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

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What kind of figure it is 997 Sennacherib wherfore his sonnes slue him eod Sent. How this place is vnderstood eod Search why God is said to search 998. Commaunded of Christ to search the Scriptures eo Serpent What Serpent doth signifie 999 What it is to sucke y● serpents head eod Seruice what the true seruice of God is 1000. How it ought to be ministred in a known tongue eod Obiections aunswered eod Sea●e of God What y● seat of God is 1001 Sethtani What manner of heretikes they were eod Seauen How it is taken in Scripture eo What the 7. Angells doe signifie 1002. Seauentie interpreters Of their trāst 1003 Seue●us Of his hereticall opinions 1004 Shadow eod Shame What shame is eod How and whereof shame came first eod Shape of God What it is to be in the shape of God 1005. Shaue How the woman taken in warre was shauen eod Wherefore Hanon shaued the beards of Dauids ambassadours eo Sheepfolde How there shall be one sheepfolde eod Shepheard The opening of these places eo The propertie of a good shepheard 1006 Of the restoring of good shepheards eo Of the outward gouernement of foolish shepheards eod Of the swoord that should come of the shepheards 1007. Of foure kinde of shepheards eo Shew bread Wherefore it was called so eo Obiections aunswered eod How the Lords death is shewēd 1008. Shooe What Gods shooe is eod Short life How it is not a generall rule of Gods iudgement eod Sicera What kinde of drinke it was 1009 Sicle What a Sicle is eod Sichem What is meant by the diuiding of Sichem 1010. Siggaion What it is 1012. Signe What a signe is eo How it is not both the signe the thing signified 1013. Silence What is meant by the word silence eod Siloh What Siloh is 1014. The meaning of the place eod Of the soft running waters of Siloh eo How that by Siloh Christ is meant eod Of the towre of Siloh 1015. Siluer What it is to tourne siluer into drosse eod What a siluerling is eod Simon Magus Of his opinions and ende eodem Of Simon Chananeus the Apostle 1016 Simple Who are simple eod Sinagogue What a Sinagogue is 1017. Singing The meaning of the places eod When it was brought into the Church 1018. The iudgment of the learned concerning singing eod When plaine song prickesong and Descant were brought into the Church 1020. Single life What the fruits thereof are among the Priests eod Sinne. The definition of sinne 1022. What sinne is eod How euerie sinne is mortall 1023. The Doctours saiengs in that matter 1024. How God ordeined sinne and yet is not the author thereof 1025. The cause of sinne is not to be layed to God eod How all sinne is both deadly and veniall eod How it is not of Gods creation in man 1026. How it entered into the world eod How Christ is called sinne eo How no man can pardon sin but Christ. 1027. To sinne against the holy Ghost what it is eod Wherfore the holy Ghost will rebuke the world of sinne 1028. Of sinne vnto death how it is declared 1029. How our sinne is made Christs sin 1031. How sinne is forgiuen in Baptime eod Sin offering what was ment therby eo Solde vnder sinne eod Sion What Sion is 1032. What the daughters of Sion signifieth eod Sir How men of countenance may be called Sir eod Sirtes What the Sirtes were eod Sister how Abraham made his wife to say she was his sister 1033. Sit. what it is to sit in the temple of God eod What it is to sit on the right hād of God eo What it is to sit in the dust eod Why they sat not at the eating of passeouer 1034. Sixe What it is to deliuer out of six c. eo What time of the day the sixt houre was 1035. Sleepe Now sleepe is taken in Scrip eod What Dauid meant by this sleepe 1036. The meaning of the place eod How God is said to sleepe eod Slime What slime is 1037. Smirna What Smirna was eod Snare What the snare signifieth eod The meaning of t●e place eod Snow Of the ingendering of snow 1038. Solde What it is to be sold vnder sinne eo Sonne of man what is meant by the sonne of man eod How the sonne is punished for the Fathers fault 1039. Sonne of God How Christ is proued so to be 1040. Of his deliuering vp his kingdome eod How he is equall to his father 1041. Who are the sonnes of God eod How we are borne the sonnes of God 1042. Sophist what a Sophist was and what now 1043. Sorrow Of godly sorrow worldly sorrow eod How Christ ouercame the sorrowes of death 1044. Souldier what the profession of a souldier is eod The meaning of the place eo Soule The diuerse taking of the word 1045. How Christs soule was heauie 1046. Of Christs soule descending into hell eo Wherein the soule of man and beast doe differ eod Of the apparition of soules eod Of soules departed 1048 The meaning of the place eod How Satan hath no part of the soule of the godly 1049. How the soules departed know nothing what c. eod Sound How Caluine vseth this worde Sound 1050. Sowe what it is to sow in the flesh 1051. Spittle How Christ made clay with his spittle eod Spiders web What it is to weaue the Spiders web 1052. Spirit how the word spirit is vnderstood eodem How the spirit of God maketh intercession for vs. eod Who is of the spirit of truth and who is not eod Of y● spirit that Christ promised to send 1053. Why the holy Ghost is called the spirit of truth eod Of the spirit of southsaieng eod Of the spirits of the Prophets eod Of the spirits in prison eod How to serue God in spirit 1054. Spirituall who they be that be spiritual eo Of the spirituall house 1055. Of the spirituall eating of Christs body eod Spitting What is meant by spitting in hir face eod Sprinkling What is meant by the sprinkling of bloud 1056. Staffe What it is to goe with a staffe eod What the staffe of Gods mouth signifieth eod What the staffe of bread signifieth eod Stained clothes eod Starre What the starre was that appered to the Magies eod How the moone and starres are vncle●● in Gods sight 1957. Of the seauen starres called Pleiades eo How the good instructors shall shine as starres eod How starres presage nothing eod Steward Of the vniust steward eod Stoikes What they were 1058 What certeine of their opinions were eo Stone Of the stone that Iosua pitched vp eodem Of the stumbling stone and who shall stumble thereat 1059. What stones in this place signifieth eod Of the stone cut out of the mountaine eo Who is the corner stone 1060. Who is the stone full of eyes eod Straite gate What it doth signifie eod Subiection Of Christs subiection to his father eod Sucoth 1061. Superstition What it is and how it is defined eod
much shadowed Marl. vpon Iohn fol. 574. ¶ Brooke Cedron was a déepe valleie through the which a streame ranne after a great raine Geneua BRVSED REDE Looke Rede BVDDAS Of his heresie and finall end BVddas otherwise called Terebinthus was a little before Manes the heretike He taught about Babilon that he himselfe was borne of a Uirgin and that he was bred and brought vp in the mountaines He wrote 4. bookes The first of Mysteries the second he called the Gospell the third Thesaurus the fourth a Summerie Through witchcraft he tooke his flight into the aire to offer sacrifice but the diuell threw him downe and broke his necke Socrates li. 1. cap. 17. BVLL The Bull of Pope Clement the sixt published for the yeare of Iubelie 1350. WHosoeuer purposeth for trauaile sake to come to Rome maie choose that daie whereon he setteth forward a confessor or confessours or els in his iourneie by the waie or in anie other place vnto the which confessour or ghostlie Father we giue full power to giue absolution in all causes that concerne the Popes owne prerogatiue in as ample manner as if our owne person were present Item we graunt that if anie béeing confessed die by the waie that he shall bée frée and discharged from all their sinnes And farthermore we commaund the Angels of Paradise that his soule béeing fullie deliuered from Purgatorie they receiue it into Paradise In an other Bull he writeth thus We will not that anie man be formented in himself with the paine of hell And also we graunt to al those that weare the crosse thrée or foure soules at their pleasure whom soeuer they will to deliuer them out of Purgatorie Bale Of a certeine Priest that cast the Popes Bull before the Popes feet There was a certeine Priest which comming before the Pope cast the Popes Bull downe before his féete saieng Loe héere take your Bull vnto you for it doth me no good at all I haue laboured now these thrée yeares with all and yet notwithstanding for all this your Bull I cannot be restored to my right The Pope hearing this commanded the poore Priest to be seourged and after to be cast into prison what became of him afterward the writer of the Storie Henricus de Erphodia maketh no mention In the Booke of Mar. fol. 487. How Doctour Whittington was slaine with a Bull. There was a faithfull woman that suffered martyrdome in a certeine towne called Cheping Sadberie in the time of king Henrie the seuenth condemned by the Chauncelour called doctour Whittington At whose death a great concourse of people there gathered together to beholde hir end Among the which the foresaid Chauncellour was there present to sée execution done The Sacrifice béeing ended the people began to returne homeward comming from the burning of this blessed martyr It happened in the meane time that as the Catholike executioners were buisie in slaieng this séelie lambe at the towne side a certeine Butcher in the towne was as buisie in slaieng of a Bull which Bull he had fast bounde in ropes readie to knocke him on the head But the Butcher belike not so skilfull in his art of killing beastes as the Papists be in murthering Christians as he was lifting his Axe to strike the Bull sailed in his stroke and smit a little too lowe or els howe hée smote I know not This was certeine that the Bull although some what gréeued at the stroke but yet not striken downe put his strength to the ropes and brake loose from the Butcher into the streete the verie same time as the people were comming in great prease from the burning Who séeing the Bull comming towards them and supposing him to be wilde as was no other like gaue waie for the beast euerie man shifting for himselfe as well as hée might Thus the people giuing backe and making a lane for the Bull he passed through the throng of thein touching neither man nor childe till hée came where the Chauncellour was Against whome the Bull as pricked with a sodeine vehementie ranne full but with his hornes and taking him vpon the panch gored him through through and killed him immediatlie carrieng his guttes and trailing them with his hornes all the stréet ouer to the great admiration and wonder of all them that sawe it Booke of Mar. fol. 919. Wherevnto the Bulls of Basan are compared The strong or fatte Bulls of Basan haue compassed mée in on euerie side ¶ A Bull is a beast not onelie stoute and strong but also boisterous blockish fierce and cruell If his nimblenesse and quicknesse were to his might there were lightlie no beast to bée compared vnto a Bull Of these naturall properties and speciallie of his hornewoode and madde fiercenesse when hée is well baited and bitten with dogges the cruell enimies and the spitefull persecutours of our Sauiour Christ are verie aptlie and liuelie called Tauri robusti Boisterous Bulles By Basan ye shall vnderstand that it was a plentiful land full of woods and pastures ouer the which Og that great fat hogge was king Which Og was a Gyaunt whose bed was of yron in length 13. foote and a halfe and in breadth 6. foote and an halfe This countrie Basan ● Pinguedo was a land of such fertiltie and plentie that the Prophet verie aptlie doth translate and applie the same vnto the persecutors of Christ which for their worldie wealth their tyrannie and pride are verie properlie called fat Buls of Basan ● men wallowing in wealth in riches and plentie euen as the Bulles of Basan doe wallow in fat pastures And if a man would nowe narrowlie drawe and applie this place of the Prophet vnto the manners of such wicked men which now a daies doe persecute Christ in his members then by the fat Bulls of Basan ye maie wel easilie vnderstand al such idle rich fat couetous worldlie rich men which in our time doe so much gather togethers and kéepe to them and to their hefres that no poore man nor meane man nor handie craftes man can haue anie competent liuing by the true labour of their handes Ric. Turnar ¶ He meaneth by the Bulles of Basan that his enimie● were so fat proude and cruell that they were rather beastes then men Geneua BVRDEN What is meant by the word burden I will laie none other burden vpon you ¶ Although there be some which in this place vnderstand the worde burden to be ment of the griefe of minde and bitternesse of heart which the godlie shold susteine by reason of his errour which they should be faine to indure till Christ come and deliuer them by his visitation yet is the place more rightlie vnderstood of the burden of the lawe For we know it was the propertie of heretikes and false Apostles to burden the Church with ceremonies whereas contrariwise Christ saith my yoke is swéete and my burden light Mat. 11. 30. c. Read Act. 15. 10. Rom 8. 15. Gal.
congregation of such pure doctrine and perfect liuing that he made all that professed Christ to followe his example To be short philo the eloquentest writer of y● Iews perceiuing the first congregation of Alexandria yet to perseuer in the Iewish religion wrote a booke of their conuersation as it were in the praise of his Nation and as Luke sheweth how all thinges were common amonge the beléeuers at Hierusalem So did he put in writing al that euer he sée done at Alexandria during the time that Marke there taught preached He died in the eight yeare of Neros reigne was buried at Alexandria In whose place succéeded Aniamis Erasmus Of the martirdome of this Euangelist This Marke was the first Bishop of Alexandria and preached the Gospell in Aegypt and there drawne with ropes vnto the fire was burned and afterward buried in a place called there Bucolus vnder the raigne of Traianus the Emperour Booke of Mar. fol. 52. What the Marke in the right hand signifieth And made all c. to receiue a marke in their right hand and in their forehead c. ¶ Wherby he meaning the Pope renounseth Christ for as faith the word the Sacraments are y● christians markes so this Antechrist will accept none but such as will approue his doctrine so that it is not inough to confesse Christ beléeue the Scriptures but a man must subscribe to y● popes doctrine Moreouer their chrismatories greasings vowes othes shauings are signes of this marke Insomuch y● no nation was excepted y● had not many of these marked beasts Ge. Markes to know the false Apostles by There are two markes to know the false Apostles by The one is when they leaue Christ serue their bellies the other when they regard not the holy Scriptures preach lyes and their owne fantasies as S. Paule saith they serue not Christ but their owne bellies and with swéete and flattering words deceiue the hearts of the innocents Rom. 6. 18. MARS STRETE What Mars strete is PAule stoode in the middest of Mars strete ¶ This was a place so called as you woulde saye Mars hill where the Iudges sat which were called Areopagitae vpon weightie affaires which in olde time arrained Socrates and afterward condempned him of impietie Theo. Beza MARTIR What maketh a Martir IT is not the death but the cause of the death that maketh a Martir Saint Austen saith Tres erant in cruce c. There were three hanged on the crosse The iust was the Sauiour the second to be saued the third to be dampned The paine of all thrée was one but the cause was diuerse Iewel fol. 30. It is no hard matter by words to testifie the truth But those testimonies are most weightie which are sealed with bloud and with death Howbeit this is to be knowne as Augustine putteth vs in minde that the paines and punishmentes or death make not martirs but the cause For otherwise manye suffer many gréeuous things which yet are not martirs for the same Augustine to Bonifacius of the correction of the Donatists and in many other places testifieth that there were in his time Circumcelliones a furious kinde of men which if they coulde finde none that would kill them oftentimes threw themselues downe headlong and killed themselues These men saith hée are not to be counted for martirs Wherefore there séeme to be thrée things required to cause a man to be a martir First that the doctrine which he defendeth be true and agréeable with the holy Scriptures The second is that there be ioyned integritie and innocencie of lyfe that he not onely by his death but also by his lyfe and manners doe edifie the Church The third is that they séeke not to dye for boasting sake or desire of name or fame c. Pet. Mar. vpon the Rom. fo 233. How Martirs ought not to be worshipped Cyrillus in his sixt booke Contra Iulianum sayth We neyther say that the holy Martirs are Gods neither are we wont to worship them but rather we doe honour them with laudes and praises because they did stoutly fight for the truth y● they might keepe the sinceritie of faith MASSE How the Masse as they call it was vsed at the first FIrst they sayd Confiteor and acknowledged themselues to be sinners And then the Priest prayed in generall for all estates and degrees and for increase of grace and in especially if neede required Unto which prayers the people harkened and sayd Amen And then the Gospell and glad tidings of sorgiuenesse of sinnes was preached to stirre our faith and then the Sacrament was ministred for the confirmation of y● faith of the Gospell and of the testament made betweene God and vs of ●orgiuenesse of sinnes in Christs bloud for our repentance and faith As ye sée how after all bargaines there is a signe thereof made eyther clapping of hands or bowing a pennie or a grote or a peece of golde or giuing some earnest And as I shewed you after a truse made they slewe beasts for a confirmation And then men departed euerye man to his businesse full certified that their sinnes were forgiuen and armed with the remembraunce of Christs passion death for y● mortifieng of the flesh all the day after And in all these was neither the Sacrament neither other ceremonies of the Masse Image seruice to God holy déeds to make satisfaction for our sinnes or to purchase such worldly things as the Gospell teacheth vs to despise And now compare this vse of the Masse to ours sée whether y● Masse be not become y● most damnable Idolatry Image seruice that euer was in the world Tindale fol. 427. How the Popish Masse is falsified vpon S. Iames. The Papists doe bragge that S. Iames did vse their manner of Masse at Hierusalem S. Marke at Alexandria and S. Peter at Antioch But they haue no historie touching this matter worthy Though they vsed y● Lords supper as Christ our Maister did and as Paule also at Corinth yet they did not vse it as the péeuish Papists doe now the Masse That Ignatius Policarpus Ireneus make mention of is not like the popish Masse They confesse y● Basilius Magnus Hierome Ambrose vsed an other order in the administration of the Lords supper then is now vsed and that diuerse haue vsed diuerse fashions therin by their owne words Therefore it is manifest that this kinde of Massing is not the ordinance of Christ but inuēted by mans wit and pollicie without the word of God Thus saith the prechers of the Gospell at Basil. Bibliander S. Gregory saith that the Apostles had no peculiar manner in celebrating the Masse but that they only sayd y● Lords praier whose words be these The manner of the Apostles was y● onely at the saieng of the Lords praier they consecrated the sacrament D. Barnes fol. 356. By whom the Popish Masse was patched Who so list to know the often alterations and chaunges of
2. 31. Ro. 10. 13. Now they that forsake the truth blaspheming Christ taking part against the Holy ghost cannot repent For if sinners would conuert call vpon God they should be sure of remission Tindale Christ himselfe said vnto the Pharesies Euery blasphemi● shall be forgiuen but the blasphemie against the Holy ghost which Iohn calleth a sinne vnto death shall neuer be forgiuen but is guiltie vnto euerlasting damnation What sinne or blasphemie is this Uerely that declareth S. Marke saieng They said he had an vncleane spirite that was the sinne vnto death euerlasting that was the sinne that should neuer be foruen He proueth so euidently vnto them that his miracles wer done by the spirit of God that they could not denie it and yet of an hard and obstinate hart euen knowing the contrary they said that he had a Diuell within him These Pharesies dyed not forthwith but lyued peraduenture many yeares after Notwithstanding if all the Apostles had praied for these Pharesies while they were yet liuing for all that their sinne shoulde not haue bene forgiuen them And truth is that after they dyed in impatiencie and desperation which was the fruit of their sin but not the sinne it selfe Now see ye the meaning of this text and what the sinne vnto death or against the Holy ghost is If any man perceiue his brother to sinne a sinne not vnto death that is not against the Holy ghost let him aske he shall giue him life that is let him pray vnto God for his brother and his sinne shall be forgiuen him But if he see his brother sinne a sinne vnto death that is against the Holy ghost let him neuer pray for him for it booteth not and so is not the text vnderstood of prayer after this lyfe as Master Moore imagineth but euen of prayer for our brother which is lyuing with vs. I. Frith How our sinne is made Christs sinne Longe a salute mea ¶ Séeing that this is most true that S. Paule saith of Christ that he neuer did sinne neither was there any guile or deceipt found in his mouth how then can these words be verified in the person of Christ Longe á salute mea verba delictorum meorum The words of my sinnes or my sinfull words are ●arre from my health Uerely they cannot bée applyed to Christ for his owne person Neuerthelesse after the minde of S. Austen these words are therefore spoken by Christ the head because they be only verefied in Christs members So that the Prophet maketh Christ in this place to speake in his owne person that thing which is verefied of vs that be sinners for whose sake he suffered his death passion that in this place is so lyuely touched Yea this is S. Austens saiengs these be his words Christ did wel say My sinful words are far from my health not for any of his owne sinne Sed nostra delicta sua delicta fecit vt suam iustitiam nostram iustitiam facerit But hée hath made our sinnes to be his sinnes that he might make his righteousnesse to be our righteousnesse That is he is contented to be reputed and deemed as a sinner because that in his vniust suffering he might iustly saue sinners that beleeue in him The most part of the learned Expositours be of this minde Ric. Turnar How sinne is forgiuen in Baptime Saint● Austen saith that all sinne is forgiuen in Baptime not that it should not be at all but that it should not be reckoned for sinne Sinne offering what was ment thereby They that offered a Sinne offering must lay their hand vppon it meaning that they themselues had deserued that death also that they did consecrate it to God therby to be sanctified Sold vnder sinne ¶ Looke Solde SION What Sion is AS many as haue euill will at Sion ¶ Sion in the Scripture signifieth the whole Church and Congregation of God and euery faithfull soule that hath his whole intent affection desire towards God T. M. What the daughters of Sion signifieth Therefore shall the Lord shane the heads of the daughters of Sion ¶ To shaue the heads of women is to make them confounded and ashamed for it is a shame for a woman to be shauen 1. Cor. 11. 5. So that the Prophet héereby signifieth by a borrowed speach that the Lord shall make the daughters of Sion by which vnderstand the women of Iewrie confounded and ashamed and bring them to extreme aduersitie and pouertie and euen to naught Iosephus maketh mention that Hierusalem which was the chiefe Citie thereof was once so famished that a certaine woman of the Citie eate hir owne childe Albeit some vnderstand euen heere also by the daughters of Sion the townes villages and castells of Sion as it doth indéed oftentimes in the Scripture Because the daughters of Sion are hautie c. ¶ He meaneth the people because of the pride and arrogancie of their women which gaue themselues to all wantonnes dissolution Geneu SIR How men of countenaunce may be called Sir SIr we would faine sée Iesus ¶ These Greekes call Philip Sir and he refuseth not the same It was the custome of those Countries to call men of wealth and countenaunce by that name Wherevpon also Mary Magdalen called Christ at the Sepulcher after he was risen Sir when as notwithstanding she tooke him to be a gardener The Apostles did not gainsay this custome neither were they serupulous in the same as we sée the Anabaptists to be Mar. vpon Iohn fol. 434. SIRTES What the Sirtes were LEast we should haue fallen into the Sirtes ¶ Sirtes are peri●lous sundry places in the Sea about the coasts of Affrica of the nature of Whirlepooles Tindale SISTER How Abraham made his wife to say she was his sister SAy I pray thée that thou art my Sister ¶ By this we maye learne not to vse vnlawful meanes nor to put other in danger to saue our selues Read ver 20. Albeit it may appeare that Abraham feared not so much death as that if he should dye with out issue Gods promise should not haue taken place wherein appeared a weake faith Geneua ¶ Looke Abraham SIT What it is to sit in the Temple of God SHall sit as Godin the Temple of God ¶ To sit in the Temple of Ged is to rule in the consciences to commaund wher God onely hath place ought onely to raigne which is as much as to be exalted aboue God Tindale Who sitteth in the Temple of God Compare the commaundements of God with the constitutions of men and you shall easely vnderstand that the Bishop of Rome whom they call the Pope to sit in the Temple of God as God and to be exalted aboue all that is called God It is written The Temple of the Lord is holy which is you Therfore the conscience of man is the Temple of the Holy ghost in which Temple I will proue the Pope to
eod Why the iust be afflicted 19. How the afflictions shal be witnesses eo How they are called light things eod How the rest of Christs afflictions are fulfilled 20. Against Who is against Christ who not eod Agony Why Christ was in such an agonie 21. Agrippa For what cause he herd Paul eo Alabaster What the propertie of it is eo Albanenses Of their opinions 22. Albigenses What their opinions wer eo Allegory What an Allegory is eod What the true vse of an Allegory is 23. Of two kindes of Allegories 24. All. How this word All is taken eo God wil haue al mē saued the meaning eo Al things are yours what it meneth 26 Almes What Almes signifieth 27. We must take heed how we giue c. 29. What profit cōmeth by almes giuing eo Of the almes sent to the Saints at Hierusalem eod Sell that ye haue and giue almes the meaning eod Of the almes the Atticus B. of Con sēt 30 Of the almes of Cornelius eod Aloes What Aloes is eod Alogiant What heretikes they w●r eod Almuth Lab. i. What the word signifieth 31 Altar What an altar is and how they began eo How Christ is the true Altar 33. What S. Austen did vnderstand by the Altar eod Amatist The definition thereof 36. Amen What the word signifieth 37. Amorites What an euil custome they had eod Anabaptists How they began eod Ananias Of his dissembling 38. How he might haue kept his possessiō 39 Anathema What the word signifieth eod Andrew Of the death of this Apostle eo Of an heretike called Andrevv eo Angell What an Angell is eod Wherefore Angels were made 41. How they ought not to be worshipped eo Of good and euill Angels 42. How they are not against the authoritie of Magistrates eodem Why the Angels be called powers principalities vertues c. eo How they be called the sonnes of the Gods 43. How they appearing in humaine bodies eod Whether they did eate and drinke when they appeared 44. How they be by nature spirits eod How they be not borne but created eod Appointed to waite on the faithfull 45. How we shall be lyke vnto them eod How Christ is greater then they eo Of mans good and bad Angell 46. The degrees of Angels eod What is meant by the foure Angels 47. What is meant by the 7. Angels eo Who the Angell was eod Of the Angel y● went down to the poole 48 Anger What anger is eod How anger in some respect is no sin eo What anger is forbidden 49. How anger or wrath is in God eo Of two kindes of anger 52. Annointing What is ment by annointing eodem The annointing of the sick with oile eo Antes The first inuenters of a common weale 53. Antichrist What Antichrist is eo A prophesie of Antichrists birth 55. The time of Antichrists disclosing eod Proues that the Pope is Antichrist 57. The marks to know Antichrist by eo The place of Antichrists reigne 58. Of Antichrists Disciples 59. Of Antichrists progenie eod Antipas Of his faithfull seruice to God 60. Antropomorphitae What they were eo Apparicions of soules 61. Appelles What his heresie was eod Apolinaris Of the heresie he fell into eo Apostle What an Apostle is 62. Who were Apostles eod How they wer not the heads of the church eodem How the Apostles were equall with Pet●r 63. How they had wiues 64. Of foure manner of Apostles 65. To take heede of false Apostles eo Of the Apostles traditions 66. Aquarij What they were eo Archbishop How the name is approued eo Archontici 68. Archdeacon When the Archdeacons began eod Arke What the Arke of couenant was 69 What is ment by the ark of the testamēt 70 Of the Arke of Noe. eo Armagedd●n How it is interpreted eod Arme. What the arme of God signifieth 61 Armintant Of their damnable opiniōs 72 Arrius Of his heresie lamētable end 73 Of the confutation of the Arrians 74. Arrowes What the arrows of God are eo How they are sometime taken● for thunder eod How they are taken for sicknesse eod Asia What Asia is eod Of whom it was first possessed 75 Asking The manner of asking of God eo Of whō we ought to aske our petitiō eo How Christ asked what men did c. 67. Assur How the people of Assiria tooke c. eod What is meant by Assur eo Astharoth What māner of idol it was 77 Astrology What Astrology is eo Authorities against the abuse therof 78 Astronomy What Astronomy is 80. The first inuenter of Astronomy eod Aue Maria. An Aue Maria of the Popes making eo Auenge How we ought not to aueng 81 Auims What the word doth signifie 82. Auricular confession eod Axe What is meant thereby eo B. BAal What Baal was and c. 82. What Baal-berith was 83. what Baal Peor was eo Babel What Babel signifieth eo For what intent the towre of Babel was built eod Babilon What Babylon signifieth 84. Why Babylon is called an hill eod The description of Babylon and c. eo How Babylon is fallen 85. How it is called the wast Sea 86. How his destruction was prophesied eo Backeparts of God What is meant thereby eo Baptime The right vse of Baptime 87. How we be washed by Baptime eo How Baptime bringeth no grace 88. Of the Baptime of Insants 89. How it is no Baptime but to the child 91. Significations of Baptime eo Considerations of Baptime 92. How it purifieth and cleanseth eod To be baptised in Christ what it is 93. To be baptised in Moses what it is eod To be baptised by the holy Ghost what it is eod To be baptised ouer the dead what it signifieth eod What Iohns Baptime signifieth 94. Of dipping in Baptime eo Of the Oacrament of Baptime eo How Baptime is taken heere 95. Barchochebas Of his heresie eo Bariesu Of his craft and subtiltie eo Barren What a reproch it was in women 99. How barrē mothers haue brought forth excellent men eo The meaning of the place 97. Why the Church is called barren eod Barthelmew Of his death and martirdome eod Basilides What his heresies were eo Bastard What child is called a bastard 98 How bastards are not admitted in c. eo Bathes How bathes without God c. eo Of Bath a certeine measure 99. Beelzabuh An Idol of the Philistines eo Behemoth What beast this is eod Beleeue What it is to beleeue 100. Prophesied y● few wil beleue Christ. 101 How men are driuen to beleeue through the works of God eod The meaning of certeine places eo Beame What this beame signifieth eod Benedict Why he is set among the heretikes eod Beril The description of Beril c. 102. Berillus Turned from his heresie c. eo Beast That came out of the bottomlesse pit eo Of the beast that rose out of the sea 103 How the number of the beast noteth c. eodem Of the beast the woman sat on
