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

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another place The Sonne of man is come to saue that which was lost And in Saint Lukes Gospell concerning the conuersion of Zacheus The Sonne of man is come to séeke and to saue that which was lost Therefore it ought to be no discomfort vnto vs to confesse that wée are vtterlye lost séeing thereby that we are assured that wée appertaine vnto Christ who came of purpose to séeke and to saue that which was lost O the wonderfull wisedome power and mercie of GOD shewed vs in CHRIST that euen then when we feele our selues lost we are founde when we sée our selues destroied we are saued when we heare our selues condemned we are iustified onely in beléeuing these words The sonne of man is come to saue that which was lost Let vs therefore with inuincible courage of faith take holde of these generall promises of God and apply them vnto our selues as the poore woman of Canany did and we shall finde it to be true which our Sauiour Christ saith vnto vs There is nothing impossible to him that beléeueth Doct. Fulke LOTTES How they may be vsed lawfully TO speake of lottes how farre foorth they are lawfull is a light question First to vse them for the breaking of s●ri●e as when partners their goods as equally deuided as they can take euery man his part by lotte to auoid all suspition of deceiptfulnesse And as the Apostles in the first of the Actes when they sought another to succéede Iudas the Traitour and two persons were presented then to breake strife and to satisfie all parties did cast lottes whether should be admitted desiring God to temper them and to take whom he knewe most meete séeing they wist not whether to preferre or happely could not all agrée either is lawfull and in all like cases But to abuse them vnto the tempting of God to compell him therewith to vtter things whereof we stand in doubt when we haue no commaundement of him so to doe as these Heathen héere did though God tourned it to his glorye cannot bée but euill Tindale fol. 27. ¶ Which declareth that the matter was in great extremitie and doubt which thing was Gods motion in them for the tryall of the cause and this maye not be done but in matters of great importaunce Geneua LOVE Of the order of Loue. SOme in seeking for an order in loue doe determine by the authoritie of S. Austine that first we must loue God secondly our selues thirdly our neighbours and bretheren and fourthly our owne body and our neighbours But there is nothing in Scripture touching any such order Indéed Christ doth saye that the first Commaundement doth stand in the loue of God but he doth not giue the seconde place to the loue of our selues but vnto the loue of our neighbour where as he saith in Mathew the second is like the first So that there is a double error committed héere by them which doe vncircumspectly and vnad●isedly follow Augustine One in that they do recken the loue of our selues amongst the kindes of loue commaunded vs whereas there is no Commaundement touching the same for it is naturally giuen to vs all to loue our selues and that there is no néede to giue any commaundement concerning this manner of loue And whereas the same is corrupted by the sin that dwelleth within vs in our flesh that corruption is not reformed by commaunding vs to loue our selues but by the loue of God of our neighbour and bretheren which is prescribed vnto vs by expresse precepts to reforme the naturall affections of loue in vs and to direct them after a good order wherefore it is not to be feared that he which doth loue God his neighbour and bretheren aright can neglect and cast away himselfe albeit that he doe wholly denie and refuse himselfe and be addicted full and whole to the glorie of God and the saluation of his neighbours The other errour standeth in that they place the loue of our selues next vnto the loue of God whereas Christ doth assigne the second place expressely to the loue of our neighbour Musculus fol. 471. How Loue is the fulfilling of the lawe Paule Rom. 13. affirmeth that loue is the fulfilling of the law and that he which loueth doth of his owne accord all that the law requireth And first Tim. 1. 5. he saith that the loue of a pure heart and good conscience and faith vnfained is the ende fulfilling of the lawe For faith vnfained in Christs bloud causeth thée to loue for Christs sake which loue is the pure loue onely and the onely cause of a good conscience for then is the conscience pure when the eyes looketh to Christ in all hir deedes to doe them for his sake not for hir owne singular aduauntage or any other wicked purpose And Iohn both in his Gospell and also Epistles spoaketh neuer of any other law then to loue one another purely Affirming that we haue God himselfe dwelling in vs and all that God desireth if we loue one another Tindale fol. 36. Againe Loue of hir owne nature bestoweth all that she hath and euen hir owne selfe of that which is loued Thou néedest not to bidde a kinde mother to be louing to hir onely sonne Much lesse spirituall Loue which hath eyes giuen hir of God néedeth mans lawe to teach hir to doe hir dutie And as in the beginning he did put foorth Christ as the cause and Authour of our righteousnesse euen so héere setteth he him foorth as an example to counterfaite that as he hath done to vs euen so should we doe one to another Tindale fol. 49. How we ought to loue God This doe and thou shalt liue ¶ That is to say Loue thy Lord God with all thy soule with all thy strength with all thy minde thy neighbour as thy selfe as who should say if thou doe this or though canst not doe it yet if thou féelest lust therevnto and thy spirit stirreth and mourneth longeth after strength to doe it take a signe euident token thereby that the spirit of life is in thee that thou art elect to life euerlasting by Christs bloud whose gift and purchase is thy faith and that spirit that worketh the will of God in thée whose gifte also are thy déedes or rather the déedes of the spirit of Christ and not thine and whose gifte is the reward of eternall life which followeth good workes Tindale fol. 78. ¶ Ye haue not the loue of God in you ¶ The loue of God is héere taken for the whole féeling of godlinesse For no man can loue God but he must also honour him and must submitte himselfe wholly vnto him euen as where is no loue of God there is no obedience in consideration Moses maketh this the summe of the lawe that we loue God with our whole heart c. Marl. vpon Iohn fol. 181. Why Loue hath the chiefe place aboue Faith and Hope Now abideth Faith Hope Loue but
had compassion on them Thē was the day of their birth And in like case after the destruction of Hierusalem and in their imprisonment at Babylon at both these times were they motherlesse helplesse concerning their owne strength but were yet cared for of God and receiued by his mercie The Prophet borroweth his fashion of speaking of the manners of mothers after the birth of their children which first dresse their nauells and wash them with s●lt then swadle them c. Such helpe had Israel none in his aduersitie in Aegypt and Babylon but lay ouer whelmed in their filthines miseries were regarded as bastards vnworthely intreated of all men Ther was no man but only God that tooke thought for them and that he onely of his méere mercie without anye of their deseruings T. M. NAZARAEANS What these Nazaraeans were in their opinions THe Nazaraeans were such as vsed no liuing creatures they abhorred the eating of flesh They allowed of Moses and of y● law written by him but they denied y● the. 5. bookes vnder his name were written by him affirming themselues to haue foūd other bookes Epiphan li. 1. Tom. 1. heraes 18. ¶ Nazaraei were Iewes which beléeued in Christ so called themselues of Nazareth They contraried the Iewes in that they confessed Iesus to be the sonne of God They erred in christian religion for that they addicted themselues wholy to the obseruation of the whole lawe Epiph. heraes 29. NECENAS What he vvas NEcenas was a noble man in Rome and a great man with Augustus Caesar and so great a ●auourer and promoter and setter forth of V●●gil Horace and such other learned men that euer since his time all those that doe notably promote helpe or ●auour students or learned men are of his name called Necenates V dal NEGINOTH What it is TO him that excelleth on Neginoth a Psalme ¶ Among them that were appointed to sing the Psalmes and to play on the instruments one was appointed chiefe to set the tune and so begin who had the charge because he was most excellent and he began this Psalme on the instrument called Neginoth or in a tune so called Geneua ¶ Caluine doth take this word Neginoth for the chiefe master of the Quere And I do Saith he deriue this word Neginoth of Nagaz which signifieth to strike and therfore I doubt not but that it was an instrument of musicke whervpon it followeth that this