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A06863 A booke of notes and common places, with their expositions, collected and gathered out of the workes of diuers singular writers, and brought alphabetically into order. A worke both profitable and also necessarie, to those that desire the true vnderstanding & meaning of holy Scripture By Iohn Marbeck Merbecke, John, ca. 1510-ca. 1585. 1581 (1581) STC 17299; ESTC S112020 964,085 1,258

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represented by the Paschall Lambe should abstaine from leauened bread Yea how dare your Priests eate anye leauened bread at anye time sith that they doe eate and drinke the bodie and bloud of Christ almost euery day How the Lords death is shewed As often as ye shall eate this bread drinke of this Cup ye shall shew the Lords death c. ¶ The Lords death is not shewed except both parts of the Sacrament be ministred because in his death the bloud was diuided from the bodie it is necessary that the same diuision be represented in the supper otherwise the supper is not a shewing of the Lords death Latimer SHOE What Gods shooe is OUer Edom will I stretch out my shooe ¶ Edom is the earth The Apostles féete be his shooes for it is writtē How bewtifull are the feete of them which bring glad tidings of peace He stretched out his shooe vppon the earth when he sent them to preach to all creatures for their sound went into all lands their words to the ende of the world SHORT LIFE How short life is not a generall rule of Gods indignation IT is a certaine token but no sure token of Gods indignation when a man is snatched away with vnripe death in his flourishing age Then what shall we saye to the sentence written in the Booke of Sapience 4. chapter The iust man is snatched out of this world that the mallice of men and wickednesse of the worlde shoulde not tourne his minde and least lyeng should deceiue his soule And againe The righteous man what death soeuer he be preuented withall his soule shall go to rest The Innocents that Herod did murther for Christs cause Iohn Baptist whom he did behead are the blessed Martirs of Christ. This must néedes be graunted y● sometime God taketh out of this world the righteous onely because the world is not worthy to haue them among them sometime least the mallice lewd example of men shoulde tourne their hearts to vngodlinesse But now this taking away of righteous men out the world is not a rule nor an order generall that God vseth with men but it is onely Per accidens because that troublesome times are at hand as of famine warres and such others and in such perticular cases It is true that Christ saide Beati sterilis c. Happye are the barren and the wombes that neuer bare c. And yet the rule generall of all women is this that fruite of their wombe is a blessing the contrary a woman to be barren is a displeasure a plague more grieuous to them then pouertie or hunger Ric. Turnar SICERA What kinde of drinke it was THis Sicera as Hierom writeth to Nepotianus was a kinde of drinke much like vnto wine which was made either of Wheate or of Apples or of Dates or els of other fruits Pet. Mar. vpon Iudic. fol. 202. SICLE What a Sicle is A Sicle as Iosephus saith cōteined 4. drams of Athens And a dran● of Athens as Budens gathereth in his booke de ass conteined 3. shillings of Towers A shilling of Towers is y● half part of a Ba●se Wherefore a dram was as much in value as a shilling of Argentine that is thrée halfe Batses that is foure shillings But there were two manner of Sicles one was vsuall and prophane and the other was of the Sanctuary The holy sickle was double so much as the prophane Wherefore Ezechiel in his 45. chapter verse 12. saith that a prophane sickle containeth 20. halfe pence but the sicle of the Sanctuary 40. Pet. Mar. vpon Iudic. fol. 238. ¶ A Sicle was a péece of money in value worth 4. grotes equiualent with that which is called Stater whereof the halfe part of this sicle is two grotes that is to saye the 5. part of a French Crowne as they went in Fraunce as very exactly declareth the learned Master William Budns in his booke De Assi Marl. fol. 390. ¶ A Sicle after the Hebrues is an Ounce but after the Gréekes and Latines it is but th● fourth part of an Ounce and is contained 12. Geras as in Exo. 30. 13. which is ten pence sterling or thereabout T. M. Take 5. Sicles of euery head ¶ Sicles were of two sorts the one common the other belonging to the Sanctuary and that of the Sanctuary was double the waight of the common The common Sicle weighed two grotes and the Sanctuary Sicle 4. The Scripture in this place and in the 30. of Exo. us Ezechiel fortie and fiue saith that the Sanctuary Sicle doth weigh 20. Geras which the Grecians doe call Obolus and we in English an halfe peny when 8. grotes of our money was an ounce and the Hebrues do think that Obolus doth weigh the waight of 16. barly Cornes The Bible note SICHEM What Dauid meaneth by the deuiding of Sichem SIchem was the most richest and the most strongest Citie in all the Tribe of Ephraim wherof Isboseth was king ouer all Israel beside The Tribe of Iuda onely except which stucke vnto Dauid Now where the Prophet doth prophecie make his bost in God saieng Dominus loquutus est è sanctuario suo laetabor diuidam Sichem The Lord hath spoken it out of his holy place I will reioice and diuide Sichem is no more to say but that Dauid should conquere Sichem and be king therof and diuide it and lot it as Iosua did as all conquerours do when they conquer any countrey or lande And as Dauid shoulde conquere Sichem so was it saide that hée shoulde meate out y● valley of Sucoth for Dauid reioysing afore hand of Gods goodnesse towards him saith Ego vallem s●coth demetiar It is not Isboseth that shall long continue king of sucoth but it is I whome the Lord hath appointed to be king of sucoth and as I haue now sayd of sichem and sucoth so will I saye of Galaad and Manasses Meus est Galaad meus est Manasses Galaad is mine and Manasses is mine And to know what Sucoth Galaad and Manasses were ye shall vnderstande that sucoth was a vale nigh vnto the citie of sichem in the land of Canaan In the which vale Iacob pitched his tents after he had met his brother Esau and was departed from him And of his pitching his tents there the va●le had this name sucoth giuen him for Sucoth by interpretation and turning of the word into Latine is as much to say as Tabernacula Galaad was the name of a little hillocke as we read in Gen. 31. When Iacob fled away sodeinly and priuely from Laban his father in lawe with his wiues Lea and Rachel Then at the ende of seauen daies iourney Laban ouertooke Iacob in mount Galaad where he reproued him not onely of running away deceitfully but also of theft which when he coulde not proue Laban cooled himselfe and so did shake hands with Iacob And in witnes of friendship of vnfeined reconciliation
that we haue by the same with all giftes and graces of the same The second is to yéelde thankes vnto him to giue testimonie of our faith towards him and of our charitie which we haue towards our bretheren and of the vnion with the Church The third to represent to vs by the bread and wine which are ther distributed the whole and perfect spiritual nouritour which we haue by the meanes of the body flesh and bloud of Iesus Christ to the end we may be spiritually nourished into eternall life according to our benefit which we haue already receiued by our regeneration whereof the Baptime is to vs as a Sacrament in the which we haue in the Supper as it were a gage of our resurrection the which we doe beléeue and waite for There euen as the bread and wine be giuen vnto vs visibly and bodely euen so are the body and bloud of Iesus giuen vnto vs indéede but inuisible and spiritually by the meanes of faith and by the vertue of the holy ghost for he is the meane by which we haue true communion and true vnion with Iesus Christ and all his Church the which is his body whereof all true Christians be members Pet. Viret Why the Supper of the Lord was called a Sacrifice The Supper of the Lord was not called a sacrifice because Christ shuld be offered in it but because he offereth presenteth himselfe vnto vs and that we doe through faith receiue him and giue him thankes for the great benefite that we haue receiued by the merites of his death and passion bloud shedding confessing and professing that we holde none other for our Sauiour but him and that we doe accept knowledge none other sacrifice but his onely for this cause was the Lordes Supper called Eucharistia which word doth signifie thankes giuing Thus doth S. Austen and all other Doctors of the Church expound it Veron in his b. of Purg. The Doctors mindes vpon the Supper of the Lord. If ye should sée the Sonne of man ascend vp where he was before ¶ What is this By that he resolueth those whom hée hath knowen of that he manifested the thing whereby they haue offended for they did thinke that he would giue vnto them his body but he saith that he will ascende vp into Heauen all whole saieng When ye shall sée the Sonne of man ascende where he was before at y● least you shall sée then that hée doth not giue his body in the same manner as ye thinke iudge at the least you shall then vnderstand that his grace is not consumed by morsells c. Aug. vpon S. Iohn in the 27. treatise vpon the 6. Chapter If faith be in vs Christ is in vs. For what other thing saith the Apostle Christ dwelling in your hearts by faith but that through the faith which thou hast of Christ Christ is in thy heart August in his 49. treatise vppon Saint Iohn 11. Chapter After he had ended the solemnitie of the auncient Passeouer the which he made in remembrance of the auncient deliuerance out of Aegypt he passeth forth to the new solemnitie y● which the church desireth to celebrate in remembrance of hir redemption to the end that putting the Sacrament of his flesh and of his bloud vnder the lykenesse of bread and wine in stéede of flesh and of the bloud he sheweth himself to be him vnto whom the Lord hath sworne and will not repent Thou art a Priest for euer c. It followeth after because the bread doeth fortifie the flesh and that the wine causeth the bloud in the flesh the bread is referred mystically to the body of Christ and the wine to his bloud Bede vpon the 22. Chapter of Saint Luke Let vs not staye héere belowe on the bread and wine which are set on the Lords Table but let vs lift vp our spirits on high through faith Let vs consider that the Lambe of God which taketh away the sinnes of the world is in that holy Table which is not offered in sacrifice by the Priestes after the manner of beasts And in taking his precious body and his bloud let vs beleeue that they are the signes and tokens of our resurrection And for the same cause we eate not much but a lyttle to the end we may know y● the same is not ordeined for to fill our bellyes withall but for to serue to sanctitie and holinesse c. ¶ Looke Bread Body Bloud Figure Signe Sacrament Sacrifice How the Lords death is Shewed in the supper As often as ye shall eate this bread and drinke of this Cup ye shall shew the Lords death c. ¶ The Lords death is not shewed except both parts of the Sacrament be ministred and because in his death the bloud was diuided from the body it is necessary that the same diuision be represented in the Supper otherwise the Supper is not a shewing of the Lords death Latimer The meaning of this place of Iohn And when the Supper was done There be some which thinke that it ought to be thus reade And Supper béeing prepared for it may be doubted whether these things were done after the supper or in supper time It is very likely that supper was not fully ended that is to say that the Table was not yet taken away séeing it followeth by and by that the Lord tooke a morsell of bread and offered the same to Iudas Marl. vppon Iohn fol. 456. SVPREMACIE Proues against the supremacie IN the Councel of Carthage it is said thus The Bishop of Rome himselfe may not be called vniuersall Bishop Dist. 99. Prima sedes S. Gregory saith thus Nullus decessorum meorum● c. None of my predecessors Bishope of Rome euer consented to vse this vngodly name no Bishop of Rome euer tooke vpon him this name of singularitie we the Bishops of Rome will not receiue this honor being offered vnto vs. Greg. li. 4. Epist. 32. and. 36. Where pride and hypocrisie beareth sway there humilitie can haue no place Hesychius sen. li. 4. dist 7. Chrisostome saith Quicunque desiderauerit c. Whosoeuer desi●eth Primatum in earth in heauen he shall finde confusion Neither shall he be counted among the seruants of Christ that will once intreate of Primacie Iewel fol. 118. 119. SVRE How we are sure of our saluation ¶ Looke Saluation SVRPLESSE From whence the wearing of Surplesses came NIcholaus Leonicenus saith Isidis Sacerdotes in Aegypto c. The Priests of the Goodesse Isis in Aegypt vsed to weare linnen Surplesses and euermore had their heads shauen which thing séemeth to haue bene deriued from them vnto our time from hand to hand For they that among vs minister Gods seruice and serue the holy Altars are forbidden to suffer the haire of their heads or their beards to grow and in their diuine seruice vse lynnen garments Nicholaus Leonicenus in varia historia li. 2. ca. 21.