is eod How God is to be worshipped eod How God is a consuming fire 446. How his Ordinaunces may not be broken eod How God was seene eod Of Gods consolation in trouble eod What Gods cursse is eod What God appointeth and no more 447 How things come to passe by Gods wil. eod Of two wills in God eod How God ordeined sinne and yet is not the Author eod Of the God of this world eod What is ment by the God of Iacob eod What the seate of God is eod Godhead in Christ. How it is vnderstood eod How Christ in his Godhead is euerye where 448. Gods mercie Of such as presume to much thereof eod How y● Magistrates are called gods eo What the nature of Gods word is eod Godly sorrow What it bringeth to a man eod Godlinesse What godlinesse is 449. Gog Magog What they were eod How they shall be destroyed 450. Golde What is ment by golde siluer and precious stones 451. Of Golde frankencense Mirrhe eod Golgotha What the word signifieth eod Good What good or goodnesse is 451. How there is none good but God eod Of good and euill doing eod What a good age is eod How y● good life of a christē smelleth 453 Of the good purpose of a man eod Good intent How it must agree with Gods word eod Of y● good intent of Nadab Abihu 454 Examples of good intents eod Goods Wher they ought to be laid vp 455. How the Church goods ought to bee bestowed eod Gortheans What they were eod Gospell What the Gospell signifieth 456. Of the Gospel preached to the dead 457. How it is likened to a bowe 458. Why the gospell is said to be euerlasting eod How it is no lesse to bee regarded then the bodie of Christ. 459. Whether the Booke or leaues bee the Gospell eod An exposition of the place 460. Goate How it signifieth Christ. eod Grace What grace is 461. The true definition of grace eod What it is to reiect grace eod The difference betweene grace and gift eod The difference betweene grace and the lawe 462. What is vnderstoode by grace and peace 464. How grace and truth are expounded eo The meaning of the place 465. Graffing How we are graffed in Christ. 466. Griefe What it is and how it is defined 467. Greekes Of whom they came eod The meaning of the places eod Great The meaning of the place 468. Groue The meaning of the places 469. Guyle The definition thereof 470. Of good and euill guyle eod H. HAlcion What Halcion was 470. What the Halcion daies be eod Hand What the hande of God signifieth 471. Of the hand that Balthasar saw eod What is ment by the place eod Hand writing what it was eod Happy The meaning of the place 472. Harden How God is said to harden 473. Heart Where the heart of man is placed eod How some mans heart is hairie eod How mās hart poisoned will not burn eo Of the heart and wombe of God eod Hart or Stag. As the Hart coueteth the water 474. Haruest What is vnderstood by har 475. Hate The meaning of the place eod When a man may hate his neighbor eod Hath The vnderstanding of the place eod Hazael How he came to his kingdome 476. Hebron What Hebron was eod Head What is ment by head of God 477 What y● head of the serpent signifieth eod Haires of God What they doe signifie eod H●lchesaites What their opinions wer eo Helias Of the strange vision seene at his birth eod Heliseus What befell at his birth 478. Hell How it is taken in Scripture eod The meaning of the place 479. What hell meaneth heere eod Helpers of faith How men be helpers of faith eod Helindius What his heresie was 480. Hem. How we touch the hem of Christs vesture eod Hemerobapti What heretiks they wer eo Henoch What his taking vp signifieth eo Her and Anan How they wer slaine 481. Heare him How Christ is to be c. eod Heresie The definition of heresie eod The proofe of heresie 482. How it is to be auoided eod Heretikes What is to be done with thē 483. How they ought not to be compelled eo Herode Of his great crueltie 484. Why he burned the Scriptures eod Of his death 485. Of the second Herode eod How he ledde away his brother Philips wife eod Of Herode Agrippa 487. What the Herodians were 488. Heauen Of the opening of heauen eod Hide What the hiding of Gods face is eo Hien● Of the propertie of this beast eod Hime ●eus Of his opinion 489. High Priest How y● office was diuided eo How ●uery Bishop is called c. eod Hill W●at is ment by this hill eod Hin W●at manner of mesure it was eod Hi●d●rpart What is ment thereby eod Hipo● rite What an hipocrite is eod Hipocrisie described eod Hipo●iposis What the word signifieth 491. Hire What is ment by hire eod Why eternall life is called hire eod Historie What an historie in 492. Hobab What this Hobab was eod Holy Who is holy eod How Christ is called holy 493. What is ment by the Angels crieng Holy Holy eod The meaning of the Prophet eod Holy ghost How whē he was c. 494. How the holy Ghost is God 495. Proued by auncient Doctors 497. Holy water How it was called of old eod Of the Popes holy water 598. Homilies Bucers iudgment thereof eod Honour What honour signifieth eod What honor is to be giuen to the wife 499 What it is to honour parents eod Of 3. manner of honours eod Hope A definition of hope 500. How hope is of things absent eod How hope hangeth vpon faith 501. Of Augustines hope eod Hormis What people they were 502. Horne What it signifieth eod Hornet What an Hornet is 503. Horseleach What hir 2. daughters be eod Hosanna What the word betokeneth eod Hot. What it is to be neither hot c. 504. Houres The distribution of y● houres eod What is ment by halfe an houre eod House of God What y● house of God is eo How the place is vnderstood 505. Humilitie A definition thereof eod Who they be that be humble 506. Hundred fold What it is to receiue c. eo Hunger and thirst eod Hu● Of the land of Hus. 507. Husband What the husbands office is eo What is ment by the husband of one c. eo I. IAcinct The description thereof 508 What Iacinct signifieth heere 509. Iacob how he is a figure of the church eo What is ment by this word Iacob c. eo Of Iacobs Iye to his father 510. Of his wrastling with the Angell 511. What the seede of Iacob is eod How God beholdeth no sin in Iacob eod Of the finding of Iacob in Bethel eod The vnderstanding of the place eod ●am The meaning of the place 512. Iames. why he was called y● Lords brother eod Of the death of this Iames. eod Of the deth of Iames the brother of Iohn eod Iannes
doubt not thereof eod L. Labans Gods how they were stolne 596. Labours The meaning of the place eod Ladder what is signified thereby eod Lay men how they ought to read the scriptures 597. The doctours affirmations 598. Of laye mens bookes 600. How saye men may baptise eod The opinion of Iohn Caluine eod How they haue ministred the sacrament 601. Laieng on of hands whoo the custreof me arose eod The meaning of the place 603. Lampes what they without oyle doe signifie eod Land what is ment by the crieng of the lande 604. Laodieia what the word signifieth eod Of the stri●e y● was ther for Easter eod Last Of the last day eod Who be last and who be first 605 Of the last farthing eod Latria what the word signifieth eod Lawe what the lawe is 606. Platoes definition of the lawe 607. What the office the vse of the law is 608. What the lawe of nature is eod What the lawe written is eod How the lawe is our scho lem●●ster 609. How the lawe first entred 610. How the lawe was giuen in thunder eo Wherefore the lawe was giuen eod How the lawe was giuen by Moses 611. How we are dead through the lawe eod How the lawe increaseth sinne 612. Why it is called y● messenger of death eod What the lawe of God requireth eod What it is to be vnder the lawe eod What it is not to be vnder the lawe 613. Why Paule calleth the booke of Genesis the lawe eo How the law is impossible to fulfill eod How the lawe is called a yoke 614. The difference between Gods lawe and mans eod Who hath fulfilled the lawe eod How the Gentiles wer not wtout law eod How the law maketh all men sinners eo How it maketh vs to hate God 615. How the law is spirituall eod How we dye to the lawe eod To die in the defence of the law eod The meaning of these places eod The argument of the lawe 616. The nature and office of the lawe and Gospell 617. Lazarus how the poore rich are matched together eod Of the loosing of Lazarus eod Left hand what Gods left hand sig 618. Legion what a Legion is eod League what a league is eo Of three kinde of seagues 619. Lend Net lend vpon vsury eo Len● wherevpon the lenten fast is gro●ided eod Why the father 's instituted Lent 620 Leper what the Leper signifieth 621 How a Leper was knowen eod Of the leprosie that Christ healed eod Lesse The meaning of the place eod Letanies what the Letanies were 622. Letter● what the letter signifieth eod How the letter killeth 623 How the letter and circumcision is taken heere 624 Leuen how it is diuersly taken in scrip eo Leuy Of Leuy otherwise called Mathew 625. Leuites what their office was eod How the place is to be vnderstood 626 Leu●athan what Lemathā signifieth 627 Libanus Charmel what they signi eod Libertie of Christ. To stand therein 628. Lye The definition of a lye eod Whether wee may lye to preserue or no. eod Of the Midwiues lye of Rahabs lye 629. How Paules Iye is excused eod Of one that would not lye 630 Of Abrahams Iye eo Of Dauids Iye eo Life how the places are expounded eod Whether a man may lengthen or shorten his life 631. Light who is the true light eod The meaning of the places 632. What is ment by the shining light 633. Wherfore these lights were ordeined eod Lilies what it is to gather vp Lilies eod Lion The meaning of the place 634 How they bee compared to the persecuters of Christ. eod How Tirants are likened to Lions 635 How they are fed by Gods prouidence 636. Locusts what manner of beasts they wer eod Loynes gird what is ment thereby eod The meaning of the place eod Long life how a good man may desire it eod Lord. how he is our shepheard feedeth vs. 638. Of the Lords helpe in trouble eod How the Lord suffereth long 639 Lordship The meaning of the place eod Lots how they may be vsed lawfully 640 Loue. Of the order of loue eod How it is the fulfilling of the lawe 641. How we ought to loue God 642. Why loue hath the chiefe place eod Of Mary Magdelens loue 643 How perfect loue casteth out all feare 644 The meaning of the place eod The difference betweene loue and charitie 645. Of 5● manner of loues eod Lowlinesse wherefore lowlinesse come to worship 646 Loosing and binding eod Of the loosing of Lazarus eod Lucifer what is ment by Lucifer eod Luke The life of Saint Luke eod Luke warme what it meaneth 648. Lunatike Of the man y● was lunatike eo Luther what he was eod The cause why he first wrote against the Pope eo How he wrote to Pope Leo. 649. How he was troubled with the lusts of the flesh eod Of his question a little before his death 650. His praier before his death eod What sects is said to rise out of him eod M. MAcedonius Of his crueltie and tumult 650 Magi. What the Magies were 651. Magistrate what a magistrate is eod How they are y● ministers of gods in 652 How the Ecclesiasticall person is subiect vnto him eod How magistrates the do not perswade the people to Gods worde are not to bee obeyed in cause of conscience eod Magnifie what it is to magnifie 653. Mahomet of y● rising vp of this false pr. eo Of his faire shew of holinesse 654 Mayzim what this word signifieth 656. Maker against the word maker in y● sacr eo Malachy of y● sacrifice he speketh off 657 Mammon what Mammon signifieth 658 Man how he was made after the image of God eod How god made mā to be vndestroied eo How the death of man and beast is alike 659 How mans life is but sorrow care eod Of mans good purpose before grace eod How mans ordinance may be altred 660 Of the disposition of man eod Of mans will and running 661. Of 2. Hebrue words y● signifie man eod Of the first man Adam and the seconde man Christ. 662. Of the man that gathered stickes on the Sabboth day eod Of the man wounded 663. How the birth of man is 4. manner of wayes eo Mandragoras What Mandragoras is eod Manes how the sect of the Maniches rose of this man 664. Wherein y● Papists agree with them eo The ●aniches con●uted 665. Many of many that be called 666 Manna What Manna signifieth eod How it is not the true bread that came downe from heauen eo Of those that eat Manna are dead eo What Manna and the white stone signifieth 667. How Manna the water brought out of the Rocke is c. eod Maranatha What this word signifieth 668. Marcion Of his damnable heresie eo A comparison betweene Marcions doctrine and the Popes 669. An example of Ma●cions chast life 670. Marcus The detestable heresie of this man eod Mary how she ought not to bee worshipped 671. Of the painting of hir
the rocke eod How Christ is the true Rocke eod Rod. The opening of the place 923. Of the rod and staffe of God 924. Rome How Babylon is proued to bee Rome eod An obiection aunswered 925. Reasons to proue that Christ suffered at Rome eod How Babylon is proued to be Rome by the Doctors 926. Rud●ments What they were c. 927. S. SAbboth Wherefore it was instituted 928. How the Priests brake it and were blamelesse 929. What is meant by the second Sabboth eod Why the Machabees sought on the Sabboth 930. The meaning of the place eo The signification of the Latine worde Sabbathum eod Sackecloth What the wearing of sackcloth meaneth eod Sacrament What a Sacrament is 931. What are Sacrament doth signifie 933. How it is called the bodye of Christ eod The right consecrating of the Sacrament eod How it is a memorial or signe of Christs death 934. How it is receiued with our mouth eod How it is more then bare bread or wine eod How it is made of two natures eod How Sacraments are no cause of grac● eod What ought to bee considered in Sacraments eod How they be holy whether the minister be good or bad 935. What the olde Fathers doe teach of the Sacrament eod As it is our body so is it Christs 936. How it hath no Accident without his substance eod Of a new Article inuented in the Sacrament 937. Of the Sacramentall chaunge eod Of the Sacramentall word eod How in the Sacramēt remaineth bread and wine eod Of the Sacramentall eating 938. What is to bee wondered at in the Sacrament eod How the sacrament may be poisoned eo How it was cast in the fire burnt 939. How there is but two Sacraments eod When it was forbidden to bee ministred in both kindes eod Sacraments of the Elders compared to ours eod Sacrifice What a sacrifice is 940. Of two mānner of sacrifices eo How the Priests cannot offer vp Christ in sacrifice 941. How it is to offer our bodies a quick sacrifice 942. What manner of sacrifice we offer to god eod Of the sacrifice of the Table and Crosse. eod What the sacrifice of righteousnesse is 943. The difference betweene a sacrifice and a sacrament eod What sacrifices doe signifie eod Of the Leuiticall sacrifices eod Of sacrifices made by fire eod What the sacrifice of thankes is eod The sacrifice of the olde lawe what it meant 944. Sacriledge What sacriledge is eod Saduces What the Saduces were 945. Sagaion what it signifieth eod Saints how they are not to be praied vnto nor c. 946. To praise God in them what it is 947. How the dead saints knowe nothing c. eod How they cannot imparte their righteousnesse to other 948. Certaine obiections aunswered eod Wherefore Saints deedes do serue 952. How they haue not merits sufficient for themselues eod How the faithfull liuing in earth are Saints 953. How Saints shall iudge the world 954. Salomons House Of the beautie thereof c. eod Of Salamons Temple 955. What Salomons porch meaneth eo Salt What is to be salt eo Who it is meet to salt 956. Of the salting of hypocrites eo Of the salt that hath lost his saltnesse eo How our speach ought to bee powdered with salt eod How the nature of Christ is set out by the ceremonie of salt 957. How salte in Baptime is not Christs order eod Of the salted Couenaunt eod What the sowing of salt meaneth eod Saluation A firme argument of our saluation 958. How without the Church is no saluation 959. The causes of our saluation eod How our saluation is neerer now then when c. 960. To worke out our saluation what it meneth eod Salute The meaning of the places eod Samaritanes Of their opinions 961. Samuel how the place is vnderstood eod Of the raising vp of Samuel eod Sanctus sanctorum what the meaning of these are eod Sanctifie what it is to sanctifie 962. The meaning of the place eod How our meates are sanctified 963. Sanctuary Of the praiers made in the Sanctuary eod What it is to feare the Sanctuary eod Saphire The nature of the Saphire and c. 964. Sapience A definition thereof eod Sardine A description of the stone c. eod Sardis What Sardis is 965. Sardonix The description thereof c. eod Satan how Satan is taken for an enimy eod How hee is called the Prince of this world 966. How his standing among the Angells is vnderstood eod Of the man that Paule deliuered to Satan 967. How Peter is called Satan 968. How Satan can doe no more then God permitteth eod How he entered into Iudas eo Of his binding vp loosing againe 969 Satisfaction What is vnderstood thereby 970. How hurtfull the doctrine of satisfaction is 971. Of two manner satisfactions 972. Saturninus Of his opinions eod Sauiours How there is no mo Sauiours but one eod How the place is vnderstood 973. To be saued by hope what it meaneth eo Saule Why he was called Paule eo How Saule rent Samuels coate eod Scape goate 974. Scepter What the scepter of Christ is eo Scisme What Scisme is and how it is defined eod Of Scismes good and euill 975. Scorner The propertie of a Scorner 976 Scorpion The papists compared to a scorpion eod Scribe What a Scribe is 977. Scripture How the Scriptures are easie to be vnderstood 978. How Christ and the Church are learned therein 979. Against them that say they bee darke eo How in them are things needfull for our saluation 980. How holy Scripture is to be read 981. Of the ignorance knowledge of Scriptures eod How by them all doubts are tried 982. How Christ ouercommeth Satan with Scripture 983. How the place is to be vnderstood eo How it hangeth not vpon the iudgement of the Church eod Whē the Scripture was in English 985 Of Herodes burning the Scriptures eo Sea Of y● diuers name● giue to the sea eo What the sea of Glasse signifieth eod What Iob meaneth by these two Sea 〈…〉 Whale 986. Sebellius Of his hereticall opinions eo Second Of the second time of punishin● 987. What is meant by the second death eod Secretnesse How secrets ought not to be disclosed 988. Sect. What is meant by the word Sect. eo How many Sectes are laied to Luthers charge 989. Secundiani What they were eo See or seeing What is meant by the place eo How the people sawe God 990. How the iust shall see God eod Seed how the seed of the righteous is said to inherit eod How y● field may not be sowen with mingled seed 991. Seeke The meaning of the place eo What it is to seeke after God 992. Selah What the word signifieth eo Seale The opening of the seuen seales eo The meaning of the place 994. Seleuciani What their opinions were 995. Sell. How the place is vnderstood eod Solde vnder sinne what it meaneth 996. Selum The misery y● happened the Iews vnder him eod Senechdoche
Superstition of Angells eod Sunne The meaning of the place eod What it is to regarde the rising of the Sunne eod Supper of the Lord. Wherfore it was ordeined 1062. Why it was called a sacrifice eod The Doctors mindes vpon the supper of the Lord. 1063. How the Lords death is shewed therein 1064. The meaning of the place of Iohn eod Supremacie Proues against it eod Sure How we are sure of our saluation 1065. Surples From whence the wearing thereof came eod Suspention What suspention is eod Swearing Why the Iewes were suffered to sweare 1066. Who sweareth aright eod What swearing is lawfull eod To sweare by the Lord and to the Lord. are two eod All priuate swearing is forbidden 1067 How customable swering is dangero eod The Doctous against swearing eod Lawes made against swearing 1069. How the Pharesies corrupted swering eod Of the concealing of swearing eod Sweating The cause of sweating 1070. Sweete What is ment by sweet odours eo Swine What manner of people is ment by swine eod Swoord To whom it belongeth to punish 1071. What is meant by the two swoords eod T. Table what is ment by the table 1072. The meaning of the place 1073. Tabernacle Wherefore it was ordeined and c. eod Why it was called the Tabernacle of the congregation eod How the Tabernacle was diuided eod Why it was called the tabernacle of witnesse 1074. Of the Tabernacle of Dauid eo Of the feast of Tabernacles eo Tabithae What the word doth meane and signifie eod Tacianus Of his hereticall opinions eod Talent What a Talent is eod Of the talent left to the seruants 1075. Tapers Against the vse of them eo Taught of God How it is vnderstood eo Tell no man How the places bee vnderstood 1076. Temperaunce What it is eod Temples wherefore they are ordeined eod How God dwelleth not in temples made with hands 1077. How long the Temple was a building and c 1078. The meaning of the place eo Of them that trusted in the outward seruice of the temple eod How they are not to be builded to Sa. eo How the Pope doth sit in the temple of God 1079. Temptation What temptation is eo How generally it is not euill 1080. The Israelits rebuked for tēpting the L. eo How God tempteth no man to euill eod Of the Pharesies tēpting of Christ. 1081. How Christ to tempted of the diuel eod God suffereth none to be tempted aboue his strength 1082. Ten. what the number of ten signifieth eo How the ten commaundements are diuided eod What the ten hornes do signifie eod Of the ten virgins 1083 Tents How tents were first inuented eo Of three manner of tents eod Teares whereof teares commeth eod The meaning of these places 1084. Terebint what manner of tree it is eod Tertulianistae What heretiks they wer eo Testament what a testament is eod Tetrarchae What Tetrarchae were 1085 Teudas Of his rebellion eod Thamar Why she is reckoned in the Genealogie eod How she is thought to be Dauids naturall daughter eod Thammuz What this Thāmuz was 1086 Thankeoffering what thanke offering is eo Tharsis What Tharsis is thought to be eo Thebulis What his heresie was 1087. Theft What theft is eod Thema What Thema was eod Theodotus what his heresie was eod Theraphim What this Theraphim was eod Theudas Of his rebellion 1088 Thiatria what Thiatria was eod Thinke How of our selues we cannot thinke well eod How our sinnes shall not be thought vppon 1089. This is my body The interpretation hereof 1090. Thomas How Thomas Didimus is one name 1091. How he was reproued for his vnbeliefe eod Of his death and martirdome eo Thoughts How euery thought is not sinne eod The meaning of the place 1092 Threshing Of two manner of threshings eod What is ment by threshing of the mountaines 1093 Whereto the threshing of Gilead is compared eod Thunder What the cause is that maketh thunder eod Time The meaning of the place 1095. What is meant by time times and halfe a time 1096 Tithes what is vnderstood by tithes eod Of the tithes laide vp for the poore eod To day what the saieng meaneth eod Tongue To speak with tongues what it meaneth eo How the Apostles spake with straunge tongues eod What it is to smite with the tongue 1097 What the tongue of God is eod How the tongue is compard vnto a l● eo What is meant by the third tongue eod Topas The description of the stone eod Topheth What it is and how it was defiled 1098. How it is taken for hell eod Touch not That is spoken against traditions eod Why Mary was forbiddē to touch Ch. eo Traditions Of the traditions of men 1099. A reason that ouerthroweth them all 1100. Transmutation When it was first inuented 1101. Transubstantiation what it signifieth eod When it was first inuented 1102. Reasons against transubstantiations eo How it hath made the Turks power to increase eod The cause wherfore it is holden defended 1103 Tree The tree falling compared to death eod What the tree of lyfe meaneth 1104 VVinter The meaning of the place eod VVisedome how it signifieth Christ. eod How wisedome is iustified of hir children 1167. VVise men what these wise men are 1168 VVith the holy The meaning of the Prophet heere eo VVitnes how y● places are to be vnder eo VVoe What woe is 1169 What is ment by the three woes eo VVood. what it is to build on wood 1170 VVolfe how a wolfe is sometimes takē in a good sense eod The meaning of the places eod VVoman of y● woman araied in purple eo Of womans apparell 1171 How they may not weare mans appa eo Of the woman taken in adulterie 1172. Of a woman taken in warre eod How women are called ministers eo How women ought not to baptise eod What the woman clothed in the Sunne signifieth 1173 Why women are commaunded to keepe silence in the Church eo What is ment by the foolish woman 1174 What is ment by the straunge woman eod The meaning of the place eod VVord of God What the word of God is 1175. How the word was made flesh eo What is ment by the word in this pl. 1176. How the word of God is called the light 1177. How it indureth for euer eod Of the nature and strength thereof eod How it hath sundry names 1178 How the word of God is the key eod How the word of God is plaine eod The more it is troden downe the more it groweth eod How the word and flesh bee not both of one nature 1179. How it ought not onely to be rend but expounded to the people 1180 Workes how workes of the lawe iustifie not eod Of workes done before faith 1182 That worketh not how it is vnderst eo How works are not the cause of felici eo Of workes● loue and faith 1183. How our good workes are the workes of God eod How we deserue nothing by our good workes eod Of
cause of his dissention But to whom it is more right that we should sticke to Clement and Ignatius of which the one was Saint Peters companion and the other was Saint Marke the Euangelists disciple or shall wée better beléeue Chrisostome which was so long a space after the Apostles time Thus farre Erasmus Of foure manner of Apostles Paule an Apostle not of men ¶ There be foure manner of Apostles or Messengers The first which were neither sent of men but by Iesus Christ and God the Father as was Esaie the Prophet and Paule himselfe The second of God but by man as Iosua was ordeined of God but by Moses which was a man The third sort are such as by fauour or monie to get y● roome of Ministers The 4. are false Apostles Apostles of whom S. Paule writeth on this wise such false Apostles do fashion them selues as though they were the Apostles of Christ dare saie This saith the Lord whereas the Lord hath not sent them Sir I. Cheeke How we are warned to take heede of false Apostles Such as saie they are Apostles and are not ¶ That is to saie such as bragge that they be sent of God to the ende they maie the eas●ier beguile the rechlesse and simple sort And are not that is to wit no true Apostles but false teachers sent of themselues and not of God according as the Lord complaineth of the false prophets by his Prophet ●eremie 14. 14. Héere wée sée how Satan is wont to take vppon him the shape of an Angell of light according as Paule saith 2. Cor. 11. 14. After y● same manner doe his Ministers also when they vaunt themselues of the name of Apostles as for example Himmineus and Alexander 1. Ti. 1. 20. And also Philogus Hermogenes 2. Tim. 1. 15. and therfore doth Paule the Apostle also commend the ●aith and constancie of the Ephesians in that they gaue no place but rather stoutlie withstood the doctrine of the false Apostles Eph. 1. 15. Marl. vpon the Apoc. fol. 32. Of the Apostles traditions ¶ Looke Tradition AQ●AR II. THese were heretikes which offered water in the Sacrament in stéede of wine August li. de haerel ARCHBISHOP How this name is approued POlidore Virgil. li. 4. de m●entoribus rerum cap. 12. saith that Clement in his booke intituled Compendiarum christiana religionis testifieth y● the Apostle Peter did in euery Prouince appoint one Archbishop whom all other Bishops of the same Prouencie should obey He saith also that the same Archbishop was called Primas Patriarcha and Metropolitanus In those daies saith Eusebius Iohn the Apostle Euangeli●● whom y● Lord loued liued as yet in Asia which did gouerne the Churches there after he was returned out of y● I le from banishment after the death of Domitian a little after he saith y● he went being desired Ad vicina Gentium loca c. Unto the places of the Gentiles adioining partlie that he might appoint Bishops partlie that he might establish whole Churches partlie that he might by lot choose such into the charge as the holie ghost should assigne So that whether he had the name of Archbishop or no certaine it is that he had the gouernment and direction of the rest I. W. Cipriane speaking of the office of an Archbishop saith thus Neque enim aliunde haeroses abo●●e c. Neither haue heresies or scismes risen of anie other occasion then of that that the Priest of God is not obeied neither one Priest for the time in the Church and one iudge for the time in the stéede of Christ thought vpon to whom if the whole brotherhood would be obedient according to Gods teaching no man would moue anie things against the Colledge of Priests Cornelius being Bishop of Rome and hauing excommunicated certaine notorious wicked men afterward being threatened and ill vsed at their hands Cipriane hearing therof wrote comfortablie vnto him and willed him in anie wise to procéed shewing further what sects and schismes ensueth in anie Prouince or Diocesse whereas the Bishops authoritie is despised For in these words he speaketh not of the vsurped authoritie of the Bishops of Rome ouer all Churches but against the insolencie of some which despising their Metropolitane or Archbishop did with their factiousnesse trouble the Church For hée would haue an Archbishop in euerie Prouince which shoulde beare the chiefe rule ouer the rest of the Clergie and so doe the godliest and best learned expound Cipriane I. W. fol. 354. Cipriane writing to one Florentius Pupianus speaking in his owne behalfe being Bishop of Carthage saith on this sort Vnde scismata c. From whence hath heresies and schismes sprong héeretofore and whereof spring they now but that the Bishop which is one and gouerneth the Church by the presumptuous disdaine of certaine is despised and a man preferred by Gods allowaunce is examined and iudged by vnworthie men For it is the chiefe and principall office of an Archbishop to kéepe vnitie in the Church to confound couetousnesse to redresse heresies schismes factions to sée that Bishoppes and all other of the Clergie which is vnder him to doe their duties c. I. Whitegift fol. 155. Caluine in his Institution saith on this sort that euerie Prouince had among their Bishops an Archbishop and that the Counsell of Nice did appoint Patriarches which should be in order and dignitie aboue Archbishops it was for the preseruation of discipline Therefore for this cause especiallie were those degrées appointed that if anie thing shoulde happen in anie particular Church which could not there be decided it might bée remooued to a Prouinciall Synode from whence there was no Appeale but vnto a generall Counsell This kinde of gouernement some called Hierarchiam an improper name and not vsed in the Scriptures For the spirite of GOD will not haue vs to dreame of Dominion and rule in gouernment of the Church But if omitting the name we shall consider the thing it selfe we shal find that these olde Bishops did not frame anie other kinde of gouernment in the Church from that which the Lord hath prescribed in his word ¶ Caluine héere mistiketh this name Hierarchia but he alloweth the name and authoritie of Patriarchs and Archbishops thinketh the gouernment of the church then vsed not to differ from that which God in his word prescribeth I. W. fol. 417. In the Ecclesiasticall estate we take not awaie the distinction of ordinarie degrées such as by the Scripture be appointed or by the Primatiue Church allowed as Patriarchs or Archbishops Bishops Ministers and Deacons for of these foure we especiall read as chiefe In which foure degrées as we graunt diuersitie of office so we admit the same also diuersitie of dignitie neither denieng that which is due to each degrée neither yet mainteining the ambition of any singular person for as we giue to the Minister place aboue the Deacon to the Bishop aboue
