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A68840 Most fruitfull [and] learned co[m]mentaries of Doctor Peter Martir Vermil Florentine, professor of deuinitie, in the Vniuersitye of Tygure with a very profitable tract of the matter and places. Herein is also added [and] contained two most ample tables, aswel of the matter, as of the wordes: wyth an index of the places in the holy scripture. Set forth & allowed, accordyng to thorder appointed in the Quenes maiesties iniunctions.; In librum Judicum commentarii doctissimi. English Vermigli, Pietro Martire, 1499-1562. 1564 (1564) STC 24670; ESTC S117825 923,082 602

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owne woorkes But to beleue to pray to acknowledge sinnes to bewaile them with an earnest repētāce are the woorkes of God and therfore are not forbidden on festiuall dayes but rather commaunded The Ethnikes acknowledged a Religious fast These thynges haue not onely the Hebrues learned out of the lawes of God but also the Ethnikes by the instincte of nature For when Ionas preached vnto the Niniuites that their City should within .40 dayes be ouerthrowen they dispayred not of the mercy of God but got themselues to repentaunce and euery one of them euen from the kyng vnto the lowest Citezin with their beastes also and cattell fasted And when they vehemētly and with a feruent zeale cried vnto the Lorde Augustine Porphyrius they were heard Augustine de ciuitate dei writeth that Porphyrius taught that abstinence from flesh and grosse meates doth purify the myndes of men wherby they are made the more prompt to thinges deuine and to familiarity with good spirites Plutarche Plutarche also in his litle booke de Iside Osiride sayth that the Priestes of Heliopolis vtterly absteyned from all meates whiche might noorishe and augment the wantones of the fleshe and that they neuer brought wyne into the temple of their God For they counted it a vilany to drinke wyne in the day tyme in the sight of their God other men sayd he vsed wyne but not much and they had many purifications without wyne The same Plutarche de cohibenda Iracundia sheweth Holy 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that among the Athenienses wer certayne holy sacrifices which were done onely with water without wyne And this is notable which is written in the same booke Empedocles Titus Liuius that Empedocles was wont to say that a mā ought most of all to fast from malice Titus Liuius maketh mention that when at Rome there happened many portentuous thyngs which seemed to foreshewe some great euill the decemuiri were sent to looke into the bookes of the Sibilles and that there was aunswere made that they should institute a publique fast in the honor of Ceres whiche fast should also be repeated agayne euery .5 yeare And that by that meanes the anger of the gods should be pacified Wherfore the Ethnikes beyng smiten with the feare of the euils whiche hoonge ouer their heades fled vnto the oracles fasted and prayed the gods to turne away their anger But Christians not onely seyng so many so great euils but also hearyng them told from all parts of the world yet turne they not vnto GOD by prayer neither are they any thyng moued in mynde But peraduenture some man will say that Fastes Fastes are commended in the new Testamēt bycause they are partly Iewishe and partly Ethnike seeme to be farre from our Religion But that it is not so may easely be proued by the new Testament In the Actes of the Apostles the .13 chap. the Church beyng admonished by an oracle that Paul and Barnabas should be chosen to visite the Cityes and Townes where the Gospell had ben preached first decreed a fast then they layd their handes vpon them And in the .14 chap. when they after they had accomplished their matters thorough Iconium Listria and Antioche returned home they instituted a fast and created ministers and Priestes in euery City Augustine in his Epistle to Cassulanus sayth Augustine When Peter should at Rome haue talke with Simon the sorcerer vpon the Son day the Churche of Rome vpon the Sabaoth day denounced a faste whiche custome was alwayes afterward retayned Ierome Ierome in his prologue vpon Mathew sayth that Iohn beyng desired of the Churches to write the Gospell agaynst Ebion and Cerinthus who denyed the deuine nature of Christ aunswered that he woulde so doo if the whole Churche woulde before indicte a publique faste Whiche thyng Eusebius also in his Ecclesiasticall Hystory testifieth Eusebius Paul also in the .1 to the Corinthians the .7 chapter admonisheth those that are ioyned together in matrimony not to separate themselues a sonder but for a tyme to geue themselues to fastyng and prayers In whiche place I thynke he vnderstādeth publique prayers and also a publique fast For fellowshyp with the wife nothyng letteth but that they may be vsed priuately but whether he vnderstood publique fastes or priuate it skilleth not much Farther Christ being asked of his Apostles why they could not heale the dōme and cast out the deuil He answered Bycause of your incredulity And he added This kynd of deuils is cast out onely by fasting and prayer That place is somewhat darke and therfore it shall not be vnprofitable briefly to expounde it Is it to be thought that by the merite of fastyng and prayers as they vse to speake deuils are cast out by vertue of the worke wrought Not so What thē signified the woordes of Christ First he said Bycause of your incredulity for if ye had fayth euen so muche as a grayne of mustard and should say vnto this mountayne Take vp thy self cast thy self into the sea it should obey you And together with a fayth is necessary a vehement and feruent prayer and also fastyng bycause a fixed and earnest prayer which draweth the mind not onely frō meate and drinke but also from all other humane cogitacions and pleasures Wherefore Christ by the effectes describeth the cause namely fayth by prayers and fasting and he speaketh of those deuils to whom god gaue more liberty as though he should haue sayd ye must not lyue easely or idely if ye will cast out this kynd of deuils Ye must haue a sure and strong fayth whiche thyng he expressed by the effectes by prayers I say and fastes By these reasons and testimonyes may fastes also be commended in the new Testament But in them are faultes to be taken heede of What vices in fasting ar to be taken heede of whiche very often are many and those greuous First bycause in the Papacy are obserued fastes vpon certayne appoynted dayes without consideration of persons or occasions Faste brought in without measure as an yearely ceremony whiche at this day is vtterly of no strength is as if it were Iewishe Moreouer euery man hath added heaped vp of his owne whatsoeuer pleased him and not that which calamity of tymes or feruent prayers required For one man brought in Septuagesima an other Sexagesima an other Quinquagesima another Quadragesima which is Lent an other Rogatiō dayes an other Imber dayes an other the euēs of the Apostles an other Friday an other Saterday an other brought in fastyng on the Wēsday But of so many fastes what vtility hath there at the length followed Many contentions and questions concernyng fastyngs A great many questions contentions For a man will scarse beleue howe many question 's the elders haue had concernyng fast Augustine ad Cassulanum writeth that therfore we must fast on the Wensday bycause Christ was sold that day and on
