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A06863 A booke of notes and common places, with their expositions, collected and gathered out of the workes of diuers singular writers, and brought alphabetically into order. A worke both profitable and also necessarie, to those that desire the true vnderstanding & meaning of holy Scripture By Iohn Marbeck Merbecke, John, ca. 1510-ca. 1585. 1581 (1581) STC 17299; ESTC S112020 964,085 1,258

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ouer all the rest supreme head of the whole Church of Christ which thing may be prooued by that that Peter as the chiefe and most worthiest person speaketh alwaies first for them all and amongst the rest hee was alwaies accompted and named first Againe in any ciuill gouernaunce of man where the common wealths be well ordered there is one supreame head which dignitie of order we sée also obserued euen among brute beasts for the Bées haue their king who gouerneth the baser sort of the common people and ouersée them to doe their duties The Cranes haue one chiefe guide whome all the rest doe followe The Shéepe also haue their Shepheard whose voice they know and whom they follow and at whose Commaundement they be Aunswere If the first begotten among the Apostles ought to be Lorde ouer all the rest then forasmuch as Andrew was called before Peter to the office of an Apostle Peter shuld not take the Lordship away from him which of right should haue a better title vnto it But truth it is that Christ is the first begotten among his bretheren and he is onely the Lord of all And the worthinesse of his first begotten which was shadowed in the first begotten of the olde Testament is fulfilled in Christ himselfe Now because the kingdome of Christ is altogether spirituall he may be accounted greater higher more excellent not that is first borne to Christ in this world nor he that is richer or more nobler after the flesh nor he that is better learned but he that excelleth more in godlinesse and hath receiued more light and strength of the holy Ghost And whereas Peter vsed oftentimes to speak first because of his boldnesse yet followeth it not of that that he had authoritie and dominion ouer the rest of the Apostles And where the Bées haue an head and gouernor yet it cannot be that one Bée should gouerne all Bées in the world but onely those that be in the same hiue And one Crane to be guide to xx or xxx Cranes yet it is vnpossible that all the Cranes in the world should followe this one Crane So neither can it be that one Bishoppe can haue the cure of all the soules in the worlde for experience teacheth that when one Shepheard hath the charge of a thousand shéepe it is as much as he is able to doe to féede so many and to order them well If he cannot rule a thousand much lesse can he order 7. or 8. thousand So that by these reasons the Bishop of Rome may be gouernour of all the soules within his owne Diocesse and no further The. 2. reason As the Iewes in the old Testament had by the wil of God one chiefe Priest aboue all other so the Christen men now a dayes must haue one Pope Aunswere The Iewes in those dayes were but a few and all knit and ioyned togethers in one narrow place whereas now the Christians be innumerable and are dispersed throughout the whole world wherefore that thing which according to the will of God was méete for them then that is to say that they should haue one chiefe Priest in earth cannot agrée now with vs in these dayes Nor the high Priesthood of the Iewes shadowed not the high Priesthood of the Bishop of Rome but the high Priesthood of Christ. Wherefore that high Priesthood of the Iewes after a certaine time had an ende Christ is the chiefe Priest not after the order of Aaron but after the order of Melchisedech not of the tribe of Leuy or of the stocke of Aaron but of the Tribe of Iuda and of the stocke of Dauid He was not chosen as other chiefe Priests be chosen of other Priests who doe not alwaies chuse the best but he was chosen of his eternall and heauenly father when he sayd Thou art my sonne this day haue I begotten thée And the other chiefe Priests were annointed with a materiall Oyle but Christ was annoynted with y● holy ghost And they had on such garments as Moses appointed by Gods commaundement but the apparel of Christ was the whole company of vertues They offered incense and brute beastes but Christ offered himselfe vpon the Crosse. They entred into the Holy of the holiest but Christ entred into Heauen and sitteth now at the right hand of the eternall father c. So that Christ was chiefe Priest after the order of Melchisedech which was much more excellent then was the order of Aaron Bar. Ochin The. 3. reason Unto thée will I giue the keyes of the kingdome of heauen● and whatsoeuer thou bindest in earth shall be bound in Heauen c. Loe saith he in that he saith whatsoeuer thou bindest in earth he excepteth nothing therefore I may make lawes and binde both King and Emperour Aunswere When Christ as he had no worldly kingdome euen so hée spake of no worldly binding but of binding of sinners Christ gaue his Disciples the keye of the knowledge of the Lawe of God to binde all sinners and the keye of the promise to loose all that repent and to let them into the mercie that is layed vp for vs in Christ. Tindale The. 4. reason All power is giuen me in heauen and earth goe ye therefore and teach all Nations baptising them in the name of the Father and of the Sonne and of the Holy Ghost teaching them to kéepe all that I commaund you and behold I am with you vnto the worlds ende Loe saith the Pope Christ hath all power in heauen and earth without exception therefore all power is mine I am aboue all Kings and Emperours in temporall iurisdiction they but my seruaunts to kisse nor my féete onely but my N. also if I list not to haue them stoope so low Tindale Aunswere When Christ as I said because he had no temporall kingdome euen so he ment of no temporall power but of power to saue sinners which the processe of the text declareth by that he saith Goe ye therefore teach and baptise that is preach this power to all Nations wash them of their sins through faith in the promises made in my bloud Tindale The. 5. reason The Priesthood being translated the law must néedes be translated also c. Now saith y● Pope y● priesthood is translated vnto me wherefore it pertaineth vnto me to make lawes and to binde euery man Tindale Aunswere The Epistle meaneth no such thing but proueth euidently that the Ceremonies of Moses must cease For the Priest of the olde Testament must néedes haue bene of the Tribe of Leuy as Aaron was whose dutie for euer was the offering of Sacrifices Wherefore when that Priesthoode ceased the Sacrifices and ceremonies ceased also Now that Priesthood ceased in Christ which was a Priest of the order of Melchisedech and not of the order of Aaron for then he must haue bene of the Tribe of Leui and that he was not but of the Tribe of Iuda and of the séede of Dauid Wherefore