taken in this place following Baptime which now saueth vs. ¶ By Baptime héere doe diuers learned Interpreters vnderstand the bloud and Passion for a figure taking the signe for the thing signified thereby for this doth baptime signifie vnto vs besides other things that as we are there washed with water so are our sins washed away with the shedding of Christs bloud For Saint Peter sheweth that we are saued by Baptime not by washing away of the filthie flesh but by the examination of a good conscience in God Tindale BARCHOCHEBAS BArchochebas a Captaine of the Iewes alluding vnto his name affirmed that he was the Light or a Starre come downe from Heauen to comfort the Iewes He ledde them to rebellion so that as Dion Cass. in Adriano writeth ther were slaine of them aboue fiftie thousand Euseb. li. 4. cap. 6. BARIESV Of the craft and subtiltie of this false Sorcerer THey found in the Citie of Paphos a certaine Sorcerer a false Prophet which was a Iewe named Bariosu ¶ Bariesu that is by interpretation Iesus sonne Euen this name had this Sorcerer gotten to blinde the world withall as now our Sorcerers and Coniorers when they goe to worke they fall to crossing and praieng with all holy words to deceiue the people withall making them to iudge that they rather talked with God then with the Diuell And Elimas was his name by interpretation saith the Text which as Erasmus affirmeth in his Paraphrasis soundeth as much in the Sirians language as great and false Prophet Tindale ¶ This Iewe being a false Prophet and a Sorcerer went about to peruert and turne from the faith Sergius Paulus the Deputie Paule the Apostlo reprehended him so that the Sorcerer was smi●●ten with blindnesse and the Deputie conuerted of whom Paul● borrowed his name Act. 13. Beda BARREN What a reproch it was to women that were barren To take from me my rebuke among men ¶ For it was a chiefe blessing of God to be fruitfull in children Gen. 7. 3. Exo. 23. 26. Psal. 127. 3. 128. 4. Because it was a multiplieng of the Lords people fulfilling of Gods promises Gen. 14. And therfore was taken among the Iewes for a reproch to the Barren The Bible note ¶ For the Barren women enioied not the promise which God made to them that were married to haue issue but principallie they were depriued of that promise which God made to Abraham that he would increase his séede Geneua How barren mothers haue brought forth excellent men And his name was Manoah whose wife was Barren ¶ When God decréed to send anie notable and excellent man he verie oftentimes stirred him vp out of a Barren woman Which thing also we sée come to passe in Sampson likewise in Samuel and Iohn Baptist and in very manie other that it might manifestlie appeare to be altogether the worke of God Barrennesse among the Hebrewes was a thing ignominious but God because he would declare that of things most contemptible he can bring forth thing● excellent hath verie oftentimes done after this manner And that fault of barrennesse was in this place in the woman and not in the man For sometime it maie be in both but the Scripture héere pronounceth it of the woman and not of the man Pet. Mar. vpon Iudic. fol. 200. The meaning of this place following Then the children whom the Barren shall bring foorth vnto thée shall saie in thine eare this place is too narrow c. ¶ Some read Yet shall the children of thy barrennesse saie in thine eare c. The meaning is when thou art most Barren hast fewest of y● faithfull in thée that is to saie the twelue Apostles and a few of their disciples Iewes borne by and by shalt thou heare a noise that these are increased to such a number that they shall not finde place sufficient to dwell in At the first sermon of Peter were there increased thrée thousand Act. 2. 41. T. M. A Prophecie of the Church and why it is called barren Reioice thou Barren that didst not beare c. ¶ After that he hath declared the death of Christ he speaketh to the Church because it should féele the fruite of the same calleth hir Barren because that in the captiuitie she was as a widdow without hope to haue anie children Geneua BARTHELMEVV Of his death and martirdome THis Apostle is said to preach to the Indians and to haue conuerted the Gospell of S. Mathew into their tongue where he continued a great space doing manie miracles At last in Albania a Citie of great Armenia after diuers persecutions hée was beaten downe with staues and after being excordiate hée was at length beheaded In the booke of Mar. fol. 52. BASILIDES What his heresies were and who confuted them EVsebius writeth that one Agrippa Castor a stout champion a famous writer of those times published a confutation of Basilides disclosing all his Satanicall iugling Hauing displaied his secrecie he reporteth that Basilides wrote 24. bookes vppon the Gospell faining vnto himselfe Prophets whom he called Barcabus and Barcoph certeine others neuer heard of before Inuenting those barbarous names to amaze the hearers with all teaching that indifferentlie things offered to Idols mais be eaten that in time of persecution the faith with periurie maie be renounced commaunding silence after the manner of Pythagoras for the space of 5. yeares And such like heresies of Basilides the said writer hath plainlie confuted Euse. li. 4. ca. 7. BASTARD What childe is called a Bastard A Bastard is he which cannot tell who is his father Or if he can tell one whom it is not lawfull for him to haue to his father as it is written in the Digestes De statu personarum in the Lawe Vulgo concepti How bastards are not admitted to the inheritaunce of their fathers Chrisostome vpon the Epistle to the Romanes when he interpreteth these words Now is the houre for vs to rise from sléepe he vehementlie inueigheth against whoremongers Why dost thou sowe saith hée that which is not lawfull for thée to reape Or if thou doe gather it is ignomious vnto thée for infamie will thereby come both to him which shall be borne to thée also For he as long as he liueth shal be full of ignomie and thou both when thou art liuing when thou art dead shall be noted of filthie lusts c. Wherfore it is ordeined by the lawes that Bastards should not be admitted to the inheritance of their fathers Pet. Mar. vpon Iudic. fol. 177. A Bastard shall not enter into the Congregation of y● Lord. ¶ This was to cause them to liue chastlie that their posteritie might not be reiected Geneua If therfore ye be without correction c. then are ye bastards and not sonnes ¶ He concludeth that they which refuse the Crosse denie to be of the number of Gods children but are bastards Geneua ¶ Read Eccl. 40. 15 and 41.
spoken of in the same that in the flame they felt no heate and in the fire they felt no consumption And I constantlie beléeue that howsoeuer the stubble of this my bodie shall be wasted by it yet my soule spirit shall be purged thereby A paine for a time whereon nowithstanding followeth ioie vnspeakable And he much intreated of this place of Scripture Noli timere c. Feare not for I haue redéemed thée and called thée by name Thou art mine owne when thou goest through the water I will bée with thée and the strong floud shall not ouerthrow thée when thou walkest in the fire it shall not burne thée and the flame shall not kindle vpon thée for I am the Lord thy God the holie one of Israel Which he did most comfortablie intreat off as well in respect of himselfe as appling it to the perticular vse of his friendes there present Of whom some tooke such swéet fruit therein that they caused the whole sayd sentence to be faire written in tables and some in their bookes the comfort whereof in diuerse of them was neuer taken from them to their dieng daie In the booke of Mar. fol 1131. His aunswere to a proude Papist BIlney béeing demaunded in dirision by a proud Papist when hée went to his death whie hée wrought no Myra●les béeing so holy a man as he was accompted aunswered with milde voice and countenance God onely sayd he worketh myracles wonders he it is that hath wrought this one wonder in your eies that I being wrōgfullie accused falslie belied opprobriouslie and spitefullie handled imprisonned buffeted and condmned to the fire yet hitherto haue I not once opened my mouth with one ill word against anie of you This passeth the worke of nature and is therefore the manifest miracle of God who will by my suffering and death be glorified and haue his truth enhaunced Of the Bill of diuorcement ¶ Looke Diuorcement BINDING AND LOOSING What is meant heereby TO binde and loose is to preach the lawe of God and the Gospel or promises as thou maist sée in the third chapter of the second epistle to the Corinthians wher Paule calleth the preaching of the lawe the ministration of death and damnation and the preaching of the promises the ministring of the spirit and of righteousnesse For when the lawe is preached al men are found sinners and therefore dampned And when the Gospell of glad tidings are preached then are all that repent and beléeue found righteous in Christ c. Tindale fol. 150. Whatsoeuer ye binde on earth c. ¶ That is whatsoeuer ye condemne by my word in earth the same is condempned in heauen And that ye allow by my word in earth is allowed in heauen Tindale In the. 16. Chapter verse 19. he meant this of doctrine and héere of Ecclesiasticall discipline which dependeth of the doctrine Geneua ¶ To binde is to banish the stifnecked and vnrepentant sinner from the congregation of the Saints to loose is when he repenteth and submitteth himselfe to receiue him againe into the fellowship of the elect and chosen people of God Sir I. Chee ¶ God in promising men the forgiuenesse of their sinnes giueth charge and commission to the ministers of his worde to drawe them from death according as it is expreslie saide that the keies of the kingdome of heauen are cōmitted so those which preach the gospell to what end To forgiue sinnes not of their owne authoritie but to the intent that the wretched man bée the better assured of their saluation and not doubt but God receiueth them to mercie Cal. ●pon Iob. fol. 592. BISHOP What a Bishop and his office is IF a man couet the office of a Bishoppe he desireth a good worke c. ¶ Bishop is as much to say as séer to or an ouer séer Which when he desireth to féede Christs flocke with the foode of health that is with his holie word as the Bishops did in Paules time desireth a good work and the verie office of a Bishop But he that desireth honour gapeth for lucre thirsteth great rentes séeketh preheminence pompe dominion coueteth abundance of al things without want rest and hearts ease castles parkes Lordships Earledomes c. desireth not a worke much lesse a good worke and is nothing lesse then a Bishop as Saint Paule héere vnderstandeth a Bishop Tind How Bishops were chosen In choosing of Bishops the people had their libertie long preserued that none should be thrust in that were not accepted of all This therfore was forbidden in the counsell at Antioch that none should be thrust in to them against their wil Which thing also Leo the first doth diligentlie confirme Héerevpon came these saiengs Let him be chosen whom the Clergie and the people or the greater number shal require Againe let him that shall beare the rule ouer all be chosen of all For it must needs be the he that is made a ruler being vnknowne and not examined is thrust in by violence Againe let him be chosen by the Clarks and desired by the people and let him be consecrate by them of that prouince with the iudgemēt of the Metropolitane The holy Fathers tooke so great héed that the libertie of the people should by no meanes be diminished that when the generall Synode gathered together at Constantinople did ordeine Nectarius they would not doe it without the allowance of the whole Clergy and people As they testified by thrée Epistles to the Synode at Rome Therfore when anie Bishop did appoint a successor to himselfe● it was none otherwise stablished vnlesse y● who le people did confirme it Whereof you haue not onely an example but also y● verie forme in Augustine in the naming of Gradius And Theodor●te when he reheraseth that Peter was named by Athanasius to bée his successor by by addeth y● the elders of Priests confirmed it the magistrate nobility the people approued it with their allowing shoute Caluine in his insti 4. ● Chap. 4. Sect. 11. Of the ordination of Bishops and Ministers The ordination of Bishops hath nothing proper or peculiar besides fruits commodities that necessarilie depend therof for it is the decrée of the Lord that of them to whome they minister the secrets and mysteries of the heauenlie life they receiue the things that belong to the necessarie vses and maintenaunce of this lyfe As Saint Paule plainlie proueth to the Corinthians 1. Chapter 9. from the. 4. verse to the. 15. And the 1. to Timothie 5. 17. 18. And to the Gal. 6. 6. which thing also Christ teacheth Mat. 10. 10. Luke 10. 17. So the this is the iust right lawe of God that the Bishoppes or ministers are to bée mainteined of the Churches and such a measure is to be kept the they be neither pressed with ouer great néed nor runne riot with too much excesse for in either of them a regard is to bée had to the calling of a
5. 1. Marl. vpon the Apocalips fol 53. ¶ My minde is to yoke you with no other lawe nor to burden you with anie other traditions then I haue alredie giuen you neither with ceremonies rites nor auncient customes in the obseruation of daies moneths times nor yeares in holie daies fastings vigils nor Sabotes for they were but shadowes of things to come Bale vpon the Apoc. fol. 40. The meaning of this place following What is the burden of the Lord. The Prophets called their threatnings Gods burden which the sinners were not able to susteine Therefore the wicked in deriding the word would aske of the Prophets what was the burden as though they would saye you séeke nothing els but to lay burdens vpon our shoulders And thus they reiected the word of God as a burden But bicause this word was brought to contempt and derision he will saith the Prophet teach them another manner of speach and will cause this word burden to cease and teach them to aske with reuerence what saith the Lord. For the thing that they mocke and contemne shall come vpon them Geneua ¶ The wicked mens hearts were so hardened against 〈…〉 truth that they vsed scornefullie to scosfe at Gods threatening prophestes in mocking calling them Gods fardle or burden The Bible note Of the burden of Babel The burden of Babel which Esaie the sonne of Amos did sée ¶ That is the great calamitie which was prophesied to come on Babel as a most gréeuous burden which they were not able to beare In these twelue Chapters following he speaketh of the plague wherwith God would smite those straunge nations whom they knew to declare that God chastened the Israelites as his children and these other as his enimies And also that if God spared not these that are ignoraunt that they must not think straunge if he punish them which haue knowledge of his lawe and kéepe it not Geneua BVRIAL How Buriall is a looking glasse of resurrection BUriall was brought in by God It is no inuention of man without good ground but it is Gods ordinaunce to the end it should be a witnesse to vs of the resurrection and euerlasting life When men be buried they are laid vp in the earth as in a store house vntill they be raised vp againe at the last daie and so our buriall is vnto vs a loking glasse of the resurrection Caluine vpon Iob. fol. 472. The Pompe of buriall forbidden But when thou doest heare saith Chrisostome that our Lord did rise againe naked cease I praie thée from the madde expence of the burieng what meaneth this superfluous and vnprofitable expence which vnto them that make it bringeth hurt and no profite to the dead but rather harme What the Greekes and Hebures doe call their buring places The Gréekes doe call their burieng places Cam●tereum that is to saie a Dorter or sléeping place signifieng thereby that we ought to be as sure or rather more sure that they that be buried shall be raised againe at the last daie of the generall resurrection then we are sure to rise againe when we lay our selues downe to sléepe and that therefore we ought no more to 〈…〉 be w●ese 〈…〉 out friends when wée sée anie of them to be laide into the ground then wée ought to be sori● when we sée them goe to ●edde and laie themselues downe to take their rest béeing most assured by the vndouted infallible word of God that we shall receiue them againe immortall and most gloriou●● The Hebrues doe call their burieng placed o● the 〈…〉 〈…〉 the liuing because that they that be buried 〈…〉 God and shall be receiued againe by his 〈…〉 I. Veron What 〈…〉 is to be buried with Christ. 〈…〉 buried with Christ 〈…〉 Bap●●●e in to his death that like as Christ was raised from the dead by the glorie of the Father so wée also should walke in newnesse of life ¶ This partaking of death and life with Christ is nothing els but the mortifieng of our owne flesh the quickening of the spirit in that the olde man is crucified and we may walke in newnesse of life Cal●ehill Of the Burial of Iohn Baptist. ¶ Looke Iohn Baptist. BVRNE What it is to Burne IT is is better to marrie then to burne ¶ To burne after Saint Ambrose is when the will consenteth to the lust of the flesh Tindale ¶ Then to burne with the fire of concupisence that is when mans will so giueth place to the lust that tempteth that he cannot call vpon God with a quiet conscience Geneua What these burning lights doe signifie And your lights burning ¶ These burning lightes that Christ willeth us to haue in our handes are a liuelie faith working through charitie The works of the Christians ought to be liuelie feruent and burning Sir I. Cheeke Of burnt offerings and peace offerings They offered burnt offerings and peace offerings ¶ Burnt offerings were they which were all burnt but of peace offerings a certeine part was offered an other part was giuen vnto the Priest an other part returned vnto him which offered it to eate it with his friends in the sight of the Lord. Pet Mar. vpon Iudic. fol. 271. Whie it was called a whole burnt offering And offered a whole burnt offering● ¶ It is called a whole burnt offering because the whole sacrifice was consumed with fire by the which is signified that the person which did offer the same should haue his heart and minde wholie vppon God as it is written Loue thy God with all thy heart with all thy soule c. The Bible note How the Christians doe offer burnt 〈…〉 Although that the burnt offering of 〈…〉 〈…〉 Sheepe of Calues and Birdes offered in the olde lawe be abolished by the glorie of Christ whose death and passion they did ad●●brate a● S. Paule witnesseth Heb. 10. Shall we thinke there● fore that we now which be Christians haue not burnt 〈…〉 fice to offer vnto God yes m● then they had For so often as we doe preach or the king or anie other godlie man doth cause or helpe Christs Gospell to be purelie and sincerelie preached to the people so oft doe we offer a burnt sacrifice of swéete sauour vnto God a sacrifice that pleaseth God farre aboue the offering of a young fat calfe that hath hornes and houes● This is that swéete sacrifice whereof Malachie the Prophet doth speake in the first Chapter saieng From the rising of the Sunne to the going downe of the same great is my name among the Gentiles and in euerie place shall sacrifice be made and offering set vp to my name This sacrifice and burnt offering is not the sacrifice of the wicked Masse but it is the sacrifice of the preaching of Christes death and the meritas of hi●●sion● We doe also offer burnt sacrifices vnto the Lord when we doe offer our selues our hearts our mindes and all 〈…〉 dilie members to the true seruing of God in
intent that we should followe him and thereby haue purgation for our sinnes For beside that it is impossible to followe him without an especiall worke of the spirit either in that he fasted fortie daies or in that he was neuer hungrie This were a plaine deniall of the benefits of his passion and the setting vp of our owne worke which is vnperfect For what great matter is it to eate meate but once euerie daie to drink two or thrée times many haue so liued in old y● time And what holines is it to eat fish onelie do not Cormerants and such as liue by the sea side liue so like wise Christ hath commaunded vs to followe him in loue peace mercie such like But in this example as a thing impossible we haue no such commaundement except we be drawne into wildernesse by the spirit as Christ was or by anie other worke of God we be destitute of food the comfort of creatures Then loe y● example of Christ may strength vs teach that not by bread onelie doe we liue but by euerie word that procéed out of the mouth of God A. G. fol. 187. Why Christ is called holie ¶ Looke Holie Why Christ is called true ¶ Looke True Why Christ was borne of a woman Whie was Christ borno of a woman truelie because ●nne and death ouerflowed the world through the first woman hee worketh the mysterie of life and righteousnesse by an other woman that the blame of sinne should not be imputed to the creature which is good but to the will by which Eue sinned R. Hutehynson Why Christ died for vs. And I was dead ¶ This cannot be verified of the Angels because they be inuisible and immortall spirits But Christ to obeie his Father and to wash awaye the sinnes of mankinde was contented to yéeld himself to death for a time to the intent that he might at length by death destroie him that had y● power of death that is to wit the diuell and set them at libertie which for feare of death were subiect to bondage all their lyfe long Heb. 2. 14. 15 for euen from the beginning God purposed vpon the sacrifice wherin Christ the true shepheard of all men gaue his life for his sheepe Iohn 10. 15. 17. And like as Christ the head of the Church entered into his glorie by death Luke 24. 26. So becommeth it all the godlie to die with him that they maie be glorified together with him according as Paule teacheth Rom. 8. 17. 2. Timo. 2. 12. 13. and Acts. 14. 22. Marl. fol. 27. Christ died for vs. ¶ They alleadge also that Christ died for vs all and thereof they inferre that his benefits is common to all men which thing we also will easilie graunt if onelie the worthinesse of the death of Christ be considered for as touching it it might be sufficient for al the sinnes of the world but although in it selfe it bée sufficient yet it neither had nor hath nor shall haue effect in all men which thing the schoolemen also confesse when they affirme that Christ hath redéemed all men sufficientlie but not effectuallie for there vnto it is necessarie that the death of Christ be healthfull vnto vs that we take holde of it which cannot otherwise be done then by ●aith which faith is the gift of God and not giuen to all men Pet. Mar. vpon the Rom. fol. 305 Obiection why did Christ choose to die vpon the crosse before other kinde of death Aunsvvere Truly because this kinde of death is accursed all that die on it as it is written Cursed is euerie one that hangeth on tree for so it commeth to passe that Christ was accursed for vs to deliuer vs from Gods curse as Paule saith Christ hath deliuered vs from the curse of the law in that he was made accursed for vs. R. Hutchynson The time and houre of Christs crucifieng One of the Euangellsts saith y● Christ was crucified the third houre the other the sixt houre Augustine affirmeth both to be true for y● Iews at the third houre cried Crucifie crucifie wherefore as touching them they slue the Lord then who yet was afterward at the sixt houre crucified by the souldiers of Pilate Pet. Mar. vpon Iudic. fol. 166. Of Christs calling vpon God in his passion My God my God wh●e hast thou forsaken me ¶ Notwithstānding y● he feeleth himselfe as it were wounded with Gods wrath forsaken for our sinnes yet he ceaseth not to put his confidence in God and call vpon him which is written to teach vs in all afflictions fo trust still in God be the assalts neuer so greeuous vnto the flesh Geneua How Christ baptised and baptised not Though that Iesus himselfe baptised not but his disciples ¶ It is said in the 22. verse of the chapter going before y● Christ was in Iewrie that he there baptised the which Saint Iohn heere expoundeth saieng that he baptised by his disciples Therefore the Lord baptised baptised not For he baptised because it was he y● cleansed washed purified the sinne He baptised not bicause he vsed not the outward sacrament of dipping or ducking in the water The Disciples vsed the ministerie of the bodie And he ioyned therewith his maiestie grace Therfore the Lord baptised by the ministerie of his Disciples Marl. fol. 10● Of Christs humanitie The Marin Vigilius saith Dei filius secundu humanitatem c. The sonne of God according to his manhood is departed from vs according to his Godhead he is euer with vs. Vigilius li 2. contra Euti Cyrillus saith Secundum carnem c. according to the flesh onelie he would depart but by the presence of his Godhead he is euer present Cyrillus in Iohn li. 9. cap. 21. Gregorie saith Verlium incarnat●m manet recaedet c. The word incarnate both ab●deth with vs and departeth from vs. It abideth with vs by the Godhead it departeth from vs by the bodie or manhood ● Gregorie de pasc homi 30. Augustin saith Ibat per id quod home erat c. Christ departed by y● he was mā abode by y● he was God He departed by that y● he was in one place he abod by y● y● he was in al places The heauens saith Saint Peter must containe and holde him vntill the time that all things bée restored Act. 3. 21. Cyrillus saith Christus non poterat c. Christ could not be conuersant with his Apostles in his flesh after he ascended vnto the Father Cyril in Iohn li. 11. chap. 3. Of Christs descending into hell three opinions Lyra saith y● Christs soule was 39. houres in Lymbo sanctoru patrum In y● place wher y● soules of y● holie Patriarks wer reserued kept till Christs cōming he saith y● Christs soule was 39. houres in y● place which he calleth Lymbus y● is to saie frō y● 9. houre
