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A16078 A harmonie vpon the the three Euangelists, Matthew, Mark and Luke with the commentarie of M. Iohn Caluine: faithfully translated out of Latine into English, by E.P. Whereunto is also added a commentarie vpon the Euangelist S. Iohn, by the same authour.; Harmonia ex tribus Evangelistis composita Calvin, Jean, 1509-1564.; Calvin, Jean, 1509-1564. In Evangelium secundum Johannem. aut; Pagit, Eusebius, 1547?-1617.; Fetherston, Christopher. 1584 (1584) STC 2962; ESTC S102561 1,583,711 1,539

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what those thinges be which the Apostles could not beare Hee shall declare vnto you those thinges which shall come saieth he Some doe restraine this vnto the spirite of prophecie but in my iudgment he meaneth rather the estate of his spirituall kingdome whiche shoulde come suche as the Apostles saw shortely after his resurrection but they could in no case comprehend it then Therfore he doth not promise thē prophecies concerning things which shuld happen after their death but he only giueth thē to vnderstand that the nature of his kingdome shal be of an other sorte and the glory farre greater then they can nowe conceiue in their mindes The treasures of which hidden wisdome which the heauenly Aungels doe learne by the Church with admiration Paule expoundeth and vnfoldeth in the Epistle to the Ephesians from the first chapter vntil the ende of the fourth VVherefore there is no cause why we shuld fette it out of the Popes tresurie or chest For he shal not speake of himselfe This is a confirmation of that clause hee shal leade you into all trueth VVe know that God is the fountaine of truth and that there is no certeine or sound thing without him VVherefore to the end the Apostles may safely or assuredly beleeue the oracles of the spirite Christ affirmeth that they are diuine as if hee should say that all that floweth from God which the spirit shal bring And yet the maiestie of the spirit is no whitte diminished by these woordes as if hee were not God or were inferiour to the father but they are referred vnto the capacitie of our minde For because we doe not sufficiently comprehende by reason of the vale put betweene with how great reuerence we ought to receiue those thinges which the spirite reuealeth vnto vs therefore there is expresse mention made of his diuinitie like as hee is called els where the earnest wherby God doth confirme vnto vs our saluatiō and the seale wherby he sealeth vnto vs the certeintie thereof In sum Christ meant to teach that the doctrine of the spirit is not of this worlde as if it were bred in the ayre but that it shal come out of the secrete places of the heauenly sanctuary Ephe. 1. 3. 14. Hee shall glorifie me Now Christ telleth them that the spirite shall not come that he may erect some new kingdome but rather that he may establish the glory giuen him of the father For many men dreame that Christ taught onely that he might deliuer the first rudimentes and that he might send the disciples afterwarde into an higher schoole By this meanes they make no more account of the gospel then of the law which is said Galath 3. 24. to haue beene a schoole maister to the olde people There is an other errour which is no more to be borne with then this which followeth is that Christ hauing taken his leaue as if he had made an end of ruling were nothing now They thrust the spirit into his place From this fountaine did flow the sacrileges of the Pope and Mahomet For although these Antichristes doe much differ one from another yet they haue both one principle to witte that we are entred into the right faith by the gospel but yet we must fette the perfection of doctrine somwhere else which may throughly pullish vs. If the scripture be obiected to the Pope he saith that we ought not to stay there because the spirite which came vpon afterward hath lifted vs vppe aboue it by many additions Mahomet saith that without his Alcharan men do alwayes continue children therefore the world was falsly bewitched vnder colour of the spirit to depart from the plaine trueth of Christ. For so soone as the spirite is pluckte away from the word of Christ the gate is set open vnto all manner of dotinges and seducinges The like way of deceiuing hath beene assayed in our time by many frantik fellowes The doctrine which is written seemed to them to be litterall therefore it pleased thē to coine a new kinde of diuinitie which should consist vpon reuelations Now we see how litle superfluitie there was in Christ his admonition that he shuld be glorified by the spirit which he would send to the end we might know that this is the office of the spirit to establish Christe his kingdom and to defend and confirme for euer whatsoeuer the Father hath giuen him Then to what end serueth the doctrine of the spirit not that it may lead vs away from the schoole of Christ but rather that tha● voice may be established whereby we are commanded to heare him Otherwise he should take somewhat from Christ his glory The reason is added He shall take of mine saith Christ in which woordes he giueth vs to vnderstand that we receiue the spirit to this end that we may enioy his benefites For what dooth he giue vs That wee may be washed by the bloud of Christe that sinne may be abolished in vs through his death that our old man may be crucified that his resurrection may be able to reforme vs vnto newnes of life finally that we may be partakers of his good thinges Therfore the spirit giueth vs nothing aparte from Christ but taketh that from Christ which he powreth ouer into vs. The same must we thinke of doctrine For he doth not illuminate vs that he may lead vs away euen a litle from Christ but that he may fulfil that which Paul saith 1. Cor. That Christ is made vnto vs wisdom and againe he openeth those treasures which are hidden in Christ. In sum he enricheth vs with no other but with the riches of Christe that he may shew forth his glory in al things 15. VVhat things soeuer the father hath they are mine Because Christ might seeme to take from his father that which he chalengeth to himself he cōfesseth that he hath that from the father which he imparteth vnto vs by the spirit And when as he saith that al things which the father hath are his he speaketh in the person of a mediatour because we must draw out of his fulnes He hath alwaies respect vnto vs as hath bin said but we see how the more part of men deceiue thēselues which passing ouer Christ seeke God here and there Other some expound it that that is common to the sonne whatsoeuer the father hath inasmuch as the same is God But hee intreateth not so much in this place of the hidden inward that I may so call it power as of his office which was enioyned him towarde vs. Finally he commendeth his riches that he may inuite vs to enioy thē and he reckoneth the spirit amongst the gifts which we receiue of the father by his hand 16. A litle while and you see me not and againe a litle while and yee see me because I goe to my father 17. Therfore certeine of his disciples said amongst themselues what is this that hee saith vnto vs A litle while and ye see me not and againe a
kisse of Iudas Although they call him king an 100. times yet doe they spoile him of his kingdom al power whilest that they do not beleeue his gospel He doth also set foorth the fruit of obedience when he saith Hee hath eternall life to the ende we may be more willing to performe the same For who ought to be so hard hearted but he will submit himselfe willingly vnto Christ hauing the reward of eternall life set before him and yet we see how few he winneth vnto himself with this so great boūtifulnes Such is our frowardnes that we had rather willingly perish then submit our selues vnto the son of God y t we may be saued through his goodnesse Therefore Christ comprehendeth both these thinges in these wordes both the rule of the godly and sincere worship which he requireth at our handes and the way whereby he hath restored vs vnto life For it were not sufficient for vs to vnderstand that which he taught before namely that he came to rayse the dead vnlesse we did also know how he doth deliuer vs from death He affirmeth that wee doe obtaine life by hearing his doctrine vnderstanding by the woorde heareth faith as it doth immediately shew it selfe And faith hath not his place in the eares but in the heart Furthermore we haue els where declared whence so great force of faith commeth VVe must alwayes consider what the gospel offereth vs. Neither is it any maruell that he that receiueth Christe with all his merites is reconciled vnto God and is absolued from the giltinesse of death that he that is indued with the holy spirite is cloathed with the heauenly righteousnesse that he may walke in newnesse of life Rom. 6. 4. The clause which is added Beleeueth in him that sent mee serueth to establish the authoritie of the Gospell whylest that Christ doth testifie that it came from God and was not forged by man Like as in another place he denieth that that is of himselfe which he speaketh but that it is commanded him of his father afterward in the xiiii chapter and x. verse Hee commeth not into iudgement Heerein is contained a secrete opposition betweene guiltinesse whereunto we are all naturally subiect and the free acquitting which we haue through Christ. For vnlesse all were in danger of damnation to what end should it serue to exempt those that beleeue in Christ Let this therefore be the meaning of these words that we are out of danger of death because we are absolued through the benefite of Christe Therefore howsoeuer Christ doth sanctifie vs and regenerate vs by his spirite into newnesse of life yet the free remission of sinnes is here specially touched wherein alone consisteth the happinesse of men For he beginneth to liue indeed who hath god to be merciful vnto him and howe should God loue vs vnlesse he did pardon our sinnes He hath passed VVhereas certaine latine copies haue it in the future tence Hee shall passe it proceedeth from the ignorance and rashnesse of some man who not vnderstanding the Euangelist his meaning did graunt himself greater libertie thē was meet For there is no doubtfulnes at all in the Greeke worde And he saith not vnfitly that there is a passage made from death alreadie because both the vncorruptible seede of life is in the children of God after that they are called and they doe alreadie sitte downe with Christe through hope in the heauenly glorye and haue the kyngdome of GOD certainely appoynted within them selues For although theyr life be hidden yet do they not therefore cease of to possesse it through faith although they are beset rounde about with death yet they doe not therefore cease to bee quiet because they know that they are safe enough through the ayde of Christe In the meane while let vs remember that the faithfull are now in such sort in life that they doe alwayes beare about them the matter of death but the spirit which dwelleth in them is y ● life which shall at length abolish the relikes of death For that saying of Paule is true that death is the last enemye that shal be destroyed Neither doth he here intreate either of the perfect abolishing of death or the full exhibiting of life But although life bee onely begunne in vs yet Christe doeth affirme that the faithfull are so sure thereof that they ought not to bee afraide of death neyther is it any maruell seeing they are ingrafted into him who is the fountaine and VVell of lyfe that can neuer be drawen drie 25 Verilie verily I say vnto you that the houre shall come and nowe is when the dead shall heare the voyce of the sonne of GOD and they that shall heare shall liue 26 For as the father hath life in himselfe so he hath also giuen vnto the sonne to haue life in himselfe 27 And hee hath gyuen him power to doe iudgement because hee is the sonne of man 28 Maruell not at this because the houre shall come wherein all they which are in the graues shall heare his voyce 29 And shall come foorth they that haue done good vnto the resurrection of life and they that haue done euill vnto the resurrection of iudgement 25 Verily verily I say vnto you Seeing that the Euangelist bringeth in the sonne of God so oftentimes swearing in the matter of our saluation we doe first of all hereby perceiue how carefull hee was for vs and secondly how greatly it skilleth that the credite of the gospel be well and throughly established and grounded Truly hee seemeth to tell in this place a certaine vncredible thing when as this effect of faith is declared whereof Christ intreateth therefore he confirmeth with an oathe that the voyce of the Gospel is so liuely that it is able to rayse vp the dead It is euident enough that he speaketh of the spirituall death For they that referre it vnto Lazarus and the sonne of the widdow of Na●m and such like they are refuted by the text it selfe Christe telleth vs first that wee are all dead before he doth quicken vs. And hereby it appeareth of what force the whole nature of man is vnto the obtaining of saluation VVhen as the Papistes will set vp their free will they compare it to the Samaritane whom the robbers left halfe dead in the way As thogh it were lawful with the smoak of an Allegorie to darken a cleare sentence whereby Christ doth flatly adiudge vs to death And truly seeing that we are estraunged from God through sinne after the falling away of the first man whosoeuer doe not acknowledge themselues to be oppressed with eternall destruction they doe nothing els but deceiue themselues with vaine flatterings I graunt truly that there remaineth some life in the soule of man for both the vnderstanding and will all the senses are so many partes of life but because there is no part of life which doth aspire vnto the heauenly life it is no maruell if the whole man
they despise the heauenlye illumination Although this pride dooth reigne euery where which extinguisheth the light of the holy spirite asmuch as is possible yet let vs who acknowledge our owne pouertie knowe that what sound vnderstanding soeuer wee haue it proceedeth from no other fountaine Neuerthelesse the woordes of Christe doe declare that nothing canne be perceiued concerninge the holye spirite by humane sense but that hee is knowne by the experience of fayth alone The worlde saieth hee cannot receiue the spirit beecause it knoweth him not but yee knowe him beecause hee abydeth with you Therefore it is the spirite aloane whiche reuealeth himselfe vnto vs by dwellinge in vs beeing otherwise vnknowne and vncomprehensible 18. I will not leaue you as Orphanes This place teacheth what menne are and what they are able to do when they are depriued of the ayde of the spirit to witte they are fatherlesse children layd open to all manner deceites and iniuries vnfitte to gouerne themselues finally vnfitte of them selues to doe any thing The onely remedy of so great want is if Christe doe gouerne vs by his spirit which thing he promiseth he wil do Therefore the Disciples are firste admonished of their owne weakenes to the ende they may distrust themselues and depende vppon Christe his ayde alone Secondly he putteth them in good hope by promising a remedie because he saith that he wil not faile them VVhen as he saith I wil come vnto you he declareth how he dwelleth in his and fulfilleth all thinges to witte by the power of his spirit VVhereby it appeareth also that the grace of the spirite is an excellent and euident testimonie of hys diuinitie 19. Yet a litle and the world shal see me no more but you see me because I liue and you shal liue 20. In that day yee shall knowe that I am in the Father and you in mee and I in you 19. Yet a litle He proceedeth in the commendation of the peculiar grace which ought to haue sufficed the disciples to lighten yea quite to remoue their sorrowe VVhen as saieth hee I shall be remoued out of the sight of the world I will neuerthelesse be present with you And to the ende we may enioy this secrete beholding of Christe wee must not esteeme his presence or absence by the sense of the flesh but we must endeuour to behold his power with the eyes of faith VVhereby it cōmeth to passe that the faithful haue Christe alwayes present with them by his spirite and doe also beholde him how farre soeuer they be distant from him in body because I liue There may be a double sense and meaning of these words eyther that this sentence may be a confirmation of the next member or that it may be read by it selfe that the faithfull shall liue for this cause because Christ liueth I do willingly embrace the former sense out of which notwithstāding this other doctrine is gathered that the life of Christ is the cause of our life He dooth first of al note the cause of the difference why he shal be seene of his not of the world because Christ cānot be seene saue only according to the spiritual life wherof y e world is depriued The world seeth not christ it is no merueil for death is y e cause blindnesse But so soone as a man beginneth to liue by the spirit he is also endowed with eyes to see Christ. And this falleth out therefore beecause our life is also ioyned with Christe his life and floweth thence as from a fountaine For we are dead in our selues and the life wherein we flatter our selues is most wicked death Therefore when wee are occupied about obtaining life we must turne our eies toward Christ must translate his life vnto our selues by faith that our consciences may be fully assured that we are free from al daunger of death so long as Christe liueth for that is sure and certeine that his life is no life when his members are dead 20. In that day Many referre it vnto the daye of Pentecost but the continuall tenor as it were of one day is noted rather from the time that Christ shewed forth the power of his spirit vntill the laste resurrection They beganne to know already but it was a certeine slender rudimente or first instruction because the spirit had not wrought so effectuallye in them as yet For the wordes tende to this end that it cannot bee knowne by an idle spectulation what maner spiritual and mistical vnion that is which is betweene him and vs and againe betweene him and the father but that this is the onely way and meanes to know the same when as he powreth out his life into vs by the hidden woorking of the spirite and that is the experiment of faith whereof I spake a litle before And wheras the Arrians abused this testimony in times past that they might proue that Christ was God onely by participation and grace their cauill is easily aunswered For doubtlesse Christ entreateth not simply of his eternall essence but he commendeth that diuine power which was reuealed in himselfe For as the father hath giuen vnto the sonne the fulnesse of all manner of good thinges so againe the sonne hath powred out himselfe into vs. VVee are saide to bee in him beecause when as wee are engrafted into his body we are made partakers of righteousnesse and of all his good things hee is said to be in vs because hee dooth plainely declare by the efficacie of his spirit that he is vnto vs the authour and cause of life 21. He that hath my preceptes and keepeth them it is he that loueth me and hee that loueth me shal be loued of my father and I wil loue him and will reueale my self vnto him 22. Iudas saith vnto him not Iudas Iscariotes Lord what is done that thou wilt shew thy self vnto vs and not vnto the world 23. Iesus aunswared and saide vnto him if anye manne loue mee hee will keepe my woorde and my father will loue him and wee will come vnto him and wil abide with him 24. He that loueth not me keepeth not my sayings and the word which you haue heard is not mine but his that sent me 2● Hee that hath my preceptes Hee repeateth the former sentence agayne because the true tryall of our loue toward him consisteth therin if we keepe his commaundementes VVhereof he putteth the disciples so often in minde least they misse the marke because we are most bent to fall awaye vnto carnall affection so that wee loue something else then Christ vnder the name of Christ. VVherunto appertaineth that of Paul likewise 2. Corin. 5. 16. Although we haue knowne Christe according to the flesh yet doe we know him so no more Therfore let vs be a new creature To haue the preceptes of Christ signifieth to be well instructed in them and to keepe them is to frame a mans selfe and his life according to their rule He that loueth me Christe speaketh
horrible 664. 48. 687. 24. whye the punishment of the VVicked is deferd 377. 6. whye the punishments of the wicked are foretolde 633. 2. the destruction of the wicked 116. 9. and 121. 12. 343. 41. 389. 7. 400. 26. and 439. 13. and 441. 14. The tormentes of the wicked perpetuall 400. 26. the causes whye a wi●e is to be put away 516. 9. VVil looke frewill VVhat it is to doe the wil of the father 223. 21. and 340. 48. wise menne for Astrologers and Philosophers 79. 1. how the wise men were directed to come vnto Christ 80. 1. what the wise mennes giftes doe signifie 84. 11. the papistes haue imagined that three wise men came vnto Christ. 80. 1. what true wisdome is 466. 22. how wisdome is iustified of her children 300. 35. the fountaine of wisdome from the spirite of God 102. 40. the wisdom of the righteous is their faith 14. 17. Howe farre wisdome is condemned of Christ 275. 16. from whence the faith of the woman of Chanaan was conceiued 443. 22. women bent to superstition 612. 14. The thankefulnesse of the women that followed Christ 345. word takē for a thing or substance 29. 37 the worde taken for the will and decree of God 129. 4. the worlde is giuen to the deceits of Sathan 329. 29. the worlde subiecte to the will of God 283. 29. the worlde alwayes ready to stirre vp hys owne faultes 253. 52. the world frameth to it selfe offences that it may not follow Christ 293. 6. the world takē for the vnbeleuers 487. 7 the world somtimes taken for the church 341. the prince of the world is sathan 329. 29. the corrupt wisdome of the world ibid. the wisdome of the worlde is accursed before God 14. 17. the peruerse iudgement of the VVorlde concerning Gods workes 19. 24. the vnthankefulnesse of the VVorlde is noted 3. 1. and 73. 10. and 159. 7. 210. 1. and 383. 3. 400. 19. the conuersion of the worlde is not to be looked for 652. 30. the contempt of the worlde is necessarye for the godly 201. 21. and 365. and 389. 4. and 468. 26. workes of supererogation of the papists 409. 10. how good woorkes are to be done 187. 2. good woorkes are of God 166. 16. good woorkes are not separated frō faith 390. 11. good woorkes are frutes of repentaunce 116. 8. the defenders of the woorkes of righteousnesse 7. 6. the ende of good woorkes is the glorye of God 165. 16. woorthipping for the bowing of the knee 250. 18. wrath for the iudgement of God 115. 7. Z ZAcharie of the stocke of the priestes 5. 5. Zacharie how iust and vnrepr●ueable 7. 6. VVhy Zacharie was so seuerely reprooued 15. 18. Zacharies punishment of vnbelief 17. 20. Zacharies thankfulnesse 142. 64. Zacheus his repentance 550. 8. Zacheus his faith 548. the Zeale of hypocrites is fained 436. 3. euery kinde of Zeale is not to bee approoued 115. 7. and 227. 4. 255. 30. and 466. 22. and 511. 54. 512. 55. and 565. 12. and 699. 33. 713. 51. Preposterous Zeale 466. 22. 23. Vnder pretence of Zeale charitie is not to be broken 497. 15. the moderation of true Zeale 320. 8. Heere endeth the Table of the Harmonie The argument of the Gospell of Iesus Christ according as it is sette foorth by MATHEVVE MARKE and LVKE THAT we may read this Euangelicall hystorie to our profite a●d commoditie it shall not be litle auaileable to vnderstand the sence of this word EVANGELIVM which we call in English the GOSPEL for thereby we shall easily discerne what mooued these heauenly witnesses to c●mmit these things to wryting and to what ende all things that they haue wrytten are to be referred For these hystories were not so named by other men but that the authours themselues did so intitle them it is manifest by Marke which sayeth in plaine woordes that he declareth the beginning of the Gospel of Iesus Christ. Moreouer the perfecte and plaine definition of the Gospell is gathered specially out of a certaine place in Paule where he sayeth that it was promised of GOD in the scriptures by the Prophets as concerning his sonne which was borne of the seede of Dauid and declared mightely to be the sonne of God through the spirit of sanctification by the rising againe of the deade First he shew●th that it is a testimonie of saluation offered which was promised long agoe to the fathers by continuall successe of ages wherein doeth appeare a plaine difference betweene those promises which did hold in doubt the mindes of the faithfull and those glad tidinges whereby God witnesseth that he hath now throughly perfourmed all things which before he woulde haue them to hope for Like a● a little after the same Paule sayeth that the iustice of God is sette foorth in the same Gospel which before was signified by the lawe and the prophets And therefore in another place the Apostle calleth it an ambassage wherin is daily declared vnto men a reconciliation which is once for all concluded betweene God the world by the death of Christ. He signifieth also that Christ is not only a pledge of all good things that euer were graunted vnto vs by God but also that in him they are fully and wholely offred vnto vs according as he sayeth elsewhere that all the promises of God are fulfilled in Christ euen so and Amen And doubtlesse that free adoption whereby ●e are made the children of God as it proceedeth from the euerlasting good wil of the father so is it opened vnto vs in that that Christe who is the onely natural sonne of God taking our flesh vpon him did chuse vs to be his brethren Neither ought we to seeke any where else but onely in the sacrifice of his death for that exp●ation or blessing wherewith our sinnes are blotted out so that the cursse or sentence of death cannot fall vpon vs. Righteousnesse saluation and perfect felicity haue a sure foundation in his resurrection VVherfore the Gospel may be defined to be a solemne publishinge or proclamation wherein the sonne of God is declared to haue beene offred vppe in the flesh to the intent that be might renew the wicked worlde and restore menne that were dead to life Neither is it without cause called good and glad tidings since in it is comprehended the summe of our felicitye for the ende thereof i● that it hauing beg●●● in vs the kingdome of God and hauing abolished the corruption of our flesh might bring vs being renewed through the spirite vnto the celestial and heauenly glory In which sense it is oft times called the kingdome of heauen and a reparation of a blisseful life atchieued by Christ and sometime it is called the kingdome of God As when Marke sayeth that Ioseph looked for the kingdom of God doubtlesse it is to be vnderstoode of the comminge of Messias whereby it is manifest that the name of the Gospel doeth properly pertaine to the Nowe Testament and that
the contrary reasons enforced her selfe to obedience and this is a right proofe of faith when we restraine our mindes hold them as prisoners that they dare not oppose this or that against God so on the other side libertie to contend is the mother of infidelitie And these words are not of smal waight Behold the seruant of the Lord for shee offereth dedicateth her self wholely vnto God that he may freely vse her according to his owne wil. The vnbeleuers withdrawe themselues from his hand and as much as they canne they hinder his worke But faith dooth present vs before God that we may be ready to obey Then if the holy Virgin was the seruant of the Lord because that she obediently submitted her selfe to his gouernement there is not a worse contempt then by fleeing to denie him that obedience which he deserueth doth require To be short as faith only maketh obedient seruants to God and deliuereth vs into his power so infidelitie maketh vs rebels and runnagates Be it done vnto me This clause may be expounded two waies either that the holy Virgin passeth into a prayer and request or els continuing in the same matter shee proceedeth in resigning and deliuering her selfe vnto God I simply interprete it that shee being perswaded of the power of God and willingly following whether he calleth she doth also subscribe vnto his promisse and so doeth not onely wait for the effecte but also doeth earnestly desire the same And it is to be noted that shee rested vppon the woorde of the Angell because shee knewe that it came from God weighing the dignitie of the same not of the minister but of the authour     Luke 1. Matthew Marke 39. And Marie arose in those daies went into the hill countrey with hast to a citie of Iuda 40. And entred into the house of Zacharias and saluted Elizabeth 41. And it came to passe as Elizabeth heard the salutation of Marie the babe sprang in her bellie and Elizabeth was filled with the holy Ghost 42. And shee cried with a loude voice and sayde Blessed art thou among women because the fruite of thy wombe is blessed 43. And whence cōmeth this to me that the mother of my Lord shoulde come to me 44. For loe assoone as the voyce of thy salutation sounded in mine eares the babe sprang in my belly● for ioy 45. And blessed i●●hee that beleeued for those things shall be performed which were tolde her from the Lorde 39. And Marie arose This iourney wherof Luke maketh mention testifieth that Maries faith was not vnfruteful because that gods promisse was not so soone forgottē as the Angel was out of sight but that remained fast in her minde And her haste witnessed her earnest ardent affection Hereof it may be gathered that all other businesse being set aside the Virgin as it was meete did accompt of and preferre this fauour and grace of God Yet it may be demaunded for what purpose she toke this iourny It is certain that she went not thither only to make search enquiry for she nourished the sonne of God as well in her heart by faith as conceiued in her wōbe neither can I subscribe to the iudgement of some which thinke that shee went thether to salute her For it seemeth more probable to me that partly to encrease and to confirme her faith partly that they one with an other might set foorth the glorye of God was the cause that moued her And there is no cause why we shoulde accompt it an absurd thing that she by the sight of a myracle did seke for confirmation of her faith because that it was not in vaine that the Angel did propose the same vnto her For although that the faithful are cōtent with the bare only word of the lord yet in the meane time they despise not any of his works which they think may any whit preuail for the supporting of their faith And especially it behoued Mary to accept this aid profered her vnles she wold haue forsaken that which the Lord had willingly geuen her Furthermore the seeing one another might stir vp as wel her as Elizabeth to a greater thankefulnesse as by the text it appeareth For the power of God was more euident and notable in that at once they see his grace powred vpon them both because that comparison did adde no small light But Luke doeth not declare which was that Citie wherein Zacharie dwelt but onely maketh mention that it pertained to the tribe of Iuda and also that it was placed in a hill country whereof is gathered that it was further from the towne of Nazareth then was Hierusalem 41. At shee heard the salutation It is a naturall thing that the childe in the wombe of a woman great with child should moue at a sodaine ioy But Luke would note vnto vs some extraordinary thing It appertaineth nothing to the matter to entangle our selues in subtile questions whether the infante knewe that Christe was presente or whether this was a sense or feeling of godlinesse Let this one thing rather suffice vs that the infant leapt by the secrete motion of the spirite Neither doth Luke attribute any proper sense to the infant but doeth rather signifie that thys was a portion of the worke of God in the mother that the infant sprang in her wombe That he sayeth that she was filled with the holy Ghoste the meaning is that shee besides the accustomed maner was sodenly endued with a spirite of prophesie For shee was not without the giftes of the spirite before but then the power appeared farre more plentifull and wonderfull 42. Blessed art thou Shee seemeth to place Marie and Christ in like degree which were nothing meere nor conuenient but I willingly admit their iudgement which thinke that the cause of her blessednesse is rendered in the second parte of the sentence For it is oft vsed to put a copulatiue in steade of a woorde causall therefore Elizabeth affirmeth that her Cousen is blessed because of the blessednesse of the Sonne And although this was not the chiefe felicitie that Marie had to beare Christe in her wombe naye this dignitie in order came behinde that that shee was by the spirite of Christe borne againe into a newe life yet was shee woorthely called blessed whome God made woorthy this singuler honour that she should beare vnto the world his sonne in whom shee was spiritually regenerate And to this day we cannot make mention of the blessing brought vnto vs through Christe but also that we must remember how honourably the Lord aduaunced Marie in that he would that she should be the mother of his only begotten Sonne 43. VVhence commeth this to me This modestie is to be noted that Elizabeth considering the great graces of God in Marie doeth geue vnto her that honor that is due and yet lifteth her no higher wherby God might be offended then was conuenient For there is such wickednesse planted in the world
that Mary is of the stocke of Dauid I graunt that it cannot certeinely be gathered by it But seeing that the kindred of Mary and Ioseph was not then vnknowne the Euangelistes were the lesse carefull in this matter but yet the purpose of them both was to take away the offence which the basenes and the contempt and the pouertie aswel of Ioseph as of Mary might breed least that there might not be knowne in them any thing apportaining to the kingly race Furthermore that they imagine or faine that Luke setreth downe the genealogie of Mary and letteth passe that of Ioseph is easily confuted For thus word for word he writeth Iesus was supposed to bee the sonne of Ioseph which was the sonne of Eli the sonne of Matthat Truely hee maketh mention neither of the father nor of the grandfather of Christ but expresly declareth the progenie of Ioseph him selfe But I am not ignoraunt what aunswere they vse to knitte vppe this knotte withall For they saye that Sonne in that place is vsed for a Sonne in lawe And so that Ioseph was the sonne of Hely they interprete thus because hee had his daughter to wife But this is not agreeable with the order of nature neither is there in any place of the scripture any such example read Nowe if Solomon bee excluded out of the genealogie of Mary then shall Christ cease to be Christ for whatsoeuer is sayde of that stocke it is grounded vppon that solemne promise Thy successour which shall sitte vppon thy throane shall reigne for euer 2. Samuel 7. 12. and Psal. 132. 11. I will be his father and hee shall be my sonne And it is without question that Solomon was the figure of this euerlasting king which was promised to Dauid And the promise cannot otherwise be applyed to Christe but as the trueth of it was shadowed in Solomon 1. Chron. 28. 5. Now if the stocke of Christ be not referred to him how or by what meanes shall hee be accompted the sonne of Dauid Therefore whosoeuer putteth Solomon out of the genealogie of Christe hee doth withall blotte and wipe away the promises by which he is knowne to be the sonne of Dauid And how Luke fetcheth the petegree from Nathan and yet reiecteth not Solomon it shall be seene hereafter in his place And least I seeme too tedious for that which is the summe of the matter I say that these two genealogies doe agree together yet there are to be noted foure differences in them The firste is that Luke with a backewarde order as they say ascendeth from the last to the first when that Matthew beginneth at the very originall The seconde is that Matthew stretcheth not his historie beyonde the holy and electe stocke of Abraham But Luke goeth on euen vnto Adam The third that Mattew entreateth of the genealogie according to the lawe and also permitteth himselfe to leaue some out of the course of his accompt in that he prouiding for the memorie of the readers dooth onelye recite the numbers of three fourteenes but Luke doth more exactlye followe the naturall stocke The fourth and laste is that they both speaking sometimes of the same men doe yet varie in their names Of the first difference seeing there is no great difficultie in it it is but in vaine to make may woordes about it The seconde wanteth not verie good reason for because that God had chosen the stocke of Abraham to him selfe whence the redeemer of the worlde should be borne and the promise of saluation was after a sorte therein included vnto the comming of Christe therefore Mattwew dooth not passe beyonde those boundes appoynted of GOD. VVee must remember that Paule saieth that Christe was a minister of circumcision for the trueth of GOD to confirme the promised saluation made vnto the holy fathers Rom. 15. 8. To the which that saying of Christ doth very well agree that saluation is of the Iewes Iohn 4. 22 Therefore Matthew proposeth him to be seene in that holy stocke to the which he was properlye appoynted And also in the catologue of Matthew the couenaunt of GOD is to be considered whereby he chose the seede of Abraham for a people vnto him selfe that it might be separate from all other nations as with a wall made vppe betweene them But Luke looketh higher for although the redeemer was peculierly promised to the seede of Abraham after that GOD had made his couenaunt with him yet wee knowe that all had neede of him presently after the fall of the first man as hee was then also promised to the whole world But it was done by the wonderfull counsell of God that Luke should propose Christ vnto vs as the sonne of Adam and that Matthew should include him in one stocke of Abraham for it shoulde haue profited vs nothing that Christ was giuen of his father the aucthour of saluation except hee had beene generally common for vs all And also that had not beene true which the Apostle saieth Hebrewes 13. 8. that hee was yesterday and to day and is the same also for euer if that his power and grace had not beene powred out vnto al ages from the creation of the worde Therefore let vs know that saluation in Christ is reuealed and giuen to all mankinde because that hee was not without cause called the sonne of Noah and the sonne of Adam yet because that hee is to be sought in the worde of GOD the spirite dooth not without aduise call vs by an other Euangeliste to the holye stocke of Abraham where the treasure of eternall life together with Christ was layd vp for a time Let vs come to the thirde difference It is not to be doubted but that Matthewe obserueth an other order then Luke dooth for the one placeth Solomon next after Dauid and the other placeth Nathan whereby it euidently appeareth that they sette downe diuerse lines Good and learned interpreters doe thus reconcile this shewe of discorde that Matthew leauing the naturall genealogie which Luke followeth doth rehearse the legall genealogie and I call that the legall genealogie wherby it came to passe that the right of the kingdome was translated to Salathiell And in that Eusebius in the firste booke of his Ecclesiasticall historie following the iudgemente of Aphricanus dooth rather call that the legall genealogie which Luke setteth downe hee speaketh it in the same sense for hee meaneth not any thing else but that the kingdome which was establyshed in the person of Solomon by lawefull meanes did fall at length vnto Salathiell But they saye better and more aptly which saye that the legall order was set downe by Matthew For he naming Solomon presentlye after Dauid doth not obserue from whome Christe came by continual course after the fleshe But how he descended from Solomen and other kinges that hee might bee theyr laweful successour in whose hand the perpetuitie of the kingdom should be established according to the couenaunt of God Their iudgement is probable which think that
Mary perfourmed The Lord commaunded Num. 3 13. that all the males shoulde bee offered to him in remembraunce of their deliueraunce because when the Angell slewe all the first borne of Aegypt hee had spared the first borne of Israell after it was lawfull for euery man to redeeme his first borne for a certaine price That was an old ceremonie Now sith the lord is a cōmon redeemer of al by right he challengeth vs to him from the least to the greatest Surely it is not in vaine that Luke doth oft repeat that Ioseph Mary did that which was prescribed in the law of the Lord. For by these words we are taught that nothing is to be attempted after our own witte in the worship of God but that must be obediently followed which he hath by his word commaunded 24. And to giue an oblation This sacrifice belonged to the rite of purifying least any shoulde thinke that it was offered for the redeeming of the first born VVhen the Euanglist nameth a paire of turtle doues or two pigeons he taketh it for graūted that the pouertie of Ioseph Mary was such that their abilitie reached not to the offering of a lambe For this exception is plainely set down Leuit. 12. 6. If any obiects that there was gold offered a litle before by the wisemen wherewith they might haue bought it I answere we cannot imagine that there was such plentie of gold as could sodenly make a poore man rich For we read not that they had camels laden with gold but it is more credible that it was some small portion which they brought only for honours sake Neither did the law precisely commaund that the poore shoulde consume theyr substaunce vpon a sacrifice but making a difference betweene them and the rich it eased them of charge VVherefore it shall be nothing hurtful if we say that Ioseph and Mary gaue as much as their abilitie did beare although that they had laid vp some money to beare the charges of the iourney and of their life 25. Behold there was a man in Ierusalem This history is set down that we might know that when almost al the people had prophaned themselues with a wicked contempt of God yet there remained a few worshippers of God Christ was known of thē from his first infancy These were those remnants which as Paul to the Ro. 11. 5. teacheth were reserued according to the free election of God And in this smal handful was the Church of God included although the priestes and scribes did no lesse proudly then falsly boast of the title of the church The Euangelist only maketh mention of two which knew Christ as Ierusalem when he was brought into the temple Simeon and Anna. And first I must speake of Simeon VVe read not of what estate he was and it may be that he was some meane man and vnknowne but Luke commendeth him for godlynesse and righteousnesse to the which he addeth the gift of prophesie Godlynesse and righteousnesse are referred to the two Tables of the law and so in these two poyntes consisteth the integritie of life It was a testimonie of godlynesse that hee looked for the comfort of Israell for without the hope of saluation GOD is not rightlye worshipped which dependeth partly in beleeuing his promises then especially by the restauration promised by christ But now seeing this waiting or looking for is praised in Simeon as a rare vertue heereof gather that there were then but few which truly nourished the hope of redēption in their harts Al men had in their mouthes the Messias the blessed state vnder the kingdom of Dauid but in the meane while almost no man did patiētly beare the present miseries staying vpon this cōfort that the redemptiō of the church was at hand And as the godlines of Simeon in this did shew it self that he lift vp his mind in waiting for the promised saluation so at this day as many as wil proue thēselues the sons of god wil sigh with cōtinuall desires for the promised redēption For sufferance is very needful euen to the last cōming of Christ. The holy ghost was vpon him He speaketh not of the spirit of adoption which is cōmon to al the children of God though not in equal manner but he speaketh of a more peculiar gifte of prophesie which doth more plainly appeare in the next verse by that which foloweth where it is sayd that he receiued answere by the holye Ghost and that the same spirit guiding him hee came into the temple Therefore although that Simeon exceeded not in any publik honor yet he was adorned with many notable gifts as godlynes innocency of life faith prophesie And it is not to be doubted but that he alone did priuatly receiue this oracle that it might passe from him as a common confirmation to all the godly Iesus is called the Christe of God because that hee was annoynted of the Father and together with the holy ghost hee tooke the honour of the kingdome and of the priesthood Simeon is said to haue come into the temple by the spirit that is by secret instinct and certaine reuelation that he should meete Christ. 29. Now lettest thou thy seruaunt departe By this songe it appeareth that Simeon beheld the sonne of God with other eies then with the eies of the flesh for the outward beholding of Christ could bring nothing but a contempt at the least it could not so haue satisfied the minde of the holy man that so glad as enioying the summe of all his desires hee shoulde make haste to die Therefore the spirit of God lightened his eies with faith that he might discern the glory of the sonne of God in that vile contēned habite When he saith that he would depart in peace he vnderstandeth that hee woulde die with a quiet mind as hee that was filled and had obtained his desires But it is demaunded if he should haue died before should Simeon haue bene drawen to it with trouble and tumult as they vse that are vnwilling I aunswere the circumstance which is added is to be noted according to thy woorde For seeing God hath promised him the sight of his Sonne it was sitte he shoulde stay in suspence nay it behooued him to liue carefully vntill that hee was made partaker of his hope This is therefore to be obserued because that many falsly and naughtely doe pretend the example of Simeon boasting that they would willingly die if it were graunted them to enioy this or that matter when as yet they take libertie to thēselues to conceaue vowes according to their owne lustes or to forge vaine hopes without the word of God If Simeon had said precisely now with a staied a quiet mind I will die because I haue seene the sonne of God in this speach he had bewrayed the weakenes of his faith but because he had the word for it it was lawfull for him according to the rule of faith to flee death vntil