so confirmed that if they had spread such things abroad they could in disputing haue confirmed the same by apt testimonies Wherfore he thought meete that they shoulde tary till they were more fully instructed He would not haue the truth vtterly to be vnspoken of but yet to the openinge of the same he chose a time conueniēt Wherfore it is not therby rightly gathered that myracles are of no force to confirme fayth bycause Christ sometimes forbad that they should be published forasmuch as that commaundement of the Lorde belonged onely for the taking of better occasions and not perpetually to keepe silence Lastlye there is an other thinge Whi●●● 〈◊〉 goeth b●●●● rac●s or 〈◊〉 me●h after whiche seemeth to be agaynste that article of the definicion For it seemeth that faythe cannot be confyrmed by miracles when as they require it and wil haue it to goe before them For in Math. the 13. chapter it is written that Christe bicause of the incredulitye of his owne citizens wroughte in a manner no miracles And Marke addeth that he could not Wherfore it shuld seme that it is rather to be said that miracles ar constituted and stablished by fayth when as if it be not present as the Euangelistes say miracles can not be done I aunswere that they which by prayers will obtayn miracles must after an accustomed iust maner be endewed with faith for vayne are those prayers counted which leane not vnto fayth But if a miracle be geuen there is nothing letteth but that fayth whiche is begon maye by it be stirred vp confyrmed Farther this is for assured that god is not letted but that he can also geue miracles vnto the vnbeleuers God sometime geueth miracles vnto the vnbeleuers yea he hath oftentimes geuē miracles vnto them Vndoubtedly Pharao and the Egiptians were infidels And who knoweth not but that there were vnto them very many miracles wrought by Moses Christ likewise did then shew the miracle of his resurrection when all men in a manner dispayred of his doctrine and truth Wherfore nothing letteth but that faith may by miracles be confirmed And for that cause as we haue said they which contend by prayers to obteyne signes do labour in vayn except they beleue Bicause prayers without fayth are of no value wyth God which Christ hath manifestly taught in Math. the .17 For when his disciples could not heale the lunatike child when the cause thereof was demaunded he sayd that it came of theyr incredulity whose aunswere openly declareth Against the coniurations wich are made al the sepulchres or graues of the deade what we muste iudge of those cuniurers which at the sepulchers of saincts and at reliques go about to expell deuels All thinges are there faynedly done Deade men are without faythe called vpon and the deuill playeth to gether with idolatrers and faineth that he beleueth to the end that pernicious worshippynges may be retayned whiche is hereby manifest bycause those Exorcistes are both men moste vnpure and also they do all things there without fayth Origene vpon the .17 Origene chapt of Mathew hath very wel written agaynst this abuse If at any time sayth he we must be by these holpē we must not speak with the spirite eyther in adiuring hym or commaunding hym as though he hearde vs but onelye let vs perseuere in geuinge our selues to prayers and fastinges These words spake he euen then when the inuocation of the dead and worshipping of reliques were not vsed in the church What would he at thys day say if he should se the madnes of our times But to return vnto the hed of the doubt I iudge that fayth goeth before miracles as touching those whych by prayers obtayne them but not as concerning those whych stand by and haue not yet beleued the preaching which they haue heard Wyth what faith euill men are endewed by whome god worketh miracles But let vs see by what meanes miracles may sometimes be done by wicked men For some shall say in the latter time Lord haue not we cast out deuils in thy name haue not we prophesied c Vnto whome shal be aunswered Verelye I say vnto you I know you not They vndoubtedly in working miracles as it seemeth credible added prayers when as for all that they wanted fayth neyther were they iustified neyther pertayned they to the kingdome of God Wherefore that seemeth not to be firme that prayers poured out without faith are not herd But we must note the ill men which by prayers obteined miracles wer not vtterly wtout fayth Three kyndes of fayth For there ar three kinds of faith foūd For there is a faith whych consisteth of humayne opinion and perswasion wherby those thinges which ar written in the holy scriptures ar beleued to be no lesse true then the histories of Liui Suetonius those things which ar now written of the new Ilandes This kinde of fayth as touching many thinges is common to the Turks the Iewes Ther is an other faith wherby we being stirred vp by the heauenly inspiration do liuely with efficacy cleaue to the promise of the mercy of God By this faith certaynelye is attayned iustification Lastlye the thirde fayth is called the fayth of miracles whereby we are neither chaunged nor made the better euen by a heare forasmuch as it is the mouinge of the spirite of God wherewith men are stirred vp to desire miracles Myracles are not alwayes wrought at the prayers of wicked men vtterly beleuing that it is the wil of God that they should be done and that which is required should haue successe Wherfore whilest they leane vnto this fayth sometimes they obteyne that whiche they desire whiche I therefore speake bycause not alwayes they doo so neither are they alwaies illustrate with that inspiration Chrisostome If so be that thou wilt demaūd how this kind of fayth can be proued let Chrisostome aunswere which vpon the .17 chapter of Mathew maketh mencion of it There Christ sayd If you haue fayth as much as is a grain of mustard sede you shall say vnto this mountayne throw thy self into the sea and it shall do it In expounding these wordes this father sayth bycause at this day these thinges ar not done in the church shal we therfore say that Christiās are destitute of faith God forbid that we should iudge so euil of the people of God The fayth which iustifieth is present but that which is called the fayth of miracles hath now ceased This kind of faith also is shewed by the words of the apostle in the .i. epistle to the Corrinthians wher he sayth Although I haue all faith so that I can remoue mountaynes and haue not charitye I am nothinge Neyther let that trouble vs in that he sayth Al. For that distribution is to be drawn vnto the faith of miracles But that is more manifestly perceaued by the same epistle wher the Apostle maketh menciō of fre gratious gifts saying
writeth Euen as welles the more they are drawen the better they are so vndoubtedly are the wordes of God for the more diligently they are handled and vsed the more plentiful fruit is by them receaued therfore I tooke in hand to interpretate this history And although I am not ignorant that you do so abound with the most learned woorkes of other men that ye neede not thys my commentary yet to that I answer that to riche men also are debtes payde and giftes are geuen vnto kinges who otherwise are more riche Who is more riche then God himselfe Vnto whō neuertheles al the godly do both geue thankes also to their power referre thankes Wherefore I doo not offer vnto you thys slight gift bicause I thinke that ye haue neede thereof but that your benefites should not remayne with me longer then is meete as though they wer neglected Farther that we might be styl more and more bound together in amity For these duties are certayn common bondes wherwith men are pleasauntlye and profitably bound together betwene themselues I haue in deede bene long in your debt yea rather I shal alwayes be in your debt for I shal neuer be able to pay al that I owe vnto you wherfore I wil gladly be perpetually in your debt And wil with great pleasure alwayes behold keepe and preserue your benefits layd vp with me so that they shal neuer dye nor neuer at anye time slyp out of my mynde So fare you wel most worthy and noble men God the father of mercy encrease prosper and for euer blesse you together with your publike wealth Church and Schoole in al good thinges through Iesus Christ our Sauiour Amen At Tigure the .22 of December 1560. ¶ Places of the scripture which here and there a man shall finde in these Commētaries expounded or learnedly and wittely alledged wheras the first number signifieth the chapter the other the verse or verses of the same chapter as they be distinguished and set foorth in the Byble printed at Geneua the most expedite and ready way for speedy finding of the same GEnesis 1.1 In the begynning 262. b 6.2 The sonnes of God saw the daughters of men that they were faire 15. b. and .285 33 18 Iaacob came safe to Sechem 159. 47 22 Onely the land of the priestes bought he not 264. Exodus 12.12 I wyll pas thorow the land of Egipt 128. b 20.13 15. .16 Non dices falsum testimonium 39. b Non furaberis Nō occides 39. b 20 16 Thou shalt not beare false wytnes c. 87. b. 22 16 .17 If a manne entyse a mayd that is not betrothed 284. b 33 11 Face to face Deuter. 