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A06492 A commentarie of M. Doctor Martin Luther vpon the Epistle of S. Paul to the Galathians first collected and gathered vvord by vvord out of his preaching, and novv out of Latine faithfully translated into English for the vnlearned. Wherein is set forth most excellently the glorious riches of Gods grace ...; In epistolam Sancti Pauli ad Galatas commentarius. English Luther, Martin, 1483-1546. 1575 (1575) STC 16965; ESTC S108973 590,302 574

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vnder the Pope Now Paule goeth about to declare out of the ten commaundements what it is to serue one an other through loue Verse 14. For the vvhole lavve is fulfilled in one vvord vvhich is this Thou shalt loue thy neighbour as thy selfe Paule after that he hath laid the foundation of Christian doctrine is wont to build gold siluer and precious stones vpon it Now there is no other foundation as he himselfe sayeth to the Corinthians than Iesus Christ or the righteousnes of Christe Vpon this foundation he buildeth now good workes yea good workes in deede all which he comprehendeth in one precept Thou shalt loue thy neighbour as thy selfe As if he should say when I say that ye must serue one an other through loue I meane the selfe same thing that the lawe sayeth in an other place Thou shalt loue thy neighbour as thy selfe And this is truely to interprete the Scriptures and Gods commaundements Now in geuing preceptes of loue he couertly toucheth by the way the false teachers against whom he setteth him selfe mightely that he may defend and stablish his doctrine of good workes against them As if he sayd O ye Galathians I haue hetherto taught you the true and spirituall life and now also I will teach you what be good workes in deede And this will I doe to the ende ye may know that the vaine and foolish workes of ceremonies which the false Apostles doe onely vrge are farre inferiour to the workes of charitie For such is the foolishnes and madnes of all wicked teachers and fantasticall spirites that not onely they leaue the true foundation and pure doctrine but also continuing alwayes in their superstitions they neuer attaine to good workes Therefore as Paule sayeth they build nothing but woode hay and stubble vppon the foundation So the false apostles which were the most earnest defenders of workes did not teach or require the workes of charitie as that Christians shuld loue one an other that they should be ready to helpe their neighbours in all necessities not onely with their goods but also with their body that is to say with tounge hand heart and with their whole strength but onely they required that circumcision should be kept that dayes monethes yeres and times should be obserued and other good workes they could teach none For after they had destroyed the foundation which is Christ darkened the doctrine of Faith it was impossible that there should remaine any true vse exercise or opinion of good workes Take away the tree the frute must needes perish The Apostle therfore diligently exhorteth the Christians to exercise themselues in good workes after that they haue heard and receaued the pure doctrine of Faith. For the remnauntes of sinne doe yet still remaine euen in those that be iustified which as they are contrary to Faith and hinder it so doe they hinder vs from doing good workes Moreouer mans reason and the flesh which in the sainctes them selues resisteth the spirite and in the wicked doth mightely raigne is naturally delited with Pharisaicall superstitions that is to say it taketh more pleasure in measuring God by her owne imaginations than by his word and doth the works that she her selfe hath chosen with farre greater zeale then those which God hath commaunded Wherfore it is necessary that the godly preachers should as diligently teach and vrge the doctrine of good workes as the doctrine of Faith for Satan is a deadly enemie to both Notwithstanding faith must first be planted for without Faith it is impossible to vnderstand what a good worke is or what pleaseth God. Let no man thinke therefore that he thorowly knoweth this commaūdement Thou shalt loue thy neighbour as thy selfe In deede it is very short and easy as touching the wordes but shew me the teachers and hearers that in teaching learning and liuing doe exercise and accomplish it rightly Therefore these wordes Serue ye one an other through loue and these also Thou shalt loue thy neighbor as thy self are incomprehensible no man no not euen the godly doe sufficiently consider teach and exercise the same And which is a wōderful thing the faithfull haue this tentation that if they omit neuer so light a matter which they ought to do by and by their conscience is wounded but they are not so troubled if they neglect the dueties of charitie as daily they doe or beare not a sincere and brotherly loue and affection towards their neighbour For they doe not so much regard the commaundement of charitie as their owne superstitions from the which they be not altogether free during this life Paule therfore reprehendeth the Galathians in these words For the vvhole lavv is fulfilled in one vvord As if he had said ye are drowned in your superstitions ceremonies concerning places times which profit neither your selues nor others and in the meane while ye neglect charitie which ye ought onely to haue kept What madnes is this So sayth Ierome We weare cōsume our bodies with watching fasting and labour but we neglect charitie which is the onely lady mistresse of workes And this may be wel seene in the Monkes who straitly obserue their traditions concerning their ceremonies fasting watching apparel such like In this case if they omitte any thing be it neuer so litle they sinne deadly But whē they do not only neglect charitie but also hate one an other to the death they sinne not nor offend God at all Therefore by this commaundement Paule not onely teacheth good works but also cōdemneth fantasticall and superstitious works He not onely buildeth gold siluer and precious stones vpon the foundation but also throweth downe the woode and burneth vp the hay stubble God witnessed by examples in the olde Testament how much he did alwayes esteme of charitie whervnto he would haue that very law it self and the ceremonies therof to geue place At such time as Dauid and they that were with him were hungrie and had not what to eate they did eate the holy shewbread which by the lawe the lay people might not eate but onely the priests Christes disciples brake the Saboth in plucking the eares of corne yea and Christ him selfe brake the Saboth as sayd the Iewes in healing the sicke on the Saboth day All these things shew that charitie or loue ought to be preferred before all lawes ceremonies that God requireth nothing so much at our handes as loue towardes our neighbour The same thing Christe also witnesseth when he sayeth And the second is like vnto this Verse 14. For all the lavv is fulfilled in one vvord As if he sayd Why doe ye burden your selues with the lawe Why doe ye so toile and tormoile your selues about the ceremonies of the law about meates dayes places and such other things as how ye ought to eate drinke keepe your feastes sacrifice c. Leaue of these follies and hearken what
I say All the lawe is fully comprehended in this one saying Thou shalt loue thy neighbour as thy selfe God deliteth not in the obseruation of the ceremonies of the lawe neither hath he any neede of them The onely thing that he requireth at your hands is this that ye beleue in Christ whom he hath sent in whom ye are made perfect and haue all things But if vnto Faith which is the most acceptable seruice of God ye will also adde lawes then assure your selues that all lawes are comprehended in this short commaundement Thou shalt loue thy neighbour as thy selfe Endeuour your selues to keepe this commaundement which being kept ye haue fulfilled all lawes Paule is a very good expounder of Gods commaundementes For he draweth all Moises into a briefe summe shewing that nothing else is cōtained in all his lawes which are in a maner infinite but this short sentence Thou shalt loue thy neighbour as thy selfe Naturall reason is offended with this basenes and shortnes of wordes for it is soone sayd Beleue in Christ And againe Loue thy neighbour as thy selfe Therefore it despiseth both the doctrine of Faith and true good works notwithstanding this base vile word of faith as reason taketh it Beleue in Christ is the power of God to the faithfull whereby they ouercome sinne death the Deuill c. wherby also they attaine saluation eternall life Thus to serue one an other through loue that is to instruct him that goeth astray to comfort him that is afflicted to raise vppe him that is weake to helpe thy neighbour by all meanes possible to beare with his infirmities to endure troubles labours ingratitude contempt in the Church in ciuile life conuersation to obey the Magistrate to geue due honour to thy parentes to be patient at home with a froward wife and an vnruely familie c these I say are workes which reason iudgeth to be of no valew But beleue me they are such workes that the whole world is not able to comprehend the excellencie and worthines thereof for it doth not measure workes or any other thing by the word of God but by the iudgement of wicked blinde and foolish reason Yea it knoweth not the valew of any one of the least good works that can be which are true good works in deede Therfore when men dreame that they well vnderstand the commaundement of charitie they are vtterly deceaued In deede they haue it wrytten in their heart for they naturally iudge that a man ought to doe vnto an other as he would an other should do vnto him But it foloweth not therefore that they vnderstand it For if they did they would also performe it in deede and would preferre loue and charitie before all their workes They would not so highly esteme their owne superstitious toyes as to goe with an heauie countenaunce hanging downe the head to be vnmarried to liue with bread and water to dwell in the wildernes to be poorely apparelled c. These monstrous and superstitious workes which they haue deuised and chosen vnto themselues God neither commaunding nor approuing the same they esteme to be so holy and so excellent that they surmount and darken charitie which is as it were the Sunne of all good works So great and incomprehēsible is the blindnes of mans reason that it is vnable not onely to iudge rightly of the doctrine of Faith but also of external conuersation and workes Wherfore we must fight strongly as well against the opinions of our owne heart to the which we are naturally more enclined in the matter of saluation then to the word of God as also against the counterfet visour holy shew of our owne wilworkes that so we may learne to magnifie the workes which euery man doth in his vocation although they seeme outwardly neuer so base and contemptible if they haue the warrant of Gods worde and contrariwise to despise those workes which reason chooseth without the commaundement of God seeme they neuer so excellent and holy Of this commaundement I haue largely entreated in an other place and therfore I will now but lightly ouerrunne it In deede this is briefly spoken Loue thy neighbour as thy selfe but yet very aptly and to that purpose No man can geue a more certaine a better or a nearer example then a mans owne selfe Therfore if thou wouldest know how thy neighbour ought to be loued and wouldest haue a plaine example therof consider well how thou louest thy selfe If thou shouldest be in necessitie or daunger thou wouldest be glad to haue the loue and frendship of all men to be holpen with the counsell the goods and the strength of all men of all creatures Wherfore thou hast no neede of any booke to instruct and to admonish thee how thou oughtest to loue thy neighbour for thou hast an excellent booke of all lawes euen in thy heart Thou needest no Scholemaster in this matter aske counsell onely of thine owne heart and that shall teach thee sufficiently that thou oughtest to loue thy neighbour as thy selfe Moreouer loue or charitie is an excellent vertue which not onely maketh a man willing and ready to serue his neighbour with tounge with hand with money and worldly goods but with his body and euen with his life also And thus to doe it is not prouoked by good desertes or any thing else neither is it hindred through euill desertes or ingratitude The mother doth therefore nourish and cherish her child because she loueth it Now my neighbour is euery man specially which hath neede of my helpe as Christ expoundeth it in the .10 chapt of Luke Who although he hath done me some wrong or hurt me by any maner of way yet notwithstanding he hath not put of the nature of man or ceased to be flesh and bloud the creature of God most like vnto my selfe briefly he ceaseth not to be my neighbour As long then as the nature of man remaineth in him so long also remaineth the commaundement of loue which requireth at my hād that I should not despise mine own flesh nor render euill for euill but ouercome euill with good or else shall loue neuer be as Paule describeth it .1 Cor. 13. Paule therefore commendeth charitie to the Galathians and to all the faithfull for they onely loue in deede and exhorteth them that through charitie one of them should serue an other As if he would say Ye neede not to burden your selues with circumcision and with the ceremonies of Moises law but aboue all things continue in the doctrine of faith which ye haue receaued of me Afterwards if ye will doe good workes I will in one word shew you the chiefest and greatest works and how ye shall fulfill all lawes Serue ye one an other through loue Ye shall not lacke them to whom ye may doe good for the world is ful of such as neede the helpe of others
