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A17662 The institution of Christian religion, vvrytten in Latine by maister Ihon Caluin, and translated into Englysh according to the authors last edition. Seen and allowed according to the order appointed in the Quenes maiesties iniunctions; Institutio Christianae religionis. English Calvin, Jean, 1509-1564.; Norton, Thomas, 1532-1584. 1561 (1561) STC 4415; ESTC S107154 1,331,886 1,044

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it selfe coulde not stande vnlesse it were set contrary to reprobation God is said to seuer them whome he adopteth vnto saluation it should be more than foolishly said that other doo either by chaunce or by their owne endeuor obteyne that whiche onely election geueth to a few Therefore whom God passeth ouer he reiecteth and for none other cause but for that he will exclude them from the inheritance which he dothe predestinate to his children Neither is the waiwardnesse of the men tolerable if it suffre not it selfe to be bridled with the word of God where the incomprehensible counsell of God is entreated of whiche the Angels themselues do worship But we haue already heard that hardening is no lesse in the hand and will of God than mercie Neither dothe Paule as these men doo that I haue spokē of busily labor to excuse God with a lyeng defence but only he teacheth that it is not lawfull for the thing formed to quarell with him that formed it Nowe who so do not admitt that any are reiected of God how wil they vncombre themselues from that sayeng of Christe Euery tree which my father hath not planted shal be plucked vp by the roote They plainly heare that all they are adiudged auowed to destruction whom the heauenly Father hath not vouchsaued to plant as holy trees in his ground If they denie this to be a signe of reprobatiō then is there nothing so clere the it may be proued to thē But if they cesse not to wrāgle let the sobrietie of Faith be contented with this admonition of Paule that there is no cause to quarel with God if he willyng on the one syde to shewe his wrath and to make his power knowen doo with dumme sufferance and lenitie beare wyth the vessels of wrathe prepared to destruction and on the other side he make knowē the richesse of his glorie toward the vessels of mercye which he hath prepared to glorie Let the Reders marke how Paule to cutte of occasion from whisperinges and backbitinges geueth the chiefe rule to the wrath and power of God bicause it is vniust that those depe iudgementes which swallow vp all our senses should be made subiect to our determination Our aduersaries aunswer is very triflyng that God doth not vtterly reiect them whome he suffreth in lenitie but abideth with a mynde hanging in suspence towarde them if peraduenture they may repente As thoughe Paule geueth to God a patience to loke for their turning whome he sayeth to be made to destruction For Augustine sayth rightly where he expoundeth this place where power is ioyned to sufferāce God doth not suffer but gouerne with his power They further say also that it is not for nothing said that the vessels of wrath are prepared to destruction but that God hathe prepared the vessels of mercie bicause by this meane he ascribeth and chalengeth the prayse of saluation to God but the blame of destruction he casteth vpon them which by their owne will doo bring it vpon themselues But although I graunt to them that Paul by the diuerse maner of speaking didde soften the rowghnesse of the first part of the sentence yet it is not mete to assigne the preparing vnto destruction to any other thing than to the secret counsel of God which also is affirmed a little before in the rest of the texte That God stirred vp Pharao Then that he hardneth whome he will Wherupō foloweth that the hidden coūsel of god is the cause of hardning This at the lest I get which Augustine saith that whē God of wolues maketh shepe he doth with a mightier grace reforme thē that their hardnes may be tamed therefore god for this cause doth not cōuert the obstinate bicause he doth not shew forth in the thē the mightier grace which he wāteth not if he wold shew it forth These sayenges in dede shoulde be sufficient for the godly and sobre and them which remembre themselues to be men But forasmuche as these venemous dogges do cast vp not only one sort of venime against God we will as the mater shal serue answer to euery one particularly Foolishe men doo diuers waies quarell with God as though they had hym subiect to their accusations First therfore they aske by what right the Lorde is angry with his creatures of whome he hath not been first prouoked by any offence for to condemne to destruction whom he will agreeth rather with the wilfulnesse of a tyrant than the lawful sentēce of a iudge Therfore they say that there is cause why mē shold charge God if by his bare will without their owne deseruyng they be predestinate to eternal death If such thoughts do at any time com into the mynd of the godly to breake their violent assaultes they shal be sufficiently armed with this although they had no more if they consider howe greate wickednesse it is euen so muche as to enquire of the causes of the wil of God sith of all thinges that are it is the cause worthily so ought to be For if it haue any cause then somwhat must go before it wherto it must be as it were boūd which it is vnlawful ones to imagine For the will of God is so the highest rule of righteousnesse that whatsoeuer he willeth euē for this that he willeth it it ought to be takē for righteous When therfore it is asked why the Lord did it it is to be answered bicause he willed it But if thou goe further in asking why he willed it thou askest some greater hier thing than the will of God which cānot be foūd Let therefore the rashnesse of