is spoken by a figure taking the cup for that which is conteined in the cup. And againe the Hebrues vnderstande by this word cup sometime the manner of punishment which is rendered to sinne as Psal. 11. 6. or the ioie that is giuen to the faithfull As. Psal. 23. 5. and sometime a lotte or condition As Psal. 16. 5. What the Cup of the new Testament signifieth This Cup is the new Testament in my bloud This Cup or Chalice is the new Testament that is this Cup or Chalice which I deliuer vnto you doth signifie the new Testament ¶ Héere it is plaine the Cup is not the new Testament but doth signifie the new Testament Therefore the bread is not the bodie but doth signifie the bodie I. Frith ¶ The signe of the new Testament which is established and ratified by Christs bloud Geneua ¶ As the Cup is the new Testament so the bread is the bodie of Christ. By the new Testament he vnderstandeth the forgiuenesse of sinnes Heb. 8. 12. But the Cup doth onelie represent vnto vs the new Testament that is to saie the forgiuenesse of our sinnes that we haue in the bloud of Christ. Sir I. Cheeke ¶ Héere is a double Metonymia For first the vessell is taken for that which is conteined in the vessell as the Cup for the wine which is within the Cup. Then the wine is called the Couenant or Testament whereas in déede it is but the signe of the Testament or rather of the bloud of Christ whereby the Testament was made neither is it a vaine signe though it be not all one with the thing it representeth Beza What is meant by the Cup of saluation I will take the Cup of saluation and call vpon the name of the Lord. ¶ In the lawe they vsed to make a banket when they gaue solempne thanks vnto God and to take the Cup and to drinke in signe of thanks-giuing Geneua ¶ I will take the Cup c. In token of my deliueraunce The Bible note ¶ He alludeth to the manner that was vsed vnder the law For when they gaue solempne thanks vnto God there was also a feast made whereat was made an holie drinking in token of gladnesse and because this dooing was as a Sacrament of their deliuerance out of Aegypt hée tearmed it the Cup of saluation Caluine Of the cup of blessing Is not the Cup of blessing which we blesse partaking of the bloud of Christ c. ¶ That is to saie they that doe eate of the bread and drinke of the Cup of the Lord with thanksgiuing are the Communion of the bodie and bloud of Christ that is to saie the congregation of them that are washed in the bloud of Chrst beeing made his bodie and members Sir I. Cheeke The Cup of blessing ¶ Of thankesgiuing wherevpon that holye banket was called Eucharist that is a thankesgiuing Is it not the Communion c. A most effectuall pleadge and note of our knitting together with Christ and ingraffing to him Beza Is not the Communion c. ¶ The effectuall badge of our coniunction and incorporation with Christ. Geneua How the Cup is taken for the drinke in the Cup. Drinke of it all for it is my bloud of the new Testament ¶ For it is that is to saie the drinke that is in the Cup or if ye list the Cup is my bloud of the new Testament taking the Cup for drinke by a manner of speaking vsed in all tongues as when we saie I haue dronke a Cup of good wine wée take there the Cup for the wine my bloud of the new Testament that is to saie my bloud for whose shedding sake this new Testament and couenaunt is made vnto you for the forgiuenesse of sinnes Tindale How by the Cup is signified Christs passion Ye shall drinke of my Cup. ¶ By the Cup and Baptime be vnderstood his bitter passion and death as he himselfe testifieth a little after saieng Let this Cup passe from me Sir I. Cheeke How the Cup is taken for the crosse of affliction Are ye able to drinke of the Cup c. ¶ He setteth the crosse before their eyes to drawe them from ambition calling it a Cup to signifie the measure of the afflictions which God hath ordeined for euerie man The which thing also he calleth baptime Geneua Of the Popes golden Cup. Hauing a Cup of golde in her hand ¶ Hee speaketh of vntoward and counterfet doctrine The Pope boasteth himselfe to haue the Scripture but he corrupteth it with his bloudie gloses and maketh men to drinke of the troubled or rather stinking water of puddles in stéede of Gods pure wordes which is the meate and drinke of our saules These blasphemous and abhominable decretals which the Romish Antichrist serueth his guests withal are yet extant howbeit y● he serueth them in a golden Cup that is to wit vnder the name of Christs Uicarship vnder the coulour of the Gospell and vnder such glorious names as that all things procéede of the instinct of the holye Ghost and that hée cannot erre c. This is the golden Cuppe which hath beguiled manie c. Marl. vpon the Apoc. fol. 242. CVRSE What this word curse impôrteth AS concerning this word curse let vs marke that it giueth vs not scope to wish the mischiefe or confusion of the partie I meane through desire of vengeaunce as oftentimes wée bée so carried awaie by our passions as there reigneth nothing in vs but heart burning and bitternesse or at least wise a foolish and vndiscrete zeale But whereas it is sayd that Eliphas cursed the wicked mans house it importeth nothing else but that he hold him to that which the scripture teacheth and sheweth vs. And therefore it is not for vs to bée Iudges for it were too great a rashnesse if we should take so much preheminence vpon vs as to saie O that man shall make an euill ende or such a man shall come to shame A man must not presume so farre but it belongeth to God onelie to curse or to blesse Cal. vpon Iob. fol. 80. Of two manner of cu●ses Upon mée bée thy curse my sonne ¶ There are two manner of curses in the Scripture the one is in the soule that perteineth to the soule as sinne and wickednesse And the other to the bodie as all temporall miserie and wretchednesse As Gen. 3. and Deut. 23. T. M. Of the curse of good men What strength the curse of holy men oppressed with wrong hath to bring the vengeaunce of God vpon the oppressors may appeare by Ioathan the sonne of Ierobaal and likewise by Eliseus the Prophet And cursed them in the name of the Lord. ¶ Perceiuing their malicious heart against the Lorde he desireth God to take vengeaunce of that iniurie done vnto him Geneua The meaning of this place following Cursed be he that doth the worke of the Lord negligentlie and cursed be he that kéepeth backe his
bread in the Sacrament is chaunged into the substance of Christs body And therefore Dunce himselfe vtterly refuseth shunneth it And thinketh it better to hold that the bread departeth getteth it selfe away that then in place of it succéedeth Christs body When it was first inuented That which is former saith Tertulian is true that which is latter is false But the doctrine of Transubstantiation is a late doctrine for it was not defined generally afore the Councell of Laterane about 1215. yeres after Christs comming vnder Pope Innocentius the third of that name for before y● time it was frée for all men to beléeue it or not beléeue it as y● B. of Duresme doth witnes in his booke of the presence of Christ in his supper lately put forth Ergo y● doctrine of transubstātiatiō is false Brad. Reasons against Transubstantiation That the Lord gaue to his disciples bread wine called it his body the very scripture do witnes For he gaue that called that his body which he tooke in his hands whereon hée gaue thanks which also he brake gaue to his disciples y● is to saye bread as y● fathers Ireneus Tertulian Origen Cypriane Epiphanius Augustin all the residue which are of antiquitie do affirme but inasmuch as the substaunce of bread wine is an other thing then the substance of the body and bloud of Christ it plainly appeareth that there is no Transubstantiation The bread is no more transubstantiate then y● wine but that the wine is not transubstantiate S. Mathew and S. Marke doe teach vs for they do witnes y● Christ said that he would drinke no more of the fruite of y● vine which was not bloud but wine and therefore it doth follow that there is no Transubstantiation Chrisostome vpon Mathew and S. Cypriane doe affirme this reason As y● Bread of the Lords supper is Christs natural body so is it his mysticall body for the same spirit that spake of it This is my body did say also for we being many are one bread one body c. But now it is not his mysticall body by transubstantiation therfore it is not his natural body by trāsubstātiation The words spoken ouer the bread in S. Luke Paule are not so mightie and effectuall as to transubstantiate it For then it or that which is in it shuld be transubstantiate into the new Testament therfore the words spoken ouer the bread are not so mightie to make Transubstantiation Bradford How it hath made the Turkes power to increase It was decréed of y● transubstantiation as they call it in the yere of Christ. 1215. Nocentius the third being Pope Which decrée hath confirmed the most horrible prodigious Idolat●y that euer was And anone after in the yeare 1250. began Othoma●s kingdom to prosper And so shortly after this Idolatrye once confirmed his kingdome began to arise and increased aboue all other Regions and brought foorth weapons against the West part of the world to punish the filthie spottes of the Romane Church So that as soone as this Idolatry of the Masse began to be confirmed of the people the Turkes power did increase to scourge it in Christ. And shall yet more and more grow prease vpon vs till this Idolatry of the Masse be taken quite away c. The cause wherefore the opinion of Transubstantiation is holden and defended The words of scripture saith Iohannes Scotus otherwise called Dunce might be expounded more easely and more plainly without Transubstantiation but y● Church did chuse this sense which is more hard being moued therevnto as it seemeth chiefely because that of the Sacraments men ought to holde as the holy Church of Rome holdeth but it holdeth that bread is transubstantiate or turned into the body wine into the blood as is shewed De summa trinitate side catholica ●irmiter credimus Cranmer Gabriel who of all other wrote most largly vpon y● Canon of the Masse saith thus It is to be noted that although in the scripture that the body of Christ is truly contained receiued of Christian people vnder the kindes of bread wine yet how the body of Christ is there whether by conuersion of any thing into it or without conuersion the body is there with the bread both the substance accidents of bread remaining there still it is not found expressed in the Bible Yet forasmuch as of the sacraments men must hold as the holy church of Rome holdeth as it is written De hereticos ad abolendū that Church holdeth hath determined that the bread is transubstantiated into the body of Christ the wine into his bloud therfore is their opinion receiued of all that be Catholike that the substance of bread remaineth not but really truly is turned transubstantiate and changed into the substaunce of the body of Christ. Cranmer TREE The tree falling compared to death WHether the trée fall to the South or to the North looke in what place the trée falleth there shall it lye ¶ That is to say looke in what case the righteous Iudge shall finde thée at the houre of thy death such shalt thou be iudged to be Hemmyn ¶ He exhorteth to be liberall while we liue for after there is no power Geneua What the tree of life the tree of knowledge meaneth The trée of life also in the middest of the garden the trée of knowledge of good and euill ¶ The one was a signe of the life receiued of God the other of miserable experience which came by disobeying God Geneua TRESPASSE How trespasse in this place is vnderstood WHen that person shall trespasse This text is to be vnderstood of such trespasses wherewith we hurt our neighbor in worldly goods as they call them and therefore must y● hurt be restored and the fift part thereto If the partie remained not to whome the restitution was due nor anye of his lawfull heires then must it be the Priests wages which at that time had no other liuelode What trespasse offering signifieth Trespasse offering that is an offering for a trespasse Trespasse after the order of the scripture signifieth sometime all the life past which we haue liued in infidelitie being ignoraunt of the veritie not onely in doing open sinnes but also when wée haue walked in our owne righteousnesse TREASVRE What this treasure in earthen vessells is BUt we haue this treasure in earthen vessels ¶ By this treasure Christ himselfe and the wholesome doctrine of the Gospell is vnderstood Mat. 13. 44. By the earthen vessells the frailnesse of our flesh is ment God for his own laude doth set forth himselfe by those things that are weak and féeble because that the whole glory should be giuen vnto God alone and not vnto men that is made of earth Ambrose Sir I. Cheeke ¶ Albeit the ministers of ●y ● Gospell be contemptible as touching their persons yet the
