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A17183 Fiftie godlie and learned sermons diuided into fiue decades, conteyning the chiefe and principall pointes of Christian religion, written in three seuerall tomes or sections, by Henrie Bullinger minister of the churche of Tigure in Swicerlande. Whereunto is adioyned a triple or three-folde table verie fruitefull and necessarie. Translated out of Latine into English by H.I. student in diuinitie.; Sermonum decades quinque. English Bullinger, Heinrich, 1504-1575.; H. I., student in divinity. 1577 (1577) STC 4056; ESTC S106874 1,440,704 1,172

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shew the worke of the lawe written in their hearts But who is he that writeth in their hearts but God alone who is the searcher of all harts And what I pray you writeth he there The lawe of nature forsooth the lawe I saye it selfe commaunding good and forbidding euill so that without the written lawe by the instruction of nature that is by the knowledge imprinted of God in nature they may vnderstand what is good and what is euill what is to be desired and what is to be shunned By these wordes of the Apostle we doe vnderstande that the lawe of nature is set against the written law of God and that therefore it is called the lawe of nature bycause it séemeth to be as it were placed or grafted in nature We vnderstande that the lawe of nature not the written lawe but that which is grafted in man hath the same office that the written lawe hath I meane to direct men and to teach thē and also to discerne betwixte good and euill and to be able to iudge of sinne We vnderstande that the beginning of this lawe is not of the corrupt disposition of mankinde but of God him selfe who with his finger writeth in our harts fasteneth in our nature and planteth in vs a rule to knowe iustice equitie and goodnesse Then also the Apostle maketh his seconde argument wherby he proueth the Gentiles to be guiltie of sinne and this argument he fetcheth from the witnesse bearing of their conscience For the conscience being instructed by the lawe of nature doth accuse and condemne the euill committed bycause this conscience onely and alone is in stéede of a thousande witnesses And againe it excuseth that is it absolueth and acquiteth them if nothing be committed contrarie to the lawe But although in this present life we doe set light by the iudgement of our conscience yet verily we may not thē despise or lightly passe ouer the consciences accusations when the Lorde shall come with iustice and equitie to iudge the world So then by all this it followeth that all nations are sinners whome vnlesse the Sonne of God the common and onely Sauiour and deliuerer of all the worlde doe cleanse from their offences it can not be but that all nations must néedes perish in their sinnes But nowe we come againe to the lawe of Nature of whiche there are two pointes especially for you to be put in mynde of The firste is Acknowledge God and worship him The seconde is Kéepe or mainteine societie friendship among mē Touching the first we haue these wordes of Christ his Apostle Whatsoeuer may be knowne of God is manifest among them to wit among the Gentiles for God hath shewed it to thē For his inuisible thinges being vnderstoode by his workes throughe the creation of the worlde are seene that is both his eternall power and Godhead so that they are without excuse bicause that when they knew God notwithstāding they glorified him not as God neyther were thankfull c. So then the Gentiles knewe God yea they knewe what so euer might be knowne of god But what teacher had they or what maister They had God to their maister In what order taught he them or out of what booke Not out of the written bookes of Moses or the Prophetes but out of that great and large booke of Nature For the thinges that are not séene of God in whiche sorte are his euerlasting eternitie his vertue power maiestie goodnesse and Godhead those he woulde haue to be estéemed of according to the visible things that is the thinges whiche he hath created For Gods eternall Godheade is knowne by mans creation by the continuall mouing of Heauen and the perpetuall course of riuers For it muste néedes be that he is moste mightie whiche susteineth all these thinges whiche moueth strengtheneth and kéepeth all thinges from decay and which with his becke shakes the whole worlde Finally who doth not sée the goodnesse of him whiche suffereth the Sunne to rise vpon the good and the euill But to what intent reuealeth he these thinges to the Gentiles To the intent forsoothe that they may acknowledge him to be God that they maye glorifie and worship him as God and be thankfull to suche a benefactour When therfore they doe not this they are inexcusable and perishe deseruedly for their vnbeliefe and vnthankfulnesse sake So then it is manifest that the lawe of Nature doth expresly teache that there is a God which is to be acknowledged and reuerently worshipped Touching the latter of these two especiall pointes that is for the preseruing of friendship and societie among men the Lorde in the Gospell sayth What so euer ye woulde that men shoulde doe to you doe ye the same to them This sentence did Alexander Seuerus the Emperour turne and expresse thus What soeuer thou wouldest not haue done to thee selfe that doe not thou to another Whiche saying he loued so well that he commaunded it to be written vp in his Palace and common houses of office Moreouer to that generall lawe belong these that followe Liue honestly Hurt not another Giue euery man his owne Prouide thinges necessarie for life and kéepe it from distresse But nowe bycause the lawe of Nature is made opposite to the written lawe of God it is requisite that it be aunswerable also to the lawe of God let vs therefore sée what the wise men and law giuers of the Gentiles haue left in writing to counteruaile the tenne Commaundementes and how farre their writings are answerable to the law of God. Pythagoras in S. Cyrils first booke Contra Iulianum writeth thus of god God verily is one and he too is not as some doe imagine without the gouernement of the worlde but being wholy in euery place of it doth view al the generations in the whole compasse thereof and is him selfe the moderation of all ages the light of his owne vertues the beginning of all works the light in heauen the father of all things the life and quickening of all thinges and lastly the mouing of al the circles Sée here Pythagoras confesseth that there is but one God who is the maker preseruer and gouernour of all things the father of al and the light and life of al things Zaleucus in the Preface of his lawes writeth as followeth It is necessarie that all men which inhabite any citie or region what soeuer be throughly persuaded that there are Gods which is euident to be seene by the contemplation of heauen and all the world and by the goodly disposition and order of that that is therein For it is not conuenient to thinke that these are the workes of Fortune or mans abilitie Then also the Gods must be worshipped and honoured as they that are the causes of all good thinges that are done to vs by any manner of meanes Euery one therefore must do his best to haue his mind purely clensed from all euill For God is not honored of a
