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A17642 The commentaries of M. Iohn Caluin vpon the Actes of the Apostles, faithfully translated out of Latine into English for the great profite of our countrie-men, by Christopher Fetherstone student in diuinitie; Commentarii in Acta Apostolorum. English Calvin, Jean, 1509-1564.; Fetherston, Christopher. 1585 (1585) STC 4398; ESTC S107377 721,474 648

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in this hee doth according to his common custome For he testifieth euery where in the scriptures that the angels are ministers of his goodnes towards vs. Neither is that a vaine speculation For this is a profitable help for our infirmitie that wee knowe that not only god doth care for vs but also that the heauenly spirits do watch for our saftie Againe this was no small pledge of Gods loue towards vs that the creatures of al other most noble are appointed to haue regarde of our saftie The angel openeth the prison in the night because he wold not worke the myracle when the wicked might see him although hee would haue the same being wrought knowen by the euent it selfe 20 Speak in the Temple This is the end of their deliueraunce that they imploy themselues stoutly in preaching the Gospell and prouoke their enemies couragiously vntill they die valiantly For they were put to death at length when the hand of God ceased after that they had finished their course But now the Lord openeth the prison for them that they may be at libertie to fulfill their function That is worth the marking because we see many men who after they haue escaped out of persecution doe afterward keepe silence as if they had done their dutie towarde God and were no more to be troubled othersome also doe scape away by denying Christ But the Lorde doth deliuer his children not to the end they may cease off from the course which they haue begun but rather that they may be the more zealous afterward the apostles might haue obiected It is better to keepe silence for a time for as much as wee cannot speak one word without daunger We are now apprehended for one only sermon how much more shall the furie of our enemies bee inflamed heereafter if they shall see vs make no end of speaking But because they knew that they were to liue and to die to the Lord they doe not refuse to doe that which the Lord commanded So we must alwaies mark what fūction the Lord inioyneth vs. There will many things meete vs oftentimes which may discourage vs vnlesse being content with the commandement of God alone wee doe our duetie committing the successe to him The words of this life A singular commendation of the Gospell Rom. 1.17 that it is a liuely doctrine bringing saluation vnto men For the righteousnesse of God is reuealed vnto vs in it and in it Christ offereth himselfe vnto vs with the sacrifice of his death with the Spirite of regeneration with the earnest of our adoption And this is spoken expresly to the Apostles to the ende they may the more couragiously enter all manner cumbates for the Gospell forasmuch as they heare that they are ministers of eternal saluation The demonstratiue is added for the more certaintie as if the angel did point out life with his finger as assuredly wee need not to seek the same far when we haue the worde in our mouth in our hart vnles peraduenture some man had rather take it by hypallage the wordes of this life for these wordes which I do not reiect yet that former sense me thinks is better For it was a new reuelation of Christe wherein they had life present 21 And when the chief priest came The chiefe Priest calleth all the councell together now least if giuing the honour to his owne sect he omit others be not able to beare the burthen Therfore he is enforced by feare to cal the multitude together notwithstanding they obserue diligently and straitly the forme of law The elders are called who did gouerne that nothing may be done but according to the sentence and authoritie of the councel Who would not haue hoped for a moderate end seeing they began thus And surely they pretende what colour they can least they seeme to oppresse the truth violently and tyrannously But when they heare that the Apostles teache in the temple howesoeuer they know that they came not out by deceit of man but myraculouslye yet they hold on still in their purpose where appeareth togeather with the vngodlines of behauiour contempt of God horrible furie want of reason Therefore the beautifull colours of right and equitie do neuer so couer hypocrites but that they do at length bewray their wickednes They must needes certainly gather by all circumstaunces that it is the work of God that the prison was opened yet they do not dout openly to rage against god These things are also meet for our time We know how proudly the Papists boast of that maxime of theirs That lawfull councels must be obeied because they represent the church Moreouer they call those lawfull councels and they will haue them so accounted wherein nothing is wanting touching the externall fourme And such a councell was this whereof Luke speaketh in this place and yet notwithstanding we know that it was gathered to put out the name of Christe For although the priestes did then creep in vnto honor by subtiltie or by inordinate sute to winne the fauour of men or by other wicked policies or whether they burst in vnto the same by bribery or murther yet the dignitie of the priesthood did continue as yet vntill Christe was reuealed There was in the assembly of the elders a representing of the Churche but whereas the truth of God is not sought all outwarde appearance is nothing els but a meere visure Therefore it is in vaine for the Papistes to couer their abhominations with the shadowe of this buckler Because it is not sufficient for those to bee gathered together who are rulers of the Churche vnlesse they doe this in the name of Christ Otherwise for as muche as it is an vsuall policie of Satan to transfourme himselfe into an angell of light we will graunt him as fit a couert vnder the title of the Church as he can wish He brought them without violence 2. Cor. 11.14 Wee haue spoken somewhat before of the captaine of the Temple For I doe not thinke that it was lawfull for the Iewes to set and appoint whome they would to rule the temple but that the President of the Prouince did appoint one to haue the gouernment of the temple And hee saieth that they were brought without violence that is that they were not drawen violently least any tumult shoulde arise So that whereas they neither feare nor reuerence God they are afraide of men The Apostles also doe shew their modestie in that that whereas they are garded with a great number of men yet doe they suffer themselues to be led away by the officers least they shoulde be authours of any tumult 27 And when they had brought them they set them before the councel and the chief priest asked them 28 Saying Did not we in commaunding commaund you that you shoulde not teach in this name● And beholde yee haue filled Ierusalem with your doctrine and you will bring the blood of this man vpon vs. 28 The chiefe
this is Paul his meaning in summe If the grace bee eternall which God saieth hee will giue in his sonne the life of his sonne must be eternall and not subiect to corruption For wee must hold this rule that all the promises of God are in Christ yea and Amen 2. Cor. 1.20 and that therefore they can not be of any force vnlesse he do quicken them 35 Thou shalt not suffer thy holy one This place was likewise cited by Peter in the first sermon set downe by Luke in the second Chapt. where I expounded the same therefore let the readers repaire thither Acts. 2.27 Onely I will touch this briefly that Dauid putteth two Hebrew words for the graue as he vseth repetitions commonly the former whereof is deriued of desiring or lusting because the graue deuoureth all things as an vnsatiable gulfe the other of corruption according to this etymologie Dauids meaning is faithfully expressed in Greeke For the qualitie of the graue is noted when as it receiueth the corpes and doeth as it were swallow it vp that it may rot there and may at length perish when it is consumed Paul affirmeth that that belongeth to Christ alone that hee was free and saued from corruption For though his bodie was laide in graue corruption had notwithstanding no title to it seing that it laide there whole as in a bedde vntill the day of the resurrection 37 When Dauid had serued his time Least any man should thinke that that place entreateth of Dauid Paul sheweth briefely that this agreeth not to Dauid in all points whose corps was rotten in the graue Therefore it remaineth that because this was a priuiledge belonging to Christ alone that Dauid Prophecied of him in Spirite Neuertheles we must note the proportion betweene the members and the head for as the truth of this prophecie was found whole and perfect in Christ alone as in the head so it taketh place in all the members according to the measure and order of euerie man And for as much as Christ rose to this ende that hee may fashion and make our base bodie like to his glorious bodie vpon this condition do the godly go downe into the pit Phil. 3.21 that rottennes may not consume their bodies Therefore according to the hope of the resurrection to come Dauid saith by good right that he shall not see corruption for that ought not altogither to be counted corruption for which there is a better restoring prepared for the bodies of the faithfull corrupt to this end that they may put on blessed incorruption in their time Yet this is no let but that the estate of the head and members may be farre vnlike and that wee may follow the sonne of God a farre off and lasily Now we see that both things are true and fitlie said that Dauid and the rest of the faithfull in as much as they shall be like to their head shall not see corruption and yet the sonne of God alone shall be free from corruption wholly We must note the phrase when he saieth that Dauid serued his age or the men of his time The olde interpreter distinguisheth it otherwise and certein Greek copies agree therto to wit that Dauid serued the wil of God in his time Which reading though it be to be allowed yet it dooth not cause me to mislike the other For it is neither superfluous nor colde that he slept by the wil of God or the counsel of God because the meaning thereof is that God in the death of Dauid did not forget that prophecie as if he should saie that the bodie of Dauid laid in the graue not without the counsel or purpose of God vntil it should rise againe that the effect of the prophecie might be extended vnto Christ If no man mislike that which I saie we are taught heerby to what end men liue in the world to wit that one man maie help another For euerie man doth not liue neither is born for himselfe but mankinde is knit togither with an holie knot Therfore vnlesse we be disposed to ouerthrow the lawes of nature let vs remember that we must not liue for our selues but for our neighbours But heer maie a question be asked whether we ought not also to care for our posteritie I answer that the ministerie of the godlie is also profitable for the posteritie as we see that Dauid being dead doth profit vs more at this daie then a great part of those which liue with vs but Paul meaneth simplie that the faithful during their whole life employ themselues and their offices to help their neighbours and that death is vnto thē as a goale because they haue made an end then when the Lord calleth them out of the world The sum is that we must haue respect first to our time that we maie serue our brethren with whom and among whom we lead our life and secondlie we must do our indeuour that the fruit of our ministerie maie redound vnto our posteritie Seing that God prescribeth his seruants this law their rashnes cannot be excused who faigne that the dead praie for vs and that they doo no lesse serue the Church then whiles they liued By the counsel of God he fel on sleep Paul might haue said simplie that Dauid died he addeth by the counsel of God that we maie know that that was not fulfilled in the person of the Prophet which is read in the psalme Notwithstanding we are taught that the bond of life and death is in like sort appointed for vs by God as it is Psa 90.3 Thou sendest out men and makest them to passe ouer again thou saist Come again ye children of men Yea Plato setteth down this verie eloquentlie that it is meet that men passe out of the world not without the leaue and pleasure of God by whose hand they are placed there as a stāding for a time And for this cause whē he speaketh of Dauids death he maketh mention of the counsel of God that we maie know that corruptiō did not happen to him by chance as if God had forgotten his promise but that it came to passe by Gods prouidēce that the faithful might know that the prophecie was to be referred vnto another To sleep and to be laid vnto the Fathers are formes of speeches so wel knowen and so common that they need no exposition 38 Therefore be it knowen vnto you that through him remission of sins is promised to you 39 And from all thinges from which yee could not be iustified in the Lawe of Moses 40 Whosoeuer beleeueth in this man is iustified 41 Therefore take heed least that befall you which is said in the Prophets 42 Behold yee despicers and wonder and vanish away because I do a worke in your dayes a worke which yee shall not beleeue if a man tell it you 38 Therefore be it knowne vnto you After that he hath declared the meane whereby saluation is purchased through Christ he doth
but he thought that he saw a vision 10 And when they were past the first watche and the seconde they came to the yron gate which leadeth into the Citie which opened to them of it owne accord And when they were come out they passed through one streete and by and by the Angel departed from him 11 Then Peter returning to himselfe saide Nowe of a truth I knowe that the Lord hath sent his Angel and hath deliuered me out of the hand of Herod and from all the waiting of the people of the Iewes 6 When he was about to bring him forth It seemeth at the first blush that the Church praieth to small purpose for the day was now appointed wherein Peter should be put to death and he is within one night of death and yet the faithfull cease not to pray because they knowe that when the Lord doeth purpose to deliuer his hee taketh his time oftentimes in the last and farthest point of necessitie and that he hath in his hande diuerse wayes to deliuer Secondly we may thinke that they did not so much pray for Peters life as that the Lord would arme him with inuincible fortitude for the glory of the Gospel and that God would set the gospel of his son open to the reproches and slanders of the wicked That night he slept Al these circumstances do more set forth the wonderfull power of God for who would not haue thought that Peter was alreadie swallowed vp of death for though he drew breath as yet yet had he no chinch to creepe out at for as much as he was beset with many deathes Therefore whereas he escapeth from amidst deaths whereas hee goeth safely among the handes of his hangmen whereas the chaines are molten and are loosed whereas the yron gate openeth it selfe to him hereby it appeareth that it was a meere diuine kinde of deliuerance and it was profitable for Peter to bee thus taught by these signes that he might with more assurance forthwith declare vnto men the grace of God thus knowne Againe it appeareth by this straite keeping that Herod meant nothing lesse than to let Peter goe away aliue 7 A light shined It is to be thought that Peter alone sawe this light and that the soldiars did either sleepe so soundly or else were so amased that they neither felt nor perceiued any thing And there might be two causes why god would haue the light to shine either that Peter might haue the vse thereof and that the darkenesse might be no hindrance to him or that it might be to him a signe and token of the heauenly glorie For we reade oftentimes that the Angels appeared with glistering brightnesse euen when the Sun did shine Assuredly Peter might haue gathered by the strange light that God was present and also hee ought to haue made his profite thereof When as the Angell smiteth Peters side it appeereth hereby what a care God hath for his who watcheth ouer them when they sleepe and raiseth them when they are drousie And surely there were nothing more miserable than wee if the continuance of our prayers alone did keepe God in his watching ouer vs. For such is the infirmitie of our flesh that wee faint quaile we stand most of all in neede of his helpe when our mindes being drawne away do not seeke him Sleepe is a certaine image of death and doth chocke and drowne all the senses what should become of vs if God should then cease to haue respect to vs But forasmuch as when the faithfull goe to sleepe they commit their safetie to God it commeth to passe by this meanes that euen their sleepe doth call vpon God Whereas he saieth that immediatly after the Angel had said the word the chaines were losed we gather by this that there is power ynough in the commandement of God alone to remoue al maner lets when all waies seeme to be stopt on al sids so that if he intend to appease the motions and tumults of war although the whole world were appointed in armor their spears and swords shall forthwith fal out of their hands on the other side if he be determined to punish vs and our sinnes with war in a moment in the twinkling of an eye their minds which were before giuen to peace shal wax hot and they shall lay hand on their swords Whereas Luke setteth downe seuerally both the words of the Angel and also the course of the matter it serueth for the more certaintie of the historie that it may in euery respect appeare that Peter was deliuered by God 9 He knew not that it was true He did not think that it was a vaine or false visure as Satan doth oftentimes dilude men with iuglings but true is taken in this place for that which is done naturally and after the manner of men For we must note the contrarietie that is betweene the thing it selfe and the vision Furthermore though he thinke that it is a vision yet doth he willingly obey whereby his obedience is prooued whiles that being content with the commandement of the angel alone he doth not inquire nor reason what he must do but doth that which he is commanded to do 10 When they were past God was able to haue carried Peter away in the turning of an hand but he ouercommeth diuerse straits one after another that the glory of the miracle might be the greater So be created the world in sixe dayes Genes 1. not because he had any need of space of time but that he might the better stay vs in the meditating vppon his works for he applieth the manner of doing vnto our capacity and vnto the encrease of faith If Peter had at a sodain ben carried vnto the house where the brethren were assembled Exod. 20.11 then should one onely deliuerance haue ben acknowledged but now we see as it were with our eyes that he was deliuered more than ten times 11 Then Peter returning to himselfe It is word for word Being made in himselfe because being before astonied with a strange and vncredible thing he was as it were without himselfe But now at length as it were after a trance he knoweth that he is deliuered from death His words set downe by Luke containe a thanksgiuing For he extolleth with himselfe the benefit of God which he had tried and whereof he had tasted and he doth highly commend it with himselfe vntil he find some other witnesses He saith that the Angel was sent of God according to the common meaning of the godly who hold that the Angels are appointed to be ministers to be careful for and to take charge of their safetie For vnlesse he had bin thus perswaded he would not haue spoken of the Angel And yet he doth not commend the Angel as the autor of the grace● but he ascribeth al the whole praise of the worke to God alone Neither do the angels help vs to this end that they may deriue vnto themselues euen the
thinke because God by sending his sonne into the world did fulfill his promise made to his seruants in times past by the effect it selfe Like as in the second Psalme Though the Greeke bookes agree in the number yet we must not passe ouer that which Erasmus saith that many of the old writers read the first Psalme And it may be that Luke wrot so For that which at this day is counted the second Psalme might haue bin called the first not without reason seing that it is likely that the first Psalme was added in steed of a Proeme by the Scribes and Priestes by whose industrie the Psalmes were gathered into one bodie For the name of the authour is not set to it and it doeth onely exhort to meditate vpon the Law of God But there is no great weight in that matter For this is the chiefest thing that we know how properly and how well Paul applieth the testimonie taken out of the Psalme vnto the matter which he hath in hand We do not denie that Dauid when he saw that he was on euery side assailed by his enimies and that they were of greater power might than that he was able to resist them doth set against them Gods aide who he knew was the authour of his kingdome and Reigne But forasmuch as he was a figure of the true Messias we know that those things were shadowed in his person which doe appertaine wholy and perfectly to the Messias alone And the text it self doth proue sufficiently that there is not onely a simple and bare thankesgiuing contained there agreeable to Dauids kingdome but it is a higher prophecie For it is wel knowne that Dauid did in his life scarce tast of the hundreth part of the glory which is spokē of in this place concerning which we haue spoken more at large Chapter 4. Now let vs looke nigher into the words kings are in deed called sonnes of God Psal 82.6 But seing that God doth intend to prefer Dauid before all other kings and to exempt him out of the number of them this title of honor is giuen to him principallie aboue all other not because so great honour resteth in his person because by this meanes he should passe the Angels as it is in the Epist to the Heb. 1. cha Therfore he is thus gorgeously set out in respect of Christ whose image he was that God doth not take him for one of the common sort or for some one of a great multitude but he doth as it were acknowledge him to his onely begotten sonne The proofe followeth Because God did beget him when he established the kingdome in his hand For that was not done by mans industrie but God shewed from heauen the inuincible power of his hand whereby it might plainly appeare that he reigned according to Gods counsel Therefore this Begetting by him mentioned must be referred vnto the vnderstanding or knowledge of men to wit because it was then openlie known that he was begotten of God when as he was set vpon the throne of the kingdome wonderfully contrarie to the hope of all men and did by the heauenly power of the Spirit breake infinit conspiracies because hee could not reigne vntill he had brought all nations round about him in subiection as if a certaine world were subdued Now let vs come vnto Christ He came not into the world without testimony whereby he did proue that he was the son of God For his glory did appeare as became the only begotten son of god as it is written Iohn 1.14 and he saith euerywhere that he hath God for the witnesse and maintainer of this honor Therefore God begat Christ when he gaue him certaine markes whereby he might be knowne to be his true liuely image son And yet this doth not let but that Christ is the wisedome begotten of the eternall father before time but that is the secreat generation now Dauid declareth that it was reuealed to men so that the relation is as we haue said vnto men and not vnto God because that which was hidden in the heart of God was made known to mē And it is a verye fine figure because Christ his diuinitie was no lesse declared and established then if he had bin begotten of God before the eyes of men I know that Augustine his deepe sight doth please some that by to day is meant perpetuitie But when as the spirit of God himself is his owne interpreter whereas he doth expound that by the mouth of Paul which he had said by Dauid we must not inuent any other sense And forasmuch as the same Paul doth witnes that Christ was declared to be the son of god in power when he rose from the dead we gather that this was the principal token of celestiall excellency that the father did then bring him truly to light that the world might know that he was begotten of him Therefore though God began to raise Christ when he came into the world yet his raising was then as it were perfect full because whereas he was humbled before hauing taken as it were the forme of a seruant he did then appeare to be the conqueror of death the Lord of life so that he wanted nothing of that maiesty which was meet for the son of god that for the onely begotten sonne 34 That he should not returne He addeth now the other member that Christ was once raised from death that he may liue for euer as Paul teacheth Rom. 6.10 Rom. 6.10 He dieth no more neither shall death haue dominion ouer him any more because he liueth to God For the hope conceiued of Christ his resurrection should be slender and cold if he were yet subiect to destruction or to any change Therefore he is said to be entred into the kingdome of God that he may also giue to his eternal felicity liuing for euer For because Christ rose rather for our sake then for himselfe the perpetuitie of life which the father hath giuen him reacheth vnto vs all and is ours Notwithstanding the place of Isay which is here cited seemeth to make but a litle for proofe of Christ his immortalitie I will giue you the holy things of Dauid But it is not so For seing Isaias speaketh of the redemption promised to Dauid Isai 55.3 and affirmeth that the same shal be firme and stable we doe well gather by this the immortall kingdome of Christ wherein the eternitie of saluation is grounded And Paul followed the Greek interpreters when he put Holy things for mercies Chessed which signifieth meeke merciful and gentle is wont by the Grecians to be translated Holy Therefore they translated 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of Dauid the holy thinges of Dauid whereas the Prophet meaneth rather the grace promised to Dauid But Paul granted this to the ignorant and weake who were better acquainted with the Greeke reading especially for as much as the force of the testimonie consisteth in another point For