the comming of Christ. 30. Because mine eies haue seene Although this maner of speaking is oftē seene in the scriptures yet the corporal beholding of Christ seemeth expressly to be noted in these words as if Simeō shuld say that he now had the sonne of god present in the flesh vpon whom he had bent the eies of his mind before I take saluation for the matter of saluation because that al the partes of saluation and of a blessed life are laid vp in Christ. Now if the only sight of Christ being as yet but an infant did so much preuail with Simeon that ioyfully quietly he would go to death how much more aboundāt matter of saluation is there giuē to vs this day who may see al the points of our saluation fulfilled in Christ. Christ is not conuersant vpon the earth neither do we beare him in our armes but his diuine maiestie doth clearly openly shine in the Gospel therin he sheweth himself to be seene of vs as it were face to face as Paule saieth 2. Cor. 3. 18. neither sheweth he himself any more in weaknes of flesh but in the wonderful power of the spirit the which he declareth in miracles in the sacrifice of his death and in the resurrection In summe he is so absent from vs in body that yet wee may beeholde him sitting at the right hand of his father If such a beholding of him bring vs not peace that we may goe ioyfully to death we are more then vnthankfull to God and we carelesly account of the glory which he hath bestowed on vs. 31. VVhich thou hast prepared By these wordes Simeon signifieth that Christ was ordained of god that al people might enioy his grace that shortly after he shoulde be placed vp on high that he might tourne the eyes of all men vnto him And in this worde he comprehendeth what prophesies so euer there be of the encrease of the kingdome of Christe But if Simeon embracing the tender infant in his armes coulde yet extend his minde to the vtter borders of the world that he acknowledged his present power euery where howe much more doeth it become vs at this day to thinke more royally of him sith that he is lift as a banner to the Gentiles and hath made himselfe knowen to the whole worlde 32. A light to lighten Now Simeon sheweth to what ende Christ was brought foorth from the father before all people that is that hee might lighten the Gentiles which before were in darknesse and that he might be the glory of the people Israel for betwene this and them he maketh a difference and that not without a cause because that the children of Abraham by right of adoption were neare vnto God but the Gentiles with whom God had made no couenant were accompted as strangers from the church By the which reason Israel Ier. 31. 9. is not only called the childe of God but also the first borne and Paul teacheth to the Ro. 15. 8. that Christ came that he mighte be a minister of circumcision according to the promisses geuen vnto the fathers But Israel is so preferred to the Gentiles that al they in common might obtaine saluation in Christe A light to lighten signifieth as much as if it had bene sayde to geue light to the Gentiles whereby we gather that menne are naturally without light vntill that Christ the Sonne of righteousnesse shine vnto them As concerning Israel although they were endewed with greate honour from God yet Simeon sheweth that all this glory dependeth of this one head that the redeemer was promised them Matthew Marke Luke 2.     33. And Ioseph and his mother maruailed at those things which were spoken touching him 34. And Simeon blessed them and sayde vnto Mary his mother Beholde this childe is appoynted for the fall and rising againe of many in Israel and for a signe which shal be spoken against 35. Yea and a sword shal● pearce through thy s●ule that the thoughtes of many hearts may be opened 36. And there was a Prophetesse one Anna the daughter of Phan●el of the tribe of Aser which was of a great age and had liued with an husband● 7● yeares from her virginitie 37. And she was widowe foure score foure yeares and w●nt not oute of the temple but serued God with fastings and pra●ers night and day 38. Shee then comminge at the same instante vppon them confessed likewise the Lorde and spake of him to al that l●ked for redēption in Ierusalem 39. And when they had performed al things according to the law of the Lorde they ret●●ned into Galile to their owne citie Nazareth 33. And Ioseph and his mother Luke doth not say that they were amased as at a new or a straunge matter but that they reuerently considered with due estimation embraced this prophesie of the holy Ghoste oute of the mouth of Symeon that they mighte more and more profite in the knowledge of Christe And we are taught by this example after we are once enstructed in a right faith to gather what small helpes soeuer may seeme to auaile for the confirmation of the same for he hath then rightly profited in the word of God who ceaseth not to esteme whatsoeuer he daily readeth or heareth for the continuall furtherance of faith 34. And Simeon blessed them If thou referrest this to Ioseph and Mary there is no difficultie in the matter but because Luke semeth to comprehend with them Christe it maye be demaunded by what righte Simeon tooke vpon him this office of blessing for the lesse is blessed of the greater as the Apostle teacheth Heb. 7. 7. Furthermore it seemeth to be absurde that any mortall manne shoulde conceiue praiers for the sonne of God I aunsweare that the Apostle doeth not speake of euery blessinge but of the priestes onely for men otherwise do blesse one an other And it is more probable that Simeon as a priuate manne and as one of the common sorte of the people blessed them rather then as a publike person for as it is sayd before he was neuer called a priest But there is no absurditie if we say that hee prayed for the happie successe of the kingdome of Christe because the spirite in the Psalme commaundeth this maner of blessing to all the godlye Beholde this childe is appoynted Simeon properly directeth this speache to Marye yet it generally belongeth to all the godly The holy Virgine hadde neede of this admonition least that shee triumphing at these pleasant beginnings as it commonly commeth to passe should be the lesse able to beare the sorowes that were to come And also least shee shoulde hope that Christe shoulde be receiued with the generall fauour of all the people but rather that shee might be armed with inulncible strengthe of the minde against all contrary blastes But yet the spirite of God woulde deliuer a generall doctrine to all the godly that they beholdinge the worlde with wicked contuma●● resisting Christe should not
whereby hee reconcileth the vnworthy to himselfe In summe the kingdome of heauen is nothing else then newnesse of lyfe wherein God restoreth vs into the hope of eternall immortalytie For we being taken out of the bondage of sinne and death he chalengeth vs vnto himselfe that wee wandring here vpon earth might now by fayth possesse that heauenly life to the Ephesians 1. 4. For although we be like to dead men yet we know that our lyfe is in safetie while that it is hidde in Christe Colloss 3. Frō hence as out of a fountaine is the exhortation to repentaunce gathered And Iohn saieth not repent and then by this meanes the kingdome of heauen shall appeare but in the first place he proposeth the grace of GOD and then hee exhorteth menne that they shoulde repent VVhereby it is euident that the mercy of God whereby he restoreth those that are lost to be the foundation of repentaunce Neither doe Matthew and Luke in any other sense reporte that he preached repentaunce for the remission of sinnes for repentaunce as some vnwisely imagine is not placed first as if it should be the cause of forgiuenesse of sinnes or that it might preuent God that hee might beginne to be mercifull vnto vs but men are cōmaunded to repent that they might receiue the reconcilyation offered them But as the free loue of GOD whereby hee imbraceth miserable men not imputing their sinnes vnto them orderly goeth before so it is to be noted that we haue forgiuenes of sinnes in Christ not that God would nourish them through his loue but that hee might heale vs from them Neyther can any man taste the grace of GOD except he hate sinne and be displeased with offēces but by the definition of repentaunce and fayth it may be fullyer knowne how vnseperably they are ioyned togeather therefore in entreating of this doctrine I am the sparer But for the better vnderstanding of this present place it is meete to obserue that the whole Gospell consisteth of two partes forgiuenesse of sinnes and repentaunce And in that Matthew noteth the first parte by the kingdome of heauen it may thereby be gathered that there was hostile dissention betweene men and God and that they were wholy banished out of the kingdome of heauen vntill that God shoulde againe receiue them into his fauour And though Iohn proposing the grace of God exhorteth menne to repentaunce yet it is to be noted that this also i● the gift of God aswell as the enheritaunce of the kingdom of heauen For as hee freely forgiueth vs our sinnes and by his mercy delyuereth vs from the guiltinesse of eternall death so also hee repayreth vs after his owne image that we might liue to righteousnesse As he freely adopteth vs to be his sonnes so hee regenerateth vs by his spirite that our life might testifie that we doe not falsly cal him father And Christ doth no lesse quicken vs vnto righteousnesse by crucifying our old man and by extinguishing the faults of our fleshe then he doth wash away our sinnes by his bloud and appease his heauenlye father towardes vs with the sacrifice of his owne death Yet this is the summe of the Gospell that GOD embraceth vs in his Sonne our sinnes being washed awaye that wee denying our selues and our owne nature might liue holylye and godlyly and so shoulde meditate a heauenly lyfe vpon the earth 3. LV. Preaching the baptisme of repentaunce This maner of speaking dooth first generally shewe what is the right vse of the Sacramentes Then for what purpose Baptisme was instituted and what it doth containe A Sacrament therefore is not a dumbe ceremonie which sheweth I wotte not what pompe without doctrine but hath the worde of God annexed to it which giueth lyfe to the outwarde ceremonie I meane not that worde which some Exorcist muttereth with magycall whisperings but that which pronounced with clear open voyce doth auaile to the edifying of fayth For it is not simplye sayde that Iohn baptised to repentaunce as if the grace of GOD hadde beene included in the visible signe but that hee preached what the profit of baptisme was that the signe might be made effectuall by the woorde preached And this is peculyar to baptisme that it is called the seale of repentance for forgiuenesse of sinne Nowe seeing that his Baptispme hadde the same signification power and manner which ours haue If a figure bee esteemed by the trueth thereof it is false that the baptismes of Iohn and Chrste are diuerse MATH 3. The voyce of a cryer in the wildernesse Although that place of Isaias 40. 1. ought not to be restrained onely to Iohn yet hee is one of them of whom that is there spoken for after the Prophet hath spoken of the ouerthrowe of the Citie and the extreame calamitie of the people he promiseth a new restitution of the people The words were the Lord shal say againe comfort ye comfort ye my people For after the temple was ouerthrowne and the Sacrifices abolyshed the people were lead into captiuitie and their estate was almost desperat and because their eares were deaffe at the continuall calling of the Prophets the Lorde did as it were holde his peace for a time Least the godlye mindes shoulde fall downe in that sorrowfull silence the Prophet declareth that there shoulde agayne aryse newe Preachers of grace which shoulde comforte the people in the hope of saluation Suche were Zacharyah Haggai Malachy Esdras and such lyke But beecause that there is promised a restitution which shoulde bee perpetuall and not for a shorte tyme and Isaias especially respecteth the redemption which was hoped for by the comming of Christe Iohn was rightlye accounted the chiefe amongst the ministers of comforte Then it followeth in the texte of the Prophet The voyce of a cryer and that voyce is opposed to the silence for a time whereof I spake euen nowe for the Iewes were for a tyme depriued of that doctrine which they had vngodlyly contemned The name of a deserte is metaphorically put for a desolation or a deformed ruine of the people as was in the time of the banishment For there was so horryble a dissipation that it might bee compared to a deserte so the prophet amplifieth the grace of GOD as if hee shoulde haue sayde although the people was thrown farre from their countrey and was banyshed out of the company of menne yet the voyce of God shall also resounde in the deserte which shall ioyfullye comforte them that are halfe dead In this sense Ierusalem was the deserte when Iohn beganne firste to preach for in euery place all thinges were brought into a waste and horyble confusion But it behooued those grosse and foolishe men the more to be styrred vppe by beeholding this visible deserte that thereby they might the more greedilye haue receiued the promise of saluation offered vnto them in death Now wee see how truely this prophesie agreeth vnto Iohn and how properly it is applyed vnto him Prepare ye the
the seconde cause was that hee might take away the vile reproche whiche the rude and ignoraunt woulde charge him with For it appeareth that the Scribes charged hys doctrine wyth this faulte in so muche as he presently inueigheth against them VVee must consider this purpose of Christe that he so calleth and exhorteth the Iewes to receiue the Gospell that yet hee keepeth them vnder obedience of the lawe then hee mightily refelleth those vnwoorthye reproches and cauilles wherewith the ennemies sought to bringe his preaching into slaunder and suspition For if anye minde to restore thinges confused into a better estate hee muste alwayes vse this wisedome and moderation that the people maye knowe that the eternall woorde of God is touched thereby and that there is no newe thing thrust in whych derogateth any thing from the scripture least any suspition of repugnancie shoulde weaken the faith of the godly and leaste that rashe vnaduised menne shoulde become insolent vnder pretence of holinesse Lastly that the prophane contempte of the woorde of God maye be staied and that religion be not brought into no reputation amongst the vnlearned And this defence of Christe wherewith hee excuseth his doctrine oughte to comforte vs if we at this day suffer the like reproaches The same faulte was also obiected against Paule that hee was an Apostate from the lawe of God wherefore it is no maruell if the Papistes out of the same mould doe coyne the like againste vs. And by the example of Christe it is meete to auoide slaunderous reportes yet so that the truthe may be freely professed though it be subiecte to many vniust reproches I came not to destroy God hadde promised a newe couenaunt at the comming of Christe but hee sheweth also that it shall not be diuers from the firste but that thys rather was the ende that the league whiche he hadde made with his people from the beginning might be sanctified for euer I will wryte sayeth hee my lawes in their heartes and I will forgette their sinnes By these woordes hee is so farre from departing from the former couenaunt that hee rather affirmeth that it shall then be established and confirmed when ●s the newe shall come in place And that was the meaning of the wordes of Christe when hee sayde that he came to fulfill the lawe For hee fulfilled it truelye quickeninge the deade letter with his spirite then hee in deede perfourmed that whyche before was shewed onelye vnder figures So that the cursse beinge abrogate the subiection is taken awaye and a libertye purchased for the faithfull and nothynge is derogated from the doctrine of the lawe but onelye expoundeth the minde of the lawe geuer as appeareth Galathians the thirde and the fourthe Chapiters Therefore as concernynge the doctrine wee maye not imagine anye abrogation of the Lawe by the comminge of Christe For sithe it is an euerlasting rule of a godly and a holy life it must be vnchangeable as the iustice of God is one and the same whiche is therein comprehended As concerning the Ceremonies thoughe they maye be accounted as a certaine addition to the same yet the onely vse of them was abrogate but the signification was the more approoued So that the commyng of Christ did not derogate anye thing from the ceremonies but rather the truth of the shadowes being shewen foorth doeth obtaine the more assured credite vnto them while wee beholding the perfecte effecte doe acknowledge that they are not vaine nor vnprofitable Therefore lette vs learne to keepe this sacred knotte of the lawe and the gospel inuiolable which many do wickedly dissolue And it doeth much auaile to the establishing of the truth of the gospell while wee heare that it is nothing else but the fulfilling of the law so that in a mutuall consent they shewe that God is the authour of them both 18. Till heauen and earth pearish Luke vseth other woordes but the same sense It is more easie for heauen and earth to passe away then that one title of the lawe shoulde fall For it was the will of Christ to teach in both places that there is nothing so sure in the whole frame of the worlde as is the certaine truth of the lawe and that in euery poynte of the same Some doe verye subtillye play with the woorde vntill as if that the passing of heauen and earth which shall be in the last daye of iudgement shoulde putte an ende to the lawe and the Prophets And truely as the tongues shall then cease and prophesies be abolished so I thincke that the wrytten lawe wyth the exposition shall cease But because I thinke that Christe spake more simply I will not feede the readers eares with suche deuices Therefore lette it suffice vs to vnderstande this that heauen shoulde fall and the whole frame of the worlde shoulde come together rather then the certaintie of the lawe shoulde wauer But what is the meaninge of this all thinges of the lawe shall be perfourmed euen to the least title For we see how farre menne are from the perfecte fulfilling of the lawe euen they that are regenerate with Gods spirite I aunsweare this fulfilling is not referred to the life of menne but to the perfecte truthe of the doctrine as if hee shoulde say there is nothing inconstante in the lawe and nothyng putte rashly in the same Therefore it cannot bee that one letter of the same should vanish away 19. VVhosoeuer therefore shall breake Heere Christe speaketh namelye of the preceptes of life or of the ten woordes according to which prescript order it becommeth all the children of God to frame their liues Therefore he pronounceth them to be false and peruerse teachers which keepe not their disciples vnder obedience of the lawe and that they are vnwoorthy to haue a place in the Churche whiche diminish the authoritie of the lawe in the least parte of the same and that they are good and faithfull ministers of God whiche teache the obseruation of the lawe as well in example of life as in woordes Also hee calleth them the leaste commaundements of the lawe according to the sense and iudgement of men for thoughe there is not like waight in all the commaundementes but while they be compared betweene themselues some are lesse then other yet may we nothing soner esteme and account that as little wherof the heauenly lawgeuer hath voutchsaued to geue a commaundemente For what sacriledge were it contemptuously to receiue that which commeth out of his mouth For by this meanes his maiestie shuld haue bene abased wherefore whereas Christ calleth them the least preceptes is a kinde of yeelding to our vnderstanding VVhen hee sayeth he shall be called least is an allusion to that was sayde before of the commaundementes but the meaning is euidente they that bring the doctrine of the law into contēpt yea though it be but in one sillable shal be reiected as the woorst sort of men The kingdome of heauen is taken for the renouation of the
mountaines a great hard of swine feeding 12. And all the deuilles besoughte him saying sende vs into the swine that we enter into them 13. And incontinently Iesus gaue them leaue Then the vncleane spirites went oute and entred into the swine and the heerd ranne headlong from the high bank into the sea and there were about two thousand swine and they were drowned in the sea 14. And the swineheardes fled and tolde it in the citie and in the countrey and they came out to see what it was that was done 15. And they came to Iesus sawe him that had beene possessed with the deuill and had the Legion and in his right minde and they were afraide 16. And they that sawe it tolde them what was done to him that was possessed with the deuill and concerning the swine 17. Then they began to pray him that he woulde depart out of their coastes 18. And when hee was come into the shippe he that had beene possessed with the deuill praied him that hee might be with him 19. How beit Iesus would not suffer him but sayde vnto him Go thy way home to thy friendes and shewe them what greate thinges the Lorde hathe done vnto thee and howe he hath had compassion on thee 20. So he departed and beganne to publishe in Decapolis what greate things Iesus had done vnto him and all men did maruell 26. So they sailed vnto the region of the Gadarens which is ouer against Galile 27. And as hee went out to land there met him a certaine man out of the city which had a deuil long time and he ware no cloathes neither aboade in house but in the graues 28. And when he sawe Iesus he cried out and fel downe before him with a loud voice sayde what haue I to doe wyth thee Iesus the sonne of God the most high I beseeche thee torment me not 29. But hee commaunded the foule spirite to come out of the man for oft times hee hadde caught him therefore hee was bound with chaines and kept in fetters but he brake the bands and was caried of the deuil into wildernesses 30. Then Iesus asked hym saying what is thy name And he saide Legion because many deuils were entred into him 31. And they besought him that he wold not command the● to go out into the deepe 32. And there was thereby an herd of swine feding on an hill the deuils besought him that he wold suffer them to enter into them so he suffered them 33. Then went the deuils out of the manne and entred into the swine and the heerd was caried with violence frō a stepe downe place into the lake and was choked 34. VVhen the herdmen sawe what was done they slodde and when they were departed they tolde it in the citie and in the countrey 35. Then they came out to see what was done and came to Iesus and founde the man out of whom the deuilles were departed sittinge at the feete of Iesus clothed in his right mind they wer afraid 36. They also which saw it told thē by what means he that was possessed with the deuill was healed 37. Then the whole multitude of the country about the Gadarenes besought hym that he wold depart frō them for they were takē with a great feare and he went into the ship and returned 38. Then the man out of whome the deuilles were departed besought him that hee mighte be with him but Iesus sent him away saying 39. Return into thine own house and shewe what greate things God hath don vnto thee So hee went his way and preached throughoute all the Citie what great thinges Iesus hadde done vnto him I haue before confuted their error which thinke that Mark and Luke do report not this but an other myracle For when as the three Euangelists doe note that region which is against Galile as Luke also declareth and all the circumstances doe agree who will beleeue that all these thinges fell out at diuers times 28. There met him two possessed with deuils This difference caused the interpreters to erre and to separate Mathewe from the other two because he nameth two and the other but one But Augustines coniecture is probable who thinketh that ther were two yet they made mētion but of one because he was the more famous and so the myracle should be the more notable in him by reason of the greatnesse of the disease And certainely we see that Marke and Luke do bestowe moe wordes in amplifying the cruelty of the deuil that it might appeare that the miserable man of whō they speake was wonderfully tormented Therefore in that they reporte a notable example of the diuine power of Christ thogh they say nothing of the other man yet they dissent not from the hystorie of Math. which addeth the hystorie of the other who was not so wel known That Luke sayth a certaine man met him out of the citie it is vncertaine whether he meaneth that he was a citizen of Gadara or whether he came out from thence to meete him For when as he was commaunded to go home and to preache the grace of God amongest his owne friendes Marke sayeth that hee did this in Decapolis whiche was a countrey next ouer againste Galile wherby it is to be cōiectured that he was not a Gadaranite borne Further Mathew and Marke do expresly say that he came not out of the Citie but out of the graues And Luke himself in the whole course of the hystorie declareth that he liued in the desart Therefore these wordes A certaine man met him out of the citie I do thus interpreate before Christ came to the Citie a certaine man possessed with a deuil mette him by the way out of that coast But their opinion which thinke that hee dwelte in the graues either because the deuils were delited with the fauour of the dead carcases or that they were pleased with the sighte of the sacrifices or because they woulde catche the soules which desired to be neare vnto their bodies is friuolous and foolish The vncleane spirite did rather holde this man amongst the graues that he might be consumed with continual terrour by the sorowfull beholding of the deade as one banished from the company of menne would dwell amongst the dead Further wee learne hereby that the deuil doth not only vexe men in this present life but persecute them euen vnto death so that his kingdom might flourish euen in death MAR. 3. And no man could binde him no not with chaines He coulde not naturally breake chains wherby we gather that sathan is permitted to haue sometime extraordinarie motions whose force excedeth our vnderstanding and vsual reason And it is often seene that frantike men haue much more strength then if they were in perfect health And it is not to be denied but that the deuil doth there also play his partes so oft as God doeth suffer him but this violent force which the Euangelists do here speake of
that Christ looked vppon them angerly for he mighte well be angry at their wicked obstinacie And that we might know that his anger was iust and holy he layeth that it sprang of this that he mourned for the hardnes of their harts First therefore Christe is sorowfull that menne exercised in the lawe of God should be in suche grosse ignorance But because that malice blinded them he also conceiueth anger with his sorowe This is a right moderation of zeale when we mourne for the destruction of wicked men and are angry at their vngodlinesse And as this place declareth that Christe was not free from humane affections so we doe heereof gather that the passions themselues are not sinfull so that a temperate meane be kepte VVe cannot holde the meane by reason of our corrupt nature we are neuer angry no not for iust causes without sinne these thinges were not to be founde in Christe for not onely integritie of nature did beare rule in him but in him there also shoane a perfecte example of righteousnesse Therefore wee muste pray that the spirite of God may be giuen vs from heauen to correct and bridle our imperfections Math. 1● Marke 3. Luke 6. 14. Then the Pharisies went oute and consulted against him how they might destroy him 15. But when Iesus knew it he departed thence and great multitudes folowed him he healed them al 16. And charged them that they should not make him knowen 17. That it might be fulfilled which was spoken by Esaias the Prophet saying 18. Beholde my seruaunt whome I haue chosen my beloued in whome my soule delighteth I will putte my spirite on him and hee● shall showe iudgement to the Gentiles 19. He shal not striue nor crie neither shall any man heare his voyce in the stretes ●0 A brused reede shall hee not breake and sinckinge flaxe shall hee not quen●he till hee bringe foorthe iudgement into victorie 21. And in his name shal the Gētiles trust 6. And the Pharisies departed straight way gathered acoūcel with the Herodians against him that they might destroy him 7. But Iesus auoided with his disciples to the sea and a great multitude folowed him from Galile and from Iudea 8. And from Ierusalem and from Idumea and beyond Iordan they that dwelt about Tyrus and Sydon when they had hearde what greate thinges hee did came vnto him in great number 9. And he commannded his disciples that a ship shuld wait for him because of the multitude least they should throng him 10. For hee had healed many in so muche that they preased vpon him to touch him as many as had plages 11. And when the vncleane spirits saw him they fel downe before him and cried saying Thou art the sonne of God 12. And he sharply rebuked them to the ende they shoulde not vtter him 11. Then they wer filled full of madnesse and communed one with another what they might doe to Iesus 14. Then the Pharisies See whether obstinate fury carieth the reprobate in resisting and striuing against God for they being vanquished with his answeres do yet powre out their poyson more and more This certainly is a detestable monster that the chiefe doctors of the lawe which had the gouernment of the Church should as theues seeke after murthers But it is necessary it shoulde so come to passe so oft as they desire to haue ouerthrowne what soeuer is against their pleasure though it be from GOD himselfe It is not to be imputed to feare that Christe escapeth away by flight for he was not any thing more couragious after then nowe but he was ledde by the strength of the same spirite when he fledde wherewith he was endued after when hee willingly offered himselfe to death And this was a portion of his humbling which Paule commendeth Phil. 2. 7. that when he could by a myracle haue readily defended his life he hadde rather by flying take vppon him our infirmity Also he did not deferre to die for any other cause then because that a time conuenient appoynted by the father was not yet come Yet it is euident that he was preserued rather by a heauenly power then by flight for it had bene no hard matter for his enemies to haue broken into that place whether he went for he drawing such company after him and making that place famous by his myracles hid not himselfe in the darke but onely he withdrew himselfe out of their sight least he shoulde make them more madde Marke addeth that they tooke counsell with the Herodians whom they yet hated most deadly For when they would seme to be kepers and defenders of the publike liberty it was necessary that they should professe thēselues to haue a deadly hatred against the tyrantes officers yet their madde hatred against Christ so farre preuailed that they not onely conspired with straungers but familiarly they insinuated themselues into their fauour whose company they otherwise abhord For when vngodlinesse by carying men hether and thether driueth them into diuers debates and controuersies yet it knitteth them togither with one consent to striue against the Lord. So no hatreds nor enemities doe let but that the extremest enemies doe ioyne hands togither to ouerthrow the truth of God 16. And he charged them Marke setteth downe an other more speciall matter that he put the vncleane spirites to silence which cried out that he was the sonne of God VVee haue in an other place shewed the cause why he woulde not admitte any suche witnesses Neither is it to be douted but that this confession was wrested out of the deuilles by the power of God but after that Christe had shewed that they were subiecte to his power he also not without cause refused their testimony But that extendeth farther which Mathewe sayeth that is that Christe commaunded that the fame of the myracles which he wrought should not be spred abroade not that he would haue it vtterly suppressed but that the roote being setled it might bring foorth fruite aboundantly in due season For we knowe that Christe plaied not with his myracles but had proposed this ende that he might proue himselfe to be the sonne of God and a Redeemer giuen vnto the world But he shewed himselfe by a litle a litle euen by certaine degrees neither was he otherwaies reuealed what he was then the time ordained by the father allowed Yet it is a matter worthy to be noted while the wicked doe most endeuour to ouerwhelm the glory of God they are so farre from obtaining that which they hope for that God applieth all their wicked endeuours rather to the contrary for though Christe was gone out of that famous place yet his glory ceaseth not to shine euen in secrete corners yea and breaketh out notably into his excellent brightnesse 17. That it might be fulfilled which was spoken Mathew meaneth not that the prophesie was altogither fulfilled in this that christ charged that rumors of his power should not be much vttered but herein
appeare by those thinges which follow It is no meruaile that shee shoulde againe bee absolued by Christes wordes which hadde tasted his grace before and who was perswaded that hee was the onely sanctuary of her saluation So it is necessary that fayth should alwayes goe before when we aske of the Lorde that hee would forgiue our sinnes Neyther do we make this prayer in vaine as a thing needlesse but that the heauenly Iudge would more and more seale his mercy in our hearts and by this meanes quiet our consciences Therefore though this woman had conceaued faith by this faith which she had obtained yet this promise was not superfluous for it much auailed to the confirmation of that faith 49. They which sate at the table with him beganne to say Heere we perceiue againe that menne not knowing the office of Christe doe thereof gather to themselues new offences And this is the roote of euil that no manne searcheth his owne miseries which without doubt would prouoke all menne to seeke remedy But it is no meruaile if the hypocrites which sleepe in their own sinnes should murmur at this as at a straunge and wonderfull matter that Christ should forgiue sinnes 50. Thy fayth hath saued thee Christ to appease the murmurers and withal to comfort the womanne prayseth her fayth as if he should haue sayde howsoeuer these do grudge establishe thou thy selfe constantly in that fayth which hath brought thee assured saluation Yet Christe reserueth vnto himselfe that right giuen him of the father for as the power of healing was in him the sayth is rightly directed to him And it declareth that the woman was not lead by rashnes or by ignoraunce to come vnto him but by the direction of the spirit shee held the right waye of fayth VVhereof it followeth that we cannot beleeue in any other then in the sonne of God but that we should make him the Iudge of life and death For if we ought to beleeue in Christ because the heauenly father hath giuen him power to forgiue sinnes assoone as faith is applyed to any other this his honour is of necessitie taken from him By this saying also is their errour confuted which thinke that sinnes are redeemed by charitie for Christ setteth here downe a farre other meanes in that we embrace the mercy offered by fayth In the last clause is noted the incomparable fruite of fayth which the scripture so oft commendeth to witte that it bringeth peace and ioy to the consciences least through disquietnesse and trouble they should be tossed hyther and thither Matth. Mark Luke 10.     38. Now it came to passe as they went that he entred into a certeine towne and a certeine womanne named Martha receiued him into her house 39. And shee had a sister called Mary whiche also sate at Iesus feete and heard his preaching 40. But Martha was cumbred aboute much seruing and came to him and saide maister doest thou not care that my sister hath left mee to serue alone bid her therefore that she helpe me 41. And Iesus aunswered and sayde vnto her Martha Martha thou carest and art troubled about many things 42. But one thing is needefull Marye hath chosen the better part which shal not bee taken awaye from her 38. That he entred This hystorie declareth that whether soeuer Christ went he was not giuen priuatelye to himselfe nor to seeke his owne commodities or delightes but this was his onely desire to profit others and that he might perfourme the office enioyned him of his father For Luke declareth that when he was friendly entertained of Martha assoone as he was entred into the house he applyed himselfe to teachinge and to exhorting But because that this place is vilely wrested to the praise of the life contemplatiue as they call it wee must seeke out the naturall meaning whereby it shall appeare that the purpose of Christe was nothing lesse then to appoynt his disciples to liue in ydlenesse and in colde speculations It is an olde errour that they which withdraw themselues from businesse and apply themselues wholly to contemplations doe lyue an Angelles life And the Sorbonistes doe seeme to haue drawne their trifling about this matter out of Aristotle who placeth his chiefest good thinge and the last end of mans lyfe in contemplation which according to his iudgement is the enioying of vertue And whē ambition had caried some to withdraw themselues from the common trade of life or that froward men had giuen themselues to solytarines and idlenes this pride also followed that by doing nothing they imagined thēselues to be like to Angels for the trauelling life was so much disdained of them as if it should withdraw vs from heauen But we know that men were created to this end that they should labour and no sacrifices doe please God better then that euery man should labour in his calling and apply himselfe to lyue profitably for the common wealth But how ignorantly they haue abused the wordes of Christ to proue their deuice shall easily appeare out of the plaine sense Luke saieth that Mary was at Iesus feete doth he meane that she did nothing else al her lyfe time But the Lord rather commandeth that the times should so be deuided that he which studieth to profit in GOD his schoole should not be an ydle and a negligent hearer but that he should put in practise that which he learned for there is a time of hearing and a tyme of labouring Therefore the Monkes doe very fondly wrest this place as though Christ should compare the contemplatiue life with the labouring life when as Christ doth simply shew to what end and how he would be receiued For though the hospitalitie of Martha is worthye of cōmendation as it is praised yet Christ noteth two faults in the same The first is that Martha exceeded measure in busiyng her self For Christ had rather to be enterteined sparingly and with small charg thē that the holy matrō shuld take so much paine The second fault was that Martha withdrawing her self being occupied in superfluous labors made the cōming of Christ vnprofitable to her For L. noteth her excesse in that he mētioneth her much seruing when Christ was content with a litle For this was asmuch as if a man receiuing a prophet shuld haue no regard to hear him but shuld rather bury al the doctrine with great supefluous preparatiō But the lawful receiuing of the prophets is whē the profit is which God appoynteth and offreth to vs by them Now wee see that the diligence of Martha worthy of cōmendation yet was not without faultes Also it had this fault more that Martha pleasing herselfe in these troublesome labours despised the godly desire that her sister hadde to learne By which example we are warned to take heede alwayes least any in weldoing preferre themselues aboue others 42. One is needefull Some expound it too coldly that one kind of meat is sufficient Others dispute more subtilly but
