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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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the word of God should be saued by the fi●e of this examination F. N. B. the Italian If anie man build vpon this foundation golde siluer precious stones wood haie or stubble c. Heere the Apostle woulde haue vs to be feruent in good workes and earnest to doe wel he wisheth vs to be occupied in y● labou● which when the iudge of all shall come maie in his sight be acceptable maie to his word be commendable and that we should well beware what works we build vpon our foundation he plainlie sheweth that at the last daie all our d●●ing shall be opened and that then the same shall be so tried as the golde-smith in fining his mettalls trieth out the drosse and base matter from the pure perfect and fine The daie saith he of our Lord shall declare it because it shall appeare in fire The daie of our Lord is the daie of iudgement the thing is so plaine as no man though he be verie peruerse maie denie it But when shall it appeare in fire euen then at the generall iudgement so is the Text. This place is onelye spoken of those which shall be saued of such as build vpon Iesus Christ vpon which foundation as all cannot builde golde precious stones and siluer as all cannot be perfect neither by martirdome be crowned nor yet by good learning shine like the starres of heauen So thereon building being b●t wood or haie be it but verie stubble though the worke it selfe be in the ende burned though he himselfe receiue no such reward as y● others yet shall he be saued and hom As it were through fire Not through fire but through the greate feare wherein he then shall stand of the iustice and iudgement of God O how comfortable is this doctrine How farre passeth it all their painted fires and ●ained flames of Purgatorie You see now that the Scripture admitteth no such place you sée the right meaning of the Apostle c. L. Euans The meaning of these places following And he heard him from heauen in fire vpon the Altar of whole burnt offerings ¶ God declared that he heard his request in that he sent downe fire from heauen for els they might vse no fire but of that which was reserued still vppon the Altar Leuit. Chap. 6. 13. and came downe from heauen Chap. 9. 14. as appeareth by the punishment of Nadab and Abihu Leuit. cap. 10. ● Geneua Shal be worthie to be punished with he●fire ¶ The Iewes vsed foure kindes of punishments before their gouernement was taken awaie by Herode hanging beheading stoning and burning This is it that Christ shot at because burning was the greatest punishment therefore in that he maketh mention of a iudgement a counsell and a fire he sheweth that some sins are worse then other some but yet they are all such y● we must giue an account for them and shall be punished for them Beza FIGGE-TREE Of the Figge-tree that Christ cursed ANd spied a Figge-trée in the waie and came to it and found nothing thereon but leaues onelie ¶ By this Figge-tree Christ doth sufficient lie shew that the Iews although they had an appearaunce of holinesse by their ceremonies yet neuerthelesse they had not the fruite of charitie by which he signified y● they should worthely be depriued put from this false appearance by the destructiō of Hierusalem Mar. 13. 2. Luk. 21. 6. Tin Cut it downe whie combereth it the ground ¶ Unles we do beléeue also bring foorth fruite worthie repentance we shall with the vnprofitable figge-trée be cut downe also our talent shall be taken from vs and giuen vnto an other that shall put it to better vse Sir I. Cheeke FIGVRE Proues how the bread in the Sacrament is a figure of Christs bodie THe Lord doubted not to saie This is my bodie when hée gaue a signe of his bodie And after in the same Chapter he expoundeth it For trulie so the bloud is the soule Christ was the stone And yet the Apostle doth not say the stone did signifie Christ but he saith the stone was Christ. ¶ Héere Christ calleth the figure of his bodie his bodie saith S. Austen doth compare the thrée texts of scripture This is my bodie The bloud is the soule Christ was the stone Declaring them to be one phrase and to be expounded after one fashion August contra● Adam The Priest saith make vs this ●●lation acceptable c. For it is a figure of the bodie of our Lord Iesus Christ. ¶ Héere he calleth it plainlie a figure of Christs bodie Ambrose li. 3. de Sacra ●et that saieng be expounded by a figure I saie the thing that is spoken is not true indéede but figured vnder the cloude of an allegorie Hierom● aduers. 〈…〉 Ye haue heard that it is a figure Therefore meruaile not ● And béeing a figure require not al things to agrée for otherwise it were no figure Chrisostome in Gen. Homil. 35. First of all thou must take heede that thou take not a figuratiue speach according to the letter for that is it wherof Saint Paule saith The letter killeth For when the thing that is spoken vnder a figure is so taken as if it wer plainlie spoken ther is a fleshlie vnderstanding neither is there anie thing that may better be called the death of the soule August de doct Chri. li. 3. ca. 5. Figures be in vaine serue for no purpose when the things of them signified be present Lactan. insti li. 2. ●ap 1. A figure of a bodie saith Tertulian presupposeth a verie naturall bodie for of a shew or a fancie ther can be no figure But Christ gaue vnto his Disciples a figure of his bodie therefore it must needs follow that Christ had a verie naturall bodie His words be these Christ taking the bread and distributing it to his Disciples made it his bodie saieng This is my bodie that is to say This is a figure of my bodie but a figure it could not bée vnlesse there were a bodie of a truth and indeede for a voide thing as is a fantasie can receiue no figure Tertulian contra Mar. li. 4. There is a figure saith Hilarie for bread and wine be outwardlie seene And there is also a truth of that figure for the bodie and bloud of Christ be of a truth inwardlie seene This Hilarie was within lesse then 350. yeares after Christ. Crisostome affirmeth saieng that if a man vnderstand the words of Christ carnallie he shal surelie profit nothing therby For what meane these words the flesh auaileth nothing He meant not his flesh God forbid but he ment of them that fleshlie and carnallie vnderstood those things that Christ spake But what is carnall vnderstanding To vnderstand the words simplie as they be spoken nothing else For we ought not so to vnderstand the things which we see But all mysteries must be considered
called the friend of God Thus wée sée S. Paule Lames reconciled both teach Iustification by faith in the sight of God I. Gough How God is iustified in vs. To the end saith S. Paule that all months might be stopped and all the world acknowledge it selfe to be indebted vnto God and that he onely should be iustified ¶ After what sorte is it that God shall be iustified in vs according to S. Paule To wit when all of vs condemne our selues and haue not the boldnesse to striue against God but doe willingly confesse that all of vs are indaungered vnto him if we be once come to that point then is God iustified y● is to say his righteousnes is commended by vs with such praise as he deserueth But contrariwise if men exalt themselues and acknowledge not that they be indaungered vnto God so as may condemne them nor confesse the bonde of debt which they haue forfeited vnto him although they protest that they minde to iustifie him that is to say to confesse that he is righteous yet neuerthelesse they condemne him Cal. vpon Iob. fol. 562. ¶ Looke in Workes in Faith that iustifieth How wisedome is iustified ¶ Looke Wisedome Obiection Men will waxe remisse in doing good workes if Faith alone iustifie Aunswere In Iustification a pardon is graunted for sinnes past and not of sinnes to come And if any man liue wickedly after Iustification without doubt he dispiseth the grace of iustification For who doth digge about the roote of a trée to the ende it shuld onely be a trée and not rather that it should be a good trée and bring foorth fruite Origen A liuely comparison for Iustification The iustifieng Faith is as it were a flame of fire which cannot but cast foorth brightnes And lyke as y● flame burneth the wood without the helpe of the light and yet the flame cannot be without the light so is it assuredly true that Faith alone consumeth and burneth away sinne without the helpe of workes and yet that the same Faith cannot be without good workes Wherefore lyke as we sée a flame of fire that giueth no lyght we know by by that it is but vaine and painted even so when we see not some light of good workes in a man it is a token that hée hath not the true inspired Faith which God giueth to his elect and chosen to iustifie and glorifie them withall And hold it for a certeintie that S. Iames meant so when he said Shewe me thy faith by thy workes and I will shew thée my faith by my workes Bar. Traheron IVSTINVS How he suffered martirdome for the defence of Christes Religion THis man in learning and Philosophie was excellent and a great defender of Christian Religion He exhibited vnto the Emperour and to the Senate a Booke or Apologie in defence of the Christians and afterward himselfe also died a Martir He suffered martirdome in the yeare of our Lord. 154. vnde● Antonius Pius as the Chronicles doe witnesse Abb. Vesperg and Eusebius in his Chronicle in the 13. yeare of the Emperour Antonius In the bo of Mar. fo 58. What moued him to imbrace the faith of Christ. This Iustinus Martir when he was an Heathen Philosopher as he confesseth of himselfe was moued to imbrace the Faith and Religion of Christ in beholding the constant patience of the Martirs which suffered for