5.9 Visiting the sinnes of the fathers vpon the children c. 178. b. c. 181. b 7.1.2.5 When the Lorde shall geue the land into thy power 245 24.3 .4 The first shal not take agayne a wyfe repudiated after the second husbands death or diuorsment 250. 1. Kings 3.16 There came .ii. harlots vnto the king 233 4. Kings 5.18 Herein the Lorde be mercifull 50. b Ezra 7.24 No tole tribute or custome to be laid vpon the priestes 264 Psalme 2.11 Kynges serue the Lord. 54. b 15.4 He that sweareth to his hinderāce chāgeth not 85 b. 86 b 33.16 The kyng is not saued by the multitude 91. b 50.18 If thou sawest a thiefe 232 73.2 My feete were almoste moued 142. b. 14● 170. b 78.49 Vexation by sending oute of euil angels 128. b 82.1 God standeth in the assembly of the Gods 267. b 91.1 He that dwelleth vnder the helpe 247 102.22 When the people shall be gathered together and kynges to serue the Lord. 266 111.10 Feare of the Lorde is the beginning of wysdome 246. b Prouerb 18.23 He that retaineth an aduoutrous woman is vngodly and a foole 249. b Esay 7.12 I wyll not aske nor tempt God 131. b 66.3 He that sacrificeth a sheepe is as if he slew a dog 206. b Ieremy 1 10 I haue appoynted thee ouer nacions and kyngdoms 262. 31.31 I wyll make a newe couenaunt 74. b Ezechil 17.13 King of Babel had taken an othe of Zedechias 85. b 18.20 The sun shall not beare the iniquity of the father 179. Daniel 4.24 Peccata tua elcemosynis redime 72. Hosea 1.2 Take thee a wyfe of fornications 233. b 6.6 I desyred mercy and not sacrifice 194. 8.4 They haue set vp a king but not by me 256. b Ecclesiasti 16.14 He wyll make place to al mercy 272. b Baruc. 6.3 When ye shal se gods of gold and syluer 51. Mathew 5.16 That they may se your good works glorifi 157 b 5. 18 If thy hande foote or eye offend thee cut it of 46. 5.23 If thou bring thy gift to the altar 206. b 6.1.2.5 To be sene of men 153. 6.22 The light of the body is the eye 153. 7.1 Iudge not that ye be not iudged 277. b 9.30 See that no man know it 10.37 He that loueth father and mother more thē me is not worthy of me 265. 12.20 A brused reede shall he not breake 134. 14.6 But whē Herods birth day was kept the daughter of Herodias daunced 287. b 15.4 Honour thy father and mother 189. b 16.18 Vpon thys rocke I wyll build my church c. wyll geue the keyes 149. 17.20 Faith as much as a graine of musterd seede 130. 17.21 This kinde goeth not out but by prayer and fasting 276. 19.28 Ye shall sytte vpon twelue seates 175. 21.31 Publicans harlotes shall go before you into the kingdome of heauen 232. b 23.24 Strain at a gnat and swalow a camell 201. b 25.41 Go ye cursed into euerlasting fyre prepared for the deuyl and his angels 208. b 26.4.5 The syxt houre 166. Marke 10.4 Moses suffered to write a bil of diuorcement 233. b 15.25 The third houre 166. Luke 18.13.14 Publican prayed and departed iustified 207. b 22.38 Behold here are two swerdes 259. b 22.35 When I sent you wythout bag or scrip dyd ye at anye tyme want any thing 260. 24.39 Feele and see for a spirite hath not flesh 209. Iohn 6.15 They would come c to make him a king 147. 8.44 The deuil whē he speaketh a lie he speaketh of his own 167 9.31 God heareth no synners 78. and. 207. 18.11 Put vp thy sword into thy sheath 260. b 20.26 The dores being shut 211. b 21.15 c. Feede my lambes 149. Actes 7. ●0 An angel of the Lord in a flame 120. 10.25 Cornelius met Peter and fel down at his feete 69. b. 13. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 41. b 21.25 Paul was purified 51. b. 15.29 That ye abstain frō things offred to Idols 229.233 b. Romains 3.8 Why do we not euil that good may come thereof 39. and. 253. 6.23 The wages of syn is death 272. b 9.3 I would wysh my selfe seperated from Christe for my brethren 253. b 11.29 Giftes and calling of God are without repentance 188. b 12.19 Vengeance is mine
sacrifice but bycause the memorye of hym beyng once offred is called to remembraunce Moreouer we must take heede that we persuade not our selues that God is pacified either by teares or by Sacrifices or by the receauyng of the Sacramentes whiche are but outwarde thynges God is not pacified by outward thynges of them selues For by one onely Sacrifice by the death I saye of Christ God is made mercifull vnto vs the fruite of whose death euery man applyeth vnto hym selfe by fayth And of that fayth we haue those outward thynges as witnesses and sygnes Wherfore if at any tyme we shall heare either the Fathers or the Scriptures them selues to saye that by teares synnes are wyped awaye or that by Sacrifices or Sacramentes GOD is made mercyfull vnto men so ought we to vnderstande their speaches that we referre the Sacrifices and Sacramentes both to Christ hym selfe The properties of thinges are oftentimes attributed to the signes of the same thīgs and also to faith in him for so much as all those are signes of him Neyther let vs thinke that this is a newe or an vnaccustomed thing that the properties operations and efficacy of thynges shoulde be transferred to the signes whiche by the institution of God do note and signife vnto vs the same thinges But these thinges left a syde let vs speake somewhat particularlye both of teares and syghing and also of Sacrifice ¶ Of Teares TEares are counted as certayne thynges added and ioyned to repentaunce Teares are adioyned both to repentaunce also to prayers and also to prayers For not onely the repentaunte when they with a grieuous sorowe deteste their synnes do vse to weepe but also as many as do earnestly and vehemently contend to obteyne any thyng Howbeit the tokens of true repentaunce are not alwayes measured by teares Weepyng is not alwayes a tokē of true repentaunce Teares do not alwayes declare that the praiers are of efficacy 2. Sam. 12. For we reade both in the booke of Genesis and also in the Epistle to the Hebrues that Esau also wepte Teares also do not alwayes declare that the prayers are of efficacye to obteyne that whiche is desired For Dauid after hys aduoutry fasted and wepte whilest he earnestly prayed that lyfe might be spared vnto hys sonne whiche was borne vnto hym by Bethsabe whiche thyng neuerthelesse he could not obteyne but that teares in those examples had no good successe there were diuerse causes thereof For Esau as we shall strayght waye declare mourned not of fayth And Dauid obtayned not that whiche he desired bycause GOD had ordayned to geue him that whiche was much better and more noble than that whiche he required In dede the sonne whiche was conceaued by aduoutry remayned not a lyue But of the same mother he afterwarde had Salomon who succeded the Father in a peaceable and moste ample kyngdome after his death yea and he beyng yet lyuyng But contrarywyse let vs marke howe in Peter teares were tokens of very true repentaunce And also in that woman whiche as the Euangelistes declare with her teares washed the feete of the Lorde And as touchyng prayers Ezechias was hearde when with weepyng he prayed and the death which was threatned hym was differred to an other tyme. Iosias also was hearde who prayed vnto GOD with many teares The 126. Psalme speaketh thus of the fruite of prayer whiche hath sighyng and teares adioyned with it They wente and wepte castyng their sedes but doubtelesse they shall come with ioye shall bryng with thē their sheaues And they which sowe in teares shall reape in ioye It is also written in the 7. Psalme The Lorde hath hearde the voyce of my weepyng And in the 56. Psalme The teares of the Sainctes are in a manner put before GOD in a bottle or potte and faythfully sealed in hys booke Dauid also in hys 95 Psalme stirreth vs vp by these wordes Let vs weepe before the Lorde whiche made vs c. But muche more are we instigated vnto it by the example of Christe who as it is written in the Epistle to the Hebrues with a loude crye and with teares prayed for vs. Paul also in the 20. of the Actes sayeth that he had longe serued the Lorde with an humble hearte and with teares What teares ar not allowed of God Neuerthelesse God alloweth not those teares whiche are by a certayne naturall nation powred out without any affection of the mynde as it commonly happeneth vnto those whose eyes are striken with any stroke or to those whiche runne either on foote or on horsebacke and whiche with ouer muche drinke become dronke for these are naturall accidences neither pertayne they any thyng to godlynesse But affections after which teares