man restrayne it self not seke which is not least paraduenture it may not finde that whiche is With this bridle I say he shal be wel withholden whosoeuer he be that wil dispute of the secretes of God with reuerence As for the boldenesse of the wicked which drede not openly to speake euel of God against it the lord with his owne righteousnesse without any our defense shal sufficiētly defend himself when he shal take al shiftyng frō their cōsciences hold them fast conuinced and condemne them Neither do we yet thrust in the fained deuise of absolute power which as it is prophane so worthily ought to be abhorted of vs. We faine not God lawlesse who is a law to himself bicause as Plato sayth men stand in neede of lawes whoe are troubled with vnlawful lustes but the wil of God is not only pure from al fault but also is the hiest rule of perfectiō yea the law of all lawes But we denie that he is subiect to yelde accompt We denie also that we are mete iudges which wold pronoūce of this cause after our owne sense Wherfore if we attēpt further than we lawfully may let that threatenyng of the Psalme bryng vs in feare that God shal ouercome so oft as he is iudged of any mortall man So can God in
sight thē in comparison therof the bryghtest thyng of all shal be darkened But howesoeuer the knowledge of God of our selues ar with mutuall knot lynked together yet the order of right teaching requireth that first we entreate of the knowledge of God and after come down to speake of the knowledge of our selues ¶ The .ii. Chapter ¶ What it is to knowe God and to what ende tendeth the knowledge of hym I Meane by the knowledge of God not onely that knowledge whereby we conceyue that there is somme God but also that wherby we learne so muche as behoueth vs to know of him and is profitable for his glory finally so much as is expedient For to speake properly we cannot say that God is knowen where there is no relygion nor godlynesse But here I dooe not yet touche that speciall kynde of knoweledge whereby those menne that are in theymselues reproba●e and accursed dooe conceyue God the redemer in Chryste the mediatoure but I speake onely of that firste and symple manner of knowledge whervnto the very order of nature woulde haue ledde vs yf Adam hadde continued in state of innocencye For althoughe no manne syth● mankinde is in this ruine can perceiue God to be either a father or authour of saluacion or in any wise fauourable vnlesse Christ come as a meane to pacifie him towarde vs yet it is one thing to fele that God our maker doth by his power sustein vs by his prouidēce gouerne vs by his goodnes nourish vs and endue vs with al kindes of blessinges and an other thing to embrace the grace of reconciliaciō offered vs in Christ. Wheras therfore the Lord fyrst simply appeareth as well by the makinge of the world as by the general doctrine of the Scripture to be the Creator and then in the face of Christe to be the redemer here vpon arise two sortes of knowing him of which the former is now to be entreated of and then the other shal orderly folow in the place fit for it For although our minde cannot conceiue the knowledge of God but that it muste geue to hym some kinde of worship yet shall it not be sufficient simply to knowe that it is he onely that oughte to bee honoured and worshipped of all menne vnlesse we be also perswaded that he is the fountaine of al good things to the ende that we shoulde seke for nothing els where but in him I meane hereby not onely for that as he hath once created this worlde so by his infinite power he susteineth it by his wisedome he gouerneth it by his goodnes he preserueth it and speciallye mankinde he ruleth by his righteousnes and iudgement suffreth by his mercye and saue gardeth by his defense but also because there can no where be founde any one droppe either of wisedom or of lyght or of rightousnes or of power or of vprightnesse or of sincere trueth whiche floweth not from him or wherof he is not the cause to this ende verely that we shoulde learne to looke for and craue all these thinges at his hande and wyth thankesgeuing accompt them receiued of him For this felinge of the powers of God is to vs a me●e scholemaster of godlynes out of which springeth religion Godlines I cal a reuerēce of God ioined with loue of him which is procured by knowledge of hys benefytes For men wyll neuer with willing obediēce submit themselues to God vntil thei perceiue that they owe all thinges to him that they are nourished by his fatherly care that he is to them the author of al good thinges so that nothyng is to be sought els where than in hym Yea they will neuer yelde themselues truly and with all their hart wholly to hym vnlesse they assuredly beleue that in hym is perfect felicite reposed for them Therefore they doe but tryfle with vaine speculations which in entreating of this question do make it their purpose to discusse what thyng God is where it rather behoueth vs to knowe what maner one he is and what agreeth with his nature For to what ende serueth it to confesse as Epicure doeth that there is a God whych doth only delyte him self wyth ydlenesse hauing no care of the world Finally what profiteth it to knowe such a God wyth whom we may haue nothyng to doo But rather the knowledge of hym ought to serue to thys ende fyrst to frame vs to feare and reuerence then that by it guydynge and teachyng vs we may learne to craue all good thynges at hys hande and to accompt them receiued of hym For how can anie thought of God enter into thy mind but that thou must therwithal by and by thinck that forasmuch as thou art his creature therfore thou art of right subiect and bonde to his authorite that thou owest him thy life that whatsoeuer thou enterprisest whatsoeuer thou doest ought to be directed to him If this be tr●w then