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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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the heauenlye life But Luk declareth the true nature of godlines whē he saith that the witnesse of the Angell was in steede of a rule to the Shepheardes to the which they directed all thinges For then is faith rightly holpe by the workes of God if it directeth al thinges to that purpose that the trueth of God which is reuealed in his word may more clearely shine forth 21. That the childe should be circumcised That which generally is to be cōsidered of circumcision let the readers fetch out of Ge. 17. 10. It shal be sufficient at this time briefly to touch those things which beelong to the person of Christ. God would that his sonne should be circumcised that he might be subiect to the lawe for circumcision was a solempne signe wherewith the Iewes were initiated into the obseruation of the lawe Paule declareth the end Gal. 4. 4. when he saith that he was made vnder the law that he might redeeme them which were vnder the law Therfore Christ taking circumcision professed himself a seruaunt of the law that he might obtaine libertie for vs. And so by this meane not onelye the seruitude of the lawe was abolyshed by him but the shadow of the ceremonie was applyed to his sound and perfect bodye that it might soone take an end For although the abrogating of it depended of the death and resurrection of Christ yet this was a certaine beginning of the same that the sonne of god suffered himselfe to be circūcised His name was then called Iesus This place also witnesseth that it was a manner receiued amongst the Iewes that on the day of circumcision they gaue names to their children as we at this day vse to doe at baptisme But the Euangeliste noteth two thinges that the name of Iesu was not giuen vnto the sonne of God rashely or for the pleasure of men but that the Angel brought it from heauen Thē that Ioseph Mary obeyed the cōmandement of God this is the consent of our faith with the word of God that that word going before wee should speake to the same and our faith shoulde answere to his promises Especiallye Luke commendeth vnto vs the order of publishing of the word when hee saieth that saluation was testified by the mouth of men which was promised by the Angell from aboue through the grace of Christ. Matth. 2. Marke Luke 1. VVhen Iesus then was borne at Bethlehem in Iudea in the dayes of Her●●e the king beholde there came wise men from the East to Ierusalem 2. Saying where is the king of the Iewes that is borne for we have seene his starre in the East and are come to worship him 3. VVhen king Herod heard this hee was troubled and all Ierusalem with him 4. And gathering togeather all the chie●● Priestes and Scribes of the people he asked of them where Christ should be borne 5. And they sayde vnto him at Bethlehem in Iudea for so it is written by the Prophet 6. And thou Bethlehem in the lande of Iuda ar● not the least among the princes of Iuda for out of thee shall come the gouernour that shal feede my people Israel     1. VVhen Iesus was then borne Matthew concealeth the cause whye Christ was borne at Bethlehem but the spirit of God who had appointed the Euangelistes as his Scribes seemeth aduisedly so to moderate their stile that with most notable consent they al write one and the same historie though it be in diuers manners that thereby the trueth of God might be the more certeine and euident when as it was openly manifest that his witnesses did not purposely before consent to speake but euery one separate from other nor hauing one respecte of an other did simply and freely write that which the spirite taught them Furthermore here is a historie declared worthy to be remembred that God fetched wisemen out of Chaldea or Persia which should come into Iudea to worship Christ where hee lay without honour and contemned Truely a wonderfull counsell of God that God would his Sonne should come forth into the world vnder this obscure humilitie yet hee excellently adorned him as with phrases so with other tokens least any thing for the triall of our faith had beene wanting from his diuine maiestie yet here is to be noted a notable harmonie of thinges seeming to be repugnant The starre from heauen declareth him to be a king whose throane is the beast● stall because that hee is denied a place euen amōgst the common sorte of men His maiestie shineth in the East which not onely appeareth not in Iudea but is also difiled with many reproches To what purpose is this namely the heauenly fathers will was to appoynt that the starre and the wisemen should lead vs the right way to his sonne but yet hee stripped him naked of all earthly honour that we might know his kingdome to be spirituall VVherefore this storie is not onely profitable because that God brought these wisemen to his sonne as the first fruites of the Gentiles but also because hee woulde set forth the kingdome of his sonne as with the praise of them so of the starre for the helpe of our fayth least the wicked and malitious dispite of his own nation should cause him to be despised of vs. It is sufficiently knowne that the Astrologers and Philosophers with the Perseans the Chaldeans were called Mag. i. wisemen Therfore is is easily to be coniectured that these came out of Persia. Furthermore how many they were in number it is better not to know because the Euangeliste doth not expresse it then rashly to affirme for certaine that which is doubtfull A childish errour lead the Papistes that they imagined them to be three because Matthew saith that they offered gold franckencense and mirrh as if hee should distinctly assigne a proper office to euery of them and that rather hee should not declare that these three thinges were generally offered by them VVhosoeuer that old writer was whose vnperfecte commentarie vppon Matthew beareth the name of Chrisostome and is accompted amongst Chrisostomes workes saith that they were fourteene which hath no more colour except that peraduenture it came by tradition of the fathers yet that same also hath no assuraunce But the Papistes are more then ridiculous which imagined to themselues that they were kinges because they did read that beefore sayde Psal. 72. 10. That the kinges of Tharsis of the Iles and of Saba should come which should offer giftes to the Lord Verily they are wise workemen who that they might giue a newe shape to men they haue begun at the turning of the worlde for of the South and VVest they haue made the East And it is not to be doubted but that by the iust reuenge of God they were so amased that their grosse ignoraunce might be laid open to the reproofe of al men who made no religion to corrupt the trueth of God and to turne the fame into a lye But here is first
so that he may now be worshipped euery where without any difference of places or countries 22 You worship you know not what we worship that which we know because saluation is of the Iewes 23 But the houre commeth and now is when the true worshippers shall worshippe the father in spirite and truth for the father requireth to haue such to worship him 24 God is a spirite and they that worship him must worship him in spirite truth 25 The woman saith vnto him I knowe that the Messias shall come who is called Christe therfore when he shall come hee shall tell vs al thinges 26 Iesus saith vnto her I am he that talke with thee Now he doth more at large expound that which he touched briefly concerning the abrogating of the law Yet doth he deuide the sum of his speech into two members in the former hee condemneth the manner of worshipping god vsed among the Samaritanes of superstition error and doeth testifie that the Iewes did worship God wel and lawfully He addeth the cause of the difference because the certaintie of the worship which the Iewes vsed did appeare vnto them out of the worde of God but the Samaritanes had no certaintie from the mouth of God Secondly hee declareth that the rites which the Iewes kept hytherto should shortly haue an end 22 You worship that which you know not A sentence worthie to be remembred wherein we are taught that we must assay nothing rashly and by chaunce in religion because vnlesse knowledge be present we doe not any longer worship God but a false imagination or ghost Therfore by this thunderbolt are throwen downe all good intents as they cal them For we know that men can doe nothing els but erre when their own opinion doth rule them without the word of God or his commandemēt For Christ taking vpon him his countries cause and person doth teache that the Iewes doe much differ from the Samaritanes VVhy so Because of them commeth saluation saith he By which wordes he giueth her to vnderstand that they doe exceede them in this one point because God had concluded the couenant of eternall saluation with them Some do restraine it vnto Christ who came of the Iewes And truly sithence that all the promises of God are sure and certaine in him there is no saluation saue only in him But because it is out of doubt that Christ doth preferre the Iewes for this cause because they doe not worship any vnknowen power but one God who reuealed himselfe vnto them and who hath adopted them to be his people by this word saluation must bee vnderstood that wholesome manifestation which they had by the heauenly doctrine But why doth he say that it is of them when as it is rather committed to them that they alone might enioy it He alludeth in my iudgement vnto that which was foretold by the Prophets that there should a lawe come out of Syon For they were separated for a time frō other people vpon this conditiō that the pure knowledge of god might at length flowe from them vnto the whole worlde Notwithstanding this is the summe that God is not worshipped aright vnlesse he be worshipped according to the certaintie of faith which must needs proceede frō the worde of God wherupon it foloweth y t they fal away vnto idolatry whosoeuer they be that depart frō the worde of god For Christe doth in plaine wordes testifie that an idol or vaine fictiō is set vp insteed of God where mē are ignorāt of the true god hee doth cōdemne all those of ignorāce vnto whō god hath not reuealed himself For so soone as we are once destitute of the light of his word darknes blindnes do reigne And we must note y t when the Iewes had brokē the couenaunt of eternal life with their vnfaithfulnes which was established with their fathers they were depriued of that treasure which they kept then as yet for they were not as yet driuen out of the church of God Nowe seeing that they denie the sonne they haue nothing to doe with the father The same must we thinke of all those who haue fled frō the pure faith of the gospel vnto their own inuentions Howsoeuer they flatter themselues in their stoutnes who worship god according to their own mind or mens traditiōs yet this one voyce thūdering out of heauē doth ouerthrow whatsoeuer diuine holy thing they think they haue You worship that which you knowe not Therefore to the end our religion may be approued of God it must needes leane vnto the knoweledge conceiued out of his worde 23 But the houre commeth and now is The latter member concerning the abrogation of the legall worship followeth VVhen he saith that the houre commeth or shall come he teacheth that the order deliuered by Moses shall not be perpetuall Heb. 9. 