father to health by the hand of Paul who was indeed sicke of a dangerous disease And by this meanes he meant to testifie how greatly that courtesie which is shewed to menne in miserie and to strangers doth please him Although those who are holpen be vnmindfull and vnthankefull for that benefite which they haue receiued or they bee not able to recompence those who haue done good to them yet god himself wil abūdantly restore to men whatsoeuer they haue bestowed at his commandement he hath somtimes appointed to those which bee mercifull and giuen to hospitalitie some of his seruauntes which bring with them a blessing This was nowe great honour in that Publius did lodge Christ in the person of Paule Notwithstanding this was added as an ouerplus in that Paul came furnished with the gifte of healing that he might not only recompence his courtesie but also giue more then he had receiued Also wee knowe not whether he learned the first principles of faith as myracles doe for the most parte winne the rude and vnbeleeuers vnto faith Luke mentioneth the kinde of disease that hee may the better set foorth the grace of God For seeing it is an harde matter to cure a bloodie fluxe especially when the ague is ioyned therewith the olde man was cured thus sodainly only by the laying on of hands and praier not without the manifest power of God 8 And had laid his hands vpon him Paul declareth by prayer that hee himselfe is not the authour of the myracle but onely the minister least God be defrauded of his glory He confirmeth this selfe same thing by the externall signe For as we saw before in other places the laying on of hands was nothing els but a solemne rite of offering and presenting Wherefore in that Paul doth offer the man to God with his owne handes he professed that he did humbly craue his life of him By which example not only those who haue excellent giftes of the Spirite giuen them are admonished to beware least by extolling them selues they darken the glory of God but also wee are all taught in generall that we must so thanke the ministers of the grace of God that the glory remaine to him alone It is said in deede that Paule healed the man which had the bloodie flixe but it is plainely expressed by the circumstances which are added that it was God which bestowed this benefite making him the minister thereof Whereas Luke saith afterwarde that others which were sicke in the yle were cured he doth not extend it vnto all but his meaning is that the power of God which appeared euidently ynough was proued by many testimonies that the Apostleship of Paul might be thereby ratified Neither need we doubt but that Paul sought as well to cure their soules as their bodies Yet Luke doeth not declare what good he did saue only that the Barbarians gaue him and his fellowes victuall and necessarie thinges when they loosed from the hauen In the meane season wee must note that though Paul myght haue withdrawen himselfe and haue escaped many wayes yet was the will of God to him in steed of voluntarie fetters because he was often cited by the heauenly oracle to appeare before the iudgement seate of Nero to beare witnesse of Christ Againe he knew that if he should run away he could no longer haue preached the gospel but shoulde haue lurked in some corner during his whole life 11 In a ship of Alexandria By these wordes Luke giueth vs to vnderstand that the former shippe was either drowned or els so rent and beaten that it serued for no vse afterwarde whereby the greatnesse of the shipwracke doeth the better appeare And hee setteth downe expresly that the badge of the ship of Alexandria wherin they were carried to Rome was Castor and Pollux that we may know that Paul had not libertie graunted to sayle with such as were like to himselfe but was enforced to enter into a ship which was dedicated to two Idols The old Poets did feigne that Castor and Pollux came of Iupiter and Leda for which cause they are called in Greeke dio scouroi which word Luke vseth in this place as if you should say Iupiters sonnes Againe they said that they are the signe in the Zodiacke called Gemini There was also another superstition among the marriners that those firie exhalations which appeare in tempests are the very same Therefore in times past they were thought to be gods of the seas and were therefore called vpon as at this day Nicholas and Clement such like Yea as in poperie they retain the old errors changing the names only so at this day they worship these exhalations vnder the name of Saint Hermes or Saint Ermus And because if one exhalation appeare alone it is a dolefull token but if two together as Plinie writeth then they foreshewe a prosperous course To the end the mariners of Alexādria might haue both Castor and Pollux to fauour them they had both for the badge of their ship Therefore as touching them the shippe was polluted with wicked sacriledge but because Paul did not make choise thereof of his owne accord he is not polluted thereby And surely seing an Idol is nothing it cannot in fect the creatures of God but that the faithfull may vse them purely and lawfully And we must needes thinke thus that al those blottes wherewith Satan doth goe about to staine the creatures of god through his iuggling are washed away by no other means but by a good and pure conscience whereas the wicked and vngodly doe defile those thinges which are of themselues pure though they do but touch them Finally Paul was no more defiled by entring into this ship then when he did behold the altars at Athens because being void of al superstition he knew that all the rites of the Gentiles were meere illusions Againe the men could not thinke that he did agree to that profane error For if hee had bin to doe any worship to Castor and Pollux though it had bin only for fashions shake hee would rather haue died a thousand deaths then once haue yeelded Therefore because he needed not to feare any offence hee entreth the ship without any more adoe and vndoubtedly he did this heauilie and with inward sorrow because he saw the honour which is due to god alone giuen to vaine inuentions Therefore this ought to be numbred among his exercises in that he had those to be his guides who thought that they were gouerned of Idols and had committed their ship to their tuition 12 When we were come to Syracusa Luke prosecuteth the residue of the course of their sayling that they arriued first in Sicilia And after that they fet a compasse by reason of the tempest and raging of the sea and sailed ouer into Italie And as that hauen whereof Luke speaketh in this place is the most famous hauen of all Sicilia so is it farther from the coast of Italie then is
by the hand of God least we be subiect to the iniuries of Satan and the wicked It is good for vs to imbrace this one thing neither did Peter meane any thing els in this place Yea wee haue an example set before vs in Christ whereby we may learne to bee wise with sobrietie For it is out of question that his flesh was subiect to corruption according to nature But the prouidence of God did set the same free If any mā aske whether the bones of Christ could be broken or no it is not to be denied that they were subiect to breaking naturally yet could there no bone be broken Iohn 19.36 because God had so appointed and determined By this example I say we are taught so to giue the chiefest roome to gods prouidence that we keepe ourselues within our bounds and that we thrust not our selues rashlie vndiscretly into the secretes of God whither our eiesight doth not pearce By the handes of the wicked Because Peter seemeth to graunt that the wicked did obey God hereupon followeth two absurdities the one eyther that God is the author of euils or that men do not sin what wickednesse soeuer they commit I answere concerning the second that the wicked do nothing lesse than obey God howsoeuer they doe execute that which God hath determined with himself For obedience springeth frō a voluntarie affection And we know that the wicked haue a farre other purpose Again no man obeieth God saue he which knoweth his will Therfore obedience dependeth vpon the knowledge of Gods will Furthermore God hath reuealed vnto vs his will in the law wherfore those mē do obey god who do that alone which is agreeable to the law of god And againe which submit themselues willingly to his gouernment Wee see no such thing in al the wicked whō god doth driue hither thither they themselues being ignorant No man therfore will say that they are excusable vnder this colour because they obey god for as much as both the wil of God must be sought in his lawe and they so muche as in them lyeth doe couet to resist God As touching the other point I denie that God is the Authour of euill because there is a certaine noting of a wicked affection in this worde For the wicked deede is esteemed according to the ende whereat a man aymeth When men committe theft or murder they offend for this cause because they are theeues or murderers And in the theft and murder there is a wicked purpose God who vseth their wickednesse is to be placed in the higher degree For he hath respect vnto a farre other thing because he will chastice the one exercise the patience of the other so he doth neuer decline from his nature that is from perfect righteousnesse So that whereas Christ was deliuered by the hands of wicked men wheras he was crucified it came to passe by the appointment and ordinaunce of God But treason which is of it selfe wicked and murther which hath in it so great wickednesse must not be thought to be the workes of God 24 Hauing loosed the sorrowes of death By the sorrowes of death I vnderstand some farther thing than the bodily sense or feeling For those which dulie cōsider the nature of death because they heare that it is the curse of God must needes conceiue that God is angrie in death Hence commeth marueilous horror wherein there is greater miserie than in death it selfe Furthermore Christe died vppon this condition that hee might take vpon him our guiltinesse That inward feare of conscience which made him so afraid that he swet blood when he presented himself before the throne and tribunall seate of God did more vexe him and brought vpon him greater horror than al the torments of the flesh And whereas Peter saith that Christ did wrastle with such sorrowes doth also declare that he had the victorie by this it commeth to passe that the faithfull ought not now to be afraid of death For death hath not the like qualitie now which was in Adam because by the victorie of Christe the curse of God is swallowed vp 1. Cor. 15.54 Wee feele in deede yet the pricking of sorrowes but such as do not wholy wound vs whilest that we hold vp the buckler of faith against them He addeth a reason because it was vnpossible that Christ should be oppressed by death who is the authour of life 25 For Dauid saith of him I saw the Lord before me alwaies because hee is on my right hand least I should be moued 26 For this my heart reioyced and my tongue was glad moreouer my fleshe shal rest in hope 27 Because thou wilt not leaue my soule in hell neither wilt thou suffer thy holy one to see corruption 28 Thou hast made knowen vnto me the wayes of life thou shalt fill mee with gladnes with thy face 29 Men and brethren seeing that I may boldly speak vnto you of the Patriark Dauid because he is both dead and buried and his sepulchre remaineth with vs vntill this day 30 Therefore seeing he was a Prophet and did knowe that God had sworne vnto him with an oth that it should come to passe that Christe shoulde rise of the frutes of his loynes concerning the fleshe who shoulde sit vpon his throne 31 He knowing this before spake of the resurrection of Christe that his soule was not left in hell neither did his flesh see corruption 25 The resurrection which was both declared and witnessed by certaine and euident testimonies and which might also haue been gathered out of the continuall doctrine of the prophetes was to be proued to the Iewes as some new and strange thing And no maruell For wee see that although Christe had oftentimes beat the same into his Disciples heads yet did they profite but a little And yet did they retaine certaine principles of true doctrine which might haue made a way for them vnto the knowledge of Christ as we shall see by by Therfore because the gift of the Spirite was a frute of the resurrection of Christ he prooueth by the testimonie of Dauid that Christ must needes haue risen againe that the Iewes may thereby knowe that hee was the authour of the gift For he taketh it as a thing which all men graunt that he was raysed vp from death that he may liue not for himself but for his Nowe wee see Peter his drift That that ought to seeme no straunge thing which was foretolde so long before And that Iesus is also Christe because Dauid did prophesie of him as of the head of the church First of all wee must see whether this place ought altogether to be vnderstood of Christe as Peter affirmeth that done if there bee any thing in the wordes worth the noting wee will in order discusse it Peter denieth that that agreeth with Dauid which is said in this place Thou shalt not suffer thine holie one to see corruption Psal 16.6
reuerently to be receiued This is therfore the thing which Peter aimeth at to bring them to heare Christ willinglie as the master whō God hath appointed to teach them But here ariseth a question which hath in it great difficultie too wit in that Peter applieth that vnto the person of Christ which Moses spake generally of the prophets For althogh he make mention of a prophet in the singular number yet the text doth plainley declare that he speaketh not of one alone but that this worde is put indefinitely For after that Moses had forbiddē the people to giue them selues vnto the superstitions of the Gentiles by turning aside vnto enchaunters soothsayers he sheweth them therwithall a remedie whereby they may auoid all vanitie to wit if they depend wholie vpon the word of God alone By this meanes he promiseth that God will be carefull at all times to sende them prophets that they may teach thē aright As if he should say God will neuer suffer you to be destitute of prophets of whom you may learn whatsoeuer shal be profitable for you to know And Moses saith expresly of thy brethren to the end the Iewes may know that the oracles of God are to bee sought and fet no where els seeing that God had appointed vnto them teachers of the kinred of Abraham Hee addeth further like vnto me that they may know that they were not to heare God onely at one time or by the mouth of one man but as God proceedeth to teache vs by diuers ministers throughout the cōtinuall course of times so must we hold on in the obedience of the word Nowe the Iewes were wont to reuerence Moses therefore he will haue them to giue like honour to the prophets I know that many would faine restraine it vnto Christe They catch at this word Deut. 18.15 whereas Moses doth testifie that the prophet shal be like vnto him wheras notwithstanding it is written that ther arose none like vnto Moses I confesse that there is in both places the same note of likenes yet in a diuers sense For in the second place the likenes or equalitie is expressed as it doth plainly appeare They catch also at another thing that the prophet shal far excel Moses of whō he beareth witnes as a crier or harrold But this is neuer a whit stronger because Moses goeth about to bring to passe that the word of God may be beleeued by whomsoeuer it be brought Therefore ther is no cause why we should set our selues to be laughed to scorn by the Iews by wresting the words of Moses violētly as if he spake of Christ alone in this place Yet must wee see whether Peter doth cite the testimonie fitlie whose authoritie ought to serue for a sound reason I say that in Peter his speech there is nothing which is not most conuenient For he saw that which all men ought to graunt that this testimonie doth so appertain vnto the other Prophets that yet notwithstāding it doeth chiefly commend Christ not only because that he is the prince and chiefe of all the Prophets but because all other former prophesies were directed toward him and because God did at length speake absolutely by his mouth For God spake in diuers maners at sundrie times in times past vnto our fathers by the Prophetes he added the conclusion at length in the last dayes in his only begotten sonne Therefore it came to passe that they wanted prophets for a certaine yeeres before his comming Heb. 1.1.2 Malac. 4.4 Mat. 11.13 Iohn 4.25 which thing is plainly gathered out of the wordes of Malachie who after that he hath commaunded the people to be mindfull of the law he passeth ouer by by vnto Iohn Baptist vnto Christ as if he should say that the prophesies are now ended vntill the last reuelation come according to that The law and the prophets prophesied vntill Iohn after that the kingdom of God is preached And that was so common amongest the people that the woman of Samaria could say according to the common fame and opinion We know that the Messias shall come who will teach vs all things Therefore we know that after the returne of the people all the prophets ceased to the end they might bee made more attentiue to heare Christe by that silence or intermission of reuelations Therefore Peter did not wrest this place or abuse the same through ignorance but he tooke that doctrine which all men had receiued for a principle that god had promised to teach his people at the first by his prophets as by means but at lēgth principally by Christ at whose hands they were to hope for the perfect manifestation laying open of al things And to this purpose serueth that excellent testimony or commendation wherewith his father setteth him foorth Heare him Mat. 17.5 23 Euerie soule Here by a most greeuous punishment against the rebellious the authority of al the prophets but most of al of Christ is established And that for good causes For seeing there is nothing that God doth account more precious than his worde it cannot be that he should suffer the same to be freely contēned Therfore if any man despised the lawe of Moses he was adiudged to die the death And hereunto Moses had respect when he said He shal be put away frō among the people For God had adopted the stock and kinred of Abraham vnto himself vpon this condition that this might bee sufficient for them vnto the chiefest felicitie to be reckoned in that number as it is said in the Psalme Blessed is the people whose god is the Lord. And in another place Blessed is the nation whom the Lorde hath chosen to be his inheritaunce Wherefore it is not to be doubted but that he pronounceth that he shall be blotted out of the booke of life whosoeuer shall refuse to heare Christ For he is not worthie to be accounted one of the church whosoeuer he be that refuseth to haue him to be his master by whō alone God doth teach vs by whom he will haue vs to heare himself and he cutteth himselfe away from the bodie whosoeuer he be that refuseth to be vnder the head 24 And all When as he saith that all the prophetes doe with one consent send their scholers vnto Christe that appeareth more plainely hereby which I said that the commendation of the Gospel is contained vnder that testimony of Moses and so consequently that the conclusion of prophecies is principally noted Againe this maketh much for the certaintie of the Gospel that al the prophets for a long time do yet notwithstanding so temper their forme of teaching with one consent that they doe testifie all together that men ought to hope for a certaine better and more perfect thing Therfore whosoeuer will beleeue Moses and the prophets he must needs submit himself vnto the doctrine of Christ Ioh. 5.47 without which all that is lame and vnperfect which they taught 25 You
Satan and men seeing faith is vnderpropped and supported with the eternall truth of God although heauen fal our saluation is safe which hath God to be the author and keeper thereof because God doeth defende the kingdome of Christ it can neuer bee ouerthrowne with any violence because the doctrine of the Gospel is grounded in God howsoeuer men resist or shake the same yet shall it neuerthelesse continue firme Againe although the wicked attempt whatsoeuer they can and seeke al meanes to destroy the church although they furiously striue against Christ and his Church so much as they are able yet they shall not preuaile because it is the propertie of God to bring the counsels of men to naught and by this meanes doeth he punish their rashnesse We see that both members are well applied to faith But in the meane season there is no cause why the seruauntes of Christ should be lesse diligent in maintaining the truth why they should suffer the Church to decay through their fault why they shoulde carelesly winke at their wickednesse who endeuor to turne all thinges topsie turuie 36 There arose one Theudas If we credit Iosephus Gamaliel altereth in this place the true course of the historie For hee reporteth that Iudas Gaulanites who was borne in Gamala at such time as Quirinius or Cyrenius was Proconsull did raise a tumult with his adherentes because they woulde not haue their goods taxed and that Theudas at such time as Cuspius Fadus was Procuratour did boast that hee was a Prophet of God And Fadus was sent into Iudea by Claudius Caesar The former hystorie is recorded in the eighteenth booke of Antiquities and the other in the twentith But I thinke that when Luke saith After him was there one Iudas he meant not to note the course of time as if he were the latter but forasmuch as Gamaliel brought in two like examples he might put the one in place of the other without hauing respect of time Therefore the worde post is as much as Moreouer or besides Furthermore euen these examples wherewith Gamaliel confirmeth his opinion doe not sufficiently agree with the present cause For because they did not by and by resist Iudas that sedition which he had raised was the occasion of many murthers and at length he was vanquished with hand and weapon Theudas also had done farre more hurt vnlesse he had beene put to flight in time by Cuspius Fadus But Gamaliel hath respect vnto this alone that men haue vnlucky successe when as they auance themselues vnaduisedly and that commeth to passe by the iust iudgement of God But because the Priestes refuse to harken when God giueth them good coūsel they are worthy to be made amased by mā with friuilous reasons wauering hither thither through foolish perplexitie Furthermore if wee cast the time wee shall finde that it was twelue yeeres at least after the death of Christ before the Apostles were beaten For vnto the fiue yeeres which remained of the gouernement of Tyberius we must adde three and one halfe which Caligula reigned Fadus was not sent by Claudius into Iudea before the second or thirde yeere of his reigne Gamaliel rehearseth not the act within a day or two after Therefore that space of time is complete whereof I spake Wherefore the constancie of the Apostles was the more excellent who though they bee so euill rewarded for those longe paines which they had endured yet are they not discouraged neither doe they cease to holde on as they had begunne That he was some great man Some bookes haue Saying that hee was some bodie yet both carrie one sense For he boasted that he was such a Prophet that hee coulde drie vp Iordan that those which were with him might goe ouer drie foote Neuerthelesse we see howe farre Gamaliel is from true knowledge who compareth the holy Ministers of Christ vnto seducers and robbers although hee mitigateth his words afterwarde and inclining towarde the better part leaueth it indifferent whether they haue taken this matter in hande hauing God for their authour or noe Yet hee speaketh doubtfullie because hee prouideth onely for quietnesse all enquirie being set a parte This is onelie to bee allowed in his speech that hee feareth the wicked from wicked boldnesse because there is nothing more to be feared than to striue against God 40 And they obeyed him And when they had called the Apostles hauing beaten them they commaunded them that they shoulde not speake in the name of Iesus and they let them goe 41 Therefore they went reioycing from the face of the councell because they were counted worthy to suffer reproch for his name 42 And they did not cease daily in the Temple and in euery house to teach and preach Christ Iesus 40 Hauing beaten them they commaunded He saieth that Gamaliel his counsel was allowed yet the Apostles are beaten and forbidden to preach Hereby wee gather how great the rage of the enimies was who being now pacified or at least mitigated doe yet notwithstanding rage immoderatlie And it appeareth also what euill successe those doubtfull counsels haue wherein men alone are respected and the trueth of God set aside Gamaliel obteineth thus much that the liues of the Apostles may be saued but in the meane season the sonne of God is blasphemed slaundered in their person The truth of the Gospel is buried in eternall silence so much as in the enimies lyeth God surely doth by this meanes wonderfully spread abroad his worde yet that counsel ceaseth not to be euill Which we must note for this cause because most men at this day doe thinke that they doe not a little obey God if they saue the liues of those men which come in hazard for the doctrine of the Gospel or somewhat appease the enimies who are otherwise bloodie in the meane season they are not afraide to driue them vnto the wicked deniall of Christ the confessing of whom is farre more precious in the sight of God then the life of all men But what could they doe who casting away all care of godlinesse go about to redeeme Gods fauour with the dutie of courtesie 41 Then they went reioycing Wee must not thinke that the Apostles were so senselesse but that they felt some shame and did also lament when they felt the punishment for they had not quite put of nature but when they considered the cause then ioy gat the vpper hande So the faithfull must bee two manner of wayes affectioned so often as they suffer persecution for the Gospel they must bee touched with the bitternesse of punishmentes yet so that they ouercome this sorrowe with spirituall ioy For they shoulde haue chaunged their minde and striken saile by and by vnlesse they had beene strengthened and encouraged by that ioie And it is not to be doubted but that euen death was sweet and pleasant to Peter on this fashion which notwithstanding the Lord doth testifie shal be bitter vnto him Let vs therefore learne that
