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A17662 The institution of Christian religion, vvrytten in Latine by maister Ihon Caluin, and translated into Englysh according to the authors last edition. Seen and allowed according to the order appointed in the Quenes maiesties iniunctions; Institutio Christianae religionis. English Calvin, Jean, 1509-1564.; Norton, Thomas, 1532-1584. 1561 (1561) STC 4415; ESTC S107154 1,331,886 1,044

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other sense thought our heart must be cleāsed of al desires al our strēgths must be gathered vp drawē together to this only purpose Thei which haue gone most far before other in the way of the Lord are yet very far from this marke For though they loue God with their minde and with sincere affection of heart yet they haue still a great part of their heart and soule possessed with the desires of the fleshe by which they are drawen back and stayed from goyng forward with hasty course to God They do in deede trauayle forward with great endeuor but the fleshe partly febleth their strengthes and partly draweth them to it self What shall they here do when they fele that thei do nothing lesse thā performe the law They wil thei couet they endeuor but nothing with such perfection as ought to be If they loke vpon the law they see that whatsoeuer worke they attēpt or purpose is accursed Neyther is there any cause why any man should deceiue himself with gathering that the worke is therefore not altogether euell bycause it is vnperfect and therfore that God doth neuerthelesse accept that good which is in it For the law requiring perfect loue condēneth al imperfectiō vnlesse y rigor of it be mitigated Therefore his workes should fal to nought which he wold haue to seme partly good he shal finde that it is a transgression of the law euen in this bicause it is vnperfect Loe how al our workes are subiect to the curse of the law if thei be measured by the rule of the law But how shold thē vnhappy soules cherefully applie thēselues to work for which thei might not trust that they colde get any thing but curse On the otherside if beyng deliuered frō this seuere exacting of the lawe or rather from the whole rigor of the lawe thei heare that they be called of God with fatherly gentlenesse thei wil merily with great cherefulnesse answer his calling folow his guiding In a summe they which are boūd to the yoke of the law ar like to vn̄dseruāts to whō are apointed by their lordes certain taskes of work for euery day These seruāts thinke that thei haue done nothing nor dare come into the sight of their lordes vnlesse they haue performed the ful taske of their workes But childrē which are more liberally more freemālike handled of their fathers stick not to present to them their begonne half vnperfect workes yea those hauing some fault trusting that they wil accept their obedience willingnesse of minde Although thei haue not exactly done so much as their good wil was to do So must we be as may haue sure affiāce that our obediēces shal be allowed of our most kinde father how little soeuer how rude vnperfect soeuer thei be As also he assureth to vs by the prophet I wil spare thē saith he as the father is wont to spare his sonne that serueth him Where this word Spare is set for to beare with al or gētly to winke at faultes forasmuch as he also maketh mention of seruice And this affiance is not a litle necessarie for vs without which we shall go about all thinges in vaine For God accompteth himselfe to be worshipped with no worke of ours but which is truely done of vs for the worshipping of him But how can that be done among these terrors where it is douted whether God be offended or worshipped with oure worke And that is the cause why the author of the Epistle to the Hebrues referreth all the good workes that are red of in the holy fathers to faith and weyeth thē only by fayth Touching this libertie there is a place in the Epistle to the Romaines where Paule resoneth that some oughte not to haue dominion ouer vs bicause we are not vnder the lawe but vnder grace For when he had exhorted the faithfull that sinne should not reygne in their mortal bodie and that they should not geue theyr members to be weapons of wickednesse to sinne but shoulde dedicate them selues to God as they that are alyue from the deade and theyr members weapons of righteousnes to God and whereas they might on the other side obiect that they do yet carry with them the fleshe full of lustes and that sinne dwelleth in them he adioyneth that comforte by the libertie of the law as if he shold say Though they doo not yet throughly fele sin destroyed the righteousnes yet liueth not in thē yet ther is no cause why they shold feare be discouraged as though they had ben alwaidispleased with thē for the remnantes of sin forasmuch as they ar by grace made free from the law that theyr workes shuld not be examined by the rule of the law As for them that gather that we may sinne because we ar not vnder the law let thē know that this libertie perteineth nothing to them the ende wherof is to encourage to God The third part is that we be bound with no conscience before God of outward thinges which are by them selues indifferent but that we may indifferently sometime vse thē and sometime leaue them vnused And the knowledge of this libertie also is very necessary for vs for if it shal be absent there shal be no quiet to our consciences no ende of superstitions Many at this daye do thinke vs fonde to moue disputation about the free eating of fleshe about the free vse of dayes and garmentes and suche other smale trifles as they in dede thinke them but there is more weight in them than is commonlye thoughte For when consciences haue ones cast thē selues into the snare they entre into a long and combersome waye from