that they at their pleasure may cōmaund what they liste and that all men by and by must take it for lawe But that kind of ruling without al doubt is extreme tyrannie The saying of the Poet is verie well knowen which representeth the verie words of a tyraunt I say it and it shal be so my lust shal be the lawe The Prince in déede is y liuing lawe if his mind obey the written lawes and square not from the lawe of nature Power and authoritie therefore is subiecte vnto lawes For vnlesse the Prince in his heart agree with the law in his brest doe write the law and in his woords and déedes expresse the law he is not worthie to be called a good mā much lesse a Prince Againe a good Prince and magistrate hath power ouer the Lawe is maister of the lawes not that they may tourne put out vndoe make and vnmake them as they liste at their pleasure but because hée may put them in practise among the people applie them to the necessitie of the state and attemper their interpretation to the meaning of the maker They therefore are deceyued as farre as heauen is wide which thinck for a few priuileges of Emperours kinges graunted to the magistrate to adde diminish or chaunge some point of the lawe that therefore they may vtterly abolish good lawes and liue against all lawe and séemelinesse For as no Emperours or kinges are permitted to graunt any priuileges contrarie to iustice goodnesse and honestie so if they do graunt any such privilege it ought not to be receiued or taken of good subiects for a good tourn or benefite but to be counted rather as it is in déede their vtter destruction and cleane ouerthrowe Among all men at all times and of all ages the meaning substaunce of the lawes touching honestie iustice publique peace is kept vnuiolable if chaūge be made it is in circumstances and the law is interpreted as the case requireth according to iustice and a good end The law sayth Let no man kill an other let him that killeth an other be killed himself That law remayneth for euer vnchaungeable neither is it lawfull for any man at any time to put it out or wipe it away And yet the rigour of the law may be diminished and the law it selfe fauourablie interpreted as for example If a man kill one whom hee loueth entirely well and kill him by chaunce not of set purpose or pretended malice so that when hee hath done hee is soarie for it at the verie hart would if it were possible buye his life again with what soeuer hée hath to giue for it in such a case the killer ought not to be killed and therin the magistrate may dispence with the rigour of the lawe An other beareth a deadly and continuall grudge to one whom hee killeth and goeth about to colour the matter vnder the pretence of happe misfortune For hée sought occasion that hée might for himself haue a shew of chauncemedley In such a case as this the magistrate cannot chaung any iote of the law but must néedes kil him whom the meaning of the law commaundeth to kill I could alledge more examples like vnto these but my care is of purpose somuch as I may not to bee too tedious vnto you with too a long a discourse By this that I haue spoken it is apparauntly euident that lawes are good and not to be broken how farre forth they doe admit the Princes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is the Princes moderation interpretation limitation or dispensation least peraduēture that old and accustomed Prouerbe bée rightly applied vnto them Lawe with extremitie is extreme iniurie Hetherto I haue declared that lawes are good profitable necessarie and not to bee broken it remaineth now to tell what and what kind of lawes the magistrate ought most chieflie to vse for the ordering and mainteyning of honestie iustice publique peace according to his office Some there are whose opinion is that the magistrate ought not to vse any written lawes but that hée should rather giue sentence as hée thought best according to naturall equitie as the circumstances of place time persons and cases doe séeme to require Other some there are that do their indeuour to thrust into all kingdomes and common weales the Iudiciall lawes of Moses And some there are which hauing once reiected the lawe of Moses wil haue no iudgement giuen in law but what is deriued out of the lawes of heathen Princes But since they that haue the preeminence and magistrates autoritie are men either good or bad and since that euen in the best men courtousnes anger hatred fauour griefe feare and other affectiōs are rife to be found to whom I pray you haue they committed the common weale which reiecting all written statuts and certein lawes would haue euerie man that is a magistrate to giue iudgment as hée himself thinketh best Haue they not committed their common weale to the rule of a beast But what shal I say then of euill men that are in authoritie since in the best men thnges are so amisse As good were a kingdome subiecte to the furies of hel as bound to the iudgments of naughtie men But wée will say they haue them giue iudgement according to the equitie of natures lawe and not after the luste of their corrupt affection Mine aunswere is to that that they will giue iudgement as affection leadeth them without controllment and say that they iudged by naturall equitie They cannot they wil say iudge otherwise nor otherwise vnderstand the pith of the matter They thincke that beste which they haue determined and nothing is done contrarie to conscience and thou for thy labour shalt be called Coram nobis for daring find fault with their sentence in iudgment And so shal the iust man perish barbarous affections shall haue the vpper hand and naughtie men rule all the roste Yea and admitte wée graunt all men are good that are called to be magistrates yet diuersitie of opinions that will rise in giuing of iudgement will stirre vp among them endlesse braules and continuall troubles If all thinges therefore be well considered the best way by a great deale is to put written lawes in vre Let vs learne this by the example of our eternall wise excellent and mightie God who gaue to the Iewes his peculiar people such lawes as at his cōmaundement were set downe in writing The magistrate hath otherwise busines enough to iudge that is to applie and conferre the causes with the lawes to sée how farre and wherein they agrée or disagrée and to iudge who hath offended against the law and who haue not transgressed the lawe Now it is to be marked that in Moses Iudiciall lawe there are many things proper and peculiar to the Iewish Nation and so ordeyned according to the state of the place time and persons that if wée should goe about to thrust on and applie them
to lay hand on the life to come The faithfull Saints could in no wise haue don these things vnlesse the doctrine whiche they beléeued had béene of god Although therefore that the Apostles were men yet their doctrine first of all taught by a liuely expressed voyce and after that set downe in writing with penne and yncke is the doctrine of God and the very true word of god For therefore the Apostle left this saying in writing When ye did receaue the woord of God whiche ye heard of vs ye receiued it not as the word of men but as it is in deede the word of God which effectually worketh in you that beleeue But nowe the matter it selfe and place require that I gather also and plainely reckon vp those bookes wherin is conteined the very word of God first of all declared of the Fathers of Christ himselfe and the Apostles by-word of mouth after that also written into Bookes by the Prophetes and Apostles And in the first place verely are set the fiue bookes of Moses Then follow the bookes of Iosua of Iudges of Ruth two bookes of Samuel two of Kinges two of Chronicles of Esdras Nehemias and Hester one a piece After these come Iob Dauid or the booke of Psalmes Prouerbes Ecclesiastes and Cantica With them are numbered the foure greater Prophets Esaias Ieremias Ezechiel