should be vnto another euen vnto him that is raysed vp from the dead that wee should bring foorth fruite vnto God ALthough hee had sufficiently as in such breuity it could be vnfolded the question of the abrogation of the lawe yet because it was both a difficult question and of it selfe might bring foorth many others he doeth more copiously declare howe the lawe is abrogated from vs secondly he sheweth what profite wee get thereby because whiles it doeth holde vs bounde without Christ it canne doe nothing but condemne vs. And least any shoulde thereby accuse the lawe hee meeteth with the obiections of the flesh and refuteth them where hee excellently handeleth a notable place of the vse of the Lawe 1 Doe yee not knowe Let the generall proposition bee that the lawe was giuen to no other ende vnto men then that it should gouerne this present life To what end the law was giuen with those be dead it hath no place Whereunto afterward hee addeth a more speciall namely that we are dead vnto the law in the body of Christe Some other vnderstand that the dominion of the lawe abideth so long to binde vs as the vse thereof is in force But because this sentence is somwhat obscure and it doth not so properly agree vnto that speciall proposition followeth straightwayes I had rather follow those who take it to be spoken of the life of man and not of the life of the lawe And the interrogatiō verily hath more strength to set foorth the certaintie of the matter is spoken of For it sheweth that that is not strange or vnknowen to any of them but is indifferently graunted among all For I speake to them haue knowledge This parenthesis is to bee referred thither whither the proposition is referred as if he should say that he knew they were not so vnskilfull of the law as they could doubte of that And albeit both might be vnderstood of all lawes together yet is it better to vnderstand it of the lawe of God whiche is now in question Whereas some thinke the knowledge of the law is attributed vnto the Romanes because the best part of the worlde was vnder their Empire gouernement that is very childish For partly he speaketh vnto Iewes or other strangers partly vnto vulgare obscure men Yea he chiefly respecteth the Iewes with whom he had to do concerning the abrogation of the law And least they should thinke they were dealte withal very captiously he sheweth that he taketh a principle cōmon knowen to thē all wherof they
protection and fatherly care which hee alway had ouer them shall minister consolation in aduersitie the iudgements and punishments of God executed vpon the wicked shall helpe vs if they put into vs a feare which may replenishe our heartes with reuerence and pietie And whereas he saith not for him onely thereby hee seemeth to insinuate that it was partly written for his sake whereby some vnderstande that to the praise of Abraham it is saide what he obteined by faith because the Lorde will haue his seruants committed to eternall remembrance Pro. 10.7 as Salomon saith Their name is blessed But what if you take it more simply The example of Abraham as all other examples are written for our instruction as though it were some speciall priueledge which mighte not be drawen into an example but that it also apperteineth to our instruction who must be iustified by the same maner this shal be the fitter sense 24 Which beleeue in him c. I haue alreadie admonished what value these circumlocutions be of namely Paule hath inserted them that according to the circumstance of the places they might diuersly shewe the substance of faith concerning the which the resurection of Christe is not the last part whiche resurrection is vnto vs the grounde of the life to come If he had simply saide that wee beleeue in God it had not beene so easie to gather what this did make to the obteining of righteousnesse but whiles Christe appeareth in his resurrection doth offer a sure pledge of life it is euident from what fountaine the imputation of righteousnesse floweth 25 Which was deliuered He doth prosecute illustrate at large that doctrine whiche I touched immediatly before For it standeth vs vpon not onely to haue our mindes directed vnto Christ but also to haue it distinctly opened vnto vs how he hath purchased saluation for vs. And albeit the Scripture when it speaketh of our saluation standeth onelie vpon the death of Christe yet here nowe the Apostle goeth further For because his purpose was to deliuer the cause of saluation more clearely hee reckoneth two braunches thereof And first he saith our sinnes are done away by the death of Christe Secondly that righteousnesse is purchased by his resurrection The fruite of Christs death resurrection is perfect righteousnesse The meaning is when wee holde the fruite of Christes death and resurrection nothing is missing vnto vs as concerning perfect righteousnesse And there is no doubt but whiles he distinguisheth the death of Christe from his resurrection hee applieth his talke to our capacitie for otherwise it is true the obedience of Christe which hee shewed in his death was the righteousnesse purchased for vs as he also will shew in the Chapter following But because by rising from the dead Christe declared how much he had preuailed by his death By the death of Christ our saluation is begun by his resurrectiō it is perfected this distinction serueth to teach vs that by that sacrifice wherein sinnes are done away our saluation was begunne and by his resurrection it was perfected For the beginning of righteousnesse is that wee be reconciled to God and the perfection is that death beeing ouercome life might raigne Paule therefore signifieth howe satisfaction for our sinnes was accomplished on the crosse For that Christe might restore vs againe into the fauour of the father it was meete our giltinesse were abolished by him which coulde not bee vnlesse hee woulde suffer that punishment for vs which we were not able to abide For the chastisement of our peace was vpon him Esay 53.5 saith Esay and hee choseth rather to say he was deliuered then dead because the satisfaction dependeth vpon the eternall pleasure of God who would be pacified this way And is risen againe for our iustification Because it was not sufficient for Christe to oppose himselfe to the ire and iudgement of God and to take vpon him the curse due to our sinnes vnlesse hee shoulde also goe foorth the conquerour thereof How iustification is ascribed vnto the resurrection of Christe that beeing receiued into the celestiall glory by his intercession hee might reconcile God vnto vs. The vertue or power of iustification is ascribed vnto the resurrection whereby death was ouercome not that the sacrifice of the crosse whereby wee are reconciled to God did further our righteousnes nothing but because in the new life the perfection of this grace doth more clearely appeare And yet I cānot consent vnto those who referre this seconde member vnto newnesse of life For the Apostle as yet hath not begunne to speake of the matter secondly it is sure that both members appertaine to one ende Wherefore if iustification signifie renouation then to haue died for our sinnes were to bee vnderstoode in this sense namely that hee died to purchase for vs the grace of mortifiyng the fleshe which thing none graunteth Therefore as hee was saide to die for our sinnes because the price of sinnes being paide by his death hee hath deliuered vs from the calamitie of death So nowe he is saide to bee risen for our iustification because by his resurrection hee hath perfectly restored life vnto vs. For first hee was smitten by the hand of God that in the person of a sinner he might susteine the miserie of sinne Secondly he was exalted into the kingdome of life that he might indue his with righteousnesse and life So then hee speaketh still of iustification by imputation and that which followeth in the next Chapter will prooue the same CHAP. 5 1 THen being iustified by faith we haue peace with God through our Lord Iesus Christ 2 By whome we haue accesse through faith into this grace wherein wee stand and glorie vnder the hope of the glorie of God THEN being iustified The Apostle beginneth to illustrate that which he hath hitherto saide of the righteousnes of faith by the effects Therefore this whole chapter consisteth vpon amplifications which are of no lesse force to explicate or make plaine then they are to confirme For thee had saide before that faith was made voide if righteousnesse were sought for by woorkes Because a perpetuall disquietnesse shoulde trouble the miserable consciences which finde nothing firme and sure in themselues Now on the contrary he teacheth they are quieted and pacified after wee haue by faith obteined righteousnesse We haue peace A singuler fruite of the righteousnesse of faith for if any man goe about to get the peace of conscience by works which is seene in prophane and barbarous men he goeth about it in vaine For either his hearte is on sleepe with the contempt or forgetfulnesse of Gods iudgemēt or els full of trembling feare vntill he repose himselfe vpon Christe For he onely is our peace Therefore the peace of conscience signifieth that serenitie and quietnesse What the peace of conscience signifieth which riseth hence that a man feeleth God is reconciled to him Neither the Pharisee which
downe before For the similitude he bringeth in taketh away al ambiguitie because grafting doth not onely note the conformitie of example but a secret coniunction whereby wee growe vppe together with him so that hee quickening vs with his spirite powreth his vertue into vs. Therefore as a graft hath the condition of life and deathe common together with the tree in the which it is grafted so it is reason wee shoulde no lesse bee partakers of the life then of the death of Christe For if wee bee grafted into the similitude of the death of Christe and that is not without his resurrection then no more shal our death be without a resurrection But the wordes may haue a two folde exposition either that wee are grafted in Christ into the similitude of his death or simply we are grafted into his similitude The first acception would require the greek Datiue homoiomati that is to the similitud to be referred to the shewing of the maner And I denie not but that hath a fuller sense yet because the other agreeth better to the simplicitie of the worde I haue thought good to preferre it Albeit it is but a small matter seeing both come to one sense Phil. 2.7 Chrysostome thinketh Paule said the similitude of death for death as in another place How wee are grafted into the similitude of the death of Christ beeing made in the similitude of men But me thinke I see some greater Emphasis in this worde For besides that it auaileth to inferre the resurrection it seemeth to tende vnto this not that wee shoulde die like Christe by a naturall death but that wee haue this congruencie with his death that as he dyed in the fleshe which hee receiued of vs so wee shoulde die in our selues that wee may liue in him Then is it not the same death but the like for the resemblance or proportion betweene the death of this present life and spiritual renouation is to bee noted Graffed This worde is very significant● for it declareth plainely that the Apostle doth not exhort onely but rather deliuereth the doctrine of the benefite of Christe For he requireth not any thinge of vs which is to be done by our studie or industrie Wherein the similitude of grafting holdeth not but he preacheth that grafting which is done by the hand of God Neither is it conuenient a man shold goe about to apply the metephor or cōparisō to euery part For betwene the graftinge of trees and this oure spirituall graftinge there will straightwayes appeare a diuersitie for in that the graft dothe drawe his nourishment from the roote but yet reteineth his naturall propertie of bearing fruite but in this insertion or grafting of ours wee doe not onely drawe the iuice and strength of life from Christe but also wee passe from our nature into his Howbeit the mynde of the Apostle is to note nothing els then that efficacie of the death of Christe which sheweth it selfe in the mortification of our fleshe and that of his resurrection to renew in vs a better nature of the spirit 6 That our olde man It is called the olde man as the old testament is so called in respect of the new For it beginneth to be olde when our regeneration being begunne How it is called the old man it is by litle and litle destroyed and he meaneth the whole nature which we bring out of our mothers wombe which is so vncapable of the kingdom of God t●● must needs perish so farre foorth as we may be restored into 〈◊〉 life He saith this old man is fastened to the crosse of Christ because through his vertue it is slayne And he hath precisely alluded vnto the Crosse that he might expressely shew How the old mā is crucified how we haue not mortification else where then by the participation of his death For I doe not agree vnto them who vnderstand that he said rather crucified then dead because it liueth yet and floorisheth on some part That is verily a true saying yet it agreeth but litle with the present place The body of sinne What is meant by the body of sin which he addeth a litle after signifieth not the flesh and bones but the masse of sinne and corruption For manne beeing lefte to his owne nature is a masse contracted of sinne Hee noteth the end of this abolishing when he saith That wee shoulde not serue sinne any more Whereby it followeth that so long as we are the sonnes of Adam and nothing els but men we are so subiect vnto sinne that wee canne doe nothing els but sinne but beyng grafted into Christ we are deliuered from this miserable necessitye not that by and by we cease altogether to sinne but that at lengthe wee become Victorers in the fight 7 For hee that is dead is iustified from sinne 8 For if so that we be dead with Christ wee beleeue that wee shall also liue him 9 Knowing that Christe beeyng raysed from the dead dyeth no more death hath no more power ouer him 10 For in that he dyed he died to sinne once but in that he liueth he liueth vnto God 11 So yee also esteeme your selues dead verily vnto sinne but liuing vnto God in Christ Iesus our Lord. 7. For he that is dead This is an argument taken from the property or effect of death For if death put downe all the actions of life we which are dead must needes cease from the actions of that life which actions it exercised whiles the same life cōtinued For iustified vnderstand freed and deliuer●●●●om seruitude or bondage For as he is loosed from the b●●● of accusation who is freed from the sentence of the Iudge so death loosing vs from this life doth free vs from all the actions therof Furthermore albeit there is no where amongest men suche an example extaunt yet there is no cause why thou shouldest thinke this that is sayde here eyther to be a vayne imagination or shouldest despayre because thou findest not thy selfe in the number of those who haue vtterly crucified the flesh For this worke of God is not perfected the same day it is begun in vs but it increaseth by little and little by daily increments as by degrees is brought to perfection The fruite of our communicatiō with the death of Christ is that the fleshe with his concupiscences be mortified To be briefe then take it thus if thou art a Christian there must appeare in thee the signe of thy communication with the death of Christ whose fruite is that the flesh be crucified with all his concupiscences Howbeit thou mayest not therefore counte this communication as none because as yet thou doest feele some reliques of the fleshe to liue in thee but thou art continually to studie for the augmentation thereof vntill thou arte come vnto the marke For it is well if our fleshe be continually mortified and we haue profited wel when the flesh beyng subdued hath yeelded to the
