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B00819 Five godlie sermons, preached by R.T. Bachiler of diuinitie. 1. The charge of the cleargie. 2. The crowne of Christians. 3. The annointment of Christ, or Christian ointment. 4. A festiuall sermon vpon the Natiuitie of Christ. 5. The fruits of hypocrisie..; Five godlie and learned sermons Tyrer, Ralph, d. 1627. 1602 (1602) STC 24475.5; ESTC S106205 127,399 317

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in thy sayinges and cleare when thou art iudged And Math. 11.14 where our Sauiour saith And wisedome is Iustified of her children meaning himselfe So likwise is it taken Luke 7.20 where the Euangelist declareth that the Publicans iustified God for those things that are exactly perfect and exquisitly absolute without any want or default and therefore allowed and liked of all are saied by a common Phrase of Scripture to be iustified Whereby Paule setteth out vnto vs the might and maiestie of our Sauiour not in outward habit and appearance or in externall pompe or power but in inward spirit and deuine vertue in mightie miracles wonderful workes heauēly doctrine most glorious greate and other incomprehensible effects by which word and Phrase the Apostle endeauoreth to take away all kinde of weake diffidēce or distrust which might any way be conceaued in our harts by taking offence at the lowe and base estate of Christs our sauiours māhood which seemed to be so vile abiect and contemptible as some supposed him to be only a base and silly man As likewise by spirit in this place is not onely meante that mortified and regenerate partes of man which is contrarie to the fleash as it is vsually taken in the scriptures and especially in the Epistle to the Romans but for what soeuer was and is in Christ extraordinarie supernaturall aboue cōmon manhood and mortalitie As if the Apostle Paule had said although he was cloathed with our fleash combred with our frailties cōpassed with our infirmities yet none of these did weakē the power of his truth the flower of the glorie of his diuinitie or once derogate from the honour of his maiestie As that although he was verie mā yet not withstanding he was true God although he tooke vpon him the fourme of a seruant yet he thought it no robberie to be equall with his father Phil. 2.7 for in him remaineth all the fulnesse of the Godhead bodily Col. 2.9 And he was the brightnesse of the glorie and ingrauen fourme of the substance of God his father Heb. 1 3. As it may appeare throughout the whole historie of the Gospell whereby he is described vnto vs to be mighty indeede and in word for so first he approued himselfe to be God in his birth in that he was borne after the common order and māner of men his mother being ouershadowed by the power of the most highest and himselfe cōceaued by the holy ghost Secondly at his inauguration consecraction after his baptisme when as by the ●iuely voice and diuine oracle from heauen he was pronounced and proclamed to be the Sonne and heire apparent of God his father Thirdly in his temptation when ●s he vanquished Sathan in a Monomachie or single combate and made him voide ●uant from him Fourthly in curing al kind of sicknesses and diseases by taking a way both the cause the effect Fiftly in know ●ng both the thoughts and harts of men as ●t appeareth oftētimes in the Gospel Sixt●y in stilling the winde calming the sea ●nd in working other strange signes and wonders Seauenthly in his Passion when as the weakenes of his fleash was succou●ed and sustained by the strength of his Godhead Eightly in his Resurection in ●hat he was able to laye downe his life and to take it to him againe Ninthly in ascēding vp into Heauen for as our Sauiour in the Gospell Iohn 3. No man hath ascended vp into heauen but he that descended downe from Heauen euen the sonne of man which also is in Heauen And tenthly in sending downe the Holy Ghost his blessed spirite which proceeded as well from himselfe as from God his father Insomuch that we cannot but confesse and say with Nicodemus the Pharisie that none can doe such things as these except he came from God or except he were God himselfe without question therefore to be iustified in this place is as Athanasius in his booke De surrectione carnis explaineth it Iustitiam habere n●● humano more sed diuina puritate that is to be iust and Righteous in himselfe and 〈◊〉 himselfe not according to humaine qualitie but by a diuine spirit for so signifieth this Hebrue Phrase in this place and i● respect of vs being allone with that which our Apostle hath 1. Col. 1.30 that he is b●come our righteousnesse redemption sanctification and saluation being the whole and so●● scope and hope of their faith which by th● same spirit doe beleeue putte their tru●● in him not resting or relying vpō any other