Christ in his time Keye What a Keye is after the minde of S. Austen SAint Austen saith that must be called a Keye whereby the hardnesse of our hearts are opened vnto faith● and whereby the secretnes of minds are made manifest A keye is it saith he the which doth both open the conscience to y● knowledge of sinne also including grace vnto the whole sonnes of euerlasting mystery This is the definition of this keye we speake off after S. Austen D. Barnes fo 258. ¶ The Law in hir right vnderstanding is the keye or at the lest way the first and principall keye to open the ●ore of the Scripture Tindale fo 184. ¶ What keye had the Doctors of the lawe sauing the exposition of the lawe Tert. cont Marcion lib. 4. The Captaines of the Church haue the keyes of knowledge to open the Scriptures vnto the people to them committed Therefore Commaundement is giuen that the Minister shuld open and the scholer should enter Hier. in Esa. li. 6. ca. 24. ¶ The keye is the knowledge of the scriptures whereby is opened the gate of turth Chrisostome in Math. homil 44. How the word of God is the right keye The word of God is the very keye in that is all the might and power to looke our sinnes and a man is but a minister and a seruaunt vnto this word This may be proued by our Master Christs words where he saith Goe your wayes into all the world and preach the Gospell vnto all creatures and hée that doeth beleeue and is baptised shall be saued but hée that doeth not beléeue shall be damned Heere maye you plainely sée that the Apostles be but ministers and seruaunts and haue no power but all onely ministration c. D. Barnes fol. 259. How the keyes were giuen vnto the Church Christ say they appointed Peter Prince of the whole Church when he promised that he would giue him the keyes But that which he then promised to one in another place he gaue it also to all the rest and deliuered it as it were into their hands If the same power were graunted to all which was promised to one wherein shall he be aboue his fellowes Héerein say they he excelleth because he receiued it both in common What if I aunswere with Cipriane and Augustine that Christ did it not for this purpose to preferre one man before other but so to sett● out the vnitie of the Church for thus saith Cipriane that God in the person of one gaue the keyes to all to signifie the vnitie of all and that the rest were the same thing that Peter was endued with like partaking both of honour and power but the beginning is taken at vnitie that the Church of Christ maye bée shewed to be one Augustine saith If there were not in Peter a mysterie of the Church the Lord would not say vnto him I will giue thée the keyes for if this wer said to Peter the Church hath them not but if the Church hath them then Peter when he receiued them betokened the whole Church And in another place when they were all asked onely Peter aunswered Thou art Christ and it is said to him I will giue thée the keyes as though he alone had receiued the power of binding and loosing whereas he being one said the one for all and he receiued the other withall as hearing the person of vnitie Therefore one for all because there is vnitie in all Cal. 4. book chap. 6. sect 4. How the Dunce men interpreteth the keyes Dunce and all his
By whom they ought to be rebuked The ministers ought to preach against abuses Iohn Baptist rebuked king Herod for kéeping his brother Philips wife S. Paule rebuked the Corinthians for hauing of sects among them for one held of Paule an other held of Apollo some held of Peter and some of Cephas For suffering a fornicator among them euen such one as kept his fathers wife For bicause they accused one an other before vnlawfull Iudges and not rather set an vnitie betwéene brother and brother among themselues For bicause they sat with the Gentiles in their Tables and did eate with them of their sacrifices For praieng in a tongue that men vnderstood not And also bicause they doubted in the resurrection 1. Cor. 15. 8 All manner of méere traditions are abuses In vaine doe yée worship me saith Christ teaching the traditions and precepts of men Mat. 15. 8. Esaie 29. 13. Tindale ACHAB Of Satans deceiuing of Achab how it is vnderstood WHo is it saith God that shall beguile me Achab Satan preuēted not God in this case neither came he afore hand to saie If thou wilt giue mée leaue to beguile Achab I will do whatsoeuer thou wilt haue me to do but God beginneth saieng where shall I finde a lieng spirit to go and deceiue Achab for I sée he will néedes bée deceiued euen to the bottome of hell And wherefore is it that God speaketh so Euen bicause the case stood vpon executing of iust vengeance vpon an hypocrite a despiser full of crueltie and a mortall enimie of all goodnesse Achab was a man that had peruerted all Gods seruice vtterlie was wholie defiled with his owne Idols and therewithall also is full of sturdinesse and malice against the Prophets and would giue no eare to anie admonition When he was thus hardened in his sinnes in such sort that a man could gaine nothing by séeking to bring him into the right waie after that God had assaide all waies and sawe hée was a man forlorne when hée held his assises and demaunded who was he that would deceiue Achab for it was Gods will to execute the office of a Iudge Wée sée then that when God meaneth to punish wicked folke and to execute his wrath vpon them according to their deserts hee tarrieth not till hée be moued to it by Satan but preuenteth him c. Caluine vpon Iob. fol. 220 ACCIDENT What an Accident is AN Accident is a thing that maie bée or not be without corruption of that wherein it is As for example One maie take awaie the whitenesse of a wall yet the substance doth still remaine Erasmus How an Accident is not without his subiect In the Sacrament of the Altar saith hée after the consecration there is not neither can be anie Accident without the subiect but there verilie remaineth the same substaunce and the verie visible and incoruptible bread and likewise the verie same wine the which before the consecration were set vpon the Altar to bée consecrated by the Priest likewise as when a Pagan or Infidell is baptised he is spirituallie conuerted into a member of Christ through grace and yet remaineth the verie same man which before hée was in his proper nature and substance This was the opinion of Iohn Puruaie in the daies of king Henrie the fourth In the booke of Mar. fol. 649. ADAM How he was the first man that God created ADam was the first man that God created héere in earth after hee had made both heauen and it with all the ornaments and things belonging vnto them both The first yeare of the world and the yeare before Christ after the supputation that is set out in the end of the Bible of Geneua 3974. hée liued 930. yeares Of certeine notable things done by Adam and Seth. Iosephus writeth that Adam and Seth made two columnes or pillers one of Brasse the other of stone for they foreséeing an extermination of all things to be one by the power of fire the other by the violence and greatnesse of the waters graued therein those things which they had inuented with the prophesies by the which the worde of God might be preserued so that they should remaine as a perpetuall monument to their successours to declare what had bene done He writeth furthermore they diuided the yeare into xij monethes and first obserued and taught the course of the celestiall bodies for it is vnpossible that mans wit could attaine to the vnderstanding of so high and difficult things except God had shewed the knowledge thereof Lanquet Of the comparison the Apostle doth make betweene Adam and Christ. They also obiect vnto vs that the Apostle compared Adam with Christ said vnto the Romanes the euen as in Adam we all die so in Christ we are all quickened Wherefore by this meanes they saie the the grace of Christ ought vniuersallie to be laid forth vnto all men But if they wil so take this cōparison they shall be compelled to graunt the all shall by Christ be brought to felicitie as by Adam all throwne headlong into sinne into death● But seeing that the thing it selfe declareth the contrarie they maie easilie perceiue that this similitude is not to be taken as touching all the parts thereof especiallie when as none fall of their owne consent into originall sinne but these men will not haue grace to be receiued but through a mans owne consent Wherfore if they admit this difference how dare they affirme that the matter is on each side a like The scope of the Apostle in this comparison is to be considered and beside the scope nothing is to be inferred And in that comparison Paule ment nothing els but that Christ is to those which are regenerate the beginning of life and blessednesse as Adam is to them that are deriued of him the cause of death and of sinne Now whosoeuer is afterward beside this scope gathered touching the equalitie of multitude or of the manner the same is Per accidens that is by chance and perteineth not vnto the scope and substance of the similitude Pet. Mar. fol. 305. How Adam did eate Christs bodie and drinke his bloud As soone as Adam had transgressed the Lords precepts and was fallen vnder condemnation our most mercifull Father of his gracious goodnesse gaue him the promise of health comfort whereby as manie as beleeued were saued from the thraldome of their transgression The word and promise was this I shall put enmitie betwéene thy séede and her séed that séed shall tread thoe on the head and thou shalt tread if on the heele In this promise they had knowledge that Christ should destroie the diuell with all his power and deliuer his faithfull from their sinnes And where he said that the diuell should tread it on the héele they vnderstood right well that the diuell should finde the meanes by his wiles and wicked ministers to put Christ to death And they knewe that God was