do followe are these heauynesse of the mynde After what affections teares do followe whiche other call sorrowe also gladnesse and that by contrary reasons For of sorowe spryngeth cold whereby as the whole bodye is constrayned together so also are the humors of the hed whereby it commeth to passe that weapyng by violence bursteth forth But contrarywyse in gladnesse the pypes pores wayes about the eyes are loosed wherby there is made a waye open vnto teares And vndoubtedly of those two affections we haue a testimony in the booke of Esdras For there it is written that when the temple was built the people wept but not all for one cause Parte of thē very sory that the new buylding differed muche in dignitie and ornamentes from the fyrst But contrarywise other reioysed that the house of GOD whiche had layen so longe prostrate was raysed vp agayne And it is manifest in the holy hystorye that Ioseph when he sawe hys brother Beniamin whome he loued wepte for ouer muche ioye Anger hath sorrowe and pleasure mingled together Furthermore there are other affections mixed of sorrowe and ioye whiche make vs to weepe as is a vehement anger whiche hath by reason of contempt sorowe myngled with it and also some ioye and pleasure whilest it goeth aboute reuengement as thoughe it were present Mercy also shaketh out teares for that we are troubled and are sory for other mens euils and are desirous to profite the afflicted For a vehement desire also casteth out teares Wherfore the men of God when in prayeng they earnestly desire to obtayne any thing easely burst forth into teares But what the matter of suche an humour is The Phisicall matter of teares we leaue to the consideration of naturall Philosophers for they do not well agree among them selues as touching it Some thincke that they do come by reason of the gaule beyng troubled vnto which opinion agreeth the first booke de mirabilibus sacrae Scripturae Augustine the x. chap whiche booke is entituled to be Augustines wryting Other suppose them to be a certayne kynde of sweate whiche Plutarche affirmeth Plutarche but some do thinke that euen as from mylke is seperated whay so also a watrish humour is separated
this any new or vnaccustomed thinge that seruantes ar somtimes wiser thē their masters although it oftētimes happeneth that counsel hath authority of the geuer as we vnderstand happened here wher counsel although it were profitable Aristotle is despised peraduēture bycause it came frō a seruāt Aristotle in his Politikes saith they which excel in mind coūsel ought to beare rule and they which are strong of body must obey But that cōmeth not alwayes to passe yea rather it oftentymes happeneth that masters which are not of the wisest but yet strong in body haue seruaunts far wiser then themselues although they be not very strong in body Farther we must not deny The giftes of God are not bound vnto the estates or cōditions of men but the prudence and counsels whiche are the giftes of God are not bounde vnto the conditions or estates of Lordshyp and seruitude nor also to the temperatures of bodyes God geueth them to them whom he thinketh good that most freely somtymes to seruauntes and sometymes to Lordes sometymes to poore men and sometymes to riche men GOD ministred vnto a man beyng a seruaunt good counsell whiche yet the Leuite would not fellowe to his great hurt For if he had turned into the City of the Iebusites peraduenture he had not fallen into that calamity whiche followed These thinges are spoken concernyng the counsell of the seruaunt if we consider the vtility therof but yet a thing is not to be iudged by the euent The Leuite is excused Neither is the Leuite in this place rashely to be accused bycause it seemeth that he had a shewe of honesty piety For he thought that if it were possible he should not go vnto the vngodly Idolatrers such as wer the Iebusites and he had a great deale better opinion of the Hebrues then of straungers Yea and the seruaunt for that he so earnestly desired to turne into the Iebusites may be accused either of sluggishnes for that he being weary of the waye would take no paynes to go any further or els he may be accused of vnaduisednes bycause he considered not with himselfe that the Iebusites wer enemyes vnto the Hebrues or els of an vngodly mind for that he litle passed to turne vnto Idolatrers Wherfore it seemeth that the Leuite did rightly and wisely if we looke vpon the ordinary way and law of piety and not vpon the end But all thynges happened contraryly For in Gibaa as we shall heare his wife was by violence oppressed and so died and ciuile warre stirred vp wherin many thousandes of men died What we ought in counsell to counte doubtful and what certayn Wherfore we ought alwayes to suspect our counsels as touching the ende but yet not as touchyng iustice not that we should feare least god shuld cast vs away but least for our sinnes there might happē some miserable end Wherfore whē we haue determined to do any thing we must with most feruent prayers pray vnto God to turne to good the counsell whiche we haue taken and to direct our purpose For vnles he build the house What is to be doone after we haue taken coūsell they labour in vayne whiche build it And except he prosper our enterprises all thynges are in vayne taken in hand And yet in the meane tyme we must vse a very great diligence But now we rede not that the Leuite called vpon God when as yet he was in some daunger Iacob when he should iorney into Mesopotamia called vpon God with a great fayth The counsell or purpose of the Leuite was to turne into Cities which the Hebrues inhabited especially either vnto Gibaa or vnto Rama These Cityes were not farre from Ierusalem He entred into Gibaa where no man bad hym to hys house That City longed to the tribe of Beniamin It may seeme that he would rather haue gone to Rama but as it is written the sunne went downe vpon him nyghe vnto Gibaa wherfore he entred into a City of men vncurteous For whē the man being a straunger stoode in the streetes in the night tyme no man receaued him into his house But where as barbarous inhospitality reigneth there also are more grieuous wicked vices wont not to be wantyng Why no man bad the Leuite to his house But why no mā receaued him into his house the cause was for that in a great number of euil Citezins there were very few good men if there were any the same wer afrayed to receaue him into their house least for his sake some euill should happen vnto them For they knewe the wantōnes and the filthy lustes of those men And so whilest the straunger was despised the law of God was in that City had in contempt For it commaunded that gentlenes should be shewed vnto straungers yea and God called himselfe the tutor and reuenger of straungers neither could those Citezins seeme any longer to be the people of God seyng they had cast awaye hys lawe A praise of hospitality And euen as to contemne straungers is a most grieuous vice so is Hospitality a vertue most excellent Wherfore in the Epistle to the Hebrues it is writtē Forget not liberality and Hospitality Although not to dissemble in Greeke it be somewhat otherwise written 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 What is the general worde of hospitality But 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is the general word of Hospitality Then it followeth For with such sacrifices God is wel pleased Out of which place the Papistes go about to defende merites as though he whiche sheweth himselfe liberall towardes the poore shall deserue something at Gods hand But in the Greke is rede 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 whiche signifieth not shal be wonne by deserte but receaueth with a glad and chearefull minde which is to be referred vnto God and not to those whiche shew liberality vnto the poore The sense therfore is this that god doth reioyse in such sacrifices doth accept them with a glad mynde yea and Christ himselfe also shall say in the last iudgement I was a straunger and ye lodged me for he that receaueth a straunger receaueth Christ in him So Abraham Lot when they thought that they had had straungers in their house receaued the sonne of God aungels The Gabaonites being voyde of this vertue contemned the Leuite beyng a straunger walkyng in the streete But there was in that City a certayne other straūger whiche was borne in mount Ephraim who being moued with mercy receaued the Leuite into hys house And so in Gabaa a straunger was better then the Citezins This man peraduenture was a husband man and in the euenyng returned out of the field frō his rusticall worke The Leuite telleth him that he hath prouendre for his Asses and also that he wanted not bread and wine that he might the easelier and willinglier be receaued As thoughe he should haue sayd we shall not be burdenous vnto any man for we haue all things