gréene colour betokening those faithfull persons which of Christian compassion hath dolorouslie lamented the fall of their bretheren Of this godlie nature was Steuen which praied for them that stoned him to death So was afore his time Samuel which mourned for Saule when he saw him cast out of the Lords fauour Bale vpon the Apoc. fol. 100. Berillus the Bishop of a Towne in Arabia named Bustra taught that Christ neither was before his carnall natiuitie nor had anie proper diuinitie but onelie the Deitie of God the father dwelling in him whom Origen confounded and brought againe to the vnitie of the Church Eusebius li. 6. Chap. 32. BEAST Of the beast that came out of the bottomlesse pitte THe Beast that came out of y● bottomlesse pit shal make war ¶ This Beast that is to saie Antichrist is said to come out of the bottomlesse pit because that being ingendred of the Diuell and starting out of the innermost dungeon of hell hee is mounted vp so hie in pride that like as the Giaunts went about in old time to driue their Iupiter out of heauen as the Fables report euen so séemeth he to be desirous to thrust Christ the King of all Kings from his Kingdome following the footesteps of his father Satan who hath bene a murtherer from the beginning and abode not in the truth Marl. vpon the Apoc. fol. 154. Of the beast that rose out of the Sea I sawe a Beast rise out of the Sea hauing 7. heads c. ¶ By the 7. heads he meaneth Rome because it was first gouerned by seauen Kings or Emperours after Nero and also is compassed about with seauen Mountaines Geneua ¶ This Beast is the Kingdome of Rome The Cat of the mountaine is the errours and blasphemous vices of the whole world gotten in battell The Beares feete Tyrannie The mouth of the Lion is spoilefull and gréedie to deuoure wounded by insurrections and ciuill warre vntill Dominion and gouernaunce came in one mans hande This other Beast that commeth out of the earth is the pompe of the Romish Bishop He pretendeth to be a Lambe This is the second Kingdome of Rome S. I. Cheeke How the number of the beast noteth the Popes comming Count the number of the Beast for it is the number of a man ¶ Number of a man that is such as maie be vnderstood by mans reason For about 666. yeares after this Reuelation the Pope or Antichrist beganne to bée manifest in the world for these Char●cters 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signfie 666. and this number is gathered of the small number 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which in the whole make 666. and signifieth Latinus or Latin which noteth the Pope or Antichrist who vseth in all things the Latin tongue and in respect thereof he contemneth the Hebrue and Greeke wherein the word of God was first and best written and because Italy in olde time was called Latinum the Italians are called Latini so that héereby he noteth of what Countrey chieflie he should come● Geneua Of the beast the woman sate on I sawe a woman sit vpon a Scarlet coloured Beast c. ¶ The Beast signifieth the auncient Rome The Woman that sitteth thereon newe Rome which is the Papistrie whose crueltie and bloudshedding is declared by Scarlet Geneua ¶ Looke Woman Of the miraculous comming of the beasts into the Arke of Noe. When Noe with his wife and thrée sonnes with their wiues entred into the Arke sodeinlie there came together to him beasts of all kinds not brought thether by man but euen by the miracle of God Neither did Noe take them but suffered them as they came to enter neither came anie moe of vncleane beasts then two a male and a female And of cleane beastes 7. foure Males and thrée females of which one male was reserued for Sacrifice after the floud the residue were kept for generation Lanquet ¶ God compelled them to present themselues to Noe as they did before to Adam Gen. 2. 19. when he gaue them names Geneua Of the beast called Booz The propertie of this Beast is when he is pursued with hunters and hounds not to defend himselfe with his hornes but hauing a long bagge hanging downe vnder his chinne wherein is gathered much water he defendeth himselfe therewith For in his running and chasing the water in the bag then wareth so scalding hot that when he casteth it vpon the houndes that followe him it scaldeth and burneth them so sore that they are forced to giue ouer their suite Policro li. ● fol. 26. Of foure sorts of beasts Whatsoeuer parteth the hoofe c. He noteth foure sorts of Beasts Some chewe the Cud onelie and some onelie haue the foote clouen Other neither chewe the Cud nor haue the foote clouen The fourth both chewe the Cud haue the hoofe clouen The last maie be eaten Geneua BETHEL Of the scituation of Bethel BEthel is a place famous both for praise and dispraise vii● miles from Hierusalem on the right hand as one iourneith from Hierusalem to Sichar or Naples because of the golden Calfe which king leroboam set vp 3. Reg. 12. 29. The Iewes of contempt called it Bethauen that is the house of an Idoll whereas Iacob gaue it the name of the house of God Gen. 28. 17. How Bethel is both the name of a citie and of a mount That goeth out from Bethel to Luz ¶ Luz is thought to bée a citie at the end of mount Bethel which is also named Bethel Gen. 28. 19. And so Bethel is both the name of a Citie and of a mount The Bible note How Bethel and Bethauen are not both one Which is beside Bethauen on the East side of Bethel ¶ Héere it appeareth that Bethel and Bethauen were two places not both one Although Bethel were after turned into Bethauen when the right seruice of God was turned into luore and to Idolatrie 1. Reg. 13. 6. Ose. 5. 8. Bethel that before was called the house of God after that Ieroboams calues were set vp in it was called Bethauen that is to saie a house vnprofitable and the house of an Idoll Hierom. in Ose. li. 1. Cap. 4 How Bethel is taken in this place following And came vp to Bethel ¶ Bethel in● this place is not the name of a citie but is taken for the house of God and signifieth a place where the Arke of the couenant remained Pet. Mar. vpon Iudic. fol. 269. Of two Bethels The same is Bethel ¶ Which was in the Tribe of Ephra i● an other Bethel was in the Tribe of Beniamin Geneua Of the finding of Iacob in Bethel He found him in Bethel and there he spake with vs. ¶ He found Iacob as he laie sléeping in Bethel Gen. 28. 12. and spake with him there that the fruit of that speach apperteined to the whole bodie of the people whereof we are Geneua Of the peoples worshipping at Bethel and other places Come
pleasure is to be done Ric. Turnar CHIEFE PRIEST ¶ Looke Supremacie CHILDREN How children are not forbidden to come to Christ. SUffer ye children to come vnto mée c. ¶ Unto such as children be doth the kingdome of God perteine therefore ought children to be brought vnto Christ not onelie by Baptime which is the seale of the kingdome of heauen but also by godlie education and bringing vp Sir I. Cheeke They brought vnto him also Babes ¶ The children were tender and young in that they were brought which appeareth more euidentilie in that that they were infants which is to be marked against them that are enimies to the baptising of child 〈…〉 Beza And shall be filled with the holie Ghost ¶ Sith that children m●ie be filled with the holie Ghost euen in their mothers wombe● who can forbid them to be baptised For Saint Peter saith who can forbid those folkes to be baptised with water sith that they haue receiued the holy Ghost as well as we Act. ●o1 47. Againe Paule faith He that hath not the spirite of Christ is not his But the children are Christs they then haue the spirit of Christ so ought to be baptised Sir I. Check ¶ Looke Baptising of children How children ought to be brought vp Saint Paules