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A18772 A postil or orderly disposing of certeine epistles vsually red in the Church of God, vppon the Sundayes and holydayes throughout the whole yeere. Written in Latin by Dauid Chytræus, and translated intoo English by Arthur Golding. Seen and allowed according too the order appoynted Chytraeus, David, 1531-1600.; Golding, Arthur, 1536-1606. aut 1570 (1570) STC 5263; ESTC S107883 320,443 478

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bée afrayde bycause thou Lord art with mée Esay and Ezechias although the Citie was beséeged by Sennacherib yet faint they not for pensiuenesse but flée vnto God by earnest prayer and wayt for deliueraunce Hereafter ensue the disposements of of certeyne Epistles which are vsually read to the people vppon the feast dayes of Sainctes Vpon the feast of the Annunciation of our blyssed Lady Sainct Marie or vppon the feast of the conception of Christ The Epistle Esay vij GOd spake once ageyn vnto Ahaz saying require a token of the Lorde thy God whether it bee towarde the depth beneath or towarde the hevghte aboue Then sayde Ahaz I will requyre none neyther will I tempte the Lorde And he sayde hearken to ye of the house of Dauid is it not ynough for you that ye be greuous vntoo men but yee must greeue my God also And therefore the Lorde shall giue you a token Beholde a virgine shall conceyue and beare a sonne and thou his mother shall call his name Emanuell Butter and hony shall he eate that hee may knowe to refuse euill and chose the good Therfore before the childe may know good or euill malice shall dissuade from choosing the good THe first feast of the new Testament and the beginning welspring of our redemption and euerlasting welfare is the wonderful cōception or cuppling of the two natures of the Godhead and manhood of our Lorde Iesus Christe the Sonne of God the memoriall whereof the Churche celebrateth as this day And of singular purpose was it Gods wil that the times of his wonderfull works and of his reuelementes should agrée For vppon this day beyng the .xxv. day of Marche was the Sonne of God conceyued in the wombe of the Uirgin Marie or as this day he cuppled too himselfe mans nature by eternall alyaunce a thousand fyue hundred thréescore and ten yéeres ago The yeere after the first promis making of the womans séede in Paradise 3962. After the renewing of the same promis vntoo Abraham that all nacions should bée blissed in the same séede 1938. After the prophesiyng of Iacob concerning Syloh or the Uirgins issue a thousand seuen hundred and six yéeres and the same day beyng the xxv of March now ful a thousand fiue hūdred xxxvij was our Lord Iesus Christ the sonne of God made a sacrifise for vs vppon the Altar of the Cr●sse The same day also is Adam the first man reported to haue bin created 5532. yéeres ago And afterward about the same time it is thought that Abell was slayne and Isaac layd vppon the Altar to haue bin sacrifised Therefore inasmuch as the day it selfe putteth vs in mind of most weyghty matters as of the sonne of God the founder and redéemer of the Church of the creation of our selues of the wonderfull alyaunce of the Godhead and manhoode made in the Uirgins wombe and of the causes and benefites of this wonderfull vnion let vs with all godlinesse and reuerēce cast our selues downe before God and yéeld him thankes for his so excellent woorkes and benefites and by deuout and earnest musing vpon so great things kindle and confirme in vs fayth prayer and most assured hope of euerlasting saluation And to the intent our hartes may bée the more fitte and earnest to the reuerent minding of them and to thankesgiuing for the same Let vs also celebrate this feast with greater modestie and sobernesse of behauiour The doctrine of this holy day concerning the causes and benefites of the wonderfull Incarnacion of Gods sonne is all one with the doctrine that is set forth vppon the byrthday of the same sonne of god And therfore the disposement of that matter may bee borowed out of that place into this day Now will I bréefly entreate of the prophesie of this dayes Epistle Behold a virgin shall cōceyue and bring forth a child and thou shalt call him Emmanuell which was vttered by the Prophet Esay seuen hundred and lvij yéeres before that the Angell Gabriell brought woord of the fulfilling of it too the virgine Marie and conteyneth the doctrine of the conception of the sonne of God whiche is the foundacion of our redemption and saluation I will therefore in few woordes set out the chéef pointes of this doctrine comprised in accustomed questions or orderly instruction The conception or incarnation of the Sonne of God is the wonderfull cuppling or personall vnion of the two natures that is to say of the Godhead begotten of the substance of the euerlasting Father and of the manhood taken in the wombe and of the substaunce of the virgin Marie wrought in Christ our Mediator that he may bée Emmanuell y is to say God with vs of one substaunce both with God the eternall Father and with vs reconciling God vnto vs and by paying the full raunsome for vs appease Gods most iust wrath ageynst sinne and restore to vs men rightuousnesse and eternall lyfe The partes of the Emmanuell conceyued in the virgin Marie may bée sayde to bee two the Godhead or the sonne of God the woorde the manhood taken of Maries substaunce and of the ofspring of Dauid Hither may all the whole doctrine concerning the person of Gods sonne the differences of the persones of the Godhead and of the two natures in Christe c. bée referred The causes THe efficient cause of the conception or incarnacion of the sonne of God is the whole Godhead For although that the persone of the sonne cuppled to it selfe mannes flesh by personall vnion yet is it the worke of all the thrée persones togither which also go ioyntly togither in this saying the holy Ghost shall come vppon thee and the power of the hyghest shall ouershadowe thee The hyghest is God the Father The power of the hyghest is the sonne of God who ouershadoweth the virgine Marie and the whole Churche making intercession for vs too the euerlasting Father cuppling our nature to him selfe and couering vs as a shadow ageynst the heate of Gods wrath The holy Ghost halloweth the flesh taken of the virgine Maries substāce therof shapeth in the virgins wombe the body of the Messias redye too bée borne which body togither with a reasonable soule the woord the sonne of God by taking vnited by vniting tooke vnto him And therefore it is sayd in our Créede whiche was conceyued by the holy Ghost The inward forcing cause of the conception byrth passion and death of Christ is al one that is to wit the infinite goodnesse and mercy of God toward manhood tempered with his heauenly Iustice for the full satisfiyng whereof with sufficient amendes the very sonne of God taking our nature vppon him became both man and a sacrifise for vs. The outward forcing cause was the fall of our firste parentes and the sinne that soked from thence into all men with death and moste sorowfull damnacion of all mankind which the sonne of God was Loth should perish vtterly Now the
that is vvritten Death is swallovved vppe intoo victorie Deathe where is thy styng Hell where is thy victory The styng of Deathe is sinne and the strength of sinne is the lawe But thankes be vnto God which hath giuen vs victorie through our Lorde Iesus Chryste Therfore my deare brethren be yee stedfast and immoue able alvvayes rich in the woorks of the Lorde for as much as yee know how that your laboure is not in vayne in the Lorde The disposement of the .xv. Chapter of the first Epistle to the Corinthians which is the seat of the Doctrine concerning the Resurrection or rysing of the dead THe most ioyful end and hauen of the whole Christen lyfe and Faith and the souereine and most assured comfort in all the miseries and sorowes of this most flightful and wretched lyfe is the Resurrection from death and the blissed and euerlasting lyfe with God In which not only our soules remayning after death shall enioy the beholding of our Lord God in quiet peace ioyfulnesse but also our bodies which were rotted and consumed in the dust of the earth shall liue ageine and bée repaired and being ioyned with their soules ageine and set frée all sinne and death shall bée glorifyed and receyue immortall honor And where in death they heertofore were dround they shall heerafter weare the rayment bryght Of true renowne and euermore bee found before the Lord in endlesse lyfe and lyght This doctrine concerning the Resurrection of our bodyes which is the peculiar wisdom of the christen church is euidently confirmed and lyghtsomly set out by Paul in this xv chapter of his first Epistle too the Corinthians Therefore it is of that kynd of cases that instruct The cheefe partes of the whole disputation are three 1 Whither there bée any rysing of the dead 2 What manner a one it is or what manner of bodyes they shall ryse with 3 Of the cause of the rysing of our bodies which is Chrystes victorie in which he swalowed vp sin death and hell by his death and restored eternall lyfe and glorie too his Church by his Resurrection THe enterance intoo the matter putteth vs in mynde that the true and néedfull Doctrine concerning the chéefe articles of the Christen faith is often continually too bée repeated and beaten intoo the hearers eares Euen in this consideracion bicause the Gospell is the power of God effectuall in woorking saluacion too euery one that beléeueth I do you too vnderstand or I put you in mynd of the Gospel which I haue preached vntoo you which you haue embraced by fayth by which also you bee saued if you holde it fast by faythe onlesse peraduenture by this tyme hauing shaken off fayth you haue beleeued in vayne This selfsame gospell I say doo I put you in mynd of that you may bethinke you wirh what words I haue preached vntoo you For I haue deliuered c. The proposition state or ground of the first part is The dead shall vndoutedly ryse agein THis proposition doth he warrant by sixe Argumentes First of the efficient cause The totall or sufficient cause of a thing being set downe the effect foloweth of necessitie in such tyme and maner as the cause or the wil of God hathe appoynted Chryst who is the cause of our Resurrection and lyfe is verely risē in his very body from death and hath promysed of certeyntie that he wil rayse vntoo lyfe the bodyes of all men that bée dead Ergo without any dout euen our dead bodyes shall also ryse agein Paul concludeth this argument in the forme of an Ethuthymema Chryst who was dead is risen ageine in very déed Ergo wée also shall ryse agein when wée bée dead The consequent is of force holding from the efficient and sufficient cause too the effect which he will accomplish as he hath promysed This reason of the consequence Paule himselfe poynteth out a little after For séeing that by man came death by a man also must come the resurrection of the dead For like as in Adam all men die So also by Chryst shall all men bée called agein too lyfe The Antecedent which is the ground woorke of the Resurrection of our bodyes and of our whole Fayth and saluacion is confirmed at large by Paule First by witnesse of the Scripture which testifyeth that Chryste dyed for our sinnes Esay liij Daniel ix Zach. iij. and .xiij. Psalm .xxij. And that he rose agein the third day Osée vj. in the storie of Iones Psalm .xv. Zach. xiij Esay xj Actes .xiij. Secondly by the record of many that sawe Chryst after he was risen and were familiarly conuersant with him full fortie dayes Chryst the same day that he rose from death appéered not only too Cephas or Simon Peter and the twelue Apostles of whom Paule maketh mencion in this place but first of all too Marie Maudlin Iohn .xx. Marke .xviij. next too the rest of the women Math. xxviij Thirdly too a cupple walking intoo the féeldes whom the Apostles beléeued not Mark .xvj. Fourthly too Cephas or Simon Peter Fifthly too Cleophas and Nathanael as they were going toowards Emaus too whome at their returne all the Apostles giue credit Luke the two and twentith Sixthly too all the Apostles as they were assembled toogither sauing Thomas Luke the foure and twentith Iohn the twentith j. Corinthians xv And all these appéerings were made the very day of his Resurrection vppon which day also S. Hierom is of opinion that Chryst shewed himselfe too Iames the lesse of whom Paule maketh mention in this place Afterward he shewed him selfe sundrye tymes too the Apostles when Thomas was with them and at the sea of Tyberias Iohn xx xxj Also in Galilie too mo than fyue hundred brethren at once And also too his Apostles or too the thrée score and tenne and too all the rest of his Disciples Finally after his Ascention Chryste shewed himselfe too Paule also that hée was risen ageyne Paules second argument WE sée the Apostles doo preache that Chryste is risen from death Ergo there is in very deede a rysing ageine of the deade The consequens holdeth of the authoritie of the Apostles who are sent from God and are assured that they cannot erre The third argument is a bringing back by impossibilitie It is impossible that twoo ful contraries should both at once be true or false This Exposition The deade ryse not ageine or no deade folkes ryse ageine is false Ergo the contradictorie or full contrarie proposition The deade shall ryse ageine is true and certeine The minor or Second parte of the Argument is proued thus of truthe there can come nothing but truthe But of this proposition No deade folks rise ageine folow things manifestly false and irkesome too heere namely that not euen Chryste is risen ageyne and that the preaching of the Apostles is vayne whych are false witnesses of GOD and so GOD himselfe who hath auouched that he raysed Chryst
vj. This is the will of my eternal Father that euery one which séeth the sonne beléeueth in him should haue lyfe euerlasting I will rayse him vp at the last day Iohn v. The houre shall come that al that are in their graues shal héere his voyce and come foorth those that haue doone good too the resurrection of lyfe and those that haue doone euil too the resurrectiō of iudgement Io. xix I knowe that my Redéemer liueth and I shall ryse out of the earth in the last day and shall bée compassed ageine with my skin and in my fleshe shall I sée my god I shall sée him my self myne owne eyes shall behold him and none other this hope is layed vp in my bosom This restitution of dead bodyes and commencement of new and euerlasting lyfe is not only warranted by euident textes verye openly and cléerly in the sermons of Christ and his Apostles but also was manifested too the eyes of the Apostles and the rest of Gods church that was at those dayes in Iewrie when by the space of full forty dayes Chryste being risen agein and many of the Patriarkes and Prophetes that were risen with Chryste were openly and familiarly conuersant with the Apostles and Marie his moother and a great companie that was ioyned with them for Paule in this Chapter witnesseth that he was séene of mo than fyue hundred brethren at once and talked with them of the kingdome of god Act. j. of the wonderfull state and redemption of the Church of heauenly reuelatious of the promise of the séede that should crush the Serpents head or of the persone office and benefites of Chryst of the abolishemēt of sinne too the restorement of our bodyes of the lyfe euerlasting Vppon these heauenly reuelements warranted by sure and euident recordes let vs set our eyes when wée thinke vppon the resurrection of our bodyes and the lyfe too come Philosophie knoweth vtterly nothing of the restoremēt of the dead bodyes but holdeth opinion that they perish and are resolued intoo the stuffe whereof they were first made vtterly come too nothing after the same sort that the bodyes of brute beasts doo Neyther hath it any sure and stable beléef at all concerning the immortalitie of the soule and the euerlasting conuersation with God and the blissed wyghts But as in a dubble and doutfull matter it disputeth too and fro of it and reasoneth that whither mennes soules remayne after death or whither they dye and perish with their bodyes yet there is none euill at all in death And the chéef reasons whereby mennes soules are auouched too bée immortal are gathered toogither by Cicero in his first booke of Tusculane questions which it is good too consider too the intent the cōferring of them may bring some lyght too both the kyndes of doctrine The first reason is of Authoritie ANtiquitie the néerer it was from the creation and from the offpring of GOD so much the better did it sée what things were true All Antiquitie was of opinion that mennes soules are immortall and that man by departing out of this lyfe is not so cleane swept away that he should vtterly perish Ergo it is true that mennes soules are immortall He proueth the minor or second part 1 By naturall instincts 2 By the Lawe of their préests 3 By the ceremonies of buryall 4 By Canonization The second reason IN all matters the consent of all Nations is too bée accoūted the Lawe of Nature All men whersoeuer they bée doo agrée in this that there is somwhat which perteyneth too those that are departed out of this lyfe Ergo wée also ought too bée of the same opinion The third reason THe proof of Nature must bée taken of euery such nature as is best The best of all sortes of men as Princes Poets woorkmē others doo hold most stedfastly the hope of immortalitie Ergo men find by nature that mennes soules are immortal The fourth reason EVery thing that moueth it selfe is euer moued and is euerlasting The soule of man moueth it selfe Ergo it moueth euer and is euerlasting The fifth reason THat which is not cōpounded of the Elements is not corruptible mānes soule is not cōpounded of the elements Ergo mannes soule is not corruptible or mortall He proueth the minor thus NO nature compounded of the Elements hath ingraffed in it instincts of knowledge power too searche secretes memorie able too conceyue and beare away things most diuerse foresyght of things too come so many Artes. c. Mannes mynd hath ingraffed in it instincts of knowledge ablenesse too inuent new things too call too mynd things past c. Ergo mannes mynd is not compounded of the elements The sixth reason IT is an vnmoueable maximée of Gods prouidence iustice that good should befall the good and euill should befall the euill But in this lyfe the good fare woorst as Socrates c. Ergo there must néedes remayne another lyfe in which the good may receyue good and those that in their humane bodyes haue ledde their lyfe like Gods may returne too the Gods frō whom they came These foresayd six Arguments are the Arguments of Cicero The second part of the Chapter IN what sort shall the dead ryse and with what maner a body come they Paule answereth that the woord of the Almighty GOD ought simply too bée beléeued though wée know not the māner how God will bring too passe the things he promyseth For as sainct Iustine sayeth It is an euident token of vnbeléef too demaund as too Godward or in Gods matters how any thing is or may bée doone For fayth alone ought too dispatch all doutes in vs Paule therfore in this place rebuketh such as bée inquisitiue of the maner how dead mennes bodyes rotten in their graues and cōsumed too nothing shall come too lyfe ageine commaunding them too settle their mynds by fayth simply in the promise and woord of the almighty god And ageinst our distrustfulnesse he setteth an Example most ordinarie in nature concerning the growing of corne which springeth vp of the seede cast intoo the ground and dead and consumed intoo fyne cinder Therfore can God easly rayse our buryed corses out of the dust intoo which they bée turned and buyld vp the whole bodye ageine making it much more beautifull and glorious than it was before like as thou sowest not the same bodye that shall growe vp but bare corne which rotteth in the ground and yet there springeth vp other corne of the same kynd and substance much better and more full of sap clad garnished and sensed with spindle eare husk ayles c. Al flesh is not a like but there is one flesh of men an other of beasts c. That is too say All the dead shall not ryse with like honor but there shall bée a difference howbéeit not in the substance but in the glorie of them that ryse