Psalme was to be song not onely in an high note but also with plaieng vpon instruments which were ruled and ordered by the same maister of whome mention is made Cal. vpon the. 4. Psalme ¶ Neginoth signifieth the tune or note of the instrument where after the Psalme before which it is prefixed were song for the Psalmes were song at certeine instruments but so that the swéete tune melody of the instruments prepared the minde more perfectly to perceiue the worde of the holy ditie T. M. NEGLIGENCE What negligence is NEgligence is nothing else then a priuation of that ende●our which we ought to applye for the gouerning of things by it the will is weakened and the chéerefulnesse of the body is diminished Pet. Mar. vpon Indic fo 247. NEHILOTH What it signifieth NEhiloth signifieth by interpretation heritages or as some will a certeine instrument of musicke T. M. NEHVSTAN What Nehustan is and how the Serpent was so called And he called it Nehustan ¶ That is a péece of brasse thus hée calleth the Serpent by contempt which notwithstanding was sette vp by the worde of God and miracles were wrought by it yet when it was abused to Idolatrie this good king destroied it not thinking it worthy to bée called a Serpent but a péece of brasse Geneua NEIGHBOVR What this word Neighbour signifieth NEighbour is a word of loue and signifieth that a man should be euer nigh and at hande and readie to helpe in time of néede As the Samaritane was to helpe his neighbour that was wounded with théeues leauing behinde with his hoste two pence to bestow vpon him more if néede were signifieng thereby that h● was euerye where mercifull both present and absent without faining cloaking complaining or excusing and forsooke not his neighbour as long as he had néede Tindale Who is our neighbour Augustine doth proue by many arguments that euery man is to be vnderstood in the name of a neighbour and he hath respect therein vnto the fellowshippe and companye of our common nature But yet they which doe liue in places farre off from vs albeit they be man also that cannot for all that conueniently be called our neighbours which by any occasion are ioyned vnto vs so that their necessitie may be presented vnto our senses become able to receiue of our benefites and well doings August de doct Christ. chap. 30. Et libro de vera religi ¶ My neighbour is euerye man specially which hath néede of my helpe As Christ expoundeth it in the. 10. chap. of Luke Who although he hath done mée some wronge of hurt me by any manner way yet notwithstanding he hath not put off the nature of man or ceased to bée flesh and bloud and the creature of God most lyke vnto thy selfe brieflye he ceaseth not to be my neighbour As longe then as the nature of man remaineth in him so longe also remayneth commaundement of loue which requireth at my hande that I shoulde not despise mine owne flesh nor render euill for euill but ouercome euill with good or else shall loue neuer be as Paule describeth it ● Cor. 13. Luther vpon the Gal. How our neighbour ought to be loued Loue thy neighbour as thy selfe ¶ Indéede this is brieflye spoken but yet verie aptly to the purpose No man can giue a more certeine a better or a néerer example then a mans owne selfe Therefore if thou wouldest knowe how thy neighbour ought to be loued and wouldest haue a plaine example thereof consider well how thou louest thy selfe If thou shouldest be in necessitie or daunger thou wouldest be glad to haue the loue and friendship of all men to be holpen with the counsell the goods and the strength of all men and of all creatures Wherefore thou hast no néede of any booke to instruct and admonish thée how thou oughtest to loue thy neighbour for thou hast an excellent booke of all lawes euen in thy heart Thou néedest no schoolemaister in this matter Aske counsell onelye of thine owne heart and that shall teach thée sufficiently that thou ought to loue thy neighbour as thy selfe Luther vpon the Gal. fol. 245. NESTORIVS Of this mans heresie NEstorius the heretike by birth a Germaine yet Priest of Antioch was sent for by Theodotius to Constantinople and there made Bishoppe For his crueltie hée was called a fire-brand Hée brought from Antioch a Priest in his companye whose name was Anastasius which taught in the Church that Marie was not to bée called the mother
the chiefe of these is Loue. ¶ The chiefe of these is Loue not concerning iustification but concerning the applieng of all things to the profit of the Congregation Nothing letteth some one peculiar thing diuersly referred to be now inferiour now superiour to another Loue concerning prouiding for the necessitie of thy neighbour is chiefe and aboue Faith but concerning the obtaining of iustification and saluation doth Faith excell Loue. Now Saint Paule doth not héere dispute what Faith doth in iustification but what loue doth to them that be needie in the Congregation therin is Loue chiefe for it séeketh narrowly to see them ho●pen To this intent onely doth S. Paule giue Loue the chiefe place héere Erasmus in his Annotations vpon this place doth likewise expound it Tindale Of Mary Magdalens loue Many sinnes are foriuen hir for she loued much or whereby it commeth that she loued much ¶ Neither doe we héere wrest the words of the Gospell to maintaine a wrong opinion for in the history there goeth before first when they were not able to pay he forgaue them both If he forgaue them and if they were not able to pay he did not then forgiue them for their loue For if they had bene able to pay he would not haue forgiuen them Secondly ther goeth before Whether of these will loue him more Symon saith He to whom he forgaue him more Therefore the Lords aunswere could in effect be nothing els but this I haue forgiuen hir very much therefore hath she loued me much So then I say loue is of forgiuenesse and not forgiuenesse of loue And then it followeth immediately And he said to the woman thy faith hath saued thee goe in peace We do therfore conclude that there is but one onely satisfaction for the sins of all the world to wit Christ once offered vp for vs which are by faith made partakers of him Lu. For the loued much that is saith Theophil●ct she hath shewed hir faith abundantly And Basill in his sermon of Baptime saith he that oweth much hath much forgiuen him that he may loue much more And therefore Christs saieng is so plaine by the similitude that it is a wonder to see the enimies of y● truth draw and racke this place so fondly to establish their meritorious workes For the greater sinne a man hath forgiuen him the more he loueth him that hath bene so gracious vnto him And this woman sheweth the duties of loue how great the benefite was she had receiued and therefore the Charitie that is héere spoken off is not to be taken for the cause but as a signe For Christ saith not as the Pharesies did that she was a sinner but beareth hir witnesse that the sinnes of hir life past are forgiuen hir B●z● ¶ Many sinnes are forgiuen hir because she loued much Not that hir loue obtained remission of hir sinnes but faith out of which hir loue procéeded and therefore Christ openly affirmeth Thy Faith hath made thée safe For as saith Saint Paule without faith it is impossible to please God Heb. 11. 6. And whatsoeuer is not of faith the same is sinne Rom. 14. 23. Tindale ¶ The more we knowledge our sinnes to God the more shal be forgiuen vs. The lesse we acknowledge our offences the lesse forgiuenesse we receiue as by Christs example to Symon the Pharesie of two debters who confessed that man to loue most that had most forgiuen him So it is said of Christ by this woman meaning Mary Magdalene she hath loued me most therefore most is forgiuen hir She hath knowen hir sins most whereby she hath most loued me and thou hast lesse loued me because thou hast lesse knowen thy sinnes therefore because thou hast lesse knowen thy sinnes thou art lesse forgiuen Hemmyng We may not thinke that loue causeth remission of sinnes but that remission of sinnes causeth loue for that our loue followeth and goeth not before Christ declareth in the same place saieng He that hath much forgiuen loueth much to whome lesse is forgiuen he loueth lesse Doth not Christ héere manifestly teach that Gods forgiuing engendereth in vs much loue or little If we examine the circumstaunce of the place and ponder it diligently we shall finde it to be none other wise But how shall we aunswere the phrase of Scripture which saith that many sinnes are forgiuen hir because she loued much Sommer is high because the trees blossome and yet the blossoming of the trees doth not cause Summer but Summer causeth them to blossome So Winter causeth colde and not colde Winter yet we complaine on Winter because it is so cold So we say the tree is good because the fruite is good Tindale How perfect loue casteth out all feare ¶ Looke Feare The meaning of this place following No man knoweth whether he be worthy of loue or hatred ¶ The