meane or merrit what so euer And of this iustifiyng had not only our Sauiour Christ the testimonie of his owne spirit euen the Holy Ghost which was a witnesse vnto Iohn the Baptist whē he descended downe vpon him invisibly in the forme of a doue Math 3.16 Which heauenly vision was a diuine oracle and siuely voice of God himselfe which the Lord caused to appeare ●nto him that when he knewe not our Saviour it might be as an infallible token to ●iscerne him from all other as he himselfe ●onfesseth Iohn 1.33.34 And I knewe ●im not but that he sente me to baptize with water he said vnto me vpon whome thou ●halt see the spirit come downe and tarrie still ●ne him that is he that baptizeth with the holy Ghost And I sawe and bare record that ●his is the sonne of God But also the spirit of ●he Saints and seruants of God which giueth ●estimony vnto themselues and their owne ●oules that our Sauiour is their Lord and God ●or so saith Paule in the person of all the electe and faithfull 1. Cor. 8.5.6 Though their ●e that are called Gods whether in Heauē or in Earth as there be many Gods and many Lords yet vnto vs there is but one God which is the Father of whom are althings and we in him and one Lord Iesus Christ by whom are althinges and we by him againe 1. Col. 12.3 No man can say that Iesus is the Lord but by the Holy Ghost But to drawe to an Ende for this point and to make our vse of this matter we are heere taught that we should laboure to iustifie our selues both before God and man not externally by carnall and earthly thinges but internally after an heauenly and spiritual manner not with the hypocritical Iewe● in Esaies daies 29.13 To drawe neere vnto God with their mouth and honour him with their lippes but in hart to be farre from the● And with the Scribes and Pharises in our Sauiour Christs time to be serious obseruers of outward ceremonies and to be far from inward sinceritie Math. 15.8 not superstitiously with the vnfaithfull Iewes and Idolatrous Samaritans to worshippe they know not what nor ignorantly they knowe not how nor blindly they knowe not where but as the true worshippers to worshippe the father in spirit in truth for God is a spirit and they that worshippe him must worshippe him in the spirit and in trueth Iohn 4.23.24 not to
my law in their inward parts and write it in their hearts I will be their God and they shall be my people and they shall teach no more euerie man his neighbour and euerie man his brother saying Know the Lord for they shall all know me from the least of them to the greatest c. And lastly not to heape vp too many places to this purpose that of Ioel. 2.28 alleadged by Peter Act. 2.17 And it shall be in the last daies saith God I will powre out of my spirit vpon all flesh and your sonnes and your daughters shall Prophesie c. As thus the Prophets so our Sauiour in the Gospell Ioh. 14.26 where he setteth downe both the cause and the effect As the Apostle in this place But the comforter which is the holy Ghost whem the Father wil send in my name he shall teach you all things and bring all thinges to your remembrance which I haue toulde you And the 15.15 Henceforth call I you not seruants for the seruant knoweth not what his maister doth but I haue called you friendes for all things that I haue heard of my Father haue I made knowne vnto you Againe 16.13 Howbeit when he is come which is the spirit of truth he wil leade you in al truth And euen our Apostle himselfe in this selfesame chap. that which he heere affirmeth with all asseuerance ver 27. when he saith Ye neede not that any man teach you but as the same annointing teacheth you all things First because as Aug. saith Nihil scire est bruti omnia scire solius Dei quaedam vero scire quaedam nescire hominis These Christians being therfore but men they could not knowe all things Againe they being but Babes as Iohn tearmeth them oftentimes in this Epistle that is new plants in the garden of the Lord young scholers in the Schoole of Christ tender nouices in the house of God and late conuerts to the Gospell such as were freshly Catechised in the Articles of the faith and rawly instructed in the first principles and rudiments of Christian religion who because they could not brooke strong meates were faine to be fed with milke as yet and therefore could not haue such a depth of knowledge as to vnderstand all things being herein not vnlike to the Hebrewes of whom the Apostle saith Heb. 5.12 and 6.1 that they were so farre from perfection that they had need be taught the doctrine of beginnings And againe how could these men know all things when as the verie Apostles of our Sauiour themselues although they had been Christs continual Disciples and were daily taught of him both publikely and priuately by the space of three whole yeares and more bewraied themselues oftentimes in the Gospell to bee meerely and miserably ignorant in many matters and misteries of the common saluation yea euen after they had receiued this ointment that is were inspired with the holy Ghost As Mat. 16.6 when as our Sauiour giuing them a caueat to take heed and beware of the Leauen of the Pharises and Saduces they ignorantly misunderstood him to haue spoken of the materiall leuen of bread and not of the spirituall leauen of false doctrine and heresie Againe when as they could not vnderstand that plaine parable of the tares but must needs haue our Sauiour to expound the same vnto them Matth. 