read He shall ouerthrow death for euermore But wée may most safely folow Paules translation The other place is in Osee xiij I Will redeeme them from the hand of hel I wil deliuer them from Death where are thy plages O Death wher is thy destruction O hell Oseas also preacheth of this most souerein benefite of the sonne of God that although his Church in this world bée oppressed with manyfold persecution and miseries as well as the rest of men that are vngodly yet will he vndoutedly deliuer it from Death and out of the very iawes of hell and wil endue it with new lyfe and euerlasting ioyfulnesse For the Hebrue woord Scheol ▪ which vsually they translate hel dooth properly signifie the graue wherin the bodyes of deade folkes are bestowed also the place in which mennes soules departing from their bodyes are reserued till the last iudgement day The Prophet therfore promiseth deliuerance too the godly members of the church not that they shalbée priuiledged in this lyfe from all miseries and from death it selfe but that when they are dispatched out of this lyfe and buryed in their graues euen then he willeth them too looke for assured deliuerance or resurrection a much better life which shall continue for euer bicause Death which héertoofore was the plage and destruction of all mankynd and deuoured al men is now ageine deuoured and swalowed by Chryst our redéemer who paying the full pryce or raunsome for vs hathe borowed vs out for so doo the Hebrew woordes Pada and Gaal signifie which the Prophet vseth in this place And as touching the woordes that ensue which Hierom hathe translated thus Ero mors tua ô Mors Ero morsus tuus ô Inferne That is too say O Death I will bée thy Death O hell I will bée thy sting and which Paule hath expressed by an Interrogation O Death where is thy sting O Hell where is thy victorie It is euident that the diuersitie of the interpretations ryseth of the Hebrew woordes which haue many significations For the woord Ehe and the future tence Cal is of the verb Haiah by Apocape which is a figure that taketh away a letter or a sillable from the end of a woord for the whole woord is Ehieh I will bée And so is the aduerbe where which also by transposition of letters is red Aieh It appéereth therfore why Paule and the .lxx. Interpreters and Aquila of Sinope and the fifth edition all which Ierom citeth haue translated the woord Ehe where and not I will bee Where is thy inditement or accusation The woorde following Deuareca which S. Ierome translateth Mors tua thy Death the thrée score and ten Interpreters translate 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 thy accusation or inditement and Aquila sermones tui thy sayings is likewyse of many significations For the woord Dibber signifyeth too speake and also too kill or destroy ij Reg. xxij Athalia Dedabber slew all the kings stocke Héeruppon Deber is as muche too say as a plage a murreine or a destruction Exod. ix ij Reg. vlt. iij. Reg. viij And the other word Keleb in the part folowing is almost of the same signification for it signifieth a wasting plage or destruction and rooting out As in the Psalme xcj. Thou shalt not bee afrayd of Deber the plage that rageth in the darke nor of Keleb the destruction that wasteth at the noone day Where wée in our Latin translation haue A negocio perambulante in tenebris ab incursu a Daemonio Meridiano Which is of the businesse walking in the darke of the sodein rushing in and of the Diuel of the noone day Therfore the proper méening of Osée is out of all dout this Where are thy plages O death where is thy rooting out O hell Death and Hell did héeretoofore bring plage and vtter destruction vppon all men through sinne wherewith all mankynd is horribly atteinted and appaired And then cheefly is this plage felt then dooth it shewe it self then dooth it strike a man intoo horrible fearfulnesse and sorowes which are the enterances intoo euerlasting Death when sinne is stirred vp and rowzed by the lawe of God as Paule sayeth Rom. vij But Chryste by his death and gooing downe intoo hell hath brought a plage and destruction vppon deathe and hell So that from hence foorth not only Chryst himselfe but also all the godly that beléeue in Chryst may vaunt themselues ouer vanquished Death and destroyed Hel with these woordes Death vvhere is thy plage or sting wherwith thou haste heretofore murdered all mankynd Hell where is thy victorie whereby thou hast vanquished all men Thankes bée vntoo God who hath giuen vs victorie by our Lord Iesus Chryst for God so loued the world that he gaue his only begotten sonne too the entēt that all that beleeue in him should not perish but haue lyfe euerlasting For like as Moyses lifted vp the serpent in the wildernesse so behoued it the sonne of man too bee exalted too the intent that all that beléeue in him should not perish but haue lyfe euerlasting Therfore my deerbeloued brethren bee stedfast vnmouable and alwayes abounding in the woork of the Lord knowing that your labour is not in vayne in the Lord. He concludeth his disputation with a short Exhortation that they should stedfastly hold them too the true doctrine cōcerning the Resurrection of the dead and the other Articles of the Christen fayth which they had receyued of Paule and not suffer themselues too bée drawen away from it by any likely persuasions of the false Apostles but endeuer too profit in true godlynesse and full assurednesse of fayth and the spreading abrode of the true doctrine and in executing the residue of the labours of their vocation vpon trust of Gods helpe and hope of luckye successe and such as may bée too the welfare of the Churche according too this most swéete promise Your labour shall not bee in vayne in the Lord. Vppon the Sunday called Quasi modo geniti or the first Sunday after Easter IT tooke this name of the Introit taken out of j. Pet. ij As newborne babes desyre the reasonable and pure milke that you may growe in it if so bée you haue tasted that the Lord is swéete For in the auncient Churche when in manner men growen were baptized it was a custome too baptize on the Easter holydayes and too giue milke to taste too those that were baptized and a whyte garment too put on whiche was a token of freedome and innocencie Whereuppon the wéeke is called yet still in Albis and the Sunday is called the Sunday in Albis or whyte Sunday and it is that which foloweth next after Easter And the verses out of the hymne Salue festa dies are knowen Behold o holy King great part of thy renowne is seene When sacred baptim doth aduāce the soules by thee made cleene Thy souldiers from the siluer streame come pure and whyte of hew Cleane washed from
thence he shal come to iudge the quick and the deade Now the doctrine concerning the last iudgemēt may be comprised in these six places 1. Whither there shal come any last iugement 2. who shall bée the iudge and howe and when he shall come 3. What shall bée the manner and order of the iudgement 4. Of the rewardes of the ryghtuous 5. Of the endlesse pains of the wicked 6. Of the tyme and of the rest of the circumstances of the iudgement The fourth Of Freendlynesse LIke as Paul reioyced vnfeynedly and from his hart that the Corinthians were brought to the true knowledge of God the felowship of the euerlasting and blissed churche So must euery man reioyce in the prosperitie of other men specially of good men and bée sory for their mischaunces and wishe them wel from the bottom of their harte This vertue is called Fréendlynesse And the vices that encounter it are diuelishnesse spyghtefulnesse and maliciousnesse of which wée haue spoken already in the Exposition of the vertues of the fifth commaundment Vppon the .xix. Sunday after Trinitie ¶ The Epistle Ephes iiij BE yee renued in the spirit of youre mynd and put on that new mā which after God is shapen in rightuousenesse and true holynesse Wherefore put away lying and speake euery man truthe to his neighbour forasmuch as we are members one of another Bee angrye and sin not Let not the Sun go downe vppon your anger neither giue place too the backbyter Let him that stole steale no more But let him rather labour with his hands the thing that is good that he may haue to giue vnto him that needeth The disposement IT is of those sort of cases that are persuasiue or exhortatiue For it is wholly occupied in exhortation vntoo good woorks concerning which the customable doctrin included in sixe places may bee recited First whither newe obedience bée néedful Secondly which are the works that bée good in déede that is to wit not Munkish ceremonies or such lyke ceremonies deuysed by men but the works that be commaunded of God as truth méekenesse liberalitie and diligence Thirdly what are the efficient causes of good woorkes or how they may be performed by vs sith we are so weake and the Diuell so strong Fourthly how good works please God sith they be vnperfect and defiled with many sinnes that is to wit not for our owne worthynesse but for Chrystes sake through faith Fifthly for what ende good works are to be done that is too wit not too deserue forgiuenesse of sinnes by them which is giuen fréely only for Chrystes merit but that wée may yeelde too God our due obedience that we may glorifie him that we may eschue paynes euerlasting and present and that we may obtaine the rewards that are promised Sixthly forasmuchas the good woorks euen of all the saincts are disteined with many sins we must speake of the difference of the sinnes that remayne in the saincts and of those that remayne not in the saincts Howbeit bycause this Epistle conteyneth otherwyse a moste plentifull doctrine and that the phrase thereof hathe some hardenesse in it we wil interprete the very text in order diuiding it into six common places wherof twoo or thrée maye bée stoode vppon somewhat longer sermonlyke The first LAy away from you that old man according to youre former conuersation whiche is corrupt thorough the deceiuable lusts and be ye renued in the spirit of youre mynd and put on that new man which after God is shapen in holynesse and rightuousnesse The first parte is a generall exhortacion to new obedience agreeable to Gods will or comformable too Gods rightuousnesse This exhortacion is enlarged with an Antithesis or setting togyther of contraries Lay away sin and put on rightuousnesse Or cease too doo euill and doo good woorkes The old man by this name he méeneth all the defaults in nature all euill inclinations affections and dooings that agrée not wyth the wyll or lawe of GOD that is too wit in the mynde ignoraunce of God darknesse and doubtefulnesse concernyng GOD concernyng the prouidence will and woorde of God and concerning the promises and threatnings of god In the will voydnesse of the feare loue towards God and of al vertues which ought to be perfect and earnest and also euill inclinations standing in ones own conceyt pryde fleshly carelesnes And in the hart a headynesse of al affections flames of vnlawfull loue of hatred of desire of reuenge and of couetousnesse All this huge heape of sinne that sticketh in the nature of man vnrenued is betokened by the terme olde man whom in other places he calleth somtimes the natural man somtime the outward man sometymes fleshe The lustes of errour or deceyuable lustes he nameth all euill inclinations of corrupted nature whereby wee are caryed headlong intoo error and sin as it is sayde Concupiscence is the fountayn of all euyls both of the fault and of the punishment For thorough concupiscence both the cleannesse and soundenesse of the soule is marred and the body is made subiect vnto death To be renued and to put on the new man are in maner all one The mynd is renewed when the darknesse of sin is chaced out of the mind by the gospel and the holy ghost and there is kindled true knowledge of God true faith loue rightuousnesse and obedience of al vertues For vnder the name of mind he comprehēdeth al the powers of the soule which the Philosophers are woont to distinguish The new man he calleth him that is renued by the voice of the Gospell and by the holy ghost who kindleth in mēs minds the light of the true knowledge of God and al vertues agreable to Gods rightuousnesse suche as were in the first man that was created after Gods image before his fall The second HE putteth in a bréefe most lerned definition of Gods image after which mā was created namely y it is tru ryghtuousnesse and holynesse and Coloss iij. he writeth that it is the true knowledge of God the creator Vppon these twoo textes wée buylde this true and lerned definition of Gods image Gods image in the first man was not onely a being of mynde and will nor onely a relation or acceptation of mankynde before God but also a qualitie of the seconde speciall kynde that is too say a natural ryghtnesse and excellente perfectnesse of all the powers of man as of the mynd the will the hart agreeing with the first pattern or diuine mynde that is too wit in the mynd light that is a manifest knowledge of God the Creator without any darknesse or wauering In the wil harty loue of God all vertues stirred vp and blazyng without any sinful inclinations and without concupiscence and fleshly carelesnesse and too be short true ryghtuousnesse and holynesse that is too say vniuersall obedience agréeing with the wil of God and directed truly too this ende that the patterne might be knowne abrode
this say wee vnto you in the worde of the Lord that wee whiche liue and are remayning in the comming of the Lord shall not come ere they which sleepe For the Lord him self shall descend from heauen with a shout and the voyce of the Archaungell and trompe of god And the dead in Christ shall arise firste then shall wee which lyue and remayne bee caught vp with them also in the cloude to meete the Lord in the ayre And so shall we euer be with the lord VVherfore comfort your selues one another with these woordes The disposementes IT is of that sort that is persuasiue For it is a comfort to bee set ageynst death or ageynst the moorning and heauinesse that wee take for the death of our selues or of some others that are deere vnto vs. And in the ende of the Epistle there is shewed this bound vse of this present discourse concerning the resurrection of the dead Comforte your selues one another with these wordes For the most effectual most stedy cōfort in al the tribulacions of this most shorte miserable lyfe which in very déede is nothing els but Dust shadow deaw but a Ghost but a steam but a puffe f●ther aire blast cinder a dreame froth a storme but a stadge but a span but a footstep Yea and in death it selfe is the assured hope of the resurrection of the blissed lyfe and euerlasting company whiche wée shall haue with God verely bycause wée are throughly perswaded that wée which embrace Christes doctrine by fatyh are not created to the miseries of this troublesome mortall lyfe onely ne that he meaneth the soul which was created of nothing the thing which was sometime nothing dooth vtterly perish and decay so as it should vtterly returne to nothing ageyn but y our soules do in déede remayne aliue after death the assoone as they are loosed from the bond of their bodies they are out of hand with the Lord enioy the sight of God in quiet peace ioy that our bodies also which sléepe in death shall assuredly reuiue become agein the dwelling places of their soules so as we hauing receiued the same bodies ageyn ▪ which shal be glorified haue a liuely beautie the same flesh which we now carie about vs and beyng vtterly free from all sinne labour and gréef shall liue for euermore with the Lord enioying the sight wisdome light rightuousnesse and blisfulnesse of the whole Godhead and glorifie God ageyne on our behalf for euer and euer Of this hope which is peculiar to the Christians and the very helmet of our saluation holy Iob sayeth this hope is layd vp in my bosome I know that my redéemer liueth and I shall rise out of the earth in the last day and shall bée compassed ageine with my skinne in my flesh shall I sée God whom I shall sée and none other for mée with these eyes shall I behold him and with none other Apoc. vj. xxj The soules of the saincts are before the throne of God and serue him day and night And God shall wipe all teares from their eyes and there shall bée no death nor moorning nor crying nor labour c. Apo. xiiij Blissed are the dead that dye in the Lord from henceforth The Philosophicall consolations that are to be set ageynst death and whiche burie a man with somewhat lesse sorow are gathered by Cicero in his first Tusculane question and by Plutarche in his booke to Apollonius And the summe therof is comprehended in this oration of Socrates in Plato I am in great hope O yée Iudges that it falleth well on my behalf that I am sente to death For one of these two things must néedes bée eyther that death taketh vtterly away all féeling or els that we fléete out of this place into some other Therefore whither all féeling perish and that death bee like that kinde of sléepe which oftentimes without sight of dreames yeldeth most quiet rest good God what a gayne is it to dye Or yf the things be true which are reported that death is a remouing into such coastes as they inhabit which are passed out of this lyfe that is now a farre greater blisse that when a man hath escaped from these that will néedes bée counted for Iudges he shall come to those that deserue the name of Iudges in déede I meane Minos Rhadamanthus Aeacus and Triptolemus and be conuersaunt with those that liued rightuously and faythfully Now to haue communication with Orpheus Musaeus Homer and Hesiodus what estéeme you it too bée woorth Truely I could finde in my harte to dye oft entimes yf it were possible so that the things whiche I speake of might befall mée what a pleasure would it bee too mée thinke you when I should talke with Palamedes with A●ax and with others that were entrapped by the iudgement of vnrightuous men neyther would I wish you yee Iudges to feare y death where by ye haue set mée at libertie For there can no manner of euill befall vnto a good man eyther aliue or dead neyther shall his case bée at any time neglected of the Gods immortall neyther is this thing happened to mée by chaunce Now forasmuch as according as Basilius right grauely counselleth it is for the behoof of Christian folke to reade the writings of Philosophers and Poetes bycause eyther they say the same that wée doo and so their consent is profitable or els they speake diuers things so it auayleth to conferre them wée will in this place recite in forme of logicke the chéef argumentes of Ciceros firste Tusculane question wherein he hath comprehended the comfortes and remedies too bee vsed ageynst death to the intent that the laying of them togither may enlighten both the kindes of doctrine and that wée considering the doutes and darknesse of the Philosophers about this article may be the more in loue with the doctrine of the Church deliuered by God warranted of God by raysing ageyn of dead men and other notable miracles The proposition of the firste Tusculane question is this Death is not euill or death is not to bee feared For eyther mens soules are not quenched by death but remaine aliue depart into those places which the blissed sort doo inhabite or els they perish vtterly with the bodyes so as there remayneth in them no féeling sense or perceyueraunce of any harme The firste parte of this Dilemna that mens soules are immortall Cicero proueth by six argumentes which wée haue recited héeretofore in the disposement of the .j. Cor. xv vppon the second holy day in Easter The latter part that though the soules dye with theyr bodyes yet there is no harme in death Cicero likewise goeth about to proue by six argumentes also The first Argument IF there bée any euill in death eyther it is to the soule or to the body But neyther in the body nor in the soule that are quite dead can
Gods sonne Gods mercie tempered with iustyce The fall of Adam The feendes the Iewes The matter of Chrystes Passion The forme or maner The endes too which Chryst ▪ suffered Redemption Remission of sinnes Reconciliatiō Iustification The holy Ghost The destruction of the Deuils kingdom Abolishment of sinne and death Euerlasting lyfe and saluacion How Chrystes benefites may bee applyed too vs. Our hauen and comfort ▪ Pascha or Passeouer The true passeouer * March● The tyme. Chrysts person Chrysts sacrifyse The benefites of Chrystes sacrifyse The applyment New obediēce The benefites of Chrystes resurrection A descriptiō of a Triumph The Triumph of Chryst The true ioy and comfort The true keeping of Easter Leuen New dowe Sweete bred What it is too keepe holyday Old leuen The efficient cause of our resurrection which argument holdeth of consequence That Chryst is risen By testymonies of the prophets By record of such as sawe him Of the authoritie of the Apostles An argument by impossibilitie An argument of ryght and reason A repetition confirmation of the first argumēt which holdeth of cōsequence or of necessitie An Argument taken of our profession and order in baptim A repetition of the fourth argument which holdeth of ryght reasō An Argument taken of the like thing Tokens of the resurrection impressed in nature The Moone The Starres The seasons of the yeere Svvalovves Flyes The Phenix This is the surest ground Argumēt for a Christian Sufficiēt vvarrant for a true Christian Philosophie knovveth nothing of the resurrection Antiquitie Consent of all Nations The best natures Selfmouing Simplenesse vncōpounded Ryght and reason Gods almyghtynesse Diuersities of glorie in the resurrection Liuing soule The state of our bodyes in the resurrectiō Liuing soule The first man. The second man. Flesh blud The efficient cause of our resurrection Death and sin Gods lawe The cheef finewes of the Diuels kingdome Our victorie in Chryst Esays prophesie of the taking away of death by Christ Esays prophesie expounded by Paule Osees prophesie expounded Interpretation of the grammaticall sense of the vvordes The proper meening of Osce An exhortation to stedfastnesse The custome of baptizing in old tyme. The cōmendation of fayth A description of fayth Mannes lyfe a vvarfare Who are borne of God. Hovv folke are borne a nevve The cheef obiect or thing vvhereon fayth resteth The name of Sonne The name Chryst Water blud To come in vvater The spirit is a vvitnesse of Chryst and his doctrine The three persones of the Godhead The end vvhy the ministerie vvas ordeined What the vvoord spirit signifyeth in the foresayd text What vvater and blud signifye Mākind vvyth out Chryst Errour touching Gods beeing Touching Gods vvill Errours of the papistes in seruing God. Chryst is the only vvay too ▪ God and godlynesse Chryst is lyfe Repentance Pointes of a good shepherd Good Princes be shepherds Bishops and ministers are shepherds Hovv Chryst is a shepherd Fleshly lustes what they be Magistrates ordeyned by God. The definition of a Magistrate Magistrates must be obeyed as God. An excellent saying Obedience too Princes Lords and Maisters for conscience sake Christen libē●tie Not God but wee our selues are cause of euil too our selues Good things are all of God and none euill commeth of him Regeneration or newbirth A similitude Against rash speaking and hasty iudgement Against a●ge● and trea●nesle Rogation weeke Of Inuocatio● and prayer The partes of true prayer What diuinitie is Gods worde a looking glasse True blissednesse The Anker●old of christian welfare Chrystes conuersation with his disciples after his resurrection Chrystes tryumphant As●●nsion Deliuerance from sin death the Diuell Mediatorship Giuing of gifts vnto men Opening our way intoo heauen Putting away of worldlinesse ▪ Too rayse our myndes tovvards heauen The kingdom of God or of Chryst The right hād of God. Too sitte A commendation of prayer Ageinst d●on●●●●esse Sobrietie which is a spice of stay ▪ ednesse Watchfulnesse Of Lou● Hospitalitie * Pleasantnesse * Gladsomues * Merinesse Doing of good ●urnes Pentecost Why Easter Whitsontyde other feastes were ordeined of God. Why Whitson tide was ordeyned too be continually kept The holy Ghost Two sortes of giuing the holy Ghost A descriptiō of the holy ghost Proofes of the godhead of the holy Ghost Basill Eusebius Palestinus Proofes that the holy Ghost is a distinct persone from the father and the sonne The office and benefits of the holy Ghost The spirit of Truthe Paracletus The seuen gift● of the holy ●host The gift of ●isdome The spirit of Counsell The spirite of Strength or Manlynesse The spirit of Kno●ledge The spirit of Godlynesse The spirit of the Feare of God. Beneuolēce ▪ Proofes of Christes Godhead Proofes of the Godhead of the holy ghost Fleshe No accepting of persones vvith Chryst Prophesying in the old Testament Diuersities of appeerings Dreames Prophesying in the nevv testament The onely vvay too saluacion The cause of our eternall saluation Iustification Diuersitie of opinions concerning Iustification Ryghtuousnesse what it is The efficiēt forcing cause of iustificacation The meane or Instrument of our saluation what it is to beleeue What ought too bee the cheefe care of men How God wil haue his being knowne What God is The Gods of the Heathen The vnitie and trinitie of the Godhead The first person The second person The third person The marke of the Father The marke of the Sonne The marke of the holy ghost ▪ The offyce of the father The offyce of the sonne The offyce of the holy ghost God is loue Our only hauē and fortresse The phisike of our soules Examples who loueth God. Sparkes of knowledge in nature why they were giuē ▪ Loue towardes God. Causes of louing God and ▪ our neighbour ▪ Gods loue towardes vs. Commaundement Woorthinesse and profit What is comprehended in the loue of our neighbour The hatred of the world ageinst the godly This folowing is worth the beating away Necessitie Example of loue Hypocrysie to be eschued Sel●e loue and selfvveening Vyces accompaning pryde Carelesse Stately Lovvlynesse Vertues conteined in lovvlynesse Causes that should mo●e to Lowlynesse The profit of Lowlynesse God resisteth the proude The Diuell Sna●es wherwith the dyuel intangleth folkes Fortification ageynst the Diuelles traynes Watchfulnesse Remedyageynst the enterance of despayre Sobrietie and stayedensle Fayth Example Gods grace Gods order to be followed This argument holdeth of right and equitie A cōparison of vnequalitie Common harmes ought too greeue the lesse Example of the Apostles The maner of saluation How we be saued by hope Argument of possibilitie One myndednesse Like affectionednesse Brotherly loue Mercifulnesse Gentlenesse Meeknesse Gelons answer too a rayler Patience Faint hartednesse Wilfulnesse or stifnesse of opinion Stedfast profession of the true doctrine The finall cause of iustification The efficient cause of iustification A similitude of baptim Of Chrystes death and resurrection Of Chrystes buryall Ageinst Libertines carnall Gospellers Necessitie of weldooing Christen libertie Eternal lyfe
