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A03549 The second tome of homilees of such matters as were promised, and intituled in the former part of homilees. Set out by the aucthoritie of the Queenes Maiestie: and to be read in euery parishe church agreeably.; Certain sermons or homilies appointed to be read in churches. Book 2. Jewel, John, 1522-1571.; Church of England. Homelie against disobedience and wylfull rebellion.; Church of England. 1571 (1571) STC 13669; ESTC S106160 342,286 618

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vnreuerentlye not discerning the Lordes bodye Ought not we then by the monition of the wise man by the wisdome of God by the fearefull example of the Corinthians to take aduised heede that we thrust not our selues to this table with rude and vnreuerent ignoraunce the smart whereof Christes Churche hath rued and lamented these many dayes and yeres For what hath ben the cause of the ruyne of Gods religion but the ignoraunce hereof What hath ben the cause of this grosse idolatrie but the ignoraunce hereof What hath ben the cause of this mummishe massyng but the ignoraunce hereof Yea what hath ben and what is at this day the cause of this want of loue and charitie but the ignoraunce hereof Let vs therfore so trauaile to vnderstand the Lordes Supper that we be no cause of the decaye of Gods worship of no idolatrie of no dumme massing of no hate and malice so maye we the boldlyer haue accesse thyther to our comfort Neyther neede we to thinke that suche exact knowledge is required of euery man that he be able to discusse al high pointes in the doctrine thereof But this muche he must be sure to hold that in the supper of the Lorde there is no vaine ceremonie no bare signe no vntrue figure of a thing absent But as the Scripture sayth the table of the Lorde the bread and cuppe of the Lorde the memorie of Christe the annuntiation of his death yea the Communion of the bodye and blood of the Lorde in a marueylous incorporation whiche by the operation of the holye ghost the verye bonde of our con●unction with Christe is through fayth wrought in the soules of the faythfull whereby not onlye theyr soules lyue to eternall lyfe but they surely trust to winne to their bodyes a resurrection to immortalitie The true vnderstandyng of this fruition and vnion whiche is the bodye and the head betwixt the true beleuers and Christe the auncient Catholique Fathers both perceauing them selues and commendyng to theyr people were not afrayde to call this Supper some of them the salue of immortalitie and soueraigne preseruatiue agaynst death other a deificall Communion other the sweete dainties of our Sauiour the pledge of eternall health the defence of fayth the hope of the resurrection other the foode of immortalitie the healthfull grace and the conseruatorie to euerlastyng lyfe All which sayinges both of the holy Scripture and godly men truely attributed to this celestial banquet and feaste yf we woulde often call to minde O how woulde they inflame our heartes to de 〈…〉 e the participation of these mysteries and oftentimes to couet after this breade continuallye to thirste for this foode Not as speciallye regarding the terrene earthly creatures which remayne but alwayes holdyng faste and cleauyng by faith to the rocke whence we may sucke the sweetenesse of euerlasting saluation And to be briefe thus much more the faithful see heare and knowe the fauourable mercies of God sealed the satisfaction by Christe towardes vs confirmed and the remission of sinne established Here they may feele wrought the tranquilitie of conscience the encrease of fayth the strengthning of hope the large spreadyng abrode of brotherly kindnes with many other sundry graces of god The taste whereof they can not attayne vnto who be drowned in the deepe durtie lake of blyndnesse and ignoraunce From the whiche O beloued washe your selues with the liuyng waters of Gods worde whence you maye perceaue and know both the spirituall foode of this costly supper and the happy trustinges effectes that the same doth bring with it Now it foloweth to haue with this knowledge a sure and constant faith not only that the death of Christe is auayleable for the redemption of all the world for the remission of sinnes and reconciliation with God the father but also that he hath made vppon his crosse a full and sufficient sacrifice for thee a perfect clensyng of thy sinnes so that thou acknowledgest no other Sauiour redeemer mediatour aduocate intercessour but Christe only and that thou mayst say with the Apostle that he loued thee and gaue him selfe for thee For this is to sticke fast to Christes promise made in his institution to make Christe thyne owne and to applicate his merites vnto thy selfe Herein thou nedest no other mans helpe no other sacrifice or oblation no sacrifisyng Priest no masse no meanes established by mans inuention That faith is a necessarie instrument in al these holy ceremonies we may thus assure our selues for that as Saint Paul sayth without fayth it is vnpossible to please god When a great number of the Israelites were ouerthrowen in the wildernesse Moyses Aaron and Phinees dyd eate Manna and pleased God for that they vnderstoode sayth Saint Augustine the visible meate spiritually Spiritually they hungred it spiritually they tasted it that they myght be spiritually satisfied And truely as the bodily meate can not feede the outward man vnlesse it be let into a stomake to be digested whiche is healthsome and sound No more can thy inwarde man be fed except his meate bereceaued into his●oule and hart sound whole in fayth Therfore saith Ciprian when we do these thinges we nede not to whet our teethe but with sincere fayth we breake and diuide that holy bread It is wel knowen that the meate wee seeke for in this supper is spiritual foode the norishmēt of our soule a heauenly refection and not earthly an inuisible meate and not bodylye a ghostly substaunce and not carnall so that to thinke that