holye spirite There is another communication of the death of Christ whereof as the Apostle speaketh often els where so to the Cor. namely 2. Cor. 4. the bearing of the crosse after which followeth the participation of eternall life 8. For if we bee dead This he repeateth to no other end then that he might adde a declaration which followeth afterwarde that Christ beyng once raysed from the dead dyeth no more Whereby hee teacheth that this newnesse of life must be folowed after of Christians their whole life For if they ought to represent in themselues by the mortification of the fleshe the image of Christ and life of the spirite How mortification must be once for all that must be done once for all but this must continue still Not as though the fleshe were mortified in vs in a moment as we said of late but because wee must not reuolt or goe backe in mortifiyng the fleshe For if wee turne backe vnto our filthines we deny Christ of whom we cannot be partakers but by newnes of life euen as he leadeth a life incorruptible 9 Death hath no more power ouer him Hee seemeth to insinuate that death did once conquere or rule ouer Christe And verily when hee gaue himselfe to death for vs hee did in a sort subiect him selfe vnto the power of death yet with that condition that it was impossible for him to bee holden bounde with the sorowes of it to be ouercome or swallowed vp of it Therefore in yeelding vnto the power of death for a moment Christ for a while yeelded vnto death he swallowed vp death for euer Albeit in speaking more simplye the power of death is referred vnto the voluntary condition of death to whom resurrection hath set an ende The meaning is Christ who nowe quickeneth the faithfull with his spirite or inspireth life into them by his secrete power from heauen was exempted from the power of death when he rose agayne that he might deliuer all his from the same 10 He dyed to sinne once Whereas he said that we after the example of Christ are loosed for euer from the yoke of death now he applyeth it vnto his purpose namely that we are no longer subiect vnto the tyranny of sinne and that he declareth by the finall cause of the death of Christ in as much as hee dyed that he might extinguishe sinne Furthermore in the phrase of speech is to bee noted what is proper vnto Christ For he saith not hee is dead vnto sinne that he might cease to sinne like as it must be sayd if the talke be of vs but because hee dyed for sinne that offering himselfe the price of our redemption hee might bring the power and authoritie of sinne vnto naught And he saith that he dyed once not onely because eternall redemption beeyng purchased by his only one sacrifice purgation of sinne being made by his blood he hath sanctified the faithfull for euer but also that we might be aunswearable by a mutuall resemblance or similitude For albeit death spirituall hath his continuall proceedinges in vs yet are we properly saide to die once whiles Christ by his blood reconciling vs to the father Heb. 10.14 doth also by the vertue of his spirite regenerate vs. In that he liueth Whither you expound it with God or in God all commeth to one sence For his meaning is he now liueth a life subiect to no mortalitie in the immortall incorruptible kingdome of God The figure of Christ his celestiall life ought to appeare in the regeneration of the godly the figure whereof ought to appeare in the regeneration of the godly Here we are to keepe in minde the word similitude For hee saith not we shall liue in heauen as Christ liueth there but he maketh that new life which by regeneration we leade in earth conformable to his celestiall life And whereas he saith we must die to sinne after his example it is not so that it may be called the same death For we dye to sinne when sinne dieth in vs but it is otherwise in Christe who by dying did put sinne to flight Nowe verily whereas he saide before we beleeue there is a life shal bee common vnto vs by the worde beleeue hee sufficiently sheweth that he speaketh of the grace of Christ For if he had onely admonished vs of our duetie hee shoulde haue saide thus seeing wee are dead with Christ we must likewise liue with him And this worde beleeue noteth that the doctrine of faith is handled here which is grounded vpon the promises as though it were said Christians ought to resolue themselues that through the benefite of Christ they are so dead according to the flesh that the same Christ may cōtinue in thē newnesse of life vnto the ende The future tense in the verbe liue doth not apperteyne vnto the last resurrection but simply noteth the perpetuall course of a new life so long as we liue in this world 11 Euen so you esteeme your selues c. Now is added that definition of the analogie How we may dye euen whiles we liue which I touched For whereas he saide that Christ died once for sinne and liueth for euer vnto God applying both vnto vs he nowe admonisheth howe wee may dye in liuing namely when we renounce sinne But withall he omitteth not that parte namely when wee haue once imbraced the grace of Christ by faith although the mortification of the flesh be but begun in vs yet in this same is the life of sinne extinguished that in steed therof spiritual newnesse which is heauenly might dure for euer For except Christ did kil sinne in vs once euen vnto the end his grace should not be firme and stable the meaning therefore of the words is esteeme the case is thus with you as Christ died once that he might slea sinn so you must die once that ye may cease to sinne hereafter yea you must daily proceed in that mortification which is begun in you vntil sin be vtterly extinguished As christ was raysed vnto an incorruptible life so ye must be regenerat by the grace of God that ye may lead your whole life in holines righteousnes seeing this vertue of the holy spirit wherby ye are renued is eternal shal florish for euer I had rather keepe the words of Paule in Christ Iesus then with Erasmus to translate it by Christ for so the grafting is better expressed which maketh vs one with Christ 12 Let not sinne therefore raigne in our mortal bodye that ye might obeye it in the lustes thereof 13 And giue not your members weapons of vnrighteousnesse vnto sinne but giue your selues to God as liuinge from the dead and your members weapons of righteousnes vnto God 12 Let not sinne therefore raigne Nowe he beginneth an exhortation which voluntarily ariseth out of the doctrine which he deliuered of our communication with Christ albeit sinne abideth in vs yet is it absurd that it shoulde bee of
could not be ignorāt who were brought vp frō their infancie in the doctrine of the law 2 For the woman which is in subiection to the man He bringeth a similitude whereby hee proueth that we are so freed from the lawe that it hath properly by right no power ouer vs any more And albeit he coulde haue proued it by other reasons yet because the example of matrimonie serued very well to set out the matter in steed of a confirmation he hath inserted a similitude taken from thence Howbeit least it shoulde trouble any man that the members compared one with another do not agree at all we are to be admonished that the minde of the Apostle was purposely by a little inuersion to auoide the spite of a more rigorous or seuere worde Hee should haue sayde that he might haue framed his similitude in order the woman after the death of her husbande is loosed from the bonde of matrimonie the lawe which is in steede of an husband to vs is dead vnto vs. Therefore wee are free from the power thereof But least he shoulde offend the Iewes with the asperitie of the word if hee had said that the lawe was dead hee vsed a digression or deflection saying we are dead to the law He seemeth vnto many to argue from the lesser to the greater yet because I feare least that bee more wrested I rather allowe the former interpretation which is more simple The whole argument therefore is to be directed into this order The woman is bound vnto her husband by the lawe so long as hee liueth so that shee cannot take another but after the death of her husband shee is loosed from the bonde of that lawe so that she may marry whom shee will Then followeth the application The lawe was as it were our husbande vnder whose yooke we were holden till it was dead vnto vs. After the death of the lawe Christe took vs that is ioyned vs being freed from the law vnto himselfe Therefore wee beeing ioyned vnto Christ risen from the dead ought to cleaue vnto him only and as the life of Christ after his resurrection is eternall so after this there shall be no diuorcement Moreouer the word law is not alway here put in one and the same sence The word lawe diuersly taken but somtimes it signifieth the mutual right of wedlocke sometimes the authoritie of the husband to whom the wife is subiect sometimes the doctrine of Moses And we are to remember that Paule doth here touch that part only which is proper vnto the ministerie of Moses For as concerning the tenne commandements wherein God hath deliuered what is right hath ordered our life wee are not to dreame of any abrogation of the lawe because the will of God ought to stand for euer Therefore we are diligently to remember that this deliuerance is not from that righteousnes is taught in the law but from the seuere exaction of the law and that curse proceedeth thence Thē the rule of life which the law prescribeth is not abrogated but that qualitie which is opposed to the liberty purchased by Christ namely whiles it requireth absolute perfection because we perfourme it not it holdeth vs bounde vnder the gilt of eternal death But because his meaning was not heere to decide what the right of matrimonie is he was not greatly carefull to reckō vp the causes which make a woman free from her husband Vnaptly therefore should sure doctrine in that respect be sought for here 4 By the body of Christ First of all Christ hauing erected the banner of his crosse did triumph ouer sin which could not be vnlesse the hand writing were canceled wherin we were boūd That hand writing is the law which whiles it standeth in force maketh vs debters vnto sin therefore is called the strength of sin From the power therfore of this hand writing we are deliuered in the body of Christ whiles it is fastened to his crosse How the law is the strength of sinne But the Apostle goeth further namely saying that the bond of the law was loosed Not that we shold liue according to our minds as a widow woman is left to her own mind whiles she is a widdow but we are now bound to another husband yea from hande to hand as they say we are passed from the law vnto Christ In the meane while he mitigateth the austeritie of the sentence whē he saith that Christ deliuered vs from the yoke of the law that he might graft vs into his own body For although Christe did voluntarily subiect himself vnto the law for a time yet is it not meete the law should haue dominion ouer him Furthermore that libertie which is proper to him he cōmunicateth also to his members Therefore it is no maruel if he deliuer those from the yooke of the law whom he coupleth vnto himself by a sacred connexion that they might be one body with him His who was raised frō the dead We haue alredy said that Christ is put in the place of the law least any libertie shold be imagined wtout him or least any should dare to make a diuorcement from the law The life purchased by Christ is eternall not being yet dead to himself Now he vseth this circumlocutiō to note the eterniti of that life which christ hath purchased by his resurrectiō that Christians might know this copulatiō is perpetual Finally hee speaketh more cleerely of the spirituall matrimonie of Christe with his church to the Ephe. That we might bring forth fruit to god Ephe. 6. Hee alway addeth the finall cause least any vnder this pretence that Christe hath deliuered vs from the seruitude of the lawe shoulde cocker the flesh and the lustes thereof For hee offered vs with himselfe in sacrifice to the father and to this ende he regenerateth vs What fruites we should bring foorth in Christ that wee might fructifie to God in newenesse of life And wee knowe what fruites our heauenly father requireth of vs namely holinesse and righteousnesse Neither is it preiudiciall to our libertie if we serue God Yea if wee wil inioy so excellent a benefite of Christ afterward we are not but to studie howe the glory of God may be aduanced for whiche cause Christ hath taken vs otherwise we abide stil not only the seruants of the lawe but of sinne and death 5 For when we were in the fleshe the affections of sinnes which are by the lawe wroughte in our members to bring foorth fruite vnto death 6 But now we are deliuered from the law being dead vnto it wherein we were holden that we should serue in newnes of the spirite and not in oldnesse of the letter 5 For when we were By the contrarie hee sheweth yet more plainely howe ill those that are zealous of the law deale to deteine the faithfull yet vnder the power thereof For so long as the litterall doctrine of the lawe ruleth and beareth swaye the lasciuiousnesse
of the fleshe is not brideled but rather it increaseth Whereby it followeth that the kingdome of righteousnesse is not established till Christe haue freed vs from the lawe And withall Paule admonisheth what workes doe become vs beeyng loosed from the lawe So long therefore as a man is holden vnder the yoke of the lawe by sinning continually he can bring nothing vnto himselfe but death If the seruice of the lawe begetteth sinne onely then deliuerance which is contrary must tende vnto righteousnesse if that lead vnto death then this vnto life But let vs consider the very wordes of Paul Whiles he goeth about to describe that time wherein wee were vnder the dominion of the lawe hee saith we were in the fleshe Whereby we vnderstand that all they which are vnder the law reape nothing els thereby then that without fruite and efficacie their eares are beaten with the externall breath thereof seeing they are inwardly destitute of the spirite of God Therefore they must needes abide altogether corrupt peruerse vntill a better remedie come to heale their disease And note the vsuall phrase of the Scripture to bee in the flesh for What it is to be in the flesh to be indued onely with the gifts of nature without that speciall grace wherew t God vouchsafeth his elect Furthermore if this whole state of life be corrupt it is apparant that naturally there is no part of our soule sound neither is there any other power of free wil but that it may send foorth euyll affections as dartes into euery part Affections of sinnes which are by the lawe That is the lawe did stir vp euill affections in vs which did declare their efficacie in all our members For there is no parte which did not serue the euill affections This is the worke of the lawe namely to inflame our heartes the more that they shoulde burst foorth into such lustes if that inwarde master of the spirite bee not present But obserue here that the lawe is matched with the corrupt nature of man whose peruersitie and lust the more it is restrained by the barres of the lawe the more furiously it bursteth foorth He addeth againe so long as the affections of the fleshe were ruled vnder the law they brought foorth fruite vnto death that they might shew how the lawe by it selfe killeth whereby it followeth that they are foolish who so greatly couet after that seruice bringeth death 6 But now wee are freed from the lawe Hee pursueth his argument from contraries if the bande of the lawe did so little preuaile to bridle the fleshe that it was rather an increment of sinne then of necessitie must we be loosed that we may cease to sinne If then wee bee freed from the bondage of the lawe that we might serue God they doe wickedly whiche take from hence libertie of sinning And they speake wickedly which say by this meanes the raines are loosed to concupiscence Note therefore wee are then loosed from the lawe when God doth indue vs being freed from the seuere exaction and curse thereof with his spirite that wee might walke in his wayes Beeing dead to it This parte conteyneth a reason or rather sheweth the maner whereby we are deliuered namely whiles the law is so farre foorth abrogated from vs that we be not oppressed with the burden thereof or least that the seuere rigour thereof ouerwhelme vs in the Curse In the newnesse of the spirite Hee opposeth the spirite against the letter because before that our will by the holy Ghoste be formed vnto the will of God we haue nothing in the lawe but the outward letter Why newnesse is ascribed vnto the spirite which in deede brideleth our externall actions but it restraineth not the furie of our concupiscence at all Hee attributeth newenesse vnto the spirite because it succeedeth in the steede of the olde man as the Letter is called old which perisheth by the regeneration of the spirite 7 What shall we say then is the lawe sinne God forbid But I knewe not sinne but by the lawe For I had not knowen concupiscence except the lawe had saide thou shalte not lust 8 But sinne tooke an occasion by the commandement wrought in me al maner of concupiscence 7 What shall wee say then Because it was saide wee must be deliuered from the lawe that we might serue God in the newnesse of spirit this fault did seeme to be in the law as though it did driue vs vnto sinne But seeing that is very absurd the Apostle did very well to take in hand to refute it When hee demaundeth therfore whether the law be sin his meaning is whether it beget sin so that the fault thereof ought to bee imputed to the law Sinne remaineth in vs not in the lawe But I knew not sin Then doth sinne abide in vs and not in the law because the cause of sin is the wicked cōcupiscence of our flesh we come into the knowledge therof by the knowledge of the righteousnes of God which is declared vnto vs in the law But you are not to vnderstād it as though there were no difference at al betweene righte wrong without the law But the either we are too blinde in seeing our corruption or els whiles wee flatter our selues wee are altogether secure as also it followeth For I had not knowen concupiscence This is therefore a declaration of the former sentence wherein he sheweth that that ignoraunce of sinne whereof hee spake did stande in this that men marked not their concupiscence And purposely he persisteth in one kynde wherein chiefly Hypocrisie raygneth whereunto retchlesse pampering and securitie is alway annexed For men are neuer so depriued of iudgement but externall woorkes keepe with them their difference Yea they are forced also to condemne wicked counsels and such like deuises which they cannot doe but they must needes giue vnto a right will that prayse is due vnto it But the faulte of concupiscence is more hidden and more deepely layde vppe whereby it commeth to passe that it neuer commeth into question so long as men iudge according to their sence For he doth not boast himselfe to haue beene voyde of it but hee did so flatter himselfe that hee made no account of that sinne lurking in his heart For seeyng he was deceiued for a tyme when hee thought that righteousnesse coulde not be hindered by concupiscence then at length he perceyued he was a sinner when he saw concupiscence of the which no man is voyde to be forbidden by the Lawe Augustine sayeth that Paule vnder this worde conteyneth the whole lawe whiche so that we vnderstande it well is true For when Moses sheweth of what things we are to take heede least wee offend or hurt our neighbour he addeth thou shalt not lust which is to bee referred vnto all those preceptes went before There is doubt but in the former commaundementes he had condemned whatsoeuer wicked affections our hearts conceiue Concupiscence without