that with stayed mindes they should depend of God alone but because they binde not their life nor make it subiecte to aboundaunce of riches but they rest in the prouidence of God who onely both sustayneth vs by his power and giueth vs as much as is meete 16. Hee put forth a similytude This similytude proposeth vnto vs as in a glasse a lyuely shew of that sentence that menne lyue not by the abundaunce of their riches For sith the richest doe also lose their lyfe in a moment what helpeth it to gather vppe great heapes of riches Al men graunt this to be true so that Christe speaketh nothing but that which is vsuall and common and which is in al mens tongues but in the meane season how doth euery man apply and giue his minde Doe not all men rather so frame theyr lyues and so mixe their counselles and theyr reasons that they may depart furthest of from God placeing their lyfe in the present aboundaunce of theyr riches Therefore all menne haue neede to waken themselues least they imagining themselues to be blessed by reason of their riches should entangle themselues in the snares of couetousnesse Also in this parable is sette forth vnto vs the vncerteine shortnes of this life Further how riches do profit nothing for the lengthening of the life There is a third thing to bee added which is not expressed but may be easilye gathered out of the former that this is a notable helpe to the faythful that seeking their daily bread from the Lord whether they be rich or poore their only rest is in his prouidence 17. VVhat shall I doe The wicked are therefore doubtfull in theyr counselles because they knowe not the lawefull vse of their riches then because they being dronken in theyr peruerse hope doe forgette themselues So this rich manne setting the hope of his lyfe in his great aboundaunce shaketh the remembraunce of death farre away And yet is dystrust annexed to this pride for couetousnes which neuer is filled doth yet neuerthelesse vexe these rich menne as this rich manne enlargeth his barnes as though his belly being stuffed with his former barnes had not yet enough Yet Christ doth not expresly condemne this that hee dooth the parte of a diligent and carefull housholder in laying vp prouision but because that as a bottomlesse deepe he would swallowe vp and deuoure many barnes in his greedy couetousnes whereof it foloweth that hee knewe not the true vse of plentifull prouision Nowe when he exhorteth himselfe to eating and to drinking he remembreth himself no longer to be a manne but becommeth proud in his aboundaunce And wee doe dayly see euident examples of this insolencie in prophane men which set the heap of their riches as brasen fortresses against death VVhen he saith my soule eate and be mery in this speach there is great force after the phrase of the Hebrewes for he so speaketh vnto himself that yet he would declare that he hath aboundance to fil the desire of his minde and all his senses 20. O foole this night will they fetch away thy soule from thee There is an allusion in this word soule The rich man spake first to his soule as the seat of al his affections but now it is spoken of the life it selfe or of the vital spirit The verbe they wil fetch though it be the plural number yet because it is indefinite it signifieth nothing else then that the life is in the power of an other which the rich manne accounted to be in his owne hande which I doe therefore giue warning of because that some doe without cause imagine this to be spoken of the Aungelles And in this is the rich manne reproued of follye that hee knew not that his lyfe depended of an other 21. So is hee that gathereth riches to himselfe Sith it appeareth that there is here a comparison the exposition of one parte of the sentence muste be gathered out of the other Let vs therefore define what the meaning of this is to be rich in God or toward God or in respecte of God They which are but meanely exercised in the scripture doe knowe that the Greekes doe vse ofte one of these prepositions for an other But it is no matter which of the two wayes soeuer be taken for this is the sum they are rich toward God which truste not in earthly thinges but depende of his onely prouidence Neyther is it of anye waight whether they haue aboundaunce or be in wante so that both sortes doe sincerelye aske theyr daily bread from the Lord. For that which is opposed against it to gather riches to himselfe signifieth as much as to neglecte the blessing of God and carefully to heape vp great aboundance as if theyr hope were shutte vppe in their barnes Of this may the end of the parable be gathered that vayne are their counselles and ridiculous are theyr labours which trusting to the aboundaunce of their riches do not repose themselues in God alone nor are not content with his measure ready to beare both estates and at length they shal beare the iudgement of theyr owne vanity Matth. Mark Luke 13.     1. There were certeine ●men present at the same season that shewed him of the Galileans whose bloud Pilate had mingled with their owne sacrifices 2. And Iesus answered and saide vnto them suppose yee that these Galileans were greater sinners then al the other Galileās because they haue suffered such things 3. I tell you nay but except yee amend your liues yee shall al likewise perish 4. Or think you that those eighteene vpon whome the tower in Sileam fell and slew thē were sinners aboue al men that dwell in Hierusalem 5. I tell you nay but except you amend your liues yee al shal likewise perish 6. He spake also this parable A certeine manne had a figtree planted in his vineyarde and hee came and sought fruit thereon and found none 7. Then said he to the dresser of his vineyard behold this three yeares I haue come and sought fruite of this figtree and finde none cut it downe why keepeth it also the ground barren 8. And he answered and saide vnto him Lorde let it alone this yeare also till I digge rounde about it and doung it 9. And if it beare fruit wel if not then after shalt thou cut it downe 2. Suppose yee that these This place is verye profitable euen for this cause for that this disease is engrafted almost in vs all that beeing too sharpe seuere Iudges against others we flatter our selues in our own sinnes So it falleth out that we doe not onely exaggerate the sinnes of our brethren more sharply then is meete but also if any aduersitie come vnto them we condemne them as wicked men and reprobates In the meane while whosoeuer is not touched with the hand of God sleepeth carelesly in his owne sinnes as if he had God fauourable and mercifull wherein there is a double fault For as
thinke with himselfe that he hath profited any thing while they entāgle themselues with these earthly hinderāces Nay the fault of men is doubled while they hinder themselues with things which are otherwise lawfull by the which they ought rather to be holpen For to what ende doth God graunt vs the commodities of this present life but that he might allure vs vnto him but euery man is so farre from being holpe so by the benefits of God that he should aspire to heauen that the holy mariages the fields and the other richesse are so many snares which doe holde men bound to the earth 7. But when the king heard it Mathew onely maketh mention of this punishment For in Luke there is no woorde spoken of iniurie done to the seruants They both say this that they were excluded and depriued from the honour of the feast which came not at the time appoynted And thys doctrine is also common to vs for the same destruction whiche Christe pronoūceth against the Iewes remaineth for all those wicked ones which doe violently rise against the ministers of the Gospell And they whiche are withdrawne with earthly cares so that they regarde not the callinge of God all these as famished men shall at length miserably waste away for want Therefore so ofte as he calleth vs lette vs be ready and glad to followe 9. Goe yee therefore out into the hie wayes After he hath shewed them to be vnwoorthy of the grace of God which doe proudly refuse the same offered vnto them nowe he sayeth others shall be placed in their roome and euen the most base and contemptible of the common people And here is the calling of the Gentiles described which should prouoke the Iewes to ielousie as it is sayd in the song of Moses Deut. 32. 21. They haue moued me to ielousie with those which are no Gods and I againe will mooue them to iealousie with those which are no people I will prouoke them to anger with a foolish nation Because they were first chosen they imagined that his grace was so tied to them as if God coulde not be wythout them and it is knowen howe proudly they despised all others Therefore vppon a graunt he compareth the Gentiles to beggers blinde and lame And he sayeth they are called out of the hedges and hie wayes as forenners and straungers and yet he affirmeth that they shoulde be placed in the roume despised by the friendes and neighbours So that whiche was more darkely fore spoken of by the Prophets of erecting a new Church he setteth downe more plainly And certainly this reprofe was the heape of the vengeance of God Romanes 11. 17. that GOD cutting them off hath grafted the wilde branches into the roote of the Oliue by casting them out he receiueth the polluted filthy Gentiles into his own house If that he spared not the natural branches then the same vengeāce shal fal on vs now if we answer not our calling And the supper shall not be lost which was prepared for vs but God will procure himselfe other guestes LVK. 23. Compell them to come in This is as much as if the housholder shuld command to bring in the beggers with hard words to leaue out none of the worst of them In which wordes Christ declareth that God wil rather gather togither all the offscourings of the world then that he would admit those vnthankful men to his table Yet he seemeth to allude to the maner of the calling of the gospel because the grace of God is not simply proposed vnto vs but to the doctrine there are also added spurres of exhortations in which the wonderful goodnes of God is seene who whē he seeth vs that are called to him to be slouthfull he solliciteth vs importunately from slouthfulnesse and he doth not onely stirre vs with exhortations but also he compelleth vs by threates to come to him Yet I do not disallow that Augustine vsed this testimonie very often againste the Donatists that he might proue that the disobedient and rebellious might be lawfully compelled by the Edictes of godly princes to the worship of the true God and to the vnitie of faith for though faith is voluntarie yet we see their stubbernesse may well be tamed by these meanes which obey not except they be compelled MAT. 11. Then the king came in to see the guests Now Christ doth not here reproue the Iewes for desping wickedly the grace calling of God but he forewarneth them betime which were to be placed in their roume lest when God should vouchsafe to make them partakers of his owne table they shuld defile the holy mariages with their filthines Threfore he hath taught hitherto that the Iewes for their wicked contēpt should be depriued of that special priuiledge of honor and that he wold call of the prophane reiected Gentiles which shuld succeede in their place And now he declareth that of this number also they shal be cast out which do defile the church for when God calleth all men generally by the gospell many vncleane and silthy men thrust in which though they occupie a place for a time amongst others when God ouerseeth his guests they are cast out of doores and throwne to punishment The summe is Not all they which shall once enter into the church shall be partakers of the heauenly life but they which shal be found attired sit for the heauenly palace Also there is a contention in vain about the mariage garment whether it shuld be faith or a holy and godly life for neither faith can be seperated from good works and good works do not proceede but from faith But this only was the meaning of Christ that we are called of the Lorde of this condition that we might be renued in spirit according to his image and that we shuld therfore alwaies remaine at his house that the old mā with his pollutions shuld be put off and that we shuld meditate a new life that the apparel might answer to so holy a calling But it is demaunded how it shuld agree that the begger shuld be punished with so seuere a punishment because he brought not a mariage garmēt as though it were a new thing for those wretches which seeke their liuing in the highe waies to be torne and deformed I answer here is not declared whence that garment should haue ben had for whom soeuer the Lord calleth he also apparelleth and fulfilleth all things in vs as is said by Ezechiel 16. 7. when God found nothing in vs but miserable nakednesse and filthy spottes he hath cloathed vs with excellent ornaments VVe know also that the image of God is not otherwise repaired in vs but when we put on Christ. Therefore Christ doth not say that those pore men shal be cast out which bring not a precious garment fetched out of their owne chest but they which are found in their sinnes whē God shall come to examine his guests And the conclusion doth shewe the
wee gather that the wisdome of the spirite and of the fleshe are not compared togeather which could not be without the reproofe of God himselfe but that the faithfull are onely stirred vppe more diligently to consider those things which apperteine to the life to come and that they should not shut their eies at the light of the Gospel when they see blynd men to see better in the darke then they And truely it behooueth them to be the more affected when they see the children of the woorlde to foresee longe before for this life which is transitory and which passeth away in a moment 9. Make you friendes As Christe commaunded not heretofore to offer sacrifices to God of thinges stolne so now he meaneth not that eyther excusers or patrones should be sought for which should hide defend vs vnder their defence but he teacheth that by bestowing louingly that the fauour of God is obtained who promiseth that hee likewise wil be mercifull to them that are mercifull and kinde But very fondlye and absurdly doe they reason which doe gather of this that we are holpen by the praiers and suites of them that are dead for so whatsoeuer is bestowed vpon the vnworthy should be lost But the wickednes of the men hynder not but that the Lord writeth vp in his tables whatsoeuer we bestow vpon the poore Therefore the Lorde hath not regard to the persons but to the worke it selfe so that our louing kindnes shal answere vs before God yea though it fall vppon vnthankfull men But so it seemeth to signifie that eternal lyfe is giuen as a recompence to our deserts I aunswere it appeareth plainely enough by the text that he speaketh after the maner of men to wit as he which is exalted by fauour riches if he get himselfe friendes in his prosperous estate hee hath when he falleth into aduersitie by whom he shal be sustayned so our kindnes shal be to vs as a conueniēt refuge because whatsoeuer any man shal bestow liberaly vpon his neighbours the Lord acknowledgeth the same as bestowed vppon himself VVhen yee shall want By this word he noteth the time of death and hee warneth vs that the time of our stewardshippe shal be but shorte For whereof commeth it to passe that the greater parte sleepe in their riches many wast that they haue in prodigall expenses others by hoardinge it doe malitiously defraud themselues and others but because they beeing deceiued with a false imagination of a long lyfe doe flatter themselues in securitie He calleth them the riches of iniquity that hee might make vs to suspect riches because that for the most part they entangle theyr owners in iniquitie For though they are not euill of themselues yet because they are seldome gotten without deceite or violence or other vnlawfull meanes and are also rarely possessed and kept without pride or luxuriousnes or some other wicked affection Christ causeth vs worthily to suspect them as in an other place he also called them thornes Mat. 13 22. Yet here seemeth to be vnderstoode an opposition as if hee shoulde haue sayd riches which otherwise defile the owners through the wicked abuse and are almost the snares of sinnes must be turned to a contrary end that they might get vs fauour Furthermore that must bee remembred which I said before that God desireth not a sacrifice of a pray vniustly gotten as if he should be a companion of theeues and therfore it is rather an admonition to the faithful that they should preserue them selues free from iniquity 10. He that is faythfull in the least They are prouerbial sentenses gathered of the common vse and experience and therefore it sufficeth that they bee true for the most parte For it shall befall somtimes that the deceiuer not accounting of a smal gaine shal shew forth his wickednes in a great matter yea and many in small matters vnder pretence of simplicity do hunt after great gaine as Liuy sayth fraud getteth credit in smal matters that when it is worthy the labour it may deceiue for a great reward Yet notwithstanding the saying of Christ is not false because in prouerbes as I sayd we follow that which is most commonly vsed Christ therefore exhorteth his disciples that by dealing faithfully in small matters they might accustome themselues to be faithfull in the greatest matters Thē he applyeth this doctrine to the right dispēsing of spiritual graces which though the world esteeme not according to the value yet it is certeine that they farre excell the transitory riches of the world And he teacheth that they are vnmeete that God shoulde commit the incomparable treasure of his Gospell and of lyke giftes to them which deale naughtily and vnfaythfully in matters of lesse value as are the fleeting riches of the world Therefore there is included in these wordes a secrete threatning that it is to be feared least for the abuse of the earthlye stewardshyppe wee should be depriued of the heauenlye gyftes In which sense the heauenlye blessednesse is opposed against riches but as a perfecte and perpetuall good thing against a shadowe and a transitorie matter 12. If yee be not faithfull in an other mans goodes Hee calleth that an other mannes which is without manne for God doth not giue vs riches of this condition that we should be tied vnto them but so he made vs stewards of them least they should holde vs bound in their bandes And it cannot be that mindes free and at lybertie should dwel in heauen excepte they account whatsoeuer is in the world to belonge to others And hee maketh the spirituall riches which belong to the lyfe to come to be ours because the enioying of them is eternall But now hee vseth an other similitude it is not to be hoped that wee should vse our owne goodes well and moderately if wee deale yll and vnfaythfully with other mens For menne vse more carelesly to abuse theyr owne and they graunt themselues more lybertie in loosing them because they are not afrayde that any manne shoulde reproue them But they are more warye and more fearefull of that which is layde vppe with them or committed to them or lent them of which thinges there must an account be giuen againe Therefore we vnderstand the meaning of Christe that they will be but euyll keepers of spirituall gyftes whiche doe dispose the earthlye goodes euyll After there is a sentence sette downe that no manne can serue GOD and riches which I haue expounded in the sixt Chapter of Matthe And lette the readers see there what this word Mamm●n signifieth 14. All these thinges heard the Pharises They which thinke that the Pharises scorned Christ because he taught in common and rude speach and gloried not in swelling words do not sufficiently consider Lukes words I graunt that the doctrine of the Gospell seemeth very contemptible to proud and disdainful men But Luke expresly declareth that Christ was therefore scorned of them because they were couetous For they being
nothing more then to discharge that office layde vpon him by his father and he knew that this was the end of his calling to gather together the lost sheepe of the house of Israel he desired that his comming might be to the sauing health of al men This was the cause why he being moued with mercy wept for the destruction of the citie of Ierusalem which was at hand For when hee considered that it was chosen of God to be the sacred seate wherin the couenaunt of eternal saluation should rest and the sanctuary frō whence saluation should proceede into the whole world it could not be but that ●e should greatly bewayle the destruction of it Also when he should see the people which he had adopted into the hope of eternall life miserably to perish through their own vnthankfulnes and malice it is no meruaile if he could not refraine from teares Some thinke it an absurditie that Christ should bewaile that mischiefe which he could haue remedied but this knot is easily dissolued For as hee descended from heauen that by taking vpon him the flesh of man he might be a witnesse and minister of the saluation of God so tooke hee vpon him indeede humane affections so farre forth as was meete for the calling he had taken vpon him And that must alwayes be wisely noted what person hee taketh vpon him when he speaketh or laboureth for the saluation of men as in this place that he might faithfully fulfill the commaundement of the father it was necessary for him to seeke that the fruite of the redemption might extend to the whole body of the elect people Therefore for so much as he was appoynted a minister of saluation to this people hee bewailed their destruction in respect of his office He was God I graunt but as oft as he supplied the office of a teacher his Godhead rested and after a sorte hid it selfe least it should be any hinderaunce to him in dooing the office of a Mediatour But by this weeping he declared that he did not onely loue them brotherly for whose sake was made manne but that God had also powred into his humane nature the spirit of a fatherly affection 42. O if thou hadst knowne This speach is patheticall or affectionate and therefore abrupt For wee know that they which are moued with vehement affections can vtter but halfe their meaninges Note also that two affections are mixed here together For Christ doth not onely take pitie of the destructiō of the citie but he also reproueth this vnthankful people of a haynous offence in that they refusing saluation offred thē puld willingly vpon them the horrible iudgmēt of god And the copulatiue which is put betweene is very forceable For Christ doth secretely compare Ierusalem with the other cities of Iudea and of the whole woorlde in this sense If thou also which hast a speciall priueledge aboue the reste of the world if thou I say at least which art a celestiall sanctuarie vppon earth hadst known Presentlye there followeth after an other amplification gathered of the time Though hetherto thou hast wickedly vngodly and stubbornely behaued thy selfe against God nowe at the length it were time for thee to repent For he sheweth that the day is now come which was ordained before in the secrete counsell of God and spoken of beefore by the Prophetes for the saluation of Ierusalem This is the acceptable tyme saith Isaias 49. 8. and 2. Cor. 6. 2. This is the day of saluation Seeke the Lord while he may be found call vppon him while hee is neere Esay 55. 6. By this word peace he noteth after the Hebrew phrase all poyntes of happinesse Hee dooth not simplye saye that Ierusalem knewe not her peace but those thinges which belonged to peace for it falleth often out that men are not ignoraunt of theyr happynesse but the waye and meanes as they saye they knowe not they are so blinded with malice But sith this reproofe is mixed with mercy lette vs note that the excellenter giftes menne are endued with the greater punishment are they worthy of beecause that to their other sinnes is added a sacrilegious prophanation of the heauenly grace Secondly let vs note that the neerer God approacheth vnto vs and proffereth the light of sound doctrine if we neglect this occasion we are so much the lesse to be excused The gate of saluation is alwayes open but because he somtime is silent it is no smal nor common benefit when as he calleth vs vnto him with a loud voice and familiarlye and therefore there remaineth the sharper reuenge for that contempt But now are they hidde This is not spoken for the lessening of the fault of Ierusalem for her wonderfull blockishnesse is noted as a shamefull cause why shee could not see God being present I graunt that it beelongeth only vnto GOD to open the eyes of the minde of them that are blinde and no man can be able to see the misteries of the heauenly kingdome but hee whome GOD lyghteneth inwardlye with his spirite but they are not therefore worthye of forgiuenesse which perishe through their owne beastlye blindnesse Christe also purposed to take awaye the offence which otherwise might be a hinderaunce to the rude and weake For when as the eyes of al men were cast vpon that citie the example of that Citie was of great importaunce of both sides eyther to worke myschiefe or to doe good Therefore least theyr incredulitie and proude contempt of the Gospell should hinder any man it is condemned of filthy blindnes 43. The daies shall come vpon thee Nowe taking vppon him as it were the person of a iudge he rebuketh Ierusalem more sharply So also the Prophets thoughe they lamented with teares their destruction for whome they ought to be carefull yet they gather their courage and hearts and fal to seuere threatnings because they knowe that not onely the care of the saluation of men was laied vppon them but also that they were appoynted preachers of Gods iudgements Further he sayeth that Ierusalem for this cause should suffer horrible punishments because shee knewe not the time of her visitation that is they contemned the redeemer whiche was sent them and did not embrace nor accept his fauour Nowe let the cruelty of the punishments which they suffered terrifie vs least we with our slouthfulnesse doe put out the light of saluation but lette vs be carefull to receiue the grace of God yea let vs speedily runne foorth to meete it Math. 21. Mark 11 Luk. 19. 10. And when he was come into Ierusalem all the Citie was moued sayinge who is this 11. And the people saide this is Iesus the prophet of Nazaret in Galile 12. And Iesus wente into the temple of God and taste out all them that solde and bought in the Temple and ouerthrewe the tables of the money chaungers the seats of them that sold doues 13. And said vnto them it is written mine house shal be called the house of
they rather acknowledged God to be the iudge of the world that al things appertaining to man are gouerned by his prouidence but sith they tyed aswell the reward of the godlye as the paynes due to the wicked to this present life though they had sayd truely that euery manne is now handled equally according to his desart yet this was too preposterous to shutte vp the promises of God into so narow corners Now experyence doth euidently declare that their folly was too grosse sith it is euident that the rewarde which is layde vp for the good is deferd to an other lyfe and the punishmentes are not powred vppon the wicked in this world To be short there cannot be imagined any thing more absurde then this fantasie that menne created after the image of God should perish like beastes But howe vile and monstrous a matter was this when as some opinion at the least of the life to come remained euery where amongst the prophane and blynde Idolaters of the Gentiles that this seede of godlynes shoulde be abolished amongst the Iewes the peculyar people of God VVhat should I say that when they saw the holy Fathers that they made haste to the heauenlye life and the couenaunte which God made with them is spirituall and eternall muste they not be more blinde then blockes which coulde not see in so cleare a light But first this was a iust rewarde for them which had rente the Church of God into sectes then God in this maner reuenged the wicked contempt of his doctrine 24. Mayster Moses sayde Sith it might haue sufficed to haue proposed the matter simply to what end made they such a preface namelye they doe craftily pretend Moses name to proue those mariages lawefull whiche were made not after the pleasure of menne but by the commaundement and ordinaunce of God himselfe also it is necessarye that God himselfe should agree with himselfe This therefore was their snare if God will in time to come gather the faithfull into his kingdome then will he restore vnto them that which he had giuen them in the worlde therefore what shall become of that womanne whom God had giuen to seauen men So all the godlesse and Heretikes doe frame their cauils wherwith they could deforme the true doctrine of godlynesse and make the seruauntes of Christ ashamed yea the Papistes endeuoring to entrappe vs as past all shame doe openly scorne at God and his word Therefore it is not without cause that Paule Tit. 1. 9. would haue the doctor furnished with weapons wherewith he may driue backe the enemies to the truth As concerning this law wherein GOD commaundeth the next kinsmen in bloud to succeede the dead in marriage if the first should die without children this was the reason that the woman which was married into any family should receiue seede therof This must not be vnderstoode of naturall brethren but of cosines and such like for it were incest to marry within the degrees forbidden by the law 29. Yee are deceiued not knowing the Scriptures Though Christ speaketh to the Saduces yet this reproofe doth generally belong to all deuisers of false doctrines For sith God doth plainely shew himselfe vnto vs in the Scriptures the ignaraunce of them is the fountaine and cause of all errours But this is no small comfort to the godly that they shal be safe and out of the daunger of errour so long as with an humble and modest desire to learne they shall seeke in the scriptures what is right and true Christes ioyning the power of God with his word is to be referred to the circumstaunce of this present matter because the resurrection far exceedeth the capacitie of mannes vnderstanding it wil be incredible vnto vs vntyll our mindes behold the great power of God which is able to subdue all thinges to himselfe as Paule teacheth Phylippians 3. 11. Further it was necessary that the Sadduces should be deceiued because they did falslye measure the glorye of the heauenly lyfe with the presente estate Yet in the meane season doe wee teache that they doe iudge and speake ryghtlye and wyselye of the misteries of the kyngdome of heauen whiche doe ioyne the power of GOD togeather with the scriptures 30. They are as the Aungelles of God Hee meaneth not that the chyldren of God shal be when they are rysen in all thinges lyke vnto the angelles but so farre as they shall be free from all infirmitie of this presente lyfe as if he shoulde saye that they were no more subiecte to the thinges which this transitory and corrupt life hath neede of Luke dooth more plainely set forth the reason of the similitude because they could not die againe therefore they should not bring forth their fruite as vpon earth And he speaketh of the faythful onely because there was no question of the reprobate But it is demaunded why hee saith that they shall then bee the sons of God because they shal be the children of the resurrection sith the Lord doth vouchsafe this honour to his faithfull ones though they be shutte vp in the pryson of the frayle body And how should we bee the heires of eternall lyfe if God shoulde not acknowledge vs nowe for children I aunswere after we are grafted into the bodye of Christe by fayth God adopteth vs for children and the spirit is a witnesse seale marke pledge of this adoption so that in hope hereof wee may freely cry Abba Father Rom. 8. 15. Gal. 4. 6. But though wee knowe that wee are the sonnes of God yet because it doth not yet appeare what we shall be vntill we be trasfigured and see him in his glory as he is wee are not in effect accounted as sonnes And though we be regenerate by the spirite of God yet because our lyfe is hidde as yet the manifestation of the same shall make a true and perfect difference betweene vs and straungers In this sense is our adoption deferd by Paule to the Rom. 8. 13. to the last daye LV. 37. And that the dead shall rise againe After Christe had confuted that absurdity obiected against him now he confirmeth the doctrine of the last resurrection by the testimonie of the Scripture And wee muste keepe this order that the enemies of the trueth hauing their quarels answered may vnderstand that they striue against the word of GOD. For vntill they be ouercome by the testimony of the scripture they may alwaies murmurre and grudge Christ citeth a place out of Moses beecause he had to doe with the Sadduces who gaue but small credit to the Prophetes at the most they accounted no better of them then we do of the booke of Ecclesiasticus or the hystory of the Machabes Also seeing they alleadged Moses he had rather turne him backe againe vpon the then to obiect any one of the Prophetes Further hee had not this purpose to gather al the places of scripture that serued for this purpose as we see the Apostles in lyke manner did
but the interpreters saw it not VVhereby it came to passe that they not onelye staggared themselues but also entangled their readers with a troublesome question For so Christ might seeme to haue bene forgetfull in making mention of this one slaughter which had beene done of olde and passeth an innumerable sort of murthers which were committed afterwarde vnder Manasse Neyther did the Iewes cease to persecute good men at the time when they were load into captiuity yea when they were now afflicted we know how cruelly they raged against Ieremiah 32. 2. But the Lorde of set purpose did not vpbraide them for these late murthers but rather chose this which had beene done so long before which was a beginning and fountaine of a wicked libertie so that afterwarde they brake out into an vnbrideled crueltie because that it was most apt for his purpose For this was the chiefe end of his purpose as I shewed euen now to proue that nation sith it ceased not from wickednes guiltie of all those murthers which had bene committed long before Therfore he doth not onelye pronounce vengeaunce againste them for this present crueltie but hee saieth that they shall yeelde a reckoninge for the bloud of Zachariah as if their handes were yet wette with his bloud Neyther is their opinion probable which doe referre this to Zacharyah who exhorted the people which were brought backe from the captiuitie of Babylon to buyld the Temple whose Prophesies doe yet remaine For though the tytle of the Booke declareth that hee was the Sonne of Barachias yet we read not in any place that he was slaine Further that exposition is wrested that he was slaine in the meane time betweene the building of the Altar and the Temple But the scripture maketh mention of an other Zachariah the son I●iada which agreeth best with this place For when after the death of his father true relygion decayed by the vngodly falling away of the king and the people hee being moued by the spirite of God reproued sharpely their publike idolatrie and therefore he was slayne in the court of the Temple And it is no absurditie to saye that his Father Ioiada hadde the name of Barachiah giuen him for honours sake for sith in all his lyfe he was a defender of the true worship hee might worthily be accounted the blessed of GOD. But whether Ioiada had two names or whether there was a faulte in the word as Hierome imagineth the matter is not to be doubted of but that Christ noteth that sacrilegious stoning of Zachariah whiche is recorded in the second booke of the Chronicles the 24. cha verse 22. The circumstance of the place augmenteth the hay nonsnesse of the faulte for that they regarded not the holynesse of the place Further the Temple is taken here for the court or porch as in other places The Altar of burnt offringes was neere to this place that the Prieste might offer the sacrifices in the sighte of the people Therefore it appeareth that theyr madnesse was too outragious which the sight of the Altar and Temple coulde not appease but that the Iewes woulde defile the holye place with horrible murther 37. Ierusalem Ierusalem Christ declareth more euidently how iuste a cause he had to be angry that Ierusalem which GOD had chosen for a sāctuary a heauenly dwelling place had not onely shewed it selfe vnworthy of so great honor but was as a den of theeues and had acustomed nowe a long time to shedde the bloud of the Prophetes Christe therefore with great affection cryeth out at so great a wonder beecause that the holye citie of GOD was falne to that madnesse that it shoulde so lately endeuour to blotte out the wholsome doctrine of GOD with the bloud of the Prophetes And therefore he rehearsed the name beecause that so wonderfull and incredible wickednesse was worthy of no samll detestation And Christ dooth not reproue them for one murther or two but hee saieth that the citie was growne into such a custome that it ceased not to slaye the Prophetes how many soeuer were sent vnto them For the Participle is putte in the place of an Epithite as if Christe shoulde haue sayde thou which oughtest to haue beene a faythful keeper of the word of GOD the mistresse of heauenly wisdome the light of the world the fountaine of true doctrine the seate of the worshippe of GOD an example of fayth and obedience art become a murtherer of the Prophets so that nowe thou haste gotten a certeine habyt in sucking theyr bloud Therefore it dooth heereby appeare that they which hadde so filthilye prophaned the sanctuarie of GOD were worthye of all kinde of reproaches It was Christes purpose also to meete with the offence which was at hande least the faythfull when they shoulde see him slayne at Ierusalem without a cause shoulde be troubled at the straungenesse of suche a sight For they were nowe admonished with these wordes that it was no meruaile if that citie which had beene accustomed to slaye or stone the Prophetes shoulde cruellye slaye their Redeemer But heereby it appeareth howe much it is conuenient to attribute to places God had giuen such notable ornamentes to no citie in the world nor so honourablye exalted anye as this yet wee see how vnthankfull it became Now let the Pope compare the seate of hys the euerye with that holye Citie what shall hee finde worthye of the like honour his hyred flatterers doe boast to vs that fayth flourished there in times past If we shoulde graunt that to be true if it appeare at this daye to be alienated falne away from Christ through infidelytie and that it is full of innumerable sacrilegies howe fondly doe they glorye that the honour of the supremacye is tyed vnto it And lette vs rather learne by this example worthye to bee remembred that the higher anye place is sette by the great benefittes of GOD and thereby exempted from other places there aboutes if it degenerate it shall not onelye bee spoyled of those ornamentes but it shall bee so much more odious and execrable beecause it hath filthily polluted the glory of God by defiling the bewtie of his graces Howe ofte woulde I. It is rather a woorde of disdaine then of compassion Hee pittyeth as yet the citie it selfe ouer the which hee had wepte a litle beefore but hee dealte more hardlye and sharpelye towardes the Scribes the aucthours of saluation as they had deserued Neither dooth he spare the rest for that they were all faulty allowers and companions of the same sinne but hee prouing all alike guiltie inueigheth specyallye against theyr leaders and guydes which were the cause of all those euilles Now the vehemencye of the speach muste bee noted If the grace of GOD hadde beene simplye denied to Ierusalem theyr vnthankfulnesse might so much the lesse haue bin excused but sith God tried by louingnesse and gentlenesse to allure the Iewes vnto him and preuayled nothing by so great gentlenesse the offence of
they should make their ennemies ashamed But thoughe Christe giueth at the same tyme a minde and power to speake yet I do thinke that he meant another thing by ioyning these two words togither as if that Christ shuld promise that he woulde gouerne their tongues so that they shoulde answeare wisely and to the purpose He addeth further that this wisedome shoulde haue the victory against all theyr ennemies because they coulde not resist nor speake agaynste the same Not that their impudencie should giue place to the truthe but because the truth against the which they sette themselues in vaine should triumph ouer their frantike boldnesse And I would that all men that are required to make confession of their faith woulde repose themselues in thys hope for then the power and maiestie of the spirite would shewe it selfe farre otherwise to the ouerthrowe of sathans ministers Now while we are caryed partly by our owne sense and puffed vppe with pride we runne headlong rashly or goe further forwarde then is mere and partly we are withholden and restrained with peeuish fearfulnesse and wofull experience sheweth that we are destitute of the grace of God help of his spirite Further when in Mathew and Marke Christ calleth it the spirite of the father which speaketh in vs and sayeth heere that hee himselfe will giue vs a mouth we do gather that it is proper and peculiar to him to directe vs by the spirite LVKE 19. By your patience possesse your soules Christe doth here teache his disciples a farre other way to preserue life then the reason of manne would teache For euery manne doeth naturally desire to keepe his life in safety and we doe all seeke for those meanes of preseruation which wee thinke to be best and we flee from all daunger to be short we seeme not to liue except we be well garded And Christ giueth vs this fortresse for our life that we should walke through fire water and swordes alwayes in daunger of death And truely no manne committeth his spirite rightly into the hand of God but he which is alwayes ready to die and learneth euery day to liue In summe Christ commaundeth vs to possesse our life both vnder the crosse and amongst the continuall terrours of death MATH 10. And then shall many be offended Nowe he rehearseth the temptations which shall come by euill examples And this is very grieuous and harde to ouercome when Christ himselfe should be a stone of offence to many whereat some shoulde stumble or others at the sighte thereof should goe backwarde and others doe fall away 1. Peter 2. 7. 8. And it seemeth to me that Christ in this woorde comprehendeth diuers kindes of troubles because they doe not onely fall away which were entred into a right course but many become enemies to Christ others forgetting modesty and equity become raginge madde others become prophane men and cast of all sense and feeling of godlinesse others do take themselues liberty in such troubles to commit sinne 11. Many false prophets shall arise This admonition differeth frō the former where Christ sayeth before that many shuld come in his name For there he spake onely of the deceiuers which shortly after the entrance of the gospel shuld fain thēselues to be Christes But now he saith that there shuld false teachers arise which shuld corrupt the foūd doctrine with errours as Peter teacheth that the church shuld be in no lesse dāger of this mischiefe vnder the gospel then it was before vnder the law 2. Pet. 2. 1. wherfore there is no cause why errors the subtil practises of sathan the corruptions of godlines shuld ouerthrow the minds of the godly because that no man is rightly established in Christ but he which hath learned to stād against such assaults For this is a right trial of our faith when it standeth without remoouing against such false doctrines as shal arise And he doeth not only say that false prophets shall come but also that they shal be so subtile as to deceiue so as they shal draw sectes after them And heere we haue neede to take great heede because the multitude of them which follow errours do as a violent storm enforce vs to turne our course if we be not throughly setled in God whereof there is somewhat spoken before 12. Because that iniquitie shall abounde No man should be ignorant howe farre and wide this mischiefe shoulde spreade it selfe but very fewe doe marke it For sith the light of the Gospell doth more plainly discouer the malice of men the desire to doe well waxeth colde and is almost quenched euen in good and well minded men For euery man thinketh with himselfe that those things are loste which are done for this or that man for that experience and daily vse declareth that all menne almost are vnthankefull or faithlesse or wicked Truely a great a dangerous temptation For what can bee more absurde then to allowe of that doctrine which seemeth to ouerthrowe the loue of godlinesse and the force of charitie But where the Gospel taketh place charitie with the heat wherof the hearts of all men should be enflamed rather waxeth colde But the fountaine of this mischiefe must be noted which Christe vttereth thus For many doe waxe faint because that for weakenesse they cannot stand in the floud of iniquitie which floweth euery where Christ then requireth his disciples to be thus strong as they may stande fast in these wrastlings As Paule commaundeth 2. Thes. 3. 13. that we should not be weary of behauing of our selues louingly and kindely Therfore though the loue of many being ouerwhelmed with the abundance of sinnes shoulde waxe colde Christ sayeth that this let must also be ouercome least that the faithfull for such euil exāples shuld giue ouer as men tired Therfore he rehearseth that sentence that no man can be saued but hee which shall striue lawfully and shall continue to the ende 14. And this Gospell of the kingdome shall be preached VVhen the Lorde had preached suche a sermon as had giuen no small occasion of sorowe thys consolation was added in very good time either for the raising vp of the mindes ouerthrowen or for the strengthening and staying of them that are falling for what soeuer sathan shall deuise and how many stirres so euer he shall make yet the Gospell shall goe forward vntill it be spredde through the whole world And though this was incredible yet it behooued the Apostles hauing this warrant of their maister to hope well beyond hope and with courage to goe forwarde to discharge their calling Some doe obiecte the Antipodes and other people which do dwel farre away which as yet haue heard nothing of Christ but it is easily answeared For Christ doeth neither note all the perticular partes of the world neither doeth he appoynt any certaine time but only sayeth that the Gospell which all men thought shoulde bee speedily banished out of Iudea the proper dwelling place shoulde be spred to the