whence they can afterwarde finde no easy way to get oute If a man beginne to doubt whether he maye occupye linnen in shetes shertes hankercheifes and napkines neither wil he be out of doubt whether he may vse hempe and at the last he wil also fal in doubt of maters for he will waye with himselfe whether he can not suppe without napkins whether he maye not be without handkerchifes If any man thinke deyntye meate to be vnlawful at length he shal not with quietnesse before the Lorde eate either brounebreade or common meates when he remembreth that he may yet susteine his body with bacer fode If he doute of pleasaunte wyne afterwarde he will not drinke deade wine with good peace of conscience last of al he wyl not be so bolde to touche sweter and cleaner water than other Finally at the length he wil come to this point to thinke it vnlawfull as the common sayinge is to treade vppon a strawe lying a crosse For here is begonne no lyghte stryfe but this is in question whether God will haue vs to vse these or those thinges whose will ought to guide al our counsels and doynges Hereby some must needes be carried with desperatiō into a confuse deuouryng pit some must despising God and casting away
that they are by chaunse made differente from brute beastes But they pretende a cloke of nature whom they accompte the maker of al thinges and so doe conuey God awaye They see that exquysyte workemanship in al their members from their mouth and their eyes euen to the nailes of their toaes and yet here also they putte nature in place of god But specially the so swift motions the so excellent powers the so rare giftes of the soule do represent a diuine nature that doth not easily suffer it selfe to be hid vnlesse the Epicureans like the Gyauntes Cyclopes wold bearing themselues bolde vppon this hye degre outrageously make warre againste God Do the whole treasures of the heauenly wisedome so mete together to rule a worme of fiue fete long and shal the whole vniuersalitie of the world be wtout this prerogatiue Firste to agree that there is a certaine instrumentall thing that aunswereth to all the partes of man doth so serue nothing at al to obscure the honor of God that it rather doeth more gloriously set it out Let Epicure answer me what meting of vndiuisible bodyes boiling the meate and drinke in man doth dispose part into excrementes part into bloud and bringeth to passe that there is in al the members of man such an endeuorynge to do their offyce euē as if so many seueral soules did by cōmon aduise rule one body But I haue not nowe to doe with that ●●ye of swyne I rather speake vnto them that being geuen to suttelties would by croked conueiaunce wrythe that colde saying of Aristotle bothe to destroye the immortalitie of the soule and also to take from God hys ryghte For because there ar instrumental powers of the soule by pretense thereof they bynde the soule to the bodye that it cannot continue without the bodye and with praises of nature they doo as much as in them is suppresse the name of God But the powers of the soule are farre from beeinge enclosed in those exercises that serue the body For what pertayneth to the body for a man to measure the skye to gather the number of the starres to lerne the greatenes of euery one to knowe what space they be distante one from an other with what swiftnes or slownesse they goe their courses how many degrees they decline this way or that way I graūt in dede that there is some vse of Astrologie but my meanyng is onely to shewe that in this so depe serching out of heauenly thyngs it is not an instrumental measuring but that the soule hath her offices by it selfe seuerall from the body I haue shewed one example by whiche it shal be easy for the readers to gather the reste Truely the manyfolde nimblenes of the soule by which it surueieth bothe heauen and earthe ioyneth thynges past with things to come kepeth in memory thinges heard long before and expresseth eche thing to it selfe by imaginacion also the ingeniousnesse by which it inuenteth thinges incredible and which is the mother of so many maruelons artes are sure tokens of diuine nature in man Beside that euen in slepyng it doeth not onely rolle and tourne it self but also conceiueth many thinges profytable reasoneth of many thynges also prophecieth of thyngs to come What shal we in this case say but that the signes of immortalitie that are emprinted in man cannot be blotted out Now what reason may beare that man shal be of diuine nature and not acknowledge his Creator Shall we forsoth by iudgement that is put into vs discerne betwene right and wronge and shall there be no iudge in heauen Shall we euen in our slepe haue abiding with vs some remnant of vnderstandyng and shall no God be waking in gouernyng the worlde Shall we be so compted the inuenters of so many artes and profitable thynges that God shal be defrauded of his praise where as yet experience sufficiently teacheth that from an other and not from our selues all that we haue is in diuerse wise distributed amonge vs As for that which some do babble of the secrete inspiracion that geueth lyuelines to the worlde it is not onely weake but also vngodly They lyke well that famous saying of Uergile Fyrst heauen and earth and flovvyng fieldes of seas The shinyng globe of Moone and Ti●ans starres Sprite fedes vvithin and throughout all the lymmes Infused mynde the vvhole huge masse dooth moue And vvith the large bigge body mixe it selfe Thense come the kyndes of men and eke of beastes And lyues of fliyng foules and monsters straunge That vvater beares vvithin the marble sea A fyry lyuelynesse and heauenly race there is VVithin those seedes c. Forsothe that the world which was created for a spectacle of the glory of God shuld be the creator of it selfe So in an other place the same author folowyng