because the King should not entice him by this sweete poison to forgette his religion and accustomed sobrietie and that in his meate and drinke hée might dailye remember of what people he was And Daniel bringeth this into shewe how God from the beginnning assisted him with his spirit and at length called him to be a Prophet Geneua DARKNESSE Of the darknesse that was in the land of Iewrie at the death of Christ. DArknesse ouer the land c. ¶ Not ouer the whole earth but this darknesse was ouer Iudea onelie or Hierusalem For if this darknesse had bene ouer the whole worlde it woulde haue ben thought a natural Eclipse and so not regarded of men But to haue Iudea couered with darknesse and the Sunne to thine in other places was a more notable myracle Tertulian doth affirme in this Apologitico that this darknesse of the Sunne was written in the booke of auncient monuments of the Romans For Pilate as he writeth in an other place had foreshewed all these things vnto Tiberius Eusebius also in his Chronicles maketh mention of this darknesse of the Sunne and of the earthquake by the which manie hou●es in Bechania sell downe Hee bringeth in Philogontis the writer of the Olimpiades for his witnesse There want not some which write that this darknes was ouer the whole world béeing lead thervnto by the writing of Philogontis and Orosius describing ●eraduenture those things which were kept of this matter in the monumentes of the Romanes beeing written and foreshewed as we said euen nowe by Pilate vnto Tiberius But although this was brought foorth by one or two writers yet notwithstanding the historie of their times was so common that such a notable myracle could not be buried in silence of so manie which diligentlie obserued those things which were not so well worthie to be remembred Marl. fol. 726. What is vnderstood by darknesse in this place And the darknesse comprehended it not ¶ This darknesse that is to saie the vnfaithfull which doe sit alwaies in darknesse and in the shadow of death doe all that they can to darken and put out the beames of this Sunne but they shal neuer preuaile Psal. 9. Esaie 29. Abdy 1. Sir I. Cheeke They could not perceiue nor reach vnto it to receiue any light of it no they did not so much as acknowledge him Beza What is meant heere by darknesse And men loued darknesse c. By darknesse is héere meant the ignorance of Christ and whatsoeuer else worldlie men loue moe then Christ. For they which are not borne of God as they cannot heare the word of God so it is necessarie y● they prefer the ignoraunce of Christ before they knowledge him and so to loue darknesse more then light Marl. vpon Iohn fol. 82. DAVID Of Dauids praise to king Saule by Doeg DOeg one of the chiefe about Saule hated Dauid and praised him to Saule not of loue but of hatred thinking that for as much as Saule was now vexed with a diuell he might kill Dauid at one time or other but God turned it to good Lyra. The cause whie Dauid was vnknowne both to Saule and Abner Saule said to Abner whose sonne is this younge man and Abner aunswered as thy soule liueth O King I cannot tell ¶ Saule knewe not Dauid now although he had béene in seruice with him afore And the matter that brought out Saule of knowing of Dauid was his bearde which was now growne and did chaunge the sight of his face verie much And whie did Abner saie that he knew not Dauid seeing hée was in seruice with him before Ans. It might bée that Abner did not know Dauid for that he was captaine of the kings armie and alwaies occupied in the kings affaires in the extreame partes of his dominion and not at home during the small time of Dauids béeing with king Saule Lyra. Of Dauids comming to Ahimelech the Priest When Ahimelech sawe Dauid come so sodeinlie so hastelie vnto him and also alone he meruailed not a little thereat and saide Quare tu solus nullus est ●ecum Whie art thou alone and no man with thée Héere it seemeth that Dauid had no bodie with him but himselfe alone when he came to Ahimelech but that is not so for the text saith afterward if thy seruants be cleane fro women So that it appeareth that he had men with him but yet verie few in comparison of them that he was wont to haue And therefore Ahimelech saith Whie commest thou alone The Euangelist S. Mathew also saith haue ye not read what Dauid did when he was an hungred and they that were with him how he entered into the house of God and did eate the shew breads which were not lawful for him to eate neither for them which were with him but onelie for the Priests Héere it is plaine that he came not to Ahimelech alone Ric. Turnar Of Dauids ●e to Ahimelech The king hath commaunded me a certaine thing c. ¶ These infirmities that we sée in the Saints of God teach vs that none hath his iustice in himselfe but receiueth it of Gods mercie Geneua ¶ This lie that Dauid made to Ahimelech Priest of Nob and such like infirmities as we see in the Saints of God maie teach vs that no man is iust of himselfe but receiueth all iustice at Christs hand The Bible note Why the people flocked to Dauid And there gathered vnto him all men that were in comberaunce and in debt ¶ The peoples gathering to Dauid was not to assemble a rebellious multitude to inuade King Saule and to depose him from the Crowne to set vp himsel●e For neither they came for anie such purpose but for their succour béeing in debt and trouble or otherwise vexed Neither did Dauid send for them nor incited anie to take his part nor proclaimed himselfe to be King or published the Lords anointing of him or euer vsed that multitude that came vnto him for anie such purpose And yet the question is moued both by Caietanus and Lyranus héerevpon The question saith Ca●etanus ariseth whether it were lawfull for Dauid to receiue these debters in the preiudice of the Creditours that had lent them The solution is that if these men had houses fieldes or vineyards they are vnderstood to haue lefte their goods vnto them But if they were vtterlie vnable to paie their debts they were excused for their vnabilitie vntill their better abilitie For that Dauid excellentlie instructed all thē that came vnto him while he taried in that Caue The Psalme testifieth I will praise the Lord at all times Conteining according to the letter a doctrine giuen ther of Dauid vnto the Souldiers Therefore Dauid receiued not these men in preiudice of their Creditours And thus as he did not receiue them to the preiudice of anie priuate man so hée receiued them not to the preiudice of the King publike state Where as Lyra moueth the other question saieng
healing that a man maie be saued by another mans faith for this man was healed by the faith of the men and not by his owne because he could not heare for faith commeth by hearing To this it maie be said there is a difference betwéene corporall benefites and euerlasting saluation But no mans faith can stand in steed for another touching saluation Now Christ loosed the tongue of the deafe and then being called vpon of him hée gaue him faith and so the dumbe man was healed by his owne faith DENIENG OF GOD. How and when men doe denie God ANd denie God which is the onelie Lord c. ¶ Men truly denie God when they ascribe their iustification or forgiuenesse of sinnes to anie creature or to anie worke by the might and power of the worke to anie Indulgence or Pardon to Masses to holie Bread to kissing of Images and such like and not to Christ Iesus and to his bloud shed for vs to obtaine vs remission of sinnes by whose bloud onelie we were washed from ●ur sinnes as S. Iohn saith Apoc. 1. 5. He hath washed vs in his owne bloud from our sinnes They denie the Lord which ascribe remission of sinnes to anie other thing then vnto Christ and his bloud which thing false Prophettes doth denieng their Master Bibliander DEEPE What the Deepe signifieth OUt of the Déepe call I vnto thée O Lord c. ¶ By the Déepe is vnderstood the aduersitie wherein the people of Israel was when they were scattered among the Chaldes Unto vs christen it signifieth the aduersitie trouble miserie which hapneth to vs for our offences and sinnes T. M. DESPERATION What an offence Desperation is SAint Hierom affirmeth the offence of Iudas to be greater in dispairing of the mercie of God then in betraieng Christ. And that Cain stirred God more to anger through desperation of pardon then by the slaughter of his brothers bloud Manie which haue persecuted Christ being conuerted beléeuing in him haue obtained pardon and are made examples to man that he ought not to distrust the remission of his wickednes seing the death of our sauiour is forgiuen to the penitent Let no man dispaire of Gods mercie and goodnesse Let him that is weake and cannot do that he would faine doe not dispaire but turne to him that is strong and hath promised to giue strength to all that aske of him in Christs name and complaine to God and desire him to fulfill his promise to God cominit himselfe And he shall of his mercie and truth strengthen him and make him féele with what loue he is beloued for Christs sake though he be neuer so weake Tindale The meanes to keepe vs from Despaire in time of afflictions To knowe Gods righteousnesse and to be fullie perswaded of it is a meane to bring vs to patience Howbeit that wée must match another Article with it that is to wit wée must alwaies thinke that GOD in afflicting vs doth not cease to loue vs yea that he will procure our saluation what rigour soeuer he vse towards vs so as all our afflictions shall bee asswaged through his grace and he will giue them a gladsome ende Caluine vpon Iob. fol. 139. DESTINIE SAint Augustine in Opusculo 82. questionum quest 45. Confuting soundlie the destinies of Planets among other his reasons saith The conceiuing of Twinnes in the mothers wombe because it is made in one and the same act as the Phisitians testifie whose discipline is farre more certaine and manifest then that of the Astrologers doth happen in so small a moment of time that ther is not so much time as two minutes of a minute betwixt the conceiuing of the one and the other How therefore commeth it that in Twinnes of one burden there is so great a diuersitie of déedes wills and chaunces considering that they of necessitie must needes haue one the same Planet in their conception and that the Mathematicalls doe giue the constellation of them both as it it were but of one man To these wordes of Saint Augustine saith Bullinger great light maie be aded if you annexe to them and examine narrowlie the example of Esau and Iacobs birth and sundrie dispositions The same Augustine writing to Boniface against two Epistles of the Pel●gians li. 2. cap. 6. saith They which affirme that Destinie doth rule will haue not onelie our déedes and euents but also our verie wills to depend vpon the placing of the starres as the time wherein euerie man is either conceiued or borne which placing they are wont to call Constellations but the grace of God doth not onelie goe aboue all starres and heauens but also aboue the verie Angells themselues Bullinger fol. 480. ¶ Looke Astrologie Fortune Chaunce DESTROIE NOT. The meaning of this place DEstroie not ¶ Or thou shalt not destroie or make awaie as some will By this he signifieth after the mind of Kimhi that he twice withstood and stilled his Souldiers which moued him to destroie and kill Saule Ezra thinketh it to be a certaine tune and manner of singing T. M. DEATH What Death is by the minde of Secundus the Philosopher WHen Adrian the Emperour had heard Secundus the Philosopher in the seuerall Oration he made of a noble Romane Matron a kinswoman of the Emperours he asked of him what death was to whom the philosopher answered thus Death is an eternall sléepe a dissolution of the bodie a terror of the rich a desire of y● poore a thing inheritable a pilgrimage vncertaine a théefe of man a kinde of sléeping a seperation of the liuing a companie of the dead a resolution of all a rest of trauailes an end of all idle desires Finallie death is y● scourge of all euill and the chiefe reward of the good ¶ We call death the loosing asunder and departing of two things the soule from the bodie y● which departing no man can escape but necessarilie die all we must that be borne in this world When the bodie by anie violence looseth his senses is spoiled from the quicke vse of his principall parts the●● departeth the soule from him in manner the bodie leaueth y● soule before the soule leaueth the bodie For it is not y● soule by himselfe y● goeth from the bodie but it is the bodie by himselfe sorsaking life that causeth the soule to depart c. Lupset How the Diuell hath power of Death The Diuell hath y● power of death that is ●he is the authour of it by his malitious nature he brought it into the worlde for God made it not nor hath anie delight in it neither is it good in his eies nor was neuer mentioned among y● works of his hands but from the Diuell and of the Diuell and in the Diuell it began and is and videth And therfore in the Apocalips his name is giuen him Abaddon that is the destroier and as death is of him so for this cause also he is said to haue the power of it
for she doubted not but as the Angell had tolde hir she should conceiue and that straight waie but because she sawe that she was not as yet coupled in Matrimonie although she were betrouthed she demaunded how that should come to passe Therefore the Angell in his aunswere comprehended two principall points The one is whereby he remooued awaie doubting if peraduenture there stucke anie thing in the minde of the Uirgin For he said No word is impossible with God The second is of the maner of conceiuing The Holie ghost saith he shall come vpon thée and the power of the most highest shall shaddowe thée But whereas some faine that she asked this because she had vowed virginitie to God it néedeth no long confutation especiallie seeing wée are by the Historie it selfe taught that shee was betrothed to a man neither was there at that time anie such custome to vowe Uirginitie Pet. Mar. vpon the Rom. fol. 96. DRAGMA What Dragma is A Dragma is the fourth part of a Sickle which is to saie fiue halfe pence for a Sickle is twentie halfe pence DRAGON Wherefore the King of Aegypt is called a Dragon I Will vpon thée thou Dragon ¶ The propertie of Dragons is to haunt where abundance of waters are Therefore is the King of Aegypt héere called a Dragon because of the abundaunce of water that are in Aegypt where he raigned So is Hierusalem called a Stewes because of hir haunting of Idolatrie As in the 16. T. M. ¶ He compareth Pharao to a Dragon which hideth himselfe in the riuer Nilus As Esay 51. 9. Geneua The meaning of this place following Thou hast couered vs in the place of Dragons and couered vs with the shaddowe of death That is thou hast condemned vs to the place of Dragons or Serpents or thou hast driuen vs into the place of Dragons or Serpents By the place of Serpents is vnderstood their bondage among the Heathen which in crueltie are like to Dragons or Serpents The same calleth he the shadow of death for it is worse then death more to be feared to be put in all thing to the arbitriment and pleasure of the vngodlie to heare continuallie the name of God blasphemed and all godlinesse despised and all manner of iniuries wrongs done to the fauourers thereof Therefore saith he thou hast couered vs with the shaddowe of death that is with the verie darknesse of death T. M. Who be the Dragons Angells And the Dragon and his Angells fought c. ¶ The Angells whose force the Dragon vseth against Michael are the great men wise men and wealthie men of the world whose puissaunce pollicie riches are the weapons that he fighteth with for the maintenaunce of his kingdome and honour which he hath vsurped wrongfullie with him we must also incounter howbeit with spiritual armour from God according as the Apostle saith 2. Cor. 10. 4. Ephe. 6. 13. Marl. vpon the Apo. fol. 174. Who be the Dragon beast and the false Prophet Out of the mouth of the Dragon beast and false Prophet ¶ There be that thinke the Dragon the Beast the false Prophet to be all one But we maie fitly vnderstand by the Dragon Satan himselfe the Father of lies By the Beast Antichrist all his bodie and by the false Prophet all manner of false teachers of Antichrists kingdome Marl. DRAVVING The meaning of these places following NO man can come to me except the Father which hath sent me draw him ¶ To be drawen of the father is to be endued with faith with the Holie ghost by which our harts are sealed cōfirmed toward Christ. For the father giueth faith to whō he will on whom he wil he hath mercie whom he will also he maketh hard hearted It is no violent manner of drawing which draweth a man with externall haling and pulling of the which our Sauiour speaketh héere and yet notwithstanding the motion of the Holie ghost is so effectuall that it maketh men willing in despite of flesh and bloud Wherefore that is false and prophane which some saie that no man is drawen against his will as though a man were obedient to God by his owne motion will For in that men willinglie obaie God it commeth of him who frameth their hearts to his obedience Therefore mans free will is nothing Marl. vpon Iohn fol. 218. I will drawe all men to mée ¶ In that our Sauiour speaketh héere so generallie that by his death he will draw all men vnto him it is to be referred to the Sonnes of God which are of the flocke Also he vsed this generall speach because the Church of God was to be gathered out of the Gentiles and also out of the Iewes according to this place There shall be one Shepheard and one Shéepefold Mar. fol. 441. ¶ Looke Father DREAMES How it is hard to discerne Dreames SAint Austen demaundeth by what meanes the reuealations of euill and good spirits maie be discerned one from another he aunswereth that that cannot be done except a man haue the gifte of discerning of spirits but he add●th that an euil spirite doth alwaies at the last lead men to wicked opinions peruerse manners although at the beginning the difference cannot be knowen without the gifte of the Holie Ghost In his Epistle to E●odius which is the hundred Epistle inquiring of the same matter he saith I would to God I could discerne betweene Dreames which are giuen to errour and those which are to saluation neuerthelesse we ought to be of good chéere because God suffereth his Children to be tempted but not to perish Pet. M 〈…〉 vpon Iudic. ●ol 137. Of Dreames naturall and supernaturall Supernaturall sleepes or Dreames doe come of God from aboue by good Angells by the which God 〈…〉 his will to whom it pleaseth him And w● vnderstand th 〈…〉 ●hose 〈…〉 de 〈…〉 Dreames doe much differ from those that be naturall because they are of more certaintie and sealed confirmed from aboue so that the veritie of the same cannot be ambiguous or doubtfull The Dreames which commonlie happen vnto men are woont to come of continnuall cogitations and thoughts of the minde or of the course of Nature or of the distemperaunce of the bodie or of such like causes But to the diuine Dreames commeth the testimonie of the spirite which witnesseth for a suretie that it is God that speaketh As of the Ladder of Iacob which we reade that he sawe in a vision or Dreame Marl. fol. 13. DRONKENNESSE What Dronkennesse is after the minde of Seneca SEneca saith in his 84. Epistle Dronkennesse is nothing els but a voluntarie madnesse And straight waies after The qualitie of Dronkennesse continuing manie daies is furiousnesse Plato in his 7. booke De legibus toward the ende writeth that Minos in his Lawes prohibited the Cretenses that they should not drinke togethers to Dronkennesse Againe in his 16. Dialogue De iusto at the beginning A dronken
the word of God should be saued by the fi●e of this examination F. N. B. the Italian If anie man build vpon this foundation golde siluer precious stones wood haie or stubble c. Heere the Apostle woulde haue vs to be feruent in good workes and earnest to doe wel he wisheth vs to be occupied in y● labou● which when the iudge of all shall come maie in his sight be acceptable maie to his word be commendable and that we should well beware what works we build vpon our foundation he plainlie sheweth that at the last daie all our d●●ing shall be opened and that then the same shall be so tried as the golde-smith in fining his mettalls trieth out the drosse and base matter from the pure perfect and fine The daie saith he of our Lord shall declare it because it shall appeare in fire The daie of our Lord is the daie of iudgement the thing is so plaine as no man though he be verie peruerse maie denie it But when shall it appeare in fire euen then at the generall iudgement so is the Text. This place is onelye spoken of those which shall be saued of such as build vpon Iesus Christ vpon which foundation as all cannot builde golde precious stones and siluer as all cannot be perfect neither by martirdome be crowned nor yet by good learning shine like the starres of heauen So thereon building being b●t wood or haie be it but verie stubble though the worke it selfe be in the ende burned though he himselfe receiue no such reward as y● others yet shall he be saued and hom As it were through fire Not through fire but through the greate feare wherein he then shall stand of the iustice and iudgement of God O how comfortable is this doctrine How farre passeth it all their painted fires and ●ained flames of Purgatorie You see now that the Scripture admitteth no such place you sée the right meaning of the Apostle c. L. Euans The meaning of these places following And he heard him from heauen in fire vpon the Altar of whole burnt offerings ¶ God declared that he heard his request in that he sent downe fire from heauen for els they might vse no fire but of that which was reserued still vppon the Altar Leuit. Chap. 6. 13. and came downe from heauen Chap. 9. 14. as appeareth by the punishment of Nadab and Abihu Leuit. cap. 10. ● Geneua Shal be worthie to be punished with he●fire ¶ The Iewes vsed foure kindes of punishments before their gouernement was taken awaie by Herode hanging beheading stoning and burning This is it that Christ shot at because burning was the greatest punishment therefore in that he maketh mention of a iudgement a counsell and a fire he sheweth that some sins are worse then other some but yet they are all such y● we must giue an account for them and shall be punished for them Beza FIGGE-TREE Of the Figge-tree that Christ cursed ANd spied a Figge-trée in the waie and came to it and found nothing thereon but leaues onelie ¶ By this Figge-tree Christ doth sufficient lie shew that the Iews although they had an appearaunce of holinesse by their ceremonies yet neuerthelesse they had not the fruite of charitie by which he signified y● they should worthely be depriued put from this false appearance by the destructiō of Hierusalem Mar. 13. 2. Luk. 21. 6. Tin Cut it downe whie combereth it the ground ¶ Unles we do beléeue also bring foorth fruite worthie repentance we shall with the vnprofitable figge-trée be cut downe also our talent shall be taken from vs and giuen vnto an other that shall put it to better vse Sir I. Cheeke FIGVRE Proues how the bread in the Sacrament is a figure of Christs bodie THe Lord doubted not to saie This is my bodie when hée gaue a signe of his bodie And after in the same Chapter he expoundeth it For trulie so the bloud is the soule Christ was the stone And yet the Apostle doth not say the stone did signifie Christ but he saith the stone was Christ. ¶ Héere Christ calleth the figure of his bodie his bodie saith S. Austen doth compare the thrée texts of scripture This is my bodie The bloud is the soule Christ was the stone Declaring them to be one phrase and to be expounded after one fashion August contra● Adam The Priest saith make vs this ●●lation acceptable c. For it is a figure of the bodie of our Lord Iesus Christ. ¶ Héere he calleth it plainlie a figure of Christs bodie Ambrose li. 3. de Sacra ●et that saieng be expounded by a figure I saie the thing that is spoken is not true indéede but figured vnder the cloude of an allegorie Hierom● aduers. 〈…〉 Ye haue heard that it is a figure Therefore meruaile not ● And béeing a figure require not al things to agrée for otherwise it were no figure Chrisostome in Gen. Homil. 35. First of all thou must take heede that thou take not a figuratiue speach according to the letter for that is it wherof Saint Paule saith The letter killeth For when the thing that is spoken vnder a figure is so taken as if it wer plainlie spoken ther is a fleshlie vnderstanding neither is there anie thing that may better be called the death of the soule August de doct Chri. li. 3. ca. 5. Figures be in vaine serue for no purpose when the things of them signified be present Lactan. insti li. 2. ●ap 1. A figure of a bodie saith Tertulian presupposeth a verie naturall bodie for of a shew or a fancie ther can be no figure But Christ gaue vnto his Disciples a figure of his bodie therefore it must needs follow that Christ had a verie naturall bodie His words be these Christ taking the bread and distributing it to his Disciples made it his bodie saieng This is my bodie that is to say This is a figure of my bodie but a figure it could not bée vnlesse there were a bodie of a truth and indeede for a voide thing as is a fantasie can receiue no figure Tertulian contra Mar. li. 4. There is a figure saith Hilarie for bread and wine be outwardlie seene And there is also a truth of that figure for the bodie and bloud of Christ be of a truth inwardlie seene This Hilarie was within lesse then 350. yeares after Christ. Crisostome affirmeth saieng that if a man vnderstand the words of Christ carnallie he shal surelie profit nothing therby For what meane these words the flesh auaileth nothing He meant not his flesh God forbid but he ment of them that fleshlie and carnallie vnderstood those things that Christ spake But what is carnall vnderstanding To vnderstand the words simplie as they be spoken nothing else For we ought not so to vnderstand the things which we see But all mysteries must be considered
with inward eyes that is spirituallie to vnderstand them ¶ In these wordes S. Chrisostome sheweth plainlie that the words of Christ concerning the eating of his flesh and drinking of his bloud are not to be vnderstoode simplie as they be spoken but spirituallie and figuratiuelie Chrisostome in Iohn Homil. 46. Tertulian writing against Marcion saith these words Christ did not reproue bread whereby he did represent his verie bodie And in the same booke he sayth That Iesus taking bread and distributing it among his Disciples made it his bodie saieng This is my bodie that is to saye sayth Tertulian a figure of my bodie And therefore saith Tertulian that Christ called bread his bodie and wine his bloud becaus● that in the old Testament bread and wine were figures of his bodie and bloud Tertulian contra Marcionem The wine refresheth and augmenteth the bloud ●or that cause the bloud of Christ is not vnproperlie figured by the same Inasmuch as al that commeth vnto vs from him doth make vs glad with a true ioie and increaseth all our gladnesse c. A little before he saith the Lord gaue vnto his Disciples the Sacrament of his bodie in remission of their sinnes for to kéepe loue and charitie to the end that hauing remembrance of that déede he would doe alwaies in a figure that which he thought to doe for them and should not forget that charitie This is my bodie that is is to saie a Sacrament c. Druthmarus Monke of S. Benet in his Comment vpon S. Ma. ¶ Looke more in Bodie Bread Bloud This is my bodie Figures of Christs resurrection Christs resurrection saith Saint Austen was prefigured in our first father Adam because like as Adam rising after sléepe knew Eue shaped out of his side So Christ rising againe from the dead builded the Church out of the wounds of his side Iosua Ioseph Samson Iames were figures of Christs resurrectiō FIGVRATIVE SPEACH How to know a figuratiue speach TO knowe a figuratiue speach S. Austen hath these words Whensoeuer the Scripture of Christ séemeth to commaund anie foule or wicked thing then must that text be taken figuratiuelie and that it is a phrase allegorie and manner of speaking and must be vnderstood spirituallie and not after the letter Except saith he ye eate the flesh of the sonne of man and drinke his bloud ye shall haue no life in you he séemeth saith S. Austen to commaund a foule wicked thing it is therefore a figure ¶ Now seeing that Saint Austen calleth it a foule thing to eate his flesh we maie soone perceiue that he thought it as foule as wicked a thing to eate his bodie séeing his bodie is flesh And then consequentlie it must followe that either this word eate where Christ said take this and eate it must be taken spirituallie or els y● this saieng of Christ. This is my 〈…〉 spoke● But this word 〈…〉 is taken after the l●tter for thy did indeed ●●o bread must bée figuratiuelie spoken I. Frith Wee euen v●e to saie when Easter draweth nigh that tomorrowe or the next daie is the Lords passeouer and yet it is manie y●a●es sin●e he suffered and that passion was neuer done but once And vppon that Sundaie we saie This daye the Lorde did rise againe and y●t it is manie yeares since hée rose Now is there no man so foolish to reproue vs as liars for so saieng because wee name those dayes after the similitude of those in which those things were done So that it is called the same daie which is not the same but by the reuolu●ion of time like it And it is named to be done the same daie through the celebration of the Sacrament Through keeping the men●oriall of the thing once done which is not done y● daie ●●t was done long before Was not Christ once crucified in his owne person yet in a mysterie which is the remembraunce of his verie passion he is crucified for the people not onlie euery ●east of Ea●●er but euerie daie Neither doth he lie which when he is asked a●●swereth that he is crucified For if Sacraments had not certeine similitudes of those things whereof they are Sacraments then should they ●e no Sacraments at all And for this similitude for the most part they take the names for the v●rie things And therefore after a certeine manner t●e sacrament of Christs bodie and the sacrament of Christs bl●ud is Christs bloud So the Sacrament of faith is faith for it is none other to beléeue then to haue faith And therefore when a man aunswereth that the infant beleeueth which hath not ●he effect of ●aith he aunswereth that it hath faith for the Sacrament of faith And then it turneth it s●lfe to God for the Sacrament of conuersion For the aunswere it selfe perteineth vnto the ministring of the Sacrament As the Apostle write●h of Baptime We be buried saith hée with Christ through baptime vnto death he sayth not wée signifie buri●ng but vtterly sayth we are buried He called also the Sacrament of so great ● thing euen with the proper name of the verie thing it selfe c. ¶ Heere doth Saint Austen plainlie set foorth the matter For euen ●s the next good Fr 〈…〉 e shal be called the day of Christs passion and yet he shal not suffer death againe vpon that day for he died but once and nowe is immortall euen so is the Sacrament called Christes bodie And as that daye is not the verie daye he dyed vppon but onelie a remembraunce of his bodie breaking and bloud-shedding And likewise as the next Easter daye shall bée called the daye of his resurrection not that it is the verie same daye that Christ did rise in but a remembraunce of the same euen so the Sacrament is called his bodye not that it is his bodie indéede but onelie a remembraunce of the same c. I. Frith Of Figuratiue speaches The Arke was called God 1. Reg. 4. 7. Iohn is Helias Math. 11. 14. My Father is an husbandman Iohn 15. 1. I am the Uine you are the braunches Iohn 15. 5. One of you is a Diuell Iohn 6. 70. Herode is a Foxe Luke 13. 32. This is the Lordes passe-by or passe-ouer Exo. 12. 1●● This is my bodie Math. 26. 26. This is the newe Testament Luke 22. 20. ¶ Looke Flesh. FINDING OF THINGS LOST How they ought to be restored and not kept SAint Austen toucheth this thing in his 19. Sermon De verbis Apostolis And it is had in the Decrees 14. Questi 5. Chap. Si quid inuenisti Where he sayth That thinges which are founde must be restored Which thing if thou doe not thou hast rapt them for as much as thou hast done what thou couldest so that if thou haddest founde more thou wouldest haue rapt more c. There the Glo●●r verie well declareth what is to be done with thinges that are founde Either sayth hée the same thinges are counted for thinges