meaning of this place is that man knoweth not by these outward things that is by prosperitie or aduersitie whom God doth sauour or hate Luther vpon the Psal. fol. 46. ¶ By any outward thing in this life no man knoweth whether he is loued or hated of God The Bible note No man knoweth c. ¶ Meaning what thing he ought to chuse or refuse or man knoweth not by these outward things that is by prosperitie and aduersitie whome God doth sauour or hate for he sendeth them as well to the wicked as to the godly Geneua The difference betweene Loue and Charitie There is saith this Authour as much difference betwéene Loue and Charitie as is betwéene thred and twined thred For though all twined thred be thred yet all thred is not twined thred So this word Loue is more common and more generall then is Charitie For true it is that all Charitie is Loue but it is not true that all Loue is Charitie In Gréeke Charitie is Agape and loue is Eroz There is the same difference in the one word from the other that is in a pen and a quill All our pens for the most part be quills but all our quills be not pens The quill is that remaineth in his nature without anye other fashion or forme put to it The pen is a quill shaped and formed and made apt to write Lykewise Loue is the common affect or fauour Charitie is Loue reduced into a due order towards God and man as to loue God alone for himselfe to loue man for Gods sake c. Lupset Of fiue manner of loues There be fiue waies noted of louing one another Of the which number one way is praised three be vtterly dispraised one neither praised nor dispraised First I may loue my neighbour for Gods sake as euery good vertuous man loueth euerye man Second I may loue my neighbour of a naturall affection because he is my sonne my brother or my kinsman Thirdly I may loue for vaine glorie as if I looke by my neighbour to bee worshipped or aduaunced to honour Fourthly I may loue
for couetousnesse as when I cherish or flatter a rich man for his goods when I make much of them that haue done me plesures and may doe me moe The fifte way I may loue for my sensuall lust as when I loue to fare deliciously or els when I mad or dote vpon women The first way to loue my neighbour for the loue I beare to God is onely worthy to be praised The second way naturally deserueth neither praise nor dispraise The third the fourth and the fift to loue for glorie and aduantage or pleasure all three be stark naught Lupset LOVVLINESSE Wherefore lowly men come to worship THe lowly person shall come to worship ¶ Not for that lowlinesse deserueth these things but that these fall vnto the lowly for the lowlinesse of Christ. Hemmyng ¶ Saint Augustine saith that the whole lowlinesse of man consisteth in the knowledge of himselfe Caluine Psal. 9. Of loosing binding ¶ Looke Binding loosing Of the loosing of Lazarus ¶ Looke Lazarus LVCIFER What is meant by Lucifer ¶ Looke Nabuchodonosor LVKE The life of S. Luke written by S. Hierome LVke a Phisition born at Antioch was not ignorant of the Gréeke tongue as his writing do shew he was a follower disciple of the Apostle Paule a companion of al his peregrination he wrote a volume of the Gospell of whom the same Paule saith on this wise We haue sent with him a brother whose praise is in the Gospel throughout all the Congregations And againe to the Collossians Most deare Lucas the Phisition gréeteth you And to Timothie Luke is with me alone He set foorth also an other speciall good booke which is intitled the Actes of the Apostles the storie whereof came euen full to Paules time béeing tarieng two yeares at Rome that is to say vnto the fourth yere of Nero the Emperour there whereby we do wel perceiue that the same booke was made in the same Citie Therfore as for the circuites of Paule of Tecla the Uirgin and all the tale of Leo by him baptised we recken among the Scriptures that be called Apo●ripha For what manner a thing is it that a companion which neuer went from his elbow should among his other matters be ignoraunt of this thing alone Tertulian which was néere vnto that time reporteth that a certaine Priest in Asia being an affectionate fauourer of the Apostle Paule was conuict before Iohn for being Author of that booke and that the Priest confessed himselfe to haue done the thing for the loue that he bare to Paule and the booke by reason thereof to had escaped him Some Writers déeme that as often as Paule in his Epistles saith according to my Gospel he signifieth of the worke of Luke And that Luke learned the Gospell not onely of the Apostle Paule who had not bene conuersant with the Lord in the flesh but also of the rest of the Apostles which thing Luke also himselfe declareth in the beginning of his owne workes saieng As they haue deliuered them vnto vs which from the beginning sawe them themselues with their eyes and were Ministers of the things that they declared The Gospell therefore he wrote as he had heard but the Actes of the Apostles he composed as he had seene He liued lxxxiiij yeares not hauing any wife Buried he was at Constantinople vnto which Citie his bones were remoued conuaied out of Achaia together with the bones of Andrew the Apostle in y● 20. yere of Constantius y● Emperour Eras. In this second booke the blessed Euangelist S. Luke whose life we haue set foorth already at the beginning of his Gospell doth declare write vnto vs if we will be Theophile that is to say vnfained louers of God what was done and wrought for our secular comfort after the glorious Resurrection most triumphant Ascention of our Sauiour Iesus Christ how that our Lord Iesus did both promise also gaue most abundantly his holy spirit vnto all his Disciples And what this spirit did worke by the preaching of the word both in the Iewes and also in the Gentiles that beleeued in Christ this booke hath alwayes bene in great estimation and that most deseruingly For the Actes of the Apostles saith S. Hierom seeme to be but a bare history because in them onely the infancie of the Church which then began to spring is set forth but if we consider that Luke the Phisition whose praise is in the Gospell hath written them we shall also perceiue that all his words are the phisick of a languishing sick soule What other thing I beséech you is this sacred heauenly history but one of the chiefest parts of the Gospell For truly in y● other bookes which are intitled the Gospell the corne of wheate are cast into the ground discribed But héere in this booke y● selfe same corne is set foorth being already sprong vp and declaring most effectually his riches vnto the world Againe if we had not by Luke known after what manner Christ forsooke the earth where and in what place how and after what fashion the promised Comforter did come what beginning the Church had wherein it did flourish by what meanes it did increase should we not haue lacked a great parte of the Gospell Therefore Bede did right well saieng that Luke had not onely made an historie vntill the Resurrection and Ascention of the Lord as the other did but also did so set foorth by writing the doings of the Apostles as much as he knew to be sufficient to edifie the faith of the readers hearers that onely his booke touching the Actes of the Apostles was by the Church thought good to be credited all other which presumed to write of the same matter being reiected disapproued Chrisostome also to them that did meruaile why S. Luke had not written forth all the Apostolicall historie vnto the ende or that he had not described the Actes of euery one of them seuerally in books by themselues doth aunswere godly saieng These are sufficient vnto them that will apply their mindes and take héede Therefore leauing vnprofitable questions why was not this written or that written let vs take heede vnto those wholesome saiengs of the Euangelist that so we may apply this most comfortable salue ministred vnto vs by him vnto our wounded soules Sir I. Cheeke Luke warme ¶ Looke Colde LVNATIKE Of the man that was lunatike MAister haue pitie vpon my sonne for he is lunaticke ¶ They that at certaine times of the Moone are troubled with the falling sicknesse or any other kinde of disease But in this place we must so take it that beside the naturall disease he had a diuelish phrensie Beza LVTHER What he vvas LVther was an Augustine Frier And began to write against the Bishop of Romes Pardons in the yeare of our Lorde 1517. The cause why he first wrote against the Bishop of Rome Frier Tecel the Pardoner made his proclamations vnto the people openly in the