the common opinion of the Greekes and Latynes sayeth Some say that bees haue part of mynde diuine And heauenly draughtes For eke they say that God Gothe through the coastes of lande and crekes of sea And through depe skye And hense the flockes and heardes And men and all the kyndes of sauage beastes Eche at their byrthe receyue theyr suttle lyues And therto are they rendred all at laste And all resolued are retournde agayne Ne place there is for deathe but lyuely they Flye into nombre of the Starres aboue And take their place vvithin the lofty skye Loe what that hungry speculacion of the vniuersall minde that geueth soule and liuelines to the world auaileth to engender and nourishe godlines in the hartes of men Whiche doeth also better appeare by the blasphemous sayings of the filthy dogge Lucretius which are deriued from the same principle Euen thys is it to make a shadowishe God to driue farre away the true God whome we ought to feare and worshyp I graunt in dede that this may be godlily sayed so that it procede from a godly minde that nature is God but because it is a hard and an vnproper maner of speche forasmuch as nature is rather an order prebed by God therfore in thynges of so great weight and to which is due a singular religiousnes it is hurtfull to wrapp vp God confusely with the inferior course of his workes Let vs therefore remember so ofte as any man considereth his owne nature that there is one God which so gouerneth al natures that his wil is to haue vs to loke vnto hym our fayth to be directed to hym and hym to bee worshypped and called vpon of vs because there is nothing more agaynst conuenience of reason thā for vs to enioy those excellent gyftes that sauoure of diuine nature in vs and to despise the authoure that freely doeth geue theym vnto vs. Nowe as concernynge his power with howe notable examples dothe it forceably drawe vs to consider it vnlesse perhappes we may be ignoraunt of howe great a strengthe it is with his onely woorde to vpholde this infinite masse of heauen and earth with his onely becke
worke of the same grace In the meane time we denie not that it is very true that Augustine teacheth that will is not destroyed by grace but rather repayred For bothe these thinges doe stand very well together that mens will be sayd to be restored when the faultinesse and peruersenesse thereof beyng reformed it is directed to the true rule of iustice and also that a newe will be sayde to be created in manne for asmuch as it is so defiled and corrupted that it needeth vtterly to put on a newe nature Nowe is there no cause to the contrarie but that we maye well be sayde to doe the same thyng that the spirit of God doth in vs although our owne will do of it self geue vs toward it nothing at all that may be seuered from his grace And therefore we muste kepe that in minde which we haue els where alledged out of Augustine that some do in vayne trauayle to finde in the will of manne some good thinge that is proprely her owne For what so euer mixture men studie to brynge from the strength of free will to the grace of God it is nothing but a corruptyng of it as if a manne would delay wine with dirty and bitter water But although what so euer good is in the will of manne it procedeth from the mere instincte of the holy ghoste yet bicause it is naturally planted in vs to will it is not whythout cause sayd that we do those thinges whereof God chalengeth the prayse to him selfe Firste bycause it is oures what so euer by his goodnesse he worketh in vs so that we vnderstand it to be not of our selues and then bycause the minde is oures the will is oures the endeuour is oures whiche are by him directed to good Those other testimonies biside these that they scrape togither here there shal not much trouble euen meane whittes that haue wel conceiued only the solutions aboue sayd They allege that sayeng out of Genesis Thine appetite shal be vnder thee and thou shalt beare rule ouer it Whiche they expound of sinne as yf the Lord did promise to Cain that the force of sinne shoulde not get the vpper hande in his minde yf he would labour in subduyng of it But we saye that it better agreeth with the order of the text that this be taken to be spoken of Abel For there Gods purpose was to reproue the wickednesse of the enuie that Cain had conceyued against his brother And that he doth two wayes One that in vayne he imagined mischiefe to excell his brother in Gods sight before whome no honour is geuen but vnto righteousnesse the other that he was to much vnthākful for the benefite of God which he had alredy receyued which could not abide his brother although he had him subiect vnder his authoritie But lest we shoulde seme therefore to embrace this exposition bicause the other is agaynst vs let vs admitte that God spake of sinne If it be so then God eyther promiseth or commaundeth that whiche he there declareth If he commaundeth then haue we alredy shewed that thereby foloweth no proofe of the power of manne If he promiseth where is the fulfillyng of the promise for Cain became subiecte to sinne ouer whiche he should haue had dominion They will saye that in the promise was included a secrete condition as yf it had ben sayd that he should haue the victorie yf he would stryue for it But who will receyue these croked compasses For yf this dominion be meante of sinne then no man can doubte that it is spoken by way of cōmmaundement wherein is not determined what we are able to doe but what we ought to doe yea though it be aboue our power Albeit bothe the matter it selfe and the order of Grammer doe require that there be a comparison made of Cain and Abel bicause the elder brother should not haue ben set behinde the younger vnlesse he had become worse by his owne wicked doyng They vse also the testimonie of the Apostle whiche sayth