but for principalitie Wherefore God did so vse the seruice of Moses that the power of Christ did surpasse him as hee is euen at this day the chiefe gouernour in accomplishing the saluation of the Church yea he vseth the ministerie of men in such sort that the force and effect dependeth vpon him alone 37 A Prophet shall God raise vp Stephen indeuoureth vndoubtedly to proue by these words that Christ is the ende of the Law although hee doth not expresse the same in plaine words And assuredly as we haue alreadie saide Luke reciteth not word for worde all those things which Stephen vttered but it is sufficient for him to note the principal points of matters Furthermore wee haue saide before in the thirde Chapter that this testimonie is so applied to Christ that notwithstanding it agreeth to the other prophetes also For after that Moses had forbidden the people to be carried to and fro with the wicked superstitions of the Gentiles hee sheweth what ought to followe There is no cause saith hee why thou shouldest desire Magicians and inchaunters for God will neuer suffer thee to want Prophetes to teach thee faithfully And nowe it is certaine that the ministerie of the Prophetes was temporall as was also the ministerie of the Lawe vntill Christ shoulde bring the full perfection of wisedome into the worlde Therefore Steephen his speech tendeth to this end that Moses doeth not keepe the people fast bounde to himself alone when as he setteth before them and commendeth vnto them another teacher The Prophetes were in deede interpreters of the Law and all their doctrine was as it were an addition or appertenance of those thinges which were vttered by Moses but for as much as this was also certaine that Christ shoulde bring a more perfect kinde of doctrine because hee shoulde make an ende of all the Prophecies it followeth that hee is made the chiefe and that the principall mastershippe that I may so call it is his least the faith of the Gospel shoulde be doubtfull Nowe we knowe to what ende Stephen intermingleth Moses his testimonie to wit that he may proue that the Iewes did no lesse contemne him of whom they made boast with open mouth to be their onely teacher euen nowe when hee is deade than they did in times past whiles hee liued wickedly and frowardly reiect him For whosoeuer beleeueth Moses hee will not refuse to bee the disciple of Christ Iohn 5.46 whose messenger and crier he was Fet the rest out of the thirde Chapter 38 This is he which was in the congregation in the wildernes with the Angell which ” or did speake to him in the mount had spoken vnto him in mount Sina and with our fathers who receiued liuely Oracles that he might giue them to vs 39 Whom our fathers woulde not obey but they refused him and they turned backe in their hearts into Aegypt 40 Saying vnto Aaron Make vs gods to goe before vs for wee knowe not what is hapned to this Moses which brought vs out of the land of Aegypt 41 And they made a Calfe in those dayes and they offered sacrifice to the Idoll and they reioyced ouer the works of their owne hands 38 Stephen proceedeth to set foorth the frowardnesse of the people who though they were prouoked with so manie benefites of God yet did they neuer cease maliciously to reiect him If they had beene disobedient and vnthankfull to God before yet this so wonderfull a deliuerance ought to haue brought them into a better minde but he declareth that they were alwayes like themselues It was meete that so many myracles shoulde not onely haue stuck fast in their mindes but also haue continued still before their eyes But hauing forgotten all they flie backe sodainlie vnto the superstitions of Aegypt The memoriall of their cruell seruitude was yet fresh which they had escaped by passing ouer the redde sea and yet they preferre those tyrantes by whom they were more than cruelly handled before their deliuerer This was therefore a heape of vngodlinesse most desperate that their stubbornesse coulde not bee broken or ouercome with so manie benefites of God but that they did awayes returne vnto their nature This doeth greatly augment the greatnesse of the offence where Steephen saieth that Moses was then with them in the wildernesse For besides that there appeareth heere rare goodnesse and long sufferance of the Lord in bearing with them they make themselues to be without all excuse whiles that being beset on euery side with so manie straites being brought into so great distresse hauing Moses to bee their guide in their iourney and the faithfull keeper of their life they fall away neuerthelesse treacherously from God Finally it appeareth that they were like vntamed beastes whom God coulde not keepe in obedience with so manie bandes Therefore in as much as Moses lefte not off to gouerne them euen through the wildernesse vnder the conduct and aide of the Angel it is an easie matter to gather by this circumstance of time how incurable and obstinate their frowardnesse was As it was a point of monstrous rebellion not to be humbled with miseries and euen with the verie sight of death Where as hee saieth that Moses was with the Angel and the fathers there is a contrarie respect Hee was present with the fathers that hee might bee their guide according to the commaundement of the Lorde he was with the Angell as a minister Where vppon it followeth that hee was no priuate person to whom this iniurie was done but it was done to the gouernance of God when the people coulde bee kept backe with the reuerence of neither from running headlong into wicked rebellion We haue already spoken of the Angel But the participle lalonutos or which spake hath a double meaning For it may be vnderstoode either of the first vision wherby Moses was called to redeem the people or of that speech which god had with Moses after they were come ouer the red sea And because Christ declared both waies that he was the author of their deliuerance it is no great matter whether we choose yea there is no let but that it may be extended vnto both For he which beganne to speake to Moses from the beginning that he might send him into Aegypt did continue the tenour of his speech afterward vntill the worke was finished Which receiued liuely Oracles Erasmus translated it Liuely speech but those which are expert in the Greek tongue they shall know that I haue more truly translated the words of Stephen For there is greater maiestie in Oracles then in Speech I speake onely of the word for I knowe that whatsoeuer proceedeth out of the mouth of God the same is an Oracle Moreouer hee purchaseth authoritie for the doctrine of Moses in these wordes because hee vttered nothing but that which proceeded from God Whereupon it followeth that they did not so much rebell against Moses as against God Whereby their stubbernes is more
discouered And this is a general way to establish doctine when men teach nothing but that which is commaunded them by God For what man dare make Moses inferiour to him who as the Spirit affirmeth ought onely to be beleeued for this cause because he faithfully vnfolded and deliuered the doctrine which he had receiued of God But some man may ask this question why he calleth the lawe a liuing speech For this title seemeth to disagree much with the words of Paul 1. Cori. 3.7 where hee saith that the lawe is the ministerie of death and that it worketh death and that it is the strength of sinne If you take liuely speech for that which is effectuall and cannot be made frustrate by the contempt of men there shal be no contrarietie but I interpret it as spoken actiuely for that which maketh to liue For seing that the Law is the perfite rule of godly and holy life and it sheweth the righteousnesse of God it is counted for good causes the doctrine of life and saluation And to this purpose serueth that solemne protestation of Moses when he calleth heauen and earth to witnesse that hee hath set before them the way of death and life In which sense the Lord himself complaineth Ezechiel 20 that his good Law is broken his good commandements wherof he had said He which shal do these things shall liue in them Therefore the Law hath life in it selfe Yet if any man had leiffer take liuing for that which is full of efficacie and strength I will not greatly stande in contention And whereas it is called the ministerie of death that is accidentall to it because of the corrupt nature of man For it doth not ingender sin but it findeth it in vs. It offereth life but wee which are altogither corrupt can haue nothing but death by it Therefore it is deadly in respect of men alone Though Stephen had respect vnto a farther thing in this place for he doeth not onely speake of the bare commaundementes but comprehendeth all Moses his doctrine wherein the free promises are included and so consequently Christ himselfe who is the onely life and health of men We must remember with what men Stephen had to doe They were such as were preposterously zelous of the law who stayed onely in the dead and deadly letter of the Lawe and in the meane season they raged against Stephen because he sought Christ in the Law who is in deede the soule thereof Therefore by touching th●●eruerse ignorance glancingly he giueth them to vnderstande that there is some greater and some more excellent thing hidden in the Lawe than they haue hitherto knowne For as they were carnall content with an outward shew they sought no spiritual thing in it yea they would not so much as suffer the same to be shewed them That he might giue them to vs. This serueth to refute the false accusation wherewith he was falsely burthened For seeing he submitteth his necke to the yoke of the Lawe and professeth that hee is one of Moses his scholers hee is farre from discrediting him amongst others Yea rather hee turneth backe the fault which was laide to his charge vppon those which were the authours of the slaunder That was as it were a common reproch for all the people because the fathers woulde not obey the Lawe And therewithall hee telleth them that Moses was appointed to be a Prophet not onely for his time but that his authoritie might be in force with the posteritie euen when he was deade For it is not meete that the doctrine of God shoulde bee extinguished togither with the ministers or that it should bee taken away For what is more vnlikely than that that should dye whereby wee haue immortalitie So must wee thinke at this day as the Prophetes and Apostle spake vnto the men of their time right so did they write vnto vs and that the force of their doctrine is continuall because it hath rather God to bee the authour thereof than men In the meane season he teacheth that if any reiect the word appointed for them they reiect the counsell of God 39 They refused and were turned away Hee saith that the fathers reiected Moses and hee sheweth the cause also because they gaue themselues rather vnto the superstitions of Aegypt which was horrible and more than blind furie to desire the customes and ordinances of Aegypt where they had suffered such grieuous thinges of late Hee saieth that they were turned away into Aegypt in their heartes not that they desired to returne thither bodily but because they returned in mind vnto those corruptions which they ought not so much as to haue remembred without great detestation and hatred It is true in deede that the Iewes did once speake of returning but Stephen toucheth not that historie now Furthermore he doth rather expresse their stubbernesse when he saieth that they were turned away For after that they had taken the right way hauing God for their guid and gouernour they start aside sodainly as if a stubberne vnbroken horse not obeying his rider shoulde frowardly run backward 40 Make vs. Though the Iewes bee turned backe diuerse wayes yet Stephen maketh choise of one notable example aboue all the rest of their filthy and detestable trecherie to wit when they made themselues a Calfe that they might worship it in steede of God For there can no more filthy thing be inuented than this their vnthankfulnes They confesse that they were deliuered out of Aegypt neither do they denie that this was done by the grace of God and the ministery of Moses yet notwithstanding they reiect the author of so great goodnesse togither with the minister And vnder what colour They pretend that they cannot tell what is become of Moses But they know full well that he is in the mount They saw him with their eies when he went vp thither vntil such time as the Lorde tooke him vnto himselfe by compassing him about with a cloude Againe they know that Moses is absent for their healths sake who had promised that he would returne and bring vnto them the Lawe which God shoulde giue He badde them onely be quiet a while They raise madde vprores sodainely within a small time and without any cause yet to the ende they may couer their madnesse with the colour of some reason they will haue Gods present with them as if God had shewed vnto them no token of his presence hitherto but his glory did appeare daily in the cloud and piller of fire Therefore we see what haste they make to commit idolatrie through wicked contempt of god that I may in the meane season omitte to declare howe filthie and wicked their vnthankfulnes was in that they had so soone forgotten those myracles which they ought to haue remembred euen vntill the ende of the worlde Therefore by this one backsliding it appeareth sufficientlie what a stubberne and rebellious people they were Moreouer it was more expedient for
forasmuch as he was full of the holy Ghoste he looked vp stedfastly into heauen and saw the glory of God and Iesus standing at the right hand of God 56 And he said Behold I see the heauens open and the Sonne of man standing at the right hande of God And they cryed with a lowde voyce and stopped their eares 57 And with one accord they ran vpon him 58 And hauing cast him out of the citie they stoned him 54 When they heard The beginning of the action had in it some colour of iudgement but at length the Iudges can not bridle their furie First they interrupt him with murmuring and noise now they break out into enuious and deadly cryings least they should heare any one worde Afterwarde they hale the holy man out of the citie that they may put him to death And Luke expresseth properly what force Satan hath to driue forward the aduersaries of the word When he saith that they burst asunder inwardly he noteth that they were not only angrie but they were also striken with madnesse Which furie breaketh out into the gnashing of the teeth as a violent fire into flame The reprobate who are at Satan his commaundement must needs be thus moued with the hearing of the word of God this is the state of the Gospell it driueth hypocrites into madnesse who might seeme before to be modest as if a drunken man which is desirous of sleepe be sodainly awaked Luke 2.35 Therefore Simeon assigneth this to Christ as proper to him to diclose the thoughts of many heartes Yet notwithstanding this ought not to bee ascribed to the doctrine of saluation whose end is rather this to frame mens minds to obey god after that it hath subdued them But so soone as Satan hath possessed their mindes if they bee vrged their vngodlinesse will breake out Therfore this is an accidentarie euil yet we are taught by these examples that we must not looke that the worde of God shoulde drawe all men vnto a sound mind Which doctrine is very requisite for vs vnto constancie Those which are teachers cannot do their dutie as they ought but they must set thēselues against the contemners of God And forasmuch as there are alwayes some wicked men which set light by the maiestie of God they must euer now and then haue recourse vnto this vehemencie of Steuen For they may not winke when Gods honour is taken from him And what shal be the end therof Their vngodlines shal be the more incensed so that we shall seeme to powre oyle into the fire as they say But whatsoeuer come of it yet must we not spare the wicked but wee must keepe them downe mightilie although they could powre out all the furies of hel And it is certaine that those which will flatter the wicked doe not respect the frute but are faint hearted through feare of daunger But as for vs howsoeuer we haue no such successe as we could wish let vs know that courage in defending the doctrine of godlinesse is a sweet smelling sacrifice to God 55 For asmuch as he was full We cannot almost expresse into what straites the seruant of Christ was brought when hee saw himselfe beset rounde with raging enemies the goodnesse of his cause was oppressed partly with false accusations and malice partly with violence and outragious outcries he was inuironned with sterne countenaunces on euery side he himselfe was hailed vnto a cruell and horrible kinde of death he could espie succour and ease no where Therfore being thus destitute of mans helpe he turneth him selfe to warde God We must first note this that Steuen did looke vnto God who is the iudge of life and death turning his eyes from beholding the world when he was brought into extreeme despaire of all thinges whiles that there is nothing but death before his eyes That done we must also adde this that his expectation was not in vaine because Christ appeared to him by and by Although Luke doth signifie that he was now armed with such power of the Spirit as could not be ouercome so that nothing could hinder him frō beholding the heauens Therefore Steuen looketh vp toward heauen that he may gather courage by beholding Christ that dying he may triūphe gloriously hauing ouercom death But as for vs it is no maruel if Christ doe not shew himself to vs because we are so set tyed vpon the earth Hereby it cōmeth to passe that our harts faile vs at euery light rumor of danger and euen at the falling of a leafe And that for good causes for where is our strength but in Christ But we passe ouer the heauens as if we had no helpe any where els saue only in the world Furthermore this vice can be redressed by no other meanes then if God lift vs vp by his Spirit being naturally set vpon the earth Therefore Luke assigneth this cause why Steuē loked vp stedfastly toward heauē because he was full of the spirite We must also ascend into heauen hauing this spirite to be our directer and guid so often as we are oppressed with troubles And surely vntill such time as he illuminate vs our eyes are not so quicke of sight that they can come vnto heauen Yea the eyes of the fleshe are so dull that they cannot ascend into heauen Hee saw the glory of God Luke signifieth as I haue said that Christ appeared foorthwith to Steuen so soone as he lifted vp his eyes towards heauen But he telleth vs before that he had other eyes giuen him than the fleshly eyes seeing that with the same he flieth vp vnto the glory of God Whence we must gather a generall comfort that God will be no lesse present with vs if forsaking the worlde all our senses striue to come to him not that he appeareth vnto vs by any externall vision as hee did to Steeuen but he will so reueale himselfe vnto vs within that wee may in deed feele his presence And this maner of seeing ought to be sufficient for vs when God doth not only by his power and grace declare that he is nigh at hand but doth also proue that hee dwelleth in vs. 56 Behold I see the heauens God ment not only priuately to prouide for his seruant but also to wring and torment his enemies as Steeuen doth couragiously triumph ouer them when he affirmeth plainely that he saw a myracle And here may a question be moued how the heauens were opened For mine owne part I think that there was nothing changed in the nature of the heauens but that Steeuen had new quicknesse of sight graunted him which pearced through all lets euen vnto the inuisible glory of the kingdome of heauen For admit we graunt that there was some diuision or parting made in heauen yet mans eye could neuer reach so farre Againe Steeuen alone did see the glory of God For that spectacle was not only hid frō the wicked who stoode in the same place but they were also so
whit excuse him And Luke will shortly after declare that he was sent by the high Priest to persecute the faithful Therfore he was no childe he might well be counted a man Why then is his youth mentioned That euery man may consider with him selfe what great hurt he might haue done in Gods Church vnlesse Christe hadde brideled him betimes And therin appeareth a most notable token both of Gods power and also of his grace in that he tamed a fierce and wilde beast in his chiefe furie euen in a moment and in that he extolled a miserable murtherer so highly who through his wickednesse was drowned almost in the deepe pit of hell 59 Calling on Because he had vttered wordes enough before men though in vaine he turneth himselfe now vnto God for good causes and armeth himselfe with prayer to suffer all thinges For although we haue need to run vnto Gods help euerie minute af an houre during our whole warfare yet we haue greatest need to call vpon God in the last conflict which is the hardest And Luke expresseth again how furious mad they were because their crueltie was not aswaged euen when they saw the seruāt of Christ praying humbly Furthermore here is set downe a prayer of Steeuen hauing two members In the former member where he commendeth his spirite to Christ he sheweth the constancie of his faith In the other where he prayeth for his enemies he testifieth his loue towarde men Forasmuch as the whole perfection of godlinesse consisteth vpon these two partes we haue in the death of Steeuen a rare example of a godly holy death It is to be thought that he vsed many mo words but the summe tendeth to this end Lord Iesu I haue alreadie said that this prayer was a witnesse of confidence and surely the couragiousnesse and valiauntnesse of Steeuen was great that when as he saw the stones flie about his eares wherewith he should be stoned by and by when as he heareth cruell curses and reproches against his head hee yet stayeth himselfe meekely vppon the grace of Christ In like sort the Lord wil haue his seruants to be brought to nought as it were sometimes to the end their saluation may bee the more wonderfull And let vs define this saluation not by the vnderstanding of our flesh but by faith Wee see how Steeuen leaneth not vnto the iudgement of the flesh but rather assuring himselfe euen in very destruction that he shal be saued he suffereth death with a quiet mind For vndoubtedly he was assured of this Col. 3.3 that our life is hid with Christe in God Therefore casting off all care of the bodie hee is content to commit his soule into the handes of Christe For hee coulde not pray thus from his heart vnlesse hauing forgotten this life he had cast of all care of the same Psal 31.6 It behoueth vs with Dauid to commit our soules into the handes of God daylie so long as we are in the worlde because we are inuironed with a thousand deaths that God may deliuer our life from all dangers but when we must die indeed and we are called thereunto we must flie vnto this prayer that Christe will receiue our spirite For hee commended his owne Spirite into the handes of his Father to this end that hee may keepe ours for euer This is an vnestimable comfort in that wee knowe our soules doe not wander vppe and downe when they flit out of our bodies but that Christ receiueth them that hee may keepe them faithfully if wee commend them into his handes This hope ought to encourage vs to suffer death patiently Yea whosoeuer commendeth his soule to Christ with an earnest affection of faith he must needes resigne himselfe wholy to his pleasure and will And this place doth plainelie testifie that the soule of man is no vaine blast which vanisheth away as some frantike fellowes imagine dotingly but that it is an Essentiall spirite which liueth after this life Furthermore wee are taught hereby that we call vpon Christ rightly and lawfully because all power is giuen him of the Father for this cause that all men may commit themselues to his tuition 60 Kneeling down he cried This is the other part of his prayer wherein he ioyneth the loue of men with faith in Christ and surely if we desire to be gathered to Christ for our saluation we must put on this affection Whereas Steeuen prayeth for his enemies and those most deadly and euen in the very instant whē their crueltie might prouoke him vnto desire of reuenge he declareth sufficiently what affection hee beareth toward all other men And we know that we are all commanded to do the same which Steuen did Mat. 5.93.94 but because there is nothing more hard than so to forgiue iniuries that we will wish wel to those who would haue vs vndone therfore we must alwaies set Steeuen before our eyes for an example He crieth in deed with a loud voice but he maketh shew of nothing before men which was not spoken sincerely and from the heart as God himselfe doth witnesse Yet he cryeth aloud that he may omit nothing which might serue to asswage the cueltie of the enemies The fruite appeared not foorthwith yet vndoubtedly he prayed not in vaine Paule is vnto vs a sufficient testimonie that this sinne was not laide to all their charges I will not say as Augustin that vnlesse Steeuen had praied the church should not haue had Paul for this is somwhat hard only I say this that whereas God pardoned Paul it appeareth thereby that Steeuen his prayer was not in vaine Here ariseth a question How Steeuen prayeth for those which he said of late did resist the holy ghost but this seemeth to be the sinne against the Spirit which shall neuer be forgiuen We may easily answere that that is pronounced generally of all which belōgeth to many euery where Therfore he called not the body of the people rebellious in such sort that he exempted none againe I haue declared before what manner of resisting hee condemned in that place for it followeth not by and by that they sin against the holy ghost who resist him for a time When he prayeth that God will not lay the sinne to their charge his meaning is that the guiltines may not remain in them And when hee had said thus hee fell on sleepe This was added that wee may knowe that these wordes were vttered euen when he was readie to yeeld vppe the Ghoste which is a token of wonderfull constancie also this word sleepe noteth a meeke kind of death Nowe because hee made this prayer when he was at the point of death hee was not moued with any hope of obtaining pardon to bee so careful to appease his enemies but only that they might repent When this worde sleepe is taken in the scripture for to die it must bee referred vnto the bodie least any man imagine foolishly with vnlearned men that the soules doe