suanitatis A Sacrifice vnto God a swéete sauour whole Grocers shops of spicerie all the flowers in Priapus garden all the floures in Naiades and Traiades and Satyrus that is all the flowers in Hils Dales and floures in manie a great Forest are not so delightfull and smelling The Uiolet hath not the like sauour the Rose hath not the like sauour the Lilie the like smell the Giliflower the like sent as good life through good faith yéeldeth to Gods nostrells c. T. Drant Of the good purpose of man ¶ Looke Man GOOD INTENT How our good intents must agree with Gods word NOthing can be done to the honour of God nor with a good intent but that which is done according to his word For the word of God is the verie true and onelie rule of all good intents and of the honour wherwith he ought to be honoured For it is not sufficient for man to honour God according to his own fansie and to doe whatsoeuer liketh himselfe For God hath giuen a contrarie commaundement saieng Do not euerie one of you what shall please you but that onelie which I commaunde you Pet. Viret The Lord was wroth with Oza and smote him because he put his hand to the Arke c. ¶ Oza punished because he tooke vpon him an office wherevnto he was not called for it was the Priests office Nu. 4. 15. So that all good intents be condemned except they be commaunded by the word of God Leo the first of that name in his sermon of the Passion of of the Lord saith that Peter when he cut off the eare of the seruaunt of the high Priest was moued with a godly motion but what godly motion could it be which Christ reproued yea so reproued it that he affirmed y● he which so drew the sword shuld perish with the sword What other thing was this then to haue a zeale of God but as Paul saith not according to knowledge Paule also the Apostle when he afflicted and destroied the Christians thought that he did God high seruice Pet. Mar. vpon Iudic. fol. 152. Of the good intent of Nadab and Abihu The good intent of Nadab and Abihu the sonnes of Aaron doe shewe vs the fruites of mans good intent without Gods word As we maie doe nothing lesse so doth that ensample teach that we maie doe no more then is commaunded T. M. Examles of good intents out of holie Scripture ¶ The man that gathered sticks on the Sabboth daie thought he had done well and yet was stoned to death for his so dooing Nu. 15. 32. ¶ Looke Man ¶ The man that doth after the meaning of his own heart God will punish Saule of a good intent saued Agag king of Amalech contrarie to the commaundement of God by Samuel therfore was reproued 1. Reg. 15. 8. c. Iames Iohn desiring of good intent that fire might come downe from heauen and consume the Samaritanes were rebuked of Christ. Luke 9. 54. ¶ Peter of good intent would haue disswaded Christ from his suffering was called Satan for his labour Mar. 8. 32. ¶ Iudas of a good intent spake to haue the ointment solde and the monie giuen to the poore ¶ The Iewes of a good intent put Christ and Stephen to death Math. 27. Act. 7. GOODS How and where they ought to be most safelie laid vp A Mans goods are no where more safelie laid vp then in the hands of his friends As Alexander being asked the question in what place he hadde his treasure lieng in the handes of my friends quod he meaning that a mans goods are no where more safelie then so laid vp in store For when the case requireth goods so bestowed come againe to our hands with increase How the goods of the Church ought to be bestowed S. Hierom saith● so manie as with the goods of the Church satisfie their own pleasure are like to the Pharisies which gaue monie to the kéepers of Christs sepulcher to oppresse the glory of God Hierom. in Math. cap. 28. Vrban Bishop of Rome saith The goodes of the Church ought not to be turned to anie other vses then to Ecclesiastical vses and the comm●dities of the poore for they are saith he the oblations of the faithfull and the patrimonie of the poore giuen vnto the Lord for this purpose If anie man therefore which God forbid bestoweth them otherwise let him take heed he fall not into the damnation of Ananias Saphira be proued guiltie of Sacriledge Forasmuch as not onlie Tenths are not ours but are appointed for y● reliefe of y● congregation but also whatsoeuer we receiue more of God then we haue néede off that altogether ought to be bestowed on the poore If we receiue that for our owne lusts vanities which is appointed for the poore looke how manie people die either for hunger or want of cloathes in all those places where we dwell let vs be well assured that at the daie of iudgement we shall vender accompts for the liues of them all Caesarius in admonitione S. Gregory appointeth that the Church-goods should be deuided into foure parts One to the Bishop and his familie for the maintenaunce of hospitalitie and reliefe of the poore The second to the Cleargie that is to saie to the Ministers Deacons Schollers The third to the poore The fourth to the repairing of the Temple S. Gregory 12. q. 2. can quatuor GORTHEANS What the Gortheans were THe Gortheans were Sects celebrating their festiuall daies at other times then the Iewes did Epipha prefaci lib. 1. de hae res GOSPELL What the Gospell signifieth THe Gospell signifieth a message of God happie and ioifull news and sheweth to vs the grace by the which we are discharged and set frée before the iudgment of God and deliuered from the death and eternall damnation to the which we are iustlie condemned by the Law And it declareth vnto vs by by what meanes wherby and by whom we obtaine that grace and of whom Pet. Viret ¶ As touching the interpretation of this word Gospell it being taken from the Gréeke word signifieth good or glad tidings The which word the thréescore and ten Interpreters vsed so often as they found the Hebrue word Bisser which signifieth to tell and Besora Tidings being the deriuatiue of the same and also Mevasser Telling Mar●orate This word Gospell signifieth good tidings and is taken héere for the Storie which conteineth the ioifull message of the comming of the Sonne of God promised from the beginning Geneua ¶ The Gospell after S. Iohn Euangelion signifieth good tidings And in the holy writers it signifieth a publique solemne and open preaching of Christ whereby his death hath purged our sinnes and being risen from the dead raineth in the ha●ts of his chosen and renueth them vnto godlines through his spirit mortifieng from time to time their foolish lusts and abolishing more and more the remnaunt
euermore since the beginning of the world commaunded all inuocation all praiers all supplications all hope and confidence of helpe either bodilie or Ghostlie to be put whollie and onelye in him the onelie fountaine of life grace goodnesse health or plentie and whatsoeuer we haue Therefore it séemeth to be a dangerous sentence to saie O Iacob this is the generation of them that séeke thy face To the vtter auoiding of this inconuenience ye must note y● by this word Iacob is not vnderstood y● person of Iacob the Patriarke which was the son of Isaac ● brother to Esau but by this word Iacob the Scripture doth customablie vnderstand the whole family the whole household and the congregation of Gods people which in their manners and liuings doe follow the steppes of Iacob which according to his name was a mightie wrastler against all worldly wayes and lewde lusts of the flesh To proue that this word Iacob doth signifie all the whole people of God we haue to witnesse beside the words of the Prophet in diuers places of y● Psalm the manifest words of the Prophet Esa. 44. 1. Audi Iacob seruus meus Israel quem elegi c. Hearken O Iacob my seruaunt and O Israel whom I haue chosen thus saith the Lord thy fashioner and ●ormer thy helper and protector from the womb of thy mother I wil poure my spirit vppon thy seede and my blessing vppon thy stocke so that this man shall say I am the Lords and another shall call in the name of Iacob Certaine it is that these words were spoken many hundred yeares after Iacob the Patriarke was departed out of this lyfe So that the Prophet héere by the name of Iacob and Israel which was all one man vnderstandeth all the Congregation of Gods people whome he biddeth to be of a good chéere and in the Lord to ioye in this lyfe for vpon all the seed of Iacob that is vpon all faithful people that do follow the fashiō of Iacob in faith purenes of life god promiseth to poure vpon them their seede his holy spirit so that this man in this corner shall say I am the Lords another man in another corner shall call on the name of Iacob that is in the name of the same God that Iacob called on which is the father of our Lord Iesus Christ. This is inough to teach that by this one word Iacob is vnderstood all the faithfull flocke people of God which doe séeke the face of Iacob when they doe follow the steppes of Iacob in good liuing Ric. Turnar Of Iacobs lye to his father And Iacob said to his father I am Esau thy first begotten sonne c. ¶ Although Iacob was assured of this blessing by faith yet he did euil to séeke it by lyes and the more he abuseth Gods name therevnto Geneua ¶ This subtill dealing of Rebecca and Iacob with Isaac considered by it selfe is altogethers blame-worthy but if it be referred to the will of God and setting foorth of his decrée it is commendable The Bible note ¶ Some to excuse Iacobs lye saith thus Though Iacob was not the person of Esau yet in office and dignitie he was because he had obtained the birth-right So doth Christ say that Iohn was Helias because he came in y● persō spirit of Helias Lyra Of Iacobs wrastlyng with the Angell When Iacob was afraid of his brother Esau and had praied to God he would deliuer him out of his hands God to comfort Iacob and to declare vnto him that he should not feare his brother Esau caused an Angell in the likenesse of a man to wrastle with him till it was day and could not preuaile against Iacob till he exercised a poynt aboue mans strength which was that he smote Iacob vnder the thigh wherewith the sinow of Iacobs leg shranke Then said Iacob I will not let goe my hold vntill thou blesse me What is the name said the Angell Iacob sayd he Well said the Angell thou shalt be called Iacob no more but thy name shal be Israel that is by interpretation a man that séeth And because thou hast wrastled with me which doth represent the person of God and hast preuailed feare not but thou shalt preuaile against men By this mystical wrastling he was ascertained that he should ouercome his brother Esau. As euermore at length the good men shall ouercome the bad R. Turn What the seede of Iacob is All men that doe wrastle fight manfully against the flesh the world and the diuell shall at length of Iacobs wrastlers be made Israelites that is the perfect séers of God in ioye and blisse euerlasting with Iacob All such spiritual wrastlers because they follow the steps of Iacob otherwise named Israel are called Semen Israel the séede of Israel Turnar How God beholdeth no sinne in Iacob He beheld no wickednesse in Iacob nor saw Idolatrie in Israel ¶ There is no people without sinne neither yet Israel but God looketh not on it he waxeth not angrie in the ende he auengeth it not according as it deserueth but amendeth it by his grace T. M. Of the finding of Iacob in Bethel ¶ Looke Bethel The vnderstanding of this place following The name of the God of Iacob defend thée By the God of Iacob or Israel is vnderstood the God of the whole stocke progenie and ofspring of Iacob or Israel and farther of all the people of the Lord as in Esay 44. 1. The cause why is that Iacob which as ye read Gen. 35. 10. was after called Israel was father to the twelue patriarks of whom the twelue tribes the whole people of Israel descended T. M. I AM. The meaning of this place following I Am that I am or I will be that I will be ¶ I will bée that I will be I am as some doe interpret it which is I am the beginning and ending by me haue ye all things and without me haue ye nothing that good is Iohn 1. 3. T. M. I am that I am ¶ The God that euer hath bene am shall be● the God almightie by whom all thinges haue their beeing and the God of mercie mindfull of my promise Apoc. 1. 4. IAMES Why he was called the Lords brother IAmes the Lords brother ¶ He was called the Lords brother for kinred sake for he was borne of Marie and Cleophe who was sister to Christs mother D. Heines Of the death of this Iames. Clement saith that he was cast downe from the pinacle of the Temple and being smitten with the instrument of a Fuller was slaine Booke of Mar. fo 53. Of the death of Iames the brother of Iohn ¶ This Iames saith Clement when he was brought to the tribunall seate he y● brought him was the cause of his trouble séeing him to be condemned and that he should suffer death as he went to execution he being moued therwith in heart and
to accuse you that being accused ye should feare fearing you should cra●e pardon not presume of your owne strength Againe The law was giuen for this purpose of great to make little to shew that thou hast no strengh of thine owne to righteousnesse that thou as poore vnworthy and néedie shouldst flye vnto grace After he furneth his speach to God saith Doe so Lord doe so mercifull Lord● commaund that which cannot be fulfilled yea command that which cannot but by thy grace be fulfilled that when men cannot fulfill it by their owne strength euery mouth maye bee stopped no man may think himselfe great Let all be litle ones let al y● world be guiltie before thée Ca. in his In. 2. b. ca. 7. se. 9. How the lawe was giuen by Moses The lawe was giuen by Moses but grace veritie came by Iesus Christ. ¶ This place doth Tindale in his exposition of the 5. 6. 7. of S. Mathew expound on this wise Though Moses saith he gaue the lawe yet he gaue no man grace to doe it nor to vnderstand it aright or wrote it in any mans hart to consent that it was good and to wish after power to fulfill it But Christ giueth grace to doe it and to vnderstand it aright and writeth it with his holy spirit in the tables of the hearts of men and maketh it a true thing there and no hypocrisie Folio 184. How we are dead through the lawe But I through the lawe am dead to the lawe that I might liue vnto God ¶ But I through the lawe am dead to the lawe that is by the lawe of libertie grace graunted in Christ I am deliuered from the lawe of bondage ministred by Moses and from the burthen and cursse thereof Tindale ¶ Are dead concerning the lawe by the body of Christ. ¶ Because the body of Christ is made an offering and a sacrifice for our sinnes whereby God is pleased and his wrath appeased for Christs sake the Holy Ghost is giuen to all beléeuers whereby the power of sinne is in vs daily weakned we are accounted dead to the lawe for that the lawe hath no dominion ouer vs. The Bible note ¶ Looke Vnder the lawe How the Lawe increaseth sinne But the lawe in the meane time entred in that sinne should increase ¶ The lawe increaseth sinne and maketh our nature more gréedie to doe euill because the law ministreth no power nor lust to y● the biddeth or to refrain from y● the forbiddeth Tin Why the lawe is called the messenger of death The lawe is called the messenger of death namely becaus that if we haue no more but the doctrine that is contained in the lawe we shall be vtterly ouerwhelmed afore God we shal be cast away without any remedy Then if God indite vs but according to the forme of y● lawe he shall discouer filthines inough in vs. Cal. vpon Iob. fo 172. What the lawe of God requireth The lawe of God requireth loue from the bottome of the heart and cannot be satisfied nor fulfilled with the workes therof as mans lawe is for the lawe is spirituall as S. Paule saith Rom. 7. which no earthly creature by his owne strength enforcement is able to fulfill but by the operation and working of the spirit of God Tindale What it is to be vnder the lawe To be vnder the lawe is to deale with the workes of the law and to worke without the spirit and grace for so long no doubt sinne raigneth in vs through the lawe that is to say the lawe declareth that we are vnder sinne and that sinne hath power and domination ouer vs séeing we cannot fulfill the lawe namely with the heart forasmuch as no man of nature fauoureth the lawe consenteth therevnto and delighteth therein which thing is excéeding great sinne y● we cannot consent to the lawe which lawe is nothing els but the will of God c. So that to be vnder the lawe is not to be able to fulfill the lawe but to be debter to it and not able to paye that which the Lawe requireth c. Tindale ¶ To be vnder the lawe is nothing els but to be bounde or subiect vnto sinne for the law through sinne condemneth vs as guiltie But to be dead vnto the law is nothing els but to haue that extinguished in vs by which the law accuseth and condemneth vs and that is the olde man the flesh naturall lust corruption of nature when these things be once dead in vs that Christ liueth and raigneth in vs we can by no meanes be condemned by the law c. Pet. Mar. vpon the Rom. fol. 161. What it is not to be vnder the Lawe Not to be vnder the lawe is to haue a frée hart renued with the spirite so that thou hast lust inwardly of thine own accord to do that which the lawe commaundeth without compulsion yea though there were no lawe Tin in his pro. to the Rom. Why Paule calleth the booke of Genesis the lawe Tell me ye that would be vnder the law c. ¶ Why doth Paule call the booke of Genesis out of the which he alledgeth the historie of Ismael and Isaac the Lawe séeing that booke containeth nothing at all concerning the law but onely containeth a plaine historie of Abrahams two children Paule is wont to call the first booke of Moses the law after the manner of the Iewes which although it containe no lawe besides the lawe of circumcision but the principall doctrine thereof is concerning faith and that Patriarks pleased God because of their faith yet the Iewes notwithstanding onely because of the law of circumcision which is there contained called the booke of Genesis the lawe as well as the other bookes of Moses so did Paule himselfe also being a Iewe. And Christ vnder the title of the lawe comprehendeth not onely the bookes of Moses but also the Psalmes Iohn 15. 25. But it is that the words might be fulfilled which were writen in the lawe They hated me without a cause Luther vpon the Gal. fol. 205. How the lawe is impossible for a man to fulfill The Pelagians saith S. Austen thinke themselues cunning men when they say God would not commaund that thing that he knoweth a man is not able to doe who is there that knoweth not this But therefore God commaundeth vs to do some thing that we are not able to doe that we may vnderstand what we ought to craue of him Iewel fol. 3●7 ¶ And the law had righteousnes but for a time not because it could iustifie before the Lord for it could not so forgiue sinne that of sinners it could make them iust But to this end it was giuen that it might be a terrour prouoking men to a godly life punishing the disobedient and vnreuerent persons Therefore is not a lawe giuen which can giue life but condempne I. Gough
How the lawe is called a yoake Why tempt ye God to put on the disciples necks that yoake which neither our fathers nor we were able to beare ¶ He meaneth the holy lawe and not the ceremonies onely and calleth it a yoake not able to be borne because no man not the most holiest and perfectest that euer was Christ onely excepted was able to perfourme the same in all pointes both outwardly according the Letter and inwardly according to the Spirit The Bible note The difference betweene Gods law and mans Mans lawe onely requireth externall and ciuill obedience Gods lawe both externall and internall Who hath fulfilled the lawe Christ is the ende of the lawe for righteousnesse to all that beléeue ¶ That is Christ hath fulfilled the whole lawe therfore whosoeuer beléeueth in him is counted iust before God as well as he had fulfilled the whole Lawe himselfe The Bible note ¶ The ende of the lawe is to iustifie them which obserue it therefore Christ hauing fulfilled it for vs is made our Iustice sanctification c. Geneua How the Gentiles were not without a lawe Whosoeuer hath sinned without lawe c. ¶ It is not to be thought that the Gentiles were altogether without a lawe for they had the lawe of nature but not the lawe written which we call the Ten commaundements therefore they cannot excuse themselues from sinne Sir I. Cheeke How the lawe maketh all men sinners Whatsoeuer the lawe saith it saith it to them which are vnder the lawe c. ¶ In this place the lawe is taken for all the holy scripture as it appeareth by these places testimonies that be alledged héere before wherby it is made euident plain that all men without exception are sinners Sir I. Cheeke ¶ The lawe doth not make vs guiltie but doth declare that we are guiltie before God and deserue condemnation Geneua How the lawe maketh vs to hate God In the faith which we haue in Christ finde we mercie life fauour and peace in the lawe we finde death damnation and wrath moreouer the cursse and vengeance of God vpon vs. And it that is to say the lawe is called of Paule the ministration of death and damnation In the lawe we are proued to be the enimies of God and that we hate him For how can we be at peace with God and loue him seeing we are conceiued and born vnder the power of the diuell and are his possession and kingdome his captiues bondmen led at his will and he holdeth our harts so that it is impossible for a man to fulfill the lawe of his owne strength and power séeing that we are by birth and nature the heires of eternall damnation c. Tind in his booke named the wicked Mammon fol. 6. How the lawe is spirituall The lawe is spirituall ¶ The lawe is called spirituall because that it requireth the spirit that is to say the righteousnes and holinesse of the heart and not the outward workes onely How we dye to the lawe For I through the lawe am dead to the law ¶ The law that terrifieth the conscience bringeth vs to Christ and he onely causeth vs to dye to the law indéed because y● by making vs righteous he taketh away from vs the terrour of conscience and by sanctifieng vs causeth the mortifieng of lusts in vs that it cannot take such occasion to sinne by the restrint which the lawe maketh as it did before Rom. 7. 10. 11. ¶ For I through the lawe am dead to the lawe that is by the lawe of libertie and grace graunted in Christ I am deliuered from the lawe of bondage ministred by Moses and from the burthen and cursse thereof Tindale To dye in the defence of the lawe If we do praise saith S. Austen the Machabees that with great admiration because they did stoutly stand vnto death for the laws of their country how much more ought we to suffer al things for our baptime for y● sacraments of the body bloud of Christ. The meaning of these places following Cursed is euery one that continueth not in all things which are written in the booke of the lawe to do them ¶ All the which meaning the things contained in the lawe since no man doth fulfill them it is manifest that no man can be iustified by the words of the lawe No man is iustified before God because saith S. Hierome no man kéepeth the lawe therefore it is said that the beléeuers must be saued by faith onely Moreouer he will shewe that no man canne be iustified by the workes of Moses lawe vnlesse he haue faith which giueth pardon to him that beléeueth in God neither yet he that beléeueth in Christ liueth without a lawe D. Heynes And I say the heire as long as he is a childe c. ¶ While we were yet younglings we had néede of the law as our tutours not that it should alwaies rule vs but so long till we come to mans state and haue the knowledge of Christ which knowledge when we haue we be deliuered from the seruitude of the law for Christs sake not for feare of punishment abstaining from euill but led by the spirit of God we are prepared made fit to fulfill all good works which the lawe commandeth D. Heynes ¶ The Church of Israel was vnder the lawe as the Pupill subiect to his Tutor euen vnto the time of Christ when she waxed strong and then hir pupilship ended Geneua ¶ Looke before where the Lawe is our schoolemaister An Argument of the Lawe If I cannot haue my sinnes forgiuen me except I kéepe and fulfill the lawe then the kéeping of the lawe iustifieth me Aunswere I cannot haue forgiuenesse of my sinnes except I haue sinned Ergo to haue sinned is the forgiuenesse of sinnes Tindale A disputation betweene the Law and the Gospell The Law saith pay thy debt the Gospell saith Christ hath payed it The Lawe saith thou art a sinner dispaire and thou shalt be damned the Gospell saith thy sinnes are forgiuen thée be of good comfort thou shalt be saued The Lawe saith made amends for thy sinnes the Gospell saith Christ hath made it for thée The Law saith the father of heauen is angry with thée the Gospell saith Christ hath pacified him with his bloud The law saith wher is thy righteousnes thy goodnes satisfaction the Gospell saith Christ is thy righteousnesse thy goodnesse and satisfaction The Lawe sayth thou art bound and obliged to me to the diuell and to hell the Gospell saith Christ hath deliuered me from them all Booke of Mar. fol. 1110. The nature and office of the Lawe and Gospell The Lawe sheweth vs our sinnes Ro. 3. 20. The Gospell sheweth vs remedie for Iohn 1. The Lawe sheweth vs our condemnation Ro. 7. The Gospell sheweth vs our redemption Coll. 1. The Lawe is the word of ire Rom. 4.
in remēbring y● benefits of God This inuention although at the first sight it might séeme trim yet it agréeth not with Christs libertie For we must think vpon the benefits of God and our great ingratitude other most gréeuous sinnes not only fortie daies but also continally Further by this meanes they opened a most wide window to liue securely rechlye For if they once had performed fullye these fortie daies they thought that all the whole yeare after they might giue themselues wholy to all kinde of pleasures lusts For they referred the time of repentaunce to these fortie daies And although the elders had a Lent yet as Eusebius saith in his 5. booke and 24. Chapter it was left frée vnto all men For Ireneus after this manner intreated with Victor Bishop of Rome when he would have excommunicated the East Church because in the obseruing of Easter it agréed not with the Church of Rome What sayth he can we not liue at concord although they vse their owne cities as we vse ours for some fast in Lent two dayes some foure dayes some x. daies some fiftéene daies some twentie and other some forty dayes And yet is concord neuerthelesse kept in the Church Pet. Mar. vpon Iudic. fo 279. LEPER What the Leper signifieth THe Leper signifieth properly mans doctrine which spreadeth abrode like a canker And to be short all infection of vngodlynesse therefore must the Leuites giue diligent héede thereto for a little leauen sowreth all the whole lumpe of dowe T. M. ¶ He meaning the Priest shall iudge the plague to be cleane ¶ For it is not that contagious leper that infecteth but a kind of scurffe which maketh not the flesh rawe as the leprosie doth Geneua ¶ Of the leprosie in clothes which was vsed among the Iewes let them iudge This is euident that we in our time suffer ouer many leprosies in clothes T. M. ¶ The leprosie in houses is anye thing thereto perteining whereby the dweller might take anie harme in health of bodie in hurting of his goods or otherwise as if it stoode in an euill ayre T. M. If I send the plague of leprosie in an house c. This declareth that no plague nor punishment commeth to man without Gods prouidence and his sending Geneua How a Leper was knowne A leper had these fiue marks to be knowne by his garment was vpon him and cut in twaine his head vncouered his face mufled his dwelling from the companie of men proclaimed openly to be a leper and vncleane Hemmyng Of the leprosie that Christ healed The leprosie that Christ healed in S. Mathewes Gospell was not like the leprosie that is now but was a kinde thereof which was vncurable Geneua LESSE The meaning of this place following NOtwithstanding he that is lesse in the kingdome of heauen is greater then he ¶ Christ which humbled himselfe to the crosse was of lesse reputation in this world then Iohn Baptist was yet in the kingdome of heauen Christ was greater then hée Tindale The least of them that shall preach the Gospell in the new estate of Christes Church shall haue more knowledge then Iohn and their message shall be more excellent Geneua LETANIES What the Letanies are LEtanies are nothing else but humble praiers and supplications to God to procure his fauo●r and turne awaye his wrath and wer receiued long before procession came in place Some be called Minores the lesse some Maiores the greater The lesse were instituted by Mamartus Bishop of Vienna in the yeare of our Lord. 469. as Sigebertus sayth 02. 488. as Polichronicon reporteth The order of them was but a solempne assembly of people vnto prayer at such time as we call the rogation wéeke The cause was for earthquake and tempests and inuasion of wilde beasts which then did greatlye destroye the people The greater Letanie was deuised by Gregorie the Pope Anno. 592. When as the cause béeing lyke as before the superstition beganne to be more for by the reason of a great pestilence following a floud the Bishoppe by Ceremonies thought to appease the wrath of God and therefore made Septiformen Laetanian a seauenfold Letanie One of the clergie an other of the Monks one of men an other of their wiues One of maidens an other of widowes the last of poore and children together These people so distinct in the seauen orders shoulde come from seauen seuerall places and then it was thought they should be heard the sooner but in their Procession fourescore persons were striken with the plague to shewe howe well God was pleased with them Notwithstanding how thinges of a good deuotio● instituted in time doe growe to great abuse For what the order and solempnitie of them was we reade in the counsell of Mentz celebrated 813. yeares after Christ. The words of the decrée be these Placint nobis c. Our will is that the greate Letanie bée obserued of all Christians thrée daies And as our holye Fathers haue ordeined it not riding nor hauing precious garments on them but bare footed in Sackcloth an Ashes vnlesse infirmitie doe let Thus farre the Counsell LETTER What the Letter signifieth AVgustine in his third booke and. 5. Chapter De doctrina Christiana writeth that they sticke in the Letter which take the signes for the thinges and that which is figuratiuely spoken in the holy Scriptures they take it so as if it were spoken properlye And so lowe crope they on the ground that when they heare the name of the Sabboth they remember nothing but the seauenth day which was obserued of the Iewes Also when they heare of a Sacrifice they thinke vppon nothing but the sacrifices which were killed And though ther bée some seruitude tollerable yet hée calleth that a miserable seruitude when wée take the signes for the thinges wherein there is a greate offence committed in these dayes in the Sacrament of the Eucharist for howe manye shall a man finde which beholding the outwarde signes of the Sacrament calleth to memorye the death and passion of Christ whereof it is most certeine that they are signes or which thinketh within himselfe that the bodye and bloud of Christ is a spirituall meate for the soule through fayth euen as breade and wine are nourishmentes for the bodye Or which weigheth with himselfe the coniunction of the members of Christ betweene themselues and with the head These thinges are not regarded and they cleaue onelye to the sight of the signes and men thinke it is inough if they haue looked vppon bowed the knée and worshipped This to imbrace the Letter and not to giue eare vnto the sayde Augustine who in the place wée haue now cited and a little afterwarde most appertlye affirmeth that to eate the bodye of Christ and to drinke his bloud are figuratiue kinde of speaches So are the Iewes accused because they cleauing onely to the Letter and circumcision were transgrassers of the lawe Pet. Mar. vpon the Rom. fol. 49.