That was of al the tribes most populous and noble vnto which afterward came the kingdome They enquired not who should be the captaine of the warre but which tribe shoulde begyn the battaile first against the enemies Why thei doubted not of the victory Wherin the Israelits synned They nothing doubt of the victory neither demaund they any thing concerning it They saw that their quarrell was iust They sawe also that they were more in number and multitude and that it would be easy to ouercome so fewe wherefore they pray not vnto God to geue them the victory which was a grieuous synne as R. Leui ben Gerson affirmeth Wherefore God being offended suffred them twise to fal before their enemies and that wonderfullye For God hateth nothing more then pride and to much trust in our owne strengthes He wil also haue men knowe that victory is both to be required D. Kimhi and also to be hoped for at his handes onelye But Kimhi sayth that other thinke that this so great misfortune of warre happened bicause of the idolatry of Micha the Israelite As though God should in this maner haue delt with them Ye will auenge the iniury done vnto a man being a Leuite but ye neglect and wyncke at the contumely which I suffer at the Danites handes who publikely worship Idoles Either of these sentences is very likelye althoughe neither of them is gathered out of the text Howbeit this we may affirme that there were some certain causes wherby God was excedinglye prouoked of the Israelites But what those causes were though we know not it is no meruayle For the counsels of God are hidden and obscure Order at the length required this that the Israelites should first auenge the contumely of God himself and afterward of the Leuite But this is sufficiently declared in the text What thynges the Israelites had omitted that they at those twoo first tymes came not vnto God earnestly inough They came in deede but they neither fasted nor killed sacrifices nor made any praiers as far as the holy history declareth But at the last hauing already two ouerthrowes all of them with a lowly and humble minde come vnto God al pray together and fast These thinges seme sufficiently to declare that they were not before in the house of the Lord in suche maner as they ought to haue beene For if they had had true fayth they would haue before also proclaimed both cōmon prayers and also fasting Mourning fasting and praiers are the effectes of faith and true repentaunce These thinges for that they had not it is probable that therfore they receaued so great losse at the first and second conflict This thing also might bee a cause for that they made warre to much securely and contemptuously as they which dyd put their confidence in the number and strength of their own men Wherefore they contemned the enemy The contempt of enemies hurteth very much then the which nothing is more vnprofitable to those that shal fight For contempt of the enemies engendreth negligence in the hostes 26 Then al the children of Israel ascended and all the people and they came into the house of God and wept and abode there before the Lorde They fasted also that day vnto the euening and offered burnt offringes and peace offeringes before the Lord. 27 And the chyldren of Israel asked the Lorde for there was the Arke of the Lord in those dayes 28 And Pinhas the sonne of Eleazar the sonne of Aaron stoode before it in those dayes saying Shal I yet go any more to battayle against the children of Beniamin my brethren or shal I cease The Lord answered Go vp for to morow I wil deliuer them into your hand 29 And Israel set men to lye in wayte round about Gibea 30 And the children of Israel went vp against the children of Beniamin the thyrd day and put them selues in aray against Gibea as at other tymes 31 Then the children of Beniamin comming out to meete the people were drawen from their City and they beganne to smite and to kyl of the people as at other times euen by the wayes whereof one goeth vp to the house of God and the other to Gibea in the fielde vpon a thirty men of Israel 32 And the chyldren of Beniamin sayd They are fallen before vs as at the first But the children of Israel said Let vs flie and pluck them away from the city euen to the high wayes 33 And when al the men of Israel rose vp oute of their place and put them selues in aray in Baal-Thamar in the meane while the men of Israel that lay in wayte came forth of their place euen out of the medowes of Gibea 34 And they came ouer agaynst Gibea ten thousande chosen men of all Israel and the battayle was sore for they knewe not that the euyll was neare them 35 And the Lord smote Beniamin before Israel and the chyldren of Israel destroyed of the Beniamites the same day .xxv. thousand and one hundreth men All they coulde handle the swoord 36 So the children of Beniamin saw that they wer smitten down for the children of Israel gaue place vnto the Beniamites bycause they trusted to the men that lay in wayte whych they had layde besydes Gibea 37 And they that lay in wayte hasted and brake forth toward Gibea and the embushment drew themselues along and smote al the City wyth the edge of the swoord 38 Also the men of Israel had appointed a certayne tyme with the embushmentes that with great speede they shoulde make a great flame and smoke ryse out of the City 39 And the men of Israel retired in the battayle and Beniamin began to smyte and kyll the men of Israell about .xxx. persons for they sayd Surely they are striken downe before vs as in the fyrste battayle 40 But when the flame began to aryse out of the City as a pyller of smoke the Beniamites looked backe and beholde the flame of the City began to ascend vp to heauen 41 Then the men of Israel turned againe and the children of Beniamin were astoyned for they saw their destruction at hand 42 Therefore they fled before the men of Israel vnto the waye of the wyldernes but the battayle ouertooke them also they whyche came out of the Cities slewe them among them 43 Thus they compassed the Beniamites about and chased them at ease and ouerran them euē ouer against Gibea on the East side 44 And there fel of Beniamin .xviii. thousand men which were all men of warre 45 And they turned and fled vnto the wyldernes vnto the rocke Rimmon and the Israelites glayned of them by the way .v. thousand men and pursued after them vnto Gidehon slew two thousand men of them 46 So that al that were slayne that day of the Beniamites were 25 thousand men that drew sword which were all men of warre 47 But .vi. hundreth men turned and fled to the wyldernes vnto the rocke of