trewly it foloweth that thy life is peruersly corrupted if it be not framed to obeyng of him for asmuche as his will ought to be our law to liue by Againe thou canst not clerely se him but that thou must nedes know that he is the fountayn original of al good thyngs whervpon shulde grow both a desire to cleaue vnto him and an assured trust in him if mannes own corruptnes did not draw his mind from the right serching of hym For first of all the godly minde doth not as by a dreame ymagine to her selfe any god at aduenture but stedfastly beholdeth the only one and trew God and doth not falsely forge of him whatsoeuer her selfe lyketh but is content to beleue him to be such a one as he discloseth him self and doth alway with great diligence beware that with presumptuous rashnes she passe not beyond his wyll and so wander out of the way And when she so knoweth him bicause she vnderstandeth that he gouerneth al things she assuredlye trusteth that he is her safekeper and defendour and therfore wholly cōmitteth her selfe to his fayth Because she vnderstandeth that he is the author of al good things therfore if any thing trouble her or if she want any thing by and by she flieth to him for succoure loking for helpe at his hande Because she is persuaded that he is good and mercifull therfore with assured confidence she resteth on him and douteth not in al her euils to fynde ready remedy in his mercifull kindnes Because she knoweth him to be her Lorde and father therefore she determineth that he is worthy that she shoulde in all thynges haue regard to his authoritie reuerence his maiestie procure the aduauncement of his glory and obey his commandementes Because she seeth that he is a righteous iudge and armed with his seueritie to punish sinnes therfore she alway setteth his iudgement seate before her eies and with feare of him withdraweth and restraineth her selfe from prouoking his wrath Yet is she not so afrayed with the felyng of his iudgement that she would conuey
doo amisse that after this simple promise of the protection of God alone we still looke about from whense other helpe maye come vnto vs. But for as muche as it pleaseth the Lorde of his infinite clemencie and gentilnesse to helpe this our fault there is no reason why we shoulde neglect his so great benefite An example therof we haue in the seruant of Elizeus whiche when he sawe the hill besieged with the army of the Syrians that there was no way open to escape was striken downe with feare as if his maister and he were then vtterly destroied Then Elizeus praied God to open his seruantes eies and by and by he sawe the hill furnished with horses and fiery chariots that is with a multitude of angels to kepe hym and the prophet safe Encouraged with this vision he gathered vp his hart again was able with a dredelesse mynde to loke down vpon his enemies with sight of whom he was before in a maner driuen out of his witte Wherfore what soeuer is saide of the ministerie of Angels let vs applie it to this ende that ouercommyng all distrust oure hope may bee the more strongely stablished in God For these succours are herefore prouided vs of God that we should not be made afrayde with multitude of enemies as though they coulde preuayle against his helpe but shuld flie vnto that saying of Elizeus that there be mo on our side than be against vs. Howe muche then is it against order of reason that we should be ledde away from God by Angels whiche are ordeined for this purpose to rectifie that his helpe is more present amonge vs But they doo leade vs away in dede if they doo not streight leade vs as it were by the hande to hym that we may haue eie vnto call vpon and publishe hym for our onely helper if we consider not theim to be as his handes that moue them selues vnto worke but by his direction if they do not holde vs faste in the one Mediatoure Christe so that we maye hang wholly of hym leane all vpon hym be caried to hym and reste in him For that whiche is described in the vision of Iacob ought to sticke and be fastened in our myndes howe Angels descende downe to the earth vnto men and from men doo go vp to heauen by a ladder whervppon standeth the Lorde of hostes Wherby is meant that by the only intercession of Christe it cometh to passe that the ministeries of the Angels doo come vnto vs as he hym selfe affirmeth saying Hereafter ye shall see the heauens open and the Angelles descendynge to the Sonne of man Ioh. i.li. Therfore the seruant of Abraham beyng cōmitted to the custody of the Angell dooth not therfore call vpon the Angell to helpe hym but holpen with that commendation he praieth to the Lord and besecheth hym to shewe his mercy to Abraham For as God doeth not therfore make them ministers of his power and goodnesse to the intēt to parte his glory with them so dooth he not therefore promise vs his helpe in their ministration that we shoulde diuide our confidence betwene hym and them Let vs therfore forsake that Platonical● philosophie to seeke the way to God by Angels and to honour them for this purpose that they may make God more gentill vnto vs whiche superstitious and curious men haue from the beginnyng gone about and to this day doo continue to bryng into our religion As for suche thynges as the Scripture teacheth concernyng deuilles they tende in a maner al to this ende that we may be careful to beware aforehande of their awaites and preparations and furnishe our selues with suche weapons as ar stronge and sure enough to driue away euen the strongest enemies For where as Sathan is called the God and prince of this worlde where as he is named the strong armed man the Spirite that hath power of the ayre and a roaryng lyon these descriptions serue to no other purpose but to make vs more ware and watchefull and readier to entre in battayle with hym Whiche is