10. VVhen he saith that the houre is nowe he maketh an end of the ceremonies and so he telleth her that the time of reformation is fulfilled In the meane while he alloweth the Temple the Priesthood and all rites annexed thereunto as touching the vse of the time past Furthermore to the ende he may declare that God will neither bee worshipped at Ierusalem nor in mount Garizin he taketh vnto himself a deeper principle namely that the true worship of him cosisteth in the spirite For thereupon it followeth that he is rightly called vppon euery where Yet first of all here may a question be asked why and in what sense the worship of God is called spirituall To the end wee may vnderstand this we must note the opposition betweene the spirite and the external figures as betwene the shadowes and the truth Therefore the worship of God is said to consist in the spirite because it is nothing els but the inward faith of the hearte which bringeth forth inuocation secondly the puritie of conscience the deniall of our selues that beeing giuen to obey God we may be vnto him as holy sacrifices Heerupon ariseth another question whether the fathers did worship him spiritually vnder the lawe or no I answere seeing that God is alwayes lyke to himselfe hee allowed no other worship from the beginning of the worlde saue the spirituall worship which was agreeable vnto his nature VVhich thyng Moses doth sufficiently testifie who doth in many places declare that the ende of the lawe did tend to no other end but that the people shold cleaue vnto God with faith and a pure conscience And the prophetes doe more clearely expresse the same when as they sharply inueigh against the hypocrisie of y e people because they thought they had satisfied God after they had offered their sacrifices and executed that externall pompe It is no need to inferre many testimonies here which are common euery where yet are there most notable places before all other in the fiftie Psalme the second of Isayas verse the fiftie eight and threescore and sixt Micheas the fift Amos the seuenth But
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
the care of them but hath alwayes help ready in his hand which he will bestow in the very moment 16. Giue yee to them to eate Because this miracle is fullyer expounded in the sixt chapter of Iohn least the repetition should be troublesome to the readers I had rather it shuld be sought there yet least nothing shuld be spoken here I will briefly set downe the summe Christ as yet hadde employed his labour to feed the soules now he also extendeth his pastorly office euen to the care also of the bodyes VVherein he also confirmeth that saying of his that to them that seeke the kingdome of God and the righteousnes thereof all other thinges shall then bee giuen Math. 6. 33. It is not to be hoped that Christ will alway in this manner giue foode to them that want and be hungry yet it is certeine that he will neuer suffer that his should want such thinges as should maintaine life but that hee would reach his hand from heauen when hee shal so see it meete for the helpe of their necessities But they which desire that Christ should nourish them must also learne not to desire exquisite deinties but to be content with barly bread That Christe commaundeth the people to sitte downe by companies was first for this purpose that they being so disposed into companies the myracle myght be the more euident Then that the men might be the easilyer numbred and when some should looke vpon others they might themselues be witnesses of this heauenly grace Thirdly because he saw the disciples so carefull hee would trye their obedience by commaunding them that which seemed in shew to be as a iest For it was wonder to what end Christe hauing no cates woulde make a shew of a banket To the same purpose also belong those things which followe the loaues were giuen to the disciples so that the wonderfull plenty should grow betweene their handes and so they shoulde be the ministers of the diuine power of Christ. For as if it were a small matter for them to be eye witnesses Christ would that they should feele and handle his power Two hundreth peeces of money here spoken of by Budeus account amounteth about the value of thirty foure Frenche poundes So they esteeme a litle bread for euery man at a French souse But when they had made account of so much bread which should suffice to feede the people but meanely their obedience deserueth no small praise while they simply obeying the commaundement of Christe doe commit the successe to his will and pleasure 19. He blessed Blessing is taken in this place as it is ofttymes otherwhere for giuing of thankes But Christ teacheth vs by his example that we cannot otherwise eate meates holyly and purely except we do shewe our thankfulnes to God out of whose hand they come vnto vs. Therefore Paule saieth 1. Tim. 4. 5. VVhatsoeuer meates God dooth giue to vs they are sanctified by the word of God and prayer VVherein he declareth that those as beastly men which neyther account of the blessing of GOD faythfully nor doe praise the same in giuing of thankes doe defile and pollute with the filthye pollutions of theyr owne infidelytie whatsoeuer was by the owne nature pure and againe the meat which they doe deuoure is polluted and defiled Christ therefore prescrybed to his a manner of eating least they should with wicked sacriledge prophane themselues and the benefites of GOD. The lyfting vp of the eies into heauen doe declare an earnest and a vehement affection of praiers Not that this gesture should be alwayes necessary when we do pray but because that the sonne of God would not neglect those ceremonies profitable for mans infirmity Also the lifting vp of our eies is a fit spur to stirre vp our sluggishnes for that our mindes are too much bent downward to the earth 20. They tooke vp of the fragments that remained VVhen as the fragments which were left after that so great a number of men were filled were twelue times more then was set downe at the first this gaue no small lyght to the myracle For all men vnderstoode thereby that Christe by his power did not onelye create meates for them of nothing whiche shuld suffice for the present vse but if neede should be he could also prouide for the necessitie to come Lastlye the myracle being wrought Christ would that this should be gathered againe to bee a notable testimony of the same that they which were filled with meate shoulde now at leasure behold the same But though Christ doth not dayly multiplye loaues neyther feedeth men without their handye labour or tyllage of the fields yet the fruit of this history extēdeth euen to vs. For our slothfulnes and vnthankfulnes is the onely hinderaunce why we doe not see the aboundaunce of corne wherby we should liue encreased by the blessing of God dayly vppon vs Also that besides the refreshing and nourishing of vs there also remayneth seede for the grounde of one yeares encrease euery one of vs should thinke with himself that it is not without heauenly encrease if that the same wickednes hindred not whiche blyndeth aswell the eies of the minde as of the fleshe least they shoulde behold the manifest worke of God Also Christe declareth that as all things are giuen of the father to him into his hand so the meates with which we are fed doe slow and come to vs from his grace Math. 14. Mark 6. Luke 22. And straightway Iesus compelled his disciples to enter into a shippe and to goe euer before him while he sent the multitude awaye 23 And assoone as he had sent the multitude away he went vp into a mountaine alone to pray and when the euening was come he was there alone 24. And the ship was now in the mids of the sea and was tossed with waues for it was a contrary winde 25. And in the fourth watche of the night Iesus wente vnto them walking on the sea 26. And when his disciples sawe him walking on the sea they were troubled saying it is a spirite and cried out for feare 27. But straightwaye Iesus spake vnto them saying be of good comfort It is I be not afraid 28. Then Peter aunswered him and said Maister if it be thou bid me come vnto thee on the water 29. And he saide come And when Peter was come downe out of the ship he walked on the water to go to Iesus 30. But when he saw a mighty wind he was afraid and as hee beganne to sinke he cryed saying master saue mee 31. So immediately Iesus stretched forth hu●band and caught him sayd to him O thou of litle fayth wherefore didst thou doubt 32. And assoone as they were come into the ship the wind ceased 33. Then they that were in the ship came and worshipped him saying of a trueth thou art the sonne of God 45. And straightway he caused his disciples to go into the ship and to go before on the