How the Letter killeth For the Letter killeth but the Spirit giueth lyfe ¶ The Letter héere and in the seconde to the Romanes verse 27. and in diuerse other places of the Scripture signifieth the Lawe or olde Testament and the Spirit the Gospell or new Testament And so doth Saint Austen expounde them in sundrie places of his booke which hée wrote of the letter and the spirit And Erasmus also both in his Paraphrases and Annotations Because the lawe findeth vs guiltie and thervpon condemneth vs therefore saith the Apostle rightly that it killeth And the gospel because it pronounceth vs righteous in Christ and sheweth vs that by him we are iustified from all thinges whereof we could not be iustified by the lawe Act. 13. 39. doth therefore bring lyfe As for such as by the letter will vnderstand the litterall sense and by the spirit the spirituall sense can no learned or christen man allowe For these wordes Letter ministration of death ministring of condemnation and that which is destroied signifieth all one thing And these Spirit Ministration of righteousness and that remaineth be there verie contraries Now wordes meaning one thing must haue one interpretation And by some of the first cannot the litterall sense be vnderstoode nor by some of the last the spirituall Ergo neither by these wordes Letter or Spirit sith Letter is all one with the first and spirit with the latter Tindale ¶ Origen writeth thus Et est in Euangelio littera c. Euen in the Gospell there is a Letter that killeth For when as Christ sayth Unlesse ye eate the flesh of the sonne of man c. If ye take the same according to the Letter the Letter killeth What is Littera occidens the murthering Letter Truely the lawe which causeth anger by which commeth knowledge of sinne which is a Schoolemaster vnto Christ. The lawe first killeth y● Christ may make aliue it condemneth y● Christ may iustifie it sheweth sinne it healeth sinne Ro. Hutchynson How letter and circumcision is taken in this place Which being vnder the Letter Circumcision doth transgresse the law ¶ The letter is héere taken for the outward shew or ceremonie as a little after by the spirit he vnderstandeth the circumcision of the heart Sir I. Cheeke ¶ When the Lawe is called the Letter or that is prouoketh death in vs or that it killeth or is the minister of death or that it is the strength of sinne it is meant as we consider the law of it selfe without Christ. Geneua LEVEN How Leuen is diuersely taken in the Scripture Leuen is sometimes taken in an euill sense for the doctrine of the Pharesies which corrupted the swéetnesse of the word of God with the leuen of their gloses And sometime in a good sense for the kingdome of heauen that is to saye the Gospell and glad tidings of Christ. For as leuen altereth the nature of dowe and maketh it through sowre euen so the Gospel turneth a man into a new lyfe and altereth him a little and little first the heart and then the members Tindale fo 226. Take heede and beware of the leuen of the Pharesies and of the Saduces ¶ By leuen héere is vnderstoode the doctrine and inuention of the Pharesies and of all other men lyke conditioned vnto them Sometime leuen in the Scripture is taken in an euill sense as héere and sometime in a good sense As in the. 13. 33. and in the 12. of Saint Luke verse 1. it is noted by the name of hypocrisie because it is deceitfull false and vngodly and maketh all the louers thereof hypocrits Tindale ¶ Leuen héere is taken for the ●rronious doctrine of the Pharesies Saduces which with their gloses deprauated the Scriptures Some thinke this word 〈…〉 n is taken for wholesome doctrine of the Gospell Math. 13. 33. Sir I. Cheeke Beware of the leuen of the Pharesie● ¶ He wi 〈…〉 eth the in to beware of contagious doctrine and such s●bile practises as the aduersarie vsed to suppresse the Gospell Ge 〈…〉 LEVY Of Leuy otherwise called Mathew AND sawe Leuy the sonne of Alphe● sit at the r●ec 〈…〉 e of ●ustome ¶ He that is heere in Marke called Leuy in the Gospell before Chapter 9. and verse 9. is called Mathew in whom we haue an example how they that be called and beléeue ought to bring foorth worthy fruites of repentaunce Sir I. Cheeke ¶ Looke Mathew LEVITES What their office was TAke the summe c. from thirtie yeare olde and aboue ¶ The Leuits were numbred after thrée sortes first at a moneth olde when they were consecrate to the Lord next at 25. yeare old when they were appointed to serue in the tabernacle and at 30. yeare olde to beare the burthen of the tabernacle Geneua ● He sayd vnto the Leuites that taught all Israel and were sanctified vnto the Lorde put the holy Arke in the house which Solo●on the sonne of Dauid king of Israel did builde it shall ●e no more a burthen vppon your shoulders ¶ It appeareth héere that the Leuites charge was not onely to minister in the Temple but also to instruct the people in the worde of God And where as he sayth It shall bée no more a burthen vpon your shoulders that is as it was before the temple was built● Therefore your office onely is now to teach the people to praise God Geneua How this place following is to be vnderstood For the Leuites were purer hearted to bée sanctified then the Priestes ¶ Pelicane translateth the wordes thus Leuitae quip 〈…〉 〈…〉 ritu c. For the Leuites were sooner or easier sanctified then the Priestes which he expoundeth more plainely in his Commentaries saieng Intiligitur Sacerdotum numerum imminutum fuisse c. It is to bée vnderstoode that the number of the Priestes was diminished which should haue sufficed for to prepare the Sacrifices and therefore they desired the helpe of the Leuites that all thinges might bée done more diligentlye There was also an other cause of the Leuites helpe for the sanctifieng of the Temple and the preparation of the Sacrifice was so sodeinly commaunded that many of the Priestes had not time to sanctifie themselues according to the lawe which required a certeine space for the same and the Leuites might bée sanctified with lesse adoe and in shorter time And surelye the verye circumstaunce of the place doe proue this to be the true vnderstanding of it for these be the wordes that immediatelye goe before but the Priests were too fewe and were not able to sleye all the burnt offeringes therfore their brethren the Liuites did helpe them vntill they had ended the worke and vntil other Priests were sanctified I. W. fol. 11. LEVIATHAN What Leuiathan signifieth DArest thou drawe out Leuiathan with an Angle c. ¶ Leuiathan as diuerse learned men expounde signifieth the greatest fish that liueth in the Sea which is a Whale T. M. Euen
heauen If a man shuld agrée with them that Christ offred to God bread and wine yet they cannot proue that he killed himselfe in sacrifice vnder bread and wine Also if Christ offered nothing but bread and wine the Priests of the olde lawe did much better in killing of liuing creatures to offer them in sacrifice The Papists cannot tell what to say And when they bring authoritie of Scripture it maketh against and are confuted with their owne saieng as one that is slaine with his owne weapon This is the exposition of the Prechers of Basil. Of the heresie of these heretikes called Melchisedechiani Melchisedechiani were heretiks which honoured Melchisedech and sayd that he was greater then Christ and that he was no man Epiph. heraes 55. MEMORIALL How the Sacrament is a memoriall of Christs death Looke Sacrament MEANE Hovv the meane is best THe counsell that Phoebus gaue to Phaeton his sonne hath neuer hurt any man which is this Medio tutissimus ibis The best way is to tempt the meane or the middest neither to be discouraged in y● reading of y● scriptures because of the multitude of the great difficults therein neither yet to be too bolde with the plainenesse of certeine places to take vppon thée to discusse the high and mysticall places thereof kéeping this rule ye shall finde the wordes of the Prophet most true The testimonie of y● Lord giueth wisdome to all men that be simple and méeke and lowly in heart Ri. Turnar MENANDER Of this mans erronious opinions MEnander a Sorcerer and the Disciple of Symon Magus a Samaritane sayd that he was the great power of God come downe from heauen that the world was made by Angells hée called himselfe a Sauiour he sayd saluation was to be purchased by his Baptime and that such as were therewith baptised should neuer die no not in this world Euse. li. 3. chap. 23. Ireneus li. 1. chap. 21. Epiph. heraes 22. MENE The interpretation of this word SOme do thus diuide it that both the years of the life of the king and also the time of the kings reigne was numbred But this subtiltie séemeth not substantiall Therfore I thinke saith Caluine that this word was added twise for confirmatition as though the Prophet should say y● the number was now fulfilled For in account it is easie to faile as the prouerb saith Wherfore y● Balthasar might vnderstand that his life and his kingdome was now at an end God doth affirme that the number is full and perfect as though he should say that there shuld not be added one minute of an houre to the tearme appointed And thus doth Daniel himselfe interpret the same God saith he hath numbred thy kingdome that is God hath appointed determined an ende of thy kingdome so that it must needs come to an ende because the time is accomplished c. Caluine vpon Daniel fol. 89. ¶ This word Mene is doubled not onely to exaggerate the certaintie of the matter but also as some thinke the one to signifie the ende of the King the other the ende of the kingdome The Bible note ¶ This word Mene is twice written for the certaintie of the thing shewing that God had most surely counted Signifieng also that God hath appointed a tearme for all kingdomes and that a miserable ende shall come on all that raise themselues against him Geneua MEN PLEASERS Who they be that please men DOe I now perswade men or God Either doe I séeke to please men ¶ Paule purgeth himselfe from the slaunders of those his enimies that said he sought the peoples fauour by his flattering tongue to the intent he might brag of the multitude of his scholars and so to be praised of men Men in Scripture is taken for sinners These please men that please the wicked wherefore let vs please the godly displease the wicked These please men that teach mens traditions D. H. What it is to be men seruaunts or seruaunts of men Be not men seruaunts ¶ To be men seruaunts or the seruaunts of men héere is to doe anye thing for the fauour of men by which they fall from the fauour of God while they dispising Christ doe hang on men more regard mens precepts and ordinaunces then the institutions of God yea then God himselfe This forbiddeth S. Paule héere and not to deny to be seruaunts vnto our Maisters to whom we be bound according to the common order appointed in Common-wealths to these we are straightlye commaunded in sundry places of the Scripture to be with loue and diligence in all things agréeable to Gods holy word Tindale Men of diuers natures and properties Seneca writeth of one Senesius that he would haue all things that were necessary for seruice excessiue great wherevpon hée was called Senesius the great Plinie writeth of one Crassus that he was neuer perceiued to laugh at any time Socrates was neuer séene either more pensiue either more merry at one time then at another Pomponeus the Poet neuer niesed Antonius was neuer séene spet Theophrast writeth that Peninus liued onely by water Aristotle writeth of a girle being noursed with poyson in hir infancie liued afterward with the same as we doe with meate Albert witnesseth that at Collen in Almayne hée sawe a young woman which from hir youth vsed to picke spiders out the walls where she might sée them and liued with that kinde of meate all hir life time S. Austen in his 4. booke of the Citie of God doth write of a certaine man which he sawe in his time that would shake his eares as an horse doth sometimes one eare sometimes another and sometimes both together though Aristotle be of that opinion that man onely of all other beastes cannot moue his eares Saint Austen saith farther that the same partie without moouing his head or putting too his hande would raise vp all the haires of his head and cast them before his face and likewise cast them behinde againe Plinie in his 7. booke and also Solinus saith that in Aphrike was a Famuly which looking with an euil eye vpon any mans Medowe or vpon the trées would incontinent make them drie and wither away Plinie affirmeth also that in his time nigh vnto Rome ther was a Famuly that would go vpon a great fire not be touched therewith Also he writeth of another Famuly called Marci or Martias that would heale the sting or biting of serpents with onely putting their hands vpon them Swetonus saith that Tiberius béeing sodainly awaked in the night would for a good season sée as well as though there had bene a candell burning by him and after a while sée nothing Curtius writing of Alexander saith that his sweate that came from him rendred a most swéete sent and odor and many other Authors affirme the same MERCES As concerning this Latine word Merces ¶ Looke Reward MERCIE What mercie is and how it
of God● whom hée defended and auoided as Socrates saith in this clause The mother or bearing God as a bugge or fraieng Ghost yet he proceeded in spite and being called to the counsell of Ephesus hée denied that Christ was God and séeing that there rose greate sturre thereof hée séemed to repent but the Councell deposed and banished him into Oasis GOD winking not at his impietie but plagued diuersly him frō aboue his tongue was eaten vp of wormes and so he died Socra li. 7. chap. 22. 23. 29. Euag. li. 1. chap. 2. 3. 7. NEVV What it is to be new THat is knowne to be new which neither euer was before nor hath bene yet séene or heard of but now beginning and commeth to light first And therfore Salomon saith that ther is nothing vnder the Sunne that is new nor that it can be sayde loe that is new for that it hath gone and ben before in times past Indéede a thing seemeth to bée new when it hath bene in times past and is now corrupted and perished either by time abuse or negligence of men by restoring againe is renued not that it beginneth now first to bée but rather to be the same which it was before And in v●rie déede it is nothing lesse then new For it is one thing to make a thing new and to renue a thing which was made long agoe They be sayde to make new things which doe in●titute new things before vnused and vnknowne and they are sayde to renewe which doe restore things decaied vnto their olde estate and vse So the lawe was new which was giuen by Moses to be kept of the Israelites when it was first set forth in the mount Sina And the Gospell of Christ was new when it was first declared in the worlde by the Apostles But the lawe was now new when by the care of godly kinges it was restored and renued after that it hadde bene once corrupt The histories of the kings Asa Hezechias and of Iosias bée well knowne Neither was the doctrine of the Prophets new when they did rebuke the corruptnesse of the lawish religion and requireth the right and true obseruation of Gods lawe although it séemed neuer so new and straunge Muse. fo 361. By whose fault the doctrine of Christ seemeth now new to the Papists What time as the booke of the lawe was found in the dayes of king Iosias in the secret corner of the temple and was exhibited vnto the king himselfe it might haue séemed some newe thing vnto them which had liued a great while without lawe where ind●ed nothing ought to haue béen more vsed or knowne to the people but through whose fault was it Was it not the fault of their a 〈…〉 itors which woulde no longer heare the wordes of that booke I meane the kinges and Priests which leauing the sermons of the lawe followed the ceremonies of the Gentiles Compare héere with all those things which are betided vs. Hath not the holy Bible bene hidden and cast into corners these many ages v●knowne to the multitude of the vnfaithfull yea too many of the pastors also in this our age what time it is translated into all languages well néere set foorth commonly to be read is it anye otherwise taken of y● superstitious Papists then if there were some new vnknowne doctrine thrust into the Churches You might haue foūd in times past in the Poperie a number of Massing Priests pastours which had neuer as much as seene y● holy Bible came not this through fault of our aunce●ors would God the heads Princes of christen people would knowledge it say with Iosias Go aske counsell of the Lord for vs and for our people for the Lords anger is greate ouer vs because our Fathers hearde not the wordes of this booke and that they woulde not onely acknowledge their fault but also with a godly holy endeuour renue and set vp againe the decaied religion according vnto y● Lords word and in so doing they shuld turne away the Lords wrath from themselues and from their people c. Muse. fo 362. A declaration of the olde and new Testament New Testament is as much to say as a new couenant The olde Testament is an olde temporall couenaunt made betwéene God and the carnall children of Abraham Isaac and Iacob otherwise called Israel vpon the déedes and obseruing of a temporall lawe where the rewarde of kéeping is temporall life and prosperitie in the land of Canaan and the breaking is reward with temporall death and punishment But the newe testament is an euerlasting couenaunt made vnto the chrildren of God through faith in Christ vpon the seruing of Christ. Where eternall lyfe is promised to all that beléeue and death to all that are vnbeléeuing My déeds if I kéepe the lawe are rewarded with the temporall promises of this life But I beleeue in Christ Christs déeds hath purchased for me the eternal promise of euerlasting life If I commit nothing worthy of death I deserue for my reward that no man kil me● If I hurt no mā I am worthy that no man hurt me If I helpe my neighbour I am worthy he helpe me againe So that with outwarde works with which I serue other men I deserue that other mē doe like to me in this world and they extend no farther But Christs déeds extend to life euerlasting vnto all that beléeue c. Tindal in his Pro. to the new Test. How they called Christs doctrine new doctrine What new doctrine is this ¶ They blasphemed which did call the doctrine a new doctrine for Christ did onelye by himselfe speake those things which before he had spoken by the Prophets Sir I. Cheeke ¶ It was then n●w and now after fiftéene hundred and seauen and thirtie yeares is yet new when will it then bée olde Tindale ¶ They referre the miracle to the kinde of doctrine and so meruaile at it as a new and straunge thing and doe not consider the power of Christ who is the authour of the one and the other Geneua NICHOLAS Of the heresie that sprang vp by the occasion of this man NIcholas one of the seauen deacons is by S. Iohn abhorred Apoc. 2. 6. He was accused of gelousie ouer his wife to cléere himselfe of this crime he brought forth his wife and bid marry her who would This fact of his is excused by Eusebius His followers by occasion héereof doe practise their wandring lust without respect of wife or maide Euseb. Eccl. hist. li. 3. chap. 26. How this Nicholas the Deacon is excused When the Church was yet springing as Eusebius testifieth in his 3. booke of his history the. 26. chapter the Nicholaites did openly and manifestly commit fornication and layde the custome of their wicked crime to Nicholas the deacon although Clemens Bishop of Alexandria in Stromatis no excuse Nicholas for he saith that he neuer thought or taught any such thing But hauing a faire woman to
imputed vnto him the first Article All men were in the first man created without sinne all by the transgression of the same man haue lost the freedome of our nature from thence we tooke the manifolde corruption both of body and soule from thence ignoraunce and dulnesse hath ensued c. Ambr. in his 1. booke and 3 Chapter of the calling of the Gentiles In the lawe it is commaunded that for him that is borne a paire of Turtles or young Pigeons shoulde be offered of the which the one should be for a sinne Offering and the other for a burnt Offering For what sinne is this one Pigeon offered Could this new borne childe sinne Yea euen then he hath sin for the which he is commaunded to offer a sinne Offering from the which ther is no man cleane and though he be but one day olde Origen in his 5. booke and 6. chap. vpon the Rom. No man lyueth heere vpon earth without sinne Hiero. in his 29. Epistle There shall be no iudgment without mercie for because ther can no man liuing be found cleane without filthines no though he were but one day olde from his birth Basil. vpon the 32. Psalme No man is cleane from filthinesse no not an Infant of a daye olde hath a cleane life héere vpon earth Barnard in his second sermon vpon the first Sunday after the Epiphany OTH What an Oth is AN Oth is the calling or taking to witnesse of Gods name to confirme the truth of that we saye c. Bullinger fol. 132. An Oth is a way or meane whereby contreuersies are ended and promises perfourmed by the calling vpon the name of God For it is written in the Lawe If a man deliuer vnto his neighbour Oxe or Asse or Shéepe to pasture and it dye or be hurt or driuen away no man séeing it then shall an Oth of the Lord goe betweene them and he shall sweare whether he hath put any hand to the taking away of his neighbors goods or not And the owner of the goods shall receiue the Oth. And if he by the Oth that he hath taken saith that he hath put no hand to it then shall he not make it good c. And this must bée done before the Gods that is to saye before the Iudges and Magistrates ¶ An Oth is also a meane whereby promises are performed as in Gen. 21. where Abraham sware to Abimelch y● he wold neither hurt him nor his posteritie and performed it indéed How an Oth is lawfull Lawfull it is for the Magistrate when they put any man in office to take an Oth of him that he shall be true diligent and faithfull therein as Iacob for the commoditie and profit of his posteritie tooke an Oth of Laban the Idolater Lykewise Iudas Machabeus of the Romanes for the same purpose Also Princes may demaund an Oth of their Subiects Commons for the sauegard of their lands and people But they that sweare must haue these properties They béeing required of the Magistrate must sweare truly minding neither fraude or deceipt but witnesse onely the truth séeking no parcialitie but the truth not themselues but the glory of God the profite of of theyr neighbour and the Common wealth of GODS people How an Oth is damnable To sweare to doe euill as to slaye to rauish or to robbe is damnable without faile and to performe such an Oth or to doe those wickednesses indéede is a double damnation both to him that so sweareth and also to the Iudge that causeth him to sweare Such an Oth was the cursed Oth that King Herod made vnto the Daughter of Herodias his harlot for the heade of holy Iohn Baptist whome Christ calleth a wily Foxe for his craftie conueyaunce A colour was this Oth of his cruell Tyranny and a cloake to his most spitefull murder For through that meanes was Iohn done to death Neither was an Oth ordeined after the minde of Saint Austen to binde the perfourmaunce of man-slaughter robberie Idolatry or other sinnes Rather had Dauid breake his Oth then to fulfil it with bloudshedding Wheras Dauid did not by shedding of bloud performe his promise bound with an Oth therein his godlines was the greater Dauid sware rashly but vpon better and godly aduise he performed not the thing he had sworne By this and by like it is declared that many Othes are not to be obserued Now he that sweareth so doth sinne but in chaunging his Oth hée doth very well He that chaungeth not such an oth committeth a double sinne First for swearing as he ought not and then for doing that he should not Bullinger fol. 134. How wicked Othes vowes are to be broken Othes are to be obserued when their ende is not euill nor to the hinderaunce of soules health In which promises sayth Isidore let faithfulnesse haue place In filthie vowes chaunge thy decréed purpose Doe not the thing in effect that thou hast without consideration sworne vnto for the promise is euermore wicked that cannot be done without sinne Therefore if the Iudges or Rulers should inforce the inferiour subiect to sweare to the things that were against soules health or Gods honour as to worship an Idol or to an Innocents vndoing they ought rather to dye then to obey as did Eleazarus with the seauen faithful bretheren and their mother in the Machabees for much better it is saith Saint Peter in such a cause to obey God then man Of Herodes wicked Oth. Neuerthelesse for his Oth sake c. ¶ Better it is otherwhises to forswere himselfe then to do any vngodly thing This déede of Herod can in no wise be excused for if she had asked his owne head or hir mothers head he would not haue graunted hir Sir I. Cheeke How Othes first began When the Lawe of naturall loue which God had inwardly written in the hearts of men remained among the good fathers Adam Seth Enoch Noe Abraham Moses other godly men then was no swearing but euery man did vnto his neighbour as he would his neighbour should doe vnto him But when the wicked as Cain the filthie Giaunts Nymroth Cham and such lyke beganne to increase in the lande they contrariwise for want of that rule fell into all manner of abhominable sinnes so that daylye more and more great mischiefes increased And as Ose the Prophette complaineth there was no faithfulnesse no brotherly loue no truth among men but bitternesse lieng manslaughter thefte and adulterie hath gotten the ouer hand In their dayly occupieng was much falshood vsed and that was thought well wonne good that was gotten by deceipt Uery seldome in their bargaining were promises perfourmed more seldome a great deale was faithfull honestie regarded In processe of time therfore were very few or none beleeued vnlesse they tooke God to witnesse that the matter was true Wherepon first of all came vp the swearing of Othes among men to confirme their sayeng with ¶ Looke Swearing
foorth the truth Ridley Teaching you vaine speculations as worshipping of Angells of blinde ceremonies and beggerlye traditions for nowe they haue no vse séeing that Christ is come Geneua PHISICKE By whom it was first inuented AESculapius the sonne of Apollo was the first inuenter and practiser of Phisick who for that science the antiquitie honoured as a God And such as recouered from anye disease did sacrifice vnto Aesculapius a liue Cock But the Poets do fable that he was slaine with lightening of Iupiter because he had with cunning of Phisick restored Hippolitus the sonne of Theseus to lyfe Vdal Of the woman that had spent all her goods in Phisicke Had suffered many things of many Phisitions and had spent al that she had ¶ Heere the woman is not blamed because shée had spent and bestowed much substaunce vpon Phisitions but rather we doe learne that Phisicke ministred without God is vnprofitable Let vs not then despise Phisicke which the highest did create from the earth but let vs resigne put our whole wil into the hands of God whether he wil heale vs by phisick or bring vs to our graue Sir I. Cheeke How God must be sought before the Phisition He sought not the Lord but Phisitions ¶ He sheweth that it is in vain to séeke to phisitions except first we séeke to God to purge our sinnes which are the chiefe cause of all our diseases and after vse the helpe of the Phisition as a meane by whom God worketh Geneua PHOTINVS Of his heresie PHotinus Bishoppe of Sirmium mainteined the heresie of Sabellius Paulus Samosatenus that Christ was not God before Marie bare him He said the worde was at the beginning with the Father but not the Sonne Socrates li. 2. cap. 24. Epiphan heraes 71. PIETIE What Pietie is PIetie is a true worshipping of God a soundnesse of doctrine and a pure ly●e which things follow hope and fayth Pet. Mar. vpon Iudic. fol. 279. Lactantius calleth it iustice and deuout worshipping and knowledge of God godlinesse godly affection naturall loue towards the parents and kinsfolke naturalnesse naturall zeale or affection PILATE Of the Acts and death of this man THis man being ordeined President of Iudea at his first entrie to flatter Tiberius caused the Image of Caesar to be brought into the Temple of Hierusalem whereby rose a great sedition forsomuch as the Iewes being therewith grieuously offended offred themselues rather to the death thē they wold suffer any Image in y● temple Pilate in like manner vsed the treasure called Corbona contrarie to the custome and lawe of the Iewes and because diuerse of the Iewes shewed themselues to be gréeued therewith he beate and slew a great number of them And after the death of Christ as witnesseth Tertulian Pilate wrote to Tiberius the Emperour of the death vertue and miracles of Christ who after he had published the same in the Senate would haue had Christ to be ascribed and numbred among the Gods of the Romanes but the Senatours woulde not consent thereto in anye wise because that Pilate wrote to the Emperour and not to them But Tiberius continued in his sentence defēded on pain of death that no man should persecute the christen people Pilate at the last was commanded by Vitellius prouost of Surrey to goe to Rome there to aunswere to certeine complaints which should be layde to his charge by the Iewes for which accusations hée was after deposed and banished to Lions in Fraunce where as Eusebius saith he slew himselfe ¶ Of Pilate Iosephus writeth hée succéeded Valerius Graccus vnder Tiberius and was deputie of Iudea ten yeares About the eight yeare of his gouernment he crucified Christ. And two yeares after that being expired he was put out of his office by Vitellius deputie of Siria for the innocent Samaritanes that were slaine an other béeing put in his place and he constrained to go to Rome to purge himselfe in the iudgement of Caesar against the accusation of the Samaritanes But before he came to Rome Tiberius was dead and Gaius appointed in his roome Under this Gaius as Eusebius maketh mention in his ecclesticall historie Pilate slew himselfe Marl. vpon Math. fol. 685. Of Pilates wife His wyfe sent to him sayeng Haue thou nothing to doe with this iust man for I haue suffered manye thinges this daie in my sléepe because of him ¶ Onely Mathew maketh mention of this thing concerning the wife of Pilate which was done when Pilate was sitting downe on his Tribunall seate to giue iudgement of death against the Lorde Haue nothing to doe with that iust man As touching the Gréeke text it is sayde Thou hast nothing to doe with that iust man But the Hebrew text hath Haue thou nothing to doe with that iust man Beholde and note héere how the innocency of Christ deserued testimonie of euery one namely of Iudas of Pilate of Pilates wife of Anna of the false witnesse of the wise men of the Cananites of the Samaritanes of the Centurion and lastlye of the theese hanging on the Crosse. For I haue suffered manie thinges although the meditation and studie in the daye time might be occasion of this dreame yet notwithstanding it is without al doubt that the wife of Pilate suffered those torments not naturally as many doe at this daie oftentimes but rather by singular instinct and motion of God Many haue thought that the Diuell suborned this woman and craftely couloured the matter in her that hée might staye the redemption of mankinde the which is verye vnlikely in all pointes when as by the motion prouocation of the Diuell the chiefe Priests and Scribes did so greatly séeke and desire to destroye Christ. Therefore we must this rather thinke of it that the innocencie of Christ was proued by manye meanes of God the Father to the end that it might appeare that he died not for his owne but for others sakes And for that cause he thought good to be absolued so oftentimes by the mouth of Pilate before hée was condempned that in his innocent dampnation there might appeare a lawfull satisfaction for our sinnes But Mathew very expresly and plainely setteth forth the matter least any man shoulde meruayle why Pilate was so carefull and diligent to defend and contende in the tumult of the people for the lyfe of a contemned man And truely God constrained him by the terrour of the dreame which his wife suffered to defend the innocencie of his sonne not that he might deliuer him from death but onely to declare that he was punished for other mens faultes c. Mar. fol. 702. Why the priests deliuered Iesus to Pilate And deliuered him to Pilate ¶ It was not lawfull for them to put anye man to death For all causes of lyfe and death were taken awaye from them first by Herode the great and afterward by the Romanes about fortie yeares before the destruction of the temple and therefore they deliuered Iesus to Pilate Theo.