without fayth we maye enioye the eatyng and drynkyng therof or that that is the fruition of it is ●ut to dreame a grosse carnall feeding basely obiecting and byndyng our selues to the elementes and creatures Whereas by the aduice of the counsel of Nicene we ought to lyft vp our mindes by faith leauing these inferiour and earthly thinges there seke it where the s●nne of ryghteousnesse euer shineth Take then this lesson O thou that art desyrous of this table of Emissenus a godly father that when thou goest vp to the reuerent Communion to be satisfied with spirituall meates thou loke vp with faith vpon the holy body and blood of thy god thou maruel with reuerence thou touche it with thy minde thou receaue it with the hand of thy heart and thou take it fully with thy inwarde man. Thus we see beloued that resortyng to this table we must plucke vp all the rootes of infidelitie al distrust in Gods promises we must make our selues lyuing members of Christes bodye For the vnbeleuers and faithlesse can not feede vpon that pretious body whereas the faythfull haue theyr life their abiding in hym their vniō and as it were their incorporation with hym Wherefore let vs proue and trye our selues vufaignedly without flattering our selues whether we be plantes of that fruitful Oliue liuyng braunches of the true vine members in deede of Christes mystical body whether God
knowen of all for daunger of heresie as they saye be shut vp and idolles and images not withstanding they be forbidden by God and not withstanding the daunger of idolatrie by them shall they yet be set vp suffered mainteyned in churches and temples O worldly and fleshely wysedome euer bent to maynteyne the inuentions and traditions of men by carnal reason and by the same to disanull or deface the holy ordinaunces lawes and honour of the eternall God who is to be honoured and praysed for euer Amen Nowe it remayneth for the conclusion of this treatie to declare aswell the abuse of churches temples by to costely and sumptuous deckyng and adourning of them as also the leude paintyng gylding and clothing of idols and images and so to conclude the whole treatie In Tertulians tyme an hundred and threescore yeares after Christe Christians had none other temples but commō houses whyther they for the most part secretely resorted And so farre of was it that they had before his tyme any goodly or gorgious declied temples that lawes were made in Antonius Verus and Commodus the Emperours times that no christians should dwell in houses come in publique bathes or be seene in streetes or any where abroade and that if they were once accused to be Christians they should by no meanes be suffred to escape As was practised in Apolonius a noble Senatour of Rome who being accused of his owne bondeman and slaue that he was a Christian coulde neyther by his defence and appologie learnedly and eloquentlie written and read publiquely in the Senate nor in respect that he was a ci 〈…〉 zen nor for the dignitie of his order nor for the vylenesse and vnlawfulnesse of his accuser being his owne slaue by lykelihoode of malice moued to forge lyes against his lorde nor for no other respect or helpe could be deliuered from death So that christians wer then driuen to dwel in caues and dennes so farre of was it that they had any publique temples adourned and decked as they now be Which is here rehearsed to the confutation of those impudent shamlesse lyers whiche reporte suche glorious glosed fables of the goodly and gorgious Temple that Saynt Peter Linus Cletus and those thirtie Bishoppes their successours had at Rome vntill the time of the Emperour Constantine and whiche saint Policarpe should haue in Asia or Ireneus in Fraunce by suche lyes contrarie to all true Histories to maynteyne the superfluous gylding and decking of Temples now a dayes wherein they put almost the whole summe and pith of our religion But in those tymes the worlde was wonne to Christendome not by gorgious gylted and paynted temples of christians which had scarsely houses to dwell in but by the godly and as it were golden mynds and fyrine fayth of suche as in al aduersitie persecution professed the trueth of our religion And after these tymes in Maximian and Constantius the Emperors proclamation the places wher Christians resorted to publique prayer were called conuenticles And in Galerius Maximinus the Emperors Epistle they are called Oratories and Dominica to saye places dedicate to the seruice of the Lorde And here by the waye it is to be noted that at that tyme there were no Churches or temples erected vnto any saint but to God onely as Saint Augustine also recordeth saying we buyld no temples vnto our martirs And Eusebius him selfe calleth Churches houses of prayer and sheweth that in Constantine the emperours tyme al men reioyced seeing in steade of lowe conuenticles whiche tyraunts had destroyed hygh temples to be buylded Loe vnto the tyme of Constantine by the space of aboue three hundred yeares after our sauiour Christ when christian religion was most pure and in deede golden Christians had but lowe and poore conuenticles and simple oratories yea caues vnder the groūd called Cryptae where they for feare of persecution assembled secretely together A sigure whereof remayneth in the vaultes whiche yet are buylded vnder great Churches to put vs in remembraunce of the old state of the primitiue church before Constantine where as in Constantines tyme and after him were buylded great and goodly temples for christians called Basilicae either for that the Grekes vsed to call all great and goodly places Basilicas or for that the hyghe and euerlasting kyng God and our Sauiour Christe was serued in them But although Constantine and other princes of good zeale to our religion did sumptuouslye decke and adourne Christians temples yet did they dedicate at that time all Churches and temples to God or our Sauiour Christe and to no saint for that abuse began long after in Iustinians tyme And that gorgeousnes then