more euidently shewe the heart of man to be the seat of all euilles he sayeth that the testimonies and fruites are apparant in the sinnes them selues For the woorde De●iling or making vncleane in Greeke is sayd to make Common as a little before Marke sayd common hands for vncleane And it is an Hebrewe phrase for because the Lord had separated the Iewes on this condition that they might be seuered from al the vncleannesse of the Gentiles what soeuer differed from this holinesse they called common or as prophane Mathew 15. Marke 7. Luke 21. And Iesus went thence departed into the c●astes of Tyrus and Sidon 22. And beholde a woman a Cananite came out of the same coastes cried saying vnto him Haue mercy on me O Lorde the sonne of Dauid my daughter is miserably vexed with a deuil 23. But he answered her not a word Then came to him his Disciples and besought him saying send her away for shee crieth after vs. 24. But he answeared and sayd I am not sent but vnto the lost shepe of the house of Israel 25. Yet ●hee came and worshipped him saying Lord helpe me 26. And he answered and sayd It is not good to take the childrēs bread and to cast it to whelpes 27. But shee said trueth Lord yet in deede the whelps eat of the crums which fall from their masters table 28. Then Iesus answeared and sayd vnto her O womā great is thy saith be it to thee as thou desirest and her daughter was made whole as that houre 24. And from thence he arose and went into the borders of Tyrus and Sidon and entred into an house and woulde that no man shoulde haue knowen but he could not be hid 25. For a certain womā whose little daughter hadde an vncleane spirit heard of him came and fell at his feete 26. And the woman was a Greeke a Syrophenissian by nation and shee be sought him that he would cast out the deuil out of her daughter 27. But Iesus said vnto her let the children first be sed for it is not good to take the childrēs bred to cast it vnto whelps 28. Then she answered said vnto him trueth Lorde yet in dede the whelps eate vnder the table of the childrens crums 29. Then he said vnto her for this saying go thy way the deuil is gon out of thy daughter 33. And when shee was come home to her house shee founde the deuill departed and her daughter lying on the bed   In this myracle we are taught how the grace of Christ begā to spread amongst the Gentiles For though the full time was not yet come wherin Christ should make himselfe knowen to the whole worlde yet it pleased him to giue some tastes of his commō mercy which at length was bestowed generally both to the Iewes and Gentiles after his resurrection Also in the woman of Canaan is described a notable image of faith that by making comparison we might knowe that the promised redemption was worthily taken from the Iewes whose vngodlines was so blockish The woman which Mathewe calleth a Canaanite is of Marke sayde to haue bene a Grecian and by nation a Syrophenissian wherein there is no difference for we knowe that it was the common maner of speache amongst the Iewes to call all forraine nations Grecians and therfore that Antithesis betwene the Grecians and the Iewes is often sounde in Paule Also when shee was borne in the coastes of Tyre and Sidon it is no meruaile that shee is called a Syrophenissean when as the region hadde the name of Syria and was a parte of Phoenicia and the Iewes very odiously called all the inhabitants of that land Cananites And it is to be supposed that the most part of them came of the people of Canaan who being banished out of their country toke the next place of refuge in their banishment They doe both agree in this that the woman came of a prophane nation not brought vp in the doctrine of the lawe that shee came of her owne accord to Christ in all humility to seeke aid of him The circumstance is also to be noted which is set downe by Marke that Christ came not thither with banner displaid but as a priuate man that he might hide himself in that corner for a time But Marke speaketh after the common sense of flesh for though Christ foresaw by his diuine spirit what should come to passe yet in as much as he was the seruant ambassadour of the father he kept himselfe after the maner of man within the bounds of the calling laid vpon him therfore it is said that he could not do that which as a man he would haue done In the meane while this circumstance hath great waight for the condemnation of the Iewes that whē Christ in opē place did set before them the promised redemption with a loud voice and myracles annexed to the same they remained blinde and deafe when yet they boasted themselues to be heires of the couenant of the Lord his peculiar people and a priestly kingdome and this woman which had none of these priuiledges with the children of Abraham vnto whome the couenant in shewe appertained not not being called either with woorde or signe commeth running of her owne free will 22. Haue mercy on me O Lorde Though this woman was a stranger from the Lordes flocke yet she had gotten some tast of godlinesse for without some knowledge of the promises shee coulde not haue called Christ the sonne of Dauid For although the Iewes were almost falne away frō the pure and sincere doctrine of the law or at the least were turned far aside from the same yet the renoumed fame of the promised redemption flourished And whē as the restitution of the church rested vpon the kingdom of Dauid whē as there was any speach of the Messias the name of the son of Dauid was cōmon among them this confession was in the mouth of all men But when as true faith was worne out amongest them by the wonderful incredible goodnes of God it came to passe that the sauor of the promisses came to the natiōs that dwelt by them Therfore though this womā had not ben familiarly taught by any master neither yet had framed a faith in Christ vnaduisedly to her self but she cōceiued it out of the law and the prophets VVherfore that dog Seruetus no lesse folishly thē wickedly abused this exāple that he might strip faith bare naked of the promisses After this sense I deny not but that somtimes there may be a faith cōceiued which alwais hath not an expres distinct knowledge of sound doctrine so that we hold this that faith doth alwaies spring out of the woorde of God and hath his beginning of the true principles so that it may alwayes be annexed to some light of true knowledge 23. But hee answeared her not The Euangelistes doe diuers wayes commend the faith of this woman as nowe of her inuincible
Centurion said so for that christ hauing cried loud had giuen vp the ghost some interpreters do think that he noted some vnwonted force which remained strong euen vnto death and truely sith the body of Christ was almost without bloud this could not be after y e maner of men y t the strēgth of his sides arteries shuld abide ●o loud a cry Yet I do rather thinke that the Cēturion praised his cōstāt perseuerance in callinge vppon the name of God Thoughe not onely Christes crying induced him to thinke honourably of him but because he saw his great power to agree with the heauenly myracles he vttered this confession But where it is sayde that hee feared God it must not be expounded so as if he shoulde repent throughly it was onely a sodaine vanishing motion as it doeth oft befall that vaine men and suche as are giuen to the world are mooued with the feare of God when he sheweth foorth his fearefull power but because there is not a roote vnder which hath life securitie presently groweth ouer which quencheth that feeling The Centurion therefore was not so chaunged as that he wold yeelde himselfe to serue God the rest of his life but he was only a publisher of the Godhead of Christ for a short time And where Luke reporteth that he only sayde Of a s●reti● this man was iust is as muche as if he should haue openly declared him to be the Sonne of God as the two other Euangelists doe report For fame had spredde it euery where that Christ was punished because he bore himselfe for the sonne of GOD Now when the Centurion praiseth him to be iust and freeth him from fault he withall confesseth him to be the Sonne of God not that he distinctly vnderstoode howe Christe was begotten of God the father but because he doubted not but that some diuine power was in him and as one conuict by the former testimonies he accoūted him to be no cōmon person but raised vppe by God As concerning the multitude striking their breastes they pray earnestly for the auoidance of the guiltinesse of that hainous offence because they perceiued that there was a hainous offence committed publikely in that vniust and cruell slaughter But because they proceeded no further their mourning auailed them nothing except that to some it was a beginninge or a preparation of a better repentaunce But because heere is onely described to vs the lamentation which God wreasted out of them for the glorye of hys Sonne lette vs learne by this example that it is little or nothing if any man be afraide at the present power of God vntill the astonishment being appeased the feare of God may rest in a quiet heart 55. And many women were there This was added as I doe interpreat it to let vs vnderstande that when the disciples were slipt away by fleeing hither and thither yet the Lord kept some of their company there to be as witnesses And though Iohn the Apostle departed not from the crosse yet heere is no mention made of him but onely the women are praised which followed Christe euen vnto death for the men fleeing fearefully away their singular pietie towardes their maister appeared the more euidently For it cannot be but that they had a rare and great affection who though they could doe him no seruice yet when he