doubt not thereof eod L. Labans Gods how they were stolne 596. Labours The meaning of the place eod Ladder what is signified thereby eod Lay men how they ought to read the scriptures 597. The doctours affirmations 598. Of laye mens bookes 600. How saye men may baptise eod The opinion of Iohn Caluine eod How they haue ministred the sacrament 601. Laieng on of hands whoo the custreof me arose eod The meaning of the place 603. Lampes what they without oyle doe signifie eod Land what is ment by the crieng of the lande 604. Laodieia what the word signifieth eod Of the stri●e y● was ther for Easter eod Last Of the last day eod Who be last and who be first 605 Of the last farthing eod Latria what the word signifieth eod Lawe what the lawe is 606. Platoes definition of the lawe 607. What the office the vse of the law is 608. What the lawe of nature is eod What the lawe written is eod How the lawe is our scho lem●●ster 609. How the lawe first entred 610. How the lawe was giuen in thunder eo Wherefore the lawe was giuen eod How the lawe was giuen by Moses 611. How we are dead through the lawe eod How the lawe increaseth sinne 612. Why it is called y● messenger of death eod What the lawe of God requireth eod What it is to be vnder the lawe eod What it is not to be vnder the lawe 613. Why Paule calleth the booke of Genesis the lawe eo How the law is impossible to fulfill eod How the lawe is called a yoke 614. The difference between Gods lawe and mans eod Who hath fulfilled the lawe eod How the Gentiles wer not wtout law eod How the law maketh all men sinners eo How it maketh vs to hate God 615. How the law is spirituall eod How we dye to the lawe eod To die in the defence of the law eod The meaning of these places eod The argument of the lawe 616. The nature and office of the lawe and Gospell 617. Lazarus how the poore rich are matched together eod Of the loosing of Lazarus eod Left hand what Gods left hand sig 618. Legion what a Legion is eod League what a league is eo Of three kinde of seagues 619. Lend Net lend vpon vsury eo Len● wherevpon the lenten fast is gro●ided eod Why the father 's instituted Lent 620 Leper what the Leper signifieth 621 How a Leper was knowen eod Of the leprosie that Christ healed eod Lesse The meaning of the place eod Letanies what the Letanies were 622. Letter● what the letter signifieth eod How the letter killeth 623 How the letter and circumcision is taken heere 624 Leuen how it is diuersly taken in scrip eo Leuy Of Leuy otherwise called Mathew 625. Leuites what their office was eod How the place is to be vnderstood 626 Leu●athan what Lemathā signifieth 627 Libanus Charmel what they signi eod Libertie of Christ. To stand therein 628. Lye The definition of a lye eod Whether wee may lye to preserue or no. eod Of the Midwiues lye of Rahabs lye 629. How Paules Iye is excused eod Of one that would not lye 630 Of Abrahams Iye eo Of Dauids Iye eo Life how the places are expounded eod Whether a man may lengthen or shorten his life 631. Light who is the true light eod The meaning of the places 632. What is ment by the shining light 633. Wherfore these lights were ordeined eod Lilies what it is to gather vp Lilies eod Lion The meaning of the place 634 How they bee compared to the persecuters of Christ. eod How Tirants are likened to Lions 635 How they are fed by Gods prouidence 636. Locusts what manner of beasts they wer eod Loynes gird what is ment thereby eod The meaning of the place eod Long life how a good man may desire it eod Lord. how he is our shepheard feedeth vs. 638. Of the Lords helpe in trouble eod How the Lord suffereth long 639 Lordship The meaning of the place eod Lots how they may be vsed lawfully 640 Loue. Of the order of loue eod How it is the fulfilling of the lawe 641. How we ought to loue God 642. Why loue hath the chiefe place eod Of Mary Magdelens loue 643 How perfect loue casteth out all feare 644 The meaning of the place eod The difference betweene loue and charitie 645. Of 5● manner of loues eod Lowlinesse wherefore lowlinesse come to worship 646 Loosing and binding eod Of the loosing of Lazarus eod Lucifer what is ment by Lucifer eod Luke The life of Saint Luke eod Luke warme what it meaneth 648. Lunatike Of the man y● was lunatike eo Luther what he was eod The cause why he first wrote against the Pope eo How he wrote to Pope Leo. 649. How he was troubled with the lusts of the flesh eod Of his question a little before his death 650. His praier before his death eod What sects is said to rise out of him eod M. MAcedonius Of his crueltie and tumult 650 Magi. What the Magies were 651. Magistrate what a magistrate is eod How they are y● ministers of gods in 652 How the Ecclesiasticall person is subiect vnto him eod How magistrates the do not perswade the people to Gods worde are not to bee obeyed in cause of conscience eod Magnifie what it is to magnifie 653. Mahomet of y● rising vp of this false pr. eo Of his faire shew of holinesse 654 Mayzim what this word signifieth 656. Maker against the word maker in y● sacr eo Malachy of y● sacrifice he speketh off 657 Mammon what Mammon signifieth 658 Man how he was made after the image of God eod How god made mā to be vndestroied eo How the death of man and beast is alike 659 How mans life is but sorrow care eod Of mans good purpose before grace eod How mans ordinance may be altred 660 Of the disposition of man eod Of mans will and running 661. Of 2. Hebrue words y● signifie man eod Of the first man Adam and the seconde man Christ. 662. Of the man that gathered stickes on the Sabboth day eod Of the man wounded 663. How the birth of man is 4. manner of wayes eo Mandragoras What Mandragoras is eod Manes how the sect of the Maniches rose of this man 664. Wherein y● Papists agree with them eo The ●aniches con●uted 665. Many of many that be called 666 Manna What Manna signifieth eod How it is not the true bread that came downe from heauen eo Of those that eat Manna are dead eo What Manna and the white stone signifieth 667. How Manna the water brought out of the Rocke is c. eod Maranatha What this word signifieth 668. Marcion Of his damnable heresie eo A comparison betweene Marcions doctrine and the Popes 669. An example of Ma●cions chast life 670. Marcus The detestable heresie of this man eod Mary how she ought not to bee worshipped 671. Of the painting of hir
because the King should not entice him by this sweete poison to forgette his religion and accustomed sobrietie and that in his meate and drinke hée might dailye remember of what people he was And Daniel bringeth this into shewe how God from the beginnning assisted him with his spirit and at length called him to be a Prophet Geneua DARKNESSE Of the darknesse that was in the land of Iewrie at the death of Christ. DArknesse ouer the land c. ¶ Not ouer the whole earth but this darknesse was ouer Iudea onelie or Hierusalem For if this darknesse had bene ouer the whole worlde it woulde haue ben thought a natural Eclipse and so not regarded of men But to haue Iudea couered with darknesse and the Sunne to thine in other places was a more notable myracle Tertulian doth affirme in this Apologitico that this darknesse of the Sunne was written in the booke of auncient monuments of the Romans For Pilate as he writeth in an other place had foreshewed all these things vnto Tiberius Eusebius also in his Chronicles maketh mention of this darknesse of the Sunne and of the earthquake by the which manie hou●es in Bechania sell downe Hee bringeth in Philogontis the writer of the Olimpiades for his witnesse There want not some which write that this darknes was ouer the whole world béeing lead thervnto by the writing of Philogontis and Orosius describing ●eraduenture those things which were kept of this matter in the monumentes of the Romanes beeing written and foreshewed as we said euen nowe by Pilate vnto Tiberius But although this was brought foorth by one or two writers yet notwithstanding the historie of their times was so common that such a notable myracle could not be buried in silence of so manie which diligentlie obserued those things which were not so well worthie to be remembred Marl. fol. 726. What is vnderstood by darknesse in this place And the darknesse comprehended it not ¶ This darknesse that is to saie the vnfaithfull which doe sit alwaies in darknesse and in the shadow of death doe all that they can to darken and put out the beames of this Sunne but they shal neuer preuaile Psal. 9. Esaie 29. Abdy 1. Sir I. Cheeke They could not perceiue nor reach vnto it to receiue any light of it no they did not so much as acknowledge him Beza What is meant heere by darknesse And men loued darknesse c. By darknesse is héere meant the ignorance of Christ and whatsoeuer else worldlie men loue moe then Christ. For they which are not borne of God as they cannot heare the word of God so it is necessarie y● they prefer the ignoraunce of Christ before they knowledge him and so to loue darknesse more then light Marl. vpon Iohn fol. 82. DAVID Of Dauids praise to king Saule by Doeg DOeg one of the chiefe about Saule hated Dauid and praised him to Saule not of loue but of hatred thinking that for as much as Saule was now vexed with a diuell he might kill Dauid at one time or other but God turned it to good Lyra. The cause whie Dauid was vnknowne both to Saule and Abner Saule said to Abner whose