that it is not of him that willeth nor of him that runneth but of God that hath mercie Whereby they gather that there is somewhat in mans will and endeuour whiche of it selfe though it be weake beyng holpen by the mercie of God is not without prosperous successe But if they did soberly weye what matter Paule there entreteth of they woulde not so vnaduisedly abuse this sentence I know that they may bryng forth Origen and Hierome for mainteiners of their expositiō and I could on the other side set Augustine against thē But what thei haue thought it maketh no mater to vs if we know what Paule meante There he teacheth that saluation is prepared only for thē to whō the lord vouchsaueth to graūt his mercie that ruine destructiō is prepared for al those that he hath not chosen He had vnder the example of Pharao declared the state of the reprobrate and had also cōfirmed the assurednesse of free election by the testimonie of Moses I will haue mercie vpon whome I will haue mercie Nowe he concludeth that it is not of him thath willeth or him that runneth but of God that hath mercie If it be thus vnderstanded that will or endeuour ar not sufficient bicause they are to weake for so great a weight that whiche Paule sayth had not ben aptly spoken Therfore awaye with these suttelties to saye It is not of him that willeth nor of him that runneth therfore there is some wil there is some rūning For Paules meaning is more simply thus It is not will it is not runnyng that get vs the waye to saluation herein is only the mercie of God For he speaketh no otherwise in this place than he doth to Titus where he writeth that the goodnesse and kindenesse of God appereh not by the workes of righteousnesse whiche we haue done but for his infinite mercie Thei thēselues that make this argument that Paul meant that there is some will some rūning bicause he saide that is not of him that willeth nor of him that runneth would not geue me leaue to reason after the same fashion that we haue done some good workes bicause Paule sayeth that we haue not atteined the goodnesse of God by the good workes that we haue done If they see a fault in this argumēt let them open their eyes and they shal perceiue that their owne is not without the like deceite For that is a sure reason that Augustine resteth vpon If it were therefore sayd that it is not of him that willeth nor of him that runneth bicause neyther the will nor the runnyng is sufficient Then it maye be turned on the contrarie parte that it is not of the mercie of God bycause it alone worketh not Sithe this seconde is an absurditie Augustine doth rightfully conclude that this is spoken to this meanyng that there is no good will of man vnlesse it be prepared of the Lord not but that
our owne vnderstandinges do of themselues imagine but such a one as he is painted out in the Scripture with whose brightnesse the starres shal be darkened by whose strength the hilles do melt away by whose wrath the earth is shakē by whose wisedome the wise are takē in their sutteltie by whose purenesse all thinges are proued vnpure whose righteousnesse the Angels are not able to beare whiche maketh the innocent not innocent whole vengeance when it is ones kindled pearceth to the bottome of hel If he I saye sit to examine mens doynges whoe shall appere assured before his throne whoe shall dwell with a deuouryng f●er sayth the Prophet Whoe shall abide with continuall burninges he that walketh in righteousnesses speaketh truth c. But let suche a one come forth what so euer he be But that answer maketh that none cōmeth forth For this terrible sayeng soundeth to the cōtrarie Lord if thou marke iniquities Lord who shal abide it truely all must needes immediatly perish as it is writtē in an other place Shall man be iustified if he be compared with God or shall he be purer than his maker Beholde they that serue him are not faythfull and he hath found peruersnesse in his Angels How much more shall they that dwell in houses of ●●aye that haue an earthly fundation be consumed with mothes th●y shal be cut downe from the mornyng to the euenyng Beholde among his Saintes there is none faythfull and the heauens are not ●●ane in his sight how much more is man abhominable and vnpro●●table whiche drinketh iniquitie as water I graunt in deede that in the booke of Iob is mention made of a righteousnesse that is hyer than the kepyng of the lawe And it is good to vnderstande this distinction bicause although a manne did satisfie the lawe yet he could not so stand to the triall of that righteousnesse that passeth all senses Therefore although Iob be cleare in his owne conscience yet he is amased and not able to speake bicause he seeth that very angelike holinesse can not appease God if he exactly weye their workes But I therfore wil at this time ouerpasse that righteousnesse which I haue spoken of bicause it is incomprehensible but only this I saye that yf our life be examined by the rule of the written lawe we are more than senslesse if so many curses wherewith the Lorde hath willed vs to be awaked do not torment vs with horrible feare and among other this general curse Cursed is euery one that doth not abide in al the thinges that are written in this boke Finally al this discourse shal be but vnsauorie and colde vnlesse euery mā yelde himself gilty before the heauenly iudge and willingly throwe downe and abace himselfe beyng carefull how he may be acquited To this to this I say we should haue lifted vp our eyes to learne rather to tremble for feare thā vainely to reioyse It is in deede easy so long as the cōparison extendeth no further than men for euery mā to thinke himself to haue somwhat which other ought not to despise But when we rise vp to haue respect vnto God then sodenly that cōfidence falleth to the ground and commeth to nought And in the same