vsed as it was borne with as rysing of a good zeale so was it signified of the godly learned euen at that tyme that such coste might otherwyse haue ben better bestowed Let saint Jerome although otherwyse to great a lyker and a lower of externall and outwarde thinges be a proofe hereof who hath these wordes in his Epistle to Demetriades Let other sayeth saint Jerome buylde Churches couer walles with tables of marble carrye together huge pyllers and gylde their toppes or heades whiche do not feele or vnderstande their precious decking and adourning let them decke the doores with iuorie and siluer and set the golden Aulters with precious stones I blame it not let euerye man abounde in his owne sense and better is it so to do then carefullye to keepe their ryches layde vp in store But thou hast another waye appoynted thee to cloth Christ in the poore to visit him in the sicke feede him in the hungrie lodge him in those who do lacke harbour and specially suche as be of the householde of fayth And the same Saint Jerome toucheth the same matter some what more freelye in his treatie of the lyfe of Clarkes to Nepotian saying thus Many buylde walles and erect pyllers of Churches the smoothe marbles do glister the roofe shyneth with Golde the aulter is set with precious stone But of the ministers of Christe there is no election or choyce Neither let any man obiecte and aleage agaynst me the ryche temple that was in Jurie the table candlestickes incense shippes platters cuppes morters and other thinges all of golde Then were these thinges allowed of the Lorde when the Priestes offered sacrifices and the blood of beastes was accompted the redemption of sinnes Howbeit all these thinges went before in figure and they were written for vs vppon whom the ende of the worlde is come And nowe when that our Lorde beyng poore hath dedicate the pouertie of his house let vs remember his crosse and we shall esteeme ryches as myre ordongue What do wee maruell at that whiche Christe calleth wicked Mammon Whereto do we so hyghlye esteeme and loue that whiche saint Peter doth for a glorie testifie that he had not Nytherto saint Jerome Thus you see how saint Jerome teacheth the sumptuousnes amongst the Jewes to be
saying Take heede to your selues least at any time your heartes be ouercome with surfetting and drunkennesse and cares of this worlde and so that day come on you vnwares Whosoeuer then wyl take warning at Christe let him take heede to him self least his heart being ouerwhelmed by surfetting and drowned in drunkennesse he be taken vnwares with that vnthriftie seruaunt which thinking not on his maisters comming began to smite his felow seruauntes and to eate and drinke and to be drunken and being sodenly taken hath his iust rewarde with vnbeleeuing hypocrites They that vse to drinke depely and to feede at full wallowing them selues in all kinde of wickednesse are brought a sleepe in that slumbring forgetfulnesse of Gods holy wyll and commaundementes Therefore almightie God crieth by the prophet Ioel Awake ye drunkardes weepe and howle all ye drinkers of wine because the newe wine shal be pulled from your mouth Here the Lord terribly threatneth to withdrawe his benefites from suche as abuse them and to pull the cup from the mouth of drunkardes Here we may learne not to sleepe in drunkennes and surfetting least God depriue vs of the vse of his creatures when we vnkindly abuse them For certainely the Lorde our God wyl not only take away his benefites when they are vnthankfully abused but also in his wrath and heauye displeasure take vengeaunce on such as immoderatly abuse them If our firste parentes Adam and Eue had not obeyed their greedy appetite in eating the forbidden fruite neyther had they lost the fruition of Gods benefites which they then enioyed in paradice neither had they brought so many mischeefes both to themselues and to all their posteritie But when they passed the bondes that God had appointed them as vnworthy of Gods benefites they are expelled and dryuen out of paradice they may no longer eate the fruites of that garden whiche by excesse they had so much abused As transgressours of Gods commaundement they and their posteritie are brought to a perpetuall shame and confusion and as accursed of God they must nowe sweate for their liuing which before had aboundaunce at their pleasure Euen so if we in eating and drinking exceede when God of his large liberalitie sendeth plentie he wyl soone chaunge plentie into scarsenesse And where as we gloryed in fulnesse he wyll make vs emptie and confounde vs with penurie yea we shal be compelled to labour and trauaile with paynes in seekyng for that whiche we sometime enioyed at ease Thus the Lorde wyll not leaue them vnpunished whiche not regardyng his workes folowe the lustes and appetites of their owne heartes The patriarch Noah whom the Apostle calleth the preacher of ryghteousnesse a man exceedingly in Gods fauour is in holy scripture made an example whereby we may learne to auoyde drunkennesse For when he had powred in wine more then was conuenient in filthie maner he lay naked in his tent his priuities discouered And whereas sometyme he was so muche esteemed he is now become a laughing stocke to his wicked sonne Cham no small greefe to Sem and Japheth his other two sonnes whiche were ashamed of their fathers beastly behauiour Here we may note that drunkennesse bryngeth with it shame and derision so that it neuer escapeth vnpunished Lot in lyke maner beyng ouercome with wine committeth abominable incest with his owne daughters So wyll almyghtie God geue ouer drunkardes to the shamefull lustes of their owne heartes Here is Lot by drinkyng fallen so farre beside hym selfe that he knoweth not his owne daughters Who woulde haue thought that an olde man in that heauie case hauing lost his wyfe and all that he had whiche had seene euen nowe Gods vengeaunce in fearefull maner declared on the fiue Cities for their vicious lyuyng shoulde be so farre past the