he offer himself in sacrifice to purge mens sinnes that hee bee punished with the hand of God that he goe downe euen vnto the very hell that hee may exalt vs vnto heauen hauing deliuered vs from destruction In sum this place teacheth plainely how men are reconciled to God howe they obtaine righteousnesse how they come to the kingdome of God being deliuered from the tyrannie of Satan and loosed from the yoke of sinne to be briefe whence they must fet all partes of their saluation Notwithstanding I will only expound those things which Luke here citeth and there be in deed two members in the former hee teacheth that Christe to the end he may redeem the church must needes be so broken that he appeare like to a man which is cast downe past hope Secondly hee affirmeth that his death shal giue life that there shal a singular triumph issue out of great despayre Wheras he compareth Christe to a lambe which suffereth it selfe to be led to be slaine and to a sheepe which offereth herself meekely to be shorne his meaning is that the sacrifice of Christe shal be voluntarie And surely this was the way to appease Gods wrath in that he shewed himselfe obedient Hee spake in deede before Pilate but not to saue his life Iohn 18.34.36 but rather that hee might willingly offer himselfe to die as hee was appointed by the Father and so might bring that punishment vpon himself which was prepared for vs. Therfore the prophet teacheth both things that Christ must needs haue suffred that he might purchase life for vs and that hee was to suffer death willingly that he might blot out the stubbornnesse of men by his obedience And hence must we gather an exhortation vnto godlines as Peter doeth but that doctrine of faith which I haue already touched is former in order 33 In his humilitie his iudgement The Eunuche had either the Greeke volume or els Luke did set downe the reading which was then vsed as he vseth to doe The prophet saith that Christe was exalted out of sorrow and iudgement by which wordes he signifieth a wonderfull victorie which immediately ensued his casting downe For if he had been oppressed with death there could nothing haue beene hoped for at his handes Therefore to the end the Prophet may establish our faith in Christe after that he had described him to be striken with the hand of God and to be subiect to be slaine he putteth vpon him a new person now to wit that he commeth vp out of the depth of death as a conqueror our of the very hell being the authour of eternal life I know in deed that this place is diuersly expounded some there bee which vnderstande by this that he was carried from the prison to the crosse other some there bee who thinke that to be taken away doth signifie as much as to be brought to nought And indeed the signification of the Hebrew word Lacham is doubtfull as is also the signification of the Greeke worde Airesthai But he which shall throughly weigh the Text shall agree with mee in that which I haue said that he passeth now from that dolefull and vnseemely sight which he had set before our eies vnto the new beginning of vnlooked for glory Therefore the Greeke interpretation differeth not much from the words of the prophet in the summe of the matter For Christs iudgement was exalted in his humilitie or casting down because at such time as he might seeme to be cast down and oppressed the father maintained his cause After this sort iudgement shall be taken in this place as in many other for right But it signifieth condemnation in the Hebrew text For the Prophet saith that after that Christ shall bee brought into great straites and shal be like vnto a condemned and lost man he shal be lifted vp by the hand of the Father Therfore the meaning of the words is that Christ must first haue suffered death before the Father shoulde exalt him vnto the glory of his kingdom Which doctrine must be translated vnto the whole bodie of the church because all the godly ought wonderfully to be lifted vp with the hand of God that they be not swallowed vppe of death But when God appeareth to bee the reuenger of his he doth not only restore them to life but also getteth to them excellent triumphes of many deathes as Christ did triumph most gloriously vpon the crosse wherof the apostle maketh mention in the second chapter to the Collossians His generation After that the prophet hath set forth the victorious death of Christe he addeth now that his victorie shall not last onely for a small time but shall goe beyonde all number of yeeres For the exclamation of the prophet importeth as much as if he should deny that the perpetuitie of Christs kingdom can be expressed by the tongue of men But interpreters haue wrested this place miserably Whereas the olde writers haue indeuoured hereby to proue the eternal generation of the worde of God against Arrius it is too far dissenting from the prophetes mind Chrysostome his exposition is neuer a whit truer who referreth it vnto the humane generation Neither doe they vnderstand the prophet his meaning which suppose that he inueigheth against the men of that age Othersome thinke better who take it to be spoken of the Churche saue onely that they are deceiued in the worde generation which they think doth signifie a posteritie or issue But the worde dor which the prophet vseth signifieth amongst the Hebrewes an age or the continuance of mans life Therefore vndoubtedly this is the prophets meaning that Christ his life shall endure for euer when as he shall bee once deliuered by his fathers grace from death although this life which is without end appertaineth vnto the whole body of the church because Christ rose not that he may liue for himselfe but for vs. Therefore he extolleth now in the members the frute and effect of that victorie which he placed in the head Wherefore euery one of the faithfull may conceiue sure hope of eternal life out of this place secondly the perpetuitie of the church is rather auouched in the person of Christ Because his life is taken from the earth This is to looke too to be a verie absurd reason that Christ doth reigne with such renowme in heauen and earth because he was cut off For who can beleeue that death is the cause of life But this was done by the wonderfull counsel of God that hell should be a ladder whereby Christ should ascend into heauen that reproch shuld be vnto him a passage into life that the ioyfull brightnes of saluation should appeare out of the horror and darknes of the crosse that blessed immortalitie shuld flow from the deep pit of death Because he humbled himselfe therefore the Father exalted him Phil. 2.10 that euery knee may bow before him c. Now must we bethinke our selues what fellowship we
loftines euen vnto the lowest degree And this vision was necessary for Ananias least through feare he should withdraw himselfe from that function which was enioyned him to wit to teach Paul For though he knowe that the Lorde calleth him yet he slydeth backe or at least he excuseth himselfe Therfore it was requisite that hee should haue some certaine testimonie of his calling that there should happie successe bee promised to his labour that he might take that in hand with a ioyfull valiaunt minde which the Lord commanded Furthermore as Christ animateth and confirmeth Ananias by appearing to him in the vision so he prepareth and maketh Paul readie for all thinges that hee may receiue Ananias reuerently as if he would receiue an angell comming frō heauen The Lord could haue sent Paule straightway vnto Ananias and haue shewed him his house but this was more fit for his confirmation because he knew the better that the Lorde had a care of him And also the Lorde setteth out his grace vnto vs that as he stopped Paul before so nowe he reacheth him his hande of his owne accord by his minister And in the meane season we are also taught by his example to be more readie and carefull to seeke out the lost sheepe In a vision This worde vision signifieth some sight which was set before the eyes to testifie gods presence For this is the vse of visions that the maiestie of the worde being well proued it may purchase credite amongst men Which kind of confirmation God vsed oftentimes toward the Prophetes as he saith that he speaketh to his seruaunts by a vision or by a dreame He hath in deed suffered Satan to deceiue the vnbeleeuers with false imaginations and visures But forasmuche as Satan his iuggling casts are of power only in darknes God doth lighten the minds of his children so that they assure thēselues that they need not to feare legierdemaine Therefore Ananias answereth Here am I Lord knowing in deed that it was God 11 For behold he praieth Luke sheweth that Paul gaue himself to praier those three dayes and peraduenture this was one cause why he fasted although it be certaine as I haue alreadie saide that hee suffered suche long hunger because he was after a sort depriued of sense as men which are in a traunce vse to be Christ doth assuredly speake of no short praier in this place but hee doeth rather shewe that Paule continued in this kinde of exercise vntyll hee shoulde bee more quiet in minde For besides other causes of terrour that voice mighte sound in his eares Saul Saul why persecutest thou mee And it is not to bee doubted but that the careful looking for of a perfect reuelation did maruellously trouble his minde but this was the reason why the Lorde caused him to wait three dayes that he might the more kindle in him an earnest desire to pray 12 He saw a man named Ananias It is vncertaine whither Luke do yet repete the words of Christ or hee adde this of his owne Those which take it in the person of Luke are mooued with some shew of absurditie because it is an vnlikely thing that Christ vsed these wordes Although this may be easily answered thus to wit that Christ confirmeth Ananias after this sort There is no cause why thou shouldest feare but that hee will receiue thee willingly forasmuch as he already knoweth thy shape by a vision I haue also told him thy name and whatsoeuer thou shalt do with him Yet may the reader choose whether he will 13 And Ananias answered Lord I haue heard of many of this man what hurt he hath done to thy seruants at Ierusalem 14 And heere he hath power from the Priests to binde all which call vppon thy name 15 And the Lord saide vnto him Goe because he is a chosen instrument to me to beare my name before the Gentiles and Kings and the children of Israel 16 For I will shew him how great things he must suffer for my name 13 Lord I haue heard In that Ananias obiecteth the daunger to the Lord he bewraieth his weaknesse of faith therein Therfore we see that the saints and seruants of God are afraid of death which thing keepeth them backe from doing their dutie yea it causeth them sometimes to stagger Ananias would gladly go to some other place but this is a point of a good man that he yeeldeth not so much to feare that he withdraweth himselfe from Christs obedience And therfore this is a signe of rare obedience that although through feare of death hee were somewhat slacke at the first yet hauing forgotten himselfe by and by he maketh great haste to goe whither Christ called him And yet notwithstanding he refuseth not flatly in these words to doe that which he is commaunded to do but vseth an excuse verie modestly Lord what meaneth this that thou sendest me to the hangman Therefore we may see a desire to obey mixed with feare 14 He hath power to binde We gather by these words that the fame of the persecution which Saule went about was spread farre and wide for which cause his conuersion was more famous Neuerthelesse the Lorde suffered the faithfull to bee euill intreated that the benefite of such sodain deliuerance might afterward be the more excellent We must mark that speech when he saith that the godly call vpon the name of Christ For whether you vnderstād it that in asmuch as they professed that they were Christs they reioyced therefore in him or that they vsed to flie to him for succour inuocation cannot be without sure confidence By both which the diuinitie of Christ is not onely proued but also if the second be receiued which seemeth to be more naturall wee are taught by the example of the faithfull to call vppon the name of Christ when hee is preached to vs. 15 Go because he is an elect instrument The commandement repeted the second time and also the promise of successe added taketh away all doubtfulnesse Therefore slouth shall want an excuse if it be neuer redressed after that many prickes be vsed like as we see that very manie who howsoeuer the Lorde cry vnto them continually doe not onely loyter during their whole life but doe also cherish their slothfulnes by al meanes possible If any man obiect that the Lord speaketh not at this day in a vision I answere that forasmuch as the Scripture is abundantly confirmed to vs we must heare God thence A vessel of election or as Erasmus translateth it an Elect instrumēt is taken for an excellent minister The word Instrument doth shew that mē can do nothing saue in asmuch as God vseth their industrie at his pleasure For if we be instruments he alone is the autor the force and power to doe is in his power alone And that which Christ speaketh in this place of Paul appertaineth to al mē both one and other Therefore how stoutlie soeuer euery man labor and how carefuly soeuer he behaue himself
wordes without making any stoppe Aeneas Iesus Christ make thee whole But as the operation of the Spirite is not alwaies alike and the same it may be that though he knew the power of God yet he went forward vnto the myracle by degrees Yet it seemeth to be an absurde thing that he putteth all the Saintes out of the chamber for whom it had bene better to haue seene it with their eyes but because the Lorde had not as yet reuealed the time when and the manner how he would shew forth his power hee desireth to bee alone that he might the more fitly pray Also it might be that he knew some other reason which moued him to doe this which we know not It is recorded in the sacred history that Eliseus did the same 2. King 14.32 for hee being alone and not so much as the mother of the child with him doth stretch himselfe thrise vpon the dead corps For the Spirite of God hath his vehement motions which if any man wil square out according to the common vse of men or measure by the sense of the flesh he shal do wickedly and vniustly We must this think when as Peter as it were douting seeketh a by place he preuenteth superstition least any man should ascribe to his power the worke of God whereof he was onely a minister For he which withdrew himselfe from company and did pray so instantly did plainly confesse that the matter was not in his own hand Therfore whē Peter waiteth to know what pleaseth the Lord he cōfessed that he alone was the author of the worke Kneeling in time of praier is a token of humilitie which hath a double profite that all our members may be applied vnto the worship of God and that the externall exercise of the body may helpe the weakenesse of the mind But we must take heede so often as we kneele downe that the inwarde submission of the heart bee answerable to the ceremonie that it be not vaine and false Turning toward the corps This seemeth also to bee contrary to reason that hee speaketh vnto a corps without feeling But this speaking vnto the dead corps was one point of the vehemency whereunto the Spirit of God enforced Peter And if any man desire a reason this forme of speech doth more liuely expresse the power of God in raising the deade than if it should be said in the thirde person Let this body receiue life againe and liue Therefore when as Ezechiel doeth shadowe the deliuerance of the people vnder a figure of the resurrection O deade bones saith he heare the word of the Lord. And Christ saith The time shall come when the dead shall heare the voice of the sonne of God Ezec. 37.4 Iohn 5.28 For this was in deed the voice of Christ which was vttered by the mouth of Peter and gaue breath to the body of Thabita The circūstances following serue to cōfirm the certainty of the myracle 41 Luke repeateth againe in the end that she was shewed openly to the disciples Whence we gather that she was raised againe rather for other mens sake than for her owne Brainsicke fellowes who dreame that the soule of man is onely a blast which vanisheth away vntill the day of the resurrection snatch at this place to proue their doting withall To what ende was it say they to call backe the soule of Thabita into the prison of the body where it shoulde suffer such misery if it were receiued into blessed rest As if it were not lawfull for God to haue respect of his glorie as well in death as in life and as if this were not the true felicitie of the godly to liue and die to him yea as if Christ were not to vs a vantage as well by lyuing as dying when wee dedicate our selues to him Therefore there shall no inconuenience follow if the Lord had greater respect to his owne glory Phil. 1.21 than to Thabita although as the commodity of the faithfull is alwayes annexed to the glory of God this turned to her greater good that she reuiued that she might be a more excellent instrument of Gods goodnes and power 42 And manie beleeued Now appeare manifold fruits of the myracle For God comforted the power a godly matron was restored to the Church in whose death it suffered great losse and many are called vnto the faith For although Peter were a minister of so great power yet he keepeth not the men in himselfe but doeth rather direct them vnto Christ 43 When as he saith that Peter dwelt with a tanner we may hereby gather of what manner men the Church of Ioppa did consist For if the chiefetaines of the Citie had beene conuerted to Christ some one of them would haue lodged Peter For it had bene too cruell a thing to suffer an Apostle of Christ to bee so despysed Therefore the Lorde did gather togither there as euery where a Church of the common sort of men that he might throwe downe the pride of the flesh and also thereby appeareth Peter his curtesie in that he vouchsafeth to lodge with a man of that calling Although it seemeth that he was rather a merchant of some good estimation than one of the basest sort of workemen for Luke will say afterward that ther were there some which ministred vnto Peter whereby it appeareth that he was well and honestly vsed CHAP. X. 1 AND there was a certaine man of Cesarea named Cornelius a captaine of the band which was called the Italian band 2 A deuout man and one that feared God with his whole houshold and one which gaue almes to all the people and which prayed to God continually 3 He saw plainly in a vision about the ninth houre of the day an angel of God comming in vnto him and saying to him Cornelius 4 And beholding and being afraid he said What is it Lorde Then he saide to him Thy prayers and thy almes are come vp into remembrance before God 5 And now send men to Ioppa and fet Simon which is called Peter 6 He lodgeth with Simon a Tanner whose house lyeth to the Sea he shal tel thee what thou must doe 1 Luke passeth ouer now vnto a worthie historie to wit that God vouchsafed to aduaunce a straunger and one vncircumcised vnto singular honour aboue all the Iewes because he doth both send his angel vnto him and for his sake bringeth Peter to Cesarea that he may instruct him in the Gospel But first of all Luke sheweth what maner person this Cornelius was for whose cause an angel descended from heauen and God spake to Peter in a vision He was a captaine of the Italian band A band did consist vpon a thousand footemen he which was chief captaine was called a Tribune or Marshal Againe euery hundreth had a captaine A legion had for the most part fiue bands That band was called the Italian bande because the Romanes did choose souldiers oftentimes from amongst those which dwelt in