case altogether is our soule in respect of God as mans body is in respect of the heauen For the sight of the eye so long as it cōtinueth in vewyng things that lie nere vnto it doth shew of what pearcing force it is but if it be ones directed vp to the sunne then bryng daseled and dulled with the to great brightnesse therof it feleth no lesse feblenesse of it self in beholding of the sunne than it perceiued strength in beholdyng inferiour thinges Therfore let vs not deceyue our selues with vayne confidence although we compt our selues eyther egal or superiour to other menne but that is nothyng to God by whose will this knowlege is to be tried But if our wildenesse can not be tamed with these admonitions he will answer to vs as he sayd to the Pharisees you be they that iustifie your selues before men but that which is hie to men is abhominable to God Now goe thy way and proudely boste of thy righteousnesse among men while God from heauen abhorreth it But what say the seruantes of God that are truely instructed with his Spirit Entre not into iudgement with thy seruant because euery liuing mā shal not be iustified in thy sight An other sayth although in somwhat diuerse meanyng Man can not be righteous with God if he will comende with him he shall not be able to answer one for a thousand Here we nowe playnely heare what is the righteousnesse of God euen such as can be satisfied with no workes of men to whom when it examineth vs of a thousand offenses we can not purge our selues of one Such a righteousnesse had that same chosen instrumēt of God Paule conceyued when he professed that he knewe himselfe gilty in nothyng but that he was not thereby iustified And not only such examples are in the holy Scriptures but also all godly writers do shewe that they were alwaye of this minde So Augustine sayth All the godly that grone vnder this burden of corruptible flesh and in this weakenesse of life haue this only hope that we haue one mediatour Iesus Christ the righteous and he is the appeasement for our sinnes What sayth he If this be their only hope where is the confidence of workes For whē he calleth it only he leaueth none other And Bernard sayth And in deede where is safe and stedfast rest and assurednesse for the weake but in the woundes of the Sauiour and so much the surer I dwell therein as he is mightier to saue The world rageth the body burdeneth the deuel lieth in waite I fall not bicause I am bulded vpon the sure rocke I haue sinned a greuous sinne my conscience is troubled but it shall not be ouertrobled bicause I shall remember the woundes of the Lord. And hereupon afterward he concludeth Therefore my merite is the Lordes takyng of mercie I am not vtterly without merite so longe as he is not without mercies But if the mercies of the Lord be many then I also haue as many merites Shal I sing mine owne righteousnesses Lord I will remember only thy righteousnesse For that is also my righteousnesse for he is made vnto me righteousnesse of God Againe in an other place This is the whole merite of man if he put his whole hope in him that saueth whole man Likewise where reteyning peace to him self he leaueth the glorie to God To thee sayth he let glorie remaine vnminished it shal be well with me if I haue peace I forswere glorie altogether least if I wrongfully take vpon me that whiche is not mine owne I lose also that whiche is offred me And more plainely in an other place he sayth Why should the church be careful of merites
lyes of Satan and hys kyngdome may vanish away be destroyed and perish he defendeth them that be his with the helpe of hys Spirite directeth them to vprightnesse and strengtheneth them to cōtinuance but ouerthroweth the wicked cōspiracies of hys enemies shaketh abrode their treasons and deceites preuenteth their malice and beateth downe their stubbornnesse til at length he kill Antichrist with the Spirite of hys mouth and destroy all vngodlinesse with the brightnesse of his comming The third petition is That the wil of God be done in earth as it is in heauen Which although it hangeth vpon his kingdome and can not be seuered from it is not in vaine added seuerally for our grossnesse whiche doth not easily or by and by conceiue what it is that God reigne in the world It shal therfore be no absurditie if this be taken by waye of plainer exposition that God shal then be king in the world when al things shal submitt themselues to his will Now here is not meant of hys secret will wherby he gouerneth al thinges and directeth them to their ende For though Satan and men are troblesomly caried againste him yet he can by hys incomprehensible counsell not only turne aside their violent motions but also driue them into order that he may do by them that which he hath purposed But here is spokē of an other wil of God namely that whereunto answereth willing obedience and therefore the heauen is by name compared with the earth because the Angells as it is sayd in the Psalme do willingly obey God and are diligently bent to do his commaundements We are therfore cōmaunded to wish that as in heauen nothing is done but by the becke of God and the Angels are quietly framed to al vprightnesse so the earth al stubbornnesse and peruersenesse being quenched may be subiect to such gouernemēt And when we require this we renounce the desires of our owne fleshe because whosoeuer doth not resigne and yelde his affections to God he doth as much as in hym lyeth set himself against him forasmuch as nothing cometh out of vs but faulty And we are againe by thys prayer framed to the forsaking of our selues that God may gouerne vs after his wil and not that only but that he may also create in vs new mindes and new hartes our olde being brought to nought that we may fele in our selues none other motion of desire than a mere cōsent with his wil