also somtyme set out in expresse woordes For Peter after he had sayd that the diuell goeth about like a roaryng lyon sekyng whom he may deuoure by and by addeth this exhortation that we strongly resiste hym by Faith And Paul after he had geuen warnyng that we wrastle not with fleshe and bloud but with the princes of the ayre the powers of darkenesse and spirituall wickednesses by and by biddeth vs put on suche armoure as may serue for so greate and daungerous a battayle Wherfore lette vs also applie all to this ende that beyng warned howe there dooth continually approche vpon vs an enemie yea an ennemy that is in courage most hardy in strength most mighty in policies most suttle in diligence celeritie vnweriable with all sortes of engins plentuously furnished in skill of warre most ready we suffer not our selues by slouthe and cowardise to be surprised but on the other syde with bolde and hardy mindes set our foote to resist him and because this warre is only ended by Death encourage our selues to continue But specially knowyng oure owne weaknesse and vnskilfulnesse let vs call vppon the helpe of God and enterprise nothyng but vpon trust of hym for as muche as it is in hym onely to geue vs policie strengthe courage and armour And that we shoulde be the more stirred vp and enforced so to do the Scripture warneth vs that ther are not one or two or a fewe enemies but great armies that make warre with vs. For it is sayde that Mary Magdalene was deliuered from seuen deuyls wherwith she was possessed And Christe sayth that it is the ordinary custome that if after a deuill bee ones caste out a man make the place open agayne he bryngeth seuen spirites worse than him self retourneth into his possession fynding it empty Yea it is saide that a whole legion besieged one man Hereby therefore we are taught that we muste fight with an infinite multitude of enemies least despisyng the fewenesse of them we shulde be more slacke to enter in bataile or thinkyng that we haue som respite in the meane tyme graunted we shoulde geue our selues to idelnesse Where as many tymes Sathan or the diuell is named in the singular numbre thereby is meant that power of wickednesse whiche standeth agaynste the kyngdome of Iustice. For as the Churche and the felowship of saintes haue Christe to their head so the faction of the wycked is paynted out vnto vs with their prince that hath the chiefe authoritie among them After which maner this is spoken Go ye cursed into eternall fyre that is prepared for the deuill and his angels Here also this oughte to stirre vs vp to a pepetuall warre with the diuell for that he is euery where called the enemy of God and of vs. For if we haue regarde of Goddes glory as it is mete we shoulde then ought we with all
stryfe when he sayeth that for a remedy to tame pride the Angel of Satan was geuen to hym by whom he myght be humbled This exercyse therefore is common to all the children of God But because that same promyse of the breakyng of Satans head perteyneth generally to Christ and to all his members therefore I saye that the faithfull can neuer be ouercome nor oppressed by him They are many times stryken down but they are neuer so astonnied withall but that they recouer thēselues They fal down many tymes wyth violence of strokes but they are after raysed vp agayne they are wounded but not deadly Finally they so labor in all course of theyr lyfe that in the ende they obteyne the victorye but I speake not this of euery doing of theyrs For we knowe we that by the iuste vengeaunce of God Dauid was for a time geuen ouer to Satan by his motion to nomber the people and not without cause Paul sayth there is hope of pardon least if any haue been entangled with the snares of the deuil Therfore in an other place the same Paule sayeth that the promise aboue alleged is begon in this lyfe wherin we must wrastle and is performed after our wrastlyng ended when he sayeth the God of peace shall shortly beate downe Satan vnder your fete This victory hath alway fully been in our hed Chryst because the Prince of the world had nothing in him but in vs that are his members it doth now partly appeare and shal be perfited whē being vnclothed of our fleshe by whiche we are yet subiecte to weakenesse we shal be ful of the power of the Holy ghoste In thys manner when the kyngdome of Chryst is raysed vp and ●duaunced Satan with his power falleth down as the Lord hymselfe sayeth I saw Satan fall as a lightening down from heauen For by this answere he confirmeth that which the Apostles had reported of the power of his preachyng Agayne When the Prince possesseth his own palace al thinges that he possesseth are in peace but when there cōmeth a stronger he is throwen out c. And to this ende Chryst in dying ouercame Satan which had the power of death triūphed vpō al his armies that they shuld not hurt the church for otherwyse they would euery momente a hundred times destroye it For cōsidering what is our weakenesse what is his furious strēgth howe coulde we stande yea neuer so litle time against his manifolde continuall assaultes but being supported by the victory of our captaine Therefore God suffereth not the deuil to reigne ouer the soules of the faythfull but onely deliuereth him the wicked and vnbeleuing to gouerne whom God doth not vouchesaue to haue reckened in hys flocke For it is said that he possesseth thys world without controuersy till he be thrust out by Christ. Againe that he doth blinde all them that beleue not the gospell agayne that he performeth hys worke in the stubborne children and worthily for all the wicked are the vesselles of wrath Therefore to whom should they be rather subiecte than to the minister of Goddes vengeaunce Finally they are saied to be of their Father the deuill because as the faythfull are hereby knowen