5. 1. Marl. vpon the Apocalips fol 53. ¶ My minde is to yoke you with no other lawe nor to burden you with anie other traditions then I haue alredie giuen you neither with ceremonies rites nor auncient customes in the obseruation of daies moneths times nor yeares in holie daies fastings vigils nor Sabotes for they were but shadowes of things to come Bale vpon the Apoc. fol. 40. The meaning of this place following What is the burden of the Lord. The Prophets called their threatnings Gods burden which the sinners were not able to susteine Therefore the wicked in deriding the word would aske of the Prophets what was the burden as though they would saye you séeke nothing els but to lay burdens vpon our shoulders And thus they reiected the word of God as a burden But bicause this word was brought to contempt and derision he will saith the Prophet teach them another manner of speach and will cause this word burden to cease and teach them to aske with reuerence what saith the Lord. For the thing that they mocke and contemne shall come vpon them Geneua ¶ The wicked mens hearts were so hardened against 〈…〉 truth that they vsed scornefullie to scosfe at Gods threatening prophestes in mocking calling them Gods fardle or burden The Bible note Of the burden of Babel The burden of Babel which Esaie the sonne of Amos did sée ¶ That is the great calamitie which was prophesied to come on Babel as a most gréeuous burden which they were not able to beare In these twelue Chapters following he speaketh of the plague wherwith God would smite those straunge nations whom they knew to declare that God chastened the Israelites as his children and these other as his enimies And also that if God spared not these that are ignoraunt that they must not think straunge if he punish them which haue knowledge of his lawe and kéepe it not Geneua BVRIAL How Buriall is a looking glasse of resurrection BUriall was brought in by God It is no inuention of man without good ground but it is Gods ordinaunce to the end it should be a witnesse to vs of the resurrection and euerlasting life When men be buried they are laid vp in the earth as in a store house vntill they be raised vp againe at the last daie and so our buriall is vnto vs a loking glasse of the resurrection Caluine vpon Iob. fol. 472. The Pompe of buriall forbidden But when thou doest heare saith Chrisostome that our Lord did rise againe naked cease I praie thée from the madde expence of the burieng what meaneth this superfluous and vnprofitable expence which vnto them that make it bringeth hurt and no profite to the dead but rather harme What the Greekes and Hebures doe call their buring places The Gréekes doe call their burieng places Cam●tereum that is to saie a Dorter or sléeping place signifieng thereby that we ought to be as sure or rather more sure that they that be buried shall be raised againe at the last daie of the generall resurrection then we are sure to rise againe when we lay our selues downe to sléepe and that therefore we ought no more to 〈…〉 be w●ese 〈…〉 out friends when wée sée anie of them to be laide into the ground then wée ought to be sori● when we sée them goe to ●edde and laie themselues downe to take their rest béeing most assured by the vndouted infallible word of God that we shall receiue them againe immortall and most gloriou●● The Hebrues doe call their burieng placed o● the 〈…〉 〈…〉 the liuing because that they that be buried 〈…〉 God and shall be receiued againe by his 〈…〉 I. Veron What 〈…〉 is to be buried with Christ. 〈…〉 buried with Christ 〈…〉 Bap●●●e in to his death that like as Christ was raised from the dead by the glorie of the Father so wée also should walke in newnesse of life ¶ This partaking of death and life with Christ is nothing els but the mortifieng of our owne flesh the quickening of the spirit in that the olde man is crucified and we may walke in newnesse of life Cal●ehill Of the Burial of Iohn Baptist. ¶ Looke Iohn Baptist. BVRNE What it is to Burne IT is is better to marrie then to burne ¶ To burne after Saint Ambrose is when the will consenteth to the lust of the flesh Tindale ¶ Then to burne with the fire of concupisence that is when mans will so giueth place to the lust that tempteth that he cannot call vpon God with a quiet conscience Geneua What these burning lights doe signifie And your lights burning ¶ These burning lightes that Christ willeth us to haue in our handes are a liuelie faith working through charitie The works of the Christians ought to be liuelie feruent and burning Sir I. Cheeke Of burnt offerings and peace offerings They offered burnt offerings and peace offerings ¶ Burnt offerings were they which were all burnt but of peace offerings a certeine part was offered an other part was giuen vnto the Priest an other part returned vnto him which offered it to eate it with his friends in the sight of the Lord. Pet Mar. vpon Iudic. fol. 271. Whie it was called a whole burnt offering And offered a whole burnt offering● ¶ It is called a whole burnt offering because the whole sacrifice was consumed with fire by the which is signified that the person which did offer the same should haue his heart and minde wholie vppon God as it is written Loue thy God with all thy heart with all thy soule c. The Bible note How the Christians doe offer burnt 〈…〉 Although that the burnt offering of 〈…〉 〈…〉 Sheepe of Calues and Birdes offered in the olde lawe be abolished by the glorie of Christ whose death and passion they did ad●●brate a● S. Paule witnesseth Heb. 10. Shall we thinke there● fore that we now which be Christians haue not burnt 〈…〉 fice to offer vnto God yes m● then they had For so often as we doe preach or the king or anie other godlie man doth cause or helpe Christs Gospell to be purelie and sincerelie preached to the people so oft doe we offer a burnt sacrifice of swéete sauour vnto God a sacrifice that pleaseth God farre aboue the offering of a young fat calfe that hath hornes and houes● This is that swéete sacrifice whereof Malachie the Prophet doth speake in the first Chapter saieng From the rising of the Sunne to the going downe of the same great is my name among the Gentiles and in euerie place shall sacrifice be made and offering set vp to my name This sacrifice and burnt offering is not the sacrifice of the wicked Masse but it is the sacrifice of the preaching of Christes death and the meritas of hi●●sion● We doe also offer burnt sacrifices vnto the Lord when we doe offer our selues our hearts our mindes and all 〈…〉 dilie members to the true seruing of God in
or a Iubelie yeare which shall be kept after this manner If ought shall bée owing to anie man either from his friend his neighbour or his brother he maie not aske it againe because it is the Lords frée yeare or the Lords Iubelie yeare This yeare was also called Sabbatum terrae Moses saieng vnto the people on this wise Sex annos agrum tuum c. Sixe yeares thou shalt sow thy land and sixe yeares thou shalt cut thy vineyard and gather in the fruite thereof but the seauenth yeare shall be a Sabboth of rest vnto the land The Lords sabboth it shall bée The crop that the ground shall bring foorth by her owne kinde without thy labour that shalt thou not reape and the crop that shall grow by their owne kinde thou shalt not gather whie Shall they rotte vpon the vines and the grasse and the corne vpon the grounde No not so but the grasse and the corne thou shalt reape and the grapes thou shalt not gather Hoc est non tibi soli ea coacernabis neque repones federum tibi cum alijs commune And vnto this I saie in the seauenth yeare Non licet tibi debita exigere Now all such debts as were pardoned by Gods commaundement in consideration of the Iubelie yeare the couetous rich man the next yeare following would require all these debtes of their poore neighbours which they were bound vpon writings made which we call Deede Obligatorie now saith Esaie Dissolue Colligationes impiae c. Cancell thy wicked Obligations loose and vndoe the heauie burthens that oppresse thy neighbour dispatch and let them goe frée which are not able to paie c. Ric. Turnar Of the debt the Lord forgaue his seruaunt The Lord forgaue the seruaunt his debt ¶ By this it appeareth that saluation falleth vnto men by releasement of the debt and not for satisfieng of the debt for relcasement and paiment cannot stand in one respect togethers It ouerthroweth Popish satisfaction which saie they must be done by pilgrimages fasting and almes deedés It quencheth the fire of Purgatorie for where debt is forgiuen the debter is not to bee punished DIVELL What the name Diuell doth signifie PRoperlie this name Diuell doth signifie a priuie accuser and slaunderer ●ausing infamie and betraieng men according to the Etimologie or force of the same worde Iohn saith the accuser of our brethren is cast downe which accused them before our God daie and night Marl. fol. 58. In what respect the diuell is euill Saint Augustine in his booke intituled De vera reli chap. 13. sayth The Diuell in as much as he is an Angell is not euill But in as much as he is peruerse wicked of his will for setting more by himself then by God he wold not be in subiection vnto him but swelling through pride hée fell from his chiefe essence and excellent béeing And againe in his treatise vpon Iohn 42. Doest thou demaund from whence the diuell is From thence doubtlesse from whence al the other Angels are But the other Angels constantlie continued in their obedience he by disobedience and pride fell from an Angell and became a diuell Bullinger fol. 746. How long the Diuell hath bene a lyar Christ saith that the Diuell hath bene a liar from the beginning ¶ That is to saie euen from the time he was first a Diuell and not from the time he was first made an Angell And that when he doth speake lies he speaketh that which is his owne And therefore Christ addeth vnto it that he did not abide still in the truth for he hath nothing of God which is truth but that which he now hath of euill is of himselfe P. Viret Who they be that offer to Diuels Let them no more offer their offering vnto diuels ¶ Hée offereth vnto diuels y● offereth vnto anie other thing then vnto God or that doth his offering after anie other manner then God willeth him to do and the same goeth a whoring after Diuels as in Psal. 73. 