other and that they should forgeue one an other And without this bearing and forbearing through loue it is impossible that peace and concord should continue amongst Christians For it can not be but that thou must needes often offend and be offended Thou seest many things in me which offend thee and I againe see many things in thee which mislike me Here if one beare not with an other through loue there shall be no end of dissension discord enuie hatred and malice Wherfore Paul would haue vs to walke in the spirit lest we fulfil the lust of the flesh As if he should say Although ye be moued with wrath displeasure against your brother offending you or doing any thing hainously agaīst you yet notwithstanding resist represse these violēt motiōs through the spirit Beare with his weaknes and loue him according to that cōmaundement Thou shalt loue thy neighbour as thy selfe For thy brother doth not therfore cease to be thy neighbour because he slippeth or offēdeth thee but thē hath he most nede that thou shuldest exercise and shew thy charitie towardes him And this commaundement Thou shalt loue thy neighbour as thy selfe requireth the selfe same thing to wit that thou shouldest not obey that flesh which when it is offended hateth biteth and deuoureth But wraste against it in spirit and cōtinue through the same in the loue of thy neighbour although thou finde no thing in him worthy of loue The Scholemen take the concupiscence of the flesh for carnall lust In deede it is true that euen that godly especially the yōger sort are tempted with fleshly lust Yea they also that be married so corrupt and pestilent is flesh are not without such carnall lust Here let euery one I speake now to the godly beinge married bothe man and wife diligently examine him selfe and no doubt many shall finde this in themselues that the bewtie and conditions of an other mans wife pleaseth him better then of his owne so contrariwise His owne lawfull wife he lotheth or misliketh loueth her which is vnlawful And this cōmōly is wont to happen not in marriage onely but in all other matters Men set light by that which they haue are in loue with that which they haue not as the Poet saith Nitimur in vetitum semper cupimusque negata That is Of things most forbidden vve alvvaies are faine And things most denied vve seeke to obtaine I doe not deny therfore but that the concupiscence of the flesh comprehendeth carnall lust but not that onely For concupiscence comprehendeth all other corrupt affections wherewith the very faithful are infected some more some lesse as pride hatred couetousnes impatiency and such like Yea Paule rehearseth afterwardes among the works of the flesh not only these grosse vices but also idolatry heresies and such other It is plaine therfore that he speaketh of the whole concupiscēce of the flesh of the whole dominion of sinne which striueth euē in the godly who haue receaued the first fruites of the spirite against the dominion of the spirite He speaketh therefore not onely of carnall lust pride couetousnes c but also of incredulitie distrust despaire hatred contempt of God idolatrie heresies and such other when he sayth And ye shall not fulfill the lusts of the flesh As if he should say I wryte vnto you that ye should loue one an other This ye do not neither can ye doe it because of the flesh which is infected and corrupted with concupiscence and doth not onely stirre vppe sinne in you but also is sinne it self For if ye had perfect charitie no heauines no aduersitie could be so great which should be able to hurt or hinder that charitie for it would be spread throughout the whole body There should be no wife were she neuer so hard fauoured whom her husband would not loue entirely lothing all other womē though they were neuer so faire and beautifull But this is not done therefore it is impossible for vs to be made righteous through loue Wherefore thinke me not to reuoke and vnsay that which I haue taught concerning Faith For Faith and hope must continue that by the one we may be iustified and by the other we may be raised vppe in aduersities and endure vnto the ende Moreouer we serue one an other through charitie because Faith is not idle but charitie is weake and litle Therefore when I bid you walke in the spirite I doe sufficiently declare that ye are not iustified through charitie And when I exhort you to walke in the spirite that ye fulfill not the concupiscence of the flesh I doe not require of you that ye should vtterly put of the flesh or kill it but that ye should bridle and subdue it For God will haue mankinde to indure euen to the last day And this can not be done without parentes which doe begette and bring vppe children These meanes continuing it must needes be that flesh also must continue and consequently sinne for flesh is not without sinne Therefore in respect of the flesh we are sinners but in respect of the spirite we are righteous and so we are partly sinners and partly righteous Notwithstanding our righteousnes is much more plentifull then our sinne because the holines and righteousnes of Christe our Mediatour doth farre excede the sinne of the whole world And the forgeuenes of sinnes which we haue through him is so great so large and so infinite that it easily swaloweth vp all sinnes so that we walke according to the spirite c. The Papistes dreamed that this commaundement belongeth only to their Cleargymen and that the Apostle exhorteth them to liue chastly by subduing the flesh with watching fasting labour c and then they should not fulfill the concupiscence of the flesh that is to say carnall lust As though the whole concupiscence of the flesh were ouercome when this fleshly lust is subdued which notwithstanding they were neuer able to suppresse and keepe vnder with any yoke that they could lay vppon the flesh Which thing Hierome I say nothing of others who was a maruelous louer and defender of chastitie doth plainly cōfesse O saith he how often haue I thought my selfe to be in the middest of the vaine delites and pleasures of Rome euen when I was in the wilde wildernes which being burnt vppe with the heat of the Sunne yeldeth an ouglesome habitation to the Monks c. Againe I who for feare of hell had condemned my selfe to such a prison thought my selfe oftētimes to be daūcing among yong wemen whē I had no other companie but Scorpions and wilde beastes My face was pale with fasting but my minde was inflamed with desires in my cold body and although my flesh was halfe dead already yet the flames of fleshly lust boyled within me c. If Hierome felt in him selfe such flames of fleshly lust who liued in the barraine wildernes with bread and water what do our
This is a perfect and a sound doctrine of Faith and loue and also the shortest and the longest Diuinitie The shortest as touching the words and sentences but as touching the vse and practise it is more large more longe more profound and more high then the whole world Verse 15. If ye bite and deuoure one an other take heede lest ye be consumed one of an other By these wordes Paule witnesseth that if the foundation that is to say if Faith in Christ be ouerthrowne by wicked teachers no peace or concord cā remaine in the church either in doctrine or life but there must needes be diuers opinions and dissensions from time to time both in doctrine and life wherby it commeth to passe that one biteth and deuoureth an other that is to say one iudgeth and condemneth an other vntill at length they be consumed Hereof not onely the Scripture but also the examples of all times beare witnes After that Aphrike was peruerted by the Manichees by and by folowed the Donatistes who also disagreeing among them selues were diuided into three sundry Sectes And how many Sectes haue we at this day springing vppe one after an other One Sect bringeth forth an other and one condemneth an other Thus when the vnitie of the spirite is broken it is vnpossible that there should be any concord either in doctrine or life but daily new errours must nedes spring vp without measure and without end Paule therefore teacheth that such occasions of discord are to be auoided and he sheweth how they may be auoided This sayth he is the way to vnitie and concord Let euery man doe his duetie in that kinde of life which God hath called him vnto Let him not lift vp himselfe aboue others nor finde fault at other mens workes and commend his owne but let euery one serue an other through loue This is a true and a simple doctrine touching good works This do not they teach which haue made shipwracke of faith haue conceaued fantasticall opinions concerning Faith good workes but disagreeing among them selues as touching the doctrine of Faith and workes they bite and deuoure that is to say they accuse condemne one an other as Paule here sayth of the Galathians If ye bite and deuoure one an other take heede lest ye be consumed one of an other As if he would say doe not accuse and condemne one an other for circumcision for obseruing of holy dayes or other ceremonies but rather geue your selues to serue and helpe one an other through charitie Or else if ye continue in biting deuouring one an other take heede that ye be not consumed that is to say that ye perish not vtterly yea and that bodely which cōmōly hapneth especially to the authors of Sects as it did to Arrius others and to certaine also in our time For he that hath laid his foūdation on the sand and buildeth hay stubble and such like must needes fall be consumed for all those things are ordained for the fire I will not say that after such bitings deuourings the ruine destructiō not of one citie but of whole countreys kingdoms are wont to folow Now the Apostle sheweth what it is to serue one an other through loue It is a hard a dangerous matter to teach that we are made righteous by faith without works yet to require workes withall Here except the ministers of Christe be faithfull wise disposers of the mysteries of God rightly diuiding the word of truth faith workes are by and by confounded Both these doctrines as well of faith as of works must be diligētly taught and vrged and yet so that both may remaine with in their bounds Otherwise if they teach works only as they do in the Popes kingdom then is faith lost If faith onely be taught then carnall men by and by dreame that workes be not needefull The Apostle began a litle before to exhort men to good workes and to teach that the whole lawe was fulfilled in one word namely Thou shalt loue thy neighbour as thy selfe Here will some man say Paule thorowout his whole Epistle taketh away righteousnes from the law for sayeth he By the vvorks of the lavv shall no flesh be iustified Also As many as are vnder the vvorks of the lavv are vnder the curse But now whē he sayth that the whole law is fulfilled in one word he seemeth to haue forgotten the matter whereof he hath entreated in all this Epistle and to be of a quite contrary opinion to witte that they which doe the works of charitie fulfill the law and be righteous To this obiection he answereth after this maner Verse 16. But I say vvalke in the spirite and ye shall not fulfill the vvorkes of the flesh As if he should haue sayd I haue not forgotten my former discourse concerning Faith neither doe I now reuoke the same in that I exhort you to mutuall loue saying that the vvhole lavve is fulfilled through loue but I am still of the same minde and opinion that I was before To the ende therefore that ye may rightly vnderstand me I adde this moreouer VValke in the spirite and ye shall not fulfill the lustes of the flesh A confutation of the argument of the Schoolemen Loue is the fulfilling of the lavve therfore the lavve iustifieth Although Paule speaketh here expresly and plainly enough yet hath he litle preuailed For the Schoolemen not vnderstanding this place of Paule Loue is the fulfilling of the lavv haue gathered out of it after this maner If loue be the fulfilling of the law it foloweth then that loue is righteousnes therfore if we loue we be righteous These profound clarkes doe argue from the word to the worke from doctrine or preceptes to life after this sort The lawe hath commaunded loue therefore the worke of loue foloweth out of hand But this is a foolish consequence to draw an argumēt from precepts and to ground the conclusion vppon workes True it is that we ought to fulfill the lawe and to be iustified through the fulfilling thereof but sinne hindreth vs In deede the law prescribeth and commaundeth that we should loue God with all our heart c. and that we should loue our neighbour as our selues but it foloweth not this is wrytten therfore it is done the law commaundeth loue therefore we loue There is not one man to be found vppon the whole earth which so loueth God and his neighbour as the lawe requireth But in the life to come where we shall be throughly clensed from all vices and sinnes and shall be made as pure as cleare as the Sunne we shall loue perfectly and shall be righteous through perfect loue But in this life that puritie is hindred by the flesh for as long as we liue sinne remaineth in our flesh By reason wherof the corrupt loue of our selues is so mightie that it farre surmounteth the loue of god
of our neighbour In the meane time notwithstanding that we may be righteous in this life also we haue Christe the Mercie seat and throne of grace and because we beleue in him sinne is not imputed vnto vs Faith therfore is our righteousnes in this life But in the life to come when we shall be thorowly clensed and deliuered from all sinnes and concupiscence we shall haue no more neede of Faith and hope but we shall then loue perfectly It is a great errour therfore to attribute iustification or righteousnes to loue whiche is nothinge or if it be any thinge yet is it not so great that it can pacifie God for loue euen in the faithfull as I haue sayd is imperfect and impure But no vncleane thing shall enter into the kingdom of god Notwithstanding in the meane while this trust and confidence sustaineth vs that Christe who a lonely committed no sinne and in whose mouth was neuer foūd any guile doth ouershadow vs with his righteousnes We being couered with this cloud and shrouded vnder this shadow this heauen of remission of sinnes throne of grace doe begin to loue and to fulfill the law Yet for this fulfilling we are not iustified nor accepted of God whilest we liue here But whē Christ hath deliuered vp the kingdom to God his father abolished all principalitie and God shall be all in all then shall Faith and hope cease and loue shall be perfect and euerlasting 1. Cor. 13. This thing the popish Schoolemen vnderstand not and therfore when they heare that loue is the summe of the whole lawe by and by they inferre Ergo the law iustifieth Or contrariwise when they read in Paule that Faith maketh a man righteous yea say they Faith formed and furnished with charitie But that is not the meaning of Paule as I haue largely declared before If we were pure from all sinne and were inflamed with perfect loue both towardes God and our neighbour then should we in deede be righteous and holy through loue and God could require no more of vs This is not done in this present life but is differred vntill the life to come In deede we receaue here the gift and first frutes of the spirite so that we begin to loue howbeit very slenderly But if we loued God truely and perfectly as the law of God requireth which sayeth Thou shalt loue the Lord thy God vvith all thy heart vvith all thy soule and vvith all thy strength then should we be as well contented with pouertie as with wealth with paine as with pleasure with life as with death Yea he that could loue God truly and perfectly in dede should not long continue in this life but should straight way be swalowed vp by this charitie But now mans nature is so corrupt and drowned in sinne that it can not haue any right sense or cogitation of god It loueth not God but hateth him deadly Wherfore as Iohn sayth VVe loued not god but he loued vs sent his sonne to be a reconciliation for our sinnes And as Paule sayth before in the second Chap Christe hath loued me and geuen him selfe for me And in the .4 Chap. But vvhen the fulnes of time vvas come God sent forth his sonne made of a vvoman and made vnder the lavve that he might redeme them vvhich vvere vnder the lavv We being redemed and iustified by this Sonne begin to loue according to that saying of Paule in the .8 to the Romains That vvhich vvas impossible to the lavv in as much as it vvas vveake because of the flesh God sending his ovvne sonne in the similitude of sinnefull flesh and for sinne condemned sinne in the flesh that the righteousnes of the lavv might be fulfilled in vs that is might begin to be fulfilled They are mere dreames therfore which the Sophisters and Schoolemen haue taught concerning the fulfilling of the lawe Wherfore Paule sheweth by these words VValke in the spirit how he would haue that sentence to be vnderstād where he sayd Serue ye one an other through loue And againe Loue is the fulfillīg of the lavv c. As if he should say When I bid you loue one an other this is it that I require of you that ye walke in the spirit For I know that ye shall not fulfill the law because sinne dwelleth in you as lōg as ye liue and therfore it is impossible that ye should fulfill the law Notwithstādīg in the meane while endeuor your selues diligētly to walk in the spirit that is wrastle in spirit against the flesh folow spiritual motions c. It appeareth then that he had not forgotten the matter of iustifition For when he biddeth them to walke in the spirit he plainly denieth that works do iustifie As if he shuld say When I speake of the fulfilling of the law I meane not that ye are iustified by the law but this I meane that there be two contrary capitaines in you the spirite and the flesh God hath stirred vp in your bodies a strife and a battaile For the spirite wrastleth against the flesh the flesh against the spirit Here I require nothing else of you but that ye folow the spirit as your captaine and guide that ye resist that captaine the flesh for that is all that ye be able to doe Obey the spirit and fight against the flesh Therfore when I teach you to obserue the lawe and exhort you to loue one an other thinke not that I goe about to reuoke that which I haue taught concerning the doctrine of Faith and that now I attribute iustification to the lawe or to charitie but my meaning is that ye should walke in the spirite and that ye should not fulfill the lustes of the flesh Paule vseth very fitte wordes and to the purpose As if he would say we come not yet to the fulfilling of the lawe therefore we must walke in the spirite and be exercised therein that we may thinke say and doe those things which are of the spirite and resist those things which are of the flesh therfore he addeth Verse 16. And ye shall not fulfill the lustes of the flesh As if he would say The desires or lustes of the flesh be not yet dead in vs but spring vppe againe and fight against the spirite The flesh of no faithful man is so good which being offended would not bite and deuour or at the least omitte somewhat of that commaundement of loue Yea euen at the first brunt he can not refraine him selfe but is angrie with his neighbour desireth to be reuenged and hateth him as an enemie or at the least loueth him not so much as he should doe and as this commaundement requireth And this hapneth euen to the faithfull Therefore the Apostle hath geuen this rule for the faithfull that they should serue one an other through loue that they should beare the burdens and infirmities one of an