was in his extreemest reproaches they ceased not to haue him in reuerent estimation yet all the men fledde not as we doe gather by Luke for hee sayeth that all his acquaintance stoode a farre off But the Euangelistes doe especially praise the women and that not without cause for they were woorthy to be preferred before the menne And in my iudgement thy● secreat comparison doeth greatly reprooue the Apostles I speake of the body of them for because there was one only of them remaining who taryed of whom as I sayd euen now three Euangelists do say nothing But this was very reproachfull to the chosen witnesses to withdrawe themselues from beholding that wherof the saluation of the world depended Therefore when afterwardes they shoulde publish the Gospell the chiefe part of the hystorie was borrowed of the women The which if the prouidence of God had not met with in so wicked a nation they had depriued vs of the knowledge of the redemption But though there seemeth not to be so great authority in women yet if we doe consider with what power of the spirite they were strengthened against that temptation there shall be no cause why our faith shoulde wauer which resteth vppon God the true authour of the testimonie In the meane while lette vs note that it came to passe by the wonderfull goodnesse of God that the Gospell of the sacrifice of satisfaction whereby God was reconciled to vs came vnto vs. For in that cōmon falling away of them who should haue gon before others God encouraged some of the meanest of the flock who casting off feare should become witnesses to vs of that hystorie without the beliefe whereof we could not be saued But of those women somewhat shall presently be spoken againe For thys present lette it suffice to note this one thing by the way they were brought from their countrey with a desire to learne that they might daily heare Christ teach they neither spared labour nor richesse so that they myght enioy the doctrine of saluation Math. 27. Marke 15. Luke 23. 57. And when the euen was come there came a rich man of Arimathea named Ioseph who had also himselfe been Iesus disciple 58. He went to Pilate and asked the body of Iesus Then Pilate commanded the body to be deliuered 59. So Ioseph toke the body wrapped it in a cleane linnen cloth 60. And put it in his new tombe which he had heuen out in a rock and rolled a great stone to the doore of the sepulchre and departed 61. And there was Mary Magdalen the other Mary sittīg ouer agaīst y e dore of y e sepulcre 42. And nowe when nighte was come because it was the daye of the preparation that is before the Sabbath 43. Ioseph of Arimathea an honourable counsellour whiche also looked for the kingdome of God came and went in boldlye vnto Pilate and asked the bodye of Iesus 44. And Pilate marueiled if he were already dead and called vnto him the Centurion and asked of him whether he had been any while dead 45. And when he knew the truth of the Centurion hee gaue the body to Ioseph 46. VVho bought a linnen cloth and tooke him downe and wrapped him in the linnen cloth and layed him in a tombe that was hewen out of a rocke and rolled a stone to the doore of the sepulchre 47. And Mary Magdalene and Mary Ioses mother behelde where he should be laid 50. And beholde there was a manne named Ioseph which was a counsellour a good manne and a iust 51. Hee did not consent to the counsell and deede of them which was of Arimathea a
the worship of God was in such sort spirituall vnder the law that yet notwithstanding being intangled in so many external ceremonies it did seeme to smell of some carnall and earthly thing Therefore Paule calleth the ceremonies the flesh and the beggerly elemēts of the world In like sort the Authour to the Hebrewes saith that the old sanctuarie with his appurtenances was earthly Therefore we may fitly say that the worship of the law was in his substance spirituall in respect of the forme it was after a sort carnall and earthly For all that way was shadowish the truth whereof appeareth now plainely Nowe we see wherein the Iewes did agre with vs and wherein they did dissent from vs. God would in all ages be worshipped with faith prayers thansgiuing purenesse of heart and innocencie of life neyther was he euer delighted in any other sacrifices but there were in the lawe diuers additions so that the spirite and truth did lye hid vnder diuers shadowes but now the veile of the Temple beeing rent there is nothing obscure or couered VVe haue indeede at this day certaine externall exercises of godlinesse whereof our ignorance hath neede but suche is their meane and sobrietie that they doe not darken the plaine truth of Christ. Finally we haue that plainely expressed which was shadowed vnto the fathers And this difference was not only confounded in time of poperie but quite ouerthrowen For there is no lesse thicknesse of shadowes there then there was in times past in time of Iudaisme But it cannot be denied that Christe doth here put a manifest difference betwene vs and the Iewes Out at what starting holes soeuer they seeke to escape it is manifest that we are only vnlike to the fathers in the externall forme because that they worshipping God spiritually were tyed to ceremonies which were abolished by the cōming of Christ. Therfore so much as in them lyeth they spoyle the Church of Christe of his presence whosoeuer doe burthen the same with an immoderate companie of ceremonies Neither doe I passe for these vaine colours that many of the common people haue as great neede of such helpes at this day as they had in times past amongest the Iewes For wee must alwayes respect after what sort the Lord would haue his Church to be gouerned because he alone knoweth best what is expedient for vs. And it is certayne that nothing is more contrary to the order which God hath appoynted then the grosse and twice carnall pompe which reigneth in papistrie The shadowes of the lawe indeede did couer the spirite but these visares doe altogether disfigure him VVherefore wee must in no case winke at such filthie and vnseemely corruptions Howsoeuer craftie men or those who are too fearefull to correct vices doe obecte that these are thinges indifferent and that therefore they are indifferētly to be taken truly it is not tollerable that the rule which Christ hath prescribed should be violated The true worshippers Christ seemeth briefly by the way to touche the stubbor nesse of many whiche brake foorth afterwarde For we know how stoutly the Iewes did defend the ceremonies whereunto they were accustomed Although this sentence reacheth further For seeing that he knew that the worlde would neuer be free from corruption therefore he separateth the true and right worshipers from the peruers and feigned VVith which testimonie being furnished let vs not doubt to condemne the Papistes in al their inuentions and to contemne their reproches For what need haue we to feare when we heare that this bare and plaine worship doth please God which the papistes doe contemne because it is not full stuffed with ceremonies And what doth the vaine pompe of the fleshe profite them whereby as Christ doth testifie the spirit is extinguished It appeareth plainly by that which goeth before what it is to worship God in spirite and truth namely taking away the shadowes of the olde rites simply to retaine that which is spirituall in the worship of God For the truth of Gods worship consisteth in the spirite the ceremonies they were a certaine accidentall thing And heere we must note againe that truth is not compared with lying but with the externall accession of figures so that the substance of the spirituall worship is pure and plaine as they say 24 God is a spirite This is a confirmation drawen from the verie nature of God Seeing that men are flesh it is no maruell if those thinges please them which are aunswerable to their nature Hereupon it commeth to passe that they inuent manie things in the worship of God whiche being full of vaine boasting haue in them no soundnesse But it is meete for them first of all to weigh this throughly that they haue to do with God who doth no more agree with the flesh then fire with water This one cogitation only ought to suffice to bridle the wantonnesse of our wit when as we are occupied about the worshipping of God that hee is so vnlike vnto vs that those thinges which please vs doe most of all displease him But admit hypocrites be so blinded with their pride that they are not afraide to make God subiect to their will or rather luste yet let vs know that this modestie hath not the lowest roome in the worship of God howsoeuer we thinke it pleaseth according to the flesh Furthermore because we cannot ascend vnto his hignesse let vs remēber that we must fet a rule out of his word wherby we may be directed The fathers doe oftentimes cite this place against the Arrians to proue the diuinitie of the spirite but it is falsly wrested thyther because Christ doth in this place simply affirme that his father is of a spirituall nature and that therefore he is not moued with friuolous thinges as men are wont by reason of their lightnes 25 The Mesiias shall come Although religion was vncleane and mixed with many errors amongest the Samaritanes yet were there certaine groundes which were taken out of the lawe imprinted in their mindes as was this of y e Messias And it is likely that seeing that the woman did gather out of Christ his wordes that there was an vnwonted kinde of change at hande which shoulde befall the Churche of GOD shee did straightway call to minde Christ vnder whom they hoped for a perfect manifestation of all thinges VVhen she saith that the Messias shal come she seemeth to speake of a time that was nigh at hand And truly it appeareth euery where by many arguments that the mindes of all menne did then wayte for the cōming of the Messias who should restore things which were miserablie destroyed and gone to decay This is out of doubt that the woman preferreth Christ before Moses and all the prophetes in the office of teaching For she comprehendeth three thinges in a few wordes First that the doctrine of the law was not altogether perfect but that there were only rudiments deliuered there For vnlesse there had been a