13.36 Notwithstanding our Sauiour had tolde them before that they might marke the better that it was giuen vnto them to know the misteries of the kingdome of heauen but to others it was not giuen verse 11. Againe when as our Sauiour telling them apart by the way as they iournied with him Behold we go vp to Ierusalem and all things shall be fulfilled to the sonne of man that are written by the Prophets for he shall be deliuered vnto the Gentiles and shall be mocked and spitefully intreated and spitte vpon and when they haue scorned him they wil put him to death but the third day he shall rise again They notwithstanding vnderstood none of these things and this saying was hidde from them neither perceiued they the things which were spoken Luke 18.31.32.34 besides many other infirmities wants and errours which were too long to rehearse and by which they made our Sauiour and their Master ashamed of them euerie where mentioned in the gospell yea and the chiefest among them euen Peter and Iohn who were accounted pillars euen by Pauls confession Gal. 2.9 First for Peter although Aug call him Aries gregis Dominici euen the bell-weather of Christs flocke yet what saith the same learned Father of him reckening vp his negligences and ignorances if not greater scapes and fowler faults saying Cum in mari titubasset cum Dominum carnaliter à passione reuocasset cum aurem serui gladio praecidisset cum ipsum Dominum ter negasset cum in simulationem postea superstitiosam lapsus esset De Agone Christiā cap. 30. And for Iohn also although he leaned on Christs breast of which as a learned father saith he squeesed out much matter of profoūd wisdome and knowledge and is called the diuine as being the chiefest Diuine of all other next vnto our Sauiour Christ Iesus himselfe And therefore resembled also to an Eagle for soaring aloft aboue the rest of the Euangelists to the highest misteries to the kingdome of heauen Yet how euidently did he togither with his brother Iames declare his ignorant arrogance or his arrogant ignorance when as he asked of Christ to sit either on his right hand or on his left in the kingdome of heauen neither knowing what hee generally asked nor vnderstanding particularly what it is to be on Christs left hand Mat. 20. And afterwards when as he so grossely erred not once but twise euen in the middest of his Reuelations in not knowing an Angel from Christ Iesus himselfe and therefore would haue worshipped the creature for the Creator Apoc. 19.10.22.8 Moreouer the verie Angels themselues knowe not all thinges although they be called Cherubins in the Hebrew and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of their perfect absolute knowledge aboue all other creatures as it is manifest Ephes 3.10 where it appeareth that the fellowship of the mysterie which from the beginning of the world had been hid in God was but now that is in Christs time and not before made knowne vnto powers and principalities in heauenly places yea and Christ himselfe is said by the Apostles not to be seene of Angels but after a while euen after his manifestation or incarnation in the flesh and then iustified in the spirit then seene of Augels c. 1. Tim. 3.16 Furthermore when as our Sauiour Christ Iesus himselfe as he was man knew not all things as he confesseth of himselfe in the Gospell That of that day and houre speaking of the last day of his second comming to iudgement knoweth no man no not the Angels of heauen but my Father onely Matth. 24.36 and as Marke hath neither the sonne himselfe 13.31 And