waked and stirred vppe to Faith and to call vppon Christe And by this occasion a Christian becommeth a mighty workman and a wonderful creatour which of heauines can make ioy of terrour comfort of sinne righteousnes and of death life when he by this meanes repressing and brideling the flesh maketh it subiect to the spirite Wherfore let not them which feele the lust of the flesh despaire of their saluation Lette them feele it and all the force thereof so that they consent not to it Lette the passions of lust wrath and such other vices shake them so that they doe not ouerthrow them Let sinne assaile them so that they doe not accōplish it Yea the more godly a man is the more doth he feele that battaile And hereof come those lamentable complaintes of the faithfull in the Psalmes and in the whole Scripture Of this battaile the Heremites the Monkes and the Schoolemen and all that seeke righteousnes and saluation by workes know nothing at all But here may some man say that it is a daungerous matter to teach that a man is not condemned if by and by he ouercome not the motions and passions of the flesh which he feeleth For when this doctrine is taught amongst the common people it maketh them carelesse negligent and slouthfull This is it which I sayd a little before that if we teach Faith then carnall men neglect and reiecte workes If works be required then is Faith and consolation of conscience lost Here no man can be compelled neither can there be any certaine rule prescribed But lette euery man diligently trie him selfe to what passion of the flesh he is most subiect and when he findeth that lette him not be carelesse nor flatter him selfe but lette him watch and wrastle in spirite against it that if he can not altogether bridle it yet at the least he doe not fulfill the lust therof This battell of the flesh against the spirit all the children of God haue had and felt And the selfe same doe we also feele and proue He that searcheth his owne cōscience if he be not an hypocrite shall well perceaue that to be true in him selfe which Paule here saith that the flesh lusteth against the spirit All the faithfull therfore do feele and confesse that their flesh resisteth against the spirit and that these two are so contrarye the one to the other in themselues that doe what they can they are not able to performe that which they woulde doe Therefore the fleshe hindreth vs the we cannot keepe the commaundementes of God that we can not loue our neighbours as our selues much lesse can we loue God with all our heart Therefore it is impossible for vs to become righteous by the works of the law In deede there is a good will in vs and so must there be for it is the spirit it self which resisteth the flesh which would gladly doe good fulfill the lawe loue God and his neighbour and such like but the flesh obeyeth not this good will but resisteth it and yet God imputeth not vnto vs this sinne For he is mercifull to those that beleue for Christes sake But it foloweth not therefore that thou shouldest make a light matter of sinne because God doth not impute it True it is that he doth not impute it But to whom and for what cause To such as repent and lay hold by Faith vppon Christe the Mercyseat for whose sake as all their sinnes are forgeuen them euen so that remnants of sinne which are in them be not imputed vnto them They make not their sinne lesse thē it is but amplifie it set it out as it is in dede for they know that it can not be put away by satisfactions works or righteousnes but only by the death of Christe And yet notwithstanding the greatnes and enormitie of their sinne doth not cause them to despaire but they assure thēselues that the same shall not be imputed vnto them or laid vnto their charge This I say lest any man shoulde thinke that after faith is receaued there is litle accoūt to be made of sinne Sinne is truely sinne whether a man commit it before he hath receaued the knowledge of Christe or after And God alwayes hateth sinne yea all sinne is damnable as touchinge the facte it selfe But in that it is not damnable to him that beleueth it commeth of Christe who by his death hath taken away sinne But to him that beleueth not in Christe not onely all his sinnes are damnable but euen his good workes also are sinne according to that saying VVhatsoeuer is not of Faith is sinne Therefore the errour of the Scholemen is moste pernicious which do distinguish sinnes according to the fact and not according to the person He that beleueth hath as great sinne as the vnbeleuer But to him that beleueth it is forgeuen and not imputed To the vnbeleuer it is not pardoned but imputed To the beleuer it is veniall to the vnbeleuer it is mortall and damnable Not for any difference of sinnes or because the sinne of the beleuer is lesse and the sinne of the vnbeleuer greater but for the difference of the persons For the faithfull assureth him selfe by Faith that his sinne is forgeuen him for as much as Christe hath geuen him selfe for it Therfore although he haue sinne in him and daily sinneth yet he continueth godly but contrariwise the vnbeleuer continueth wicked And this is the true wisedome and consolation of the godly that although they haue and commit sinnes yet they know that for Christes sake they are not imputed vnto them This I say for the comfort of the godly For they onely feele in deede that they haue and doe commit sinnes that is to say they feele that they doe not loue God so feruently as they should doe that they doe not beleue him so hartely as they would but rather they oftētimes dout whether God haue a care of them or no they are impatient and are angrie with God in aduersitie Hereof as I haue sayd proceede the sorowfull complaintes of the faithfull in the scriptures and specially in the Psalmes And Paule him selfe complaineth that he is solde vnder sinne And here he saith that the flesh resisteth rebelleth against the spirit But because they mortifie the deedes of that flesh by the spirite as he sayth in an other place also in the ende of this chapiter They crucifie the flesh vvith the desires and lustes thereof therefore these sinnes doe not hurt them nor condemne them But if they obey the flesh in fulfilling the lustes thereof then doe they lose Faith and the holy Ghost And if they doe not abhorre their sinne and returne vnto Christ who hath geuen power to his church to receaue and raise vppe those that be falne that so they may recouer Faith and the holy Ghost they die in their sinnes Wherefore we speake not of them which dreame that they haue Faith and
the wisedom and righteousnes of Christ moreouer it darkneth hindreth blasphemeth and persecuteth the same Therfore Paule doth rightly call it the euill or vvicked vvorld for when it is at the best then is it worst In the religious wise and learned men the world is at the best and yet in very dede in them it is double euill I ouerpasse those grosse vices which are against the second table as disobedience to parents to magistrates addulteries whoredomes couetousnes thefts murthers and maliciousnes wherin the world is altogether drowned which notwithstanding are light faultes if ye compare them with the wisedom and righteousnes of the wicked wherwith they fight against the first table This white Deuill which forceth men to commit spirituall sinnes that they may sell them for righteousnes is farre more daungerous then the blacke deuill which onely enforceth them to commit fleshly sinnes which the world acknowledgeth to be sinnes By these wordes then That he might deliuer vs c. Paule sheweth what is the argument of this Epistle to wit that we haue neede of grace and of Christ and that no other creature neither man nor Angell can deliuer man out of this present euill world For these workes are onely belonging to the diuine Maiestie and are not in the power of any either man or Angell that Christ hath put away sinne and hath deliuered vs from the tyrannie and kingdom of the Deuill that is to say from this wicked world which is an obedient seruaunt and a willing follower of the Deuill his god Whatsoeuer that murtherer and father of lies either doth or speaketh that the world as his most loyall and obedient sonne diligently followeth and performeth And therfore it is full of the ignoraunce of God of hatred lying errours blasphemie and of the contempt of God Moreouer of grosse sinnes murthers adulteries fornications theftes robberies and such like because he followeth his father the deuill who is a lier and a murtherer And the more wise righteous and holy men are without Christ so much the more hurt they doe to the gospell So we also that were religious men were double wicked in the Papacie before God did lighten vs with the knowledge of his gospell and yet notwithstanding vnder the colour of true pietie and holines Let these words then of Paule stand as they are in deede true and effectual not coloured or coūterfait namely that this present world is euill Let it nothing at all moue thee that in a great nombre of men there be many excellent vertues and that there is so great a shew of holines in hypocrites But marke thou rather what Paule sayeth out of whose wordes thou maist boldly and freely pronounce this sentence against the world That the world with all his wisedome power and righteousnes is the kingdom of the deuill out of the which God onely is able to deliuer vs by his onely begotten sonne Therfore let vs praise God the father geue him harty thankes for this his vnmeasurable mercy that hath deliuered vs out of the kingdom of the Deuill in which we were holden captiues by his owne sonne when it was impossible to be done by oure own strength And let vs acknowledge together with Paule that all our works righteousnes with all which we could not make the deuil to stoupe one hear bredth are but losse and dung Also let vs cast vnder our feete and vtterly abhorre all the power of free will all Pharasaicall wisedom and righteousnes all religious orders all Masses ceremonies vowes fastings and such like as a most filthie defiled cloth and as the most daungerous poyson of the Deuill Contrariwise let vs extoll and magnifie the glory of Christ who hath deliuered vs by his death not out of a world onely but out of an euill world Paule then by this word Euill sheweth that the kingdom of the world or the Deuils kingdom is a kingdom of iniquitie ignoraunce errour sinne death blasphemie desperation and euerlasting damnation On the other side the kingdom of Christ is a kingdom of equitie light grace remission of sinnes peace consolation sauing health and euerlasting life into the which we are translated by our Lord Iesus Christ to whom be glory world without end So be it Verse 4. According to the vvill of God euen our father Here Paule so placeth and setteth in order euery word that there is not one of them but it fighteth against those false Apostles for the article of iustification Christ sayth he hath deliuered vs out of this most wicked kingdom of the deuill and the world And this hath he done according to the will good pleasure and commaundement of the father wherfore we be not deliuered by our owne will or running nor by our owne wisedom or policie but for that God hath taken mercy vpon vs and hath loued vs like as it is wrytten also in an other place Herein hath appeared the great loue of God tovvardes vs not that vve haue loued God but that he hath loued vs and hath sent his onely begotten sonne to be a reconciliation for our sinnes That we then are deliuered from this present euill world it is of mere grace and no desert of our ours Paule is so plentifull and so vehement in amplifying and extolling the grace of God that he sharpeneth directeth euery word against the false Apostles There is also here another cause why Paule maketh mention of the Fathers wil which also in many places of S. Iohns gospel is declared wher christ cōmēding his office calleth vs back to his fathers wil that in his words works we should not so much loke vpon him as vpō the father For Christ came into this world toke mans nature vpō him that he might be made a sacrifice for the sinnes of the whole world so recōcile vs to God the father that he alone might declare vnto vs how that this was done through the good pleasure of his father that we by fastning our eyes vpō Christ might be drawn caried streight vnto the father For we must not thinke as I haue warned you before that by the curious searching of the Maiestie of God any thing concerning God can be known to our saluation but by taking hold of Christ who according to the wil of the father hath geuē himself to the death for our sinnes Whē thou shalt acknowledge this to be the wil of God through christ then wrath ceaseth feare and trembling vanisheth away neither doth God appeare any other then mercifull who by his determinate coūsell would that his sonne should die for vs that we might liue thorow him This knowledge maketh the hart chearfull so that it stedfastly beleueth that God is not angry but that he so loueth vs wretched sinners that he gaue his onely begotten sonne for vs It is not for nought therfore that Paule doth so oftē repeat and beat into our minds that