to be the children of God because they beare his image so they by the image of Satan into which they are gone out of kind ar properly discerned to be his childrē As we haue before confuted that trifling philosophie concerning the holy Angels which teacheth that they ar nothing els but good inspirations or motiōs which God stirreth vp in the mindes of men so in this place must we confute them that fondly say that deuils ar nothing els but euil affections or perturbations of minde that are thrust into vs by oure fleshe That maye we shortly doe because there be many testimonies of Scripture those playne enough vpon this poynt First where the vncleane Spirites ar called Angels Apostataes which haue swarued out of kind from their beginning the very names do sufficiently expresse that they are not motions or affections of myndes but rather in dede as they be called mindes or Spirites endued with sense and vnderstanding Likewise wheras both Christ and Iohn do compare the children of God with the children of the deuil wer it not an vnfit comparisō if the name of the deuil signified nothing els but euil inspirations And Iohn addeth somwhat more plainly that the deuill synneth from the beginning Likewise when Iude bringeth in Michael the archangel fyghtyng with the deuil doutlesse he setteth agaynste the good Angel an euil and rebellious Angel Wherwith agreeth that which is red in the hostory of Iob that Satan appeared with the Holy Angels before God But most plaine of al are those places that make mention of the punishment which they begin to fele by the iudgement of God and specially shal fele at the resurrection Sonne of Dauid why arte thou come before the time to torment vs Againe Go ye cursed into the eternal fyre that is prepared for the deuil his Angels Agayne If he spared not his own Angels that had synned but cast them down into hell and deliuered thē into cheines of darkenesse to be kept vnto damnaciō c. How fonde should these speches be that the deuils are ordeined to eternal iudgement that fier is prepared for them that they are now already tormented vexed by the glory of Christ if there were no deuils at all But because this matter nedeth no disputation among them that beleue the word of the Lord. litle good is done with testimonies of Scripture among those vaine studentes of speculation whō nothing pleaseth but that which is new I suppose I haue performed the which I purposed that is that the godly mindes should be furnished agaynst such fonde errors wherew t vnquiet men do trouble both thēselues and other that be more simple But it was good to touche this least any entangled with that error while they thinke they haue none to stande againste them should waxe more slowe and vnprouided to resist In the meane time let it not be werisom vnto vs in this so beautiful a stage to take a godly delight of the manifest and ordinary woorkes of God For as I haue els where already said though this be not the chefe yet is it in order the first doctrine of Faith to remember that what way soeuer we turne our eyes al that we see are the workes of God wyth godly consideration to wey for what end God did make thē Therefore that we may conceiue by Faith so muche as behoueth vs to knowe of God it is good first of al to learne the history of the creation of the world how it is shortly rehearsed by Moses and afterwarde more largely set out by holy men specially by Basile and Ambrose Oute of it we shall learne that God by the power of his worde and Spirite created heauē and earth of nothing
steppe at al of remēbrance behinde it finally it passeth away as a clapping of hādes vpō a stage at any pleasant sight And we forgetting not only death but also that we be subiect to death as though we had neuer heard any report therof fall to a carelesse assurednesse of earthly immortalitie If any mā in the meane time tel vs of the Prouerbe that man is a creature of a dayes continuance we graunt it in deede but so heedelesly that still the thought of euerlastyng continuance resteth in our minde Whoe therfore can denie that it is a great profit to vs all not only to be admonished in wordes but by all the exāples of experiēce that may be to be cōuinced of the miserable estate of earthly life for asmuche as euen when we are conuinced we scarcely cesse to stand amased with peruerse foolish admiratiō of it as though it cōteined the vttermost end of good thinges But if it be necessarie that God instruct vs it is our dutie likewise on our behalues to harken to him when he calleth awaketh our dulnesse that despisyng the world we may with al our heartes endeuour to the meditatiō of the life to come But let the faithfull accustome themselues to suche a despisyng of present life as maye neither engendre a hatred thereof nor any vnthankfulnesse toward God For this life howsoeuer it is ful of infinite miseries is yet worthily reckened amōg the not sclender blessynges of God Therfore if we acknowlege no benefit of God in it we are gilry of no small vnthankfulnesse toward God himselfe But specially it ought to bee to the faythfull a testimonie of Gods good will for asmuche as it is wholy directed to the furtherance of their saluation For before that he openly deliuer vnto vs the inheritance of eternall glorye hys will is to shewe hymselfe a Father vnto vs by smaller examples and these be the benefites that are dayely bestowed vpon vs. Sithe therefore this life serueth vs to vnderstand the goodnesse of God shal we disdaine it as though it had not a crūme of goodnesse in it We must therefore put on this felyng and affection to recken it among the giftes of goodnesse that are not to be refused For though there wanted testimonies of Scripture of which there are both many and most euident very nature it self doth exhort vs to geue thākes to the Lorde for