and Daniel then the twelue lesser Prophetes whose names are very well knowne With these bookes the olde Testament ended The Newe Testament hathe in the beginning the Euangelicall hystorie of Christ the Lord written by foure Authors that is by two Apostles Mathewe and Iohn and by two Disciples Marke and Luke who compiled a wonderfull goodly and profitable booke of the Actes of the Apostles Paule to sundrie Churches and persons published 14. Epistles The other Apostles wrote 7. whiche are called both Canonical and Catholique And the books of the new Testament are ended with the reuelation of Iesus Christ whiche he opened to the Disciple whome he loued Iohn the Euangelist and Apostle shewing vnto him and so to the whole church the ordinaunce of God touching the Churche euen vntil the day of iudgement Therefore in these fewe and meane not vnmeasurable in these plaine and simple not darke and vnkemmed books is coōprehended the ful doctrine of godlynes whiche is the very word of the true liuing and eternall God. Also the bookes of Moses and the Prophetes through so many ages perils and captiuities came sound and vncorruptted euen vntill the time of Christ and his Apostles For the Lord Iesus the Apostles vsed those bookes as true copies and authentical which vndoubtedly they neither would nor could haue done if so be that eyther they had béen corrupted or altogether perished The bookes also whiche the Apostles of Christ haue added were throughout all persecutions kept in the Church safe and vncorrupted and are come sound and vncorrupted into our handes vpon whome the endes of the world are falne For by the vigilāt care vnspeakable goodnes of God our Father it is brought to passe that no age at any time either hathe or shal want so great a treasure Thus muche hitherto haue I declared vnto you derely beloued what the word of God is what the beginning of it in the Churche was what procéeding dignitie and certaintie it had The word of God is the speache of God that is to say the reuealing of his good will to mankinde whiche frō the beginning one while by his owne mouthe and an other whyle by the speache of Angels he did open to those first ancient and most holy Fathers who againe by tradition did faithfully deliuer it to their posteritie Here are to be remembred those great lightes of the world Adam Seth Methusalem Noe Sem Abraham Isaac Iaacob Amram and his Sonne Moses who at Gods commaundement did in writing comprehend the hystorie and traditiōs of the holy Fathers whervnto he ioyned the written lawe and exposition of the lawe togeather with a large and lightsome hystorie of his owne lyfe time After Moses God gaue to his Churche moste excellent men Prophets and Priestes who also by worde of mouthe and wrytings did deliuer to their posterity that whiche they had learned of the Lord After them came the Onely begotten Sonne of God himselfe downe from heauen into the world and fulfilled all whatsoeuer was found to be written of himselfe in the Lawe and the Prophetes The same also taught a moste absolute meane howe to liue well and holily He made the Apostles his witnesses Which witnesses did afterwardes first of all with a liuely expressed voice preach al things which the Lord had taught them and then to the intent that they should not be corrupted or clean taken out of mans remembraunce they did commit it to writing so that nowe we haue from the Fathers the Prophetes and Apostles the word of God as it was preached and written These thinges had their beginning of one the same spirite of God and do tende to one end that is To teach vs men how to liue well and holily He that beléeueth not these men namely the only begotten Sonne of God whom I pray you will he beleeue We haue here the moste holie innocent vpright liuing most praise worthie most iust moste ancient most wise and most diuine men of the whole world and compasse of the earth and briefly suche men as are by all meanes without comparison All the worlde cannot shew vs the like againe although it shuld wholy a thousand times be assembled in Counsels The holy Emperour Constantine gathered a generall counsell out of al the compasse of the earthe thether came there together out of all the worlde thrée hundred and eightéene moste excellent Fathers But they that are of the wisest sorte will say that these are not so muche as shadowes to be compared to them of whome we haue receiued the worde of god Let vs therefore in all thinges beléeue the worde of God deliuered to vs by the Scriptures Let vs thinke that the Lorde him selfe whiche is the very liuing and eternall God dothe speake to vs by the Scriptures Let vs for euermore prayse the name and goodnesse of him who hath vouched safe so faythfully fully and plainely to open to vs miserable mortall men all the meanes howe to liue well and holyly To him be prayse honour and glory for euermore Amen Of the worde of God to whom and to what end it was reuealed also in what maner it is to be hearde and that it doth fully teache the whole doctrine of godlinesse ¶ The seconde Sermon DEarely beloued in the laste Sermon you learned what the worde of God is from whence it came by whome it was chiefly reuealed what procéedings it had and of what dignitie and certaintie it is Now am I come againe and by Gods fauour and the helpe of your prayers I will declare vnto you beloued to whome and to what ende the worde of
and comfort imprisoned captiues Herevnto Lactantius lib. Institut 6. cap. 12. hath an eye where he sayth The chiefest vertue is to keepe hospitalitie and to feede the poore To redeeme captiues also is a greate and excellent worke of righteousnes And as great a work of iustice is it to saue and defend the fatherlesse widowes the desolate helplesse whiche the law of God doth euery where cōmaund It is also a part of the chiefest humanitie and a great good deed to take in hand to heale and chearish the sicke that haue no body to helpe them Finally that last and greatest duetie of pietie is the buriall of strangers and of the poore Thus muche hitherto touching the duetie of ciuil humanitie which true loue sheweth to his neighbour in necessitie But it is not inough my brethren to vnderstande how we ought to loue our neighbour though we ought often to repeate it but rather we must loue him excéedingly and aboue that that I am able to say Let vs heare the Apostle who with a wonderful goodly grace of spéech with a most excellēt exquisite holy example of Christe doth exhort vs all to the shewing of charitie to our neighbour and sayth If therefore there bee any consolation in Christe if any comfort of loue if any fellowship of the spirite if any compassion mercie fulfill ye my ioye that ye be like minded hauing the same loue being of one accorde and minde let nothing be done through strife or vaine glory but in meekenesse let euery man esteeme one the other better then him selfe looke ye not euery man on his owne thinges but euery man also on the thinges of others For let the same minde be in you that was in Christ Iesus who being in the fourme of God thought it no robberie to be equall with God but made him selfe of no reputation taking on him the forme of a seruant and made in the likenesse of men and found in figure as a man he humbled him selfe made obedient vnto death euen the death of the crosse Wherefore God also hath lightly exalted him and giuen him a name which is aboue euery name that in the name of Iesus euery knee shoulde bow of things in heauen and things in earth and things vnder the earth and that euery tongue shoulde confesse that the Lorde Iesus Christe is the glory of God the