losse of lyfe for a mannes stedfastnesse in standing too the true and vncorrupt doctrine of Chryst Cōmonly they make difference that those are confessors which haue endured hatred terrours imprisonmentes and some other hurts of the body for confessing Chryste but yet haue not bin put too death as the holy men Athanasius Paphnutius Macarius Iohn Frederick Duke of Sanonie Luther and such others And those are Martyrs that haue spent their blud their lyfe in their confession as Saint Steuen the most of the Apostles Ignatius Bishop of Antioche who was cast vntoo beasts by Traiane Attalus who was rosted vppon a spit at Lyons in the tyme of the Emperour Antonie Vere Vincent who was most cruelly rent a péeces in Spayne by Diocletian Laurence who was broyled vppon a gréedyron by the Emperour Decius Boniface Byshoppe of Mentz who was put too death by the Fryselanders the yéere of Christ 775 Iohn Hus And in our dayes many are slayne for y truthes sake and by cruell woounds doo purchace a noble death The efficient causes are FIrst the holy Ghost the conforter who reléeueth our infirmitie and kindleth in our hartes a myndfulnesse of Gods most streight commaundement too prefer our profession before lyfe and all worldly things and of the promises of lyfe and glorie that shall ensew Ageyn he addeth strength to the will and hart that they may bée both willing and able to endure bodily punishements reproche and death for our professions sake Secondly the woord of God which both enioyneth profession and threateneth the renouncers with most sore manaces of casting away for euer and offereth promises of lyfe glory and crowne euerlasting too those that constantly professe Chrysts truthe Math. x. He that denyeth mée before men him will I also denye before my Father whiche is in heauen ij Cor. iiij The lightnesse of affliction for the twincling of an eye purchaceth an euerlasting weyghtynesse of glorie Psal Cxv. Precious in the sight of the Lorde is the death of his Saincts ij Timoth. Now is there a crowne of rightuousnesse layd vp for mée Thirdly mannes mynd thinking vppon Gods commaūdement and the promises of the Crowne of eternall glorie wherewith the constant witnesses of the true doctrine shall bée adorned And his will and hart which through the help and furtherance of the holy Ghost beléeueth the promises and conceyuing an assured hope of immortalitie and glorie euerlasting endureth death quietly and with a chéerefull mynd as is sayd of Steuen He went reioycing in his brest and through strong hope his harmes supprest Besides these thrée causes of stedfastnesse common too all Martyrs there is another also in Steuen the first Martyr namely the singular comfort by beholding the Sonne of God who shewed himself visibly vntoo him By which shewing wée also may lerne this that the sonne of God sitting at the right hand of the Father is not vtterly gone away from the Church but is in deed present with it regarding it comforting it defending it and helping it like as he is here present with Steuen at his death refreshing and strengthning him by shewing himself too him that he may with a glad chéerfull mynd suffer death for Chrysts quarell and receyue a crowne of glorie that shall neuer wither The matter wherabout martyrdoome is occupied is the true and vncorrupt doctrine set foorth in the Gospel concerning the persone and benefits of Chryst and concerning the true woorshipping of god For as sayeth Apollinaris wheras Chrystes truthe is not there is no true martyrdoome And the saying of Peter is knowen Sée that none of you suffer as a murtherer or an euill dooer c. and Austins not what any man suffereth but wherfore he suffereth is too bée considered Also Ciprians It is the cause that maketh a Martyr and not the martyrdoome Therefore are not mad-braynd felowes too bée honored with the tytle of martyrdoomme which are iustly put too death for their sedition and manifest blasphemies The forme of martyrdoome is the confession of y truth or the witnesse which is borne too the truthe both by the lyuely voyce and by the bludshed and death of the partye The ends effects of martyrdome are these First Gods glorie which is set out and spred far abrode by the witnessebearings of the Martyrs Secondly the preseruation of the true doctrine concerning god For onlesse there should from tyme too tyme bée stirred vp some Martyrs or witnesses of the true doctrine who in the persecutions of Tyrants should preferre the professiō of the truthe before their own lyfe within a whyle the true knowledge of GOD vppon earth would bée quite quenched with ▪ Idolatrie and errours Thirdly that the weaker sort are strengthened and the Churche enlarged by the example of the constancie of the Martyrs The church was founded vppon blud and by blud hath it encreaced Fourthly that the deathes of the Martyrs may bée witnesses of the certeintie of the doctrine of the Gospell lyke as Steuen by his bludshed and death sealeth vp the doctrine concerning the Messias promised too the Fathers and now performed Fifthly that they may bée witnesse of the immortalitie of the iudgment too come wherin Tyrants and Hipocrites shall bée cast intoo endlesse paynes and the holy Martyrs bée honored with euerlasting rewards Sixtly that the godly may not lose the forgiuenesse of sinnes which they haue receyued and the inheritance of euerlasting saluation Math. xxiiij He that continueth too the end shal bee saufe Rom. x. By the mouth is acknowledgement made too saluation The Alyances or neybourvertues of martyrdoome are Stedfastnesse Stoutnesse in bearing out aduersities Patience Continaunce and in especially earnest fayth hope and calling vppon God. The thing that fyghts ageinst martyrdoome is reuolting or renouncing of the true doctrine which eyther procéedeth of an epicurish skornfulnesse and malice as the reuolting of the Emperour Iulian or ryseth of fearfulnesse and infirmitie of mynde as the renyall of Peter and of many others or else is committed in fact as when those that vnderstand the true doctrine of the Gospell are present at the Idolatrous seruice of the Masse and dissemble their méening or when wée beare about the Gospell in our mouth and yet aunswer not too our profession in lyfe and behauiour Vppon the Sunday next after Christmas day ¶ The Epistle Gal. iiij AND I say that the heire as long as he is a chyld differeth not from a seruant though he bee Lord of al but is vnder tutours and gouernours vntill the tyme that the father hath appointed Euen so we also when we were children were in bondage vnder the ordinances of the world but when the tyme was full come God sent his sonne made of a woman and made bond vnto the law to redeeme them which were bond vntoo the law that we through election might receyue the inheritaunce that belongeth vntoo the naturall sonnes
tokens shewed that he had a fauour to that people Euen so dooth God impart his benefites too vs by the water of Baptim washing vs from our sinnes and hyding and couering vs as it were with the shadowe thereof from the heate of his wrath Concerning the spirituall foode whereof the Manna gyuen from heauen in the wildernesse Exo. xvi was a figure with whiche the soules of the beleeuers are fed and euerlasting lyfe is begonne in them like as this bodily lyfe of men is susteyned with wheaten bread more plentifull exposition may bée taken out of the sixth Chapter of Iohn Vppon the Sunday called Sexagesima or Shrouesunday ¶ The Epistle .ij. Cor. xj xij FOR yee suffer fooles gladly bycause that yee your selues are wyse For ye suffer euen if a mā bryng you intoo bondage yf a man deuoure if a man take if a man exalt himselfe if a man smyte you on the face I speake as concerning rebuke as though we had bin weake Howbeit wherein soeuer any man dare be bolde I speake foolishly I dare bee bold also They are Ebrewes euen so am I. They are Israelites euen so am I. They are the seed of Abraham euen so am I. They are the ministers of Chryst I speake as a foole I am more In laboures more aboundaunt In strypes aboue measure In pryson more plenteously In death oft Of the Iewes fyue tymes receyued I euery tyme .xl. strypes saue one Thryse was I beaten with roddes I was once stoned I suffered thryse shipwracke Night and day haue I bin in the deepe of the sea ▪ In iorneying often in parelles of waters in parels of robbers in ieopardies of myne owne nation in ieopardies among the Heathen in parels in the citie in parels in wildernesse in parels in the sea in parels among false brethren in labour and trauayle in watching often in hunger and in thirst in fastings often in cold and in nakednesse And besyde the things which outwardly happen vntoo mee I am combred dayly and doo care for all congregations Who is weake and I am not weake Who is offended and I burne not If I must needes reioyce I will reioyce of myne infirmities The .xij. Chapter THE God and father of our Lord Iesus Christ which is blissed for euermore knoweth that I lye not In the Citie of Damascon the gouernour of the people vnder king Aretas layde watch in the Citie of Damascens and would haue caught mee and at a windowe was I let down in a basket through the wall so scaped his hands It is not expedient for mee no doubt too reioyce Neuerthelesse I will come too visions and reuelations of the lord I knowe a man in Chryst aboue .xiiij. yeares agone whither he were in the body I can not tell or whither he were out of the body I can not tel God knoweth which was taken vp into the third heauen And I knowe the same man whither in the body or out of the body I can not tell God knoweth howe that he was taken vp intoo Paradise and herd woordes not too bee spoken which no man can vtter Of this man will I reioyce of my selfe will I not reioyce except it bee of myne infirmities And yet though I would reioyce I should not be a foole for I would say the truthe Neuerthelesse I spare least any mā should thinke of mee aboue that he seeth mee too bee or heareth of mee And least I should bee exalted out of measure thorow the abundance of reuelations there was giuen vntoo mee vnquietnesse of the flesh the messanger of Sathan too buffet me bycause I should not bee exalted out of measure For this thing besought I the Lorde thryce that it might depart from mee And he sayd vntoo mee my grace is sufficient for thee For my strength is made perfect thorow weakenesse Very gladly therefore will I reioyce of my weaknesse that the strength of Chryste may dwell in mee WElnéere all the whole latter Epistle to the Corinthians is an Apologie of Paule defēding himself ageinst the y slaūdersof the false Apostles who despysed his doctrine authoritie ministration preferred thēselues before him vpheld that the Iewish ceremonies were to bée layd vpon the Gētyls as of necessitie too saluatiō And truly they alledged the examples of Peter the other Apostles who in Iewrye the countryes bordering thereabouts hild still the ceremonies of their own countrey And this defence of Paules is necessarie too the intent the truthe certeintie of the doctrine of the Gospell which Paule had taught the authoritie of Apostleship the fayth might bée preserued in the churche It perteyneth too the kynd of cases that are Iudiciall The groūd of the Epistle before red is I Paule am a farre more excellent minister of Chryst than are the rest The cheef Arguments or reasons are twoo FIrst he that with greater faythfulnesse cōstancie spreddeth abrode the gospel of Chryst endureth more trauel persecution trouble for profession of the gospel and for the fayth is woorthely also too bée déemed greater and excellenter than the rest I Paule haue endured greater peynes mo in number mo perils imprisonments punishments such other miseries in spredding of the gospel thā any of the false Apostles Ergo I am farre too bée preferred before them Secōdly too whō more manifest visiōs of greatest things are shewed frō heauē by god himself he as more familiar déerer to God ought of right to bee preferred before others Paule was caught vp intoo the third heauen there had shewed vntoo him a notable reuelatiō from God Ergo c. This is the effect of this dayes Epistle which our aunceters haue in this respect appoynted too this tyme of the yéere for that it maketh mention of fasting labours watching other exerc●ses that serue to kéepe vnder mortifie y flesh whiche things their méening was that men should take vppon them specially these fortye dayes going before Easter too the intent that the bodye béeing chastized and brought in subiection mēnes mynds bée more fit more bent and more desyrous too consider the wonderfull passion and death of the sonne of god and too repent themselues earnestly of their misdéeds Out of this Epistle may bée picked foure places of doctrine First of the duties or true ornamentes of an Apostle or any minister of the gospel which are faythfulnesse in spreading abrode the doctrine of the Gospel and stedfastnesse and patience in bearing out the labours trubles tormentes whiche accompanie the profession and ministerie of the Gospell Secondly the doctrine of the crosse and of the twelue causes for which God dooth cheefly lode his Churche and the godly sorte with so huge a heape of aduersities whiche are too bée fetched out of the place that concerneth the crosse and aduersities Thirdly of the visions and reuelatiō made vntoo Paule Fourthly the most sweete comfort set foorth in this saying My grace suffyseth thée for my power is made
things and thy neibor as thy self .j. Tim. j. The summe of the commaundement is loue from a pure hart .j. Ioh. iij. He that loueth not abideth in death Héeruppon Paul reasoneth that the loue of a mannes neybor is too bée preferred beforethe gifts of tungs eloquence miracles learning c whiche are not needfull for all Christians Straunge and vnknowē languages are no more too the profit of the héerers than sounding brasse or a tingling cimball that lulleth the eares with a vayne sound Ageine the giftes of Tungs without charitie is not true godlynesse ne maketh a man a right Christian nor acceptable to god So like wise Prophesying which is able too opē euen the darkest places of al the scripture faith or y gift of working miracles al vnderstanding or the knowledge of all Arts without louingnesse is not the chéef and most excellent seruice of God. Much wrangling is there in the disputations of these dayes about this saying If I haue all fayth and yet haue not loue I am nothing and it séemeth that there is not any more notable saying y can bée set ageinst this proposition Onely fayth iustifyeth But I answer First by the rule of Logicke The truenesse of propositions Hypothetical that is to say of sentences grounded vppon if is not too bée measured by the vntwyning of the proposition intoo his partes but by the knitting togither of his members matching rightly or otherwise among themselues As for examples sake If an Asse flye he hath fethers This proposition or ground is true but the members of it being vnknit are most false An Asse flyeth An Asse hath fethers Also .j. Cor. xv If Chryst bée not risen in vayne is our preaching vayne is your fayth This proposition in the partes knit togyther is true but the partes being vnknit are most vntrue So also this proposition I● I haue fayth and yet haue no loue I am nothing is very true But if yée take asunder the proposition intoo his partes and say y fayth is nothing or he y is endued w true faith is nothing or is not a godly mā in déed that loue may bée pulled away from fayth all men perceyue that this dissolution or dismembering is false and too bée found fault with Other some answere that Paule in this place speaketh not of the iustifying Faith but of the gift of woorking miracles which may bée euen in the vngodly Mathew vij But were it so that Paule spake of the iustifying Fayth yet can it not bée concluded thereby that wée are not iustified by fayth only or for Chrystes sake only For certeine it is that the loue of God and a mannes neybor doo of necessitie go ioyntly toogither with fayth Like as with the rising of the sunne there goeth ioyntly of necessitie the spreading foorth of his beames or lyght Euen so of necessitie loue foloweth Fayth in those that are iustified in so much as he that loueth not abydeth in death Like as that body wherein there remayneth no féeling or mouing liueth not and yet it foloweth not therupon that feeling and mouing are the cause of lyfe but lyfe is the cause of mouing Euen so the efficient cause of our iustification is God for the obedience passion and death of Chryst only And fayth is the instrument wherby wée take hold of Chryst our ryghtuousnesse Now must the loue of God and a mannes neybor of necessitie folow Fayth in him that is iustified like as mouing and féeling doo of necessitie folow lyfe But loue can not procéede but of fayth like as there can grow no good frutes but of a good trée Of the second A register of the woorkes of charitie or of the vertues that flow out of the true loue of God and a mannes neybor as out of a fountaine LEt them bée conueyed intoo preceptes agréeing too the ten commaundements let them bée set out by adding their definitions and laying the vices too them Loue is long suffering j Long sufferance or patience is a vertue that represseth wrathfulnesse desire of reuenge And though it haue cause too hurt others yet for Gods sake the common peace it remitteth offences beareth with him that did the displeasure as Aristides bare with Themistocles Scipio with the Tribunes and Dauid with Saule It perteyneth too the fifth of the tenne commaundements The vyces that encounter it are desyre of reuenge as in Marius and Sylla also crueltie as in Tyberius Nero And ouermuch forbearing or silinesse Courteous or Gentle. ij Courteousnesse or Gentlenesse not only letteth offences slip and forgiueth them but also by all meanes it cā deuise as by counsell trauell and ayde dooth good to others as well fréends as foes For the Gréeke woord Chrestos which commeth of Chraomai to vse dooth properly signifie such a one as easly and willingly yéeldeth him self to other folk too vse as Aristides by his counsell and trauell benefiteth the common weale of Athens which had bannished him It perteyneth to the fifth and seuenth commaundements The vyces that encounter it are discourtesie or vngentlenesse frowardnesse or chorlishnesse also fond lauishnesse or wastfulnesse and counterfet courtesie or feyned gentlenesse Loue enuieth not iij Freendlynesse modestie or myldnesse which acknowledgeth and loueth Gods gifts in other men willing good too the good and reioycing in their prosperitie Ageinst this vertue fyghteth Enuyousnesse which is gréeued that an other man should excell vs or bée preferred afore vs and longeth too remoue him or take him away to the intent wée lose no part of our estimation as Saul enuyed the glorie of Dauid Pompey enuyed the power of Cesar Marius repyneth for spyght ageinst Sylla Loue dealeth not frowardly or is not giuen to lewdnesse or is not malapert and vngraciouse iiij Good meening modestie or myldnesse which lyeth not in wayte for other folks like the brothers called Perperanes who of a singular vngraciousnesse lewdnesse laying wayt for other mennes lyues were at length taken by Hercules and he hung them vp at his backe vppon his club It perteyneth to the fifth commaundement Thou shalt not kyll Loue swelleth not v Lowlynesse repressing pryde acknowledging a mānes infirmitie submitting himself vnto others and employing his gifts to the behoof of others without disdeyne It perteyneth to the first and .iiij. cōmaundements The vyces that beset it are pride puffed vp with ouer wéening of itself trusting in his own vertue wisdom welth other gifts and despysing othermen Euery mā may behold an example of pryde in his own hart Loue is not disdeynfull neyther is shee vncomly vj Grauitie whiche is too doo rightful necessarie things constantly so to rule al the outward gestures dooings that they may agrée with the order of nature of persones and of places The vyces that encounter it are lyghtnesse skornfulnesse which proudly disdeyning others doth with vncomlygestures expresse the pryde or the hatred or