man onely of a corporall disease the comparison should haue been nothing worth for circumcision which appertaineth to the health of the soule should be more excellent Therefore Christ ioyneth the spirituall fruit of the myracle with the external benefit done to the bodie and therfore doth worthilie prefer the perfect health of the man before circumcision There may be also another reason of the comparison namely that the Sacraments haue not alwayes their force and effect present but Christ himself wrought effectually in curing the man that was sick of the palsey But I doe rather imbrace that former exposition that the Iewes do maliciously reprochfully find fault with that work wherein the grace of God doth more plainly appeare then in circumcision which they do so much honor that they do think that the Sabboth is not broken by it The marueiling wherof he speaketh doth signifie that murmuring which arose about the fact of Christ because they thought that he durst do more then was lawfull 22 Therefore Moses gaue you circumcision The illatiue worde seemeth not to agree therfore some do take dia tout● for dia t● but the Greeke construction is repugnant to their opinion Therfore I do expound it more simplie that circumcision was so commaunded that the vse of that signe was necessary euen vpon the Sabboths as if he should say that it was sufficiently shewed vnto them therby that the worship of the Sabboth is not violated by the works of God that Christ may applie the example of circumcision vnto the present cause yet notwithstanding he vseth a correction by and by when as he saith that Moses was not the first minister of circumcision But this was sufficient for him that Moses who was so straight an exactor of the Sabboth did notwithstanding cōmaund that infants should be circumcised the eight day although it fell vpon the Sabboth day 24 Iudge not After that he had ended his defence he vseth also an expostulation because being carried away w t wicked affections they iudge not according to the thing and the cause Circumcision was reuerenced amongest them for good causes when as it was done vpon the Sabboth day They knew that the law was not broken because the workes of god doe agree well together why do they not thinke the same of the worke of Christe saue only because a preiudice conceiued of the person of Christ doth possesse their mindes Therefore there shall no iudgement be right saue that which shall bee giuen according to the truth of the matter For so soone as the persons come abroade they turne the eyes and senses of all men vnto them so that the truth doth vanishe away by and by As this admonition ought to be of force in all causes and matters so is it more then necessarie when as we haue the heauenly doctrine in hand For ther is nothing which happeneth soner then that wee be estraunged from the same with the hatred and contempt of men 25 Therefore some of the men of Ierusalem saide Is not this he whome they seeke to kill 26 And beholde he speaketh openly and they say nothing to him whether or no doe the rulers know indeed that this is Christ indeed 27 But we know whence this man is but when Christ shall come no man shall know whence hee is 28 Therfore Iesus cryed in the Temple teaching and saying you both know mee and yee know whence I am and I came not of my selfe but he speaketh the truth that sent me whome you know not 29 But I know him because I am of him and he hath sent mee 30 Therfore they sought to take him no man laid hand on him because his hower was not yet come 25 Certaine of the men of Ierusalem Namely such as knew of the lying in wayt of the rulers and which knewe how greatly Christ was hated For the common people as wee saw a little before counted this as a dreame or doting Therfore those who knewe with what outragious hatred the chiefe rulers of their nation were incensed against Christ do not marueile in vaine that Christe was not only openly conuersaunt in the temple they being quiet but that he did also prech freely but they offend in that that in a myracle altogether diuine they do not consider the prouidence of God So carnall men so often as they see any straunge worke of God they marueile indeed but in the meane season there commeth no consideration of Gods power into their minde But it is our dutie more wisely to weigh the workes of God especially seeing that the wicked when as they haue assayed all things doe not so hinder the course of the gospel as they would desire we may surely think that their endeuours are void because God is able to throw them down with his hand being set against them 27 But we know whence this man is Heere we doe see not only howe great the blindnesse of men is when they are to iudge of diuine matters but that this vice is almost ingendred in them that they haue witte enough to lay stumbling blockes before themselues that they may not come vnto the knowledge of the truth There doe oftentimes fall out offences through the subtiltie of Satan which may driue away moste men from Christ but and if the way were plaine and equall euery man would feigne vnto himselfe an offence So long as the rulers knew not Christ this multitude would haue beene letted with their vnbeliefe alone now whenas that impediment is remoued they inuent a new cause least they should come vnto Christ. Yea whereas it was meet that they should be moued with the example of the rulers they are so farre from following that which is right that they do willingly stumble at the first step Euen so men that haue begun well are wont to faile by by in such sort vnles the Lord do direct their goings euē vnto the end Furthermore the argument wherwith they hinder themselues is this The Prophets haue testified that the beginning of Christ shal be vnknowē but we know from whence this man came therefore he is not to bee taken for Christ. Hereby are we taught what a dāgerous thing it is to teare in peeces the scriptures and so consequently Christ himselfe that he may be iudged only by the halfe of himselfe God promised a deliuerer of the seed of Dauid but he challengeth this office euery where vnto himselfe as proper to himselfe Therefore it was requisite that God should be reuealed in the flesh that hee might be the Redeemer of his Church So Micheas assigneth the place where Christ should be borne Out of thee Bethleehem shall arise a captaine that he may gouerne my people But immediately after he speaketh of an higher going out and therefore hidden and secrete These miserable men whilest that they respect nothing in Christ saue that which is subiect to contempt they doe rashlye gather that he is not he that was promised Therefore let
vs learne so to behold Christ being humble in y e flesh that this humilitie which is despised amongest the wicked may extoll vs vnto his heauenly glory So that Bethlehem where he should haue beene borne as he was man shall be vnto vs a gate through which we may goe in vnto the eternall God 28 Therefore Iesus cryed Hee inueigheth with bitter wordes against theyr rashnes because that pleasing themselues proudly in a false opinion they did exclude themselues from the knowledge of the truth As if he shoulde say whilest that you know all thinges you know nothyng And truly there is no worse plague then when as the confidence of that little knowledge which men haue doth make them so drunken that they doe carelesly reiect whatsoeuer is contrarie to their meaning Hee speaketh tauntingly when he saith Yee know mee and yee know from whence I am I came not of my selfe He setteth that which is true against the opinion which they had falsely conceiued as if he should say whilest that you haue your eyes fastened vpon the earth you doe also thinke that I am wholy subiect to these thinges and therefore you contemne me as a base start vp but God will testifie that I came from heauen Therfore howsoeuer you doe reiect mee God will indeede acknowledge that I am his He calleth God true in the same sense wherein Paule calleth him faithful If so be it saith he we be vnsaithful he continueth faithfull he cannot denie himselfe For his drift is this that there is no whit of the credite of the Gospell diminished howsoeuer the worlde doe goe about to supplant it that how much soeuer the wicked do pull from Christ yet doth he remaine perfect because the truth of God remaineth alwayes sound and like to himselfe Christ seeth that he is despised hee is so farre from yeelding that he doth rather couragiously tryumph against their mad arrogancie who set nothing by him It becommeth al the faithfull to be endewed with this inuincible and heroicall stoutnes Yea our faith shall neuer be firme stable vnlesse it set light by the frowardnes of the wicked when as they arise against Christe And 〈◊〉 doth especially become godly teachers trusting to this ayd to goe foreward in defending sound doctrine although the whole world say na● So Ieremie calleth God his promiser and reuenger because he is condemned as a deceiuer Thou hast deceiued mee O Lord saith he and I 〈◊〉 deceiued So Isaias being on euery side ouerwhelmed with slaunders reproches he flieth vnto this sanctuarie that ●e shall haue God the approuer of his cause So Paule being oppressed with vniust iudgements prouoketh them all vnto the day of the Lorde counting it sufficient to set God alone against the raging world VVhom yee know not His meaning is that it is no maruell if the Iewes know not him who know not God for this is the beginning of true wisdome to haue respect vnto God VVhen he doth attribute vnto him selfe the knowledge of God he giueth vs to vnderstand that hee is not extolled rashly vnto so great confidence And he teacheth vs by his example