sonne is this younge man and Abner aunswered as thy soule liueth O King I cannot tell ¶ Saule knewe not Dauid now although he had béene in seruice with him afore And the matter that brought out Saule of knowing of Dauid was his bearde which was now growne and did chaunge the sight of his face verie much And whie did Abner saie that he knew not Dauid seeing hée was in seruice with him before Ans. It might bée that Abner did not know Dauid for that he was captaine of the kings armie and alwaies occupied in the kings affaires in the extreame partes of his dominion and not at home during the small time of Dauids béeing with king Saule Lyra. Of Dauids comming to Ahimelech the Priest When Ahimelech sawe Dauid come so sodeinlie so hastelie vnto him and also alone he meruailed not a little thereat and saide Quare tu solus nullus est ●ecum Whie art thou alone and no man with thée Héere it seemeth that Dauid had no bodie with him but himselfe alone when he came to Ahimelech but that is not so for the text saith afterward if thy seruants be cleane fro women So that it appeareth that he had men with him but yet verie few in comparison of them that he was wont to haue And therefore Ahimelech saith Whie commest thou alone The Euangelist S. Mathew also saith haue ye not read what Dauid did when he was an hungred and they that were with him how he entered into the house of God and did eate the shew breads which were not lawful for him to eate neither for them which were with him but onelie for the Priests Héere it is plaine that he came not to Ahimelech alone Ric. Turnar Of Dauids ●e to Ahimelech The king hath commaunded me a certaine thing c. ¶ These infirmities that we sée in the Saints of God teach vs that none hath his iustice in himselfe but receiueth it of Gods mercie Geneua ¶ This lie that Dauid made to Ahimelech Priest of Nob and such like infirmities as we see in the Saints of God maie teach vs that no man is iust of himselfe but receiueth all iustice at Christs hand The Bible note Why the people flocked to Dauid And there gathered vnto him all men that were in comberaunce and in debt ¶ The peoples gathering to Dauid was not to assemble a rebellious multitude to inuade King Saule and to depose him from the Crowne to set vp himsel●e For neither they came for anie such purpose but for their succour béeing in debt and trouble or otherwise vexed Neither did Dauid send for them nor incited anie to take his part nor proclaimed himselfe to be King or published the Lords anointing of him or euer vsed that multitude that came vnto him for anie such purpose And yet the question is moued both by Caietanus and Lyranus héerevpon The question saith Ca●etanus ariseth whether it were lawfull for Dauid to receiue these debters in the preiudice of the Creditours that had lent them The solution is that if these men had houses fieldes or vineyards they are vnderstood to haue lefte their goods vnto them But if they were vtterlie vnable to paie their debts they were excused for their vnabilitie vntill their better abilitie For that Dauid excellentlie instructed all thē that came vnto him while he taried in that Caue The Psalme testifieth I will praise the Lord at all times Conteining according to the letter a doctrine giuen ther of Dauid vnto the Souldiers Therefore Dauid receiued not these men in preiudice of their Creditours And thus as he did not receiue them to the preiudice of anie priuate man so hée receiued them not to the preiudice of the King publike state Where as Lyra moueth the other question saieng
267. What the feare of God is Wheras we speak of the feare of God we haue to vnderstand y● it is not a ●●auish feare as men term it but it is so termed in respect of the honour which we owe for that he is our Father Master● Doe we feare God Then it is certaine nothing but to honour him to be whollie his Doe we know him That must be in such wise as he hath vttered himself that is to wit that he is our maker our maintaines ●●e that shewed such fatherly goodnes towards vs that we of dutie ought to be as children toward him if we wil not be vtterlie vnthankful Also it behoueth vs to acknowledge his dominiō● superioritie ouer vs to the end y● euerie of vs yeld●ng him his due honor may ●ern to plese him in al respects thus you see y● vnder this ●ere of god héere is cōprehended all religion y● is to wit all y● seruice honor which the creatures owe vnto their God 〈…〉 4. They nei●her f●ared the Lord c. ¶ Not to feare the Lord is to liue carelesse and to serue their lusts and appetites and not to sette by God and his Lawe as is said Ps●l 55 19. T. M. ¶ He meaneth this by the Israelites to whome God hat giuen his commaundements Geneua They feared the Lord but serued their Gods ¶ That is they had a certaine knowledge of God and feared him because of the punishment but they continued still Idolaters as do y● Papists which worship both God I●ols but this is not to feare God as appeareth ver 34. Geneua How this place following is expounded Perfect loue casteth out feare ●I know there are some which interpret those words in this sense that they which loue God trulie are not afraid for pietie sake to put themselues in al manner of daungers neith●r doe they shame persecution but valiantlie stand fast in all manner of dangers which selfe thing Paule in the letter to Timothie writ in other words 〈…〉 We haue not receiued the spirit of fearefulnesse but of might of loue Wherefore he exhorteth Timothie not to be ashamed of the testimonie of the Lord nor of him being in ●andes for the Lords sake but couragiouslie to indure labours for the Gospels sake Although those things are true yet this is not it which this place of Iohn teacheth For it there maketh mention of the iudgment of the Lord of which he willeth the godly which loue God not to be afeard and he rendreth a reason for y● feare hath vexation ioined with it Wherefore I gladlie assent vnto Augustine which saith that Iohn speaketh of perfect Charitie which forasmuch as it cannot be had in this life we maie not looke to haue it without feare Further we mought in this place vnderstand that feare which is se●oined from confidence therfore driued men to desperation For they which beleeue loue God trulie vphold their feare with a liuely faith Pet. Mar. vpon the Rom. fol. 208. Of feare that commeth of faith and of feare without faith He that fearth God trulie will eschew all things wherewith he knoweth he shall offend God and doe whatsoeuer hée perceiueth to be acceptable vnto him this feare hath his beginning of faith There is a feare of God in the vng●lie but it is without faith For they alwaies dread Gods iudgement against them and would rather there were no God then to bée punished for their wickednesse How we cannot vtterly shake off all feare so long as we liue heere Be not high minded but feare ¶ No man of the number of the faithfull ought to be in doubt of his saluation For the nature of faith is to make men assured of the promise of God Howbeit this is to be known y● it is not possible that so long as we liue héere we should not vtterlie shake off all feare for we are continuallie tossed betwéene two cogitations the one of the goodnes faith constancie of god The other of our corruption infirmitie pronesse to euill For when we consider how weak we are prone to euil cōsider also the filthines imperfection of our workes though they be neuer so good therwithal the seueritie of the law in requiring euen to the vttermost the things which it commaundeth This consideration I saie if it be vehement cannot but excéedinglie make afeard the mind and deiect it But on the other side when we consider the clemencie goodnesse mercie of God his constancie in his promises therewithall remember that all the merits of Christ are communicated to vs we are refreshed and recreated and the feare is either lenified or els sometime vtterlie laide awaie And these effects where they are perfect vehement doe succéed the one the other for they cannot be both at one time or if they be both at one time then are either of them remisse not vehement But in what matter they giue place the one to the other we may by daily experience vnderstand For if a man be set vpon the top of an high tower if being ther his mind run vpon n●thing els but vpon the height of the tower what a déepe way he shuld fall so y● he cannot fall without danger of death it i● possible but y● his minde being still vpon this he should be altogether smitten with an errour but if he turne his eie aside to the barre or battlements which staie him vp that he cannot fall then will he plucke vp his spirits againe and put away al feare neither ought it to seeme vnto anie man straunge y● wée saie that faith expelleth that feare which is ioined with doubting of saluation when as in Iohn it is said That charitie driueth feare out a doores For it is most certeine that y● which the Scripture attributeth to charitie may be attributed to faith for charitie springeth of faith Pet. Mar. vpon the Rom. fol. 355. FERVENT Of two sorts of feruentnesse THey haue a feruēt mind to God but not according to knowledge ¶ There be two manner of feruentnesse of minde two maner of good intents The one is grounded vpon a vaine or fleshlie opinion and not vpon Gods word this good intent is damnable before God The other procéedeth of faith and suffereth it selfe to be ruled by the wisdome and iudgement of the spirit of God Such feruentnesse was in Moses in Phin●hes and in Helias with other innumerable Sir I. Cheeke ¶ Looke Zeale FEASTES Feast of dedication wherefore it was ordeined THE feast of dedication ¶ That is to saie the feast of inuocation or renueng because the temple which was polluted by y● cōmandemēt authority of Iudas Machabeus was cōsecrated a fresh And then it was appointed y● euerie yeare ther should be a feast daie of new dedication to put the people in minde of the grace and fauour of God who had taken from them