27. T. M. How we must aunswere the Diuell reasoning with vs. Thou art a sinner saith the diuell and therefore thou art dampned Because thou saist I am a sinner therefore will I bée righteous saued Naie saith the diuell thou shalt be damned No saie I for I flie vnto Christ who hath himself suffered for my sins therfore Satan thou shalt nothing preuaile against me in y● thou goest about to terrifie me in setting forth y● greatnes of my sinnes and so to bring me into heauinesse distrust dispaire hatred contempt and blaspheming of God yea rather by this that thou saist I am a sinner thou giuest me armour and weapon against thy selfe that with thine owne swoorde I maie cut thy throate and treade thée vnder my féet for Christ dyed for sinners Moreouer thou thy selfe preachest vnto me the glorie of GOD. For thou puttest mée in minde of GODS fatherlie loue towards me wretched and dampned sinner who so loued the world that he gaue his onelie begotten sonne that whosoeuer beléeueth in him might not perish but haue euerlasting life Also as oft as thou doest obiect that I am a sinner so oft thou callest to my remembraunce the benefite of Christ my redéemer vpon whose shoulders and not vpon mine lie all my sinnes for the Lord hath laide all our iniquities vpon him Again for the transgression of his people was he smitten wherfore when thou obiectest that I am a sinner thou doest not terifie me but comfort mée aboue measure Luther vpon the Gal. DEVOTION True deuotion or pure religion what it is TRue deuotion that is called in latine Pietas is that which hath annexed therewith diuine promises for this present life to come as witnesseth Paule 1. Tim. 4. which is nothing els but obseruation of Christs lawe that in the Psalme for the purenesse thereof is called siluer fined often and manie times through fire It hath no chaffe in it as hath mens traditions but is pure and cleane wheate As sheweth Ieremie writing thus What is the chaffe to the Wheate Therefore beholde I will come against the Prophet saith the Lord that steale my word euerie one from his neighbour and deceiue my people in their lyes and in their errours And this deuotion is that which Saint Iames calleth the pure religion of Christ saieng Pure and immaculate religion afore God the father is to visit fatherlesse children and widdowes in their vexation Whereby hee meaneth all needie people that are succourlesse and helplesse without councell or other meanes according to our abilitie whensoeuer we sée them in néede or distresse Lambert in the booke of Mar. fol. 1266. What the Papists call deuotion What is it that they call deuotion Euerie mans owne lyking As soone as a man hath a minde to anie thing by and by he beareth him in hand that God is as much delighted therewith as he himselfe is And there is no man but he vndertaketh some thing or
of the truth and haue bene obedient vnto the word If the Religion of our fore-fathers hath bene false or contrarie to the Scriptures wée ought in no wi●e to followe Lactan. de Origen erro 2. cap. The Father is greater then I. First I saie that one place of the Gospell is not to be expounded against the whole purpose of the booke which is to teach that the Lord Iesus is Gods naturall s●nne and equall to God And sith the Euangelist hath this word Equall plainlie and expre●lie they shew themselues mad y● would make him to incounter against himselfe Second I say that in that place the Lord Iesus compareth not his substaunce with his Fathers substaunce but compareth his present humble state with the glorious state that he should haue after his Ascension And therefore all the godly old fathers well nigh haue taught these wordes to be spoken of his mans nature which should be forthwith aduaunced to immortall and incorporall glorie by the power of the Father Some Gréeke Writers indéede admit that the Father is greater then the Sonne not because he had greater power or that there is anie difference in their substance essence but in that he is the Father and begetteth the sonne is not begotten of the sonne therefore he maie be said greater The meaning also of these words The Father is greater then I maie be this The end why I trauaile with you is not that you should staie in me and looke no farther but to bring you to the Father as to the last marke that with me ye maie see him as he is whose glorie is more deere to me then mine owne glorie and therefore I séeke it more then mine own and I think that I haue not accomplished mine office vntill I haue brought you to him c. My sonne heare thy Fathers instruction ¶ He speaketh this in the name of God which is the vniuersall Father of all creatures Or in the name of the Pastour of the Church which is as a Father Geneua Heare O ye children your Fathers instruction ¶ He speaketh this in the person of a Preacher and Minister which is as a Father vnto the people Geneua Whosoeuer shall saie to the father or mother By the gifte that is offered by me thou maist haue profite ¶ The meaning is this whatsoeuer I bestow vpon the Temple is to thy profite for it is as good as if I gaue it thée For as the Pharis●es in our time saie it shall be meritorious for thée for vnder this colour of religion they raked all to themselues as though that he that had giuen anie thing to the Temple had done the dutie of a 〈…〉 Beza The Father haue eaten sower Grapes and the childrens téeth are set on edge ¶ The people murmured at the chastening of the Lord and therefore vsed this Prouerb meaning that their Fathers had sinned and the Children were punished for their transgressions Read Ieremie 31. 29. Geneua The fathers wickednesse punished in their children There is a double manner of punishing the wickednes of the fathers vpon the children for sometime God sheweth mercie to the children and yet notwithstanding ceaseth not to chastise the vnrighteousnes of their fathers in the persons of their children As for example we see a father that hath gotten much goods howbeit by wicked bargening by subtiltie by craft and by crueltie yet God hath pitie vpon the childe of such a man and what will he doe He will rid him quite and cleane of all those euill gotten goods because they would but bring him to confusion according as it is said that such kind of riches are as wood which in the ende will kindle the fire of Gods wrath Therefore when the Lord meaneth to saue the childe of a wicked man that hath liued amisse he bereaueth him of al the euill gotten goodes as though he should lette him bloud to saue his life that he might not be wrapped in the mischife coruption which his father had drawen vnto himselfe Behold how God punisheth the wickednes of the fathers vpon the children yet ceaseth not to be the sauiour of the children to shew them mercie Sometimes he passeth farther because the fathers haue ben so far out of al square● as they haue led a stubborne froward life God forsaketh their ofspring insomuch y● the grace of his spirit dwelleth not with them Now when we be so destitute of Gods guiding we must néeds run into destruction néeds must the mischiefe increase more more Thus we sée y● when the children of the vngodly do beare the sins of their fathers it is not only for that God forsaketh them and leaueth them vp to the state of their owne nature● but also for that he giueth Satan full power ouer them and letteth him haue the bridle to ●aigne in such houses at his pleasure And when the diuell hath led awaie the fathers and carried them into all naughtinesse their children shall also ouer-shoote themselues into excessiue outrage We see then as now what is meant héere that is to wit● that when the children of wicked men are 〈…〉 destitute of Gods grace walke after their inordinat● 〈…〉 they must néeds come to greater confusion then their Fathers Cal. vpon Iob. fol. 82. How our fathers did eate the same spirituall meate c. Our Fathers did all eate the same spirituall meate and did all drinke of the same spirituall drinke and then dranke of that spirituall Rocke that followed them which Rocke was Christ. ¶ These words Saint Austen expoundeth saieng What is to eate the same meate But that they did eate the same which we doe Whosoeuer in Manna vnderstoode Christ did eate the same spirituall meate that we doe that is to saie that meate which was receiued with faith and not with bodies Therefore to them that vnderstoode and beléeued it was the same meate and the same drinke So that to such as vnderstoode not the meate was onelie Manna and the drinke onelie water but to such as vnderstoode it was the same that it is now To come and is come be diuers words but it is the same Christ. These be S. Austens words De vtilita poeniten How our fathers were iustified by faith as we are now The fathers were no lesse iustified onely by the faith of Christ then we Wherfore it is written in the booke of Genesis of Abraham that he beléeued and it was counted vnto him for righteousnes Iohn also testifieth that Christ said of Abraham y● hée had séene his daie therin reioiced The Epistle to the Hebrewes the 13 chap. affirmeth that Christ was yesterdaie to daie remaineth for euer Wherfore euen as we are said now to be saued not by workes but by the true mercie of God by faith in Christ so was it with the Fathers at y● time for they wer iustified by no works but only by faith in Christ. Furthermore what