might thereby yeelde the praise of all good thing● which they had receiued to God VVherefore it is not to be doubted but that Christ describing the saluation of the godly beginneth at the free loue of GOD whereby they which by the direction of Gods spirite do aspire to righteousnesse in this life are predestinated to life Heereunto also appertaineth that which he sayeth a little after that the kingdome was prepared for them from the beginning of the world into the possession whereof they shall be sent at the last day And though it may easily be obiected that the rewarde was layde vppe before for their merites which shoulde come after yet if any man will way the woordes without contention he will graunt that it is a secreat commendation of the grace of God For Christ also doeth not simply call the faithfull to possesse the kingdome as if they haue gotten the same by their merites but expresly sayeth that it shoulde be giuen as to heires Yet there is an other end to be noted whereunto the Lord had regarde for though the life of the godly is nothinge else but a miserable and grieuous banishmēt so that the earth can scarcely bear them though they trauaile vnder a harde want vnder reproaches and other troubles that they may with a stronge and valiant minde ouercome these lettes the Lord declareth that there is a kingdome prepared for them in an other place And it is a notable exhortation to patience when menne are certainly perswaded that they beare not in vaine Therefore least the pride of the wicked wherin they doe glory now should make our minds to fainte and least our owne miseries shoulde weaken our hope lette vs alwayes remember that enheritance which remaineth for vs in heauen for it dependeth not of any doubtfull case but it was prepared for vs of God before we were borne yea I say for euery one of the electe because that Christ doeth heere call them the blessed of the father But there is no absurdity in this that it is onely sayd heere that the kingdome was prepared from the beginning of the world and in an other place Before the creation of the heauen and the earth For Christ doth not here set downe the poynt of time when the inheritaunce of eternall life was prepared for the children of God but only calleth vs to the cōsideration of the fatherly care of God wherein he embraced vs before we were borne and hee doeth thereby confirme the assurance of our hope so that the troublesome stormes of the world cannot ouerthrow our life I was an hungered If the disputation heere had beene of the cause of our saluation the Papists had not gathered amisse that we shoulde merite eternall life by good woorkes but when as Christ had no other purpose but to exhort his disciples to endeuour to liue well and righteously it is yll gathered by his woordes what the merites of workes shoulde auaile They rest vppon the woorde causall which is but a weake stay for wee knowe that it doeth not alwayes note the cause but rather the consequence when as eternall life is promised to the righteous But there is a plainer answeare For we deny not but that there is a rewarde promised to good woorkes but it is of fauour because it dependeth of the adoption Paule in the 2. Tim. 4. 8. reioyceth that there was a crowne of righteousnesse laied vppe for him But whereof gathered hee thys comforte but of this that he was a member of Iesus Christ who is the onely heire of the heauenly kingdome Hee sayeth that the iust iudge will giue hym that crowne but howe should he come by that rewarde but because hee was adopted of free grace and endowed with that righteousnes wherwhereof we all are voide Therefore these two things must be considered that the faithfull are called to the possession of the kingdome of heauen in respecte of good woorkes not because they should deserue it by the righteousnesse of workes or because that they shoulde be the authours of the getting of it for themselues but because that God doeth iustifie them whome he hath first chosen Furthermore though that by the direction of the spirit they shuld aspire to the loue of righteousnesse yet because they doe neuer satisfie the lawe of God there is no reward due to them but that is called a rewarde whiche is giuen freely But Christe doeth not recken vppe all the partes of a godly and a holy life but doeth only note for example sake some poyntes of charitye whereby we declare that we doe worship God For though the woorshippe of God excelleth the loue of menne and therefore faith and inuocation is more to be desired then almes yet Christe doeth not without cause sette downe the testimonies of true right●ousnesse which are more apparant to be seene If any man despising God should only deale wel with men such mercy shuld nothing auaile for the appeasing of God because that in the meane season he is defrauded of his owne right Christe therefore doeth not say that the summe of righteousnesse consisteth in almes but by signes which may be moste easily seene he declareth what it is to liue godly and rightuously so that truely the faithfull doe not only professe with the mouth but by diligent exercises they doe shewe that they doe worship God VVherfore those fantasticall men do very preposterously vnder pretence of this place withdrawe themselues both from the hearing of the word and also from receiuing the holy supper for vnder the same coloure they might also cast away faith and bearing of the crosse and prayers chastitie But Christ meant nothing lesse then to restrain to a part of the seconde table the rule of holy life which is contained in the two tables of the law The Monkes also and such like rascalles haue sottishly sette downe to themselues sixe woorkes of mercy because that Christ maketh mention of no mo As if that children might not plainly see that by the figure Synecdoche al the workes of charity are here cōmended For to comfort the sorrowfull to helpe them that be vniustly oppressed to aid the simple with counsel to pull the poore wretches out of the iawes of the wolues is a woorke of mercy as much worthy to be praised as to cloath the naked or to feede the hungry But may a man thinke that Christe commending charity vnto vs woulde exclude those dueties which appertaine to the worship of God yet he telleth his disciples that this shal be a lawful trial of a holy life if they exercise thēselues in charity according to that saying of the Prophet I will haue mercy not sacrifice Hose 6. 6. Namely because that the hypocrites being couetous cruel deceitfull snatching to them by violence proud do yet vnder a vaine pompe of ceremonies dissemble a kinde of holines VVherby we do also gather if we desire to haue our life approoued before the chiefe iudge we must not wander in our
delyuered the simple exposition of the wordes of the Lord now it is to be added that there is no vaine nor ydle signe set beefore vs but that they are made indeed partakers of the body and bloud which by faith do take hold of this promise For the Lord should in vain commaund his disciples to eat the bread affirming it to be his body if the effect should not truely aunswere the figure Neither is this in question amongst vs whether that Christ doth truely or onelye significatiuely offer himselfe vnto vs in the Supper For though wee do see nothing there but bread yet hee dooth neither deceiue nor mocke vs who feedeth our soules with his own flesh Therfore the true eating of the flesh of Christ is not onely shewed in signe but it is also deliuered in verye deede But it is woorth the labour to obserue heere three thinges least that whiche is spyrituall shoulde bee myxed with the signe nexte leaste Christe shoulde bee soughte vppon the earth or in earthlye elementes thirdlye least there shoulde be imagined another manner of eating then that which by the secret power of the spirit in spireth into vs the life of Christ but we obtain him by no other meane but by faith alone First as I said except we will ouerthrowe all there must be a distinction betweene the signe and the thing signified Neyther can there be any profitte had by the Sacrament except that according to the rudenes of our capacitye it lead vs from the beholding of the earthly element to the heauenlye mistery So that whosoeuer shall not discerne the body of Christ from the bread and the bloud from the wine shall neuer vnderstande what the Supper meaneth or to what ende the faythfull shoulde vse these signes Afterward let that lawefull meane of seeking of Christe follow let not our mindes rest vppon the earth but ascend on high to the celestial glory where he dwelleth For the body of Christe is not so cloathed wyth life which is vncorrupt as that it shoulde cast awaye the proper nature whereof it followeth that it is finite And now he is ascended aboue the heauens least we should holde any grosse imagination of his beeing vppon the earth And surely if this mystery be heauenlye there is nothinge more preposterous then to draw him to the earth who rather calleth vs vppe to him The last which I sayde is to be noted is the kind of eatinge For it must not be dreamed that his substaunce should naturally descend into our soules but we doe eate his flesh when we do receiue life by the same For the proportion or likenes of bread with fleshe must be kepte whereby wee are taught that our soules are so fedde with the fleshe of Christ as our bodyes receiue strength by bread The flesh of Christ is therefore a spirituall nourishment and it doth therefore giue lyfe beecause that the holy Ghoste dooth powre into vs the lyfe which is in it And though that there is a diuersitie betweene the eating of the fleshe of Christ and to beleeue in him yet it is euidentlye knowne that none can feede vppon Christ otherwise then by faith because that the very eating is an effect of faith 29. I say vnto you Mathew and Mark doe adde this sentence to the holy Supper after that Christ had giuen the sign of his bloud in the cup. VVhereof some doe gather that Luke dooth set downe the same matter here which he rehearsed a litle after But this knot is easilye losed because that it maketh litle for the matter when Christe shoulde speake this For the Euangelistes doe onelye applye themselues in this place to shew that the Disciples were admonished aswell of the approachinge of the death of their maister as of the new and heauenlye lyfe For the neerer that the houre of death was at hand the more they were to be strēgthened least they shuld altogether fall away Further when as his mind was in the holy supper to set his death before their eyes as in a glasse it is not without cause that he telleth them againe that he dooth now depart out of the world But because that it was a sorrowfull message hee presently addeth this comfort that there is no cause whye they shoulde feare death for that a better lyfe doth follow it as if he shuld haue said Now I doe haste to death but so that I maye passe thence to the blessed immortalytye neyther will I lyue alone in the kingdome of God but I wyll haue you fellowes with mee of the same lyfe So we doe see how hee leadeth his Disciples by the hand to the crosse and lyfteth them vppe from thence to the hope of the resurrection As it was meete for them to be directed to the death of Christ that they might ascend by the same ladder vp into heauen so now since that Christ dyed and is receiued into heauen it is meete that wee from the beeholding of the crosse should be lead into heauen that there may bee an vnion made between death and the recouery of life And he promiseth that they shal be glorified togeather with himselfe as it appeareth plainelye in these woordes vntill that I shall drinke it new with you And that obiection whiche some doe make that meate and drinke do not agree with the kingdome of God is friuolous for Christ hath no other meaning then that his disciples should presently want his company and that hee should eate no more with them vntill they should meete togeather in heauen Further when as the society of that life shoulde be described which needeth not the helpes of meate and drinke he saieth that there shall then be a newe kinde of drinking By which worde wee are taught that hee spake allegorically Therefore in Luke hee saieth simply vntill the kingdome of God be come In summe Christ commendeth vnto vs the fruit and effecte of the redemption which he purchased by his death VVhere some doe thinke that this was fulfilled when as the Lord eate with his disciples after his resurrection it is farre from his minde For when as that was an estate betweene the course of the mortall life and the mark of the life celestial the kingdome of God was not as then reuealed and therfore he said vnto Mary touch me not for I haue not yet ascended to the father Further the Disciples were not yet entred into the kingdome of God that as partakers of the same glory they might drinke that newe wine with Christ. And where wee read that Christ dranke after his resurrection when yet hee hadde sayde hee woulde not vntyll the Disciples were gathered into the kingdome of GOD the shewe of repugnancye is easilye answered For hee dooth not preciselye speake of meate and drinke but of the fellowshippe of this present lyfe Also wee knowe that Christe did not drinke at that time that hee might eyther strengthen hymselfe by those meates or to eate with hys Disciples for companye but onelye that
gather his owne shepe togither But though the Prophet doeth generally declare that the church should be spoiled of shepheards yet this doth truly and properly belong to Christ. For when he was the chiefe of all shepheards of whome only the safety of the Church depended he being dead al hope might seeme to be taken away And this temptation was extreeme that the redemer who was the spirite and life of the people shoulde sodainly be caryed to death when he had begun to gather the flocke of God togither And so much the more notable was the grace of God when as the remnant of the flocke was wonderfully recouered againe out of that confusion and destruction VVe see therefore that Christ applied thys testimony very aptly least this scattering nowe at hande should terrifie the disciples aboue measure and yet that they knowing their owne infirmitye should repose themselues vppon their pastour This therefore is the sense you thinke because you haue not yet tried your owne weakenesse that you are valiant and strong enough but shortly after it shall appeare that Zachariah foretold the truth the shepheard should be slaine and the shepe shoulde be scattered but in the meane season let the promisse whyche is added recreate and comfort you that he wil gather the dispearsed shepe home to himselfe And this place doeth teach that no vnitie is safe but that which keepeth the sheepe togither vnder Christes shepheards staffe 32. After that I shall rise againe He doeth more euidently expresse here that whiche I touched euen nowe that the disciples stricken wyth feare shoulde for a little time be as sheepe dispearsed and going astray so that yet againe they should be called backe to the shepefold For Christ doth not simply say that he shal rise again but promiseth that he will be their guide and adopteth them to be his companions as if they hadde stoode sounde and that they may haue the more assurance he doeth before appoynt the place whether he will gather them together againe as if hee should haue sayde I will gather you that are scattered againe to Ierusalem 33. Peter answeared Though Peter dissembleth not but speaketh of a sincere affection yet because that with a vaine confidence of hys owne strength he is caried into a fonde bragge hee is woorthily reprooued by Christ and shortly after is grieuously punished for his rashnesse So the successe doth declare that Peter promised more then he was able to performe because that he had not made sufficient trial of himselfe Heereby also it is better perceiued how blockish a thing it is for mā to be drunke with trust in himselfe in that he being againe admonished by the sonne of God of his weakenesse and he addeth an othe so that he yeeldeth not neither forsaketh any thinge of his vaine opinion but that he proceedeth with greater boldnesse to puffe vppe those lofty and bragging motions Yet it is demaunded whether Peter might not hope for that which he promiseth of himselfe and also whether he trusting in the promisse of Christ might not promisse this of himselfe I answeare that the promisse which Christe made before to his disciples of the spirite of inuincible fortitude belonged to that time of renewinge which followed the resurrection Therefore because they were not yet endued with the heauenly power Peter trusting in himselfe went beyonde the boundes of faith And he greatly offended two wayes for hee preuentinge the time rashly promised for himselfe and reposed not himselfe in the promisse of the Lord. Secondly with closed eyes he passing by his owne infirmity doeth rather securely then valiantly promisse more of himselfe then reason would require This therfore is to be noted that euery man being mindefull of his owne infirmity should flee to the assistāce of the holy Ghost then that no man shuld be so bolde to take more vpon him then the Lorde promiseth And the faithfull ought so to come prepared to the battel as that not doubting nor mistrusting the successe of the victory they shuld couragiously resist feare for fearfulnesse and too much doubtfulnesse is a signe of distrust But on the other side blockishnesse must be auoided which both driueth away all care and puffeth vppe the mindes with pride and quencheth the desire of praying This meane is notably set downe by Paule to the Phil. 2. 12. when hee commandeth vs to make an ende of our saluation with feare and trembling because it is God which worketh in vs both to will and to do For of the one side he prouoketh them that are humbled to seeke helpe other where yet againe least this course shoulde make vs slouthful hee exhorteth vs to behaue our selues boldly Therefore so oft as any temptation doth assault vs first lette vs remember our infirmity that we being altogither ouerthrowne may learne from other where to seeke for that which is wanting in vs then let vs remember the grace which is offered vs which may put vs out of doubt For they which forget their owne infirmity wythout calling vpon God doe imagine themselues to be strong doe as rashe souldiours which rashly doe runne to the warres and when they haue breathed out their surfetting they thinke vppon nothing else but flight And it is maruell that the rest of the disciples after that Peter was reprooued doe yet fall into the same rashnesse whereby it appeareth howe little acquainted they were with themselues By the which example we are taught not to be so bold to attempt any thing further then the hand of God doeth leade vs because that nothing is more transitorie or will sooner vanishe then an inconsiderate zeale The disciples sawe nothing to be more vile and absurd then to forsake their maister Therfore they doe iustly detest that offence but without assurance of hope of the promisse and neglecting prayers they doe flie in vaine to boast of that constancie which was none Mathew Marke Luke 22.     35. And he sayd vnto them when I sent you without bagge and scrippe and shee s lacked yee any thynge And they sayd Nothing 36. Then he sayde to them But nowe he that hath a bagge let him take it and likewise a scrippe and hee that hath none let him sell his coate buy a sword 37. For I say vnto you that yet the same whiche is wrytten must be perfourmed in race euen wyth the wicked was he numbred for doubtlesse those thinges which are wrytten of me haue an ende 38. And they sayd Lord behold here are two swords And he sayd vnto them It is enough All Christes speache tendeth to this purpose that he had as yet spared his disciples had not laid more trouble vpō them then they were apt for And he cōmendeth the ease of the former time that they might the more willingly prepare thēselues to a sharper warfare For to what ende hath he yet kept these simple yong nouices far out of the shot and reach of the dartes but that in this case they somwhat
offered in the heauenly oracles doeth profite vs nothing But nowe if by vnderstanding we do not perceiue what shoulde be right howe shoulde our will be able to yeelde obedience Therefore it must be granted that we are weake euery way so that the heauenly doctrine is not otherwise profitable and effectuall to vs but so farre as the Spirite doeth frame our mindes to vnderstande the same and our hearts to be subiecte to the yoake of the same and therefore that we may become sitte disciples to him it is necessary that all trust in our owne witte being cast away to aske for light from heauen and also leauing the folish opinion of free will to deliuer our selues to be gouerned by God And it is not without a cause that Paule in the first to the Corrinthians the third chapter and the eighteene verse doth commaunde menne to become foolish that they may be wise to God for the light of the spirite cannot be extinguished by a worse darknesse then by trusting to our owne witte Furthermore lette the readers obserue that the disciples hadde not the eyes of the minde opened wherewith without the helpe of God they might discerne mysteries but as they are comprehēded in the Scriptures and so was that fulfilled which was spoken in the hundreth and nineteene Psalme and eighteene verse Lighten mine eyes that I may consider the maruellous woorkes of thy lawe For God doeth not giue suche a Spirite to his childrenne as shoulde abolishe the vse his woorde but rather it should make the same frutefull VVherefore fanaticall menne doe wickedly vnder pretence of reuelations graunt themselues libertie to despice the Scripture For that which we doe reade heere of the Apostles Christ worketh daily in all his for that by his spirit he directeth them to vnderstand the Scripture but not to carye them to vaine imaginations But it is demaunded why Christe hadde rather loose his labour for the space of whole three yeres then to open their eyes presently I doe aunsweare first thoughe the fruite of the labour doeth not so speedily appeare yet it was not vnprofitable for being lightened a newe they also felte the profite of the former time For I doe take that their mindes were opened not onely that they might afterwardes be apt to learne if any thing shoulde be taught them but that they might call to memorie for their profite the doctrine hearde before in vaine Furthermore that ignorance by the space of three yeares doeth teache vs a profitable lesson that they obtained not this knowledge a newe by any other meanes then by the heauenly light Adde also that Christe in this shewed an euident token of his Godhead because that hee was not onely a minister of the outwarde voyce which should giue a sounde in the eares but by his secreate power he pearsed into the mindes and so he declareth that it belongeth to him alone which Paule denieth to the doctours of the Churche 1. Corrinthians 3. 7. yet it is to be noted that the Apostles were not so voyd and depriued of the light of vnderstanding but that they knew some few principles but because it was only a smal taste whiche they hadde this is accounted the beginning of true vnderstanding while the vaile being remooued they doe see Christe plainely in the Lawe and the Prophets 46. Hee sayde vnto them so it is wrytten By this texte is their quarrel confuted whiche doe pretende that the outwarde doctrine is but in vaine if that we haue in vs by nature no power to vnderstande the same To what ende say they shoulde the Lorde speake to the deafe But we see where the Spirite of Christe which is the inwarde maister perfourmeth his parte that the labour of the minister which teacheth is not lost For after that Christe endewed his with the Spirite of vnderstandinge they doe receiue fruite by that which he teacheth out of the Scriptures And euen amongest the reprobate thoughe the outwarde voyce vanisheth awaye as if it were deade yet notwythstandinge it maketh them inexcusable And as concerninge the woordes of Christ they are gathered of that principle It is necessary that what soeuer is wrytten shoulde be fulfilled because that God witnessed nothing by his prophets but that which hee woulde certainly bring to passe But by the same woordes wee are taughte what must be chiefly learned out of the law and the Prophets for sith Christe is the ende and soule of the lawe without him and besides him what knowledge soeuer is obtained is vaine and friuolous VVherefore as any manne shall desire to profite best by the Scripture lette him bee alwayes bente to thys poynte And nowe Christe doeth heere firste sette downe his death and resurrection and afterwardes the fruite whiche shall come to vs by them bothe For whence commeth repentaunce and forgiuenesse of sinnes but because oure olde manne is crucified with Christe Romanes 6. and the 6. verse that throughe the same wee maye arise to newnesse of life for by the sacrifice of his death our sinnes are cleansed and our filthinesse washed with bloude but righteousnesse is obtained by the resurrection Therefore hee teacheth that the cause and matter of oure saluation muste be soughte in hys death and resurrection for from thence proceedeth reconciliation with God and regeneration into a newe and spirituall life And therefore it is plainely expressed that as well forgiuenesse of sinnes as repentance cānot be preached but in his name For neither can we hope for imputation of righteousnesse neither growe to the deniall of our selues and newnesse of life but so farre foorth as he is become our righteousnesse and sanctification 1. Cor. 1. 30. But because we haue entreated at large in another place of this summe of the Gospel it is better that the readers should thence seeke for any thing whiche they haue forgotten then to be burdened with repetition 47. Amongst all nations beginning first Now doeth Christ at the lengthe declare euidently that which hee had before concealed that the grace of redemption which he brought doth generally appertaine to all nations For though the calling of the Gentiles hadde beene oft foretold by the Prophets yet the same had not beene so reuealed as that the Iewes ●huld easily admit them into the hope of saluation with them Therefore vntill the resurrection Christ was not supposed to be the redeemer but of that one speciall people And then was the wall first broken downe that they which before were straungers and scattered abroade might be gathered into the sheepefolde of the Lorde Yet in the meane season least the couenaunt of God might seeme to bee in vaine Christe placeth the Iewes in the first degree commaunding that they should first beginne at Hierusalem for because that God had peculiarly adopted the stocke of Abraham it was meete that it shoulde be preferred before the rest of the worlde This is the right of the first begotten which Ieremiah assigneth vnto them 31. 9. Paule also doeth euery where
goe vnto them they were greatly afraide as if they should defile themselues the doctrine Act. 10. 28. Baptising them Christe commaundeth that they shoulde be baptized which shoulde giue their name to the Gospell and should professe them selues to be disciples partlye that it mighte be a witnesse vnto them of eternal life before God partly that it might be an outward signe of faith before men For we knowe that by this signe God doeth witnesse vnto vs the grace of his adoption for he grafteth vs into the body of his sonne that he might account vs to be of his flocke and therefore our spirituall washing wherewith he reconcileth vs vnto himselfe and the new righteousnesse are there represented But as God confirmeth his grace vnto vs by this zeale so who soeuer doe offer themselues to baptisme they do in like maner binde their faith as it were by giuing of an obligation Also sith the Apostles haue these dueties expreslye committed to their charge togither with the preachinge of the Gospell it followeth that there are no other lawfull ministers of Baptisme but they which doe also minister doctrine Therefore where libertie hath beene graunted to priuate men and also to women to baptise because it is not agreeable to the institution of Christ it was nothing else but a meere prophanation Also where the first place is appoynted for doctrine there is a true differēce set down betwene this mysterie and the adoulterous rites of the Gentiles wherwith they do enter thēselues into their religions for vntill God by his word shal giue life to the earthly elemēt it is made no sacramēt for vs. As superstition hath a preposterous emulation at all the works of God so folish men do frame diuers sacraments according to their owne pleasure but because they want the woorde as the soule they are vaine and toyishe shadowes VVherefore let vs note that by the power of the doctrine it commeth to passe that the fignes doe put on a newe nature so as the outwarde washing of the flesh beginneth to be a spirituall pledge of regeneration by the doctrine of the Gospell goinge before and this is the right consecration in steade wherof popery hath brought in vppon vs magicall exorcismes And therefore it is sayde in Marke He that shall beleeue and be baptised by which woordes Christ doeth not onely exclude hypocrites from the hope of saluation who beinge without faith are onely puffed vp with the outward signe but hee ioyneth baptisme to the holy bande of doctrine that this should be nothing else then an addition to that But because Christe commaundeth them to reache before he commaundeth to baptise and willeth that onely beleeuers be receiued to baptisme baptisme seemeth not to be rightly ministred except that faith should goe before And vnder this pretence the Anabaptists haue stirred much against the baptisme of infants Yet it is not harde to be answeared if any manne shall consider the reason of the commaundement Christ commaundeth that the embassage of eternall saluation should be caryed to all the Gentiles hee confirmeth the same by adding the seale of baptisme And there is good cause why the beleuing of the woorde is sette before baptisme sith the Gentiles were altogither straungers from God and had no fellowship with the elect people For otherwise it should haue beene a lying signe which should offer forgiuenesse of sinnes and the gift of the spirite to vnbeleeuers who as yet were not the members of Christ. And we knowe that they are gathered by faith who were before dispearsed Nowe it is demanded vppon what condition God adopted them to be his sonnes which before were straungers It cannot certainly be denied when hee once accepted them into his fauour but that hee extendeth the same to their children and nephewes At the comming of Christ he shewed himselfe generally to be a father both to the Gentiles and to the Iewes Therefore it is necessary that the promisse which was in times past made to the Iewes shoulde also at this daye be of force amongest the Gentiles I will be thy God and the God of thy seede after thee Gen. 17. 7. So wee see them which by faith are entred into the Church of God to be accounted for the members of Christe and also to be called to the enheritance of saluation And yet baptisme is not by this meanes separated from faith or doctrine for though yong infants doe not as yet by reason of their age take holde of the grace of God by faith yet God accepting of theyr parents doeth also embrace them I doe therfore deny it to be rashly done to baptise infants whereto the Lord doth call them while he promiseth them to be their God In the name of the father This place doeth teache the full and euident knowledge of God the which beinge but darkely shadowed foorth vnder the lawe and the Prophets at the lengthe sprange foorth vnder the kingdome of Christe The olde fathers neuer durst call God their Father if they hadde not taken this hope from Christe theyr head neither were they altogither ignorant of the eternall wisdome of God which was the fountaine of light and life It was also one of their confessed principles that God shewed forth his power in the holy ghost But at the arising of the gospell God was much more manifestly shewed vnder the three persons for the father then reuealed himselfe plainly in the sonne his liuely and expresse image and Christ himselfe lightening the world by the cleare brightnesse of his spirite made both him himselfe to be knowen But it is not without cause that heere is expresse mention made of the Father of the Sonne and of the spirite for the force of baptisme cannot be apprehended otherwise then by beginning at the free mercy of the Father who reconcileth vs vnto himselfe by hys only begotten Sonne then shall Christ himselfe appeare before vs wyth the sacrifice of his death and at the length the holy ghost shal also come by whome he washeth and regenerateth vs and at the length he maketh vs partakers of all their good giftes So we do see that we do not rightly know God except that our faith do distinctly conceiue three persons in one essence and that the efficacie and frute of baptisme doth come from thence that God the Father adopteth vs in his Sonne and by the Spirit we being purged from the silthinesse of our fleshe he refourmeth vs to righteousnesse MAR. 16. He that shall beleeue This promisse was added that it might allure all mankind to faith as againe for the terrifying of the vnbeleeuers there followeth a denounced sentence of grieuous destruction But it is no maruel that saluation is promised to the faithful for by beleuing in the only begotten sonne of God they are not only accoūted amongst the sonnes of God but being endued with the righteousnes of his grace and with the spirit of regeneration they do possesse the summe of eternal life Baptisme is ioyned
as muche force as the vniuersall sentence who soeuer shall not be borne againe c. Furthermore by this worde borne againe he doth not meane the amending of one parte but the renuyng of the whole nature VVhereuppon it followeth that there is nothing in vs but that whiche is corrupt For if it bee necessary that the whole and euery part be renued it must needes followe that the corruption is spread abrode euery where Concerning which matter wee will speake shortly after Erasmus following Cyrillus his iudgement did euill translate the aduerb anothen from aboue I confesse that the signification thereof is doubtfull amongest the Grecians but we know that Christe did talke with Nicodemus in Hebrew Furthermore there had beene no place there for the doubtfull saying wherewith Nicodemus being deceiued doth childishly doubt of the second natiuitie of the flesh Therefore he conceiued no other thing out of the words of Christ but this that a man must be borne againe before he can enter into the kingdome of God 4 How can a man be borne Although the manner of speeche whiche Christ vsed was not expressed in the law tho prophets notwithstanding forasmuch as there is mention made euery where in the scripture of renouation and it is one of the first principles of faith it is manifest what euill successe the Scribes had as then in the reading of the Scripture It was not only one mans fault to be ignoraunt of this what the grace of regeneratiō ment but forasmuch as they were al almost occupyed in friuolous shiftes and fallacies that which was the chiefest in the doctrine of godlines was neglected The like example haue wee in papistrie at this day For seeing that they doe weatie themselues all their whole life in hidden speculations they doe no more knowe what belongeth properly vnto the worship of God the hope of our saluation vnto the exercises of Godlinesse then coblers and neatheards do know the course of the starres yea whilest that they delight them selues in strange mysteries they doe openly contemne the naturall doctrine of the scripture as vnmeete for the degree of a master teacher It is therfore no maruel that Nicodemus doth here as it were stumble at a straw For this is the iust vengeance of God that those who seeme to themselues to bee most excellent and graund Doctors with whom the simplicitie of the common doctrine is base and vile are astonied in small points 5 Vnlesse a man be borne of water This place hath beene diuersly expounded For some haue thought that the two partes of regeneration are distinctly expressed and that by this worde water is signified the deniyng of the olde man and by spirite they vnderstoode the newe life Othersome doe thinke that it comprehendeth an hidden matching of contraries as if Christ did set water and the spirite namely the pure moyst elements against the grosse nature of man So that they expound this saying Allegorically as though Christ did commaund vs to put off the heauie and weightie masse of flesh and to be made like to water and the ayre that we may couet vpward or at least be not so muche depressed toward the earth But both these opinions seeme to me to be contrary to Christe his meaning Chrysostome vnto whom the greater part subscribeth referreth the worde water vnto Baptisme so that the sense shold be that we enter into the kingdome of God through baptisme because the spirit of God doth regenerate vs ther. And here came in that opinion that baptisme was necessarie to the hope of eternall life But admitte Christe doth speake in this place of Baptisme yet the wordes are not so to be vrged that he includeth saluation in the outward signe but he rather ioyneth water with the spirite because he doth testifie and seale vnto vs by that visible signe the newnesse of life which GOD alone doth worke in vs by his spirite It is true indeede that we are driuen from saluation by neglectyng of baptisme and I doe confesse that in this sense it is necessary but the hope of saluation is falsly included vnder the signe And a concerning this place I can by no meanes bee persuaded to thinke that Christe speaketh of baptisme for that had beene out of due time For wee must alwayes marke what was the intent and purpose of Christ which we haue before declared namely that hee intended to exhort Nicodemus vnto newnes of life because he was not fit to receiue the Gospel vntyll he began to be another man Therefore it is one and a simple sentence that we must be borne againe that we may be the children of God and that the holy spirit is the authour of this second begetting For whereas Nicodemus did dreame of Pythagoras his regeneration Christe to the ende hee might take from him this errour added this in steede of an interpretation that it commeth not to passe naturally that men are borne againe neither yet that it is needful that they put on another body but that they are borne when as they are renued in minde and heart through the grace of the spirite Therefore hee putteth the spirite and water both for one thing neyther ought this to seeme hearde or racked For it is an vsuall maner of speakyng in the scripture when as mention is made of the spirite to adde this woorde water or fire to expresse the force thereof Now we haue sometimes had this that it is Christe that baptiseth with the holy spirite and fire where by fire is meant nothing els but the spirite and doth onely shewe how the same doth worke in vs. And whereas he doth heere put water first it skilleth not much yea this speech runneth better then the other namely because the plaine and manifest meaning doth followe the Metaphore As if Christe did say that no man is the child of God vntill he be renued by water and that this water is the spirite that purgeth vs and which being powred into vs by his power inspireth the power and force of the heauenly life seeing that we are by nature altogether drie and wythered And to the end Christe may vpbraid vnto Nicodemus his ignorance he doeth induce a kinde of speeche vsed in the scripture For Nicodemus ought to haue acknowledged at length that that which Christ said was taken out of the common doctrine of the Prophetes Therfore water is nothing els but the inward purgation and quickening of the holy spirite Moreouer the cōiunctiō copulatiue is cōmōly takē expositiuely namely when as the former member is expounded by the latter And moreouer the text agreeth with mee For when as Christ doth by and by adde a reason why we must be borne againe making no mention of water he teacheth that the newnes of life which he requireth consisteth only in the spirite whereupon it followeth that the water is not to be separated from the spirite 6 That which is borne of flesh Hee proueth by contraries that the kingdome
yet is the cause and originall vnknowen For my part as I doe not much disagree with them so will I indeuour to expound the meaning of Christe more cleerely and surely I retaine that grounde that Christe doth borrowe a similitude of the order of nature Nicodemus thought it to bee an vncredible thynge which hee had hearde of regeneration and the newe life because the meane and manner of this regeneration did surpasse his capacitie To the ende that Christe may take from him this doubt hee teacheth him that euen in the corporall life there appeareth the singuler power of God the reason whereof is hidden For all men haue the vitall spirite from the ayre the mouing of the ayre is felt Yet doe wee not knowe whence it commeth or whither it goeth If God do worke so mightily in this fraile and mortall life that we are compelled to marueile at his power how absurd a thing is it to goe about with our minde to measure and apprehende the hydden worke of GOD in the celestiall and supernaturall life so that we will beleeue no more but that which appeareth So Paule when hee inueigheth against those which doe therefore refuse the doctrine of the resurrection because it seemeth an vnpossible thing that the body which is nowe subiect to corruption when as it shall be turned to dust and brought to nothing shoulde bee cloathed with blessed immortalitie he casteth in their teeth theyr dulnesse that they doe not consider and marke the like power in a corne of wheate For the seede sprouteth not vntill it be rotten This is that wonderfull wisedome whereof Dauid crieth out Therefore they are too dull who being admonished by the common order of nature doe not ryse higher that they may knowe that the hande of GOD is farre more mightie in the spirituall kingdome of Christe And whereas Christe doth forbid him to maruell wee must not so take it as if he would haue vs to set light by so excellent a worke of God and that whiche is worthie of chiefe admiration but he will not haue vs so to maruell that our faith be hindered thereby For many do refuse that as a thing vntrue which they thinke to be too hard and difficile To conclude let vs not doubt but that wee are fashioned againe by the spirite of GOD and are made newe men although wee knowe not howe this is done 8 The winde bloweth whyther it lusteth Not that there is any will properly in the blast but because it moueth to and fro freely and diuersly For the ayre is carryed sometimes hyther and sometimes thyther And this maketh more to the matter because if it did run continually with a straight course as doth the water it were lesse to be maruelled at So is euerie one Christe his meaning is that the motion and action of the spirite of God doth no lesse appeare in the renuing of man then the motion of the ayer in this earthly and externall life but the manner is hidden Therefore we are vnthankefull and wicked if we doe not adore the incomprehensible power of God in the heauenly life whereof he sheweth vnto vs such an euident token in this worlde if we doe attribute lesse vnto him in the restoring of the saluation of the soule then hee sheweth vnto vs in the defending of the estate of the bodie The application shall bee somewhat more plaine if you resolue the sentence thus suche is the force and effect of the holy spirite in the regenerate man 9 Howe can these thinges bee VVee see what thing doth most of all hinder Nicodemus whatsoeuer he heareth hee wondereth at it as at a monster because he vnderstandeth not the maner howe it is done So there is nothing which doth more hinder vs then our owne arrogancie namely because we will alwayes bee wiser then we shoulde and therfore we doe with diuelishe pride reiect whatsoeuer is repugnant to our reason As though it were meete that the infinite power of GOD should be restrained vnto so small a measure VVee may in deede in some measure enquyre after the reason and manner of the woorkes of GOD so that it bee done soberly and reuerently but Nicodemus doth by this obiection refuse this as a fable because hee thinketh that it cannot bee VVhich thing we will handle more largely in the sixt chapter 10 Art thou a master in Israell Because Christe sawe that hee spente his time and labour in vaine in teaching a proude man hee falleth to chiding And truely doctrine shall take no roote neither bring foorth fruite in such vntill such time as that winde of vaine confidence shal bee gone out of them wherewith they swell Furthermore this is most fitly obiected vnto him to tame his pride withall For Christe espieth his ignorance in that wherein he seemeth to himselfe most subtile and wise He thought that this was a point of grauitie and wisedome not to admit a thing vnpossible because he is foolishly credulous that doth beleeue another mans wordes before he doe well knowe the reason of them But in the meane while Nicodemus is to be laught at with his masterly countenance for that hee doubteth more then childishly in the first elements Such doubting truly is filthie and shamefull For what manner religion what manner knowledge of God what manner rule of good life what manner hope of eternall life shall there be vnlesse we holde that a man is renued by the spirite of God Therefore there is an Emphasis in these words these thinges For seeing that the scripture doth euer now and then inculcate this point of doctrine the first beginners must not be ignorant thereof Therefore it is intollerable that hee shoulde be ignorant and vnskilfull in the same who doth professe himselfe to be a teacher in the church 11 That which wee knowe wee speake Certaine doe referre this vnto Christe and Iohn Baptist othersome say that the plurall number is put insteede of the singuler number But I doe verily thinke that Christe doth ioyne himselfe with all the Prophetes speaketh in all their persons generally For the Philosophers and other teachers whose woorkes are more full of wordes then wisedome doe oftentimes thrust in those toyes which they haue inuented but Christe doth challendge this as a thing proper to him and al the seruants of God that they doe onely deliuer that doctrine which is sure and certaine For God doth not sende them to bable of thinges which they knowe not or doubtfull matters but he frameth them in his schoole that they may teache others those thinges which they themselues haue learned Furthermore as Christe setteth forth vnto vs by this title the certaintie of his doctrine so he prescribeth vnto all his ministers a rule of modestie that they doe not thrust in their owne dreames or coniectures that they doe not set abroche mens inuentions wherein there is no soundnesse but let them beare faithfull and true witnesse with God Let euery man therefore take heede