that we must not lightly thrust in the name of god that we may boast of our patron and the reuenger of our cause For there are many too bold in boasting of the authoritie of GOD yea there is nothing more readie and bold to reiect the iudgements of all men then frantike persons who make boast of their inuentions insteed of the oracles of God But we are taught by these wordes of Christ that we must take good heed of vaine and friuolous confidence and that then we must ualiantly resist men when as we know the truth of God throughly And he that is certainely persuaded that God is on his side there is no cause why he should feare the crime of insolencie in treading vnderfoote all the loftinesse of the world 29 Because I am of him Some there be that doe so distinguishe these two members that they referre the former vnto the diuine essence of Christe the other vnto the office inioyned him of his father which that be might take vpon him he clothed himselfe with mans flesh nature which although I dare not reiect yet I cannot tell whether Christe woulde speake so subtillie or no. I confesse indeede that the heauenly beginning and arising of Christ may bee gathered thence but yet this is no sufficient proofe of his eternall diuinitie againste the Arrians 30 Therefore they sought to catch him There wanted no will in them to hurt him nay no endeuour and they had strength sufficient VVhy then do they linger in so great heate as though their handes and theyr feete had been bound The Euangelist answereth Because his houre was not yet come VVherby he telleth vs that Christ was couered with his fathers ayde against their strength and furious force And he doth also preuent the offence of the crosse because there is no cause why wee should be troubled when as we heare that Christ was carryed away vnto death not at mans pleasure but because he was aypointed of the father to be such a sacrifice Hence may we gather a generall doctrine For howesoeuer we liue vntill a day yet the houre of euerie mans death is appointed of God It is an hard matter to beleeue that being subiect to so many casualties being laid open vnto so many iniuries layings in wayte of men and wilde beastes being inuironed with so manie diseases yet we are out of all daunger vnlesse it be when the Lorde will call vs away But we must striue with distrust and first of all wee must hold such doctrine as we heare in this place Secondly the ende thereof and the exhortation which is gathered thence that all cares being cast vpon God euery man doe serue in his vocation and that he bee not called away with any feare from his office Yet may no man passe his bounds For we must not go any farther trusting vpon the prouidence of God then God commaundeth 31 And manie of the companie beleeued on him and saide when Christ shall come shall he doe more myracles th●n this man doth 32 The Pharisees heard the companie murmuring th●se thinges about him and the Pharisees and Priestes sent ministers to take him 33 Therefore Iesus said vnto them yet a litle while am I with you and I go vnto him that sent me 34 Yee shall seeke mee and shall not finde mee and where I am you cannot come 35 Therefore the Iewes said amongest themselues whyther will he goe that we shall not finde him will he goe into the dispersion of the Greekes and teach the Greekes 36 VVhat speech is this that he hath said yee shall seeke me and shall not find mee and whither I goe yee cannot come 31 And many of the companie It might seeme that Christ preached vnto those which were deafe and altogether obstinate yet the Euangelist saith that there followed some fruite
their destruction And God doth bring them to this kinde of knowledge diuers waies For oftentimes being scourged they learne that God is angrie with thē sometimes hee vexeth them inwardly without vsing any outwarde torment sometimes he suffereth them to sleepe vntill hee call them out of the worlde By the worde lifted vp Christ meaneth his death And he maketh mention of his death that hee may foretell them that although they extinguish him according to the flesh yet shall it profite them nothing as if he should say You doe now proudly mock me when I speake vnto you your vngodlinesse shall shortly goe farther to wit euen vnto my death then shall you triumph as if you had obteyned your desire But you shall shortly perceiue by your most wicked destruction howe much my death differeth from destruction He vseth the word lifted vp that he may the more pricke them Their purpose was to drowne Christ in the neathermost hell he affirmeth that this their hope shal be frustrate and that the euent shal be farre contrarie It may be indeed that he alludeth vnto the external maner of his death to wit because he was to be lifted vp vpon the crosse yet he did chiefly regard his glorious successe which followed shortly after contrary to all their expectations He did triumph gloriously ouer Satan before God and the Angels hauing blotted out the hande writing of sinne and abolished the giltinesse of death vpon the crosse but this triumph beganne at length to appear● vnto men when the Gospel was preached The same thing chaunced afterward the Christ should rise out of the graue and ascend into heauen VVhich thing we must hope for at this day for whatsoeuer the wicked doe inuent to oppresse Christ with in his doctrine church he shall not onely spring vp against their willes but shall turne their wicked endeuours vnto the greater encrease of his kingdome That I am I haue alreadie saide that this is not referred vnto the diuine essence of Christ but vnto his office onely which thing doth also appeare by the text where he denieth that he doth any thing saue onely according to his fathers commaundement For this is as much as if he should say that he is sent of God and that he did discharge is dutie faithfully I doe nothing of my selfe That is I doe not rashly thrust in my selfe to doe any thing The worde speake tendeth to the same ende namely vnto the office of teaching For when Christ will proue that he doth nothing without his fathers commandement he saith that he speaketh according as he teacheth him Therefore this is the summe of the words In all this administration which yee condemne there is nothing myne but I doe onely execute that which God hath enioyned me they be his wordes which you heare out of my mouth and he alone doth gouerne my calling the authour whereof he is Let vs remember that which I haue sometimes touched that these wordes are applyed vnto y e capacitie of the hearers For because they iudged Christ to be one of the common sort of men he denieth that that is his what diuine thing soeuer he hath as if he should say that it is not mans neither of man because y e father teacheth vs by him maketh him the onely schoole master of the Church therfore he affirmeth that he is taught of the father 29 And he that sent me He boastath againe that God through whose conduct aid he doth all things wil be present with him least he labor in vain without fruite as if he should say that y e power of the spirit of God is ioyned with his ministerie All godly teachers must be endowed with the same confidence that they doubt not but be fully assured that the hand of god wil be nigh vnto thē whilest that with a pure cōscience they shew thēselues to bee such ministers vnto him as he requireth For God doth not furnish them with his worde that they may beate the ayre with a cold vain sound but he giueth successe by the secrete working of his spirite he doth also couer thē with his ayde that their enemies beeing throwen downe they may stande inuincible against the whole world And truly if they looke vpon themselues their owne habilitie they must needs fall euery moment Therfore the only way to stand is this if they be persuaded that they are vpholdē with the hand of god But we must note the cause why Christ doth professe that god is on his side that he shall neuer be destitute of his aid namely because he dependeth wholy vpon him doth serue him faithfully For the aduerbe alwaies importeth thus much that he doth obey god not only in some part but that he his altogether without exceptiō addicted to serue obey him Therfore if we couet to trie the same presence of God wee must submit all our reason vnto his gouernment For if our wit do possesse any part of the gouernment because gods blessing shal be absent all our studies shal be in vain if sobeit there appeare for a time some ioyful shew of prosperous successe yet the end shal be vnfortunate VVhen as Christ saith that he was not left alone he complaineth by the way of the vnfaithfulnesse of his nation wherein he did almost finde none which did ioyne handes with hym Neuerthelesse he sheweth that this one thing is sufficient for him that he hath God to be his reuenger So must we also be encouraged at this day least we be discouraged with the smalnesse of the number of the faithfull For although all the whole worlde do gainstand our doctrine yet are we not alone Moreouer it appeareth hereby how foolish the boasting of the Papistes is who passing ouer God doe make their boast of theyr multitude 30 As he spake these things many beleeued on him 31 Therfore Iesus said vnto the Iewes which beleeued in him If you shall abide in my worde you are my disciples indeed 32 And yee shall knowe the truth and the truth shall make you free 33 They answered him we are the seed of Abraham and we neuer serued any man how sayest thou yee shall be free 34 Iesus answered them verily verily I say vnto you that euery one that doth sinne is the seruant of sinne 35 And the seruaunt abideth not in the house euer but the sonne abydeth for euer 36 Therfore if the sonne shal set you free you shal be free indeed 37 I know that you are the seed of Abraham but you seeke to kill mee because my word dwelleth not in you 38 I speake that which I haue seene with my father and you doe that which you haue seene with your father 30 As he spake these things Although the Iewes were then almost like to drie and barren land yet God did not suffer the seed of his worde to perish wholy Therefore there ariseth some fruite amongst so many lets contrarye to hope And