How can a man be borne in his age Againe How can those things be done Of vaine questions The Serpent moued this vaine question why hath God forbidden you to eate of the Trée of knowledge of good and euill The Apostles asked this vaine question Lord when wilt thou restore the kingdome of Israel whom Christ controlleth It is not yours to know times or the moment of times Peter asked this vaine question of his fellow Iohn Lorde what shall this Iohn doe The Saduces moued this vaine question Lord if a woman haue 7. husbands who shall be her husband in the latter day This man moued a question why men and Angels were not made both of one mattere This man asked this question whether God be alone or hath mo Gods with him This man moued a question whether the Church can be in any other place then in Africke This man asked a question whether the virgin Mary were corrupted in bringing forth her sonne This man moued this question whether that when a man is purged with Baptime an hog goe forth at his mouth or no This man asked this question whether the word were changed into bones flesh or haire or no This man moued a question whether the holy Ghost doe wéepe in men as he doth speake in men This man moued this question whether the world be made of the diuell because it is an euill world This man moued this question whether the holy Ghost may be commaunded by the Sonne This man moued this question whether a man may professe both Iudisme and Christianisme This man moued this question whether that by frée will a man may catch the kingdome of heauen This man moued this question whether the honour of Christs diuinitie were giuen him of duetie or no This man asked a question whether a sinner ought to be baptised Because it is sayd the oyle of a sinner shall not fasten thine hand This man asked this question whether a mans soule deserued to sinne before it did sinne c. Of foolish questions of Schoolemen Whether there were any instant in the generation of God the second person Whether in Christ there be mo ●aluations then one Whether God the Father hath the Sonne Whether Christ might possible haue taken vppon him the likenesse of an Asse of a woman of a féend or of a Goord How that Goord should haue preached done miracles or haue hanged vpon the Crosse. And what Peter should haue con●ecrated if he had consecrated what time Christs body hang vpon the crosse Or whether Christ being so transformed into a Goord he might at the same time be called man also Whether after the resurrection men doe eate and drinke or no Whether it be lesse sinne to slaye a thousand men then once on the Sabboth or Sunday to ●lout a poore mans shooe Whether mens soules be bred within them or come from without into them What yeare Christ will come vnto his iudgement Whether the Starre that did shine to the wise men at the birth of Christ were a Starre or an Angell Whether a Mouse canne eate Christes bodye or no And if shée doe eate it what daunger canne bee leuied vppon her head These and such like bée fonde and foolish questions Rabbi What this word Rabbi doth signifie AND to bée called Rabbi ¶ This word Rab signifieth one that is aboue his fellowes and is as good as a number of them And we may sée by the repeating of it how proude a title it was Now they were called Rabbi which by laieng on of handes were vttered and declared to the world to be wise men Theo. Beza ¶ Christ forbiddeth not to giue iust honour to magistrates maisters but condempneth ambition and superioritie ouer our brothers fayth which office apperteineth vnto Christ. Geneua ¶ The chiefe purpose of Christ in this place is to teach vs not so to depend vpon men as though it were not lawfull to breake their decrees or to decline from their authoritie for there is one onely Father Lorde Maister to whome wée are so bounde that by no meanes we may decline at any time from his precepts D. Whitegift They sayde vnto him Rabbi ¶ The name of Rabbi was common to great men and such as were of honour and great calling But héere the Euangelist sheweth an other vse of this worde in his time namely that Doctours and interpreters of the worde of God were saluted with this name although therefore as yet they knewe not Christ to be the onely maister of his Church yet notwithstanding they béeing moued with the title that Iohn gaue vnto him they do count him as a Prophet and a teacher which is the first steppe to aptnesse to be taught Marl. vpon Iohn fol. 34. RACHA What the word Racha doth signifie RAcha is a reprochfull worde of Hebrewe and signifieth Thistles or Brambles Finallye it is a rebukefull worde signifieng the extremitie of the person that speaketh it ¶ It signifieth in the Sirians tongue an idle braine and is spoken in contempt Geneua ¶ Chrisostome sayth that it is a worde of the Sirians speach by which is shewed that the minde is moued to anger But vnder this worde foole doth Saint Austen and Chrisostome vnderstand all manner of iniury opprobrious spitefull wordes Tindale ¶ This worde Racha in English signifieth ill or affliction Christ meaneth there that he onely is not a murtherer that by hand killeth his brother but also hee that curseth or desireth euill to his neighbour as those doe that bid the Pestilence the Feuer quartaine Saint Antonies euill or such other execrations and should be punished as heretikes and blasphemers of God as ye may read Leuit. 20. 9. Gen. 27. 29. 1. Cor. 5. 5. Such euill sayers hath no part in the kingdome of God He that calleth his brother foole that is to say contemne him mocking or as men call it now a daies flowting or lowting committeth such murther as is worthy hell fire and eternall dampnation the which vice is reprehended Psal. 56. And was so abhorred of the Gentiles that manye would rather suffer death then susteine the slaunder of a pestilent tongue C ham that cursed his Father Gen. 9. The Philistines that counted Sampson for a foole Iudic. 16. Michol that lowted Dauid her husband 2. Reg. 6. The Ammonites the contemned Dauids ambassadours 1. Reg. 10. The Boies that mocked Elizeus the Prophet God punished the same with death more cruell then the magistrates doe punish murtherers Whooper RACHEL The opening of this place following RAchel wéeping for her children c. ¶ To declare the greatnesse of Gods mercie in deliuering the Iewes he sheweth them that they were lyke to the Beniamites or Israelites that is vtterly destroied and carried awaye insomuch that if Rachel the mother of Beniamin coulde haue risen
that his body was slaine and his bloud shed for thy sins beléeuest it so art thou saued iustified therby if not so helpeth it thée not though thou herest a thousand Masses in a day or though thou dost nothing els al thy life long then eat his body drink his bloud no more then it shuld help thée in a dead thirst to behold a bush at a Tauerne dore if thou knewest not therby the ther wer wine wtin to be solde Tin This word sacrament did not signifie the same with the olde Writers as it doth now in the Church for they call a sacrament the oth or religious bond which was of the strength of an oth So they called y● souldiers oth wherby they sware when they shuld go a warfare for the Common wealth that they would serue faithfully The souldiers sacrament as we may perceiue by Seruius and Vigetius in their bookes of warre matters Augustine defineth a sacrament in this sort The visible sacrifice saith he is the sacrament of the inuisible sacrifice that is to say the holy signe And againe A sacrament saith he is a visible forme of an inuisible grace c. Musc. fol. 272. S. Austen describeth a sacrament thus The word of God comming to the Element maketh the sacrament And againe in another place he saith A sacrament is a thing wherin the power of God vnder the forme of visible things doth worke secret saluation And the Master of the sentences doeth describe a sacrament none otherwise A Sacrament saith he is an inuisible grace and hath a visible forme and by this inuisible grace saith he I meane remission of sinnes In the b. of Mar. fo 1352. What the Sacrament doth signifie The signification and substaunce of the Sacrament is to shewe how we are fed with the body of Christ that is that like as materiall bread feedeth the body so the body of Christ nailed vpon the Crosse embraced and eaten by faith féedeth the soule The like representation is also made in the Sacrament of Baptime that as our bodies is washed cleane with water so is our soules cleane with Christs bloud How the sacrament is called the body of Christ. It is called the body of Christ that is to say it signifieth the body of Christ. Glosa de consecra dist 2. Hoc est The right consecrating of the sacrament The same Christ that did adorne and beautifie the Table is now present and he doth consecrate the same also For it is not men that doth make these things that be set before vs of the consecration of y● Lords table to be y● body bloud of Christ but the same Christ which was crucified for vs. The words are pronounced by the mouth of the Priest but the things are consecrated by the power grace of God This is saith he my body by this word are the things y● are set before vs consecrated And euen as y● voice which saith grow be multiplied replenish y● earth was but once spoken but yet doth at all times by the work of nature féele effect to generation so that voice also was but once spoken yet it giueth sure staye to the sacrifice throughout al y● tables of the Church euen to this daye from henceforth til his comming ¶ Chrisostome doth héere compare y● words y● Christ spake at y● insitution of his supper to the words y● God spake when he appointed man to be multiplied by generation affirmeth y● the same power y● worketh stil in the one doth stil work in the other also Not to charm out the substance of bread● to charme in y● substance of Christ vnder the accidēts of bread as you do teach meaning Watson But y● as by naturall order y● generation of mankind is continued according to the first voice so the inuisible graces y● wer promised by the death bloudshedding of our Sauiour Christ are by y● sacramentall vse of these creatures according to his commaundement continually preached to our senses and by ●aith receiued into our soules Crowley How the sacrament is a memoriall or signe of Christs death If Iesus haue not dyed whose memoriall and signe is this Sacrifice Thou seest what diligence he gaue that we shuld continually keepe in memory that he dyed for vs c. ¶ Héere Chrisostome calleth the Sacrament a memoriall or signe of Christ and that it was instituted to kéepe his death in perpetuall remembraunce And where he calleth it a Sacrifice he meaneth it to be a remembraunce of that holy sacrifice that Christ made vpon the C●osse once for all for he can be sacrificed no more seeing he is immortall I. Frith How the sacrament is receiued with our mouth Rabanus Maurus saith The sacrament is receiued with the mouth of our body but the body of Christ is receiued into the inner man and that with the spirituall mouth of our soule How the sacrament is more then bare bread or wine Our Bread and Cup be not of the common sort as in stéede of Christ bound togethers in eares of corne and twigs as they that is the Maniches do foolishly imagine but by vndoubted consecration it is made vnto vs mystical or sacramental bread it doth not growe such wherefore that foode that is not so made although it be bread and wine it is a nourishment of refection but not a sacrament of religion otherwise then that we blesse and giue thankes to God in all his gifts not onely spirituall but corporall also How the sacrament is made of two natures Ireneus saith that the Sacrament is made of two natures of an heauenly nature of a terrenall earthly nature now take away the substaunce of bread what earthly nature or substaunce remaineth in this holy Sacrament How sacraments are no cause of grace In Sacraments the onely promise of God by Christ both by word and signe are exhibited vnto vs which promises if we apprehende by faith then is the grace increased in vs and the gifte of God by faith receiued is by the Sacrament ●ealed in vs. What ought to be considered in sacraments S. Augustine saith in Sacraments we must consider not they be indéede but what they signifie All misteries or sacraments must be considered with inward eyes that is to say spiritually How the sacraments are holie whether the minister or receiuer be good or bad S. Augustin in this place against the Donatists shooteth not at this But whether Christs verye naturall bodie be receiued with our mouths but whether the Sacraments in generall bee receiued both of good and bad And he declareth that it is all one water whether Symon Peter or Symon Magus be christened in it all one Table of the Lord and one Cup whether Peter sup thereat or Iudas all one Oyle whether Dauid or Saule were annoynted therewith Wherefore he concludeth thus Memento ergo sacramentis Dei c. Remember
how God worketh in the outward visible sacrament but his meruailous worke is in the worthy receiuers of the sacraments The wonderful worke of God is not in the water which onely washeth the body but God by his omnipotent power worketh wonderfully in the receiuers therof scouring washing and making them cleane inwardly as it were new men and celestiall creatures This haue all olde Authors wondred at this wonder passeth the capacitie of all mens wits how damnation is turned into saluation and of the sonne of the Diuell condemned into hell is made the sonne of God an inheritour of heauen This wonderfull worke of God all men may meruaile and wonder at but no creature is able sufficiently to comprehend it And as this is wondred at in the sacrament of Baptime how he that was subiect to death receiueth lyfe by Christ and his holy spirite so is this wondred at in the sacrament of Christs holy Table how the same lyfe is continued and endured for euer by continual feeding of Christs flesh and his bloud And these wonderfull workes of God toward vs we be taught by Gods ho●y word and his sacraments of bread wine water and yet be not these wonderfull workes of God in the Sacraments but in vs. Cranmer fol. 74. How the sacrament may be poysoned Pope Victor the third was poysoned in the Sacrament The Emperour Henry the seuenth was poysoned by a Dominike Frier named Barnardmus de monte policiano in receiuing the sacrament and yet may it be none other substance but the body and bloud of our Sauiour Christ God and man where if he had bene man they had poysoned him first but if he hadde bene God he would first haue espyed their poyson because hée cannot be deceiued And because he cannot deceiue he would not haue poysoned the Emperour who mistrusted nothing A. G. How the Sacrament was cast into the fire and burnt This wicked Pope Heldibrand sought by all meanes how he might destroy Henry the Emperour and on a time demaunded of the Sacrament of Christs body as the Heathen vse to doe of their Idolls what successe he should haue against him And because the sacrament spake not gaue him no aunswere he threw it into the fire maugrie all the Eardinalls that were about him said to the sacrament most blasphemously Could the Idoll gods of y● Heathen giue thē answere of their successe and canst not thou tell me How there is but two sacraments ¶ Looke Two When the sacrament was forbidden to be ministred in both kinds The sacrament was forbidden to be giuen in both y● formes vnto lay men in the generall Councell at Constaunce which was in the yere of our Lord. 1415. The words of the Councell Although Christ after supper ordeined this worshipfull Sacrament and gaue it vnder both the formes of bread and wine to his Disciples yet that notwithstanding the authoritie of the holy Canous and the laudable and approued custome of the Church hath ord●ined that the lay men should not receiue it Sacraments of the Elders compared to ours Chrisostome bringeth a very apt similitude in his Homely which he made vpon these words of Paule Our Fathers were baptised into Moses And in his vii Homely vpon the Epistle to the Hebrues Paint●rs saith he when they intend to 〈…〉 a King first draw out the proportion vpon a table with shadows and darke colours but yet in such sort that a man may by that deliniation although it be some what obscure easely perceiue that the Image of a King is there painted and harsemen Chariots such other like things which things are not yet straight way known of all men But afterward when the Painter hath layed on fresh colours and hath finished the worke those things which before by those first lines appered scarce begon and rude are now manifestly and opresly perceiued Such saith he were the sacraments of the Elders if they be compared with ours By these words it is manifest that Chrisostome was of y● op●nion that one and the selfe same thing is represented in our sacraments and in the sacraments of Elders although in theirs more obscurely and in ours more manifestly Pet. Mar. vpon the Rom. fol. 82. SACRIFICE What a Sacrifice is A Sacrifice is a voluntary action wherein we worship God and offer vnto him somewhat wherby we testifie his chiefe dignitie and dominion and our seruitude and submission towardes him Pet. Mart. vpon the Roman●s fol. 411. Againe A sacrifice saith he is a voluntary and a religious action instituted of God to offer vnto him our things vnto his glory and that thereby we may with a straighter ●and be coupled vnto him in holy societie To this definition of sacrifices must be added a perticipation Certaine sacrifices are propiciatorie and other of thankes giuing By the first kinde God is made mercifull vnto vs by the power and iust merite thereof but of this sort we haue but onely one forasmuch as onely by the death of Christ the eternall Father is neconciled vnto vs and by the merites of this one onely Oblation the sinnes of the elect are forgiuen but in the other kinde of sacrifice wée giue thankes vnto God we celebrate his name to our power wée obey his will Pet Mar. vpon Iudic. fol 63. Of two manner of sacrifices The sacrifice of reconciliation or redemption is to delyuer sinners from the wrath of God which doeth onely pertaine to our Sauiour Iesus Christ whereof all the Leuiticall sacrifices were but shadowes signes The Sacrifice of praise or thanks giuing is all the workes of the faithful wherewith they praise and laud God and labour to be ioined with him c. S. Austen himselfe doth expound it August lib. 10. de ciuita Dei cap. 6. I. Veron One kinde of sacrifice there is which is called a propiciatory or mercifull sacrifice that is to say such a sacrifice as pacifieth Gods wrath and indignation and obtaineth mercie and forgiuenesse for all our sinnes and is the raunsome of our redemption from euerlasting damnation And although in y● olde Testament there were certaine sacrifices called by that name yet in very deede there is but one such sacrifice whereby our sinnes be pardoned and Gods mercie and fauour obtained which is the death of the Sonne of God our Lorde Iesus Christ nor neuer was any other sacrifice propiciatory at anye time nor neuer shall be This is the honour glory of this our high Priest wherein he admitteth neither partner nor successour For by his one obsation he satisfied his father for all mens sinnes and recon●iled mankinde vnto his grace and fauour And whosoeuer depriue him of this honour and goe about to take it to themselues they be very Antichrists and most arrogant 〈…〉 phemers against God and against his Sonne Iesus Christ whome hee hath sent Another sacrifice there is which doeth not reconcile v● vnto God but is made of them
kicke against the manifest and knowen truth and so to dye without repentaunce with a dispaire of the mercie of God in Iesus Christ is to sinne against the Holy ghost Sir I. Cheeke But whosoeuer c. ¶ That is he that striueth against the truth which he knoweth and against his owne conscience cannot retourne to repentaunce for he sinneth against the Holye ghost Geneua He resisteth the Holy ghost which openly repugneth against the veritie of God and by despite enforceth himselfe as much as he can to ouerthrow it Now a man may sinne willyngly yet be not in wil to warre against God or to blaspheme his holy word Caluine It is named the sinne of the Holy ghost not against the godhead of the Holy ghost for the same God is also father sonne nor against the person of the Holy ghost for it is no greater then the person of the Father and of the Sonne but it is to sinne against the graces of the spirite within vs and so to sinne against them that we contemne and despise them treade them vnder féete accompt them prophane● and maliciously cary them away to all wantonnesse This then is sinne against the Holy ghost In a continuall Apostacie and general falling from God to sinne against thine owne conscience so that thou despise the graces of God which he had giuen thée to the setting foorth of his praise and turne them to the contempt of his maiestie and glorie By the example of Satan and the Angels that fell from heauen by Ca● that flew his brother by the Scribes Pharesies against Christ and Iulianus the Emperour and that is written before it appeareth that the sinne of the Holy ghost is a generall Apostacie from God with wilfull malitious vnrepentaunt heart to persecute the truth vnto the ende As manie as doe feare at the remembrance of this sinne they are as farre from it as the East is from the West for this sinne is a mocking and scoffing of the Sonne of God it is not a wéeping and mourning Deering When couetousnesse findeth aduauntage in seruing falshood it riseth vp in an obstinate mallice against the truth and séeke●h all meanes to resist it this is sinne against the Holy ghost As by example Balaam the false prophet though he wi 〈…〉 that God loued Israel and had blessed them promised them great things and that he would fulfill his promise yet for couetousnesse and desire of honour fell into such mallice against the truth of God that he sought how to resist and to cursse the people Christ saith It shall neuer be forgiuen héere nor in y● world to come that is that as the sinne shall be punished with euerlasting damnation in the life to come euen so shal it not escape vengeaunce heere as thou séest in Iudas Pharao and in Balaam and in all other Tyrants which against their consciences resisted the open truth of God The cause why it shall not be forgiuen is for that the offender cannot repent but is vtterly shut out from repentaunce hath his heart hardened for if he were able to repent he shuld be pardoned because that by repentaunce and faith all things are washed away Wherefore the Holy ghost will rebuke the world of sinne Of sinne because they beléeue not in me ¶ Unbeléefe is that sinne that condemneth the world by the world vnderstand the wicked reproued and vnfaithfull and not all the creatures that be in the world and faith is the righteousnes of beléeuers This thing because the world and naturall reson will not know but will be iustified saued by their owne works is euen it wherof the Holy ghost shall rebuke the world and shew that it shall be iustly condemned Tindale Of sinne c. His enimies which contemned him and put him to death shall be conuict by their owne conscience for that they did not beleeue in him Act. 2. 27. And shall knowe that without Iesus Christ there is nothing but sinne Geneua How sinne is taken in this place following And by sinne condemned sinne in the flesh ¶ Sinne is héere taken for a sinne offering after the vse of the Hebrue tongue Tindale God through the sacrifice of sin which Christ his onely sonne offered vpon the Crosse in his flesh and abolished sinne which raigned in our mortal bodies The Bible note Of sinne vnto death how it is declared There is a sinne vnto death and for it I say not that thou shouldest pray ¶ Whatsoeuer sinne we sée in the world let vs pray and not dispaire for God is the God of mercie But for the sinne to death which is resisting grace fighting against mercie open blaspheming of the Holy ghost affirming y● Christs miracle● are done in Belzabub and his doctrine to be of the diuell I thinke no Christen man if he perceiue it can otherwise pray then as Paule prayed for Alexander the Coppersmith the 2. to Timothy the last that God would rewarde him according to his workes They that goe backe againe after they knowe the truth and giue themselues willingly to sinne for to follow it and persecute the doctrine of truth by profession to maintain falshood for their glory and vauntage are remediles as ye may sée Heb. 6. and 10. Balaam so sinned the false Prophets in the olde Testament so sinned the Pharesies so sinned Alexander so sinned and now many so sinne following their pride couetousnesse Tindale ¶ What this sinne vnto death is our Sauiour Christ doeth sufficiently declare saieng If ye will not beléeue ye shall dye in your owne sinnes So that this sinne vnto death is nothing els but a wilfull obstinate infidelitie this sinne no man that is borne of God doth commit though of frailenesse we be subiect to sinne as long as we liue Sir I. Cheeke If we sinne willingly after we haue receiued y● knowledge of the truth ¶ This is the sinne whereof is spoken Mat. 12. 31. that is the sinne of blasphemie against the Holy ghost which sinne Iohn calleth the sinne vnto death 1. Iohn 5. 16. ¶ They sinne willingly which of set purpose and mallice doth withhold the truth in vnrighteousnesse and lying which know that in all the world ther is no other Sacrifice for sinne but that onely Omnisufficient sacrifice of Christs death and yet they will not commit themselues vnto it but rather despise it and abide still obstinately in their wickednesse and sinnes vnto such remaineth a most horrible and dreadfull iudgement Sir I. Cheeke For it is not possible that they which were once lightened haue tasted ¶ This text denieth not impossibilitie of mercie in God but the impossibilitie of repentaunce in such men as mal●tiously forsake the truth blaspheme Christ take part against the Holy ghost For the truth is that with the Lord ther is mercie plenteous redemption Psa. 130. 7. So that whosoeuer calleth vpon his name shal be saued Ioel.