consent is sinne but there is great difference between a set will and affections whereby we are tickled Therefore by this last precept God requireth such integrity of vs that no corrupt lust should moue vs vnto euil howsoeuer it be that we cōsent not vnto it And for this cause it was I saide Paule did mount higher then the common capacity of man is able to reache For politike lawes cry that they punishe the counselles and not the euentes and the Philosophers more subtilly place both vices and vertues in the mynde but God by this precept pearceth vnto the concupiscence which is more secrete then the will And therefore men did not count it for sinne Neyther was it onelye pardoned of the Philosophers but at this day the Papistes contend mightely that it is not sinne in the regenerate But Paule saith he found out his guiltinesse by this lurking disease whereupon it followeth that they are not excusable who so are sicke of it but so farre foorth as GOD doeth pardon the faulte A twofolde concupiscence In the meane while wee are to holde that distinction betweene euill lustes which come vnto consent and concupiscence which only so tickleth and mooueth the heartes that it stayeth in the middle way 8 But sin tooke an occasion So then whatsoeuer is euil it ariseth of sinne the corruption of the flesh the occasion only is in the law And although he may be supposed to speake of that prouocation only whereby through the law our lust is so stirred vp that it bursteth forth into greater madnes yet I refer it chiefly vnto knowledge as though it were saide it discouered in me all concupiscence which whiles it lay hidden seemed in a manner to be none And yet I denie not but the flesh is more vehemētly prouoked vnto cōcupiscēce by the law so this way it cōmeth into light which thing might also happen vnto Paule But that which I sayd of manifestation agreeth rather vnto the text For straightwaies he addeth For without the law sinne is dead 9 And I liued sometime without law But when the commandement came sinne reuiued 10 But I died and that commandement which was ordeyned vnto life was found vnto me to be vnto death 11 For sinne taking an occasion by the commandemēt led me out of the way and by that killed me 12 Wherefore the law is holye the commaundement holy and iust and good For without the law Here he doth plainely expresse the meaning of the former words For it is as much as if he said that knowledge of sinne without the law is buried And it is the generall sentence wherunto he doth by and by apply his example Wherfore I maruell what the interpreters meant to translate it in the preterimperfectence as though Paule spake of himselfe seeing it is apparant that his mind was to begin at an vniuersal proposition and afterward to open the matter by his example 9 And I liued sometime wthout lawe His meaning is to insinuate that there was a time wherin to him or with him sinne was dead For it is not to be vnderstood that he was at any time lawlesse but this word I liued is very significant because the absēce of the lawe made that he liued that is being puffed vp with the cōfidence of his owne righteousnes he chalenged life vnto himselfe when neuerthelesse he was dead That the sentence may be more cleare resolue it thus when somtime I was without law I liued And I said that this word was significant because in faining himselfe righteous hee claymed vnto himselfe life also This then is the meaning when I sinned without knowledge of the lawe sinne was so drowned that I did not obserue it and that it seemed almost to be dead On the other side I because I did not see that I was a sinner did please my selfe in my selfe thinking that I had life at home with my selfe For the death of sinne is the life of man againe the life of sinne is the death of man But the question is what time that was 2. Cor. 3.14 how paul being brought vp of a childe in the doctrine of the law is saide to haue liued sometime without law wherein by the ignorance of the lawe or as hee sayth by the absence of the lawe hee did confidently claime life vnto him selfe For sure it is hee was brought vp of a childe in the doctrine of the lawe But that was a litterall Diuinitie which doth not humble his Disciples For as he saith in another place the vaile was interposed that the Iewes coulde not see the light of life in the lawe So he also so long as he beyng voyd of the spirite of Christe had his eyes couered did please himself in the externall shew of righteousnesse Hee therefore counteth the lawe absent which though it were present before his eyes yet did not smite him with a perfecte sence of the iudgement of the Lorde Thus are the eyes of hypocrites couered with a vayle that they see not howe much this precept requireth wherein wee are forbidden of concupiscence But when the commaundement came So nowe on the contrary hee counteth the lawe then to come when it began truely to be vnderstoode The lawe therefore did as a man woulde say rayse sinne from the dead because it discouered vnto Paule with howe muche corruption the inwarde partes of his heart abounded and also did flea him And let vs alway remember that he speaketh of a secure confidence wherein hypocrites rest whiles they flatter themselues because they wincke at their sinnes 10 Was found vnto me c. Two thinges are said here 1. namely that the commaundement sheweth vnto vs the way of life in the righteousnesse of God therfore was giuen that we obseruing the law of the Lord The law in it selfe is the way of life But that none are saued by the law the cause is for that none doth keepe it might obteyne eternall life if the prauity of vs all did not hinder it 2. But because there is none of vs that keepeth the law but rather we are altogether carried headlong into that kinde of life from the which it doth call vs it can bring nothing els but death Thus we are to distinguish betweene the nature of the lawe and our corruption Whereby it followeth that wheras the law doth wound vs vnto death that is accidentical as if an incurable disease should be stirred vp the more by an wholesome medicine Indeed I confesse it is an insepararable accident and therefore the lawe in another place in respect of the Gospell is called the minister of death but yet this abideth firme 1. Cor. 3.7 that it is not hurtfull vnto vs of his own nature but because our corruption doth prouoke and cause his curse 11 hath lead mee out of the way Verily true it is although the will of God bee hidden from vs and no doctrine doth shine vnto vs the whole life of men
that raysed Iesus from the dead dwell in you hee which raysed Christe from the dead shall also quicken your mortall bodies because of his spirite that dwelleth in you 9 Nowe yee are not in the fleshe By a supposition he applieth the generall sentence vnto them to whome hee wrote not onely to the ende that directing his talke as proper vnto them hee might the more vehemently moue them but also that by the definition late put downe they might certainely gather howe they are of the number of those from whome Christe hath taken the curse of the lawe Yet withall shewing of what force the spirite of God is in the elect and what fruit it bringeth forth hee exhorteth them vnto newenesse of life If so be that the spirite of God This is a correction very fitly applyed whereby they are stirred vp to examine themselues more neerely A note to knowe the true sonnes of God from the children of the world least they pretende the name of Christe in vaine And this is a most sure note whereby the sonnes of God are discerned from the children of the worlde if by the spirit of God they be regenerate vnto innocencie and holinesse Although it seemeth his purpose was not so much to correct hypocrisie as to suggest matter of glorying against those were preposterously zealous ouer the lawe who esteemed more of the dead letter then of the inwarde vertue of the spirite which quickeneth the lawe Furthermore this place teacheth that Paule by the name of spirite meant not the minde or vnderstanding whiche of the Patrones of free will is called the more excellent part of the soule but the heauenly gift For hee expoundeth those to bee spirituall not which obey reason by their owne motion but whom God gouerneth by his spirite Who and howe they are called spirituall Neither yet are they said to bee according to the spirite as though they were full of the spirite of God which thing hath happened to none yet but because they haue the spirite of God abiding in them howesoeuer they feele some relique of the flesh remaining in them And it cannot meaning the spirite cannot remaine except it haue the superioritie For we are to note that a man is named of the chiefest part in him But if any haue not the spirite of Christe Hee addeth this that he might shewe howe necessarie the deniall of the fleshe is in christians The kingdome of the spirite is the abolishing of the fleshe in whome the spirite of Christe raigneth not they doe not appertaine vnto Christe Then they are not Christians that serue the fleshe For they who pull Christ away from his spirite make him like vnto a dead image or carkasse And alway wee are to remember that counsaile of the Apostle namelye that free remission of sinnes cannot bee separated from the spirite of regeneration because this were as a man woulde saye to rent Christe in peeces Which thing if it be true it is maruaile that wee are charged by the aduersaries of the Gospell with arrogancie that wee dare acknowledge the spirite of Christe dwelling in vs. For eyther wee muste denie Christe or confesse that wee are Christians by his spirite Surely it is horrible to heare that men are so fallen from the woorde of the Lorde that they doe not onely boast themselues to bee Christians without the spirite of God but also they scoffe at the faith of others But this is the Philosophie of Papists Nowe verily let the Readers marke heere that the spirite is indifferently sometime called the spirite of God the father somtime of Christe not onely because all the fulnesse thereof is shed vpon Christe How the spirite of God is also called the spirite of Christe as hee is our mediatour and head that from thence might redownde to euery one of vs his portion but also because the same spirite is common to the father and the sonne who haue one essence add the same eternall dietie Yet because wee haue no communication with God but through Christe the Apostle very wisely descendeth from the father who seemeth to be further of vnto Christe 10 And if Christe bee in you That which before he said of the spirite now hee saith of Christe whereby is declared the maner of Christes dwelling in vs. For as by his spirite he consecrateth vs for temples to himselfe so by the same spirit he dwelleth in vs and now he doth more cleerely open that which wee touched before How Christe dwelleth in vs. namely that the sonnes of God are counted spirituall not in respect of a full and absolute perfection but onely for the newnesse of life is begun in them And here is a preoccupation whereby he preuenteth that doubt which might otherwise vexe vs. For howsoeuer the spirit possesseth one part of vs yet we see another parte to be holden styll of death Therefore hee answereth that in the spirite of Christe there is a vertue of quickening which is of power to swallow vp our mortalitie Whereupō he inferreth how we are paciently to expect till the reliques of sin be vtterly abolished Furthermore the Readers haue bin alredy admonished that by the word spirit they vnderstand not our soule but the spirite of regeneration which spirite Paule calleth life not onely because it liueth and florisheth in vs but because by his strength it quickeneth vs vntill at the length our mortall flesh being extinguished it doth perfectly renewe vs as on the contrarie the worde body signifieth that grosse masse which is not yet cleansed by the spirite of GOD from the dregges of the earth which sauour of nothing but that is grosse For otherwise to attribute vnto the body the guiltinesse of sinne were absurde Againe the soule is so farre from beeing life that it liueth not it selfe Then the meaning of Paul is although sin doth iudge vs vnto death so farre foorth as there remaineth yet in vs the corruption of the first nature yet is the spirite of God the conquerour neither doeth this hinder any whit namely that wee are onely indued with the firste fruites because euen one sparkle thereof is the seede of life 11 If I say the spirite This is a confirmation of the last sentence being taken from the efficient cause after this maner if by the power of the spirite of God Christe were raysed and the spirite keepeth his power for euer Then it shall also shewe foorth the same power in vs. And hee taketh it for a thing graunted namely that a proofe of that power whiche apperteineth vnto the body of the whole Church was declared in the person of Christe And because hee maketh God the authour of the resurrection hee assigneth vnto him the quickening spirite Who raysed by a circumlocution hee describeth God which did agree better for the present purpose then if had simply named him In like maner hee ascribeth the glory of Christe raysed vnto the father for that was more effectuall to proue the thing
Therefore in it onelye is saluation to bee founde And hee bringeth for the first argument of condemnation that when the frame of the worlde and this comely composition of Elementes ought to haue beene a spurre vnto man that hee shoulde glorifie GOD no manne was founde to doe his duetie Whereby appeareth howe all menne are guyltye of sacriledge and wicked and abhominable ingratitude Some menne thinke this to bee the firste proposition or generall sentence that Paule might beginne his Sermon at Repentaunce but my mynde is that the disputation beginneth heere And that the state of the cause was sette downe in the former proposition For the purpose of Paule is to shewe where saluation is to bee sought for And hee hath alreadye pronounced that wee doe not otherwise obtayne it then by the Gospell But because fleshe doeth not willinglye humble it selfe thus farre that it might assigne the prayse of saluation to the onelye grace of GOD Seeing al men are guilty of eternall death in themselues who so wil be saued must seeke for life else where Paule prooueth the whole worlde to bee guiltye of eternall death Whereuppon it ensueth that wee must seeke for life else where seeyng wee are all loste and vtterlye cast awaye in our selues Howe bee it the woordes beeyng diligentlye weighed will helpe greatelye to the vnderstanding of the tenour of the proposition Some putte a difference betweene impietye and vnrighteousnesse after this sorte by the firste woorde they vnderstand the violating of the woorshippe of GOD by the second the violating of that equitye shoulde be amongst men But because the Apostle immediatly after referreth that vnrighteousnesse vnto the neglect of religion we wil vnderstand both as one and the same Secondlye all impietye of menne Hypallage is when in speeche the order of things is turned by the figure Hypallage for the impietie of all men or whereof all menne are guiltye One thing to witte vnthankfulnesse against God is sette foorth by two names because wee offende therein two wayes It is called Asebeia id est impiety or vngodlines as a dishonouring of God It is called Adigeia ●d est vnrighteousnes or iniustice because man in taking vnto him selfe that is Gods hath vniustly robbed GOD of his honour Wrath an humane affection after the manner of the Scripture How God is said to be angrie is put for the reuēgement of God because GOD when hee punisheth seemeth in our opinion to bee angrye Therefore it doeth not signifye any motion in GOD but onelye hath respecte vnto the sence of the sinner that is punished When hee sayeth that the same is reuealed from heauen although this particle from heauen bee taken of some in steede of an Epitheton as though it were sayde of the Celestiall GOD yet I thinke there is more efficacie in it after this sence whether soeuer a manne looke about him he shall finde no health for so farre and wyde as the heauens are the wrath of God is powred out into the whole worlde The trueth of God signifieth the true knowledge of GOD. Gods truth is withholdē whē his true knowledge is suppressed or obscured To withholde it is to suppresse or obscure it whereby they are as it were accused of thefte Where wee translate it vniustlye Paule hath in vnrighteousnesse which phrase of the Hebrewes is all one but wee studie to bee playne 19 For as muche as that whiche may bee knowen of God Thus hee tearmeth that whiche is lawefull or expedient for vs to knowe of GOD. And hee vnderstandeth all that whiche appertayneth to the setting foorth of the glorye of the Lorde or whiche is all one whatsoeuer might mooue or stirre vs to glorifie God By whiche woorde hee signifyeth that GOD can not bee conceyued of vs God cannot be knowen as he is but only so farre as it hath pleased him to make himself knowen howe greate hee is but there is a certayne measure within the whiche men ought to keepe them selues euen as God applyeth to our capacitye what so euer hee testifieth of him selfe Those dote therefore whosoeuer they bee contende to knowe what God is because it is not vayne that the Spirite the Teacher of true wisedome doeth call vs vnto To gnoston to saye whiche maye bee knowen of God And howe it maye bee knowen hee will shewe straight way in that which followeth For the greater Emphasis hee sayeth rather in them then simply them For although the Apostle doeth euery where vse the Phrases of the Hebrewe tongue wherein Beth is often superfluous yet heere it is thought hee woulde shewe suche a manifestation of God whereby they might bee vrged more neerelye then that they coulde make anye euasion as vndoubtedly euery one of vs doeth feele it grauen in his heart Whereas he sayeth God hath shewed it the meaning is that man was therefore made that he might be a beholder of the frame of the world and that therefore were eyes giuen vnto him that by the beholding of so goodly a spectacle The beholding of Gods workemanship in the creation should leade vs vnto God he might be carried vnto the author him selfe 20 For the inuisible thinges of him God by himselfe is inuisible but because his Maiestie shyneth in all his workes and creatures men ought in them to acknowledge him For they doe playnlye shewe foorth their woorkemaister In whiche respect the Apostle to the Hebrewes calleth the worlde a glasse or spectacle of inuisible thinges Hee reckoneth not particulerly what thinges maye bee considered in God By the glasse of Gods creatures we may come euē to the knowledge of his eternall power Godhead but he teacheth that wee may by that glasse come euen vnto the knowledge of his eternall power and Godhead For it behooueth him who is the authour of all thinges to bee without beginning and of him selfe When wee are come thither nowe the Godhead sheweth it selfe which cannot consist but with euerye the vertues of God seeing they are all comprehended vnder it To the intent that they shoulde bee without excuse Heereby it doeth easilye appeare what menne gette by this demonstration namelye that they can alleadge no excuse beefore the iudgement of GOD but they are iustlye condemned Let this distinction therefore stande the demonstration of God whereby hee maketh his glorie apparaunt in his creatures The reuelation of God in his creatures hath a two fold consideration in respecte of the brightnesse thereof is cleere enough but in respecte of our ca●●citie is not so sufficient Yet wee are not so blynde that wee canne pretende ignoraunce to quite vs from the blame of naughtinesse or peruersitie First wee conceyue with our selues there is a God Secondly that the same whosoeuer hee bee is to bee woorshipped But heere our reason fayleth before it canne obtayne eyther who is GOD Heb. 11.3 It is the light of faith whe●eby we profit aright in the creation of the world or what hee is Wherefore the