S. Paule vseth it to signifie the verie bread and verie wine or the substaunce of bread and wine not the similitude or likenesse of bread wine without the substance as you fantasie and imagine Craumer 302. FOXES Of the Foxes that Sampson caught ANd Sampson went tooke 300. Foxes c. If a man aske how Sampson got so manie Foxes he must vnderstande that as there are sundrie Regions so are there also in them manie sundrie increase of things In some place there are manie horses and those faire In some place there is great abundaunce of cattell In England there is great plentie of Connies so is there in the Ilands called Baleares In those Regions a man maie easelie in one daie in a little ground take 3. or 400. Conies which to some peraduenture might séeme incredible And so it is said the ther is a verie great abundance of Foxes in Siria speciallie in the borders of Iewrie Wherefore Salomon in his Canticles saith Take Foxes for vs which destroieth the vineyards for they delight most of al in ripe grapes Yea and Dauid saith of the vngod●●e the 〈…〉 be parts of Foxes that is their praie so that their carkasses shall be deuou●ed of them And out of the fourth chapter of Nehemias is gathered that the number of them was so great that they could in a manner ouerturne the walles of the citie And Sampson tooke them either by his owne industrie or by the helpe of his friends Pet. Mar. vpon Iudic. fol. 223. FREE How we are free in Christ. THen are the children free ¶ Though we be made frée by the death of Christ yet ought we to be obedient vnto Magistrates and to paie them such tribute as they doe require of vs. Sir I. Cheeke FREE-VVILL How the word Free-wil is not found in all the Scripture THis word Frée-choise or as some men call it Frée-will is not in all the holie Sccipture but is inuented by proud men which would set vp their owne righteousnesse and put downe the righteousnes of God vpon the which also they haue grounded their merites attributing righteousnesse and saluation to their workes by the which thing they denie the merites of the passion of Christ. Rom. 3 24. Gal. 2. 16. The Free-will of man before his fall Frée-will was giuen to man when he was first created by the which he might haue chosen either to sinne or not to sinne August 12. b. 13. cha of the citie of God ¶ All men before sinne had frée-will either to followe the diuell or not Chrisostome in his sermon of the comming of our Lord in his 36. homelie ¶ Man was made good and by his frée-will was he made an euill man And shall he now saith S. Austen being euill make himselfe good seeing that wh●n he was good he could not keepe himselfe good He hath set fire and water before thée stretch out thine hand vnto which thou wilt ¶ Frée-will before the fall of man was an vpright frée-will before which fire and water was laied of God and the first man did reach his hande to which he would He did chuse fire and forsooke water So the righteous Iudge the same which man being frée did chuse he did receiue he wold haue euill and the same did follow him Augustine in his booke of the new song the 8. chapter But why God did not vphold man with the strength of his stedfast countenaunce that resteth hidden in his owne secrete councell it is our part onelie to be so farre wise as with sobrietie we maie Man receiued indéede to be able if he would but he had not to will that he might be able For of this will should haue followed stedfast continuance Yet is he not excusable which receiued so much that of his owne will he hath thought his owne destruction And there was no necessitie to compell God to giue him anie other then a meane will and a fraile will that of mans fall he might gather matter for his owne glorie Of the free-will of man after his fall Man misusing his frée-will lost both himselfe and his will Augustine in his Ench. to Laurence the 30. chap. No man can beléeue hope or loue vnlesse he will but euen the selfe same will to beleeue to hope loue commeth not but from God Frée-will once made thrall auaileth nothing now but to sinne August ad Boni in his 3. b. 8. chap. That we liue well that we vnderstand aright we haue it of God Of our selues we haue nothing but onelie sinne that is within vs. Aug. de verbis Apost Ser. 10. After that man had sinned with his frée-will we wer cast headlong downe into necessitie as manie as euer came of his stocke Aug. against Fortunatus in the 2. disp It was shewed in Adam what free-will can doe without help it is able inough of it self to do euil but not vnto goodnes except it be holpen of God Au. in his b. of the new song cap. 8. Man is apt and able to wound himselfe but he is not apt able to heale himselfe when he will he maie be sicke not when he will he maie rise Augustine vpon the 98. Psal. All men at the first wer created without fault or vice and all our natures were in health but by the transgression of the same man we haue lost it There hence is drawne mortalitie there hence are so manie corruptions of the minde ther hence is ignorance a difficultie vnprofitable cares and vnlawfull conc●●piscence● c. Amb. in his b. of the calling of the Gentiles chap. 3. We had frée-will before sinne to worke well but after sin we had none because we were not able by our owne power and strength after sinne to escape from the power of ye. diuel but as a ship when the sterne is broken is driuen hether and thether where the tempest will so by the diuell we are domen from one sinne to another neither hetherto can doe anie thing but euen as the diuell will And except God deliuer of with his strong hande of his mercie we shall remaine in bondes and chaines of sinnes vnto death Chrisostome in his 36. hom That man of his naturall power without the spirit of God can doe nothing but sin is proued by the words of Christ himselfe He that abideth in me saith Christ bringeth foorth much fruite for without me can ye doe nothing If a man bide not in me he is cast out as a braunch and he shall burne Héere it is plaine that frée-will without grace can doe nothing that is acceptable before God Saint Austen vpon this place of Iohn saith Least anie man should suppose that the braunch of it self could bring foorth at the least waie a little friute therefore saith he not Without me can ye doe a little but Without me can ye doe nothing Therefore whether it be little
GOD And wée béeing regenerate it bringeth vs forth to battaile and vnto good workes Héerevnto Chrisostome addeth the lawe reproueth but loseth not from sinne Grace loseth from sinne and reproueth not The lawe reproueth sinne and increaseth it Grace forgiuing it suffereth vs not to be vnder sinne c. Pet. Mar. vpon the Rom. fol. 134. How this following is vnderstoode And of his fulnesse haue all wée receiued euen Grace for Grace ¶ This sentence is sundrie wise expounded I will first shew you Saint Austens minde These be his words vpon this place That brethren all we haue receiued out of his fulnesse out of the fulnesse of his mercie haue we receiued what Remission of sinnes that we might be iustified by fayth And what moreouer Grace for Grace that is to witte For this Grace whereby we liue of Fayth we shall receiue an other Grace namelie Euerlasting lyfe But what else is it saue Grace For if I shall saie this is due to me I assigne somewhat to my selfe as to whome it is due But GOD crowneth the giftes of his mercie in vs. Thus yée sée Saint Austens meaning to witte that all good giftes and in the ende euerlasting lyfe is not a recompence of our merites but commeth of the frée liberalitie of God because it pleaseth him so to reward his former graces and to crowne his owne gyftes in vs. And so hée calleth faith whereby wée are iustified one Grace and euerla●ing lyfe an other grace verye truelie and godlye to the confusion of the common Idolles Souldiers Other expounding Grace for Grace Grace vppon Grace teach that out of this fulnesse of his sonne GOD gaue to our Fathers vnder the olde Testament the spirite of