doctrine is that children be brought vp in godlinesse and good ciuilitie which both be comprehended in his words when he saith Yée parents bring vp your children in nurture and awe of the Lord. The same is taught and confirmed in Tobie where he saith All the daies of thy life beare God in thy minde beware thou consent not vnto sinne First he willeth him to studie godlinesse next to beware of sinne that he be not entised therevnto Hemming Of children adopted ¶ Looke Adoption Of the children of this world Children of this world are wiser in their generation then the children of light ¶ This is a most gréeuous complaint that worldlie men are more carefull in getting temporall goods which perteine onelie to this present life and continue but a verie short time then Christians are carefull for the getting of heauenlie goods which shall endure for euer Hemming Men that are giuen to this present life contrarie to whome the children of light are set S. Paule calleth those spirituall and the other carnall Beza How the children of God are holpen of the Infidels And all that were about them strengthen●d their handes with vessels of siluer and golde c. ¶ The Babilonians Chaldeans gaue them these gifts Thus rather then the children of God should want for their necessities he would stirre vp the verie hearts of Infidels to helpe them Geneua What is vnderstood by children in this place If a man die hauing no children c. ¶ Under which name are daughters also comprehended but yet as touching the familie and name of a man because he that left daughters was in no better case then if he had left no children at all for they were not reckoned in the familie By the name of children are sonnes vnderstood Beza CHILIASSIS Of the fond opinion of this man THe Chiliassis whō in latin we maie call Mellenarij thought that this inheritaunce of the whole world shal be declared before the ende of this worlde when Christ as they thought should reigne a thousand years in this world with his Saints hauing destroied and ouercome all the wicked And these men it should seeme followed the Oracle which is said to come from Elias y● the world should endure 6000. yeares these yeares they thus describe saieng that 2000. yeares passed away before the lawe 2000. vnder the lawe and so manie shall be vnder y● Gospell Afterward they adde a thousand years in which say they shall be the chiefe rest so that the thousand last years they call the sabaoth And so they appoint a wéeke in which euerie particular daie is called for a thousand yeares according to that which is said A thousand yeares is with the Lord as one day and againe One daie as a thousand yeares Augustine maketh mention of this opinion in his 20. booke and 7● chapter De ciuitate Dei and saith that it was after ● 〈…〉 tollerable and that he himselfe once was of the same opinion But that which they added concerning pleasures delighte worldlie honours which they said all the faithfull shoulde for the space of those thousand yeares eni●ie togethers with Christ he ear●estly veproueth c. Eus●bius Cesariensis in the third booke of his history saith that this opinion had his beginning of Cheri●hus the heretik of whom D●omsius Bishop of Alexandria exp●unding the Apocalips of Iohn thus writeth That hée was altogether giuen to lustes and vnto the bellie and therefore attributed these carnall delights vnto the kingdome of Christ which shuld continue a thousand yeares Pet. Ma● vpon the Rom. fol. 88. CHORE How this Psalme made by the children of Chore is vnderstood A Mysticall Psalme made by the children of Chore. ¶ We reade in the 16. Chapter of the booke of Numeri that a certeine man named Chore which was the great Nephew of the Patriarke Leui or els to whom Leui was Perannus his great graund-father with other Captaines mo rebelled against Moses and Aaron whose fact displeased almightie God so sore that he caused the earth to open and to swallowe vp Chore with all his companie their wiues children and all their substaunce Now séeing that all his substance wife and children went the same waie that he did how can it be true that the children of Chore should be makers and setters foorth of this 42. Psal. of Dauid as the title thereof maketh mention To this question aunswere is made in the 26. of Nu. where it is written y● when Chore was swallowed vp of the earth God miraculouslie preserued certeine of Chores children of whose ofspring there came afterward certeine that proued verie excellent learned men and notable wise men namelie these foure Ethan Heman Calcal and Darda as who should saie these men excelled all other Loe such noble men came of the spring of Chore of whome the title of this Psalme and diuerse other Psalmes to their perpetuall name and renowme doth make mention calling them the children of Chore because they sprang of y● séede of Chore and of his children whom God did miraculously preserue from the swallowing of the earth and not because they were his naturall children For it is well knowne that Chore liued in Moses time against whō he was y● chiefe in stirring vp of rebellion against him Againe Ethan Heman Calcal Darda which were the naturall sonnes of Mahol liued and flourished in Salomons time which was 400. and almost or altogether fourescore yeares after that Chore was killed So that these men could not be the naturall sonnes of Chore but they are called his children and his sonnes because they came of his porgenie and of his ofspring CHOSEN Wherefore
and office the Father the Sonne and holie Ghost And yet but one God The same thing also is more plainlie opened vnto vs in the 18. of Genesis where it is written that the Lord appeared vnto Abraham as he sate in the Tent dore for he lifte vp his eies and sawe three men which ranne to méete them and fell to the ground and said Lord I beséech thée if I haue found fauour in thy sight goe not I praie thée from thy seruant c. Héere he sawe thrée to make vs vnderstand as I said before the pluralitie of persons And yet he honoured but one and therefore said Lord I beséech thee depart not from me And to signifie vnto vs the vnitie of the Godhead And therefore not without cause S. Iohn saith There are thrée that beare witnesse in heauen the Father the Word and the holie Ghost these thrée are one wherefore it must néedes be graunted that Christ is God Christ saith also Or Abraham was borne I am Which words I am declare vnto vs his Godhead for it is onelie the name of God as he himselfe said when he sent Moses vnto the children of Israel in Aegypt saieng thou shalt saie thus vnto them I am hath sent me vnto you Ergo Christ is God Christ said vnto his disciples Goe your waie and teach all Nations baptising them in the name of the Father of the Sonne and of the holie Ghost But yet it is not lawfull to baptise in the name of anie creature but onelie in the name of God and we are commaunded to baptise in the name of Iesus Christ. Ergo Christ is God S. Iohn saith In the beginning was the Word and the Word was with God and God was the Word which Word also became flesh and dwelt among vs by which words it is euident that he is God and that from the beginning None hath power to make and create all things but onelie God but Christ hath made and created all things as saith Paule both in heauen and in earth visible and inuisible and S. Iohn saith the world was made by him and the world knew him not Ergo Christ is God Whatsoeuer is without beginning is God Christ is without beginning Ergo Christ is God But now to proue the Minor that Christ is without beginning it is written that in the beginning God created heauen and earth and so made y● world and all that are therein and this was done in the beginning But Christ was before the world was as he himselfe affirmeth saieng Glorifie me then Father with thine owne selfe with the glorie which I had with thée or euer the world was Ergo Christ is God Saint Iohn saith We knowe that the Sonne of God is come and hath giuen vs aminde to knowe him which is true we are in him which is true through his sonne Iesus Christ the same is verie God and eternall life 1. Iohn 5. 