father To him alone be honor power for euer euer Amen The end of the first Decade of Sermons The Second Decade of Sermons writen by Henrie Bullinger Of lawes and first of the lawe of Nature then of the lawes of men ¶ The first Sermon THE summe of all lawes is the loue of GOD and our neighbour of which and euery parte whereof bycause I haue already spokē in my last Sermon the next is that nowe also I make a particular discourse of lawes and euery part and kinde thereof Let vs therefore call to God who is the cause and beginning of lawes that he through our Lorde Iesus Christe will vouchsafe with his spirite alwayes to direct vs in the waye of trueth and righteousnesse A heathen writer no base authour ywis made this definition of lawe that it is an especiall reason placed in nature cōmaūding what is to be done and fordidding the contrarie And verily the lawe is nothing but a declaration of Gods will appointing what thou hast to do and what thou oughtest to leaue vndone The beginning and cause of lawes is God him selfe who is the fountaine of all goodnesse equitie trueth and righteousnesse Therefore all good and iust lawes come from God him selfe althoughe they be for the most parte published and brought to light by men Touching the lawes of men we muste haue a peculiar consideratiō of thē by thē selues For of lawes some are of God some of Nature some of Men. As concerning Gods law I wil speak of it in my seconde Sermon at this present I will touch first the lawe of Nature and then the lawe of Men. The law of Nature is an instruction of the conscience and as it were a certaine direction placed by God him self in the mindes and hearts of men to teach them what they haue to doe and what to eschue And the conscience verily is the knowledge iudgement and reason of a man whereby euery man in him selfe and in his owne minde being made priuie to euery thing that he eyther hath committed or not committed doth eyther condemne or else acquite him self And this reason procéedeth from God who both prompteth and writeth his iudgementes in the hearts and mindes of men Moreouer that which we call Nature is the proper disposition or inclination of euery thing But the disposition of mankind being flatly corrupted by sinne as it is blinde so also is it in all pointes euill and naughtie It knoweth not God it worshippeth not God neyther doth it loue the neighbour but rather is affected with selfe loue towarde it selfe and séeketh still for the owne aduauntage For whiche cause the Apostle sayde That we by nature are the children of wrath Wherefore the lawe of nature is not called the lawe of nature bicause in the nature disposition of mā there is of or by it selfe that reason of light exhorting to the best things and that holy working but for bycause God hath imprinted or ingrauen in our myndes some knowledge and certaine generall principles of religion iustice and goodnesse which bycause they be grafted in vs and borne together with vs do therefore séeme to be naturally in vs. Let vs heare the Apostle Paule who beareth witnesse to this saith When the Gentiles whiche haue not the lawe do of nature the things conteined in the law they hauing not the law are a law vnto themselues which shew the workes of the lawe written in their hearts their conscience bearing thē witnesse and their thoughts accusing one another or excusing in that same day when the Lorde shall iudge the secrets of mē by Iesus Christ according to my Gospel By two arguments here doth the apostle very euidently proue that the gentiles are sinners For first of all least peraduenture they might make this excuse and say that they haue no law he sheweth that they haue a law and that bicause they transgresse this law they are become sinners For although they had not the written law of Moses yet notwithstanding they did by nature the things cōteined in the law The office of the law is to disclose the wil of God and to teache thée what thou haste to do and what to leaue vndone This haue thei by nature that is this know they by the lawe of nature For that whiche followeth maketh this more plaine They when they haue no law are to them selues a law That is they haue in thē selues that which is written in the law But in what sort haue they it in them selues This againe is ma●e manifest by that which followeth For they
Sichem Abraham in taking an othe vsed alwayes a reuerend feare and a spiced conscience whereby it followeth that to him the name of the Lorde was holy and not lightly taken All the holy fathers did both diligently and deuoutly solemnize and obserue holy rites and sacrifices Chā hath his fathers curse bycause he did vnreuerently behaue him self toward his father Cain is reproued for murdering his brother Noe giueth commaundement not to shead bloud Ioseph is highly commended for refusing to lye with another mans wife I meane the wife of his maister Ruben is rebuked bycause he did with incest defile his fathers bed Iacob was not angrie without a cause with Laban his father in Law when he suspected him of theft All the Patriarchs haue vtterly condemned lyars false witnesses as wel as euil lusts concupiscence Wherfore the patriarchs euer from the beginning of the world euen vntill Moses time were not without the preceptes of the ten commaundements although they had them not grauen in tables or written in parchments For the Lord with his finger writ them in their hearts whiche the liuely tradition of the fathers did exquisitely garnish reuerently teach The lawe is euerie where the same and the will of God is alwayes one bycause God is but one and is neuer chaunged Neuerthelesse the commaundements were firste of all set downe in tables by God who was the beginner and writer of them and after that againe were written into bookes by Moses Likewise also the olde and holy Patriarches that were before Moses did not want the ceremoniall and iudiciall lawes For they had their Priestes I say their fathers of euery kindred or houshold they had their ceremonies their altars and sacrifices they had their solemne assemblies and purifications They had their lawes for succession in heritage for the diuision and possession of goods for bargayning and contractes and for the punishing of euill doers All which Moses gathered together into a certaine number of decréed lawes setting downe many thinges more plainely then they were before and ordeining many thinges which the Patriarches were eyther altogether without or else had vsed in another order Of which sorte were the Tabernacle the holy vessels the Arke of the couenaunt the table the Candlesticke the Altar for burnt offerings and for incense the Leuiticall Priesthoode the holy vestments with the feastes and holy dayes and what so euer else is like to this all which verily are abrogated by Christe as in place conuenient I meane to declare But for bycause manners can not consist if the tenne Commaundements be broken therefore the Morall lawe although it haue properly the name of a lawe is notwithstanding not abrogated or broken For the tenne Commaundementes are the very absolute and euerlasting rule of true righteousnesse and all vertues set downe for al places men and ages to frame themselues by For the summe of the ten Commaundements is this To shewe our loue to God and one loue another and this doth the Lorde require at all times and euery where of all kynde of men Moreouer this is to be noted touching the dignitie of the Morall lawe conteined in the tenne Commaundements that whereas all the Ceremoniall and Iudiciall lawes were reuealed of God to Moses by the Angels and by Moses to the