obedience soeuer the fathers had towards the commandemēts of God also faith in the promises they were not deriued from their own strength power but euen as it also happeneth vnto vs they came vnto them by the grace of God and Christ. Pet. Mar. vpon Iudic. fol. 74. FAT What is ment by the fat● the inwards two kidneies THe fat that couereth the inwards ¶ By taking away of the fat the inwards two kidneies and the kall is signified vnto vs that if we wil be a swéet sacrifice vnto the Lord we must cut off all concupiscence and mightie desires of the flesh and the euill vse of all our members and must subdue and mortifie our affections and offer them to God by the mortification of the crosse as saith the Prophet Psa. 25. T. M. What the fatted Calfe signifieth And bring hether the fatted Calfe ¶ That fat Calfe is Christ which hath washed awaie our sinnes in his bloud and féedeth vs dailie through faith with his bodie and bloud vnto life euerlasting for he was killed therefore that he might be the foode and meate of our soules Sir I. Cheeke What fat Bread signifieth Of Aser commeth fat bread ¶ Fat bread is plenteousnes of the earth as increase of corne and other c. therewith shall féede Kings all the men of the earth As 2. Esd. 9. T. M. FAVOVR How Fauour casteth manie a man awaie DEsired fauour against him ¶ Héere we doe learne that manie good men are by fauour of them that be in authoritie or by hatred of the Iud ges cast awaie Sir I. Cheeke FEEDE The exposition of this place Feede my sheepe WHereas you thinke that this place of the Gospell of Iohn was spoken onlie to Peter and that these wordes make him shepheard ouer all and aboue all S. Peter himselfe testifieth the contrarie in his canonicall Epistle where he saith to all Priests Féed y● flock of Christ which is among you which he bad them doe by the authoritie y● Christ had put them in as followeth And when the chiefe shepheard Christ shal appeare ye shall receiue the incorruptible crowne of eternall glorie Tonstall in the b. of Mar. fol. 1212. Whosoeuer they be saith S. Austen that féede the shéepe to the end to make them theirs not Christs they loue thēselues not Christ for desire either of glorie or of rule or of gaine Iewel fol. 18. FELIX Wherefore he is praised of Tertull●s the Orator FElix by his diligence had taken Eleazarus the Captaine of the murtherers put the Aegyptians of flight which raised vp tumults in Iewrie for these y● Orator praised him Otherwise he was both cruell and couetous Read Iosephus lib. 2. Antiq. cha 11. 12. And li. 2. De bello Iudaico cap. 12. Geneua Of Felix trembling Felix trembled ¶ The feare of the dreadfull iudgement of God profiteth nothing vnlesse it do ingender true repentance in mens hearts Felix was afraid at the preaching of the iudgment but he was neuer the better for it for why he did gape still for bribes and rewards as a most corrupted Iudge Sir I. Cheeke ¶ The word of God maketh the verie wicked astonished therefore to them it is the ●auour of death vnto death Geneua Wherefore Felix would haue pleasured the Iewes And willing to get fauour of the Iewes left Paule in prison ¶ For whereas he had behaued himselfe verie wickedlie in the Prouince hadde it not bene for fauour of his brother Pallas he should haue died for it So that we maie gather héereby why he would haue pleasured the Iewes Beza FEARE A definition of feare FEare is nothing els but a certaine affect of the minde wherby we are striken by reason of some great and hurtfull euill which is at hand We are not commonlie moued by such daungers which are far from vs but by those which seeme to be euen now at hand neither do things light and of small waight make vs afraid Wherefore feare as a Diuine speaketh of feare hath a respect vnto sinne vnto the wrath of God vnto chastisement scourges and finallie vnto hell fire But there are noted two kinde of feares of which the one is commonly called filiall that is pertaining to a naturall childe and the other seruile that is pertaining to a bond-man And that is called a seruile feare which onelie by the feare of paines of hell fire either draweth vs backe from doing euill or impelleth vs to do well Euen so signified an Ethnike Poet when he wrote Oderunt peccare●ma● formidine poen● that is The wicked hate to sinne for feare of punishment But the finall feare is whereby men liue vpright and flie wickednesse for that they desire to set foorth the glorie of God and for that they allow righteousnesse euen for his owne sake wherfore the same Poet saith Oderun● peccare bo●● virtutis amore that is The good hate to sinne for the loue of vertue c. Pet. Mar. vpon the Rom. fol. 209. Difference of feares Peter feared otherwise then did Iudas For Iudas indéede so feared that he despaired but Peter so feared that he gotte him againe vnto Christ whom before by denieng he had forsaken Where we saie that a seruile feare is whereby we so abhorre God being angrie and flie from him that we are vtterly void of faith But a filial feare is wherby in the midst of terrors we are lifted vp through faith neither suffer we our selues to be swallowed vp with feare Wherfore in godlie men feare is neuer seioined from faith For these 2. things are so to be knit together y● faith alwaies gouerneth feare for if it shuld not desperation wold easily succéed for euen as the law ought alwaies to be ioined with the gospell so also ought feare to be euer ioined with faith We do not so imbrace the gospell but y● we alwaies think vpō the obediēce of the cōmandemēts of God when we see how often how grieuously we fal we call our selues back again by repētance And contrariwise the law is not to be receiued without the gospell for if it should we could neuer obey it without Christ nor also obtaine pardon for the offences which we committed against it Pet. Mar. vpon the Ro. fol. 207. What Feare importeth Feare importeth as much as y● our life must be ruled according to the will of God For what becommeth of men when they know not themselues to be subiect to their maker They rush out into al naughtines We know what our lusts are thē if the feare of god raign in vs we must acknowledge y● he hath not put vs into the world to liue at such libertie as we lust our selues but reserueth his whole right ouer vs so as we must obey him behold I say what the word feare importeth y● is to say y● we shuld lern to direct our whole life to the wil of god c. Ca. vp Iob.
more illuminated of God On the contrarie part they that doe not couet after righteousnesse and truth are more hardened and blinded though they séeme vnto themselues to be most wise Sir I. Cheeke HAZ●●● How he came to his kingdome HE tooke a rough cloth and dipt it in the wa●er and ●pred it on his face ¶ Hazael brought this wet cloth to Benhadad as though he would therewith haue 〈…〉 him and eased him of his 〈…〉 ●ut did in déede st●●gle him after Iosephus He had heard of the Prophet that Benhadad should 〈…〉 haue be 〈…〉 long or he had raigned therefore did he rid 〈…〉 to the 〈…〉 that he might 〈…〉 ●ome by the kingdome T. M. HEBRON What Hebron was HEbron is a proper 〈…〉 of a 〈…〉 which 〈…〉 called the Citie of Arbe which Arbe after the Hebrue was a Giant both strong and mightie and of a famous name T. M. HEAD What is meant by the head of God WHen we read that God hath a head we must vnderstand his diuine nature which was before all things and to it all things be obedient Augustine What the head of the Serpent signifieth Shall tread thée on the head ¶ The head of the Serpent signifieth the power and tyrannie of the Deuill which Christ the seede of the Woman ouercame The héele is Christs manhoode which was tempted with our sinnes T. M. HAIRES OF GOD. What the haires of God signifie HIs haires signifie his Angells and the whole multitude of his chosen Dan. 7. 9. His cloathing was as white as snow the haires of his head like pure wooll Where the head of God is his Deitie and Godhead his cloathes and his haires be his Angells and Elect which be like white snow and pure wooll Augustine HELCHESAITES What their opinions were and who consuted them HElchesaites called of Epiphanius Sampsai the first Author of them was Elxais a false Prophet They reiected parte of the olde Testament They denied the Apostle They counted it a thing indifferent in case of necessitie to denie with y● mouth so that thou beléeue with heart Origen confuted them Euse. li. 6. cap. 37. HELIAS Of the straunge vision seene at the birth of this Prophet HElias the Prophet of Thesbes of the Countrie of Arabia a Leuite of the Tribe of Aaron He dwelt in Gilead for Thesbes was an habitation dedicated vnto Priests In the time of his birth his father Sobas did sée a vision that men apparailed in white did call the childe threwe him to the fire and gaue to him a flame of fire to eate The Father rising vp went to Hierusalem and shewed his Uision to the Priests And he that gaue aunswere said vnto him beware thou disclose it not The habitation of this child shall be light and his word a demonstration and shall iudge Israel in the sword and fire This is that Helias that brought fire thrice from Heauen and bare raine in his tongue and was taken vp into Heauen in a fire storme That which is written more of him in the Bible maie be there read Eliote● HELISE●S Of a straunge thing that befell at his birth HEliseus the Prophet of Abelmath of the Lande of Rubim when he was borne at Galgalis the Cow of golde in Selom so lowed that she was heard at Hierusalem And the Priestes said that it signified that a Prophet was borne that day which should dissolue and breake in peeces Images carued and cast in mettall Manie meruailes almightie God shewed by him which maie be read in the Bible Eliote HELL How Hell is taken in the scripture OUt of the bellie of Hell I cried ¶ The Scripture speaketh of Hell commonlie as of a place common for all them that goe downe into the earth as into a graue or to the deepe of the Sea c. As ye haue in Gen. and in the Psalmes T. M. ¶ For he was in the Fishes bellie as in a graue or place of darknesse Geneua I thought I shoulde haue gone to the gates of Hell in my best age ¶ That is I thought I should haue gone downe to my graue and haue died in my best age The Hebrue word signifieth both Hell and a graue pit or ditch That ye may perceiue in Gen. 42. 