haue giuen thee liuely water In these words Christ doth testifie that if our petitions be directed vnto him they shall not be void And truly without this hope all the desire to aske shoulde waxe colde And seeing that Christe doth preuent those that come vp to him and is ready to satisfie them all there remaineth no longer any place for sluggishnesse or lingering But there is no one that woulde not thynke that this is spoken to vs al vnlesse euery mans vnbeliefe did hinder him And although he translated this word water vnto the spirite according to the thing that is present yet this Metaphore is vsuall enough in the scriptures and hath very good reason for we are as drie barren ground there is no ioyce nor sappe in vs vntill such time as the Lorde doth water vs with his spirite The spirite is called els where pure water but in another sense namely because it wipeth away and purgeth the blottes and filth whereof we are full But in this and such like places the secret quickening whereby he restoreth vs to life defendeth and finisheth the same is spoken of Some there be who expounde it of the doctrine of the Gospell whereunto I confesse this name doth agree But I doe thinke that Christ doth vnder this comprehende all the whole grace of renouation For we know he was sent to this ende that hee might bring a newe life Therefore in my iudgement his meaning was to set water against the want of all good thinges wherewith mankind is oppressed and troubled Furthermore he doth not onely call it liuing water of the effect as being quickening water but he alludeth also vnto the diuers sortes of waters Therfore it is called liuely because it floweth out of a liuing fountaine 11 Syr thou neither hast any thing to draw with As the Samaritanes were despiced of the Iewes so they did despice them againe Therefore this woman doth at the first set light by Christe and so consequently doeth flout him shee knew well enough that Christe doth speake figuratiuely but she requiteth him with a contrary figure as if she should say that he promiseth more then he is able to perfourme Then secondly shee accuseth him of arrogancie because he preferreth himselfe before the holy Patriarche Iacob Iacob saith she was contented with this well both for his owne vse and the vse of all his familie hast thou better water It doth sufficiently appeare how corrupt this comparison is euen by this because she setteth the seruant against the master and a dead man against the liuing God and yet how many doe at this day fall into the same vice VVherfore we must take good heede that we doe not extoll mens persons so high that they darken the glory of God Truly the gifts of God are reuerently to be reuerenced wheresoeuer they appeare Therefore it is meete that we honour men who excell in godlinesse are indued with other rare giftes but yet so farre foorth that God doe alwayes surpasse all that Christe with his Gospel may shyne and bee seene for all the brightnesse and gorgeousnesse of the worlde muste yeeld vnto him VVee must also note that the Samaritanes did falsly boaste that they were the Progenie of the holy fathers So at this day the Papistes whereas they are bastardes and an adulterous seede doe most proudly bragge of the fathers and do mocke and taunt the lawfull children of God Although the Samaritanes had come of Iacob accoding to the flesh yet because they were altogether growen out of kinde and alienated from true godlinesse this had beene a wrong kinde of boasting Now whereas they are Cuthites by their originall or at least gathered together of the profane Gentiles yet they doe not cease falsly to pretend and vse the name of the holy patriarch but this was to no ende So must it needes befall all those who doe wickedly reioyce in the light of men they must be depriued of the light of God and haue no fellowship with the holy fathers whose title they did abuse 13 Euery one which drinketh of the water How small effect soeuer Christ doth see his doctrine take and so consequently to be mocked yet doeth he proceede more plainely to expound that which hee had said For hee setteth downe the vse of both waters that the one serueth the body for a time the force of the other is perpetuall in the quickening of the soule For as the body is subiect to corruption so the helpes wherewith it is fostered must be fraile and britle that which quickeneth the soule must needes bee eternall And that is not contrarie to the woordes of Christe that the faithfull are inflamed with a desire of more plentifull grace euen vnto the ende of their life For he doth not meane that wee do drinke the first day so much as will serue vs so that we haue need of no more But his onely meaning is this that the holy spirite is a fountaine which runneth continually so that they neede not to feare that they shall wyther away who are renued with the spirituall grace Therfore although we be a thyrst during our whole life yet is it certain that we haue drunken the spirite not for one day onely or a short time but that flowing continually he may neuer forsake and faile vs. So that the faithfull are a thirst during their whole life and that vehemently yet in the meane while they abounde with liuely ioyse because howe lyttle grace soeuer they haue receiued the same doth quicken them continually so that they are neuer altogether drie VVherefore this sufficiencie is not set against desire but onely against drinesse which thing is more plainly expressed in the words next following It shall be 〈…〉 containe of water leaping our vnto eternall life For there is a continuall 〈◊〉 signified which cherisheth in them in this mortall life heauenly eternitie Therefore the grace of Christ doth not flow vnto vs for a short time but doth powre out it selfe euen vnto blessed immortalitie because it ceaseth not to flow vntil the vncorruptible life which it doth begin be throughly made perfect Giue mee this water It is questionlesse that the woman doth knowe well enough that Christ doth speake of the spirituall water but because she despiseth him shee counteth all his promises as good as nothing For doctrine can haue no passage so long as he that speaketh is not of any anthoritie amongest vs. Therefore the woman doth interrupt hym by the way as if shee shoulde say thou makest great bragges but I see nothing if thou canst doe any thing let me see it indeede 16 Iesus saith vnto her goe call thy husband and come hyther 17 The woman answered and said vnto him I haue no husband Iesus said vnto her thou hast said well I haue no husband 18 For thou hast had fiue husbands and he whom thou now hast is not thy husbande this saide ● thou truly 19 The woman saith vnto him Syr I see
continually in defending and preseruing the order thereof as Paule teacheth that in him we liue we moue and haue our being And Dauid teacheth that all thinges doe stande forasmuch as the spirite of God giueth life vnto them and that they doe fayle so sone as they shal be destitute of his force Neither doth God only defende nature being created by him with his generall prouidence only but hee ordereth moderateth euery part thereof And he doth especially keepe gouern by his ayde the faithfull whom he hath taken into his tuition And I woorke Christe hauing omitted the patronage defence of the present cause hee declareth the ende and vse of the myracle namely that he may bee thereby knowen to bee the sonne of God For this was his purpose in all his words deedes to shew himselfe to be the authour of saluation This is proper to the diuinitie which he challengeth to himselfe as saith also the Apostle that he susteineth all thinges by his mightie becke And he doth testifie that he is God for this cause that beeing reuealed in the flesh he may execute the office of Christe so that he affirmeth that hee came from heauen because he would haue it knowen especially why he descended into the earth 18 For this cause therefore Hee was so farre from pacifiyng their rage with this defence that he did rather prouoke the same Neither was hee ignorant how malitious their wickednes and how hard their stubbornnesse were but this was his chiefe drift to profite a fewe of his who were then present and secondly to bring to light their incurable wickednesse And he hath taught vs by example that we must neuer yeelde vnto the furie of the wicked but endeuour so much as neede requireth to defende the truth of God though all the worlde gainsay vs and murmur against vs. Neyther is there any cause why the seruauntes of God should be greeued if so be it they haue not so good successe as they would wish seeing y t euen Christ himself had not such successe Neither is it any maruell if Satan doe so much more violently rage in his members and instruments the more that the glory of God doth shew it selfe In the former member when the Euangelist saith that they were displeased with Christe because he had broken the Sabboth he speaketh according to their meaning For I haue alredie taught that the matter was otherwise The principall cause of indignation is because he calleth god his father And indeede Christ his intent was to haue God to bee taken for his father after a peculiar sort that hee might exempt himselfe from the common order of other men He made himselfe equall with God seeing that he did attribute vnto himselfe the continuall working And Christe is so farre from denying of this that he doth more plainly confirme the same VVhereby is refuted the madnes of the Arrians who did confesse that Christe was God in such sort that they thought that he was not equall with the father As if there coulde any inequalitie be found in the one and simple essence of God 19 Therefore Iesus answered VVee see as I haue saide that Christe is so farre from refuting that which the Iewes did obiect althogh it were slāderous y t he doth more plainely proue that it was true And first of al he stādeth vpō this point that y t was a work of god wher w t y e Iewes found that they may perceiue that they must striue with God if they proceede to condemne that which must of necessitie be ascribed vnto him This place was in times past diuersly tost betweene the true fathers the Arrians Arrius did gather thereby that the sonne was lesser then the father because he could doe nothing of himselfe The fathers did obiect that the distinction of person is only meant by these words that it might be knowen that Christ is of the father and yet notwithstanding that he is not depriued of the internall power of working But they were both deceiued for neither are these words spoken cōcerning the bare diuinitie of Christ and those thinges which we shall see by by doe not belong of themselues simplie vnto the eternall worde of God but doe only agree with the son of God inasmuch as hee is reuealed in the flesh Let vs therefore set Christ before our eyes as he was sent of the father to be the redeemer of the worlde The Iewes did consider in him no farther thing then his humane nature Therefore he affirmeth that hee healed not the sicke man as he was man but by his diuine power whiche laid hid vnder the visible fleshe This is the estate of the cause wheras they fastening their eyes vpon the flesh did contemne Christ hee biddeth them ryse higher and behold God All the speech is to be referred vnto this matching of contraries that they are greatly deceiued who thinke that they haue to deale with a mortall man whilest that they accuse Christ for his workes which were meere diuine Therefore doth he so earnestly affirme that in this worke hee differeth nothing from the father 20 For the father loueth the sonne and sheweth him all things which he doth and he will shew him greater workes then these that you may maruel 21 For as the father rayseth vp the dead and quickeneth so the sonne also quickneth whom he will 22 For the father iudgeth no man but he hath giuen all iudgement to the sonne 23 That all men may honour the sonne as they honour the father hee that honoureth not the sonne honoureth not the father that sent him 24 Verily verily I say vnto you that he which heareth my wordes and beleeueth in him that sent me hath eternall life and shal not come into iudgemen but hath passed from death to life 20 For the father loueth All men see howe hard and farre set the exposition of the old writers is God say they loueth himselfe in his son But this doth very well belong vnto Christ being clothed with the flesh to be beloued of his father Yea we know that hee was distinguished by this excellent title aswell from angels as frō men This is my welbeloued son For we know that Christ was elected that in him might be resident the whole loue of God that it might flow thence vnto vs as frō a full fountaine For Christ is beloued of God the father as hee is the head of the church He teacheth that this loue is the cause why the father worketh al things by his hand For when he saith that al things are shewed vnto him by these words is to be vnderstood the cōmunication or participation as if he should say as the father hath powred out his mind into mee so hath he poured into me his power that in my works y ● diuine glory may appeare so y t mē cā seek no diuine thing which they may not find in me And truely we shall in vaine seeke
as appertaining vnto the kingdome of God bee iudged dead And Paule declareth this death at large Ephe. 2. 1. and 4. 17. when as hee saith that we are estraunged frō the pure sound reason of the minde and that being enemies vnto God with all the affection of our hearte and aduersaries of his iustice that we wander in darkenesse beyng blinde we are giuen to wicked concupiscence If there be no force in a nature that is so corrupt to desire righteousnesse it followeth that the life of God is quite extinguished in vs. So that the grace of Christ is the true resurrection from death Furthermore we haue this grace giuen vs by the gospell not that the outwarde voyce hath so great force which doth oftentimes beate the eares in vaine but because Christ doth speake vnto our heartes within by his spirite that wee may receiue by faith the life that is offered vs. Neither doth he intreate in this place generally of al the dead but he meaneth only the elect whose eares God doth bore through and open that they may heare the voyce of his sonne that it may restore them to life Yea Christ doth distinctly in his words cōmend vnto vs a double grace when he saith The dead shall heare the voyce of the son of God and they that shall heare shall liue For it is no lesse contrary to nature for the dead to heare then to bee called againe to life from which they were fallen Therefore both of these are properties of the secrete power of God VVhen he saith The houre shall come and now is he speaketh as of a thing before vnaccustomed And truly the publishing of the Gospell was a newe and sodaine resurrection of the worlde If any man aske this question whether the worde of God did not alwayes giue life to men or no wee may readilie answere that the doctrine of the lawe and the prophetes forasmuch as it was appointed for God his people it rather had this office to nourish those in life who were begotten to God then to bring them backe againe from death But the estate of the Gospel was otherwise whereby the Gentiles who were before aliants from the kingdome of God separated from God depriued of all hope of saluation were gathered into the fellowship of life 26 For as the father Hee sheweth by what meanes his voyce hath so great force to wit because he is the fountaine of life and doth powre out the same by his voyce into men For wee should not haue life from his mouth vnlesse the cause and originall thereof were in his power For God is not only said to haue life in himselfe because he liueth alone through his owne and inward power but because hauing in himselfe the fulnes of life he quickeneth all thinges And this truly doth properly appertaine vnto God as it is Psal. 36. 9. VVith thee is the VVell of life But because the maiestie of God as it is set far off frō vs might be like to an hidden secrete spring therfore did it shewe it selfe in Christ. Therfore we haue a readie and common well out of which wee may draw This is the meaning of the words because God would not haue life to be hidden with him as it were buried he therefore powred it out into his sonne that it might flowe vnto vs. Hence wee gather that this title is properly ascribed to Christ inasmuch as he was manifested in the flesh 27 And hath giuen him power Hee repeateth this againe that the gouernment was giuen of the father that hee may haue full power of all things both in heauen and earth exo●sia doth in this place signifie dignitie and iudgement is taken for gouernment As if he should say that the sonne is made of his father a king that he may gouerne the world and exercise his fathers power The reason which followeth immediately is principally to be noted Because he is the sonne of man For his meaning is that hee commeth vnto men adorned with so great power that he may impart vnto them that which he receiued of his father Some do think that that which is here spoken is all one with that of Paule Phil. 2. 7. That Christe when he was in the forme of God did make himselfe of no reputation taking vpon him the shape of a seruant and did humble himselfe vnto the death vpon the crosse VVherefore God hath also highly exalted him and giuen him a name aboue all names that euery knee may bowe before it c. But I doe make it to reache farther that Christe inasmuch as hee was man was appointed of the father to be the authour of life that we might not seeke farre for it For Christe did not take it to himselfe as if he needed the same but that he might inrich vs with his plentie The summe is that that was reuealed vnto vs in Christ as he was man which was hidden in God that the life which before could not be attained vnto is now in readines And whereas some doe knit this reason vnto the member following hauing pulled it away from his owne text it is farre set and contrary to Christ his meaning 28 Maruell not at this He seemeth to reason very vnfitlie whilest that he setteth the confirmation of that which he had spoken from the last resurrection For it is no harder matter for the bodies to be raysed vppe then for the soules I answere that here is no cōparison made betwene the greater the lesser according to the thing it selfe but according to the meaning of men For as they are carnall they maruell at nothing but that which is carnall and visible Hereby it cōmeth to passe that they doe carelesly passe ouer the resurrection of the soule do more wōder at the resurrectiō of y e flesh And also this our blockishnes causeth those things to be more of credite which can be seen w t the eyes thē those whiche cā be cōceued by faith only because he maketh mētiō of the last day y t restraint is no lōger added And now is but he doth absolutely say that y ● time shal once be And here meteth vs another obiectiō for althogh the faithful do wait for the resurrectiō of the bodies yet can they not leane vnto the knowledge thereof to bee persuaded that the soules are nowe deliuered from death because the bodies shall in time to come ryse out of the graues And what is more ridiculous amongest the wicked then to proue that which is knowen by that which is as they say vnknowē I answere that Christ doth in this place boast of his power amongst the reprobate that he may declare that the perfect restoring of all things was commanded by the father as if he shold say that which I say I haue now begun I wil once finish before your face And truly whereas Christ doth now quicken the soules that were drowned in destruction by the voyce of his Gospel that is
For they had no true and lawfull reason to render why they did so because they sought in Christ another thing then Christe himselfe Therefore this fault is noted in them that they seeke Christe for their bellies sake and not because of the myracles And yet it cannot be denyed but that they had respect vnto the myracle Yea the Euangelist saide before that they were mooued with the myracles to followe Christ but because they did abuse the myracles vnto a straunge end he doth worthily cast in their teeth that they haue greater respect vnto their bellie then vnto the myracles as if he should say that they did not goe forward in the workes of God as they ought For this had beene true profiting so to haue acknowledged Christe to bee the Messias that they should haue giuen themselues to be taught and gouerned by him and to haue gone toward the heauenly kingdome of GOD he beeing their guide But they looke for no more at his hands but to bee well in this world Furthermore this is to spoyle Christe of his principall power For he was giuen of the father for this cause and he reuealed himselfe vnto mē for this cause that he may reforme those who were endowed with the holy ghost according to the Image of God that he may leade them into euerlasting life being clothed with his righteousnes Therfore it skilleth much what we respect in Christ his myracles For he y t doth not desire to attaine vnto the kingdome of God but sticketh fast in the commodities of this present life he seeketh no other thing but to fill his bellie Like as at this day many would gladly embrace the Gospel if beeing voide of the bitternes of the crosse it did only bring with it the delights of the flesh Yea we see many offer themselues to serue Christ that they may liue more merily and freely Some for hope of gain some for feare some for their sakes whome they will please doe professe themselues to be Christ his disciples Therefore this is the chiefest thyng in the seeking of Christ that contemning the worlde we seeke the kingdome of God and the righteousnesse thereof But because men are well persuaded of themselues and do assure themselues that they seek Christ very well when as they corrupt his whole power Christ after his accustomed manner doth double the word verilie as if hee would by an oathe bring to light the vice which lyeth hid vnder our hypocrisie 27 VVorke He teacheth whereunto he would haue his wh●lie bent namely vnto eternall life but because by reason of the gr●ssenes of nature we are alwayes addicted vnto earthly thinges therefore he doth first correct that disease which is ingendered in vs before he sheweth what we must doe This doctrine had been simple and plaine labour for the incorruptible meate but because he knew that mens senses are tyed vnto earthly cares he doth first of all commaund them to acquit themselues of these snares that they may arise vp into heauen not that he forbiddeth those that be his to labour that they may get themselues dayly foode but he telleth them that they must preferre the heauēly life before the earthly because this is the only cause of liuing to the godly that being as strangers in the world they may make hast into the heauenly countrie Secondly wee must marke the drift of this place because they do corrupt the power of Christ who are addicted to their belly and earthly thinges hee sheweth what we ought to seeke in hym and for what cause we ought to seeke him And he vseth such metaphors as are agreeable vnto the circumstance of the communication If there had been no mention made of meate he might haue said without vsing any figure it behoueth you setting aside the care of the worlde to striue to attaine vnto the heauenly life but because they run to meate like beastes Christ frameth his speech metaphorically and calleth all that meate whatsoeuer doth appertaine vnto newnes of life VVe know that our soules are fed with the doctrine of the Gospel whilest that it worketh effectually in vs through the power of the spirite Therefore seeing that faith is the life of the soule what things soeuer do nourish further faith they are compared to meate Hee calleth this kinde of meate vncorruptible and he saith that it remaineth vnto eternall life that we may know that our soules are not fed for a day but that they are brought vp vnto the hope of blessed immortalitie because the Lord beginneth the worke of our saluation that he may finish it vntyll the day of Christ. Therefore it is meet that we receiue the giftes of the spirite that they may be to kens and pledges of eternall life For although the reprobate doe oftentimes refuse this meate hauing tasted thereof so that it doth not remaine in them yet doe the faithfull perceiue this force of the soule abiding when as they do perceiue that force of the spirite which is neuer fraile in his giftes yea which neuer falleth away Their reason is friuolous who gather out of the word worke that we doe merite euerlasting life by workes For Christ as we haue said doth figuratiuely exhort men to applie their studies vnto the meditating vpon the heauenly life whereas they are wont otherwise to bee set wholy vpon the worlde And Christ remoueth all doubt when he saith that he giueth this meate For no man doth obtain that by his own industrie which he hath of his gifte There is some shew of contrarietie these words yet these two things do easily agree together that the spirituall meat of the soule is the free gift of Christ and that it standeth vs vpon to endeuour to be made partakers of this so great a good thing For him hath God the father sealed He confirmeth the sentence next going before because he is appointed by his father to this end The old writers did falsly wrest this place vnto the diuine essence of Christ as if he were said to be sealed because he is the print and expresse image of the father For he doth not intreat in this place subtilly of his eternall essence but what is commanded and inioyned him what is his office and furthermore what we must hope for at his hands Furthermore the fit metaphor alludeth vnto the auncient custome for they sealed that with ringes which they would establish with their authoritie So Christ that he may not seem to take any thing to himselfe affirmeth that this office was laide vpon him by his father and that this decree of his father was reuealed as it were with a grauen seale The summe is seeing that it is not euerie mans office to feed y e soules with vncorruptible meat Christ commeth foorth promising himselfe to be the authour of so great a good thing he addeth moreouer that he is approued of God that he was sent vnto men with this marke of the seale Hereupon it foloweth that
eyes to see his manifest glory withall VVee doe also offend dayly both wayes First of all this is vnto vs a great let that we doe only beholde Christ with fleshly eyes whereby it commeth to passe that we doe see in him no worthie thing For wee doe peruert whatsoeuer is in him and his doctrine with our corrupte sense such sinister interpreters are we Againe being not contented therewith wee catch hold of many false thinges which may breed the contempt of the Gospel Moreouer many men doe forge to themselues monsters vnder colour whereof they may hate the Gospell Therfore the worlde doeth of set purpose beat back the grace of God The Euangelist expresseth the Iewes by name that we may know that the murmuring did proceede from them who did boast of the title of faith and the Church that al of vs may learne reuerently to receiue Christ when he commeth humblie vnto vs and the nigher he is vnto vs so much the more willingly to come vnto him that he may extoll vs vnto his heauenly glory 43 Murmur not amongest your selues He layeth to their charge the faulte of murmuring as if he should say my doctrine containeth no matter of offence but because you are reprobates it moueth your poysoned minds and therefore is it vnsauerie because you haue an vnsauerie palate and taste 44 No man can c. He doth not only accuse their wickednesse but doth also tell them that this is the peculiar gift of God to embrace the doctrine which hee setteth before them which he doth for this cause least their vnbelief do trouble the weake For many mē are holden with this foolishnesse that they do depend vpon the respect of men in matters appertaining vnto God whereby it commeth to passe that they suspect the gospel so sone as they see that the world doth not receiue it Againe the vnbeleeuers flattering themselues in their frowardnes dare condemne the gospel because it doth not please them Therfore christ affirmeth on the contrary y t althogh y e doctrine of the gospel be preached vnto al men generally yet cānot all men receiue it but that they haue need of a new mind a new vnderstāding and that therfore faith is not in mans will but that it is God who giueth it Because to come vnto Christ is put metaphorically in this place for to beleeue the Euangelist to the end he may frame the metaphor in the contrary member sayth that they are drawen whose mindes God doth illuminate and whose heartes he bendeth and frameth vnto the obedience of Christ. This is the summe that it is no maruell if many do loath the gospel because no man shall euer bee able to come vnto Christ willingly saue he whom God shal preuent with his spirite And thereupon it followeth that all men are not drawen but that God doth graunt this grace vnto those whom he hath chosen As touching the manner of drawing the same is not violent whiche may compel a man with an externall motion yet notwithstanding it is an effectuall motion of the holy spirit which maketh men that were vnwilling to be willing VVherfore that is false and prophane that none are drawen saue those who are willing as if man did shew himselfe obedient vnto God of his owne motion For in that men do follow God willingly they haue that now of him who hath framed their heartes to obey him 45 It is written in the prophetes Christ confirmeth that whiche he saide with the testimonie of Iesaias that no man commeth vnto him saue he whom the father draweth He calleth them the Prophetes in the plural number because al the Prophesies were gathered into one body so that all the bookes of the prophets might worthily be counted one booke Furthermore the place which is cited is extant in Iesaias chap. 54. 13. and Ier. 31. 34 VVhere speaking of the restoring of the Church he promiseth vnto her sonnes taught of God VVhence we may easily gather that the Church can by no other meanes be restored vnlesse God taking vpon him to play the scholemaster do bring the faithfull vnto himselfe The maner of teaching whereof the Prophet speaketh is not placed only in the external voyce but also in the secret working of the holy ghost To bee briefe this teaching of God is the inward illumination of the heart In that hee saith all it ought to bee restrained vnto the elect who are only the true children of the Church Now it is no hard matter to see how Christ applyeth this prophesie vnto the cause which he hath in hand Isaias teacheth that the Church is then edified indeed whē it hath childrē who are taught of God Therefore Christ inferreth fitly that men haue not eyes to see the light of life vntil God doth open thē Also he standeth vpon the vniuersall word because he reasoneth thence that all those who are taught of God are drawen effectually that they may come And hereunto appertaineth that which foloweth by and by VVhosoeuer therfore hath hearde The summe is that the reprobate are euen giuen ouer vnto destruction whosoeuer doe not beleeue because God doth make all the children of the Churche and the heyres of life his obedient schollers VVhereupon it followeth that none of the elect of God are strangers from the faith of Christ. Therefore as Christ did before denie that men are apt to beleeue vnlesse they be drawen so he doth nowe pronounce that it is the effectuall grace of the spirite wherby they are drawen that they may necessarily beleeue By these two members is quite ouerthrowen all the libertie of free will whereon the Papistes doe dreame For if wee begin to come vnto Christe then when the father hath drawen vs the beginning of faith is not in vs neyther any preparation againe if all doe come whome the father hath taught he doth not only giue them the earnest of faith only but faith it selfe Therefore in that we doe willingly obey the direction of the spirite this is a parte of grace as it were the sealing because God should not draw vs if reaching out his hand only he left vs to our own choise And he is properly said to draw vs when he extendeth the power of his spirite euen vnto the full effect of faith They are said to heare of God who do submit themselues vnto God when he speaketh vnto them inwardly that with all their heart because the spirite reigneth in their hearts Commeth vnto mee Hee sheweth the vndiuisible coniunction which he hath with the father For the meaning of the wordes is that it cannot be but that they shal addict themselues vnto Christ whosoeuer are the disciples of God and that they are vnapt to bee taught of God who do reiect Christ because this is the only wisedome which the elect do learn in Gods schoole to come vnto Christ. For doubtlesse the father who sent him cannot denie himselfe 46 Not that any man hath seene the father saue he who
although this power doe come from some thyng els then from the flesh yet is there no let but that this title doeth aptly agree thereunto For as the eternall worde of God is the fountaine of life so his fleshe doeth powre out vnto vs as a conduit the life which resteth as they say in the inwarde diuinitie And in this sense is it called liuely because it imparteth vnto vs the life which it borroweth of some other That shal be plaine enough if we consider what is the cause of life namely righteousnesse And although righteousnesse doe flow from God alone yet wee haue the same fully giuen vnto vs onely in the flesh of Christ. For the redemption of man was fulfilled in it in it was offered the sacrifice for satisfaction for our sinnes the obedience was perfourmed towardes God which might reconcile him vnto vs. It was also sprinckled with the sanctification of the spirite it was receiued into heauenly glory after that death was ouercome Therefore it followeth that all the partes of life were placed in it so that no man canne iustly complaine that he is depriued of life because it is hid farre off VVhich I will giue for the life of the worlde The worde giue is diuersly taken the former giuing whereof hee maketh mention is done daylye namely so often as Christe doth offer himselfe vnto vs in the seconde place he meaneth that onely giuing which was done vpon the crosse when he offered himselfe vnto the father for a sacrifice For then hee gaue himselfe vnto death for the life of men now he inuiteth vs to reap the fruite of his death For it should nothing profite vs that that sacrifice was once offered vnlesse we should now eate the holy banket Furthermore we must note this that Christ challengeth to himselfe the office of sacrificing his flesh VVhereby appeareth with what wicked sacrilege the papistes do pollute themselues who doe in the Masse vsurpe that which was proper to that priest onely 52 Therefore the Iewes did striue amongest themselues saying how can hee giue vs his flesh to eate 53 Therefore Iesus said vnto them verilie verilie I say vnto you vnlesse you shall eat the flesh of the sonne of man and shall drinke his blood you haue not life in you 54 Hee that eateth my flesh and drinketh my blood hath eternall life and I will rayse him vp at the last day 55 For my flesh is meate in deede and my blood is drinke indeed 56 Hee that eateth my fleshe and drinketh my blood abideth in mee and I in him 57 As the liuing father hath sent me I doe also liue for the father and he that eateth me he shall also liue for mee 58 This is the bread which came downe from heauen not as your fathers eat Manna and dyed he that eateth this bred shall liue for euer 52 Therefore the Iewes did striue Hee nameth the Iewes againe not for honours sake but that he may cast in their teeth their vnbeliefe because they doe not receiue his familiar doctrine concerning eternall life or at least because they do enquire vnmodestly of a thing which was as yet dark doubtful For it is a signe of frowardnes contempt in that he saith they did contende and they who doe dispute so contentiously do stoppe the way before themselues so that they cannot come vnto the knowledge of the truth Neither is this simplie reprehended in them that they did aske concerning the meanes for then should the same reprehension fall vpon Abraham and the blessed virgin Therefore they are either deceiued through ignorance or they deale vncourteously who passing ouer the lust and boldnesse which they had to contend whiche the Euangelist doth only condemne doe only tosse this worde how as if it had been wickednesse for the Iewes to enquyre of the manner of eating But this is rather to be imputed vnto slouthfulnesse then vnto the obedience of faith if we keepe those knots of doubtes vnloosed willingly wittingly which are losed for vs by the word of the Lord. VVherfore it is not onely lawfull to enquire of the manner of eating of the flesh of Christ but it is also profitable for vs to know the same so farre foorth as it is expounded in the scripture Away with that twise stubborne colour of humilitie that one only saying of Christ is sufficient for me when he affirmeth that his flesh is meate in deede I am willingly blinde in the rest As if the heretikes may not haue the same colour if they be willingly ignorant of this that Christ is conceaued of the holy Ghost because beleeuing that he is the seed of Abrahā they will search no farther VVe must only holde this moderation in the secrete workes of God that we desire to knowe to more then he setteth downe in his worde 53 Verilie verilie I say vnto you Indignation did wring out of Christe this oath when he saw his grace refused with so proud contempt for he doth not now vse plaine doctrine but doth also intermingle threatnings to make them afraid withall for he denounceth eternall destruction vnto all those who shall refuse to fet life from his flesh as if hee shoulde say if you despise my fleshe knowe yee that there remaineth no other hope of life for you This vengeance remaineth for all the contemners of the grace of Christe that they doe wickedly perish through their pride and they are to bee vrged with this precise seueritie that they may not proceede to flatter themselues For it we doe threaten death vnto sicke men which refuse remedies what shall the wicked doe when as they endeuour so much as in them lyeth to abolish the life it selfe In that he saith the flesh of the sonne of man it hath great force for he toucheth their contempt which did arise thereupon because they saw that he was like vnto other men The meaning therfore of the wordes is contemne me at your pleasure because of the humble base sight of my flesh yet is there life included in this contemptible flesh whereof if you depriue your selues you shall finde no where els that which can quicken you It was a grosse error of the mē of old who thought that infants were depriued of eternal life vnlesse that the sacrament of the Lords body were giuen them For he speaketh not of the supper but of the euerlasting participation which wee haue without the vse of the supper And the Boemians dealt not well whenas they did prooue by this testimony that the vse of the Cuppe ought to bee common vnto all in general As touching infants Christ his institution doth barre them from the partaking of the supper because they cannot yet try themselues they can not obserue the memorial of the death of Christ. The same institution maketh the cup cōmon vnto all together with the bread for hee commaundeth vs all to drinke thereof 54 Hee that eateth my flesh This is a repetition but not superfluous for it confirmeth