least iot of gods glory Whereas he saith that he was deliuered out of the hand of Herod he amplifieth the goodnes and benefit of god by the power of his enimy To the same end tendeth that which he addeth of the Iewes For the greater the number of the enimies was the more excellent was the grace of God toward his seruant for it is a great matter that God alone being fauorable the deadly hatred of al the whol world should come to nought 12 And considering he came into the house of Mary the mother of Iohn whose syrname was Marke where many were gathered and praying 13 And when Peter had knocked at the entry doore a maid came out to harken named Rhode 14 And when she knew Peters voice she opened not the doore for ioy but running in she told that Peter stood without 15 But they said to her Thou art mad But she affirmed more vehemently that is was so But they said it is his Angel 16 But Peter continued knocking When they had opened they saw him and they were astonied 17 But after that he had beckned to them with the hand that they should hold their peace he told them how God had brought him out of prison And he said Tel Iames and the brethren these things And he departed thence and went into an other place 18 After that it was day there was no smal adoe amongst the soldiars what was become of Peter 19 And when Herod had sought him and could not finde him so soone as he knew the matter he commanded the keepers to be carried away 12 Into the house of Mary It appeareth that shee was a matron of rare godlinesse whose house was as it were a certaine temple of God where the brethren did vse to meet togither And Luke saith that there were Many assembled there because seing they could not all meet togither in one place without feare of some tumult they came togither in diuerse places of the citie in companies as they could conueniently For doubtlesse there were other companies gathered togither elsewhere because it is not to be thought that at such time as many of the faithful did giue themselues to praier the Apostles were not in like sort occupied one house could not hold so many And we must alwayes marke the circumstance of time because euē in the heat of the enimies cruelty the godly were notwithstāding assembled togither For if at any time this exercise be profitable then is it most necessary when hard conflicts approch 15 When he did knocke at the gate Whereas they thinke that the maide is madde which telleth them that Peter was come we gather by this that they did not hope or looke for Peters deliuerance and yet wee will not say that they prayed without faith because they looked for some other successe to witte that Peter being armed with power from heauen shoulde bee readie whether it were by life or death to glorifie God that the flocke being terrified with the violent inuasion of woolues might not be scattered abroad that those that were weake might not faint that the Lord would put away that whirle winde of persecution But in that the Lorde graunteth them more than they hoped for he surpasseth their desires with his infinit goodnes And now that which was done seemeth to them incredible that they may bee the more prouoked to praise his power Matth. 18.10 It is his Angell They call him his Angel who was by God appointed to bee his keeper and the minister of his safetie In which sense Christ saith that the Angels of little ones do alwayes see the face of his father And what do they gather hence commonly That euery particular man hath a particular Angel which taketh charge of him but it is too weak For the scripture doeth sometimes testifie that there is one Angel giuen to a great people Exod. 14.10 2. Kings 6.17 Dan. 10.5.12 Psalm 91.11 Psalm 34.8 and to one man onely a great hoast For Elizeus his seruant had his eies opened so that hee sawe in the aire charriots of fire which were appointed to defend the prophet And in Daniel there is but one Angel of the Persians and one of the Grecians named Neither doeth the Scripture promise to euery man a certaine and peculiar Angel but rather that the Lorde hath charged his Angels to keepe all the faithfull also that they pitch their tents about the godly Therefore that vaine surmise which is common touching the two Angels of euerie man is prophane Let this bee sufficient for vs that the whole hoast of heauen doth watch for the safetie of the Church and that as necessity of time requireth sometimes one Angel sometimes moe doe defende vs with their aide Assuredly this is vnestimable goodnes of God in that he saieth that the Angels who are the beames of his brightnesse are our ministers 17 Tel Iames and the Brethren By Brethren I vnderstand not euery one that was of the Church but the Apostles and elders For though it were requisite that the myracle should be made knowne to all yet will Peter worthily for honors sake haue his fellowes in office to be certified thereof Ecclesiastical writers after Eusebius report that this Iames was one of the disciples but forasmuch as Paul reckoneth him in the number of the three pillars of the Church I doe not thinke that a disciple was aduanced to that dignities and the Apostles set aside Wherefore I doe rather coniecture that this was Iames the son of Alphee whose holinesse was such that it caused the Iewes to wonder at it And there be two reasons for which Peter would haue this ioyfull message brought vnto the brethren to wit that he might ridde them of that care which did vexe them secondly that they might be incouraged with such an example of Gods goodnesse to be the more bold Whereas he passeth into another place I thinke it was done for this cause because forasmuch as the house was well knowne and famous because many of the brethren resorted thither hee might lye hidde elsewhere with lesse daunger Therefore hee sought a place which was not so much suspected of the enimie and that that hee might not onely saue himselfe but also his hostis and others 18 When it was day Luke returneth nowe vnto Herod and the soldiars and he saith that there was no small adoe amongst them For they could not suspect that Peter was taken from them by violence or that he was escaped by some subtill shift Herod examineth the matter afterward as a iudge but when as he perceiued that the soldiars were in no fault he himself is also inforced to be a witnesse of the deliuerance wrought by God Whereas he commandeth them to be carried out of his sight or to be carried to prison we may thereby gather that their faithfulnesse and diligence were approued and seene for if there had beene any suspition of negligence there was punishment prepared for them but
persecution for the gospel Therfore though the Lord suffred Paul Silas to be scourged imprisoned by the wicked Iudges yet he did not suffer them to be put to any shame but that which turned to their greater renown For seing that those persecutions which we must suffer for the testimony of the Gospel are remnants of the suffrings of Christ like as our Prince turned the crosse which was accursed into a triumphant charret so he shal in like sort adorn the prisons gibbets of his that they may there triumph ouer Satan and all the wicked Renting their garments Because the old interpreter had truly translated this it was euill done of Erasmus to change it that The Magistrates did rent their owne garments For this was Luke his meaning only that the holy men were outragiously beaten the lawefull order of iudgement being neglected and that they laid hands on them with such violence that their garments were rent And this had been too far disagreing with the custome of the Romanes for the iudges to cut their owne garments publikely in the market place especially seeing the question was concerning an vnknowne religion for which they did not greatly care but I will not long stand about a plaine matter 23 And when they had giuen them many stripes they did cast them into prison commaunding the keeper of the prison to keepe them safe 24 Who seeing he had receiued such commandement did put them in the inner prison and made fast their feet in the stocks 25 And at midnight Paul Silas praying did praise god And those which lay bound heard them 26 And sodainly there was a great earthquake so that the foundations of the prison wer shaken And by and by all the dores were opened and all their hands were loosed 27 And when the keeper of the prison awaked and saw al the prison dores open drawing out his sworde he was about to slea himself thinking that those which lay bounde were fled 28 And Paul cryed with a loud voice saying do thy selfe no harm for we be al heere 23 That he should keep them safe Whereas the Magistrates command that Paul and Silas should be kept so diligently it was done to this end that they might know more of the matter For they had already beaten them with rods to appease the tumult And this is that which I saide of late that the worlde doth rage with such blinde furie against the ministers of the gospel that it doth keepe no meane in seueritie But as it is very profitable for vs for examples sake to know howe vncourteously and vncomlie the witnesses of Christe were entertained in times past so it is no lesse profitable to know that which Luke addeth immediatlie concerning their fortitude and patience For euen when they lay bound with fetters he saith that in praier they lauded god wherby it appereth that neither the reproch which they suffred nor the stripes which made their flesh smart nor the stinke of the deep dungeon nor the danger of death which was hard at hand could hinder them from giuing thankes to the Lord ioyfully and with glad hearts Wee must note this generall rule that we cannot pray as we ought but we must also praise God For though the desire to pray arise of the feeling of our want and miseries and therfore it is for the most part ioyned with sorrow and carefulnesse yet the faithfull must so bridle their affections that they mumur not against God so that the right forme of prayer doth ioyne two affections together to look too contrary carefulnesse and sorow by reason of the present necessitie which doth keepe vs downe and ioyfulnesse by reason of the obedience whereby we submit our selues to God and by reason of the hope which shewing vs the hauen nigh at hand doth refresh vs euen in the midst of shipwracke Such a forme doth Paul prescribe to vs. Phil. 4.6 Let your prayers saith he be made knowen to God with thanksgiuing But in this historie we must note the circumstāces For though the pain of the stripes wer greeuous though the prison were troublesome thogh the daunger were great seeing that Paule and Silas cease not to praise GOD wee gather by this howe greatly they were incouraged to beare the crosse Chap. 5.41 So Luke reported before that the Apostles reioyced because they were counted worthie to suffer reproche for the name of the Lord. And those which lay bound Wee must know that Paul Silas prayed aloud that they might make the boldnesse of a good conscience known to others who wer shut vp in the same prison for they might haue made their praier with secret groning and sighing of heart as they were wont or they might haue prayed vnto the Lorde quietly and softly Why doe they then exalt their voice Assuredly they do not that for any ambitiō but that they may professe that trusting to the goodnesse of their cause they flie without fear vnto God Therefore in their praiers was included a confession of faith which did appertaine vnto a common exāple and prepared as wel the malefactors as the Iailers house to consider the myracle 26 There was an earthquake The Lord in shewing this visible sign ment chiefly to prouide for his seruants that they might more manifestlye know that their praiers wer heard yet he had respect also of the rest He could haue loosed the fetters of Paul Silas without an earthquake also haue opened the gates But that addition serued not a little to confirme them seeing that the Lord for their sakes did shake both the aire also the earth againe it was requisite that the keeper of the prison the rest should feele the presence of God least they should thinke that the myracle came by chaunce Neither is it to bee doubted but that the Lord did then shew a token of his power which should be profitable for all ages so that the faithfull may fully assure themselues that hee will be nigh vnto them so often as they are to enter cumbats dangers for the defence of the Gospel Neuerthelesse he doth neither alwayes keep the same course to testifie his pretence by manifest signes neither is it lawful for vs to prescribe him a lawe For hee did helpe his by manifest myracles then for this cause that we may bee content with his hidden grace at this day concerning which matter we haue spoken more vppon the second chapter 27 when the keeper of the prison was awaked He would haue slaine himself that he might preuent punishment For it had been a foolish answer to haue said that the dores were opened of their owne accord But this question may be asked Seing that Paul seeth that they might haue som hope to escape if he should slea himself why doth he hinder him for he seemeth by this means to refuse the diliuerāce which was offred by god yea it seemeth to haue bin a meer toy in that the Lord would
certaintie be gathered out of the scriptures and therefore they hold that we must stand to the decrees of men For I demaund of them whether Paul did obserue a right order in disputing or no at least let them blush for shame that the worde of the Lord was more reuerenced in an vnbeleeuing nation then it is at this day among them The Iewes admit Paul suffer him when he disputeth out of the scriptures the Pope and all his count it a meere mocke when the scripture is cited as if God did speak doubtfully there and did with vaine boughts mocke men Hereunto is added that bicause there is at this day much more light in the scripture and the trueth of God shineth there more cleerely then in the law and prophets For in the Gospel Christ who is the sonne of righteousnes doeth shed out his beam with perfect brightnes vpon vs for which cause the blasphemy of the papists is the more intollerable whiles that they wil make the word of God as yet vncertain But let vs know as faith can bee grounded no where els then in the word of the Lord so we must only stand to the testimonie thereof in al controuersies 3 Opening In this place he describeth the sum or subiect of the disputation and he putteth down two members concerning Christ that He must haue died and risen againe that the son of Mary which was crucified is Christ When the question is concerning Christ there come 3. things in question Whether he be who he is what he is If Paul had had to deale with the gentiles he must haue fet his beginning farther because they had heard nothing concerning Christ nether do profane mē conceiue that they need a mediator But this point was out of doubt among the Iewes to whom the mediator was promised wherefore Paul omitteth that as superfluous which was receiued by common consent of al men But because there was nothing more harde then to bring the Iewes to confesse that Iesus who was crucified was the redeemer therefore Paul beginneth with this that it was meet that Christ should die that he may remoue the stumbling blocke of the crosse and yet we must not thinke that he recited the 〈◊〉 history but he taketh an vndoubted principle that the causes were shewed why Christe must haue suffered rise againe to wit because he preached of the ruine of mankind of sin of the punishment thereof of the iudgement of God and of the eternal curse wherein we be al inwrapped For euen the scripture calleth vs hither when it foretelleth the death of Christ As Isaias saith not simply that Christ should die Isa 53.6 Ib. 5. but plainly expressing because we haue al erred euery one hath gone his owne way he assigneth the cause of his death that God hath laid vpon him al our iniquities that the chastisement of our peace is vppon him that by his stripes we may bee healed that by making satisfaction for vs hee hath purchased righteousnes for vs. So doth Daniel Dan. 9.24 shew the force and fruit of his death in his 9. chapter when he saith that sinne must be sealed vp that eternall righteousnesse may succeed And surely there is no more apt or effectuall way to proue the office of Christ then when men being humbled with the feeling of their miseries see that there is no hope left vnlesse they be reconciled by the sacrifice of Christ Thē laying away their pride they humbly imbrace his crosse wherof they were before both weary ashamed Therfore we must come vnto the same fountaines at this day from which Paul fetteth the proofe of the death and resurrectiō of Christ And that definition brought great light to the second chapter It had not beene so easie a matter for Paul to prooue and certainely to gather that the sonne of Mary is Christ vnlesse the Iewes had been taught before what manner redeemer they were to hope for And when that doth once appeare it doth only remain that those things be applied to Christ which the scripture doth attribute to the mediator But this is the summe of our faith that we know that the sonne of Marie is that Christ mediator which God promised from the beginning that done that we knowe vnderstand why he died and rose againe that we do not feigne to our selues any earthly king but that we seeke in him righteousnes and all parts of our saluatiō Both which things Paul is said to haue proued out of the scriptures we must know that the Iewes were not so blockish nor so impudent as they be at this day Paul might haue drawen arguments from the sacrifices from all the worship of the law whereat the Iewes narre at this day like dogs It is wel knowne howe vnseemelily they rent and corrupt other places of Scripture At that daye they had some curtefie in them also they did somwhat reuerence the scripture so that they were not altogether such as would not be taught at this daye the veyle is laid ouer their hearts so that they can see no more in the cleere light then moales 4 Certaine of them beleeued We see here the fruite of Paul his disputation He prooued flatly that Iesus was Christ 2. Cor. 3.15 who by his death did appease the fathers wrath for vs and whose resurrection is the life of the worlde Yet onely certaine of the Iewes beleeue the rest are blind at noone day and with deafe eares refuse the certaine and playne trueth This is also woorth the noting that whereas onely a fewe Iewes beleeued a great multitude of the Gretians who were farre farther of came vnto the faith To what end can you say they weer noussed vp in the doctrine of the law from their childhood saue onely that they might bee more estranged from God Therefore the Lord doth now begin to shew some tokens of that blindnes in them which the prophetes doe oftentimes denounce vnto the●● Notwithstanding he declareth by this that his couenaunt was not in vaine because he did at least gather some of that people vnto himselfe that the sparkles of the election may shyne in the remnaunt which was saued freely Luke doth moreouer teache that they did not beleeue the sayinges of Paul onely so farre foorth that they subscribed vnto them with a cold consent but that they did testifie their earnest of affection because they had ioyned themselues to Paul and Silas as companions prouoked against themselues the hatred of their nation by the free profession of the Gospel For what meaneth this adioyning saue only because they professed that they allowed that doctrine which he deliuered and that they tooke his part For ther is nothing more contrarie to faith then if when we knowe the truth of God we stand notwithstanding in doubt and are loth to ioyn our selues to any side If any man had rather expound it that they did ioyne them selues to Paul and Silas because
they should neuer see him any more And it was very expedient that the patterne which was set before them by God of them to be followed shuld be alwayes before their eies that they should remember him when he was dead For we know how readily men degenerate from pure institution But thought hee deny that he doth know what shall befall him at Ierusalem yet because hee was taught by many prophecies that bōds were prepared for him there as if he were now readie to die he cutteth off shortly after the hope of his returne And yet for all this he is not contrarie to him selfe Hee speaketh doubtfully at the first of set purpose that hee maye soften that which was about to be more hard bitter yet he doth truly affirm that he knew not as yet the ends euēts of things because he had no certain and special reuelation touching the whole processe bound in the spirit Some expound this that he was bound to the churches who had committed to him this function to carry almes Notwithstanding I doe rather thinke that hereby is meant the inward force and motion of the spirit not as thogh he were so inspired that he was out of his witte but because being certified of the will of God he did meekely follow the direction and instinct of the spirit euen of his owne accord Therefore this speech importeth as much as if he shoulde haue saide I cannot otherwise doe vnlesse I woulde be stubborne and rebellious against God who doth as it were draw me thither being bounde by his spirit For to the end he may excuse himself of rashnes he saith that the spirite is the authour guide of his iourney But woulde to God those brainsick men who boast that the spirit doth indite to thē those things which proceed from their own fantasie did know the spirit as familiarly as did Paul who doth notwithstanding not say that al his motions and instigations are of the spirit but declareth that that fel out in one thing as a singuler thing For men do oftentimes foolishly vnaduisedly take in hande those things which they put in practise afterwarde stoutly because they be ashamed of lightnes and vnstabilitie And he doth not only meane that he tooke in hand his iourney for a good cause which the spirit of god sheweth him but that it is altogether necessary for him because it is wickednes to resist Furthermore let vs learne by the example of the holy man not to kick against the spirit of the Lord but obediētly to giue ouer our selues by him to be gouerned that he may rule vs at his pleasure after we be as it were bound to him For if the reprobate who are the bōd slaues of Satā be carried not only willingly but also greedily through his motion how much more ought this voluntary bondage or seruice to be in the children of God 23 But that the holy ghost I do not vnderstand this of secret oracles but of those foretellings which he heard euery where of the Prophets And this speech hath greater dignity to set forth the prophecies then if the men thēselues which spake were called cited to be witnesses For by this meanes the word of God hath his authoritie whē we confesse that the spirit of God is the author therof though the ministers be mē Now for as much as the same spirit which foretelleth Paul of bonds tribulations doth also hold him fast boūd that he cānot refuse to submit himself vnto him by this we learn that what dangers so euer hang ouer our heads we are not therby acquitted but that we must obey the cōmandemēts of god folow his calling In vain therfore do those mē flatter thē selues who wil do good so long as they be free from molestation may make discōmodities damages and dangers of death sufficient excuses 24 I care not Al the godly must be so framed in their minds chiefly the ministers of the word that settīg al things apart they make hast to obey god The life is indeed a more excellēt gift thē that it ought to be neglected to wit seing we be therin created after the image of god to the end we may think vpō that blessed immortality which is laid vp for vs in heauē in which the lord doth now by diuers testimonies tokēs shew himself to be our father But because it is ordained to be vnto vs as a race we must alwa●●sten vnto the marke ouercome all hinderances least any thing binder or stay vs in our course For it is a filthy thing for vs to be so holden with a blind desire to liue that we loose the causes of life for life it self this do the words of Paul expresse For he doeth not simplie set light by his life but he doth forget the respect thereof that he may finish his course that he may fulfil the ministery which he hath receiued of Christ as if he should say that he is not desirous to liue saue onely that he may satisfie the calling of God and that therefore it shall bee no griefe to him to loose his life so that hee may come by death vnto the goale of the function prescribed to him by God And we must note that which he saith with ioy for his meaning is that this is taken from the faithful by no sorrow or griefe but that they both liue and die to the Lord. For the ioy of a good cōscience is more deeply surely laid vp thā that it can be takē away by any externall troble or any sorrow of the flesh it triumpheth more ioyfully than that it can be oppressed Also we must note the definition of his course to wit that it is the ministery receiued of the Lord. Paul doth in deed speak of himself yet by his own example he teacheth that all those goe astray who haue not God to be the gouernour of their course Whereupon it followeth that his calling is vnto euery one of vs a rule of good life Neither can we be otherwise perswaded that the Lorde alloweth that which we doe vnlesse our life be framed ordered according to his wil which certainty is required especially in the ministers of the worde that they take nothing in hand vnlesse they haue Christ for their authour Neither is it to be doubted but that Paul in giuing his Apostleship this mark as he vseth to do very often doth confirm the credit thereof He calleth it the Gospel of the grace of God of the effect or end notwithstanding this is a title of rare commendation that by the gospel saluation the grace of god are brought vnto vs. For it is very expedient for vs to know that god is foūd ther to be merciful fauorable 25 And behold now I know He doeth now vtter that plainely which he had insinuated couertly And wee said that he did put them out of hope of his returne to the end he might more