38. where Iacob saith that if any misfortune should happen to Beniamin in his iournie into Aegypt with his other bretheren his graie head should be brought with sorrowe vnto his Graue where the common Translation readeth Hell for graue As for Hezekia he neither feared Hell nor Purgatorie as ye maie well sée by that he a little before saith Remember O Lord that I haue walked before thée in truth and a stedfast hart and haue done that thing that is pleasant to thée which thing who so doth néedeth not to feare any of those two places Beside that the Dunce-men and Sophisters themselues which were as most learned men thinke the inuenters and finders yea and the verie makers of Purgatorie saie that before the time of Christ there was no sure place So that Hezekia is by their sentence skilled quite from that place And of Hell doth the sentence of the word of God quite him which saith There is no damnation to them that are in Christ Iesu. Rom. 8. 1. T. M. The meaning of this place following For Hell praiseth thée not c. ¶ The meaning is if I now die I cannot praise thée in thy Temple For the dead and buried cannot loue and praise with their materiall tongues or hearts neither can anie death nor anie burieng be at this season for the setting out of thy glorie For all the godlie will be feared with this thy Iudgement And the wicked will impute my death to the ouerthrowing of Idolatrie and to the putting downe of the brasen Serpent ¶ Looke Hezekia The meaning of this place of Mathew Shall be worthy to be punished with Hell c. ¶ Whereas we read heere Hell it is in the text it selfe Gehenna which is an Hebrue word made of two and is as much to saie as the Uallie of Hynnon which otherwise the Hebrewes called Topheth It was a place where the Israelites were wont most cruellie to sacrifice their Children to false Gods wherevppon it was taken for a place to torment the Reprobates As Ieremy 7. 31 Beza HELPERS OF FAITH How men be helpers of faith MEn be helpers of faith when they suffer not the faith receiued to be weake féeble or inconstant to be oppressed with desires or affections of the flesh or of the world by the craft or subtiltie of false prophets to be brought awaie from it led into a false beliefe by false doctrine whom the diuell doth vs as his ministers to deceiue the simple people vnlearned Also scripture vseth to call men helpers of the faith when men doe diligentlie watch that they be not deceiued by y● diuell nor by anie of his Ministers when they doe labour with all force to make their faith sure
heauen If a man shuld agrée with them that Christ offred to God bread and wine yet they cannot proue that he killed himselfe in sacrifice vnder bread and wine Also if Christ offered nothing but bread and wine the Priests of the olde lawe did much better in killing of liuing creatures to offer them in sacrifice The Papists cannot tell what to say And when they bring authoritie of Scripture it maketh against and are confuted with their owne saieng as one that is slaine with his owne weapon This is the exposition of the Prechers of Basil. Of the heresie of these heretikes called Melchisedechiani Melchisedechiani were heretiks which honoured Melchisedech and sayd that he was greater then Christ and that he was no man Epiph. heraes 55. MEMORIALL How the Sacrament is a memoriall of Christs death Looke Sacrament MEANE Hovv the meane is best THe counsell that Phoebus gaue to Phaeton his sonne hath neuer hurt any man which is this Medio tutissimus ibis The best way is to tempt the meane or the middest neither to be discouraged in y● reading of y● scriptures because of the multitude of the great difficults therein neither yet to be too bolde with the plainenesse of certeine places to take vppon thée to discusse the high and mysticall places thereof kéeping this rule ye shall finde the wordes of the Prophet most true The testimonie of y● Lord giueth wisdome to all men that be simple and méeke and lowly in heart Ri. Turnar MENANDER Of this mans erronious opinions MEnander a Sorcerer and the Disciple of Symon Magus a Samaritane sayd that he was the great power of God come downe from heauen that the world was made by Angells hée called himselfe a Sauiour he sayd saluation was to be purchased by his Baptime and that such as were therewith baptised should neuer die no not in this world Euse. li. 3. chap. 23. Ireneus li. 1. chap. 21. Epiph. heraes 22. MENE The interpretation of this word SOme do thus diuide it that both the years of the life of the king and also the time of the kings reigne was numbred But this subtiltie séemeth not substantiall Therfore I thinke saith Caluine that this word was added twise for confirmatition as though the Prophet should say y● the number was now fulfilled For in account it is easie to faile as the prouerb saith Wherfore y● Balthasar might vnderstand that his life and his kingdome was now at an end God doth affirme that the number is full and perfect as though he should say that there shuld not be added one minute of an houre to the tearme appointed And thus doth Daniel himselfe interpret the same God saith he hath numbred thy kingdome that is God hath appointed determined an ende of thy kingdome so that it must needs come to an ende because the time is accomplished c. Caluine vpon Daniel fol. 89. ¶ This word Mene is doubled not onely to exaggerate the certaintie of the matter but also as some thinke the one to signifie the ende of the King the other the ende of the kingdome The Bible note ¶ This word Mene is twice written for the certaintie of the thing shewing that God had most surely counted Signifieng also that God hath appointed a tearme for all kingdomes and that a miserable ende shall come on all that raise themselues against him Geneua MEN PLEASERS Who they be that please men DOe I now perswade men or God Either doe I séeke to please men ¶ Paule purgeth himselfe from the slaunders of those his enimies that said he sought the peoples fauour by his flattering tongue to the intent he might brag of the multitude of his scholars and so to be praised of men Men in Scripture is taken for sinners These please men that please the wicked wherefore let vs please the godly displease the wicked These please men that teach mens traditions D. H. What it is to be men seruaunts or seruaunts of men Be not men seruaunts ¶ To be men seruaunts or the seruaunts of men héere is to doe anye thing for the fauour of men by which they fall from the fauour of God while they dispising Christ doe hang on men more regard mens precepts and ordinaunces then the institutions of God yea then God himselfe This forbiddeth S. Paule héere and not to deny to be seruaunts vnto our Maisters to whom we be bound according to the common order appointed in Common-wealths to these we are straightlye commaunded in sundry places of the Scripture to be with loue and diligence in all things agréeable to Gods holy word Tindale Men of diuers natures and properties Seneca writeth of one Senesius that he would haue all things that were necessary for seruice excessiue great wherevpon hée was called Senesius the great Plinie writeth of one Crassus that he was neuer perceiued to laugh at any time Socrates was neuer séene either more pensiue either more merry at one time then at another Pomponeus the Poet neuer niesed Antonius was neuer séene spet Theophrast writeth that Peninus liued onely by water Aristotle writeth of a girle being noursed with poyson in hir infancie liued afterward with the same as we doe with meate Albert witnesseth that at Collen in Almayne hée sawe a young woman which from hir youth vsed to picke spiders out the walls where she might sée them and liued with that kinde of meate all hir life time S. Austen in his 4. booke of the Citie of God doth write of a certaine man which he sawe in his time that would shake his eares as an horse doth sometimes one eare sometimes another and sometimes both together though Aristotle be of that opinion that man onely of all other beastes cannot moue his eares Saint Austen saith farther that the same partie without moouing his head or putting too his hande would raise vp all the haires of his head and cast them before his face and likewise cast them behinde againe Plinie in his 7. booke and also Solinus saith that in Aphrike was a Famuly which looking with an euil eye vpon any mans Medowe or vpon the trées would incontinent make them drie and wither away Plinie affirmeth also that in his time nigh vnto Rome ther was a Famuly that would go vpon a great fire not be touched therewith Also he writeth of another Famuly called Marci or Martias that would heale the sting or biting of serpents with onely putting their hands vpon them Swetonus saith that Tiberius béeing sodainly awaked in the night would for a good season sée as well as though there had bene a candell burning by him and after a while sée nothing Curtius writing of Alexander saith that his sweate that came from him rendred a most swéete sent and odor and many other Authors affirme the same MERCES As concerning this Latine word Merces ¶ Looke Reward MERCIE What mercie is and how it