20. A more euident place of scripture cannot be which affirmeth not that Christ was God by his Office as was Moses but the true and verie God and also eternall life S. Paule also affirmeth that Christ came of the Israelites which is God ouer all things blessed for euermore And Thomas said vnto Christ My Lord and my God In all which places he is called as he is indéed God It is written thou shalt honour the Lord thy God and him onelie shalt thou serue And yet S. Paule saith that in the name of Iesus Christ shall euerie knée boow both of things in heauen and things in earth and things vnder the earth By which sentence we see that godlie honour is due vnto him also wherefore it must néedes be graunted that he is God Esay also prophecieng of Christ saith that vnto vs a childe is borne and vnto vs a sonne is giuen vppon his shoulders shall his Kingdome lie and he is called with his owne name wonderfull the giuer of counsell the mightie GOD the euerlasting Father the Prince of Peace And Paule in like manner out of the Psalmes of Dauid saith He maketh his Angels spirits and his ministers flames of fire But vnto the Sonne he saith God thy seate shall be for euer euer In which places we sée he is called God yea and that the mightie God M●ch●● the Prophet saith and thou Bethleem Epheata art little among the thousands of Iuda out of thée shall come vnto 〈…〉 which shall ●ée the Gouernour of Israel whose out-going hath bene from the beginning and from euerlasting And againe Paule saith Iesus Christ yesterdaie and to daie the same continueth for euer the which sentence meruailouslie commendeth and setteth forth the diuinitie of Christ forasmuch as he is without beginning from euerlasting shall continue for euermore None is able or hath raised vp Christ from death but God as Peter affirmeth that God raised him vp and loosed the sorrowes of death But Christ hath power to raise vp himselfe for he saith Destroie this Temple meaning the Temple of his bodie and I will reare it vp in thrée daies And againe I haue power to put my life from me and haue power to take it againe Wherefore it must néedes be graunted that Christ is God Christ saith All that the Father hath are mine The Father hath the Diuine nature and Godhead in him Ergo Christ hath the same and so he is God For saith Paule in him dwelleth all the fulnesse of the Godhead bodilie we are complete in him which is the head of all rule and power All things that the Father doeth the same doe I saith Christ for the Father giueth eternall life to as manie as beléeue in him and so doth Christ. Wherefore séeing that the Father and the Sonne haue all one action néedes must it followe then that they be of one nature and so is one God with him as he himselfe affirmeth saieng The Father and I are one teacheth vs also to beléeue that the Father is in him and he in the Father Certaine of the Arrians Obiections that Christ is not God aunswered Obiection THe Father saith Christ is greater then I. Christ ye sée in this place hath graunted himselfe to be infexiour vnto the Father wherefore it cannot be said that he is all one God equall with him Aunswere Forasmuch as there are two natures in Christ the nature of God and man as is before sufficientlie proued I aunswere that by his diuine nature he is God equall and all one with the Father as he himselfe said I and the Father are one But as touching his humaine nature he was lesse then the father And therefore he said the Father is greater then I. But how y● this Scripture ought thus to be vnderstood we shall sée that Saint Paule will declare the selfe same thing in effect in one sentence Iesus Christ saith he when he was in the shape of God thought it
sinne wherefore hast thou made me such a one If thou be the preseruer of men ●hy shouldest thou condempne me so seeing it lyeth in thée to saue me But a man may well sée that this is not the naturall meaning And such as take it so neuer knewe the intent of the Holy ghost as touching this streine and moreouer they haue ill considered y● which is witnessed vnto vs concerning lob how he was patient howsoeuer the world went with him What is it then that Iob ment It is as if he should say Well I confesse my fault and I cannot escape the iudgement of God why so He is the kéeper of men But this word Keeper hath bene misconstrued for men haue taken it for a preseruer of mankind for one that shieldeth them vnder his protection It is certaine that as y● Gréeke Translater also hath well marked which thing he is commonly wont to doe Iob ment to say that God wayteth vpon vs that he watcheth vs and that he knoweth all as if a man should watch one to spye and marke all that euer he doeth and saith We sée then in what sence Iob applyeth this title vnto God that is The kéeper of men Cal. vpon Iob. fol. 135. KILL How the intent to kill is worse then the slaughter it selfe BUt ye goe about to kill me c. ¶ We are taught by this place that the minde and purpose to do any work is accounted for the worke it selfe Yea if thou consider well the intent to doe any euill thing is worse then the worke it selfe and the intent to doe any good worke is better then the worke it selfe Better is the desire to doe good to those that are in misery then the Almes déede it selfe And the intent to kill is worse then the murther it selfe The Almes déede may be so done that it may displease God concerning the which reade the 5. of Mathew verse 42. A murderous déede may be so done that it may please God as may appeare in the Leuiticus in Phinehes in Iehu and so refused that God may be displeased for the not dooing of it as we may sée in Agag Amalech whom Saule kept alyue But the desire and intent to do good cannot displease God euen as the desire to kill cannot please him Marl. vpon Iohn fol. 317 KING How and wherefore we are called Kings and Priests AS euery perfect beléeuing man in our Sauiour Christ are called Priests of offering of spirituall Sacrifices so are they ●alled Kings of ruling and subduing the temptations and suggestions of their sinfull appetites vnto reason and to the will of God vppon the perfourmaunce of this condition Moses doeth call vs Kings and Priests saieng If ye will heare my voice and kéepe my appointment ye shall be mine owne aboue all Nations For all the earth is mine ye shall be also vnto me a Kingdome of Priests and an holy people Ric. Turnar Of the Kings of Israel and Iuda how many were good Of all the kings that reigned ouer Israel and Iuda there were no mo but Dauid Ezechias and Iosias that continued perfectly vnto the ende of their liues in the true religion of God not that these