that he hath brought vs into the light of it that he graunteth vs the vse of it that he geueth vs all necessarie succors for the preseruation of it And this is a muche greater reason yf we consider that we are in it after a certayne manner prepared to the glorie of the heauenly kingdome For so the Lorde hath ordeyned that they whiche in time to come shal be crowned in heauen must fight certaine battels in earth that they should not triumph till they had ouercome the hard aduentures of the battel obteyned the victorie Then an other reason is that we do by diuerse benefites beginne therin to taste the swetenesse of Gods liberalitie that our hope desire should be whetted to long for the reuelyng thereof When this is determined that it is a gift of Gods clemencie that we lyue this earthly lyfe for whiche as we be bound vnto him so we ought to be mindefull and thankfull thē we shal in fit order come to cōsider the most miserable estate therof to this end that we may be deliuered frō to much gredinesse of it wherunto as I haue before sayd we are of our selues naturally enclined Now what so euer is taken from the wrongfull desire of this life ought to be added to the desire of a better life I graūt in deede that thei thought truely that thought it best not to be borne the next to die quickly For what could they beyng destitute of the light of God and true religion see therin but vnhappy and miserable And they dyd not without reason that mourned and wepte at the birthes of their frendes and solemnely reioysed at their burials but they did it without profit bicause beyng without the right doctrine of fayth they did not see how that may turne to good to the godly which is of it self neither blessed nor to be desired and so they ended their iudgement with desperation Let this therfore be the marke of the faithful in iudgyng of mortall life that when they vnderstand it to be of it self nothing but miserie they maye resort wholly the more freshly redily to the eternall life to come When we come to this comparison then this present lyfe maye not only be safely neglected but also vtterly despysed and lothed in comparison of the other For if heauen be our contrey what is the earth els but a place of banishment If the departyng out of the world be an entryng into lyfe what is the world but a graue to abide in it what is it els but to be drowned in death If to be deliuered from the bodie is to be set in perfect libertie what is the bodye els but a pryson If to enioye the presence of God is the hyest summe of felicitie is it not miserable to lacke it But til we be escaped out of the world we wander abrode from the Lord. Therefore if the earthly life be compared with the heauenly life doutlesse it ought to be despised troden vnder foote But it is neuer to be hated but in respect that it holdeth vs in subiection to sinne yet that hatred is not properly to be layed vpon our life But how so euer it be yet we must be so moued either with werinesse or hatred of it that desyrynge the end of it we may be also redy at the will of the Lorde to abide in it so that our werinesse may be far from all grudging and impatience For it is like a place in battell array wherin the Lorde hath placed vs which we ought to kepe tyll he call vs away Paul in dede lamēteth his state that he is holden bond in the bondes of the body longer than he wyshed and sigheth with feruent desire of his redemption neuerthelesse to obey the commaundement of the Lorde he professed him self ready to both because he acknowledgeth himself to owe this vnto God to glorifie his name either by death or life and that it is in God to determine what is moste expedient for his glory Therfore if we must liue and die to the Lorde let vs leaue to his will the tyme of our life and death but so that we be styll feruent in desire of death and be cōtinually occupied in meditation therof and despise this life in comparison of the immortalitie to come and wyshe to forsake it when it shall please the Lorde because of the bondage of sinne But this is monstruous that in stede of that desire of death manye that bost them selues to be Christians are so afrayed of it that they trēble at euery
we suffer with him we shal also reigne together with him that we be so fashioned like to his suffringes till we atteyne to the likenesse of his resurrection For asmuch as the Father hath predestinate these to be fashioned like the image of his sonne whome in him he hath chosen that he maye be the first begotten among all his brethrē and therfore that neyther death nor present thinges nor thinges to come shall seuer vs from the loue of God which is in Christ but rather all thinges shall turne to vs to good and to saluation Loe me do not iustifie a mā by workes before God but we say that all they that are of God are regenerate made a newe creature that they may passe out of the kingdome of sinne into the kingdome of righteousnesse that by this testimonie thei make their callyng certayne and are iudged as trees by the frutes The .xvi. Chapter ¶ A confutation of the sclaunders whereby the Papistes goe about to bryng this doctrine in hatred WIth this one word may the shamelesnesse of certayne vngodly men be confuted whiche sclaunder vs with sayeng that we destroy good workes and doe draw men awaye from the followyng of thē when we say that they are not iustified by workes nor do deserue saluatiō and againe that we make to easy away to right cousnesse when we teache that it lieth in the free forgeuenesse of sinnes and that we do by this enticement allure men to sinne whiche are of their owne will to much enclined thereto already These sclaunders I say are with that one word sufficiently confuted yet I will brefely answer to them bothe They allege that by the iustification of fayth good workes are destroyed I