any true feling of sinne or of the terrour of death haue forged these vaine toyes blasphemies of their owne braine and therefore they know not what they say or what they teach Moreouer they can shew no example of any worke done either before or after grace that could iustifie before god Wherfore these are nothing else but vaine fables and lies whereby the Papists deceaue both them selues and other For Paule here plainly affirmeth that a man is not iustified by the works of the lawe either going before grace wherof he here speaketh or comming after You see then that Christian righteousnes is not such an essentiall qualitie engrafted in the nature of man as the Scholemen doe imagine when they say The Diuinitie of the Schole men When a man doth any good worke God accepteth it and for that good worke he poureth into him charitie This infused charitie say they is a qualitie grafted in the heart and this they call formall righteousnes which maner of speaking it is expedient for you to know and they cā abide nothing lesse then to heare that this qualitie furnishing the soule as whitenes doth the wal should not be coūted righteousnes They can clime no higher then to this cogitatiō of mans reason that man is righteous hy his owne formall righteousnes which is grace making him acceptable vnto God that is to say loue or charitie So to this qualitie cleauing vnto the soule that is to wit charitie which is a worke after the law for the law sayth Thou shalt loue the Lord thy god c. they attribute formall righteousnes and they say that this righteousnes is worthy of euerlasting life and he that hath it is formally righteous and moreouer he is effectually or actually righteous because he now doth good workes wherevnto euerlasting life is due This is the opinion of the Scholemen yea euen of the best among them Some other there be which are not so good as Scotus and Occam which sayd that for the obtaining of the grace of God this charity infused or geuen of God is not necessary but that a man euen by his owne naturall strength may procure this charitie aboue all things For so reasoneth Scotus If a man may loue a creature a yong man a maiden a couetous man money which are the lesse good he may also loue God which is the greater good If he haue a loue of the creature through his naturall strength much more hath he a loue of the creator With this argument were all the Sophisters conuicted and none of them all was able to soile it Notwithstanding thus they replie The scripture compelleth vs to cōfesse say they that God besides that naturall loue and charitie which is engrafted in vs wherwith alone he is not contented requireth also charitie which he him selfe geueth And heereby they accuse God as a tyranne and a cruell exactor who is not content that we kepe and fulfil his law but aboue the law which we are of our selues able to fulfill requireth also that we should accomplishe it with other circumstaunce and furniture as apparell to the same As if a Mistres should not be contented that her Cooke had dressed her meate excellently well but should chide her for that she did not prepare the same being decked with precious apparel hauing a croune of gold vpon her head What a mistres were this who besides that which her Cooke was onely bound to doe and also exactly performed would require moreouer precious apparell or a croune of gold which she could not haue Euen so what a one should God be if he should require his lawe to be fulfilled of vs which otherwise by our owne naturall strength we obserue and fulfill with such furniture as we can not haue But here lest they should seeme to aduouch contrary things they make a distinction and say that the law is fulfilled two maner of waies first according to the substance of the deede and secondly according to the minde of the commaunder According to the substance of the deede say they we may fulfil al things which the law commaūdeth but not according to the meaning of the Commaunder which is that God is not contented that thou hast done all things which are commaunded in the law although he can require no more of thee but he yet further requireth that thou shouldest fulfill the law in charitie not that charitie which thou hast by nature but that which is aboue nature and heauēly which he himselfe geueth And what is this els but to make of God a tyranne and a tormentor which requireth of vs that we are not able to performe And it is in a maner as much as if they should say that the fault is not in vs if we be damned but in God which with this circumstance requireth his law to be accomplished of vs. These things I doe the more diligently repete that you may see how farre they haue wādred from the true sense of the scripture which haue sayd that we by our owne naturall strength may loue God aboue all things or at least by the worke wrought we may deserue euerlasting life And because God is not contente that we fulfill the law according to the substance of the deede but will haue vs also to fulfill the same according to the meaning of the Commaunder therefore the scripture further compelleth vs to haue a qualitie aboue nature poured into vs from aboue and that is charitie which they call formall righteousnes adorning and bewtifying faith being also the cause that faith iustifieth vs So faith is the body and the shell charitie the life the kernell the forme and furniture These are the dreames of the Scholemen But we in the steede of this charitie do place faith and we say that faith apprehendeth Iesus Christ who is the forme which adorneth furnisheth faith as the colour adorneth and bewtifieth the wall Christian faith thē is not an idle qualitie or empty huske in the heart which may be in deadly sinne as they say vntill charitie come and quicken it but if it be true faith it is a sure trust and confidence of the heart and a firme consent wherby Christ is apprehended So that Christ is the obiect of faith yea rather euen in faith Christ himselfe is present Faith therefore is a certaine obscure knowledge or rather darkenes which seeth nothing and yet Christ apprehended by faith sitteth in this darknes like as God in Sinai and in the temple satte in the middest of darknes Wherfore our formall righteousnes is not charitie furnishing and beutifying faith but it is faith it self which is as it were a certain cloud in our harts that is to say a stedfast trust affiance in the thing which we see not which is Christ who although he be not seene at all yet is he present Faith therefore iustifieth because it apprehendeth and possesseth this treasure euen
god This which I now speake springeth out of an other fountaine then that which thou heardest of me before Paule before his conuersion spake with the same voice and toung wherwith he spake afterwards But his voice and his toung were then blasphemous and therfore he could speake nothing els but blasphemies abhominations against Christ and his Church After he was conuerted he had the same flesh the same voice and toung which he had before and nothing was chaunged but his voice and his toung then vttered no blasphemies but spirituall and heauenly words to witte thanks geuing and the praise of God which came of faith the holy Ghost So then I liue in the flesh but not of the flesh or after the flesh but in the faith of the sonne of God. Hereby we may plainly see whence this spirituall life cometh which we haue not of our selues but of an other which the natural man can in no wise vnderstand for he knoweth not what maner of life this is He heareth the wind but whence it cometh or whither it goeth he knoweth not He heareth the voice of the spirituall man he knoweth his face his maners and his gestures but he seeth not whence these workes which are not now wicked and blasphemous as before but holy and godly or whence these motions and actions doe come For this life is in the heart by Faith where the flesh is killed and Christ raigneth with his holy spirite who now seeth heareth speaketh worketh suffereth and doth all other things in him although the flesh doe resist To cōclude this is not the life of the flesh although it be in the flesh but of Christ the sonne of God whom the Christian possesseth by faith Verse 20. VVho loued me and gaue him selfe for me Here haue ye the true meane of iustification and a perfect example of the assuraunce of faith set before your eyes He that can with a firme constāt faith say these words with Paule I liue by Faith in the sonne of God vvho hath loued me geuen him selfe for me is happie in deede And euen with these wordes Paule taketh away the whole righteousnes of the lawe and workes as afterwardes we will declare But we must diligently wey and consider these wordes The sonne of God hath loued me and geuen him selfe for me It was not I then that first loued the sonne of God and deliuered my selfe for him as the Sophisters dreame that they loue the sonne of God and deliuer thēselues for him For they teach that a man expuris naturalibus that is of his owne pure naturall strength can do meritorious works before grace loue God Christ aboue all things These felowes preuent the loue of God and Christ for they doe that which lieth in them as they are wont to say that is they doe not onely kepe the commaundements but they doe also the workes of supererogation sell the ouerplus of their merites to laimen so as they imagine they deliuer them selues for Christes sake whereby they saue both themselues others turning the words of Paule cleane contrary and saying we haue loued Christ and geuen our selues for him Thus whiles the wicked being puffed vp with the wisedom of the flesh imagine that they doe what in them lieth that they loue God and deliuer them selues for Christ what doe they else but abolish the gospel deride deny and blaspheme Christ yea spit vpon him tread him vnder foote They confesse in wordes that he is a iustifier and a Sauiour but in very deede they take from him the power both to iustifie and saue and geue the same to their owne wilworkes ceremonies and deuotions This is to liue in their owne righteousnes and workes and not in the faith of the sonne of God. This is not then the true meanes to attaine iustification to do that which in thee lieth as the Sophisters and Scholedoctours doe teache which affirme that if a man do what in him lieth God wil vndoubtedly geue vnto him his grace But this saying may not be straitly vrged say they For if we doe those works which may be approued by the iudgement of any good man it is enough for then grace shall surely follow because god in that he is good and iust must needes geue grace as a recompence for such good works And hereof cometh this verse Vitra posse viri non vult Deus vlla requiri That is God vvill no more require of man then of him selfe performe he can In dede this is a good saying if it be vsed rightly in place cōuenient that is in the gouernment of cōmon weales or families And if I being in the kingdome of reason do execute the office of a magistrate or gouerne a family doing that in me lieth I am excused This kingdom hath his boūds and limites to the which also these sayings doe pertaine To doe what in vs lieth To doe as much as we are able But the Sophisters apply these sayings to the spirituall kingdome wherin a man can do nothing els but sinne for he is sold vnder sinne But in externall things such I meane as pertaine to ciuill and houshould gouernment he is not a seruaunt but a Lord and a ruler Wherfore they haue done wickedly in applying these sentences to the church which properly pertaine to the gouernment of common weales families For the kingdome of mans reason and the spirituall kingdome must be separate farre asunder Moreouer they say that nature is corrupt but the qualities of nature notwithstanding are sound and vncorrupt which also they attribute euen vnto Deuils Vpon this groūd they reason after this maner If the naturall qualities of man be sound and vncorrupt then is his vnderstanding and his will soūd and vncorrupt and so consequently all other qualities of nature are pure and perfecte in him To knowe these things it is necessary for you that ye may hold the sinceritie of the doctrine of faith Where they say then that the naturall qualities of man are sound and vncorrupt and therof do inferre that a mā is able of him selfe to fulfil the law and to loue God with al his heart applying these qualities to the spirituall kingdome I deny the consequence And here I make a distinction betwene the naturall and the spirituall qualities which they confound and mingle together I say that the spirituall qualities are not sound but corrupt yea vtterly quenched through sinne both in man and deuill so that there is in them nothing els but corrupt vnderstanding and a will continually striuing against the will of God which can thinke nothing els but that which is altogether against god Notwithstanding I graunt that the naturall qualities are vncorrupt But what qualities are they That a man being drowned in sinne and iniquitie and a bondslaue of Satan hath will reason and power notwithstāding to execute the office of a magistrate to gouerne a family
nature that is he must needes hate sinne and sinners and this he doth of necessity for otherwise he shoulde be vnrighteous and loue sinne How then can these two contradictories stand together I am a sinner and most worthy of Gods wrath and indignation and yet the father loueth me Here nothing commeth betwene but onely Christ the mediatour The father saith he doth not therfore loue you because ye are worthy of loue but because ye haue loued me and haue beleeued that I came out from him Thus a Christian man abideth in true humilitie feeling sinne in him effectually and confessing himselfe to be worthy of wrath the iudgement of God and euerlasting death for the same that he may be humbled in this life And yet notwithstanding he continueth still in his holy pride in the which he turneth vnto Christ and in him he lifteth vp him selfe against this feeling of Gods wrath and iudgement and beleueth that not only the remnants of sinne are not imputed vnto him but that also he is loued of the father not for his own sake but for Christes sake whom the father loueth Hereby now we may see how faith iustifieth without works and yet notwithstanding how imputation of righteousnes is also necessary Sinnes doe remaine in vs which God vtterly hateth Therefore it is necessary that we should haue imputation of righteousnes which we obtaine through Christ and for Christes sake who is geuen vnto vs and receaued of vs by faith In the meane time as long as we liue here we are caried and norished in the bosome of mercy and long sufferance of God vntill the body of sinne be abolished and we raised vp as newe creatures in that great day Then shall there be newe heauens and a new earth in which righteousnes shal dwell In the meane while vnder this heauen sinne and wicked men do dwell and the godly also haue sinne dwelling in them For this cause Paule Rom. 7. cōplaineth of sinne which remaineth in the Saincts yet notwithstanding he saith afterwards in the 8. chapter that there is no damnation to them vvhich are in Christ Iesu Now how shall these things so contrary and repugnant be reconciled together that sinne in vs is no sinne that he which is damnable shall not be condemned that he which is reiected shall not be reiected that he which is worthy of the wrath of God and euerlasting damnation shall not be punished The onely reconciler hereof is the mediatour betwene God and man euen the man Iesus Christ as Paule sayth There is no condemnation to them vvhich are in Christ Iesu Verse 7. Knovve ye therfore that they vvhich are of faith the same are the children of Abraham This is the generall argument and whole disputation of Paule against the Iewes that they which beleeue are the children of Abraham and not they which are borne of his flesh and his bloud This disputation Paule vehemently prosecuteth in this place and in the 4. and 9. chapit to the Rom. For this was the