behalfe that you bée reconcyled to God Secondly they must exhorte by sound doctrine and allure and incense their héerers to the earnest embracing and practizing the rightuousnesse of fayth and of a good conscience according as Paule exhorfeth and beseecheth the Corynthians in this place Thirdly they must beware that they estraunge not mennes myndes from the Gospell of grace from the ministerie by giuing them cause of offence in their doctrine or conuersation as is sayd héere Gyuing no cause of offence in any thing least the ministerie bée misreported And fourthly that they beautifie the doctrine ministerie of the gospel with examples of al vertues and specially of patience vnder the crosse and of stedynesse in their profession According as Paule sayeth in this place setting foorth your selues in all things as Gods ministers by patience And it is a most weightie saying of Nazianzene They that teache well liue amisse snatch away that thing with the one hand which they reache foorth with the other It is better not too teache at all than too teache for a fashion Thou must not pull too thée with the one hand and thrust away from thée with the other hand Thou shalt néed too talke the lesse if thou doo as thou oughtest too doo The third part of the Epistle is ABundell or beadroll of the vertues with which the ministers of the Gospell and all the godly must serue God and beautifie the Gospell and mortifie and hold in the flesh not only these fortie dayes but also all the whole tyme of their lyfe Paule reckeneth vp in order .x. vertues the which too the entent they may the easlier bée discerned and applied to the preceptes of the ten commaundements agréeable too them I will set them downe by tale i Patience that is too say stedfastnesse in daungers aduersities that accompanie the ministerie of the Gospell Of this vertue there bée six obiectes or six kyndes of miseries in which patience is too bée performed whiche Paule gathereth toogither so as they may bée discerned ij Labour or peynfulnesse performing continuall diligence and earnestnesse in executing faythfully the duties of ones vocation For honest labours are brydles of lustes But ydlenesse bréedeth vyces and men by dooing nothing doo lerne too doo euill iij Watchfulnesse iiij Fasting or sobernesse and measure or abstinence from meate and drink v Chastitie vj Skilfulnesse or true knowledge of Gods being will disclosed in the Lawe and the Gospell wisdome able too iudge what is too bée earnestly followed in what place afore whom vij Long sufferance viij Gentlenesse and Courtesie ix Zeale of the spirit x Loue vncounterfetted VNtoo these vertues he addeth in the ende the touchestone and rule of religion and christen cōuersation The woord of truthe whiche wée must embrace hold fast spred abrode by firme faith And all these things may bée brought to passe and performed of vs not by our owne power but by the myght of God who helpeth those that séeke ayd at his hand The fourth place PAule entreateth in this Epistle chéefly of Patience which is too obey God in suffering miseries plages strypes imprisonment pouertie reuylings slaunder punishments of body death and other daungers which accompanie the godly profession of the Gospell and not too bée so discouraged for these euils that a man should cast away the Gospell but too brydle sorowe and too abyde stedfastly in the acknowledged truthe and by grounded fayth and hope too wayt for deliuerance and euerlasting lyfe And this latter part of the Epistle is pullished and garnished by Paule with shyning lyghts of figures that is to wit with tenne Antithesies and as many Iscolies and moreouer with Homoeoptots and Homaeoteleuts and Anaphoraze Also a little afore with a long heaping vp or gathering toogither and a repetition wherby one selfsame woord is repeted in the beginnings of eyghtéen Cōmaze This is the bréef disposemēt of this Epistle which being wel weyed there may bée set foorth too the héere recerteyne notable places as some Exhortation too fayth embracing the frée fauor of God offered in his gospell or some Doctrine of patience and constancie in tribulation and aduersitie which accompanie fayth or some other of the vertues out of the register which wée haue reckened vp I at this tyme will say some what of Fasting FOr too this entent haue our aunceters apoynted this Epistle in the beginning of Lent bicause in it there is mention made of the fasting watching painestaking and other afflictions in which the godly shew foorth the true and earnest repentance of a sorowfull hart and tame and subdue their flesh And although the olde primitiue Churche prescribed no formes or lawes of meats and fastings yet would it that during these .xl. dayes men should haue more stay of themselues too liue soberly and to forbeare euen their lawful pleasures that their mindes myght bée more fit fit ▪ and ardent in bending themselues too the consideration of Gods wonderful purpose concerning the passion and death of his sōne our Lord Iesus Chryst and also too true repentance and earnest Prayer Afterward also suche as were defiled with outward offences excommunicated were woont this Lent tyme before they were assoyled too bée chastyzed and tryed with certeine ceremonies whither they repented in good earnest and amended from their hart or no. A description of these Ceremonies of open penance woorth the reading taken out of the ninetenth Chapiter of the Agathine Counsell is recited by Gracian in his fiftith distinction in the Chapiter of Lent 33. q. 2. c. beginning with these woordes Laborem praesentium c. admonere The Catechumeni also whom it appéereth by the stories too haue bin baptyzed only vppon Easter day and Whitsunday vntoo the tyme of Charles the great were woont after that they had giuen their names too bée tryed all the Lent season and too bée instructed and apposed in the true Doctryne of Chryste and too bee as it were purged with the Ceremonies of Fasting and other things that they might come the more woorthely and reuerently too the Sacrament of Baptim at Easter And they wryte that Telesphorus was he that first enioyned the fortie dayes Fast before Easter who was Bishop of the Romane Church about the hundred and thirtith yéer after Chryst But it appéereth plainly by Irenaeus who florished about the twoo hundredth yéer after Chrystes birth that as yet in those dayes men were vtterly at theyr owne choyce for their Fastings This mannes woordes which are woorthy too bée marked are recited by Eusebius in the .xxiiij. chapter of his fifth booke Some are of opinion that the Fast ought too bée kept but onely one day some twoo dayes some thrée some mo and many also the whole fortie dayes And yet all these notwithstāding that they disagrée among them selues in keeping the fast haue alwayes bin and are at peace with vs and the disagréeablenesse of the Fast
dayes but in all our whole lyfe and in our dayly prayers Yea and at all tymes there hath bin sacrifysing in the world euen among the Heathen not only of beasts but also of men as Calchas Alexander lulian the Frenchemen at their passing ouer Po and others slew men and offered them in sacrifise These customes were borowed out of the church of the Fathers which had spred abrode the doctrine concerning the sacrifysing of the man Chryst that was too come and of euill zeale in coūterfetting the example of Abraham And here vntoo were added superstitious opinions that God was pacifyed and made at tone with vs for the preciousnesse and woorthynesse of the sacrifyses But in deed there is but one only sacrifyse of Chryste that reconcyleth too God the merit and recompence whereof pacifyeth Gods displeasure of whiche the other sacrifyses of the Fathers and of the Leuits were but shadowes The second place PAule therfore in this Epistle compareth the figuratiue préesthod of the Leuits with the préesthod of Chryste And before in the vij chapter he rehersed eyght differences which I haue expounded in another place In this dayes lesson are reckened vp foure differēces betwéene the sacrifyse of Christ and the Leuiticall sacrifyses of which the chéefest is First Chryst being a hygh préest of good things too come or of eternall good things that is too wit of blissing and deliuerance from sinne which the Fathers by their sacrifyses witnessed themselues too looke for found euerlasting redemption that is too say deliuerance from sinne frō gods wrath and from euerlasting death and attonement with God and clenzing of the conscience from dead woorkes that is to say from sinnes for which wée are subiect too death and also the frée giuing of the heritage that was promised But the Leuiticall préests by their sacrifysing of Cattel of Calues and of Gotes deserue not eternal redēption but only are figures of the true préest Chryst and make men holy only concerning the outward clennesse of the flesh Secondly Chryst offered but once only and but one sacrifyse by which he purged all sinnes of the whole world But the Leuiticall préests offer sacrifyses dayly and enter intoo the holy of holyes euery yéere and can not deliuer those from sinne for whom they offer as is sayd more at large in the beginning of the .x. chapter Thirdly Chryste is entered in by his owne bludshed or hath purged the sinnes of all men by his owne bludshed as is sayd .j. Iohn .j. The blud of Chryste clenzeth vs quite from all sinfulnesse But the Leuitical préestes sprinkle the altar with the bloud of Calues and Gotes whiche purgeth not sinnes but all the bludsheds of beasts in the Leuiticall sacrifises were only figures of Christs bludshed by which only the church is redéemed as in Act. xx Ephe. j. Col. j. j. Iohn j. Rom. v. and elswhere is written Fourthly the Leuiticall préests when they should make sacrifise entered yéerly intoo the holy place or temple made with mannes hand But Chryste is entered euen intoo heauen that is too say intoo the syght of GOD and is priuie too Gods secret purpose concerning mannes redemption Vppon Palmes Sunday ¶ The Epistle Philip. ij LET the same mynd bee in you that was also in Chryste Iesu whiche when he was in the shape of God thought it no robbery too bee equall with God neuerthelesse he made him self of no reputation taking on him the shape of a seruaunt and became lyke vntoo man and was found in his apparell as a man He humbled himself and became obedient too the death euen the death of the crosse Wherefore God hath also exalted him on hygh and gyuen him a name whiche is aboue all names that in the name of IESVS euery knee should bowe both of things in heauen and things in earth and things vnder the earthe and that all tongues should confesse that Iesus Chryste is the Lorde vntoo the prayse of God the Father The disposement THis Epistle is of that kynd that is persuasiue For it is an Exhortation too lowlynesse or humilitie taken of the examples and rewardes of Chrystes humilitie The places of doctrine are these 1 A notable witnesse of the twoo natures in Chryst very God and very man to bée ioyned too the rest which are gathered toogither in the place concerning the sonne of God. 2 Of Chrysts passion and death 3 Of the aduauncement or glorie of Christ reigning 4 Of humilitie or lowlynesse The text of the Epistle THe ground of the exhortation whiche Paule purposeth is set downe next before the woordes of this dayes Epistle Let euery one of you through lowlynesse think another man better than himself Bée lowly Too this proposition he addeth a reason grounded vppon the example of Chryst Let the same mynde bée in you that was in Iesu Chryst that is too say Let there bée true lowlynesse of mynd in you as was in Chryste who being in the shape of God that is too say being God in verye déed and by nature did notwithstanding abace himselfe before the eternall Father beneath all Angels and men Who being in the shape of God that is too say in the nature and substance of god For the Gréeke woord Morphe signifieth a substātiall shape or expresse and personal image and not a proportion figure or counterfet wauing before ones eyes This therfore is the méening Chryste when as he was in the shape of God that is when as he was in déed and by nature God or whereas he was the shape and lyuely ymage of God the father begotten of the substance of the father and equall too God the father in power maiestie and glorie Thought it no robberie too bee equall with God. The Gréeke phrase is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is too cōmit robberie Like as 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 too make a passage or too passe So like wise 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 too count it robberie that is too say too robbe So is there a very like phrase Heb. x. Treading the sonne of God vnder foote and accounting the blud of his Testament vnholy that is too say dishonouring it The méening therfore is He thought it no robberie too bée equall with God that is too say He vsurped not equalitie with god In this his calling when it was decréed that the sonne should béecōme a sacrifyse and obey God in suffering death he vsed not his power ageinst his calling nor was proud or haultye for this his equalitie of the Godhead whiche he vsurped not ne possessed too the wrong and dishonour of the other but obteyned it by birth as a good thing of nature But humbled him self that is too say he exercysed not his godly power but humbled and abased himself in such wyse as he tooke vppon him ▪ the shape of a seruaunt that is too say the substantiall shape of man or the verye nature of man bodye and soule He is termed a seruaunt
both for taking vppon him mannes nature subiect to death and other miseries and also for his seruisablenesse in teaching and suffering as he himselfe sayeth Math. xx The sonne of man is not come too haue seruice doone vntoo him but too doo seruice himselfe and too giue his lyfe as a raunsome for the whole multitude of mankynd Also let the yonger sort beare in mynd that this most cōmon and ordinarie maner of spéeche of the Churche wherby wée say that the sonne tooke vppon him the nature of man is taken out of this place of Paule and out of the second too the Hebrewes for hée tooke not vppon him the Angels but the séede of Abraham that is too say he cuppled not too himselfe the nature of Angels but the nature of man of the posteritie of Abraham Framed after the likenesse of men that is too say he became altogither like other men He was no Ghost or counterfet of a man as Marcion and the Manichees surmysed but a very man and in all things like his brethren yea and mortall also sinne only excepted Heb. ij iiij And in fashion he was found as a man that is too say not only in proportion and gesture of bodye but also in inclinations and motions of mynd in fearfulnesse sorowfulnesse ioyfulnesse and other affections whiche notwithstanding were well ordered in Chryste and conformable too his heauenly mynd He humbled or cast himself downe becoōming obedient too death euen too the death of the crosse This notable sentence hathe Ciprian expressed with great lyghtsomnesse of woords in his sermon of Almesdéeds Chryste the sonne of God would become the sonne of man that he myght make vs the sonnes of god He brought himself lowe y he myght lift vs vp which lay vnder foote he tooke vpon him the shape of a seruaūt that he myght make vs frée He was wounded that he might heale our wounds He was contented too dye that he myght gyue vs mortall wyghtes immortalitie Wherfore God hath also exalted him on hygh God hathe exalted Chryst the man and seruant that was crucified and dead for vs as in respect of his manhod He hath giuen him a name which is aboue all names that is too wit Iehoua or the Lorde which is the peculiar name of the onely true and most hygh God the maker of heauen and earth as is sayd in Esai xlij I am the Lord this is my name and I wil not giue my glorie too another This name Iehoua or Lorde is not onely attributed too his Godhead which had it from euerlasting but also too his manhod the which is ioyntly woorshipped and serued in one selfesame woorship and seruice toogither with the sonne of God the woord to which it is vnited That in the name of Iesu euery knee should bowe Some deryue the name Iesu of the Hebrewe woord Iehouah which being vnutterable of it selfe is as they wryght made vtterable by putting in the letler Ieschua and so by contraction Iesu that is too say the Lorde incarnate or God become man Paule taketh these woordes out of Esay xlv Turne vntoo mée and yée shall bée saued all the endes of the earth for I am the Lord and there is none other vntoo mée shall euery knée bow and vntoo mée shall euery tung swere That IESVS Chryste is the Lord that is too say that he is the Lorde or in very déed and nature god By this Grammaticall declaration of the woordes the ruder sorte may the ryghtlyer vnderstand the Text of the Epistle Which in as much as it is red vppon this day chéefly in this respect bycause it maketh mention of the wonderfull abacement and death of the sonne of GOD the memoriall whereof is celebrated by all the Christen Churches of the whole world as the next wéeke Let a summe of the doctrine concerning the passion and death of our Lord Iesus Chryste included in the vsuall questions of Methodicall order bée repeted in this place The consideration of the wonderfull purpose of GOD concerning the redemption of mankynd wrought by the sonne of God our Lord Iesus Chryste who suffered and was crucifyed for vs farre surmounteth the wisdome of all Angels and men Too this end hath God by the wonderfull temperature of his Iustice and mercie stablished this secret decrée and made his sonne who is the Mediator a sinne offering and sacrifyse too the intent that wée men being set frée from Gods wrath from sinne and death might bée made the rightuousnesse of God as is sayd .ij. Cor. v. And in consideration of this maruelous benefite let vs acknowledge the horrible wrath of God ageinst our sinnes and the vnmeasurable largenesse of Gods mercye towardes vs and also let vs stirre vp the feare of God fayth and thankesgiuing in our harts It is an eternall and vnchaungeable Maxime of Gods iustice that the reasonable creatures shold eyther thorowly agrée with the wisdome and rightuousnesse of god or else suffer due punishement and bée horribly destroyed for not obeying Forasmuch therfore as the first man and woman had of their own frank fréewill cast from them the rightuousnesse and purenesse whiche God had giuen them in their creation they ageine on the other syde were too bée cast intoo eternall peynes But the sonne of God of his vnmeasurable goodnesse pitying mankynd made intreatance for vs and too the intent Gods wrath myght bée satisfyed he offered himselfe too punishement and too make amendes vntoo Gods most iust displeasure and so in that secret counsell of the Godhead this decrée was made that the sonne of GOD taking mannes nature vpon him should becōme a sacrifise and by his passion and death pacifye Gods dreadfull wrath and satisfye his iustice and restore forgiuenesse of sinnes ryghtuousnesse and euerlasting lyfe too all those that flée vntoo him by faith Now the passion of Chryst is first a féeling of Gods dredfull wrath ageinst all the sinnes of mankynd which were poured out vppon Chryst as vppon a sacrifyse which great burden of Gods wrath enforceth Chryst too say thus My soul is heauy euen vntoo death And agein my God my God why haste thou forsaken mée Mennes myndes are not able ▪ too sée throughly the greatnes of this extreme vnutterable sorow of Chrystes bicause they vnderstande not she greatnesse of sinne and of Gods wrath which is a consuming fire Notwithstāding mennes myndes are too bée stirred vp too consider truely and earnestly the horrible wrath of God ageinst sinne bothe by the miseries of all mankynd and the examples of the consciences of wicked men and also by the testimonies of Gods woorde too the entent that they on their behalfe may the cléerlyer perceyue the greatnesse of the mercy and benefits of Christ who hathe vndertaken that dreadefull burthen of Gods wrath for vs. Notable testimonies of the true horrible wrath of God are first the innumerable calamities of all mankynd as the death of all men swarmes of diseases fluds burnings
warres destructions of Cities and other innumerable miseries of all men and the slaughters of all the Sainctes as of Abel and Iohn Baptist by which notwithstanding Gods wrath could not bée pacifyed but that the sonne of God must bée made a sacrifyse Ageine the greatnesse of Gods wrath is after some manner shewed by the examples of many men who for the conscience of one wickednesse haue bin striken with most heauie fearfulnesse which hathe driuen them too fordoo themselues As the examples of Orestes of Aristobulus king of the Iewes of Iudas the traitor of Theodorich of Verona and of dyuers others Now if the féeling of Gods wrath ageinst one sin alone doo bréede so bitter sorow in the hart that it dispatcheth a mā of his life What an vnmeasurable huge heape of Gods wrath and of horrible sorowes think you wer thronged vppon Chryst who susteined not one sinne alone or the sinnes of some only one mā but mine and thine yea and al mennes offences Idoll gaddings and murders all their sinfull inclinations affections and outward faultes toogither with the fire of Gods wrath ageinst these sinnes Being ouerwhelmed with this houge burthen of Gods wrath he cryeth out Psalm xxij O God my God why haste thou forsaken mée My hart is become like melting wax my strength is withered like a potsherd and thou hast brought mée downe too the dust of death This féeling of the houge and horrible wrathe of God ageinst al the sinnes of all men was the first and chéefest part of Chrystes passion The second part was the heauinesse and excéeding great torment rysing in his hart for the féeling of Gods wrathe ageinst sinnes and for the feare of death and tearing of his bodie which so appalled all the partes of his bodie that he swet droppes of blud The third and lyghtest part of all was the tearing of his bodie and streyning of his sinewes when he was whipped ▪ buffeted and fastened too the crosse with nailes The causes of Chrystes passion IT is not the wisdome of any creature that can serche out the causes of Gods woonderfull purpose concerning the redemption of mankynd too bée brought too passe in this wyse that the sonne of God should make intreatance for vs take our nature vpon him and bee sacrifysed for vs neuerthelesse God will haue the consideration of this woonderfull Decrée begonne in this lyfe The principall efficient cause is the will of Gods sonne making intercession of his owne mere motion for mankind falne intoo sinne and death and offering himself too this obedience and punnishment wherby he myght make satisfaction for mankynd Iohn .x. I am the good shepeherd and I giue my life for my shéepe The inward cause that moued or enforced him too doo so is the vnmeasurable mercy of God tēpered with his iustice For sith that God is vnchaungeably iust he is in déede and horribly angry with sinne and destroyeth sinners like a consuming fire Neyther relenteth he his anger ageinst sinne of a fondnesse lyghtnesse but vnchaungeably most streightly kéepeth this rule of iustice that men shall eyther performe due obedience or else abyde the fire of Gods wrath Therefore God receiueth not men that are faln without equal and sufficient amends which forbicause mākind was not able to yéeld therfore was too bee cast intoo endlesse torments the sonne of God béeing inflamed with vnmeasurable loue and mercy towards mankynd maketh intretance for vs and too the entent Gods iustice should be satisfied he vndertaketh him self the punishmēt amends making for our sinnes taking our nature vppon him becometh a sacrifise susteining Gods dreadful wrath ageinst sin payeth too Gods maiestie a rāsome too the full value of our sin vanquishing sin and death and restoring men too ryghtuousnesse and eternall lyfe The outward cause that moued or enforced him so too doo was the fal of our first parents the sin that frō thens did shed it self intoo all vs who for the same must haue perished in euerlasting paynes had not the sonne of God bin sacrifysed The instrumentall and outward woorking cause are the Diuels and their instruments the Iewes who burning in hatred ageinst Chryste for finding fault with their wickednesse and false opinions coueted too rid him away and too destroy him too the entent they myght without checke maynteine their hypocrisie and wicked lustes These enforcing and finall causes make an infinite difference betwéene the will of the Iewes crucifying Chryste and the will of God Who béeing moued by his owne exceeding mercie toward mankynde and through the entreatance of his sonne would haue Chryst too suffer too dye and too ryse alyue agein too the entent he might restore men too lyfe and euerlasting saluation The matter wherin as in moulds Christes Passion was wrought are the mynd will hart and body of Chryste The forme or manner is the very feeling of Gods horrible wrath and the anguishe as well of Chrystes mynd as of his bodie and his chyldly obedience through which he willingly submitted himselfe with true reuerence and woonderfull lowlynesse too the eternal father and without grudging or repyning endured Gods wrathe poured out vppon him and most bitter formentes for the loue of Gods iustice and mannes saluacion The end of his Passion is first that mankynd béeing redéemed with sufficient ransome from Gods wrath and euerlasting damnacion myght bée rewarded with ryghtuousnesse and euerlasting lyfe Iohn .iij. Like as Moyses lifted vp the Serpent in the wildernesse so must the sonne of man be lifted vp too the entent that all that beléeue in him should not perishe but haue lyfe euerlasting Secondly that wée myght become conformable too the image of Gods sonne that is too say that wée myght bée like the sonne of God our patterne in bearing the Crosse Romaines .viij. Thirdly that wée should folowe the example of Chrystes patience and méeknesse .j. Peter ij Fourthly that wée in all our lyfe should expresse the humilitie that Chryste performed in his passion Philip. ij Through lowlynesse of mynde let euery man estéeme others better than himselfe And let the same mynd bee in you that was in Iesus Chryst Fifthly that being dead to sinne wée might liue vprightly and blamelesse For like as Chryst caryed downe our sinnes intoo his graue and abolished them by his death euen so wée mortifying the dregges of sinne as yet sticking in our flesh must performe new obedience and ryghtuousnesse agréeing with the will of god j. Peter ij Chryste bare our sinnes in his bodye vppon the trée that wée béeing dead to sinne should lyue too ryghtuousnesse The effectes of Chrystes passion are all his benefites which for instruction sake wee will distribute intoo eyght formes FIrst the redemption of mankynde from Gods wrath sin death and the diuels tyranny j. Tim. ij There is but one mediator betwéene God and man the man Iesus Chryste who gaue himselfe for vs too redéeme vs The