the Friday bycause on that day he was crucified But of the Sabaoth day he much doubted For they of Millane of the East parte affirmed that on the day we should not fast bycause Christ that day was at reast in the sepulchre contraryly the Romanes and Affricans and certayne other bycause Christ was deiected euen vnto the ignominy of the sepulchre therfore contended that the Sabaoth should be fasted Monica the mother of Augustine The mother of Augustine when she came out of Affrike to Millane and sawe that the men there fasted not on the Sabaoth day began to meruayle at the vnaccustomed manner Wherfore Augustine which was not yet baptised came to Ambrose asked in his mothers behalfe what was best to be done Do sayth Ambrose that which I do An aunswere of Ambrose By which words Augustine thought that he should not fast bycause Ambrose fasted not But what he ment he himselfe more manifestly expressed I sayth he when I come to Rome do fast bycause the Sabaoth day is there fasted but when I returne to Millane bicause here it is not fasted I fast not De consecratione dist 3. chap. De esu carnium it is decreed that Friday and Wensday should be fasted the Sabaoth day is left free And in the same distinct the chap. Sabbato vero Innocentius Innocētius hath added That the Sabaoth also must be fasted But he bringeth a farre other cause then that which before we spake of For for bycause saith he the Apostles both vpon the Friday and also vpon the Sabaoth day were in great mourning and sorow therfore we must fast In the same dist chap. Ieiunium Melchiades decreed that we must not fast on the Sonday nor on the Thursday and he geueth a reason bycause the fastes of Christians ought to be on contrary dayes to the fastes both of heretikes and of Ethnikes Epiphanius Epiphanius bringeth a reason why the Wensday is to be fasted namely bycause Christ was that day taken vp to heauen for it is written that when the bridgrome is taken from thē then they shall fast and this he affirmeth to be the tradition of the Apostles when as yet at this day we beleue that the Ascension happened on the Thursday We must geue ●●le credite to traditions wherfore let the Papistes take heede howe muche credite they will haue to be geuen vnto their traditions For there are many of them whiche euen they themselues can not deny but that they are ridiculous and vayne I know in deede there are traditions founde whiche are necessaryly gathered out of the holy scriptures and for that cause they ought not to be abrogated But other traditions whiche are indifferent are not to be augmented in number least the Churche should be oppressed neither to be thought so necessary that they can not be abolished And we must beware that in them be not put the worshipping of GOD. But as for those whiche are agaynst the woorde of god are by no meanes to be admitted In the dist 76. chapter .1 are added Imber dayes or the Fastes foure tymes in the yeare Which why they are so diuided scarsely can any man perceaue They cite Ierome vpon Zachary who maketh mention of the fourth moneth fift seuenth and tenth And they seeme to be moued with a wicked zeale to distribute these fastes into foure partes of the yeare And those fastes whiche the Iewes receaued euery yeare for the calamityes which they had suffred Why the fast of Imber dayes were inuented the same our men haue made yearely But other haue inuented an other cause namely bycause in those foure tymes of the yeare Byshops are wont to promote clarkes vnto the ministery and orders Wherfore they say that the people ought then most of all to faste and praye that GOD would graunt them good Pastors Fasting and prayers should be had in the ordering of Ministers But I would demaund of the Byshops why they institute Ministers onely at those .iiii. tymes of the yere Vndoubtedly they cā render no certayn iust reason therof Augustine Aerius an heretike Augustine in his boke de Haeresibus sayth the Aerius contemned oblatiōs for the dead also such fast as were appointed bycause Christiās were not vnder the law but vnder grace but he would the euery mā should fast at his owne pleasure whē he himselfe would In dede I allow not Aerius in that he was an Arriā but as touchīg sacrifices oblations for the dead he iudged rightly godly And also concerning appointed fastes I see no cause why he ought to be reproued vnles peraduēture he thought this that fastes could not be denoūced of the Magistrate of the Church as the difficulty of times required The reason also which he vseth the Christiās are not vnder the law but vnder grace is weake for we are not so deliuered frō the law that we are absolued frō all order Iouinian an heretike Augustine also writeth that Iouiniā contemned abstinences fastes as things vaine vnprofitable where in if he spake of bare fastes onely such as wer appointed at certayne dayes certayne tymes of the yeare he iudged not ill For vnles they be adioyned with faith repentāce also with vehement prayers they nothing at all profite In Esay the .58 chap. the people cōplayned We haue fasted thou hast not looked vpon vs which wordes shew that fastes with out circumstances requisite are not acceptable vnto God but if they be ioyned with their additions they are not vnprofitable By the decrees of Liberius who liued in the tyme of Cōstātius may be knowē Liberius how that whē the ayre was vntēperate or that there was any famine or pestilēce or warre then they assēbled together to denoūce a fast wherby to mitigate the anger of god Augustine Augustine whē he saw his city besieged of the Vandales gaue himself vnto fastyng prayers in that siege died as Possidonius testifieth And generally whē we attēpt any great waighty matter as whē we denoūce war or creat Magistrats or ordeine Ministers of the Church we haue nede most of al of feruēt prayers for the feruētnes wherof fasting very much auayleth Christ when he should begyn his preaching went into the wildernes fasted A widow when her husband is dead is left in a perillous state Therfore prayers fastes are very conuenient for her Anna the daughter of Phanuel led her life in the temple where she gaue herself to prayer fasting Paul to Tim. sayth A widowe which is truly a widowe putteth her cōfidence in the Lord day night applieth herselfe to prayers fastes Cornelius when he was not yet sufficiently instructed of Christe and was heauy and pensiue in mynde in the ninth houre was fastyng and in prayers to whom the Aungell as it is written in the Actes of the Apostles appeared But it may be demāded when fastes are denoūced of princes
of the Church Whether fastes denounced ought to be obeyed whether men are bound to obey them or no Vndoubtedly they are bound by the law of fayth by obediēce For when fastes are set forth that are agreable vnto the word of God how can he which beleueth in god detract thē Assuredly he cā not Howbeit this is to be vnderstād of those which are of the state conditiō that they be able to fast For if a mā be hindred either by age or disease or labours in the case this ought to be of force which the scriptures say I wil haue mercy not sacrifice But they which are not hindred ought to obey Consilium Gāgrense In the counsell of Gāgrensis chap. 30. it is ordeyned that if a mā obey not the fastes which ar cōmāded him of the Church howsoeuer he boast of perfectiō without bodely necessity proudly contemneth the decrees of the Church let him be accursed The Canones of the Apostles In the Canones of the Apostles although they be Apocripha conteyne certayne strāge things neither is it sufficiently agreed vpō the nōber of them in the Canon I say .68 it is cōmanded that the Clergy which fast not hauing no bodely necessity shuld be deposed Let infātes in no case be cōpelled driuē to fast for that should hurt their health Yet Ioel sayth Sanctify a fast gather together old men sucking children And the Niniuites at the preaching of Ionas cōpelled beasts infātes to fast These wer extraordinary thinges neither are they for that end set forth that we should imitate them Augustine As for priuate fastes most men will haue them to be free Wherfore Augustine ad Cassulanum We know sayth he that we must fast when we are commaunded but on what dayes we should fast and what dayes we should not we know not bycause that is no where prescribed in the newe Testament therfore fastes are to be left free And in his 2. booke de Sermone domini in monte expoundyng these woordes Howe fastes maye be called free or not fre Iudge not and ye shall not be iudged he writeth that men may two maner of wayes iudge rashly Either if they drawe that into the euill parte whiche mought haue bene done ryghtly or if when it is manifest that a facte is playnely euill they thinke that he which hath done it can not repent And of the first kynd he bringeth an exāple as if a mā bycause he is sicke in the stomake or is troubled with any other infirmity of the body would not fast An other whiche knoweth not this will suspect him to be a gloton to much delicate For here that which is free which may well be done is drawen into the worse part This in deede is Augustines opinion which yet we ought prudently soundly to vnderstand For if a priuate man when he is in misery or daunger doth see that fasting prayers may helpe him he except he fast doth vndoubtedly sinne But for as much as fasting after this sort maner now declared may profit we must vndoubtedly fast It is free in deede bycause by the outward law he can not be condēned which fasteth not But when our fast may aduance the glory of god it is no more fre for asmuch as we ar cōmanded to loue