thrée were men of such perfection that they did not notably offende the lawe of God in their life time But these wer such men that they wer neuer infected with the foule sinne of Idolatrie and wicked worshipping of straunge Gods Into other sinnes in déede they fell and from the same by true repentaunce obteined mercie and forgiuenesse a● Gods hand So that notwithstanding both the murther adulterie of Dauid the foolish vaine glory of Ezechias that shewed all his treasure and all his secrets vnto the Ambassadours of Babilon for the which Esay the Prophet did openly reproue him to his face Yet otherwise they stoode vpright kéeping themselues pure and cleane from the most detestable sinne of Idolatry And therefore Dauid strong in the armes and amiable of countenaunce and Ezechias which by interpretation is called the health of our Lorde and Iosias Fortitudo Domini the strength of the Lord These thrée doe beare the bell away and are preferred aboue all the Kings of Iuda as we reade in the Booke of Ecclesiasticus 40. Chapter where their praises are commended to endure to the worlds ende Ric. Turnar How Kings haue to doe in matters of religion Dauid commaunded Sadoch and Abiathar the Priests and the Leuites to bring the Arke of the Lord God into the place which he had prepared for it Salomon displaced Abiathar from the high Priests office put Sadoch into his roome Heare me O you Leuites and be sanctified cleanse the house of the God of your Fathers and take awaye all vncleannesse from the Sanctuary ¶ Th●se are not words of entreatie but flat commaundements as Lyra saith Ezechia cupiens renouare foedus c. Ezechias desirous to renue the Couenaunt with the Lord first did commaund the Leuites to be sanctified Second by them being sanctified the Temple to be cleansed Thirdly by those which were cleansed sacrifice to be made for the offence of the people Fourthly by sacrificing God to be praised Fiftly by cleansing the holye Burnt-offerings to bée offered vp ¶ Thus were all things done by his commaundement by his constitution and at his pleasure c. I. Bridges fol. 285. Nunc mihi debio c. I iudge it saith Constantine the great that this ought before all other things to be my scope that among the most holy multitude of the Catholike Church one faith and sincere Charitie and godlynesse agréeing together towards almightie God might be conserued I. Bridges fol. 117. Quanto subditorum gloria c. How much more saith the king of Spaine called Richardus we are exalted in royall glorie ouer the subiects so much more ought we to be carefull in those matters that apperteine vnto God Either to augment our owne hope or else to looke to the profit of the people committed to vs of God And as ye sée me in very déede inflamed with the seruice of faith God hath stirred me vp to this end that the obstinacie of infidelitie béeing expelled and the furie of discorde remoued I should reuoke the people to the knowledge of faith and to the fellowship of the Catholike Church who serued errour vnder the name of religion These be the wordes of this christen king which he spake openly in the third counsel at To-let before all the Bishops there assembled S. Austen sayth that the auncient actes of the godly kings mentioned in the propheticall bookes were signes of the like factes to be done by the godly Princes in the time of the new testament I. Bridges fol. 505. Of Iosaphats supreme gouernement ¶ Looke Iosaphat Carolus Magnus commaunded that nothing should be read openly in the Church sauing onely the Canonicall bookes of the holy Scripture And that the faithfull people should receiue
that they were abused of them Marcus ranne away with another mans wife They powre oyle and water vpon the head of the departed hoping so to redeeme them They said that the life and generation of man consisted in 7. starres that Christ suffered not indéede but was so thought and that there was no resurrection of the flesh Epiph. haeres 34. 35. 36. Irenaeus Aug. li. de haeres MARY How Mary the mother of Christ ought not to be worshipped CHrist saith Epiphanius did forme a fashion himselfe of the Uirgin Mary as of the earth who came downe from heauen and being both God and the word did put on flesh of the Uirgin but not that the Uirgin should be worshipped or that he would make hir a God or that we should offer in hir name For he neither did suffer hir to giue or minister Baptime nor to blesse the Apostles neither did he commaund hir to beare rule in the earth but will haue vs to know that he alone is the sanctification and that she is made worthy of the kingdome of heauen Whence doth this rolling Serpent or Dragon come vnto vs Whence are these lewd and wicked councells renued Let Mary be in honour let the Father the Sonne and the holy Ghost be worshipped let no man worship Mary And by by after Let no man eate of the errour which is of the holy Mary Although it be a goodly trée yet is it not for meate to be eaten of Although Mary be most beautiful holy honourable yet she is not appointed to be worshipped let therfore the error of the deceiued cease For neither is Mary a God neither hath she a body from heauen but of the conception of man woman howbeit disposed according to y● promise as y● cōception birth of Isaac was And let no man offer in hir name for he that doth it doth cast away his soule Againe let no man raile against hir nor blaspheme y● holy Uirgin God forbid for she was not coupled to man neither after the birth nor before the birth of our Sauiour Againe in y● same booke Contra Colicidianos these are also his words Indéed the virgin was a virgin honorable but not giuen to vs to be worshipped but rather she doth worship him y● tooke his substaunce of hir that is to say of hir flesh Of the painting of hir Image ¶ Looke Painting Wherein Mary was most blessed ¶ Looke Mother of God Of Mary Magdalens loue ¶ Looke Loue. Of Mary the sister of Lazarus It was that Mary that anoynted the Lord with oyntment ¶ Because the Gospell maketh mention of many Maries héere there is a difference put betwéene this Mary the rest namely that it was the very same which anoynted the Lord. And this is put downe héere by anticipation For the Euangelist declareth this anoynting in the Chapter following Therefore there is a great ignoraunce in them which imagine this Mary the sister of Lazarus to be that infamous woman of whome Luke maketh mention in his 7. Chapter The making mention of the oyntment occasioned this error and also because in both places mention is made of Symon in whose house it was done as though it were not manifest that Christ was oftentimes annointed that in diuers places The sinfull woman of whome Luke speaketh of anoynted Christ in Ierusalem wher she dwelt And Mary of Betany did the like in hir towne And the preter tense anoynted which the Euangelist vseth ought not to be referre● to the time in the which the same was done but to the time in which he wrote as if he should say● This is that Mary which afterward powred out hir oyntment for the which cause there arose a murmuring among the Disciples c. Marl. vpon Iohn fol. 376. MARIAGE Who ordeined Mariage and how it is honourable in all estates Concerning Mariage we say that it ordeined of God and honourable in all estates as the holy Scripture teacheth So that whosoeuer hath not the gift of continencie that is to say who that feeleth