thēselues the grace of Christ whosoeuer being puffed vp with a vaine confidence doe flatter themselues in their own estate This pride goeth through the whole worlde almost so that there is scarce one amongest an hundred that doth perceiue that he hath need of the grace of God 34 He that doth sin c. An argument drawen from contraries They made their boast that they were free he proueth that they are the seruants of sinne because being subiect to the desires of the flesh they sinne continually And it is a maruell y t mē are not conuinced with their own experience that hauing laid away pride they may learne to humble them selues This thing is at this day too common that the more a mans vices are so much the more fiercely doth he with loftie words extol free wil. And Christ as it seemeth affirmeth no other thing in this place saue that which in times past was tossed amongst the philosophers that those who are addicted vnto their lustes are in the worst bondage But there is a deeper and more hidden sense For he doth not only dispute what euill men doe bring vppon themselues but what maner estate the estate of mans nature is The philosophers thought that euerie man is made a bondslaue at his own pleasure doth returne vnto libertie againe But Christ proueth aduoucheth in this place that al those are subiect to bōdage whō he doth not set free so consequently that they are seruantes by beginning who draw the infection of sin frō corrupt nature we must note the comparison of grace nature whereupon Christ standeth in this place whereby it shall easily appeare that men are spoyled of libertie vnlesse they recouer the same by some other meanes This bondage is so voluntarie that those which offend necessarily are not compelled to sin 35 And the seruant c. He addeth a similitude takē from the lawes the politik law as a seruant although he rule for a time yet is he not the heire of the house whereupon he concludeth that there is no perfect continuall libertie saue that which is obtained through the sonne By this meanes he doth accuse the Iewes of vanitie because they make boast of the shadow insteed of the thing For in that they were the carnal progenie of Abrahā they were nothing els but a shadow they had a place in y e church of God but such an one as Ismael did vsurp vnto himselfe for a short space the seruant triumphing against the free brother The sum is whosoeuer do boast that they are the childrē of Abrahā they haue nothing but a false vanishing show 36 Therfore if the son shal make you free In these words he giueth vs to vnderstād y t the right of liberty appertaineth vnto him alone that al other forasmuch as they are born seruants are set free only through his grace For he doth impart that vnto vs by adoptiō which is proper to himself by nature whilest that we are engrafted into his bodie by faith are made his mēbers So that we must remēber that which I said before that he setteth vs free by the gospel Therefore our liberty is the benefit of Christ but we obtain the same by faith whiche doth also cause Christ to regenerate vs by his spirit VVhēas he saith that they are free indeed there is great force in y ● aduerb indeed for we must vnderstād the contrary which is the false perswasiō wherwith the Iewes did swell like as euen now a great part of the world imagineth to themselues a kingdom in most miserable subiectiō 37 I know that you are the seed of Abraham I take this to be spoken by a kind of concession Notwithstāding in y e mean season he derideth their foolishnes because they boast of a friuolous title as if he should say admit I graunt you that wherein you do so much flatter your selues Yet what doth it profit those to bee called y e seed of Abrahā who rage against god his ministers who being moued with an vngodly wicked hatred of the truth are carried headlong to shed innocēt blood wherupō it foloweth that they are nothing lesse thē that which they wil be called because they are in no point like vnto Abrahā You seeke to kyll me VVhen he saith y t they seek to put him to death because his word hath no place in thē his meaning is that they are not simply māslears but that they are enforced vnto suche madnes with the hatred of god his truth which is far more cruel For the iniurie doth not thē keep it self within the cōpasse of mē but it doth also dishonour God Hee saith that they cānot receiue his word because their minds are ful fraught with malice so that they cā admit no sound thing 38 That which I haue seen with my father He had oftentimes alreadie made mētiō of his father Now he gathereth by an argument drawen frō contraries that they are both the enemies of God children of the Diuell that resist his doctrine I do only saith he speake that which I haue heard of my father therfore how commeth it to passe that the word of GOD doth so nettle you saue only bicause you haue the father set against you He saith that he speaketh and they doe because he did take vppon him the office of a teacher they did furiously endeuour to extinguish his doctrine Neuerthelesse he setteth his Gospel fre from contempt because it is no maruell if the children of the Diuell doe resist it Some doe translate it doe yee as if Christ did say goe too shew your selues to be the children of the Diuell in resisting me For I do only speake according to the prescript of God 39 They aunswered and saide vnto him Abraham is our father Iesus saieth vnto them If you were the children of Abraham yee woulde doe the workes of Abraham 40 And now yee seeke to kill me a man that haue spoken the truth vnto you which I haue heard of God Abraham did not this 41 You doe the workes of your father Therfore they said vnto him we are not begotten of fornication we haue one father which is God 42 Iesus said vnto them If GOD were your father you woulde loue mee for I came out from God and came neither came I of my selfe but hee sent me 39 Our father Abraham This chiding doeth plainely declare howe proudly and cruelly they despised all Christ his chidinges They challendge this to themselues continually that they are the children of Abraham and not only in that sense because they had Abraham his progenie for their progenitours but because they are an holy kinred gods inheritance the childrē of god Notwithstāding they leane only vnto the confidence of the flesh But the fleshly stocke is nothing els but a meere visure without faith Now we vnderstande what did so blinde them that they tossed Christ to and fro being euen armed with a
declareth that he is too desirous of Christes carnall presence For he counteth it an absurd thing that he should stay behinde when Christe went vnto some other place VVhither I goe Christe brideleth in these wordes the immoderate desire of Peter And hee speaketh precisely and sharpely as becommeth a master yet doth he tamper anon the sharpnesse of the saying Hee teacheth that this shall be but for a time that he shall bee separated from his and in this place are we taught to make our desires subiect vnto god that they passe not their boundes and if they doe at any time leape ouer let vs at least suffer them to be brought backe with this bridle And least we be discouraged let that consolation whiche is added immediately helpe vs when as Christe promiseth that it shall once come to passe that wee shall bee gathered vnto hym For his meanynge is that PETER is not yet rype enoughe to beare the Crosse but that he is as yet like corne in the blade yet must he be formed and strengthened in tract of time that he may follow VVherefore we must pray God that hee will encrease that in vs dayly which he hath begunne in vs. And in the meane while we must creepe vntill we shal be better able to runne Now as Christe beareth with vs whilest we are as yet soft and tender so let vs learne not to cast away our weake brethren who are as yet farre from the marke It is to be desired that all men may run with great feruentnesse and all men must be encouraged likewise but if any goe slowly so they hold way we must hope well 37 VVhy cannot I follow thee now Peter declareth in these words that he tooke Christ his answere heauenly Hee perceiueth that he was admonished of his owne infirmitie whereby he gathereth that his owne vice hindered him that hee cannot follow Christ forthwith yet hee is not persuaded of this For men are puffed vp by nature with a confidence and trust which they repose in their owne vertue and power Therefore these wordes of Peter declare what opinion we haue naturally of our selues to wit that we attribute more then wee ought vnto our owne strength Hereby it commeth to passe that they dare take in hande any thing without crauing Gods ayd who notwithstanding are able to doe nothing of themselues 38 VVilt thou lay downe thy life for my sake Christ would not contende with Peter but woulde haue him to waxe wise through his owne experience like fooles who are neuer wise vntill they haue caught harme Peter promiseth inuincible constancie Matth. 26. 33. 34. 35. and speaketh according to the sincere meaning of his minde but confidence is full of rashnesse because it considereth not what is graunted vnto it And because the example appertaineth vnto vs let euery man learn to examine his wants imperfections least he be puffed vp with vaine confidence VVe cannot be too much perswaded of the grace of God but the carelesse presumption of the flesh is reprehended in this place seeing that faith doth rather beget feare and carefulnes The cocke shall not crow Because boldnesse and rashnesse doe proceede frō the not knowing of our selues Peter is reproued because he is a stout souldier without the battaile where there is no daunger because hauing not tryed his strength as yet he thinketh that he is able to do somthing He was punished for his arrogancie as he deserued let vs mistrusting our owne strength learne to flie vnto the Lorde betimes that hee may vnderproppe vs with his power Chap. 14. 