sit as God and to bée exalted aboue all that is called God For whoso contemneth the Decalogue of the table of the commaundements of God there is but a small punishment for him neither is that punishment to death but contrariwise he y● shal contemn or violate speaking to Frier Brusiard the constitutions which you cal the sanctions of men is coūted by all mens iudgmēts guiltie of death What is this but the high bishop of Rome to sit to raign in y● temple of God y● is in mans consciēce as God Bil. in the b. of M. 1140 What it is to sit on the right hand of God Sit thou on my right hand c. ¶ To sit on the right hand is to haue y● same glory of the godly maiestie the he hath to rule gouern as largly as he doth Ephe. 1. 20. whom he set on his right hand in heauenly things aboue all rule c. That is made him equall with himselfe and ruler ouer all things T. M. What it is to sit in the dust Thou shalt sit in the dust ¶ To sit in the dust is to bée brought low to be poorely araied decked to sit without pompe and to fall from hir estate and degrée As is said Ionas 3. 6. The Prophet héere describeth the destruction of Babylon vnder the figure of a proud Quéene which was deliciously and dainetely brought vp and after fell into extreame pouertie miserie and wretchednesse T. M. Why they sate not downe at the eating of Passeouer ¶ Looke Passeouer SIXE TROVBLES What it is to deliuer out of vi troubles HE shall deliuer thée in vi troubles ¶ We had néede to minde well this lesson that is to wit that God wil deliuer vs out of vi troubles as if it had ben said we must not trust in God onely for a daye or two or onely for one push but forasmuch as our lyfe is full of many miseries so y● we be not sooner crept out of one aduersitie but there commeth another fresh in the necke of it so we be tormented with miseries out of number Therefore insomuch as we haue a continuall battell and should be ouerthrowen incontinently if God were not at hand to helpe vs we must beléeue for a certaintie that he will not faile vs. Some expound this text more precisely as though it were said that God will deliuer vs from miseries all y● time of our life and in the ende make vs to passe out of all by taking vs out of this world For lyke as the world was made in vi daies so also mans life is willingly comprehended in that number then commeth rest whē God strippeth vs out of this mortall body for ye sée how he then maketh an ende of all our labours griefes and battells But let it suffice vs to hane the plain meaning of this text which is that although we be ●ossed with many miseries during this present lyfe God will continually make vs way out of them bring as to a good hauen Cal. vpon Iob. fol. 99. This sentence propounded after the manner of a Prophecie in the 5. chap. of Iob signifieth all one with that of Paul 1. Co● 10. 13. God is faithfull which shall not suffer you to be tempted aboue your strength but shall in the middes of the temptation make a waye to escape out Eliphas meaneth he hath verelye wrapt thée in many miseries but when the seuenth commeth when it shall seeme to him that the offence is sufficiently punished and that thou hast left thine impatiencie for that layeth he to Iob though vniustly then will he prosper thée with so great health that thou shalt after leade thy lyfe most ●ortunate T. M. ¶ Alluding the sixe troubles to the sixe daies of Gods first worke and the seuenth daye he rested meaning that of all thy cares and troubles God wil delyuer thee and bring thée to rest as in the seuenth day The Bible note ¶ He will send trouble vpon trouble that his children maye not for one time but cōtinually trust in him but they shal haue a comfortable issue euen in the greatest and the last which is héere called the seuenth Geneua What time of the daye the sixt houre was ¶ Looke Houre SLEEPE How sleepe is taken in Scripture THe maide is not dead but sleepeth ¶ Sleepe in the scripture is taken oftentimes to dye neither is it so saide of the good onely but also of the wicked It is said of Steuen when he had thus spoken he fell asleepe and of Lazarus Our friend Lazarus is asléepe but I goe that I may awake him Moreouer it is written Of the which some remaine as yet other some are asléepe Also of wicked Ieroboam it is said And he slept with his Fathers Both the wicked and the vngodly sléepe vnto the Lord and shall be raised of him but this is onely beleeued of the godly which know y● God is not the God of the dead but of the liuing that all things liue vnto him Héer vpon y● Christians with a singular faith calleth the place of the burial Coimete●iou which is in Latin Dormitoriū as much to say in English properly a sléeping place which commonly we now call a Sepulcher a Tombe or a graue But heere in this place Christ taketh it otherwise For Christ maketh a speciall difference betweene sleepe and death to the ende he might bring hope of life as if he should haue said She is not so dead that she sleepeth in death for ye shall see hi● arise by and by whome ye thinke to be dead● Marl. vpon Mat. fol. 191. Concerning them which are fallen asléepe ¶ To sléepe in this place is taken to dye because of the sure hope of the resurrection For we are not so sure to rise againe when we laye our selues downe to sléepe as we are sure by the word of God that our naturall bodies shall be raised againe and this sléepe ought onely to be applied to the body and not vnto the soule which is immortall S. I. Cheeke But while men slept ¶ This sléepe signifieth the negligence that men haue of God which connueth by the carefulnesse of riches and pleasures of this world Tindale Sléepe henceforth and take your rest ¶ This is an Ironie which is one thing spoken another ment And héere in hidding them sleepe he signifieth that it had bene more méete● for them to haue gone about other businesse then to fall a sléeping at this time Tindale ¶ He speaketh this in a contrary sense meaning they shuld anone be well wakened Geneua What Dauid ment by this sleepe That I sléepe not in death c. ¶ That is that I sléepe not the sléepe of death that I dye not and be ouercome of mi 〈…〉 enimies and therefore followeth it least mine enimies say they haue preuailed against me T. M. The meaning of this place following And many sléeping in the earth
shall be vp waked c. ¶ To dye is not els but after labour ● wearinesse of body to go to bed and sléepe and so to rise vp early more fresh and lustie by which vprising he describeth our resurrection By sleep is vnderstood the rest of our bodies in our graues for our soules sléep not but be receiued into the handes o● our Father in heauen blessed with Christ in the fruition of his pres●nce by the rising vp again in the morning is vnderstood y● resurrection of our dead bodies vnto life eternal our soules ioyned againe to them Melan. vp Da. ¶ Meaning all shall rise at the generall resurrection which thing he heere meaneth because the faithfull shoulde haue ●uer their respect to that for in the earth there shall be no sure comfort Geneua How God is said to sleepe God is said to sleepe when Christ laye dead in his graue whose death is called a swéete sléepe of ●eremie or els when he is slowe to helpe his elect out of trouble as in the Psa. 44. 23. Arise wherefore dost thou sléepe O Lord. SLIME What Slime was SLime was their mortar ¶ That slime was a fatnes y● issued out of the earth like vnto tarre thou maist call it Sement and if thou wilt In the 14. Chap. verse 10. ye shall read of Slime pits SMYRNA What Smyrna was ANd vnto Smyrna ¶ This was the famous Citie of all Ionia by the record of Plinie in his 5. Booke and 29. Chapter and of Strabo in his 14. Booke This word Smyrna soundeth as much as Myrrhe Marl. fol. 19. SNARE What the snare signifieth FRom the snare of the hunter ¶ The snare héere signifieth al naughtie doctrine whether it be taken of the Scripture euil expounded or of the euill inuentions of men As in the Psa. 69. 22. and 119. 110. T. M. That is Gods helpe is most redy for vs whether Satan assaile vs secretly which he calleth a snare or openly which is heere ment by the pestilence Geneua The meaning of this place following Let their Table be made a snare to take themselues withal ¶ That is let their opinion and doctrine be the cause of their stiffenesse and destruction as it is come to the Iewes Ro. 11. 9. The Hebrue Paraphrast saith thus Let such a dinner be sette before them wherevnto they may be so bound that they cannot escape The Scripture is a snare vnto the vngodly wherewith they be trapped although they be neuer so wel learned for only the spirituall perceiueth the meaning On the other side vnto the godly though they haue neuer so little learning it is the Riuer of the water of life Iohn 7. 38. T. M. ¶ The Iewes carry about in their hands the bookes of Moses and vnderstand them not they read the Prophecies denie that in thē is promised But where vnto maketh this some man will say They are blindfolded they are snared they be bowed downe and become deafe Eras. in his Paraphrase SNOVV Of the ingendring of snow WHen God couereth the whole earth with snow whence taketh he so great quantitie of waters Truly men will it is ingendered in the middle roomth of the ayer which is colde that when a great quantitie of vapours be drawen vp thether at length the same commeth together and fréeseth and thereof ingendereth the snow and if the same stuffe be more harder bound then is hayle ingendered because y● thing is become more fast and substantiall c. Cal. vpon Iob. fol. 704. Snow is a Cloud congeled by great cold before it be perfectly resolued frō vapors into water Snow is white not of the proper colour but by receiuing the light into it in so many smal parts as in fome or the white of an Egge beaten Snow is often vppon high Hills lyeth long there because their tops are colde as they be neare to the middle region of the ayer For oftentimes it rayneth in the valley when it snoweth on the Hills Snowe melting on the high hills and after frosen againe becommeth so hard that it is a stone and is called Christall Sléet is generated euen as Snow but of lesse colde or els beginneth to melte in the falling Snow causeth things growing to be fruitfull increase because the colde driueth heate into the rootes and so cherisheth the plants W. Fulee SOLD What it is to be sold vnder sinne BUt I am carnall sold vnder sinne ¶ Lyke as bond-men are violently thrust hurled turmoiled as it pleaseth their cruell master so are we through heapes of sinnes draw●n to many euill doings which we neither doe lyke nor allow The Bible note ¶ Read 3. Reg. 21. 20. of Achab. SONNE OF MAN What is ment by the Sonne of man BEcause he is the Sonne of man ¶ To be the Sonne of man according to the phrase of Scripture is nothing els then to be a very man euen as that he is said to be the Sonne of God is meant that he is very God The meaning of Christ is that he came foorth vnto men adorned with such power that hée might communicate and bestow that vpon them which he had receiued of his father And in that he is man he was ordeined by the Father to be the Authour of lyfe least we shoulde séeke him a farre off For Christ hath not receiued any thing wherof he himselfe stoode in néede but rather to make vs rich with his abundaunt treasure The summe and meaning is that in the man Christ the same is reueled vnto vs which was hidden in God and the life which men before could not attaine vnto is now at hand Also it is worthy to be noted y● when he might haue said because he is man he chose rather to saye because hée is the Sonne of man Let this serue our faith against those that teach that Christ tooke flesh not of the Uirgin Mary y● is to say of the séede of Abraham which the whole Scripture teacheth but that he brought the same with him from Heauen But Christ héere plainely calleth himselfe the Sonne of man not man onely Marl. vpon Iohn fol. 168. But the Sonne of man hath not whereon to rest his head ¶ Christ calleth himselfe the Sonne of man that is very natural man shewing in that his humilitie goodnesse which humbled himselfe to the death of the Crosse for our saluation Tindale Whosoeuer speaketh a word against the Sonne of man c. ¶ To speake a word against the Sonne of man is to be offenwith the humanitie or manhoode of Iesus Christ for his humble and lowe degrée as were manye of the Iewes Tindale Behold one lyke the Sonne of man came in the cloudes ¶ Which is ment of Christ who had not yet taken vpon him mans nature neither was the Sonne of Dauid according to the flesh as he was afterward but appeared then in a figure and that in the Cloudes that is being seperate from the common sort
that we haue by the same with all giftes and graces of the same The second is to yéelde thankes vnto him to giue testimonie of our faith towards him and of our charitie which we haue towards our bretheren and of the vnion with the Church The third to represent to vs by the bread and wine which are ther distributed the whole and perfect spiritual nouritour which we haue by the meanes of the body flesh and bloud of Iesus Christ to the end we may be spiritually nourished into eternall life according to our benefit which we haue already receiued by our regeneration whereof the Baptime is to vs as a Sacrament in the which we haue in the Supper as it were a gage of our resurrection the which we doe beléeue and waite for There euen as the bread and wine be giuen vnto vs visibly and bodely euen so are the body and bloud of Iesus giuen vnto vs indéede but inuisible and spiritually by the meanes of faith and by the vertue of the holy ghost for he is the meane by which we haue true communion and true vnion with Iesus Christ and all his Church the which is his body whereof all true Christians be members Pet. Viret Why the Supper of the Lord was called a Sacrifice The Supper of the Lord was not called a sacrifice because Christ shuld be offered in it but because he offereth presenteth himselfe vnto vs and that we doe through faith receiue him and giue him thankes for the great benefite that we haue receiued by the merites of his death and passion bloud shedding confessing and professing that we holde none other for our Sauiour but him and that we doe accept knowledge none other sacrifice but his onely for this cause was the Lordes Supper called Eucharistia which word doth signifie thankes giuing Thus doth S. Austen and all other Doctors of the Church expound it Veron in his b. of Purg. The Doctors mindes vpon the Supper of the Lord. If ye should sée the Sonne of man ascend vp where he was before ¶ What is this By that he resolueth those whom hée hath knowen of that he manifested the thing whereby they haue offended for they did thinke that he would giue vnto them his body but he saith that he will ascende vp into Heauen all whole saieng When ye shall sée the Sonne of man ascende where he was before at y● least you shall sée then that hée doth not giue his body in the same manner as ye thinke iudge at the least you shall then vnderstand that his grace is not consumed by morsells c. Aug. vpon S. Iohn in the 27. treatise vpon the 6. Chapter If faith be in vs Christ is in vs. For what other thing saith the Apostle Christ dwelling in your hearts by faith but that through the faith which thou hast of Christ Christ is in thy heart August in his 49. treatise vppon Saint Iohn 11. Chapter After he had ended the solemnitie of the auncient Passeouer the which he made in remembrance of the auncient deliuerance out of Aegypt he passeth forth to the new solemnitie y● which the church desireth to celebrate in remembrance of hir redemption to the end that putting the Sacrament of his flesh and of his bloud vnder the lykenesse of bread and wine in stéede of flesh and of the bloud he sheweth himself to be him vnto whom the Lord hath sworne and will not repent Thou art a Priest for euer c. It followeth after because the bread doeth fortifie the flesh and that the wine causeth the bloud in the flesh the bread is referred mystically to the body of Christ and the wine to his bloud Bede vpon the 22. Chapter of Saint Luke Let vs not staye héere belowe on the bread and wine which are set on the Lords Table but let vs lift vp our spirits on high through faith Let vs consider that the Lambe of God which taketh away the sinnes of the world is in that holy Table which is not offered in sacrifice by the Priestes after the manner of beasts And in taking his precious body and his bloud let vs beleeue that they are the signes and tokens of our resurrection And for the same cause we eate not much but a lyttle to the end we may know y● the same is not ordeined for to fill our bellyes withall but for to serue to sanctitie and holinesse c. ¶ Looke Bread Body Bloud Figure Signe Sacrament Sacrifice How the Lords death is Shewed in the supper As often as ye shall eate this bread and drinke of this Cup ye shall shew the Lords death c. ¶ The Lords death is not shewed except both parts of the Sacrament be ministred and because in his death the bloud was diuided from the body it is necessary that the same diuision be represented in the Supper otherwise the Supper is not a shewing of the Lords death Latimer The meaning of this place of Iohn And when the Supper was done There be some which thinke that it ought to be thus reade And Supper béeing prepared for it may be doubted whether these things were done after the supper or in supper time It is very likely that supper was not fully ended that is to say that the Table was not yet taken away séeing it followeth by and by that the Lord tooke a morsell of bread and offered the same to Iudas Marl. vppon Iohn fol. 456. SVPREMACIE Proues against the supremacie IN the Councel of Carthage it is said thus The Bishop of Rome himselfe may not be called vniuersall Bishop Dist. 99. Prima sedes S. Gregory saith thus Nullus decessorum meorum● c. None of my predecessors Bishope of Rome euer consented to vse this vngodly name no Bishop of Rome euer tooke vpon him this name of singularitie we the Bishops of Rome will not receiue this honor being offered vnto vs. Greg. li. 4. Epist. 32. and. 36. Where pride and hypocrisie beareth sway there humilitie can haue no place Hesychius sen. li. 4. dist 7. Chrisostome saith Quicunque desiderauerit c. Whosoeuer desi●eth Primatum in earth in heauen he shall finde confusion Neither shall he be counted among the seruants of Christ that will once intreate of Primacie Iewel fol. 118. 119. SVRE How we are sure of our saluation ¶ Looke Saluation SVRPLESSE From whence the wearing of Surplesses came NIcholaus Leonicenus saith Isidis Sacerdotes in Aegypto c. The Priests of the Goodesse Isis in Aegypt vsed to weare linnen Surplesses and euermore had their heads shauen which thing séemeth to haue bene deriued from them vnto our time from hand to hand For they that among vs minister Gods seruice and serue the holy Altars are forbidden to suffer the haire of their heads or their beards to grow and in their diuine seruice vse lynnen garments Nicholaus Leonicenus in varia historia li. 2. ca. 21.
in the sixt yeare of the same Darius So that from the second yeare of Cyrus vnto the. 6. yeare of Darius were 46. yeares wherein they were a building The meaning of this place following I will worship towards the holy Temple c. ¶ Both the temple and ceremoniall seruice at Christs comming wer abolished so that now God will be worshipped onely in spirit and truth Geneua Of them that trusted in the outward seruice of the Temple Trust not in lyeng words saieng The Temple of the Lord the Temple of the Lord c. ¶ Beleeue not the false Prophets which say that for the temples sake the sacrifice there the Lord will preserue you and so nourish you in your sinne and vaine confidence for in the next verse after God sheweth on what condition he made his promise to this temple y● they should be an holy people vnto him as he would be a faithfull God vnto them Geneua How Churches or Temples are not to be builded to Saints Saint Austen in his booke De imitat Dei sayth plainely we build no Temple vnto our Martirs And againe in his first booke against Maximinus a Bishop of the Arrians if we shuld saith he build a Church of timber stones vnto some excellent holy Angell shoulde we not be accursed by the truth of Christ and the Church of God Therefore if we should commit sacriledge in making a temple to euery creature whatsoeuer how may it be that God is not true vnto whome wée make no Temple but wée our selues are a Temple for him Bullinger fol. 1127. How the Pope doth sit in the temple of God as God Compare the commaundements of God with the constitutions of men and you shall easily vnderstand y● the Bishop of Rome whom they call the Pope to sit in the temple of God as God and to bée extolled aboue all that is named God It is written The Temple of the Lorde is holy which is you Therfore the conscience of man is the temple of the holy Ghost in which Temple I will proue the Pope to sit as God and to be exalted aboue all that is called God For who so contemneth the Decalogue or the Table of the ten commandements of God there is but a smal punishment for him neither is that punishment to death but contrariwise he that shall contemne or violate speaking to Frier Brusiard the constitutions which you call the sanctions of men is counted by all mens iudgements guiltie of death what is this but the Bishop of Rome to sit and to reigne in the Temple of God that is in mans conscience as God Bilney in the booke of Mar. fol. 1140. TEMPTATION What Temptation is TEmptation is nothing else but to take proofe or triall of any thing wherefore the end of temptation is rightly called knowledge And they which will passe ouer a water doe trie out the shallowe places to know the depth of the water wounds also are tried of Surgions to féele the déepenesse of them In tempting therefore knowledge is sought But God néedeth not that new and fresh knowledge for such is his nature that he knoweth all things most perfectly But when he tempteth he onely doth it to leade men to the knowledge of those things which they ought to knowe Wherefore when he sometime tempteth good and holymen hée bringeth into lyght and maketh open the fayth obedience● strength and godlynesse which before laye hidde in their heartes that they which sée the same things might glorifie God the authour of them And that they which are so tempted when they haue gotten the victorye may giue thankes and desire of him that euen as he hath done now so he woulde vouchsafe to helpe them continually in temptations Pet. Mar. vpon Iudic fol. 33. How temptation generally is not euill All temptations or tryall is not euill For God tempted his seruauntes One friende is tempted of an other The childe is tried by the Father the wife by her husband the seruaunt by his Maister not that they might bée hurt by tryall but rather that they might thereby bée profited The Diuell also tempteth wherevpon also hee is called a temptor in the Scripture Also enimies vse to tempt not to profite thereby but to hurt and destroye This kinde of temptation is wicked Therefore the Lorde hath exhorted vs to beware of those which tempt with an euill minde when hée willeth vs not onely to bee innocent as Doues but also wise as Serpents Marlo vpon Iohn fol. 283. The Israelites are rebuked of Moses for tempting the Lord. Wherefore do ye tempt the Lord. ¶ Why distrust you God Why looke ye not for succour of him without murmuring against God Geneua How God tempteth no man to euill God tempteth not vnto euill ¶ Almightye GOD hath euer tempted and proued his elect by trouble and persecution and by nur●uring them with outwarde plagues neuerthelesse he doth it not vnto euill but for good namelye because he loueth them and will haue their fayth exercised Thus tempted hée Abraham Genesis 22. ● and the Israelites Deut. 8. 2. As for temptation that we praye in our Pater noster to bee deliuered from it is the 〈…〉 and concupiscence of our flesh whereby we are entised vnto euill Tindale ¶ This worde to Tempt is taken two manner of wayes first it ●etokeneth to entice a man to euill after this sayeng we saye that God tempted no man For as GOD is of his owne nature good and can●e in no wise be entised to euill so doth hée moue or entice no man to sinne which he himselfe doth detest and abhorre Héere we learne that if we sinne we ought not to putte the fault in God but in our owne selues Secondly this worde to Tempt is taken for to proue As when wée saye God tempted Abraham Gen. 22. 1. And that hée did tempt the Israelites Deut. 8. 2. that is to saye did proue Abraham and tryed the Israelites whether they loued him or not Sir I. Cheeke Of the Pharesies and Saduces tempting of Christ. Then came the Pharesies and Saduces to tempt him ¶ To trye whether hée coulde doe that which they desired but their purpose was naught for they thought to finde some thing in him by that meanes wherevpon they might haue iust occasion to reprehende him Or distrust and curiositye moued them so to doe for by such meanes also is God sayde to bée tempted that is to saye prouoked to anger as though men would striue with him Beza ¶ Men tempt God either by their incrudelitie or curiositie Geneua How Christ is tempted of the Diuell To bée tempted of the Diuell ¶ To the ende hée ouercomming these temptations might gette the victorye for vs. Geneua Christ is by and by after Baptime tempted which thing we must looke for Yea the more wée shall encrease in fayth and vertuous liuing the more strongly will Satan assault vs. Sir I. Cheeke When the diuell had ended his temptations
How our sinnes shall not be thought vpon with God They shall not be thought vpon c. ¶ The sophisters haue a proper solution for this text such like which testifieth y● God so forgiueth that he will not after call again his forgiuenes punish True it is say they God forgiueth the sin but not the punishment due vnto sin Seauen yeares punishment as they praie must we abide in Purgatory for euery sin whō it is forgiuē If this be not to mocke with God his holy word I wot not what is mo●king If God can do as they affirme giue me punishment due vnto my sin so that he neither giue me too much nor too little paine therfore yet not once thinke on my sin surely he hath a wonde● fult remembraunce And that hée will not thinke on it the text doth héere plainely affirme By this sophistry might the king giue a man pardon for his theft and after ha●g him vp For he might say Sir I forgaue you your theft but not your hanging which is due vnto it Such pardon would they be lo●h●to haue that first imagined it If the king which is but a man be more faithfull then to deale so with prisoners whome he forgiueth how should God then which is our heauenly Father and which is euen goodnesse it selfe haue such a subtill and vnperfect forgiuenesse that shuld after punish But héereof will I now speake no more least yée should haply smell y● this solution were imagined to pick mens purses th●ough Masse pence Dirge grotes Trentals yearemindes month mindes c. Because that although God can and may forgiue the sin yet must such things obtein the forgiuenesse of the punishment thervnto or that the Priests benefits were not sufficient for them to liue on without such pillage Or yet that the poore people could by anye other meanes bee milked from that thing wherewith their wiues their householde and children should liue T. M. THIS IS MY BODY The interpetation of these words TRuth it is indéede that the wordes be as plaine as may b● spoken but that the sense is not so plaine it is manifest to euery man that wayeth substancially the circumstances of the place For when Christ gaue bread to his Disciples and sayd This is body ther is no man of any discretion that vnderstandeth the English tongue that he may well knowe by the order of the speach that Christ spake those words of the bread calling it his body As all the olde authors also do affirme although some of the Papists denie the same Wherefore this sentence cannot meane as the words séeme and purport but there must néeds be some figure or mysterie in the speach more then appeareth in y● plaine words For by this manner of speach plainly vnderstoode without any figure as the words do lye can bée gathered none other sense but that bread is Christs body and that Christs body is bread which all christian eares do abhor to heare Wherefore in these words must néeds be sought out an other sense and meaning than the words of themselues do beare ¶ Looke Bread how it is called Christs body Cranmer Druthmarius expoundeth these wordes This is my body on this manner that is to say this is my body in a mysterie I. Frith fol. 134. This is my body ¶ This is a figuratiue speach which is called M●tonymia y● is to say the putting of one name for another so calling the bread his body which is a signe Sacramēt of his body And yet notwithstanding it is so a figuratiue and chaunged kinde of speach that the faithfull doe receiue Christ indeede with all his gifts though by a spirituall manner become one in him Beza ¶ The thing which signifieth hath of custome ben called of the name of the thing which it signified as it is written the seuen eares are seuen yeares the scripture saith not y● they signifie seuē years And y● seuen kine are seuen yers many things In like manner S. Paule saith that the Rocke was Christ and not that it signified Christ but as it had bene him in very deed y● which notwithstanding was not Christ by substaunce but by figuration August vpon Leuiticus ¶ When God gaue the Circumcision to Abraham he made his counenaunt before the Circumcision and yet hée calleth the Circumcision his couenant or alliance saieng Hoc est pactum meum This is my couenaunt S. Paule expounding the same saieng Abraham hath receiued the signe of Circumcision as a seale of the righteousnesse of faith God saide to the Prophet Ezechiel Thou Sonne of man take a tyle stone and lay it before thée describe vpon it y● citie of Hierusalem After he saith This same is Hierusalem Denis in the ecclesiastical Hierarch THOMAS How Thomas and Didimus is one name THen said Thomas which is called Didimus ¶ In that he saith Thomas was called Didimus is not so to be vnderstood as though Thomas were his proper name and Didimus his sirname For the same which the Greekes call Didimus the Hebrues call Thomas Marl. vpon Iohn fol. 405. How he was reproued for his vnbeleefe Looke Happy Of his death and martirdome Thomas as it hath bene deliuered vnto vs saith Dorotheus preached the Gospell of our Sauiour Christ Iesus vnto the Parthians Medes and Persians He preached also vnto the Caramans Hircans Bactrians and Magitians He rested at Calamina a Citie in India béeing slaine with a Darte which they call a Speare or Iau●lin where he was also honouradly buryed Dorotheus fol. 532. THOVGHTS How euery thought is not sinne WE teach not that euery thought is sinne but euery euill thought that riseth in the heart of man and is not resisted but with delight followed although it be not accomplished in act the same is deadly and damnable if it be not repented Mat. 5. 28. 1. Iohn ● 8. But there 〈…〉 betwéene these thoughts which our will 〈…〉 ●and with loue imbraceth and these ●ogitations which after the man 〈…〉 of a darke shaddow are wont to passe ouer the minde and but euen only in passing ouer to shew themselues which the Greekes call Tulous y● is a bare or naked 〈…〉 or shadowing of any thing or at y● least betwéen those which came into the mind with a certain 〈…〉 resisteth For y● losse of y● which as it sorroweth so it reioy●eth y● they are driuen out In those truly which shew thē selues softly to the minde doe declare them as it were flieng away● the● is neither sinne at all nor yet battaile But in these with y● which for a spa●e the soule striueth against y● which the wil resisteth ther is an equal fight for either we cons●nt are ouercome or els we withstand doe ouercome and in battaile get the victory Some therefore are the children of the world yet are not the children of the diuell For albeit the diuell is the author chiefs worker of all
tresure which they cary is nothing worse nor inferiour Geneua TRIE OR PROVE How we ought to trie and proue mens doctrines THe Priests that were Pharisies saith Chrisostom in y● time of Christ made an ordinaunce that whosoeuer should knowledge Iesus to be Christ shuld be accursed and excommunicate If then the Pharisies or Priests y● now do occupie their roomes shuld make a like ordinance because they wold not haue Christs doctrine to be professed for hindering their lucre shuld we therfore giue in all points credence vnto them leaue off to séeke after the knowledge of Christs doctrine Nay truly why quod he shall we not be excused héerein by ignoraunce séeing we be for●ended by the rulers to haue knowledge He answereth no vely for if saith he when thou desirest to buye cloth thou wilt not be content to see one Merchaunts ware but goe from the first to the second from the second to the third so farther to know wher is y● best cloth best cheape thou vsing such carefull diligence for a temporall profit art well worthy great reproch that will be more remisse negligent for thy soule helth Séeke therfore about from one doctor or teacher vnto another that thou maist knowe who doeth most duely and truly teach Christ and him follow according to the saieng of the Apostle Proue all and hold the good And as it is said in the Gospell that thou maist know who be true lawfull chaungers or coyners who bée not Lamb. in the B. of Mar. fol. 1257. ¶ Looke Prouing TRIBVLATION There be two kindes of tribulation affliction THere be saith Gasper Megander two sorts of tribulation The one bréedeth of the griefe which y● fa●thfull conceiue of the scornings lewdnes blasphemies scoffings wherewith the vngodly mock at y● gospel promises of God of which matter looke Ga. 4. 29. Phi. 3. 18. 2. Pe. 3. 3. And also of y● pitie which they haue of those that be blinded whereof Paul speaketh Ro. 9. And this kinde of persecution may be called inward The other procéedeth of such things as are laid vpon them outwardly as of hunger imprisonment exile losse of goods sword and death This is the outward persecution wherewith Tyrants other enimies of the Church rage against the Children of God Howbeit the one can scarce hap without the other insomuch as this saieng of the Apostle is most true that all they which wil liue godly in Christ must suffer persecutiō 1. Ti. 3. 12. Ma. fo 38. I know thy workes and tribulation ¶ This was the persecution vnder the Emperour Domitian Geneua ¶ Looke Affliction TRIBVTE How tribute ought to be paid to earthly Princes IS it lawfull to giue tribute to Caesar or not ¶ The word that is vsed héere signifieth a valewing rating of mens substaunce according to the proportion whereof they payed tribute in those prouinces which were subiect to tribute and it is héere taken for the tribute it selfe Beza The Doctors mindes concerning tribute Origen saith In tempore ergo Christi c. In the time therfore of Christ when they were commaunded to giue tribute to the Romanes there was a thought counsell among y● Iewes V●rum deberent whether they ought that were Gods people and his portion to giue Princes tribute or rather take armes for their libertie except they wer suffered to liue as they lusted And the storie telleth that one Iudas a Galilean of whom Luke mentioneth in the Acts of the Apostles drawing away the multitude of the Iewes taught Non oportet they ought not to giue tribute to Caesar and call Caesar Lord But he that was at that time the Tetrach hastened to perswade the people and that they should regard the present state and not wilfully take armes against the stronger but be content to giue tribute And truly the word of this present gospel not indéed manifesteth yet it sheweth these things But he y● diligently considereth the sense of the present words shall finde this yea euen in this place For the Pharisies had not had occasion being willing to take Christ in speach sending their disciples with the Herodians to aske him whether it were lawfull to giue Caesar tribute or no if it had bene manifested among them that they ought not to giue it and that there had bene agréement of all their wills that they should not giue it Hilary of the question that was moued to Christ sayth Igitur an violaret c. Therefore they trye him whether on the condition of the question propounded he would violate the worldly power An videtur reddi tributum Caesari oportet whether tribute ought to be rendred to C●sar c. And● whē they sayd it was Caesars he sayd Caesari redenda esse c. The things that are Caesars ought to be rendered to Caesar. S. Ambrose sayth Et tu si vis c. And thou if thou wilt not be bound or thrall to Caesar haue thou not those thinges that are of the world But if thou hast the riches of the world thou art bound to Caesar. If thou wilt owe nothing to the earthly king forsake all things and followe Christ. And before discerne ye well what things ought to be rendred to Caesar. Saint Austen sayth Sed quia Manichei c. But because the Maniches vse openly to blaspheme Iohn let them heare euen the Lord Iesus Christ. Hoc stipendium iubentem reddi Caesari commaunting not permitting this stipent to be rendered vnto Caesar. And of these wordes of Saint Paule to the Romanes Omnis anima Let euery soule bée subiect vnto the higher powers Si quis ergo If therfore any body thinke that because he is a christian he ought not to render taxe or tribute or that honour ought not to bée giuen due to those powers that care for these things he falleth in great errour but that meane ought to be kept which God himselfe prescribeth that we should giue vnto Caesar the things that are Caesars and to God the things that were of God Arbitrati se c. Thinking they should smoth him with praises they flatter him that being milked he should say Non deberi tributum Tribute ought not to be giuen to Caesar and therevpon they might take him as a seditious man mouing the people against Caesar and therefore they bring the Herodians with them that were the kings men to apprehende him as a stirrer of new things Thou regardest not say they the person of any man thou speakest nothing to get the fauour of Herode and Pilate Tell vs therefore Debemus hominibus ought we to be both tributary to men and to giue them taxe as well as to giue taxe to God or shall we giue to God onely or else to Caesar This they spake as I said that he shuld say that tribute ought not to be giuen to Caesar. Thus we sée againe their question whether they ought or no. But Iesus by