feare whereby as children vnd●r a Schoolemaster they were kept in and restrained that they shoulde not stray abroad after fleshlie lusts but be ledde foorth and framed to some goodnesse And in the new Testament hée giueth the spirit of fréedome whereby with more franke and free hearts with more ioifull courage by the motion of the spirit we doe the thing that pleaseth God not that our Fathers were altogether voide of this frée spirit but because of their childlie age they were kept more vnder by feare the spirite was not so richlie larglie giuen to them as to vs I meane vniuersallie touching gods ordinarie disposition For to some speciall person the spirit was larglie giuen and more larglie then it is nowe The exposition of other is that God loueth and fauoureth vs because of the loue and fauour that he beareth to his sonne as Saint Paule writeth That he hath made vs acceptable in the beloued For by nature we are the children of wrath the loue and fauour that we finde in Gods sight is for that of his own goodnesse he hath made vs the members of his most dearelye beloued sonne and so loueth vs as a parte of his sonnes bodie Other thinke that the meaning of these words is that GOD powreth all his graces into the Lorde Iesus and by him conueieth the same vnto vs as by a Conduct pipe● I leaue to your choise which of these expositions ye will take B. Traheron By grace vnderstand fauour The meaning is for the fauour that God the Father hath to his sonne Christ hath he receiued vs into fauour So as Christ is beloued of his Father euen so are we beloued for his sake Rom. 5. 15. T. M. ¶ All grace and all that is pleasant in the sight of God is giuen vs for Christs sake onelie euen out of the fulnesse and abundance of the fauour that he receiueth with the father Tindale ¶ Grace for grace That is God doth fauour vs and giue grace to so manie as beléeue in Christ are become his members The Bible note What is vnderstood by grace and peace Grace to you and peace from God By grace héere is vnderstood the fauour of GOD wherewith he fréelie forgiueth sinnes● By peace the tranquilitie of conscience pr●céeding therof Tindale How these words Grace and Truth are expounded But grace and truth came by Iesus Christ. ¶ By grace some vnderstand that that maketh vs amiable and acceptable and getteth vs fauour before God and man By truth they vnderstand true sincere perfect sound and sure righteousnesse Other by grace in this place vnderstand forgiuenesse of sinnes by truth the fulfilling of all the figures and shadowes in Moses lawe in which signification you shall take the words the s●nce shall be good and godlie B. Traheron The grace saith Saint Austen which is giuen of the largnesse of God priuilie into mans heart cannot be despised of no manner of hard heart for therfore it is giuen that the hardnesse of the heart shal be taken awaie Wherefore when the father is herde within and doth learne that he must come vnto his sonne then taketh he awaie our stonie heart and giueth vs a fleshlie heart by this meanes he maketh vs his children of promise and the vessels of mercie which he hath prepared to glorie But wherefore doth he not learne all men to come to Christ because that those y● he learneth he learneth of mercie and those that he learneth not of his iudgement doth he not learne them These places following are alleadged of D. Barnes against Free will Saint Austen saith that there is no hardnesse of heart that can resist grace Dunce saith that there maie bée an obstacie in mans heart S. Austen saith that grace findeth the heart in hardnesse and obstinacie But Dunce saith that there is a mollifieng that precedeth grace which is called attrition Saint Austen saith when the Father learneth vs within then taketh he awaie our stonie hearts But Dunce saith that we can doe it by the common naturall influence that is wée can dispose our selues of congruence Saint Austen saith how all men be not taught to come to Christ but onelie they that be taught of mercie be taught and if it be of mercie then it is not of congruence by attrition The meaning of these places following For by grace are ye saued through faith ¶ So then grace that is to saie the gift of God and Faith doe stande one with an other to which two these be contrarie to be saued by our selues or by our workes Therefore what meane they which would ioine together things of so contrarie nature Beza And grace for grace ¶ This place is diuerslie expounded Some vnderstand the first grace to be that by y● which through faith we receiue remission of our sinnes the other grace to bée lyfe euerlasting the which kinde of Grace is giuen to the faithfull according to the saieng of the Apostle but the grace of God is eternall life Rom. 6. 23. But other some will haue the first to bée that which in the olde Testament was giuen to the Iewes The other to be more copious and large and giuen to all men But the simple sence
againe to séeke for her children she should haue founde none remaining Geneua That is to say all that compasse about Bethleem for Rachel Iacobs wife who died in Childbed was buried in the way that leadeth to this towne which is also called Ephrata because of the fruitfulnesse of the soyle and plentie of corne Theo. Beza RAGVEL How Raguel and Iethro were not both one person AND when they came to Raguel their Father he sayde ¶ This Raguel is not Iethro but is the Father of Iethro and the graundfather of Zephora and was also the Priest of Madian For it was a lyke order with them as it was with the Iewes that the sonne possessed the office of his Father T. M. RAHAB How this woman Rahab was no harlot OF Rahab some doe saye that when the men which Iosua had sent to spie out Iericho came into her house they came not to commit fornication with her for she was no harlot but there to hide themselues Other saye that in times past she had bene an harlot but now shée was none although that name remained with her still as in Math. 4. it is sayd that Iesus came into the house of Symon the leper not that he was then a leper but before that time he had béene a leper of the which Christ had healed him and yet the name remained still with him so that hee was called still by that name Symon the leper Other be against these and say that this Rachab was afterward ioyned in marriage to Salmon which was one of the principall men in the Tribe of Iuda and therefore doe thinke it vnlikely that hée would haue taken such a woman to his wife whcih had bene then named to be an harlot or euer had bene any before But she was a woman that kept an honest vi●ling house● both for straungers other no harlot For where as we haue in our speach a woman harlot they haue in the Chaldish tongue a woman that selleth victualls Ric. Turnar Of Rahabs lye she made But I wist not what they were ¶ Albeit Rahab lyed of a good intent yet in that she lyed she did amisse for as Saint Paule sayth We must not doe euill that good maye come of it For as her act in hiding Gds people came of faith and is praised Heb. 11. 31. and Iames. 2. 2. So her lye came of the feare and weaknesse of the flesh and therefore not to be followed The Bible note How Rahab confesseth God For the Lorde your God he is the God of heauen aboue and in earth beneath ¶ God is no respecter of persons for heare a daughter of Abraham by fayth and worthy confession found among the Gentiles yea in the sinfull Citie of Iericho ¶ Héerein appeareth the great mercye of God that in this common destruction hée would drawe a most miserable sinner to repent and confesse his name Geneua How Rahab and Ruth are named in the Genealogy of Christ. Salmon begat Booz of Rahab ¶ Rahab and Ruth are héere named among the grandmothers of our Sauiour thereby to signifie that he was not onely come of the Iewes and for the Iewes but also the Gentiles and for the saluation of the Gentiles Sir I. Cheeke Rahab Ruth being Gentiles signifie that Christ came not onely of the Iewes and for them but also of the Gentiles and for their saluation Geneua RAINEBOVV What the Rainbow signifieth WHen Noe was come out of the Arke and had made an Altar and offered vp beastes and birdes thereon vnto the Lorde GOD gaue first of all vnto him his worde by the which he promised that hée woulde no more destroye the worlde with water And for the confirmation thereof hée gaue the Rainebowe for a sure token betw●ene him and man For in that Bowe is expressed both the couloures of Water and Fire the one parte being blew and the other redde that it might be a witnesse to both the iudgementes the one past the other to come Lanquet RAVEN How the Rauens feedeth Elias I Haue commaunded the Rauens to féed thée there ¶ To strengthen his faith against persecution God promiseth to feede him miraculously Geneua How God feedeth the Rauens And the young Rauens the crie ¶ For their crieng is as it were a confession of their néede which cannot bee releeued but by God onely then if God shew himselfe mindfull of the most contemptible foules can he suffer them to die with famine whom he hath assured of lyfe euerlasting Reade Iob. 39. 