as Fil●●s fil●orum dicuntur etiam filij auorum The sonnes sonnes daughters are also called the sonnes daughters of the grandfather And so she was Abrahams sister because she was his brothers daughter How Abraham did eate Christs bodie When this promise was established to Abraham by the word of God which said In thy séed shal all the nations of the earth be blessed he beléeued which was counted to him for righteousnesse and did both eate his bodie drinke the bloud of Christ through faith beléeuing verelie that Christ should take our nature and spring out of his séede as touching the flesh also that he should suffer death to redéeme vs. And as Christ testifieth he heartelie desired to sée the daie of Christ who sawe it reioiced He sawe it in faith had the daie of Christ that is to saie all those things that shuld chance him plainlie reuealed vnto him albeit he were dead manie hundred yeres before it was actuallie fulfilled reuealed vnto the world by that faith was he saued yet neuer did eate his flesh with his téeth nor neuer beléeued y● bread shuld be his bodie wine his bloud And therefore sith he was saued without that faith and the same faith shall saue vs that saued him I thinke we shall also be saued if we eate him spirituallie as he did although we neuer beléeue that the bread is his bodie I. Frith vpon the Lords supper against Moore How Abraham sawe the daie of Christ. ¶ Looke My daie Of the communication betwene Abraham and the glutton The communication that the glutton had with Abraham happened spirituallie for so thought the glutton with himselfe in his torments and such aunswere receiued he in his owne conscience Heming How God tried Abrahams faith Take now thy sonne c. and offer him vp there ¶ Héerein stoode the chiefest point of his temptation séeing he was commanded to offer vp him in whom God had promised to blesse all the nations of the world Geneua How Abraham is said to be a Prophet Deliuer the man his wife againe for he is a Prophet ¶ That is one to whom God reuealeth himselfe familiarlie Geneua ¶ Of the doubting of Abraham Looke Doubt ¶ Of Abrahams riches Looke Lazarus ABSOLVTION How no mortall man can absolue from sinne THeir absolution also iustifieth no man from sinne for with the heart do men beléeue to be iustified with all faith Saint Paule Rom. 10. ver 10. that is through faith beléeuing the promises are we iustified as I haue sufficientlie proued in other places with the scripture Faith saith Saint Paule in the same place commeth by hearing that is to saie by hearing the preacher that is sent from God and preacheth Gods promises Now when they absolue in latine the vnlearned heareth not for how saith Paule 1. Cor. 14. ver 16. when thou blessest in an vnknowne tongue shall the vnlearned saie Amen vnto thy thankes giuing for he wotteth not what thou saist So likewise the laie man wotteth not whether thou loose or binde or whether thou blesse or cursse In like manner it is if the laie vnderstand Latine or though the Priest absolue in English for in his Absolution he rehearseth no promise of Christ but speaketh his owne words saieng I by the authoritie of Peter and Paule absolue and loose thée from all thy sinnes Thou saist so which art but a lieng man and neuer more then now verelie Thou saist I forgiue thée thy sinne and the scripture Iohn the first that Christ onelie forgiueth and taketh awaie the sinnes of the world and Paul Peter and all the Apostles preacheth that all is forgiuen in Christ for Christs sake Gods word onely looseth thou in preaching that mightst loose also els not T●m● fo 149. How absolution standeth not in the will of the Priest Gratian saith Voluntas sacerdotis c. The will of the priest can neither further nor hinder but the merite of him that desireth absolution Iewel fol. 138. ABSTINENCE What the abstinence of a Christian man is THe abstinence of a Christian man is to withdrawe himselfe from sin As it is said in Toby how that he taught his sonne from his youth vp to feare God to refraine from sinne And S. Paule exhorteth the Thessalonians from fornication and other sinnes Tindale What difference is betweene fasting and Abstinence True fasting is a religious worke ordeined to testifie our humilitie and to make the flesh the more obedient vnto the spirit that we maie be the quicker to praie to all good workes But Abstinence from this or that meat with opinion of holinesse supersticious it maie easilie make a man but holie it cannot S. Paule saith It is not meat that maketh vs acceptable vnto God 1. Cor. 8. ver 8. Againe It is good to confirme the heart with grace not with meates wherein they that haue walked haue found no profit Heb. 13. Ver. 9. The meate serueth for the bellie the bellie for the meate the Lord will destroie them both 1. Cor. 6. ver 13. And againe The kingdome of God is not meate drinke Rom. 14. ver 17. Likewise Christ saith The thing that entreth into the mouth defileth not the man Ma● 1● ver 〈…〉 Héere it is easie to sée that fasting is one thing abstinence from flesh another The Nazaries in the Testament absteined not from flesh yet they fasted Elias 3. Reg. 17. ver 6. was fed with flesh Iohn the Baptist eate y● flesh of loc●stes yet they both fasted Socrates saith that manie Christians in y● Lent season did eate fish birds Manie ab●●ained vntill 3. of the clock in the afternoone then receiued all kind of meats either fish or flesh wtout difference Likewise Epiphanius saith some eate all kind of birds or fowle absteining onelie from the flesh of foure footed beasts And yet they kept their lent trulie fasted as well as anie others Wherefore abstinence from anie one certeine kinde of meat is not of it selfe a work of religion to please God but onelie a méere positiue policie S. Austine saith Non quaero c. I demaund not what thou eatest but wherein thou hast pleasure And Saint Hierome saith of the Maniches Ieiunant illi c. They fast in déed but their fasting is worse then if they filled their bellies Iewell fol. 15. ABVSES By whom they ought to be reformed THe abuses that he in the Church ought to be corrected by Princes Let euerie soule saith Saint Paule submit himselfe to the higher powers Hezekia destroied the brasen Serpent when he sawe the children of Israel abuse it Iosaphat sent abrode his commission to suppresse and banish all Idolatrie and superstition out of his land Iosia cleansed his land from Idolatrie witchcraft sorceries and all other abuses Ioas destroied the house of Baal brake downe the Altars and corrected manie other abuses within his dominions
true would fulfill his promise vnto them and heartilie longed for this seede and so did both eat his bodie drinke his bloud Acknowledging with infinit thankes that Christ should for their sins take the perfect nature of manhood vpon him also suffer the death This promise was giuen to Adam and saued as manie as did beléeue and were thankfull to God for his kindnesse I. Frith fol. 109. Of the first Adam earthlie and the second heauenlie The first man was of earth earthlie and the second man the Lord himself from heauen ¶ As concerning Adam it hath no darknes in it at all It is knowne how he is of the earth is called earthlie But where as Christ the second Adam is said to bée from heuen that is peruerted by heretiks The true meaning of it is that Christ Adam are alledged by the Apostle as the two heads in mankind to this intent that he might expresse by them the condition of our mortalitie and glorification As manie as be of Adam be earthlie and bearing the Image of their parent subiect vnto death and corruption And this all we be vniuersallie On the other side the elect which be borne not of bloud nor of the will of the flesh nor of the will of man but of God they be called héere heauenlie albeit in flesh they be of Adam and of them it is reported that they shall be such in the resurrection as the heauenlie Christ is also If the Val●ntinians and the Euthichians doe gather of this the one sort that the flesh of Christ commeth not of our flesh the other sort that it did not holde the true nature of man it followeth that the flesh of the elect persons also is of the verie same condition For the Apostle saith héere not onelie that the second man Christ is of heauen heauenlie but he addeth that also manifestlie saieng And such as is the heauenlie such be they also that be heauenlie And because you shall not referre it to Angels in knitting vp the matter he doth conclude Therfore like as we haue borne the image of the earthlie so we shall beare also the image of the heauenlie Wherfore it appeareth that the Apostle doth attribute this vnto the faithfull bicause they do expresse in them both the Images of Adam of Christ one of corruption mortalitie the other of incorruption and immortalitie So that in the former they do expresse the earthlie Adam in that they do die be corrupted In the latter they do expresse the heauenlie Adam that is Christ when they shall rise in the end of the world to glorifieng immortalitie and incorruption This is the true right meaning of the Apostle which cannot stand vnlesse we do graunt that the flesh of Christ was taken of our flesh without sinne carried into heauen to the glorie of immortalitie through the coniunction of the word and the power of God Otherwise we can haue no hope that after the Image of the earthlie man we shall be like vnto the heauenlie Musculus fol. 138. How Adam was not deceiued but Eue. And Adam was not deceiued but the woman ¶ The woman was first deceiued and so became the instrument of Sathan to deceiue the man And though therefore God punish them with subiection and paine in their trauaile yet if they be faithfull and godlie in their vocation they shall be saued Geneua How the sect of the Adamites sprang vp The Adamites were a sect of heretikes which tooke their beginning of a Pickard who came into the land of Boheme and said that he was the sonne of God and named himselfe Adam And he commaunded all men and women to goe naked that whosoeuer desired to companie carnallie with anie woman should take her by the hand and bring her to him and saie hée feruentlie desired her companie and then would Adam saie Go together and increase and multiplie This heresie was begun in the yeare of our Lord. 1412. in the time of Sigismonde the Emperour And men suppose that it endureth yet not onelie in Bohemia but in other places also ADDE What it is to Adde or take awaie from the word of God TO Adde or take awaie from the word of God is this To thinke otherwise or teach otherwise of God then he hath in his word reueled They ta kt from the word that beléeue lesse then in his word is expressed Those adde to the word first which teach or decrée anie thing either in matters of faith or ceremonies contrarie to the word Secondlie such as make anie religion or opinion of merits in anie thing that they themselues haue inuented beside the word of God Last of all they doe adde to the word which forbid that for a thing of it selfe vnlawfull which Gods word doth not forbid and to make that sinne which Gods word doth not make sinne If anie man shall adde vnto these things c. ¶ The effect is that men must neither put anie thing to nor take anie thing awaie from the Scripture ● according as it is said in an other place All the saiengs of God are as it were cleansed with fire they are a shield to them that trust in them put not anie thing to the words thereof least he perchance do reproue thée and thou be found a liar Pro. 30. 5. 6. Marl. vpon the Apoc. fol. 317. They saith Gasper Megander be said to adde to the Scripture which counterfeit it and marre it and make a cloke of it for their leasings and errours of which sort be the heretikes and deceiuers c. Marl. vpon the Apoc. fol. 317. ADOPTION How the Lawiers define adoption THE Lawiers as it is had in the institutions define Adoption to be a legitimate an imitating nature found out for their solace and comfort which haue no children Further they make a distinction betwéene Adoption and Arrogation For Arrogation they saie is when he which is his owne man and at libertie is receiued in stéede of a sonne But Adoption is when hee which is receiued is vnder an other mans power Howbeit the lawes forbid that the elder should be adopted of the younger for it séemeth a thing monstrous that the sonne should erréed the father in yeares And therefore Cicero oftentimes vehementlie inueigheth against that Adoption of Clodius Now God adopteth vnto himselfe his elect not for that he had not an other sonne for he had his onlie begotten sonne Christ in whom he was well pleased but for that in all the nature of man he had yet no children for through Adam we were all made strangers vnto him Wherefore God for this cause sent his naturall and legitimate sonne into the world that by him he might adopt vnto himselfe manie children out of our kinde c. Pet. Mar. fol. 205. We haue receiued the spirit of Adoption saith S. Paule ¶ Adoption is the inheritance promised by grace Tindale ¶ So he meaneth the holie Ghost of
are so lightened with the●hri●ht beames of the Gospell y● for all inquisitions impris●nments exquisite torments and cruell burnings that can be deuised they neuer a whitte diminish but mightelie increase as God hath promised that the bloud of the Martyrs should be the séede of the Gospell W. Fulke How Babilon is called the wast Sea This is the heauie burden of the wast Sea ¶ By the wast sea is vnderstood Babilon it is so called because of the excéeding great cruelnesse and tyranme wherewith it exercised the Iewes Héereof is there a prouerbe Babilon is the Sea of euils and euen the wast of the Sea that is the most tempestious and desolate place and that is least possible to be sayled through T. M. How the destruction of Babilon was prophesied long before Thou shalt binde a stone to it and cast it in the middest of Euphrates ¶ Saint Iohn in his Reuelation alludeth to this place when he saith The Angell tooke a Milstone and cast it into the Sea signifieng thereby the destruction of Babilon His wordes be these Then a mightie Angell tooke vp a stone like a great milstone cast it into the Sea saieng With such violence shall the greate Citie of Babilon be cast and shall bee founde no more ¶ That is It shall not be like to other Cities which maie bée builded againe but it shall bée destroied without mercie Geneua ¶ Looke more of Babilon in the word Rome BACKE PARTES OF GOD. What is meant by the backe partes of God ANd thou shalt sée my Backepartes but my face shall not be séene ¶ Shall sée my backparts That is so much of my glorie as in this mortall life thou art able to sée Geneua Death is the hauen that carrieth vs to the place where we shall sée GOD face to face which wée shall neuer sée so long as we be in this mortall lyfe but must couer our faces with Moses and Helias till the face or forepart of the Lorde be gone by Now must we looke on his Backepartes beholding God in his wordes and in his creatures and in the face of Iesus Christ our Mediatour But when this bodie is dissolued by death we shall sée God face to face and knowe him as we are knowne Luther BAPTIME The right signification and vse of Baptime BAptime which is now come in the roome of circumcision signifieth on the one side how that all that repent and beléeue are washed in Christs bloud and on the other side how that the same must quench and drowne the lusts of the flesh to followe the steps of Christ. Tindale fol. 6. ¶ Baptime is a signe of repentance and of forgiuenesse of sinnes whereby God doth testifie that he washeth awaie or forgiueth the sinnes of them that beléeue and also wherby God doth seale and admonish vs of true repentance all the daies of our life Cheeke All we which haue bene baptised into Iesus Christ haue bene baptised into his death ¶ That is that sinne through Christs death maie be abolished and die in vs and that as wée are made cleane outwardlie with water in our Baptime so inwardlie our sinnes maie be washed awaie and cleansed by the bloud of Christ. The Bible note ¶ Baptime is an outward signe representing in vs the ●enuing of the spirit and mortifieng of our members in Iesus Christ by the which we are buried in death with him Tind ¶ Baptime is a Sacrament by the which Iesus Christ doth offer vnto vs the remission of our sinnes and our regeneration vnder the figure of the water as he doth indéed communicate the same vnto vs by his holie spirit Also it testifieth vnto vs that he receiueth vs into his Church as true members of the same And we for our part doe testifie that we acknowledge him for such a one as he declareth himselfe toward vs that we beléeue that he maketh vs partakers of all his great riches Pet. Viret ¶ By Baptime wherewith we be washed out wardlie is signified that we be washed inwardlie by the bloud of Christ the remembrance wherof all the Apostles indeuoured to worke in the mindes of the faithfull Marl. vpon the Apoc. fol. 11. How we be washed by baptime Whereas Saint Paule saith we be washed by Baptime his meaning is that GOD doth thereby both witnesse our washing and therewithall perfourme the thing that is figured For except the truth or performaunce of the thing went ioyntlie with the signe of it it were an vnproper speach to say that Baptime is the washing of the soule And by the waie we must beware that we put not ouer that thing either to the signe or to the minister of the signe which is proper to God onelie that is to saie that we thinke not the minister to be the author of washing vs cleane or the water to purge the filthinesse of our soule Which to doe belongeth onelie vnto Christs bloud Againe we must take héede that no peece of our trust do stick either to the water or to the man for as much as the onelie right vse of the Sacrament is to leade vs straightlie by the hande vnto Christ and there to staie For it is onelie the holie Ghost that renueth and quickeneth vs and no creature or outward worke is able to bring that to passe For if circumcision doe nothing auaile in Christ Gal. 5. 6. Surelie neither auaileth it anie man to bée but onelie dipt in water and to be admitted into the Church except he haue faith that is workefull by charitie which thing the powring on of water perfourmeth not for then should all that bée baptised be faithfull And therefore there is added Through the word Marl. vpon the Apoc. fol. 292. How baptime bringeth no grace examples followe Baptime bringeth no grace with it as doth appeare by Simon the Sorcerer Tindale ¶ Hée hath not put on Christ saith Saint Hierome that hath onelie receiued the washing of the water except also hée receiue the holie Ghost Symon Magus receiued water but because he receiued not the holie Ghost therfore he put not on Christ Iesu. Paule héere iudgeth of Christians as a man iudgeth but God doth not measure and iudge his faithfull onelie by outward signes but by the inwarde thoughts and heartes D. Heines ¶ Cornelius the Centurion receiued the holie Ghost before he was baptised ¶ The gelded man of Quéene Candace beléeued and therefore had grace before he was baptised Obiection The Apostles béeing commaunded to baptise in the name of the Father and of the Sonne and of the holie Ghost they notwithstanding baptised in the name of Iesus Christ onelie Aunswere To baptise in the name of Christ is to baptise according to the institution and commaundement of Christ neither do these words in the name of Christ import that Baptime was ministred in the name of Christ onelie and in none other name beside no more then these wordes Paule the Seruaunt of Iesus Christ doe import