Adam foure creations of man who was only formed of the slime of the Earth without man or woman then the second Eue who was made of a ribbe of man only without any woman and then the third of all men in generall both by man and woman according to the ordinarie and common course of nature This foure being by woman alone without man a new thing a strang matter a wonderfull miracle neuer the like seene nor hard of before Yea such a marueile as that the reporte of it made an infant to skippe in his mothers wombe for Ioye the Heauens to speake by a starre to declare the wonder of it the wise men from the East to come from farre to see and be eyewitnesses of it the Angels to singe in the Consort and to shew fourth their gladnesse after it was made knowne vnto them The sheaphards of Bethlem to runne in hast to behould it after it was declared vnto them the auncient father Simeon to desire to die and departe in peace after he had seene his saluation Finally this made the ould Prophetesse Anna when as by the motion of the spirit this thing was reueled vnto her to leaue her prayer to God and to fal to praising the Lord Christ and from fasting to come not only to confesse him her selfe but also to commend him vnto other And such a misterie as none was thought worthie to be messenger of the same not a holy preist nor a deuine Frophet nor a greate Patriarch but an holy Angell and Archangel euen Gabriell that standeth in the presence of God Whose countenance being terrible his garments glorious and his cōming sodaine in visiting the virgin Marie he troubled her and yet his voice being pleasant his words sweete and his tydings gladsome in saluting her comforted her telling her that as she was the beloued virgin of God and handmaide of God so she should be the blessed mother of God and spouse of God And such a miracle as whereby the word did not perish being turned into fleash but fleash least it should perish cleauing to the word that as man is both soule and bodie so Christ might be both God and man not by confusion of nature but by vnitie of person and this conceaued and perceaued not with the Eies of the fleash but with the faith of the harte the only begotten and the first begotten of his Father and the first begotten of his bretheren lying in a manger filling the whole world wrapped in swadling clothes and thundering in the Cloudes sucking on earth the pappes of his mother and yet sitting in Heauen at the right hand of God his Father and is finally such a greate mysterie as that it compriseth the principall Pillour of our faith the most certaine groūd of truth the strongest foūdation of the Church wherein we are to consider first the vnspeakeable loue of God the father towards vs who would not spare his owne and only sonne but freely gaue him to saue vs. And our Sauiour in the gospell God so loued the world that he gaue his only begotten sonne c. Secondly his owne incomparable loue in shewing himselfe so kinde and courteous vnto mankind as to suffer himselfe to be cast in his mould to be clothed with his fleash to be compassed about his infirmities which he himselfe commen deth Iohn 15.13 Saying to his disciples greater loue then this hath no man c. Both which their loues our Apostle Paule setteth out most liuelie Rom. 5.8 when he saith God setteth out his loue towards vs seing the while we were yet sinners Christ died for vs. And thirdly our Sauiour Christs lowly humilitie herein likewise appeareth as Paule also declareth the same as that he being in forme of God and thinking it no robberie to be equall with God made himselfe of no reputation c. Phil. 2.6.7 Here then first we are to know for our instruction the two natures of Christ secondlie the destinction of both his natures 2 natures of Christ as first his diuinitie in that the Apostle calleth him God Three distinctions and then his humanitie in affirming him to be manifested in the fleash Thirdly the Hipostaticall vnion and communitie of of properties in one the same personne of our Sauiour three deepe misteries contained and couched in three words in quibus saieth Beza verie briefly duae ponuntur distinguntur vniuntur naturae Christi whereby three sorts of Heresies are confuted First the Arrirans that denie the diuinitie of our Sauiour Christ secōdly the Marcianits who gaine say Christ to haue a humaine and fleashlie bodie but only an heauenly spiritual bodie thirdly the Nestorians who affirme Christ to haue two persons one of his Humanitie the other of his diuinitie and that his manhoode was deified and changed into his godhead Secondly we are to learne for our edification that we may make vse and take proffit in our life and conuersation by this misterie euen three thinges Austin comprehendeth them together in one sweete sentence Ser. 22. 