remembraunce of his duetie But men ouercome with drynke are altogether madde as Seneca sayth He was deceaued by his daughters but nowe many deceaue themselues neuer thinking that GOD by his terrible punishmentes wylbe auenged on them that offend by excesse It is no small plague that Lot purchased by his drunkennesse For he had copulation moste filthily with his owne daughters whiche conceaued thereby so that the matter is brought to lyght it can no lenger be hid Two incestuous chyldren are borne Ammon and Moab of whom came two nations the Ammonites and Moabites abhorred of God and cruel aduersaries to his people the Israelites Lo Lot hath gotten to hym selfe by drynking sorow and care with perpetuall infamie and reproche vnto the worldes ende If God spared not his seruaunt Lot being otherwyse a godly man nephewe vnto Abraham one that entertained the angelles of God What wyll he do to these beastly belly slaues whiche voyde of all godlynes or vertuous behauiour not once but continually day and nyght geue them selues wholly to bibbyng and banquetting Butlet vs yet further beholde the terrible examples of Gods indignation agaynst suche as greedyly folowe their vnsatiable lustes Ammon the sonne of Dauid feastyng hym selfe with his brother Absolon is cruelly murthered of his owne brother Holophernes a valeant and mightie captaine being ouer whelmed with wine had his head stricken from his shoulders by that seely woman Iudith Simon the hie priest and his two sonnes Mattathias and Iudas being entertained of Ptolomie the son of Abobus who had before maryed Simons daughter after muche eatyng and drynkyng were trayterously murthered of their owne kynsman If the Israelites had not geuen them selues to belly cheare they had neuer so often fallen to idolatrie Neyther woulde we at this day be so addict to superstition were it not that we so much esteemed the fillyng of our bellies The Israelites when they serued idolles sate downe to eate and drynke and rose agayne to play as the scripture reporteth Therefore seeking to serue their bellyes they forsooke the seruice of the Lorde their god So are we drawne to consent vnto wickednesse when our heartes are ouerwhelmed by drunkennesse and feasting So Herode setting his minde on banquetting was content to graunt that the holy man of God John Baptist shoulde be beheaded at the request of his whores daughter Had not the riche glutton ben so greedely geuen to the pamperyng of his belly he woulde neuer haue ben so vnmercifull to the poore Lazarus neyther had he felt the tormentes of the vnquenchable fire What was the cause that god so horribly punished Sodoma and Gomorrha was it not their proud banquetting and continual idlenes whiche caused them to be so lewde of lyfe and so vnmercifull towardes the poore What shall we nowe thinke of the horrible excesse whereby so many haue perished and ben brought to destruction The great Alexander after that he had conquered the whole worlde was himselfe ouercome by drunkennesse insomuche that being drunken he slewe his faythfull freende Clitus whereof when he was sober he was so muche ashamed that for anguishe of heart
to be cōdempned vnto death to take vpon him the rewarde of our sinnes and to geue his body to be broken on the crosse for our offences He sayth the prophete Esai meaning Christe hath borne our infirmities hath caried our sorowes the chastisement of our peace was vpō him by his stripes are we made whole Saint Paul like wyse sayth God made him a sacrifice for our sinnes whiche knewe not sinne that we should be made the righteousnesse of God by him And saint Peter most agreeably wryting in this behalfe sayth Christe hath once died suffered for our sinnes the iust for the vniust c. To these myght be added an infinite number of other places to the same effect but these fewe shal be sufficient for this tyme Now then as it was said at the beginning let vs ponder weigh the cause of his death that therby we may be the more moued to glorifie him in our whole lyfe Whiche yf you wyll haue comprehended briefelye in one worde it was nothyng els in our parte but onlye the transgression and sinne of mankinde When the angell came to warne Joseph that he should not feare to take Mary to his wife Did he not therefore will the childes name to he called Jesus because he should saue his people from their sinnes When John the Baptist preached Christ and she wed hym to the people with his finger Dyd he not playnely say vnto them Behold the lambe of God whiche taketh away the sinnes of the worlde When the woman of Canaan besought Christ to helpe her daughter which was possest with a deuil did he not openly confesse that he was sent to saue the lost sheepe of the house of Israel by geuing his life for theyr sinnes It was sinne then O man euē thy sinne that caused Christe the onlye sonne of God to be crucified in the fleshe and to suffer the most vyle slaunderous death of the crosse If thou haddest kept thy selfe vyryght if thou haddest obserued the commaundementes yf thou haddest not presumed to transgresse the wyll of God in thy fyrst father Adam then Christe being in fourme of God needed not to haue taken vppon him the shape of a seruaunt being immortall in heauen he needed not to become mortal on earth beyng the true bread of the soule he needed not to hunger being the healthfull water of lyfe he needed not to thirst being life it selfe he needed not to haue suffred death But to these and many other suche extremities was he dryuen by thy sinne which was so manifolde great that god could be onlye pleased in hym and none other Canst thou thinke of this O sinful man and not tremble within thy selfe Canst thou heare it quietlye without remorse of conscience and sorowe of heart Did Christ suffer his passion for thee and wylt thou shewe no compassion towardes hym Whyle Christe was yet hangyng on the Crosse and yelding vp the ghost the Scripture witnesseth that the vale of the temple did rent in twaine and the earth dyd quake that the