greatest confidence and glory of the Iewes VVe are the seede and children of Abraham He was circumcised and kept the lawe therfore if we will be the true children of Abraham we must folow our father c. It was no doubt an excellent glory and great dignitie to be the seede of Abraham For no man could denie but that God spake to the seede and of the seede of Abraham But this prerogatiue nothing profited the vnbeleuing Iewes By reason wherof Paule especially in this place mightely striueth against this argument and wresteth from the Iewes this strong affiance in them selues And this could he as the elect vessell of Christ doe aboue all other For if we at the beginning should haue disputed with the Iewes without Paule peraduenture we should haue preuailed very litle against them So then Paule reasoneth against the Iewes which stoode so proudly vpon this opinion that they were the children of Abraham saying VVe are the seede of Abraham Well what then Abraham was circumcised kept the lawe we doe the same All this I graunt What will ye therefore looke to be iustified and saued No not so But let vs come to the Patriarke Abraham himselfe and let vs see by what meanes he was iustified and saued Doutles not for his excellent vertues and holy workes not because he forsooke his countrey kinred and fathers house not because he was circumcised and obserued the lawe not because he was about to offer vp in sacrifice at the commaundement of God his sonne Isacke in whom he had the promise of posteritie but because he beleued Therfore he was not iustified by any other meanes then by faith alone If ye then will be iustified by the lawe much more ought Abraham your father to be iustified by the lawe But Abraham could not otherwise be iustified nor receaue forgeuenes of sinnes and the holy Ghost then by faith alone Since this is true by the testimonie of the scripture why stande ye so much vpon circumcision and the lawe contending that ye haue righteousnes and saluation therby when as your father Abraham him selfe euen your headspring of whom ye doe so much glory was iustified and saued without these by faith alone What can be brought against this argument Paule therfore concludeth with this sentence They vvhich are of faith are the children of Abraham that corporall birth or carnall seede maketh not the children of Abraham before God. As though he would say There is none before God accompted as the childe of this Abraham who is the seruaunt of God whom God hath chosen and made righteous by faith through carnall generation but he must haue such children geuen him before God as he was a father But he was a father of faith and was iustified and pleased God not because he could beget children after the flesh not because he had circumcision and the lawe but because he beleeued in god Therfore he that will be a childe of the beleeuing Abraham must also him selfe beleeue or else he is not a childe of the elect acceptable and iustified Abraham but onely of the begetting Abraham which is nothing else but a man conceaued borne wrapt in sinne without the forgeuenes of sinnes without faith without the holy ghost as an other man is and therfore cōdemned Such also are the children carnally begotten of him hauing nothing in them like vnto their father but flesh and bloud sinne and death therefore these are also damned This glorious boasting then Vve are the seede of Abraham is to no purpose This argument Paule setteth out plainly in the .9 to the Romains by two examples of the holy scripture The first is of Ismaell and Isaac which were both the seede and naturall children of Abraham and yet notwithstanding Ismaell which was begotten of Abraham as Isaac was yea and should also haue bene the first begotten if
Lorde himselfe who is aboue the Scripture and is made vnto me the merite and price of righteousnes and euerlasting life On him I lay holde him I sticke to and leaue workes vnto thee which notwithstanding thou neuer didest This solution neither the Deuill nor any Iusticiary can euer wrest from thee or ouerthrowe Moreouer thou art in safetie before God For thy hearte abideth fixed in the obiect which is called Christ who being nailed to the crosse and accursed not for him selfe but for vs as the text saith vvas made a curse for vs. Holde fast this and lay it against all the sentences of the lawe and workes whatsoeuer and say doest thou heare this Satan Here must he needes geue place for he knoweth that Christe is his Lorde and master Verse 11. And that no man is iustified by the lavve in the sight of God it is euident For the iust shall liue by faith This is an other argument grounded vpon the testimony of the Prophet Habacucke And it is a sentence of greate weight and aucthoritie which Paule setteth against all the sentences that speake of the lawe and workes As if he should say what neede we any longe disputation Here I bringe forth a moste plaine testimonie of the Prophet againste the which no man can cauill The iust man shall liue by faith If he liue by faith then he liueth not by the lawe For the lawe is not of faith And here Paule excludeth workes and the lawe as things contrary to faith The Sophisters as they are alwayes ready to corrupt the scriptures do wrest and peruert this place after this manner The iust man doth liue by faith that is to wirte say they by a faith which is effectuall or working or formed and made perfect with charitie but if it be a faith not formed with charitie then doth it not iustifie This glose they them selues haue forged and by the same they doe iniurie to the wordes of the Prophet If they did call this formed or furnished faith the true faith which the Gospell teacheth this their glose should nothing at all offend me for then faith should not be separated from charitie but from the vaine opinion of faith As we also put a difference betwene a counterfeit faith and a true faith The counterfeit faith is that which heareth of God of Christ and of all the mysteries of his incarnation and our redemption which also apprehendeth beareth away those things which it heareth yea and can talke goodly thereof and yet there remaineth nothinge els in the hearte but a naked opinion and a sounde of the Gospell which howe farre of it is from true faith hereby it may appeare in that it neither renueth nor changeth the hearte it maketh not a new man but leaueth him in the vanity of his former opinion and conuersation and this is a very pernicious faith The morall philosopher is much better then the hypocrite hauing such a faith Wherefore if they would make a distinction betwene their formed faith and a false or counterfeit faith as I haue said their distinction should not offend me But they speake of faith in such sorte that they make charitie the forme and perfection of faith This is to preferre charitie before faith and to attribute righteousnes not to faith but to charitie wherefore when they doe not attribute righteousnes to faith but onely for charities sake they attribute to faith nothing at al. But the holy Ghost which geueth to all men both mouth tongue knoweth howe to speake He coulde haue said as the Sophisters doe wickedly imagine The righteous man shall liue by faith formed and beautified or made perfecte by charitie But this he omitteth of purpose and saith plainely The righteous man liueth by faith Let these doltish Sophisters goe therfore with this their wicked and pestilent glose We will still hold and extoll this faith which God himselfe hath called faith that is to say a true and a certaine faith which doubteth not of God nor of the diuine promises nor of the forgeuenes of sinnes through Christ that we may dwel sure safe in this our obiect Christ and may keepe still before our eies the passion and bloud of the Mediatour and all his benefites Now faith alone which ●●ieth holde vpon Christ is the onely meane that we suffer not these benefites to be takē out of our sight or wrested from vs by any meanes Therfore reiecting this pestilent glose we must vnderstād this place of faith onely And this Paule himselfe declareth when he disputeth against faith formed with charitie after this sorte Verse 12 And the lavv is not of faith The Scholemen say The righteous man doth liue if his faith be formed and adorned with charitie But contrariwise Paule saith The lavv is not of faith But what is the law Is it not also a commaundement touching charity yea the law commaundeth nothing els but charitie as we may see by the texte it selfe Thou shalt loue the Lord thy God vvith all thy soule c. Againe shevving mercy vnto thousands that loue him and keepe his commaundements Also In these tvvo commaundementes consist the lavve and the Prophetes If the lawe then that commaundeth charitie be contrary to Faith it must needes follow that charitie is not of faith So Paule plainely confuteth that glose which the Sophisters haue forged touching their formed faith and speaketh onely of faith as it is separate from the law Nowe the law being separate and set aparte charitie is also set aparte with all that belongeth to the lawe and faith onely is left which iustifieth and quickneth to euerlasting life Paule therfore reasoneth here out of a plaine testimony of the Prophet that there is none which obtaineth iustification and life before God but the beleeuing man who obtaineth righteousnes and euerlasting life without the law and without charitie by faith alone The reason is because the law is not of faith that is the law is not faith or any thing belonging to faith for it beleueth not neither are the works of the lawe faith nor yet of faith therfore faith is a thing much differing from the law like as the promise is a thing much differing from the law For the promise is not apprehended by working but by beleuing Yea there is as greate a difference betwene the promise and the law and consequently betwene faith and works as there is distaunce betwene heauen and earth It is impossible therefore that faith should be of the lawe For faith only resteth in the promise it onely apprehendeth and knoweth God and standeth onely in receauing good things of God. Contrariwise the law and workes consist in exacting in doing and in geuing vnto god As Abell offering his sacrifice geueth vnto God but he beleuing receaueth of god Paule therefore concludeth mightely out of that place of Habacuck that the righteous mā liueth by faith alone For the law in no
promise made vnto Abraham In thy seede shall all nations be blessed might so be fulfilled Therfore by no other meanes could this be done that is here promised but that Iesus Christ must needes become a Curse and ioyne him selfe to those that were accursed that so he might take away the Curse from them and through his Blessing might bring vnto them righteousnes and life And here marke as I haue also forewarned you that this word Blessing is not in vaine as the Iewes dreame who expoūd it to be but a salutation by word of mouth or by wryting But Paule entreateth here of sinne and righteousnes of death and life before god He speaketh therefore of inestimable and incomprehensible things when he sayth that the Blessing of Abraham might come vpon the Gentiles through Iesus Christ Ye see moreouer what merits we bring by what meanes we obtain this Blessing This is the merite of Congruence worthines these are the works preparatiue wherby we obtain this righteousnes that Christ Iesus was made a Curse for vs For we are ignorant of God enemies of God dead in sinne accursed and what is our desert then What can he deserue that is accursed ignorāt of God dead in sinnes and subiect to the wrath iudgement of God When the Pope excōmunicateth a man whatsoeuer he doth is counted accursed How much more then may we say that he is accursed before God as all we are before we know Christ which doth nothing else but cursed things Wherefore there is no other way to auoide the Curse but to beleue and with assured confidēce to say Thou Christ art my sinne my Curse or rather I am thy sinne thy Curse thy death thy wrath of God thy hell and contrariwise thou arte my righteousnes my Blessing my life my grace of God and my heauen For the text sayeth plainely Christe is made a Curse for vs. Therefore we are the cause that he was made a Curse nay rather we are his Curse This is an excellent place full of spiritual consolation albeit it satisfie not the blind hard harted Iewes yet it satisfieth vs that are baptised and haue receaued this doctrine and concludeth most mightely that we are blessed through the Curse the sinne the death of Christ that is to say we are iustified and quickned vnto life So long as sinne death and the Curse do abide in vs sinne terrifieth death killeth and the Curse condemneth vs But when these are translated and laid vpon Christes backe then are these euils made his owne and his good thinges are made ours Let vs therefore learne in all tentations to translate sinne death the Curse and all euils which oppresse vs from our selues vnto Christ and againe from him vnto our selues righteousnes mercy life and blessing For he beareth all our euils vpon him God the father cast the iniquities of vs all as Esay the Prophet saith vpon him And he hath taken them vpon him willingly for he was not giltie But this he did that he might fulfill the will of his father by the which we are made holy for euer This is that infinite and vnmeasurable mercy of God which Paule would gladly amplifie with all eloquence and plentie of wordes but the slender capacitie of mans heart can not comprehende and much lesse vtter that vnsearchable deapth and burning zeale of Gods loue towards vs And verely the inestimable greatnes of Gods mercy not only engendreth an hardnes to beleue but also incredulitie it selfe For I doe not onely heare that almightie God the creatour and maker of all things is good and merciful but also that the same high souereigne Maiestie was so careful for me a damnable sinner a child of wrath and of euerlasting death that he spared not his owne deare Sonne but deliuered him to a most opprobrious and shamefull death that he hāging betwene two theeues might be made a Curse and sinne for me a cursed sinner that I might be made blessed that is to say the childe and heire of god Who can sufficiently praise and magnify this exceeding great goodnes of God Not all the Angels in heauen Therfore the doctrine of the Gospell the booke of God speaketh of farre other matters then any booke of policie or philosophie yea or the booke of Moses himselfe to wit of the vnspeakeable and most diuine giftes of God which farre passe the capacitie and vnderstanding both of men and Angels Verse 14. That vve might receaue the promise of the spirite through faith This is a phrase of the Hebrewes The promise of the spirite that is to say the spirite promised Now the spirite is freedom from the law sinne death the Curse hel and from the wrath and iudgement of god Here is no merite or worthines of ours but a free promise and a gifte geuen through the Seede of Abraham that we may be free from all euils and obtaine all good things whatsoeuer And this libertye gift of the spirite we receiue not by any other merites then by Faith alone For that onely taketh holde of the promise of God as Paule plainly sayth in this place that vve might receaue the promise of the spirite not by vvorkes but by Faith. This is in dede a sweete and a true Apostolike doctrine which sheweth that those things are fulfilled for vs now geuen to vs which many Prophets Kings desired to see to heare And such like places as this one is were gathered together out of diuers sayings of the Prophets which forsaw long before in spirite that all things should be chaūged repaired and gouerned by this man Christe Therfore the Iewes hauing the law of God did notwithstanding besides that law looke for Christ None of the Prophets or gouernours of the people of God did make any new lawe but Elias Samuel Dauid all the other Prophets did abide vnder the law of Moses they did not appoint any new tables or a new kingdom priesthode for that new chaunge of the kingly priesthoode of the law the worship was referred kept to him only of whom Moises had prophesied longe before The Lord thy God shal raise vp a Prophet vnto thee of thine ovvne nation and from among thy brethren Him shalt thou heare As if he should say Thou shalt heare him onely and none besides him This the Fathers well vnderstode for none could teach greater and higher poynts then Moises him selfe who made excellent lawes of high and great matters as are the ten commaundemēts especially the first commaundement I am the Lord thy God Thou shalt haue no other Gods but me Thou shalt loue the Lord thy God vvith all thy heart c. This law concerning the loue of God doth comprehend the very Angels also Therfore it is the headspring of all diuine wisedom And yet was it necessary notwithstanding that an other teacher should come that is to say