people and that againe by Moses at Gods commaundement they were inserted into written bookes yet notwithstanding the Morall lawe of the tonne Commaundements was not reuealed by man or any meanes of man but by God him selfe at the Mount Sina who there among other mightie and maruellous wonders did openly in a publique and innumerable assembly of men and Angels rehearse them word for word as they are now to be séene Furthermore they were written not by the hande of Moses but with the finger of God in tables not made of matter easie to be dissolued but made of stone to indure for euer Those tables also were kept as the most precious treasure in that Arke which of the tables of the couenant conteining in thē the chiefe articles of the eternal league was named the Arke of the couenant Which Arke againe was layde vp in the holy of holiest All which circumstances tend to nothing else but to cōmend vnto vs the excellencie of the. 10 Cōmaundements and to warne vs to reuerence that God which published this Moral law as him that is the Lord of heauen and earth and which at his owne wil and pleasure doth order the disposition of all the elements against disobedient rebels these circūstances also do admonish vs that euen now in our time also we haue to estéeme of the ten Commaundements as of the déerest iuels to be found in al the world For the holy reliques the are remaining in the church of Christ are the 10. Commandements the Apostles Créed the Lordes prayer lastly the whole contents of the sacred Bible Touching the proclamation or first edition of the. 10 Cōmandements we haue a wonderful large discourse of Moses Exo. 19 Deut. 4. 5. chap. Now the tables wherinto the. 10. Cōmaundements of Gods law be disposed are in number two Whereof the first conteineth 4. Cōmaundements the latter 6. For the last commaundement which some diuide into twaine is in very déed but one alone and vndiuided For first the Lord doth generally commaund say Thou shalt not couet thē he descendeth particularly doth by enumeration reckon vp that things that we must not couet to wit our neighbours wife his house his landes his cattell his substance Beside that too this doth argue that it is so bicause according to that Hebrue diposition this commaundement is altogether one whole verse not diuided into twaine With this diuision of ours agrée Ioseph Antiqui li. 6. ca. 3. Origenes in Exod. Homelia 8. Ambros in 6. cap. Epist ad Ephe. But the maister of sentences hauing diuided this last comaundement into twaine doth therefore place in that first table 3. comaundements no more He did peraduēture folow Augustine herein who Questio in Exo. 71. Epistola ad Ianuarium 119 dothe also reckon vp but thrée Commaundements of the first table alone which he did in respect of the mystical Trinitie And yet this notwithstanding he dothe not ouerslippe the commaundement for abandoning and not worshipping of images for vndoutedly he had alwayes in his mynde those wordes of the Lorde in the Gospell where he saith Verily I say vnto you though heauen and earth doe passe one iote or title of the lawe shall not passe till all be fulfilled Whosoeuer therefore shall breake one of the least of these commaundements and shall teach men so hee shall bee called the least in the kingdome of heauen The same Augustine againe in Questionibus veteris et noui testamenti lib. 1. cap. 7. maketh foure cōmaundements of the first table and sixe of the second And againe he differeth not much from the same order in his thirde
cōmon weale Judgement and punishment therfore are in the magistrate the most excellent offices although peraduenture they séeme to be somewhat hard and cruel But vnlesse this which seemeth to be crueltie bee put in vre all ages states and sexes shal féele the smart of crueller thinges and that which is most cruel in déede For it is not crueltie but rather iust seueritie which as the Lord commaundeth is put in vre for the safegard of the guiltlesse and preseruation of peace within the realme and common weale Put case there were a common weale wel furnished with most absolute lawes for politique manners and matters of religion suppose also that in the same common weale there were no magistrate to execute and as it were to father those lawes by his authoritie to bring and reduce all the déedes and sayinges of men to the triall of those lawes and that therefore euerie man breaketh forth to what kinde of life hée list himselfe and doth what he will tell mée I pray you what good do those written lawes to the men of the countrie Belieue mée forsooth not one halfpenie worth of good The best part therfore of the magistrates duetie consisteth in vpright iudgement punishing reuengement And those two points require a man of courage and Princely stomache whom the Lord in his law deseribeth liuelie and telleth what kind of man hee would haue him to bee and what the office is whereto hée is called which description I will rehearse expound because therein the Iudges person is chieflie touched Moses at the Lords commaundement saith to the Iudges Heare the cause of your bretherne and iudge righteouslie betwixt euerie man and his brother and the straunger that is with him Ye shall haue no respect of any person in iudgement but ye shal heare the small as well as the great ye shall not feare the face of any man for the iudgement is the Lords The holie Prophete in these woords toucheth two thinges chieflie Hée declareth what the Iudges office is and what vices or diseases doe infecte the Iudge that hée cannot fulfill his office as hee ought to doe Now touching the office of a good Iudge the first point thereof is that hée repel no man but heare euery one the small the great the Citizen the stranger the knowen and vnknowen And hée must heare the parties willingly diligentlie and attentiuelie Herein there is admitted no sluggishnes of the iudge nor a mind busied about other matters Iudgement before the matter be decided is vtterly excluded because it carieth away the minde of the Iudge before the matter is knowen The thing it selfe crieth out that the matter must first be heard and wel vnderstoode before the magistrate procéede to iudgement And the common prouerbe saith Let the other partie be heard too Herie wisely said that Iudge which told one that made a complaint That with the one eare hee heard him kept the other eare for him vppon whom the complaint was made Herein wée cont●ine the perfecte knowledge of the Iudge and say that hée must not make too much haste in cases vnknowen since hée must iudge them by the thing it selfe and not by the parties secrete tales and priuie accusations Secondarilie let him iudge saith hée yea let him iudge vprightly To iudge is to determine and pronounce truelie and iustly according to the lawes what is good what is euill what is right and what is wronge Wée Switzers saye Vrteilen oder ertetlen oder richten As if one should say to distinguishe a thinge throughlie considered and to plaine and make streighte a crooked thinge Parties blinded with affections make streight thinges crocked which the Iudge by applyinge the rule of equitie and lawe doth streighten againe So that to iudge is to streighten and to make plaine Moreouer to iudge is by defending and punishing to kéepe in libertie The magistrate doeth iudge therefore when hée defendeth the innocent and brideleth the hurtfull personne But hée must iudge iustly that is according to iustice and agreablie to the lawes which giue to euerie man that that is his The Iudge doth iudge vniustlie when of a corrupte minde hée pronounceth sentence contrarie to all lawe and equitie