stones claue asunder that the graues dyd open the dead bodyes rise And shall the heart of man be nothyng moued to remember how greeuously and cruelly he was handled of the Jewes for our sinnes Shall man shew himselfe to be more hard hearted then stones to haue lesse compassion thē dead bodies Call to minde O sinful creature and set before thyne eyes Christe crucified Thinke thou seest his body stretched out in length vppon the crosse his head crowned with sharpe thorne his handes his feete pearsed with nailes his heart opened with a long speare his fleshe rente and torne with whippes his browes sweating water and blood Thinke thou hearest hym nowe crying in an intollerable agonie to his father saying My God my God why hast thou forsaken me Couldest thou behold this wofull sight or heare this mournefull voyce without teares consydering that he suffered all this not for any desart of his owne but only for the greeuousnes of thy sinnes O that mankinde shoulde put the euerlasting sonne of God to such paines O that we should be the occasion of his death the only cause of his condempnation May we not iustly crye wo worth the time that euer we sinned O my brethren let this image of Christe crucified be alwayes printed in our heartes let it stirre vs vp to the hatred of sinne prouoke our mindes to the earnest loue of almightie god For why Is not sinne thinke you a greuous thing in his sight seing for the transgressing of Gods precept in eating of one apple he condempned all the world to perpetuall death and would not be pacified but only with the blood of his own sonne True yea moste true is that saying of Dauid Thou O Lorde hatest all them that worke iniquitie neyther shall the wicked and euill man dwell with thee By the mouth of his prophete Esai he cryeth mainely out agaynst sinners and sayth ●o be vnto you that draw iniquitie with cordes of vanitie and sinne as it were with cart ropes Dyd not God geue a plaine token howe greatly he hated abhored sinne whē he drowned all the world saue only eyght persons when he destroyed Sodome Gomorra with fire and brimstone when in three dayes space he killed with pestilence threescore and ten thousande for Dauids offence when he drowned Pharao and al his hoast in the red sea when he turned Nabuchodonozor the kyng into the fourme of a bruite beast creeping vppon all foure when he suffered Achitophel Iudas to hang them selues vpō the remorse of sinne whiche was so terrible to theyr eyes A thousand such examples are to be found in scripture yf a man would stand to seeke them out But what neede we This one example which we haue now in hande is of more force ought more to moue vs then all the rest Christe being the sonne of god and perfect God him self who neuer committed sinne was compelled to come downe from heauen to geue his body to be bruised broken on the crosse for our sinnes Was not this a manifest token of Gods great wrath and displeasure towardes sinne that he could be pacified by no other meanes but onlye by the sweete precious blood of his deare sonne O sinne sinne that euer thou shouldest dryue Christe to suche extremitie Wo worth the tyme that euer thou camest into the world But what booteth it now to bewayle Sinne is come and so come that it can not be auoyded There is no man liuing no not the iustest man on the earth but he falleth seuen times a day as Salomon sayth And our Sauiour Christe although he hath deliuered vs from sinne yet not so that we shal be free from committing sinne But so that it shal not be imputed to our condempnation He hath taken vpon him the iust rewarde of sinne which was death by death
yea towardes the image of GOD the excellent creature thyne owne soule If thou haue offended nowe be reconciled If thou hast caused anye to stumble in the waye of God nowe set them vp agayne If thou haue disquieted thy brother nowe pacitie hym If thou haue wronged hym nowe reliefe hym If thou haue defrauded hym nowe restore to hym If thou haue nourished spite nowe embrace frendshippe If thou haue fostred hatred and malice nowe openly shewe thy loue and charitie yea be ●●este and redye to procure thy neyghbours health of soule wealth commoditie and pleasure as thyne owne Deserue not the heauie and dreadfull burden of Gods displeasure for thyne euyll wyll towardes thy neyghbour so vnreuerentlye to approche to this table of the Lorde Last of all as there is here the mysterie of peace and the Sacrament of Christian societie wherby we vnderstand what sincere loue ought to be betwixt the true communicantes So here be the tokens of purenesse and innocencie of lyfe whereby we maye perceaue that we ought to purge our owne soule from all vncleannesse iniquitie and wickednesse lest when we receaue the mysticall bread as Origen saith we eate it in an vncleane place that is in a soule defiled and polluted with sinne In Moyses lawe the man that dyd eate of the sacrifice of thankesgenyng with his vncleannesse vppon him shoulde be destroyed from his people And shal we thinke that the wicked and sinfull person shal be excurable at the table of the Lord ●e both ●eade in S. Paul that the Churche at Corinth was scourged of the Lorde for misusing the Lordes supper and we maye plainelye see Christes Churche these many yeres miserably vexed and oppressed for the horrible prophanation of the same Wherefore let vs al vniuersall and singuler behold our owne maners and liues to amende them Yea nowe at the least let vs call our selues to an accompt that it may greeue vs of our former euyll conuersation that we may hate sinne that we may sorowe and mourne for our offences that we may with teares powre them out before god that we may with sure trust desire and craue the salue of his mercie bought and purchased with the blood of his dearelye beloued sonne Jesus Christe to heale our deadly woundes withall For surely yf we do not with earnest repentance clense the filthy stomacke of our soule it must needes come to passe that as wholsome meate receaued into a rawe