him a prophet as of late he called the four daughters of Philip he signifieth that it was not a common but a peculiar gift Now we must see to what ende the persecutiō which was at hand was now again shewed by Agabus As concerning Paul he was sufficiently told alreadie Therefore I doe not doubt but that this confirmation was added for other mens sake bicause the Lord meant euery where to make knowen the bonds of his seruant partly that they might know that he entred the combat willingly partly that they might perceiue that he was appointed of god to be a chāpion to fight for the gospell It was surely a profitable example of inuincible constancie seeing that he offered himself willingly and wittingly to the violence of the aduersaries and no lesse profitable is it for vs at this day that his apostleship should be confirmed with this voluntarie no lesse constant giuing ouer of his life The man who oweth this girdle It was an vsuall thing among the prophets to represen● those thinges which they spake by signes Ies 20.2 neither did they confirme their prophesies by vsing signes through their owne motion but at the commandement of the spirit Ier. 27.2 32.7 Ez. 12.5 as when Isaias is commaunded to goe barefoot Ieremie to put a yoke vpon his necke to sel the possession and to buy it Ezechiel to digge through the wall of his house priuily and in the same night to carry foorth burthens These and such like might seeme to the common sort to be toies but the same spirite who did apply signes to his woordes did inwardly touch the hearts of the godly as if they had bin brought to the very thing it selfe So this spectacle mentioned by Luke did no lesse mooue Paul his companions then if they had seene him bound in deed The false prophets did afterward assay to delude the simple by this pollicie as Satan is in a manner Gods ape and his ministers do enuie the seruauntes of God Zedechias made himselfe hornes wherewith he promised Syria should be pushed Ananias by breaking Ieremies yoke put the people in a vaine hope of deliueraunce GOD hath suffered the reprobate to bee deluded with such delusions that he might punish their vnbeleefe But forasmuch as there was in them no force of the Spirite their vanitie did no whit hurt the faithfull This is also worthie to be noted that Agabus doth not set before their eies a dumb spectacle but he coupleth therewith the worde whereby he may shew to the faithfull the vse and end of the ceremonie 12 Both we Bicause they had not al one reuelatiō it is no maruel if their iudgements were diuers For seeing these holy men knew that ther consisted much in the life or death of one man they would not haue him to come in danger rashly And their desire is worthie praise in that they desired to prouide for the common safetie of the church by keeping back Paul But on the otherside Paul his constancie deserueth so much the more praise when as he continueth so stedfast in the calling of god For he was not ignorant what great trouble he shuld suffer by reason of his bands But because he knoweth the will of God which was his only rule in taking counsell he maketh no account of all other thinges that hee may follow it And assuredly we must bee so subiect to the will and pleasure of God that no profit no kind of reason may remoue vs from obeying him When Paul doth reprehend the brethren because they afflict his hart with weeping he doth sufficiently declare that he was not hardened but that hee was brought vnto some feeling and suffering together with them Therefore the teares of the godly did wounde his heart but that softnesse did not turne him out of the way but that hee proceeded to follow God with a streight course Therfore we must vse such curtesie toward our brethren that the beck or will of God haue alwayes the vpper hand Now Paul doth againe declare by his answere that the seruants of Christe cannot be prepared to doe their dutie vnlesse they despice death and that none can euer bee well incouraged to liue to the Lord but those who will willingly lay downe their liues for the testimonie of the truth 14 We ceased saying If they had thought that he runne rashly vnto death they would not haue ceased so Therfore they yeeld least they resist the holy Spirit whereby they vnderstand that Paul is gouerned for that which they had hearde before by the mouth of Paul that hee was drawen as it were by the bands of the Spirit was quite out of their heads by reason of the sorow which they had cōceiued but whē they be taught againe that it was the will of God that it should be so they thinke it vnlawfull for them to resist any longer and with this bridle must al our affections be kept in that nothing bee so bitter or dolefull or harde which the wyll of God may not mittigate and mollifie For so often as anye thing which is harde or sharpe doeth fall out we giue God small honor vnlesse this cogitation preuaile with vs that we must obey him 15 And after these daies hauing taken vp our burthens we went vp to Ierusalem 16 And there came togeather with vs certaine of the Disciples from Cesarea bringing with them one Mnason of Cyprus an old disciple with whom we should lodge 17 And when wee were come vnto Ierusalem the brethren receiued vs gladlie 18 And on the morrowe Paul went in with vs vnto Iames and all the Elders were present 19 Whom after we had saluted he told by order all things which God had done among the Gentiles by his ministerie 20 But when they had heard they glorified the Lord and said to him Thou seest brother how many thousand Iewes there be which beleeue and they all are earnest followers of the law 21 And it hath beene tolde them concerning thee that thou teachest all the Iewes which are amonge the Gentiles to forsake Moses saying that they muste not circumcise their children nor liue accordinge to the customes 22 What is it then The multitude must needes come together for they shall heare that thou art come 23 Therefore do this which we say to thee we haue foure men which haue a vow vpon them 24 Them take and purifie thy selfe with them and doe cost on them that they may shaue their heads and that all men may knowe that those thinges which they haue heard concerning thee are nothing but that thou thy self also walkest an keepest the law 25 And as concerning those which among the Gentiles haue beleeued we haue written decreeing that they obserue no such thing but that they keepe themselues from things offered to Idols and from blood and from that which is strangled and from fornication 15 When we had taken vp our burdens Paul his companions declare that when they went about to
Helpe They crie out as if they were in extreame danger and they call vpon all men to helpe them as if all religion were in hazard Whereby we see with what furious hatred they were inflamed against Paul onely because in shewing that the full and perfite truth is found in Christ he taught that the figures of the Law had an end Now whereas they conceiue a false opinion hauing seene Trophymus they do more bewray by this headlong lightnes how venemous they be They accuse Paul of sacrilege Why because he brought into the Temple a man which was vncircumcised But they laid a most cruell crime to the charge of an innocent through a false opinion Thus the boldnesse of those men vseth commonly to bee preposterous who are carried away with an opinion conceiued before But let vs learne by such examples to beware of the distemperature of affections and not to let light preiudices haue the raine least we runne headlong vpon the innocent being carried with blind force 30 And the Citie was moued Wee see in this place the vanitie of the common people which count Paul a condemned man before euer they heare him Whereas the citie is moued about godlines it is no maruell but this is a point of peruerse zeale and mad rashnes in that they set themselues against Paule before they knowe his matter For in this corruption of nature frowardnes is ioined with foolishnes so that those will readily of their owne accord make haste to maintaine an euil cause who can hardly be moued with many exhortations to do well This is a hard case that the whole world should be armed against vs at a sodaine through the perswasion of a fewe but seeing it pleaseth the Lorde it should bee so let euery one of vs prepare himselfe by this and such like examples to suffer all manner assaults and to beare and abide albrunts 31 And as they sought to kill him it was told the captaine of the band that all Ierusalem was on an vprore 32 Who tooke with him streightway soldiars and vnder captaines and ranne downe vnto them But they when they saw the chiefe captaine and the soldiars left smiting of Paul 33 Then the chiefe captaine drew neere and tooke him and commanded him to be bounde with two chaines and hee asked what he was and what hee had done 34 And some cried one thing and some another among the people And when he could not know the truth by reason of the tumult he commanded him to be carried into the campe 35 And when he came to the staires it happened that he was carried of the soldiars because of the violence of the multitude 36 For the multitude of people followed crying Away with him 37 And when Paul began to be carried into the campe he saith to the captaine May I speake to thee who said canst thou speake Greeke 38 Art not thou that Egyptian which before these dayes madest an vprore and leddest into the wildernes fower thousand men which were murderers 39 And Paul saide I verely am a man which am a Iewe borne in Tharsus a citizen of no vile Citie of Cilicia But I beseech thee suffer me to speake to the people 40 And when he had giuen him leaue Paul standing vpon the staires beckoned with the hand vnto the people and when there was made great silence he spake in the Hebrew tongue saying 31 As they sought to kill him Assuredly the force of satan appeareth therein in that he driueth the people headlong into such rage that whē they haue shut the doares of the Temple being not content with meane punishment they conspire to put Paul to death Wee must thus thinke with our selues that Sathan doth pricke forward the enimies of godlinesse least their rage how cruell and troublesome so euer it be trouble vs. On the otherside appeareth the wonderfull goodnes of God when as he raiseth vp the chiefe captaine at a sodaine that hee may deliuer Paul from death He himselfe thought vpon no such thing but he came to appease the tumult which was raised among the people but the Lord sheweth a more euident token of his prouidence because Paul his life was deliuered from such present danger without mans counsell Thus doth he suffer the faithful not only to labor but to be almost oppressed that hee may deliuer them from death more wonderfully Luke calleth him the chiefe captaine of the band improperly seing euery chiefe captain was set ouer a thousand which doth also appeare by the text where he saith that the chiefe captaine tooke with him vndercaptaines 32 And when they saw the chiefe captaine Those whose furie neither the maiestie of God ne yet the reuerence of the temple could once stay begin to relent when they see a prophane man Wherby it appeareth that theye were set on fire rather with barbarous crueltie than zeale Nowe whereas the chiefe captaine bindeth Paul with chaines hee declareth thereby sufficiently that he came not to ease him The vnbeleeuers wold attribute this to fortune but the Spirit hath depainted out vnto vs the prouidence of God as in a table reigning amidst the confused vprores of men And though this be very hard that this holy minister of God is so shamefully handled yet the equitie of the chiefe captaine is to be commended if hee bee compared with the Iewes Hee bindeth him with chaines as if he were some euill doer or some wicked person yet doth he vouchsafe to heare him when he is bounde whom they did beat vnmercifully neither doeth hee determin to handle him hardly before he knew his cause Yea this was the best way to mitigate their cruelty because they thought that Paul should be punished immediatly 34 Some cried one thing and some another The madnesse of the raging people doth bewray it selfe on euery side They make horrible outcries whereof one is contrary to another Neuerthelesse they desire with one consent to haue him put to death who was conuict of no offence In the meane season we need not doubt but that they were blinded with a color of holy zeale but the truth of the cause wel known maketh mē truly zealous as it maketh them true martyrs of God but rage bewraieth diuellish madnes Whereas mention is made in this place of the campe or fortresse we must know that the soldiars which were placed to gard the City had a place which was trenched fortified on euerie side which they might defend as if it were a castle from which they might beat backe all assaultes if any sedition were raised For it had not been good for them to haue been dispearsed here and there in diuers Innes seeing the people were treacherous and the Citie troublesome And wee gather by this that the place was high because Luke saith that when they came to the steps Paul was carried of the soldiers And whether the soldiers did lift vp Paul on high that they might bring him safe to the station or campe
so For if hee ought to beleeue Paul his wordes euery malefactour might by this shift haue escaped punishment But this was their manner of dealing hee which did say that he was a citizen of Rome vnlesse hee could bryng in some which knewe hym or proue it lawefullie hee was punished For it was death for any man to pretend the freedome of the citie falsly Wherefore the Centurion referreth the matter vnto the chiefe captaine as doubting thereof and he as wee haue said doth streightway examine the matter more throughly And though Luke doeth not expresse by what testimonies Paul did proue himselfe to bee a citizen of Rome yet vndoubtedly the chiefe captaine knewe the truth of the matter before he loosed him 28 With a great summe The chiefe captaine obiecteth this to refute him as if he shoulde say that the freedome of the citie is not so common and easily to be obtayned How can it be that thou beeing some base fellowe of the countrie of the Cilicians shouldest obtayne this honour for which I paid sweetly Whereas Paul maketh answeare that he was free borne who neuer saw the citie yea whose father it may be was neuer there there is no cause why this should trouble any man For those who are skilfull in the Romaine historie knowe that certayne were made free of the citie who dwelt in the prouinces if hauing deserued well of the common wealth or in warre or in other waighty affaires they did desire and craue this rewarde of the deputies so that it is no absurdity to say that he was borne a Citizen of Rome who discending by his ancetors of some prouince farre distant from Rome did neuer set foote in Italy Notwithstanding the question is howe this can hang together that the chiefe captaine was afraide because hee had bounde a Citizen of Rome and yet he did not loose him from his bondes vntill the morrowe It may be that he deferred it till the next daye least he shoulde shew some token of feare Notwithstanding I thinke that the chiefe captaine was afraide because Paul was bounde at his commaundement that he might be scourged because this was to do iniurie to the bodie of a Citizen of Rome and to breake the common liberty and that it was lawfull to put a Romane in prison CHAP. XXIII 1 ANd Paul beheld the Councel stedfastly and said Men brethren I haue serued God vntil this day in all good conscience 2 And the high Priest Ananias commanded those that stoode by him to smite him on the face 3 Then Paul saide to him God will smite thee thou painted wall And thou sittest iudging according to Lawe and transgressing the Lawe Commaundest thou me to be smitten 4 And those which stood by said Railest thou on Gods high priest 5 And Paul saide I wist not brethren that he was the high priest for it is written Thou shalt not speake euill of the ruler of thy people 1 Looking earnestly Paul beginneth with the testimonie of a good cōscience that al the whole multitude may vnderstand that he is vniustly charged with such an hainous offence as if he had gone about to ouerthrow the woorshippe of God It may be indeed that a man may offend of ignorance who will not otherwise be a contemner either of God or of religion but Paul meant at the first only with this excuse to mollifie their netled mindes that he might the better be heard For it had byn in vaine for him to haue defended himselfe so long as that opinion did sticke in the mindes of the priests that he was a wicked reuolt Therefore before he enter the cause hee excuseth him selfe of that cryme not onely that he may purchase fauour by that desire which he had to liue godlily but also that he may preuent false accusations or at least that he may refute vniust preiudices which might haue made against him wherewith he saw the whole multitude infected and corrupted We know not what he meant to say besides Notwithstanding this preface teacheth that no man can rightly handle the doctrine of godlines vnlesse the feare of God reigne and beare the chief sway in him And now though hee giue not the priestes so honorable a title heere as hee did a little before when he stood vppon the steppes of the fortresse yet he calleth them brethren giuing them that honour not because they deserue it but that hee may testifie that hee is not the cause of the breache of friendship 2 And the chiefe priest Luke his narration seemeth not to agree with the vsuall history For Iosephus writeth thus concerning the high priests of that time that Quadratus deputie of Syria deposing Cumanus from the gouernment of Iudea commanded him to answere for himselfe before Caesar and sent Ananias the highest priest bound with him into whose place who was chosen he maketh no mentiō sauing that it is likely that Ionathas had the honour giuen him who as he reporteth was afterward slaine by the subtlety and trechery of Felix Deputie of Iudea wh succeeded Cumanus For when he had oftentimes told Felix part of his minde and he coulde not away with the constancie of the man he made a compact with one Doras that hee shoulde priuily conuey in murtherers to slea him Then as the same Iosephus doth witnesse King Agrippa made Ismael the sonne of Phebeus priest But when he was sent by the people to Rome about a certaine suite and was kepte there by Popea wife to Nero Agrippa putteth in his place one Iosephus whose name was Chabus the sonne of Simon But immediatly being also weary of him he appointeth Ananus the sonne of Ananus to be high priest Futhermore he saith that this last thing happened at suche time as after the death of Festus Albinus did succeede him And I see not why some call this Ananus Ananias That hath indeed some colour in that he is called a pharisie also in that it is said that he was bold and stout who wythout any lawfull authoritie caused Iames the Lords brother to be stoned But if we giue credaunce to Iosephus he coulde not bee that Ananias of whome mention is made in this place by Luke who was then made priest when manye yeeres were past and gone after that Felix departed out of the prouince I haue another coniecture in my head For there flourished during all that time one Ananias an high prieste who excepting the title of honour was almost chiefe in the order And because Iosephus leaueth some voyde time betweene Ananias and Ismael it may be that this manne had the roome of the highest priest in the meane time But though this were not so it appeareth out of Iosephus that Ananias who died when the Citie was besieged was in the reigne of Claudius Caesar and Nero equall in dignity with the chiefe priestes which were then Yea his authoritie is so highly extolled as if he had had the chiefe gouernement howsoeuer other men did beare the insignes
iudgement of God by the present estate of men whether it be good or bad hee must needes fall away from faith at length vnto Epicurish contempt of God Now this is beastly blockishnesse to rest in an vncertain transitorie life and not to be wise aboue the earth For which cause we must flee frō that error as from a detestable monster For though godlines haue the promises of the earthly life also yet because we be most miserable if our hope stay still in this worlde the children of God must begin with this that they may lift vp their eyes toward heauen and think continually vpon the glory of the last resurrection Neither angell nor spirite This place is expounded two manner of wayes Many referre it vnto the holy Ghost which seemeth to bee vnlikely For howsoeuer the Saduces be to be holden excused in other errours yet because the scripture doeth so often repeate the name of the Spirite I will scarce beleeue that they denyed that which the Pharises beleeued onely lightly and obscurely For euen these men had no distinct faith concerning the holy Spirite that they did acknowledge the proper person of the Spirit in the substance of God Some wil haue Angel and Spirite to signifie one thing as if one thing were spoken twise But to what ende was it to repeate a thing which was plaine enough I warraunt you that member which followeth did deceiue them where Luke seemeth to make no distinction But we shewed the reason before because seeing the soules of men and Angels are of one and the same nature and substance they be both placed in one order Therefore I do not doubt but that this is Luke his true meaning that the Saduces did denie Angels and also all maner of Spirites Nowe for as much as Paul crieth that hee is a Pharisee in this point of doctrine hee doeth flatly condemne all brainsicke fellowes who at this day are in the same error For there be certaine profane vnlearned men who dreame that Angelles and Diuels are nothing els but good and euil inspirations and least they want som colour they say that all that came from the Heathen which the scripture hath concerning good and euill angels whereas that opinion which was common in the world had his beginning from the heauenly doctrine But the Heathen did with their lyes pollute that doctrine which they had from the fathers As touching mens soules because euen at this day certain miscreants doe feigne that the soules do vanish away in death vntill the day of the resurrection their madnesse is likewise refuted by the testimony of Luke 9 There was a great crie That sedition whereof Luke spake a little before is more plainly expressed in this place to wit that they were not only of diuers opinions but did striue clamorously with outcries Wherfore stasis doth signifie somewhat more then dissention Furthermore this place doth teach what mischief disagreementes bring with them For because they take their beginning for the moste part of ambition men proceed thence vnto contention and straightway stubbornnesse breaketh out When they be come thither because there is no place left either for iudgement or moderation they can no longer iudge of the cause Those who did detest Paul begin at a sodaine to defend him It was well done if they had done it with iudgement But because they inueigh against the Sadduces they are so inflamed with hatred against them that they be blind in Paul his matter For which cause we must beware of heat of contention which disturbeth all things If the spirit This ought vndoubtedly to be expounded of the holie Ghost And nothing could be spoken either more godlily or modestly For so soone as it is apparant that any doctrine is reuealed from heauen those doe wickedly resist God who doe not receiue the same But how is it that the Scribes do so sodainly count Paul a prophete of God whom they were once readie to haue murthered whom they had condemned with their preiudice vntill the contention arose Furthermore as they did cut their owne throtes with these words as with a swoord so God would haue them to be to vs teachers to instruct vs that we despice not the oracles which come from heauen Notwithstanding wee see againe that those stande in doubt who take not good heede and are not carefull to marke the woord of God and that they wauer so often as anie thing is brought to light because they be vnworthie to vnderstande the certaine truth Wherefore if wee bee desirous to haue our studies gouerned by the spirite of discretion let vs applie our selues to learne 10 And when there arose a sore dissention among them the chiefe captaine feared least Paul should haue bin pulled in peeces by them and he commanded the souldiars to goe downe and to take him from them and to bring him into the campe 11 And the night following the Lord stood by him and said Be of good courage Paul for as thou hast borne witnesse of me at Ierusalem so thou must bear witnesse of mee at Rome also 12 And when it was day certaine of the Iewes gathered themselues together bound themselues with a curse saying that they would neither eat nor drink vntill they had killed Paul 13 And they were more then fortie men whiche had made this conspiracie 14 And they came to the chiefe Priestes and Elders and saide we haue bound our selues with a curse that wee will taste nothing vntyll wee haue killed Paul 15 Nowe therefore signifie yee to the chiefe captaine and councell that he bring him foorth to you to morrow as if yee would know somewhat more certainely of him And we before he come neere are readie to kil him 16 But when Paul his sisters sonne heard of the laying in wait he came and entred into the campe and told Paul 10 Wee see againe what a cruell mischiefe contention is which so soone as it doeth once waxe whot hath suche violent motions that euen most wise men are not well in their wittes Therefore so soone as anie beginning shall shew it selfe let vs studie to preuent it in time least the remedie be too late in brideling it when it is in the middle because no fire is so swift as it As for the chiefe captaine as hee was appointed to bee the minister of Gods prouidence to saue Paules life so hee deliuereth him now the second time by his souldiars from death For thogh the chief captaine defend him so diligently for no other purpose saue only that he may preuent vprores and murder yet the Lorde who from heauen prouided and appointed helpe for his seruaunt doeth direct his blind hands thither 11 And the night following Luke declareth that Paul was strengthened with an oracle that he might stand couragiously against terrible assaultes when things were so far out of order Surely it could not be but that he was sore afraid and that hee was sore troubled with the