3 things to be lerned by this misterie De tempore in these words omnis Natiuitatis schola est humanitatis officina patientiae massa virtutis agonia First humilitie in following him in the like lowlinesse in making our selues equall with them of the lower sort as Paule exacteth secondly Patience whereof he shewes himselfe a president that we should follow his steppes in constantly bearing and abiding all kind of aduersitie and of affliction as Peter admonisheth And finally vertue and especially loue that we should loue one another as Christ hath loued vs as our sauiour himselfe cōmādeth Thus much of these words as hauing a general vew of them but now let vs sift the same more narrowly and perticularly consider them not in waie of ample discourse but in manner of a short suruey as first to declare what manifestation this was and secondly the forme thereof For Paule here saith not only that God was manifested but also sheweth how in the fleash we read in Prophaine Histories that the Gods of the Heathen as first Iupiter the greate Father of these Gods that he did metamorphose himselfe into diuers shapes and formes of sundrie Creatures As into a Bull when he laye with Europa into a swanne when he begat of Leda Castor Pollux and into Amphritrio a man when he begatt of Alcmena Hercules of which the Poet. Nā Deus humana lustrās sub imagine terras And likewise the other Gods that they tooke vpon them the like semblance to the same ends and purposes as Apollo when he changed himselfe into a crowe Bacchus into a goate Diana into a catte Iuno into a Cowe Venus into a fishe and Mercurie into the bird Ibis As Ouid conteineth thē altogether Metamorph. 5. Delius in Coruo proles Semeleia capra Fele soror Phebi niuea Saturnia vacca Fisce venus latuit Cyllenius Ibidis alis But these are but Poets faininges being the Painters out of false
fables as shadowes of some other truth as that these mortall creatures supposed Gods and Idolles of the Gentles were in a manner conuerted into such brute beasts by their vncleane actions Againe we finde in the holy scriptures that Satan transformed him selfe in to an Angell of light 2. Cor. 11.13 that the true Angels of God haue oftentimes takē vnto them the shapes forms of men in which they haue appeared when they haue beene sente from Heauen downe into the earth and whereby they haue not only spoken vnto men but also eaten and druncken with men Yea we shall reade in the ould Testament and new in manie places that the Lord God himselfe appeareth vnto his saints and seruants in diuers semblances and fashions but especially in the forme of fire As when he appeared vnto Moises in the flame of a firie bush Exo. 3. Vnto the Children of Israell when he led them throughe the wildernesse in a Pillour of fire Exod. 13. and vnto the disciples and Apostles when the Holy Ghost descended in the shape of fire clouen tounges whervpon Austin vseth these words Hoc enim ele mentum est magnum sacramentum De Symb ad Catech lib. 3. cap. 9. As also the Lord some times to haue shewed himselfe in other formes as God the Father in the shape of a man when he came to Abraham sitting at the Oake of Mamre Gen. 18. And God the Holy ghost in the forme of a Doue when he appeared to Iohn Baptist after Christs baptisme Math. 3. But none of these before mentioned did keepe those shapes and sēblances which they tooke or seemed to take vpon them but forsooke them immediately after they had perfourmed what they would by that meanes But our Sauiour Christ Iesus whē he was thus manifested in our flesh he tooke it not vpō him for a time but perpetually euen to be our eternall mediatour both God and man world without end and to continewe a preist for euer after the order of Melchesidecke And here we are to note how properly the Apostle writeth when he here setteth downe that God was manifested in the fleash and not the Godhead speaking as the logitians say in the contract but not in the Abstract being true in the one as appeareth but not in the other as in the Contract because it containeth in it the whole person of Christ consisting of both natures but not in the Abstract for that it considereth the seuerall nature of his diuinitie only which in noe wise can be manifested in the fleash nor be confounded with his humanitie vnlesse we will runne into Eutiches errour and thinke that his manhood was not taken only but also absorpt and consūpt of his Godhead which is a foule Heresie so that it appeareth euidently what maner of manifestation this was Now therefore only in a word or two lette vs speake of the forme it selfe into which god is here said to be manifested so to passe on to the nexte branche of this misterie because we haue dwelt verie lōg in this alreadie which forme is here said to be in the fleash that is in humaine nature As that which was immortall inuisible incomprehensible and infinite should take vnto it a kind of nature which was mortal uisible comprehensible and finite yea which might be seene touched and handled and like vnto vs in all respects sinne only excepted not by conuerting the Godhead in to manhood but by conioyning the humaine nature to the diuine vniting them both in one person of Christ our mediatour euen as Iohn 1.1 witnesseth that which we haue hard that which we haue seen which we haue looked vpon our hands haue handled of the word of life neither tooke he any other fourme either of any Creature vpon the earth or of any power in heauē noe not of any Angell but of the seede of Abraham onely Heb. 2.16 And why because