3. and Luke 12. 24. Geneua Of the Rauen and Doue sent out of the Arke The Rauen that Noe sent out of the Arke went going and returning vntill the waters were dried vp vpon the earth But the Doue which he sent out finding no resting place for her foote retourned vnto him into the Arke suffering Noe to pull her in vnto him with his hande Uppon this place the Bible note sayth thus It séemeth the Rauen béeing a wilde and vncleane foule fed of the dead carcases and therefore refused to tourne againe into the Arke But the Doue being of nature a tame foule and vsed to cleane foode and finding no place to rest on suffered her selfe to be receiued in againe REALITIE When and by whome this word was inuented THis tearme Reallye present you shall vnderstande that after Bonifacius the thirde about the yeare of ●ur Lorde 603. obteyned of Phocas the false Emperour to bée the head of the Church by the craftie practise of the Monkes Pas●hasius Hunbe●●cus Guinudus Algerus Rogerus Franciscus Anselmus and such other was Realitie inuented a●d tearmed to the Sacrament before that time the spirituall eating was magnified among the olde Doctors Antony Gyloy RECEIVED How we haue nothing but that wee haue receiued of God WHat hast thou that thou hast not recei●ed ¶ This sentence ought to bée had in remembraunce of all men For if wée haue nothing but that we haue receiued what can we deserue I praye you or what néede we dispute of our merites It commeth of the frée gift of God that we liue that wée loue God that we walke in his feare where be our own deseruings then Sir I. Cheeke RECONCILIATION What it is to be reconciled TO be reconciled is all hatred and discord set aparte to restore all the former loue concord friendshippe necessitie and familiaritie that was wont to bée Marl. vpon Math. fol. 97. ¶ Reconcile to make at one to bring in grace and fauour Tindale REEDE What is signified by this Reede A Réede shaken with the Winde ¶ The Réede is a figure of the doctrine that is not of God but wauereth with the winde Tindale How the power of Aegypt is compared to a Reede Thou trustest now in this broken staffe of Réede to wit on Aegypt ¶ Aegypt shal not onely be able not to succour thee but shall bée an hurt vnto thée Reade Esay 6. 36. and Ezech. 29. 6. Geneua A Réede shaken with
Looke Saluation Of the workes of darknesse and of the spirit For ye were sometimes darknesse ¶ They are called darknesse that walke yet in the night of incredulitie misbeléefe doing the works of darknesse which are whooredome adultery wantonnesse c. but they are contrariwise called the children of light that bring forth the fruits of the spirit Gal. 5. 21. How they know not God that denieth him in deedes They confesse they know God but with works they deny him ¶ As infidelitie is the headspring of all wickednesse and vice so on the contrarie side faith is the original well fountaine of all vertue and godlynesse Which faith is declared not onely by works but by such déeds works as God hath commaunded vs in his holy and sacred Scriptures And where no such works be speake they neuer so godly ther is no true liuely faith Sir I. Cheeke VVORLD What the world signifieth in this place ANd the world knew him not● The world in this place signifieth all men for it cannot be taken in a straighter sense In the sentence going before the world was made by him In other places of Scripture the world signifieth y● reprobate onely Héere the world is condemned of vnthankfulnesse vnkindnesse that it hath not embraced but shamefully refused reiected his maker It is vnnaturall it is horrible abhominable that men should not acknowledge him by whom they haue euen this that they be men Trah Why Paule doth call this world present and euill To deliuer vs from this present and euill world ¶ Hée calleth this whole world which hath bene is and shall be the present world to put a difference betwixt this and that euerlasting world which is to come Moreouer he calleth it an euill world because that whatsoeuer is in this worlde is subiect to the mallice of the Diuell reigning ouer the whole world● For this cause the world is sayd to be the kingdome of the Diuell for ther is nothing else in this world but ignorance contempt blasphemy and hatred of God Also disobedience against all the words and works of God In and vnder the kingdome of this world are we c. Luther vpon the Gal. fol. 20. Of the disputers of this world Where is the disputer of this world ¶ He that is so subtile in discussing of questions and héerein Paule reprocheth euen the best lerned as though not one of them could perceiue by his owne wisdome this mysterie of Christ reuealed in the Gospell Geneua The meaning of this place following We haue receiued not the spirit of the world Wée are not moued with that spirit which techeth things wherwith the world is delighted which men vnderstand by nature● Ge. VVORME How Christ compareth himselfe to a worme EGo sum vermis non homo I am a worme and no man The scorne of men the outcast of the people ¶ How truly and how iustly Christ might say I am a worme no man euery man knoweth that hath read either the. 26. of Mathew or the. 14. of S. Marke how the Iewes did spit in his face did buffet him with fists so vilely intreated him as no man could be worse and therefore it is very properly said of the Prophet● I am a worme and no man A worme is a vile thing in daunger of treading on and killing with euery mans foot No man regardeth it no man loueth it nor pittieth it though he be a right good man To expresse therefore liuely and properly the vile reputation of Christ at the time of his passion it is verye aptly sayde Ego sum vermis non homo c. Beside this Saint Austen supposeth him to bée called Vermis for an higher consideration Why is Christ called Vermis saith he Because he aunswereth he was mortall he was borne of the flesh and begotten without the companieng together of man and woman in the act of generation And therefore he sayth thus Sicut vermis calefaciente sole de puro limo formatur sic spiritu sancto c. As the worme is ingendered of the pure and onely slime or mudde being made hotte with the warme Sunne Euen so the holy Ghost illustrating and halowing the heart of the virgin She was conceiued with childe without any humane act of ingendering wrought therein In consideration whereof Christ comparing himselfe to a worme sayth by Dauid I am a worme and no man that is I am not conceiued after the manner fashion of man Thus farre Saint Austen Ric. Turnar VVORMEVVOOD How false teachers heretiks be compared to wormewood THe name of the starre was called wormewood Wormewood is an hearbe faire inough vnto the eye● but very bitter to the tast Euen so be heretiks and as many as fauour Antichrist the more they seeme to excell in holines the more do they annoy Marl. ¶ The nature of wormwood is to withdraw all sweetnesse These meaning pernitious heretikes with their bitter heresies and their noysome doctrine destroyed y● pits of Abraham they troubled the text they mixed the truth with falshoode they poysoned the waters they tooke away the louesomnes of them they left them vnpure and vnperfect not that they can be so of themselues but of their false working they made them vnpleasaunt vnprofitable yea and most perillous vnto many c. Bale ¶ The third plague came vpon the starres of heuen that is vpon the most holiest people which were taken for the spirituall state order as Monkes Friers Priests which through their hipocrisie haue heaped vnto themselues money goods and treasures and haue gotten lands and dominions for the which great diuision was among them And whereas the world shuld haue learned of them faith loue and knowledge it was nothing but slaundered offended deceiued seduced and sore hindered by them both in faith and in godly liuing behauiour both which were vtterly decayed in these persons to the great vndoing and destruction both of body and soule And thus the swéete honnye of Christian loue and concord among these Orders is turned into bitter wormwood by the which many soules are destroyed Erasmus in his Paraphrase VVORSHIP What is meant by worshipping BY worshipping whether it was in the olde Testament or new vnderstand the bowing of a mans selfe vpon y● ground as we oftentimes as we knéele in our praiers boow our selues and lye on our armes and hands with our faces to the ground Tindale fol. 11. ¶ Whereas the Latin word of worshipping is of that nature that it signifieth both to serue and obserue and honour it is aptly referred to God so that all that seruice obseruation reuerence and deuotion whereby we doe worship God as wel inwardly in our hearts as outwardly in deede is called the worship of God Muscul. fol. 351. ¶ To worship God is the first precept euen to beléeue him to be our God and to haue no strange Gods in his sight that