remēbrance of things to come Wherfore the oracle was not superfluous Those former things whereby he was taught that God cared for him ought to haue sufficed to nourish his hope and to haue kept hym from fainting but because in great dangers Satan doth oftentimes procure new feares that he may thereby if he cannot altogether ouerwhelme Gods promises in the hearts of the godly at least darken the same with cloudes it is needfull that the remembrance of them bee renued that faith beeing holpen with new proppes and stayes may stand more stedfastly But the summe is that Paul may behaue him selfe boldly because hee must bee Christe his witnesse at Rome also But this seemeth to bee but a colde and vaine consolation as if he shoulde say Feare not because thou must abide a sorer brunt for it had beene better accordyng to the fleshe once to die and with speede to ende his dayes then to pine awaye in bandes and long time to lie in prison The Lord doth not promise to deliuer him no he saith not so muche as that he shall haue a ioyfull end only he saith that those troubles and afflictions wherewith hee was too sore oppressed alreadie shall continue long But by this we gather better of what great importance this confidence is that the Lord hath respect vnto vs in our miseries though hee stretch not foorth his hand by and by to helpe vs. Therefore let vs learn euen in most extreeme afflictions to stay our selues vppon the woord of God alone and let vs neuer faint so long as hee quickneth vs with the testimonie of his fatherly loue And because Oracles are not nowe sent from heauen neither doeth the Lorde himselfe appeare by visions wee must meditate vpon his innumerable promises whereby he doth testifie that he will be nigh vnto vs continually If it be expedient that an angel come downe vnto vs the Lord will not denie euen this kinde of confirmation Neuerthelesse we must giue this honour to the word that being content with it alone wee wait patiently for that helpe which it promiseth vs. Moreouer it did profite some nothing to heare Angeles which were sent downe from heauen but the Lord doth not in vaine seale vp in the hearts of the faithfull by his Spirite those promises which are made by him And as he doth not in vaine beate them in and often repeat them so let our faith exercise it selfe diligentlye in the continuall remembrance of them For if it were necessarie that Pauls faith should bee oftentimes set and shoared vp with a new help there is none of vs which needeth not many moe helps Also our minds must be armed with patience that they may passe through the long and troublesome circuits of troubles and afflictions 12 And when it was day By this circumstaunce Luke sheweth howe necessary it was for Paul to gather new and fresh strength of faith that he might nor quake in most great and sodaine danger For being told of this so desperate madnesse of his enemies he could not otherwise think but that he should loose his life This vow whereof Luke speaketh was a kinde of curse The cause of the vow was that it might not be lawful for them to change their purpose nor to cal back that which they had promised There is alwaies in deed in an oath a secret curse if any man deceiue or forsweare but sometimes to the end men may the more bind themselues they vse certaine formes of cursing and they make themselues subiect to cruell torments to the ende they may be thee more afraid This historie doeth teache that zeale is so blooddy in hypocrites that they weigh not what is lawfull for them but they runne carelesly whither soeuer their lust doth carry them Admit we graunt that Paul was a wicked man and worthie to die yet who had giuen priuate men leaue to put him to death Now if any man had asked why they did so hate Paul they would quickly haue answered because he was a reuolt schismatike but it was but a foolish opinion and an opinion conceiued of an vnc●rtaine report concerning this matter which had rashly possessed their minds The same blindnesse and blockishnes doth at this day prick forward the Papists so that they thinke nothing vnlawfull for them in destroying vs. Hypocrisie doth so blinde their eies that as men freed from the lawes of God and men they are carried by their zeale sometimes vnto trecherie sometimes vnto guile sometime vnto intollerable crueltie finally to attempt whatsoeuer they will Moreouer we see in this historie how great the rashnesse of the wicked is They bind themselues with a curse that they will eat no meat till they haue slaine Paul as if his life were in their hands Therefore these brainsick men take to them selues that which the Lord doth so often in Scripture say is his to wit Deut. 32.39 to haue the life and death of those men whom hee hath created in his hande Moreouer there bee not onely two or three who are partners in this madnesse but more then fortie Whence wee doe also gather how willing and bent men are to doe mischief seeing they runne together thus on heapes Furthermore seeing Satan doeth driue them headlong into their own destruction how shamefull is then our sluggishnesse when as wee scarce moue one finger in maintaining the glory of God Wee must vse moderation that wee attempt nothing without the commaundement of God but when God calleth vs expresly our loitring is without excuse 14 They came to the chiefe priestes Seeing that the priests agree to such a wicked and vngodly conspiracie by this they proue that there was in them neither any feare of God neither yet any humanitie They doe not only allowe that which is brought before them concerning the murthering of the man by laying awaite but also they are readie to be partners in the murder that they may deliuer him into the handes of the murtherers whom they woulde haue made away some way they passe not howe For what other thing was it to take a man out of the handes of the iudge and to slea him then like murtherers to rage euen in the very place of iudgement The priests surely would neuer haue alowed suche a wicked purpose if there had been in them any droppe of godly and right affectiō or of humane feeling Moreouer they did what they could to bring destruction vpon all the people and themselues also But the Lord did by this means disclose their wicked impietie which lay hid vnder a colour of honour 16 Paul his sisters sonne Wee see in this place how the Lord doth crosse the purposes of the vngodlye Hee permitteth them to attempt many thinges and he suffereth their wicked indeuours but at length hee sheweth euen in the twinckling of an eye that hee doth from heauen deride whatsoeuer men go about vpon earth There is no wisdome sayeth Salomon there is no counsell against the Lorde
was destitute of mans helpe Therefore it was a signe of an euill conscience in that seing they were men of great experience exercised in publike affaires and skilfull in matters pertaining to courts they hyre a Rhetorician Eloquence is I confesse the gift of God but in this matter they went about nothing else but to deceiue the iudge therewith And Luke declareth this therefore that wee may know that the Iewes did omit nothing whereby they might oppresse Paule and that they might not onely prooue him giltie but so dash him out of countenance that he might not be able to defend himselfe and so let vs consider that it came to passe by the wonderfull prouidence of God that Paul did so stoutly endure such sore assaultes Wherefore if it so fall out at any time that a godly man being alone be beset with a great number of enimies let him call to minde this historie and let him bee of good courage Psal 27.3 As Dauid doeth likewise exhort vs by his owne example If tentes were pitched about mee I will not feare because thou art with me 2 Seeing wee liue in great peace Tertullus vseth a preface nothing appertinent to the matter because hee commendeth Felix his wisedome and vertues that hee may purchase fauour Therefore it is a filthie and flattering Exordium not that I am of their minde who reprehende Tertullus for speaking the iudge faire and for seeking to winne his fauour For it is not alwayes disagreeing with the right and lawfull forme of pleading to commende the iudge and there may reasons be brought on both sides as they say touching this matter But I mislike nothing but this which is altogither corrupt For the Rhetorician doth insinuate himselfe vnder false praises that hee may darken the matter which is called in question For to what ende doeth he speake of peace and a wel ordered state saue onely that Felix may think that the safetie of Iudea consisteth in condemning Paul and that he may examine the matter no further Moreouer it appeareth by Iosephus how couetously cruelly and voluptuously Felix behaued himselfe in that prouince The vnworthy and tragicall murthering of the highest Priest Ionathas because he set himselfe against his dissolute tyranny was alreadie past and finally almost at the very same time Claudius Caesar was enforced with the complaints of the whole nation to put Festus in his place and to call him to answere for himselfe Therefore we see how shamefullie this oratour did lie And seeing all Pauls aduersaries sing the same song we see that they bee blinded with hatred and malice and that they trecherously betray the state of their countrie neither doe they passe what befall them so Paule may die the death Where Erasmus translateth it Many thinges are well done the olde interpreter seemeth to come nearer vnto Paule his meaning who saieth that catorthomata are wrought which signifieth as much as reformations or dressings Therefore Tertullus commendeth the industrie of Felix because he had cleansed Iudea from many corruptions and he restored many things which would otherwise haue decayed To wit to the ende he may the more greedily seeke to purchase the fauour of the nation which he knew was otherwise offended with him by the death of one man 5 For wee founde this man Tertullus dooth aime at a double marke The first is this that Paul may be deliuered to the Iewes because they be very skilfull in matters which concerne the worship of God and the Lawe of Moses But and if hee denie this hee layeth to his charge a crime worthie of death because hee procured contention among the people They knewe that the Romanes did hate nothing more therefore they vrge that the sorest against Paule This doeth Tertullus amplifie when hee saieth that Paul had moued the Iewes throughout the whole worlde But I wonder why hee addeth that he is the authour or chiefe of the sect of the Nazarites which we know was rather a praise than a dispraise among the Iewes I thinke that they meane not those who according to the olde and lawfull custome of the Lawe did consecrate themselues to God but those troublesome murtherers who did also vaunt and boast that they were zealous men Some thinke that Nazarites are heere put for Christians which may verie well bee But if wee like the former exposition better hee doeth craftilie laye to Paule his charge that hee was one of that secte which the Romaines did hate For where as these zealous men woulde aboue all other haue beene counted for notable obseruers of the Lawe they aduanced a colour of zeale as a banner to stir vp the minds of the common people Neuerthelesse these good men who are so zealous ouer their libertie doe not spare the chiefest maintainers thereof so they may cause Paul to be hated by meanes of them They would haue commended the Nazarites as couragious defenders of the Lawe if it had not bin in this matter but now as if they did infect the whole world they seeke to bring vpon Paul great reproch by saying that he is one of them Moreouer they slaunder Paul impudently for no man did thinke that he was guiltie of that crime Therefore they lay to his charge no lesse wickedly than maliciously a crime which they take vp at their foote and inuent without all colour But such is the carelesse security of hypocrits that they thinke they may do whatsoeuer they will so they colour their doings with zeale 6 Who went about to pollute the Temple It was a light and almost a friuolous accusation to lay this to his charge before the Romane Gouernour who could haue wished that the Temple had bin turned topsituruie But because nothing was more fit for procuring vprores than the polluting of the Temple he doth craftily accuse Paul thereof as if hee should say that it was no thankes to him that Ierusalem was not on an vprore and that hee carried such a firebrande as might haue procured sore hurt if hee had not beene preuented Also he includeth that other thing that because Paul had offended in matters of religion it did belong properly to the Iewes to giue iudgement in that matter And here hee complaineth also of the chiefe captaine Lysias because hee robbed them of their right Therefore his drift is to obtaine at the hands of the Ruler that he wil restore to them that which Lysias had taken from thē This is also not voide of subtiltie in that Tertullus doeth discredite the chiefe captaine because hee dealt more courteously toward Paul than the Priests would he should and glauncingly hee bringeth him in suspition because hee dare not openly accuse him But the question is whether they could hope that the Gouernour would graunt them so much seing the Romane magistrates alone were to sit vppon life and death I answere that hee maketh in this place some semblance of equitie as if they were purposed to handle him more gentlie than hee deserued For though
man being a Romane cared not for Moses lawe therefore hee speaketh so disdainfully when he saith that they did striue about their superstition Though this word deisidaimonia bee taken of the Grecians as well in good as euill part to wit because the choice of worshippings of false gods were common in al places Notwithstanding his meaning is that he careth not what maner religion the Iewes haue And no maruell if a man which was an Ethnick and had not learned that the rule of godlinesse must bee fet from the mouth of God know not how to distinguishe between the pure worship of God and superstitions Wherefore we must hold fast that marke whereby wee may discerne the one from the other that there is no godlines but that which is groūded in the knowledge of faith least we grabble in darknesse Moreouer the Romans were so drunkē with prosperous successe that they thoght that they were more acceptable to God then any other as at this day the Turks by reason of their manifolde victories deride the doctrine of Christ This was a lamentable case that a man being an vnbeleeuer and idolater sitteth as iudge amidst the Iewes to giue iudgement of the sacred oracles of God according to his ignorance but all the fault was in Paul his aduersaries who did not care for the maiestie of God so they might satisfie and obey their owne madnesse Nothwithstanding there rested nothing for Paul to doe but to cleare himselfe of those crimes which were laide against him So at this day though inwarde brawles which are among Christans doe defame the name of Christe and his Gospell among the Turkes and Iewes yet the defender of holy doctrine are vnworthily blamed which are enforced to enter the combate Of one Iesus It is not to bee doubted but that Paul intreated both grauely and with such vehemencie as became him of the resurrection of Christe But Festus by reason of his pride thought it no meet matter for him to occupie his head about Hee doth not in deed openly deride Paul but he sheweth plainly how negligently he hard him when he disputed of Christ Wherby we see how little preaching auaileth yea that it auaileth nothing at all vnlesse the Spirit of God doe inwardly touch the harts of mē For the wicked do lightly passe ouer whatsoeuer is spoken as if a man should tell them a tale of Robin Hood Wherfore there is no cause why the carelesnesse of many shoulde trouble vs at this day seeing Paul preuailed nothing with Festus But this place doth witnesse that many speeches did passe in the handeling of the matter whereof Luke maketh no mention For he had spoken nothing as yet of Christe and yet this latter narration doth shewe that Paul intreated seriouslye before the Iewes of his death and resurrection Which coulde not bee but hee must needes intreate of the principall pointes of the Gospel Therefore I gesse that Paul did so handle the matter that when he had refuted the false accusations of the Iewes wherewith they went about to burden him before the gouernour hauing gotten a fit occasion hee began afterward to speake freely of Christ 22 And Agrippa said vnto Festus I would also my self hear the man To morow saith he thou shalt heare him 23 And on the morrow when Agrippa was come and Bernice with great pompe and was entred into the common hall with the chiefe captaines and the principall men of the citie at Festus commaundement Paul was brought 24 And Festus saith king Agrippa and all men which are present with vs yee see this man about whome all the multitude of the Iewes hath called vppon mee both at Ierusalem and heere crying that hee ought not to liue any longer 25 Yet haue I found that he hath committed nothing worthie of death And because hee hath appealed vnto Augustus I haue determined to sende him 26 Of whom I haue no certaine thing to write vnto my Lord. Wherefore I haue brought him foorth vnto you and chiefly vnto thee O king Agrippa that after examination had I may haue somewhat to write 27 For it seemeth to me an vnmeet thing to send a prisoner and not to shew the crimes whereof he is accused 22 I would also By this we may gather that Agrippa did so desire to hear Paul that he was ashamed to make his desire knowen least Festus should thinke that he came for some other end then to salute him And it may be that not only curiositie did moue him to be desirous to heare Paul but because he did hope to profite by hearing him Notwithstanding we may easily gather by this how cold his desire was because hee suffered many dayes to passe before he sheweth any signe of his desire because he was more in loue with earthly commodities which he counted better Neither durst he make any wordes neither did he passe for vttering any speech vntill such time as Festus did of his owne accorde will him so to doe So that the holy minister of Christ is brought foorth as on a stage that a profane man may cheare vppe his guest saue onely that Festus wil be holpen with the aduise of Agrippa and his company that he may let Caesar vnderstand how diligent hee is But the matter was turned to another end by the secrete prouidence of God neither ne●d we doubt but that such report went abroad as made much for the confirmation of the godly and it may be also that some of the hearers were touched and did conceiue seed of faith which did afterward bring foorth frute in due time But admit none of them did embrace Christe sincerely from his heart this was no small profit that the vnskilful● were appeased after that the malice of the enemies was discouered that they might not be enflamed with such hatred against the gospel impietie was made ashamed and the faithfull did gather newe strength so that they were confirmed more and more in the gospel 23 And on the morrow Agrippa and his sister do not come like humble disciples of Christ but they bring with them such pompe and gorgeousnesse as may stop their eares and blind their eyes and it is to bee thought that like hautinesse of minde was ioyned with that gorgeous great pompe No maruell therefore if they were not brought to obey Christ Notwithstanding it seemeth that Luke maketh mention of the pompe that we might know that in a great assembly and before choise witnesses whose authority was great Paul had leaue graunted not onelie to plead his matter as a partie defendant but also to preach the gospel For he commeth foorth as in the person of a teacher that he may set foorth the name of Christ So that the trueth of God brake out of his bands which was foorthwith spread abroad euery where with a free course yea it came euen vnto vs. By this word phantasia Luke vnderstādeth that which wee call commonly preparation or pompe But there must other furniture bee
Now it appeareth that there is nothing in the very summe of his doctrine which dissenteth from the law and the prophetes Whereby the oracle doth winne greater credite whereby Paul was commanded to teach nothing but that which was agreeable to the scripture Conuersion or turning vnto God is ioyned with repentance not as some peculiar thing but that we may know what it is to repent Like as also on the contrary the corruption of men and their frowardenesse is nothing els but an estranging frō God And because repentance is an inward thing and placed in the affection of the heart Paul requireth in the second place such works as may make the same knowen according to that exhortation of Iohn the baptist Mat. 3.8 Bring foorth fruites meete for repentance Now forasmuch as the gospell calleth all those which are Christes vnto repentance it followeth that all men are naturally corrupt and that they haue neede to bee chaunged In like sort this place teacheth that these men do vnskilfully peruert the gospell which separate the grace of Christ from repentance 21 They went about to kill mee Hee complaineth in this place of the iniquitie of his aduersaries that it may thereby appeare that their cause and conscience were both euill For if Paul had offended they might haue gone to lawe with hym and euen there shoulde they haue stande in better state seeing they did farre passe him both in fauour and authoritie Therefore their madnesse doeth testifie that they are destitute of reason Whereas Paule saieth that hee was saued by the helpe of God it maketh for the confirmation of his doctrine For how is it that he reacheth out his hand to help him saue onely because he acknowledgeth his minister and because hee will defende the cause which hee alloweth Moreouer this ought to haue encouraged him to goe forwarde so much the more boldly in his office in that hee was thus holpen by God For it had been a point of an vnthankfull man to withdraw himselfe frō him which had holpen him By which example we be taught that so often as we be deliuered from danger the Lord doeth not therefore prolong our dayes that wee may afterwarde liue idlie but that we may doe our dutie cheerefully and bee readie to die euery houre to his glory who hath reserued vs to himselfe And yet Paul did not forget howe muche hee was indebted to the chiefe captaine but in this place hee commendeth the helpe of God that hee may shewe that it became him to spende all the rest of his course in his seruice by whome hee was deliuered though that came to passe and were doone through the industrye and by the hande of man Testifying both to small and great Wee haue saide els where that it is more to testifie than to teach as if there were some solemne contestation made betweene God and men that the Gospel may haue his maiestie And he saieth that hee is a witnesse both to great and small that king Agrippa may perceiue that this doth appertaine euen to him and that when the Gospell is offered euen to euery simple man that doeth no whit hinder but that it may ascend euen vnto the throne of Princes For Christ doth gather al mē into his bosom with one the same imbracing that those who lay before in the doung hill and are now extolled vnto so great honour may reioyce in his free goodnesse and that those who are placed in high degree of honour may willingly humble themselues and not grudge to haue some of the base and contemptible multitude for their brethren that they may bee made the children of God So in the first chapter to the Romanes Hee saith that he is indebted both to the fooles and to the wise least the Romanes should bee kept backe with the confidence which they might repose in their wisedome from submitting themselues to his doctrine By this let vs learne that it is not in the teachers wil to make choyse of his hearers and that they doe no lesse doe iniurie to God then defraude men of their right whosoeuer they be which restraine their labour vnto great men whom God doth ioyne with those which are small It were too cold to restrain this vnto ages Wherefore I doe not doubt but that Paule taketh away the exception which vseth to bee between the noble and vnnoble because he was neither afraide of the dignitie of the one neither did he loath the basenesse of the other but did shew himself a faithfull teacher to both alike Saying no other thing First this is woorth the noting that Paul to the ende hee may bring in fit and substantiall witnesses of his doctrine doeth not take the same from among men but hee citeth Moses and the Prophetes to whome the Lorde had gtaunted vndoubted authoritie And surely this is one principle to bee obserued when we wil teach soundly to vtter nothing but that which did proceed out of the mouth of God Secondly this is worth the noting that these were the principall pointes of the disputation which Luke doeth nowe touch that This was the proper office of Christ by his death to make satisfaction for the sinnes of the worlde by his resurrection to purchase righteousnesse and life for men and that the fruite of his death and resurrection is common both to Iewes and Gentiles But forasmuch as there is no manifest and as they say literall testimonie extant in the Lawe concerning the death and resurrection of Christ vndoubtedly they had some doctrin deliuered by hand from the Fathers out of which they did learne to referre all figures vnto Christ And as the Prophets which did prophecie more plainly of Christ had their doctrin from that fountaine so they made the men of their time beleeue that they deliuered vnto them no new thing or which did dissent from Moses And now Paul did either not finish his apologie or else he gathered more euident testimonies of all those things wherein he professed Moses and the Prophets to be his authours The first of those which There were some other whose resurrection went before Christs in time namely if we admit that the saints of whom the Euangelists speake did come out of their graues before Christ Mat. 27.57 Gen. 5.24 2. King 2.11 1. Cor. 15.23 which may likwise be said of the taking vp of Enoch Elias But he calleth him in this place the First as in another place the first fruits of those which rise again Therefore this word doth rather note out the cause than the order of time because whē Christ did rise again he became the conqueror of death Lord of life that he might reigne for euer make those who are his partakers of blessed immortalitie Vnder this word light he comprehendeth whatsoeuer doeth pertaine vnto perfite felicitie as by darknesse is meant death and all manner of miserie And I do not doubt but that Paul alluded vnto the sayings of the Prophetes