as the Apostle in the same chapter rendreth the Reason for as much as the children were partakers of flesh bloud he also himselfe tooke likewise parte with them Vers 14 Here then flesh is not taken for the naturall vitiousnesse of mans corruption as it is often times taken in the scriptures especially in the Epistle to the Romanes for the vnregenerate parte of man contrarie vnto the spirit for then should our Sauiour Christ be subiect vnto sinne as we are which were blasphemie to affirme but for the whole naturall and true essence and substance of a mortal man both of reasonable soule and of humaine fleash subsisting and not of body only least we fall into the Erronious opinion of the Apollinarists And thus much of this maine branche of this greate misterie now of the nexte Iustified in the spirite As this is an annexiō vnto the words going before so is it an amplification of the former misterie as if the Apostle Paule had said although Christ the sonne of God and God himselfe was manifested in the fleash as he hath set downe more at large Phil. 2. Yet did th● 〈◊〉 most glorious shine and signe of diuine power and Godhead manifestly appeare and shew fourth it selfe which here is called spirit as the same is expressed more plainely First by our Apostle Romans 1.4 when he saieth that he was declared mightily to be the son of god touching the spirit of sanctification by the resurrection from the deade as being one notable and notorious action of his supernaturall vertue Secondly by Peter 1.3.18 by an other semblable acte euen the worthy worke of his passion As that he was put to death according to the fleash but was quickned in the spirit And thirdly Iohn 1.14 that the word became fleash and dwelt amongest vs and we sawe the glorie thereof as the glorie of the only begotten sonne of the father full of grace and truth So that to iustifie in this place is not to make or pronounce one Righteous or iust which is not so indeede as this word is taken Luke 16.15 in those words of our Sauiour vnto the Pharisies Ye are they which Iustifie your selues before men but God knoweth your harts c. And Luke 18.14 in that conclusion of the parable and difinitiue sentence of our sauiour between the Pharisie and the publican whē he saith that the one departed ●ō rather Iustified thē the other And finally as it is taken so often in the Epistle to the Romans where our Apostle handleth that cheife pointe of our Religion euen our Iustification but especially Chap. 3.28 In those words Therfore we cōclude that a man is iustified by faith without the workes of the lawe But this word here signifieth to approue shewe forth or declare a man to be such an one by certaine signes and sure tokens by infallible Arguments and euident demonstrations such as cannot be refelled or refuted As Psal 51. in those words of the Prophet Dauid Against thee alone O Lord haue I sinned and done this euill in thy sight that thou mightest be iustified
being past reached him vnto posteritie how not obscurely and darkely as Moyses that had a vaile before his face and without cōceite and vnderstanding as vnto the Iewes who had a vaile before their harts but after the vaile of the Temple was rente in sunder painefully with diligence for they preached in season and out of season as Paule to Timot. 2.4.2 plainely without ēloquence as the spirit gaue them vtterance acts 2.4 and powerfully by heauenly influence for it was not they that spake but the holy ghost that spake in them Math. 10.20 As Christ himselfe preached with power and not as the scribes cōmanding as it were the hearts of men to yeeld reuerence and obedience to the Gospell and conuerting manie soules at once vnto Christ And finally to conclude to whōe was he preached by them euen vnto the Gentiles new preachers deliuering an vncouth doctrine to a strange people to whom they were sent as Ambassadours to a nation farre off by our sauiour their Master to carrie with blessed feete the glad tidinges of the Gospell and not to one nation for their charter commission was larger being commanded to teach all nations baptising them in the name of the father c. Being the Apostles and messengers of God promising profering grace and truth to all languages degrees sexes callinges and conditions vnder the sun being those seruants which were sent forth by the king as is signified in the parable Math 22. and Luke 14. which made a mariage dinner for his sonne to call those that were bidden who because the vnworthie Iewes which were first inuited neglected dissolutely and refused stubbornly to come were cōmanded to go out quicly into the high places and streetes of the cittie and to bringe in the poore maimed the halt and the blind and yet there being roome to go out into the high waies and hedges euen to al outlandish and forreigne regions countries