stomacke corrupteth and marreth all and is the cause of further sicknesse so shal we eate this healthsome bread and drinke this cup to our eternall destruction This we and not other must throughly examine and not lyghtly loke ouer our selues not other men our owne conscience not other mens liues whiche we ought to do vpryghtly truely and with iust correction O sayth Chrisostome let no Judas resort to this table let no couetous personne approche If any be a disciple let hym be present For Christe sayth With my disciples I make my Passouer Why cryed the Deacon in the primatiue Church If any be holy let him draw neare Why dyd they celebrate these mysteries the quier doore beyng shut Why were the publique penitentes and learners in religion commaunded at this tyme to auoyde Was it not because this table receaued no vnholye vncleane or sinfull ghestes Wherefore yf seruauntes dare not presume to an earthly maisters table whom they haue offended Let vs take heede we come not with our sinnes vnexamined into this presence of our Lorde iudge If they be worthy blame which kisse the Princes hand with a filthy vncleane mouth shalt thou be blamelesse whiche with a filthy stinking soule ful of couetousnesse fornication drunkennesse pride full of wretched cogitations thoughts doest breath out iniquitie and vncleannesse on the bread and cup of the Lorde Thus haue you heard howe you shoulde come reuerently and decentlye to the table of the Lord hauing the knowledge out of his word of the thing it selfe the fruites thereof bringing a true constant faith the roote and welspring of all newnes of life aswell in praysing God louyng our neighbour as purging our owne conscience from filthines So that neither the ignoraunce of the thing shall cause vs to contempne it nor vnfaithfulnes make vs voyde of fruite nor sinne and iniquitie procure vs Gods plagues but shal by fayth in knowledge and amendement of lyfe in fayth be here so vnited to Christe our head in his mysteries to our comfort that after we shall haue full fruition of him indeede to our euerlasting ioy and eternall lyfe to the which he bryng vs that dyed for vs and redeemed vs Jesus Christe the righteous to whom with the father and the holy ghost one true and eternall God be al prayse honour and dominion for euer Amen An Homilee concerning the comming downe of the holy ghost and the manifolde giftes of the same For Whitsunday BEfore we come to the declaration of the great and manifolde gyftes of the holye ghost wherwith the church of God hath ben euermore replenished it shall first be nedefull briefly to expound vnto you wherof this feaste of Pentecoste or Whitsuntide had his first beginnyng You shall therefore vnderstande that the feast of Pentecoste was alwayes kept the fiftie day after Easter a great solempne feast among the Jewes wherein they dyd celebrate the memoriall of their deliueraunce out of Egypt and also the memoriall of the publishing of the lawe whiche was geuen vnto them in the mount Sinai vpon that day It was fyrst ordeyned and commaunded to be kept holye not by anye mortall man but by the mouth of the Lorde him selfe as we reade in Leuit. 23. Deut. 16. The place appoynted for the obseruation thereof was Hierusalem where was great recourse of people from all partes of the worlde as may well appeare in the second Chapter of the Actes wherein mention is made of Parthians Medes Elamites inhabitours of Mesopotamia inhabitours of Iurie Capadocia Pontus Asia Phrygia Pamphylia diuers other such places whereby we may also partly gather what great and royal solempnitie was commonly vsed in that feast Nowe as this was geuen in cōmaundement to the Jewes in the olde lawe so dyd our Sauiour Christe as it were confirme the same in the tyme of the Gospell ordeyning after a sort a newe Pentecost for his disciples namely when he sent downe the holy ghost visiblye in fourme of clouen tongues lyke fyre and gaue them power to speake in such sort that euery one myght heare them and also vnderstand them in his owne language Which miracle that it myght be had in perpetuall remembraunce the Church hath thought good to solemnize and kepe holy this day commonly called Whitsunday And here is to be noted that as the lawe was geuen to the Jewes in the mount Sinai the fiftie day after Easter so was the preaching of the Gospell through the myghtie power of the holy ghost geuen
then such lenitie whiche sinfull humanitie sayeth holy Chrisostome is more cruell before God then any murder or shedding of blood when it is commaunded of god But yet how euill soeuer Saul the kyng was and out of Gods fauour yet was he obeyed of his subiect Dauid the verye best of all subiectes and moste valiaunt in the seruice of his Prince and countrey in the warres the moste obedient and louyng in peace and alwayes most true and faythfull to his soueraygne and Lord and furthest of from all maner rebellion For the which his most painfull true and faithfull seruice Kyng Saule yet rewarded him not onelye with great vnkyndnesse but also sought his destruction and death by all meanes possible so that Dauid was faine to saue his lyfe not by rebellion nor any resistaunce but by flight and hyding him selfe from the kings sight Which notwithstanding when kyng Saul vpon a time came alone into the caue where Dauid was so that Dauid might easily haue slaine him yet woulde he neither hurt him him selfe neyther suffer any of his men to lay handes vppon hym Another tyme also Dauid entring by nyght with one Abisai a valiaunte and a fierce man into the tent where Kyng Saule did lye a sleepe where also he myght yet more easylye haue slayne hym yet woulde he neyther hurte hym hym selfe nor suffer Abisai who was wyllyng and redye to slea Kyng Saule once to touche hym Thus did Dauid deale with Saule his prince notwithstanding that Kyng Saule continuallye sought his death and destruction It shall not be amisse vnto these deedes of Dauid to adde his wordes and to shewe you what he spake vnto such as encouraged him