summarily that we may wil nothing of our selues but that his Spirite may gouerne our hartes by whō inwardly teaching vs we may learne to loue those thinges that please hym and to hate those thinges that displease him Wherupon this also foloweth that whatsoeuer affections fyght against his wil he may make them vaine and voide Loe here be the first three chefe pointes of thys prayer in asking wherof we oughte to haue the onely glorie of God before our eyes leauing the respect of our selues and hauing no regarde to any of our owne profit whiche although it come hereof largely vnto vs yet we ought not here to seke it But albeit al these thinges though we neither thinke of them nor wish them nor aske them must neuerthelesse come to passe in their due time yet we must wishe them and require them And thys to doe is no smal profit for our trauaill that we may so testifie and professe our selues to be the seruantes and childrē of God as much as in vs lyeth endeuoring and being truely and throughly geuen to set fourth hys honor which is due to hym being bothe a Lord and a Father Whoso therefore doe not with affection and zele of auauncing the glorie of God pray that the name of God be hallowed that hys kyngdome come that hys wyll be done they are not to be accompted among the childrē and seruantes of God and as all these thinges shal be done agaynst their willes so they shal turne to their confusion and destruction Now foloweth the seconde part of the prayer in which we come down to our own commodities not that bidding farewel to the glorie of God which as Paul witnesseth is to be regarded euen in meate and drink we shold seke only what is profitable for our selues but we haue alredy geuen warning that there is thys difference that God peculiarly claiming three petitions to hymselfe doth draw vs to hymselfe wholly that he may in thys wise proue our godlinesse Then he graunteth vs also to haue an eye to our own commodities but with this condition that we aske nothīg for our selues but to this ende that whatsoeuer benefites he bestoweth vpō vs they may set fourth his glorie forasmuche as nothing is more rightfull than that we lyue and dye to hym But in thys petition we aske of God generally al thinges whiche the vse of the body nedeth vnder the elementes of this world not only wherwith we may be fed and clothed but also whatsoeuer he foreseeth to be profitable for vs that we may eate our bred in peace By which prayer brefely we yelde our selues into his care and commit vs to his prouidence that he may fede cherishe and preserue vs. For the most good Father disdayneth not to receiue also our body into hys faythfull sauegarde and keping to exercise our Fayth in these smal thinges when we loke for all thinges at hys handes euen to a crumme of bred and a droppe of water For wheras it is come to passe I wote not how by our iniquitie that we be moued and vexed with greater care of the fleshe than of the soule many which dare trust to God for their soule are yet carefull for their fleshe are yet in doute what they shall eate and wherewith they shal be clothed and if they haue not plenty of wyne wheate and oyle aforehande they tremble for feare So muche more do we esteme the shadow of this lyfe which lasteth but a moment than that euerlasting immortalitie But whoso trusting to God haue ones cast away y● carefulnesse for the prouision of the fleshe do also by and by loke for saluatiō and euerlasting lyfe at hys hand which are greater things It is therfore no smal exercise of Fayth to hope for those thinges of God whiche otherwise do so much holde vs in care and we haue not smally profited when we haue put of thys vnbeleuingnesse whiche s●●cketh fall within the bones almost of all men As for that whiche some doe here teache of transubstantiall bred it semeth but smally to agree with the meaning of Christ yea but if we did not euen in thys frayle lyfe geue to God the office of a nourishing Father our prayer should be vnperfect The reason whiche they bryng is to muche profane that it is not mete that the children of God which ought to be spiritual should not only cast their minde to earthly cares but also wrappe God therin with them As though his blessing fatherly fauor doth not also appeare in y● sustenāce
we haue sayd that we shall rise againe in the same fleshe whiche we beare as touchyng the substance but the qualitie shal be other As when the same flesh of Christ whiche had ben offred for sacrifice was raysed vp againe yet it excelled in other qualities as yf it had ben altogether an other flesh Which thing Paule declareth by familiar examples For as there is all one substance of the fleshe of a man and of a beast but not al one qualitie as all starres haue like matter but not like brightnesse so he teacheth that though we shal kepe stil the substance of our body yet there shal be a change that the state of it may be muche more excellent The body therefore that we maye be raysed vp agayne shal not perish nor vanish awaye but puttyng of corruption it shal put on vncorruption But for asmuch as God hath al the elementes ready at his becke no hardinesse shall hinder him but that he may commaund both the earth waters fier to rēder that which semeth to be cōsumed by them Which also Esay testifieth though not without a figure where he sayth Beholde the Lord shal goe forth of his place that he maye visit the iniquitie of the earth and the earth shall discouer her bloud and shal no more hide her dead But there is to be noted a difference betwene them that haue ben dead long before and those whō that daye shall finde aliue For we shall not all slepe as Paul sayth but we shall all be changed that is to saye it shall not be of necessitie that there be a distance of time betwene death and the beginnyng of the seconde life bycause in a moment of time and