in himselfe such a naturall desire that he may be drawen to euill thoughts is obliged and bound to marry Theodore de Beza Wedlocke or mariage is a perpetuall ioyning together of one man with one woman instituted of God to bring forth fruit and is ordained to auoid lusts forbidden in the scripture They shall be two in one flesh that is to say to please God the Creator of nature to obaie his ordinaunce in that vocation the man not to despise the womankinde but to hono●r and loue hir that euerie man should know his owne vessell as the part and parent of mankinde to defend hir to helpe hir and to loue hir Both bringing foorth children teaching them the true knowledge of God that this knowledge of God might be set foorth more plenteously and be conserued vpon earth For this cause also ought wedlocke to be vsed that when men be departed from this societie euery mans dutie is for himselfe gone to leaue after him by iust wedlocke other worshippers of God in his place vpon earth For this intent Abraham Isaac and many ancient olde holy Bishops desired to haue children that they might leaue after them the faithfull kéepers of the heauenly doctrine M●la●ct●on Matrimonie or wedlocke is a state or a degrée ordeined of God and an office wherein the husband serueth the wife the wife the husband It was ordeined for a remedie to increase the world and for the man to helpe the woman the woman the man with all loue and kindnesse not to signifie any promise that euer I haue heard or read off in the scripture Therefore ought it not to be called a Sacrament It hath a promise that we sinne not in that state if a man receiue his wife as a gifte giuen him of God and the wife hir husband like wise as all manner of meates and drinkes haue a promise that we sinne not if we vse them measurably with thanks-giuing It they cal Matrimonie a Sacrament because the scripture vseth the similitude of matrimonie to expresse the mariage or wedlocke y● is betwéene vs and Christ for as a woman though she be neuer so poore yet when she is maried is as rich as hir husband euen so we when we repent beleeue the promises of God in Christ though we be neuer so poore sinners yet are as rich as Christ all his merits are ours with all that he hath If for that cause they call it a Sacrament so will I mustard seed ●euen a net keyes bread wine a thousand other things which Christ the Prophets and all the Scripture● is to expresse the kingdome of heauen and Gods word withall They praise wedlocke with their mouth and say it is an holy thing as it is verely but had leuer be sanctified with an whore then to come within the sanctuary Tindale fol. 144. How eurry man is commaunded to marry that hath not the gift of
of the Tabernacle wherin the Arke of couenaunt the propiciatorie seate and the golden Censures were kept yet almightie God to preserue the people of Israel from worshipping of hills and mountaines woods and groues as the Heathen Idolaters did he commaunded Moses to make him a Tabernacle within the which Tabernacle the chiefe part was called Sanctum sanctorum the holy of the holyest where God promised fauourably to heare the praiers of the people And at such time as this Psalme was made this Sanctuary was placed by the Commaundement of King Dauid in the mount and high tower belonging to the Citie of Hierusalem called Syon and according to the same hée commaunded now the people to pray in this Psalme made for the preseruation of their King and say Mittet tibi auxilium c. The Lord sende vnto thée helpe from the Sanctuary and strengthen thee out of Syon That is the Lord which hath promised to heare your praiers out of his Sanctuary the holy of holyest which is now placed in Mount Syon O King the same Lord send thée helpe and defend thee Turnar What it is to feare the Sanctuary And feare my Sanctuary ¶ To feare the Sanctuary is diligently to performe the true worshipping seruice of God and leaue of nothing to obserue and kéepe the purenesse both of body and minde verely and not Hypocrite lyke to beléeue that hee knoweth beholdeth doeth and ruleth all things to beware of offending him and with all feare and diligence to walke in the pathes of his lawes T. M. SAPHIRE The nature of the Saphire what is ment by it THe second a Saphire ¶ This stone is lyke the cléere skie which being striken with the Sun beames casteth foorth a burning brightnes And it betokeneth the highnesse of the hope of holy men whose conuersation is in heuen Phi. 3. 20. And who being renued by the true sonne doe the more earnestly séeke euerlasting things and teach other to doe the same Marl. vpon the Apoc. fol. 299. The second foundation was of a Saphyre whose colour is as the aire cleare but not very precious in sight This betokeneth those simple soules which though they were as Iob Ioseph the Carpenter not precious to the world yet had they their daily conuersation in heauen Bale SAPIENCE A definition of this word Sapience SApience is defined to be the knowledge of things pertaining to God and man and of things diuine and worldly which they that had gotten were called Sapientes that is men of perfect knowledge vertue and honestie For of right knowledge consequently ensueth honestie of life Vdall SARDINE A description of this stone and what it betokeneth THe sixt a Sardine ¶ This stone is all of one colour lyke bloud and it betokeneth the glorye of Martirdome after the suffering of the Martyrs themselues Marl. vpon the Apoc. fol. 300. The sixt a Sardine which in similitude is very lyke vnto redde earth and such are they as notwithstanding the great benefite of God thinketh themselues the vnworthy children of Adam whose interpretation after Philo is redde earth indéede Mary Christs mother was of this sort confessing hir selfe after most high benefits to be but an handmaid and hir spirite to reioyce in God hir Sauiour So was Abraham calling himselfe but dust and Ashes before the Lord. Bale SARDIS What Sardis is CHurch which is at Sardis ¶ Sardis is the name of a most flourishing Citie wher the kings of Lydia kept their Courts This Sardis which is as much to say as a prince of plesantnes or a song of mirth or that which is the remnaunt or leauing of a thing or in the Syrian language a Cauldron was also another Citie whose scituation is notwithstanding vnkn●wen Marl. vpon the Apoc. fol. 19. SARDONIX The description of the Sardonix and what it betokeneth THe 5. a Sardonix ¶ A Sardonix is of diuers colours Blacke in the bottome white in the mids and red in the top Euen so the Saints are red through sufferaunce of aduersities and troubles white by inward purenesse of conscience blacke or despised in themselues through lowlinesse Marl. fol. 299. The. 5. was a Sardonix which is compounded of a Sardi● and an Onix and is beneath blacke in the middle white and aboue red Such were those méeke sprited that confesseth themselues sinners with Dauid and Magdalene being through faith both pure and orient before God Though I be blacke saith the true Congregation yet am I faire and well fauoured We faint not saith Paule for though our outward man be corrupt yet is he that is inward daily renued Bale SATAN How Satan is taken for an enimie and aduersary SAtan doth signifie an enimie an aduersary a hurtful person as Dauid sayd What matter is betweene you and me for this day ye are become aduersaries vnto me The latin text hath