to take his oportunitie and aduantage to slaye kyng Saule as his mortall enemie when he myght The Lord keepe me sayth Dauid from doing that thing and from laying handes vpon my Lorde Gods annoynted For who can lay his hand vpon the Lords annointed and be gyltlesse As truely as the Lord lyueth except that the Lorde do smyte hym or his dayes shall come to dye or that he go downe to warre and be slayne in battell the Lorde be mercifull vnto me that I laye not my hande vppon the Lordes annoynted These be Dauids words spokē at sundry times to diuers his seruauntes prouokyng hym to stea king Saul when oportunitie serued him thervnto Neither is it to be omitted and left out how when an Amalechite had slayne king Saul euen at Sauls owne bidding commaundement for he would lyue no longer now for that he had lost the feeld against his enemies the Philistines the said Amalechite making great hast to bryng fyrst word and newes thereof vnto Dauid as ioyous vnto him for the death of his mortal enemy bringing withall the crowne that was vppon Kyng Saules head and the bracelet that was vppon his arme both as a proofe of the trueth of his newes and also as fit and pleasaunt presentes vnto Dauid beyng by God appoynted to be king Saul his successour in the kyngdome Yet was that faithfull and godly Dauid so farre from reioycing at these newes that he rent his clothes wept and mourned and fasted and so farre of from thankesfeuing to the messenger either for his deede in killing the king though his deadly enemy or for his message and newes or for hys presentes that he brought that he sayd vnto him How happened it that thou wast not afrayde to lay thy handes vppon the Lordes annoynted to slea hym Whereupon immediatelye hee commaunded one of his seruauntes to kyll the messenger and sayd Thy blood be vpon thyne owne head for thine owne mouth hath wytnessed agaynst thy selfe in confessyng that thou haste slayne the Lordes annoynted This example dearely beloued is notable and the circumstances thereof are well to be considered for the better instruction of all Subiectes in theyr bounden duetie of obedience and perpetuall fearyng of them from attemptyng of any rebellion or hurt agaynst theyr Prince On the one part Dauid was not onely a good and true Subiect but also suche a Subiect as both in peace and warre had serued and saued his Princes honour and lyfe and delyuered hys countrey and countreymen from great daunger of Infidels forraigne and most cruell enemies horribly inuading the kyng and hys countrey for the whiche Dauid was in singuler fauour wyth all the people so that he might haue had great numbers of them at hys commaundement if he woulde haue attempted any thyng Besydes thys Dauid was no commō or absolute subiect but heyre aparant to the crowne and kyngdome by God appoynted to raygne after Saule whiche as it increased the fauour of the people that knewe it towardes Dauid so did it make Dauids cause case much differing from the case of common and absolute subiectes And which is most of all Dauid was hyghly and singulerly in the fauour of God On the contrary part kyng Saul was out of Gods fauour for that cause which is before rehearsed and he as it were Gods enemy and therefore like in warre and peace to be hurtful and pernitious vnto the common wealth and that was knowen to many of his subiectes for that he was openly rebuked of Samuel for his disobedience vnto God whiche might make the people the lesse to esteeme him Kyng Saul was also vnto Dauid a mortall and deadlye enemie though without Dauids deseruing who by his faythfull paynefull profitable yea moste necessarye seruice had well deserued as of his country so of his prince but kyng Saul farre otherwyse the more was his vnkyndnesse hatred and crueltie towardes suche a good subiect both odious and detestable Yet would Dauid neither him selfe s●ea nor hurt suche an enemie for that he was his prince and Lord nor would suffer any other to kill hurt or laye hand vppon hym when he myght haue ben slayne without any sturre tumult or daunger of any mans lyfe Now let Dauid answere to such demaundes as men desyrous of rebellion do vse to make Shall not we speciallye beyng so good men as we are ryse and rebell agaynst a Prince hated of God and Gods enemie and therefore like not to prosper either in warre or peace but to be hurtful and pernitious to the commō wealth No sayth good and godly Dauid Gods and such a kynges faythful subiect and so conuicting such subiectes as attempt any rebellion agaynst suche a king to be neither good subiects nor good men But say they shall we not ryse and rebell against so vnkynde a Prince nothing consyderyng or regarding our true faythfull and payneful seruice or the safegarde of our posteritie No sayth good Dauid whom no such vnkyndnesse coulde cause to forsake his due obedience to his Soueraigne Shall we not say they ryse and rebell agaynst our knowen mortall and deadly enemie that seeketh our lyues No sayth godly Dauid who had learned the lesson that our Sauiour afterwarde playnelye taught
Rome toke for a iust cause to rebell agaynst his lawfull prince they myght haue knowen to be a doubling and tripling of his most heynous wickednes heaped with horrible impietie and blasphemie But lest the poore people shoulde knowe to muche he woulde not let them haue as muche of Gods worde as the ten commaundementes wholye and perfectly withdrawyng from them the commaundement that bewrayeth his impietie by a subtill sacrilege Had the Emperours subiectes likewyse knowen and ben of anye vnderstandyng in Gods worde woulde they at other times haue rebelled agaynst their Soueraigne Lorde and by their rebellion haue holpen to depose hym onlye for that the byshop of Rome dyd beare them in hande that it was symonie and heresye to for the Emperour to geue any ecclesiasticall dignities or promotions to his learned Chaplaines or other of his learned cleargie which all Christian Emperours before hym had done without controulement woulde they I say