our Baptime is a certaine most frée ensealement and Sacrament of our attonement with God and that this attonement is made by the bloud death and resurrection of Christ and to put vs in minde of the mortifieng of the flesh of the quickening of the spirit and continuall repentaunce of the glorifieng that shall be héereafter by Christ. It must also put vs in minde that the benefite of regeneration is the gift and worke of the whole Trinitie in whose name we are baptised to the intent we should sticke therevnto and worship it all our life long Hemmyng How baptime purifieth and cleanseth Baptime hath also his word and promise which the Priest ought to teach the people and christen them in the English tongue and not to plaie the Popengaie with Credo saie yee Volo saie ye Baptismum saie ye for there ought to be no mumming in such matter The Priest before he baptiseth asketh saieng Beleeuest thou in God the Father Almightie and in his sonne Iesus Christ and in the Holie Ghost and that the Congregation of Christ is holie and they saie yea Then the Priest vpon this faith baptiseth the childe in the name of the Father of the Sonne and of the holy Ghost for the forgiuenes of sinnes as Peter saith Act. 2. The washing without the word helpeth not but through the word it purifieth and cleanseth vs. As thou readest Ephe. 5. 26. Now Christ cleanseth the Congregation in the Fountaine of water through the Word The Word is the promise that God hath made Now as Preachers in preaching the word of God saueth the hearers that beléeue so doth the washing in that it preacheth and representeth vnto vs the promise that God hath made vnto vs in Christ. The washing preach vnto vs that we are cleansed with Christs bloudshedding which was an offering and a satisfaction for the sinne of all that repent and beléeue consenting and submitting themselues vnto the will of God The plunging into the water signifieth that we die are buried with Christ as cōcerning the olde life of sinne which is Adam And the pulling out againe signifieth that we rise againe with Christ in a new life full of the holie Ghost which shall rule vs and guide vs and worke the will of God in vs as thou s●est Rom. 6. 4. Tindale fol. 143. To be baptised in Christ what it is To be baptised in Christ is nothing els then according to his commaundement and institution to be imitated And by this forme of speaking is signified that we doe passe into Christ to the end we maie be more straightlie ioined together with him in faith hope and charitie For euen as Souldiers doe sweare to the name of obedience of their Captaine and are so bound vnto him that afterward it is not lawfull for them to be conuersant in the Campe of their enimies which thing if they doe shoulde be death vnto them So we in Baptime are bound vnto Christ and doe sweare that we will neuer afterward fall away vnto the Diuell c. Pet. Mar. fol. 143. To be baptised in Moses what it is Whereas in the Epistle to the Corinthians it is said that the Fathers are baptised in Moses the sence of that place is that the Israelites passed ouer the Sea trusting to those promises which were set foorth of God by Moses Pet. Mar. ¶ Moses being their guide or minister or as some read they were baptised vnto Moses Lawe other by Moses Geneua To be baptised by the holie Ghost what it is To be baptised by the holie Ghost is to receiue the visible graces and giftes of the holie Ghost or to be endued with the graces of the holie Ghost The Bible note Geneua To be baptised ouer the dead what it signifieth Baptised ouer the dead ¶ Some men saie that in token of the generall resurrection certeine Christian men were baptised ouer dead mens graues signifieng that the same dead men should rise at the last daie Tindale ¶ That is as dead and because they were but newly come to Christ would be baptised before they died Except these things be true of Christs kingdome and his subiection what shall become of them whom the Church dailie baptiseth for to destroie death in them which is the ende of Baptime and so they to rise againe Geneua ¶ Among the Corinthians if anie had deceased afore hée could be baptised some did take in hande to bée baptised for them thinking that the same should be auaileable vnto the dead against the resurrection Tertulian Theophilactus Ambrose Though Saint Paule did not allow this superstition yet thereby did he take an occasion to confute them which among the Corinthians denied the rising againe of the dead I. Cheeke What Iohns Baptime signifieth Indeed I baptise you with water to amendment of life ¶ The outward signe putteth vs in minde of this that wée must ●haunge our liues and become better assuring vs as by a seale that we are ingraffed into Christ whereby our olde man dieth and the new man riseth vp Beza Of dipping in Baptime As touching the dipping downe of the childe that is to be baptised I thinke saith Musculus it is not so necessarie but that the Church is at libertie to baptise either by dipping in or els by sprinkling We maie sée in Augustine that this libertie was ●ept in the Churches He that is 〈…〉 baptised saith he doth confesse his● aith before the Priest and doth aunswere as he is asked 〈…〉 And after his aunswering he is either sprinkled with water or dipped into it And Cipriane doth vphold the vse of sprinkling in Baptime but yet so that he saith it is at mens libertie Masculus fol. 29● Of the Sacrament of Baptime The Sacrament of Baptime saith the Master of the Sentences doth consist in two things that is to saie in the Word and in the Element so that although that the other things bée awaie which were instituted for the better beautifieng of the Sacrament in case that the Word be there and the Element For both in this and in other Sacraments also there are accustomed to be done some things to the beautie comelinesse and some things which belong to the substance and cause of the Sacrament The Word and the Element be of the substaunce of the Sacrament the rest is applied to the solemnitie of it Thus saith he Of which saith Musculus I like well that he doth acknowledge that the wholenesse and substaunce of Baptime doth consist in two things that is to wit the Word and the Element And that the Sacrament is true and holie if it haue these two things though the rest be awaie But wheras he doth referre the rest vnto beautie comelinesse and solemnitie what followeth thereof els but that Iohn and the Apostles did baptise neither beautifullie nor comelie nor Colemnlie for as much as they vsed none of these things Musculus fol. 291. How Baptime is
liue after the fashion of the sonne of God Héere Saint Peter séemeth to make answere to a secret question that might haue bene asked which is this If the Gospell that is the tidings of their redemption by the merites of Christs passion was preached the deliuerance of the faithfull that wer in prison how came they out with their bodies or without their bodies S. Peter answereth y● they came out with their soules alone for as concerning their bodies they shal be iudged secundum homines after the fashion of men that is to saie at the daie of doonie Thus I haue rehearsed to you the second Opinion Now shall yée heare briefelie of the third Opinion which is that these words Christus descendit ad inferna is no distinct nor seuerall article of our Crede but rather an exposition of the former clause et sepultus est he was buried They that be of this Opinion they bring these reasons for the proofe of their assertion First S. Cipriane expounding the Crede doth make no exposition thereoff but he saith Haec verba non habentur in symbolo romano Erasmus expounding the Crede séemeth to allow verie much the sentence of S. Cypriane Insomuch that he saith that Inconcin●itas sermonis i. the disordred speach proueth these words to be added for the exposition of these wordes Et sepultus est otherwise it is the cart before the horse yea Erasmus is so plaine that it is but a patch added vnto y● Crede that he thinketh that S. Thomas not Thomas the Apostle but Thomas Aquina did adde to the Crede these words Descendit ad inferna These be Erasmus words An Thomas Aquina addidit sub dubito Furthermore they bring in for their purpose this argument in the Crede read at the holie Communion called Symbolum necenum And likewise in the Counsell set forth in the thrée other generall counsells ther is no mention of these words Descendit ad inferna And where as Athanasius in his Crede which we call Quicunque vult hath these words Descendit ad inferna they graunt but yet onlie in steed of these words Et sepultus est which all other Credes haue And Athanasius vsed in the stéed therof Descendit ad inferna And to proue Descendere in infernum may rightly signifie I was buried they alledge the words of Iacob dolens Ioseph discerptum a bestia Descendam ad filium meum lugens in infernū morietur pater noster deducent samuli tui cauos eius cum dolore ad infernum R. Turnar Of Christs Ascention This same Iesus which is taken vp from you into heauen shall so come euen as ye haue séene him goe vp into heauen As Christ did ascend visiblie into heauen so shall he come againe in the same shape and forme that he went vp Till that time then that we maie see him with our own eies come down as the Apostles saw him go vp let vs neuer beléeue that he is héere touching his manhood for he is euerie where touching his Godhead so in that he is a very naturall man he is in heauen and sitteth at the right hand of the Father Sir I. Cheeke The heauens saith S. Peter must conteine and hold him vntill the time that all things be restored ¶ Cyrillus saith Christus non poterat c. Christ could not be conuersant with his disciples in the flesh after he had ascended vnto the father l. Fri. How Christ is the ende of the Lawe Christ is the end of y● law to iustifie all that beléeue ¶ That is Christ is y● fulfilling of y● Law so y● whoso hath him beléeueth that he with shedding of his bloud hath washed away sinnes therewith ouer come death hell and obtained the fauour of his father For all that thus beléeue is counted righteous although he do not indéed satisfie the lawe Tindale ¶ The end of y● law is to iustifie thē which obserue it Therfore Christ hauing fulfilled it for vs is made our iustice sanctification c. Geneua ¶ Christ hath fulfilled the whole law and therefore whosoeuer beléeueth in him is counted iust before God as well as hée had fulfilled the whole lawe himselfe The Bible note ¶ The end of the lawe is to iustifie them that kéepe the law but seeing we doe not obserue the law through the fault of our flesh we attaine not vnto this end But Christ salueth this disease for he fulfilled the lawe for vs. Beza How Christ dwelleth in vs. When Christ is said to dwell in vs by faith or y● spirit it doth not therfore folow y● either his body or his soule dwelleth in our harts really as I may cal it substācially It is inough y● Christ be said to be in vs by his diuine presence that he is by his spirit grace gifts present with vs c. Pet. Mar. vpon the Ro. fo 199. We denie not saith Cyrill against the heretike but we bée spirituallie ioined to Christ by faith and sincere charitie but that we should haue no manner of coniunction in our flesh with Christ that we vtterlie denie and thinke it vtterlie discrepant from Gods holie Scriptures For who doubteth but Christ is so the Uine trée and we so the braunches as we get thence our life Heare what S. Paule saith we be all one bodie with Christ for though we be manie we be one in him All we participate in one seede Thinketh this hereticke that wée knowe not the strength vertue of the mysticall benediction which when it is made in vs doth it not make Christ by communication of his flesh to dwell corporallie in vs Why be the members of faithfull mens bodies called the members of Christ And Shall I make the members of Christ parts of the whores bodie GOD forbid And our Sauiour also saith He that eateth my flesh and drinketh my bloud dwelleth in me and I in him ¶ Although in these words Cyrill doth saie that Christ doth dwell corporallie in vs when we receiue the mysticall benediction yet he neither saith that Christ dwelleth corporallie in the Bread nor that he dwelleth in vs corporallie onelie at such times as we receiue the Sacrament nor that he dwelleth in vs and not we in him but he saith as well that we dwell in him as that he dwelleth in vs. Which dwelling is neither corporall nor locall but an heauenlie spirituall and supernaturall dwelling whereby so long as we dwell in him he in vs we haue by him euerlasting life And therfore Christ saith in the same place that Christ is the Uine and we are the braunches because that by him we haue life For as the braunches receiue life and nourishment of the bodie of the vine so receiue we by him the naturall propertie of his bodie which is life and immortalitie and by these meanes we being his members doe liue and are nourished And this meant Cyrill by this word Corporallie in vs.