separated from the goates and 〈◊〉 ●ll the corne bee purged from the tares 6 Who shal giue to euery man c. Because he hath to doe with blynd saints who thinke the wickednes of the heart to be well couered so that it be spread ouer with certayne I know not what shewes of vayne workes he setteth downe true righteousnesse of woorkes which shall haue place before God least they shoulde thinke it were sufficient to please him if they brought words trifles only or leaues God in cōdemning the reprobate payeth them that they haue deserued Moreouer there is no such difficultie in this sentence as commonly there is thought to be For if God by iust reuengement shall punishe the wickednesse of the reprobate he shall recompence them that they haue deserued Agayne because he sanctifieth them whom in time to come he purposeth to glorifie in them also he will crowne good workes but not according to merite Good woorkes crowned but not according to merite For merite is not proued by the reward For that cannot be prooued by this sentence which sentence although it shew what rewarde good workes shall haue yet notwithstanding it sheweth not what they merite are woorth or deserue nor yet what rewarde is due vnto them It is a foolishe sequele to prooue merite by the rewarde 7 To them truely whiche according to perseueraunce worde for word it is patience by whiche worde there is somewhat more expressed For perseuerance is when one constantly abydeth in well doyng without wearinesse pacience also is required in the Sayntes whereby although they are oppressed with diuers tentations yet they faynt not Satā interrupteth the course of godlinesse For Sathan suffereth them not with free passage to come vnto the Lorde but laboureth by innumerable offences to hynder them and turne them out of the right way And whereas hee sayeth that the faithfull by persisting in good woorkes doe seeke glory and honour his meaning is not that they aspire any whither then vnto the Lorde or to seeke any thing aboue him or more excellent then he but they can not seeke him but also they must contende to come vnto the blessednesse of his kingdome The Lord giueth eternall life vnto them who by well doing meditate vppon immortalitie a description whereof is conteyned vnder the circumlocution of these woordes The meaning therefore is that the Lorde will giue vnto those eternall life who studying to doe good workes meditate vpon immortalitie 8 But to those are contentious The speech is somewhat confused First because the tenor forme or fashion of the talke is broken For the course of speeche required that the second part of comparison shoulde cleaue vnto the first after this sort the Lorde will giue eternall life to those which by perseuerance in good workes seeke glory honour and immortalitie but to the contentious and disobedient eternall death Then should bee added the illation or conclusion namely that there is prepared for those glory honour and incorruption but for these there is laide vppe wrath and affliction Secondly because these woordes indignation wrath tribulation and anguishe are applied vnto two diuers members In the scriptures we must seeke for spirituall wisedome and not for eloquēce yet this troubleth not the sense of the speache which ought to suffise vs in the writinges of the Apostles For out of others wee must seeke for eloquence heere is spirituall wisedome to be sought for vnder a base and simple stile of wordes Contention heere is put for rebellion and stiffeneckednesse because Paul hath to doe with hypocrites who through grosse and rechlesse cockering make a mockerie of God Vnder the name of trueth is simply vnderstoode the rule of Gods will which is the onely lanterne of trueth For this is a common thing to al the wicked that they had rather subiect thē selues in seruice to iniquitie then take vpon thē the yoke of God And what obediēce so euer they pretende yet they cease not stubburnely to murmure and striue against the woorde of God For as they which are openly wicked Betweene the seruice of God and sinne there is no meane so that if we serue not God then do we serue sinne scoffe at this trueth so the hypocrites doubt not to oppose their counterfeite seruinges and worshippinges against it Moreouer the Apostle heereby putteth in minde that such stubburne people doe serue iniquitie For there is no meane whereby they shoulde not presently fall into the seruitude of sinne who will not be ruled by the lawe of the Lorde And this also is a iust rewarde of franticke licenciousnesse that they are made the bondslaues of sinne who thought it much to obey God Indignation and wrath The property of the wordes hath caused mee to turne it thus For Thumos with the Grecians signifieth that which Cicero teacheth Excandescentiam to note with the latines ●usc 4. namely a sudden inflammation of wrath In the others I followe Erasmus And note that of the foure which are reconed the two latter are as it were effectes of the former For they which perceiue or feele God to bee against them and angrie with them forthwith are confounded Neuerthelesse when hee might briefly in two woordes haue shewed as well the blessednesse of the godly as the destruction of the reprobate he amplyfieth them both in many woordes To the ende hee might better and more effectually mooue men with the feare of Gods wrath and stirre vp the desire of obtayning grace by Christ For we neuer feare the iudgement of God sufficiently vnlesse it bee by a liuely description as it were set before our eyes Neyther do wee seriously burne with the desire of the life to come except wee be stirred vp by manie prouokements 9 To the Iewe first I doubt not but he simplie opposeth the Gentile to the Iewe. For whom he nowe calleth Grecians straight wayes hee calleth the same Gentiles And the Iewes are first in the action of this cause for that they specially had the promises and threatnings of the lawe as if hee shoulde say this is the vniuersall lawe of Gods iudgement which shall begin at the Iewes and comprehend the whole worlde 11 For there is no respect of persons with God 12 Whosoeuer haue sinned without lawe shall also perishe without lawe and who so haue sinned in the lawe shall be iudged by the lawe 13 For not the hearers of the lawe are righteous before God but the doers of the lawe shal be iustified 11 For there is no respect of persons Hitherto hee hath drawen all men generally giltie vnto iudgement nowe he beginneth here to reproue the Iewes by themselues and the Gentiles by themselues And withall he teacheth that that diuersitie or difference which separateth the one from the other letteth not but both of them without difference may bee subiect to eternall death The Gentiles pretended excuse by ignoraunce the Iewes gloried in the title of the Lawe from the Gentiles hee
vndoubtedly he saith that glorying is excluded because wee can bring nothing of our owne which is worthy to be approued or commended of God If merite be the matter of glorying whether you terme it de congruo which is apt fitte or conuenient That is called merite de congruo when a man of his own good motiō proceeding naturally from him meriteth the firste grace which they call grace preuenting Merite de condigno when man being holpen by the firste grace doth make himselfe worthy of eternall life or whether you call it de condigno that is worthie whereby man recōcileth God vnto himself here thou seest they are both ouerthrowen For here he speaketh of no diminishing or moderating but Paule verily leaueth no droppe of merite Moreouer if the glorying of workes be so taken away by faith the faith cannot purely be preached but in giuing all vnto the mercie of God man must needes bee spoyled of all prayse it followeth then that wee are not holpen by any woorkes to the obteyning of righteousnesse Of woorkes How doth the Apostle here deny our merits to be excluded by the lawe seeyng before he proued our damnation out of the lawe For if the lawe make vs subiecte to death what glorie shall wee gette out of it Or rather doeth it not couer vs beeyng depriued of all glorye with shame or reproche But then hee shewed howe our sinne is layd open by the detection of the Lawe because wee are all fallen from the obseruation of it And heere hee meaneth if righteousnesse were in the lawe of woorkes our glorying were not excluded but because it is of fayth onely therefore we cann● chalenge nothinge to our selues for fayth receyueth all from God it bringeth nothing but a humble confession of neede or want And the Antithesis or contrarietye of fayth and woorkes is to bee noted wherein without addition woorkes are put vniuersally Therefore he neyther intreateth of ceremonies onelye nor yet of the externall shew of woorkes but comprehendeth all the merites of woorkes which can be imagined The name Lawe is giuen vnto fayth improperly but yet this darkeneth not the sence of the Apostle For his meaning is that when wee are once come vnto the rule of faith then all the glorie of woorkes is ouerthrowen as if hee shoulde saye the righteousnesse of woorkes veryly is commended in the lawe but faith hath a lawe of his owne which leaueth no righteousnesse in workes whatsoeuer they be 28 We haue determined therefore Now he gathereth the principall proposition as though it were now out of all controuersie adding also an explication For iustification by faith is made very cleere whiles woorkes are excluded by name Therefore our aduersaries at this day labour nothing more then that faith might be intangled with the merite of workes They confesse a man is iustified by faith but not by sole faith Yea in verie deede they place the power of iustification in charity howsoeuer in wordes they giue it vnto fayth But Paule in this place doeth make iustification so free that he maketh it euident howe in no sort it can stand with any merite of workes I haue shewed before why he nameth the workes of the lawe and also I haue declared those to be ridiculous whiche restrayne it vnto ceremonies Their imagination also is childish which take the works of the lawe for externall or literal workes which are done without the spirite of Christ But rather the Epitheton is as much of value as if he had called them meritorious How S. Iames saith a man is not iustified by faith onely because he hath regard vnto the roward promised in the law Whereas Iames sayeth a man is not iustified by faith onely but by works it is nothing cōtrary to the former sentence The reconciliation depēdeth chiefly vpon the state of that argument of the which Iames intreateth in that place For in that place the question is not howe menne get vnto them righteousnesse before God but how they approue themselues to be iust For hee refuteth Hypocrites who glorie vainely in the title of faith It is therefore a grosse fallacie not to obserue how the word iustifie or iustifying is otherwise taken with Iames then with Paule as they intreate of diuers things And also the word faith most certainly appeareth to be equiuocal id est of ambiguous and doubtfull signification This twofolde ambiguity or doubtfulnesse ought is haue byn noted It may be gathered out of the text that Iames would nothing els then that a man is not made or approued iust by a dead faith excepte hee confirme his righteousnesse by woorkes Of which matter see our institutions 29 Is God the God of the Iewes only and not of the Gentiles also Yea euen of the Gentiles also 30 Seing there is but one God who shall iustifie the circumcision by faith and the vncircumcision by faith 29 Is God the God of the c. The second proposition sheweth how that righteousnesse doth no more appertayne vnto the Iewes then vnto the Gentiles And it was very necessary that should be vrged to the end place might be made for the kingdom of Christ through the whole world He doeth not therefore aske simply or precisely whither God bee the maker of the Gentiles which was knowen to be out of all controuersie but whether he would shew himselfe a Sauiour to them also or no. For after he hath matched all mankynde together and hath brought them all vnder the same condition if there be any difference amongst them it is of God and not of themselues The righteousnes of God in Christ is not tyed to one nation which haue all things like or equall amongst them So that if it be true God woulde haue all the people of the earth to be partakers of his mercy thē saluation and righteousnes which is necessary to saluation is extended vnto all Wherefore ●nder the name of God heere is an insinuation of that mutuall relation which often commeth to our sight in Scripture Iere. 30.22 I wil be your God you shal be my people For that God for a time did choose vnto himself a peculiar people that taketh not away the beginning of nature namely that all mē were made according to the image of God brought vp in this world vnto the hope of blessed eternity 30 Who iustifieth When hee saith some are iustified by faith other some of faith he seemeth to be delighted with the variety of speech in declaring the same matter that he might by the way gyrde the folly of the Iewes who imagine a difference betweene them and the Gentiles In the cause of iustification there is no difference between the Iewes and Gentiles when as in the cause of iustification there is no difference at al. For if men be made partakers of this grace by faith onely and there is one faith in them both it is childishnesse to make a variance or diuersitie where there is so great