Christ which should bring teach an other thing farre passing these excellent lawes to witte grace and remission of sinnes This is therfore a mightie text For in this short sentence That vve might receaue the promise of the spirite by faith Paule poureth out at once what so euer he was able to say Therfore when he can goe no further for he could not vtter any greater or more excellent thing he breaketh of and here he stayeth Verse 15. Brethern I speake according to man Though it be but a mans couenaunt vvhen it is confirmed yet no man doth abrogate it or addeth any thing therto After this principall inuincible argument Paule addeth an other grounded vpon the similitude of a mans Testament which semeth to be very weake and such as the Apostle ought not to vse for the confirmation of a matter of so great importance For in high and waightie matters we ought to confirme earthly things by diuine things not diuine and heauenly things by earthly and worldly things And in deede it is true the these arguments of all other are most weake when we goe about to proue and confirme heauenly matters with earthly and corruptible things as Scotus is wont to doe A man sayth he is able to loue God aboue all things for he loueth him self aboue all things therfore much more is he able to loue God aboue all things For a good thing the greater it is the more it is to be loued And hereof he inferreth that a man is able ex puris naturalibus that is to say euen of his owne pure natural strength easily to fulfil that high commaundement Thou shalt loue the Lord thy God vvith all thy heart c. For sayth he a man is able to loue the least good thing aboue all thīgs yea he setteth at naught his life of all other things most deare vnto him for a litle vile money Therfore he can much more doe it for Gods cause Ye haue oftentimes heard of me that ciuill ordinaunces are of God for God hath ordained them and alloweth them as he doth the Sunne the Moone other creatures Therfore an argument taken of the ordinance or of the creatures of God is good so that we vse the same rightly So the Prophets haue very often vsed similitudes and comparisons taken of creatures calling Christ the Sunne the Church the Mone the preachers teachers of the word the Starres Also there are many similitudes in the Prophets of trees thornes flowers and frutes of the earth The new Testament likewise is full of such similitudes Therfore where Gods ordināce is in the creature there may an argument be wel borrowed and applied to diuine and heauenly things So our Sauiour Christ in Mat. 7. argueth frō earthly thīgs to heauēly things whē he sayth If ye then vvhich are euil cā geue to your children good gifts hovv much more shall your Father vvhich is in heauē geue good things to them that aske him Likewise Paule We must obey men therfore much more must we obey god Ieremie also in the 53. chap The Rhecabites obeyed their Father hovv much more ought ye to haue obeyed me Now these things are appoynted of God and are his ordinaunces that Fathers should geue vnto their children that children should obey their parents Therfore such maner of arguments are good when they are grounded vpon the ordinaūce of god But if they be taken from mens corrupt affections they are naught Such is the argument of Scotus I loue the lesser good thing therfore I loue the greater more I deny the consequence For my louing is not Gods ordinaunce but a deuillish corruption In deede it should be so that I louing my selfe or an other creature should much more loue God the creatour but it is not so For the loue wherwith I loue my selfe is corrupt and against God. This I say lest any man should cauill that an argument taken of corruptible things applied to diuine and spirituall matters is nothing worth For this argument as I haue sayd is strōg enough so that we ground the same vpon the ordinaunce of God as we see in this argumēt which we haue in hand For the ciuil law which is an ordinaunce of God sayth that it is not lawfull to breake or to chaunge the testament of a man Yea it commaundeth that the last will or testament of a man be straitly kept For that it is one of the holiest most laudable customes that are among men Now therefore vppon this custome of mans Testament Paule argueth after this maner How cometh it to passe that mā is obeyed and not God Political and ciuill ordinaūces as concerning Testaments and other things are diligently kept There nothing is chaūged nothing is added or taken away But the Testament of God is chaunged that is to say his promise concerning the spiritual Blessing that is concerning heauenly and euerlasting things which the whole world ought not onely to receaue with great zeale and affection but also ought most religiously to reuerence and honour This persuadeth vehemently when we so argue from the examples and lawes of men Therfore he sayth I speake after the maner of men that is to say I bring vnto you a similitude taken of the custome and maner of men As if he should say The testaments of men and such other corruptible things are streitly executed and that which the lawe commaundeth is diligently obserued and kept For when a man maketh his last wil bequeathing his lands and goods to his heires and therupon dieth this last wil is confirmed and ratified by the death of the Testator so that nothing may nowe be either added to it or taken from it according to all law equitie Now if a mās wil be kept with so great fibelity that nothīg is added to it or taken from it after his death how much more ought the last Wil of God to be faithfully kept which he promised and gaue vnto Abraham and his seede after him For when Christ died then was it confirmed in him and after his death the writing of his last Testament was opened that is to say the promised Blessing of Abraham was preached amonge all nations dispersed throughout the whole world This was that last Wil and Testament of God the great Testatour confirmed by the death of Christ therfore no man ought to chaunge it or to adde any thing to it as they that teach the law and mans traditions doe For they say vnlesse thou be circumcised kepe the law do many workes suffer many things thou cāst not be saued This is not the last Will or Testament of god For he said not vnto Abraham if thou doe this or that thou shalt obtaine the Blessing or they that be circumcised keepe the law shall obtaine the same but he saith In thy seede shall all the nations of the earth be blessed As if he
and much lesse to rewarde them For it seeth them not or if it doe it esteemeth them not as good workes but as most wicked and detestable crimes and riddeth the world of those which are the doers therof as most pestilent plagues to mankinde So Christ the Sauiour of the world for a recōpence of his incōprehensible inestimable benefites was put to the most ignominious death of the crosse The Apostles also bringing the word of grace eternall life into the world were coūted the ofscouring the outcastes of the whole world This is the goodly reward which the world geueth for so great vnspeakeable benefites But workes done without faith although they haue neuer so goodly a shew of holines are vnder the Curse Wherfore so farre of it is that the doers therof should deserue grace righteousnes eternall life that rather they heape sinne vpon sinne After this maner the Pope that child of perdition and all that follow him doe worke So worke all meritemongers and heretikes which are fallen frō the faith Verse 23. But before faith came He proceedeth in declaring the profite necessitie of the law He said before the the law was added for transgressions Not that it was the principall purpose of God to make a law that should bring death dānation as he saith Rom. 7. VVas that vvhich vvas good saith he made death vnto me God forbid For the law is a word that sheweth life driueth mē vnto it Therfore it is not only geuen as a minister of death but the principal vse end therof is to reueile death that so it might be seene knowen how horrible sinne is notwithstanding it doth not so reueile death as though it tended to no other end but to kill destroy But to this end it reuealeth death that when men are terrified cast downe humbled they should feare god And this doth the 20. chap. of Erodus declare Feare not saith Moses For God is come to proue you that his feare may be before you that ye sinne not The office therfore of the law is to kill yet so that God may reuiue quickē againe The law then is not geuē only to kil but because mā is proud dreameth that he is wise righteous and holy therfore it is necessary he should be humbled by the law that so this beaste the opinion of righteousnes I say might be slaine for otherwise men can not obtaine life Albeit then that the law killeth yet God vseth this effect of the law this death I meane to a good vse that is to say euen to life For God seeing that this vniuersall plague of the whole world to wit mās opinion of his owne righteousnes his hypocrisie cōfidence in his owne holines could not be beatē downe by any other meanes he would that it should be slaine by the law not for euer but that when it is once slaine mā might be raised vppe againe aboue and beyond the lawe and there might heare this voice Feare not I haue not geuen the lawe and killed thee by the lawe to this ende that thou shouldest abide in this death but that thou shouldest feare me and liue For the presuming of good workes and righteousnes standeth not with the feare of God And where the feare of God is not there cā be no thirsting for grace or life God must therefore haue a strong hammer or a mightie maul to breake the rockes and a hote burning fire in the middes of heauen to ouerthrowe the mountaines that is to say to destroy this furious and obstinate beast this presumption I say that when a man by this brusing and breaking is brought to nothīg he should despaire of his owne strēgth righteousnes and holines and being thus throughly terrified should thirst after mercy and remission of sinnes Ver. 23. But before Faith came vve vvere vnder the lavv shut vppe vnto the Faith vvhich should aftervvardes be reuealed That is to say before the time of the Gospell and grace came the office of the law was that we should be shutte vppe and kept vnder the same as it were in prison This is a goodly and a fitte similitude shewing the effect of the law and how righteous it maketh men therefore it is diligently to be weyed No theefe no murtherer no adulterer or other malefactour loueth the chaines and fetters the darke and lothsome prison wherin he lieth fast boūd but rather if he could he would breake and beate in to pouder the prison with his irons and fetters In deede whiles he is in prison he refraineth from doing of euill but not of a good will or for righteousnes sake but because the prison restreineth him that he can not doe it And nowe being fast fettred he hateth not his theft and his murther yea he is sory with all his heart that he can not robbe and steale cutte and slay but he hateth the prison and if he could escape he would robbe and kill as he did before The lawe shutteth men vnder sinne two wayes Ciuily and Spiritually Such is the force of the lawe and the righteousnes that cometh of the lawe compelling vs to be outwardly good when it threatneth death or any other punishment to the transgressours thereof Here we obey the law in deede but for feare of punishment that is vnwillingly and with great indignation But what righteousnes is this when we absteine from doing euill for feare of punishment Wherefore this righteousnes of works is in deede nothing else but to loue sinne to hate righteousnes to detest God with his lawe and to loue and reuerence that which is most horrible and abhominable For looke howe hartely the theefe loueth the prison and hateth his theft so gladly doe we obey the lawe in accomplishing that which it commaundeth and auoiding that which it forbiddeth Notwithstanding this fruite and this profite the lawe bringeth although mens hartes remaine neuer so wicked that first outwardly and ciuily after a sort it restraineth theeues murtherers and other malefactours For if they did not see and vnderstand that sinne is punished in this life by imprisonment by the galowes by the sword and such like and after this life with eternall damnation and hell fire no Magistrate should be able to bridle the fury and rage of men by any lawes bondes or chaines But the threatnings of the lawe strike a terrour in to the hartes of the wicked whereby they are brideled after a sort that they runne not headlong as otherwise they would doe into all kindes of wickednes Notwithstanding they would rather that there were no law no punishment no hell and finally no god If God had not an hell or did not punish the wicked he should be loued and praised of all men But because he punisheth the wicked and all are wicked therefore in as much as they are shut vnder the lawe they can doe no otherwise