1 LEt not your hearte bee troubled you beleeue in GGD beleeue also in mee 2 In my fathers house there are many mansions and if there were not I had tolde you I goe to prepare you a place 3 And if I shall goe I will prepare you a place I will returne againe and will take you vnto me that where I am you may be also 4 And whither I goe you know and the way you know 5 Thomas saith vnto him Lorde we know not whither thou goest and howe can wee know the way 6 Iesus saith vnto him I am the way and the truth and the life No man commeth vnto the father but by me 7 If you had knowen mee you had knowen my father also and from this time you know him and haue seene him 1 Let not your heart bee troubled It is not without good cause that Christe confirmeth his disciples with so many wordes for whom there was such an hard and fearefull combate prepared For doubtlesse this was no small tryall that they shoulde shortly after see him hanging vpō the crosse in which sight there was nothing els but matter of extreeme dispaire Therfore seeing y t the time houre of so great perturbatiō was at hand he sheweth a remedie least being ouercom they should fal down flat Neither doth he encourage them only by exhorting them but teacheth them also whence they must fet strength to wit from faith whō they acknowledge him to be the sonne of God which hath strength enough in himselfe to defend the saluation of his VVe must alwayes marke the circumstance of the time that Christ would haue his Disciples to stand stoutly and valiantly when as all things might seeme to go hande ouer head Therefore wee must also apply vnto our selues this buckler to beare such bruntes It cannot be but that we shall feele diuers motions but we must be so striken that we fall not Therefore the faithfull are said not to be troubled because they leane vnto the word of God although they be brought into great straites yet they stand strong and vpright Yee beleeue in God It may also be read in the imparatiue mode Beleeue in God and beleeue in mee yet the former reading agreeth the better and is more vsuall And heere is shewed the way to stand as wee haue alreadie said namely if our faith doe leane vnto Christe and beholde him euen as if he were present and did helpe vs with his out-stretched hand But it is a maruell why faith in the father is placed in the former place For he shoulde rather haue saide vnto his disciples that they should beleeue in god after y t they had beleeued in Christ because as Christ is the expres image of his father so we must first cast our eyes vpon him for this cause came he down vnto vs that our faith myght begin at him and then goe vp vnto the father but Christe had respect vnto another thing For all men confesse that we must beleeue in God and this is a sure axioma whereunto all men subscribe without any more adoe yet is there scarse one amongest an hundreth that beleeueth indeede both because the bare Maiestie of God is too farre distant from vs and also because Satan casteth all manner of cloudes and mystes before our eyes which can keepe vs from beholding God VVhereby it commeth to passe that when our faith seeketh God in
is profitable to be knowen It was requisite that Thomas his curiositie should bee brideled therfore Christ disputeth not in what estate he shal be with the father but he stādeth vpō a more necessarie point Thomas would willingly haue heard what Christ would do in heauē likeas we are sometimes wearied with those curious speculatiōs But it is more meet for vs to be occupied about som other matter to witte how we may be partakers of the blessed resurrection Furthermore the summe of this sētence is that whosoeuer enioyeth Christe hee wanteth nothing and that for this cause he striueth to goe beyond the farthest perfection whosoeuer is not content with him alone He setteth downe three degrees as if hee did say that he is the beginning the middle and the ende VVhereupon it followeth that we must beginne at him we must goe forward in him and in him must we end VVe neede not to desire any higher wisdome then that which can leade vs vnto eternall life he testifieth that this wisdome is found in him Now the way to obtaine lyfe is that we become new creatures he affirmeth also that this thing must be sought no where els saue only in him he telleth vs furthermore that he is the way wherby alone we may come thither Therefore least he fayle vs in any poynt he giueth vs his hande when we go astray and he humbleth himselfe so farre that he directeth euen sucking children hauing professed himselfe to be a guide hee leaueth not his in the middest of the race but maketh them partakers of the trueth He maketh them reape the fruite thereof at length then whiche there can no better or more excellent thing be inuēted Seing that christ is the way there is no cause why the ignoraunt and weake should complaine that he hath forsaken them seeing that hee is the trueth and the life he hath also in himselfe that wherwith he is able to satisfie the most perfect Finally Christ speaketh that now of blessednes which I sayd of late touching the obiecte of faith All men doe rightly iudge and confesse that blessednes consisteth in God alone but they are deceiued afterward in this that whilest they seeke God else where then in Christ they pull him away after a sort from his true and perfect diuinitie Some mē do take trueth in this place for the sauing light of the heauēly wisdom othersom take it for the substance of life and of al spiritual good things which may be set against shadowes and figures as in the firste chapter grace and truth were made by Iesus Christ. I think y t trueth ought to be taken for the perfection of faith as way ought to be taken for the beeginning and first rudimentes The summe is this that if anye man turne aside from Christ he can do nothing but erre if any man stay not wholy vppon him he shal be fedde with nothing else but winde and vanity else where if any man go beyond him he shall finde death in steede of lyfe No man commeth vnto the father This is the exposition of the sentence nexte going before for hee is the way for this cause because he leadeth vs vnto the father he is the trueth and the life therfore because we apprehende and lay hold on the father in him This may be truely said concerning inuocation that no praiers are heard saue onelye through Christes ayde and assistance but because Christ intreate not in this place of prayer vnderstand simply that men do feigne vnto themselues meere labirinths so often as hauing left Christ they striue to come vnto God For Christ proueth that he is the life because wee possesse God in him alone with whō is the foūtaine of life VVherfore al diuinitie without Christ is not only confused and vaine but also foolish false and corrupt For although there proceede somtimes excellent speaches from the Pholosophers yet haue they nothing but that which is fraile and also entangled with peruerse errours 7. If you had knowne mee He confirmeth that which we haue already sayde that that curiositie is foolish and daungerous when as menne that are not content with him doe desire to come vnto God by bie wayes They confesse that there is nothing better then the knowledge of God but when as he is nigh vnto them and insinuateth himselfe familyarlye they wander through their owne speculations and seeke him aboue the cloudes whom they cannot afoarde to beholde being present Therefore Christ reprehendeth the Disciples beecause they doe not acknowledge that the fulnes of the godhead was reuealed vnto them in him I see saith he that you haue not known me hetherto rightly and lawfully beecause you know not as yet the liuely image of the father which is expressed in me And from this time Hee addeth this not onely that hee may myttigate the bytternesse of the reprehension but also that hee maye accuse them of vnthankefulnesse and sluggishnesse vnlesse they consider and weigh what is giuen him For this is spoken rather in commendation of his doctrine then that hee might extoll their fayth Therefore hys meaninge is this that they maye nowe beeholde GOD if sobeit they open their eyes In this woorde seene is expressed the certeintie of fayth 8. Philip saith vnto him Lord shew vs the father and it sufficeth vs. 9. Iesus saith vnto him am I so long with you and haue you not knowne me Philip he that hath seene me hath seene the father and how saiest thou shew vs the father 10. Beleeuest thou not that I am in the father and the father in me the words which I speake vnto you I speake them not of my selfe but the father which abideth in me hee doth the workes 11. Beleeue me that I am in the father and the father in me if not beleeue me for the workes sake 22. Verely verely I saye vnto you hee that beeleeueth in mee the woorkes whiche I doe hee shall also doe them and hee shall doe greater then these because I goe to my father 13. And that which ye shal aske in my name this wil I do that the father may bee glorified in the sonne 14. If you shal aske any thing in my name I wil do it 8. Shew vs the father It seemeth to be a very absurd thing that the Apostles do so interrupt the Lord now and then For to what end spak he saue onely that he might teach them that thing wherof Philip asketh enquireth yet is there no fault described in this place which is not common to vs aswel as to them VVe say that we seeke God earnestly when he standeth before vs we are blind 9. Am I so long with you Christ chideth Philip by good right because he had not the cleare eies of faith He had God present in Christ yet did he not behold him VVhat letted him saue onely his vnthankfulnes So at this day they profit litle in the Gospel who being not contente with Christ alone are carried into wandring
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