soeuer he had in himselfe And we must note that there are three degrees of life reckoned vp in this place the liuing father hath the first place who is the foūtain but yet placed farre off and hidden the sonne followeth whō we haue laid out vnto vs as a fountaine through whom life is powred out vnto vs the third is life which we doe draw from him Now wee know the summe because God the father in whose power is life is farre distant from vs Christ is placed in the middle who is the second cause of life that that may come vnto vs thence which should otherwise lie hid in God 58 This is the bread He returneth vnto the comparison of Manna his flesh where he began For he should haue ended his speech thus there is no cause why yee should preferre Moses before me because hee fedde your fathers in the desert seing that I giue you a farre better meat For I bring the heauenly life with me For as it was said before the bread is said to come downe from heauen which tasteth of no earthly or corruptible thing but breatheth out the immortalitie of the kingdome of God They tryed not this power in Manna who were only bent to feed their bellie For whereas there was a double vse of Manna the Iewes with whom Christ disputeth in this place did loke vnto nothing but the corporall meat But the life of the soule is not fraile but groweth to be better vntil the whole man shal be renued 59 These thinges said he in the synagogue teaching in Capernaum 60 Therefore many of his disciples when they had heard saide This is a hard saying who can heare it 61 And when Iesus know in himselfe that his disciples murmured concerning this hee said vnto them doth this offend you 62 If therefore you shall see the sonne of man ascending where he was before 63 It is the spirite that giueth life the flesh profiteth nothing The wordes whiche I speake vnto you are spirite and life 64 But there are some of you that doe not beleeue For Iesus knewe from the beginning who they were that did not beleeue and who it was that shoulde betray him 59 These thinges spake hee in the synagogue Iohn assigneth the place y t we may know that there were many present and secondly that the sermon was made about a graue and waightie matter Yet notwithstanding it followeth by and by that there were scant a few of so great a company who did profite yea this doctrine was vnto a great many who did professe themselues to be Christe his disciples a cause of falling away If the Euangelist had said that only some wer offended that might haue byn counted now a wonder but in that they do ryse against him in troupes do conspire together what maner example shal we say this is VVherfore let vs deeply imprint in our minds this historie lest at any time we doe murmur against Christe when hee speaketh Secondly if wee see anye suche like thing in others let not theyr pryde trouble our faith 60 This is an hard saying Nay there was rather hardnes in their hearts and not in the saying But the reprobates are wont after this sort to gather together stones out of the worde of God whereat they may stumble And when as they runne headlong against Christe through their harde stubbornnesse they complaine that his word is harde which ought rather to make them soft For whosoeuer shall humblie submit himselfe vnto Christ his doctrine hee shall finde no harde or sharpe matter therin and it shal be vnto the vnbeleeuers who shall stubbornely set themselues against it an hammer which breaketh the rockes as the prophete calleth it Ier. 23. 29. Furthermore seeing that the same hardnes is bred in vs al if we iudge according to our owne meaning of the doctrine of Christ there shal be as many paradoxes as wordes VVherefore there remaineth nothing but that euery one doe commende himselfe vnto the direction of the spirite that he may write that in our heartes which otherwise would not enter into our eares VVho can heare it Heere we see how malitious vnbeliefe is For they which vngodlily wickedly reiect the doctrine of saluation being not content with an excuse they dare make the sonne of God giltie in their steed and pronounce him to be vnworthie to be heard So at this day the Papists doe not only boldly refuse the Gospel but doe also thunder out horrible blasphemies least they should seeme to resist God without a cause And truely seeing that they desire darknesse it is no maruell if Satan doe delude them with feigned monsters But that which they by reason of their distemperature cannot endure shall not only be suffered of the modest and those who are easie to be taught but it shall also lift them vp and vphold them In the meane while the reprobate shall doe nothing els with their murmuring raylings but bring vppon themselues a more greeuous destruction 61 And when Iesus knew Christe knew that the offence which the reprobate had taken could not be remoued for the doctrine doth not so much wound them as it doth discouer the rotten gall which they nourished within in their harts yet would he by all means trye whether any of those who were offended were as yet curable intending to stop the mouth of the rest By asking the question he giueth them to vnderstand that they had no cause or at least that in the doctrine it selfe there was no matter of offence In like sort the wickednesse of those men is t● bee brideled who being only smitten with a dogged madnesse do spea● euill of the worde of God and their foolishnesse is also to be corrected who rush rashly against the truth He saith that Iesus knew in him selfe because they had not yet freely vttered what did byte them but did feet amongest themselues with a secrete whispering Therefore he preuenteth their open complaints If any doe obiect that their nature was not obscure seeing that they did in plaine wordes refuse Christe his doctrine I confesse in deede that the woordes are playne whiche Iohn recited before but I say also that they did tosse amongest themselues these murmurings and as it were secrete speeches and words after the manner of reuoltes For if they had conferred with Christe there had bin better hope because they had opened him a way vnto doctrine now when as they murmur amongst themselues they exclude themselues frō learning Therefore there is nothing better then when as we doe not at the first vnderstand the Lords meaning to come straightway vnto him that he may open vnto vs all doubtes Doth this offend you Christ seemeth in this place not so much to remoue the offence as to encrease it yet if any man doe more narrowly weigh the cause of the offence there was in this sentence that which ought to haue appeased their mindes The low and base estate of Christ which
they saw with their eyes seeing that being clothed with flesh he differed nothing from the common sort of men was vnto them a let that they could not giue place to his diuine power now hauing as it were pulled away the vaile he reclaimeth them vnto the beholding of his heauenly glory as if he should say because I am conuersant amongst men without honour you despice me neither doe yee acknowledge in me any diuine thing but before it be long it shall come to passe that God shall lift me vp aboue the heauens being adorned with great power from this contemptible state of the mortall life For in Christes resurrection there appeared such power of the holy spirite as might make it knowen that Christ was the sonne of God as Paule also teacheth in the first chapter of the Epistle to the Romanes the fourth verse when it is said in the 2. Psalme the seuenth verse Thou art my sonne this day haue I begotten thee the resurrection is made as a token whereby this glory of Christe ought to be knowen and his ascending into heauen was the fulfilling of that glory In that he saith that hee was in heauen before It doth not properly agree with his humanitie yet notwithstanding he speketh of the son of man But this kinde of speeche is not strange seeing that two natures doe make one person in Christ to applie that which is proper to the one vnto the other 63 It is the spirite that giueth life In these wordes Christ teacheth that his doctrine had no successe amongest the Iewes because whereas it is spirituall and liuely it findeth eares scarse wel prepared But because this place hath been diuersly expounded it is first of all requisite to knowe the true and naturall meaning of the wordes hereby shall we easily see what was Christ his drift In that he denieth that the flesh doth profite Chrysostome in my iudgement doth not well referre it vnto the Iewes who were carnall I confesse indeede that all the force of mans wit doeth vanishe awaye and quaile in heauenly mysteries but that is not the meaning of Christes wordes vnlesse they be violently wrested In lyke sort the sense shoulde bee farre fet in the contrarie namely that the illumination of the spirite doth quicken Neither doe they say well who say that the flesh of Christ doth profite insomuch as it was crucified but that it bringeth no good vnto vs being eaten but we must rather eate it that it may profite vs being crucified Augustine thinketh that this word alone or of it selfe ought to be vnderstood because it ought to be ioyned with the spirite which agreeth with the thing it selfe For Christ doth simplie respect the maner of eating Therfore he doth not exclude all manner commoditie as if there could none bee reapt by his flesh but he doth affirme that it shall be vnprofitable if it bee separated from the spirit For whence hath the flesh this that it doth quicken saue only because it is spirituall Therefore whosoeuer he be that shall remaine in the earthly nature of the flesh he shall finde nothing in it but that which is dead but those who shall lift vp their eyes vnto the power of the spirit wherwith the flesh is besprinkled they shall perceiue that it is called liuely not in vaine by the verye effect and experience of faith Now we know how the flesh is meate indeed and yet it profiteth nothing namely it is meate because through it we haue life because in it God is reconciled vnto vs because in it we haue all the partes of our saluation fulfilled it profiteth nothing if it be esteemed according to y ● beginning nature for y e seed of Abrahā which of it selfe is subiect to death shal not giue life but it receiueth that of the spirite wherewith it feedeth vs. VVherefore to the ende that we may be nourished indeede by it we must bring the spirituall mouth of faith And in that the breuitie of the sentence is so short it is to be thought that Christe did thus because he thought that he ought thus to deale with the vnbeleeuers Therefore he brake of his speech with this sentence because they were vnworthie to haue any more speeches In the meane while he did not neglect the godly and those that were readie to be taught because they haue heere in a fewe woordes that which may satisfie them aboundantly The wordes which I speake He alludeth vnto the sentence next going before for he taketh the worde spirit in another sense But because he spake of the secrete power of the spirite he doth very finely applie this vnto his doctrine because it is spirituall For the worde spirite must be resolued into an adiectiue Furthermore the worde is called spirituall because it willeth vs to ascend vpwarde that wee may seeke Christ in his heauenly glory the spirite being our guide by faith and not by the reason of the flesh For we know that there is nothing of those thinges which are spoken which can be vnderstood without faith This is also worthie the noting that he ioyneth life with the spirite He calleth his worde life of the effect as being liuely yet he teacheth that it is liuely vnto none saue only vnto those who receiue it spiritually For som shall rather draw death thence This title of the Gospell is most sweete vnto the godly because they are certaine that it is appointed vnto them vnto eternall saluation Notwithstanding they are also admonished to endeuour to shew themselues apt schollers 64 But there are certaine of you He layeth the blame vpon them selues againe because being voide of the spirite they do wickedly corrupt and depraue his doctrine and by this meanes turne it to their destruction For they might otherwise obiect Thou dost boast that that whcih thou speakest is liuely but we finde no such thing therein Therefore he saith that they hinder themselues For vnbeliefe as it is alwayes proud will neuer attaine vnto any thing in the wordes of Christ which it despiseth despitefully Therefore if we couet to profite any thing vnder this master let vs bring our mindes well prepared to heare him For vnlesse humilitie and reuerence doe prepare a way for his doctrine our mindes are more then deafe neither wil they admit any part of sound doctrine Therefore let vs remember that it commeth to passe through the wickednesse of men that there appeareth so small fruite of the Gospel at this day For who is he that renouncing himselfe doth addict himselfe wholy and truly to Christ VVhereas he saith that there bee onely certaine that did not beleeue when as this fault was common to them all almost it seemeth that he did it for this cause least if there were any who were as yet curable they shoulde bee discouraged through despaire For he knewe from the beginning The Euangelist added this for this cause least any man shold thinke that Christ iudged rashly of his hearers Many
in the Gospel replenished with power wisdome righteousnesse puritie life and with al the giftes of the spirite And he doth here confirme the promise more plainely which we touched of late for he teacheth that he hath store wherewith he is able to refresh vs sufficiently It is indeede a metaphore hard enough at the first sight whē as he saith that there shal floods of liuing water flow out of the belly of the faithfull yet is the sense no whit doubtfull that the beleeuers shall neuer want any spiritual good thing He calleth that liuing water the spring whereof doth neuer waxe drie neither doth the continuall flowing cease I expounde that the manifold graces of the spirite are called floods in the plurall number whiche are necessarie vnto the spirituall life of the soule To bee briefe aswell the perpetuitie of the giftes of the spirite as the aboundance thereof is promised vs in this place Some doe thinke that waters doe flow out of the bellie of the beleeuers when as he that is endowed with the spirit doth impart some part vnto his brethren as there ought to be a mutuall participation amongest vs. Notwithstanding the sense seemeth to me to bee more simple that whosoeuer shall beleeue in Christ he shall haue a well of life as it were springing in him Like as Christe said before in the fourth Chapter Hee that shall drinke of this water shall neuer bee a thirst For whereas the ordinarie drinke doth only quenche the thirst for a short time Christ saith that we doe draw vp by faith the spirite whiche is a fountaine of water leaping out vnto eternall life And yet notwithstanding he doth not teach that the faithfull are so full of Christe the first day that they are afterward neither an hungred nor a thirst but rather that the enioying of Christ doth kindle a new desiring of him and the sense is that the spirit is like to a liuely fountain which runneth alwaies in the faithfull Like as Paule also doth testifie that he is life in vs although we doe yet carry about the matter of death in the relikes of sin And truly seeing that euerie one is made partaker of the giftes of the spirite according to the measure of his faith there can no perfect fulnes thereof be had in this life But in the mean season the faithful do so aspire oftentimes vnto new encreasings of the spirit by going forward in faith that the first fruites which they haue are vnto them sufficient vnto the continuaunce of life But heereby wee are also admonished howe small the measure of our faithe is seeinge that the graces of the spirit do scarse drop by little little in vs which should run like floods if we did yeeld vnto Christ due place as we ought that is if faith did make vs able to receiue him As saith the scripture Some doe restraine this vnto the former member other some vnto the latter but I doe extend it vnto all the whole sentence Againe in my iudgement Christ doth not here assigne any certaine place of the scripture but he taketh a testimonie from the commō doctrine of the Prophets For so often as the Lord promising the aboundance of his spirite doth compare it vnto liuely waters he doth chiefly respect the kingdome of Christ and directeth the minds of the faithfull thyther Therfore all the prophesies concerning the liuely waters haue their fulfilling in Christ because he alone hath opened and reuealed vnto vs the hidden treasures of God Therefore the graces of the spirite are powred out vpon him that wee may all draw of his fulnesse Therefore they are worthie miserablie to perishe who being called so gently and mercifully of Christ doe wander hyther and thither He spake of the spirite The spirite is sometimes called by the name of water because of the cleannesse because it is proper to it to purge our filthinesse but in this place and such like the maner of this phrase is vnlike namely that we are destitute of all ioyce and humor of life saue only whenas the spirit of God doth quicken vs doth water vs as it were with a secret force And here is the figure Synecdoche vsed because all y e parts of life are comprehended vnder one worde water VVhence we do also gather that whosoeuer are not regenerate with the spirite of Christ they are to bee accounted as dead howsoeuer they boast themselues as if they did liue For the spirite was not yet VVe know that the spirit is eternall but the Euangelist saith that that grace of the spirite which was powred out vpon men after Christ his resurrectiō did not appeare openly so long as Christ was conuersant in the world vnder the humble shape of a feruaunt And he speaketh comparatiuely like as when the new Testament is set against the olde God promiseth his spirit vnto the faithful as if he had neuer giuen it vnto the fathers The Disciples had then receiued the first fruites of the spirite for whence commeth faith but from the spirite Therefore the Euangelist doth not simply denie that the grace of the spirit was giuen vnto the godly before Christ his death but that it was not then so apparant as it should be afterward For this is the principall worship of the kingdome of Christe that hee doth gouerne his Church with his spirite But he did then take iust and as it were solemne possession of his kingdome whenas he was lifted vp vnto his fathers right hande It is no marueile then if he did deferre the perfect giuing of his spirite vntill that time Yet there remayneth one question whether he vnderstandeth in this place the visible graces of the spirite or regeneration which is a fruite of adoption I answere that the spirite appeared in these visible giftes as in glasses which was promised by the comming of Christ yet doth hee properly intreat in this place of the power of the spirit whereby we are borne againe and are made new creatures In that therefore that Christe being glorious and indued with great maiestie of gouernment doth sit at the right hand of God but we doe lie vpon the earth poore hungrie and almost voide of spirituall giftes it is to bee imputed to our flownes and weaknesse of faith 40 Therfore many of the companie when they heard these words said This is indeed a Prophet 41 Other some said This is Christ. And others saide shall Christe come out of Galilee 42 Saith not the Scripture that Christ shall come of the seed of Dauid and out of the towne of Bethlehem 43 Therfore there was a strife in the companie because of him Furthermore certaine of them would catch him but no man laid handes on him 40 Therfore many of the companie Nowe the Euangelist reciteth what fruit did spring of the last sermon namely that whilest one thought one thing another another there arose dissention amongest y e people VVee must note that Iohn speaketh not of the
deadly thunderbolt So at this day the Papists doe laugh at and boldly with fire and swoorde persecute the worde of God which is able to mooue stones only because trusting to the deceitfull title of the Churche they thinke that they are able to mocke God and men To be briefe hypocrites so soone as they haue gotten any beautifull cloake doe oppose harde stubbornnesse against God as if hee did not pearce into theyr heartes If yee were the children of Abraham Christ doth more plainly extinguish the degenerate children of Abraham from lawfull children for hee taketh away the very name from all those that are vnlike vnto Abraham It falleth out oftentimes indeede that the children doe not represent in manners their fathers which begate them But Christ doth not dispute in this place of the carnall originall but doth onely deny that they are accounted amongest the children of Abraham before God whiche doe not hold the grace of adoption by faith For seeing that the Lorde had promised vnto the seed of Abraham that he would be their God all the vnbeleeuers which did cast away this promise did thrust thēselues out of the stock of Abraham Therfore the state of the questiō is whether they are to be accounted the children of Abraham or no which doe cast away the blessing offered vnto them in the worde so that they may be neuertheles an holy stock the peculiar people of God and princely priesthood Christe denieth this and that for good causes because they must be borne againe of the spirite which are the children of promise and be new creatures whosoeuer desire a place in the kingdome of God The fleshly stocke of Abraham was no vnprofitable thing or of no valew if sobeit the truth were added For the election of God resteth in the seede of Abraham yet being free so that they are accounted the heires of life whō god doth sanctifie by his spirite 40 And now yee seeke He proueth by the effect that they are not the children of Abraham as they did bragge because they resist God For what is chieflye commended in Abraham but the obedience of faith Therfore this is the marke of the difference so often as wee are to distinguish his children from straungers For vaine titles are nothing worth before God what credite soeuer they carry before men Therefore Christe concludeth againe that they are the children of the Diuell because they are suche deadly enemies vnto true and sounde doctrine 41 VVe are not of fornication They challenge no more to themselues now then before For they thought it was all one to be the sonne of Abraham and of God But they were greatly deceiued therein in that they thought that God was bound vnto all the seed of Abraham For they reason on this wise God adopted vnto himselfe the stocke of Abraham therfore seeing that we are begotten of Abraham we must needs be the children of God VVe see now how they thought that they had holynesse from the wombe because they sprang from an holy roote Finally they affirme that they are the Church of God because they descende from the holy fathers Like as at this day the continuall succession from the holy fathers puffeth vp the Papistes and maketh them more then swell Satan doth so delude them and deceiue them that they separate God from his word the church from faith the kingdome of heauen from the spirite Therefore let vs know that although they be not bastards according to the flesh but boast of the laudible title of the Church yet are they nothing lesse then the children of God who haue corrupted the seede of life For what corners soeuer they runne into yet shall they neuer bee able to escape but that they bee puffed vp with this vaine bragge onely VVe succeede the holy fathers therfore we are the Church And if so be it Christ his answere was sufficient to refute y e Iewes withal it is no lesse sufficient at this day to refute these men It wil neuer be otherwise but y ● hypocrites will with their most wicked boldnes vainly make boast of the name of God but they shall neuer make those beleeue that will stand to the iudgement of Christ but that these false boastinges whiche they blunder out are ridiculous 42 If God were your father you woulde loue mee for I. This is Christe his argument VVhosoeuer is the child of God he wil acknowledge and loue his first begotten sonne but you hate me therefore there is no cause why you shoulde boast that you are Gods children VVe must diligently note this place that there is no godlinesse no feare of GOD where Christ is reiected Feigned religion pretendeth God boldly but what agreement can they haue with the father who disagree with his only sonne what maner knowledge of God is that where his liuely image is refused And this is the meaning of Christ his wordes when he testifieth that he came from the father For hee giueth vs to vnderstand that all that is diuine which he hath and that therefore it is not likely that the true worshippers of God doe refuse his truth I came not saith he of my selfe you can obiect nothing vnto me which agreeth not with God and finally you shall finde no earthly or humane thyng in my doctrine and in the whole administration thereof For hee intreateth not of his essence but of his doctrine 43 VVhy doe yee not acknowledge my speeche because you cannot heare my woorde 44 You are of your father the Diuell and yee will doe the lustes of your father He was a murtherer frō the beginning stood not in the truth because the truth is not in him VVhen he speaketh a lye he speaketh of his owne because he is a lyer and the father therof 45 But because I say the truth you beleeue not mee 43 VVhy doy yee not He casteth the stubbornnes of the Iewes in their teeth in this place which was so great that they could not abide to heare him Hence gathereth he that they were caried with a diuelish furie I see no difference betwene speech and word For it is more to say then to speak But it were an vnmeete thing to put the lesser in the former place Many doe distinguish it so that the ende of the interrogation may be in the worde speech as if the interrogation did only consist in these words VVhy doe yee not acknowledge my speech so that the rendring of the reason doth follow immediately because you cannot heare my word But I think they ought rather to be read in one text as if he should haue said what is the cause that my word is barbarous and vnknowen to you that I do you no good by speaking vnto you and so consequently that you cannot vouchsafe to heare that which I speake Therefore he toucheth their dulnes in the former member in the other the stubborne hatred of his doctrine afterward he assigneth the cause of both when as he saith
that they are the children of the diuell For his meaning was to cut of that wherof they made their boast continually that they were perswaded by reason and iudgement to resist 44 You are of your father the Diuell He doth now more fully expresse that which he spake twise obscurely And we must vnderstand the oppositiō that they could not be so enuious against the son of god vnles they had the continuall aduersarie of God to be their father Furthermore he calleth them the children of the Diuell not only because they doe imitate him but because they are enforced by him to gainstand Christ. For like as we are called the children of God not only because wee are like him but because he gouerneth vs with his spirite because Christe doth liue in vs that he may make vs like vnto the image of his father so againe the Diuel is called their father whose mindes he blindeth whose heartes he pricketh forward vnto all vnrighteousnesse and finally in whome hee exerciseth his tyranny by working mightily But the Maniches did in vaine and foolishly abuse this place to proue their doting For like as when the scripture calleth vs the children of God it doth not referre this vnto the propagation or beginning of the substance but vnto the grace of the spirite which doth regenerate vs vnto newnes of life so this saying of Christ doth nothing appertain vnto the propagation of the substance but vnto the corruption of nature the cause and beginning whereof is the fall of man In that therefore men are borne the children of the Diuell it is not to be imputed vnto the creation but vnto the vice of sinne And this doth Christ proue by the effect because they are bent readily and willingly to follow the Diuell Hee was a manslear He expresseth what these lustes be and he reckoneth vp two kindes crueltie and lying wherein the Iewes were too like Satan In that he saith he was a manslear he meaneth that he imagined mans destruction For so soone as man was created Satan being pricked forward with a wicked desire to hurt did bende all his force to destroy him And Christ doth not meane the beginning of the creation as if God had giuen him a desire to hurt but he vnderstandeth the corruption of nature in Satan which he got to himselfe which appeareth better out of the second member wher he saith that he stood not in the truth For althogh they would escape who feigne that the Diuell was euill by nature notwithstanding these words doe plainely expres a changing vnto worse that therfore Satā is a lyar because he fell away frō the truth Therfore in that he is a lyar it is not therefore because he dissented from the truth by nature but because he fell away from the same by a voluntarie fall This description of Satan is verye profitable for vs that euery man may take heede of his subtiltie and also studie to resist his violence and force For he goeth about like a roaring Lion seeking whom he may deuour and he is furnished with a thousand craftes and ●leightes to deceiue wherefore the faithfull ought so muche the more to be furnished with spirituall weapons to fight and to be giuen to watchfull sobrietie that they may watch Now if Satan cannot put off this affection there is no cause why we should be troubled with this as with some new and vnwonted thing when as errours arise for Satan pricketh forward his children as fannes to make mad the world with their errours And it is no maruell if Satan doe so earnestly endeuour to euer runne the truth for it is the only life of the soule Therefore lying hath a most deadly dart to slea the soule Seeing that all men which haue eyes doe see this image of Satan in Papistrie at this day they must first of all consider with what enemie they make war●e and secondly ●●ie vnto the ayd of Christ their captain vnder whose banner they fight That which followeth next because the truth is not in him is a confirmatiō of the effect or taken as they say from the latter For because Satan hateth the truth neyther can abyde the same but is rather altogether ful of lyes Christe gathereth hence that hee is altogether fallen from the truth and that he is an enemie to the same Therfore let vs not maruel if hee shew some fruite of his Apostacie VVhen hee speaketh a lie They expounde this commonly thus as if Christe dyd denie that lying did belong vnto GOD the authour of nature and dyd rather say that it came from deprauation But I interprete it more simplie that it is the Diuell his common custome to lye and that hee canne doe nothing els but woorke fraude deceite and guile And yet may we fitly gather out of these words that the Diuell hath this vice of himselfe and that it is so proper vnto him that it is also accidentall For whenas Christe maketh the Diuel the craftes man of lying he doth manifestly separate him from God yea hee affirmeth that he is contrarie vnto him To the same ende tendeth the worde father which is added immediately for Satan is called the father of lying for this cause because he is estraunged from God in whome alone the truth abydeth and from whom as from the onely fountaine it floweth 45 And because He confirmeth the former sentence because seeing that they haue no cause to resist saue onely because they hate the truth they doe openly bewray them selues to bee the children of Satan 46 VVhich of you accuseth mee of sinne And if I speake the truth why doe ye not beleeue me 47 He that is of God heareth the words of God yee heare not because yee are not of God 48 Therfore the Iewes answered and said vnto him doe not we say well that thou art a Samaritane and hast a Diuell 49 Iesus answered I haue not a Diuell but I honour my father and yee haue dishonoured mee 50 And I seeke not my glory there is one that seeketh and iudgeth 46 VVhich of you This interrogation proceedeth from boldnes For seeing that he was giltie of no crime hee triumpheth ouer his aduersaries as a conquerour And yet notwithstanding he doth not say that he is free from their slaunders for whenas they had no matter to speake against him yet did they not cease to raile vpon Christ but he vnderstandeth y t there was no fault in him And thus much doth the word elegehein signifie as the latines doe call it rebuking when as any man is founde giltie indeed And yet notwithstanding they are deceiued who thinke that Christe doeth in this place defende his perfect innocencie wherein he alone did excell amongest men insomuch as he was the son of God For this defence must be restrained vnto the circumstance of the place as if he did deny that any thing can bee obiected vnto him for which he is not the faithfull minister of God Like
those that will keepe it as a precious treasure he saith they shall not see death because where faith doth quicken the soule of man death cannot giue any deadly wounde any more hauing his sting beaten back poyson wyped away 52 Now we know The wicked persist in their dulnesse neither are they touched any more with promises then with threatnings so that they can neither be led nor drawen vnto Christ. VVhereas some doe thinke that they craftily wrest the wordes because they say tast of death which they heard not of Christ I thinke it is scarse sound I do rather thinke that the phrases did signifie all one thing amongest the Hebrues To tast of death and to see death for to die But in this they are false interpreters because they apply the spirituall doctrine of Christe vnto the body None of the faithfull shall see death because being borne againe of vncorruptible seed they liue euen by dying because beeing ioyned vnto Christ their head they cannot be extinguished by death because death is vnto them a passage into the kingdome of heauen because the spirit that dwelleth in them is life for righteousnes vntill he swallow vp the death which remaineth But these men as they are carnall so they do acknowledge no deliuerance from death but such as may appeare openly in the body And this disease is too cōmō in the world so that most men do almost make no account of the grace of Christ because they esteeme the same only by the sense of the flesh Therfore least the same befall vs our mindes are to be awaked that they may be made partakers of the spirituall life in the middest of death 53 Then our father This is the other vice because they endeuour to darken the glory of Christe with the brightnesse of Abraham and the saintes But as the brightnesse of the Sun doth darken all the starres so all the glory which is in the Saintes must vanish away at the vnmeasurable brightnesse of Christ. Therefore they deale vniustly and peruersly in that they set the seruantes against the master Nay moreouer they are iniurious vnto Abraham and the Prophets whilest that they abuse their name against Christ. But this frowardnes hath also reigned almost in al ages and it doth as yet reigne at this day that the wicked by pulling in peeces the workes of God doe make him as it were their aduersarie God did make his name knowen by the Apostles and martyres the Papistes make vnto themselues Idols of the Apostles Martires that they may supplie the place of God doe they not by this meanes forge vnto themselues of the graces of God engins to pul down his power For what remaineth vnto God or Christe if the Saintes haue that which the Papistes doe giue vnto them lauishingly Therfore we must knowe that all the order of the kingdome of GOD is confounded vnlesse the Prophetes Apostles and all the Saintes bee farre inferiour vnto Christe that hee alone may excell them all And truly we cannot speake more honourably of the Saints then whenas we put them vnder Christ. But howsoeuer the Papistes doe deceiue the vnskilfull by boasting that they are good worshippers of the Saintes yet they are iniurious both vnto God and them because they pull downe Christ by setting them vp And truely they offende double in this that they preferre the Saintes before Christ in theyr doctrine secondly in that cloathing them with that which they take from Christ they doe almost dispoyle Christe of his power 54 If I glorifie Before hee answere them concerning that vnequall comparison he saith first that hee seeketh not his owne glory by this meanes he answereth their slaunder If any man obiect that Christ did also glorifie himselfe we may readily answere that hee did this not after the manner of men but hauing God for his authour and guyde for in this place as in many other he separateth himselfe from God by a kinde of graunting In summe he affirmeth that he desireth no gl●ry saue that which is giuen him of his father And we are taught by these wordes that sithence God doth gloryfie his son hee will not suffer the world to contemne him freely In the meane season these voyces of god sounding from heauen ought not a little to encourage the faithfull to worship Christ reuerently Kisse the sonne Let all the Angels worship him Let euery knee bo●e vnto him heare him let the Gentiles seeke after him let all flesh be hambled Furthermore we are admonished by these words that all that glory is vaine and nothing worth which men doe purchase to themselues of themselues Therfore what blinde ambition is this when as we are busie about nothing Therefore let vs alwayes haue that saing of Paule before our eyes 2. Cor. 10. 17. Hee that commendeth himselfe is not allowed but he whom God commendeth And because we are all destitute of the glory of God let vs learne to glory in Christ alone for asmuch as hee maketh vs partakers of his glory through grace VVho you say He wresteth from them the false colour and cloake of the name of God which they were wont to catch at I knowe saith he how boldly you boast that you are the people of God but that is a false title because you doe not acknowledge GOD. VVhence wee doe also learne what profession of faith is lawfull namely that which springeth from true knowledge and whence commeth that knowledge but frō the word therfore whosoeuer make boast of the name of God without the word of God they do nothing els but lie In the meane season Christ setteth the boldnes of his conscience against their frowardnesse And thus doth it become all the seruaunts of God to haue theyr mindes so setled that they be content with this one thing that God is on their side although all the whole world do rebell against him Thus did the couragiousnesse of the Prophets Apostles stand inuincible against al y e horrible brunts of y e whole world because they knew who it was that sent them And whereas the perfect knowledge of God is wanting there is nothing that can hold vs vp 55 And if I shall say By this clause Christ doth testifie that he is enforced by the necessitie of his office to speake because his silence should be a traiterous betraying of the truth An excellent sentence that God doth reueale himself vnto vs to this end that we may with our mouth profes amongest men the faith of our heart when neede requireth For doubtlesse this ought not a litle to terrifie vs that they which do dissemble for mans sake and do either denie the truth of God or disfigure the same with false inuentions and glosses are not only a little weakened but are euen sent away to be the sonne of Satan 56 Your father Abraham reioyced to see my daye and hee sawe it and was glad 57 Therfore the Iewes said vnto him Thou hast not yet fifty
yeeres and hast then seen Abraham 58 Iesus said vnto them verilie verily I say vnto you before Abraham was made I am 59 Therfore they tooke vp stones to cast at him and Iesus was hidde and went out of the Temple 56 Your father Abraham He graunteth vnto them only in word that which he tooke from them before namely that Abraham is their father And he sheweth how vaine that obiecting of the name of Abraham was This saith he was the only end which was set before him during his whole life to see my kingdom florish For he desired me whē I was absent you despice me being preset That which Christ affirmeth in this place as touching Abraham alone appertaineth vnto all the saints but this doctrine is more weighty in the person of Abraham because he is the father of all the whole church Therefore whosoeuer is desirous to be reckoned in the number of the godly let him receiue with ioy conuenient the presence of Christ which Abraham did most earnestly desire For in the worde reioyced is expressed his vehement and earnest affection Now must we vnderstand the opposition VVhen as the knowledge of Christ was as yet so obscure Abraham was so inflamed with the desire therof that he preferred the enioying therof before all good things whatsoeuer therfore how filthie is their vnthankfulnesse who despice him being ope●ly reuealed vnto thē so cōsequently reiect him Day doth not signifie in this place as Augustine thought eternitie but the time of Christ his kingdom after y t being clothed with flesh he appeared vnto the world that he might fulfill y e functiō of a redeemer But now the question is how Abraham saw the manifestation of Christ euen with the eies of faith for this seemeth not to agree with the other saying of Christ many kinges and prophetes haue wished to see the things which you see and haue not seen the Luke 10. 24. I answere that faith hath her degrees in the beholding of Christ wherby it commeth to passe that the olde prophetes sawe Christ a farre off as he was promised vnto thē yet coulde they not behold him as if he had been present like as he reuealed himselfe familiarly and throughly when he came downe from heauen vnto men Furthermore we are taught by these wordes that as God did not suffer the desire of Abraham to be frustrate so hee will not at this day suffer any man in vaine to desire to come vnto Christ but he will satisfie his desire Therfore in that he doth not giue himselfe to be enioyed of many the cause therof is mans frowardnes because there is but a fewe that desire him The ioy of Abraham doth testifie that he counted the knowledge of the kingdome of Christ an vnspeakable treasure and to this end is he said to haue reioyced when he saw the day of Christ that we may know y t there was nothing wherof he made greater account This fruite of faith doe all the faithfull reape that beeing content with Christ alone in whō they are fully perfectly blessed they haue quiet and merie consciences And truly no man knoweth Christ aright saue he that giueth him this honour that hee stay himselfe wholy vpon him Some do expound it thus that Abraham after he was dead did perceiue the presence of Christ when he appeared vnto the worlde and so they make the time of the desire and the time of the seeing diuers times It is true in deed that the comming of Christe was reuealed vnto the holy spirits after death for whom they looked during their whole life but I cannot tell whether so subtile an exposition will agree with the wordes of Christ or no. 57 Fiftie yeeres They goe about to refute the saying of Christ as a thing vnpossible in that the maketh himselfe equall with Abraham who dyed many yeres agoe being himselfe as yet not 50. yeres olde And although Christ were not yet foure and thirtie yeeres of age yet they do graunt him more age least they shoulde seeme to deale too precisely straightly with him as if he should say thou wilt not make thy selfe so olde that thou canst boast that thou art fiftie Therefore those who doe cōiecture that his face was more shrieueled then his age required or that mention is not made in this place of the yeeres according to the ascending and descending of the Sun they both busie themselues about nothing and the vaine surmise of Pap●a who taught that Christe liued aboue fiftie yeeres is in no case to be receiued 58 Before Abraham was made Because the vnbeleeuers doe iudge only according to the carnal sight Christ telleth them that he hath somwhat that is greater and higher then mans shape which beeing hidden from the senses of the flesh is onely seene with the eyes of faith In this respect he affirmeth that he might haue been seene of the holy fathers before he did appeare in the flesh Yet he vseth other wordes before saith he Abraham was borne I am But in these wordes he exempteth himselfe from the common sort of men and challengeth to himselfe an heauenly and diuine power the feeling and perceiuing wherof was spread abroad from the beginning of the worlde throughout all ages Although these wordes may be expounded two manner of wayes for some do thinke that this may agree with the eternall Godhead of Christ simplie and they compare it with that place of Moses I am that I am Exod. 3. 14. But I doe stretch the same further because the power and grace of Christ inasmuch as he is the redeemer of the worlde was common to all ages Therfore it agreeth with that saying of the Apostle Christ yesterday to day and for euer Heb. 13. 8. For the text seemeth to require that it should be so He had said before that Abraham did earnestly desire his day because the Iewes would not beleeue that he addeth that he was euen then also Furthermore the rendring of the reason shall not bee strong enough vnlesse we vnderstand that hee was euen then knowen to be the mediatour by whom God should be pacified And yet notwithstanding in that the grace of the mediatour was of force in all ages this depended vpon his eternall Godhead Therefore this saying of Christ containeth an excellent commendation of his diuine essence Furthermore wee must marke the solemne forme of his asseueration verily verily Neyther doe I mislike that in that Chrysostome thinketh that there is great weight in the presentense of the verbe For he saith not I was or I haue beene but I am whereby he signifieth an equall and the same state from the beginning of the world vntil the end therof neither saith he before Abraham was but before he was made attributing vnto him a beginning 59 Therefore they tooke vp stones It is to bee thought that they did this as if according to the appointment of the law Christ were to bestoned VVhence we gather how great the madnesse