healing that a man maie be saued by another mans faith for this man was healed by the faith of the men and not by his owne because he could not heare for faith commeth by hearing To this it maie be said there is a difference betwéene corporall benefites and euerlasting saluation But no mans faith can stand in steed for another touching saluation Now Christ loosed the tongue of the deafe and then being called vpon of him hée gaue him faith and so the dumbe man was healed by his owne faith DENIENG OF GOD. How and when men doe denie God ANd denie God which is the onelie Lord c. ¶ Men truly denie God when they ascribe their iustification or forgiuenesse of sinnes to anie creature or to anie worke by the might and power of the worke to anie Indulgence or Pardon to Masses to holie Bread to kissing of Images and such like and not to Christ Iesus and to his bloud shed for vs to obtaine vs remission of sinnes by whose bloud onelie we were washed from ●ur sinnes as S. Iohn saith Apoc. 1. 5. He hath washed vs in his owne bloud from our sinnes They denie the Lord which ascribe remission of sinnes to anie other thing then vnto Christ and his bloud which thing false Prophettes doth denieng their Master Bibliander DEEPE What the Deepe signifieth OUt of the Déepe call I vnto thée O Lord c. ¶ By the Déepe is vnderstood the aduersitie wherein the people of Israel was when they were scattered among the Chaldes Unto vs christen it signifieth the aduersitie trouble miserie which hapneth to vs for our offences and sinnes T. M. DESPERATION What an offence Desperation is SAint Hierom affirmeth the offence of Iudas to be greater in dispairing of the mercie of God then in betraieng Christ. And that Cain stirred God more to anger through desperation of pardon then by the slaughter of his brothers bloud Manie which haue persecuted Christ being conuerted beléeuing in him haue obtained pardon and are made examples to man that he ought not to distrust the remission of his wickednes seing the death of our sauiour is forgiuen to the penitent Let no man dispaire of Gods mercie and goodnesse Let him that is weake and cannot do that he would faine doe not dispaire but turne to him that is strong and hath promised to giue strength to all that aske of him in Christs name and complaine to God and desire him to fulfill his promise to God cominit himselfe And he shall of his mercie and truth strengthen him and make him féele with what loue he is beloued for Christs sake though he be neuer so weake Tindale The meanes to keepe vs from Despaire in time of afflictions To knowe Gods righteousnesse and to be fullie perswaded of it is a meane to bring vs to patience Howbeit that wée must match another Article with it that is to wit wée must alwaies thinke that GOD in afflicting vs doth not cease to loue vs yea that he will procure our saluation what rigour soeuer he vse towards vs so as all our afflictions shall bee asswaged through his grace and he will giue them a gladsome ende Caluine vpon Iob. fol. 139. DESTINIE SAint Augustine in Opusculo 82. questionum quest 45. Confuting soundlie the destinies of Planets among other his reasons saith The conceiuing of Twinnes in the mothers wombe because it is made in one and the same act as the Phisitians testifie whose discipline is farre more certaine and manifest then that of the Astrologers doth happen in so small a moment of time that ther is not so much time as two minutes of a minute betwixt the conceiuing of the one and the other How therefore commeth it that in Twinnes of one burden there is so great a diuersitie of déedes wills and chaunces considering that they of necessitie must needes haue one the same Planet in their conception and that the Mathematicalls doe giue the constellation of them both as it it were but of one man To these wordes of Saint Augustine saith Bullinger great light maie be aded if you annexe to them and examine narrowlie the example of Esau and Iacobs birth and sundrie dispositions The same Augustine writing to Boniface against two Epistles of the Pel●gians li. 2. cap. 6. saith They which affirme that Destinie doth rule will haue not onelie our déedes and euents but also our verie wills to depend vpon the placing of the starres as the time wherein euerie man is either conceiued or borne which placing they are wont to call Constellations but the grace of God doth not onelie goe aboue all starres and heauens but also aboue the verie Angells themselues Bullinger fol. 480. ¶ Looke Astrologie Fortune Chaunce DESTROIE NOT. The meaning of this place DEstroie not ¶ Or thou shalt not destroie or make awaie as some will By this he signifieth after the mind of Kimhi that he twice withstood and stilled his Souldiers which moued him to destroie and kill Saule Ezra thinketh it to be a certaine tune and manner of singing T. M. DEATH What Death is by the minde of Secundus the Philosopher WHen Adrian the Emperour had heard Secundus the Philosopher in the seuerall Oration he made of a noble Romane Matron a kinswoman of the Emperours he asked of him what death was to whom the philosopher answered thus Death is an eternall sléepe a dissolution of the bodie a terror of the rich a desire of y● poore a thing inheritable a pilgrimage vncertaine a théefe of man a kinde of sléeping a seperation of the liuing a companie of the dead a resolution of all a rest of trauailes an end of all idle desires Finallie death is y● scourge of all euill and the chiefe reward of the good ¶ We call death the loosing asunder and departing of two things the soule from the bodie y● which departing no man can escape but necessarilie die all we must that be borne in this world When the bodie by anie violence looseth his senses is spoiled from the quicke vse of his principall parts the●● departeth the soule from him in manner the bodie leaueth y● soule before the soule leaueth the bodie For it is not y● soule by himselfe y● goeth from the bodie but it is the bodie by himselfe sorsaking life that causeth the soule to depart c. Lupset How the Diuell hath power of Death The Diuell hath y● power of death that is ●he is the authour of it by his malitious nature he brought it into the worlde for God made it not nor hath anie delight in it neither is it good in his eies nor was neuer mentioned among y● works of his hands but from the Diuell and of the Diuell and in the Diuell it began and is and videth And therfore in the Apocalips his name is giuen him Abaddon that is the destroier and as death is of him so for this cause also he is said to haue the power of it
¶ Holofernes being ouercome with drinke was slaine of a woman ¶ Simon and his sonnes through dronkennesse was slaine of Ptolomy and Abobus ¶ Of the incommodities of Dronkennesse Read Pro. 23. 30 c. Eccl. 36. 26. c. DROPPES How these Droppes shewe Christ to be a true man ANd his sweate was like Droppes of bloud ¶ These not onelie showe that Christ was true man but other things also which the godlie haue to consider of wherein the secret of the redemption of all mankinde is contained in the sonne of God his debasing himselfe to the state of a seruant such things as no man can sufficientlie declare DRVCILLA What manner of woman this Drucilla was FElix with his wife Drucilla ¶ This Drucilla was Agrippa his sister of whom Luke speaketh afterward a very harlot and licentious woman and being the wife of Azizus King of the Emesens who was circumcised departed from him and went to this Felix the brother of one Pallas who was somtime Nero his bondman DVVELL What is betokened by this word Dwell WIll dwell among them ¶ By this word dwell is betokened friendship familiari●ie and companie betwéene● God and the Elect according as Christ saith If anie man heare my voice and open me the dore I will come in to him and suppe with him and he with me Marl. vpon the Apo. fol. 113. ¶ The Lord that sitteth on the throne will alwaies dwell among them as their most mightie defender their solace their comfort Bale Let the word of God dwell in you plentifullie in all wisedome ¶ To dwell in vs is to haue full possession and a mansion house in vs to sit and rest there to gouerne and rule there as we doe in our houses and places of our owne abo●e and how shall this be but by that ordinarie meanes which God hath appointed vs which is by reading and hearing the word of God c. Beza And dwelt in vs. ¶ And dwelt The Gréeke word Escuiosen is as much to say as he made his Tabernacle whereby the Euangelist signifieth that he was conuersant among them as a verie man and he shewed not himselfe the twinckling of an eie and so vanished awaie but had his abode and continued among them long time whereby they might haue sure and certaine experience of his godlie behauiour of his singular vertues and of his wonderfull workes Some thinke by this word Dwelt that the Lord Iesus had no certaine dwelling place in this world but was faine to ●lit often and remoue for so do they that dwell in Tents and Tabernacles Chrisostome taketh in vs to be in our flesh and vnderstandeth that the humanitie of Christ was a Tabernacle to the diuinitie and so frameth this argument against the Heretikes that affirmed the Word to be turned into flesh ¶ Looke after in Word Traheron How men should dwell with their wiues Likewise ye men dwell with them according to knowledge ¶ To dwell with them is with faithfulnesse with the despising of pleasures and of ambition with the decking of the inner man with the méekenesse and demurenesse of a quiet spirit with loue reuerence to order them not according to our wilfull commaundement lust but according to knowledge appointing them to doe nothing but that is expedient and flattering them in nothing that maie hurt or corrupt honest conditions and manners Tindale Ebion Of the heresie of this man EBion of whom the Ebionites are called affirmed Christ to be but a bare man borne of Ioseph and Marie he thought that faith onelie did not iustifie● He affirmed the corporall obseruation of the lawe to be necessarie he denied the Epistles of Paule accusing him that he fell from the Lawe The Iewish Sabaoth and other Ceremonies he obserued together with the Iewes onelie the Sundaie he celebrated in remembraunce of the resurrection Euse. li. 3. ca. 24 Epiphanius saith haeres 30. that Iohn the Euangelist hearing that Ebion was in the Bath refrained his companie Abdias B. of Babilon saith that Philip the Apostle ouerthrew this heresie of Ebion at 〈…〉 erapolis EDIFIENG What it is to edifie LEt euerie man please his neighbour in that that is good to edifieng ¶ To Edifie signifieth to doe all manner duties to our neighbours either to bring him to Christ or if he be won that he maie grow from faith to faith for the faithfull are called the Temple of God wherein is resident his holie spirit and these faithful are the stones of new Hierusalem that is the vniuersall Church● Esay 54. Apoc. 21. 2. Of the which building Christ is the corner stone Ephe. 2. 20. Geneua EDOM What is signified by Edom. WHo is this that commeth from Edom with stained red clothes of Bosra ¶ Edom is the Earth and the stained and red clothes are Christs bloud which he did shed vpon earth for our sinnes And they which demaund Who is he be his creatures which shall meruaile at the wisedome of God in deliuering mankinde from the bondage of the spirituall ●harao by bloud by death and by the Crosse. Turnar This Prophecie aforesaid Esay 63. 1. is against the Edumians and enimies which persecuted the church on whom God will take vengeaunce and is heere set foorth all bloudie after he hath destroied them in Bosra the chiefe Citie of the I●umeans for these were their greatest enimies And vnder the title of Circumcision the kinred of Abraham claimed to themselues the chiefe religion and hated the true worshippers Psal. 137. Geneua Remember the Children of Edom. According as Ezechiel 25. 13. And leremy 49. 7. and Abdias ver ●0 sheweth that the E●onntes which came of Esau conspired with the Babilonians against their bretheren and kinfolkes For thy crueltie saith Abdias against thy brother Iacob shame shall couer thée and thou shalt be cast off for euer ¶ Héere he sheweth the cause why the Edomites were so sharplie punished to wit because they were enimies to his Church whome now he comforteth by punishing their enimies Geneua EIE A description of the Eie LActantius in a little booke that he wrote de opificio Dei saith on this wise Marke saith Lacta●tius the scituation of Eies in the head of a man The Head is like a goodlie Tower gallantlie garnished with the Eies which Nature by the premission and ordinaunce of God haue set in a pretie valley compassed about with the bulwarke of the strong and hardie rocke of the forhead couered with fine soft close windowes which we call the Eie liddes In Latine they be called Cilia quasi caelia caelando of ciling or couering the eies Vnderneath is set as it were a little Mount which we call the ball of the cheeke and all this is for the defence and sauegard of the Eie which if he stood open in a flat plaine place as it standeth in a round valley it should euer be in daunger to be hurt where now it is so on