not that the Lord there speaketh of the fault of sinne Now if it be so what is that to their Purgatory forasmuch as by their opinion y● paine is ther suffered of those sins whereof they deny not the fault to be forgiuen in this present lyfe But that they may no more carpe against vs they shall haue yet a plainer solution When the Lord meant to cut off all hope of pardon from so hainous wickednesse he thought it not inough to say that it should neuer be forgiuen but the more to amplifie it he vsed a diuision wherin he comprehended both the iudgement that euery mans conscience féeleth in this life and the last iudgement that shall be pronounced at the resurrection As though he shoulde haue sayde Beware ye of malitious rebellion as of most present damnation for he that of set purpose shall endeuour to quench the light of the holy Ghost shall not obeteine pardon neither in this lyfe which is giuen to sinners for their conuersion nor in the last day when the lambes shall be seuered by the Angels of God from the Goates and the kingdome of heauen shall bée cleansed from al offences Then they bring forth also that parable of Mathew Agrée with thine aduersarie least he delyuer thée to the Iudge and the Iudge to the Sergeant and the Sergeant to the prison from whence thou shalt not gette forth vntill thou haue paide the vttermost farthing If in this place the Iudge doe signifie God and the aduersarie plaintiue the Diuell the Sergeant the Angell and the prison Purgatory I will gladly yéeld vnto them But if it bée euident to all men that Christ meant there to shew into how many daungers mischifes they cast themselues y● had rather obstinatly pursue the extremitie of the lawe then deale according to equitie and good right to the end to exhort his Disciples the more earnestly to agrée with equitie where then I pray you shall Purgatory be found Cal. in his Inst. 3. b. cha 5. Sect. 7. How Purgatorie came from the Heathen As for the fansie of Purgatory it sprang first from the heathen and was receiued among them in that time of darknesse long before the comming of CHRIST as it maye plainely appeare by Plato and Virgil in whome ye shall finde described at large the whole common weale and all the orders and degrées of Purgatory Saint Austen sayth the olde Heathen Romanes had a sacrifice which they called Sacrum Purgatorium a Purgatory sacrifice Iewel 300. An Argument of Purgatory It is impossible that remission or purging from sins shuld be made without bloud Paule to the Hebrues But in Purgatory ther is no bloud but fire Ergo in purgatory it is impossible that remission or purging from sinnes should be made Obiection Purgatory is good to feare men from sinne Aunswere Christ and his Apostles thought hell fire inough yet besides the fleshly imagination cannot stande with Gods word what great feare can there be of that terrible fire which thou maist quench almost for thrée halfe pence How our sinnes are onely purged by Christ. By his owne person he hath purged our sinnes ¶ These words by his owne person haue an Emphasis or vehemencie which driueth away all sacrificing Priests from such office of sacrificing séeing that which he hath done by himselfe he hath not left to be perfected by other so that the purging of our sins may more truely be thought done past then a thing to come and to be done Latimer Doctor Readmans opinion of Purgatory Being asked what his opinion was concerning Purgatory and what the Schoolemen iudged thereof he aunswered that the subtill reasons of the Schoolemen concerning Purgatorie séemed to him to be no lesse vaine and friuolous then disagréeing from the truth Adding thereto that when we be rapt vp to the clowdes to méete Christ comming to iudgement with a great number of Angels in all glorie maiestie then euerie one shall be purged with fire as it is written The fire shall goe before him and shall flame round about his enimies and the fire shall burne in sight and round about him shall be a greate tempest saieng that diuerse of the olde writers approued this his sentence concerning Purgatory Booke of Mar. fol. 1540. PVRPLE AND LINNEN WHich was clothed in Purple Linnen ¶ Uery gorgeously and sumptuously for Purple garments were costly and this fine linnen which was a kinde of linnen that came out of Achaia was deare as golde Beza PVTTING ON OF HANDS Looke Laieng on of hands Queene of Heauen Who it was they called the Queene of Heauen AND the women kneded dough to make cakes to the Quéene of heuen That is they sacrifice to the Sunne Moone and starres whom they called the Quéene of heauen Geneua As to burne incense to the Quéene of heauen c. It séemeth that the Papists gathered of this place their Salua Regina Regina coeliletare Calling the virgin Mary Quéene of heauen so of the blessed virgin and mother of our sauiour Christ made an Idoll For heere the Prophet condempneth their Idolatrie Read the fourth of Kings chap. 21. verse 5. Epiphanius saith Ne quis comedat de errore c. Let no man eate of this errour touching S. Mary For though the trée be faire yet is not this fruit to be eaten Although Mary be beautifull holy honorable yet in she not to be adored But these women worshipping S. Mary renue again y● sacrifice of wine mingled in the honour of the Goddesse Fortuna prepare a table for the diuell not for God as it is written in the Scriptures they are fed with the meat of wickednesse And againe Their women boult flowre and the children gather stickes to make fine Cakes in the honour of Queene of Heauen Therefore let such women be rebuked by the Prophet Ieremy and let them trouble no more the worlde and let them not say we worshippe the Quéene of Heauen Iewel fol. 313. QVESTIONS AS touching Questions Saint Paule saith to Timothy thus In these things I would haue thée confirmed these be good and profitable for men but foolish questions and questions of vanities those shunne for they vnprofitable and vaine Of good questious Naaman asked Elias the Prophet whether if his maister should goe vp to the Idols Temple and worship he might do so or no. The Eunuchus asked Philip the exposition of these words He was lead as a shéepe to the slaughter Act. 8. 23. Esay 52. 7. Iohn asked this question Art thou he that shall come or shal we looke for an other Mary asked this question How can these things be done vnto me sith I haue no knowledge of man Thomas asked this question Lord tell vs the way that is Lord what is the way Peter asked this question Lord whether shall we goe Thou hast the words of eternall life Nichodemus asked this question
sin yet all sin do not make men y● children of the diuel For y● children of God do sin also for if they say they haue no sin they deceiue themselues truth is not in them● but by y● meanes they sin by the which they are yet the children of this world but in y● respect y● they are the children of god they sin not at all for euery one that is borne of God sinneth not But vnbeléefe maketh the childe of the diuell which sin is called theyr owne as though it were alone if it be not expressed what manner of sinne it is I. Gough The meaning of this place followi●g That the thoughts of many may be opened ¶ That is many shall shew themselues openly to be Christs enimies And many againe shall confesse Christ yea and that with vtter perill and shedding of their bloud Hemmyng ¶ This chiefly appeareth when the Crosse is layed vpon vs whereby mens hearts are tryed Geneua THRESHING Of two manner of threshing THe Hebrues haue 2. words Dash which signifieth to thresh but yet then when we occupie to threshing beasts The other word is Chabat which is also to thresh but yet with ●lailes without beasts Pet. Mar. vpon Iudic. fol. 114. What is ment by threshing of the mountaines Thou shalt thresh the mountaines ¶ I will make thée able to destroy thi●e enimies be they neuer so mightie this chiefly is referred to the kingdome of Christ. Geneua Whereto the threshing of Gilead is compared Because they haue threshed Gilead c. ¶ If the Sirians shal not be spared for committing this crueltie against one Citie it is not possible that Israel shuld escape punishment which hate committed so many and grie●ous sins against God man Gen. THVNDER What the cause is that maketh thunder THunder is a sound caused in the cloudes by the breaking out of a hot and drie exhalation boating against the edge of the cloude It is heard in Spring Summer by reason of the heate of the Sunne that then draweth vp many exhalations which méeting in the middle region of the ayre with colde and moyst vapors are together with them inclosed in a hollow cloud But when the hot exhalation cannot agrée with the coldnesse of the place by this ●●ri●e being driuen together made stronger kindeled it wil néedes ●reake out with soda●●e violent eruption causeth the noise which we call thunder A similitude is put by great Authors of moist wood y● cracketh in the fire we may adde héerevnto the breaking of an Egge in the fire of an Apple or any like thing for what soeuer holdeth withholdeth inclosed any hot winde so that it cannot haue no vent it wil séeke it selfe a way by breaking the skin shell or case It were no euil comparison to liken Thunder to the sound of a Gun● which be both caused of the same or very like causes c. W. F. Thunder after the opinion of Aristotle is a natural thing Facta tamen ●t ●nqule secundū natu●●ordinatam Neuertheles saith he yet a thing of an vncertain doubtfull nature or of a ●sordred nature This thundring is nothing els but a crack a rsibling in the clouds y● cause efficient being the sun the planets the cause materiall being the h●t drye exhalations seeking a way out of y● clouds In the scripture both in the old testament in the new there is o●ten mention made of thundring