Fathers who had obteined righteousnes before this death For they had that benefite from his death that was to come 7 For the iuste Reason forced me to sett downe this particle gar id est For rather affirmatiuely or by the waye of declaration then causatiuely This is the meaning of the sentence it is a very rare thing amongst men that any shoulde die for a iust man although that may nowe and then happen But let vs grannt that No such example of loue any where to bee found as was in Christ who died for the vngodly and his enemies yet can no man bee founde that will die for a wicked man That did Christ So it is an amplification taken from a comparison because no suche example of loue is extant amongst men as Christ shewed towardes vs. 8 And God confirmeth Seeing this verbe sunist esi is of a doubtfull signification it is more fitte in this place to bee taken for to confirme For the purpose of the Apostle is not to incitate vs vnto thankefulnesse but to establish the confidence and affiance of consciences Hee confirmeth That is he declareth his sure most constant loue towards vs in that for the vngodly sake he spared not Christ his sonne For herein his loue appeared that not being prouoked by loue of his owne free will he first loued vs as Iohn saith They are here called sinners as in many other places who are altogether corrupted and addicted to sinne as Iohn saith Iohn 3.16 God heareth not sinners That is such as are desperately Iohn 9.31 and wholly giuen to wickednes A woman that was a sinner that is of an vnhonest life And that appeareth better by the Antithesis whiche straightwayes followeth beyng iustified by his blood For seeyng hee opposeth these two betweene themselues Luke 7.37 and faythe they are iustified who are deliuered from the guiltinesse of sinne it is a consequent they are sinners who for their euill wookes are condemned The summe is if Christe by his death hath purchased righteousnesse vnto sinners Christ is no lesse able nor willing to defēd then he was to redeeme much more shall hee defend them beyng now iustified from destruction And in this last member hee applyeth the comparison of the lesse and greater vnto this doctrine For it were not enough that saluation was once purchased for vs except Christe did conserue the same safe and firme vnto the ende And that is it the Apostle goeth about nowe namely that it is not to be feared least Christ should breake of the course of his grace in the middle rase For since he hath reconciled vs to the father such is our condition that hee will shewe foorth his fauour more effectually towardes vs and dayly increase the same 10 For if when wee were enemies wee were reconciled to God by the death of his sonne much more being reconciled shall wee be saued by his life This is an exposition of the former sentence with an amplification taken frome the comparison of life and death Wee were enemies quoth hee when Christe tooke vpon him the mediation to reconcile the father Nowe we are friendes through his reconciliation if that coulde bee brought to passe by his death his life shall be of greater power and more effectuall So then we haue notable testimonies which may cōfirme the confidence of saluation in our heartes His meaning is wee were reconciled to GOD by the death of Christe because it was the sacrifice of reconciliation whereby GOD was reconciled to the worlde as I haue declared in the fourth Chapter But here the Apostle seemeth to be contrary vnto himselfe For if the death of Christ were the pledge of the loue of God towards vs Obiection It followeth that euen then we were acceptable to him Answeare but now he saith we were enimies I aunsweare because God hateth sinne we also are odious vnto him as we are sinners but as in his secret counsayle he electeth vs into the body of Christ he ceaseth to hate vs. But the restoring into fauour is vnknowne vnto vs vntill we perceiue it by faith Therefore in respect of our selues we are alway enimies vntil the death of Christ come betweene to reconcile God And this difference of a twofold respect is to be noted For otherwise we know not the free mercy of God then if we be perswaded that he spared not his onely begotten sonne because he loued vs at suche time as there was enmitie betweene him and vs Againe wee doe not sufficiently feele the benefite brought vnto vs by the death of Christe except this be vnto vs the beginning of our reconciliation with God that wee being perswaded the satisfaction being perfourmed hee is nowe fauourable to vs who before was iustly angrie with vs. So when acceptation into grace is ascribed to the death of Christe the meaning is that then the guiltinesse is taken away whereunto wee are otherwise subiect 11 And not this onely but also wee reioyce in God through our Lorde Iesus Christe by whome we are nowe reconciled 11 And not this onely Nowe he scaleth vnto the highest steppe of reioycing For whiles wee glory that God is ours what so euer good thinge may eyther bee imagined or wished doeth followe and flowe out of this fountayne For God is not onely the chiefest of all good thinges but he conteineth the summe and euery part in him selfe God in whom all good things are included is made ours by faith and hee is made ours by Christ Hither then doe wee come by the benefite of fayth that nothing bee wanting vnto vs touching felicitie And it is not without cause hee so often repeateth reconciliation First that wee might learne to fixe our eyes vpon the death of Christ as often as wee speake of our saluation Secondly that we may knowe that our confidence is no where t is to be reposed then in the forgiuenesse of sinnes 12 Wherefore as by one man sinne entered into the world and by sinne death and so death went ouer all men in as much as all haue sinned 13 For vnto the lawe sinne was in the world but sinne is not imputed while there is no lawe 14 But death raigned from Adam vnto Moses euen ouer them that sinned not after the like maner of the transgression of Adam which was the figure of him that was to come 12 Wherefore as Now hee beginneth to exaggerate the same doctrine by a comparison taken from contraryes For if Christ came therefore that he might deliuer vs from that calamitie into the which Adam fell and did precipitate all his posteritie with him we can no way better see what we haue in Christ then when it is shewed vnto vs what wee lost in Adam although all thinges are not a like on both partes Therefore Paul addeth a correction which shall be seene in his place and wee also if there be any diuersitie shall note it It is a vice in writing when that
he intended then if he had attributed it vnto Christ himselfe For it might haue beene obiected Christe was able by his owne vertue to rayse vppe himselfe which no man can doe But when hee saith that God raysed vp Christe by his spirite whiche hee hath also giuen vnto you nothing canne bee brought againste it seeing thereby hee doeth put vs in sure hope of the resurrection Iohn 10.18 Seeing Christe rose by his own power how then is his resurrection ascribed to the father And for all this there is nothing derogated from that sentence of Iohn namely I haue power to lay downe my soule and to take it againe Surely Christe did rise of himfelfe and by his owne power but as hee is wont to transfer vnto the father whatsoeuer heauenly vertue is in hym so the Apostle not vnproperly hath translated that vnto the father which was a moste proper worke in Christ Finally by mortall bodies he vnderstandeth whatsoeuer remayneth yet in vs subiect vnto death as his common custome is by this name to call the grosser part of vs. Whence we gather that hee speaketh not of the last resurrection which shall bee in a moment but of that continuall operation of the spirite whereby it mortifieth by little and little the reliques of the fleshe and renueth a celestiall life in vs. 12 Therefore brethren wee are debters not to the fleshe that wee should liue after the flesh 13 For if you liue after the flesh yee shall die but if by the spirite yee mortifie the deedes of the fleshe yee shall liue 14 For who so are lead by the spirite of God they are the sonnes of God 12 Therefore brethren This is the conclusion of the premisses For if wee bee to renounce the fleshe then ought wee haue nothing to doe with it Againe if the spirite oughte to raigne in vs not to be at his becke were absurde The speeche of Paule heere is vnperfect because hee omitteth one member of the antithesis or contrarietie namely that wee are debters vnto the spirite howebeit the sense is cleere enough And this conclusion hath the force of an exhortation as hee is alwaye wont to drawe exhortation out of doctrine So in another place Ephe. 4.30 hee admonisheth vs that wee greeue not the holy spirite of God whereby wee are sealed vnto the day of redemption And againe if wee liue in the spirite let vs also walke in the spirite Gal. 5.25 When wee may be said to liue according to the spirite And that commeth to passe whiles we renounce our carnall concupiscences that we might as it were binde our selues in seruice to the righteousnesse of God For verily in this sorte wee oughte to reason and not as some blasphemous persons who prate saying let vs bee secure because there is no power in vs. But this is as it were to fight againste God if through contempt and negligence wee extinguish his grace offered to vs. 13 For if yee liue after the fleshe Hee addeth a commination or threatning that hee might the rather shake off from them all drowsinesse whereby also they are notably refuted who bragge of iustification by faith without the spirite of Christ Although in their owne conscience they are sufficiently reprooued because there is no trust in God where there is not also a loue of righteousnesse Indeede it is true that wee are iustified by the sole mercy of God in Christ but this also is as true and certaine that all they are iustified are called of the Lorde that they shoulde liue worthie their calling Let the faithfull therefore learne to imbrace Christe not only vnto righteousnesse but also vnto sanctification as hee was giuen vnto vs to both these ends leaste through their lame faith they rent him in peeces But if by the spirite yee mortifie the deeds of the fleshe Hee so tempereth his spéech that hee cause not the godly to dispaire who feele yet in themselues many infirmities For howsoeuer wee bee yet subiect vnto sinne We must not kill our bodies but sudue the lustes of them neuerthe lesse hee promiseth life vnto vs so that we studie to mortifie the fleshe Neither doth hee require exactly the destruction of the fleshe but onelie chargeth vs to studie to came the lustes thereof 14 For who so are lead by the spirite of God This is a confirmation of that went immediately before For heere hee teacheth that they are counted amongest the sonnes of God who are ruled by his spirite because by this marke God acknoweledgeth them to be his Who are the sonnes of God By this meanes the vaine ostentation of hypocrites is doone away who vsurpe the title without the thing and the faithfull are incouraged vnto moste sure confidence of their saluation The summe is they are the sonnes of GOD who so are lead by the spirite of GOD But all the sounes of GOD are heires of eternal life Therefore they ought to bee sure of eternall life who so are lead by the spirit of God And the middle proposition or assumption as they call it is omitted because it was out of all question Neuerthelesse wee are to note that there is a manifold leading of the spirite For there is an vniuersall whereby all the creatures are supported and moued The leading of the spirite is diuers there are also peculier in men and the same are diuers But heere hee vnderstandeth sanctification where with God vouchsafeth none but his electe whiles hee doeth separate them apart to hym selfe for sonns 15 For yee haue not receiued the spirite of bondage to feare againe but yee haue receiued the spirite of adoption whereby wee cry Abba father 16 The same spirite beareth witnesse with our spirit that wee are the sonnes of God 17 If wee be sonnes wee are also heires euen the heires of God and heires annexed with Christe if so bee that wee suffer with him that wee maye also bee glorified with him 18 For I counte the afflictions of this presente time not to bee comparable to the glory to come which shall bee reuealed vnto vs. Nowe hee confirmeth that certaintie of truste or confidence wherein of late hee byd the faithfull stay themselues and that by an argument taken from an especiall effect of the spirit because it is not therefore giuen vs that it might tosse vs with trembling To what ende the spirite of god is giuen vs or presse vs with anxietie but rather that all perturbation beeing quenched setting our mindes in a quiet state it might stirre vs vnto assured and free inuocation of God So then hee doth not onely prosecute the argument hee touched before but also standeth more in that other member which he had annexed namely of the fatherly mercy of God whereby hee forgiueth his the infirmitie of the flesh and those faultes which yet remaine in them Hee teacheth that the confidence hereof is assured vnto vs by the spirite of adoption which woulde not bid vs bee bolde in
patiently expect a deliuerāce For he would that they being lift vp with the expectatiō of the blessednes to come should with stoutnes of mind ouercome al the presēt euils that they might not cōsider what they are but what they shal be Which haue the first beginnings Wheras some interprete first fruits a rare singular excellency that I like not at all therfore to auoyd doubtfulnes I choose rather to translate it first beginnings For I doe not with thē take it to be spoken of the Apostles onely but of al the faithful who in this world are only sprinckled with drops of the spirit or certainly whē they haue profited very wel being indued with a certaine measure thereof are yet farre frō the perfection thereof These therfore are vnto the Apostle the first beginnings or first fruits Wherunto the whole or entire increase is opposed For seeing wee are not yet indued with fulnes it is no maruel though we bee moued with disquietnes And wheras he repeateth we our selues addeth in our selues that he doth for the more vehemēcy that hee might expresse a more feruent desire And he doth not only name desire but a mourning for where there is a feeling of misery there is also mourning Expecting the adoption Adoption here improperly yet not without good reason Adoption put for that inheritance we are adopted vnto the fruition therof is called the fruitiō of that inheritance wherunto we are adopted For Paule meaneth that that eternall decree of God wherby he hath chosen vs for sonnes before the world were made of the which he testifieth vnto vs by the gospel the faith whereof he sealeth by his spirit in our hearts should be voyde vnlesse the promised resurrection were firme sure which is an effect therof For to what end is god our father but that this earthly pilgrimage being ended the celestiall inheritance might receiue vs Hereunto apperteyneth the redemption of our body which is straightwaies added For the price of our redemption was so paid of Christ that death neuertheles might hold vs yet bound in his bonds yea we carrie it within vs wherupon it followeth that the sacrifice of the death of Christ shoulde be in vayne and fruitles except there appeared fruite in the celestial renouation 24 For we are saued by hope Paul confirmeth his exhortatiō by an other argument Namely because our saluation cannot be separated from a kinde of death which he proueth by the nature of hope For seeing hope extendeth it selfe vnto things not yet knowen by experience and representeth vnto our mindes the image of things which are hid and farre off whatsoeuer is either openly seene or holden with the hand cannot be hoped for But Paule taketh it for a thing so graūted that it cannot be denied so long as we liue in this worlde our saluation standeth in hope whereby it followeth that it is laide vp with God farre aboue our sences Whereas he saith that is no hope which is seene it is verily a hard speeche but yet such as obserueth not the sence for he goeth about simply to teach seeing hope is of good things to come not present it can neuer be ioyned with manifest possession So then if any thinke much to mourne they must need● euert the order is set downe of God who doeth not call his vnto the triumph before he haue exercised them in the warfare of sufferance But seeing it hath pleased God to nourish our saluation as it were secretly in his bosome it is expedient for vs to labour in earth to be oppressed to mourne to be afflicted yea to lye as it were halfe dead or like vnto those are dead For they who couet a visible saluation they put them selues by it renouncing hope which is ordeyned of God to be the keeper of it 25. But if we hope for that we see not This is an argument taken from the antecedent to the consequent because patience necessarily followeth hope For if it be grieuous to wante the good thing thou desirest vnles thou support and comfort thy selfe by patience thou must fall by desperation So then hope alway draweth patience with it So it is a most fitte conclusion namely that the doth vanquish away whatsoeuer the Gospel promiseth of the glorie of the resurrection except by bearing the crosse and tribulations patiently we passe through this present life For it life be inuisible then we must haue death before our eyes if glorie be inuisible then ignominy is present Therfore if thou wilt comprise this place in fewe wordes The saluation of the godly is laid vp in hope thou maiest digest the argumentes of Paule into this forme Saluation is layde vp in hope for all the faithfull it is the propertie of hope to intēd vpon good thinges to come and which are absent therefore the saluation of the godly is hidden vp Nowe hope is not otherwise mainteyned then by patience therfore the saluation of the godly is not consummated but by patience Patience is an inseparable companion of faith Finally heere wee haue a notable place that patience is an inseparable companion of faith The reason whereof is at hande because whiles wee comforte our selues with the hope of a better estate the sence or feeling of the present miseries is mollified and mitigated that they are not so hard to be ●oure 26 Likewise the spirite also helpeth our infirmities for we know not what to pray as wee ought but the spirit it selfe maketh request for vs with sighes which cānot be expressed 27 But he that searcheth the heartes knoweth what is the meaning of the spirite for he maketh request for the Saintes according to the will of God 26 Likewise the spirite also Least the faithful shoulde obiect that they are weaker then they are able to beare so many so hard burdens he setteth before them the helpe of the spirit whiche is aboundantly sufficient to ouercome al difficulties There is no cause then why any should complayne that the bearing of the crosse is aboue their strength seeing we are strengthened by vertue from aboue And the greeke word Sunantilambanesthai to helpe together is very significant namely that the spirit receiuing vnto it part of the burdē wherwith our infirmity is oppressed doth not only helpe vs and succour vs but doeth so ease vs as though it vndertooke some part of the burden with vs. And in the word infirmities the plural number hath his augmentation For seeing experience doeth teach vs that vnlesse we be stayed by the power of God innumerable ruines are straight waies at hand Paule therfore admonisheth that notwithstāding we are euery way weake diuers infirmities threatē falling vnto vs yet there is ayde inough in the spirit of God so that we shal neuer be moued or ouerthrown by any heape of euils Howbeit these helpes of the spirite teach vs more certainly that through the ordinaunce of God it is so brought to passe that by