Now therefore wée haue to consider the vices which vsuallie are wont to reigne in iudges The vices that are in Iudges bée many and the diseases of their minds are sondrie but two especiall diseases there are and chiefe of all the rest The one of these two vices which so infecteth the mindes of Iudges that they cānot execute their office as they should is the accepting of faces or respecte of personnes that is when the Iudge in geuing iudgement hath not his eye set vppon the thinges themselues or vppon the causes or circumstances of the causes as they are in déde but hath a regard either of dignitie excellencie humilitie pouertie kinred men of honours letters or some such like scuffe The Lord excludeth this euill and saith Yee shall iudge iustelie yee shall haue ▪ no respecte of any person in Iudgement Yee shall heare the small aswell as the great The other disease of these twaine is feare a verie vehement affection of the minde which disturbeth the verie best and most excellent counsells and choaketh vppe Vertue before it come to light Vnder feare wée doe conteine hope also I meane of commoditie and so by that meanes by feare wée vnderstande the corruption of bribes The Iudge that standes in feare to loose his life or goods or is afrayde to displease a noble man or is loath to loose the common peoples good will hée also that taketh bribes or is in hope to be rewarded at one of the parties handes doth peruerte equitie and aduaunce iniquitie The Lord saith therefore Yée shall not feare any mortall man yee shall not looke for any reward at any mans hand Hée addeth the reason whie Because the matter is not yours neither were yée called to doe your owne businesse but the iudgemente is the Lords The will and lawe of God therefore must bée respected For God is able to defende iuste Iudges from the vniuste hatred of any whatsoeuer they bée and against all wronge and open violence Moreouer where it is said that the iudgement is the Lords thereby are the Iudges warned that they ought to imitate the example of the moste highe god But what and of what sort that example of God is the same Mo●es in the first of Deuteronomie expresseth and saith GOD doth accept neither personne nor giste hee doth Iustice for the fatherlesse and widdowe and loueth the straunger to giue him meate and cloathinge and therefore shal yee loue the straūger And so must godlie Iudges doe in the iudgemente which is Gods. Iosasaphat without all doubt a verie godly Prince speakinge to them whom hee had made Iudges did say Take heede what yee doe For yee execute not the Iudgementes of manne but of God which is with you in
without all filthie vncleane beastlynesse Last of all hee willeth the Gentiles to be restrayned of eating bloud and strangled He addeth the cause why and saith For Moses of olde time hath in euery citie them that preache him in the Synagogues where hee is read euery Sabboth daye Of which constitution touching bloud and strangled I spake somewhat before that I made this same digression Nowe therefore since the matter is at that pointe it is euident that they are without a cause offended with Sainct Iames which thinke that he did without all right and reason make and publishe this decree and that the fruite of that Synode was verie perillous nothing healesome and flatly contrary to Christian libertie For it is assuredly certeine that the meaning of Iames did in no poynte differ from the minde of Sainct Paule who neuerthelesse did verie well and praisworthily saye Let vs followe the things that make for peace and thinges wherewith we may one edifie an other Destroy not the work of God for meates sake All thinges are pure but it is euil for that man that eateth with offence It is good neither to eate flesh nor to drinke wine nor any thing whereby thy brother stumbleth or falleth or is made weake c. Romanes 14. It is also moste certeine that Sainct Paule who was so sharpely set to defend the Christian libertie that hee withstood Peter openly at Antioche would not haue beene behinde hand to resist Sainct Iames if he had thought that this constitution either had béen or should bée preiudiciall to Christian libertie Verily hee woulde neither haue preached nor yet commended this tredition of y Apostles to the churches of the Gentiles if hee had not thoughte that it had béene both hoalesome and profitable for them all to embrace But he did preache and commende it vnto the churches as is to be séene in the sixtéenth of the Actes and therfore is sainct Iames without a cause murmured against of some because hee for badd to eate bloud and strangled Finally the conclusion of their Epistle is From which if ye keep your selues ye do well So fare ye well They praise that abstinence and teach it as a good woorke because it is also commended to vs in all the Scriptures Thus haue I digressed not farre I trust from our purpose to speake of the decrée of the apostolique Synode helde at Hierusalem and thus muche at this time touching the abrogation of the ceremoniall lawes It remaineth here for mée to saye somewhat concerning the abrogation of the Iudiciall lawes Nowe therefore the Iudiciall lawes doe séeme to be abrogated in this sense because no Christian common weale no citie or kingdome is compelled to be bound to receiue those verie same lawes which were by Moses in that nation according to the time place state published and set out of olde Therefore euery countrie hath frée libertie to vse such lawes as are best and most requisite for the estate and necessitie of euery place and of euery time and persons so yet that the substance of Gods lawes be not reiected troden downe and vtterly neglected For the things which are agréeable to the lawe of nature and the tenne commaundements and whatsoeuer else God hath commaunded to bee punished must not in anye case bee either cleane forgotten or lightly regarded Nowe the ende whereunto all these lawes do tende is that honestie maye flourish peace and publique tranquillitie be firmely mainteined iudgement and iustice be rightly executed Of which because I haue at large disputed in the exposition of the precept Thou shalt doe no murther I will here be cōtent to be so much the briefer The holie Apostle Paule commaundeth to obey the magistrate he aloweth of the authoritie of the sword which he confesseth that the magistrate hath not in vaine receiued at the hande of god And therefore he did not dissallowe or finde faulte with the election of the magistrate the vse of the sworde the execution of the iudgement and iustice nor with vpright ciuil lawes Now whosoeuer doth conferre the lawes and constitutions of Princes kings Emperours or Christian magistrates which are to be found either in the Code in the booke of Digestes or Pandectes in the volume of newe Constitutions or else in anye other bookes of good lawes of sundrie nations with these Iudiciall lawes of God he must néedes confesse that they drawe verie néere in likenesse and do verie well agrée one with an other Iustinian the Emperour forbad by law either to sel or otherwise to make awaye the possessions of the church things consecrated vnto god For the sincere confessing and pure mainteining of the catholique faith the Emperours Gratian Valentinian Theodosius did make a moste excellent holie law Constantine the great gaue charge to Taurus one of his lieuetenauntes to shutte the idol temples and with the sworde to destroye suche rebeiles as went about to sett them open and to do sacrifice in them That lawes were made for the reliefe of the poore and that kinges and emperours had a care ouer them it is to be séene in