and a carnall libertie to doe what so euer they list These as Peter sayeth haue the libertie of the spirite as a cloke of maliciousnes through which the name of God and the Gospell of Christe is sclaundered euery where and therfore they shall once suffer worthy punishment for this their vngodlines Thirdly such doe also abuse the lawe who feeling the terrours thereof doe not vnderstand that such terrours ought no longer to continue but vnto Christe This abuse in them is the cause that they fall to desperation as in the hypocrites it is the cause of arrogancie and presumption Contrariwise the true vse of the lawe can neuer be estemed and magnified as it is worthy namely that when the conscience shutte vp vnder the lawe despaireth not but being instructed by the wisedom of the holy Ghost concludeth with it selfe after this sort I am in deede shut vppe as a prisoner vnder the lawe but not for euer yea this shutting vppe shall turne to my great profite How so Because that I being thus shut vppe shall be driuen to sigh and seeke the hand of an helper c. After this maner the lawe is as an enforcer which by compulsion bringeth the hungrie vnto Christe that he may satisfie them with his good things Wherefore the true office of the lawe is to shew vnto vs our sinnes to make vs giltie to humble vs to kill vs and to bring vs downe to hell and finally to take from vs all helpe all succour all cōfort but yet altogether to this end that we may be iustified exalted quickned to life caried vppe into heauen and obtaine all good things Therfore it doth not onely kill but it killeth that we may liue Verse 24. VVherefore the lavve vvas our Scholemaster to bring v● to Christe Here againe he ioyneth the lawe and the Gospell together which are separate so farre asunder as touching the affections and inward man when he sayeth The lawe is a Scholemaster to Christ This similitude also of the Scholemaster is worthy to be noted Although a Scholemaster be very profitable and necessary to enstruct and to bring vppe children yet shewe me one childe or scholer which loueth his master We may easily coniecture what affection the Iewes bare to their Moises and how zelously they performed that which he commaunded In deede such was their loue and obedience towards him that euery hower as the Storie testifieth they would with all their hearts haue stoned him to death It is not possible therefore that the scholer should loue his master For howe can he loue him which keepeth him in prison that is to say which suffereth him not to doe that which gladly he would And if he doe any thing against his commaundement by and by he is rebuked and chastised yea and is constrained moreouer to kisse the rodde when he is beaten Is not this I pray you a goodly righteousnes and obedience of the scholer that he obeyeth his master so seuerely threatning and so sharply correcting him and kisseth the rodde But doth he this with a good wil As soone as his master hath turned his backe he breaketh the rodde or casteth it into the fire And if he had any power ouer his master he would not suffer him selfe to be beaten of his master but rather he would beat him And yet notwithstanding the scholemaster is very necessary for the child to enstruct and to chastise him otherwise the childe without this discipline enstruction and good education should be vtterly lost The scholemaster therfore is appoynted for the child to teach him to bring him vp to kepe him as it were in prison But to what ende or how long Is it to the ende that this streit and sharpe dealing of the scholemaster should alwayes cōtinue or that the child should remaine in continuall bōdage Not so but onely for a time that this obedience this prison and correction might turne to the profit of the child that in time he might be heire and Prince For it is not the fathers will that his sonne should be alwayes subiect to the scholemaster and alwayes beaten with roddes but that by this instruction and discipline he may be made able and meete to be his fathers successour Euen so the law sayth Paule is nothing else but a Scholemaster not for euer but vntill it haue brought vs to Christ as in other wordes he sayd also before The lavve vvas geuen for transgressions vntill the blessed Seede should come Also the scripture hath shut all vnder sin c. Againe vve vvere kept vnder shut vp vnto faith vvhich should after be reuealed Wherefore the lawe is not onely a Scholemaster but it is a Scholemaster to bring vs vnto Christ For what a Scholemaster were he which would alwaies torment beat the child teach him nothing at all And yet such Scholemasters there were in time past when Scholes were nothing else but a prison and a very hell the Scholemasters cruell tyrannes and very butchers The childrē were alwayes beaten they learned with continuall paine and trauell yet few of thē came to any proofe The law is not such a Scholemaster For it doth not onely terrifie torment as the foolish Scholemaster beateth his scholers teacheth them nothing but with his roddes he driueth vs vnto Christ like as a good Scholemaster enstructeth exerciseth his scholers in reading and wryting to the ende they may come to the knowledge of good letters other profitable things that afterwardes they may haue a delite in doing of that which before when they were constrained thervnto they did against their willes By this goodly similitude Paule sheweth what is the true vse of the lawe namely that it iustifieth not hypocrites for they remaine without Christ in their presumption securitie And contrariwise that it leaueth not in death damnation those that are of a contrite heart so that they vse it as Paul teacheth but driueth them vnto Christ But they which in these terrours continue still in their weaknes doe not apprehend Christ by faith do fall at length into desperatiō Paule therfore in this allegorie of the Scholemaster most liuely expresseth the true vse of the law For like as the Scholemaster reproueth his scholers he greeueth them maketh thē heauy yet not to the end that this bondage should alwayes continue but that it should cease when the children are well brought vppe and enstructed accordingly that afterwards without any cōstraint of the Scholemaster they should cherefully enioy their libertie their fathers goods euen so they which are vexed oppressed with the law doe know that these terrours and vexations shall not alwayes continue but that therby they are prepared to come vnto Christ which is to be reuealed and to receaue the libertie of the spirite c. Verse 24. That vve may be made righteous by Faith. The lawe is not a Scholemaster to bring vs vnto
ouerthroweth whole kingdoms and Empires Therfore as many as trust to their owne strength and righteousnes doe serue a God but such a God as they them selues haue deuised and not the true God in deede For the true God speaketh thus No righteousnes wisedom nor religiō pleaseth me but that onely whereby the Father is glorified through the Sonne Whosoeuer apprehendeth this Sonne and me and my promise in him by Faith to him I am a God to him I am a Father him do I accept iustifie and saue All other abide vnder wrath because they worship that thing which by nature is no God. Whosoeuer forsaketh this doctrine must needes fall into the ignorance of God he vnderstandeth not what the true Christian righteousnes wisedom and seruice of God is he is an Idolater abiding vnder the law sinne death and the power of the Deuill and all things that he doth are accursed and condemned Therefore the Anabaptist imagining with him selfe that he pleaseth God if he be rebaptised if he forsake his house wife and children if he mortifie his flesh and suffer much aduersity and at length death it selfe yet there is not one droppe of the knowledge of Christe in him but secluding Christ he dreameth altogether of his owne workes of the forsaking of his goodes of his affliction and mortification and now differeth nothing frō the Turke Iewe or Papist in spirite or in heart but onely in the outward appearance workes and ceremonies which he hath chosen to him selfe The same confidence in workes haue all the Monkes and other religious orders notwithstanding in their apparell and other outward things there is a difference There are at this day very many like vnto these which notwithstanding would be counted among the true professors and teachers of the Gospell and as touching the words they teach that men are deliuered from their sinnes by the death of Christ But because they teach faith in such sort that they attribute more to charitie then to faith they highly dishonour Christe and wickedly peruert his word For they dreame that God regardeth accepteth vs for our charities sake wherby we being reconciled to God doe loue God and our neighbour If this be true then haue we no neede of Christ at all Such men serue not the true God but an Idol of their owne heart which they themselues haue deuised For the true God doth not regard or accept vs for our charitie vertues or newnes of life but for Christes sake c. But they make this obiection Yet notwithstāding the Scripture cōmaundeth that we should loue God with all our heart c. It is true But it foloweth not that because God cōmaūdeth vs therfore we do it If we did loue God with all our heart c. then no dout we should be iustified liue through this obedience as it is wrytten He that shal doe these things shall liue in them But the Gospel sayth Thou doest not these things therfore thou shalt not liue in them For this sentence Thou shalt loue the Lord thy God c. requireth a perfect obedience a perfect feare trust loue towards god These things men neither doe nor can performe in this corrupt nature Therfore this law Thou shalt loue the Lord thy god c. iustifieth not but accuseth condemneth all men according to that saying The lavv causeth vvrath c. Contrariwise Christ is the finishing accomplishing of the lavv to righteousnes to euery one that beleueth Of this we haue spoken largely before In like maner the Iewe keping the law with this opinion that he by this obediēce wil please God serueth not the true God but is an Idolater worshipping a dreame an idoll of his owne heart which is no where to be found For the God of his fathers whom he saith he worshippeth promised to Abraham a Seede thorough the which all nations should be blessed Therfore God is knowen the Blessing is geuē not by the lawe but by the Gospel of Christ Although Paule speake these words Thē vvhē ye knevv not God ye did seruice c. properly prīcipally to the Galathians which were Gentiles yet notwithstanding by the same words he also toucheth the Iewes who though they had reiected their Idols outwardly yet in their hearts they worshipped them more then did the Gentiles as it is sayd Rom. 2. Thou abhorrest Idols committest sacriledge The Gētiles were not the people of God they had not his word and therfore their Idolatrie was grosse But the Idolatrous Iewes cloked their Idolatrie with the name and word of God as all Iusticiaries which seeke righteousnes by workes are wont to doe and so with this outward shew of holines they deceiued many Therfore Idolatrie the more holy and spirituall it is the more hurtfull it is But how may these two contrary sayings which the Apostle here setteth downe be recōciled together Ye knevv not God ye vvorshipped God. I answer All mē naturally haue this general knowledge that there is a God according to the saying Ro. 1. Forasmuch as that vvhich may be knovvn of god vvas manifest in thē For God was made manifest vnto thē in that the inuisible things of him did appeare by the creation of the world Moreouer the ceremonies religiōs which were alwaies remained among al nations sufficiently witnesse that all men haue had a certain general knowledge of god But whether they had it by nature or by the tradition of their forefathers I wil not here dispute But here some wil obiect againe If all mē knew God wherfore thē doth Paul say that the Galathians knew not God before the preaching of the Gospel I answer There is a double knowledge of God general perticuler All men haue the generall knowledge namely that there is a God that he created heauen earth that he is iust that he punisheth the wicked But what god thīketh of vs what his wil is towards vs what he wil geue do to the end we may be deliuered from sinne death and be saued which is the true knowledge of God in dede this they know not As it may be that I know some man by sight whō yet in dede I know not thorowly because I vnderstand not what affection he beareth towards me So mē know naturally that there is a god but what his wil is or what is not his will they doe not know For it is wrytten There is none that vnderstādeth God. And in an other place No mā hath sene God that is to say no man hath knowen what is the will of god Now what doth it auaile thee if thou know that there is a God yet art ignorāt what is his will towards thee Here some thinke one thing some an other The Iewes imagine this to be the will of God if they worship him according to the rule of Moses lawe the Turke if he obserue his Alcoran the
contemptible as Paule was among the Galathians as here he witnesseth of him selfe and to receaue him as an angel from heauen and to geue him such honour as if he had bene Christ Iesus him selfe and not to be offended with his afflictions being so great and so many Wherefore by these wordes he highly commendeth the vertue of the Galathians which he sayeth he will kepe in perpetuall remembraunce and so much estemeth the same that he desireth it may be knowne vnto all men Notwithstanding in setting forth so highly their benefites and praises he sheweth couertly how entirely they loued him before the comming of the false apostles and therwithall he moueth them to continue as they began and to embrace hym with no lesse loue and reuerence then they did before And hereby it may also appeare that the false apostles had greater aucthoritie amōg the Galathians then Paule himselfe For the Galathians being moued with their authoritie preferred them farre aboue Paule whom before they so dearly loued and receaued as an angell of god c. Verse 15. VVhat vvas then your felicitie As if he would say How happie were ye counted how much were ye then praised and commended The like maner of speech we haue in the song of the virgin Marie All generations shall call me blessed And these words VVhat vvas then your felicitie containe in them a certeine vehemēcie As if he would say ye were not only blessed but in all things most blessed highly cōmēded Thus he goeth about to qualifie mitigate his bitter potion that is to say his sharpe chiding fearing lest the Galathians should be offended therwith especially knowing that the false apostles would sclaūder him and most spitefully interprete his wordes For this is the qualitie and nature of these Vipers that they will sclaunder maliciously peruert those words which procede from a simple and sincere heart and wrest them cleane contrary to the true sense and meaning thereof They are maruelous cunning workemen in this matter farre passing all the witte and eloquence of all the Rhetoricians in the world For they are ledde with a wicked spirite which so bewitcheth them that they being enflamed with a diuelish rage against the Faithfull can no otherwise doe but maliciously interprete and wickedly peruert their wordes and wrytings Therefore they are like vnto the spider which sucketh venome out of sweete and pleasant flowers and this procedeth not of the flowers but of their owne venemous nature which turneth that into poyson which of it selfe is good and holesome Paule therefore by these milde and sweet wordes goeth about to preuent the false apostles to the ende they should haue no occasion to sclaunder and peruert his wordes after this maner Paule handleth you very vngentely he calleth you foolish bewitched and disobecient to the truth which is a sure token that he seeketh not your saluation but accounteth you as damned and reiected from Christe Ver. 15. For I beare you record that if it had bene possible ye vvould haue plucked out your ovvne eyes and haue geuen them to me He praiseth the Galathians aboue measure Ye did not onely entreat me sayth he most curteously and with all reuerence receauing me as an angell of God c but also if necessitie had required ye would haue plucked out your owne eyes and geuen them to me yea ye would haue bestowed your liues for me And in dede the Galathians bestowed their liues for him For in that they receaued and mainteined Paule whom the world accounted most execrable and accursed they turned vpon their owne heades as receauers mainteiners of Paule the cruell hatred and indignation of all the Iewes and Gentiles So also at this day the name of Luther is most odious to that world He that praiseth me sinneth worse then any idolater blasphemer periurer whoremonger adulterer murtherer or theefe It must needes be therfore that the Galathians were wel established in the doctrine faith of Christ seeing that they with so great daūger of their liues receaued maintained Paule which was hated throughout all the world For else they would neuer haue