God as the first cause Yea Paule sheweth that the faithfull loue not God before they be called of him as in another place he admonisheth that the Galathians were first knowen of God Gal. 4.9 before they knewe him Verily this of Paule is true that afflictions profite none to saluation but them loue God God preuenteth vs by his grace and we doe not preuent him by our loue yet that of Iohn is as true namely that then at length he is begunne to be loued of vs when he hath preuented vs by his free grace Finally the calling Paule speaketh of here is large For it must not be restrayned vnto the manifestation of election wherof mention shal be made shortly after but simply it is opposed to mans course as though Paule had said the faithful get not vnto themselues godlinesse by their owne motion but rather it is brought by the hande of God so farre as God hath chosen them to himselfe for his owne The woorde purpose doth plainely exclude whatsoeuer may be imagined to be brought of mē as though Paule denied the causes of our election to be sought for els where then in the secret pleasure of God which thing appeareth more clearly out of the 1. to the Ephe. 1. the 2. Tim. 1. Where also the Antithesis or contrarietie of this purpose Ephe. 1. 2. Tim. 1. and humane righteousnes is plainly expressed Yet it is not to be doubted but Paul did therfore here precisely say our saluatiō is founded vpō the election of God that he might thence make a passage vnto that which followeth straightwaies namely the afflictiōs which make vs like vnto Christ are destinated to vs by the same celestiall decree that hee might as it were by a certaine bonde of necessity linke our saluation with the bearing of the crosse 29 Because whom he foreknew Therefore by the order of election he declareth how all afflictions are nothing els then a meane whereby they are conformed vnto Christ ve● 17. which thing to be necessary he testified before Wherefore there is no cause why it should grieue vs or be bitter and heauy vnto vs to bee afflicted except we take in ill part the election of the Lord wherby we are foreordeined vnto life except we be vnwilling to represent in vs the image of the sonne of God whereby wee are prepared vnto the celestial glory And the foreknowledge of God wherof Paul here maketh mentiō What is meant by foreknowledge is not a bare foreknowledge as some vnskilful bodies doe foolishly imagine but adoption wherby he alway discerneth his sonnes from the reprobate In which sence Peter saith the faithfull were elected vnto the sanctification of spirite according to the foreknowledge of God Wherfore they I spake on gather foolishly that God hath elected no others then those he foresaw to bee worthie of his grace For Peter doth not flatter the faithfull as though euery one were elected for his merite but calling them vnto the eternall counsell of God doth put them beside all worthines And also in this place Paule repeateth by another worde that which he touched lately concerning purpose Whence it followeth that this knowledge dependeth vpon the good pleasure of God because God foreknew nothing out of himselfe touching those he would adopt but only signed whom he would elect The worde Proorizein which they trāslate predestinate is referred vnto the circumstance of this place because Paule only meaneth the God hath so decreed that whomsoeuer he hath adopted the same should carrie the image of Christ for he did not simply say that they might be conformed vnto Christ but to the image of Christ that he might shewe there is a liuely and manifest example in Christ which is set before al the sonnes of God to imitate Finally the summe is Christ is the paterne of all the sonnes of God that the free adoption wherein our saluation consisteth cannot be separated from this other decree wherein he hath allotted vs to beare the crosse because none can bee an heire of the kingdome of heauen who first is not made like vnto the only begottē sonne of God That he might be the first begotten or that he should be For both wayes the Greeke infinitiue Einai may be resolued yet I rather allow of the former Furthermore in that Christ is called the first begottten Paules mind is only to note this if Christ obteyne the prerogatiue amongst al the sonnes of God he is worthily giuen vnto vs for an example that we shoulde refuse nothing which he hath voutsafed to take vpon him Therefore that the celestiall father might by all meanes testifie the right dignity which he hath giuen vnto his sonne he wil haue all whō he hath adopted into the inheritance of his kingdome to be conformed or made like to his example For although there be in shew a diuers condition of the godly as there is some varietie betweene the members of a mans body yet is euery one coupled with his head Therfore as the first borne doth beare the name of the family so Christ is placed in an high degree not only that he might excel in honour among the faithful but also the vnder the common note of fraternity he might conteine al vnder him 30 And whom he hath predestinate them also he called Now that he might in a clearer sort proue how true it is that that conformation or conformitie and likelinesse with the humilitie of Christ is healthful to vs he vseth a gradation wherein he teacheth that the society of the crosse is so linked with our vocation iustification glorificatiō that they cānot be separated Howbeit that the readers might better vnderstād the meaning of the Apostle they are to remēber that I admonished before namely What the word predestinate noteth that the word predestinate noteth not election but the purpose or decree of God wherby he hath ordeined for his a crosse to be borne now teaching that the same are called hee signifieth that God doth not hold the close within himselfe whiche he hath determined of them but hath disclosed it that they might quietly and patiently vndertake the condition laid vpon them For here vocation or calling as the inferiour is distinguished from secret election Least any therefore shoulde obiect that no man knoweth what condition God hath appointed for him the Apostle saith God by his calling hath openly testified of his secrete counsell And this testimony consisteth not in the sole externall preaching but it hath the efficacie of the spirit coupled because the speech is of the elect whom God doth not onely speake vnto by voyce but also inwardly draweth Iustification might fitly be extended vnto the continuall tenour of the grace of God euen from the tyme of our calling vnto the houre of death but because Paule in the whole Epistle vseth this worde for the free imputation of righteousnes no necessitie doth compel to decline frō this sence For the
floorish in our heartes that it might alway shine in the mist of afflictions For as the cloudes although they darken the cleare sight of the sonne yet doe not altogether depriue vs of his shine euen so God in aduersities sendeth through cloudes the beames of his grace least anie tentation should ouerwhelme vs with dispaire yea our faith being supported by the promises of God as by winges ought through all impedimentes which are in the way to pearce vp into the heauens Indeede it is true that aduersities are tokens of Gods wrath if they be esteemed by themselues but when pardon and reconciliation is gone before we are to be resolued that although God doeth chasten yet he wil neuer forget his mercy Verily he admonisheth what wee haue deserued but withall he testifieth that he hath a care of our saluation whiles he prouoketh vs vnto repentaunce And he calleth it the loue of Christ Because the father in a manner doeth open his bowelles vnto vs in him Seeing then the loue of God is not to bee sought for out of Christ woorthily doeth Paule call vs hither that in the beames of the grace of Christ our faith might beholde the cleere countenaunce of the Father The summe is that this faith ought not to bee shaken with anie aduersitie for God beeing gracious vnto vs nothing is against vs. Whereas some take the loue of Christ passiuely for that loue wherewith hee is loued of vs as though Paule armed vs vnto inuincible fortitude this imagination is easily refuted by the whole course of Paules speeche and straight way also Paule will remooue all doubt heerein by defining this loue more clearely Tribulation or anguishe or persecution The Pronowne masculine which he put downe of late conteineth a secrete Emphasis or force For when hee might haue saide in the newter gender what shall separate vs hee chose rather to attribute the person vnto the dombe creatures that hee might commit into the fight with vs so many champions as there bee kinds of temptations which assault our fayth How tribulation anguish and persecution differ Furthermore these three differ amongest themselues thus that tribulation comprehendeth euery kinde of griefe and discommoditie but anguish is an inward passion namely whiles extremities driue vs vnto our wits ende Such was the angush of Abraham Lot whiles the one was constrained to offer his wife the other his daughters because they beeing hard bestead and wrapped in on euery side coulde not tell what to doe Persecution properly noteth tyrannicall violence whereby the sonnes of God are vnworthily vexed of the wicked And although Paul denieth the sonnes to be destressed or to bee brought into narrow straites yet hee is not contrary to himself 2. Cor. 4. ● because he doth not simply make them free from paynefull care but he vnderstandeth they are deliuered as also the examples of Abraham and Lot declare 36 As it is written Psal 44 2● This testimonie bringeth great weight vnto the cause For he insinuateth howe wee ought to bee so farre off from falling away through the feare of death that this is almost fatall to the seruauntes of God to haue death as it were alway present before their eyes It is probable or like that the miserable oppression of the people vnder the tyrannie of Antiochus is described in that Psalme because it is precisely expressed that they raged against the worshippers of God so cruelly for no other cause then for the hatred of true godlinesse There is also added a notable protestation that yet they fell not away from the couenaunt of God which thing I suppose was chiefly noted of Paule neither doth it let that the Saintes there complayne of calamitie which then pressed them otherwise then it was wont For seeing they first hauing testified their innocencie then shewe how they were oppressed with so many euils an argument is conueniently taken thence namely that it is no newe thing if the Lorde permit the godly without deserte to bee cruelly intreated of the wicked And it is out of question that the same commeth not to passe but for their profite seeing the scripture teacheth that it is farre from the righteousnes of God Gen. 18.23 to destroy the iust with the vniust but rather it is meete to requite affliction to those doe afflict and deliueraunce to those are afflicted 2. Thes 1.6 7 Secondly they affirme that they suffer for the Lorde and Christ denounceth them blessed that suffer for righteousnes sake Mat. 5.10 And whereas they say they die dayly thereby they signifie that death doth so hang ouer their heades that such a life differeth nothing in a maner from death 37 We ouercome by him That is Wee wrestle forth alway and escape I haue reteyned the word which Paul vseth superuincing thogh it be not so cōmon with the latins For sometimes it happeneth that the faythfull seeme to be ouercome and to lie forlorne the Lorde doth not onely so exercise them but also so humble them Yet this ishue is alway giuen that they obteyne the victorie Neuertheles to the ende they might consider whence this inuincible strength is he repeateth that agayne which he sayde before For he doth not onely teach that God because he loueth vs therefore putteth his hande vnder vs to stay vs but also he confirmeth that same sentence of the loue of Christ And this one woorde doeth sufficiently declare that the Apostle speaketh not of the feruencie of that loue wherewith wee loue God but of the fatherly loue of God and Christ towardes vs the perswasion wherof being throughly printed in our heartes it wil alway drawe vs from the gates of hell into the light of life will be of sufficient strength to support vs. 38 For I am perswaded that neyther death nor life nor angell nor principalitie nor powers nor thinges present nor things to come 39 Nor heigth nor depth nor any other creature shall be able to separate vs from the loue of God which is in Christ Iesus That he might the rather confirme vs in those things whiche are felt nowe hee bursteth also into hyperbolicall or excessiue speeches Whatsoeuer quoth hee is in life or death which may seeme to be able to seperate vs from God shall prevaile nothing Yea the Angels themselues if they go about to ouerthrowe this foundation shall not hurt vs. Neither doth it withstande that angels are ministring spirites Heb. 1.4 ordeyned for the health of the electe For Paul here reasoneth from that which is impossible as he doeth also to the Galathians Where in wee may obserue howe all thinges ought to be vile vnto vs Gal. 1.4 in respect of the glorie of God seeing it is lawfull for the maintenaunce of his trueth not to care yea euen for the angels By the names of principalities and powers angels are also signified being so called because they are the special instruments of Gods power Why angels are called principalities and
he hath remoued all doubt And then the third clause not of workes but of the caller Nowe then let vs apply our mindes more neerely vnto this text If the purpose of God according to election be thereby established that before the brethren were borne had done either good or euill the one is reiected the other is chosen then if any would go about to attribute to their works the cause of differēce the purpose of God shold so be ouerthrowē Now whereas he addeth Our election is grounded onely vpon the goodnes of god not of workes but of the caller Hee signifieth not of the behalfe of workes but of calling only For he goeth about to exclude all consideration of works Wherfore we haue all the stablenes of our election concluded in the onely purpose of God merites are worth nothing here which serue for nothing but vnto death no dignitie is regarded for ther is none but the onely goodnes of God raigneth And therefore the doctrine is false contrary to the word of God namely that God doth chose or reiect as hee foreseeth euery man worthie or vnworthie of his grace 12 The elder shall serue the younger Beholde how the Lord putteth a difference betweene the sonnes of Isaac yet beeing in their mothers wombe When the Lord called Iacob to that birthright was due by the order of nature to Esau therby he gaue a type of another matter For this is the answere of the heauenly oracle wherby it followeth that his pleasure was to shewe vnto the younger speciall fauour which he denied vnto the elder And although this did appertein vnto the law of birth right yet therin as in the type of a greater matter was the will of God declared And that may easily be seen if we doe consider how litle according to the flesh the birthright profited Iacob For therefore hee was both in great danger also for the auoiding of that danger he was forced to flee from his house countrie and was vncourteously intreated in exilement and when he returned trembling doubtful of life he prostrateth himfelfe at the feete of his brother humbly he beseecheth him to forgiue him his offence doth not liue but by his pardon Where is his Lordship ouer his brother of whom he is constrained by prayer to aske life Therefore there was some greater matter then the birthright which the Lord promised by his oracle 13 As it is written Yet he confirmeth by a surer testimonie how greatly that oracle giuen to Rebecca did auaile to the presente cause namely that by the Lordship of Iacob bondage of Esau the spirituall condition of thē both was testified Secondarily that Iacob obteined this grace by the goodnes of God and no merit of his Therefore this testimonie of the Prophet declareth why the Lord gaue vnto Iacob the birthright And it is takē out of Malachie where the Lord vpbraiding the vnthankfulnes of the Iewes first maketh mention of his goodnes towards thē Malac. 1. I haue loued you quoth he and he addeth whence the beginning of loue proceeded was not Esau the brother of Iacob As though hee said what prerogatiue had he why I should preferre him before his brother none at all For there was an equall right sauing that by the law of nature this which was the younger ought to haue been subiect to him that was the elder yet haue I chosen hym refused this being moued thereunto by my mercy only and by no dignitie of workes And now I had adopted you to be my people that I might still prosecute the same loue towardes the seede of Iacob but I haue reiected the Edomites the progenie of Esau Therefore ye are so much the worse whom the remembrance of so great fauour cannot prouoke to the worship of my maiestie And although the earthly blessings are there also mentioned which god bestowed vpon the Israelites yet we must not otherwise take thē then pledges of his beneuolence For where the wrath of God is there foloweth death but where his loue is there followeth life 14 What shall we say then is there any vnrighteousnesse with God God forbid 15 For hee saith to Moses I will haue mercy on whom I will haue mercy and will shew compassion on whome I will shewe compassion 16 So then it is not in him that willeth nor in him that runneth but in God that sheweth mercy 17 For the scripture saith to Pharaoh For this same purpose haue I stirred thee vp that I might shewe my power in thee and that my name might be declared throughout all the earth 18 Therefore he hath mercy on whom he will whome he will hee hardeneth 14 What shall wee say then Fleshe cannot heare that wisedome of God but straightwayes it is troubled with tumultuous questions and in a sort striueth to bring God to a count Therefore wee see the Apostle so often as hee handeleth any high mysterie answereth many inconueniences wherewithall hee knewe the mindes of men otherwise to bee occupied And chiefly when men heare that of predestination whiche the scripture deliuereth they are tangled with many trifles For the predestination of God is truly a Labyrinth whence the wit of man can no way vnwinde it selfe but such is the importunate curiositte of man that the more dangerous the inquisitiō of any thing is the more boldly he rusheth thither so when talke is of predestination because he cānot bridle himself Predestination is not therefore vtterly to be neglected because it is a hard dāgerous question by his rashnes hee doth straightwaies as it were drowne himself in the depth of the sea What remedie then haue the godly should they flee all remembrance of predestinatiō no not so For seeing the holy ghost hath taught nothing but that which is necessary for vs to know assuredly the knowledge thereof shal be profitable if it keep it self within the word of God Let this thē be a sure obseruatiō with vs that we seek to know nothing of it but that the scripture teacheth where the Lord shutteth his holy mouth let vs also stop the way to our mindes of going further But because wee are men into whose mindes those foolish questions doe naturally come let vs heare of Paul how we may meet with thē Is there any vnrighteousnes with god This is a mōstrous furie of mans wit that rather it chargeth god of vnrighteousnes thē it wil reproue itselfe of c●citie neither wold paul fetch things far of wherw t he might trouble the readers but at it were hee taketh away that wicked doubt which straitwayes creepeth in vpon many so soone as they heare that God doth determine of euery one according to his pleasure Furthermore this is that kind of vnrighteousnesse which flesh imagineth that one being neglected God doth respect another That Paul might loose this knot he deuideth the whole cause into two members in the former whereof he intreateth of the elect in the