God withall our hart with all our soule wtal our strength For there are many things which of their own nature are free indifferent But when it commeth to choise we see they may eyther illustrate or obscure the glory of God then are they not free nor indifferent bycause all our strengthes and facultyes are to be applyed vnto the glory of God In true fastīg we must faste the whole day Farther there is an abuse of fastes as touching the space of tyme for as much as the Papistes if they some litle while defer their dinner and then whatsoeuer they eate so that they eate no fleshe they thinke it sufficient But the elders remayned fasting al the whole day euen to euening al which time they were occupied in the worde of God in prayers and holy occupations In Leuit. the .23 God sayth The Iewes fasted from euenyng to euenyng when ye fast rest from all worke and afflicte your soules for it is a Sabaoth And no man doubteth but that the Sabaoth endureth from euening to euening So Saul when he had put the Philistines to flight proclaymed a fast vntill night And Dauid in the death of Abner sware that he would taste of no meate till night Tertulian Augustine Tertullian cōtra Psychicos sayth that the Churche produced their fastes euen to euenyng Augustine de moribus Ecclesiae contra Manicheos Let accustoned fastes saith he of the Church be continued euen vntil night for al the whole day were celebrated holy assemblyes were also had publique prayers but at euenyng they were dismissed In the Lent did eate meate But it is a sporte to see how the Papistes illude this aūcient custome they say their euen songes before noone then they go to dyner at night they institute a drinking so boast that they fast very wel Thomas Aquinas Consilium Calcedonense Whiche was the ix houre Thomas in secunda secundae sayth that in his time fastes were produced euen vnto the ninth houre And he bringeth the counsell of Chalcedonia where it is decreed that he which eateth before the ninth houre should not be counted to haue fasted Here by the way we must declare which was the ninth houre The vi houre was at none in which tyme we rede the Christ our sauiour was crucified Wherfore the ninth houre must needes be the third houre from noone The elders dyd so deuide the tyme The distribution of the houres among the elders that alwayes from the Sunne set to the Sunne rysing they counted 12. houres and agayne as many from the rysing of the Sunne to the goynge downe thereof Agayne they deuided eyther tyme into foure spaces and those they called watches And euery one of those spaces contayned three houres Wherefore the thirde houre from the rysing of the Sunne is with vs eyther the eyght or nynth houre as the tyme of the yeare requireth For these houres are vnequall The sixte houre is noone and the nynth is the thirde at after noone and the .xii. at the sunne set But Thomas obiecteth vnto hymselfe that whiche we say namely that the elders fasted the whole day It is ridiculous to heare what he aunswereth Bycause we sayth he are in the state of the day and the elders were in the state of the nyght therefore we must finishe our fastes in the day tyme when as they ended them in the night tyme. And he bryngeth this saying of Paul The nyght is past the day hath drawen nyghe Whiche sentence how much it serueth to this present thyng all menne see and vnderstande An other abuse is the choyse of
dayes althoughe he mought haue commaunded it What then commaunded he Learne sayth he of me for I am meeke and humble in heart But the manner of these men is peruerse For they will imitate Christe in that which they ar not commaunded but that which they are cōmaunded they will not followe Our sauior when he sent foorth his disciples Go sayth he to all nations teachyng to obserue those thynges not whatsoeuer thynges I haue done but whatsoeuer thynges I haue commaunded you And it is a wonder to see howe superstitiously and subtelly they haue decreed of these thynges in the Counsell of Martine de Consecratione Confiliū Martini in the dist 3. Non licet and in the Canones of the Counsell of Laodicenum in the chapter Non oportet it is commaunded that in the Lent fastyng on the Thursday should not be broken And in the Counsell of Agathensis it is commaunded Consiliū Agathense that in the Lent fasting on the Saterday also should not be broken bycause on the Thursday Saterday many fasted not Yea on the Sondayes also in the Lent wherin they fasted not they would that there should be retayned a choise of meates And de Consec in the dist 4. A reason out of Gregorye for the obseruynge of Lent Gregoryes reason confuted chap. Denique sacerdotes it is ordeyned that the Priestes should begyn theyr fast from Quinquagesima And in the same place .5 distinct chap. Quadragesima Gregorius hath inuented a reason wherby to proue that Lent is to be fasted We must sayth he geue the tenth part of the whole yeare vnto God And the .x. part of the yeare cōsisteth of .40 dayes Wherfore we must fast so many dayes A goodly reason I promise you Why doth thys Gregory forget that the Leuiticall priesthoode and ceremonies thereof haue now ceased Wherfore it is not lawfull to bind christian men to tenthes and Iewishe ceremonies And if for that cause the time of Lent be to be cōsecrated to a fast bicause it is the tenth part of the whole yeare why did not the Iewes in the old time so fast Why did not the Prophets reproue them bicause they deceaued god of such a kind of tenth But why Lent was inuented as much as I can gather I wil declare Why the father 's instituted Lent The fathers when they saw men liue very carelesly and negligently thoughte it good that they should be cōpelled after a sort to renew godlines in some part of the year somewhat to bridle the fearcenes of the flesh And for this thing they thought that the .40 dayes before Easter were most mete that men should so long haue theyr minds both occupied in repentance also in remembring the benefites of God This inuention although at the first sight it might seme trimme The institutiō of Lent is against Christiā liberty yet it agreeth not with Christian liberty For we must think vpon the benefites of god and of our greate ingratitude and other our moste grieuous sinnes not onelye 40. daies but also continually Farther by this meanes they opened a most wide window to liue securely and reacheleslye For if they once had performed fullye those .40 dayes they thoughte that all the whole yeare after they mighte geue themselues wholy to al kind of pleasures and lustes For they referred the time of repentance to these .40 dayes And although the elders had a lent Eusebius Ireneus yet as Eusebius sayth in his .5 booke and .24 chapter it was left free vnto all men For Ireneus after this manner entreated with Victor bishop of Rome whē he would haue excommunicated the East church because in the obseruinge of Easter it agreed not with the church of Rome What sayd he can we not liue at concord although they vse theyr owne rites as we vse ours For some fast in the Lente two dayes some .4 dayes some ten dayes some .15 some .20 and other some .40 dayes and yet is concord neuertheles kept in the Church Ther is an other abuse Fasting is an excercise not a holines namely bicause som put holines in fasting as though a worshipping of god consisted in it where as in very dede fasting is onely an excercise which of it selfe hath no holines They are fooles which in fasting thinke that for that cause they haue god bound vnto them Ierome wherfore we must not rashly geue credite vnto Ierome when he sayth that fasting is not a vertue but the foundation of al vertues For onely Christ and faith in him is the foundation of all vertues If he had sayd that fasting is a helpe of certayn vertues he mought haue bene borne with al. And vndoubtedly herein the elders oftentymes erre A fall of the riders for that they prayse extol fasting aboue measure If so much should be attributed vnto fasting we must of necessity confesse that Iohn Baptist liued more holily then Christ For he fasted more then Christ did For Christ did eate and drinke as temperate and modest men vse to do But it is sayde that Iohn did neither eat nor drinke Yea and Paule to Timothy writeth that the exercise of the body hath small vtilitye but piety is profitable to all thinges If thou wilte demaunde what piety