second benefit is remission of sinnes Ephes 1. and Col. 1. In whome wée haue redemption remissiō of sinnes by his blud The third is reconciliation or attonement with god Rom. viij When as wée were enemies too God wée were reconcyled too him by the death of his sōne Eph. v. Making peace that he myght reconcyle the Iewes and Gentyles in one body vntoo God ▪ by his crosse The fourth is Iustification Rom. iij. Wée are iustifyed fréely by his grace through the redemption made by Iesus Chryst whom GOD hath appoynted a seat of mercy through fayth in his blud too declare his ryghtuousnesse in y he forgiueth y sinnes which are past The fifth is the giuing of the holy ghost of holynesse Gal. iij. Chryst hath redéemed vs and is become accursed for vs that wée might receiue his spirit by fayth Iohn vj. If I go not away the comforter shall not come too you The sixth is the destruction of the Diuels kingdome Hebr. ij By death he hath abolished him that had the power of death that is too wit the Diuel and reconciled those that for feare of deathe were in bondage all their lyfe long The seuenth is the abolishing of sin death j. Cor. xv Death is swalowed vp intoo victorie O death where is thy sting O Hell where is thy victorie For the sting of death is sinne and the power of sinne is the lawe But thankes bée vntoo God who hathe giuen vs victorie by our Lord Iesus Chryste The eyght is euerlasting lyfe and saluation Iohn iij. The sonne of man must bée lifted vpon the Crosse too the entent that euery one which beléeueth in him should not perish but haue lyfe euerlasting The application of these benefits is made by true repentance and faith That is too wit when acknowledging gods wrath and the horiblenesse of our sinnes wée are earnestly afraide and hartely sory that wée haue offended God and by faith acknowledge that Chryst the sonne of God suffred and was crucifyed made a sacrifise for vs persuade our selues assuredly that for this sacrifyse of Chrystes our sinnes are forgiuen vs ryghtuousnesse and euerlasting lyfe giuen vs. Of this Application there are testimonies too bée séen euery where And notable is this saying of Chryst Iohn xvij I sacrifyse my selfe for them that is too say I offer my selfe for them that they also may bée holy in déede And I pray not for them only but for all that shall beléeue in mée through their prayer In this prayer Chryst our byshop or préest executeth the chéefest duetie or office of a high préest and applyeth his sacrifyse too the whole Churche Therefore in this place the whole Doctrine concerning the préesthoode and sacrifyse of Chryst is too bée thought vppon and repeated Vppon Easter day ¶ The Epistle j. Cor. xv PVrge therefore the olde leuen that yee may bee new dowe as yee are sweete bread For Chryste our Easter Lambe is offered vp for vs Therefore let vs keepe holyday not with olde leuen neyther with the leuen of maliciousnesse and wickednesse but with the sweete bread of purenesse and truthe The disposement THe foūdacion of our fayth and saluacion and the end and marke of the whole storie of the gospel the chéefe hauen of comfort in which only our hartes may rest in all troubles in death is the most ioyful resurrection of the sonne of God our Lord Iesus Chryst where through he being conqueror of sin death hel and the féends hy him vanquished leadeth a glorious triumphe and imparteth vntoo vs that flée vntoo him ryghtuousnesse eternall saluation calling agein euen our bodyes from death vntoo lyfe This excéeding great and wonderful woork of God and benefite towards vs worthy too bée had alwayes in memorie let vs embrace and set out cōtinually with thankfull hart and voyce This Epistle is of that kynd that is perswasiue For it is an exhortacion too the true celebration of the feast of Easter that is too say too the true acknowledgement of the persone and benefites of the sacrifyse or Lamb Chtyst slaine and offered vp for vs vppon the Altar of the Crosse and too true repentance or acknowledgement of our owne sinne of Gods wrath conueyed intoo this Lamb too true faith in the gréefes which rise vppon the féeling of Gods wrath and the beholding of our own sinne death and other calamities assuredly beléeuing that our passeouer is slaine and offered vp already for vs that our sinnes are taken quite away by this Lamb of God and that euen when wée bée dead lyfe and ioy euerlasting shall doutlesse bée restored too vs with Christ who is risen agein Uppon which Faith there must ensew new obedience or clensing from the sinne that yet remayneth in our nature and a beginning of new lyght ryghtuousnesse and conuersation wholly agréeing with the will and woorde of God and continewally setting foorth these incomparable benefites of Chryst with godly minde and voice This is the true Celebration of the Passeouer in this lyfe yea and for euermore Untoo which Paule exhorteth vs by a representacion of leuened bread taken of the custome of the Iewish Passeouer Now too the entent the summe of the most large Doctrine set foorth in this Epistle may the easlyer bée comprehended in mynd Let vs distribute it intoo thrée places 1 Of the woord Pascha or Passeouer 2 A conferring of our Passeouer with the Passeouer of the old Testament which caryeth with it the doctrine of the benefites of Chryste the Lamb that suffered for vs and rose agein for vs. 3 How wée may celebrate this feast of Passeouer aryght in this lyfe The first place THe woord Pascha which is an Hebrew woord deriued of the verbe Pasah signifyeth in Englishe a Passingby or a Passingouer namely in that the Lord passing through Egipt slew the firstborne of the Egiptians and spared the Israelites whose doore poostes were sprinkled with the blud of a Lamb. Exod. xij Secondly it signifyeth the holyday wherin the rememberance of that Passeouer is continued by killing of a Lamb. Luke xxij The feast of swéete bread drew nye which is called Easter Thirdly in this Epistle it signifyeth the Paschall Lamb which was a signe or rememberance of the Lordes passing through Egipt and of the passing of the Israelites through the red Sea And it was a figure of Chryst the true Lambe that was offered vp for vs and passed by death too the eternall Father that by his passage he myght obteine vs deliuerance out of the bondage of Egipt that is too say of the Diuell sinne and death and restore vs ryghtuousnesse and euerlasting lyfe Now assoone as Chryste the true Passeouer was once offered the figuring passeouer ceased and there was instituted a new Passeouer the name where of dooth properly agrée too that day in which the sonne of God our Lord Iesus was offered vp for our sinnes vppon
alreadye and will hereafter call all the deade ageyne too lyfe shoulde be a lyar But for asmuch as these thyngs are manifestly false and impossible it followeth that the proposition out of whiche these thinges ensue is false And therefore the playne contrarye is true namely that the deade shall ryse The fourth argument IT is impossible that the best and holyest part of mankynd should bee created only too the miseries of this present lyfe and too eternall destruction For séeing that God is ryghtuous and also a iudge it must néedes fall out that the godly and the ryghtuous must at one time or other bée in good case and the wicked in ill case But those that liue godlyly in Chryst Iesu are of all men most miserable in this lyfe Ergo it must néedes bée that there remayneth an other hauen and another lyfe in which the godly béeing raysed from death shalbée set frée from all miserie and bée crowned with eternal blisse and glorie The fifth argument BVt now is Chryst risen from death and is the first frutes of the dead Fifthly he repeteth the first Argument and reason which holdeth of consequence expounding and enlarging the consequence with many woordes Chryst is rysen ageine Ergo all the dead shall ryse He proueth the consequence For like as by Adam death entered vppon all men So by Chryste the cause and author of lyfe all men shal bée called too lyfe agein In this order that the first frutes or fyrst of them that ryse ageine from death bée Chryst himself Then those that bée Chrystes or which haue departed out of this life in the faith of Chryst shall rise at Chrystes comming too iudgement Afterward shall bée the ende of the world or of worldly things when he shal deliuer vp his kingdom too God the father that is too say when he shall bring vntoo his Father all the whole Church gathered toogither on earth by the ministerie of the Gospell too the entent that all kingdomes being abolished and all power as well of Diuels as men suppressed yea and the ministerie of the sonne of God whereby he gathered his Church in this world cessing onely GOD without other meanes may reigne in the godly and bée all in all filling all things with his lyght wisdome ryghtuousnesse lyfe blissednesse and glorie vnspeakable The sixth Argument THe very maner of Baptim whereby wée are first graffed intoo the churche or body of Chryste betokeneth that wée looke assuredly for the resurrection from death for they are baptized ouer the deade or ouer the graues of the dead as it is vsed in these dayes also protesting in the behalfe of the dead that they beléeue of a certeintie that they shall returne too lyfe ageine according as the Créede whiche wée hold professeth in our Baptim And the very dipping in the water and taking out agein is a token and representation not only of the abolishment of sinne and of the regeneration and renewing of the soule but also of the death of our bodyes and the rysing of them ageine The .vij. Why are wee also in daunger euery houre HErepeteth the .iiij. Argument and amplifyeth it by an absurditie of Epicure heathnishnesse ensewing it which he describeth in woordes taken out of the .xxij. of Esai And he expresseth the reproof of it in a verse of Menanders Euill communication corrupteth good manners With whiche agréeth this saying of Theogius Thou mayst lern good of the good but if thou kéepe companie mith the wicked thou marrest thyne owne mynd The .viij. Argument of a like LIke as séedes that are cast intoo the ground doo rotte there and spring vp agein and eche of them yéelde foorth most goodly frute in their kynd So our bodyes being sowen intoo the ground and buryed shall certeinly liue agein ryse ageine much more beautifull and bryght than they were héere vppon earth This comparison hath Stigelius expressed in very trim verses This corne that growes of bodye voyd of blud in lyuely plyght Immortall honor after death our bodyes dooth behyght Deepe vnderneath the turned clod the dryed seedes lye hid In which a man would ill suppose that any strength abid Yet growing vp by secret meane they ryse agein and beare A greater strength encreast too more thā heretofore they were Euen so our courses being layd too rot in holowe graue A lyuely beautie afterward in glorious state shall haue When death hath hild thē downe awhyle anon they shal aryse ▪ Eternally too liue in lyght with God aboue the skies Right many and notable tokens of the resurrection hathe God imprinted in the whole nature of things which too consider after a reuerent and godly fashion it is behouefull The day dooth dayly fade intoo nyght and is buryed in darknesse But in the morning killing his death and breaking out of his graue of darknesse it becommeth alyue agein as Tertullian sayeth And this entercourse of dayes and nyghts is fynely expressed in this Gréek ridle A father there is that hath sonnes nine and three And eche of those sonnes eke hath children thrice ten Not one like another some fair and white bee Some black all immortall yet dead now and then The Moone dying euery mooneth quickeneth agein and recouereth hir lyght that shée had lost The beames of the Starres whiche are dimmed by the rysing of the Sunne are kindled agein in the nyght The foure seasons of the yéere Lenton Sommer Haruest and Winter doo fade and returne by mutuall course In Springtyme the earth that was dead and barrein in the winter becōmeth lyuely agein bringeth foorth herbes grasse floures and frutes The trées are clad agein with leaues floures and fruites The swallowes which were dead and buryed in the waters in wintertyme recouer lyfe agein in the Springtyme Flyes also and other Cutfoules whiche were killed with cold recouer their former force and lyfe by warmth The Phenix bréedeth ageine with fyre and hir own asshes For shée perisheth too liue and yet shée ingenders hirself atteyning immortalitie by the benefite of death as Lactantius sayeth Finally all this most beautifull Theater of heauen and earth which was made of nothing giueth vs to vnderstand that God who made all things of nothing may with much more ease at the latter day restore our flesh or bodyes agein which haue bin somewhat before than he made them at the beginning But in thinking vppon this Article let vs alwayes haue our myndes and our eyes fastened vppon our Lord Iesus Chrystes death and resurrection and vppon the promises concerning the restitution of our bodyes and the eternal lyfe too ensue without fayle after this lyfe warranted by the Resurrection of himself and the raysing vp of Lazarus and others Iohn xj I knowe he shall ryse agein in the resurrection at the last day Iesus sayd vntoo hir I am the resurrection and lyfe He that beléeueth in mée yea though he were dead he shall liue Iohn
Also there bee heauenly bodyes and there bee earthly bodyes that is too say there shall bée a difference betwéene the bodyes of the godly and the bodyes of the vngodly There is one glorie of the Sunne and another glorie of the Moone and another glorie of the starres y is to say euē amōg the godly and the Saincts in heauen there shall bée a differente of glorie For like as one Starre excelleth another in bryghtnesse so shall Chryst the Prophetes Apostles and other constant Martyrs and acknowledgers of the sonne of God shyne bryghter than the other common sort of the godly as is sayd Dan. xij Then shall the lerned shyne like the bryghtnesse of heauen and those that haue instructed many in ryghtuousnesse shall shyne like the Starres for euer and euer Then declareth he by foure Iscolies set one ageinst another what maner of bodyes the bodyes of them that ryse agein shalbée verely euen the selfsame that they bée at their buriall as touching their substāce but immortal made bright and glorified Wherein the phrase of Paules wryting is too bée considered how the nowne adiectiue in forme of a substantiue is ioyned too the subiect by the preposition In. It is sowen in corruption that is too say it is buried in the ground a mortall or corruptible bodye ▪ It ryseth in incorruption that is too say it ryseth an incorruptible or immortall bodye It is sowen in dishonour that is too say a foule or ylfauoured bodye stinking and crawling full of wormes It ryseth in glorie that is too say glorious shyning cléered and pure from all blemish It is sowen in weaknesse that is too say weake frayle transitorie of a dayes continaunce a shadowe a froth a Ghoste a steme a blast a fether a breth a puffe a dreame a bubble a flud a temple a strydey a wynd a dust It ryseth in power that is too say myghtie strong florisshing and frée from all infirmitie It is sowen a natural body that is too say liuing the naturall lyfe by reason sense and nourishing power which is susteyned with meat and drink and is encreased and begetteth and may dye It ryseth a spirituall body that is too say liuing the spirituall lyfe kindled by the holy Ghoste which is not maynteyned with meate drink ne begetteth ne dyeth but is like the lyfe of the Angels Math. xxij and like the lyfe of God. The first man was made a liuing soule Gen. ij That is too wit not simply as the beastes liue but such a one as Chryst should also with his spirit quicken without meat and drink too the spirituall and euerlasting lyfe The first man is of the earth earthly Hée alludeth too the originall of the woord Adam which signifyeth earth or clay whereof he was made like as also among the Latines man is called Homo of Humus which signifyeth the earth as if he had sayd made of the earth clay and earthly The second man is the Lord from heauen Chryste being risen from Death hath now a heauenly immortall and glorious body too which our bodies shall in all respectes bée like and conformable when they are raised ageine from Death Phil. ij Like as before Death they were altoogither like Adams body which was subiect too Death and other miseries Flesh and blud cannot inherite the kingdom of God that is too say this corruptible body defiled with sinfull inclinations and fleshly affections and subiect too death cannot possesse the kingdome of God vnlesse it bée altered of a body mortall defyled and stained with sinne bée made a body pure and cleane and fined from all filthinesse immortal The same flesh that is buryed shal rise agein and the same substance of flesh and blud shall remaine still as Iob sayth I shal sée God in my self whom I my self shall sée and none other for mée For as Tertullian reasoneth plainly in his bóoke concerning the resurrection of the flesh God forbid that God should for euermore abandon too destruction mannes flesh which is the woorke of his handes the care of hart the case of his breth the Quéene of his woorkes the heire of his liberalitie the préest of his religion the souldyer of his warfare and the sister of his Chryst ▪ c. Behold I shew you a mysterie that is too say I will more plainly expoūd and declare that which I told you more darkly in my former woords when I sayd that flesh bloud shuld not possesse the kingdome of god For that saying is too hée vnderstood not of the substance of fleshe and bloud but of the exchaunge of their properties For it behoueth this corruptible body which wée now beare about vs too put on incorruption and this selfsame mortal body too put on immortalitie before it can obtein possession of Gods kingdom Some also shall not die at all whom the sonne of God shal find aliue at his comming too iudgement but they shalbée sodeinly changed endued with new lyght glory power immortalitie The third part of the Chapter THen shal the saying be fulfilled which is written Esay xxv Osee xiij Death is swallowed vp intoo victorie O Death where is thy sting O Hell where is thy victorie The sting of Death is sin and the strength of sin is the law But thanks bee to God who hath giuen vs victorie by our Lord Iesus Chryst The efficient cause of the raysing of our bodyes and of restoremēt of ryghtuousnesse and euerlasting lyfe is the sonne of God our Lord Iesus Chryst who in his Death hath swalowed vp our Death and by his ryghtuousnesse obedience hath purged our sinnes and pacifying Gods wrath taking away the curse of the law hath gottē vs victorie ageinst sin death and the curse of Gods law For these thrée are the cruellest enemies of mankynd and the chéef mischeues plages which moost cruelly and féersly make hauock of all mankind without difference killing them and deuouring them euerychone Therfore Paul in this place by feining a person peinteth out death like a most mischeuous outlaw or cruell souldier armed with a pike or a darte that is too wit with sinne wherwith he assaileth all mankind without gainsaying and pusheth all men through and killeth them For by reason of sin all men are subiect too death and are slaine by death as is sayd Rom. v. By one man sinne entered intoo the world and by sinne death And so death ran ouer al men bicause al men haue sinne Also sinne reigned by death slaying all men The very same is the méening of the woords in this text the sting of Death is sinne that is too say all men are slaine by Death bycause of sinne Now when this sting or speare of Death wexeth dul and blunt so as sin cannot execute his ful force vppon vs and bée felt Gods law like a whetstone sharpneth sin and both sheweth the greatnesse and horriblenesse of sin and also maketh it more