Cur efficimini mihi hodie in Satan Euē so to Peter perswading Christ from the Crosse it was said Come after me Satan for he was an aduersary vnto Christ reuoking him from his Fathers commaundement Marl. fol. 38. How Satan is called the Prince of this world S. Austen in his treatise vpon Iohn 15. saith God forbidde we should thinke the Diuell were so called the Prince of the world that we should beleeue that he is able to rule ouer Heauen and earth but the world for he is said to be the Prince of this world is saide to be in wicked men which are dispearsed throughout the whole compasse of the earth And againe the same Augustine in his 1. chap. De agone christia saith The Prince of this world is cast out not that he is cast out of the worlde but out of their mindes which cleaue vnto the word of God and loue not the world whereof he is Prince because he hath dominion ouer them which loue temporal goods which are contained in this visible world not for the he is Lord of this world but Prince of those concupiscences whereby euery thing is coueted that is transitory By this concupiscence the Diuel raigneth in man and holdeth his heart in possession Bull●n fol. 750. Now shall the Prince of this world be cast out ¶ Satan is called Prince of this world not because he is the lawful Prince of the same but by rapine by which he hath made mankind● subiect vnto him by sinne Other wise the earth is the Lords all that therein is the compasse of the world and they the dwell therein The Apostle Paule calleth him the God of this world which worketh in the children of vnbeliefe by whom they are helde captiue to his will pleasure for his kingdome is in the hearts of the vnbeléeuers but by the power of Christ he is cast out of the hearts of mortall men And now we must take héed least he get entraunce againe into his olde seate Christ and the Prince of this world cannot reigne together Christ béeing let in expelleth Satan and Satan
shall saue his lyfe his soule that is his life shall be vnto him as a pray because he should vtterly haue lost it if hée had bidden in Hierosalem and by flieng to the Chaldees he should winne it euen as a man winneth a praye in battell T. M. How satan hath no power of the soule of the godly God hath giuen Satan leaue to punish Iob he sayth to him beholde thou maist worke thy spite vpon his substaunce but much not his person And againe after he hath destroyed all his goods he sayth Thou maist touch his person but thou shalt not come ●eere his soule H●●re●● aga●● we see how God reserueth alwayes the soule of Iob sol 〈…〉 Satan can no more but torment him in his goods and in his mortall lyfe and in his honour for he had not the power to ●●lter into his soule to sedu●e him and to make him to burst out into impatience Calui●●e fol. 22. How the soules departed know not what is done in earth If the soules of the dead departed sayth Saint Austen were present at the affaires of the liuing then woulde they speake vnto vs when we sée them in our sléepe and to omit others my tender mother would forsake me neuer a night which followed by sea by land to the end she might liue together with me God forbid she should become cruell in the happ●er life so that if ought al anytime greiue my heart she comfort not her sorrowfull sonne whom she loued entirely whome she would neuer see sadde But in good sooth that which the sacred Psalme soundoth out is true My Father and my Mother hath forsaken me but the Lord tooke me vp if our Fathers haue forsaken vs how are they present at our cares businesse If our parents be not present what other of the departed bée there which know what we doe or what we suffer The Prophet Esay sayth Abraham hath bene ignorant of vs and Israel hath not knowne vs. God of his great goodnesse promised Iosias that he should dye be gathered vnto his people least y● he should sée the plagues which he threatned shuld happē to y● place people Chrisostome writeth that the diuels vseth to say to the liuing Anima talis ego sum I am such a mans soule to the ende he may deceiue him Chrisost. Mat. chap. 8. Cipriane saith The wicked spirits doe hide themselues in pictures and Images consecrated they inspire the mindes of the Prophets they holden the heart strings intrailes they gouerne the flieng of birds they sort lots they sift out Oracles they mingle alwayes falsehood and truth togethers they distemper the health for they deceiue and are deceiued They trouble the lyfe they disquiet the sléepe and créeping into the bodyes they fray the secrets of the minde they bring the lim● out of fashion they distemper the health they vexe with diseases that they may compell the poore silly wretches to the worshipping of them that being filled with the sauour from the altars and burnt bowels of b●ast● loosing the thing which they bound They may séeme to cure for this is their curing and healing when they cease to hurt Cipriane de Idol vanitate SOVND Why Caluine doth vse this word Sound and not perfect HE was a sound man ¶ This word sound in the Scripture is taken for a plain●nesse when there is no point of sayuing counter feiting or hypocriste in a man but that he sheweth himselfe the same out wardly that he is inwardly and specially when he hath no starting holes to shift himselfe from God but ●a●eth open his heart and all his thoughts and affections so that he desireth nothing but to consecrate and dedicate himself wholy vnto God The same word also hath ben translated perfect as well by the Gréekes as by the Latines But forasmuch as the word perfect hath afterward bene misconstrued it is better for vs to vse the word sound for many ignoraunt persons not knowing how the sayd perfection is to bée taken haue thought thus Beholde héere a man that is called perfect and therefore it followeth that it is possible for vs to haue perfection in our selues euen during the time wée walke in this present lyfe but they deface the grace of God whereof wée haue néede continually For euen they that haue liued most vprightly must haue recourse to Gods mercye and except their sinnes be forgiuen them and that God vpholde them they must needes all perish So then although that they which haue vsed this word perfect haue meant well yet notwithstanding forasmuch as there hath bene some that haue wrast it to a contrarye sense as I haue sayde let vs kéepe still this worde Sounde Caluine vpon Iob. fol. 3. SOVVE What it is to sowe in the flesh and to sowe in the spirit TO sow in the flesh is to prouido for the néedes of this present lyfe without regard of the lyfe to come It is to bée all for a mans owne selfe to feede his owne paunch onely and to bestowe nothing to the mainteinaunce of the spirituall functions And to sowe in the flesh is to followe the fruites of the flesh and to pamper the fleshly lusts And to sowe in the spirit is to looke more to heauen then to the earth And to frame a mans lyfe as he may séeke alwayes the kingdome of God Wée sowe in the spirit when wée doe and suffer all thing in this lyfe to the end we may be wel at ease in the lyfe to come Marl. vpon the Apoc. fol. 307. For he that soweth in the flesh c. ¶ Hée proueth that the ministers must be nourished for if men onelye prouide for worldly thinges without respect of the lyfe euerlasting then they procure to themselues death and mocke God who hath giuen them his ministers to teach them heauenly thinges Geneua SPETTLE Of the clay that Christ made with his Spettle HE spat on the ground and made clay of the spettle annointed the eyes of the blinde with the clay ¶ This was not for any vertue that was in the earth in the spettle or in the clay to make one sée but it only pleased him to vse these signes and meanes Geneua How Spettle was abused in Baptime THe spettle whereby they doe not lighten but defile and beraye the infant they tooke out of the miraculous fact of Christ where he did strike ouer the eies of him that was borne blind with the spettle and clay and opened them This miracle the Apostles did see but for all that none of them stroke their spettle in the eies of them that should be baptised Musculus fol. 291. SPIDERS VVEB What it is to weaue the Spiders web AND weaue the Spiders web ¶ To weaue the Spiders web is to goe about vaine and trifling thinges which are of no value although they seeme neuer so excellent to the dooers T. M. SPIRIT How this word spirit is vnderstood GOD is a spirit