Cor. 15. 52. Tindale How this place following is vnderstood Because his face shall be so deformed and not as mans face ¶ That is his face shall be more deformed then other mens his beautie fouler then the beautie of the sonnes of men The whole sentence meaneth that manie men shall be estonied whē they shall sée Christ our sauiour which was excéeding beautifull before all the sonnes of men Psal. 45. 2. so wickedly and violently intreated of the Iewes spit vpon scourged crowned with thorne all be blouded yea greatlier humbled contemned and despised then euer was anie mortall man T. M. FAITH What Faith is FAith is a sure confidence of things which are hoped for and a certeintie of things which are not seene ¶ Faith trust in Christ onelie is the life and quietnesse of the conscience not trust in works how holie so euer they be or appere Works cānot set the heart at rest because we euer think they be not inough nor yet good inough but to few and so fal we to mistrusting after which followeth despairing and so damnation if we leaue not the confidence in them and sticke to faith which canne receiue and beléeue without mistrust that Christs workes on the crosse hath full purged cleansed and loosed vs from our sinnes Againe Faith is a liuely and stedfast trust in the fauour of God wherewith we commit our selues altogether vnto God and that trust is so surelie grounded and sticketh so fast in our hearts that a man wold not once doubt of it though he should die a thousand times therfore and such trust wrought by the holie Ghost through faith maketh a man gladde lustie chéerefull and true hearted vnto God and all creatures by the meanes whereof willingly and without compulsion he is glad and readie to do good to euerie man to suffer all things that God maie beloued and praised which hath giuen him such grace so that it is impossibl● to separate good works from faith euen as it is impossible to separate heate and burning from fire Therefore take heede and beware of thine owne fantasies which to iudge of faith good workes will se●me wise when indéede they are starke blinde and of all things most foolish Praie God that hée will vouthsafe to worke faith in thine heart or else thou shalt remaine euermore faithlesse faine thou imagine thou enforce thou wrastle with thy selfe and doe what thou wilt Againe Faith is the beléeuing of Gods promises a sure trust in the goodnesse and truth of God which faith iustified Abraham● Gen. 15. was the mother of al his good works which he afterward did for faith is the goodnesse of all workes in the sight of God Good works are things of Gods cōmaundement wrought in faith And to shew a show at the commandement of God to do thy neighbour seruice with all with faith to be saued by Christ as God promiseth vs● is much better thē to build an Abbeie of their own imagination trusting to be saued by y● fained works of hypocrits Iacob robbed Laban his vnckle Moses robbed the Aegiptians Abraham is about to sley burne his own son al are holy works because they are wrought in faith at Gods commandement To steale rob murther are no holy works before worldly people but vnto thē the haue their trust in God they are holie when God commandeth them What God commaundeth not getteth no reward with God Holy works of mens imagination receiue their reward héere as Christ testifieth Math. 6. 2. Tindale Faith is an vndoubted beliefe most firmelie grounded in the minde Bullinger fo 30. Againe True faith is the wel-spring root of all vertues good works first of al it satisfieth the minde and desire of man and maketh it quiet and ioyfull Bullinger fol. 54. How Faith is the ground of all good works As a good trée in the time of the yeare bringeth foorth good apples not to make him good for he is good before nor yet this apple is to his owne profit but vnto other mens notwithstanding the good nature the is in him must needs bring it forth So like wise y● iust man must needs do good works not by them to be iustified but alonelie in them to serue his brother for he hath no néed of thē concerning iustification This is the verie true way maner of doing good works how the no man can do goods workes but a iustified man as our sauiour Christ saith either make y● trée good and then his fruit must be good or els the tree euill and his fruit also euil for a good trée must néedes bring forth good fruite and a bad euill fruite D. Barnes How Faith iustifieth The faith of true beleeuers is the God iustifieth or forgiueth Christ deserueth it the faith trust in Christs bloud receiueth it certifieth the conscience thereof saueth deliuereth from feare of death dampnation this is it the we meane when we saie faith iustifieth the faith I meane in Christ not in our own works certifieth the conscience the our sins are forgiuen vs for Christs bloud sake Tindale fol. 187. Againe when I saie the faith iustifieth the vnderstanding is the faith receiueth the iustifieng God promiseth to forgiue our sinnes to impute vs for full righteous And God doth iustifie vs actiuely y● is to saie forgiueth vs for ful righteous Christs bloud deserueth it saith in the promiser receiueth it certifieth the conscience therof Faith chalengeth it for Christs sake which hath deserued all that is promised cleaueth euer to the promise truth of the promiser pretendeth not the goodnes of the worke but knowledgeth that our works deserue it not but are crowned and rewarded with the deseruinges of Christ. Take an example of young children when the Father promiseth them a good thing for dooing of some trifle and when they come for their reward dalyeth with them saieng What that thou hast done is not worth halfe so much Should I giue thée so great a thing for so little a trifle Ye did promise mée ye said I should haue it why did you promise and whie● did you saye so And let him saie what he will to driue them off they will euen saie againe you did promise me so yée did you said I should haue it so ye did But hirelings will pretend their worke and saie I haue deserued it I haue done so much my worke is worthie it c. Tindale fol. 225. That faith the mother of all good workes iustifieth before wée can bring forth anie good worke as the husbād marrieth his wife before he can haue anie lawfull children by her Furthermore as y● husbād marieth not his wife the she shuld cōtinue vnfruitful as before as she was in the state of virginity wherein it was impossible for her to heare fruit but contrariwise to make her fruitfull euen so faith iustifieth
congregation of such pure doctrine and perfect liuing that he made all that professed Christ to followe his example To be short philo the eloquentest writer of y● Iews perceiuing the first congregation of Alexandria yet to perseuer in the Iewish religion wrote a booke of their conuersation as it were in the praise of his Nation and as Luke sheweth how all thinges were common amonge the beléeuers at Hierusalem So did he put in writing al that euer he sée done at Alexandria during the time that Marke there taught preached He died in the eight yeare of Neros reigne was buried at Alexandria In whose place succéeded Aniamis Erasmus Of the martirdome of this Euangelist This Marke was the first Bishop of Alexandria and preached the Gospell in Aegypt and there drawne with ropes vnto the fire was burned and afterward buried in a place called there Bucolus vnder the raigne of Traianus the Emperour Booke of Mar. fol. 52. What the Marke in the right hand signifieth And made all c. to receiue a marke in their right hand and in their forehead c. ¶ Wherby he meaning the Pope renounseth Christ for as faith the word the Sacraments are y● christians markes so this Antechrist will accept none but such as will approue his doctrine so that it is not inough to confesse Christ beléeue the Scriptures but a man must subscribe to y● popes doctrine Moreouer their chrismatories greasings vowes othes shauings are signes of this marke Insomuch y● no nation was excepted y● had not many of these marked beasts Ge. Markes to know the false Apostles by There are two markes to know the false Apostles by The one is when they leaue Christ serue their bellies the other when they regard not the holy Scriptures preach lyes and their owne fantasies as S. Paule saith they serue not Christ but their owne bellies and with swéete and flattering words deceiue the hearts of the innocents Rom. 6. 18. MARS STRETE What Mars strete is PAule stoode in the middest of Mars strete ¶ This was a place so called as you woulde saye Mars hill where the Iudges sat which were called Areopagitae vpon weightie affaires which in olde time arrained Socrates and afterward condempned him of impietie Theo. Beza MARTIR What maketh a Martir IT is not the death but the cause of the death that maketh a Martir Saint Austen saith Tres erant in cruce c. There were three hanged on the crosse The iust was the Sauiour the second to be saued the third to be dampned The paine of all thrée was one but the cause was diuerse Iewel fol. 30. It is no hard matter by words to testifie the truth But those testimonies are most weightie which are sealed with bloud and with death Howbeit this is to be knowne as Augustine putteth vs in minde that the paines and punishmentes or death make not martirs but the cause For otherwise manye suffer many gréeuous things which yet are not martirs for the same Augustine to Bonifacius of the correction of the Donatists and in many other places testifieth that there were in his time Circumcelliones a furious kinde of men which if they coulde finde none that would kill them oftentimes threw themselues downe headlong and killed themselues These men saith hée are not to be counted for martirs Wherefore there séeme to be thrée things required to cause a man to be a martir First that the doctrine which he defendeth be true and agréeable with the holy Scriptures The second is that there be ioyned integritie and innocencie of lyfe that he not onely by his death but also by his lyfe and manners doe edifie the Church The third is that they séeke not to dye for boasting sake or desire of name or fame c. Pet. Mar. vpon the Rom. fo 233. How Martirs ought not to be worshipped Cyrillus in his sixt booke Contra Iulianum sayth We neyther say that the holy Martirs are Gods neither are we wont to worship them but rather we doe honour them with laudes and praises because they did stoutly fight for the truth y● they might keepe the sinceritie of faith MASSE How the Masse as they call it was vsed at the first FIrst they sayd Confiteor and acknowledged themselues to be sinners And then the Priest prayed in generall for all estates and degrees and for increase of grace and in especially if neede required Unto which prayers the people harkened and sayd Amen And then the Gospell and glad tidings of sorgiuenesse of sinnes was preached to stirre our faith and then the Sacrament was ministred for the confirmation of y● faith of the Gospell and of the testament made betweene God and vs of ●orgiuenesse of sinnes in Christs bloud for our repentance and faith As ye sée how after all bargaines there is a signe thereof made eyther clapping of hands or bowing a pennie or a grote or a peece of golde or giuing some earnest And as I shewed you after a truse made they slewe beasts for a confirmation And then men departed euerye man to his businesse full certified that their sinnes were forgiuen and armed with the remembraunce of Christs passion death for y● mortifieng of the flesh all the day after And in all these was neither the Sacrament neither other ceremonies of the Masse Image seruice to God holy déeds to make satisfaction for our sinnes or to purchase such worldly things as the Gospell teacheth vs to despise And now compare this vse of the Masse to ours sée whether y● Masse be not become y● most damnable Idolatry Image seruice that euer was in the world Tindale fol. 427. How the Popish Masse is falsified vpon S. Iames. The Papists doe bragge that S. Iames did vse their manner of Masse at Hierusalem S. Marke at Alexandria and S. Peter at Antioch But they haue no historie touching this matter worthy Though they vsed y● Lords supper as Christ our Maister did and as Paule also at Corinth yet they did not vse it as the péeuish Papists doe now the Masse That Ignatius Policarpus Ireneus make mention of is not like the popish Masse They confesse y● Basilius Magnus Hierome Ambrose vsed an other order in the administration of the Lords supper then is now vsed and that diuerse haue vsed diuerse fashions therin by their owne words Therefore it is manifest that this kinde of Massing is not the ordinance of Christ but inuēted by mans wit and pollicie without the word of God Thus saith the prechers of the Gospell at Basil. Bibliander S. Gregory saith that the Apostles had no peculiar manner in celebrating the Masse but that they only sayd y● Lords praier whose words be these The manner of the Apostles was y● onely at the saieng of the Lords praier they consecrated the sacrament D. Barnes fol. 356. By whom the Popish Masse was patched Who so list to know the often alterations and chaunges of