by Chryst himselfe are included in seuen petitions This profitable and necessaris Doctrine let the well mynded diligently and earnestly lerne and exercise ▪ For the whole diuinitie or doctrine concerning God is not a cō templatiue science whose end consisteth only in knowledge But it is also a woorkfull conscience which consisteth in dayly exercises of repentance faith Inuocation aduersities and comfortes and is too bee practysed and put in vre in all the deuyses and dooings of our lyfe like as Iames admonisheth vs in this present Epistle that it is not inough too héere the doctrine of the gospel and too allow of it and that they are deceiued which bestow the whole effect of their godlynesse vpon that poynt But that there must bée ioyned vntoo it faith obedience as well of the hart as of outward woorks that I may vse the woordes of Herodotus thou must make thy deedes like vntoo thy woordes Now are there of the whole Epistle of this day twoo partes THe first warneth vs that wée haue néed of new obedience or amendment of life according too Gods word as Christ sayeth blissed are they that heare the worde of God and keepe it by fayth with a good conscience Iames cōpareth Gods woord too a glasse in which wée behold both the filth of our sinnes which is too bée scoured of cleused and also the rule of Gods wil according too which all the deuises and dooings of our lyfe are too bée directed They therfore that héere the woord of God and doo it not or which endeuer not too wash of the filth and vnclennesse of their nature and too eschue sinnes and too begin a new and faire lyfe agréeing with the woord of God they I say are like a man that beholdeth his bodely shape in a glasse and thinketh no whit of chaunging the faultes of his countenance But he the looketh intoo the perfect law of libertie that is too say he that diligently héereth lerneth and considereth the doctrine of the gospel by which wée are deliuered from death and continueth in stedfast faith and obedience of life he bicause he is not a forgetfull héerer but also a performer of the woork shalbée blissed in his woork that is too say shall witnesse and declare himself too bée blissed bycause he expresseth true faythe in his déedes For it is not the méening of Iames that wée become ryghtuous before God by our own woorks and wel dooings for he himselfe in the Synod of the Apostles Act ▪ xv ratifieth this decrée wee beleeue our selues too bee saued by the grace of our Lord Iesu Chryst And all the whole Doctrine of the Prophetes and Apostles witnesseth vs too bee made blissed or saued through frée mercyfor Chrystes sake only Therefore the true blissednesse and christen Religion is too acknowledge God and his sonne our Lord Iesus Chryste aryght according too his woord too haue remission of sinnes for Chrysts sake and through this knowledge of Christ foreshyning in vs too bridle our tung by faith in our talk concerning God Gods seruices and other things that it speake not things repugnant too the word of God and too doo good too the fatherlesse and widowes and too kéepe our selues vndefiled from the world that is too wit from all sinne Vppon the day of the Assension of Gods sonne intoo Heauen ¶ The Epistle Actes j. IN my former treatyse deere Theophilus wee haue spoken all that Iesus beegan too doo and teache vntill the day in which he was taken vp after that hee through the holy Ghost had geuen commaundementes vntoo the Apostles whom he had chosen too whom also he shewed himselfe alyue after his Passion and that by many tokens appearing vntoo them fortie dayes and speaking of the kingdome of God and gathered them toogether and commaunded them that they should not depart from Ierusalem but to waite for the promisse of the father wherof sayth he ye haue heard of mee For Iohn truely baptised with water but ye shall bee baptised with the holy ghost after these few dayes When they therfore were come toogether they asked of him saying Lord wilt thou at this tyme restore agayne the kyngdome of Israell And he sayd vntoo them it is not for you to know the tymes or the seasons which the father hath put in his own power But ye shall receiue power after the holy Ghoste is come vppon you And yee shall bee witnesses vntoo mee not onely in Ierusalem but also in all Iewry and in al Samaria and euen vntoo the worlds end And when he had spoken these things while they behelde he was taken vp on hie and a cloud receyued him out of their sight And while they looked stedfastly vp towarde heauen as he went behold two men stoode by them in white apparel which also sayd ye men of Galilee why stand ye gasing vp intoo heauen This same Iesus which is taken vp from you intoo heauen shall so come euen as yee haue seene him goe intoo heauen The disposement A summe of the doctrine concerning Chrystes Ascension out of the readings vppon the Actes of the Apostles The cheefe places are foure 1 The storie of Chrystes Ascension and triumph is too bée considered 2 A doctrine of the vse and frute or benefites of the Ascension of our Lord Iesu Chryst 3 A description of Chrystes kingdome 4 An exposition of the phrases in the Articles of our beléef he ascended intoo heauen and sitteth at the right hand of God the father almightie The first place THe foundation of the Christen faith of true comfort in death and all aduersities and of the resurrection of our bodyes and of euerlasting saluation is the storie of the resurrection tryumph of the sonne of God our Lord Iesus Christ ascending into heauen leading captiuitie captiue sitting at the right hand of God as Paule sheweth euidently j. Cor. xv If Chryst bée not risen from Death then is our preaching in vaine and in vaine is your Faith and you are still in your sinnes And if wée trust in Chryste but in this lyfe only then are wée most wretched of all men Therfore let those that be wel minded diligently and héedfully read the whole storie of Chrystes resurrection and Ascension and gather the testimonies or proofes as Luke nameth them in this place which auouch Chryst too bée in his owne very body and in very déed risen from the dead and ascended intoo heauen As for the record of those too whom Chryst shewed himselfe after his rysing from death they are declared in the holy days of Easter last past Agein y he might not séeme too haue bin a ghost but might shew himself to be risē in déed with his true body he was visibly conuersāt by the space of whole xl dayes toogither with the Apostles a great congregation of that time for Paule declareth that he was séen of mo than fiue hundred brethren at once and in his company a great
you VVee knowe that wee are translated from death vntoo lyfe bycause wee loue the brethren He that loueth not his brother abideth in death Whosoeuer hateth his brother is a manslear And yee knowe that no manslear hath eternall lyfe abyding in him Hereby perceyue wee loue bycause he gaue his lyfe for vs and wee ought too giue our liues for the brethren But who so hath this worldes good and seeth his brother haue neede and shutteth vp his compassion from him how dwelleth the loue of God in him ▪ My babes let vs not loue in woorde neyther in tong but in deede and in veritie The disposement THis Epistle is of those sort that persuade For first there is a comfort too bée set ageinst the hatreds of the world Secondly there is an Exhortation too louingnesse and liberalitie towardes a mannes neyghbour The first place MAruell not my brethren though the world hate you Mannes reason iudgeth of the tooyles and troubles of the godly and specially of the contentions among the teachers euen for all the world after the same manner as Salust sayeth in his preface too the warres of Iugurth Too labour in vayne and too preache nothing else by ouertooyling a mānes selfe but hatred and slaunder is a poynt of vtter madnesse For all the godly and specially the Ministers of the Gospel who performe the déedes of most singular louingnesse and most earnestly séeke the euerlasting welfare of their héerers and execute their dutie most faithfully doo reape in manner none other reward than most bitter hatred and vtter vnthankfulnesse at the hands of those vppon whom they haue bestowed greatest benefites Ageinst this temptation and the bitter fordoomes spyghts and hatreds of the wysemē of the world whereby many are woont too bée withdrawen from the ministerie Iohn comforteth vs in these woordes Maruell not my brethren though the world hate you as if he had sayd the iudgement of God and of the godly is farre of another sort than is the iudgement of the wicked worlde The greater that any man is before God the more contemned and abiect is he before the world And seing that at many mennes hands there is no token of a thankfull mynd rendred too God for his excéeding great benefites which he poureth out by heapes vppon all men but all kynd of spyght Let not vs wonder if the world hate vs also For the Diuell enuying vs this so greate felicitie that wée are conueyed from death too euerlasting lyfe stirreth vp his instrumentes and inflameth mennes hatreds ageinst vs Therefore ageinst the most bitter hatred of the world and of the vngodly let vs set Gods good will and fatherly loue towardes vs which the sonne of God hath shewed by this notable token that he hath spent his lyfe for vs and deliuering vs from death by the death of him selfe hath restored vs to the possession of eternall life Wherefore let eche of vs bee so disposed in mynd that they may with a true harte say thus It is sufficient for mée hauyng my full delyght in Chryst too doo those things which are godly and to speake such as are godly The second place AN exhortation too louingnesse and liberalitie towards a mannes neybour and the argumentes of this exhortation are three Of the honestnesse of it Of the profitablenesse of it And of the example of Chryst FIrst of the honestnesse or the necessary couplyng of the cause and the effects I knowe that we are translated from death too lyfe bycause wee loue the brethren or bycause our fayth is effectuall by loue For too this end are wee washed from our sinnes by the bloud of Chryste and translated from death intoo lyfe that wee shoulde hereafter eschue sinne and earnestly execute loue towardes God and our neybour which is the fountayn of all vertues Now like as mouing in a mannes bodie is an vndouted token effect of lyfe yet left in the body euen so louingnesse is the next effect and an vnfallible signe of fayth shyning in the hart wherby wée are translated from deathe vntoo lyfe And like as in this Euthymeme I knowe there is lyfe still in him bycause there is stirring yet left in his bodye it foloweth not that stirring is the efficient cause of life but by the effect I gather according too reson that the cause is present so in this place of Iohns wee know wee are translated from death to life bycause wee loue the brethren this part of spéeche bycause betokeneth not the efficient cause of whiche is spoken in the fifth of Iohns Gospell in this wyse He that beleeueth in the sonne is passed from deathe vnto lyfe but it betokeneth the effect whervpon the argument is gathered that we are verely translated from deathe vntoo lyfe like as Luke in his vij Chapter reasoneth vppon the effect that many sinnes are forgiuen too the sinfull woman bycause she loued muche Likewise as if I should say I knowe for a certeintie that the Sunne is vp bycause I sée the sunne beames glaring in my chamber And in this selfesame Epistle is sayde In this haue wee knowne his loue bicause he hath spent his life for vs. The second argument of the profitablenesse or of the necessitie of holding faste Fayth lyfe and euerlasting saluation For he that loueth not hath not lyfe euerlasting abyding in him but he continueth in deathe according also as Paule sayth j. Cor. vj. No whoremongers Idolaters abusers of themselues with the mankynde pillers c. shall inherite the kingdome of god Therefore too the intent wee lose not the remission of sinnes receiued the deliueraunce from Deathe the grace of GOD and the euerlasting lyfe wée must of necessitie fall to louingnesse and new obedience agréeable with Gods will. And yet it foloweth not therevppon that oure louingnesse or newe obedience deserueth forgiuenesse of sinnes and eternall lyfe For this louingnesse cannot so muche as bée begon neyther pleaseth it God except remission of sinnes be first freely giuen for Chrystes sake and that faith shyne in the hart Bréefly euen altoogyther after the manner of Logicke hath Iohn included this argument in the forme of reasonyng agréeing to the moode Celarent But in the first place he hath put the conclusion in the second the minor and in the last the maior Ce Euery murderer hath not lyfe euerlasting abyding in him or abydeth in death la Euery one that hateth or loueth not his brother is a murtherer before god Math. v. rent Ergo he that loueth not his brother abydeth in Death or hath not eternall lyfe abyding in him The third Argument OF the example of Chryste who spent his soule or his lyfe for vs as he sayth in Iohn xv Greater loue than this can no man haue than that a man shoulde giue hys lyfe for his freends Paule Rom. v. GOD commendeth his owne loue towardes vs in that when wée were his enemies Chryst dyed for vs. Vntoo these three arguments Iohn addeth a warnyng
which is to be touched with no feeling of another mannes miserie The third is of brotherly loue or christē fréendship which perteineth too the .iiij. and .v. commaundements The vices that encounter it are hatred or enmitie and counterfet good wil. The fourth is mercyfulnesse or frankhartednesse which with a willing hart or with a redy chéerfull mynd endeuereth to his power to do good to others with his coūsel trauel mony c. It perteineth to the .v. and .vij. commaundements The vices that encoūter it are churlishnesse which either dooth no good too others or else doth it not with a willing hart a chéerful coūtenance lauishnesse which doth aboue mesure The fifth is of gentlenesse or courtesie which in familiar méetings in talking with men or in héering them in answering them in performing all other poynts of fréendly behauior sheweth a good wil towardes them with a certein pleasantnesse in countenance gesture without churlishnesse or disdein It perteineth too the .v. viij commaundements The vices that encounter it are churlishnesse and lightnesse The sixth is of méeknesse which is a vertue that executeth no priuate reuengement but suffereth wrongs reproches and other displeasures for gods sake and for the quietnesse of the church the common weale And it perteineth too the .v. commaūdement And vntoo this part of his exhortacion he addeth arguments groūded vpon honestnesse profit Ye know how you are called to this purpose that ye shuld be heirs of blissednesse that is to say séeing that you are blissed of God for the blissed séedes sake that you may enioy the heritage of eternall blisse It standeth with honestie right or it is good right reason that you also on your behalfe shuld blisse others requite other mens slaunderings and wrōgs not with railing hatefulnesse but with curtesie and well dooing ▪ For in any wise it becommeth Christians too speake do as Gelon king of Syracuse saith to the ambassador of Lacedemon in Herodotus Surely thy delight to rail thus in thy talk shal not cause me to serue thy turn in requiting thée with reproche The other argument grounded vppon the profitablenesse is expoūded with the most swéet words of the .xxxiiij. Psalm the which I wold wish yoongmen to lerne whole without booke and to cun it by hart Now wheras the words of the Psalme doo in general promisse rewards to the godly who in religion in their daily conuersation exercise truthe which eschue lying rayling slaundering backbyting deceites sophistrie c. and practise ryghtfulnesse which doth no mā any euil but al men good and endeuereth too maintaine peace and concord Peter in this place restreyneth them too a certeine peculiar kynd of folke and behighteth quietnesse of lyfe successe of welfare Gods care and defence in all perils too the méeke and milde which beare wrongs and reproches paciently And vntoo the vnryghtuous and such as are desirous of reuenge he threatneth the countenance that is too say the wrath of God and horrible punishments The seuenth is of patience or peaceable manlinesse or cōstācie which shunneth not the profession of the truth nor the defence of a rightful case nor any dooings that bée honest and helpfull vntoo others for any fear reuilings threates slaunders or reproches but with a stout courage suffereth for the ryght and awayteth for the rewardes that are behyght the patient in heauen according too this saying Math. v. Blissed are they that suffer persecution for ryghtuousnesse sake for theirs is the kingdom of heauen Blissed are you when men reuyle you c. It perteyneth too the first and fifth commaundement And the vyces that encounter it are faint hartednesse which is so discouraged with fearefulnesse or with reproche that he forsaketh the profession of the truth rightful cases or the dueties of his vocation that are necessary and behouefull vnto others but as Ierom sayth the feare of God must work this in vs namely too set lyght by al other feares And wilfulnesse or stiffenesse in defending vntrue néedlesse or wrongfull cases c. The woordes are taken out of Esay the eyght Chapter The eyght is of noble and stedfast profession of the true doctrine concerning god Sanctifie the Lord god in your harts and bée redy at all tymes too rēder a reason too euery one that asketh you of your faith It perteyneth too the second precept of the .x. commaundements The vyces that encounter it are vtter renouncing of God or hyding of a mannes profession when it is néedfull too bée shewed And vngodly rashnesse or wilfulnesse in maynteining errors These places of this dayes Epistle haue I diuided as shortly as I could the full setting out of which at large may bée fetched out of my declarations of the vertues First concerning endeuer too exercyse concord courtesie and liberalitie towards others Secondly of méeknesse which restreyneth desire of priuate reuengement And thirdly of constancie in profession and in enduring the troubles that accompanie the profession Vppon the sixth Sunday after Trinitie ¶ The Epistle Rom. vj. WHat shall wee say then Shal wee continue in sinne that there may be abundance of grace God forbid How shall wee that are deade as touching sinne liue any longer therein Remember yee not that all wee which are baptysed in the name of Iesu Chryst are baptysed too dye with him VVee are buryed then with him by baptim for too die that likewise as Christ was raysed vp from death by the glory of the father euen so wee also shoulde walke in a new life For if we be graft in death like vntoo him euen so shall wee bee partakers in the resurrection knowing this that our olde man is crucified with him also that the body of sinne might vtterly bee destroyed that hencefoorthe wee should not bee seruaunts vntoo sinne For he that is dead is iustified from sinne VVherfore if wee bee dead with Chryst wee beleeue that wee shal liue also with him remembring that Chryst beeing raised from death dyeth no more Death hath no more power ouer him For as touching that he died he died concerning sinne once And as touching that hee lyuteh he lyueth vnto god Likewise imagine yee also that yee are dead concerning sinne but are alyue vntoo God throughe Iesus Chryst our Lord. The disposement THis Epistle is of those kind of cases that instruct And the state proposition or matter wherof it entreateth is this New obedience is needful or As many as are baptised Christians and iustified by faith for Chrystes sake muste all from henceforth eschue sin and yeeld new obedience agreing with Gods will or else Those that are regenerated must doo good woorkes This proposition confirmeth he with thrée arguments gathered out of the place of causes and he setteth it foorth with as many similitudes taken of the Baptim of death and buryall of Chryst The first argument is of the finall cause of iustification
of theyr places Of this fayth he speaketh thus in the chapter folowing If I haue neuer so greate fayth yea that I can remoue mountaynes out of their places Such fayth was in the Apostles and in our dayes with Luther who with a stout and vnabashed courage of hart did spred abroade the doctrine of the Gospell when all the worlde was ageinst him iiij The gifte of healing as the Apostles healed the diseased and S. Pantaleon restored health to many that were sicke in Maximilians Court. v. Operations of power or mightie operacions or working of miracles and wonderfull deliueraunces as Esay deliuered Hierusalem from beséeging or of the dueties of a mans owne calling like as Paule is paynfull and laboursome in his vocation and spréedeth the Gospel further abroade than the rest of the Apostles vj. Prophesying that is to wit the gift of foretelling things too come suche as was in Agabus Act. xj and .xxj. and in the daughters of Philip the Gospeller Act. xxj or els a singular aptnesse and fitnesse in expounding the prophesies of the scriptures and such a singular aptnesse was there in Luther euen by the witnesse of Erasmus vij Iudgement to discerne spirites or discernement of opinions whiche are decked with a counterfet colour of truth like as Malchion was the firste that discouered the slightes of Samosetane Alexander spyed out that Arius taught false doctrine and Hilarius found fault with the crafty conueyaunce of Auxentius viij Diuersitie of tongues as Ierome was séene in diuers tongues as in the Latin Gréeke Hebrew Slauonish and the Chaldey tongues ix The interpretacion of tongues or the ablenesse too translate forreyne languages properly and expressely intoo a mans owne toong as Luther with a singular cléernesse turned the Psalmes and the Prophetes intoo the Dutch toong or generally it is an eloquence or gifte of vtteraunce and handsome expounding of entangled opinions in controuersie whereof many ryse onely of the ignoraunce of the toong and of the phrases of the same Hitherto I haue reckened vp a beadroll of the cheef giftes of the holy Ghost The second place THe efficient cause or author and giuer of all spirituall gifts is the one and self same holy Ghost which distributeth seuerally to eche mā according as he listeth Then it is the greatest foly in the world too bee proude of an other mans goods whiche neyther are in our power nor can bee gotten by our owne cunning and too vaunt ones self aboue other men for them and too kindle harteburning and cherish hatred for them as it happened in the Church of Corinth and in other places at all times The third place IF God of his goodnesse haue bestowed any gifts vpō vs they are to be vsed reuerently not to boasting or to the disdeyne and contempt of other folkes the nurrishment of such like fond affections but too the common profite welfare of the whole Church like the members of mans body which though they bee one vnlike another and some haue more excellent offices than the rest yet striue they not ambitiously among themselues but employ all theyr workings to the common welfare of the whole body And hereuntoo may this most honest sentence of Euripides bée referred If euery man taking the benefite or good gift of God bestowed vppon him would regard it and employ it too the common profite of his countrey then should Cities bée afflicted with fewer inconueniences and become happy hereafter The fourth place LEt the notable testimonie concerning the person and benefites of the holy Ghoste set foorth in this Epistle bée considered For by expresse woordes the title of Lord and God and the peculiar woorkes of the diuine and almightie nature are attributed vnto him which do conuince that the holy Ghost is God in very déede and by nature and that he is of one substaunce and of one continuaunce with God the Father and the sonne But a more plenteous and full declaracion of this doctrine may bée fetched out of the place that concerneth the holy Ghost Vppon the .xj. Sunday after Trinitie ¶ The Epistle j. Cor. xv BRethren as perteyning to the Gospell which I preached vnto you whiche ye haue also accepted and in the which ye continue by the which ye are also saued I do you to wit after what maner I preached vnto you yf ye kepe it except ye haue beleeued in vaine For first of all I deliuered vnto you that which I receyued how that Christ died for our sinnes agreeing to the scriptures and that he was buryed and that he rose ageyne the thirde day according to the scriptures And that he was seene of Cephas then of the twelue After that he was seene of moe than fiue hundreth brethren at once of whiche many remayne vnto this day and many are fallen a sleepe After that appeared he too Iames then to all the Apostles And laste of all he was seene of me as of one that was borne out of due time For I am the least of the Apostles whiche am not worthy to bee called an Apostle bycause I haue persecuted the cōgregacion of God. But by the grace of God I am that I am And his grace which is in me was not in vayne But I laboured more aboundantly than they all yet not I but the grace of God whiche is with me Therfore whether it were I or they so wee preached and so ye haue beleeued The disposement ALl the whole xv Chapter of the firste Epistle too the Corinthians perteyneth too those kinde of cases that instructe For it is a doctrine concerning the resurrection of the dead And the partes of the whole discourse are thrée 1. Whither there shall bée any rysing ageyn of the dead 2. What manner of rysing that shall bée or what maner a bodyes they shall rise withall 3. What is the cause of the rising ageyne of our bodies that is to wit the death and resurrection of Christe whereby he hath swalowed vp our sinne and death restored lyfe and glorie euerlasting to his Church The firste parte of this discourse namely that there shall bée a rising ageyn of the dead is confirmed by Paule with foure reasons of the whiche the firste in this dayes Epistle is taken of the efficient cause Christ hauing bin dead is risen ageyn Ergo wée also shall ryse ageyn He proueth the antecedent first by the holy scripture as Psal xv Esa. liij Ose vj. and also by the story of Ionas And secondly by the record of many that with theyr eyes saw Christ risen from death For Christe the same day that he rose ageyne to lyfe appeared first too Marie Mawdline alone Iohn xx Mar. xvj Secondly to the rest of the womē togither Mat. xxviij Thirdly too the twoo men that were going intoo the féeldes whom the Apostles beléeued not Mar. xvj Fourthly too Simon Peter or Cephas Luk. xxiiij j. Cor. xv And sixthly to all the Apostles at once as