in his booke of Predest fol. 19. STONE● Of the stone that Iosua pitched vp IT hath heard all the words of the Lord. ¶ It hath heard c. That is it signifieth that ye haue heard It left not to bée a stone nor was so transformed that it had eares or the sense of hearing but should put them in remembraunce what couenant they had made there and stirre them to the performance thereof such phrases are familiar to the Hebrues T. M. Of the stumbling stone and who shall stumble thereat And stone to stumble at ¶ Some read and as the Rocke to fall vpon to the two houses of Israel a snare and net to the inhabitaunts of Hierusalem And they expound y● sentence thus The Lord will be vnto the houses of Israel that is to the house of Iuda and to the house of the ten Tribes partly a sanctifieng by which vnderstand health and felicitie and partly a stone to stumble at So that some of both the houses shall be sanctified some shall stumble but the chiefely they of Hierusalem shal be snared Who shal be sanctified and who shal stumble fall doth S. Peter cléerly expound 1. Pet. 2. 6. saieng Unto you therefore which beléeue he is precious but vnto them which beléeue not the stone which the builders refused the same is made y● head stone in the corner and a stone to stumble at T. M. What stones in this place signifieth Thy seruaunt hath a loue to hir stones Stones héere signifie the men vpon whom the Church is edified as 1. Pet. 2. 5. And ye as lyuing Stones are made a spirituall house c. T. M. ¶ The more that the Church is in misery the more ought the faithfull to loue and pittie it Geneua Of the stone cut out of the mountaine Whereas thou sawest that the stone that was cut out of the mountaine c. ¶ Meaning Christ who was sent of God and not set vp by man whose kingdom at the beginning should be smal and without beautie to mans iudgement but should at length grow and fill the whole earth which he calleth a great Mountaine As ver 35. And this kingdom which is not only referred to the person of Christ but also to the whole body of his Church and to euery member thereof shall be eternall for the spirite that is in them is lyfe eternall Rom. 8. 10. Who is the corner stone The stone which the builders refused c. ¶ Christ is called the head stone in the corner not only because that he beareth vp the whole building that is to say the Congregation but because that he doth ioyne two wals together in one that is to say the Iewes and the Gentiles Sir I. Cheeke The same stone which the builders refused c. ¶ The stone is Christ and the builders such teachers as taught that he was vnprofitable Mat. 22. such builders remaine yet and shall do to the worlds ende T. M. Who is the stone full of eyes For the stone that I haue laide before Iosua vppon one stone shall be 7. eyes ¶ He sheweth that the ministers cannot build before God lay the first stone which is Christ who is full of eyes both because he giueth light vnto all others and that all ought to seeke lyght at him Cha. 4. 10. STRAIGHT GATE What the straight gate doth signifie ENter in at the straight gate ¶ The straight gate is the true knowledge and vnderstanding of the law and of the true intent of workes which whosoeuer vnderstandeth the same shal be driuen to Christ to fetch of his fulnesse and to take him for his righteousnesse and fulfilling of the lawe altogether at the beginning and as oft as we fall afterward and for more then the thousand part of our fulfilling of the law and righteousnes of our best workes all our life long for except the righteousnes of Christ be knit to the best déedes we doe it will be too short to reach to heauen Tindale ¶ We must ouercome and mortifie our affections if we wil be true disciples of Christ. Geneua Striue to enter in at the straight gate ¶ We must indeuour and cut of all impediments which may let vs. Geneua ¶ Looke Narrow way SVBIECTION Of Christs subiection to his father THen shall the Sonne also himselfe be subiect ¶ Not because the Sonne was not subiect to his Father before but because his body that is to say the Church which is héere in distresse and not yet wholly pertakers of his glory is not yet fully perfect and also because the bodies of the Saints which bée in the graues shall not be glorified vnto the resurrection but Christ as he is God hath vs subiect to him as his father hath but as he is Priest he is subiect to his father with vs. August b. 1. chap. 2. of the Trinitie Beza ¶ Looke Sonne SVCOTH ¶ Looke Sichem SVPERSTITION What superstition is and how it is defined SUperstition is a superfluous religiō what waies soeuer it be superfluous whether it be of the superfluitie of the things honoured or of the things vsed for Religion or for the manner in Religion This doubtlesse is vnderstood by the name of superstition from whence soeuer the name hath his beginning Whatsoeuer thou do to please the Almightie if it be not commaunded in his word it is superfluous superstition Superstition of Angells ¶ Looke Angell SVNNE The meaning of this place of Mathew THe Sunne shall be darkned c. ¶ By the Sunne Christ which is the sonne of righteousnes is to be vnderstood This Sunne hath bene darkned with the cloudes of mens traditions Therefore the Moone which is the Church and hath hir light of the Sunne must néedes begin to loose hir light yea and also the starres that is to say the Teachers and Ministers shal fall from heauen that is to say from the heauenly doctrine and word of God Sir I. Cheeke What it is to regard the rising of the Sunne Did I euer greatly regard the rising of the Sunne c. ¶ To regard the rising of the Sunne the going downe of y● Moone is to be glorious in prosperitie to vse the things of this world to plesure Ie. 25. 10. For on them that be in prosperitie is the sun counted to shine the Moone to go down preciously and plesantly and on the contrary part to them that be in tribulation are both the Sunne the Moone counted cloudie and darke T. M. ¶ If I was proud of my worldly prosperitie felicitie which is meant by the shining of the Sunne and brightnesse of the Moone Geneua SVPPER OF THE LORD Wherefore the Supper was ordeined THe Supper of the Lord is ordeined first to confirme vs and as it were to seale vs in the same remission of sinnes the which we obtaine by faith in the death and passion of Iesus Christ and the true and spirituall Communion