more places than one of the Emperours lawes and constitutions It is verie certeine y whosoeuer readeth the Code lib. 1. tit 2. he shal finde much matter belonging to this argument For the honest trayning vp of children and the liberal susteining of aged parents there are verie commēdable lawes in the bookes of the heathens Concerning the authoritie y parentes haue ouer their childrē there is m●ch● many things to be found in writing● likewise of wedlock of inc●st 〈◊〉 marriages Honoriꝰ A●cadiꝰ many other princes haue made verie tollerable laudable decrées where they speake also verie well and wisely of the lawe of diuorcement But if I go on to add or oppose to euery seuerall title of the Iudiciall lawes conteined in this sermon sundrie and peculiar lawes out of the decrées of Christian Princes I shall I knowe be too tedious vnto your patience For then would this treatise passe the time of an ordinarie sermon Let it therefore suffice vs at this time by the declaration of these notes to haue opened and made a way to the diligēt louers of the truth to come to the vnderstanding of other things which we haue here omitted and that they may beléeue that the substance of Gods Iudiciall lawes is not taken awaye or abolished but that the ordering and limitation of them is placed in the will and arbitrement of good Christian princes so yet that they ordeine and appoinct that which is iuste and equall as the estate of the time place and persons shall best require that honestie and publique peace may be thereby preserued and god the father duely honoured through his onely begotten sonne Christe Iesus to whome all praise is due for euer For we do sée that the Apostles of Christe did neither require nor cōmaunde any nation in the administration of politique affaires to binde them selues to
ex●●sition of the scripture 〈◊〉 not be c●●trary to the arti●●● of our beliefe The expositiō must not be repugnant to the loue of God and our neighbour 〈◊〉 expoun●●●g the ●●●●ptures ●e must ●●rk that ●●at goeth ●●fore and ●●lloweth ●●●er and 〈◊〉 the circumstā●es The exposition of g●ds word ●●st be ma●● by 〈◊〉 layin●●●ge●her of ●iuers places 2. Pet. 1. The scri●tures m●● be expo●●ded wi●● zealous ● hertaf●● earnest prayer The de●nitions 〈◊〉 faith The description of true fayth The begi●ning and cause of faith Faith is planted by the worde of God. We muste ●raye for ●rue fayth That faith is an vndoubted persuasion of the minde Faith beleueth not euerithing what soeuer Examples ●f vndoub●ed saith ●herunto ●aith lea●eth and what the ●biect or ●oundation of faith 〈◊〉 Two chief ●●in●s of ●aith True fai●● seeketh a●● good thi●ges in 〈◊〉 through Christ ●rue faith ●eleeueth 〈◊〉 holy ●●riptures Fayth is ●ue alone 〈…〉 religions but no more the● one true fayth Faith do●● encrease and decrease Generall and particular faith Faith insp●red and Faith gotten 〈…〉 mall 〈…〉 The power and ef●ecte of faith Faith is the true knowledge that maketh men wise How man may attaine to ●he chiefe goodnesse Faith maketh happy Faith quickneth Faith ioyneth to god Faith i●stifieth Iustification What it is ●o iustifie ●hri●t hath 〈◊〉 on ●im self 〈…〉 sinnes The 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of since ●re take● away by Chri●● The death ●f Christ a ●●ll satis●●ction for ●ur sinnes Howe punishment is laide on vs. God hath ●ppointed ●●at he ●hat belee●eth shuld ●aue eternall life and be iustified Men are ●ustified ●y faith ●lone Christ cōpared with Adam Gods Testament We are not iustified by the workes o● the Law● but by Faith Christ died not in vaine All men are sinner● God iu●●●fieth as 〈◊〉 the Gentiles as 〈◊〉 Iewes by faith By what meanes ●ur father ●braham was iusti●●ed Neither is ●aith nor the promis of none effect ●ustification of free gift Faith sheweth foorth and expresseth it selfe by good workes Faith onely iustifieth Of good workes Faith the ●oore of al good ●o●kes Faith the victorie 〈◊〉 al Christians The Apo●tles 〈◊〉 The partition of the Apostles Creede God is one in su●stance an● three in persons I beleeue in God God is called a father God is called Almighty ●od is the m●ker of heauen ●nd earth The secōd article of our belief To belieue in the Sonn● of God. Who the Sonne of God is Consubstantial ●oessētiall The onely Sonne Iesus Christe Christe is our Lord. The 3. Article of our b●lie● The causes of the Lord his incarnatiō Immanuel A mediatour T●e manner of 〈◊〉 his ●●nceptiō The causes why Christ hi● conceptiō is pure Of the birth of Christ The fourth Article of our belief ●●●ist did 〈◊〉 Christ sufered vn●er P●nti●s Pilate Our Lord was buried He descended into Hell. The fift article of ou● belief The glorious resurrection of Christe What a resurrection ●s Out of from the dead He was ●rucified dead tokē downe and laid ●● his gran● vpon 〈◊〉 Friday where his body ●ay ▪ Saturday that is E●●er eue● and one Sunday which is Easter day in the morning he rose againe frō death to life The sixte article of our belief The glorious ascension of Christ The for● of Christ his ascension into heauen He ascen●ed into ●eauen He sitteth at the right hand of God the father Almighty The definition of gods right hand take here for the places name To sit is to be at rest and enioy felicitie Gods right hand the name of his power and in this signification to sit is to reign Saint Hierom of the ●ight hād of the fa●her Saint Augustine of the right hand of 〈◊〉 father ●●int Fulgentius His humanitie i● l●cal that is ●●●teined i● space of ●lace but ●●s Godhead incōprehēsible as that that is euery where 〈…〉 not 〈◊〉 in any place Saint vigilius The seuenth Article Christ a Iudge To Iudg● what it 〈◊〉 The pic●ure of ●he laste ●●dgemēt The quick and dead are iudged The reward and punishment is moste certaine the eighth article of our faith The father in Christ hath fully giuen vs all heauenly treasures The ninth ●rticle of ●ur belief ●ee must ●ot in our ●onfession ●y I be●●eue in ●he church Cyprian Augustine Paschasius ●●int Gre●orie ●homas ●quine Pope Leo. The Catholike Church The true Churche Wee beleeue the Church to be holy How the Church 〈◊〉 holy The co●munion of 〈◊〉 The tenth ●rticle of our belief The acknowledging and confessing of our sinnes O●r sins ar● forgi●ē of god 〈◊〉 for ●ur owne merits but for Christ his sake All sinnes are forgeuen God alone and not man forgeueth sinns Howe sins are forgeuen We make not satisfaction for punishmēt The ele●enth arti●le of our ●aith The resurrection of the flesh Whether the same bodies that do ●ut●ifie rise again Testimoni●s of the true resurrection In what sort our bodies shal rise again Of what facion our bodies shal be in the resurrection A glorious body What a glorious ●●dy is Glorious bodies rest free from vilenesse The natural and spi●●tuall body Fleshe and ●●oud ●hal not be 〈◊〉 heauen S●●su ani●●li Animalis The bodies of th● wicked shall also rise aga●n The t●elfth article of our belief Lyfe eue●lasting The face of God. Loue and c●antie Loue frō whence it is Double charitie The le● of God ▪ By the loue of God all euilles are ouercome The loue ●f God fa●oneth vs 〈◊〉 the will 〈◊〉 plea●●re of ●od The manner how to loue God. G●d alone to be loued Who is our neighbour The 〈…〉 ●ny one ●hat is a ●●an as wel 〈◊〉 we An order ●nd mea●●re in 〈◊〉 Howe our neighbour must be loued The loue of our neighbour must bee sincere We must loue our neighbour as our self We must loue ou● neighbo●● as Chris●● hath loue vs. Howe we ought to stand our n●ighbour in steede The pith of Charity Loue the fulfilling of the la● Workes of mercie An exhortation to Loue What law is The diuision of ●awes The la● of natu●● Consciēc● Nature Two especial points of the law of nature The Gen●●l●s knew God. Friendship societ●● of men t● be prese●ued The Lawe of nature answerable to the written Lawe 1 Of God. The Ethnickes sent●nces are in some pl●ces ma●●●ed 2 The Gentiles against idoles 3 The name ●f God ●ighly es●eemed 4 The Gen●●les kee●ers of re●●gion 5 The hono●ring of parentes 6 Murder adulterie 8 Theft 9 Lies False witnesses A hill in Rome Cata●a a Towne in Sicilie 10 Concupiscence Nature without grace of none effect ●awes of ●en ●awes of ●licie Ecclesias●●cal La●● Superstitious law●● Mens ●●●ditions What the Lawe of God is The mo●all lawe The Ceremoniall Lawe The Iudiciall Lawe The Law was euen before Moses time The Patriarches before Moses had the Ceremoniall and iudiciall Lawes The Mo●al Lawe endure● still The ma●estie and ●ignitie of ●he moral ●awe 〈…〉 the ●●st holy 〈◊〉 in 〈…〉 of 〈◊〉 Two Tables