they were gathered toogither sauing Thomas Iohn xx Luk. xxiiij and .j. Corinthians xv And all these discoueries were made in one day on which day Ierom supposeth that Christ shewed himself to Iames the lesse also Afterward he shewed himselfe certeine times too the Apostles when Thomas was with them and at the sea of Tyberias Iohn xx and .xxj. Also in Galilée too mo than fiue hundred brethren at once Mat. xxviij j. Cor. xv Also hée appéered too all the Apostles or Disciples And this is the proofe of the Antecedent And the consequent of this argument is euidently confirmed by this Syllogisme Whatsoeuer Chryst bothe will and can bring too passe shall out of all dout take effect Chryst bothe will call the dead too lyfe ageine as the sayings of Iohn doo witnesse Iohn v. vj. and .xj. And also he can restore lyfe too the dead for by his death he hath swalowed death intoo victorie and by his Resurrection be restoreth lyfe euerlasting too vs when wée bée dead Ergo wée also shall out of all dout bée called too lyfe ageine The cheefe places THe first and most principall place is the doctrine concerning the rysing agein of the dead which perteyneth to the Article of our Créede I beléeue the resurrection of this flesh and the life euerlasting This is the end mark of the whole lyfe and fayth of christen folke and the chéefest and most stayed comfort in all the tribulations of this most miserable and flyghtfull lyfe yea and in death also that wée for a certeintie persuade our selues beléeue that wée are not created too the miseries of this troublesome and mortall lyfe only but that after the death of this bodie there remaineth assuredly a blissed and euerlasting lyfe in which receyuing ageine the same bodyes howbéeit renued and the same flesh which wée now beare about vs and that béeing set vtterly frée from all sinne labor and sorow wee shall face to face enioy the sight of the whole Godhead and so béeing filled with heauenly lyght rightuousnesse life and gladnesse shal praise God for euermore The doctrine of this Article is most euidently confirmed by many Sermons of Chryst of the Prophets and of the Apostles and most bryghtly set foorth in this fiftene Chapter of the first too the Corinthians Too the intent therefore that wée may surely fasten in the inward bowels of our hartes this wholsom and most effectuall comfort in all miseryes Let the chéefest textes bée alwayes in our sight As these Iob. xix I knowe that my redéemer liueth and I shall ryse out of the earth in the latter day and shall bée compassed agein with my skin and in my flesh shall I sée my God whom I shall beehold euen I my selfe and myne eyes shall behold him and none other for mée This hope is layd vp in my bosome Iohn v. The houre shall come that all which are in their graues c. Iohn vj. This is the will of the father that sent mée that euery one which séeth the sonne beléeueth in him should not perish but haue lyfe euerlasting and I will rayse him vp at the last day Ioh. xj I know that he shall ryse agein at the last day The foundacion and cause of the rysing ageine of our bodyes and of lyfe and saluation euerlasting is the Resurrection of our Lord Iesus Chryst the sonne of God whereby he hath swallowed vp sinne death hell and the diuell intoo victorie and conueyeth all those that flée vntoo him from death vntoo a blissed and endlesse lyfe And this is the cause why Paul in this Epistle confirmeth this sentence with so many woordes that Chryst is risen from death in déede I doo you too wit of the Gospell The second place THe enterance intoo this Epistle dooth vs too vnderstand that the true wholsome and necessary Doctrine concerning the chéef Articles of the christen faith ought oftentimes and continually too bée repeated yea and the self same things too bee beaten intoo the héerers eares in the self same woords that they may déepely sinke and stedfastly sticke in their mindes as Paule sayth Phil. iij. It is no paine vnto mée but it is for your welfare that I wryte one thing oftentymes béeware of dogges which chaunge and marre the doctrine of the Gospell which I deliuered you Therefore let those that teache faythfully repete oft times one doctrine that is profitable and necessary as that wyse man sayd that he speaketh the selfe same things too the selfe same persons And this most profitable rule of studyes giuē by Epictetus is wel knowne Knowe thou that it is not easie for a man too bée lerned vnlesse that he doo euery day either heare or read suche things as he would be grounded in and likewise vse them in this lyfe So Paule in this place sayeth that he deliuereth not a new Doctrine too them but that he putteth them in mynd of the Gospel by the same woordes that he had preached it too them before The third place OF the effectualnesse of the Gospell or of the liuely woord sounding in the mouth of the ministers by which woord only and not otherwyse God imparteth the true knowledge of himselfe true faith the holy Ghost and euerlasting welfare too those that beléeue Therefore sayth Paule in this place by the Gospell which I haue preached vntoo you which you haue embraced and by which you are saued if yée hold it fast by fayth onlesse perchaunce which God forbid yée haue now shaken of the faith and beléeued héeretoofore in vaine And it agréeth fully with this sentence Rom. j. The Gospel is the power of God too the saluation of euery one that beléeueth Act. xj Peter shal speake woords too thée by which thou and thy house shalt bée saued Such other texts as these wée shall héere in the Epistle of the next Sunday which are too bée set ageinst the Enthusiastes who imbrace the woorking of the woord sacraments and looke for new enlightenings and heauenly traunces without the woord The fourth place OF the passion death and resurrection of Christ and of the witnessings of the Prophets in the scripture as Esa. liij Dan. ix Psal xxij Zach. xiij in which places Chrystes death and passion is foretold and of the causes benefites of Chrystes death which things wée haue made mencion of alreadie vppon good Friday last The fifth place OF Paules modestie in boasting who termeth himselfe the least of the Apostles and vnwoorthy the name of an Apostle yet declareth of himself that he hath labored more than the rest of the Apostles Modestie or mildnesse and true glory are cousin vertues like as sparingnesse and liberality vprightnesse streightnesse true dealing and streight iustice Modestie acknowledging a mans owne weakenesse and filthinesse is not proud ne exalteth himself either in conceit or in talke or in dooings aboue that he is able too performe but vppon trust of Gods help diligently executeth
much as the maiestie brightnesse of the countenance of Moyses the Lawe giuer was so great that the children of Israel by reason of the glorie or glistering cléernesse of his face were not able too hold their eyes ageinst it How should not the ministration of Chrystes spirit which giueth lyfe or the ministration of the Gospell bée much more glorious and effectuall For if the ministering of condemnation bee glorious that is too say if the ministering of the Lawe whiche condemneth all men and soundeth out this voyce Cursed is euery one that abydeth not in all the things that are written in the booke of the Law bée glorious how much more dooth the ministration of rightuousnesse exceede in glorie That is too say in how much greater glorie excelleth the ministration of Chrystes Gospell by which wée are deliuered from the condemnation of the Lawe and made heires of rightuousnesse and euerlasting lyfe For no dout that which was there glorifyed is not once glorifyed in respecte of this exceeding glorie that is too say the ministration of Moyses or of the Lawe which was instituted and glorified with so many signes and woonders is not too bée counted glorious in respect of the excellent glorie of the ministration of the Gospell For if that whiche is put away was glorious much more shall that which continueth bee glorious that is too say If the ministration of Moyses Lawe whiche was too bée doone away the ordinance of a state of gouernemēt which afterward should decay was set vp with so glorious miracles how much more shall the ministration of the Gospell which bringeth not the decaying and flightfull benefites of this lyfe nor vayne shadowes but the true euerlasting and continuall benefites of rightuousnesse lyfe and light in heauen bée glorious and mightie of operation in all those that embrace the Gospell Therefore hauing such hope that is too wit of the true and euerlasting lyfe and glorie set foorth in the Gospell wee vse great assurance and libertie in our ministration and neglecting the figures and shadowes of Moyses lawe preache Chrystes Gospell openly boldely and fréely And not as Moyses did put a veyle before his face that is too say wée doo not hyde ouerwrap or darken Christs Gospell so as Christes face can not bée knowen and séene like as Moyses when he put the veyle afore his face ment that he should kéepe many from looking intoo the ende of the lawe which is abolished that is too say from looking vntoo Chryst who is the end of the lawe whiche was too bée abolished For the ende of the lawe is Chryste too iustifye euery one that beléeueth Rom. x. And Chryst him self sayeth If yée beléeued Moyses yée would also beléeue mée for of mée Chryst hath Moyses written peinting out Christes sacrifise and redemption in the promises of the seede that was too come and in the figure of the Easter Lamb and in all the sacrifises But their senses are blinded Esai vj. For vntoo this present day the same veyle that is too say the same mist and blindnesse of hart in not acknowledging Chryst the end and spirit of the lawe continueth in the reading of the old Testament neyther is this veyle taken away whiche is abolished by Chrystes spirit For Chryst hath reueled him selfe too vs by his spirit j Cor. ij But assoone as the Israelites shall bee conuerted vntoo the Lord that is too wit vntoo Chryst the veyle shall be takē away that is too wit the blindnesse of mynd which kéepeth them frō knowing Chryst and they shal rightly acknowledge Chryst the ende of the lawe whom only GOD hath made our wisdome rightuousnesse holynesse and redemption that he whiche glorieth may glorie in the Lorde The Lord is that quickening spirit or Christ is the spirit and lyfe of the Lawe too whom those that bée conuerted doo vnderstand that the ceremonies and figures of Moyses Lawe were but shadowes of the good things too come and that the bodye of them was Chryst Colos ij Ebr. x. and that the morall law is the letter that killeth or which pronounceth the sentence of death and eternall damnation ageinst this corrupt nature and that wée bée not able too begin obedience of the lawe so as it may please God but if Chrystes spirite or God himselfe shyne in vs and make our hartes comfortable too him Now where soeuer the spirit of the Lorde that is too say of Chryst dwelleth and woorketh there is freedome from the Lawe from sinne from Gods wrath and from euerlasting cursednesse and there is kindled new ryghtuousnesse and lyfe acceptable too God which shall cōtinue world without end But all wee that is too wit as many as are cōuerted vntoo Chryst and embrace his Gospell by fayth beholding in our harts as it were in a myrrour receyuing by faith doo rightly acknowledge the glorie of the Lorde that is too say Christ for so is Christ named Exo. xxxiij Esai lx Ebr. j. Iohn j. and in other places or the true light and glorie of Chryst with his face open that is too say cléerely and manifestly without any veyle without any mistinesse without any comberance and being set frée by the spirit of the Lord or by Chryst himself are chaunged intoo the same likenesse that the like new light or true knowledge of God true rightuousnesse holynesse and lyfe as shyneth in Chryst may bée kindled and framed in vs also from glorie too glorie that is too say with encreasement and augmentation of new light rightuousnesse and lyfe from time to time by the light of the Lordes spirit shyning in vs The terme of glorie or glorification whiche Paule vseth in this Sermon is taken out of Exod. xxxiiij where it is written of Moyses departing from communication with the Lord Cicaran or panau that is too say that his face glistered like vntoo a horne This haue the threescore and ten interpreters translated thus that the beautie of the skin of his face was glorifyed that is too say that the skin of his face was become cléere glistering and bright like the shyning Sunne Of this translation of the threescore and ten Interpreters did Paule borow the woord glorie in this comparison of his which thing it is good for the reader too beare in mynd Vppon the .xiij. Sunday after Trinitie ¶ The Epistle Gal. iij. BRethren I will speake after the manner of men Though it bee but a mannes Testament yet no man despiseth it or addeth any thing thereto when it is once alowed To Abraham and his seede were the promises made He sayeth not in the seedes as many but in thy seede as in one which is Chryste This I say that the law which began afterward beyond foure hundred and thirtie yeeres doth not disanull the testament that was confirmed afore of God vnto Christward to make the promise of none effect For if the inheritaunce come of the lawe it commeth not then of promise But God gaue it vntoo Abraham by promise VVherefore
then serueth the Lawe The lawe was added bycause of transgression till the seede came too which the promise was made and it was ordeyned by Aungels in the hande of a Mediatour A Mediatour is not a mediatour of one But GOD is one Is the Lawe then ageynst the promise of God God forbyd Howbeit if there had bin a Lawe giuen which could haue giuen lyfe thē no dout rightuousnesse shold haue come by the law But the Scripture concluded all things vnder sinne that the promise by the fayth of Iesus Chryste should bee giuen too them that beleeue The disposement THe Epistle is of those sort that instruct For the doctrine therof concerneth mannes iustification before god The proposition that conteyneth the summe of the Epistle is Wee are iustified before God for Chrysts sake only freely by faith and not for our own good woorkes The Arguments wherewith he confirmeth this proposition are three FIrst of the weightynesse of the woords The Testament or promise of God is out of all dout true certein vnchaūgeable and too bée vnderstood simply as the woords sound Gods Testament or promise deliuered vntoo Abraham In thy seede shall all nations bee blissed affirmeth by expresse woords that Blissing that is too wit remission of sinnes and euerlasting saluatiō is giuen not in seedes as in many that is too wit not partly for Chrystes sake and partly for our owne good woorkes but onely for the one séede whiche is Chryst Ergo it is a true certein and vnchaungeable ground that wée are iustified or accepted as rightuouse before GOD for Chrystes sake onely by faith onely and not partly by faith for Chrystes sake and partly for our owne good woorkes Paule amplifieth the first proposition by a matter of lesse likelyhod or force thus If it bée not lawfull too alter the Testament or last will of a man much lesse is it lawfull too alter the Testament or will of God. The second argument is of things that hang not togither FOr yf the inheritaunce come by the law then is it not by promis but God graūted it to Abraham by promis This argument may bée included in this Syllogisme Whatsoeuer is giuen by the law as a wages eyther for our own obedience to the law or for our own workes and desertes is not giuen fréely by the promis taken hold vppon by fayth onely The heritage of rightuousnesse and eternall lyfe is giuen fréely vnto Abraham by promis Ergo the inheritaunce of rightuousnesse and eternall lyfe befalleth not by the law or is not giuen for our own woorkes or our obedience towardes the law This argument dooth Paule amplifye with two preuentions Of which the firste is this The Testament or promis that was made to Abraham concerning Christe was ratified and approued by God foure hundred xxx yéeres before the publishing of the law Ergo after the deliueraunce of the law our obedience towards the law or our good works also must néedes mete to iustification To this obiection Paule aunswereth thus that the testamēt which was ratified before by God through Christ or the promis of frée reconcilement is not made voyde or disanulled by the lawe but that it continueth alwayes stedfast vnmouable without putting any thing to it or taking aught away from it by the publishing of the law Hereuppon riseth the second obiection To what purpose is the law then why was it made by God yf it iustifie not ne bée néedfull to saluation Paule aunswereth it was added bycause of transgression that is to say for this cause was the law made that it should shew accuse and condemne the sinne that sticketh in vs and driue vs too seeke the séede Christ who was made sinne for vs that we might bée made the rightuousnesse of God in him Out of this aunswer is buylded the third argument of the effects hanging vppon it If the law coulde deliuer from death and restore lyfe and effectuall comfort then might wée bée iustified also by the law But the law can not deliuer men from sinne death and restore lyfe Ergo it is impossible for vs too bée iustified by the lawe He proueth the minor or second proposition thus The law promiseth or giueth eternal life to all those that yeld perfect obedience without any sinne But the scripture hath closed all things vnder sinne that is to say the woord or law of God conuinceth accuseth and condemneth all men that they are defiled with sinne and giltie of Gods wrath and endlesse damnacion Ergo the law deliuereth no man from eternall death neyther can it giue lyfe but the promised rightuousnesse and life is giuen fréely through fayth in Iesus Christe too them that beléeue This is the disposement of this Epistle in which there appeare chéefly two places of doctrine which are also the cheef places throughout all the Christen doctrine The one is the glad tydings or promis of remission of sinnes rightuousnesse and lyfe euerlasting too bée fréely bestowed vppon them that beléeue for the onely one séede of Abraham our Lord Iesus Christ The other is the law giuen of God to shew accuse and condemne sinne and to driue men to true repentaunce or sorynesse for theyr sinnes committed and the séeking of help at the sonne of God the Mediator shewed in the promis Therfore the definitions of the law and the Gospell and the foure differences of the law and of the Gospell taken of the forme of vnderstanding of the forme of the promises of the effectes and of the obiectes and also a declaracion of the causes and effectes of the law the Gospell may be repeted in this place out of the Catechisme The promis concerning Christe made vnto Abraham in these woordes In thy seede shall all nacions bee blissed Gen. xij is bréefly declared alredy where wée haue harde that the cheef places of the Gospell are conteyned in it First concerning Christes person in whiche the twoo natures of man borne of the séede of Abraham Dauid as touching the flesh and of God enduing the churche with heauenly blissing and taking away sinne and death are verely personally vnited togither Secondly of Christes office benefites which are comprised in that one worde blissing For blissing signifieth deliueraunce from curse from Gods wrath from sinne from eternall death and the frée giuing of lyfe and rightuousnesse euerlasting For so dooth Paule himself interprete the word Galat. iij. and Ephe. j. and Peter also Act. iij. Thirdly of the difference of the law and the Gospell The law is a doctrine that curseth as it is written Cursed is euery one that cōtinueth not in all the things that are written in the booke of the law But the Gospell bringeth heauenly and euerlasting blissing promised fréely for Christes sake Fourthly of Iustification or remission of sinnes and eternall saluacion which may befall vs for the one onely séede of Abraham which is Christ or by fayth only
the labours of the day defend infantes are an ornament too men giue comfort to old folke decke women with cōlinesse replenish deserts with inhabiters accustome men to modestie in their meetings instruct yong beginners in their firste principles help those that haue profited with further aduauntage and strengthen those that be perfect The Psalmes are the common voyce of the Church they beautify the feastfull dayes and they woorke that sorowfulnesse which is according vnto God for they are able to wrest teares euen out of a stony harte To sing Psalmes is an Angelike office a heauenly ministracion and a spiritual perfume O wōderful deuice of a most wise schoolemaster who would haue vs learne profitable things by singing Therefore are his preceptes fastned the surer in our mindes For nothing that is learned by compulsion continueth long in memorie But y which entereth with some swéete kind of delectacion doth settle more stedfastly and roote more déepely For what is it that a man shall not learne out of the Psalmes From thence ye may fetch the assured stoutnesse of harte from thence shall ye draw true rightuousnesse modestie grauitie perfect wisdome the true maner of repentance patience all kind of good things Héere is perfect diuinitie héere is prophe●ying of Christes cōming in the flesh threatuing of the last iudgement hope of resurrection feare of punishmentes promises of glorie reuelacions of mysteries All these things are layde vp in the treasurie of the Psalmbooke as in a most large storehouse The fourth place IT entreateth of thankesgeuing wherewithall God is too bée magnified for all his heauenly benefites with a true harte and a liuely voyce in loudsounded songs and Hymnes Moreouer concerning lowlinesse and the feare of ▪ God there may bée declaracions fet out of the rules of life or out of the exposition of the vertues of the first and second Commanndement Vppon the .xxj. Sunday after Trinitie ¶ The Epistle Ephes vj. MY Brethren bee strong through the Lorde and through the power of his might Putte on all the armour of God that ye may stand ageinst all the assaultes of the Diuell for we wrestle not ageynst bloude and flesh but ageynst rule ageynste power ageynst worldly rulers euen gouernours of the darknes of this world ageynst spirituall craftines in heauenly things VVherefore take vnto you the whole armour of God that yee may bee able to resist in the euill day and stande perfecte in all things Stand therfore and your loynes gyrde with the truth hauing on the breste plate of rightuousnesse and hauing shoos on your feete that ye may be prepared for the Gospell of peace Aboue all take to you the shield of fayth wherwith ye may quench all the fiery dartes of the wicked And take the helmet of saluacion the sword of the spirit which is the worde of god And pray alwayes with all maner of prayer and supplication in the spirite and watch thereunto with all instance and supplication for all sainctes and for me that vtteraunce may be giuen vnto me that I may open my mouth f●eely to vtter the secretes of my Gospell wherof I am a messanger in bondes that therin I may speake freely as I ought to speake The di sposement IT is that kind of cases that are persuasiue For it is an exhortacion to the godly to continue stedfastely in true godlinesse or in the acknowledgement of God in faith and to fortifie and strengthen their hartes ageynst the assaultes of the Diuell of naughty nature of Heretikes of Tyrauntes And Paule enlargeth and garnisheth his purposed exhortacion with a lightsome similitude taken of warfare and worldly battels out of Esay lix In which warfare it behooueth first and formest that the enemies bée knowen Secondly that munition bée gotten néedfull for a mans own defence And thirdly artillerie weapon fit to put backe and vanquishe the enemie All the whole lyfe of a Christian man is as it were a warfare againste oure most mischéeuous enemies Of whom y first is y Diuel a lyer a murtherer who lyeth cōtinually in wait to anoy vs in our soules in our bodies in our goods spredding abroad false opinions concerning God dropping into our minds epicurish doutes contempt of Gods word carnall carefulnesse pryde egging vs wretched wights vnto all kind of sinnes with his blast alluremēts which he trūpeth in our wayes to the intēt y hauing haled vs from God he may draw vs into euerlasting destruction Agein he empayreth our bodies goods by fires battels robberies slaunders diseases deaths The second enemie is our own flesh y is to say the wandring heady braydes of our own nature corrupted with sin darknesse doutfulnesse concerning God fleshly restynesse the heates of hatred lecherie desire of reuenge of excellencie and money and finally the whole huge heape of naughty inclinacions and sinfull affections cleauing in our hartes Iacob j. Euery one that is tempted is tempted of his owne concupiscēce The third enemy are Heretikes spreding abrode false opinions which are the very firy weapons wherewith they kill the faith and prayers of many The fourth enimie is the manaces and persecutions of tyraunts of all vngodly persones For through the terrours and displeasures of great men the cruelnesse of persecutions many renounce the profession of true godlinesse many by reason of the contempt néedynesse of the godly ministers are moued to withhold the fat prebends linked with Idolatrie Ageinst these foure enimies doth Paule fortify arme the godly with armour munition weapon néedful for the defence of thēselues the putting backe of the enemie The armour or apparell is this FIrst the sword girdle wherewithall it behooueth vs too bée girded and closed in is truth or the true doctrine of the Gospell and the true knowledge of god They therefore that eyther bée ignorant of the doctrine or haue a delight in the corruptings of the Gospell shall make but an vnlucky match Secondly the Brestplate wherewith the brest is defended is rightuousnesse that is to wit the reconciliation of a man into Gods fauour for Christes sake through fayth Thirdly his shoes are the very profession of the Gospel which directeth the way or vocation of the godly boundeth them about with listes within which they must kéepe their standing The armour necessarie to repulse the blowes of our enemies and to defend our selues are first a Buckler or Sheeld y is to wit faith which quencheth all the firy dartes of the diuell And the firy most noysome dartes of the diuell are these Epicurish and Academical doutings whither there bée any God whither God haue care of vs whither the gospell bée true whither God regard vs in our troubles whither he will giue vs eternall lyfe Also fleshly carelessenesse which neglecteth the wrath and iudgement of God heresies and false pleasurable opinions c. Secōdly the