the Saints washed their garments in the bloud of the Lambe The Pardons teache men to washe their garmentes in the bloude of Saints Leo Bishoppe of Rome writeth notablye well to the Padestines against these Sacri●edges Although sayth hée the death of manye Saintes hath béene precious in the ●ight of the Lorde yet the killing of no innocent hath béene the perpetuation of the worlde The righteous receiued but gaue no Crownes and out of the valyauntnesse of the faythfull are graue examples of patience not giftes of righteousnesse for their deathe it were euerye one singular to themselues and none of them did by his ende paye the debt of an other for as much as there is one Lord Christ in whom all are crucified all are dead buried and raised vp againe Which sentence as it was worthy to bée remembred he repeated in an other place Saint Austen speaketh no lesse fitlye to the same effect Though fayth hee wee bye bretheren for bretheren yet the bloud of no Martyrs is shedde for the forgiuenesse of sinnes Which thing Christ hath done for vs that wée shoulde followe him but hath giuen vs a thing to reioyce vppon Againe in an other place As onely the sonne of GOD was made the sonne of man to make vs with him the sonnes of GOD So hée alone for vs hath taken vppon him punishment without euill deserninges that wée by him might without good deseruings obteine grace not due vnto vs. Caluine is his Institu 3. 〈…〉 chap. 5. Sect. 2. and. 3. Pardons are not knowne vnto vs by the authoritie of the Scriptures but by the authoritie of the Church of Rome and of the Popes which is greater then the authoritie of the Scriptures O blasphemous mouth so to saye I. N. Thus I aunswere It cannot well appeare from whom Pardons first begunne Amonge the olde Doctoure and Fathers of the Church there was either no talke at all or very little talke of Purgatorie But as long as Purgatorye was not cared for there was no man that sought for Pardons for the whole price of Pardons hangeth vppon Purgatorye take awaye Purgatorye● and what shall wée néede of Pardons Pardons beganne when folkes were afraide of the paines of Purgatorie I. N. There is nothing in the Scripture lesse opened or wherof the olds learned fathers haue lesse written then Pardons Of Pardons there is no mention Alphe de Castro in his 8. booke or Pardons ¶ Looke Purgatorie PASSEOVER How the Lambe was called the passeouer FOr it is the Lords passeouer ¶ The 〈…〉 was called the passeouer that the very name it selfe should kéepe in memorie what was signified thereby which phrase and manner of speaking the Scripture vseth often calling the signe by the name of the thing that is signified As Gen. 16. b. T. M. ¶ The Lambe was not the passeouer but signified it As the Sacraments are not the thing it selfe which they do represent but signifie it Geneua ¶ This was the passeouer of the Iewes but our paschall Lambe is Christ as witnesseth Saint Paule 1. Co● 5. 7. The Bible note What the passeouer was The passeouer was an holy action ordeined by God in the killing eating of a Lambe partly to the end that the Church might kéepe in memorie the benefit which God did for them in the land of Aegypt to be a testimonie of Gods good will towards the faithfull to be a tipe of Christ and part●ye also togather all the p●r takers thereof into the fellowship of one body and to put them in minde to be thankfull and innocent Bullinger fol. 362. And they ●●ue the passouer ¶ The Scripture vseth in sundrie places to call the Lambe the passeouer which was but the signe of the passeouer Because in all Sacraments y● signes haue the names of the things signified How this place following is vnderstood There was no passeouer holden like that which Iosias held from the dayes of the Iudges that iudged Israel nor in all the dayes of the kings of Israel and the kings of Iuda ¶ This is onel● spoken in the respect of the multitude zeale of the people ●●ith the great preparation not because the passeouer was not all th●● time celebrated D. Whitegift fol. 9. Of the passeouer offering of the cleane and vncleane If a man be cleane and not let in a iourney and yet was negligent to offer passeouer the same soule shal perish from his people c. ¶ In like manner it is with vs in our spirituall Easter or passeouer whosoeuer doth not reuerently beléeue the redemption of mankinde which was throughly finished in the true lambe Christ and amendeth not his life nor turneth from vice to vertue in the time of this mortall lyfe shall not belong vnto the glorie of the resurrection which shall be giuen to the● true worshippers of Christ but shal be rooted out from the companie of the Saints T. M. PASSION What a passion is WHatsoeuer moueth the minde in an vngodly desire is called a passion as malice rancour ire enuie ambition couetousnesse lecherie pride hatred studie of praise studie of enuieng and such other which stirre akd moue the minde out of his naturall rest to loue or to hate without reason measure As when a body suffereth any torment we say we be in a passion So whē our minde suffreth any such inordinate desire we haue the mindes passion And euery such motion of minde out of his due course is called a passion Lupset What is now the passions and sufferings of Christ. Now ioye I in my sufferings which I suffer for you fulfill that which is behinde of the passions of Christ in my flesh c. ¶ Passions sufferings of Christ is the passions which we must suffer for his sake for we haue professed and are appointed to suffer with Christ. Iohn 20. 21. As my Father sent mée so send I you Tindale ¶ As Christ hath once suffered in himselfe to redéeme his Church to sanctifie it so doth daily suffer in his members as pertakers of their infirmities therfore a reuenger of their iniuries Geneua PASTOR Who are pastors and Shepheards PAstors or Shepheards are such as being endued with a singular gift know how to féed Christs hungry shéepe with his healthfull word as with most pleasaunt pasture how to heale them that be attainted how to bring backe them y● be astray to kéepe away the wolues from the Lords flocke These haue some certeine flocke committed to their charge which is the marke wherby they be discerned from the other afore And concerning these ther be diuerse things written by the Prophets and specially by Ezec. 34. 1. and also by Iohn 10. 11. 21. 15. And in the Act. 20. 28. Marl. vpon the Apoc. fol. 259. Looke Shepheard PATERNIANI What the opinions of these heretikes were PAterniani were heretikes which thought that the neather partes of mans bodie were made not by God but by the
so ashamed that they hid themselues from the presence of God and founde the meanes to couer their nakednesse with Figge leaues SHAPE OF GOD. What it is to be in the shape of God WHich being in the shape of God ¶ To be in the shape of God is to be equall with God in all things yea to be a very naturall God which thing we ought to vnderstande of Christ which being a true naturall God did for our saluation take vpon him the shape of a seruaunt that is to say vouchsafe to be borne a very naturall man being in all things lyke vnto vs sinne onely being excepted Sir I. Cheeke If Christ being very God equall with the father laid aside his glory and being Lord became a seruaunt willyngly submitted himselfe to most shamefull death shall we which are nothing but vile slaues through arrogancie tread downe our brotheren and preferre our selues Geneua SHAVE ¶ Looke Woman taken in warre Wherefore Hanon shaued the beards of Dauids Ambassadours ANd shaued thē cut off their garments by y● halfe ¶ They shaued off the halfe of their beards to put them to shame villanye whereas the Ambassadours ought to haue bene honoured and because the Iewes vsed to weare side garments and beards they thus disfigured them to make them odious vnto others Geneua ¶ Looke Sion SHEEPEFOLD ¶ Looke One sheepefold SHEPHEARD The opening of these places following WHich is not the Shepheard neither the Sheepe are his owne ¶ These words containe some difficultie for if they are not shepheards in the church of Christ whose shéepe are none of their owne there shall be neuer a Pastour in the church but Christ onely What meaneth then the Apostles to saye God hath ordeyned some in the Church to bée Apostles some Euangelists and some Shepheardes and Teachers Also Christ said to Peter Féede my shéepe for he is the Pastour which féedeth and he is the teacher which teacheth Peter therefore was a shepheard although he fed none of his owne but the shéepe of Christ. But let vs remember that they which are guided by the spirit of God they count that their owne which belongeth vnto the head not to vsurpe power vnto themselues but faithfully to keepe that which is committed to his charge For he which is truly ioyned vnto Christ will neuer accompt that to be none of his owne which hath bene so deare vnto him Marl. vpon Iohn fol. 369. Their shepheards haue caused them to goe astray c. ¶ Their Gouernours and ministers by their examples haue prouoked them to Idolatry Geneua ¶ Looke Nahum 3. 18. Woe be vnto the shepheards of Israel that féede themselues should not the shepheard féede the flocke ¶ By the Shepheards he meaneth the Kings and Magistrates Priests Prophets● Ye seeke to enrich your selues by their commodities and so spoyle their riches and substaunce But the office dutie of a good shepheard is to loue and succour his flock and not to be cruell towards them Eze. 34. 4. The propertie of a good shepheard For now we liue if we stand fast in the Lord. ¶ A good shepheard doth alwaies count the welfare and prosperous estate of Christs flock to be his owne For while it goeth well with the congregation it goeth wel with him also But if he seeth y● church to be in any peril or weaknes then he is werie of his own● life he can haue no ioye Who is weake saith S. Paule I am not weake who is offended I burne not This affection is not in them that seeke their owne lucre or their owne glory Beza Of the restoring of good shepheards For I will deliuer my sheepe from their mouths c. ¶ By destroieng the couetous hirelings and restoring true shepheards whereof we haue a signe so oft as God sendeth true preachers which both by doctrine and lyfe labour to féede his shéepe in the pleasaunt pastures of his word Geneua Of the outward gouernment of a foolish shepheard Take to thée yet the instrument of a foolish shepheard ¶ Signifieng y● they shall haue a certain kinde of Regiment outward shew of gouernment but in effect it shuld be nothing for they should be wolues and deuouring beasts in stéede of Shepheards Geneua Of the sword that should come of the shepheards Arise O sword vpon my shepheards c. ¶ The Prophet warneth the Iewes that before this great comfort should rise vnder Christ there should be an horrible dissipacion among the people for their gouernours and Pastours should be destroyed the people should be as scattered shéepe and the Euangelist applyeth this to Christ because he was y● head of all Pastors Mat. 26. 31. Geneua Of foure kinde of shepheards One kinde there is that both teacheth well and liueth wel following the examples of the Prophets Apostles and Christ himselfe Another kinde there is that teacheth euill lyueth euill these pull downe the Temple of God with both hands The third are they which teach well and lyue euill and these what they build with their right hand they pull it down with the left and are altogether lyke to the shipwright that builded and prepared the Arke of Noe for others to be saued perished themselues There is also a fourth kind that teacheth euil and lyueth well and these through hypocrisie doe most harme of all For when the people doe gaze at the outward appeara●nce of their conuersation they are easely drawen to imbrace their doctrine c. Hemmyng SHEVV BREAD Wherefore it was called Shew bread SHew bread ¶ Because it was euer in the sight of the Lord. T. M. Obiection Dauid did eate of the Shewe bread notwithstanding it was forbidden Aunswere He was forced thereto by extremitie of famine He neuer decréed that it should be lawfull for all other to doe the lyke Obiection If it were necessary as by the words of S. Hierom y● they which would eats the Shewe bread should abstaine from their wiues how much more is it necessary that they that eate the bodie of Christ dayly as the Priests do shuld kéepe themselues chast and be altogether without wiues If they eating of the figure doe require such a cleannesse from women what shal the veritie of the thing it selfe doe Aunswere God gaue a commaundement that when the Paschall lambe should be eaten the Israelites should vse no leauened bread by the space of 7. daies and that whosoeuer did eate or keepe any in his house all that while his soule should perish from among his people now may I make mine argument after this manner If it was necessarie that they which did eate the paschall lambe should abstaine from leauened bread not onely when they did eate the Easter Lambe but also whole sixe dayes after how much more is it requisite and necessary that they which doe eate the Sacrament of the body and bloud of Christ which as ye say was figured signified and