of Gods law He putteth 3. in the first table and 7. in the last whic● added to gether d● make vp tenne What the two tables ●● the la● doe con●eine The first commaundement The 〈◊〉 is this I am a 〈◊〉 God 〈◊〉 the 〈◊〉 of all things ●hat this commaundem●nt requireth ofvs The true God is our God. The mysterie of our red●tion by Christ conteined in the first commau●dement Straunge Gods are forbidden Straunge gods wha● they are Coniu●●rs and witches The second commaundement of God. The ende of the cōmaundement is to drawe vs frō straūg and forreigne worshippinges God forbiddeth a grauen Image That is the Sunne Moone starres The cause why God wil not be likened to any thing They were h●●tiques ●●firming that Go● hath m●●bers 〈◊〉 to mo●● men ▪ All othe● images 〈◊〉 for bidd●● to be wo●shipped No imag● must be made for Christ How farre 〈◊〉 it 〈◊〉 law 〈◊〉 to ●●ke Images To Bow ●●wne what it is To serue what it 〈◊〉 Ideles teach no● Wee haue no cause to choose haunge Gods. God suf●●reth not mate How 〈◊〉 the fathers sinnes 〈◊〉 the 〈◊〉 A moste large promise is made to the godly worshippers of the Lord. The third commaundement of God. 〈◊〉 the 〈…〉 How the name of God is abused The punishment of them that abuse Gods ●ame A pain 〈…〉 by 〈…〉 Of an oath Whether it be lawfull to sweare For what causes we ought to sweare What an ●●the is Circ●●stances ceremonies is swear●●● How 〈◊〉 ought 〈◊〉 sweare An oath is ●he special ●onour ●one to God. The conditions of an holy oathe Whether wicked o●thes must be perfou●med It is be●t to 〈◊〉 an ill 〈◊〉 Monastial vowes ●ow reli●iously we ●ught to ●epe our ●athes A large rewarde promised to such as keepe ther Othes The 4. precept The order of the Lord his commaundements The Sabboth The Sabboth is spirituall The Sab●oth is the ●utward ●●stituti●n of re●●gion ●●ere is 〈…〉 to abou● in ●he mais●●● of the 〈◊〉 must teach 〈◊〉 his fa●●lie the 〈…〉 the Sab●●th day Ease or rest The Lo●● did ke●p the Sabboth day The Lord blessed the Sabboth day 〈…〉 The Sun●●y Christ●●● day New-yeares 〈◊〉 Good Friday East●● day As●●●sion day 〈◊〉 day The sanc●●fication of the christian Sabboth 〈◊〉 office of euery housholder Nume 15. the abu●●s ●f the ●●●●●th day Promises and thre●●nings added to the Sabboth day The Emperour●●aw for ●he kee●ing of ●he Sab●oth ●●e Sab●●●● made 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 man 〈◊〉 ●he ●●●both To plow land on the Sab●oth day ▪ ●●d doth ●●●ctifie ●r make ●oly The fifth ●●ecept ●hat is 〈◊〉 by 〈◊〉 name parents Our natiue Countrie Magisrates or Rulers Gardians or ouerseers of fatherlesse children Ministers pastour●●● the C●urch Cousins 〈◊〉 Aged per●●ns or olde folks To honor what it is The honour of God 〈…〉 before The honour due to parents Math. 15. The Stork he ensign of natural loue The Gen●iles sen●ences touching ho●●ur due ●o parents The pains 〈◊〉 trauails ●f Mo●hers in ●hildbirth For the honoring of our Countrie Fighting in defence of our Countrie Heb. 11 ● Cor. 4 1. Iohn ● Louers of their Coūtrie We must pray for our Countrie For the honour due to Magistrates Against seditious rebels The ho●our due 〈◊〉 Gardi●●ans and maisters ●f occupations ●●e office 〈◊〉 duetie ●asters 〈◊〉 schol●●● The ho●our due ●o Ministers of the Churches 1. Cor. 5. Math. ●● Act. 23. ●● 25. The 〈◊〉 temp●● the 〈…〉 God 's 〈◊〉 The honour due to our kinsfolkes For the honour due to old men Churche goods The p●●mis 〈◊〉 to those that worship 〈◊〉 parents 〈◊〉 threatninges 〈…〉 their parents Exod. 22 ●phes 5 The d●tie of p●rents to the● 〈◊〉 Childrē to be i●structed relig●●● Counsel aduise giuen to housholders in captiuitie Precepts on the in●tructi●● of 〈…〉 〈◊〉 The chi●● must be taught manners Childr●● must 〈◊〉 an occupation Of correction Cockering of children The dutie of childrē The sixt ●●●cept What is ●●●bidden 〈◊〉 this cō●aunde●●nt Of Anger Of 〈◊〉 Al hurting is forbidden The Lawe of like for like The man●●rs of killing The ●a●ses of m●●der Sanc●●●ries Howe great an offence murder is The magistrate may kill ●hat the 〈◊〉 is ●●gistra●●● what 〈◊〉 Three kindes of Magistracies Monarchie Tyrannie Aristocracie Oligarchie Democracie A prouerb 〈…〉 it is 〈◊〉 ●or a sub●●cte to speake a●●●nst his 〈…〉 In 〈…〉 it 〈…〉 wit● Saints The 〈…〉 must 〈…〉 Titus The 〈…〉 th● beg●●ning The Magistrate ordeined by God for the good of of men A good Magistrate and a badde Wheth●● an 〈…〉 be of 〈…〉 How the opp●essed must behaue themselues vnder tyrannical princes ● Cor. 10. ● Pet. 2. 〈◊〉 of ●●antes The elec●ion of 〈◊〉 Who ●●ght to chuse thē What ●inde of 〈◊〉 ●●ght to ●● chosen ●● be Ma●●strates ●● the de●●iption 〈◊〉 a good 〈◊〉 The Magistrate must be sound in religion Deut. ● Num. 27. The manner of consecrating Magistrates The Magistrates 〈◊〉 Whether ●e care of religi●n belong ●o the Magistrate Leui●●● Deut. 2● An answer to an obiection 1. Iohn 2 Esai 4● Const●●tine the great Gratian Valentinian Theodose Osias the Leper The seuerall offices of the Magistrates of the ministers must not be cōfounded Princes haue done and dealt in religion 2. Parali 8. Pri●ces haue 〈…〉 relig●●● Ecclesiasticall priuileges What lawes the magistrate ought to appoint concerning religion 〈◊〉 ●●●isers of new fan 〈◊〉 wor●●ippes are ●●arsed of God. 〈…〉 The Magistrate 〈◊〉 a lawe i●dued wit● life To put too and take from ●awes Wh●● mann●● lawes mag 〈…〉 ought vse Written ●●wes are ●eedfull The lawe of Moses is not to be in forced vpon kingdom countries A prouerb vsed when one will make them blinde that were before him disanull that which wise men haue allowed Ciuill lawes what manner of lawes they bee Lawes of honestie 〈…〉 ●awes of 〈◊〉 and ●●nimitie What ●●●gement Iudgemēt punishment pertaine to the Magistrate as depending vpon his office The 〈◊〉 Iudge●●●fice is ●●scribe● 〈…〉 〈◊〉 Iudge 〈◊〉 iudg● 〈◊〉 The faultes of Iudges Respect of Persons Vehement affection The good iudg oght to haue God be●ore him for a pat●rne to ●olowe 2. P●●al 9. Exod●● Leui●●● 〈◊〉 Iudge●ents are ●ot abro●ated a●ōg chri●tians Esai 1. Zach. 7. Of reuengeme●t t●ken by the Magistrate The sworde whet●●● 〈◊〉 be 〈◊〉 to kil● 〈◊〉 puni●●●●fende● Foolishe pitie Seueritie is not crueltie For what ●auses God commaunded to kill offenders Luke● ▪ Wh●●● mag●●● oug●● 〈◊〉 pu●●●●● end●● ▪ The ●indes of ●unish●ente Dimin●tio ●●pitis ● kinde of ●●dgemēt ●hereby ●●e is put ●●t of the ●●ings pro●●ction or ●ondem●ed to ●ondage ●●cretion 〈◊〉 cle●●ncie of ●●e iudge What is to be punished in offenders Whether ●●e Magi●●rate may 〈◊〉 for ●he breach 〈◊〉 religiō What moderation must be had in punishing Admonition before punishm●●● Obiections answe●ed Faith is the gift of God. Whether it be lawful to compel one to faith The Apostles required no ●ide of the magistrat for the maintenance of religion against the