for that the Byshop of Rome bare them so in hande haue rebelled by the space of more then fourtie yeres together agaynst hym with so much shedding of Christian blood and murther of so many thousandes of Christians and finallie haue deposed their Soueraigne Lorde had they knowen and had in Gods worde anye vnderstandyng at all Specially had they knowen that they dyd al this to plucke from their Soueraigne Lorde and his successours for euer theyr auncient right of the Empyre to geue it vnto the Romishe Cleargie and to the Byshop of Rome that he myght for the confirmation of one Archbyshop and for a Romishe ragge whiche he calleth a Paul scarse worth twelue pence receaue many thousande crownes of golde and of other Byshoppes likewyse great summes of money for their bulles whiche is symonie in deede would I say Christian men and subiectes by rebellion haue spent so muche Christian blood and haue deposed their natural most noble and most valiaunt prince to bring the matter finally to this passe had they knowen what they dyd or had any vnderstandyng in Gods word at all And as these ambitious vsurpers the byshops of Rome haue ouerflowed all Italie and Germanie with streames of Christian blood shed by the rebellions of ignoraunt subiectes agayng their naturall lordes the Emperous whom they haue stirred there vnto by such false pretences so is there no countrey in Christendome whiche by theyr lyke meanes and false pretences hath not ben oursprinkled with the blood of subiectes by rebellion agaynst their naturall Soueraignes styrred vp by the same Byshops of Rome And to vse one example of our owne countrey The Byshop of Rome dyd pike a quarell to kyng John of Englande about the election of Steuen Langton to the Byshoprike of Canterburie wherein the kyng had auncient ryght being vsed by his progenitours all Christian Kynges of Englande before hym the Byshops of Rome hauing no ryght but had begun then to vsurpe vpon the kinges of Englande and al other Christian kynges as they had before done agaynst theyr Soueraigne Lordes the Emperours proceeding euen by the same wayes meanes and lyke wyse cursing kyng John discharging his subiectes of their oth of fidelitie vnto theyr soueraigne lord Now had Englishmen at that time knowen their duetie to their prince set foorth in gods word woulde a great many of the nobles other Englishmen naturall subiectes for this forraigne vnnaturall vsurper his vaine curse of the kyng for his fained discharging of them of their othe of fidelitie to their naturall Lorde vpon so sclender or no grounde at all haue rebelled agaynst their soueraigne lord the king Woulde Englishe subiectes haue taken part agaynst the king of Englande against Englishmen with the Frenche king and Frenchmen beyng incensed against this Realme by the Bishop of Rome Would they haue sent for and receaued the Dolphin of Fraunce with a great armie of Frenchmen into the Realme of Englande Would they haue sworne fidelitie to the Dolphin of Fraunce breaking their othe of fidelitie to their naturall Lord the king of Englande and haue stande vnder the Dolphins banner displaied agaynst the kyng of Englande woulde they haue expelled their soueraigne lord the king of England out of London the cheefe citie of Englande and out of the greatest part of England vppon the South-side of Trent euen vnto Lincolne and out of Lincolne it selfe also and haue deliuered the possession thereof vnto the Dolphin of Fraunce whereof he kept the possession a great whyle Would they being Englishmen haue procured so great shedding of English blood other infinite mischeefes miseries vnto England their naturall countrey as dyd folow those cruell warres trayterous rebellion the fruites of the Byshop of Romes blessings would they haue driuen their natural soueraigne lorde the kyng of Englande to suche extremitie that he was inforced to submit hym selfe vnto that forraigne false vsurper the Byshoppe of Rome who compelled hym to surrender vp the crowne of Englande into the handes of his Legate who in token of possession kept it in his handes diuers dayes and then deliuered it agayne to king John vpon that condition that the kyng and his successours kinges of Englande shoulde holde the crowne and kyngdome of Englande of the Byshop of Rome and his successours as the vassalles of the sayde Byshops of Rome for euer in token whereof the kynges of Englande shoulde also paye an yerely tribute to the sayde Byshop of Rome as his vassals and liege men woulde Englishemen haue brought their Soueraigne lorde and naturall countrey into this thraldome and subiection to a false forraigne vsurper had they knowen and had any vnderstandyng in Gods worde at all Out of the which most lamentable case moste miserable tyrannye rauenye and spoyle of the most greedy Romishe wolues ensuing here vppon the kinges and realme of Englande coulde not rid them selues by the space of many yeares after the Bishop of Rome by his ministers continually not only spoling the realme and kyngs of England of infinite treasure but also with the same monye hyring and maynteyning forraigne enemies agaynst the realme and kinges of England to kepe them in such his subiection that they should not refuse to paye whatsoeuer those vnsaciable wolues did greedely gape for and suffer whatsoeuer those moste cruell tyrants would lay vpon them Would Englishmen haue suffered this would they by rebellion haue caused this trowe you and all for the Byshop of Romes causelesse curse had they in those dayes knowen and vnderstanded that God doth curse the blessings and blesse the cursinges of suche wicked vsurping bishops and tyrantes as it appeared afterward in kyng Henrye the eyght his dayes and kyng Edwarde the sixt in our gratious Soueraignes dayes that nowe is where neyther the Popes curses nor Gods manifolde blessinges are wanting But in kyng Johns tyme the Byshop of Rome vnderstandyng the brute blyndnes ignorance of Gods worde and superstition of Englishmen how much they were enclined to worship the