God is iust and good although his hand be fore vpon him Geneua He that shall blesse in the earth shall blesse himselfe in the true God and he that sweareth in the earth shall sweare by the true God By blessing and by swearing is ment the praising of God for his benefites the true worshipping of him which shall not be onelie in Iudea but through all the world Geneua How this place of the Psalme is expounded And he shall receiue a blessing of the Lord. ¶ When he speaketh of blessing he doth vs to wit that not all they which in title onely vaunt themselues for worshippers of God shal be pertakers of the promised blessednesse but they that are aunswerable to their calling from the heart Howbeit it is a very effectuall encouragement to godlinesse to and good life when the faithfull heare that they misspend not their labour in following righteousnesse because there is an assured blessing laied vp for them with God Caluine BLINDE Who be blinde ANd blinde ¶ That is to saie one whom Christ enlighteth not which knoweth not God nor Iesus Christ whome hée hath sent Concerninn blindnesse sée Iohn 9. 41. Also he is called blinde which séeth not how miserable and néedie himselfe is Marl. vpon the Apoc. fol. 68. Why God is said to blinde men The cause why God is said to blinde men is for that when he hath bereft them of right vnderstanding of minde and of the light of his holie spirit he giueth them vp to the Diuell to be caried awaie into a wilfull wicked minde Rom. 1. 28. and sendeth them strong illusions 2. Thes. 2. 11. And so executeth iust vengeaunce vpon them by the minister of his wrath Marl. vpon the Apoc. fol. 92. ¶ God is said to blinde mens eies so oft as he doth reuoke or take awaie the contemned light of his truth and sinceritie leauing them that delight in darknes stil for then the Lord permitteth his worde to be preached to the vnthankfull and vngodlie receiuers vnto their iudgement or condemnation For so verelie doth the Euangelicall and Apostolique doctrine teach vs to thinke This saith the Lord is condemnation or this is iudgement that the sonne of God the verie true light came into the world and the world loued darknesse more then light And Paule said If yet the Gospell be hid it is hid in them that perish in whom the God of this world hath blinded the senses of their vnderstanding c. Pullinger in his Decades fol. 492. The meaning of this place following Except thou take awaie the blinde and the lame thou shalt not come in hether ¶ The Iebusites spake this in derision béeing perswaded that the● strong holde was of such force y● Dauid could not ouercome it although it were defended onelie by lame and blinde men Some write that they spake this of a confidence they had in their Idolls which the children of God estéemed as blinde and lame The Bible note ¶ The Children of God called Idolls blinde lame guides Therefore the Iebusites meant that they should proue y● their Gods were neither blinde nor lame Geneua BLOVD What is meant by bloud And bloud went out of the wine fat vnto the Horse bridles ¶ By the name of bloud the Scripture is wont to betoken vengeaunce and reuengement and so meant Iohn to describe the greatnesse of Gods wrath in this place Marl. vpon the Apoc. fol. 218. ¶ By this similitude he declareth the horrible confusion of the Tyraunts and Infidells which delight in nothing but warres slaughters persecutions and effusion of bloud Geneua How our cleansing is by Christs bloud And made them white in the bloud of the Lambe ¶ That is to saie in faith and in following the sufferings of Christ. But how can bloud make them white will some man saie I aunswere after the same manner that the Authour of the Epistle to the Romanes saith If the bloud of Bulls and Goates and the ashes of a Bullocke besprinkling them that are defiled doe hallowe them as touching the cleansing of the flesh how much more shall the bloud of Christ who by the euerlasting spirite hath offered himselfe vnspotted vnto GOD cleanse your consciences from deade workes to serue the liuing GOD. The Saints therefore and the faithfull being cleansed by the bloud of the Lambe both from originall sinne and also from actuall sinne committed through humaine ignoraunce and weaknesse and béeing preserued that they should not giue their assent to pestilent errours against y● faith are said to haue cleare yea and also comelie garments Marl. vpon the Apoc. fol. 111. ¶ There is no puritie nor cleannesse but by the bloud of Christ onelie which purgeth our sinnes and so maketh them white Geneua And sprinckling of the bloud of Iesus Christ. ¶ Héere S. Peter séemeth to haue had respect vnto the olde Ceremonie of bloud sprinckling for euen as it was not inough then that the Sacrifice should be offered and the bloud thereof shed vnlesse the people had bene sprinkeled with the same so now at this present it shall profit vs nothing that Christs bloud is shed vnlesse our conscience be cleansed and purified therewith which thing is done by the ministring of the holie Ghost which doth sprinkle our consciences with Christs bloud to wash them withall Sir I. Cheeke How the verie flesh and bloud of Christ is not in the Sacrament It was not lawfull by Moses lawe to eate nor drinke the bloud neither of man nor of beast And the Apostles themselues somewhat fauouring the infirmitie of the Iewes did institute that men should abstaine from bloud Now if the Apostles had taught that in the sacrament the very flesh and bloud of Christ is eaten and dronken with the téeth and mouth it had bene a great occasion to haue excluded al y● Iewes at once from Christ againe the Apostles would haue bene too scrupulous if they had so groselie vnderstood it to haue dronken the very bloud séeing it was so plaine against Moses Lawe Reade the 10. of the Actes where as Peter had the cloath sent downe I. Frith Bloud is the soule ¶ S. Augustine vppon these wordes saith thus So is the Bloud the Soule euen as the Rocke was Christ. And in the same Chapter he ioineth these thrée sentences together The Bloud is the Soule the Rocke was Christ and This is my Bodie as being all both of like meaning and also of like manner of vtteraunce ¶ Saint Ambrose expounding the same words saith thus When Moses in that place called the Bloud the Soule doubtlesse he meant thereby that the Bloud is one thing● and the Soule another For this is my bloud in the new Testament ¶ The wine signifieth that our soules are refreshed and satisfied with the bloud of Christ spirituallie receiued so that without him we haue no nourishment Geneua How the bloud of Martirs is the seede of the Church And there fell
a great feare vpon those that sawe them ¶ That is to saie when the enimies of the truth sawe they auailed nothing by putting the Preachers of the word to death they were sore afraid like as at this daie manie of the persecuters of the Gospell are constrained to saie that they loose their labour vtterlie in persecuting those that be against the Popish doctrine For the moe of them that be burned and put to death the mo do come away from the vntoward doctrine to the doctrine of the Gospel for the bloud of Martirs is the séed of the church● Marl. vpon the Apoc. fol. 159. BODIE What a naturall bodie is A Naturall bodie is he that is led by his affections not vnderstanding the things of the spirit of God Tindale What a spirituall bodie is A spirituall bodie is he that is led by the spirit of God How the bodie of Christ is in one place Dardamus did write vnto Saint Austen for the exposition of these words that Christ spake vnto the Thiefe saieng This daie shalt thou be with me in Paradise and wist not how to vnderstand it whether Christ meant that the Thiefe should be in Paradise with Christs soule or with his bodie or with his Godhead Therevpon Saint Austen writeth that as touching Christs bodie that daie it was in the Sepulcher saith it was not in Paradise although it was in a garden that he was buried for Christ he saith meant of a place of ioie and that was not saith S. Augustine in his Sepulcher And as for Christs soule it was that daie in hell and no man will saie that Paradise is there wherefore saith S. Austen the text must néedes be vnderstood that Christ spake it of his Godhead ¶ Héere S. Austen saith plainlie that Christs bodie as touching his manhood was in the graue and as touching his Soule it was in Hell so that while his bodie was in the graue it was not in Paradise For if he had thought that Christs bodie or soule might haue bene in diuers places at once he would not haue said that the text must néedes be vnderstood of his Diuinitie Againe As touching his Manhoode he was in Earth and not in Heauen where he now is when he said No man ascendeth into Heauen but he that descended from Heauen the Sonne of man which is in Heauen ¶ Doubt not saith Austen againe but that Christ our Lord the onelie begotten sonne of God equall with the Father and the same being the sonne of man wherein the Father is greater is whole present in all places as touching his Godhead and dwelleth in the same Temple of God as God and in some place of heauen for the cordicion of his verie bodie Héere S. Austen saith as touching his Manhood he is onelie in one certaine place in heauen and not in manie places at once ¶ The same one man is locall that is to saie contained in one place as touching his manhood which is also God vnmeasurable from the father The same one man as touching the substaunce of his manhood was absent from heauen when he was in earth and so forsaking the earth when he ascended into Heauen but as touching his Godhead vnmeasurable substance he neither forsooke heauen when he descended from heauen nor forsooke the earth when he ascended into heauen which maie be knowen by the most sure word of the Lord which to shew his humanitie to be locall that is to say conteined in one place onelie did say vnto his Disciples I ascend vnto my father your father my God and your God Of Lazarus also when he said I am glad for your sakes that you may beléeue for that I was not there And againe shewing the vnmeasurablenesse of his Godhead said vnto his Disciples I am with you vnto the worlds ende How did he ascend into heauen but because hée is locall and a verie man or how is he present vnto his faithfull but because he is vnmeasurable and verie God ¶ Now may Christ be called a straunger is he departed into a strange countrey séeing he is with vs vnto the worlds end and is among them that be gathered in his name Aunswere Christ is both God and man hauing in him two natures And as man he is not with vs vnto the worlds ende nor is present with his faithfull gathered together in his name But his diuine power spirit is euer with vs. Paule saith he was absent from the Corinthiaris in bodie but he was present with them in spirit So is Christ gone hence saith he and absent in his humanitie which in his diuine nature is euerie where and in these saiengs we reserue to both his natures their properties ¶ A bodie must néedes bée in some place if it be not within the compasse of a place it is no where if it be no where it is not ¶ Doubt not but Iesus Christ as concerning the nature of his manhood is now there from whence he shall come And we may not thinke that his mans nature is euerie where for we must beware that we doe not so stablish his diuinitie to take awaie the vertue of his bodie ¶ Christian people must beléeue that although Christ be absent from vs concerning his bodie yet by his power he gouerneth vs all things For like as when he was conuersant héere in earth as man yet then he filled heauen Euen so being in heauen with his flesh yet filleth the Earth and is in them that loue him ¶ S. Ambrose saith We must not séeke Christ vpon earth nor in earth but in heauen where he sitteth at the right hande of his Father ¶ To goe to his father from vs was to take from the world the nature which he receiued of vs. He is with vs and not with vs. For touching the forme of a seruaunt which he tooke away from vs into heauen he is absent frōm vs but by y● forme of God he is present with vs. And neuerthelesse both present absent he is all one Christ. ¶ If the word flesh wer both of one nature séeing that the word is euerie where why is not the flesh then euerie where For when it was in Earth then verelie it was not in heauen And when it is in heauen it is not surelie in earth And so sure that it is not in earth that we looke for him to come from heauen ¶ To be conteined in a place and to be euerie where be diuers and contrarie one nature cannot receiue in it selfe two diuers and contrarie things ¶ He is created by nature of his flesh and not created by the nature of his Godhead He is comprehended in a place by the nature of his flesh and not comprehended in a place by the nature of his Godhead ¶ Thus much of this matter gathered out of the workes of I. Frith BOOKE What the booke of life is ANd