in the twyncling of an eye the sound of the trompet shall pearce to rayse vp the dead vncorruptible and with a sodeyne change to fashion agayne the liuing into the same glorie So in an other place he comforteth the faythful whiche muste die bycause they whiche shall then remayne aliue shal not goe before the dead but rather they shall first rise agayne whiche haue slept in Christ. If any obiect that sayeng of the Apostle that it is apointed to all mortalll menne ones to dye it is easy to answere it with sayeng that when the state of nature is changed it is a kinde of death and is fittly so called And therefore these thinges agree wel together that all shal be renewed by death when they shall put of their mortall bodie and yet that it is not necessarie that there be a seueryng of the bodie and the soule where there shal be a sodeyne changyng But here ariseth a harder question by what right the resurrection whyche is the singular benefit of Christe is common also to the wicked and the accursed of God We knowe that all were in Adam condemned to death Christ came the resurrection and lyfe Came he to geue life to all mankinde vniuersally without choyse But what is more agaynst reason than that they should by their obstinate blindenesse obteyne that which the godly worshippers of God do obteine by onely faith Yet this remaineth certaine that there shal be one resurrection of iudgement and an other resurrectiō of life and that Christ shall come to seuer the Lambes from the Goates I answer that this ought not to seme strange the likenesse whereof we see in dayly experience We see that in Adam we were depryued of the inheritance of the whole worlde and that we are by no lesse iuste reason debarred from common foode than from the eatyng of the tree of lyfe Whense then commeth it to passe that God doth not onely make his sunne to ryse vpon the good and euell but also as touchyng the vses of this present lyfe his inestimable liberalitie continually floweth forth to them with large plentuousnesse Hereby verily we knowe that those thinges whiche properly belong to Christ and his members doe also ouerflowe to the wicked not that it is their rightfull possession but that they maye be made the more inexcusable So the wicked do oftentimes finde God beneficiall by more than meane proues yea suche as somtime do darken all the blessinges of the Godly but yet do turne to their greater damnation If any man obiect that the resurrection is not fitly compared to fadynge and earthly benefites here also I answere that so sone as they were estranged from God the fountayne of life they deserued the death of the Deuell whereby they should be vtterly destroyed Yet by the maruelous counsell of God there was founde a meane state that out of lyfe they mighte liue in death No more absurditie ought it to seme yf the resurrection happen to the wicked whiche draweth them agaynst their willes to the iudgement seate of Christ whome nowe they refuse to heare for their mayster and teacher For it were a small peyne to be consumed awaye with death yf they were not to suffer punishment for their obstinacie broughte before the iudge whose vengeance they haue without ende and measure prouoked agaynst themselues But although we muste holde that whiche we haue sayd and whiche that notable confession Paule before Felix conteyneth that he loketh for the resurrection of the righteous and wicked yet the Scripture oftentimes setteth forth election together with the heauenly glorie to the only children of God Bicause Christ proprely came not to the destruction but to the saluation of the worlde Therefore in the Crede there is made mention of the blessed life only But for as much as the Prophecie of death swallowed vp by victorie shall then and not till then be fulfilled let vs alwaye haue in mynde the eternall felicitie the ende of the resurrection of the excellencie whereof yf all thinges were spoken whiche the tonges of men where able to speake yet scarcely the smallest parcell thereof should bee expressed For howe so euer we truely heare that the kyngdome of God shal be stuffed full with bryghtnesse ioye felicitie and glorie yet those thynges that are spoken of are moste farre remoued from our sense and remayne as it were wrapped in darke speaches vntill that daye come when he himselfe shall geue to vs his glorie to be seene face to face We know sayth Iohn that we are the chyldren of God but it hath not yet appered But when we shal be lyke to him then we shal see him such as he is Wherfore the Prophets bicause thei could by no wordes expresse the spiritual blessednesse in it self did in a manner grosly portray it out vnder bodily thinges But for as much as the feruentnesse of desire must with some tast of the swetenesse be kindled in vs let vs chefely cōtinue in this thought that if god do as a certaine fountaine which can not be drawen drie cōteyne in him the fulnesse of al good things nothing is beyōd him to be coueted of them that tend toward the soueraigne good and the