sustained the cruel hatred of the whole world Vers 16. Am I therfore becōe your enemy because I tel you the truth Here he sheweth the reason why he speaketh the Galathians so faire For he suspecteth that they take him for their enemie because he had reproued them so sharply I pray you sayth he set apart these rebukes and separate them from doctrine and ye shal finde that my purpose was not to rebuke you but to teach you the truth In deede I confesse that my Epistle is sharpe and seuere but by this seueritie I goe about to call you backe againe to the truth of the Gospel from the which ye are falne and to kepe you in the same therfore applie this sharpnes this bitter potiō not to your persons but to your disease And iudge me not to be your enemy in rebuking you so sharply but rather thinke that I am your father For vnlesse I loued you dearly as my children and knew also that I am beloued of you I would not haue reproued you so sharply It is the part of a frend freely to admonish his frend if he doe amisse and when he is so admonished if he be wise he is not angry with the other which hath so frendly admonished him and tolde him the truth but geueth him thanks It is commonly seene in the world that truth bringeth hatred and that he is accounted an enemie which speaketh the truth But amongst frendes it is not so much lesse amongst Christians Seing therefore I haue reprehended you of mere loue to the ende ye might abide in the truth ye ought not to be offended with me nor lose the truth or thinke me your enemie because of my fatherly reprehension All these things are spoken of Paule to confirme that which he sayd before Be ye as I am Ye haue not hurt me c. Verse 17. They are ielous ouer you amisse c. He reproueth here the flattery of the false apostles For Satan is wont by his ministers through wonderfull subtiltie craftie sleightes to begile the simple As Paule sayth Rom. 16. VVith faire speech and flattering they deceaue the hearts of the simple For first of all they make great protestations that they seeke nothing else but the aduaūcement of Gods glory and moreouer that they are moued by the spirite because the miserable people are neglected or else because the truth is not purely taught of others to teach the infallible truth that by this meanes the elect may be deliuered from errour and may come to the true light knowledge of the truth Moreouer they promise vndouted saluation to those that receaue their doctrine If vigilant and faithfull pastors doe not withstand these rauening wolues they will doe great harme to the church vnder this pretēce of godlines vnder this sheepes clothing
dreame are possessed of the Deuil and altogether carnall therefore they performe and fulfill the desires of the flesh euen with all the power of the soule Therfore most necessary it was that so horrible and terrible a sentence should be pronounced by the Apostle against such careles contemners and obstinate hypocrites namely that all they which do such works of the flesh as Paule hath recited shall not inherite the kingdom of God that yet some of them being terrified by this seuere sentence may begin to fight against the workes of the flesh by the spirit that they accomplish not the same Verse 22. But the fruits of the spirite are loue ioy peace long suffering svvetenes goodnes faithfulnes gentlenes or mekenes temperance The Apostle sayeth not the workes of the spirite as he sayd the workes of the flesh but he adorneth these Christian vertues with a more honorable name calling them the frutes of the spirite For they bring with them most excellent frutes and commodities for they that haue them geue glory to God and with the same doe allure and prouoke others to embrace the doctrine and Faith of Christ Loue. It had bene enough to haue sayd Loue and no more for loue extendeth it selfe vnto all the fruites of the spirite And in the. 1. Cor. 13. Paule attributeth to loue all the fruites which are done in the spirite when he sayth Loue is patiēt curteous c. Notwithstāding he would set it here by it selfe amongs the rest of the fruites of the spirit and in the first place thereby to admonish the Christians that before all things they should loue one an other geuing honour one to an other euery man esteming better of an other then of him selfe and seruing one an other because they haue Christ the holy Ghost dwelling in them because of the word baptisme other gifts of God which christiās haue Ioy. This is the voyce of the Bridegrome and of the Bride that is to say sweete cogitations of Christ holesom exhortations plesant songs or Psalmes praises and thanks geuing wherby the godly do instruct stirre vp and refresh them selues Therefore God loueth not heauines and doulfulnes of spirite he hateth vncomfortable doctrine heauy and sorowfull cogitations and loueth chearfull hearts For therefore hath he sent his sonne not to oppresse vs with heauines and sorrow but to cheare vp our soules in him For this cause the Prophets the Apostles and Christ him selfe do exhort vs yea they commaūd vs to reioyce be glad Zach. 9. Reioyce thou daughter of Syon be ioyful thou daughter of Ierusalem for behold thy king commeth to thee And in the Psalmes it is often sayd Be ioyfull in the Lord. Paule sayth Reioyce in the Lord alvvaies c. And Christe sayeth Reioyce because your names are vvryttē in heauen Where this ioy of the spirit is there the heart inwardly reioyceth through faith in Christ with ful assurance that he is our Sauiour and our byshop and outwardly it expresseth this ioy with wordes and gestures Also the faithfull reioyce when they see that the Gospell spreadeth abrode that many be wonne to the Faith and that the kingdom of Christ is enlarged Peace Both towardes God men the Christians may be peaceable quiet not contentious nor hating one an other but one bearing an others burden through long suffering or perseuerance without the which peace cannot continue and therfore Paule putteth it next after peace Long suffering or perseuerance Wherby a mā doth not only beare aduersities iniuries reproches such like but also with patiēce waiteth for the amendmēt of those which haue done him any wrong When the Deuil cannot by force ouercome those which are tempted then seketh he to ouercome them by long cōtinuance For he knoweth that we be earthen vessels which can not long endure hold out many knockes violent strokes therfore with long continuance of tēptations he ouercometh many To vanquish these his cōtinuall assaults we must vse long sufferance which patiētly looketh not only for the amendment of those which doe vs wrong but also for the ende of those temptations which the Deuil raiseth vp against vs. Gentlenes Which is when a man is gentle and tractable in his conuersation in his whole life For such as wil be true folowers of the Gospel must not be sharpe and bitter but gentle milde courteous and faire spoken which should encourage others to delite in their company which can winke at other mens faults or at least expound them to the best which will be well contented to yelde and geue place to others contented to beare with those which are froward intractable as the very Heathen sayd Thou must know the maners of thy frend but thou must not hate thē Such a one was our Sauiour Christ as euery where is to be sene in that Gospell It is wryttē of Peter that he wept so often as he remēbred the sweete mildnes of Christe which he vsed in his daily conuersation It is an excellent vertue and most necessary in euery kinde of life Goodnes Which is when a man willingly helpeth others in their necessitie by geuing lending and such other meanes Faith. When Paule here reckeneth faith amongs the fruites of the spirit it is manifest that he speaketh not of Faith which is in Christe but of the fidelitie humanitie of one man towards an other Herevpon he sayeth in the .13 Chap. of the first to the Cor. that charitie beleueth all things Therfore he that hath this faith is not suspicious but milde taketh all things to the best And although he be deceaued and findeth himselfe to be mocked yet such is his patiencie and softnes that he letteth it passe Briefly he is ready to beleue al mē but he trusteth not all On the cōtrary where this vertue is lacking there men are suspicious froward waiward dogged so neither wil beleue any thing nor geue place to any body They can suffer nothing Whatsoeuer a mā saith or doth neuer so wel they cauill sclander it so that who so serueth not their humor cā neuer please them Therefore it is impossible for thē to kepe charity frendship concord peace with men But if these vertues be takē away what is this life else but biting and deuouring one of an other Faith therfore in this place is whē one mā geueth credite to an other in things pertaining to this present life For what maner of life should we lead in this world if one man should not credite an other Mekenes Which is when a man is not lightly moued or prouoked to anger There be infinite occasions in this life which prouoke men to anger but the godly ouer come them by meekenes Temperance chastitie or continencie This is a sobrietie or modestie in the whole life of man which vertue Paule setteth against the works of the flesh He would therfore that Christians should liue soberly and
not of terrour or heauines but of boldnes ioy gladnes Therfore if ye see any brother cast downe afflicted by occasion of sinne which he hath cōmitted runne vnto him reaching out your hand raise him vp againe comfort him with sweete words embrace him with motherly armes As for those that be hard harted obstinate which without feare continue carelesly in their sinnes rebuke thē sharply But on the other side as I said they that be ouertakē with any sinne are heauy sorowful for their fault which they haue cōmitted must be raised vp admonished by you that are spiritual and that in the spirit of meekenes not in the zeale of seuere iustice as some haue done who whē they should haue refreshed thirsty consciences with some sweete cōsolation gaue thē gall vineger to drinke as the Iewes did vnto Christ hanging vpon the crosse Ezechiel sayeth of the shepheards of Israel that they ruled the flocke of God with cruelty rigour but a brother ought to cōfort his brother that is falne with a louing a meke spirit Againe let him that is falne heare the word of him that raiseth him vp beleue it For God would not haue those that are brused to be cast away but to be raised vp as the Psalme saith For God hath bestowed more for them than we haue done that is to say the life and bloud of his owne sonne Wherfore we ought also to receiue to aide comfort such with all mildnes and gentlenes Verse 1. Considering thy selfe lest thou also be tempted This is a very necessary admonition to beat downe the sharpe dealing of such pastours as shew no pity in raising vp restoring againe them which are falne There is no sinne saith Augustin which any mā hath done but an other man may do the same We stād on a slipperie groūd therfore if we waxe proud leaue of our duty there is nothing so easie vnto vs as to fall It was well sayd therfore of one in the booke called the liues of the fathers when it was told him that one of his brethrē was falne into whoredō He fel yesterday saith he and I may fall to day Paul therfore addeth this earnest admonitiō that the pastors shuld not be rigorous and vnmerciful towardes the offenders or measure their owne holines by other mens sinnes but that they shuld beare a motherly affection towards thē thinke thus with thēselues This mā is fallen it may be that I also shal fal more dāgerously more shamefully thā he did And if they which be so ready to iudge condemne other would well consider their owne sinnes they should finde the sinnes of others which are falne to be but motes and their owne sinnes to be great beames Let him therfore that stādeth take hede lest he fal If Dauid which was so holy a mā ful of faith the spirit of god which had such notable promises of god which also did so many great thīgs for the lord did fall so greeuously being now strickē in yeres was ouerthrown with youthful lust after so many diuers tēptations wherw t God had exercised him why shuld we presume of our owne cōstancy And god by such exāples doth shew vnto vs first our owne weaknes that we shuld not waxe proud but stād in feare Then he sheweth vnto vs his iudgemēt that he cā beare nothing lesse than pride either against himself or against our brethrē Paule therfore saith not without cause Considering thy selfe lest thou also be tempted They that be exercised with temptations do know how necessary this commaundement is On the other side they which be not tried therwith do not vnderstād Paule and therfore are not touched with any pity toward them that are fallen as was to be seene in Poperie where nothing else raigned but tyrannie and crueltie Verse 2. Beare ye one an others burden so fulfil the lavv of Christ This is a gentle cōmaundemēt to the which he ioyneth a great cōmendatiō The law of Christ is the law of loue Christ after he had redemed vs renewed vs made vs his church gaue vs no other law but the law of mutual loue Iohn 13. A nevv cōmaūdemēt geue I to you that ye loue together c. And to loue is not as the Popish Sophisters dreame to wish well one to an other but one to beare an others burdē that is to beare those things which he greeuous vnto thee and which thou wouldest not willingly beare Therfore Christians must haue strong shoulders mighty bones that they may beare flesh that is the weaknes of their brethern for Paule sayth that they haue burdens troubles Loue therfore is milde courteous patient not in receiuing but in geuing For it is constrained to winke at many things to beare them Faithful teachers do see in the church many errours offences which they are cōpelled to beare In the common weale subiectes are neuer so obedient to the lawes of the magistrates as they should be Therefore vnlesse the magistrate can winke dissemble in time place he shal neuer be meete to rule the commō wealth In houshold affaires there be many things done which displease the master of the house But if we can beare winke at our owne vices offences which we daily cōmit let vs also beare other mens faults according to that saying bear ye one an others burdē c. Again Thou shalt loue thy neighbor as thy self Seing then there be vices in euery state of life in all men therfore Paule setteth forth the law of Christ vnto the faithful wherby he exhorteth them to beare one an others burden They which do not so doe plainly witnesse that they vnderstand not one iote of the law of Christ which is the law of loue which as Paule sayth 1. Cor. 13. beleueth all things hopeth all things and beareth all the burdens of the brethern yet alwayes holding notwithstanding the first cōmaundement wherin they that offend do not transgresse the law of Christ that is to say the law of charitie they doe not hurt nor offend their neighbour but Christe and his kingdom which he hath purchased with his owne blood This kingdom is not maintained by the lawe of charitie but by the word of God by Faith and by the holy Ghost This commaundement then of bearing one an others burden belongeth not to them which deny Christ and not only doe not acknowledge their sinne but also defend it neither doth it belong vnto those which continue still in their sinnes who also do partly deny Christ but such must be forsakē lest we become partakers of their euil workes On the contrary they which willingly heare the word of God beleue and yet notwithstanding against their will do fall into sinne after they be admonished doe not only receaue such admonition gladly but also detest their sinne