leaue vnspoken what manner of men be these zelous louers of good workes whiche doe so backbite vs. Let them haue licence as freely to rayle as they do licētiously infect the whole world with the filthinesse of their life They faine that they be greued that when fayth is so gloriously aduaunced workes are dryuen downe out of their place What if they be more raysed vp and stablished For neyther doe me dreame of a fayth voyde of good workes nor a iustification that is without them This onely is the difference that when we confesse that fayth and good workes do necessarily hange together yet we set iustification in fayth not in workes For what reason we doe so we haue in redinesse easily to declare if we do but turne to Christ vnto whome our faythe is directed and from whome it receyueth her whole strength Why therefore are we iustified by faith bycause by fayth we take holde of the righteousnesse of Christ by which alone we are reconciled to God But this thou canst not take holde of but that thou must also therewithall take holde of sanctification For he was geuen to vs for righteousnesse wisdome sanctification redemptiō Therfore Christ iustifieth none whome he doth not also sanctifie For these benefites are coupled together with a perpetuall and vnseperable knot that whome he enlighteneth with his wisdome them he redemeth whome he redemeth he iustifieth whom he iustifieth he sanctifieth But for asmuch as our question is only of righteousnesse and sanctifieng let vs staye vpon these We maye put difference betwene them yet Christ conteineth them bothe vnseperably in himself Wilt thou therfore obteine righteousnesse in Christ Thou must first possesse Christ thou canst not possesse him but that thou must ●e made partaker of his sanctification bicause he can not be torne in peces Sithe therefore the Lord doth graunt vs these benefites to be enioyed none otherwise than in geuing himself he geueth them bothe together the one neuer without the other So appereth how true it is that we are iustified not without workes and yet not by workes bycause in the partaking of Christ wherby we are iustified is no lesse cōteined sanctification than righteousnesse That also is moste false that the mindes of men are withdrawen from the affection of weldoyng when we take from them the opinion of merityng Here by the way the readers must be warned that they foolishly reason frō reward to merit as I shall afterward more plainly declare namely bicause they know not this principle that God is no lesse liberal when he assigneth reward to workes than whē he geueth power to do well But this I had rather differre to the place fit for it Now it shal be enough to touche howe weake their obiection is whiche shal be done two wayes For first whereas they say that there shal be no care of well framyng of life but when hope of reward is set before them they erre quite from the truth For if this only be entēded when men serue God that thei loke to reward or let out to hire or sell their labors to him they litle preuayle for God will be freely worshipped freely loued he I say alloweth that worshipper which when all hope of receyuing reward is cut of yet cesseth not to worshippe him Moreouer if men be to be pricked forward no man can put sharper spurres vnto them than those that are taken of the ende of our redēption and calling such as the word of God spurreth men withal when it teacheth that it is to wicked vnthākefulnesse not mutually to loue him agayne whiche first loued vs that by the blood of Christ our consciences are cleansed from dead workes to serue the liuyng God that it is a haynous sacrilege if beyng ones cleased we defile our selues with newe filthinesse and prophane that holy blood that we are deliuered from the handes of our enemies that we maye without feare serue him in holinesse and righteousnesse before him all the dayes of our life that we are made free from sinne that we maye with a free Spirit folow righteousnesse that our olde man is crucified that we may rise agayne into newnesse of life agayne that if we be dead with Christ as becommeth his members we must seeke those thinges that are aboue and must in the world be wayfaring men from home that we may long toward heauen where is our treasure that the grace of God hath appered to this end that forsakyng al vngodlinesse worldly desires we maye liue soberly holyly and godlyly in this world lokyng for the blessed hope and the appering of the glorie of the great God sauior therefore that we are not apointed that we should stirre vp wrath to our selues but that we may obteyne saluation by Christ that we are the tēples of the Holy ghost which it is not lawfull to be defiled that we are not darknesse but light in the Lord whiche muste walke as children of light that we are not called to vncleannesse but to holinesse bicause this is the will of God our sanctificatiō that we absteyne from vnlawfull desires that our callyng is holy that the same is not fulfilled but with purenesse of life that we are