which God miraculously sent down frō heuen aboue In the 9. of Exo. ve 23. God plagued K. Pha●●o because he wold not let the childrē of Israel depart out of Aegipt with thūder lightning hail stones In the 1. Reg. 7. When y● Philistines made warre against y● Israelites thinking to haue destroyed them all the Lord with a sodaine great Thunder cracke did make the Philistines so sore afraid that they ranne away and were slaine the most parte of them Also in the new Testament Iohn 12. Christ a lyttle before he should suffer his Passion praied vnto his Father saieng Father delyuer me from this houre but therefore came I into this houre O Father glorifie and set out thy name thy might and power And immediately there came a voyce from heauen saieng on this wise Glorifica●i iterum glorificabo I haue glorified it and I will glorifie it As he might say I haue glorified it in thée my sonne since the first houre of thine Incarnation with manifest wonderfull great miracles Et iterum glorificabo and I will glorifie my name in thée after the time of thy glorious Resurrection and Ascention more then euer I haue done through the comfort of the Holy ghost which shall so worke in the hearts of men that then shall my name in thée my sonne Christ begin to flourish in such wise as it neuer did before When this voice was heard there was such a stout noyse heard from heauen that the people that followed Christ Dixerunt Tonitrium factum esse They said it was a Thunder Such a Thunder was heard vpon the daye of Pentecost at the comming downe of the Holy ghost Now héere is to be noted that the Thundering of God mentioned in the old Testament were euer to fraye and to make men agast but the Thundering of God mentioned in the new Testament were so tempered that they did not feare but comfort men wherein is manifestly declared a Maiestie to be both in the Law in the Gospell but yet the one to driue vs to God for feare of the rodde and the other with the loue of euerlasting reward to imbrace Christ. Of whom the words of the Prophet Dauid Psal. 18. bée verefied as well in y● letter as in the Allegory when he saith Intonuit de coelo Dominus altissimus dedit vocem suam The Lord from heauen hath thundered and the highest hath declared his voice Ric. Turnar The Lord also thundered out of heauen c. ¶ By all the things héere rehearsed is described the power might maiestie of almightie God which he declareth in tempests of which the whole 29. Psal. intreateth And in Iob. 37. are lyke things mentioned to y● setting out of his power Oftentimes we read that when he would more openly more expresly declare his power vnto men caused thunder lightening and earthquakes c. As in Exo. 19. 16. when the law was giuen 1. Reg. 12. 18. when the people desired a king Mat. 27. 51. when Christ was on y● Crosse. Act. 2. when the Holy ghost came vpon the Apostles Act. 4. 3● when they prayed With such lyke words doe some suppose that God did at one time or other shew his benefite to Dauid and confirmed his promises with shaking y● earth sending thunder lyghtening hayle cloudes stormes other terrible tokens wherwith he holy Dauid ouerthrew his enimies Neither letteth it y● the Scripture mentioneth not thereof in any place for it mentioneth not the Tempest which Esay prophecied
inferior more obscure then the bright shew of Christs works Mar. fol. 176. Though I beare record of my selfe yet my record is true The sense meaning is this Although euery man is suspected in his owne cause although it be prouided by lawes that no man speaking in his owne cause shuld be credited yet notwithstanding this can take no place in the son of God which is aboue the whole world for he is not to be reckoned in the order of men but hath this priuiledge from his father to gouerne all men with his word alone Mar. fol. 293. That which Christ denieth chap. 5. 37. héere he graunteth to declare vnto them their stubburnes saith that béeing God he beareth witnes to his humanitie likewise doth God the father witnes the same wher are two distinct persons though but one God Geneua At the mouth of two witnesses c. Not that the testimony of two witnesses are alwaies true but because it is to be counted true For otherwise the testimonie of men may be false as it is to be séene in the 3. of Kings chapter 21. 13. Math. 26. 6. Susanna 13. VVOE What woe is THis word Woe as Basil saith is a lamentable mone wherewith all they y● grone vnder the crosse doth vtter their griefe What is betokened by the 3. woes in the reuelation of Iohn One woe is past and behold two woes come yet heereafter ¶ The fi●st woe betokeneth the mischiefe that is brought into the world by the false prechers Cloister men which aduanced Antichrist vnto so great authoritie y● he began to be estéemed for a God and Sauiour when notwithstanding he was but a destroier rooter out loe saith the text ther came yet two woes after this y● is to wit in the opening of the trumpets of the sixt seuenth Angels For the second woe is ment of the time wherin Antichrist raigneth with most cruel persecutions against the godly through the whole world And the third is about y● ende destruction of Antichrist whome the Lord shall dispatch with the breath of his mouth and rid quite away through the brightnesse of his comming 2. The. 2. 8. Mar. fol. 135. VVOOD What it is to build on wood haye or stubble IF any doe build on this foundation wood haye or stubble ¶ That is if a man of good intent but yet through ignorance preach teach you to sticke vnto ceremonies mens traditions although they seeme neuer so glorious to such things as are not grounded on scriptures as S. Cyprian taught defended to rebaptise him that was once baptised after fallen into heresie yea many Bishops consented vnto him yet was it surely a great errour This is wood haye and stubble that cannot endure the fire of temptation light of Gods word c. I. Frith fol. 43. VVOLFE How a Wolfe is sometime taken in a good sense BEniamin is a rauishing Wolfe ¶ Wolfe is héere taken in ● a good sense and signifieth a feruent preacher of Gods word as was Paule in whom the text is verefied T. M. The meaning of these places following The Wolfe the Lambe shall féede together ¶ The meaning is that the most wicked cruell men shall at the comming of Christ agrée with the good peaceable that the Gentiles which for their beastly liuing are often signified vnder the name of beasts shal be at vnitie with the faithfull the one liue ioyfully with the other without strife The very selfe saieng haue ye in the 11. Chap. ver 6. T. M. The Wolfe shall dwell with the Lambe ¶ Men because of their wicked affections are named by the name of beasts wherin the like affections raigne but Christ by his spirite shall reforme them worke in them such mutuall charitie that they shal be lyke Lambes fauouring and louing one another cast off all their cruell affections Geneua VVOMAN Of the woman arayed in Purple ANd the woman araied in Purple c. ¶ This woman is Antichrist that is the Pope with the whole bodye of his filthy● creatures as is expounded ver ●8 whose beautie only stādeth in outward pompe and impudencie and craft like a strumpet Geneua ¶ The womans variable garments be tokeneth diuerse liueryes of religious orders or the Rose coulour may signifie a readinesse to shedde christen bloud The cup ●ull of abhominations c. the Popes decrées decrefalls Bulles dispensations suspensations and cursings The beast she sat on is the Papall seate Sir I. Cheeke Of womens apparell The Prophet Esay reckoneth vp their bracelets their tablets their bonets their nosegaies iewels their vailes their wimples c. ¶ In rehearsing all these things perticularly he sheweth the lightnesse and vanitie of such as cannot be content with comelye apparell according to their degrée Geneua Tertulian in his booke of the ●ttire of women setting forth a better new apparell of women saith thus Prodite vos feminae c. Come ye forth ye women hauing your beauties bettered with the helps and ornaments of the Apostles taking white liues of simplicitie and readynesse of shamefastnesse hauing your eyes painted with shamefastnesse and your spirits with secresie putting into your eares the word of God tieng to your neckes the yoake of Christ put vnder your neckes to your husbands and ye shall be well apparelled Haue alwaies what to doe in your hands and fasten your féete at home and ye shall bee better lyked of them and if ye were in gold Clad you with the silke of sinceritie with the saten of sanctitie with the purple of probitie Thus prune and pricke vp your selues and God himselfe shall be your paramour c. How women may not weare mans apparell The woman shall not weare that which perteineth to man c. ¶ It is not forbidden but that to eschew or auoide ieopardy or to passe the time merely or to beguile our enimies a womā may weare a mans harnesse or vestiments and contrariwise a man womans clothes but that they be not earnestly and customably vsed that due honour and dignitie may be obserued of both kindes seeing to doe contrariwise is vncomely T. M. Of the woman taken in adultery Neither doe I condemne thee goe and sinne no more ¶ Hée sayth not neither shall any man condemne thée because hée would not abrogate the office of y● lawful iudge Therfore they which gather heereby y● adultery is not to be punished by death by the same it is necessarie that they graunt y● an inheritaunce ought not to be diuided because Christ would not make himselfe an arbitrer or vmper in that businesse betwéene two bretheren yea let euery wickednesse be exempted from the punishment of the lawe if so be adulterers may escape vnpunished they open the gate to treason to murther to rapine and theft If the magistrate had lawfully condemned adulterye Christ would not haue absolued the same He absolued