and so great charges 3 He suffered him to goe to Paule might haue hid himselfe in a large Citie which ioyned to the sea but he was bound with the Oracle that he could not withdraw himselfe from the calling of God Again bicause the Centurion had so courteously intertained him that he suffered him to go to his friends that they might dresse refresh him whō he might haue left in the stincking shippe hee ought not ne could he prouide for his owne life with the other mans daunger without filthy trechery Neither must we in any case suffer those who haue courteously intreated vs to be deceiued by their courtesie through our fault Let the readers fet the voyage whereof Luke speaketh out of those which describe places and countries onely I say thus much that all that which is said tendeth to this end that we may know that their sayling was dangerous tempestuous after that they were once gone out of the hauen of Sidon vntil they came neere to Melita that afterward the mariners did striue long time with contrarie windes vntill a cruell storme arose whose end was shipwracke as we shall see 9 And when much time was spent and when sailing was now iepardous because also the time of fasting was now passed Paul admonished them 10 Saying to them Syrs I see that this voyage will be with hurt and great losse not onely of the burthen and of the ship but also of our soules 11 But the Centurion beleeued rather the Gouernor and the master of the ship then those things which were spoken of Paul 12 And because the hauen was vnfit to winter in many tooke counsell to depart thence if by any meanes they might come to Phenice and there winter That is a hauen of Candie and lieth toward the Southwest and by west and Northwest and by west 13 And when the South wind blewe softly supposing to obtaine their purpose when they had loosed neerer they sailed beyond Candie 14 But not long after there arose ouer against it a stormie wind which is called Euroclydon 15 And when the ship was caught and could not resist the wind we let her goe and were carried away 16 And when we were carried into a certaine Ile called Candie we could scarce get the boat 17 Which they tooke vp and vsed helpes vndergyrding the shippe and fearing least they shoulde fall into Syries they strake saile and so were carried 18 And when wee were tossed with an exceeding tempest on the morrowe they lightned the ship 19 And the thirde day wee cast out with our owne handes the tackling of the shippe 20 Furthermore when neither sunne nor starres appeared now many dayes and no small tempest lay vpon vs all hope that wee should be saued was then taken away 9 When sailing was nowe ieoperdous He doth not onely meane that the windes were contrary then but also that the time of the yeare was not then commodious which hee expresseth more plainely afterwarde when he saith that the fast was passed for I thinke that this worde was added by way of exposition to note the end of haruest Neither doe I passe for that that that solemne time of fasting whereof Luke speaketh was straunge to the Centurion and the rest of the mariners for hee noteth out the times of the yeare according to the custome of the Iewes Furthermore wee neede not doubt but that it was the haruest fast Though I am not of their minde who thinke that it was one of the fower fastes which the Iewes did appoint after the carrying away into Babylon For Luke woulde not haue put downe simplie without adding any distinction the thirde fast which was in the seuenth moneth seeing it was not more famous than the rest being commaunded to bee kept because of the death of Godolia and because of the destruction of the rest of the people Againe I cannot tell whether that custome were retained by the people after their returne it is more likely that he meaneth the feast of the attonement wherein the Lord commanded them to humble their soules seuen dayes And they beganne the tenth day of the seuenth moneth Leu. 16.25 whereto partly September and partly October doth now agree Therefore seing they were nowe entered into October it is saide not without cause that sailing was ieoperdous at that time But and if you referre it vnto hunger as some doe I doe not see what sense can bee gathered thence for they had as yet store of wheat in the shippe so that they needed not to bee hunger sterued And why shoulde hee say that the time of the voluntarie fast was passed Moreouer it shall hereafter appeare by the text that they were therefore exhorted by Paul to stay because winter was at hand whose sharpenes vseth to shut vp the seas For though he were assured that God woulde gouern the ship yet he would not tempt him rashly by making too great haste 11 But the Centurion The Centurion is not reproued because hee harkned rather to the master and gouernour of the shippe than to Paul For what should he haue done For though hee did well like Paule his counsell in other matters yet hee knew that hee was vnskilfull in sayling Therefore he suffered himselfe to be gouerned by those which were expert which was a point of a wise and modest man Yea verie necessitie did almost compel him to doe this for the hauen was not commodious to Winter in Neither did the Gouernour giue counsell to commit the shippe to the maine sea but to thrust in into the next hauen which was almost in view So that with taking a little paines they might commodiously passe the winter Luke reciteth this not in vaine but that we may know that Paul was from the beginning furnished with the sense of the Spirit so that he did better see what things were profitable than did the masters We know not whether he were taught by Oracles or whether he gaue this counsell through secreat inspiration This is certaine that it serued afterward to his commendation Furthermore in that he saith that they sailed beyond the coast of Candie vntil they were caught and carried away our friend Beza doth iustly reproue the errour of interpreters in this worde asson who make of an aduerbe the name of a Citie 15 When the shippe was caught Luke saieth that that fell out heere which vseth to fall out in extreame danger namely they suffered themselues to be carried of the winds Seing they were first gone some space and the marriners thought that all things fel out as they would haue it vndoubtedly they did deride Paul his admonition as rash men vse cōmonly to wax proud if fortune fauour them Being now caught they are grieuously punished for their boldnesse yea when they drewe neere to an hauen they were no lesse affraid least they should breake the shippe then they were before of ouerturning the same Luke doeth diligentlie note all these things out of which
them euen as an Angel of God hee had giuen them wholsome counsell hee had refreshed them in the same day when they were past hope and nowe they sticke not to seeke to destroy him by whom they were so often and so many wayes deliuered Wherefore if it so fall out that we bee ill rewarded for our good deeds there is no cause why the vnthankfulnesse of men shoulde trouble vs which is a disease too common But they are not onely vnthankfull to Paule who was the minister of their life but also their filthie misbeliefe and forgetfulnesse of the goodnesse of God doth bewray it selfe They had of late receiued that oracle that their soules were giuen to Paul and now seeing they will be saued after he is dead what other thing goe they about but to resist God that they may saue themselues from death contrarie to his will Therefore they haue nowe forgotten that grace whereof they tasted against their will in extreme dispaire neither doth it tast any longer after that they see the hauen nigh at hand But it behooueth vs to consider the wonderfull counsell of God as well in sauing Paul as in fulfilling his promise when as he bringeth those men to land who did what they could to make his promise of none effect Thus doth his goodnesse oftentimes striue with the wickednesse of men Yet hee doeth so pittie the wicked that deferring their punishment vntill so fit opportunitie he doth not quite discharge them yea the longer he tarrieth the more grieuously he punisheth so by that meanes he maketh amends for his long tarrying CHAP. XXVIII 1 AND when they were escaped they knewe that the I le was called Melite 2 And the Barbarians shewed vs no little kindnesse for they kindled a fire and receiued vs all because of the present showre and because of the cold 3 And when Paul had gathered a bundle of stickes and had laide them on the fire a vyper came out of the heat and lept on his hand 4 Nowe when the Barbarians saw the beast hang vpon his hande they saide among themselues This man surely is a murtherer whom though he hath escaped the sea vengeance doth not suffer to liue 5 But he shooke off the vyper into the fire and suffered no harme 6 But they thought that it would come to passe that he would swell and fal down dead sodainly And as they waited long and saw no harme come to him chaunging their mind they said he was a God 1 That dolefull spectacle is described in the beginning of the Chapter when so many men being wet and also all berayed with the some filth of the sea and stiffe with colde did with much adoe crawle to the shore for that was all one as if they had beene cast vp by the sea to die some other death After that Luke declareth that they were courteously intertained of the Barbarians that they kindled a fire that they might drie their cloathes and refresh their ioynts which were stiffe with colde and at length that they were saued from the showre Therefore in that Paul commendeth these dueties he sheweth his thankfulnesse and so great liberalitie toward strangers is for good causes aduaunced whereof there be rare examples in the world And though common nature doth wring out of the barbarous Gentiles some affection of mercy in so great necessitie yet vndoubtedly it was God which caused the mē of Melita to handle these men so courteously that his promise might be sure and certaine which might seeme vnperfect if the shipwracke had caused the losse of any mans life A Viper comming out of the heat The very euent did proue that Paule was a true and vndoubted prophet of God Nowe that God may make him famous as well by land as by sea hee sealeth the former myracles with a newe myracle and so hee ratifieth his Apostleshippe among the men of Melita And though there were not many which did profite thereby yet the maiestie of the Gospell did shine euen among the vnbeleeuers also this did greatly confirme the Oracles to the mariners which they had not sufficiently reuerenced Neither did the viper come out of the stickes by chance but the Lorde did direct her by his secreat counsell to bite Paul because he saw it would turne to the glorie of his Gospel 4 So soone as the Barbarians saw This iudgement was common in all ages that Those who were grieuously punished had grieuously offended Neither was this perswasion conceiued of nothing but it came rather from a true feeling of godlinesse For God to the ende hee might make the world without excuse would haue this deepely rooted in the minds of all men that calamitie and aduersitie and chiefely notable destruction were testimonies and signes of his wrath and iust vengeance against sinnes Therefore so often as wee call to minde any notable calamitie wee doe also remember that God is soare offended seeing hee punisheth so sharpely Neither did vngodlinesse euer get the vpper hande so farre but that all men did still retaine this principle that God to the end hee may showe himselfe to be the iudge of the worlde doeth notably punish the wicked But heere crept in an errour almost alwaies because they condemned all those of wickednesse whom they saw roughly handeled Though God doeth alwayes punishe mens sinnes with aduersitie yet doth he not punish euery man according to his desertes in this life and sometimes the punishmentes of the godlie are not so much punishments as tryals of their faith and exercises of godlinesse Therfore those men are deceiued who make this a generall rule to iudge euery man according to his prosperitie or aduersitie This was the state of the controuersie between Iob and his friends Iab 4.7 they did affirme that that man was a reprobate and hated of God whome God did punish and he did alleage on the other side that the godly are sometimes humbled with the crosse Wherefore least we be deceiued in this point we must beware of two things The former is that wee giue not rash blind iudgement of things vnknown according to the euenr alone for because God doth punish the good aswell as the bad yea it falleth out oftētimes that he spareth the reprobate doth sharplie punish those who are his if we wil iudge aright we must begin at another thing then at punishmēts to wit that we enquire after the life deeds if any adulterer if any blasphemous person if any periured man or murtherer if any filthie person if any cosiner if any blooddie beast be punished God doth point out his iudgement as it were with his finger If we see no wickednes nothing is better then to suspend our iudgement cōcerning punishment The other caution is that we wait for the end For so soone as God beginneth to strike we doe not by and by see his drifte and purpose but the vnlike end doth at length declare that those differ farre before God who seeme in
of the Counsel of Laodicia touching the Election of Pastours 14. 23. A liuely patterne of a lawful Councel 15. 12. How vnhappily doubtful Counsels fal out 5. 4. What a vertue Curtesie is 23. 19. Too much credulity is to be fled 21. 17. Peter healeth the Creeple 3. 7. Crispus the ruler of the Synagogue was conuerted to the faith 18. 7. Curiosity ingrafted in men 1. 7. Curiosity springeth from idlenes and distrust 1. 8. Curiosity of the Apostles 1. 7. Curiosity ought to be auoided 1 7. 20. 10. 41. 17. 21. 30. and 19. 19. D How the Daies were diuided by the men of old into certain houres 2. 14. 3. 1. and 10. 3. and 12. 14. The great Day of the Lord comprehēdeth the whole kingdom of Christ 2. 18. To whom the Day of the Lord is ioyful and to be wished for 3. 20. Dauid a figure of Christ 1. 18 and 4. 11. 25. 13. 22. 33. The temporall and fraile kingdome of Dauid 2. 35. Why the Day of iudgement is called the time of refreshing 3. 20. The Day of the Saboattis for the Sabaoth 19. 12. The Deaconshippe subiect to sinister murmurings 6. 3. To what ende the Deacons were ordayned 6. 1. 3. How Deacons ought to be chosē 6. 3. Deacons are subiect to the Elders 11. 30. What manner Deacons were in Popery 6. 2. Feare of Death falleth euen vpon the Saints 9. 13. How farre foorth we must bewaile the Dead 8. 2. Why they did in times past washe the bodies of the Dead 9. 37. Decrees of the Apostles 16. 4. Demas a trecherous reuolt 8. 13. Demetrius the Authour of sedition against Paul 19. 23. Demosthenes his place 12. 20. Deniall of Christ howe daungerous 36. 10. Deniall of our selues is commanded 7. 3. and 14. 16. and 20. 28. Deniall of our selues followeth true faith 8. 18. Whence the deniall of the prouidence and of the free election of God doeth come 20. 26. The deuotion or vowe of those who had conspired to kill Paul 23. 12. Dexterity is the gift of God 7. 10. The inuention of the image of Diana 10. 35. Dionysius Areopagita 17. 34. The disciples for the faithful 6. 2. The office of the disciples 21. 3. Discipline is necessary in the churche 3. 1. Discord must be fled 15. 2. How hurtfull inwarde dscord is to the church 15. 1. Discord betweene Paul and Barnabas 15. 37. Discorde ariseth for the most parte of ambition 23. 9. The true way of disputation 17. 2. Howe the Diuell is the father of lyes 16. 16. The diuels are enforced to yeeld to the maiesty of the gospel 8. 7. The popish diuinity is an horrible Labyrinth 16. 31. The popysh dyuines were ouerthrowen with the onely voyce of the Martyrs 6. 9. Doctrine is as it were the soule of the church 2. 42. Doctrine without zeale is vnprofitable 18. 25. How the Iewes did handle doctrine in Paules time 13. 15. The doctryne of the Gospel is no new doctryne 3. 21. The authority immortality of foūd doctrine 7. 38. The sum of the doctrine of the apostles 8. 25. The sorowes of death 2. 24. Donatists were heretikes 10. 15. Dorcas which was also called Tabita 9. 36. The difference betweene Dreames visions 18. 9. What a filthy vice Drūkennes is 2. 14 Drusilla the wyfe of Felix and daughter of Agrippa the elder 24. 25. The men of the East are enclyned to lust 15. 19. E Ecclesiasticall assemblyes are profitable 3. 1. and 5. 12. VVhat a hard matter the Edyfiyng of the church is 18. 11. VVherein the edifying of the churche consisteth 20. 21. We must study to edifie 10. 24. 11. 24. 25. and 13. 15. and 15. 28. 16. 5. 20. 20 The Egyptians woorshipped an Oxe 7. 41. VVhat Elders there were in the Apostles tyme. 11. 30. and 20. 16. A vessel of Election put for an excellent minister 9. 15. Election is the cause of al good things 13. 17. Election goeth before faith 13. 48. There was a double Election of the children of Abraham 13. 33. Whence the denyall of free Election commeth 20. 26. The Elect alone do truely beleeue 13. 48. 16. 14. and 28. 25. 26. The difference between the Elect and the reprobate the faithfull and the vnfaithful the godly and the vngodly 3. 20. and 5. 11. and 9. 5. 6. 29. 12. 13. and 14. 22. and 17. 32. and 16. 16. 30. 33. Eloquence is the gyft of God 24. 1. VVee must not despise all Eloquence 18. 24. How farre Eloquence doth profite the Gospel Ibid. The Encratite heretikes 10. 15. Eneas his faith 9. 34. Ennius his place 9. 37. Enuy is condemned 11. 23. 24. The bookes which were openly burnt at Ephesus 19. 19. Epicures make semblaunce of faith 8. 15. Epicures dotings 17. 18. The difference betweene the Epicures and Sadduces 23. 8. The Errour of those which hold that the baptisme of Iohn and the baptisme of Christ were diuers 1. 5. The errour of the Iewes touching the kingdom of the Messias 1. 8. Stubbornnesse accompanieth Errour 11. 2. Errours once conceyued are not easily plucked out of mens mynds 10. 45. The old Errors are retayned in Popery the names alone being changed 28. 11. The sect of the Essenes 26. 4. The Euangelistes were in the middest between the Apostles and Doctors 21. 8. Ennica the mother of Timothie 16. 3. How the Eunuches faith was perfect 8. 37. The notable modesty of the Eunuches 8. 31. Eusebius his place 12. 17. and 15. 13. Eutiches an heretike 30. 28. Eutichus was raised from death when Paul praied 20. 10. An Example of dying godlily and holily in the death of Stephen 7. 59. Exhortations are very necessary 11. 23. 14. 20. and 19. 8. The popish Exorcists 19. 13. F True Faith 10. 43. and 11. 21. 16. 31. 33. Faith put for the woorde of God and the profession of Christianity 6. 7. Faith is the gift of God 15. 9. 16. 14. Faith commeth by hearing 8. 6. and 10. 5. and 14. 9. 17. Faith is the soule of the Church 23. 6. Faith is the sole foundation of godlynesse 24. 14. 25. 19. True faith doth wholly addict vs to God 10. 33. Faith is grounded in the woorde of God 13. 9. Faith alone doth iustifie 13. 39. Faith leaneth to the resurrection of Christ 1. 3. Faith dependeth vpon the election of God 13. 48. How faith doth purifie the heart 15. 9. Faith must not bee separate from the knowledge of Christ 10. 4. The Faith of the men of Antioche 11. 17. The intangled Faith of the Papistes 16. 31. The certainty of Faith 1. 4. The confirmation of faith is necessary 8. 25. and 17. 11. The externall confession of Faith is necessary 8. 36. The fruite of faith 8. 39. The foundation of the true Faith 24. 14. The encrease of Faith 8. 37. and 10. 48. The righteousnes of Faith 13. 38 The nature of Faith 27. 25. The obedience of Faith 10. 20. The office of Faith 15. 9.
Esai 9.2 Ibid. 60.2 The people which walked in darknesse sawe great light And againe Behold darkenesse shall couer the earth and a myst the people but the Lord shall be seene vpon thee Againe Behold those which are in darknesse shall see light Againe I haue made thee a light of the Gentiles Ibid. 42.16 6. 49.6 And it appeareth by many oracles that the light of life should come out of Iudea and should be spread abroad among the Gentiles 24 And as Paul answered for himselfe Festus saith with a lowd voice Paule thou art beside thy selfe much learning doth make thee madde 25 And Paul said I am not mad most noble Festus but speake forth the words of truth and sobrietie 26 For the king knoweth of these things before whom I also speake freely For I thinke that none of these thinges are hidden from him for this was not done in a corner 27 King Agrippa beleeuest thou the Prophetes I know that thou beleeuest 28 And Agrippa said vnto Paul Thou briefely perswadest me to become a Christian 29 And Paul saith would to God that not onely thou but also all which heare mee this day were both almost and altogither such as I am except these bonds 30 And when he had thus spoken the king arose and the Gouernour and Bernice and those which sate with them 31 And when they were gone apart they talked togither betweene themselues saying This man doth nothing worthie of death or bonds 32 Then Agrippa said to Festus This man might haue bin loosed if hee had not appealed vnto Cesar 24 Festus said with a lowd voice This outcrie which Festus doth make doth shewe how much the truth of God preuaileth with the reprobate to wit though it bee neuer so plaine and euident yet is it troden vnder foote by their pride For though those things which Paul had alleaged out of the Lawe and Prophetes had nothing in them which was any thing like to madnesse but were grounded in good reason yet he doth attribute the same to madnesse not because hee seeth any absurditie but because hee refuseth those thinges which hee doeth not vnderstande Nothing was more foolish or more vnsauourie than the superstitions of the Gentiles so that their high Priestes were for good causes ashamed to vtter their mysteries whose follie was more than ridiculous Festus doeth graunt that there was learning packed in Paules speech neuerthelesse because the Gospell is hidden from the vnbeleeuers 2. Cor. 4.3 whose mindes Sathan hath blinded hee thinketh that hee is a brainsicke fellowe which handleth matters intricarlie So that though hee cannot mocke and openly contemne him yet hee is so farre from being mooued or inwardly touched that hee counteth him a man which is frensie and of madde curiositie And this is the cause that he cannot away to marke what hee saieth least hee make him madde also As manie at this day flie from the worde of God least they drowne themselues in a Labarinth and they thinke that we be madde because wee mooue questions concerning hidden matters and so become troublesome both to our selues and also to others Wherefore being admonished by this example let vs begge of God that hee will shewe vs the light of his doctrine and that he will therewithall giue vs a taste thereof least through obscuritie and hardnesse it become vnsauourie and at length proude loathsomnesse breake out into blasphemie 25 I am not madde Paul is not angrie neither doeth hee sharpely reprehende Festus for his blasphemous speech yea hee speaketh vnto him with great submission For it was no place for reprehension and it became him to pardon the ignorance of the man seing hee did not set himselfe face to face against God Also he had respect vnto his person For though hee were vnworthie of honour yet was hee in authoritie And yet for all that hee doeth not therefore giue place to his blasphemie but hee defendeth the glorie of the word of God Whereby wee doe also see that not caring for himselfe hee did onelie take thought for his doctrine For he doeth not vaunt of his wit hee doeth not labour in defense of his wisedome but hee is content with this defense alone that hee teacheth nothing but that which is true and sober Furthermore the truth is set against all manner fallacies and fraud sobrietie against all manner friuolous speculations and thornie subtilties which are onely seeds of contention Paul doeth in deede refute Festus his errour yet wee may gather by this which is the best manner of teaching to wit that which is not onely cleane from all fallicies and deceit but also doth not make the mindes of men drunken with vaine questions and doth not nourish foolish curiositie nor an intemperate desire to know more than is meete but is moderate and good for sound edification 26 For the King knoweth of these th●nges Hee turneth himselfe vnto Agrippa in whom there was more hope And first hee saieth that hee knewe the hystorie of the thinges but hee calleth him streightway backe to the Lawe and the Prophetes For it was to small end for him to knowe the thing which was done vnlesse hee did knowe that those thinges which had beene spoken before of Christ were fulfilled in the person of Iesus which was crucified And whereas Paule doeth not doubt of Agrippa his faith hee doeth it not so much to praise him as that hee may put the Scripture out of all question least hee be enforced to stande vppon the verie principles Therefore his meaning is that the Scripture is of sufficient credite of it selfe so that it is not lawfull for a man that is a Iewe to diminish any iot of the authoritie thereof And yet Paule doeth not flatter him for though hee did not reuerence the Scripture as became a godly man yet he had this rudiment from his childhoode that hee was perswaded that nothing is contained therein besides the Oracles of God As the common sort of men though they do not greatly care for the word of God yet they acknowledge and confesse generally and confusedly that it is the word of God so that they are letted with some reuerence either to reiect or to despise the same 28 And Agrippa saide vnto Paule The Apostle preuailed thus farre at least that hee wronge out of king Agrippa a confession though it were not voluntarie as those vse to yeelde who can no longer resist the trueth or at least to shewe some token of assent Agrippa his meaning is that hee will not willingly become a Christian yea that he will not bee one at all and yet that hee is not able to gainesay but that he is drawne after a sort against his wil. Wherby it appeareth how great the pride of mans nature is vntill it bee brought vnder to obey by the Spirit of God Interpreters expound this en olige diuersly Valla thought that it ought to be translated thus Thou dost almost make me a Christian Erasmus doth trāslate