and prouinces of the outcast despised Gētiles poore in mind for the want of the riches of Gods grace maimed and halte in their soules for lacke of the integritie of good life blind in their hartes for want of the light of the truth to compel them by the force of their commission by the power of their preaching by the efficacie of the word of the gospell to come vnto the wedding of Christ Iesus vnto his spouse the Church as the guestes of the bridegrom and frends of the bride as the Apostles themselues perfourming that in practise which our sauiour by the purport of the parable did prophesie should come to passe when as the Iewes being moued with indignation thereat did forsake them and betake themselues to the Gentiles did rēder this reason of this their doing saying It was necessarie that first the word of God should haue beene spoken vnto you but seeing you putte it from you and iudge your selues vnworthy of euerlasting life loe we turne to the Gētiles Act. 13.4.6 As it was oftentimes before tould vnto the Iewes euen to their teeth As first by the Baptist That God would of the stonie harted Gentiles raise vp children vnto Abraham Math. 3.9 And that the haughtie hills that the loftie minded Iewes which bare themselues bould of their mount Synai where their law was giuen of their mounte Sion where their temple was builded and where the Lord promised his blessing for euer more should be brought to lowe vallies that is the hūble harted Gentiles that liued in the vallie of the shadowe of death should be exalted that the crooked affections should be strēgthned by the line leuill of the gospell and their rough waies that is their ●ude and barbarous life should be smo●hed by the plainer of the word of God and finally that all fleash that is all men and all manner of men of what natiō language degree age calling and condition whatsoeuer should see the saluation of God And this the Propheticall Euāgelist but of the Euangelicall Prophet Iohn out of Esaie 40.3 And secondly by our Sauiour Math. 8.11.22 But I say vnto you that ma●ie shall come from the East West and shall sit downe with Abraham Isaach and Iacob in the kingedome of heauen and the children of the kingdome shal be cast out into vtter darkenesse And againe Math. 24.43 I say vnto you that the kingdome of God shall be taken from you and shal be giuen to a nation that shall bringe forth the fruites thereof And finally by Paule who in the 11. to the Romans telleth the Romaine Iewes or Iewish Romans that the natural oliues meaning the Iewes were cut of and the vile oliues euen the Gentiles were grafted in their stead and that the election of the one was the reiection of the other the calling of the one the casting away of the other the conuersion of the one the subuersion of the other the ruine of the Iewes being the riches of the world and their diminishing the riches of the Gentiles the one proceeding frō the seueritie the other from the bountifulnesse of God as the Apostle amplifieth at large in the same chap. Whereby it is come to passe at this day to apply it in a word vnto ourselues because we haue beene ouer longe in this pointe that we which dwelt sometimes in darkenesse blundred in blindnesse and groped at noone daie were the furthest from the sunshine of the Gospel haue bin made partakers of the gratious and glorious light thereof So that of vs that of the Prophet Esaie 9.3 and the Euang Math. 4.16 The people which satte in darkenesse and in the shadow of death haue seene a greate light and to them that sitte in the region and shadowe of death a greate light is risen vp may seeme to be most truely verified Our dutie to cōclude being this to labour by all meanes possible to keepe and continue still amongst vs this lampe and lanthorne of light which Christ the light and life of the world hath vouchsafed to bestowe vpon vs by his blessed appearance least that happelie or rather vnhappelie happen vnto vs which God threatneth to the Angell and the Church of Ephesus Apo. 2.5 Euen a remouing of the Candlesticke of his Church from vs and an extingushing of his word from amongst vs and in turning the congregation of Christ in to the sinagogue of Antichrist or the changing of the consolation of our saluation into the abomination of desolation but it followeth in the texte Beleeued in the world Marueile was it and noe doute a great meruaile that God manifested in the flesh with the other misteries appertaining thereunto should be preached by such silly ministers in so simple manner to such sinfull men yet far more maruelous is it that the same preaching should not only take such place as that it should be receaued with such regard and reuerence but also be so harboured in there hartes that it should be embraced with credence and cōfidence for of all those marueiles which are found