leauing the woord looke for new enlyghtmentes and reuelations or traunces and iudge of Gods election not by the vniuersal promise writtē but by imaginatiōs of mānes reason With most thankfull mynde therefore is this excéeding great benefit of God too bée embraced that he hath deliuered vs the doctrine written whereby he will haue our faith and all our thoughts concerning him our own saluatiō ruled And therfore let vs reade these writings diligently and heedfully let vs bée in hand with them night and day as Chryste cōmandeth Serche the scriptures And Paule biddeth vs take héed too reading and doctrine And for this purpose chéefly are the first traynements of learning in schooles and the whole maner of spelling and reading too bée lerned that wée may reade and vnderstande the booke heretofore written too the church by the prophets and Apostles Secondly let vs consider that by these writings or by this woord of God which wée héere reade and think vpon God in very déed woorketh mightily in vs that by this only meane and not otherwise he teacheth cōforteth draweth begetteth a new and saueth men and kindleth in vs the faith whereby wée receyue these benefites as it is playnly sayd Roman x. How shall they beléeue onlesse they héere Howe shall they héere without a preacher Faith is by héering and héering by the woord of god Rō j. The Gospel is the power of God too saluation to euery one that beléeueth Act. xj Hée shal speake woordes too thée by whiche thou shalt bée saued thou and all thy houshold ij Cor. v. Wée are messangers in sted of Christ as though God exhorteth or comforteth by vs And in this place Paule expresly sayeth that wée may haue hope by cōfort of the Scripture His méening is that in all our troubles banishments diseases and death wée should séeke comfort out of this woorde which is written before tyme for vs and that wée should by fayth rest vppon God knowen by the woord beléeue this woord written as well as if wée should héere God declaring his will with his owne lyuely voyce from heauen Let vs set these testimonies ageinst Stinkféeld who cryeth out that GOD conuerteth sanctifyeth and comforteth vs not by thinking vppon the woorde written but immediatly by himselfe without any meanes Whiche fantasticall imagination dooth vtterly put away all the exercyses of faith and Christen inuocation Thirdly Whereas Paule fayeth that these Bookes of holy writ were written before for oure learning he the rewithall counselleth vs too reade the same diligently continually and héedfully For he hath not set foorth these holy Bookes for myse too knibble in bencheholes or for flyes too ray in the pulpit or for mothes and bowds too consume in corners but for vs too reade that wée may sucke wholesome instruction and comfort out of them Ageine this selfesayd parcell dooth vs too wit that all the promises of grace helpe deliuerance and of all Gods benefites and that all the examples of Gods wrath in punishing and of his mercie in receyuing those that bée falne perteyne too vs also and are also too bée applyed too vs. Fourthly let vs in this saying of Paules cōsider the foure chéef ends vses or profites and effectes Of which the first is the doctrine of the most high matters vnknowen too mānes reason and perteyning too the eternall saluation of vs all concerning which things all other bookes written by men can vtterly teache nothing at al that is sound and substantiall that is to wit concerning the true knowledge calling vpon the true God the father the sonne the holy Ghost euerlasting concerning the twoo natures in Christ the creation of all things of Angels and men of the cause of sinne miserie and death vntoo mankynde of the forgiuenesse of sinnes and attonement of man with GOD for the sonne of God our Lord Iesus Chryst sake who was crucified rose agein for vs of true comfort too bée set ageinst death and all tribulations of the abolishement of sinne and death of the restorement of our bodyes of the euerlasting punishments of the vngodly of the eternall lyfe and glorie of the godly Of these so great matters and specially of the persone and benefites of our Lord Iesus Chryst the sonne of God who hath vanquished sinne death and the Diuell for vs there are none other bookes eyther in heauen or earth that instruct vs. The second is Patience a vertue no lesse necessarie too a godly and right christen man than meate and drink is néedful too the mayntenance of the lyfe of this body For persecution and aduersitie are vnseparable companions of true godlynesse and christen profession according too Paules saying All that will liue godlily in Chryst must suffer persecution Otherwyse al the whole lyfe of man were nothing else but miserie as Euripides hath truly sayd This life in good sooth is not lyfe but miserie Nowe in these miseries there can no calmnesse and ioy of mynd bée settled in God without disobedience and repyning nor yet continue without the comfort of fayth which the holy scripture onely sheweth And therefore in this place vntoo patience is foorthwith added comfort of the Scriptures But patience is a vertue whiche in bearing aduersities quietly and myldly dooth reuerently submit it selfe too Gods will séeketh not vnlawful helpes but assureth it self by faith too bée in Gods fauoure séeking looking for helpe assuagement and deliuerance at Gods hand and by this faith and hope alayeth the gréef and féeleth peace and gladnesse in harte All the whole orderly setting out of the doctrine of patience and the difference of the philosophical patience and the Christen patience may bée conueyed hither out of the Exposition of the ten commaundements The third end of holy writ is true certeine and firme comfort too bée sette not only ageinst pouertie sicknesse and aduersities but also ageinst Gods wrath sinne and death which comfort none other bookes besydes these wrytings of the Prophetes and Apostles doo shewe For onely the scripture teacheth that our Lord Iesus Chryst the sonne of God did by his owne death ouercomme our death and the sting of death whiche is sinne and that all the other troubles of this lyfe are not tokens of Gods wrath but of his fauoure and fatherly good will toowards vs who doutlesse is at hand with vs in our troubles mitigating and taking them away and at the length will recompence the lightnesse of affliction which continueth but a whyle with an éncōparable weight of glorie By these comfortes written in Gods woorde the sonne of God woorketh mightily in vs and when we think vppon them and embrace them by fayth he kindleth in oure hartes peace ioy and tranquillitie quietly resting in the louing kindnesse of God the father Now the whole doctrine of the Gospell is in manner nothing else but a comfort of the conscience that is afflicted with gréefe that ryseth of the feeling of Gods
the Lawe by the ordinance of angels and haue not kept it VVhen they herd these things their harts claue a sunder they gnashed on hym with their teeth But he being full of the holy Ghost loked vp stedfastly with his eyes intoo heauen and sawe the glorie of God and Iesus standing on the right hande of God and sayde Beholde I see the heauens open and the sonne of man standing on the ryght hande of god Then they gaue a shout with a loude voyce and stopped their eares and ranne vpon him all at once and cast him out of the Citie and stoned hym And the witnesses layd downe their clothes at a yong mans feete named Saule And they stoned Steuen calling on and saying Lord Iesu receyue my spirit And he kneeled down and cryed with a loud voyce Lord laye not this sinne to their charge And when he had thus spoken he fell a sleepe The disposement of the accusation of Steuen of his defence out of the readings vppon the Actes of the Apostles The summe of the accusation may bee included in this Sylogisme IT is a blasphemie too teache that the law of Moyses giuen by God himself iustifyeth not but is to bée abolished togither with the temple and the rites of the sacrifices and all the politicke ordinances of Moyses Steuen teacheth that the Law and sacrifices of Moyses are not néedfull too the atteynèment of forgiuenesse of sinnes and euerlasting saluation nor the chéef woorshipping of God but that they and the whole common weale of Moyses and the temple shall decay togither Ergo Steuen is giltye of blasphemie and treason and is too bée stoned to death according too the Lawe Leuit. 14. Ageynst this so heinous accusation Steuen hauing hys hart and countenaunce cléered with the light of God maketh a long defence wherein he answered too the Maior or first part denying it too bée blasphemie to teach that the law of Moyses iustifieth not and that the ceremonies and sacrifices of Moyses are not the true and chéef woorshipping of God and that the rites of Moses togither with the common weale and temple must bée doone away Therefore the summe of Steuens aunswer for his defence may bée included in foure Syllogismes The .j. Of iustification RIghtuousnesse and eternall saluation is bestowed after one selfsame maner vppon the fathers Abraham Isaac Iacob and all holy men in all times of the world The Fathers Abraham Isaac and Iacob c obteyned forgiuenesse of sinne and euerlasting saluation not for the law and sacrifices offered in the temple which at that time were not yet ordeyned but only by the promise of the blissed séede which they tooke hold on by fayth Ergo wée also are made heires of rightuousnesse and euerlasting saluation not by the Lawe and sacrifices of Moses but by that only séede of Abraham that was promised euen our Lord Iesus Chryst according also as Peter witnesseth afterward wée beleue that wée are saued by the grace of our Lord Iesus Chryst like as our fathers were saued also Her vppon it is rightly concluded that the ceremonies of Moyses or the lawe and sacrifices of Moyses are not néedfull to saluation The .ij. Of the promises ALl Saints must néedes obteyne the principall promise made too all the Saincts For otherwyse the promise were in vayne and too no purpose Vntoo Abraham and the other Fathers was giuen promis of blissing and of the inheritance of the land of Canaā and yet Abraham obteyned not so much as one foote bredth of the land at any tyme in possession Ergo the blissing that was promised too Abraham was another thing than this bodyly common weale and sacrifices of Moyses that is too wit forgiuenesse of sinnes and the true and euerlasting good things The .iij. Of the true worshipping of God. THe principall woorshipping of God is alwayes one and cōmon too all the saincts throughout al times of that world The fathers Abraham Isaac Iacob and Ioseph dyd doutlesse woorship God a right and yet obserued not the ceremonies of Moyses Lawe which at that time was not yet deliuered ne offered sacrifices in the temple which was not yet at that tyme buylded Ergo the Mosaicall ceremonies and the sacrifices that are offered in the temple of Hierusalem are not the true chéef woorshipping of God according as the Prophete sayeth I will haue mercie and not sacrifice and the knowledge of God rather than burnt offerings The .iiij. Of the abrogating of the law and common weale of Moyses MOyses himself sayeth The Lorde our God shall rayse vp vnto you a Prophet from among our brethrē Héere yée him Whosoeuer shall not héere that Prophet I wilbée reuenged of him But now is that Prophet come that Moyses promised which teacheth playnly that the Law and ceremonies of Moyses are not necessary too iustification and saluation Ergo he is too be heard or it is too bée beléeued for a certeintie that the law is abrogated Or let the Argument bée framed in thys wyse Chryst whom Moyses himself commaunded too bée herd is the end of the Law for the ceremoniall politike lawes and all the common weale of Moyses was ordeyned too this end that it might bée the seate of the churche and a place for Chryst too bée borne in and that it should ceasse assoone as Chryst was exhibited Chryst whom Moyses in the .xviij. of Deut. commaundeth too bée herd is now exhibited Ergo the Lawes of Moyses toogither with his common weale temple shall bée abrogated and that too this end that the very same dooing away of it may bere witnesse that the Messias which was promised too the Fathers is already exhibited and that the lawes of Moyses are not necessarie too saluation This is the summe of Steuens long oration which comprehendeth the chéef Articles of the Christian doctrine Of which things the full exposition may bée fetched out of my wrytings that conteyn the summe of the doctrine of my expositions vppon Genesis and Exodus the notablest Stories of which bookes Steuen citeth for the most part in this Oration Of Steuens martyrdoome MArtyrdoome signifieth witnes bearing wherby wée witnesse before other men not only in voyce ▪ but also with our blud and by our death that the doctrine of the Gospell concerning the sonne of God our Lord Iesus Chryst is certein and vndeuybable and neuer shrink from our confession of the true doctrine for all the most bitter hatreds terrours and bodyly tormentes in the world too this ende that the true knowledge of God may bee preserued and the certeyntie of the true doctrine and the fayth of others that bée of the weaker sort may bée cōfirmed And finally that it may bee a witnesse of the iudgment to come and of the endlesse immortalitie and glorie of the Saincts The partes of martyrdoome may bée called the confession of the true doctrine which is made with the mouth and the sufferance or torment of the bodye and
remayne any sense of euill Ergo in death whiche vtterly quencheth a man bringeth him to nothing there is no euill at all The second THat whiche riddeth men from the troubles and miseries that hang ouer them and is the ende of all mischéeues and harmes is not to bée counted among euill things Death riddeth men from the troubles that hang ouer them and is the end and vttermost refuge from all miseries Ergo death is not euill The third THat which many excellent men haue of their owne accord or certeinly with a stout and quiet minde vndertaken is not to bée feared Many valiaunt and good men haue with stout courage vndertaken to dye for their countrey and for other causes as the Decians the Scipios Theramenes Socrates Leonides c. Ergo death is not to be feared as the chéef euill The fourth In sléepe there is none euill Death is like to sléepe Ergo there is none euill in death The fifth No naturall things are euill Death is due vnto nature who hath lent vs the occupying of lyfe as it were of money without setting any day of payment Ergo death is not euill The sixth No commendable thing is euill The deathes of such as excelled in vertue and specially of those that vndertooke them for their coūtry sake purchase euerlasting commendation Ergo they bée not euill These argumentes haue I bréefly set downe not onely to the intent the reading of the first Tusculane question may bee the playner to the yonger sort by shewing too them the framing and order of the argumentes but also to thintent the difference betwene the Christian doctrine and the doctrine of the Philosophers might bée séene the more euidently For Philosophie knoweth vtterly nothing at all of the restitution of our dead bodies and the resurrection of our flesh but déemeth that the same are resolued into their first matter whereof they were made and there vtterly perish for euer euen as the bodyes of beastes doo Neyther hath it any certeyn stable and stedy beleef of the immortalitie of the soule and of the euerlasting felowship with God and the blissed sort but floting ●o●●ing gazing about sticking and making many backe-turnings like a ship y is wether driuen on the huge sea like images the wauer in a troubled water w eout bringing any certeins and sound comfort too the mindes that are encountring and wrestling with death Therfore let vs with most thankfull mindes embrace Gods voyce auouched with the resurrection of his owne sonne whiche alonly sheweth both the causes of death and all miseries and the true and effectuall remedies of the same that is to wit the most ioyfull resurrection and lyfe and glorie euerlasting with God. Vppon the first Sunday in Aduent ¶ The Epistle Rom. xiij THis also we know I meane the season how that it is time that we should now awake out of sleepe For now is our saluation neerer than when we beleeued The night is passed and the day is come nye Let vs therfore cast away the deedes of darknesse and let vs put on the armour of light Let vs wake honestly as it were in the day light not in eating and drinking neyther in chambering and wantonnesse neyther in strife and enuying but put yee on the Lorde Iesus Christe And make not prouision for the flesh to fulfill the lustes of it The disposement THis Epistle is of that kind that is persuasiue For it is an exhortacion to watchfulnesse or diligence in learning the doctrine of the Gospel and in framing the whole lyfe after the rule of Gods word The state or summe of it is this I exhort you to embrace earnestly the Gospel wherin is offe●●d you euerlasting saluation by Iesus Christ and to worshi 〈…〉 with true fayth dutyfulnesse of all vertues The cheef places are three THe doctrine of the Gospell concerning Christes delight of the world by whom lyfe and euerlasting saluacion are offered giuen to vs must earnestly and with singular heedfulnesse and diligence bee of all the godly sort learned kept and spred abrode ij Of the faith of the Fathers and that all holy men of all ages obteyned eternall saluation by one selfe same way that is to wit by the voyce of the gospel for the only mediator Christes sake through faith iij An exhortation too new obedience or a lyfe agreeable with the Gospell or too good woorkes of which he reckeneth fiue kindes in order 1 Diligence and watchfulnesse in learning the Doctrine and folowing true godlynesse according too the lyght shewed in the Gospell 2 Sobrietie which eschueth drunkennesse and gluttonie 3 Chastitie or stayednesse which eschueth forbidden lusts and wantonnesse 4 Méeknesse and desire of concord which represseth wilfulnesse and enuiousnesse 5 Gouernement or brideling of all the affections Concerning these vertues sobrietie chastitie méeknesse and desire of concorde and concerning the vices that encounter them there bée orderly expositions set foorth in the declaration of the ten commaundements and in my rules of lyfe Which I would wish too bee matched with this booke conteining the disposements of the Epistles in the end thereof for this cause that there should not néed too tedious turning and returning too the morall preceptes or places of vertues and vices in euery seueral Epistle Now therfore wil I adde certeine aduertisements to the first two places of this dayes Epistle which are propre too the gospell and will expound certeine of the darker termes and spéeches ¶ THE ENTERANCE FIrst formost in this place the preacher may make some short preface concerning the tyme For our aunceters of old tyme termed the four Sundayes next before Christmas the Sundayes in Aduent And their méening was that their héerers should bée put in remembrance and prepared too discharge their mindes from all other cares desires and with greater care watchfulnesse sobretie reuerence and héedfulnesse too settle them selues too consider this woonderfull purpose of God concerning the redemption of mankynde by the comming of his sonne in the flesh And our forefathers made foure commings of Christ First in the flesh Secondly in the ministerie Thirdly too his Passion whereof is spoken in the gospel of this day And fourthly too the last iudgement wherof wée shall héere more this day seuennight Therefore too the intent that men might bée stirred vp too the more héedfull consideration of so great matters at this time which goeth next before the comming or birthe of our Sauior Iesu Christ the Epistle that is red this day was appoynted very fit for the time For in it Paul making mention of the tyme also exhorteth all the godly too wake out of their sléepe and darknesse of sinnes ignorance of God and carelessenesse which neglecteth GOD and letteth loose the reynes too all misdéedes and lustes and not too let slip the occasion of atteyning eternall saluation by the Gospell but too lerne the doctrine of it with singuler endeuer watchfulnesse and héede