and to addict himselfe wholy vnto him Although he vseth a more honorable name then they were wont to vse as then for the Messias was only accounted the sonne of Dauid at that time 36 VVho is he that I may beleeue By this answere of the blinde man it appeareth that although he knewe as yet no certaine or manifest thing concerning Christ yet was he redy easie to be taught For these words import as much as if he did say I am readie to imbrace him so soone as he shal be reuealed vnto me And we must note that the blinde man is desirous to be taught of Christ who was a Prophete for hee was alreadie perswaded that Christ was sent from god VVherfore he doth not rashly submit his faith vnto his doctrine 37 And thou hast seene him The blinde man coulde be set no farther forwarde by these woordes of Christe saue only vnto a bare colde and hungrie porcion or parcell of faith for Christe maketh no mention either of his power or why he was sent of his father or what he broughte vnto men But this is the principal thing in faith to know that by the sacrifice of his death sinnes are purged and that wee are reconciled vnto God that his resurrection is the tryumph ouer death beeing ouercome that wee are renewed by his spirite that beeing dead vnto the fleshe and sinne we may liue vnto righteousnesse that hee is the onely mediatour that his spirit is the earnest of our adoption and finally that all the parts of eternall life are in him But the Euangelist doth either not recite all the communication which he had with Christ or els he doth only giue vs to vnderstand that the blinde man gaue Christ his name that he might hereafter begin to bee his disciple I do not doubt but that Iesus his mening was to haue him to know that he was christ that he might bring him from this beginning of faith vnto a more full knowledge of him 38 And hee worshipped him The question may be whether hee gaue vnto Christ the honour that is due vnto God or no. The worde which the Euangelist vseth signifieth nothing els saue this that by bowing the knee and other signes he did testifie some worshippe and reuerence I thinke that hereby is meant some rare and vnwonted thing namely that the blind man gaue farre more honor to Christ then to a man or a prophete And yet notwithstanding I doe not thinke that he was come so farre then that he knew that Christ was God reuealed in the flesh Therfore what meaneth this worshipping Seeing that the blind man was perswaded that Iesus was the sonne of God beeing as it were in a traunce by reason of wondering hee dyd throwe downe himselfe before him 39 I am come to iudgement Iudgement cannot be simply taken in this place for the punishment which is laid vpon the wicked and the despicers of God because it is extended vnto the grace of illumination Therefore Christ calleth it iudgemēt because it restoreth things which were cōfused and scattered abroade into some lawfull order yet notwithstanding his meaning is that this is done by the wonderfull counsell of God and contrarie to the common sense of men And truly mans reason iudgeth that nothing can be more vnconuenient then that those shoulde bee made blinde by the light of the world which doe see Therefore this is one of the secrete iudgements of God whereby he casteth downe mans pride Furthermore we must note that the blindnesse which is here mentioned doth not so much come frō christ as through mans fault Neither doth any mans owne nature properly make him blind but seeing y t the reprobate desire nothing els but to quēch his light it must needs be that the eyes of their minde which are infected with wickednes frowardnesse must be blinded with the light offered vnto them To be briefe sithence Christe is of his owne nature the light of the worlde this is a thing that is accidentall that som are made blinde by his comming Yet may this question be asked againe seeing all men are generally condemned of blindnesse who are those that see I answere that that was spoken tauntingly by a concession because the vnbeleeuers althogh they be blinde doe yet notwithstanding thinke that they are very sharpe and quicke of sight and being pusted vp with this confidence they doe not vouchsafe to heare God and the wisedome of the flesh hath a fayre shew without Christ because the world doth not comprehende what true wisdome is Therefore Christ saith that those men doe see who are carried with their owne sense and fantasie deceiuing themselues and others vnder a foolish hope of wisdome accounting their vaine imaginations wisdome Such men become blinde so soone as Christe appeareth in the brightnesse of his Gospell not only because their foolishnesse whiche lay hid before in the darknesse of infidelitie is discouered but because being deeper drowned in darknesse through the iust iudgement of God they loose that little light which remained in them All men truly are born blinde yet there shine some sparkles as yet in the darknesse of corrupt and depraued nature that men may differ from bruit beastes Nowe if any man being puffed vp with a proud confidence and trust which he hath in his own reason do refuse to submit himself to God hee shall seeme wise without Christe but the brightnesse of Christe shall make him foolish Because the vanitie of mans minde beginneth then to appeare when as the heauenly wisedome commeth abroade But Christe his meaning was to expresse by these words as I haue said before some greater thing For hypocrites doe not so stubbornly resist God before such time as Christ doeth beginne to shine but so soone as the light commeth neerer them they rebell against God with open warre and as if they were his open enemies Therefore this frowardnesse vnthankfulnesse causeth their blindnes to be doubled that God doth eyther put out or altogether pluck out in his iust iudgement their eyes which were before depriued of the true light Now doe we know the summe of this place that Christ came into the worlde that hee may illuminate the blinde and bring those vnto madnesse which seeme to themselues to be wise And in the former place he maketh mention of giuing sight because this is the proper cause of his comming For hee came not to iudge the worlde but rather to saue that which was perished as Paule 2. Cor. 10. 6. when he saith that God hath vengeance in readinesse against all the rebellious he addeth also that this punishment shall take place after that the obedience of the godly shal be fulfilled Neither ought this vengeance to be restrained vnto the person of Christ as if hee did not the same dayly by the ministers of his Gospell VVerefore we must take good heede least any of vs doe pull downe vpon his own pate this horrible punishment through a fond
stedfast in Christe are carried about through many errors saue onely because they doe not so beware and take heede of suche false teachers as they ought Furthermore our vnsatiable curiositie is so delighted in newe and straunge inuentions of men that we runne wilfully like mad men vnto wolues and theeues Therefore it is not without cause that Christe doth testifie that false teachers how flatteringly soeuer they doe insinuate thēselues doe alwayes offer deadly poyson to the end we may be the more bent to driue them away Like vnto this is the admonition which Paule giueth Collos. 2. 8. Take heede least any man spoyle you through philosophie c. I am come An other similitude for seeing that Christ hath hitherto called himselfe a gate and those true sheephe ardes which gather their sheep vnto this gate he doth now take vppon himselfe the person of a shepheard and doth indeed affirme that hee is the onely shephearde so that this honour and title doth properly appertaine vnto none other For howe many faithfull shepheards of the Church soeuer therebe yet because hee rayseth them vp furnisheth them with necessarie gifts gouerneth them with his spirite worketh in thē they doe no whit hynder him from being the only gouernour of his Church and being the only most excellent pastour For although he vse their ministerie yet doth hee not cease from executing the office of a pastour by his power and also they are masters and teacher● so that they take nothing away from his dignitie and office Furthermore this woorde sheepheard when it is applyed vnto men it is subal●●rnum as they call it or placed vnder another And Christ doth so impart his honour vnto his ministers that hee doth yet notwithstanding remaine the only shepheard as well of them as of the whole flock Nowe when as he saith that he came that the sheepe may haue life his meaning is that they are only subiect to bee carryed away and deuouted by theeues and wolues which keepe not themselues vnder his sheephooke And to the end he may make them the more bold he affirmeth that life is continuallie by little and little encreased and confirmed in those which doe not depart from him And truly the more that euerye man goeth forward in faith the ●igher he commeth vnto the perfection of life because the spirite 〈…〉 in him which is life 11 I am the good 〈…〉 good sheepe hearde layeth downe his life for his sheepe 12 But an 〈…〉 that is not the sheephearde whose the sheepe are not see●th the wolfe comming and forsaketh his sheepe and flyeth and the wolfe catcheth them and 〈◊〉 them 13 But the 〈…〉 and careth not for his sheepe 14 〈…〉 15 As the father knoweth mee and I knowe the father and I say downe my life for my sheepe 11 A good sheepehearde layeth downe his life He declareth by that singular affection which he beareth toward his sheepe how truly he sheweth himselfe a shepheard toward them Because he is so carefull for their safetie that he spareth not his owne life whereupon it followeth that they are more then vnthankfull and an hundreth times woorthie to perish and to bee laide open vnto all manner of harme who refuse to be kept by so bountifull louing a shepheard Furthermore that is most true which Augustine saith that in this place is set before vs what is to be desired what is to be fled and what is to bee suffered in the gouernment of the Church There is nothing more to be desired then that the Churche may be gouerned by good and carefull sheepheads Christ doth professe that he alone is a good shepheard who first by him selfe and secondly by his instruments doth make the Church sound and safe Therefore so often as thinges are set in good order and fit men are made gouernours there Christ playeth the sheepheard in deede But there bee many Theeues and VVolues who hauing on sheepeheardes visures do wickedly despearse the Church Christ affirmeth that suche are to be fled by what name or title soeuer they be called and howsoeuer they vaunt and bragge of their name If the Church could be purged of hyrelinges it should be in better case but because by this meanes the Lord doth exercise the pacience of his faithfull children and we are also vnwoorthie of that singuler benefite that Christ shoulde appeare vnto vs in sincere pastours they are to bee suffered howsoeuer they be not allowed and do mislike vs for good causes By hyrelings vnderstand those who retaine and keepe backe pure doctrine and which do rather preach the truth by occasion then of any true zeale as saith Paule Phil. 1. 15. Such men are to bee hearde although they doe not serue Christe faithfully For like as Christ wold haue the Pharisees hard because they did sit in Moses his chaire Mat. 23. 3. so must we giue this honor vnto the Gospel that we despice not the ministers thereof although they bee not very good And because euery little offence doth make the gospell vnsauery in our tast least such daintines do hinder vs let vs alwaies remēber that which I said before that if the spirite of Christ bee not of suche power and force in the ministers that hee doe openly shew himselfe in them to be a sheepheard then are we punished for our sinnes and tha● in the meane season our obedience is tryed 12 But the hireling and hee that is not the shepheard Although Christ doth challendge the name of a shepheard to himselfe alone yet doth he secretly graunt that it is in some respect common to the instruments in whom he worketh For we know that many after Christ were not afraid to shed their blood for the safetie of the Church neither did the prophetes which were before Christes comming spare their liues But in his owne person he setteth before vs an absolute example that he may prescribe a rule vnto his ministers For how filthie and shamefull is our slouthfulnes if our life be more precious vnto vs then the safety of the church before which Christ did not preferre his owne life And that which is said in this place of giuing the life for the sheepe is as a sure and principall signe of fatherly affectiō Christ his mening was first to testifie vnto vs how singuler a tokē of his loue towards vs he shewed in his death and secondly to prouoke al his ministers to folow his example Notwithstanding we must note the difference betweene them and him that he gaue his life for the price of satisfaction hee shed his blood to purge our soules he offered his body for a sacrifice whereby he might purge our sinnes and pacifie Gods wrath which was stirred vp against vs. But there cā be no such thing in y e ministers of the gospell who haue all need to be purged and whose sins are cleansed by that only sacrifice and are reconciled vnto God But Christe disputeth not in this place of the efficacie of his death or
whereby they may darken the cleare light of the Gospel And also we see many light spirits who flying through friuolous speculations do finde no certaine station and resting place during their whole life VVhen as they desire Christ to make himselfe knowen openly or freely and boldly their meaning is that he do not insinuate himselfe any longer ouerthwa●ly and as it were by certaine long circumstances So that they accuse his doctrine of obcuritie which was notwithstanding plaine and shrill enough vnlesse it had fallen amongst deaf men This history teacheth vs that wee cannot escape the deceits and slaunders of the wicked if wee be called to preach the Gospel VVherfore we must watch diligently not be moued herewithall as with some new matter when the same shall befall vs whiche befell our master 25 I haue told you The Lord doth not dissemble that he is Christ and yet notwithstanding he doth not teach them as if they were apt to learne bot doth rather cast in their teeth their malice and wickednesse wherin they were become obstinate because they had profited nothing hitherto being taught by the word and works of God Therfore he blameth them for that that they did not know him as if he should say my doctrine is easie enough to be vnderstood of it selfe and you are in the fault because you do wickedly and maliciously resist God Hee doth afterward speak of works that he may proue that they are guilty of double stubbornnes For besides his doctrine they had an euident testimonie in his myracles vnlesse they had been vnthankfull vnto God Therfore he repeateth that twise that they did not beleeue that he may manifestly proue vnto them that they are wilfully deafe when they shoulde heare his doctrine and blind when they shold behold his works which is a token of extreeme and desperate wickednes He saith that he hath done workes in the fathers name because this was the ende thereof that he might make the power of God knowen by them whereby it might be made manifest that he came from God 26 Because you are not of my sheep He sheweth an higher cause why they doe neither beleeue his myracles nor doctrine namely because they are reprobates And we must note Christ his purpose For because they did boast that they were Gods Church least theyr vnbeliefe should any whit discredite the Gospell he pronounceth that the gift of beleeuing is speciall and truly it is necessarie that men be knowen of God that men may know him as saith Paule Galat. 4. 9. Againe it must needes be that those whome God regardeth not must alwaies continue turned away from him If any man murmur and say that the cause of vnbeliefe is in God because it is in his power alone to make sheepe I answere that he is free from all fault seeing that men do only of voluntarie wickednesse reiect grace God doth purchase vnto himselfe so muche credit as is sufficient but wilde beastes doe neuer waxe tame vntill suche time as they be chaunged into sheepe by the spirit of God They that are such shall in vaine assay to lay the blame of their fiercenesse and wildenesse vpon God which is proper to their nature In summe Christe giueth vs to vnderstande that it is no maruell if there bee but a fewe that obey his gospell because they are cruell and vntamed beastes whosoeuer are not brought vnto the obedience of faith by the spirite of God VVherefore it is an vnmeete and absurd thing that the authoritie of the gospell should depend vpon the faith of men but rather let the faithfull consider that they are so much the more bound vnto God because whereas others do continue in blindnes they are drawē vnto Christ by the illumination of the spirite Moreouer the ministers of the gospel haue in this place wherewith they may comfort themselues if their labour bee not profitable to all men 27 My sheepe He proueth by an argument drawen from contraries that they are not sheepe because they obey not the Gospell For God doth call those effectually whom he hath chosen so that Christs sheepe are tryed by faith And truly this name sheepe is therfore giuen vnto the faithful because they submit themselues vnto God to be gouerned by the hand of the chiefe shepheard and hauing laid away their former wildnesse they shew themselues easie to be guided and obedient This also is no small cōfort for godly teachers that howsoeuer the greater part of the worlde doth not hearken vnto Christe yet hath hee his sheepe whom he knoweth and of whom he is knowen againe Let them endeuour so much as in them lyeth to bring the whole world vnto Christe his sheepfold but when it falleth not out as they would wish let them be content with this one thing that those shal be gathered together by their diligence who are sheepe The rest I haue expounded before 28 And they shall not perish for ●uer This is an vncomparable fruit of faith that Christ commaundeth vs to be sure certaine voyde of care when as we are gathered into his sheepfold by faith But wee must also note vnto what proppe this certaintie leaneth namely because hee wil be a faithfull keeper of our saluation for he doth testifie that it is in his hand And if sobeit this be not yet sufficient he saith that it kept is safe by the power of the father An excellent place whereby we are taught that the saluation of all the elect is no lesse sure then the power of God is inuincible Furthermore Christe would not speake this rashlye and in vaine but his meaning was to make vnto his a promise which may remaine surely fixed in their mindes Therefore we gather that this is Christ his drift in these wordes that the faithfull and elect may be sure of their saluation VVe are compassed about with strong enemies and so great is our weakenesse that we are not farre from death euery moment yet because he is greater or mightier then all whiche keepeth that whiche is committed vnto him to keepe in our behalfe there is no cause why we should feare as if our life were in daunger we doe also gather heereby howe vaine the hope and confidence of the Papistes is which leaneth vnto freewill vnto their owne power and vnto the merites of workes Christe doth teache those that bee his farre otherwise that they remember that they are in this worlde as in the middest of a wood amongest many robbers and that besides that they are vnweaponed and alwaies as a pray they do also acknowledge that they haue the matter of death shut vp in them so that they doe walke in safetie trusting vnto the keeping of God alone Finally our saluation is therfore certaine and sure because it is in the hand of God because our faith is both weake and we are too too readie and bent to fall But God who hath taken vs into his hand is strong enough so that hee is able to
manifest a token of Gods power being shewed in a famous place in a great assemblie of people and euen almost at the gates of the Citie as vpon a stage doth straightway vanish out of their sight Yea the Iewes shutting their eyes maliciously did of set purpose not see that which was before their eies And truly this is no new or strange thing that men who doe alwayes too greedily gape after myracles are altogether dull and blockish at the consideration thereof The distance of place which is here noted was not two miles For a furlong containeth sixe hundred foote that is an hundred and fiue and twentie pases 19 That they might comfort them This was the thing for which they came but God had respect vnto another thing as I haue alreadie saide Furthermore it appeareth that the house of Lazarus and of his sisters was full of dignitie and honourably reuerenced And because it is a naturall thing that the death of friendes should bring vnto men sorrow heauines this dutie whereof the Euangelist maketh mention is not to be disalowed saue only that the corrupt excesse whiche reigneth as in other parts of the life so in this doth corrupt a thing which is of it self not to be discommended 20 Therfore when Martha had heard Martha went out of the Towne as wee shall afterward see peraduenture not only for reuerence sake but that she might receiue him more priuily because the daunger was freshe in memorie and the rage of the enemies was as yet scarse wel appeased which being somewhat pacified by the departure of Christ into Galilee might breake out a fresh so soone as it was heard that hee was returned 21 Lord if thou hadst been heere She beginneth with a complaint although shee doeth by this meanes modestly signifie vnto him what shee wold For it is as much as if she shold say Thou couldest by thy presence haue deliuered my brother from death yea thou canst euen now do it because God will denie thee nothing And by speaking thus she doth rather fauour her affection then keepe her selfe vnder the rule of faith I confesse indeede that these wordes did partly proceede from faith but I say that ther were certaine disordered affectiōs mixed with thē which carryed her beyond her boundes For whence had she this hope that her brother should not haue died if Christ had been present Truly it was not conceiued of any promise of Christe therefore it remaineth that she doth rather obey her owne desires then submit her selfe vnto Christ. It is a poynt of faith that shee ascribeth vnto Christe power and most singuler goodnesse but in that she promiseth herself more then she had heard of Christ that agreeth not with faith For we must alwayes hold the mutuall consent betweene the worde and faith least man doe forge vnto himselfe any thing rashly besides the worde of God Moreouer Martha did sticke too much in the corporal presence of Christ. Therefore the faith of Martha being mixed with and intangled with immoderate desires and not altogether voide of superstition could not shine out with perfect brightnesse so that there do only certaine sparkles appeare in these wordes 23 Thy brother shall rise againe This is wonderfull gentlenesse of Christe in that pardoning vnto Martha those faultes whereof we haue spoken he promiseth vnto her more of his owne accord then she durst precisely and openly aske 24 I know that he shall rise againe Now appeareth the too too greate fearfulnesse of Martha in that shee doth extenuate the saying of Christ. VVe said euen now that she went farther then was meete when shee feined vnto her selfe an hope after her owne imagination now shee falleth into the contrarie vice in that shee stood as it were trembling when as Christe reached out his hande VVherefore wee must take heed of both these thinges that we take not vnto our selues friuolous hope heere and there as winde being destitute of the worde of god and againe that the Lord doe not finde our heartes eyther shut or els too straitly restrained when he openeth his mouth But Martha meante to gather out of this answere some other thing then she durst hope for out of the wordes of Christe as if she should say if thou meane the last resurrection I doe not doubt but that my brother shall rise againe in the last day and with this hope doe I comfort my selfe but I cannot tell whether it hath any farther meaning or no. 25 I am the resurrection and the life Christe doth first of al affirme that he is the resurrection and life that done he doeth seuerally expounde both the members of that sentence In the former place he calleth him selfe the resurrection because the restoring from death to life is former in order then is the state of life But all mankinde is drowned in death Therefore no man shall bee made partaker of life saue hee that shall first rise from death So that Christ doth teache that hee is the beginning of life and he addeth afterwarde that the perpetuitie continuaunce of life is a worke of his grace Furthermore the expositiō which foloweth immediatly doth manifestly declare that he speaketh of the spirituall life He that beleeueth in me although hee shall bee dead yet shall hee liue VVhy is Christ then the resurrection Because he doth regenerate by his spirite the children of Adam who were estranged frō God through sin that they may begin to lead a new life VVhich thing I haue handeled more largely before in the Chap. 5. 21. and 24. ver And paule vnto the Ephesians is the best interpreter of this place Ephesians 2. 5. and 5 8. Let them now bee packing who babble that men are prepared by the motion of nature to receyue the grace of God It is as much as if they shoulde say that dead men doe walke For in that men doe liue and breath are endowed with sense vnderstanding and will all that tendeth to destruction because there is no part or facultie of the soule which is not corrupt and turned away from that which is right VVhereby it commeth to passe y t death reigneth euery where For the estranging from God is the death of the soule Therefore those which beleeue in Christ wheras they were before dead they do begin to liue because faith is the spirituall resurrection of the soule doth after a sort quicken the soule it self that it may liue vnto God according to that which is said before chap. 5. 25. The dead shall heare the voyce of the sonne of God and they that shall heare shall liue This is surely an excellent title and commendation of faith that powring the life of Christe into vs it deliuereth vs from death 26 And euery one that liueth and beleeueth in mee This is the exposition of the second member namely how Christ is the life because he doth neuer suffer that life to fall away which he hath once gyuen but preserueth it vnto the ende For
what should become of men in so greate frailtie of the fleshe if hauing once obtained life they shoulde afterward be left vnto themselues Therefore the continuall estate of the life must be grounded vpon the power of the selfe same Christ that hee may finish that which he hath begunne And the faithfull are saide neuer to dye for this cause because their soules being borne againe of the vncorruptible seed haue the spirite of Christ abiding in them whereby they are continually quickned For although the body be subiect to death because of sinne yet that spirite is life for righteousnesse Rom. 8. 10. And in that the outwarde man is dayly corrupted in them that is so farre from impayring theyr true life that it euen helpeth forwarde the same because the inwarde man is renewed from day to day 2. Cor. 4. 16. Yea death it selfe is in them a certaine setting free from the bondage of death Doest thou beleeue this Christ seemeth at the firste sight to intreate of the spirituall life for this cause that hee may withdrawe the minde of Martha from her present desire Martha did desire to haue her brother restored to life Christ answereth that he is the authour of a better life namely because he quickneth the soules of the faithfull by his heauenly power But I doe not doubt but that his meaning was to comprehende a double grace Therefore he commendeth generally the spirituall life which he giueth vnto all those that be his but he will giue some tast thereby of this power which hee would afterward shewe in raysing vp Lazarus 27 Truly Lorde To the end that Martha may prooue that she did beleeue that which she had heard of Christ that he is the resurrection the life she maketh answere that she beleeueth that he is Christe and the sonne of God so that indeed this knowledge comprehendeth in it selfe the summe of all good things For we must alwayes mark to what end the Messias was promised and what office the Prophetes doe attribute vnto him And when as Martha confesseth that it was he that shoulde come she confirmeth her faith with the prophesies of the Prophetes VVhereupon it followeth that the full restoring of all thinges and perfect felicitie is to be hoped for at his hands and finally that he was sent for this cause that he may erect set in order a true and absolute estate of the kingdome of God 28 VVhen she had said these thinges she went and called her sister Mary secretly saying the master is present and calleth thee 29 So soone as shee heard that shee ryseth straightway and commeth vnto him 30 And Iesus was not yet come into the towne but was in the place where Martha met him 31 The Iewes therefore which were with her at home and did comfort her seeing that Mary arose sodainely and went out they followed her saying shee goeth vnto the graue that shee may weepe there 32 Therefore after that Mary came where Iesus was when shee sawe him shee fell at his feete saying vnto him Lorde if thou haddest beene heere my brother had not beene dead 33 Therefore so soone as Iesus saw her weeping and the Iewes whiche came with her weeping he gro●ed in the spirite and troubled himselfe 34 And hee sayde where haue you laide hym They say vnto him come and see 35 Iesus wept 36 Therfore the Iewes said behold how he loued him 37 And certaine of them said could not he which opened the eyes of one that was blinde bring to passe that this man should not die 38 Then Iesus groned againe in himselfe and came vnto the graue and it was a 〈◊〉 and a stone laid vpon it ●● Called her sister It is likely that Christ stayed without the towne at the request of Martha least he should come into such an assemblie of men For she feared daunger because Christ had but of late hardly escaped out of the middest of death Therefore least his comming shoulde be noysed abroade any further she telleth her sister priuilie The master is present This word master doth shew what account these godly matrones did make of Christ And although they had not profited so much as became them yet was this a great matter that they had wholy addicted themselues to be his disciples And the sodaine departure of Mary that she might come to meet him doth not a little testifie how she reuerenced him 31 Therfore the Iewes that were with her Although Christ suffereth Martha to returne home that she might draw aside her sister out of the companie yet Christe did intend an other thing namely that he might haue the Iewes to see the myracle They doe in no case thinke vpon this but it was no new matter that men should be brought thyther as it were in darknes by the secret prouidence of God whyther they went not They thinke y t Mary goeth vnto the graue as those are wont to doe who seek to haue their sorrow stirred vp For this disease reigneth commonly euery where that husbands being depriued of their wiues and parents of their children and again wiues of their husbandes and children of their parents or kinsfolkes or friendes doe increase ambitiously by all means possible their mourning and it is a solemne thing to finde out diuers inuentions to this ende So that indeede whereas the affections of men are alreadie inordinate they prick them forward with newe prickes to the ende they may the more vehementlye and with greater force resiste God Further more it was their dutie to pull backe Mary least by beholding the Sepulchre she should gather matter of mourning but they dare not vse so sharpe a remedie but euen they themselues doe nourish the intēperancie of her grief in that they beare he● cōpanie So that it falleth out oftentimes that their consolations are little worth who beare with their friendes too much 32 Shee fell downe at his feete In that she falleth downe at his feet we doe thereby gather that he was worshipped in that house aboue the cōmon order and manner of men For although they were wont to prostrate themselues before kinges and rulers yet because Christ had him selfe no princely or loftie thing in himselfe according to the flesh Mary falleth downe at his feete for another ende Neither would she haue doone so vnlesse shee had beene perswaded that hee was the sonne of God Lord if thou hadst been here Although she seemeth to speake honourably of Christ after a sort yet we haue of late declared what corruption is in these wordes For doubtlesse the power of Christ whiche did replenish heauē earth ought not to haue bin restrained vnto his corporall presence 33 Hee groned in the spirite Vnlesse Christ had sorrowed togeather with them he woulde haue stood rather with a fierce countenance but when as he conformeth himselfe vnto them euen vnto weeping he declareth his agreement with them For the Euangelist seemeth in my iudgement to expresse the cause of such
shal afterward declare in his place That the father may be glorified This place agreeth with the sayinge of Paule that euery tongue may confesse that Iesus is Christe to the glory of God the father Philip. 2. 11. The end of all thinges is the sanctification of the name of God But the lawfull meanes to sanctifie it is expressed in this place to witte in the sonne and through the sonne For seeing that the maiestie of God is hidden from vs of it selfe it shineth in Christ seeing that his hand is hidden we may see the same in Christ. Therefore it is not lawfull for vs to separate the sonne from the father in those benefites which the father giueth vs according to that He that honoureth not the sonne he honoureth not the father 14. If you shall aske any thing This repetition is not in vaine All men see perceiue that they are vnworthy to come vnto God yet the greater part breaketh our as being madde and speaketh vnto God rashly proudly Afterward when as that vnworthines whereof I haue spoken commeth into their mindes euery manne forgeth vnto himselfe diuerse meanes But when God willeth vs to come vnto him hee setteth beefore vs one Mediatour by whom he will be intreated and be mercifull And here the frowardnes of mans nature breaketh out againe beecause the greater part ceaseth not hauing left the way to go about through crooked boughtes This commeth to passe therefore because the power and goodnes of God is laid hold vpon in Christ onely slenderly and malitiously There is also a second errour that we doe not consider that we are all excluded from comming to God worthily vntill we be called by him and that we are called onely by the sonne But and if one testimony be not sufficient for vs yet let vs know that seeing that Christ repeateth this againe that we must pray the father in his name he dooth as it were lay hand vppon vs least we spend our labour in vaine in seeking other patrons 15. If yee loue me keepe my commaundements 16. And I wil pray my father and he shal giue you another comforter that hee may continue with you for euer 17. The spirit of trueth whom the world cannot receiue because it seeth him not neither knoweth him But yee know him beecause hee abideth with you and shall bee in you 18. I wil not leaue you as orphanes I come vnto you 15 If you loue me That was true and sincere loue wherewith the disciples loued Christ yet had it some superstitiō mixed with it as it befalleth vs oftentimes in like sort For that was preposterous in that they desired to keepe him stil in the world To the end he may reform this fault he willeth them to bend their loue vnto some thing else to wit that they bend their whole studye to keepe the preceptes which he had giuen A most profitable doctrine because there be but a few of those that seeme to themselues to loue Christ that worship him as they ought yea rather when they haue done some foolishe toy they thinke all is well But on the contrary the true loue of Christ is reduced in this place vnto the keeping of his doctrine as vnto the only rule wherby it must be tried Moreouer we are taught how corrupt our other affections are seeing that euē our loue toward Christ is not without fault vnlesse it bee framed vnto pure obedience 16. And I will pray my father This remedy was prepared to pacifie the sorrow which they might conceiue by reason of Christ his absence notwithstanding Christe promiseth therewithall that hee will giue them strength to keepe his commaundementes otherwise the exhortatiō had had but small strength Therefore hee preuenteth it in time and telleth them that howsoeuer he be absent from them in bodye yet will hee not suffer them to be destitute of helpe because hee will be present with thē by his spirit He calleth the spirite in this place the gifte of the father suche a gifte as he will obtaine by his praiers he will promise else where that hee giueth it Both these thinges are saide truelye and fitly for inasmuche as Christ is our mediatour and patrone he obtaineth the grace of the spirit of the father inasmuch as he is God he giueth it of himselfe The meaning of this place is I was giuen vnto you of the father as a conforter yet onely for a season now seeing that I haue fulfilled my course I wyll desire that there may another be giuen you which may not be temporal but that he may continue with you for euer This name comforter is giuen in this place both to Christ and also to the spirite that by good right for this office is common to them both to comfort and exhorte vs and to defend vs with their ayde and patronage Christe was vnto his a patrone so long as he liued in the world afterward hee committed them to the tuition and ayde of the spirite If anye manne aske this question whether we be not vnder the tuition of Christe at this daye or no wee may readily aunswere that Christe is our patrone for euer but not after a visible sorte So long as hee was conuersant in the worlde hee shewed himselfe openly to bee their patrone but hee defendeth vs nowe by his spirite Hee calleth him another comforter beecause of the difference of good thinges whiche wee receiue from them both It was proper to Christ to pacifie the wrath of God to redeeme men from death to purchase righteousnes and life by purging the sinnes of the world it is proper to the spirite to make vs partakers aswel of Christe himselfe as of all his good things Although we may well gather the distinction of persons out of this place for the spirit must needes differ from the sonne in some propertie that he may be another 17. The spirit of trueth Christ adorneth the spirit with an other title to witte that hee is a teacher of trueth VVhereuppon it followeth that vntill such time as we be inwardly taught by him all our mindes are taken with vanitie and lying VVhome the world cannot receiue This opposition dooth amplifie the excellencie of the grace which God dooth vouchsafe to bestowe vppon those alone that be his For his meaning is that it is no small gyft whereof the world is depriued In which sense Isaias saieth also 60. 1. Behold darkenes shall couer the earth and a myste the people but the Lorde shall arise vppon thee For Gods mercy towarde the Church deserueth so much the greater praise whilest that hee lifteth vppe the same aboue the whole world Notwithstanding Christe dooth therewithall exhort the disciples that they doe not driue away frō them the grace of the spirite beeing pufte vppe with the sense and vnderstanding of the fleshe Earthly menne count all that but a dreame whatsoeuer the Scripture saieth concerninge the holye Ghoste beecause why lest they trust to their owne reason
this place of the secrete loue of God the father which he bare alwayes towarde his sonne they misse the marke seeing that Christ intended rather to lay as it were in our bosome a certaine pledge of Gods loue towarde vs. Therefore that subtile saying doth nothing appertaine vnto this place how the father hath alwayes loued himselfe in the sonne but the loue heere mentioned must bee referred vnto vs because Christ doth testifie that he is beloued of the father in asmuch as he is the head of the Church like as is more then necessary for vs. For hee that seeketh to know how he is beloued without a mediatour he intangleth himselfe in a Labyrinth wherein hee shall neyther finde way nor out going Therefore wee must behold Christe wherein we shall finde the pledge of Gods loue laide open For the loue of God was altogether powred into him that it might flowe from him into his members Hee had this title giuen him that hee was the welbeloued sonne in whom the good will of the father resteth But wee must note the ende that God may accept vs in him Therefore we may all beholde the fatherly loue of God toward vs in him as in a glasse because hee is not loued apart or for his owne sake onely but that he may ioyne vs vnto the father with himselfe Abide in my loue Some doe expound it thus that Christe requireth mutuall loue of his D●ciples Othersome deale better who take the loue of Christ actiuely For he will haue vs to enioy the loue wherewith hee hath once loued vs for euer and therefore hee telleth vs that wee must take heed that we depriue not our selues thereof For many men refuse the grace that is offered them many men throw away that which they had in their hands Therefore after that wee are once receiued into Christes fauour we must beware that wee fall not thence through our owne faulte VVhereas some doe inferre vpon these wordes that there is no force nor efficacie in the grace of God vnlesse it bee holpen with our constancie it is a friuolous thing Neither doe I graunt that the spirit doth only require at our hāds those things which are in our power but that he doth shew what is to be done that if we want strength wee may craue the same at the hands of som other Likeas when Christ exhorteth vs in this place vnto perseuerāce we must not trust to our owne cunning and strength but we must beseech him that commaundeth to confirme vs in his loue 10 If yee keepe my commandements Hee sheweth the meanes howe to perseuere if we follow him thither whither he calleth vs. for as Paule saith Rom. 8. ● They that be in Christe walke not after the fleshe but after the spirite For these thinges are continually coupled together faith which layeth hold vpon the free loue of Christe and a good conscience and newnesse of life And truly Christ doth not reconcile the faithfull vnto the f●●her to this end that they may play the wantons freely but that he may keepe them vnder his fathers hand and gouernment by gouerning them with his spirite VVhereupon it followeth that all those cast away the loue of Christ which do not proue by true obedience that they are his Disciples If any man obiect that the firmenesse of our saluation doth therefore depend vpon our selues I answere that Christes wordes are falsly wrested to that part because the obedience which the faithfull vse toward him is not so much the cause that hee continueth his loue toward them as the effect of loue For how commeth it to passe that they answere to their calling saue onely because they are mooued with the spirite of free adoption But it seemeth that there is too harde a condition laid vpon vs that we keepe Christs commandements wherin is conteined the axact perfection of righteousnes which farre passeth our meane measure For it cōmeth to passe therby y t the loue of Christ shal be in vaine vnlesse we be endowed with angelicall puritie VVe may easily answere for when as Christe intreateth of the studie and desire to liue well and aright hee excludeth not that which is the principall point in his doctrine to wit concerning the free imputation of righteousnesse whereby it commeth to passe that by graunting of pardon our good deedes doe please God which beeing lame and vnperfect of themselues did deserue to be reiected Therefore the faithfull are iudged to keepe Christes commaundements when they apply their studies vnto this ende although they misse the mark much because they are loosed from that rigour of the lawe Deut. 27. 26. Accursed be euery one which shall not fulfil all thinges c. Likeas I haue also kept As we are elected in Christ so the image of our calling is most liuely expressed in him Therefore he doth for good causes set himselfe before our eyes as a patterne whome all the godly must endeuour to follow In me saith hee appeareth the similitude of those thinges which I require at your handes For you see how that I am addicted indeede vnto my father to obey him and I will proceed in this course 〈◊〉 Againe hee hath loued mee not for a moment or for a short time but the tenor of his loue toward me is euerlasting VVe must alwayes haue this conformitie of the head and the members before our eyes not only to the end the faithfull may studie to frame themselues vnto the example of Christe but that they may hope that they shall bee dayly reformed and bettered by his spirite that they may walke vntill the end in newnesse of life 11 These thinges haue I spoken vnto you Hee addeth that the goodly are not ignorant of his loue but that it is perceiued by the sense of faith so that the consciences shall enioy blessed peace For the ioy whereof he maketh mention ariseth from that peace which they haue with god whosoeuer are iustified freely Therefore so often as the fatherly loue of God toward vs is spoken of let vs know that we haue matter of true ioy giuen vs so that our consciences being quiet we may bee certaine of our saluation Furthermore this ioy is called Christes and ours in a diuers respect It is Christes because it is giuen vs by him for he is both the authour and the cause I say that hee is the cause because wee were deliuered from guiltinesse when as the correction of our peace was laide vpon him I call him the authour also because hee abolisheth feare and carefulnesse in our heartes from whence that cleare merines proceedeth It is called ours in another respect because we enioy it after that it is giuen vs. Now seeing that Christ saith that he spake these things for this cause that the Disciples may haue ioy we gather out of these wordes that all those which haue rightly profited in this sermon haue whereupon they may stay themselues By this worde abide he giueth vs to