other ones because the effectualnesse and force of that one sacrifice which Christ hath fully done is eternal as he himselfe hath testified with hys own mouth whē he sayd y● it was ended fulfylled that is to saye that whatsoeuer was necessarie to the recōciling of the Fathers fauour to the obteyning of the forgeuenesse of sinnes to righteousnesse to saluatiō al the same was performed fulfilled with that hys only oblation and there so nothyng wanted therof that there was afterward no place left to any other sacrifice Wherfore I determine that it is a most wicked reproch blasphemy not to be suffred as wel against Christ as agaynst the sacrifice which he hath fully done by hys death vpō the crosse for vs if any man by renewyng an oblation thynke to purchace the pardon of synnes to appease God and to obteyne ryghteousnesse But what is ells done by Massing but that by deseruing of new oblatiō we may be made partakers of the passiō of Christe And that there myght be no measure of madding they thought it but a smal thyng to say that there is made indifferently a cōmō sacrifice for the whole Chirch vnlesse they further sayd that it is in theyr choise to apply it peculiarly to thys man or that man to whō they would or rather to euery one whosoeuer he were that would bye for hymselfe suche ware with redy money Now because they could not reache to the pryce that Iudas had yet that they might in some marke resemble their author they kepte the lykenesse of number Iudas solde him for thirty siluer pens these fellowes sell hym after the French accompt for xxx brasen pens but Iudas solde hym ones these fellowes sel hym as oft as they can find a bier In this sence also we deny that they be sacrificing prestes that is to say they that with such an oblation are meanes to God for the people they that appeasing God may purchace the satisfactorie purging of synnes For Christ is the only Bishop sacrificing prest of the new Testamente into whom all Presthodes are remoued and in whome they be shut vp and ended And if the Scripture had made no mētion of the eternal Presthode of Christe yet forasmuche as God sins that he hath taken away those old Presthodes hath ordeined none the Apostles argument remayneth inuincible that no man taketh honor to hymselfe but he that is called of God By what affiance therfore dare these robbers of God that bost themselues for the butchers of Christ call themselues the sacrificing Prestes of the liuing God Plato hath an excellent place in his seconde boke of Cōmon weale Where when he entreateth of the olde maners of expiation and laugheth to scorne the foolishe confidence of euil mē and wicked doers which thought that their wicked doinges were by these as by coueringes hidden that the Gods could not se them and did as if they had gotten warrant of the Gods by couenant more carelesly folow their own Iustes he semeth throughly to touche the maner of satisfactorie purging of the Masse suche as is at thys day in the world To beguile and vndermine an other man al men know to be vnlawfull To greue widowes with wrongful dealinges to robbe the fatherlesse to troble the poore by euil crafty meanes to catch other mens goods to themselues with forsweringes and deceites to enter forceably into any mans possessiōs to oppresse any man with violence and tyrannous feare al men cōfesse to be wicked How therfore dare so many commonly do al these thinges as though they shoulde freely be bolde to doe them Truely if we ryghtly wey it no other cause doth so much encourage them but because they haue confidence that by the sacrifice of a Masse as by paymente of full price for recōpense they shal satisfie God or at the least that thys is an easy way to cōpounde with him Thē Plato procedeth further to scorne their grosse blockishnesse which thinke that by such satisfactorie cleāsinges those peynes are redemed that otherwise they should suffer in hell And wherto serue at this day the yereli obites the greater part of Masses but that thei which throughout al their life haue ben most cruel tyrātes or most rauenous robbers or geuen fourth to al mischeuous doinges should as though they wer redemed by thys pryce escape the fier of purgatorie Under the other kinde of sacrifice which we haue called the sacrifice of Thākesgeuing are cōteined al the dutieful workes of charitie which when we extende to our brethrē we honor the Lord himselfe in his mēbers then al our prayers praysinges geuinges of thankes whatsoeuer we do to the worshipping of God Al which thinges finally do hāg vpon the greater sacrifice wherby we are in soule and body hallowed to be a holy tēple to the Lord. For neither is it enough if our outward doinges be applyed to the obeying of hym but first our selues and then al that is ours ought to be consecrate and dedicate to hym that whatsoeuer is in vs may serue hys glory may sauor of zelous endeuor to aduāce it This kynde of sacrifice tendeth nothing at al to appease the wrath of God nothing at al to obteine forgeuenesse of synnes nothing at all to deserue righteousnesse but is occupied only in magnifyeng extolling of God For it can not be pleasāt acceptable to God but at their hāds whō by forgeuenesse of sinnes alredy receiued he hath by other meanes reconciled to himselfe and therfore acquited them from gyltinesse But it is so necessary for the Chirch that it can not be away from it Therefore it shal be euerlasting so long as the people of God shal cōtinue as we haue before alredy shewed out of the Prophet for in that meaning I will take this prophecie For frō the rising of the sunne to the going down therof great is my name amōg the Gentiles and in euery place incēse shal be offred to my name and a cleane offring because my name is terrible among the Gentiles sayth the Lord so farr is it of that we would put it away So Paul biddeth vs to offer our bodyes a sacrifice liuing holy acceptable to God a reasonable worship Where he spake very pithily when he added that thys is our reasonable worshipping for he meant the spiritual maner of worshipping of God whiche he did secretely set in cōparisō against the carnal sacrifices of the law of Moses So liberall doing of good and communicating are called sacrifices by which God is pleased So the liberalitie of the Philippians wherby they had releued the pouertie of Paul is called a sacrifice of swete smellyng So al the good workes of the faithful are called spiritual sacrifices And why do I seke out many exāples For commonly this maner of speakyng is often foūde in the Scriptures Yea while the people of God was yet holdē vnder the outwarde schooling of the lawe yet