that Baptisme is nothing ells but a marke and token wherby we professe our religion before men as soldiars beare the conufance of their capitaine for a marke of their profession wey not that which was the chefe thing in Baptisme That is this that we shoulde receiue it with this promise that whosoeuer beleue and are Baptised shal be saued In this sense is that to be vnderstode which Paule writeth that the Chirch is sanctified of Christ her spouse and cleansed with washing of water in the worde of lyfe And in an other place that we are saued according to his mercy by the washing of regeneration and of the renewing of the Holy ghost And that which Peter writeth that Baptisme saueth vs. For Paules will was not to signifie that our washing and saluation is perfectly made by water or that water conteyneth in it self the power of cleanse regenerate and renew Neither did Peter meane the cause of saluation but only the knowlege certaintie of such giftes to be receiued in this Sacrament which is euidently enough expressed in the wordes themselues For Paul knitteth together the word of lyfe Baptisme of water as if he had sayd that by the Gospel the message of washing sanctifieng is brought vs that by Baptisme such message is sealed And Peter immediatly adioyneth that that Baptisme is not the putting away of the filthinesse of the flesh but a good cōscience before God which is of Fayth Yea Baptisme promiseth vs no other cleansing but by the sprinkling of the blood of Christ which is figured by water for the lykenesse of cleansing washing Who therefore can say that we be cleansed by thys water which certainly testifieth that the blood of Christ is oure true onely washing So that frō no where ells can be fetched a surer reason to confute their blinde error which referr al thinges to the power of the water thā from the signification of Baptisme it selfe which doth withdraw vs as wel from that visible element which is set before oure eies as from all other meanes that it may bynde our mindes to Christ alone Neither is it to be thought that Baptisme is applied only to the time past that for new fallinges into whiche we fall backe after Baptisme we must seke new remedies of clensing in I wote not what other Sacramentes as thoughe the force of Baptisme were worne out of vse By this error it came to passe in old time that some would not be Baptised but in the vttermost peril of life and at their laste gaspinges that so they might obteine pardon of their whole life Against whiche waywarde suttle prouision the olde Bishops so oft inuey in their writinges But thus we ought to thinke that at what time soeuer we be Baptised we are at ones washed and cleansed for al our life Therfore so ofte as we fal we must goe backe to the remembrance of Baptisme and therewith we must arme our minde that it may be alway certaine and assured of the forgeuenesse of sinnes For though when it is ones ministred it semeth to be past yet by later sinnes it is not abolished For the cleannesse of Christ is therin offred vs that alway florisheth is oppressed with no spottes but ouerwhelmeth wypeth away al our filthinesse yet oughte we not to take therof a libertie to sinne in tyme to come as verily we be not hereby armed to such boldnesse but this doctrine is geuen onely to them which when they haue sinned doe grone weryed and oppressed vnder their sinnes that they may haue wherwith thei may raise vp and comfort themselues least they should fal into confusion and desperatiō So Paule sayth that Christ was made to vs a propitiator vnto the forgeuenesse of faultes going before Wherin he denieth not that therin is obteined perpetual continual forgeuenesse of sinnes euē vnto death but he meaneth that it was geuē of the Father onely to poore synners which wounded with the searing iron of conscience to sighe to the Phisitian To these the mercy of God is offred They whiche by escaping of punishment do hunt for mater and libertie to sinne dooe nothing but prouoke to themselues the wrath and iugement of God I knowe in dede that it is commonly thought otherwise that by the benefite of repentance and of the keyes we do after Baptisme obteine forgeuenesse which at our first regeneration is geuen vs by only Baptisme But they which deuise this do erre herin that they do not remember that the power of the keyes wherof they speake doth so hang vpon Baptisme that it ought in no wise to be seuered The sinner receiueth forgeuenesse by the ministerie of the Chirch namely not without the preaching of the Gospell But what maner of preaching is that That we be cleansed from sinnes by the blood of Christ. But what signe and testimonie is there of that washing but Baptisme We se therfore how that absolution is referred to Baptisme And this error hath bredde vs the fayned Sacrament of Penance of which I haue touched somwhat before and the residue I wil make an ende of in place fit for it But it is no maruell if men which according to the grossenesse of their witt were immeasurably fast tyed to outwarde thynges haue in this behalfe also bewrayed that faulte that not contented with the pure institution of God they did thrust in newe helpes fayned of themselues As thoughe Baptisme it selfe were not a Sacrament of repentance But if repentance be commended to vs for our whole life the force also of Baptisme ought to be extended to the same boundes Wherfore it is also no doute but that all the godly throughout all their life long so oft as they be vexed with knowlege in conscience of their owne sinnes dare calle backe themselues to the remēbrance of Baptisme that therby they may confirme themselues in the affiance of that onely and continuall washing which we haue in the blood of Christ. It bringeth also an other fruit because it sheweth vs our mortificatiō in Christ and new life in hym For as the Apostle saith we are baptised into his death beyng buried together with hym into death that we may walke in newnesse of life By whiche wordes he doth not only exhort vs to the folowyng of hym as though he did saye that we are by Baptisme put in mynde that after a certaine example of the deathe of Christ we should die to our lustes and after the example of his resurrection we shold be raised vp to righteousnesse but he fetcheth the mater muche deper that is to say that by Baptisme Christ hath made vs partakers of his death that we may be graffed into it And as the graffe receiueth substāce and nourishmēt of the roote into which it is graffed so they that receiue Baptisme with such faith as thei ought do truly fele the effectualnesse of the death of Christ in the mortifiyng of their flesh and therwithall