filthie or rotten cauillation to abuse the sentence of Paule namely that it is not the willer or runner onely because the grace of God helpeth Whom Augustine hath not onely soundly but wittilye refuted for if the will of man be therefore denied to be the cause of election because it is not the onely cause but in part then thus it may be saide againe that it is not of mercy but of the willer and runner For where there is a mutuall woorkyng there shall also bee a mutuall praise But assuredlie this last saying doeth fall with the weight of his owne absurditie The saluation of the elect standeth wholy and onely vpon the mercy of God let vs therefore determine that the saluation of those whome it pleaseth God to saue is so ascribed vnto the mercy of God that nothing is left vnto the industrie of man Neither hath it much more colour that some would haue those recited together in the person of the wicked For howe shall it hang together to wrest those places of Scripture where the righteousnesse of God is defended to vpbraide vnto him tyrannie Againe is it like seeing the refutation was readie and easie that Paule without speeche woulde suffer the Scripture to bee so grossely abused But these starting holes they haue soughte who dyd measure this incomparable mysterie of GOD by theyr owne sense It was a rougher doctrine for their daintie and tender eares then that they coulde thinke it meete for an Apostle But they ought rather to haue bended their own stifneckednesse to the obsequie of the spirite that they might not haue been so much addicted to their own grosse imaginations 17 For the scripture saith c. Nowe hee commeth vnto the seconde member of the reiection of the wicked Wherin because there seemeth to bee somewhat more absurditie so muche the more diligently hee goeth about to make manifeste howe God in reiecting whome hee will is not onely irreprehensible or without blame Exod. 9.16 but also wonderfull in his wisedome and equitie Hee therefore taketh his testimonie out of Exodus Where the Lorde saith it was hee that stirred vp Pharaoh to that ende that whiles he went about stubbornely to resist the power of GOD hee beeing ouercome and subdued might be for an example how inuincible the arme of God is to the bearing wherof much lesse to the breaking wherof no humaine strength is sufficient Beholde the paterne that the Lord would shewe in Pharaoh Two things to be considered in Pharaoh Wherefore two thinges are to bee considered here the predestination of Pharaoh to destruction which is verely referred vnto the iust but yet secrete counsayle of God Secondly the ende thereof which is that the name of God might be celebrated and to that ende doth Paule chiefly staye vpon it For if this hardening be such for the which the name of GOD deserueth to bee declared that hee shoulde bee charged with vnrighteousnesse is abhomination It is an argument taken from the places of contraries But because manie interpreters whiles they go about to qualifie this place also they doe corrupt it first it is to bee noted that for the worde stirred vp In Hebrewe it is I haue ordeyned thee where the Lorde going about to declare that the stubbornnesse of Pharaoh was no let to him that hee might not deliuer his people affirmeth that his furie was not onely foreseene of him and that hee had meanes prepared to brydle it but also that hee had purposely so ordeyned it and verely to that ende that hee might shewe foorth a more euident testimonie of his power Some therefore doe turne it amisse namely that Pharaoh was reserued to a tyme seeing rather hee speaketh of the beginning For seeing many thinges else where occurre vnto men whiche hinder their counsayles and let the course of their actions God saith Pharaoh came from him and that this person was layde vpon him Vnto which sentēce the word raise or stirre vp notably agreeth Finally least any should imagin that Pharaoh was moued from aboue by a certaine vniuersall and confused motion that hee might rushe into that furie the speciall cause or ende is noted as if it were sayde that God did not onely know what Pharoah woulde do but also purposely appointed him to this vse Where by it followeth that it is in vayne nowe to striue with him as though hee were bounde to giue a reason or account seeing hee doeth willingly come forth himselfe and preuenteth this obiection denouncing that the reprobate in whom hee will haue his name celebrated come from the secret fountain of his prouidēce 18 Therefore he hath mercie on whom he will Heere followeth the conclusion of both members which can not any way bee vnderstoode in the person of any other then of the Apostle because straightwayes he addeth a communication with the aduersary when he beginneth to bring foorth such things as may be obiected of the contrary part Therfore it is not to be doubted but Paule speaketh these of his owne sence as we haue admonished a little before namely that God according to his pleasure voutsafeth whom he seeth good of mercy and draweth foorth the seuerity of iudgement against whom he list For this hee goeth about to bring to passe amongest vs that concerning the diuersitie is betweene the elect and reprobate our mind might bee content with this namely that it hath so pleased God to illuminate some vnto saluation and blind othersome vnto death and not seeke for any cause aboue his will For we must stande vpon these particles of whom hee will and whom hee will Beyond that which he doeth not suffer vs to passe But the worde harden To harden how it is taken when in the Scriptures it is attributed to GOD it doth not onely signifie as certaine tempering moderatours woulde haue it a permission or suffering but also the action of Gods wrath For all externall thinges which make to the excecation of the reprobate are the instruments of his wrath And Satan him selfe which inwardly worketh effectually is so farre foorth his minister that he worketh not but at his commaundement Therefore that friuolous euasion or refuge which the schoole men haue of foreknowledge doth fall downe For Paule doth not onely say that the ruine of the wicked is foreseene of the Lorde but is ordeined by his counsaile and will as Salomon also teacheth Prou. 16.4 that the destruction of the wicked was not onely foreknowne but that the wicked ones themselues were purposely created that they might perish 19 Thou wilt say then vnto mee why doeth hee yet complayne who hath resisted his will 20 But O man what art thou that pleadest or shouldest pleade in iudgement with GOD shall the thinge formed say to him that formed it why hast thou made mee so 21 Hath not the potter power of the clay to make of the same lumpe one vessel to honour and another vessell to dishonour 19 Thou wilt say then vnto mee
this office that he might instruct the people in the true rule of godlinesse Which thing if it be true it behoued him to preach repentance and faith but faith is not taught vnlesse the promises of Gods mercy and the same free promises be propounded or set before the people therefore it behoued him to bee a Preacher of the gospell which thing hee did faithfully as appeareth by diuers places And to the ende he might informe the people vnto repentance it was his part to teach what maner of life were acceptable to God that he hath comprised in the precepts of the lawe Now to the ende hee might put into the mindes of the people a loue of righteousnes and againe inserte a hatred of sinne promises and threatnings were to bee added whiche might declare how there are rewardes laid vp for the iust and horrible punishments for the wicked Now also it was the dutie of the people to cōsider by how many wayes they were accursed and howe farre they were from that that they could merite God by their workes so they being in dispaire of their owne righteousnes might flee vnto the hauen of Gods goodnesse and that is vnto Christe himselfe This was the ende of Moses ministerie And now because the promises of the gospell are onely read heere and there in Moses and the same also verie obscurely but the precepts and rewardes appointed for the keepers of the lawe appeare eftsoones worthily is this office properly and peculiarly giuen vnto Moses to teach what true righteousnes of workes is secondarily to shewe what reward remaineth for the obseruation and what punishment for the transgression thereof In this respect Moses himselfe is compared with Christe in Iohn where it is saide The lawe was giuen by Moses grace and truth is fulfilled by Christe And so often as the lawe is taken so stricktly Iohn 1.17 Moses is couertly opposed vnto Christe and therefore wee are then to consider what the lawe conteineth in it selfe beyng separate from the gospell That therfore which is saide heere of the righteousnesse of the lawe must be referred not vnto the whole office of Moses but vnto this part which peculiarly in a maner was committed vnto him Nowe I come vnto the wordes For Moses describeth Paule hath Graphei in latine scribit in english he writeth Apheresis is y● taking away of a letter or sillable from the beginning of a word Leuit. 18.5 but it is the figure Aphaeresis for the word describit id est hee describeth And the place is taken out of Leuiticus where the Lorde promiseth eternall life to them shal keepe his lawe For thou seest that Paule also hath so taken it not of a temporall or transitory life onely which pleaseth a manie And Paule reasoneth thus from that place seeyng no man can obteyne righteousnesse prescribed in the lawe but he that fulfilleth exactly euery part thereof and all men haue alway beene farre from that perfection in vayne doth any seeke for saluation this way Israel therefore did amisse which thought he coulde obtayne the righteousnesse of the lawe from the which we are all excluded See howe he argueth from the promise it selfe that it profiteth vs nothing namely because of the impossible condition What a foolish toy is it then to alleadge legal promises to establishe the righteousnesse of woorkes For a sure curse abydeth for vs and thē so farre is it off that saluation should come thence vnto vs. The more abhominable is the sottishnes of Papistes who thinke it sufficient to proue merits by bare promises It is not in vayne quoth they that God hath promised life to his worshippers but in the meane while they see not that it is therefore promised that the sence of their transgressions might put into al men the feare of death so they being forced by their owne want might learne to flee vnto Christ 6 But the righteousnes whiche is of faith This place is suche as maye greatelye trouble the Reader and that for two causes For both it seemeth to bee improperly wrested of Paule and also the wordes seeme to be chaunged into another sence But concerning the words we shall see what is to be said of them First let vs consider the application For it is a place of Deuteronomie where as in the former place Moses speaketh of the doctrine of the lawe Deut. 30.12 and Paule draweth it vnto the promises of the Gospell This knotte maye bee well vntied thus Moses in that place sheweth the facilitye or easinesse of comminge vnto life because the wil of God was not nowe hidde nor sette a farre off from the Iewes but was layd before their eyes If he spake of the law onely it had beene a friuolous argument seeing the law of God being put before our eyes is nothing more easie to be done then if it were set a farre off Therefore he noteth not the lawe onely but in generall all the doctrine of God which comprehendeth vnder it the Gospell For the worde of the law by it selfe is neuer in our heart no not the least sillable thereof vntil it be put in by the faith of the Gospel Secondly yea euen after regeneration the worde of the lawe shall not properly bee saide to be in our heart because it requireth perfection from the which the faithfull themselues are farre off But the worde of the Gospel hath his seate in the heart although it filleth not the heart for it offereth pardon for the imperfection and want And Moses altogether in that Chapter as also in the fourth studieth to commende vnto the people the singuler loue of God because he had receiued them into his tuition and gouernment whiche commendation could not be taken from the bare lawe Neither letteth it that Moses preacheth there of reforming the life vnto the rule of the lawe for the spirit of regeneration is coupled with the righteousnesse of faith Therefore he collecteth the one out of the other because the obseruation of the lawe is of the faith of Christ Neither is it to be doubted but this sentence dependeth vpō that principle the Lord shal circumcise thine heart which he had put downe a little before in the same Chapter Wherefore they are easily refuted who say that Moses intreateth there of good workes Indeede I confesse that to be true but I deny it to be absurd that the obseruation of the law should be drawen from this fountaine that is ●●om the righteousnes of faith Nowe the opening of the words is to be sought for Say not in thy heart who shal ascende c. Moses nameth heauen the Sea as places furthest off hard for a man to come vnto But Paule as though there were some spirituall mystery hidden vnder these wordes draweth them vnto the death and resurrection of Christ If any alleadge that this interpretation is too muche wrested and too subtile let him know the minde of the Apostle was not curiously or exactly to