is What piety is I wyll aunsweare that it is a true worshippinge of God a soundnes of doctrine and a pure life which thinges follow hope and faith In these thinges assuredly is very great profite and the excercise of the body hath indede some profit but not so great But we must note that Paule speaketh not of fasting and excercise of the body which is Hipocriticall and wanteth fayth but of the true and christian fasting and excercise of the body For those things which want fayth and procede of hipocrisy are sinnes neither do they any thing profite Wherfore Esay sayth Fasting is not a part of satisfaction Is this the fast which I haue chosen But these our men go farther and besides that in fastynge they put holynes they make it also a parte of satisfaction Forasmuch as the Scholemē in the .4 They extende fastes euen to purgatory Gracian boke of sētences do appoint satisfactiō to consiste of prayers almes fasting What abrogateth the death of Christ if this do not They say also that by fasts soules are deliuered out of purgatory And least any should think that I fayn these things let him rede Gratian in the .13 quest .2 chapter anima where he putteth the wordes of Gregory who sayth Soules are deliuered from purgatory either by the prayers or fastinge of theyr kinsfolkes There is also an other more greuous abuse for that some affirme that by fastes they can satisfye the churche althoughe they ceasse not from sinne Thys kynde of faste God himselfe reproueth by expresse woordes in Esaye What care I saith he for your fastes Ye fast contentions and strifes Is thys the faste which my soul hath chosē
health 135. b Dreames it is not vtterly forbidden to regard them 138. b Dreames of prophecieng geuen by God to the wicked 134. Dreames some ar sent by God 137 Drunkennes hurtes 163. b Drunkennes hath 2. sences 162. Drunkennes bringeth all vices to light 164. b Dwelling of Christians with infidels or godly with vngodly 44. b E. EAre rynges 250. b Eating defined 212. Ecclesiasticall power and Ciuill 257. b Ecclesiasticall causes pertayne to the Magistrate 266. Ecclesiasticall power is subiect to the ciuill 258. b Elect are punished to their saluation 33. Electors of Princes 90. b Elements of bread wine and water 134. b Elias was of the tribe of Beniamin 272. Elloborus is bearfoote 164. b Elohim and Iehouah 112 b Elohim whom it is attributed vnto 206. b Emaus called Nicopolis 41. Emperours why they were ordained 2. Emperour subiect to the pope 257 Emperor corrected of a bishop 145 Emperours all were not consecrated of the Pope 261. b Emulation handled 141. b Emulation described 143. b Enak defined 15. Enakim 15. b Endeuour or labour is required to be ioyned with faith 13. b Enemies described 85. Enemies god destroieth somtimes without the helpe of man 99. England 271. d Enochs booke 16. Enterprises require three things 271. b Enuy intreated of 141. b Enuy described and mother therof 143. Enuious persons described 141. b Epha measure 116. b Ephod what 150 b Ephod what 238. b Ephori 90. b Ephraites more noblethen Manasses 141. b Ephramites pride 197. Epitaphes soong 102. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 reioycing at an other mās hurt 143 Errour very hurtfull 〈◊〉 the church 148. b Errours of fathers 279. Errour of Ambrose 194. Errour of Augustine 195. b Errours of Grigory 147. b Errour of Grigorye Byshoppe of Rome 56. Esay was maryed 94. Esay deth what occasioned 117. b Espials thre mēcioned in the scripture 35. b Essence of God shal be knowen of vs in the lyfe euerlasting 121 Eternal life fully geuen vs is presently possessed onely in part 7. b Eternall lyfe whether it may be called a reward 272. Ethniks had better knowledge of God then the Papistes 207. b Euensong before noone 277. b Euents no good trial of lawful actions 227. Euils is not to be committed to auoyde euyl 253. Euil lesse is to bee preferred before the greater 253. Euil how it is taken away 268. b Euil not euill if God commaunde it 39 Euil in the fight of the Lord. 67. b Euil works how God may be said to worke in the wicked 7. Euill men sometymes punished by wurs 80. b Euil spirit signifieth either the deuil or wicked affections 168 Euil thinges muste not onelye bee left but good thynges also put in vre 176. Euripides sentence 158. Examples of drunkennes 163 Examples profitable 2. wayes 4 Examples of sayntes abused 4 Examples of Gods doinges is not to be reasoned of alwayes by vs. 233. b Excommunicate person 285. Excommunicate persons howe we may keepe cōpany with thē 45. b Exercises of the bodi haue no great vtility but piety 140 Exodus what it entreateth of 1. b Ezechias liued in Romulus time 3. b Ezechiel was maried 94 F. FAble defined 159. b Fable of frogs in Aesop 160 Face of the mynde aswell as of the body 121 Fayning is not alwaies lying 209. Fallacy a secundum quid ad simpli citer et accidentis 256. b Faithes efficacy 98. Faith of three sortes 130. b Faith of hospitality 252. b Faith is to be kept with the ennemy 85. b Faith to heretiks is to be kept 86 Faith is not to be kept to him that breaketh faith 85. b Faithes beginning 207. b Faith obtaineth promises 13. b Faithe of no force if it want the word of God 152. Faith cannot sufficiently be confirmed by myracles 129. b Faith iustified the fathers as well as vs. 74. b Faith refuseth not humain help 125 Faithes effectes is prayer and fasting 276. Faith cōmeth not of miracles but is confirmed by them 127. Faith is the soul of good works 242 Faith whyther it go before miracles or miracles before faith 130 Faith directeth good intent cleaueth onely to the woord of God not to fathers or counsels 152. b Faith is the gift of God 122 Fals of godli mē churches 226 b Fathers synnes whether the sonne shall beare 178. b Fathers iustified by fayth as wee 74. b Fathers the more aūcient the more sincere 216 Fathers are not to be excused in all thinges 20 Fathers are neither constant nor without errour 152. b Fathers authoritye yll compared with the scriptures 152 Fasting handled 274 Fastes of sundry kindes 278 Fasting distinguished into common and priuate 94. Fastinges abuses 279. Fastes denounced of Princes whither they are to be obeyed 277 Fastings vpon saints euens 140 Fault where none is ought none to confes 90 Feare of God contrarye to securitye 246. b Feare comprehendeth al maner religion of worshipping 113. b Feare maye not moue againste iustice 38 Feare godly driueth not a man to parricide 194. Feare of the enemies once knowē is a good begīning of victory 134 Feare at the sight of God or angel how it commeth 117. b Feare euil of two sortes 247. b Feastes are wont to haue ryddels 218. b Felicity of the vngodly 170. b Fellowship of the wicked is to bee fled 251. b Fellowship of godlye with vngodlye 44. b Fellowship of the godlye is profitable 29 Feeding of the flocke was not onely Peters office 149 Feete washing much vsed in Syria 252. b Figuratiue speeches ar no lies 111 Filthy burthens defined 263. b Fish counted among delicates 278 Finders of things ought to restore them 283 Flatterers vsage 84. b Flesh and bone of any man is the most coniunction that may be 156. b Flesh refreining 278 Flight for truth 52. b Foode of angels 212. b Foote measure 16. b Forbidding of things is to some an alluring to the same 158. b Forgeuenes of synnes 13 Forgiuenes of syns may be wyth●out restituciō of so happy state as we had before we synned 65. b Formes why they are more seene sleeping then waking 135 Fornication handled 229 Fornication is hurtful to the common wealth 130. b Forswearing is alwayes vnlawfull 39. b Fortune ruleth not things but the prouidence of God 172 Found things must be restored 283 Foundation church hath none but Christ 149 Foundatiō of the church is Christ 241. b Foule parents how they shal haue fayre children 4. b Foxes plenty in Syria 223. b Free men may chaunge their dwellings for iust causes 227. b Free will confuted 104. b Free will cannot be gathered of the commaundements 73 frēdships foūdatiō is honesty 166. b Frendship grounded vpon profit or pleasure is weake 26. b Frendes dreame ofte of their frendes 135. b Frōwardnes of ours whence it springeth 167 G GAbaonites god fauoured 36 Gabaonites traitors ●8 b Gabaonites wickednes 252 Gaine more commonly soughte for then health 174 Garmentes of nedle worke or dyuers colours attributed onely to prynces 111. b