is giuen him and so may fulfill al things Finally he filleth the world with the smel of his righteousnes out of his heauenly glory And the spirite pronounceth by the Gospell that this is the onely meanes whereby we are iudged iuste Therefore this second degree is fet from the conuiction of sin that the spirite may conuince the worlde what is to be accounted true righteousnes to wit Christ hath appointed and ordained the kingdome of life by his ascending into heauen and he sitteth now at the right hand of the father to the end he may establish true righteousnes 11. And of iudgement Those that take this word iudgement for damnation they want not a reason for the same because Christ addeth immediately that the prince of the world is iudged But as I thinke the other sense dooth better agree to witte that so soone as the light of the Gospell is once lighted the spirite reuealeth that the state of the world was rightly and orderly framed by the victory of Christ whereby he threwe down Sathan his empyre as if hee should saye that this is the true restoringe whereby al things are reformed when as Christ himselfe possesseth the kingdome alone hauing subdued and conquered Sathan Therefore iudgement is set against confused and disordered things or that I maye speake more brieflye it is contrarye to disorder as if a man should call it rightnesse or straightnesse in whiche sense it is oftentimes taken in the scripture The sense therefore is that so long as Sathan ruleth he mixeth and troubleth all thinges so that there is a filthy and euill fauoured confusion of the workes of God but when as he is stripped of his tyrannye by Christ then is the world reformed and there appeareth good order So that the spirite conuinceth the world of iudgment that is that Christ restoreth and bringeth those things in order which were gone to decay before hauing ouercome the prince of iniquitie 12. I haue yet many thinges Christ his sermon coulde not preuaile so much amongst his disciples but that their rudenes did cause them doubt as yet in many thinges yea they did scarse taste of those thinges whiche ought to haue refreshed them throughly vnlesse the weakenes of the flesh had hindered them Therefore it could not be but that acknowledging their own want they shuld feare and stand in doubt Therefore in that he saith that they are vnable to beare thē if he shall tell them more and higher things it tendeth to this end that being incouraged with the hope of better profiting they bee not discouraged For it was not meete that they shuld measure the grace wherwith they shuld be endowed according to the present feeling seeing they were so farre from heauen In summe he biddeth them be of good courage how weake soeuer they be now But beecause they had no vnderpropping whereunto they might leane saue onely doctrine Christ telleth them that he had tempered the same so that they might receiue it yet so y t they are to hope for an higher and more plentifull shortly as if he shuld say if that be not yet sufficient to establish you which you haue heard of me suffer a litle for ye shal shortly be taught by the spirit and then shall ye want nothing hee shall resolue that which is yet rude in you Nowe the question is what those thinges were whiche the Apostles were not sitte to learne as yet To the end the Papists may thrust in their owne inuentions in steede of Gods oracles they do wickedly abuse this place Christe promised say they vnto the Apostles new reuelations therefore they must not stay in the scripture aboue which he calleth his First of all if we will say as Augustine saith we shal answere readily His wordes are these seeing that Christ held his peace which of vs can saye that they are these or these thinges or if hee dare saye so how will hee prooue it who is so vaine or rashe who although hee say those thinges which are true canne affirme without any diuine testimonie that those are the thinges which the Lord would not vtter at that time But wee haue a surer reason out of Christ his wordes to refute them The spirite is called the perfect maister of truth whom Christ promysed to his Apostles And why was hee promised saue only that they might deliuer with their handes the wisdome which they receiued from him The spirit was giuen them who being their guide and directer they executed the office which was enioyned them The same spirit had brought them into all trueth when as they cōprehended in writing the sum of their doctrine VVhosoeuer thinketh that there ought any thing to be added to this doctrine as if it were lame and but halfe full and perfect he doth not only accuse the Disciples of fraudulent dealing but he doth also blaspeme the spirit If the doctrine which they didde write had proceeded from fresh water soldiours and nounces the addition had not beene superfluous but now fithence that their writinges are as it were the euerlasting tables of that reuelation which was promised them and giuen them there can nothing be added vnto them without doing cruell iniury to the spirite Furthermore the Papists are more then ridiculous when as they are come to the matters themselues For they define that those secretes which the Apostles were vnable to bere were childish diriges then which there is nothing more vaine or foolysh Forsooth spirite must needes come downe from heauen that the Apostles might learne how to hallow the chalices with their altars how to baptise Belles how to blesse holy water and how to celebrate Masse Therfore how doe noddies and children learne these thinges which haue them at their fingers endes Therefore it is most manifest that the Papists doe mocke God seeinge that they feigne that those thinges came downe from heauen which doe no lesse smell of the misteries of Ceres and Proserpina then they are contrary to the sincere wisdome of the spirite But let vs vnlesse we will be vnthankfull to God reste vppon that doctrine whereof the Apostles were the aucthors as their writinges declare seeing that the chiefest perfection of the heauenly wisdome is deliuered vnto vs there which may make the man of GOD perfect Colloss 1. 28. Let vs not thinke that it is lawefull for vs to goe beyond the same For our height and breadth and depth are placed in that that we knowe the loue of God shewed vnto vs in Christe Ephe. 3. 18. This knowledge excelleth all knowledge as saieth Paule Like as when he teacheth that all the treasures of wisdome and knowledge are hidden in Christ Colloss 2. 3. hee forgeth not an vnknowne Christ but him whome he had liuely depaynted by his preaching that he may be seene as it were crucified before our eyes as hee saith vnto the Galathians the third chapter the first verse But least there shoulde anye doubt remaine Christe declareth afterwarde by his owne wordes
shall suffer Therefore if wee couet to be preserued according to the rule whiche Christe hath deliuered wee must not wishe to be free from euilles neither must we pray God to translate vs by and by into blessed rest but let vs bee content with the certaine and sure hope of victorie and let vs in the meane season resist all euilles valiauntly from whiche that wee may escape Christ hath prayed vnto the father In summe Christ taketh not his out of the wold because he will not haue them to be soft an slouthfull yet notwithstanding he deliuereth them from euill that they may not be ouerwhelmed For he will haue them to striue but hee will not suffer them to be wounded to death 16 They are not of the worlde likeas Hee repeateth againe that all the whole worlde hateth them to the end that his heauenly father may the more beningly help them he doth also declare that this hatred procedeth not from their offence or fault but because the world hateth God and Christ. 17 Sanctifie them in thy truth This sanctification comprehendeth the kingdome of God and the righteousnesse thereof to wit when God doth renue vs by his spirite and confirmeth and prosecuteth vnto the ende the grace of renouation Therefore he requesteth first that the father woulde sanctifie his disciples that is that he woulde addict them wholy vnto himselfe and challenge them as an holy flocke Secondly hee assigneth the meanes and manner of sanctification and that not without cause For brainsick men doe babble many things foolishly concerning sanctification yet they passe ouer gods truth wherby he consecrateth vs vnto himselfe Again because other mē being ful out as foolish do trifle cōcerning the truth and doe in the meane season neglect the woorde Christe saith plainely that the truth is no where els saue only in the worde by which truth God doth sanctifie his children For the woorde is taken for the gospell whiche the Apostles had alreadie hearde proceede from the mouth of their master and which they should shortly preach vnto others In this sense Paule teacheth Ephe. 5 2. 6. that the Churche is made cleane in the fountaine of water in the worde of life It is god alone that sanctifieth but because the Gospell is his power vnto saluation to euery one that beleeueth Rom. 1. 16. whosoeuer hee bee that departeth from the meane hee must needes waxe more and more vile Truth is taken in this place by the excellencie for the light of the heauenly wisedome wherein God reuealeth himselfe vnto vs that hee may conforme vs and make vs like to his owne image The externall preaching of the worde doth not this of it selfe which the reprobate do wickedly profane but let vs remember tha● Christe speaketh of the electe whome the spirite doth regenerate effectually by the woorde And seeing that the Apostles were not altogether voide of this grace wee must gather out of Christ his wordes that this sanctification is not finished in vs the first day but that wee goe forwarde in the same during our whole life vntill God doe fulfill vs with his righteousnesse when we haue put off the flesh 18 As thou hast sent mee He confirmeth his prayer with another argument to wit because he and the Apostles haue both one calling I saith he doe put vppon them the same person which at thy commandement I haue borne hytherto Therefore they must needes bee furnished with thy spirite that they may bee able to beare so great a burthen 19 And for their sakes doe I sanctifie my selfe He doth more plainely declare by these wordes out of what fountaine that sanctification doeth flowe which is wrought in vs by the doctrine of the Gospell to wit because hee hath consecrated and dedicated himselfe vnto the father that his holinesse might come vnto vs. For the blessing is spread abroad from the first fruites vnto al the other fruite so the spirit of God sprinkleth vs with Christe his holinesse and maketh vs partakers thereof and that not by imputation only for by this meanes he is said to bee made vnto vs righteousnesse 1. Cor. 1. 13. but he is also saide to bee made vnto vs sanctification because he hath offered vs vnto his father after a sort in his owne person that wee may bee renued by his spirite into true holinesse Furthermore although this sanctification doe appertaine vnto the whole life of Christ yet it is made most apparant in the sacrifice of his death because hee appeared then to be y ● true Priest which should consecrate the temple the altar all the vessels and the people by the power of his spirite 20 And I pray not for them only but for those which shall beleeue in mee by theyr worde 21 That they may be all one as thou O father in me and I in thee that they may be one also in vs that the worlde may beleeue that thou hast sent me 22 And I haue giuen thē the glory which thou gauest me that they may be one as we are one 23 I in them and thou in mee that they may be made one and that the world may knowe that thou hast sen● mee and hast loued them as thou hast loued mee 20 And I pray not for thē onely Hee extendeth that prayer farther nowe wherein he comprehendeth the Disciples only hytherto to wit vnto all the Disciples of the Gospell which should be vnto the ende of the worlde This is certainely notable matter of hope for if wee beleeue in Christ through the doctrine of the Gospell wee neede not to doubt but that wee are alreadie gathered with the Apostles into the faithfull custodie least any of vs doe perish This prayer of Christ is a quiet hauen wherein whosoeuer arriueth he is free from all danger of shipwracke For it is as muche as if Christ had sworne by solemne wordes that he careth greatly for our safetie And he beginneth with his Apostles that their safetie wherof we are certaine might make vs also more certain that we our selues shal be safe Therefore so often as Satan assaulteth vs let vs learne to holde vp this buckler that wee are not in vaine ioyned vnto the Apostles by the holy mouth of the sonne of God that the safetie of vs all might be included as it were in the same bundle Therefore there is nothing which ought more vehemently to pricke vs forwarde to embrace the Gospell For as it is an vncomparable good thing for vs to be offered to God by the hand of Christ that we may bee preserued from destruction so we ought worthily to preferre the loue and care thereof before all other thinges The slouthfulnesse of the worlde in this point is wonderfull All men are desirous to bee safe Christ deliuereth the sure and certaine way and meanes to obtayne the same from whiche if any man turne aside there remaineth no good hope for him yet there is scarse one amongst an hundreth which doth vouchsafe to receiue that which
was offered him so gently VVee must note the manner of speech Christ prayeth for all those which shoulde beleeue in him in which wordes he teacheth that which wee haue sometimes said that our faith must looke vnto him The member whiche foloweth next by their worde doth very well expresse the force and nature of faith and doth also confirme vs familiarly who know that our faith is grounded in the Gospel deliuered by the Apostles Therfore howsoeuer the worlde do condemne vs a thousand times let this one thing suffice vs that Christ acknowledgeth vs to be his owne and commendeth vs vnto the father And woe be to the Papists whose faith wandereth so farre from this rule that they are not ashamed to spue out execrable blasphemie that there is nothing conteined in the scripture but that whiche is doubtfull and which may bee wrested hither and thyther therefore the only tradition of the Church teacheth them to beleeue But let vs remember that the sonne of God who is the only iudge doth allow that faith alone which is conceiued out of the doctrine of the Apostles Furthermore the sure testimonie thereof shal be founde no where els saue only in their writings VVe must also note the phrase which shal beleeue by their worde which signifieth that faith commeth by hearing because the instrument wherewith God draweth vs vnto faith is the externall preaching of men VVherefore God is properly the authour of faith and men themselues are the ministers by whom wee beleeue as Paule also teacheth Cor. 3. 5. 21 That they may be all one c. He placeth the ende and drift of our felicity againe in vnitie that for good causes For this is the destructiō of mankinde that being estraunged from God it is also lame and scattered abroad in it selfe Therfore the contrary restoring therof is if it grow together into one body aright like as Paule placeth the perfection of the Church in that Ephe. 4. 3. if the faithfull agree together amongst themselues by one spirit and he saith that the Apostles and Prophetes Euangelists and Pastours were giuen for that cause in the same place 11. 12. that they might persist in edifiyng the body of Christ vntill we be come vnto the vnitie of faith And therefore hee exhorteth the faithfull to grow vp into Christ who is the head by whom all the body being coupled and knit togeather by euery ioynt of subministration according to the effectuall woorking in the measure of euery member encreaseth it selfe vnto edifiyng Therfore so often as Christe speaketh of vnitie let vs remember that horrible and filthie scattering abroad of the world which is without him And secondly let vs know that this is the beginning of blessed life if we be al gouerned and liue by the spirit of Christ alone And we must vnderstand that so often as Christ saith in this chap. that he and the father are one he speaketh not simply of his diuine essence but that he is called one in the person of the mediatour and inasmuch as he is our head Many of the fathers did interprete it thus precisely that Christ is one with the father because he is eternal God but the contention which they had with the Arrians enforced them to this to wreste shorte sentenses into a straung sense But Christ intended a far other thing then to carry vs vp vnto the bare beholding of his hidden diuinitie for he reasoneth from the end that we ought therfore to be one because otherwise the vnitie which he hath with the father shuld be vaine and vnfruitful Therfore to the end you may rightly comprehend what is the intente or effecte of that that Christ and the father are one take heede that you stripe not Christ out of the person of the Mediatour but consider him rather as he is the head of the Church and ioyne him with his members so the texte shall stand best least the vnitie of the sonne with the father be vaine and vnprofitable his power must be spread abroad throughout the whol boby of the godly VVhence we do also gather that we are one with christ not because he powreth his substaunce into vs but because hee maketh vs partakers by the power of his spirit of his life of whatsoeuer good things he hath receiued of the father That the world may beleeue Some doe interprete this word world for the elect who were as then dispearsed but because world is taken throughout this whole chapter for the reprobate I am rather of the contrary opiniō Moreouer immediately after he separateth the same word wherof he maketh mention now from al his The Euangelist did put in the word beleeue vnproperly for know or acknowledge to wit whilest that the vnfaithfull beeing conuinced by experience it selfe doe perceiue the heauenly and diuine glory of Christ whereby it commeth to passe that in beleeuing they beleeue not because this feeling pearceth not vnto the inward affection of the minde And this is the iust iudgement of God that the brightnes of the glory of God doth blind the eies of the reprobate because they are not worthy to see him sincerely and clearely Hee vseth the word know afterward in the same sense 22. And I haue giuen them the glory which thou hast giuen me Note that the patterne of perfect blessednes was expressed in Christ in such sorte that he had nothing of his own or for himself alone but he was rather rich that he might enrich his faithfull This is our blessednes that the image of God may be repayred and formed againe which was blotted out through sinne Christ is not onely the image of God inasmuch as he is his eternal word but the image of the fathers glory was also engrauen in his humane nature wherof he is made partaker with vs that he may transfigure his members into the same Paul also teacheth the selfe same thing 2. Cor. 3. 18 that we are transformed into the same image as it were from glory to glorye by beholding the glory of GOD as it were with open face VVhereuppon it followeth that no man is to be accountted Christes disciples saue onely hee in whom the glory of God is seene imprinted by the image of Christ as by a fignet The words which follow shortly after tend to the same end 23. I in them and thou in me For his meaning is to teach that the fulnes of all good thinges is in him and that that appeareth now plainely in him which was hidden in God that hee may powre it out into his by making them partakers thereof as water flowinge from a fountaiyne hyther and thyther by conduytes dooth water the fieldes euery where And hast loued them He giueth vs to vnderstande that that is the most manifest token and pledge of Gods loue towarde the godly which euē the world whither it will or no is enforced to feale and perceiue whilest that the spirit which dwelleth in them sendeth forth the beames of heauenly
all other most odious to the end that hauing ended that hee maye acquite the partie accused The aunswere which Christe maketh tendeth to this ende that there is no colour in that accusation So that it containeth a refutation made by the way as if hee should say there is a crime laid to my charge ridiculously whereof there cannot be the very least suspition in me Pilate seemeth to haue taken it grieuously that Christe had demaunded why he suspected him Therefore hee vpbraydeth vnto him disdainfully that what euill soeuer is it commeth of his owne nation I saieth he sit as a iudge they be no straungers but thine owne countreymenne which accuse thee therefore there is no cause why thou shouldest inwrappe me in your discorde Ye might liue quietly for me and the Romanes but yee your selues are vnto your selues a cause of trouble part wherof I am enforced to suffer against my will 36. My kingdome He confesseth in these wordes that he is a king yet he putteth away and purgeth the slaunderous reporte so muche as was sufficient to proue his innocencie For he denieth that there is any disagreement betweene his kingdome and the politike order as if he shuld say I am falsely accused as if I had assayed to trouble or alter somewhat in the publike estate I haue preached concerning the kingdome of God but that is spirituall Therefore there is no cause why ye shoulde suspecte me for an vsurper or one that desireth to attaine to a kingdome by ambition or vnlawfull meanes Christe vsed this defence being 〈…〉 before Pilate but the same doctrine is profitable for all the godly 〈◊〉 the ende of the worlde For if Christe his kingdome were earthlye it shuld be vnstable and subiect to falling because the fashion of this world passeth Nowe because it is called heauenly he dooth also defend and auouch the perpetuitie and continuaunce thereof So that if it so fall out that the whole compasse of the earth be weakened and subuerted our consciences shal cōtinue neuerthelesse stable if so be it they take heede vnto christ his kingdome not onely amongst mouinges and shakinges but also amidst horrible ruines and destructions If we bee tyrannously vexed by the wicked yet our saluation and safetie persisteth whole and sound vnto vs in the kingdome of Christ which is not subiect to the wil of men Finally sithence y e the world rageth cōtinually with continuall stormes the kingdome of Christ is separated thence wherein we must seeke for quietnes and peace Furthermore we are taught of what sorte the nature of this kingdome is For if it didde make vs happy according to the fleshe and did bring vs ritches pleasures and whatsoeuer is to be wished for the vses of this present life it should smel of the earth and the world but now how miserable soeuer our estate be to looke to yet perfect felicitie remayneth safe for vs. VVe doe also learne heere who those be which appertaine vnto this kingdome namely those who being renewed by the spirite of God doe meditate vppon the heauenlye life in holynesse and righteousnesse Although we must also note that it is not denied but that the kingdome of Christ is in this worlde For we know that it hath a place in our mindes as Christ saieth also in another place the kingdome of God is within you Luke 17. 21. But to speake properlye the kingdome of God which dwelleth in vs is as it were a stranger in the world because the estate therof is altogeather vnlike My seruaunts would surely fight He proueth that he had not ambitiouslye aspired vnto a kingdome because no man stirreth no man taketh weapon in hande For if any priuate man doe vsurpe vnto himselfe a kingdome it must needes be that he is ayded by seditious persons There appeareth no such thing in Christe therefore it followeth that hee is no earthly king But heere may a question be moued whether it be lawfull to defend the kingdom of Christ with weapons or no. For when as the Princes are commaunded to kisse the sonne Psal. 2. 11. they are not onely commaunded to submit themselues priuately vnto his gouernmente but also that they employ al their power which they haue to defend the Church and maintaine godlines First of all I aunswere that they deale disorderly and ignorauntly who deduct this consequence that the pure worshippe of God and the doctrine of the Gospell ought not to bee defended with weapons because Christ is not then defended in his owne person For Christ doth onely reason according to this present fact how friuolous that is which the Iewes had slaunderously layd to his charge And secondly although godlye kinges doe defende Christes kingdome with the sword yet this is done some other way then earthly kingdome are woont to be defended For as the kingdome of Christ is spirituall so it must be grounded in doctrine and the power of the spirit In like sorte is the edifying thereof finished For neither the lawes and edicts of men neither yet their penalties doe come vnto the consciences yet this letteth not but that princes may defende the kingdome of Christ accidentally partly whilest that they ordaine externall discipline partly whilest that they ayde the Church againste the wicked But it commeth to passe through the frowardnesse of the worlde that the kyngdome of Christ is rather establyshed by the bloud of Martyrres then by the helpe and ayde of weapons 37. Therfore Pilat said vnto him art thou then a king Iesus answered him thou saiest that I am a king To this end was I borne and to this end came I into the world that I may beare witnesse of the trueth whosoeuer is of the trueth he heareth my voice 38 Pilate saith vnto him what is trueth And when he had said thus he went out againe vnto the Iewes and said vnto them I find no fault in him 39. But ye haue a custome that I shuld let one loose vnto you at Easter will yee then that I let lose vnto you the king of the Iewes 40. Therfore they cried al againe saying not him but Barabbas and Barabbas was a murtherer 37. Thou saist that I am Although Pilat vnderstoode already by the former answer y t christ did chalēg to himself some kingdom yet christ affirmeth this self sāe thing more plainly being not cōtēt therwith he addeth an other sentēce which is as it were a certain sealing of that saying Whēce we gather that the doctrine of the kingdome of Christe is no common doctrine seeing that he thought it worthie of so great asseueration or auouching This is a general sentence I was borne for this cause that I may bear witnesse of the truth yet it is especially to be applyed vnto the circumstance of this place But the wordes signifie thus much that this is a naturall thing for Christe to speake the truth and secondly that he was sent of the father to this end and that therfore this is his proper office
spake openly 18. 20 The name comforter apperteineth aswell to Christ as to the spirit 14 16 The comforter should not haue come vnlesse Christe had gone away 16. 7 hee should teach the Apostles al things 14. 26 Christ his godlines towardes his mother was strange 19. 25 Christe is the onelye meanes to please God 1. 29 How wee receiue of Christe his fulnes 1. 16. Christ sitteth vppon a colte 12. 14 15 Christe praieth for his Apostles and not for the world 17. 9 Christ is the king of Israel 1. 46 and 12. 13 Christ his coat 19. 23 The multitude wil make Christe a king 6. 16 They seeke Christ that they may be filled 6. 16 They beare witnesse of Christe 12. 17 Church How the Church can be restored 6. 45 What we must chiefly respecte in the gouernment of the church 10. The church hath no more deadly enemies than houshold enemies 13. 18 Circumcision Circum is of the Fathers 7. 22 Commandement The commandements of Christ are loue 15. 12 Those which keepe Christ his cōmandementes are beloued of him 15. 10 Confession Confes. must not bee separated from faith 12. 24 Confidence Confid in our knowledge is the worste plague of all other 7. 28 The hope and confidence which leaneth vnto Christ ouercommeth al feare 12. 14 The certeintie of confidence is necessary 3. 18 Conscience whence peace of conscience ariseth 15. 11. A notable example of a fearfull conscience in Pilate 19. 11. Counsel Counsel taken according to the reason of the flesh 11. 49. Crosse. the humilitie of the crosse offendeth many 1. 46. If the feare of the crosse doe terrifie vs from followinge christe it is a great shame 19. 25. Crowne the crowne of thornes 19. 2 Cuppe those men do not refuse the cuppe giuen them of God who seeke remedy for diseases 18. 11. Curiositie An example of hurtfull curiosity in Peter 2. 20. D. Darkenesse To walke in darkenesse 8. 12. 25. not to abide in the same place 46. Dauid Dauid did beare Christe his person 16. 28. Dead the dead shall heare the voice of the sonne of God 5. 25. Christ raiseth the dead As the father 5. 21. Death VVhy christ his death is a sacrifice for our sinnes 10. 18. Christe his deathe is likened to sowing 12. 23. why it was requisite that christe his death shuld be volūtary 12. 12 Christe his death was the perfect restoring of the world 12. 31 In the death of christe we haue sure hope of life 19. 30. what we oughte chiefly to consider in the deathe of Christe 12. 27. In the death of christe we must loke vnto the eternall counsell of God 16. 32. there was nothinge done in the death of christ but that which was decreed by the hande and counsell of God 19. 17. the whole accomplishing of our saluation and all the partes thereof are contained in the deathe of christ 19. 30. The death of faithfull is a passage vnto God 3. 1. Howe the bitternesse of deathe waxeth pleasant vnto vs. 12. 26. The houre of euery man Death is appoynted 7. 30. All men are naturally afraide of death 21. 18. VVe cānot ouercome the fear of death without gods helpe 21. 18. God is glorified by the death of the martyrs in y ● same place How that those that beleeue are sayd to passe from death to life 5. 24. None of the faithfull shall see death 8. 51. Deedes All the deedes of Christ are not to be imitated 13. 14. Doe VVithout me yee can doe nothing 15. 5. Degrees Degrees to be cōsidered in the wordes of Christ. 12. 27. Deliberation Deliberation which is godly 11. 48. Deceit Deceit what it signifieth in Iohn 1. 47. Disciples By what marke Christ distinguished his disciples frō the world 14. 2● 17. 22. True disciples of Christe 8. 31. The disciple is not greater then his master 19. 26. The disciples of Christe goinge backewarde 6. 66. The disciples beleeue Christe 2. 11. Iesus standeth in the middest of them 20. 19. The disciples are sent 17. 18. 20. 21. The disciples are cleane 13. 11. because of the woorde of Christe 15. 3. Dissention Dissention about christ 7. 43. 10. 19. Deuill The deuil is the father of lying 8. 44. VVhether the deuill be a lier by nature or no. 8. 44. Diuinitie Diuinitie of Christe sheweth forth it selfe more mightily after his ascention 14. 12. The diuinitie of Christe is eternall 11. Doctrine What is the chiefest thing in doctrine 1. 45. How Christ calleth his doctrine the fathers doctrine 7. 16. Christe is asked by Cayphas of his doctrine 18. 19. The end of Christ his doctrine 16. 25. Those which loue Christes doctrine do profit dayly 14. 21. Christ his doctrine is a stone of stumbling to the vnbeleeuers 6. 66 They blaspheme the spirit who thinke that any th●ng ought to be added vnto the doctrine of the Apostles 16. 13. We must stay our selues vpon the doctrin of the Apostls in the same place It is a peculier gifte of God to embrace doctrine 6. 44. Whence we must set the autority of the spiritual doctrine 7. 16. The way to examine doctrin 7. 18 The contempt of doctrine troubleth the godly 15. 20. The doctrine of Christ shall be a death to the vnbeleeuers 6. 60. Wee must distinguish diligently betweene general doctrine suppositions 19. 7. Drawn How men are said to bee drawn of God 6. 44. Draweth The father draweth vnto Christ. 6. 44. Dye It is expedient that one dye for the people 11. 51. 18. 14. Dyeth Christ dieth 16. 19. 30 Duety VVhat is our duetie in entring into daungers 7. 1. E Elect. Howe the elect are distinguished from the reprobate 17. 6. Why god careth for the elect 17. 3 Gods spirit worketh in the elect after an hidden manner 17. 10. By what marke the Elect are distinguished from the reprobate 5. 29. and 6. 37. God keepeth backe the Elect by an hidden bridle 20. 28. Christ giueth life to the Elect alone 17. 3. How sure the Electe are of their saluation 10. 29. Election Election is lame without faith 6. 40. The knowledge of Election ought to procure in vs the desire to praie 17. 9. Two kinds of Election 15. 16. Elias Elias called Iohn 1. 21. Empires Empires did not arise rashely nor through the errour of men 10. 35. Errour Errour arose amongst the disciples by mistaking the wordes of Christ. 21. 23. Erring No end of erring vnlesse we cleaue to the worde of GOD. 22. 23. Eutiches Eutich heretike 21. 23 Euangelist Those things are sufficient to saluation whiche the Euangelistes haue comprehended in writinges 21. 24. Euils The Euils which we suffer are to be imputed to our liues 5. 14 Excommunication The ryte of Excommunication did springe from the moste auncient custome of the Church 9. 22. Excommunication must be restored to his lawfull vse 16. 2. Excommunication is the sinowe of Ecclesiasticall discipline 12. 42. Excuse The Iewes haue no excuse 15. 22. Easter Preparation
7. 38. The spirite is the perfect maister of trueth 16. 12. Christ receiued the spirite not so much for himselfe as for his 1. 32. VVhat it is to worship in spirite and trueth 4. 23. How this must be vnderstoode that Christe was troubled in the spirit 13. 21. The testimony of the spirit is our onely aide against the inuasion of the world 15. 16. How the spirite is said to testifie of Christe in the same place Christ is present with vs by the trueth and grace of his spirit 12. 6. To what end the faithful doe receiue the spirit in the same place Howe this must be vnderstoode that the spirit speaketh not of himself 16. 13. The duetie of the holy spirit 16. 14. How this muste be vnderstoode that the spirit was not giuen christ by measure 3. 34. The spirite reproueth men two maner of waies 16. 8. VVhy christ added the visible brething in giuing the spirit to the Apostles 20. 22. What men are able to doe beeing depriued of the aid of the holy spirite 14. 18. Iesus gaue vp the ghost 19. 3. How the worship of God is said to consist in the spirit 4. 23. The spirit of giddinesse wherewith Satan driueth the wicked 12 10. The spirite of truth shall declare things to come 16. 13. Spittle Iesus made clay of spittle 9. 6. Sicke The sick man who had laid sick thirtie eight yeeres is made whole by Christ. 5. 9. To whom god hath sent speake the wordes of God 3. 35. Sinagogues christ preacheth in the Sinagogues 6. 59. To be cast out of the Sinagogues 9. 22. and 12. 42. and 16. 2. T Taught Taught of God 6. 45. Teachers It belongeth to Christe alone to frame the teachers of the Church 10. 22. Christ the onely teacher of the Church 20. 21. With what stoutnesse of minde the teachers of the Churche must bee endewed 2. 28. and 8. 29. and 16. 3. Whereuppon the authoritie of teachers dependeth 3. 2. Teaching God hath a double maner of teaching 14. 25. Temple The temple of Ierusalem was builded by Herod 2. 20. To what ende the temple was builded 2. 16. The temple was a figure of the church in the same place Why the temple was called the house of God 2. 16. Christ teacheth in the temple 7 24. 28. and 8. 12. 1. and 18. 20. The temple of the body of christ muste be destroyed by the Iewes 2. 19. 21. Temples VVhye our bodies are called Temples 2. 19. Tempted God will not suffer vs to be tempted aboue our strength 18. 9. Testimonie All men receiue not the testimonie of christ 3. 11. Christ giueth testimony of himselfe 8. 13. 14. 18. The testimony of the father of the sonne 5. 32. 36. 88. The testimony of christ of Iohn Baptist 1. 26. Theefe A thiefe a murtherer 10. 12. 8. Theeues Theeues are crucified with christ 19. 18. Thernades Fastning of the Thernades an holye daye of the Iewes 7. 2. Thankes To giue thanks 11. 2. 3. Thomas Thomas Didymus 11. 16. hee is reprehended for his vnbeliefe Thirst. Let him that is a thirst go vnto Christ 7. 37. To be a thirst for euer and not to be a thirst Title the title of christes cause 19. 19. Troubled Let not your heart be troubled 14. 1. 27. Truth Christ is the truth 14. 6 the truth of God must be defended although all the whole world say nay 5. 18. It is knowen to christe howe much the truthe differeth from figures 19. 10. Truth is taken for perfection of faith 14. 6. The truth shall make you free saith christ 8. 32. God is the fountaine of truth 16. 13. Christ full of truth 1. 17. It is a common thing amonge men to corrupt the truth of God 6. 14. who are saide to be of the truth 18. 37. What it is to do the truth 3. 21. Christe came to beare witnes of the truth 18. 37. The Diuell stood not in the truth Christ speaketh the truth 8. 45. which he hath heard of the father the spirite of truth shall teache all truth 16. 13. Twelue Twelue chosen by christ 6. 7. Time Christ saith that his time is not yet come 7. 6. 8. V Vnitie Vnitie of y e church is grounded no where els saue onely in the faith of the scripture 19. 23. Vnbeliefe How vnbeliefe is called the fountaine cause of all euils 8. 24. 15. 22. Vnbeliefe doth stop the way before vs that we cannot come vnto God 11. 34. He that beleueth not the sonne shall not haue life 3. 38. Vnrighteousnesse Vnrighteousnesse is not in God 7. 23. Vnion The meanes to know the vnion whiche is betweene vs and Christe 14. 20. Voyce The voice of one crying in the wildernesse 1. 23. How horible the voyce of christ shall bee to the wicked in the last iudgement 18. 4. The sheepe shall heare the voice of christ 10 16. Vine VVe must note three things chiefly in the similitude of y e Vine 15. 1. Christ is the true vine 15. 1. VV VVay Howe Christe is called the way the trueh and the life 14. 6. Christ is the way to the father in the same place VVater pots Water pots of stone 2. 6. VVeepe Mary and the Iewes doe weep for Lazarus his death 11. 33 Ye shal mourne weepe 16. 20 Iesus speaketh vnto Magdalen as she wept 20. 15. VVhole Christ made a man euery whit whole 7. 22 Thou art made whole sinne no more 5. 14. VVhippes The sinnes of men are not alwaies to be measured by the whips of God 9. 34. Pilate deliuereth Iesus into the wil of the Iewes beeing whipped 19. 1. VVeaknes Christ his weakenesse ought to vnderprop faith 14. 1. VVicked The wicked are not streightway to be discouered 13. 22. 26. Wicked men must be called vnto Gods iudgement seate 8. 28 VVorship The rule of worshippe which God requireth at our hāds 5. 24. VVhence we must set the law of Gods worship 18. 39. VVorshippers VVho be true worshippers 4. 23. 24. VVoman The comparison of a woman with childe 16. 21. VVord VVhy the Sonne of God is called the word 11. 〈…〉 In what sense the word of Christ is called life 6. 63. The word of christ shal iudg him that reiecteth his words 12. 42. To abide in the word of Christ. 8. 31. To keepe the word of Christ. 8. 51. 14. 23. 24. 15. 20. 17. 6. VVhy the word of God is darke vnto vs. 16. 25. The word of God is truth 17. 17. The word was in the beginning 1. 1. was made fleshe in the same place 14. the worde of God is the onely mark of faith 20. 31. The word of life 6. 68. What knowledge we can conceiue of Christ without the word 6. 19. It is a dangerous thing to inuēt any thing in diuine matters without the word 6. 15. VVe must alwaies hold a mutual consent betweene the word and faith 11. 21. VVith what remedy wee muste cure the
contempt of the word of God 4. 16. VVe are blinde where the word of God goeth not before 12. 16. The outwarde preaching of the word is of it selfe vnfruitful 1. 45. 14. 25. 15. 3. The words of Christ are spirite and life 6. 63. VVorld VVhy the worlde hateth Christ. 7. 7. They are called the world who are not regenerate by the spirite of God in the same place 15. 19. VVhye the Deuill is called th prince of the world 14. 30. The world shal reioyce 16. 20. Why Christ came into the world Christ by this word world meaneth al mankind in the same place To passe out of this worlde 13. 1. The worlde hath not knowne God 1. 10. 17. 24. yea it hateth him 7. 7. Christ hath ouercom the world 16. 33. The princes of this world 14. 30 In the world yee shall haue oppression 16. 33. Christ praieth not for this world 17. 9. Christ is not the worlde 17. 11. as his discipls are not of the world 15. 19. 17. 14. 16. VVorketh As the father worketh so the sonne worketh also 5. 17. VVorkes The works of God are not subiect to the iudgementes of men 5. 4. The work of the father 4. 34. is to beleeue Christ. 6. 29. We must weigh the workes of God 7. 25. The fruite of the works of God doth not by and by appeare 12. 16 The works of God haue not the like fruit in al men 2. 23. How slacke men are in considering the works of God 7. 4. There is nothing better then modesty in weighing the workes of God 9. 2. How Moses saide that God had made an ende of his works 5. 17. What workes are done in God 3. 21. The works do testifie Christ. 5. 36. To beleeue because of the works 10. 38. 14. 11. VVrath The wrath of God abideth oftentimes long in one house 9. 2. The greatnes of Gods wrath against sinne 19. 17. VVind The disciples are tossed with wind vpon the sea 6. 18. Z Zeale Holy zeale 5. 41. The zeale of the house of God 2. 17. An excellent example of rashe zeale in Peter 18. 10. Pretence of zeale helpeth nothing 6. 15. Imprinted at London by Thomas Dawson for George Byshop 1584. Rom. 1. 2 2. Cor. 5. 20 Mar. 1. 534. Lu. 16. 16. 2. Tim. 2. 8. Gen. 18. 10 Mat. 11. 11. Num. 6. 3 Iud. 13. 5 Ioh. 1. 6. 1. Cor. 12 11. Eph. 4. 7. ● Cor. 3. 6. Rom. 10. 17. Mal. 3. 1. Rom. 4. 19. Iud. 6. 17 Gen. 1.7 17. 18. 10. Luke 10. 16. Heb. 10. 28 12. 25. Isai 7. 11 1. Reg. 6. 5 1. Sam. 21. 4 Leui. 10. 9 Eze● 24. 20 Heb. 13. 4 Heb. ● 3. 1. Ki. 17. 9 2. Ki. 5. 14 Isa 9. 1 2. Ki. 15. 26 18. 9 1. Tim. 3. 2 1. Cor. 4. 28 Eph. 3. 7 Col. 1. 25 1. Pet. 3. 13. 2. Tim. 3. 12● Gal. 1. 10. Leuit. 2. 13. Col. 4. 6. 2. Cor. 8. 2● Act. 21. 21. Ier. 31. 3● Deu. 30. 19 Deu. 10. 12 Leuit. 18. 5 Ro. ●1 36. Esay 1. 3. Ro. 11. 12 Ephe. 5. 8 Act. 7. 55 Mal. 4. 5. Mal. 3. 1. Act. 2. 3. Isay. 42. 1 Exo. 3. 12. Esay 42. 3. Ge. 28. 12. Psal 4. 12 Psal. 68. 10. Mat. 13. 15. 2. Cor. 3. 4 Iam. 2. 17. and 26. Pro. 21. 2. 1. Cor. 13. 4 Deu 13. 3. Mat. 24. 24 2. The. 2. 9. 1. Cor. 15. 36. Psal. 104 24. 1. Cor. 2. 14. 1. Cor. 4. ●8 Esay 2. 2. Gal. 3. 1. 1. Cor. 10. 3 Eph. 1. 5. Ro. 5. 10. 2. Cor. 10. 16. Rom. 3. 4 Eph. 5. 29. Ge. 34. 29. Iudg. 9. 45. Exo. 2. 12. Num. 25. 8 Gen. 22. 2. Esay 2. 3. Gal. 4. 9. Heb. 9. 1. Isay. 6. 1. Mat. 16. 3. Gal. 4. ● 1. Cor. 1. 22. Luk. 4. 26. 27. 2. Kin 4. 32 1. Kin. 17. 9 2. Kin. 3. 10. 11. Ier. 17. 21. Act. 17. 28 Psa. 104. 29 Heb. 1. 3. Mat. 3. 17. Psal. 2. 12. Col. 3. 3. 1. Cor. 15. 26. Mat. 24. 31. 2. Cor. 15. 52. Tit. 2. 14. Phil. 2. 15. 2. Cor. 3. 13. ●eut 13. 3 2. Th. 2. 10 1. Cor. 1. 3 Eph. 5. 20. Deut. 8. 3. Mat. 15. 37 Ioh. 18. 6 Mat. 12. 39. 1. Cor. 10. 3. 1. Cor. 2. 8 2. Tim. 2. ●5 Rom. 1. 16. Mal. 2. 7. Phil. 2. 7. 2. Cor. 5. 17 Galat. 6 15. Luk. 11. 27. Ioh. 16. 8. Deut. 13. 3. Mat. 7. 7. Mich. 5. 2. 2. Tim. 2. 23. Ier 20. 7 ●say 50. 7. Ephe. 2. 17. Gen. 27. 38. Esay 55. 6. Esay 49. 8. Isay. 55. 1 Rom. Cap. 8. 10. Esay 11. 4. Deut. 17. 9. Deut. 17. 7. Gen. 3. 7. ● Cor. 4. 4. Eph. 2. 2. 1. Pet. 5. 8. ● Cor. 4. 4. 1. Sam. 2. 30.