handle the place of Moses but onely to apply it vnto the treatise of the present cause He doeth not therefore recite sillable by sillable what is in Moses but he vseth a polishing whereby hee applyeth the testimonie of Moses more neerely to his purpose Hee spake of p●aces are not to bee come vnto Paule hath expressed those places whiche are most of all hidden from our eyes and yet are to bee ●ee●e of our faith Wherefore if you take these to be spoken by the way of amplification or polishing thou canst not say that Paule hath violently and vnaptly wrested the woodes of Moses but rather thou wilt confesse that without any damage to the sense hee hath notably alluded vnto the wordes heauen and Sea Now let vs expound the wordes of Paule simply Because the assurance of our saluation dependeth vpon two principles namely whiles wee vnderstande that life is purchased for vs and death conquered to vs. With both which he teacheth our faith is supported by the word of the Gospell For Christe by dying hath swallowed vp death by rysing againe he hath gotten life in his power Nowe in the gospell the benefite of Christes death and resurrection is communicated vnto vs then there is no cause that wee shoulde seeke further for any thing Therefore that it myght appeare the righteousnesse of faith is aboundantly sufficient vnto saluation hee teacheth that those two members which onely are necessary vnto saluation are conteined in it Who then shall ascend into heauen Is as much as if he said who knoweth whether that inheritance of eternall and celestiall life abideth for vs Who shall descend into the deepe As if thou said who knoweth whether eternall death of the soule also follow the death of the bodie Both which doubtes hee teacheth to bee taken away by the righteousnesse of faith For the one should bring Christ downe from heauen Christ in his humane nature hath taken possesion of the heauens for the faithfull the other frō death should bring him backe againe For the ascention of Christe into heauen ought so to establish our faith of eternall life that hee in a maner draweth Christe himselfe out of the possession of the heauens that doubteth whether the inheritance of heauen bee prepared for the faithfull in whose name and cause hee is entred in thyther Likewise seeing hee tooke vpon hym the great horrours of Hell that hee myghte deliuer vs thence to call it into question whether the faythfull be still subiect to this miserie is to make his death voide and in a maner to denie it 8 But what saith it That negatiue speech which the Apostle hath hitherto vsed did serue to take away the impediments of faith it remaineth therefore that he declare the maner of obteining righteousnesse vnto the which ende this affirmation is added And whereas there is an interrogation interposed when they might all haue beene spoken together in on course of speeche that is done to procure attention And also his meaning is to shewe what a great difference there is betweene the righteousnes of the law and the Gospel seeing that sheweth it selfe a farre off it doth driue away all men from comming vnto it but this offering it selfe at hand doth familiarly inuite vs vnto the fruition of it The word is neere thee First of all this is to bee noted that least the mindes of men beeing carried away by vaine circumstances shoulde erre from saluation the boundes of the worde are prescribed vnto them within the whiche they ought to keepe themselues For it is as if hee shoulde commaund them to bee contente with the worde onely and admonish them that in this glasse the secretes of heauen are to bee seene which would both dasill theyr eyes with their brightnes astonishe their eares and also make the mynd it self amased Therefore the godly receiue an excellent consolation out of this place touchyng the certaynetie of the worde namely that they may as safely rest therein as in the most present beholdyng of things or as in any thyng is present and in hande Secondly it is to bee noted that suche a worde is propounded by Moses wherein wee haue firme and sure trust of saluation This is the worde of faith Iustly doth Paule take that for the doctrine of the lawe doth not pacyfie and quiet the conscience neyther doeth it minister vnto the conscience those thinges wherewith it ought to bee content Yet in the meane whyle hee excludeth not the other partes of the worde no not the precepts of the lawe but his mynde is to put downe remission of sinnes for righteousnesse and that without suche exact obedyence as the lawe requireth Therefore the worde of the gospell wherein wee are not commaunded to merite righteousnesse by workes but to imbrace it by faith being freely offered sufficeth to pacifie mens consciences and establish their saluation And the worde of faith by the figure Metonymia is put for the worde of promise that is for the gospel because it hath a relation with faith For the contrarietie whereby the law is discerned from the gospell muste bee vnderstood And out of this note of distinction we gather as the lawe requireth workes so the gospell requireth nothing els but that men bring faith to receiue the grace of God This parcell whiche wee preache is therefore added least any shoulde suspect Paule to dissent from Moses For hee testifieth that in the ministerie of the Gospell hee agreeth with Moses seeing he also did not place our felicitie any other where then in the free promise of Gods grace 9 So that if thou confesse This also is rather an allusion then a proper and naturall interpretation For it is like that Moses by the figure Synecdoche did vse the worde mouth Synecdoche is when by one thing another is vnderstood for face or countenance But it was not vnseemely for the Apostle to allude vnto the worde mouth to this sense when the Lorde publisheth his worde before our face assuredly hee calleth vs vnto the confession thereof For wheresoeuer the woorde of the Lorde is there it ought to fructifie and the fruite is the confession of the mouth Whereas hee putteth confession before faith it is the figure Anastrophe very vsuall in the Scriptures For the order had beene better Anastrophe is an inuersion of wordes when that is first should be last c. if faith of the hearte being put in the first place confessiō of the mouth which proceedeth thence had beene added And he doth confesse the Lorde Iesus aright who adorneth him with his vertue acknowledging him to bee such one as hee is giuen of the father and described in the Gospell And whereas resurrection onely is named wee must not so take it as though his death were in no place but because Christ by rysing again made vp our saluation For albeit our redemption and satisfaction was accomplished by his death by the which we are reconciled vnto God yet the victorie
it commeth from God for as much as there is nothing to be desired or prayse worthy in this worlde which doth not proceede and come from his hande Heere also we learne howe greatly the preaching of the Gospell is to be desired and howe highly it is to bee esteemed of all good men which is commended in suche sorte by the mouth of God Neyther is it to bee doubted but that God speaketh gloriously of the incomparable price of this treasure that all mens mindes may be awaked and stirred vp to seeke for the same greedily By this woorde feete vnderstande in this place their comming by the figure metonymia 16 But all haue not obeyed the Gospell This perteyneth nothing to that argument which Paul prosecuteth and followeth in this gradation And therefore hee doeth not repeate it in the conclusion which foloweth strayghtwayes but yet it was very necessarie expedient for Paul to ioyne this also in steed of a preoccupation least that where as it was sayde that the worde doeth alway ordinarily goe before fayth euen as the seede is before the corne any man shoulde reason or drawe an argument from the contrary part and inferre that fayth must needs follow wheresoeuer the woorde is For so might Israel glory who neuer wanted the worde Though ordinarily the woorde doeth alway go before fayth yet fayth doth not alway follow where the worde is Iere. 53.1 Iohn 12.38 Therefore it was meete and requisit for him to declare this in his way or passage that many are called who are not chosen And heriteth a place out of Esai and Iohn where the Prophete beeing about to publishe that excellent oracle of the death and kingdome of Christ Doth first with admiration and wonder speake of the pawcitie and fewnesse of beleeuers which in spirite appeared such to him as forced him to cry out Lorde who hath beleeued our reporte that is to say the woordes which wee haue preached For where as the Hebrewe woorde shemugnah signifieth speech passiuely the Grecians haue expounded it acoen and the Latines sermonem albeit improperly yet not in any obscure or doubtfull sence Nowe wee see why this exception was added by the way to witte that no man shoulde thinke fayth doeth necessaryly followe wheresoeuer the preathing of the woorde doeth flourishe Notwithstanding hee noteth the reason afterwarde when hee addeth To whome is the arme of the Lorde reuealed For hee signifieth that there appeareth no profite or fruite of the woorde but whilest God doth shine vpon vs by the bryghtnesse of his spirite and so is the inwarde calling distinguished from the outwarde voyce of man Which inwarde calling is onely effectuall and proper to the elect Whereby it is euident howe foolyshly some men reason that all are indifferently elected and chosen because the doctrine of saluation is vniuersall and God doeth indifferently inuite all men vnto him For the generalitie of the promise alone of it selfe and by it selfe doth not make saluation common and generall to all But rather this peculiar reuelation whereof the prophete maketh mention restrayneth and tyeth it onely to the elect 17 Therefore fayth commeth by hearing c. By the conclusion wee see what Paule did respect in framing that his gradatiō Namely to shew that wheresoeuer faith is there God hath alreadie giuen a manifest and euident signe of his elecion Secondly that he hath powred out his blessinge by the ministration of the Gospel that he might lighten the mindes of men by fayth and by the same fayth also might prepare them to call vpon his name wherein saluation is promised to all And that by this meanes it was testified howe the Gentiles were admitted by him into the felowship of the eternal inheritāce And this a worthie and excellent place concerning the vertue and efficatie of preaching because he doeth testifie that fayth proceedeth and springeth from it Hee confessed truely of late that of it selfe it profiteth nothing but where it pleaseth the Lorde to worke this is the instrument of his power And truely both the voyce of man is vnable by his owne vertue to pearce into the soule and also 〈◊〉 who is mortall woulde bee too proude if hee were said to haue power to regenerate vs and also the light of fayth is a more high and excellent thing then that it can be giuen and bestowed by man And yet all this doth not hinder but God may worke effectually by the voyce of man so that hee may beget in vs fayth by his ministerie Furthermore wee must note that fayth is not grounded vpon any other doctrine then vpon the worde of God for Paule doth not say that fayth doeth proceede from euery doctrine Fayth is grounded vpon the word of God onely but hee restrayneth it by expresse wordes to the worde of God which restraynte were absurde if faith might leane or stay itselfe vpon the decrees of men Therefore all the inuention of man muste cease when as the certayntie of fayth is handled by this meanes also doth that papistical dreame and fancie of intricate and intangled fayth fall flatte to the grounde whiche seuereth and destracteth fayth from the word And much more that execrable and cursed blasphemie which woulde haue the authoritie of the woorde to hang wauering and doubtfull till such time as the authoritie of the Church doth stay and establish it 18 But I demaunde haue they not hearde yea truly their sounde is gone into all the earth and their wordes into the endes of the worlde 19 But I demaunde hath not Israel knowen first Moses sayth I will prouoke you to enuie by a nation that is not my nation and I will anger you by a foolishe nation 20 And Esay is bolde and sayth I was founde of them who sought mee not I was made knowen to them who did not aske after mee 21 But of Israel he saith I haue stretched out my handes dayly to a proude and rebellious people 18 But I say haue they not heard c. Seeing that by preaching the mindes of men are indewed with the knowledge of God whiche of it selfe breedeth and bringeth forth the inuocation and calling vpon the same God It remayned to bee examined whether the trueth of God were euer declared and preached to the Gentiles or no. For in that Paule turned to the Gentiles vpon the sudden there was no small offence taken at this his sudden change and alteration Therefore hee asketh this question whether God had neuer directed and sent his voice before to the Gentiles and performed the duetie of a teacher towarde the whole world Furthermore to the intent hee might shewe howe the schoole is generally free and open to all into the whiche God doeth gather to him schollers from euery place hee citeth the testimonie of the prophete which in appearaunce doeth seeme to make little to the matter for the Prophete speaketh not there of the Apostles but of the dumbe woorkes of God In whiche hee sayth the glory of God
dispaired of neyther were there any hope of repentaunce lefte And heere hee woorthily denyeth the saluation of the Iewes to be past hope or that they are so cast off of the Lord that there is no restitution to be looked for or that the couenant of grace is vtterly extinguished which God once made with them seeing there remained alway in that nation a blessed seede That his meaning is thus to bee vnderstoode it appeareth by this namely that before he ioyned most sure ruine vnto excecation now maketh hope of rising againe which two cold not agree in one Then they are fallen fallen to destruction who were obstinately offended at Christ yet the nation is not so fallen that it should follow of necessitie who so is a Iewe he is lost or fallen away from God But their fal is saluatiō to the Gentiles The Apostle in this place noteth two thinges namely that the fall of the Iewes turned to the saluation of the Gentiles but to this end that they might be kindled with a certaine ielousie so bethinke thēselues of repentance Surely he respected the testimonie of Moses which he had already cited where the Lorde threatneth Israel that as he was prouoked of them through false Gods vnto emulation so also by the lawe of retaliation he would prouoke them with a foolish people The word that is vsed there noteth the affection of emulation and ielousie namely that we burne when we see another preferred before vs. Then if the counsaile of the Lord be that Israel should be prouoked vnto emulation Israel is not therefore fallen that hee should be throwen into eternall destruction but that the blessing of God The Iewes are not therefore reiected that they should vtterly perishe which was contemned of them might come vnto the gentiles to the end that they also at length might bee stirred to seeke the Lorde from whom they are fallen But there is no cause why the readers shoulde greatly weary themselues in applying the testimonie for Paule doth not vrge the proper sēce of the worde but only alludeth vnto the vulgare and knowen manner For as emulation prouoketh the wife being reiected from her husband for her fault that she should studie to reconcile herselfe so now he saith it may come to passe that when the Iewes shall see the Gentiles placed in their roome they beeing touched with the sorow of their diuorcement should seeke for reconciliation 12 Wherfore if the fall of them Because he had taught that after the Iewes were diuorced the gētiles entred in their steed least he should make the saluation of the Iewes odious vnto the gētiles as though the saluatiō of the gētiles stood vpō the destructiō of the Iewes he preuēteth the false opinion putteth downe the cōtrary sētence namely that nothing serueth more to promote the saluation of the gētiles then if the grace of God did floorish and aboūd greatly with the Iewes Which thing that he might proue he vseth an argument frō the lesse If their fall could raise vp the Gentiles and their diminishing inritch them how muche more shall their fulnes For that was done against nature but this shoulde come to passe by the order of nature Neither doth it hinder this reason that the word of God came vnto the Gentiles If the Iewes receiued the gospel it should be so farre from hindering that it should greatly further the faith of the Gentiles after the Iewes by refusing of it had as it were vomited it For if they had receiued it their faith had brought muche more fruite then their infidelitie brought by this occasion For so both the trueth of God had beene confirmed because it had appeared to be fulfilled in them and they also by doctrine had brought many whom by their stubbornesse they rather turned away And he had spoken more properly if he had opposed rising of the gētiles against the fal of the Iewes Which I therfore note least any should seeke here for the elegancie of speech or be offended at the rudenes of speech For these are spoken not to frame the tongue but the heart 13 For I say to you Gentiles He proueth by a notable reason that the Gentiles shal loose nothing if the Iewes returned againe into fauour with God For he sheweth that the saluation of them both is so ioyned together that by one and the same worke it may be promoted For thus he speaketh vnto the Gentiles notwithstanding I am an Apostle peculiarly appointed for you and therefore ought in a speciall sort procure your saluation committed vnto me and as it were all other thinges layde apart to seeke that onely yet I shal doe my duetie faithfully if I can winne any vnto Christ of mine owne nation And that shall be to the glorie of my mynisterie and so for your wealth For whatsoeuer did serue to set foorth the mynisterie of Paule it was an ornament to the Gentiles whose saluation was the end thereof And here also he vseth the verbe Parazelosai to prouoke That the Gentiles might seeke for the euent of Moses prophesie such as he describeth Deut. 32.22 when they should vnderstand it to be profitable for them 14 Might saue How the minister is said to saue Here note how the minister of the worde is said in his manner to saue those whom he hath brought vnto the obedience of faith For the dispensation of our saluation must be so moderated that we know al the vertue and efficacie therof to be in God and giue vnto him due praise yet that we knowe also preaching is an instrument to bring to passe the saluation of the faithful which although it can profite nothing without the spirit of God yet the same spirite woorking inwardly it doeth mightily shew foorth his vertue 15 For if the reiection Some doe lewdely corrupt this place which many count to be obscure in my iudgemēt it ought to be so vnderstood that it is another argument taken from the comparing of the lesse and greater to this sence if the casting off of the Iewes could doe so much that it should giue cause to the reconciling of the gentiles of how much more force shall their receiuing be Ought it not euen to raise from the dead For Paul persisteth stil in this that the gentiles haue no cause of enuie as though the Iewes being receiued into fauour their estate should be the worse He reasoneth therfore that seeing God hath woonderfully brought life out of death and darknes out of light it is much more to be looked for that the raysing againe of a people as it were cleane dead should quicken the gentiles Neither letteth that which some alleadge namely that reconciliation differeth not from resurrection as we do here vnderstand resurrection namely whereby we are translated from the kingdome of death into the kingdome of life For although the thing be one yet there is lesse and more weight in the wordes which sufficeth to the force of